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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-06-28 - Orange Coast Pilot7 ,. I West County Rash Court Overturns Of ArJDed Holdups Draft Convi~tion Raging Un~he~ked ·Of Cassius Clay DAILY PILOT entences · * * * 1oc * * * MONDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 28, 1971 VOL. '4. HO. lll. J U!(TtON5, a ~.t.Glil everse or Suspect Surre1iders Ellsherg Admits Leaking Secrets I BOSTON f UPI) -Coming oul of hiding , Dr. Daniel Ellsberg surrendered to Federal authori\ie.!i today and admitted giving top secrel Pentagon documents on the Vietnam War to the New York Times. At a hearing before a U.S. magis1rale. E!lsberg. 40, was released in $50,000 bond without surety. meaning he did not have to post bail. No Plea was entered. The go\'ernmenl prosecutor, saying 1'the charges generally deal with es- pionage, .. had asked for $100,000 bond "''ilh surety. Ellsbcl'g was specifically charged v.·itb unauthorized possession and retention of documcnlS "vi tal lo the na- tional defense." "I am prepared to answer to a!I the consequences . . " said Ellsberg. If con. victed, he fa ces a maximum penalty of 10 years' imprisonment and a $10,000 fine . Magistrale Pe1er \V. Princi continued the cast' to ,July lfl for a hearing on E!lsbcrg's renioval lo C;i!ifornia where a warrant was issued for his arrest. As he arrived lo surrender as promised lo U.S. Attor nry Herbert f'. Travers, Ellsberg said he 'tc;iked the papers to the press about 18 months after giving then1 to Sen . J . William Fulbright (IJ..Ark.), chairman of the powerful Senate foreign Relations Committee and an outspoken foe of U.S. involvement in Vietnam fromhthe start. Ellsberg, senior research associate at Massachusetts Jn5'litute •f Technology (MlTl. told newsmen: "All these action s W1?re tjearly in con- tradiction to security reguladons. secrecy , Coast Weather The sun will peek thrilugh the haze again th is afternoon and Tuesday, following the eteady diet of low clouds and fog along the coaet. Highs today 71)' at the beaches. 80 inland. Lows 50 to liO. INSWE TODAY The COsta. Mesa Civic Pln11· hou.st wfshed itself o happu Jlxth birthdtl11 (he 0th.tr doll with member,<; of it.~ pasf .• 10 pToductio11J rr1i hand to cele· brate. Ste Entertainment, Pagt JI. \ s,..ilM :lt (.•ll .. r11!1 I (.~ei~lnt Ut 1 (llHlllM U·ll C.Mnlc• JJ C'9u_.i JI O.tfll l'l.ilcu t '""""Ill ,.,. ' 1111tt11l11m•Pll »ll •lol•~• H·1t ... __ 1t '"" l ..... ,. u MallM• tt ,,.,.,,. ... ~. """"'" ,...,, l'lf!llMI N--' •I Ori .... (-TY t 111¥11 h rtw " llotrlt Jl•H lltdt JMrll.tt H•Tt Ttl1vltlell ll Tlltlftrt •ll W•ll~tr 4 w~tt• w"" " Womtfl't Ntw\ 1).1J World NtWI W regulations and, even more. the in· formation praclice.s of lhe Department of Defense. .. Neverlheless, I felt as an American citizen, a responsible citizen. I could no longer cnoperate in concealing lhis in· formation form the American publi c. I did this clearly at my own jeopardy. "I am prepared to answer lo all the co nsequences of these decisions. That in· eludes the personal consequences to me (Stt ELLSBERG. Page Z) Court Ov erturns Draft Sentence Of Cassius Oay \VASHINGTON (UPI ) -The Supreme Court unanimously threw out the draft defiance conviction of f <1 r m e r heavyweight. champion Muhammad Ali today and the fighter declared his than~ to Allah for the verdict The court in an unsigned opinion upheld Ali's claim that he was entitled to con· scientious objector !!Laius from the draft because of his Black Muslim beliefs. The ruliig said the Justice Department was clearly wrong under the law in denying his religious claim. In Chicago, Ali, whn won the title under his original name Cas.!ius Clay, said he learned of the 8-0 decision wh(n a stranger r111n out of a atort and told hi'm with teer• in his eyes: ''You're . free! You 're frff! 1be Supreme Court said 90," The on~time Olympic champion said he would say anotber prayer thanking Allah In celebralion. "I said one already," he told a reporter. In reversing the conviction or All, the court declared : "The (Justice) Oeparf~nl was simply "MOil!!: as a matter of law in advising that the petiUoner's beliefs •ere not religious- ly hued and were not sjncerely held." The court said that AU's objection IG military duty was based upon "religioua training and belief'', the test for dr11ft ex· empt status as a conscientiou5 objector. "In order lo qualify for classification as a conscientious objector. 1 registrant must ealisfy threl!! basic teau," the court sald : "He must show that kt ta coo- gcientlously nppnsed to war in any form ..• he must show that this oppo'sitlon is ba~ upon re:ligJous training and belief. as the term his been construed Jn our decisions. And he must show that this ob- jection Is sincere." The court said All met all thrtt lesL~. The Supreme: Court cited t b e IS.. CLAY, Pap 1) Suspecwd MafiaHead Shot Down ... NEW YORK IUPIJ -Jnseph A. Colombo Sr., reputed leader of one of New York 's five Mafia fami lies. was shot in the head and critically wounded by a blac k man tod ay at an Ita lian.America n Unity Day rally. The young gunman wa s shot and killed by police as a crnwd of SC\'etal thoosa rui wa!ched in stunned silence. The assailant v.·as not immediately identified. Wi!nesses said Colombo. 48. ~·as mov. ing among a crov.•d or well.wishers lo'olo'ard the speakers platform when the gunman grabbed him by the neck, spun him around and shot him 1n the head . The gunman, carrying a camera and wearing what appeared tn be press credentials. had been slanding nearby with a black worn.an. !he witnesses said. He was in his early 20's and wore green trousers and a green shirt, they said. Both Colombo and the gunman were laken to Roosevelt Hospital a hlock away. A priest administered the last riles of the Roman Catholic Church to the wounded man in the emergency room. The shooting happened at about 11: 15 a.m., 4;. minutes before the scheduled sta rt of the Columbus Circle ra lly organized by Colombo and his so n, Anthony. 27. Speakers pleaded with the crowd to remain cairn and not to !!ave the area. Anthony Colombo had predicted 450,000 persons would attend the second annual Unity Day rally but th! crowd only numbered severa l thousand at that point. The younger Colombo had said the demonstration was "for ordinary people to show pride in thejr , heritage end love of their coun try." The 1peakers platform and ~Udings in • th! area, ll'lcluding the hospital, werl!! draped with red, black and green flags and bunting in honor of the observaoce. Colombo, a founder of the Italian Ameri can Civil Rights League and the moving force behind the Unity Da y observance. was admilted to Roosev elt Hospital "in critical condil ion wil.h a gunshot wound of the head," a hospital spokt!man aaid. 1llf: spokesman said "a male dead on arrival" al&0 was brought to the hospital. UPI Photographer Oirck !{alstead said the gunman pumped "uveral shols Into Colombc>'s head as he was moving toward • crowd of well·wishers near !he speakers da is. "There was 1 brief exchange of gunfire between the police and the assailant. who fell to the pavement bleeding Crom the back," Halstead 1aJd. · Court Voids NY Gnnfire ) • . ,. \.. ' "'·u,iTt ...... BYSTANDERSlUlSH TO AID REPUTED UNDERWORLt>'LEADER .Joteph•Gotembo4Sr-Shot> ini New Ydrk-Gun lift~· ·,.. Holdups Rage Unchecked " 1 1'>e rash of holdups in the West Orange I County area continued this weekend with 'the frobbtry or a Winchell's Doughnut , shoP, in Wuitminster. Detective Sgt. Frank Fisher said l wo mu, armed with what appeared lo be a pellet gun took $97 rrom the ahop s.t 15347 Beach Blvd . Saturday night. The robbery Is the eighth since June 21 in the Huntington Beach·Weatmlnster~ Seal Beach srea. Fridey alternoon 'I •Vntted Cal!f'ori'lla' Bank Jn Seal Beach end a rlrst Westeiii Bank In We3lrninster were robbf:d or more lhan $2,500. Inve!Ugators in thOH cities are checking the pouiblllty that tbe gunman wae the same in both Ca~a aince the robberleJ occurred wJlhin 15 mlDules of each Gthtr. Sgt Sam O'Amlcn, or Seal Beach said I.he suspect In the UCB 11Uckup had a~ parently attempted to rob the Security Pacific Bank. at 770 Pacific Coast HJghwa~cl\· ll'!!'!l"'" 'r,!!!U.be . tm. tht tet~ near tA:lsure WOrld. Conviction Of Speck WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court tOOsy reversed the death senUmce• of 35 persons. including the electric chair sentence of Richard F. Speck, who waJ convicted of murdering !ight nurse! ln. Chicago in 1966. Speck was sentenced to death after a jury in Peoria, lU., convicted him of kill- ing the nurses. one by one, In th!d' southside Chicago apartment. Jn reversing the death penalty, the court cited its 1968 dl!!Cision holding that persons exposed !() the dtath pena lty could not be excluded auto matically from juries in c;ipltal cases. It also cited twtt -Olher precedents in reversing one bloc of 20 dealh cases includ ing Speck's. Relying on the jury provision known as rhc Witherspoon case, and various other cases, the court reversed a total of 35 death cases and remanded them to lower courts for further proceedings. ··A third'death· penalty cak t'Akm on for hearing ts an appeal by John Henry Furman, under death sentence for tho! pistol slaying of William J. MiCke in 1961 In Chatham County, Ga. The other appeals to be heard Involved' EarneS"t Jamee. Aikens jr. or California' and Elmer Branch or Texas. This will be the first time the court has! ever been willing to hear arguments on• the "cruel and unusual punishment" line of attack. Bomb Package 'False' Al.arm ~' .. . . A wrapped package making • ''v.ery •*NI.gt noisl!!?' •Pltrktd • DWTY of...actlvlty:..iD Laguna Beach Saturday mominc wh!n Post Office employes suspected lhe parcel might contain a Ume bomb. The employes quickly removed the pa ckage from the building, the Post Offkt annex at 2295 La.gun• Canyon lload, and ph1ctd it in the center of a vacant lot. Pollet and tiremen rushed to the scene. The city manager and police chief"'" lllformed of lhe situation. And tht bomb disposal squad trom El Toro Marine Base was called to di.91.rm the txpk>slve device. carefully opening the J)8ckage, the tense Marines dlscovtred a bat- tery operated electric toothbrush , ruMing 1moothly and acrubblng the "(l•N>ln& paper. t 1 I l DAILY J>ILOT s 'THANKS TO ALLAH' Former Champ Ali From Page J CLAY ... government's O\.\o11 concession that "there is no dispute that petitioner's professed beliefs were founded on basic tenets of th! ~\uslim religion, a:i he under.stood them , and derived in substanllal part from hi:i devotion Lo Allah as the supreme being.·· "This concession is clearly correct," the Supreme Court said. The ruling. reversing Ali's conviction 3nd the five-year prison sentence and $10.000 fine imposed by a lower court. means he can conti nue his ring career ·with a right against Jimmy Ellis schedul- ed next month. Public Funding For Parochial Schools Barred \VASHI NGTON (UPI) -TI1c Supreme Court barred states today from earmark- ing public funds for secular education in parochial schools. The precedent·selling decision came in cases from Pennsylvania and Rhode Island . Rhode Island had a p!an lo supplement parochial teachers' salaries. Pennsylvania was using part of the ad- miS!ion tax on horse racing and harness 'facing to reimburse private t'!ementary and secondary schools for the cost of text. bocks and instructional material:i and for teachers' salarle:i. Later part of the cigarette tax \vas ad- ded. The court :iaid both statutes were un- constitutional under the religion clauses of the fir st amendment because their cumulative effect involved excessive en- tang lement between government and religion. In a separate opinion, the court ruled that federal ronstruction grants to church-related colleges did not violate the separation of church and slate required by I.he Constitution. The court did strike doi,•:n the portion or the federal law providing for a 20-year limitation on religious use of the faci\lti!!:s construcled with !ederal money. Billions of dollArs In college con- struction funds to ir.stitutions with close 1ink.'I lo religious denominations y,•ere et stake in th test case, started by 15 Con- necticut taxpayers . The 5-4 decision was the first con- ,;titutional IPst in the Supreme l'oun of the 1963 higher Education fac1lit1es Act. It returned the case to a special three- judge federal panel in l\ew Haven, v.·h1ch upheld th e law March 19, 1970. OU.Mii CO.UT DAILY PILOT "..,..._ .., __ <:oft ·- OllAHC:.t: COAST f'VILISHl'4G COMl'AHY leltert H. Wee4 "'"\Hiii Mii """'"""' J1,k It. Curley \lkt f'r11kl.,1 1NI G-11 Ml1\ll9I" Tliem11 K11•il Editor T~1••• A. MYrpliine ............... idllW Ch•r11t H. 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June 28, 1911 Coast Sands Inundated By C1·owds By TERRY CO\'ILLE 01 ""' Oi llr ~1111 $1111 The waves of peciple flooding Orange County beaches over the weekend were considerably bigger !11a11 the waves of water striking the shoreline. More than 400.000 sunbathers and swimmers spread the ir towels and bodie:o1 along the Orange Coast :-:iaturd;iy and Sunday, but lhc surf never peaked abo ve two feet in height. As a result of thf' poor surr condilion:oi lifeguards had an easy v.·eekend making less than 130 rescues both days al al l beaches. The most serious incident Y:as reported at ~1onarch Bay. Sunday. v.•hen a ~oung boy was shot in lhe left leg v.·ith a spt'ar gun while several youngsters \rtre playing with it on th e beach. Steve Shaw. 9, of 30411 Via Alcaza r, Laguna Niguel , was reporled in good con- dition after l!feguards removed the straight spear from his leg which hrid been shot from a Hawaiian sling. In Seal Beach caln1 prevailed ovcr the weekend where a riot had stirred the sands Thursday resulting in 65 arrests. Police Chief Lee Case said heavy police patrols of the beach Saturday and Sunday apparently kept peace among 15,000 beach goers. A riot broke out on the beach Thursday when several youths began Uirowing rocks and bottles at three Huntington Beach undercover officers v:hen they made an arrest on the beach. Sea l Beach police. units rushed to the rescue and arrested 33 persons Thursday, and ran the arrest total higher on Friday. The rock throwing riot lasted and hour before officers from five cities fina!ly cJosed down the beach, Case said. All Seal Beach policemen were on duty Saturday and Sunday, with many assign- f'd to beach patrols. Bul nothing h;ir- pened, Case said , Ne"·port Beach drew the biggest \\'eckend crowds with 80,000 Saturday and 85.000 Sunday. The weather was moderate. with af- ternoon clouds and temperatures ranging from a high of only 69 degrees in San Clemente up to 75 degrees in Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. \Varm "'ater. however. offse! the C'oolrr air. Water temperatures ran frorn 66 degrees to 69 degrees at all beaches. In Huntington Beach about 35.000 ,·isitors went to the cit y beach each da_,., y,·hile 18,000 Saturday, and 14,000 Sunday, were recorded at Hunlington State Park. Bolsa Chica state lifeguards counted 10,000 visitors each day. Laguna Beach lifeguards said their at- tendance figures shov,,ed 12.000 on the beach Saturday and 16.000 Sunday. while cou nty beaches patrolled by Laguna lifegua rds counted 3,000 and <4,000 Satur· day and Sunday, respectively. San Clemente city beaches were the choice of 12 ,000 swimmers Saturday and 18,000 Sunday, white J0,000 vi sitors \Yent to the co1.n ty bt'ach on Saturday and 12.500 wenl on Sunday. State lifeguards for snulh county beaches reported 13.000 persons each day. The state camping park in Sa11 Clemente was also filled all y,·eekend. Krishnu Groups Swge Religions Purude in SF SAN FRANCISCO IUPI) -Hare Krishna followers, pull ing three 4:>-loot high juggernauL~. chanted and danced their wav lhrough (;nlden Gate Park on Sunday in their !1flh annual religious parade. "Hare Krlshna Hare Krishna Krishna Kr ishna Hare Hare Hare Rtima Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Har e'' went lhr. chant that believers say leads a person inlo the inner folds of Krishna con- sciousness. Wearing sitffron i::olored rob«?s, the believers also pulled along with ropes a 24).foot high statue of I.Ard Chaitanya, In· dian mystic who devised the chanl. There were some 300 of the believer!I and a crowd estimated al 3.500 taking part in the two-mile parade that le!t. a trail of incense among the park's shrub- lined lakes and Lrees. A. C. Bhaktivedanta S\Yami. who found- ed the religion in thi3 country. spoke br iefly both al lhe start end finish of the march which was attended by ~tr~. Florence Douglas, ma yor of nearby Vallejo. "I feel the Krishna people are the ser\'ants of God." lhe mayor told the gaihering. "They're workinr;i: un~elftshl:-­ and doing very good work In help eASc the problems or today's youth." "We all have the po111·cr of prayer. Th1:1 ls the only thing that's going to savt lhls generation.'' She also praised the move1nenl for ''slopping the excesses of today -drugs 111nd alcoholic beverages -and offering spiritual values to our youlh .°' Believen abstJin from drugs nnd ire vegeLarian.,. M the cymbals clanged and 1t1e group marched. a motnrbike po Ii c em an remarked, •·well . the y look a bit strange. but it ctrt1inly is a ruly crowd." Just about the only :;!gn of connict came from a group of youlh:i wh(I dec.111.rtd thty rectnUy had becom~ estranged from the M:c.t ind urged onlookers to "turn on to Christ -the: otle t ~ue !!f)iritu111 trip " War Goes On Search Pressed Slain Realtor's Rites Scheduled Funeral servlct:i are sch e du I e d Wednesday for a Costa Me:ia real es!ate: woman found niurdered in Del tl-1ar six days ago, while San Diego pt1l1ce pre!ls a so-far unsuccessful search for the killer. Rile!! for Mrs. Jean Smith. 56. will be \Vednesday al 10 a.m. in ,Bell Broadway Mortuary Chapel, with Dr. Rayn1ond I. Brahams officiating . lnte.rn1en1 will follow Lile. services tor fo.1rs. Smith, of 482 Abbie \\111y, Costa Mesa, in Pacific View ~1emorial Park. Supreme Court Deluys Decisio 1t On Puper Cuper By The Associated Press The Supreme Cour1 put off today a ru l- ing on whether lhe New York Ti1nes and the Washi ngton Posl can resume publica- tion of secret PenlRgon pa pers on Viel· nam and the. man accused of leaking lhe paper$ lo the press surrendered to federal authorities. A man hitch!Vklr\& to work, 'aetouring around and below a :itretch or lnler1llte 5 freeway near the Del Mar Racetrack discovered the vlc~m·s nude body on a graS!ly !llope al 7:I$ a.m. last Tuesday. A pair of bloe>d-stalned rock.a taken frum the scene as evidence were evidently used to blud11eon the popular Realtor to death. Beside!! severe head injuries, Mrs. Smith also suffered 11 broken left leg and a fractured rib on her left side and oor· oner·s deputies theorize she had been dead at least three days. ln\·estigators believe lhe O\\'!ler of Jean Smith Real Estate, 400 E . 17\h St .. Costa ~lesa. was probably slain not long aflPr :;he left the home of relatives June 15 in San Diego. So far, the hunt £or additional clues, leads or a motive in the tragic slaying has fa iled to pro\'ide any particularly useful materia l. "I'm sorry to !iay we have nn new developments ." said LL Gordon Oberle, of 1he San Diego Police Department homicide squad today. \Vith crucifix hanging from his neck, GI lugs his weapon back to sand-bagged f'irebase Barbara after a patrol near the Dl\1Z. \.\'hile controversy continues here at. home on the secret paper caper, the war in Vietnain goes on. See story, Page 4. The high court heard argun1ents on Lile case over the weekend. and sat today for what was to have been the last session until the fall tern1 . The court announced no ruling on the Pentagon paper:i case, hut Chief Justice \\larren E. Burger an- nounced the justices would continue sit· ting to hand down further orders. Police suspect l.1rs. Smith mel her fa te shortly after leaving the home of her stepson, David Smith, v.·ho iden tified the body after hearing a radio broadcast describing clothes and jewelry found near ii. His stepmother \\'BS reported missing June 16 after she tailed lo arrive back in Qista l-1esa. LA Pla11e Sla1ns Into Sea; At about the same time, in Boston. Dr. Daniel Ellsberg surrendered lo federal authorities and told about 150 persons that he had provided the Times with the papers. California Highway Patrol oflictrs ticketed and finally im pounded her Cit, parked on the freeway shoulder, June 111, ne11r the spot "'here her body was even· tual\y found. 3 l(ille(l, 3 Mo1·e Missi11g ' ".T am prepared for all consequences:• said Ellsberg, whose attomey5 had said Saturday their client would surrender on Monday. The terrain -marshy and slopinf down below the !ree:way on ty,·o different tiers -hid her body from \•iew at that lime. A Harbor Area resident for nearly 20 years. Mrs. Smith was active in the Costa J\fesa-Ne 111'port Harbor Board of Realtor!i and chambers of commerce in both cities. EUREKA (UPI) - A chartered \win- e.ngined plane carrying 23 persons tore the roor olr a sewage treatment plant and crashed into the Pacific Ocean Sund;iy nigh t y,liilc laking off (rom a private ;iirstrip at a recreational comn1unil)· f.ight bnd1es 11ere recovered hy the Coast t;u!lrd an d t'igl1L 11·cre 1111:;si ng. Scvrn perwns survived !he crash and \1•cre taken to St _ Joseph's Hospital in Eureka and Southern Hun1boldt l'u:n- 1nun1ty Hospital in Gerberv1l!e Five or the survivors were reported 1n ,;erious condition. The other 1110 11rrc 1n good cundi11on. The Coast Guard said three crew men1- bers -the pilot. co-pilot and s!e"·ardes.cr -were on the plane 11·hich "'as carrying sales representatives for the develop- mcn!. An umada of Coast Guard cutters, helicopters and amphibian planes, plus pleasure craft anrt fishing boats. assisted in rescue operations. High \1·1ntls. darkness and rough seas hampered the search. "'The plane appeared to dip after taking orr and clipped the top of the sew:>.!(C treatmenl planl which !iits below lhc runwa1·.·· Humbold t roun!v :\11a!ion D1rrctOr Da1e Zeho quotrd 111itncsse.'i" a.s sa.\ 1ng. Zebo said the DC3 ripped the. roof off lhe building. smashed into a hugr rock about 300 reel off shore and tort• aparl P;i.~sengcrs and crew members were tossed into the sea . Sonic 11err fe11re([ trapped 1n the fUst>lage \1•h1ch sank The pilot and co-pilot .,..,.re k1llrd l1ut the stewardess. believed to be J-:l11.<1beth Ileuville of San Francist'O, sur\ i1 ,.d Another plane. carrying prnspecl!\'l' land buyers, took off jllst before the Pentagon Papers Given to Solons With Warnings \\'ASHJNGTON !UPI) -The Defense Departn1enl deli\•ered its top secret history of the origins of the Vietnam War to Congress 1oday y,•\th a y,•arning that their public disclosure \.\o'ould pose "grave af'ld immediate dangers lo the national security .. Pentagon messengers carried ty,'o cartons filled 'With the 4 7 -v o I um e docun1en!s lo the capilol office or Senate President Pro. Tern Allen J . Ellender. l D- La > A sin11)ar ~l"t of volumes "'as deli\'ered to Hou.ore-Speaker Carl Albert. The Senate volumes werl' locked 1n a \'etUl l in the office of Frank Valeo. Secretary of the Sc.nate. and the l:louse copic! werc. put under lock and key in lhe l louse Arrned Services Committee. Only congressmen "'Ill be alloy,·ed to read them , and 1hey may not take noles. Ellender read parL~ or a lettC"r from J)efenMi Secretary Melv in R Laird .~aylng thal disclosurt would lead to "11ra\'e and immediate dangers to the ne· t1on11l sccuri1y:· One of the Pentagon couriers slashed o!)l'n one of the boxes anrl Ellenrll'r "ithdrtY.' two of the. volumes -31 and 32 -and held !hem up for photographer,;. A y,•hitc co\•er sheet over the blue·bound \'olunics was stamped "Top Secret" in block red letters. The Defense Oepartn1ent said thf ''\·a.~t bulk" of the ~fudy probably "'ould be rlccla~sified. and released to the public, 11~ a rc.~1111 of A rtvif".,.. now under \.\ay crash It !hen returned to !be airport and a p<'d in trieian aboard aided in treating survil'or~. Sheriff's dt·pul1cs .-;11id 1J1e pla ne \'.'as crirrying 111ni11ly sales representatives of Shcl1rr l'Ol't' Si.!:t[lark l.td. of Los Angelt·-~-11h1t•h 1s conslruclini; :1 hous ing devel opnll'llt tailed Shelter Core along the !'O:IS1 , nbnu1 ::oo rnlles IJ(•rth or Son Fr<1nt•isl'o One of !he 20 p:i!'sengrrs \\<IS f\ "Olll<ln brli1·1·cd tu I.Jc !he 11·irr r1f one of the ~n!cst11l·n Soni l' inJUl'C'il .sur1·n·nrs rcm111ned aHoaL fur abnu! 4\J minu!es before being rescued by :10 hoa!s !hat convrrged on the area. A1 rl1f1td lo St Jnscph"s llospital at F:urcka. ;1hut ;)fl mllc.s north ol !he crash 1'1!e. 11C'rc Hilly Nelson. 29. Steven Reid, 41. :ind Anthonv Sanchci, 61. all of San lJ1cg11. and Jri1i11g lirossman. 36, l.A:i Angck•s. Nclsun and Heid 11 trl' 111 gol)d condi tion with lrg irl]UrJl'S \\hilt' Sanrbez and < ;1·0:,Rm.'.ln ll'rrc repurled in .serious eon· chl1011. Tn~\"ll 10 :-iouthcrn I lumholdt t'o111- 111u11i1,1 fl(•~pll<JI :11 ( :nrhcr\'il tr. :ibout :10 1ni!('s fr<•111 Shcl!rr CO\'e. v.·ere Elizabeth Deauv1lle nr San francist'O, believed tu he 1h1• ~1~·11anles.~: Herbert Huber, Fairfield .. ind Jo~rph Dupl:inr . no ad- dr(·~s Bodies of thr vicums v.err takrn to n1nrluarir~ in l~u rck:i Zc·bo ~;11d thr l){'J 11:i.~ oprra1rd out of S.tn ,Ju~r b\ :O.ht•l!l'J' Cl)ve De1elopment l '> Tlir Frrtrral A1•1;11 1on Admuustration .!i.11d llir plane 11a5 en rnu!c to San .Jose, ;1IM1Ul 1;:) nHh's s1111111 of Sa11 Francisco, :inc! th1•11 on I" Lu~ 1\ngcll'"· S!1tH1·r t'''"' 1'> ;, tl'r rrn1 iiinal ;irra .. prn.•d 111 1flf,~. (ln n !i 01111-<u.:rc tract along llir l';u·1t1r \h111ll h:ilf thr are:i w;is l1r-1n~ rlr\1 l1•pt•d 1n!o 4 !KM\ In :i.ooo home :;1t1•, ,\ l:-i11d1nf.( !->trip 11 as l;11tl oul al lhr n·q1011· di'\ (•lnpnirnl s11r 10 :illow real r~tnlr ngrn ts nnd prospective buyers lo th· 1ntu lht• are:i. E!lsberg, a former Pent ago n researcher no1Y a research associate at the ~1ass:ichuset1.s lnstilut e of Technology Technology in Cnn·1bridge. had been sought unsucccssfull.v by the FB I since in Cainhridge, had been s,,ugh! un~uccess­ fullv bv the FBI since Fridav on a \1·ar- ranl :i(.'cu~ing hin1 of unautliorized pns- ~ession of lop secret documents and failure to return them. From 1•nge J ELLSBERG ... and my family, "hatever these may be. \Vouldn't you go to prison to help end lhe "·ar?" Ellsberg \1'as accornpanicd by hi s \~if~ and a lawyer as he drove up In !he post Clrfice building \.\o'hich houses lhe federal cou r!s and Travers' office. lie \\'ore a l1uge sn1ile. and dark pinstripe suit. blue shirt and dark lie. He kep t his arn1 around his wire Palricia as they tried to get inside the building. "In the fall of 19ti9. I took th~ responsibility on my own initiative <lf delivering to the chairmen of the foreign relations committee of the U.S. Senate 1he information containtd in the so-called Pentagon papers. including several studies on negotiations \1·hich h;ive not been given lo :in~· newspaper." Ellsberg said ·•L"ntil lhat l1n1c. thcsr studie!i have bern acctssib!e only lo me and to a few other individuals. "By th is spring. 111 0 1n\'aS1on~ la1er, and after 9.000 more A merican~ and hun· drrds or thou~ands of Indochinese had died. I cou!d only rl'grct thnt I had nol at lh;it lime rela ~ed tha t informa!Jon to the An1erican public lhrnu~h 1hf' newspapers. l l1a\'P now done ~o." he said. '' frdrr;il 11arn1n! .,...As issu<'d Friday ni~ht 1n Los Angeles ,1~ainst Ellsberg, who 1iist h;id bern seen .Jur1f" 16 afler lunchini.:: a1 the MIT f;icul1 .v r lub. He told ne11·smrn he hrrcl been J1iding in Cam· hridi;e since then. She leaves l\l'O daughters, Mrs . Flora Frey, of Costa Mesa and r.frs. Sharon Steinmetz, of Jla ly. plus the stepson ,,.,.11p identified her body. She also leaves lwo sisters. Alice Gin- now. of Lyn"·ood. Ada Paris. of Norwa lk plus_ brothers-in-law George Ginno"'"'• J~ Paris and 13 grandchildren. TI1e family suggests those wishing to make a contribution to r-.1rs. Smith 's memory donate funds lo the Hoag Memorial Hospital 11eriatrics "·ard. Ship Blast Kills Fou1·; Seven Hmt Off Guantanamo NORFOLK. \'a. (AP) -Four Navy !'"en were _killed and seven injured today In an engine room explosion aboard 111 U.S. vessel operating off Guantanamo Bay. Cuba, Atlantic Fleet headqur.rte:rs here said. A spokesman for the Atlan!ic Fleet Amphibious Force said the explosio n oc· curred aboard the amphibinu!' lransport dock USS Trenton as the \'cssel w;u undergoing shakedo.,..·n !raining about !IC'& miles south of the Guantanamo navtJ st.a· lion. The names of thr dead and injured u·e~e. "''.1lhheld by the Xavy pending not1f1cat1on of next or kin. Six of the injured were P\·aruated to the naval hospilal at (;uantanamo the ~a1·y said. whlle the seventh was tr;a.ted on board the Trenton. The Trenton returned to port under her own µ<iwer. The Navy said i! y,•as in- ves tigating to determine the cau~e of the f'Xplosion. Expert Watch Repair Rings Redesigned WATCH REPAIR SPECIAL e Cleonod e Ollod s5 95 e Adf1trtf'd ""wlor • Electrlcorty TlmM wud'I WATCH REPAIRING DONE ON PREMISES We bvy our ring mountings direct from ring costing houses end htive them finished by SPftC.io!ists, thus enabling us to sell to you for less. 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • DOM u.cm Jewelry Repair at it's finest FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, BUY, SELL. TRADE 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA - COME IN AND HOWSE AROUND PHONE 646-7741 htw-H-&lo-oy I I I I ( I In Ii n pa le ca w u no bu no hi to gi th El wi lo .. , pi wi ch " llo <O vi ye t El w fo Ell pr to ch R , .. fro M oM tra re for De cir Ion lo di I Pa Pr Su rid ho ., Ha St ho acl So '" •• tin •• h• tw M fri Ir H Di Huntington Be-a~h Fountain Valley EDITION * f * VOL. ~. NO. 153 , l SECTIONS )38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JtJNE 28, 197.1. Data Ruling Delayed I Court Still Considering Pentagon Papers By fit Assoclaled Press The Supreme Court put <>ff today 11 rut. 1ng on whether the New York Times and the Washington Post can resume publica· l ion of secret Pentagon papers on Viel· nam and lbe man acc used of leaking the papers to the press surrendered to federal authorities. The high court heard arguments on lhe case over th e weekend, and sat today for whal was to have been the last session until the fall term. The court announced no ruling on the Pentagon papers case, but Chief Justice Warren E. Burger an· nounced the justices would continue sit· ling lo hand do1o.•n further orders. At about the same time. in Boston, Or. Daniel .Ellsb<'rg surrendered to federal authorities and told about 150 persons tha l he had provided the Times with lhe papers. ··r am prepared for all consequences,'' said Ellsberg. whose attorneys had said Saturday their client would surrender on Mooday. Ellsberg, a former Pen t a go n researcher now a research associate at the f\.fassachusetts lnslilule of Technology Technology in Cambrldge. h;id been sought unsuccessfully by the FBI !'i1nce * * * * * Papers Figu1·e Su1·re11der s To Federal Authorities BOSTON /UPI) -Coming out nf tiidlng , Dr. Danie! Ellsberg surrendered to federa l authorities today and admitted giving lop secret Pentagon documents on the Vietnam War lo the New York Times, At A hearing before 21 U.S. magistrate. Ellsberg. ~O. was released in $50.000 bond without surety, meaning he did not have to post ball. No plea was entered. Tbe government prnsecutor, '1aying ''the charges generally deal with es· p~onage." had asked for $100,000 bond with surety. Ellsberg was speciflcally charged with unauthorited possession and retention of doc uments ''vii.al lo the na· lional dt:fense." "1 am prepared lo 11n~wer to all the (:onsequences ... " said Ellsberg. If con· victed . he faces .1 ma ximum penalty of JO years" imprisonment and a $10.000 fine . Magistrale Peter W. Princi continued the case U:i July 1;i for a hearing on Ellsberg's removal to Californ ia where a warrant was issued for his arrest. A., he arrived to surrender as promised to U.S. A!t orney Herbert F'. Travers. Etlsberg !'.aid he leaktd thr papers In thl!. press about JR month.~ 11fler gh'ing them to Sen. J. Willi11m F'ulbright 1D~Ark.), chairman nf the powerful Senate Foreign R~atinns Comm11tee and an outspoken foe of U.S. involvement in Vietnam fromhthe slart. Ellsberg. sen1nr research nss&ciatr 11t Massachusetts Institute e[ Technology !MITl, told newsmen . "All these actions we.rt' c1e<1r!y in cnn- tradictlon 10 :o;e<:"urily regulations. secrtt.y regulat ions and. ev,.n more. the in· lnrmalion prattice.ii or the Depa rt ment of Defen~e. ''NPvertheless, I fell 11:\ an America n citir.en, 11 responsible citizen. I could no longer cooperate in concealing this in- formation form the American publit. I did this clearly at my own jeopardy. ''l am prepared lo answer lo a\J lhe consequences of these decisions. That in· eludes the personal conseq uences to me and my fam ily. whatever these niay be. (m ELLSBERG, Page Z) Doughnut Shop Robbed of $97 In W cstminster The rash of holdups in the West Orange County area continued this v.•eekend with lhe robbery nf 11 Win chell's Doughnul i!ihop in Wesl mins ter. Detective Sgt. Fran k Fisher ~aid l~·n men, armed v.•ith wha t .appeared to be 11 pellet gun look $97 from the. shop a.I l[l.147 Beach Blvd. Saturrlay night. The robbery is the eighth since ,Junf.' 21 in the Hunlinglon Beach-Westminster· Seal Be.ach area. friday afternoon a United California Bank in Seal Beach and a first West ern Hank in \l/eslminsrer were rnbberl nf more than S2.~. lnvestiga1nrs in !hose c1lies are checking I.he possibilily that thl!. ~unman was the same in both cases sinrr. the robberit>.s occurred ~·i thin 1$ minu!es of each other. Sgt. Sam D'Am1cn, of Seal Beach said the suspect 1n the UCB slickup had ap- parently attempted to roh the. Securi!v Pacific Rank al 7i0 Pacific Coa~t Highway, Sral Beach. moments before he hit the UCB loc<'oled near Leisure \Vorld "But the teller told him she nnly had si:ime ones and twenties so he said It wa sn't worlh the !rouble and lefl." O'Amico said. ''I don't know v.·hat ii is but there sure is a lot of this going around lately.'' fn the past wee k bandil~ have tAken 11 tota l of $900 in cash and $2.000 in checks from markets in Westminsl.Pr and Hun· tington Beach. in Cambridge, had been sought unS1Jtcess. fully by the FBI '.liince Friday on a wa1 - rant accusing hin1 of unaut.hori1.ed pos· session of top secret documcnL~ and failure to return them . At issue in the court case ls thf: government's contention lhat publication of exccrp!s of the study will end anger na· tioaal security. The Times and Posl con- tend freedom nr the press is threatened b.\' the government's effort to prevent publicat!on nf arlicles based on the study outlining U.S. involvement in Vietnam. Both the Tin1e5 11nd the Po!>l remai n restrainrrl from publishing more articlell pending a fina l court decision . * * War Papers Delivered To Congress WASHINGTON (U PlJ -The Defense [)epartmenl delivered Its lop i;ecret his tory of the origins of the Vietnam War tn Congress today v.'ilh a warning that their public disclosure would pose "grave and immediate dangers to the national gecurity."' Pentagon me.sse nger·s carried two carton~ filled wi1h the 4 7-v o ! um e riocumenl! tO the capitol nffice of Senate President Pro-Tern Allen J. Ellender, I I). La. l ' A similar set of volumf's was delivered lo House Speaker Carl AJbert. The Sen.11le volumes were locked in a vault in the office of Frank Valeo. Secretary of the Sena te. and the House copies were put under lock and key in the tlnuse Armed Services Commiltee. Only congre1smrn will be allowt>d In read them, and they may not l.ake notes, Ellender read parLs nf a lellcr from Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird :oiaying that disclosure wotild tearl to "gr;ive and immediate dangers lo the na- t1ona! security " One nf the Pentagon couriers slashed n1J('n onr of the boxe!'. and Ellender v.·11hdrr"' two of the volumes -31 and 32 -and held them up for photographers. A whit e tover sheet over the blue -bnund '1olumes wa~ slamped ''Top Secret" in blork rerl le11t'rs. The [)efcn~e DepArt.n1ent !>aid thr "va.~t hulk" of lhe ~!LJdy probabl y wn:.ild be drrla:;sif1erl. and relf'asecl t<1 lhP public, as a re~ult of a revie~· no1.1' under v.•ay Tobacco Supply Cut R01'1E (AP) -llaly"s 60.000 govern· ment \obaccn shops. the only place.., v.·here cii;:arettes are sold legally. were cfbsed today by 11. 24-hour ::trike. The tobacronists complained that the. gnvernment charged too much for tnb;ic. e<1 and was npening t.oo many new .!ihops. They 1aid the only way to be11t the com· pelition or the black market was to lower prices. er . "''~ BYSTANDE'RS RUSH TO AID REPUTED UNDERWORLD LE..,D!'R JoMph Colombo Sr. SJ,ot In New 'Yoik Gun B41ttle • Fired Officer Coerper Seeks Court Hearing F'irtd motorcycle patrolman Gdbert Coerper is still f1ghllng for his job Yl11h !he HunungUJn Beach Police Department. His atlorney, Cecil Ricks of Fullerton, has Fil('d 11 J'l('tilion ask ing lhe Suf}f'rior Courl to reinstate the, officer or hold a hearing f'..oerpPr was rlismisSf'd by tht-depart· men! last Aug 21 on charge~ of mishanrllnni:: merchandise all€gerll y given him lo be passed on to the Police Wives Guild The palrolman fought the d1schR rl{e in .11 ~hearing or lhe cily"s five-member personnel commission . Aller a hearing v"hich lasted ~evera l weeks and which in· volved more than 30 hours of testimony, the panel In February unan imously upheld the decision of Police Cbief Earle Robitaille in firing Coerper. Jn the petition U:i S'uperior Court. Ricks alleges lhal the cha rl{es brought agafnsl his client were wrong ful and charges that the former palro!man v.·a11 denied a fair hearing by lhe city. Specifically,' he ~lates thal it wa!'. wrbngful fOr City Al· tornev Don Bonfa lo act a~ hearing of- ficer 'in the personnel board proceedings. Ounng !he hearings. Ricks and Bqnfa squ;:ired off frC"quently on this point with !hf' C'i!y attorney ;irguing that. there was proper precedent for him lo act as hear· in1: off1ter. Ricks. pointing oul that the city's case was handled by Deputy City Attorney Mike Miller, claimed his client v.·as having to battle two city attorneys. A veteran of IJ ye;irs in law en- rorcement. Coerper was discharged after an In-house investigation concluded that the palrol man had kept Montgomery Ward merchandise allegedly given him for distribution lo the Poliet: Wives Guild. Cocrper h;,d been moonlighting as a part· time security guard at the store. • Huntington Girl Fatally Injured In Horse Fall soonnie Royce. IG-year-old daughter or Patrick and Hilda Royce , 1118 O 2 Providence Lant. Huntington Beach, died Sunday from injuries sht rli!'Ce.ived in a riding accKlent Saturday. Airport Curfew Pending Coerper maintained U..,t the •marked· nut goods werl!. given to him for distriblJ- tion as he saw fit ralber than specifically In the guild. He sa id the items had been ,ll'.iven to an orphanage in ·Me:xtco , an· In· dian reservation and·other palice officers, as well as to the: guild. Miss Royce was riding htr Arab ian tiorse, Golden Boy, when U1e horse bolted al &iut.h Hillsview Riding Club, 16334 S. Harbor Blvd. near SUinlon. Barbara Jean Ward, 11, of 706 Stoneridge, also was thrown fmm tht borst and suffered a broken leg. MW Royce never regained con- 1ciousnes.' after the accident. Her falher is widely known In Southland boating circ\esXthe aulhllr or several illustrated bocb on .......... ling and tralltrboating .. Miss Royct was born in Newport Beach and attended W11rd low School in Hun- tington Beach. She wa1 aelive in a11.ilin11 11nd swimming from an early age. She had taktn up h<lrseNck riding in I.be last 1wo years. She Willi 1lso acltve in the Mailln Swimming Club. Rosary, open tn her 1ailing and riding friends. will be recited Tuesday at 2 p.m. from the. Hacienda Heighti: SU!bles in HuntJngton Beach. Funer&l 11rran:gements are In charrie ol Dilday t-.!ortuary, 171111 Beach Blvd. \ Meadowlark Night Flight Ban on July 6 Agenda The city of Huntington Beach 111 e1· peeled lo move ahead with a curfew on night Oying .11t Meadowlark Airport. City Attorney Don Bonfa confirmed to- day that be iJ 1till slanding by lhc ordinance he wrote at th!: city cmmeil'11 request that would ban land ings and takeoffs alter 10 p.m. "In our opinion ii'i 11 vfllid nrdinance," ht said. The cily attorney reaffirmed his opi· nlon amid reports lhaL pilots. fl ight school operaU:irs. and the owner a.nd operator of the 11irport are planning U:i sue the ciLy for damages if the ordinBllCf: becomes law. Last week tht city council unanimou&ly ipproved thf! first reading of the ()rdinance, after 11mendlng the proposed curfew time I() two houri after sunset or 10 p.m. to read simply 1n p.m. After lht volt, "Wllh pilots shllutin11 that tllf! city would !'IOI be able to enforce the ordinance. a re«ss wa s called while the council huddled in an executive sc.ulon with Arnold Kessler. a con!!ultant !Cl tht. state Department of Aeronautics. After the seMion, at which Ke8Sler Is understood to have told councllmen that the city may face litigation, Mayor George McCracken announced th1t the second reeding of the ordinance "may never come lo pMs." Since then many homoowners who have prote sted night nying at Meadowla rk have. called councilmen demanding tit know why the curfew shou ld not be Im· posed. Today &nfa. who was not present at lttst week's council meeting, said that the ordinanc.e would be on the agenda 11t the July 6 council meeting for stt0nd reading. The 10 p.m. ban would go into tffect 3ll da ys 11 fter the. second reading. Bonfa said lhat he has talked wtlh Robert Dingwall, ch airman of the cltliens committtt set up last ytar to study com· plaints over Meadowlark. and othtrs who mNntaln thitt (Inly 1he st.Ale and federa l governments c11n control l\ylng opera· tiotis from a privale airport but his opi- nion remains uhchanged. "We have a different oplnlon from them." he said. Bon.fa, who was instructed to write the liw by tot.1ncllmen several ·months ago. ex.plained that Uie ban on takeoffs was patterned after • Sabla M o n I c 11 ordinance , 11 l.1w that has not yet been te.o;ted In federal couri.s. No prectdent was found for prohibiting landings during night houn , but the .at- forney pointed out that Ult ordinance. contains 1 provis)on allowing "eme:gen- cy" landing!!. Al the same lime lbe ordinance a.lao·re- quires that any0ne: meting an ''emergen. cy" landing report the landing to lbe police department wlLhln 15 minutetJ, Th is requirement 111 aimed at •·.;iscouraglng all but bona fide •1mer1en· cy· landings." ViolaUon of UM! on1inanc:e wouJd be pun~able by 1 fine up to $500 or Iii months Jall or bot'h. . ' Valley Shooting Injures Lawman A 26-year-o!Q. Los Angeles police deteco. · live Is in satisfaclory condltkin todily at Huntingkln lnlercommun lty H:o.s·p it 11 T a fter he was wounded -In a shootiD1 ac- cident Ut Fountain Valley. A ho,,pltal spokesman said Richard Roy Vail i1 recovering from 1wgtry after being shot In the neck .Sunday afternoon.' Fountain Valley Dctec:tlve Sgt .. BUJ DeNlsl said the officer was ,visiting ·his parents in rount.ain Vall¢Y with a elose friend , Darryl HotnsheU. ' deputy ,for the Loii An11eles County SM:rlff"s Office. "They were drt.uing after, golna fot a swim end Hoenshell. was putting his ill9 Into It!· bol1tu when It . a.cciden'"'1!y dlachargtd," DeN'81 said. Teday'• Ft•al N.Y. Stoekll TEN CENTS ot Crowd Sees Police Slay Assailant NEW-YORK IUP il -Joseph A. Colo mbo Sr .• reputed leader of one of New York's five Mafia families , was shot Jn' the head and crititally wounded by • black man today at an Italian-American Unity Day rally. The young gunman was shOt and killed by police as a crowd of several thousa.1•d wa tched in ,.;tunned silence. The .1ssaila.ct was not inunediately identified. \Vitnesses said Colombo, 48, was mov- fng among a crowd or well-wishers to'!"ard the speaker1 platform when the gunman grabbed him by the neck, spun him around and shot him in the head. The gunman, carrying a camera i nd wearing what appeared to be press credentials, had been standing nearby with a black woman , the witnesses aaid. He was in his early 2(J's and wore: green trousers and a green shirt. they said. Both Colombo and the gunman were taken to Roosevelt Hospital a block away. A priest Administe red the last rites of the Roman Catholic Church to the wounded man in the emergency room. The shooting happened at about 11:15 fl .m., 45 minutes before the scheduled start of the Columbus Circle rally organized by Colombo and his son, Anthony, 27. Speakers pleaded with the crowd to remaUt calm and not to leave . the area. Anthony Colombo had predicted 250,00I persona would attend the second annual Un.IQ' Day rally but the crowd only nu~ft4 several thousand at that point. the younger Colombo had said the demonstration was "for ordinary people to show pride in their heril.age and Jove of their rountry." The speakers platform and buildings in the area. including the hos pital, were draped with red, black and green flags and bunting in honor of the observance. Colombo, a founder of the Italian American Civil Rights League and the movin g force behind the Unit}· Day observance. was admitted lo Roosevelt Ho.spit.al "in critical condition with a gunshot wound of the head," a hospital apokesman said. The spokesman said "a male de11d on arrival" also was brought lo the hospital. UPI Photographer Dirck Halstead said the gunman pumped "several shot!! into Colombo's head as he was moving toward a cro wd of well-wishers near lhe speakers dais. "'There was .1 brief erchange of gunfire between the police and the assailant, who fell to !he pavement bleeding from the back," Halstead i!iaid. Another witness, Carl Cttora, said he 1(a~· a black photographer wearing what appeared to be regular press credentials standing with a black woman near Colombo as Colombo talked to a .small group in front of the platform. Cecora said he turned away momen. tarily. heard · a ahot and saw people "pouncing on the bl.11ck photographer.'' He said he Lben heard si~ shot& in rapid succession. Colombo !oundrd lhe Italian America" Civi l Rlg~ts. ~ague aller his son. Joseph Jr., was indicted on charges of plotting to melt down 1ilver coins for their greater value as metal. The eon later-was found. inl10C:'ent by a jury. Cout lfe•ther 'l'h• sun wlll peek through the, haze aga in this afternoon and Tuesday, folk>wing the: ateady diet ol low clouda: and fog along the -L Highs . today 70, al tl)e beaches, IO inland.. Low3 50 to Ill. INSmE TODAY Tht Costa Mtsa Civic Plait' hovse wished itsel/ a hopp11 ai.rcll birthda11 the ()ther · daJI wtth membtiri of fts pest 30 production.a: on hand to ctlt• bratt. See Entertainment, Pag~ 31. ... 11.;, • » Ctlllolr~11 • Cll.c,l11t U. 1 Ci.ttlli.I »·• twnlc1 11 <,..,..,. ,, ~ •kft • llltwtiel ,_ ' l'fltwlt ...... JHl '"'"'' .. ,. -" Aft-....... ,. 1t ,,,,.,..... 11 ' Elimination Of Bu sing 'Unlikely' Bwln& is not likely lo be e.Jimrnat.ed from the Hunt1ngl0n Beat•h L:nion High School District. according to District Superintendent Jack S. Hope r. Hoper indtcaterl this stand today in a lettf'r to Huntington Beach resHient Rona.Id G. Wymer. Wymer, 21682 Hilaria Circle, had urged a cutback in busing, the beginnlng of year-round .school at· 1endance and e!iminahoo er so-called O\'f'rspecialized curricula. In a letter sent to Roper last week, the Huntington Beach resident. who sup- ported lhf' rf'cently approved 69-cent lax override. suggeslal the measures to save the district money. In his reply, Roper noted that the district limits busing to students who hve more than tv.·o miles from their high ochool. lie noted that i1tate aid (or busing is based on a minlmun1 walking distance of up to tv.·o n1iles to the local high school. "I think we should remember. though, th at today high schools are compelled to purchase acres upon acres of extra land for parking lots for those 11tudent11 who choose lo dri\1e cars to school,., Roper t:ontinued. ··cetting lo school costs the public eit her way, but buses tip the scales in favor of safety," he added. As for year-round school al\endance. Roper said it had been tried in other areaa; and then abandoned. He said lhe di strict would continue le keep 5Ummer school a voluntary pro. gram because ''families have become us- ed to taking lheir vacations during the sum~r months. and it is bard to break a habit once established." Roper told Wymer that the specialized curricula are used by 40 percent of the district's student! who do not go to col- lege. Services Slated For Ben Brown, South Lagunan Services will ht held In Beverly Hills Tuesday for Ben K. Brown , South Laguna motel Ov.'Mr and land developer who died Thursday al the age of M. P.ir. Brown was ov.·ner of the fashionable Ben Brown Motor Inn and restaurant and the adjacent Laguna Buch Country Club. 31106 S. Coast Highway. He purc hased the golf eourse in 1956. He built the mO(el in 1963 and ex- panded restaurant operations in 1968. He bad resided at the motel for the past two years after leaving the Beverly Hil l$ area. Mr. Brown is survived by hi! wife. Violet , of the family home; a son, Barry of Van Nuys, three sisters and one brother, The 11 11 .m. services v.·ill be held 11t Pierce Brothers Chapel, 4l7 N. Maple, Beverly Hil!s. Private burial v.·ill follow, -~. Brov.·n. ln addition to developing the~lh Lagwia mot el complex. wa! lhe priniipeJ-promoter of lhe Five Points shopping center in Hunllngton Beach. He \\-"as also ac tive until 1965 in the Standard Tool and Dye: Co. of Los Angeles. The fam ily suggests contributions to the Heart Fund. Actress Stricken HONOLULU tAP) -Actress tllam1e Van Doren was listed in good condit ion loday at Tripler Army Hospital after being no"·n here from South Vietna1n \\.'here she became 1!1 while entertain tng troops. lniti a!ly her ailment "'as describ- ed as exhaustion, but a Tnpler ispokesman said Sunday. "She probably picked up some sort of a bug out there." OU.N•I COAST DAILY PILOT 011.AN!)I! COAST l'USLISHIMG COMl'AM'I" l •\o•rt N. WeH l'nllf..t .... l'ul:>llalw J1cl: a, c,,,., • .,. \l'a ,.,.. ...... Miiii "--•' ~ '"''"''' .: .... if l:dUor Th•"''' A. M,,,.,lliR" ,M•Mll ... Edi,., Al1R Di,\fR W•f Oo'•"90 '-lY ~dllOI' Jt,lb,.t w .••••• .... _ .. " l.tll!W H•thtttM 1eet• Offk• 17115 ····" ,,,,,1 ....... 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C.llflr'llt. ~"-"" llT ...,..., nn ....,"'111 .,,. .... 11 u.n ,,......,, ......,. ... u ... rteM, tt.t• """'""''· \ Ca1tip Puk· Wudgie ··oil City~ Pioneer, 76, Looks Back By ALAN D1RKIN 01 r~. 01111' "lit' 11•11 'fo m:.in)' of !lie sandaled. free-spirited vouth of tod<11 . an oil .... ell Is a symbol of .......___Qgilution . · To the ~·oung tnen of the 19Z<fs. eager to profit fron'I the e<ir\y hooms th<1t bll'1Y a.tro~s thr co u111r.1•. a 11·ell was 1he sym. bol of the An1ertcan drearn C Ray ~1iller. now 76 11;1,~ onr of those men. ~011· thr 1etrr:in oil operat(lr 1:; retiring fron1 his last c11•1c posi tion -he 11·al'i n•s1gned tron1 the Huntington Beach Planning Co1nm1ssion aflrr 10 .l'f'ars' service -:ind he hkt•s 10 look ba('k on lhoSf' tt1n111ltuous days 11hrn Hun1ington &>aeh hrcn1nr •·011 ('11~ .. "There 11as plrnty 01 oppor1un11~. t'l'en !hough therf' 11ere 11elts all ol'rr 1he place bv the tu11e ! arril'ed in 1923." ~ satd "There 11ere hundred~ of J>fOp\e 11'ork111g In the !1t•lds , but not th;it many knew 11·hat the1 .,.,·erl' doing" tililler ~1·as one 11ho knt'11 11ha1 hr 11ac: do1n~ tor he had 111.1rlo.ed the lields in the: oil boon1 lh:i! hit \\'~·01111nj.!. his home stare. He y,·as a ti\oocl {'able tool dresser \\'hat that n1eans !o the layman he ill !hat he had a lalent for clt1aning out wells and gcltlng thern to procluee again ENDING CITY SERVICE Planning Commissioner Millar '.'Puk·Wudgie" means happy little children. accord- ing to Girl Scout officials who appear to be d oing their best to see to it that the scout day camp in Huntington Beach lives up lo its name. tilore than 257 Brownies and Girl Scouts have been attending the camp at Farquhar Park this '''eek. lie got his fir~t Joh in the Huntington l~each field rlC'flning out a 11·e!J fot' :111othcr operator find pulling it 01~ 11lr pump again . It \1·orked Then hr pickrd . up a lease on a v.·ell himself ~·1 kflel'o' it wel~." he recalled •·11 ha d n1udded up, but J and another man sw11b- bed the de,•il out of i1 and 11·e made good money on it '' rid the ci1y of oil blight. but believes 011 men have been misunderstood "Any well that is producing the operator can afford to fix up." he said. ··Rut any l'o'ell that JS idle and is being kPpt on the land just for nuisance: value I 11ould ger real tough on " County Cou1·t Test, Looms For Ediso11 Expansio11 Bid 'The Orange County Supe rior Court may be the next battleground in the 18 month fight over expansion of the Southern Cali fornia Edison's Huntington plan!. This move developed fo!!owing the new s that the State Supreme CourL has re fused to hold 11 new hearing of its 1'.1ay 26 decision which found that the company required permits from both the Public Utilllies Commission l P L:Cl and Orange County Air Pollution Control Dislrict (APCD) to enlarge the facility. The Court rejected the petitions for a rehearing from both the company and the PUC. The PUC last year ordered Edi son to proceed with expansion claiming it I the PUC ) had "paramount jurisdiction" 1n tfle case, but the county appealed rhis order lo the State Supreme Court. The court round !hal neither the PUC nor the APCD had ··exclusive authority'' and !hal Edison need ed pcrn1 ils fron1 both agent'les. The couoty distric1 had denied Edi.son a permit contending that the companv 's plans did not meet air pollution cont.rol regulations. Rohert Burbank. Ed 1son·s Jl unlJnJ;ton Beach manage , said the t'Cln1- pany v.•as now· considering peli1ioning the Superior Court for a procerdini; to determine !he '·reasnnahlenc~s arid legality '_' of the APCD s action in denying a permit. From Page 1 ELLSBERG ... \\'ould n't you go to prison to help end the 11ar~" Ellsberg v.·as flrco1npan1ed by h1s v.1fe and a !a.,,,'yer as he drove up In the po51 office bu ilding 11hich houses the fcder.'.11 courts and Tra1•crs· office. He 1vore B huge srnile and d111·k pinstripe suit, blue shirt And dark lie. He kept his arm around his v.·ife Patricia as they tried to get inside the building. In denying the petit ions for a rehear- ing this week, the st ale court modified its opinion to incorporate new language on how Edison might challenge the APCD's regulations and il ls understood lhal the Pf!ltion tn the Superior Court v.•ill cite this n1odification. H 1u1ti11gton 4th Sho1 v Sclieduled Huntington Beadh residents .... ho want to lake in a fireworks show (Ill Independence Day y,·i[I be able to v1e 11· the official city show v.·hich \\•ill begin at 8:30 p.m. at the pier. l\o other f1re11orks displays l'o ill he allov.·ed from any of the city or stale beaches in Huntlngtor. Beach. LifCJ:!:llard Capt 11<luglas n·Arnall to<l:iv n111ed !hal fin.>11•nrks are prohibited frorTI the eight and a half miles rif st;:ite and ci- ty run beaches in Huntington Beach. "If people wan t to see fireworks on 111e lJ{'ach. tl1c,\'·re more 1ha11 11·elcome to the official show.'' he said. The c·1t:.'~ annual Fourth o! Jul~· parade 11 il1 be held on the fifth of Julv this \·ear. lL 1s scheduled to begin at IJ 0·30 a.i=n al Lake Park. \'alley Police Pro he 81,100 House Theft Fountain \'alley police toda~ 11rr!! in- \("sllµ:al!ng 1he 1hefl or n1ore th.in .~\ 100 11·orth of hnusehold goods from the horn£' nf ~lark A. Spina!. '.!(I, ()f R899 C;inarv A\e . lie told police he diseo\'ered the llleil !>iunda.v r1ight after 1isHlng Jriends 111 \\ rstmtnslcr. Dt>let'ti1·es saul the house's rcnr sl1d1n~ 1o:l2.ss door had been pried oprn. Among the missing items ·was a stereo set and a coin collection. F1·eda Selected Pri11cipal At Arev~os Eleme11tru·y J ames E. Freda, 39, formerly with the Orange County Department of Education, has been ap pointed principal nl the Andres R. Arevalos Elemcntar.1' School by the: Fountain Valley School District. He repl.acts Robert Lindstrom v.·ho has taken a position as director of curriculu1n planning with the Ocean View School D~trict. With the county education deparlment Freda helped public sc hool distrlc1!1 1nd private schools in planning a n d evaluating instruction programs. He also arranged 11"-0rk.shops and training sessions for edll(.alors in the county, From 1967 to 1969. Freda v.·as coordina tor ol rese;irch and plan ning with the county education department. He !trved 1t5 vice principal of the ~tcCombtr Int ermediate School en Buena Park from 1963 to 1967 and berore 1hat was dean of students at the G;irvey School Dlstri('t In South San Gabrit1. He Is married . has t11 0 children and tlvts in l..a Habra ' ---r ..... -.. -• -- TAKES AREVALOS JDS New Princip1I Freda t • State Freeicays Still Maintain Legend Status l.OS A:\GELES IAPI -The stale, 11h1ch want s to put a freeway w11h1n fou r n11lt·.s of every loca tion in the sprall'ling Lo~ Angrles Basin, has completed 620 nHll's of the eoncretr arteries and has 60 more unclrr construction. 'fo n1:ikc v.·av for these roads. mrire 01a n 250.000 pci·sons have been uprooted fn1n1 1ht'11· hon1es, aecord1ng In <:nn- sC'rvatJve l'slrrnale. and lhe figure coo· !1nues to gr·ow at 3.000 farnilies a year. Thf' near legendary Los Angele~ Free\1·;iv systc111. 11·1th 14-lane spans and c1uadruplr de('k 1n1erchanges. has many l'l1h£1r stat1~!1cs that are jusl as stilg- ~ering. S1ncl' 1940. lhP slote ha~ spent roughly the same an1oun!. $1.2 billion, on buying r1ghls·of-11;iy as it has on oonslructing !he freeways thernselves. Rights·of-way purchases th ts yrar .,.. di run $87 million. Since the s1at c buys up to 10 to 12 years in advance nf actual construction. this ai~n niahcs 1L one of the largest land- 011·ners. and landlords, in the Los 1\n~eles n1etropolilan area. The ~!ate currrntly has 5.959 pa rcels , purehas1•d ror $207 1nillion. available for cxp11r.ding the freeway systen1 s. ll als G has 2.622 properties for 1\·hich il is receiv- ing rent. They range lrom single family h(\uses lo rnutels and parking lots. 1'he state a!.~n sells a lot or excess property. Engu1eer~ now figure rough!)' 40 acres for a m1lf' of free11·ay and 80 acres for an 1111errhangP. Rut tha1 varies according to the nun1hl·r ul lanes. lane 111dth, shoulder 11 1d!h, l'o'ld1h cf the median strip and so for1h Tl1e ~late no11 ha~ \,381 parcels of land \'alued al $4 2 rn111ion left over from freew~y ronstruclion. They range Jrom ~trip~ 'inl~ ;i fool \1·ide tn a 47.5 acre p:1ri.:el 1n \~'cs111unstrr \1·hich the city is cnn~1dering for ;1 parh It Is C.')!llnflted 1ha1 nearl) 30.000 acres h:11·c b('l'n con~u1ned b~ lrre11ays in the 1.ri, ·\ni.:rl1·~ 1)r.ingr and \'rntura coun· lie•, rl'g1nn ( ' 111b1ncd. that would cover 11 H'l~I nl San I· ra.nc1sro. .\rvrrthelC'ss. stale acqu1s1t1on nf morl' kind fur trL·rw;1\~ conlinues a! 1\s record 11rice, al1hnugh ·there arc signs 1t n'lay slo\1· d011 n One 11·eU lrd In ano1her and .\liller and his partner. Bert Fo11·lie. a veteran of the Texas boom, 11·ere soon operat ing sel'e-ral producers "He 11·as a good tool dresser. a pro.'' Jo.filler said. "I remember he ah1·ays kept a SS bi!I and silver v.·atch on him . He said th;:iL in Texas it paid lo have some 1 ;iluable on .1·ou so if ~·ou got held up. the robberl'i would ha1·e something to ste<il and wouldn 't kiU you. 1'hat 's how rough 1! 11·as therr." i\'filler t111rr ll'ent inl.o partnership \\'1th 1'1iles Ford and. a.s Miller and Ford. the v look over 20 wells from the Atl anlic oil Co. "J don't thin k 1ve had more than one failure.'· he said. The operator 11·as in1'o!ved in several 1i1her partnerships alter that , but about live years ago he sold ou! all his interests u1 "'ells. "f saw the \\Tiling on the 11·a11:· he said. ··the community 11·as making things tough!'r on the oil operators .. ~!iller understands the current dr11·e to He feels 1he city should try lo ge t the tooperation of thP 01! men 10 clean up un· 11dy tots , but he is opposPrl lo increased fees and the five cen!s a bilrret sel'erance lox that is being ~1ud1ed . "I think you'll find that the oil com· pan1es h11 \·£. done their parl fl\'er the .vears.'' he said, •·and they arc slill paying big taxes .. , As a pla11ni11g eomrnissloner for the pa~1 10 \'Cars. fl1iller h<1.~ shov.·n his slrong beilel 111 pri1 ale proprrty rights. He does agrrr with present planning moves 1n the c11y to reduce the densities in certain zones 10 <:Ontrol the population gro11·th . "I iust don't think we should pull the rug ou t fro1n under sorneone y,·ho has spenl a loL of money on his property, say b~· abandoning an oil 11·el1 " tl!i ll er also served on the tllid11·av Ci!\/ Sanllary District for JO vears froril 1948 lO 1958 and v.as a member of lhe \\'estminster elementary school board for eight years Summer Progra1n Varied In Fountain Valley Area Re sidents of all ages 1n Vounta in Valley 1rill have a variety of sun1mer programs to choose from . Sponsored by the clly Rerreat1on Dcpartmcn1. information about the pro- grams is available at city hall, 10200 Slater Ave., 962·2424. In special programs. the city is offering :idult recreation. introduction to ballet and tap. bridge lessons. gymnastic!". k;irate. slim and swim. lenni5 lessons and tumbling and acrobatics. A playground progra1n v.111 be t1ffered in elementary school playgrounds for children 6 lo 14. Progran1s 1•ary slightly for rach playground, but all featurP a 11eekly rontes1 and n10l'ie and instru ction In art.~ and rraf1 s Each week a theme 11111 be used for the program. The recreation drpartment Jl\so offl'rs a full slate of Sll'imming programs a1 the l.ns Amigos and Fountain V111ley high schools . At F'ounlain V111lry High Sthool pool les~ons will be given 1n beginning, <id· vanced beginning and intermediate swim- ming; novice swim team : s~nchron ized swim ming ; mommie and me : "'a!er polo : beginner diving. and Junior and senior lifesaving. The same program "'tll be ortered .&t Los Amigos High School with the ex- ception of the IHesaving course. Lo~ Amigos l'o'ill also feature. an adult sv.•1m- ming class. Studeut Head Sla in S!\IGO:\ !AP f -A rro-~nl'ernmenl !'tudent leader .,.,-as ,.ho1 anrl ~d l rd tndav in a Saigon Unn·ejs1ty l'(lurtvarcl 111 d2.1.'s ;ifter he v.·as named depul\' ·ch:i1rn1an of the Saigon Studen1 l·nion · \\'itnesses said J..e Khac S1nh Nhut 11·a~ 11·nting an examin;ition in a lecture room 11·hen someone told him. ··Your 1110\her 11·a nts to ~ee you nuts1de ·· \\'hen he en!ered the. C'Ourtyard. two ~nung me n :;hot. him anrl fled after f1rin~ al othl'r ~tudents \\'ho lrted to prevent their Expert Watch Repair Rings Redesigned WATCH REPAIR SPECIAL • Adjuattd e c1-..i e Oiied s59s e EIKtrlcolty TIIMCI ";::::; WATCH REPAIRING DONE ON PREMISES We buy ou r ring mountings d irect from ring casting houses end hove them finished by speci alists, thus enabling us to sell to you for less. Jewelry Repair at it's finest 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, Sill, TIADI COME IN AND HOWSE A~OUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA ---H-& lfMdwar' . I I -~ ..... + .. ....... -- Charcoal B1·oiled Firemen battle blaze at the Anaheim steak house that bears the name of onetime Detroit Tiger pitching star Hal Gregg. Fire early today caused an e stimated $250,000 damage at the restaurant. 257 1 \V. La Palma Ave. Investigators believe the 4:30 a.m. blaze started in a \vaste container under the bar. \Vhen firemen arrived, flames were burning through the roof. LA Pla11e Slams l11to Sea; 8 l(illed, 8 More Missing EUREKA (UPI) - A chartered twin- engined plane carrying 23 persons tore the roof off a sewage treatment plant and crashed into the Pacific Ocean Sunday nighl "'"hile taking off from a private airstrip at a recreational comn1un ity, the building, smashed into a huge rock about 300 feet off shore and tore apart. P2.ssengers and crew members \\'ere tossed into the sea. Some were feared trapped in the fuselage which slink. The pilot and co-pilot ~·ere killed but the ste\\'ardess, belie\'ed to be Elizabeth Deuville of San Francisoo, survived. -< Mondar, Jun• 28, l~n H D•tl Y PILOT ;J U1ianimous Court Ruling Ali Draft Conviction Reversed \Y ASHJNGTON (UPI) -The Suprem~ Court unanimously threw out the drafl defiance conviction of f o r m e r heavyweight champion Muha1nn1ad Ali today and the fight.er declared his thanks t.o Allah for lhe verdict. The court In an unsigned opinion upheld Ali's claim that he was entitled to con- scientious obje(tor status from the draft because of his Black Muslim be.liefs. The ruling said the Justice Department was clearly wrong under the law in denying his religious claim. ln Chicago, Ali. ~·ho v.:on the title under his original name Cassius Clay, said he learned of the 8--0 decision \\'hen a Surf Small stranger ran out of a store and told him with tears in his ey~: "'You're free! You·re free! The Supreme Court said so." The one-lime Olympic champion said he •Nould say another prayer thanking Allah in celebration, "I said one aiready," he told a reporter. In reversing the conviction of Ali, the court declared: "The (Justice) Department was simply "Tong as a matter of law in advising that the petitioner's beliefs were not religious- ly based and "'ere not sincerely held." The court said that Ali·s objection ta milil.:lry duly was based upon "rtligious 400,000Sun Worshipers Flood Southland Sands Hy TERRY COVILLE Of l!>f; OIJIJ f'llri Slllf The v.·aves of people floOOing Orange County beaches over the v.·eekend were ronsiderably bigger than the waves of \\'ater striking the shoreline. More Ulan 400,000 SWlbathers and s"1im1ners spread their towels and bodies along the Orange Coast Saturday and Sunday, but the surf never peaked above two feet in height. As a result of the poor surf conditions lifrguards had an easy ~·eekend malting less th an 130 rescues both days at all beaches. The most serious incident was reported al ~fonarch Bay , SWlday, \vhen a young boy v.·as .shot in the left leg with a spear gun while several youngsters v.•ere plnying with it on the beach. Steve Shaw·, 9, of 30411 Via Alcazar, Laguna Niguel, ~·as.reported in good con- dition after lifeguards removed the straight spear frorii his leg which had been shot from a Hawaiian sli,1g. Jn Seal· Beach calm Prevailed over the ~·eekend where a riot had stirred the sands Thursday resulting in 65 arrests. Police Chief Lee Case said heavy police patrols of the beach Saturday and Sunday apparently kept peace among 15,000 beach goers. A riol broke out on the beach Thursday "'hen several youths began throwing rocks and bottles at three Huntington Beach undercover <lfficers ~·hen they made an arrest on lhe beach. Seal Beach police units rushed to the rescue and arrested 38 persons Thursday, and ran the arrest total higher on Friday. The rock throwing riot lasted and hour before officers from rive cities finally closed down the beach, Case said. All Seal Beach policemen were on duty Saturday and Sunday, with many assign· cd to beach patrols. But nothing hap- pened, Case said. Newport Beach drew the biggest weekend crowds with 80,000 Saturday and 85,000 Sunday. Bomb Package 'Fals e' Alarnt training and belief'', the test for draft es.- empt status as a conscienllous objector. •·in order to qualify for classification as a conscienUous objector, a registrant must satisfy three basic tests," the court said : "He must show that he is ton· scienti ously opposed to war in any form ... he must show that this opposition is based upon religious training and belief, as the term has been construed in our decisions. And he must show tbat this ob- jection is sincere." The court said Ali met all three tests. Tile Supren1e Court cited t h e Ul'I T1 l1PllO'lt 'THANKS TO ALLAH' Former Champ Ali Public Ftmding For Parochial Schools Barred government's own conceMion Ulal "there is no dispute Ulat petitioner's profea!M!d beliefs were founded on bas.le tenet. of the Muslim religion, as he understood them, and derived In subst.anUal part from his devotion to Allah u tfle supreme being." "This concession is clearly correct," the Supreme Court said. The ruling, re\'ersing Ali's conviction and the five-year prison senlence and $10,000 fine imposed by a lower court, means he can continue his ring career with a fight against Jimmy Ellis schedW.. ed next month. * * * Higli Court Reverses 35 Death Terms WASHINGTON (AP) -The Sup-eme Court today reversed the death 11entence1 <>f 35 persons. including the ' electric chair sentence of Ric bard F. Speck, who wu convicted of murdering eighl nuraes tn Chicago in 1966. Speck was sentenced to death after a jury in Peoria, Ill., convicted him <>f kill· ing the nurses, one by one, in their i;outhside Chicago apartment. In reversing the death penalty, the ('(lllrt cited its 1968 decision holding that persons exposed kl the death penall1 could not be excluded automatically from juries in capital cases. lt also cited two other precedents in reversing CJne bloc at 20 death cases includ ing Speck's. Relying on the jury provision known as ihe. Wilherspoon case, and various other cases, the court reversed a kit.al of 3S death cases and remanded them to lower courts for further proceedings. A third death penally case takrn CJn for tiearing is an appeal by John Henry Furman, under death sentence for the pistol slaying of William J. hficke in 1967 in Chatham County, Ga. Eigbt bodies "'ere reco\'ered by lhe Coast Guard and cighl y,·ere missi ng. Se\·en persons survi\'cd the crash and \\'ere taken to St. Joseph"s Hospital in Eureka and Southern Humboldt Com- munity llospital 1n Garber\111le. Five of the survivors were reported in serious condition. The other two v.·ere in good condition. The Coast Guard said three crew mem- bers -the pilot, co-pilot and stewarde~ -v.·ere on the plane v.·hich "'as carryi ng zales representatives for the develop- ment. Trial Program 4 -day Work Week Begins at UCI A \\"rapped package making a "very strange noise'' sparked a nurry of activity in· Laguna Beach Saturday morning when Post Office employes suspected the parcel :night contain a time bomb. \\"ASH INGTON ~UPI ) -The Supreme Court barred slates loday from earmark- ing public fund s for secular education in parochial schools. The precedent-selling decision came in cases from Pennsylvania and Rhode Island. The other appeals lo be beard invol~ Earnest James Aikens Jr. of California and Elmer Branch or Texas. This will be the first time the court has ever been willing to hear argumenll! on the "cruel and unusual punishment" line o( attack. An umada of Coast Guard cutters, helicopters rind amphibian planes, plus pleasure craft and fishing boats, assisted in resc ue operations. Hi gh Y.'inds, darkness and rough seas hampered the 1earch. "The plane appeared to dip after laking off and clipped the top of the sew2€e treatment plant "·hich sits below the tu11way," Humboldt County A\•ialion Director Dave Zebo quoted witnesses as 1aying. Zebo ~aid the OC.1 ripped the roof off Physical plant ~·orkers at UC Jrvine to- day began a three-month !rial of a four. day, 40-hour V.'ork week. F'ro[l"l today through Oct. l , part of ttie physical plnnt staff -n1ainte11ance employes, gardeners. engineers, painters, plumbers, electricians and others -will work Jl.Iondays through T b u rs days, Another part or the staff will start their week on Tue.sdays working through Fridays. All \\'ill start at 7 a.m. each day and quit at 5:31} p.m. Taking a half-hour for lunch. Both groups thus will have three-day l>."Cekends. either Fridays to Sundays or Saturdays to Jl.1ondays. Ralph Laue, UC! personnel manager, said 5everal administrative departments of the campus are studying more ef- ficient y,·ays of providing necessary services throllgh changed '"'ork weeks. The physical plant department is the first to experiment with the four-day work week, Laue noted. The adjusted work schedule. means a 21> percent saving to emp!oyes on com· muting costs. "The University f'lCpects to save through reduced travel time between shops and work sites, reduced cleanup time and faster completion of con- struction and maintenance job.'I which are performed by the physical plant depart,. ment," Laue fiaid, The einployes quickly removed the package from the building, the Post Office annex at 2295 Laguna Canyon Road, and placed ii in the center or a vacant lot. Police and firemen rushed to the scene. The city tnanager and police chief were informed of the silualion. And the bomb disposal squad from El Toro Marine Bai;e was called to disarm the explosive device. Carefully opening the package, the tense Marines discovered a bat· tery operated electric toothbrush, running smoothly and scrubbing the \'/rapping paper. Rhode Island had a plan lo supplement parochial teachers' salaries. Pennsylvania was using part of the ad· mission lax on horse racing and harness racing lo relmburse pri vale elementary and secondary schools for the cost of lext. books and instructional materials .and ror teachers' salaries. Later parL or lhe cigarette ta~ ~·as ad· ded . The court said both statutes were un- constitutional under the religion clauses or the first amendment because their cumulative effect in volved excessive en· tanglement between government and religion. Antique Shop Loses $500 in Merchandise A burglar broke into .a Costa Me$8. an- tique dealer's facility Sunday, stealing nearly $500 "'Orth of merchandl.!e in· eluding two ca<:es of what police descri~ as imitation Tiffany Jamj)fthe~. Larry Morgan. owner of Larry Morgan Antiques. 2065 Charle St., told Q(fictt Rudy Malik the loss also Included two old-fashioned oaken tables with claw feet. The burglary oecurred at a storage garage used by Morgan, w h o 1 • dealership is elsewhere. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! Stew Beef ... ~~;.~ ... 99fb Compnrel ••. we "·hy so many people prefer ours! Shrimp Rolls .. ~p~ ... 99~ J u.lit heat and sen·e ... delicious ! flavo ... 11 oz. pkg. Stuffed Flank Steak ........................... 51.49 ib. J~eady for the oven, stuffed \\'ith tasty dr<'ssing! They'll lo\•e it! Seedless Grapes .................................... 29~ .A not.her or lhe \Vonderful joys of summer! •• , Anrl El Rancho'~ fresher produce! 2 QUARTS ••• WITH FREE PITCHER! ••••••••••••••• Deliciously refreshing l ••• and so convenient in El Ranoho's new pour pack! Easy to stOre •.. easy to -pour! , , , chill it .. , freeze it .. , enjoy it! •.• and enjoy the winning flavors •.. Fruit Punch, Grape, Orange or Lemonade! Save more on the 4 quart pack ••• • Quart• ••• w~h free pitcher ••• 69" light l •o.1. Punch 'n' Bags ••• 39cl Pricci in t/ftct ltf on.., Tuc8., lVtd., l1tne ta, !9, 3() . No 'alts to dcaler1. And try our Fresh Sq1Leezed Orange Juice and our Fru 'A Gra:pefruit Juice in. the netv convenient package! No preservatives ••. no additives •• , Freshn,eu niake8 tht &iffcrtnce! Cheerios ................ S 3 c Get their day off to a better start! Big 15 oz. pkg ••• from General M illa. Danish Margarine ................................... 39• Borden's makes it ..• and makes it so well! 1 lb. pkg. Pecan Shortbread .................................. 53• Deliciou! cookies from Nabisco ••• great "'ith milk! 14 oz. package. Dow Bathroom Cleaner ............................ 69• Save 20c on lhe 20 oz. aeroeol can ••• make your work Uahterl ' ARCADIA : sunset '"d H11n1tng1on or /llii/. PASADENA : :'/U. SOUTH PASADENA : i1/i;1 1• HUNTINGTON BEACH : "r/i\'I. NEWPORT BEACH :· 1111 Newpor1 01.,1 , .• ~ 1E1 Rancho Center) · J/0 Wr.st Colo1 ~do Bl~!l .. Fremout anti Huntington Or " Warner and Al1tonQ111n (8oardwa!k Cente1J ,r •,'·' 25~15 Easthlu tl Or i.fasthlull V1llaRe Ce11IP.r 1 • I. j DAILY I'll.Of -·-28,1971 Israelis • Ill Dither--Visit by Reported By United Prftl: Iaternatioaal J1raeli newspapers and radios carried 1tn11Uon1l reportl today of a 1ecret vl1lt to Israel by an unofrlcltl Soviet t.11voy to dllCUU poulble resumption ol dlplomaUc nlaUonl broken durtnc tbt 1M7 Arab- JJratU war. The new1p1pe.n idenWied him as Vic· tbr Loul.!;, the Soviet n1Uonal wbo ls M01cow correspondent of the London Troop~Raid 5 Villages In Pakistan By ARNOLD ZEITLIN DACCA, East P.11klstan (AP) -The Paki.aLani anny has attacked at Jeut ttva villq:tt within 30 miler of Dacca le the pUt four day1, killing Hindu men and bumlng homes and market!: in raid• befon dawn, reliable aourcea W d today. An1vinl at one vlllaae, Bolladi, this con-espondent passed an army co1UJM leavina the pla~ and saw dead lllndu men and the ba:uar and houses bumlng. From nearby villages, rifle fire could be heard and cohmma of 1moke were rising. ...(' Residtnb of Bolladi said the raid• atarted Friday, the day after lhe arrival in Dacca of four mtmbert of the British Parllament investigating c:ooditlons i• East Paklltan and refugee camps ln indJL The people ln Bolladl aald the aoldierr attacked the Hindu aection of their vilJ.aie at 4 1.m. Sunday. A Hindu woman held her husband in her arm1. He had been shot 1.n the neck . Another .11arl-clad woman moaned over the body of her husband. Meanwhile, P1kl1tan Pre1ident Agha Mohammed Yahy1 Khan &aid bl a na- t ionwi de broadc u t today he planned "tran1fer of power to the eltettd repruentaUves of tht people of Pakistan within four months or so from today." "The precise timing will n1tur11ly de- pend 011 the Internal and external aitua· t.ioru at that time," he added. Jn a SS-minute broadcut, Gen. Ylhya reviewed the 11tuat1on in thi! country before and alter military act.loo bt&an ln East Pakistan on March 25. Yahya announced he had decided to give the country a constitution framed by experl.t who already art working o.n Jt and he usured the naU011 that the coo· trt.ltution would be "1ubject to amendment.I by the N1Uonal A1sembly." Cosmonauts Say They Are Best Fed in Space MOSCOW (UPI) -The bt!st·f~ Soviet Cosmonauls think they htve ga.i~ a pound or two during their record 22 day1 in orbit. The three crewmen aboard the Salyut orbit.al station still miss home cookrng :although their menu is the most varied of any Soviet space mission and includes solid food like beefsteak for the first Lime. "We have no :<:cales -01ey would ht! uS1?1ess anyway," Soyuz JI commandtr Georgi Dobrovol~ky told ground cont rol Sunday. "But we think v•e h.ir.ven't lost weight and maybe aained some. We 'll 5ee when we 're back home ." Loss of body weight durlna prolonged space flight has been a common com- plaint (Jf Soviet CoemonautJ. Dobrovol1ky1 Vladislav Volkov and Vlktor P1t11yev tri~ to avert the problem. with four meals a day -terved boL Evening News, a shadowy figure describ- ed by Israeli radio as "a pathfinder for official Soviet policy," The newspaper Yed.loth Aharonoth 1aid Louil probably was behind the 1muggllng from the Soviet Union to the Weit ol the memoirs of Svetlana St1Un and Nlklt1 S. Khruahcbev. Yedioth and other afternoon papers also said Louis may be on the payroll of lhe Russ.ian Secret Police !KGB). Rabbi Arrested Reports of lhe mysteriOU! visit followed equally sensational report! in Scan- dinavian newspapers late In May that Premier Golda Meir had .secretly met Soviet. envoys in Finnish Lapland whlle attending a soci1lilt conference In Helsinki. Louil also was reported to hav11 attended tbe Soctalltt confert!ne&. Yedioth said Louil Arrived in Israel June 13 ostensibly for medical e:r.- Rabbi ?-.feir Kahane. leader of the militant Jewish Defense League, was ~ested in front of the Soviet Embassy in \\lashington Sunday for disorderly conduct. Ka.hane was protesting treatment of Jews in the Soviet Union. Third of U.S. Casualties Blamed on Poor. Training NEW YORK (AP) -Nearly a lhird ot ell U.S. caauallles in Viel.nam are the result G! improper training, ~timatta a decorated combat officer who says he is quitting the Ar my. Wicks 'Papen, p apers! Get your secret l!apen here!' Col. David HsckwGrth. who served five ~·e11rs in Vietnam. !aid, "I think that our casualties were at least 30 percent higher because of poor training. or even higher than lhat. '' He also said one out of every five casualtie1 is a victim of "friendly fire" from his own comrade~. In an interview taped by ABC.TV in the fl1ekong Delta. Hackwtirlh said he helped prepare a Pentagon study in 1968 !howing friendly fire "'as responsible fflr IS to 20 percent of Ameriran "'·ounded. The in- terview was telecast Sunday on the 11etwork's ls.ctues and Answers program . The colonel recalled one ''well tralned'' outfit -.. one of the finest unlb in lhe U.S. Army ," he said -which made "criminal" mist..akes after its arrival in Vietnam in 1965. "The number or dead th11t they had 1c l1led among themselves. men that were shGL by their com rades, artillery that had l:tllcn Gn them -great misla1ces were made because of lmproper training," he 11ald. Hackworth. who branded the Viel· manizaHon program a "public relalionl' gimmick,'' has been awarded two Distinguished Service C?'Oue!, ten Sil ver Stars and eight Purple Hurt& durln& b11 2S yee.rs lwlh the Army. It's Hot • Ill Hell, Mich. Heat Wave Broils Nation; Bly the Hits 110 California v.s. s._,,, •1 UJIUT98 Niii INft •llUiflOfrU, 11-1"" -.., ....... -"'l'lt ll, o\llch, kfMltr 11'111 II Wltl •I Mt lft Cllk-"' • -....... ..... P!otl't# •1111 "' •l'rll'W. -1(11 "-1 rMdlM ., 110 ,..,_, II (Ol'll!,_.. IMI -rlf iltvfflr K,_ llWdl " ffilt ,..,...,. ""'· l.lrlY .....,,,..., '-•II.H'M tlllf _,.., .... ,.. ...... _."'-" ,..., ·~ ""' "" ~-' T.,, .. ,._, .. ttlflltlH II ,,._ TOii de- l ftt .., ••• tlWI •'*"-......... "" ...... wul IO IM •rid OOU! ...... I SuNllf, Ill -m .... ro C~ll'llW'• IOI °"' ..... tM Ot.S. O.irol• •n!nr~ll wrrt !>II Of •-' " ... -!'Ifft. A 1>11! "'41rlol! C~k•-~t lloc:l\..S ii ftlt -•1 ., llllr lllk,,._.n ii _. ••ll4'f ''""' !!'le 1w.i1.,1n1 l'>t<ll. ~ .... r ""'" ol ...... ll'fl-'•••""" -· ,_,,,.,, 11 c111, • ., ....... 111h •• • """" ., ""' ..... --~ •. lll• "''~' ~I 111111 ,..tit-I le ..... ! ..... 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JIOT, 11 ....-reo br "'9 U.S. WMlflw Bvr•u It SM! ,rtl!Cltco. "'"' Lew ''"' Alllulu-ve .. • Anc~M " .. .... .. .. ClllcMO .. " ClnclnMtt " .. Ct-111\d .. " ..... .. ~ _,, " ~ 'ort w""' .. " ..... " " MOV1lon • n '""lt r1111ll1 .. " Ka,...1 Cltr .. " L11V-1 .. ....... ""1 .. " ., Mlt !Tll tlfffl " ~ Mllwtilll;M .. n MlllMt ... lt .. " NIW 0.11-.. " N .... '!'Ott! .. " °"""""" .. .. Pt!"' S~l"l~t ,. .. 1'1111-IDllLI .. n "~"" ,.. " 1'11 .. bU•tll .. " ""''l•IWI ., • .. ~ " " 51('1'"t n!ll " " $1 LOUii " " .. I! Lt~t City " n S.n 0 1"° n .. ~" '••n<ltcl " n S.n!1 ltr.O.tt " n l t ttllt " .. !...,..•"• .. • ,,.,.,~'"'™' ~ " ' a.mlnalion .11t th!: Ttl Aviv lchilow Jlospltal whose director, Dr. }.rie HareJ, once terved u ambulador lo Moacow. The report.I sald lt wu Hartl who ar· ranged !or Louil to meet wltb Israeli of- ficlala includin1 Slrnba Dinitz, Mr&. Meir's closest aide. Yedioth uid Louil told his Israeli bolts that "further dlaloiue on potalble reeumpUon o{ SoviM-Iaraell. diplomatic rel1Uon1 may be beld at h1tber lrrtl" '"" r<poN a1Jo J&ld Louil cmild • Soviet diplomaUc pauport. tbt Ont tlma :such I pauport had been lltD ln laratl in four years. In LoDdon, The Evenlnl New1 aa.ld Louis hid left thl1 capital about thrff weeU 110, aaylnc he wu bound for a Scandinavian vacation. 'The new1p1per Hurets u ld Forel&o Mlnllter Abbi Ebln reported Sunday ta the IaruU c1bloet on meetbll witb th• RuulJJ:I envoy and that there had bten Ruutan hlnta of a wlllinsneu to dltculs diplomatic retaUona. It aaid Russia hid asked for 1teret lalb with Mra. Meir and Defense Mln11t.er Moshe Dayan but that Dayart reluaed, illailUnc the United States be ln- locmed if aucb conlllcta arf!I made. Reds Pound Five Outposts Fire Base Full,er Ignored in Attacks Near DMZ SAIGON (UPI) -Communist troops 1heUed five allied bases below the Demllitarlied Zone (DMZ) today but ig· nored Fire Base Fuller which has been reoccupied by South Vietnamese in· fantrymen, military spokesmen li&id. The buea th at were shelled included the last two U.S. outpo!ts along the DMZ. U.S. spokesmen said artillery base Alpha. 4 was hit by 20 rowids of 120MM mortar fire with cuualtle1 undetermined and the U.S. Base Charl!e 2 received about 25 round11 of the 122 mm rocket fire and suf· fered li&}lt casualties. South Vietnamese spokesmen in Saigon report~ rocket and mortar attacks against the government Nsea Charlie 1, Alpha 1 and Camp catroll but 11id there were no casualties. Wilhdr1w1l or 3,200 more Gls lut week reduced U.S. strength in Vietnam to 241,700 men from a peak of 543,000 in April, 19e9, the U.S. Command reported. South Korea11 units reported killing 52 Communists in wee.Ir.end fighting along South Vietnam's central coast while auf. fering one killed and three wounded. U.S. B52 bomber• made three raids on suspected Communist positions arouGd Fire Base Fuller, five miles below the DMZ, in a 24-hour period ending at noon today, the U.S. Comme.nd reported. A 111()..man company of South Viet- namese infantrymen acaled 1,600-foot Dong Ha Mountain Sunday night tG retake the base. but spokesmen said they would 1tay only "temporarily''. There was no fighting In the area today, the spokesmen gaid. Sal gon apokesmen 1aid aovtrnment troops found the bodies of 44 Communist Forest F ires Rage Across Southwest PECOS, N.M. (UPI) -Fatigued civilian and mlliLary crews battled six major fort:sl flrts today that swept more than 27,000 acres or feder1l forests .11nd Indian reservations In New Mexico and Arizona. "Thing• don't look ao good .. The firefighters are hard pressed. Record! show the 1971 fire season is one of the worst In the century," Flre Control Of- ficer Frank Carroll ~f the U.S. Forest Service said. soldier• ln the JLIJlilea near Fuller Sunday and today. 'Ibt spokesmen aa.ld 4116 Com- munists we.re killed in lht area In the put nine day1, while aovemment k>ue1 were put at 29 dead and ll5 wounded. A CommunJ1t force overraR Fuller ear· ly Thur1day after a four-d ay battle for the base that effectively controls the m• jor appro1cbea to a number of American Power Secured and South Vietname.se basts to the 1outh . The South Viclnameae retook Fuller within l4 houri, but rn1de no eUort to hold it. North Vietnamese commandos crt:pt back into the ba1e Friday night and rais- ed 1 huge Viet Cong flag atop Dllng Ha Mountain, but South Vle tnameae artillery ahot It away Saturday. Prime Minister.Sato Logs Japanese Ballot Victory TOKYO (AP) -Prime Minister Eisaku Sato'a Liberal·Democralic party retained control of Japan's upper house in Sunday's election, but Sato conceded the Japan Socialist party and other op- posi tion forces shGwed "unex pectedly strong" Influence in suburban areas. The 70-year-old prime minister, in • television interview today, sald his party gained 1upport in city artas and il1 ca11- dldates WGn the largest number or votes in Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya. Sato returned to Tokyo from the sum- mer ttsort of Karuluwa, where his &ides said he had been wGrking on a new lineup for his Ca binet. Hi.Ii present Cabinet has been in office since January 1970. With 115 of the 126 teats in the House of Councillors 1t stake decided .. Sato·a party had won 61 te11tl -three short of its pre· election strength. The Socialists, Japan's largest op- position party, had won 3S aeata, a ga in of one, the Buddhist-allied Komeito, or clean government party. 10; the Democratic Socialist party four, the Japan Communist party, rive; and the in- dependent party one. Exactly half of lhe 251 seats In the Hou!le or Councillors wsa contested In the election. The Liberal-Democrats held 138 sea ts before the electlon but 72 of them were not at stake and they needed lo win 55 seats to retain control. The Socialists attributed their party'• good showing to di!content among tanners over the go v ernment '& agricultural policies. The s u bur ban districts have been traditional Liberal· Democratic strongholds. Polling officials said 59.3 percent or the nation 's 17.6 million voters voted, com· pared to 68.9 percent in the last upper house election in 1968. Officials attributed the lower vote tn public apathy regarding the upper hou!Je, wh ich is considered virtually powerle.!!, except In such important mailer! as rati· fying treaties and approving national budgets. Also. some offi cials blamed the low turnout on the fact that the election was beld on Sunday instead or nn a week· day. Elizabeth, Princess Ignore Two T hreats YORK, England (AP) Queen Elizabeth tr and her daughter Princess Anne ignored death threats today and set out on royal visil.5 to two ancie nt cities in northern England. Police checked the rooftops in 'York fflr snipers who threatened to shoot the queen as she drove In an open carriaae surrounded by cavalry swordsmen. Semi Annual Shoe Sale CHILDREN'S STRIDE RITE and LAZY BONES 690to890 Values to $17.00 WOMEN'S e VALLIY e JOHANSEN e I.Hy PLOHHllM e VITALITY e PINAUO • 11s9u1 • INNA JITTICKS ... e HUSH PUPPY e HILL l DALI v .... ,., $]0.00 1090 101790 Sizes to 11 .... ---MEN'S---... OPEN MON. & FRI. • WINTHROP SHOES VALUIS TO TO $22 NOW s14•0 SIIIS TO 12 NITE TILL 9:30 P.M. 54 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER 644-4223 I " I .... . ' . . . . . . ~ -.. --... . :· .... . .,.: Project Blossoming 'Lots' of Seeds Planted • 1n Ugly spots will be wttded out (If Foun· tain Valley and beauty will flower thia year th anks to members of the Chamber of Comn1erce, Women 's Division aod other groups of "good scouts." The chamber groups are encouraging residents to fix up, paint up and green up their homes and businesses, and are sponsoring a citywide planting of poppy seeds which will follow the city's weed abatement program. In a drive which began in January, the chamber groups are trying to rid the: city ()( weed·filled empty lots which are an in· vitation to passing molorisU and pedestrians to throw bottles, cans and papers, furthe r compounding the trash problem, Citizens and youth groups will be ann· ed with poppy seeds and, following the clearance of weeds by the city, will plant the fields with the golden Dowers. Homeowners are encouraged to u- evaluate their front and back yards and lo improve them during the summer and early fall months in preparation for the Yard-cf·lhe-year contest lo end Oct. 15. Judging will be members of the Golden West Branch of the California Division of the Woman's National Farm and Garden Association. Jt is hoped by the chambt:r and women's division that early measures will prevent the l4-year-0ld city of Foun- tain Valley fr om becoming a blighted area filled with Lrash. :From a population of 976 at in- corporation , the city ha :: grown lo a total of 37,380 people, increasina: the potential trash problem by 38 fold. Mrs. Donald Thompson, city beautifica~ fion and ecology chairman of the women's division, is coordinating the prcr ject for lhe chamber's distaff side. Valley Linked together in a common cause- 'lots' of beouly- ore (left to right) Mrs . Richord Wilhelm, Mrs . Donald Thompson ond Dr. Marvin Adler. BEA ANDERSON, Edito• • • ••• u . ' Ann D_ictates New Style, DEAR ANN LANDERS~ If one more kid uys to me, "Long hair is great. After aJI, Jesus had long hair," -I will personally kick him in the teeth. Nolx>dy knows what Jesus k>oked like. They did not have photographers 2,000 yurs ago aod no artist ever painted a picture of Him. The pictwes we see hang· ing in ctiurdles and hospilal1 ire b.ed en somebody's imaginaUon. The best infonnalion we ha v e regardin& hair stylu or that time is from the Bible. Corinthians , Chapter JI, VerM 14: "Does not even nature itself teach you that, if a man have Jong hair, it ii a 1hame unto him?" Any kid who wants to wear his hai r long ought ·to be man enough to do It without saying he Is imitating Jeerus. - ANN LANDERS LIKE IT SHORT DEA& LID! IT: 1 IW'Ol't I would .ot pint dOlller Inter about hair, bot yours 11 .at ef Uae ordinary, N I'm maldnr an eiceptlo11. fta.ab htr wrlUq, nd I'm renewU1 my rt10l11don. DUR ANN LANDF;RS: Recently yoo printed IWo Jett.era In your column from mothm who htd loet their babies. They wrote to co'mptain about the bad manners and poor judgment of people who asked fantastic questions ind made some very dumb remarks. I wu in a similar situation eight months ago, only my baby lived. Our son was premature. He weighed 3 poundJ, a ounces. Within two hours after the baby was born two doctors assured U.! he was perfectly formed and in excellent con- dition. 1 was scarcely back from the delivery room when a friend called to say, "If the baby dies, don't feel bad. Usually Be outy is the business of e veryone in Fountoin Vall ey. Admiring the londscaping completed by o c ooperating firm ore Chorles Brok e r ond Mrs. Muriel Fl etcher Poppy seeds ore bei ng sown by Comp Fir e G irls Lindo W illh ite and Lynn McCandless a nd Blu e Bird Lorri Jo Stephe ns (above, left lo right I to crowd out weeds. At left, Mory Anne Vr eeland, W ilma Vr eeland a nd Kevi n King (left to right I colle ct cons and papers which will be so ld to pur.chose equipme nt ,for t hei r Gi rl Seoul and Indian Guide groups. Chops off All Long-hairs premies have 110mething wrong and jfs belt.er if they don't live." Our baby was Jn an incubator 40 days. I never re<:i!ive<I one gift or even a card in all that lime. Eve'7.one was afra id he might not make 1t. I was told by "friends" the baby would be "slow , sickly aod he might not have teeth." Our son is now 8 months old, weighs 13 pounds and can wal k around in his crib, hanging onto the sides. He bas six teeth, is a bright, happy child and has never even had diaper rash. Please print this. A lot of women need educating on the subject of premature ba bies. -BALTIMORE r..10Tl-IER DEAR B.: llere't your Jetter, plus my lh at1ks for belplt1g to edu cate lbe women who need It. DEAR ANN LANDERS: t am 11. 1 have two sisters-one is 14, the other 17. Seeing as how they are both older than I am you would expect tbem to be more mature. but they aren't. Both sisters are in bad with the library. They have lost their cards, lost books and !ended up having a hassle with the 'librarian. They ca n't take any more books out so they have been borrowln1 my card. Now 1 ·m in trouble. They have run up fines v.·hlch I am getting notices about. The last nolice sounds as if lhe library will sue me if I don't pay up. please tell me what to do ....... VICTIM OF SISTERS DEA R VIC: Tbe fln:I thing you should do Is tee lhat the fl ne1 are paid. Since they are charged 11aln1t )'Om' card, ,... .. are responslble. This ml1!it reqlllre ... high-level famOy meeting, like _,. paruts. NtII, urge your •later• io co Ce die library and get rtlnsltkd 11 welcor:M vlsilort. Inform them I.bey D\I)' DOt ... your card i.a the fulur e -and mate a 1tJck. Drinking may be "in .. to the kids you • nm with -but It can put you "out" for keeps. You can cool il and stay popular. Read "Booze Rnd You -For Teenagers OnJy." Send 35 cea&i In coin and a Jon•; self-addressed, staiti~ envelope wilJ your request in care of the DAILY PILOT. I . -;·Attuned to Teens • : Offeri~g helpin~ hands to the Foun tain Valley Parks and Recreation Defart· ~ menl 1n prescnllng dances for seventh and eighth graders are members o the ·; S?ulh ('oast Junior. \\101nen '.s.Club v.•ho are serving as chaperones. The F'riday ~ night grt-togelhcrs 1n the C'1v1c c:enter are scheduled on July 9 and 23 and Aug. 6 and 20. Attuned to the progra1n are (left to right) Mrs. Michael Brusseau, Bob Somma and !ilrs. Bruce ~1altern. Call of the Outdoors . • • • • • • . • . Slowdown • Progress 1n • ~ C.1 11 to the outdoors has been : heard and heeding the tradi· • ' • • . Students Engaged '• • ~r. and Mrs. Gilbert ~t • • J4ttsen of Huntington Beach ~ h~ announced the engage· ~ n1!-Dt of their d a ugh t e r, : B&rbara Susan Hansen, lo : ..Donglas 1-laig frwin Jr. of : :Newport Beach. : · He is lhe son of r-.trs . : '.W illia m Purdon or Newport , ~Beach. : ; The engaged pair graduated : :from Marina High School and • ·attend San Diego State College ~ ::where he belongs to Tau Kap· • .. ;pa Epsllon fra.ternity. tional slowing down or ac- tivities are most clubs. though some social affairs are being planned. YWCA Camping season at the YWCA 's Camp Ta h q u i t z 1'.leadows near Idyllwild wit! open Thursday, July I . Registration is being taken now at the Y headquarters 1n Santa Ana. Youngsters in the fourth to ninth grades may eo:nroll in any or the eight-week sessions stated from July I to Aug. 31, while 10th-12th graders may al tend sessions on July 15, Ju- ly 22, Aug. 17 and Aug . 24. Ou!door life. nature Jore, riding, swimming, h i king , music and crafts are oHered. Color portrait Star Club A fashion luncheon and card party are on !he agenda of the Star Club which will meet .et 11 :30 a.m. Thursday, July J. in lhe Laguna Beach Masonic Temple. Democrat s Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Democratic Club will ballot on new by.Jaws during a meeting at II p.m. Wednesday, June 30. in the Hunt ington Beach home of J\.1r. and Mrs. H. C. Sullivan. B'nai B'rith The seventh birthday nf the Orange Coast B'nai B'rith Women 's Chapter will be celebrated at 8 p.m. Thursday, J uly I, in the Newport Riviera, Costa Me1a. of your child, 1.49. l '· ; Tru ly professional portraits. Select from several poses. • Large 5 x 7" size photo ••• 1.49 each • Set of 4 wallet size ..•.•. 1.49 set TllO cllll<Wn phologrephed togothor ••• 2.18. A Penney-11clu1tv1I Full color porlr1ll1 in • sin aullable for froml1111 ••• porfoct for gills. All porlr•it. dollvorod to you 11 our 1tor1 by- '•nnty 111ocf1t11. '------------------"Ago limit; 12 yoora. ennelfJ Costa Mesa Store Only Tuet. 6-29 thru Set. 7.3 Harbor Shoppln9 Center Hr>.: 9:30-1 :00 lo 2:00·5:00 Dilly • Yo ur Ho roscope Tomorrow Taurus: In-law Jokes Not Humorous TU ESDAY JUNE 29 By SYDNEY OMA.RR The late, great psychologist, Carl Gustav June". who was Freud's leading protege, often utilized horoscopes of in· dividua l patients in an effort to get at the root of their psychological problems. Jung also identified "Lhe Ages of Mankind" through zodiacal symbolism. Thus, today, we hear many persons talk about the Age (I( Aquarius. As fa r as Jung was concerned. there were the Ages of the Fish. the Goat, the Ram and so forth. ARI ES (March 21-April 19) · Financial support you had relied upon may take 11 dif~ ferent course. Refuse to hang July Rite In Offing Mr. and Mrs. James R. Crowder of Newport Beach have aMounced the engage- ment of their daughter, Doris Crowder to Donald E. Loeffler of Huntington Beach. an ad- ministrative assistant to Assemblyman Robert H , Burke. Miss Crowder is a graduate of St. Charles High School in Missouri. Her fiance is a graduate of Glendale College and attended California State College at Long Beach . He is the son or Ed Loeffler or Glen· dale and the late ~1rs . Loef- fler. A July 25 wedding is being planned in the New por l Harbor Lutheran Church . Bridal Age Reaches 20 NEW YORK (UP I) -The latest information on the me - dizin age of U.S. brides at first marriage is a Bureau of the Census estimate or 20.8 vears. The fed er a I statisiicians report 511 percent of the girl s marry sometime after their twentieth birthday. In the 25 and oldtr category were 11.5 peret>nl of the first time brides. And under 18? The statisti- llans put 13.9 percent in that age bracket. m MAVCO join t he fun ! may company presents a model summer workshop !i's a n1cxlcl work- shop just for teens. learn <ill about modeling, bcllcr posture, advanced make-up and how to communicate wilh you r audi- ence. And you 'll model in your very own iashion show. Five week modrl workshop 8.5 0 Register now in the May Co Coed or Campus Shop. Classes Begin: may co. south coa1t plaz• tuesday, jun• 29 7 p.m. on lo outmoded coocept.s. You will have to !ear down in order Lo rebuild. TAURUS (April 26-May 20): Today you will not find in-law jokes funny. One who may be well-meaning may be trying to usurp your parental duties. Stress independence. GErttINI (May 21..June 20) · Deliberate efforts are requ ired to improve home, property. Leaving such matters to chance would be an error. Unorthodox approach tends now to succeed. CANCER (June 2!-July 22): There is litt le doubt about your actual abilities-but key is to find correct fonn of ac· lion. There are numerous demands on your time. Be s-elective. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Emphasis Is on practical ap- proach. Playing the clown now would be ina ppropriate. ex· NEWPORT pen~ive and would gain 11\tte or no appreclallon. Thorough approach 1s necessity. abilities. You art intrigued by unu!U1l romanllc Interlude. CAPRJCORN (Dec. 22..Jan. 19): What appears necessary mO!t significant years. If single, man·iage is on horiwn . l! married, there could be an addition to family. VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22 ): Some neighbors, associates make no secret of resentment based on Pnvy . Your role now is to collect and utilize pertinent Uata. You arc on right track. seems to be at a distance.lli"'iiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiii;..;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii! Check reservations. Be aware LAST of potential. Get started on . theBis. Prepare c r e at i v e1 format. CALL AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. LlBHA ~Sept. 23-0c\. Z2): Someone appear~ to be go111g to considerable expe;ise behind the scenes-and not necessari- ly in your favor. Uulize tn- tuiLive intellect. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Significant compl1ments are received. Stop kicking toe in sand. You deserve acco lade. Know this and respond ac· co rding1y. SAG ITTARIUS {Nov. 22- Dec. 211: There is room for you at the top : know thls and act like you kno\V ii. Exude confidence. Invest in your own 18): Get promises in writing. Son1e 1n posit ion:; of authority are in 1nagnan1n1ous mood. ·rhat's fir1e -but you deserve something more solid than a. 111ere pro1n ise. PISCES (Feb. 19·J\.1arch 20 ): Apply light touch. Don't at- 1 ten1pt lo force iss ues. Improve public relations. Study con- tracts. A domestic squabble is but l£"mporary . r-.1ake con· tts.sion to mate, partner. IF TOl)AY IS YOUR BlltTHDAY you are intuitive, have natural sense or drama, and this wilt be one of your ETHEREA INVITES YOU TO MEET THE STAN LAWRENCE BEAUTY TEAM FOR ETHEREA THIS WEEK MONDAY, JUNE 28- FRIDAY, JULY 2 . RESERVATIONS FOR A PRIVATE CONSULTATION BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. 10.00 RESERVATION FEE MAY BE APPLIED TO ANY PURCHASE OF ETHEREA: RECEIVE YOUR PERSONALIZED GIFT WITH YOUR PURCHASE. PHONE NOW, THERE ARE ONLY A LIMITED NUMBER OF RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE. 644-2800, EXT. 286. IN OUR COSMETICS. ROBINSON'S • FASHION ISLAND • COUNT T"E STITCH CONTllT .,,tt w ... ,.. ... .,, Junt llll!I, T~•,..'• ~ llm~ on 1u•11•1, .... 1 you cOlllt win (1b .. !11ltlY lrH ) I tHt.M l#U l! a 1toT"'" KNITTINO MACHIHI. ~ ~1+1111 .... The KNIT WIT ~th COii! ~1•11 LOWEii MAlL CO!ll Metil j~}·2111 644-2800 J 7 I In th li n p le c w u n b n l D • th p hi "' gi th E hi lo th • " c d p lo c H T • I i 7 & • ~ • • • & •• -· . ., ' Newport Bea~h VOL 64, NO. 153, l SECTIONS, 38 PAGES e Further Study Court Postpones Pentagon Ruling Ily The Associated Press The Supreme Court put off Loday a rul· ing on whelher the New York Times and the Washington Post can resume publica· lion of secret Pentagon papers on Viet• nam and the man accused or leaking the papers to th e press surrendered tn federal authorities. The high court heard arguments on the case over the weekend, and sat today for what was to have been the last session until the ·fall term. The court announced no ruling on the Pentagon papers case, but Chief Justice Warren E. Burger an· nounced the justices would continue sit· ting to hand down furthe r orders. At about the same time, in Boston, Dr. Daniel Ellsberg surrendered to federa l euthorilies and told about lflO perso ns that he had provided the Times with tile papers. "I am prepared for all consequences," said E\!sberg, whose allorneys had said Saturday their client would surrender 011 Monday. El!sberg, a former Pent a go n researcher now a research associate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Technology in Cambridge, had bee11 sought unsuccessfully by the FBI sinca in Cambridge, had been sought unsurcess· fully by the FBI since Friday on a war· rant ace.using him of unauthorized pos· session of top secret documents and failure lo return them. At issue in the court case is 1he govemmr:nt's contention that publication of excerpts of the study will endanger na· tiona\ security. Thr: Times and Post con· tend freedom of the press is threatened by the governnlent's efforl lo prrven t publication of arlicles based on the study outlining U.S. involvement in Vietnam. Both the Times and the Post remain restrained from publishing more articles pending a final court decision. * * * * * * Papers Figure Surrenclers To Federal Autl1orities BOSTON {UPI) -Coming ()Ut or hiding. Dr, Daniel Ellsberg surrendered to Federal authori ties today and admitted giving top secre t Pentagon docu ments on the Vietna m War to the New York Times. At .11 hearing before a U.S. magistrate, Ellsberg, 40, was released in $50,000 bond P entagon Papers Give n to Solons With Warnings \\'ASl.JJr-;GTON IUPll -The Delense Department delivered its top secret hislnry of the origins of the V1C'!nam War to Congress today with a warn ing that the ir public disclosure would posC' "~ra ve 11nd 1mrnedia1e dangers to the. nallona\ 5ecurity " Pentagon me~se ngers carrier! !W() cartons ft lied ~ ith the 4 7 · v o I u m e documents to the capilol office of Senate President Pro-Tern Allen J . Ellender, {D· La.\ A similar set of volumes was delivered lo House Speaker Carl Albert. The Senate volumes were locked in a vault in the office of F'rank Valeo, Secretary of lhe Senate. and the House copies were put under lock and key in the House Armed Services Committee. Only congressmen will be allowed to read them, and they may not take notes. Ellender read parL~ of a letter from J)e.fense Secretary Melvin R. Laird 11aying that disclosure would lead to "grave and immediate dangers to the na· lional 11ecurity." without surety, meaning he dld not have to post bail. No plea was entered. The government prosecutor, saying "the charges generally deal with es· pionagc," had asked for $100 .000 bond with surely. Ellsberg was specHica!ly cha rged with unauthorized possession and retention l"lf doc.umen!s ·'v!\al to the na · tional defense.,. "I am prepared lo answer to all the consequences, , ,"said Eltsbcrg. If con· "ic ted. he faces a maximum penalty of 10 years' imprisonment and a 110,000 fine . Mag ist rate Peler W, Princi con tinued the case to July \~ for a hearin11: on Ells berg's remova l lo California where a v.•arranl was issued for his arrest. As he arrived to surrender as promi sed to U.S. All nrney Herbert f . Tra\'ers, Ell sberg sa id he leaked !he papers tn !he. prsss about 16 months after giving !hem lo ~en J. \V illiam Fulbr iRhl 10-Ark ), chairman of !he po1,1·erful Senate Foreig n Relations Committee and an outspoken foe of U S. involvement in Vietn;im fromh the starL Ellsberg, senior research associate at Massachusetls Institute of Technology (J\1IT}, told newsmen . "Al! lhese actions were clearl y in con· tradicti.on to security regulations. secrecy regulations and, even more, the in· formation practices of lhe Department of Defense. "Nevertheless. J felt as an Americ.'l.n <'ilizen, a responsible c.ilizen, I could n" longer . cooperate in concealing this in· formation form the American publi<'. I did this clearly at my own jeopardy. "I am prepared to answer to all the consequences of Uiese decisions. That in· elu des !he personal consequences to me and my family, whatever th ese may be. \\'ou ldn't you go to prison to help end the war?" Ellsberg was accompanied by his v.•ife 1'nd a lawyer as he drove up to the post office building which houses the federal courts and Travers' office. ED ITI ON ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 28, ·197 r • a 1a ea er CAILY ,ILOT , ..... ff T•r"l'Y C..Yllle Bread, Witae and Thou The economy may be do,vn. b ut a young slockbrok· er (Udo Giesen) can still wine and dine his date (Tina Hastings) in an exciting fashion in Balboa - llkt on the wall in front of his Cypress Street apartment. Who said sidewalk cafes are dead? They may yet reach new heights. Huntington Girl Fatally lnJured In Horse Fall Shonnie Royce. \Q.year~old daughter or Patrick and Hilda Royce. I 9 8 0 2 Providence Lane, Huntlnglon Beach, died Sunday from injuries she received in a riding accident Saturday. ri.tiss Royce was riding her Arabian hor.se. Golden Boy , when the horse bolted <\I South Hillsview Riding Club, 16334 S. Harbor Blvd. near Stanton. Barbara Jean Ward. 11. of 7{l6 ~10ner1dge, :il<:o ~·as !hroY•n fr om the horse and suffered a broken leg. 1'1iss Royce oe\·er regained con- sciousness after the accident. Her father ls ~·idely kno"·n in SQuthlaod boating circles as the author of several illustrated books on sailing and lrailcrboating. lvliss Roy ce v.'aS born in Newport Beach and attended \Vardlow Sch ool in Hun- ti ngton Beach. She was active In sailing and s~·i mming from an early age. Sh~ had taken ur horseback riding 1n the last '"'o years. She v.•as also active io the fl1 arlin Swimming C!ub. Rosary, open to her sailing and riding friends. wlll be recited Tuesday at 2 p.m. from the Hacienda Heights Stables in Huntington Beach. Funeral arrangements are in charge of Dilday Mortuary, 17911 Beach Blvd . T o bacco Suppl y Cut RO,,.IE (AP) -Italy's li0,000 govern· menl tobacCo shops, the only place~ where cigaref.tes are sold legally, "'ere closed today by a 24-hour strike. Tht tobacconists complained that the governmen t charged. too much for tobac· co and was open ing too many new shops. They i;aid Ute only wa y to beat the com· pet ition ()f lhe black market wai; to lower pric es. Final Action Expected In Newport on Budget Newpcrl Beach eily councilmen are schedfled to take final action on the pra- posed $12.7 million 1971-72 municipal 'ibudget tonight al 7:30 o'clock in city hall. Aeling City Manager Philip F. Bet- tencourt said this morning the staff has reached salary agreement with two of !hree city employe association&: and he is hopeful of bringing signed contracts wilb all three lo the council by tonight. He decli ned to say whether it was the city or the police or fi re associ ations that had not agreed lo terms. He also ha!'i refused to speculatt on how !he new agreements would affect the total amount of the budget. Jn other action tonight , the council: -Will CQnslder a proposal to assign the. Br1.lhna Yacht Basi n lease lO lhe Irvine Company. -Wil! act on an administration pro. posal lo hike the parking fee s at the OUI Firefighting Methods Vsed Newport Beach firemen didn't have. far to go Friday when a careleuly discarded cigarellt set off a blaze across the Costa ,,.tes11. city limit, within sight of their Mariner's f'ire Station. firemen cros.sed Irvine Avenue Ul the site, between 18th and Me.gnolia Stree.Ls, and stomped It out with their feet, ac• cording to the report. "No injuries," the report concluded , saying damage waJ limited to a small area of parkway grai;s. Ocean Front parking Jot at Newpnrt Pier from 25 to 50 cents per hour. -Will act on a contract with lndu6lr!al Turf. Inc., of Laguna Hills , for $144,MI, for conslruclion of Phase tr of Buffalo Hills Park in Harbor View Hills. -Act on a proposal by the city's Parks, Beaches and Recreation Comm issi()n to landscape and provide parking for West Jetty Park al the tip of Balboa Penirisula. -Consider lln ordinance that would strip the planning commission of its authority to grant u:i1e permits. making fina l approval the respon:sibi1ily or the council. -Consider a request by lhe Irvine Ulmpany to pre-zone 45 acres of land, now part of Pacific View Memorial Park. for single·fami!y residential development, Annexation proceedings for the property are under way. The proposed 120-lot subdivision wa:ii the subject of a heated controversy two weeks ago when the c<1uncil. on a 4-3 vote, approved a tentative tract map for I.he parcel. The approval came despite a conterition by Marine Corps officials -later iup- ported by an FAA spokesman-that lht established Marine helicopter Inclement weather flijih l path would put some homes less than 50 feet under 1lhe flyicg machines. Ship Blast Ki.lls Four; Seven Hurt Off Guantanamo Garbage Men Seek Sum1nons 'Vnlair Treatnaent' NORFOLK. Va. (AP ) -·Four Navy men were killed and seven injured today in an engine room explosion aboard a U.S. veBStl operatfng · otr Guentanamo Bay, Cuba, AU antic P1eet headquarte:rJ The long arm of the law may soon be reachln& down from garbage trucks. A proposal to give officials 0£ the General ~rvicts Department, in- cluding the refuse foreman and his assistant. the authority to issue tickets to residents who fail to follow diposal rules will go be:fore the Newport Beach City Council tonight . Aeling City Manager Philip f'. Bettencaurt said the men would have tht authority lo write cita- ti()nS to people who don't havt lids for their cans or who put lhin11 like building material:i1 In lhcm. He 5aid the authority would ex· tend to Uc.keting perisons for illegal dumping 11nd tampering \\'1th beach rect ptacles. Exhibitor Blames Council City employ~ today were bl amed !or Friday's ~anctllalion of the Balboa Arts and Crafts Festival by photographer John Palmer, one of the exhibitors. In a lellcr to Newport Stach ~tayor Ed Hirth, Palme r said, "I don't believe a citizen should have to fight clly hall, cHy ha\J should be fighting for us.'' Palmer Friday criticized lhe treatment he and festival ()rga n1zer ,Jim Cullen h11d IH'st rectivcd when applying for 11 special events permit, hour!'! before owne rs of the Balboa Inn ordered the displ11;ys from th• grounds. • Cullen !laid inn ewncrJ had first t n· • couraged the event , but were unhappy over so-called bad publicity. "l feel very strongly that J dldn't get any help from city representatives on May 4 when I tried to help Mr. Cullen, and lhe eventual reaction by lhose agen· cles that had to paM on the festival's npening was so chaotic. as In cause the Balboa Inn to lermb1ate its approval of the festival ," Palmer said Palmer iaid his efforL, lo help Cullen get the permit "showed me a building (c1ly hall) full cf nnt•so-tivil serv11 nts who ell.her could not or "'ould not provide the kind of assistance I hove come to be.lltvt. should be roullnt in a progressive cily 1dmlnlatr1tion. ·• He 11!d be first tried to 1et the special events permit In May. Palmer maintained the "modt!t but potentislly 1uccessful fe!tival couldn't have helped but bring people tt the Balbca area." He claimed the. 1ing1' most M1Ud result of the enti re matter ''Is the perpetualion or 11 negative, do-nothing attitude on the p11rt of city emp1oyes whose primary motivation seems to bt protection of the.Ir own jobs an~ tht maln1Aln1nce of the status quo." bere aald. \ A 1poke1m1n for lhe A.tlaii,~ Fleet AmphibiOWI Force saJd the. etploaion oc· curred 1board lhe arpphlbiOUJ transport doek USS Trenton a8 the Ve.s&el WAS undergolcg ~kedown training 1bout two miles south of Ute Guantanamo naval Sta· lion. The na.mu of lhc dead and Injured were withheld by the Navy pend.Ing notltlcaUon of neat of kin. Str of th' injured were ev1cuated tn the naval hOl'iplla\ at Guantanamo. the Navy a11id, while. the 1eventh wu tre&ted on board the Trenton. The Tre nton returned lo port under her ()Wn' power, The Navy sit Id il was ln- vestlg11tlng to determine the cause of tbe explosion . --.. -----.~· Today's Fln(al N.Y. Stoek8 TEN CENTS Crowd Sees Police Slay Assailant NEW YORK (UPI) -Joseph A. Colombo Sr.. reputed leader of one or New York's five. Mafia families, was shot in the head and critically wounded by a black man today at an Italian-American Unity Day rally. The young gunman was shot and killed by police as a crowd of several thousalld watched in stunned silenc.e. The assailant was not immediately idenUfied.. Witnesses said Colombo, 48, was mov· Ing among a crowd of well-wisher! toward the speakers platform when the gurunan grabbed him by the neck. spun him around and shot him in the head. The gunman, carrying a camera and wearing what appeared to be preu credentials, had been standing nearby with a black woman , the witnesses .!iaid . He was in his early 20's and wore green trousers and a green shirt, they said. Both Colombo and the gunman were taken to Roosevelt Hospital a block away. A priest administered the last rite:ii of the Roma n Catholic Church to the wounded man in the. emergency room. The shoot ing happened al about 11:15 a.m., 45 minutes before the scheduled start of the Co!umbw Circle rally ()rganized by Colombo and hi& .son, Anthony, 27. Speakers pleaded with the crowd tG remain calm and not to leave the area. Anthony Colombo had precilcted 250,<m persons would attend the second annual Unity Day t11ily but !he crowd only numbered several thousand at lh1t r int. The younger Colombo had sa! tha demonstration was "for ord inary peopht to show pride in their heritage. and lova of their country." The speakers platform and buildings in the area, including tha hospital, were draped with red, black and green fla gs and bunting in honor of the observance. Cojombo, a founder of the Italian American Civil Rights League and the moving force behind the Unity Day observance. was admitted lo Roosevelt Hospital "'in critical condit ion with a gunshot wound of the head,'' a hospital spokesman said. The spokesman said "a male dead 011 arrival" als o wa.!i brought to the hospital. UPI Photographer Dirck Ha lstead said the @Unman pumped ''several !hots into Colombo's head as he was moving towa rd a crowd or well·w ishers near the speakers dais. "There ~·as a brief exchange of gunfire between the police and the assailant, ~:ho fell to the pavement bleeding from the back," Halstead said. Another witness, Carl Cecnra. said he saw a black photographer wearing what appeared to be regular press credentials standing with a hlack won\an near Co!omOO as Colombo talked to a small group in front of the platform . Cecora said he lurne<l away momen- tarily, heard a shot and saw people ''poun cing on the black photographer.'' He said he then heard si:i shots in rapid succe:!lsio c. Colombo founded the Italian American Civil Rights League after hia son , Joseph Jr .. was indicted on charges of plotting to melt down silver coins for their greater val ue as metal. The son later was found innocent by a jury. or .. ge Coast Weather The sun will peek-through the ha"te again thi3 afternoon and Tu esday, following the steady diet of low cloud:s and fog along the coast. Highs todily 70 at the beaches, 80 inland. Low! so to a>. INSmE TODA. Y Tht Co!ta Mesa Civic Ptav- h()ute wi.,hed itself a hnppJI 1tzth birt.hda11 lh.f! other dau with members of its past JO productioq 0'1' hand to ce tf!.. brait. Set Entertainment, Page JI. iett1t11 ' u ClllftnfJ1 t Cl'lt<klri. U• ' Cl1n!li.it .u-• Ctmk:1 rJ Cr.u_. J1 0..tll -I<.. ' ltllwll l ,... ' l llf9n&!ft-I Jt.ll l'lfllflCI •·It Mt~ II Aftit Lelldtn 11 Mtoflllff " ,Z,._:..0"1-"'-l v_Plc:L:..or ___ • ______ M_--=':..· "'=":...2::1:.., :..lffic..:: City ~ s Chief Hails Heli~opter Cri1ne Fight By l.. PETER KRIEG Of IM Dell'I '1111 lttll It •&1 a cold, Wk and dreary nicht ln early April whu a 17-ycar-<>ld COrona del Mar girl walking home along the CoaJt Highwa.y was suddenly grabbed from behind. A witness saw what was happening. The witness ran to a nearby Cameo Shores home and called police. "Cameo Shores and East Ct'la.>l Highway, altempttd rapt,'' went the caU to the Newport Beach police helicopter. The witness had obtained a description Newport Pool Can B e Aided By City Fund Newport Beach can spend general fund money for th!! Harbor Area Olympic-size swimming pool. Acting City Altomey Dennis O'Neil has ruled. Usf' of excise tax dollars is out , ae.- cording to O'Neil, but "there Is no legal rea90n why upltal improvement projects cannot be funded by general fund money." He said it didn't matter whether the ci- ty ii the contracting party for the pro- ject, which is isn't, or not. City Councilmen asked for the ruling :P..1onday night after former councilman Dee Cook challenged the expenditure dur- ing a review oI the proposed $12.7 million city budget. Newport Beach more than a y ear ago committed to spend $87 ,500 for the 50- meter pool to be built at Newport Harbor High Schoo!, primarily with funds ra.ised by the Nr:wport-Me.sa Unified School District. O'Nt:il said the determining factor as to whr:ther the city is responsible to control the contract is whether or not the city is dealing with another public agency on a public project. "The city need not legally be the con- tracting party when working with another public entity on a public project," he liald. He explained that the rightJ of the city wouJd be protected by tht: terms of !ht: joint exercise of powers agreement which would be executed by the city and the board of eduaJ.ion prior to construction. O'Neil ruh~d out the possibility of building: eir:cbe tax funds, raised from f~ charged all construction projects, on the grounds that the city code restricts we of these funds to contruction and development of fire slallons, parks and librarles. Trustees Slate 'Goals' Meeting Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees will hold .a .special meeting at 7 o'clock Tuesdz.y to review the dislrict goals .and objective5, lhe data processing study and the 1971-72 district budget. The board will meel in the lyceum of Costa fo.fes11 High School. A $30.5 million preliminary budget draft was presented at the June 14 meeting of the board. Tuesday's con- sideration is expected to include a recom- mendation on salaries for teaching at1d non-teaching personnel. A recom· mendation for classified -non-leaching ,;taff -will be received from lhe district PersoMel Commission. The tentative budget document wh ic h is not expected to receive ftnal board ap- proval until lhe J uly 6 trustee meeting. calls for a 20<ent per $100 lax increase. OUNel COA$T DAILY PILOT da.v«i• COAST f'UILllMOfO COMl'AHY le .. wt H. WeM ,,...,,. .... l"vlllllMP Jee.Ii l. cwt:.., \'k.I'~ ... ~~ Tli•111•< "'•e•ir l•llef Them•• A. lol11rp)il11e M.IMt;t111 fdlfltl" L '•'•' Kri•f IM.,..,..,I ... di Clly l:dllot ... ,... .... OM.. l l JJ Htwpetl leul1v1nl w·.it.1111 A4~re11: r.o. ••• 1a11, tt••> ,,_.,_ c;.i. Met.t! lQD w.1 ••v ''""' L"9V""I ... du :tt: l'erar ..,,,..."" ....... lei'! 9-11: 1111S ... ell llevirff:l"f ... (l9111MN; • t1"111 11 ·c-ilM ll•I Do\11.V PM.OT, wtllil W\dl t. _....... .. ........ -. ....... ftlly ~ """"" .. ., "" ..,,. ... _ .... .., l,A9llfle loMCll. ~ le::f(fl, IDlltl ..... .....,..,._ ...... 1'"""'9"' Vt~ lefl (..,._ti/ ~-..:::. ~:., .::::. ~-: et -Wiit .. , $U.:., C..11 -. 11 Tall,tra· (714) M2-4JJ1 Cl WW .Uoaft I I MJ-Wn ~t, ""· 0.-c.w ...... "" ... ~·· ... -·-· llkl\IT't l-. ... *"-' .......... ., ......... -1. _ ..... _, ...... , .. •l"'-t lofllC.1111 ,... .......... ~..,.,--· ...... -...... ,.111 111· ......... 9-.:fl .... °"" "'-'· C.•"'""'· SWKl'lff'i'O .,, _....,. et.a -"''1' w -" a .11 ~I .......,.,. M 1•rleM, f;:t,H -!My. of the man's vehicle and vdthin minutes the helicopter spotted 1t heading norlh on MacArthur Boulevard. The helicopter led ground un1LS lO lh• fleeing car. The suspect was apprthtnded in Tustin. The dramatic account is only one or hundreds that Police Chief B. James Clavas cites as proOf positive of the. ad- vantages of -2lld need for -police helicopters. He discussed several others in a reporl to the city council this ~·eek at he outlin- ed costs of the progran1 that ha.~ Jls Dowr1 to Earth critics. So far, Glav;u said, the city has aptn1 $811,700 on helicopters. They will cost 1134.600 dur ina the upcOmin& f1JCal yr:ar. Aecordln& to Olavas, and lh• city coun- cil. It's worth every penny. "Major crimes which rose 15 percent in 1970 are down nearly nine percent this yeo-.r ," <.:lavas said. "And although not categorized as ma- jor crin1c. boat hurg!artes decreased !'.15 percent iii this period. apparently rt'spon- d1ng to lhe more versatile patrol ~.\stem." Glavas cited some more eltamplt'S "Burglary from residence occutrmg now," came the call, "suspect \'ehicle described as a • , . " Within 30 seconds. Gl~1·a~ said. a helicopter spotted lhe car -in an al!ey. In another instance a helicopter spotted 8 car overturned down an embankment out of sighl of ground units. 1'he pilot landed and the victim ~·as removed from the car and gil'en firs1 aid minutes lx>fore he otherwise ~·ould ha1•e received it. Glavas didn I dodge th~ complaints, either. "\\'e have received compl;unl8 about the noi!e 1en.raled by the OeUc~r11 ," be said. pointing out a new mufOer system has now bfen in~talled to reduce the noise level. ..A newly-designed header system i:. to be Installed in the very near future \l'/uch \\Ill be n1ore compatible v.·ilh the new muffler and thus furl.her reduce noise. -·while the departn1ent has undoubtedly irritated and annoyed a number of citizens wi!h !he noise of the n1otors. there has been at le&st as 1nany "'ho Search Pressed ha\"e expressed by letter their incrrast"d feeling of security and protection throogh the presence of the hellcoplers iD tht air." he said. Glavas said the helicopter patrol •·af- fords us a dynamic new tool 1n rha prrformancc of our increasingly dif ficult task. "Although we 1\'ill 11ot attribute 1he: decrease in cnn1e directly to the ht:licopter.5. Jt is sllll the only ntaJor l'hange in field procedure:~ installed bv 1his dep<irtment during the perlOd 111 · \'Dil•ed," Slain Realtor's Rites Scheduled Funeral services are sc h e d u t e d \\1ednesday for a Cosl<i J\1es11 real estate \1·oman found n1urdered 1n Del r-.1ar s111: days ago. ~·hile San Diego police press a ,so.fa r unsuccessful search for !he k11lrr. Rites for J\1rs. Jean S1n11h. 5ii, 11·i!J be \\'ednesday at ID a.in. in Bell Rroadw:iy Mortuary Chapel. with Dr. Rayn1ond I. Brahams officiating. Interment will fo llow the services for t-trs. Smith, of 482 Abbie \\'a~'· Costa Mesa. in Pacific View f\1emorial Park. A man hitchhiking to "'ork. detouring around and below a stretch of Interstate 5 freeway near the Del t.1ar Racetrack discovered the victim's nude body on a grassy slope at 7:\l a.m. last Tuesday. A pair of blood-stained rocks taken from the scene as evidence \1·ere evidently used to bludgeon the popular Realtor to death. Besides severe he;id injuries. tvlrs. Sn1ilh also suffered a broken left leg and a fractured rib on her left side and cor• oner's deputies theorize she had been dead at leAsl three day!i. make: a contribution to /'ltrs. Smith's memory donate fu nds to lhc Hoa& /'llemorial Hospita l geriatr1t's v.anl. \Vhen Brian Mlrney, 18 (rightl. and J\fike J\1cFar- land, 17 (he missed the picturel. btii!d a castle in the sand. they d on't fool around. They built this one on Balboa Island this \1•eekend, much to the delight of Khrisie Quiggle, 9. Oeft). The project took about four hours. Birney and fl1cFarland said they are '1'arrning up for Newport Beach's annual sand castle building contest in the fall. Investigators believe the o"·ner of Jean Smith Real Estatl'. 400 E. 171h St .. Costa f\lesa. ~·as probabl,v slain not long after she left lht home of relatives June 15 in San Diego. School Tax l1icrease Seen in Tztstin Budget A $9.2 million budget requJr1ng a 6.9· cent tax increase for thr 1971-72 school year will be considered tonigh! by the Tustin Union High District board of trustees. The board meets at 7:30 p.n1 . rn the conference room of Tus1Ln HiSh School. 1171 Laguna Road, Tustin. The tentative budget projects a t2 per- cent increase Jn enrollment next ~·car compared with a 10 percent incrrasr 111 assessed valuation. James J . f'arlt'y, district business manager said "bolh in- creases represent a co n s c r 1· a l i ~· c e stimate of ro~1h." "Virith the great increase in res1den\La\ construction ta king place in the lr11ne an<l ~·!ission \·ieio are11.~. thr prniccted increase of 9~ pupils may \l f.'!J be e¥· reeded ." Farley said Of the tntal re ntat1\·e lax 1ncrea~e. 3 !I cents is needed to "pro\·ir!e fnr lhe 1n- crrased operational costs requ1rrd by the anliripalC'cl J,;rn\1·th " F:irlry saicl . "An additional three-cent inrrrase i~ required to meet ;in increased s!.1te school building fund loan rrpay111r11r· for building and equipping Unh·crsi1y Jhgh School. The es!lmated 1!171-72 t;ix rate is SI 77 per $100 of assessed valu:ition The bulk of the SI 7 million hudget in- crease over 1970-?t expenditure~ is due to an S800,000 projected increase in leachers' salaries. Teacher salaries ac- count for $4.5 mlll!on ol !he budi;ct total. New Boys Cl ub Proposal Heard A propo~d use permit for construction of a Harbor Area Boys Club hr:inch - and a 2~year lease on tl1e IAnd 1n Eastblulf Park whC'rl' it will be built - ~'ill go before the Newport Beach city council tonight. Already approved by !he planning coni- mission. the building "'i1i be the fi rst Boys Club facility in Newport Beach. Councilmen earlil:!r approve d the site, choosing it over Balboa Penin:sula, after club ofllcial!i .said con~truction rosls v.·ould be far lower on the higher ground. Newport Seeks 8900 Pier Fee Jlcturnecl l'\e~-port Stach wants $900 b;1ck from the contractor who rebuilt lht Ral boa Pier Parking Jot because he had !he lot re'lr1y for use n1nt. davs. ]:lie ' The $100-ptr-day l1qu1d;i1ecl dam<igc-s as"es5ment i~ eon1monplncr The: S900 c:i n't be con~1<1crPd ~igntfi­ c.anl. the project C-Ost S247,AA7. allhllufl h that fi ~ure \\':IS morr tlu1 n S22 ,000 below the. budgeted e.st!m:ilr Farley notes the preliminary budget draft includes 40 addi1ion;:il teaching personnel •·anticipated fo r growth and special education programs. as 1vell ;is ;:idd illon<il custodial personnel.'' Despite the iJtcrease in the teachers' s:ilaries budget category. Farley notes the budget dOC's not include pay increases for either teaching or non-teaching staff. Any pay rai~es that may be granted by the board ~'ould have to come from the hlld'1Cted reserves. Reserves a mount to !ihgh!ly rnore 1h:in $i00,000 in the pro- l'll1'i1~d bud!(e!. do11n $500 ,000 from the $1.J n1ilhnn 1970-7t figure. An nthf'r two and a half cents per $100 \1 nuld ha1·e lo be addecl to the distric1 tax ra1 r Ft1 rlr1· nn1es. if the district chooses 111 go <ihf'ad \\ll h its hre and intrusion alarm s~ste1n plans. Col. Sanders ~1acl as Wet Hen j ·01,)nrl Sanders lhink~ l1e got <i p!uck- 1111:: by tht' ;'li'wport Beach Pl:lnning Com. n11ss1011 and is ;ippealing his claim rhal hr runs grocrry stores. no t t<1ke-0ut restaurant<;, lo the ci:r council ton ight. A request by Donald \V. Steinke to cpcrate a Kentucky fried Chicken stand a ~ 2007 \\1est Balboa Bh·d. ~·as rejected rarlitr thi!i month by the planners. acting on a staff report thal said not enough pArking \\'Ould be provided. Roy It ~\'oolsey, attorney for the ap- plic-11111. said the esta blishment is a stort. not a restaurant, and the parking should be rigured on that be.sis. Pl;u1ners si'l1d '.!8 parking stalls are needed, \\loolse~ :l.n•I 1he colonel feel only 1\l 11ould be nece<:sr.~,. The council 111et'i" !1)111ghl ;:it 7.30 o clot'k in lhf' c11y hall. Steinbeck Fil111 Screened at VC I The fllm \'ersion of J ohn Steinbtek '~ no\rl "The Grapes of Wrath" 1vill be scrt.ened 111 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. today in Ph~·sical Sc1rnces room J{H at UC lrvinf'. For the admission of SI filmgoers wtll a l~o see ;i chapter of !he serits "F'lash Gordon Conquer!i Ute Univtrse.'' The !i('ten~e flcllon serles will ph1y along ~·ith l h~ remaining filn15 of the. su mmer pro- grarns l)1her film!i to bf> shown in July art· "The List of Adria n ~1e~senger," July 2: "I.Urie RRsca:!i, Laurel and H11rdy, W C . F1('lds. KPyston" Cops.'' Jul,v 9 "All Qu i('! on the v.·cstrrn Fron!." .July 12; '·Tt'll Them \\llllle Roy i~ Here," July 16: ''Thr C.1inr. f.1utin r." July 19, and "Alict in \\'rndcrl<ind," July 2.l Sidewalk I ss ue Set for Hearing B y County Co urt A i\e"·port Beach homeo11'ner's protest against city action that orders him to rebuild par1 of th(' Edge11·ater Place !->idewalk will be aired July 16 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge fioberl Banya rd set the hearing d<itr Friday, imrnediate!y after P. A. Cassel riled a ~·rit of mandate naming the city, Public \\lorks Director Joseph T. i)evlin and the city council as defendant!. Cassel. 310 Fernando St .. o\\·ns three lu!s fronting on £dge11·a1er Place that are affected b.v the city action. lie argues 1n h1.~ 11·n1 that a city improvement order must be supported by a fou r-fifths vote of lhe council ano only five of se\'en coun- l'tl n1en appro\'ed lh!! order. ('a~scl :;a:i s the s1x-foo t-1\·1de strip. ll'l11ch hp had ripped nut last year and !'>HlCe planted v.'ith shrubbery. is on a line 11·1th p<lltf)s And pnrche~ constructed by ad1nce111 hon1eownc rs. The c.11}' ordered l11e widewalk replaced r·nn t.cnd1n,>: Cassel was encroaching on public righ\·of·\l'a1· The walk was 14 feet \1•idc hefore Cassel ac1ed, city officials ,<,aid. So far, Lhe hunt for additional clues. leads or a motive in the tragic s\ayinR has failed lo provide any parlicularly useful material. '·I'm sorry to "ay ~·e ha\·e no ne1\I de\'elopments,'' said Lt Gordon Oberle. pf. the San Diego • Police Department homicide squad today, Police suspect Mrs. Sntith n1et her fale: shortly :ifter leaving !he home of her stepson. David Smilh. whQ idenlified lhe body after hearing a radio broadcast describing clothes and je.,.,.elry round near i !. His stepmother 1•;as reported missing ,June 16 after she failed to arrive back in Costa Mesa. Californ ia High\\•ay Patrol officers ticketed and Finall y impounded her car, parked on the rreewav shoulder. June \8, near tht spot ~·here her body v.·.as even- tually found. The terrain -marshy And sloping dov.'Tl belo~· lhe free\l·ay on two different tiers -hid her body from l'iel\' at that limr A Harbor Area resident for neflrly 20 year~. ~-frs. Smith \ras a clil'e in the rosta Mesa-Net1rporl Harbor Board of Realtors and chambers or commerce in hoth ('ilirs. She le31'es 1v.·o daughters. J\lrs Flora Fre~'· nf Costa ~1esa and l\1rs Sharon Steinmet1 .. or l!aly. plus lhe stepson v.ho 1rlentificd hPr hod.1 . She also leaves !v.'n sisters. Alic!' Gin- no11', of Lynv.·ood. Ada Paris. or l\'or\ralk. plu~. brn1 her~-in-IA11• 1;eorge G1nno1.1•, J oe Par is and IJ grandchildren . The: family suggests those \\'fshlng to LEADS LOCAL HISTORIANS Newport Beach's (;rundy Grundy Elected Newport l-Iistory Society Leader (;. ~Villiam (;rundv 11'111 serve &s president of (11r 1\Jewport Be a c h }hstorical Society for the con1ing ,\·ear. Grundy . a Harbor Arra realtnr, is a founder of lhc society lls <ti ni is lo nro- cure and preser\ e historical information abnul fhe Harbor area. Crundy is lhe son of :'\e11porrs first medical doctor, the late Gordon \I Grun- d~. The ne~· society leader ;ind his \rife, Audrt~ :ind !heir two chil'.lren !11e at l'.!O \"1:1 \\'azier,<:. Lido Isle Other historical ~ociel _1· off1rrrs ln. clud~· 11\rs. \\'illtam lJC'an) toner. 11ce- prC's1denl ; ~\rs. \\'1ll1am 1Pci::g 1 ) Rertulell, srcretar~. J,1me~ I. nuber. l r('a.~urer : Ed\\·1n ~·1n<:!rr, rnrrnher•hir chairman: anr! ~1r.<: i\1;irlin 1J}11rntlica1 }.h('tly publu·it.1 <'ha1rr11;111 flppo1n!e-l'S lo !he .~or1et 1 ~ Boilrrl or l)irector!i arc. The!1d11rc l<!1b1n~ .. lt1 t k Barnett. flilrss Agnes ll101nq111st. .)!1srph l la1nhle1 .. John T l\relt'r . n arr 11 ~·1C'(;avren. Pelc U:irrrt1. ~lr~ .. !11~1·r ~ IC:arrolll Beek and J. Le1;he St('f!t'n~f·u Expert Watch Repair Rings Redesigned WATCH REPAIR SPECIAL WATCH REPAIRING DONE ON PREMISES We buy our ring mounting s direct from ring co1ting houses ond heve them fini shed by specialis ts, thus enabling us to sell to you for less. DOM RACITI Jewelry Repair at it's finest 1002 ITEMS TO CttOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LO AN, IUT, Slll, TIADE 1838 NEWPORT ILYD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MRA COME IN AND HOWSE AROUND PHONE 646·7741 .......... H•bw A lt .... w.y I I I --· ... ; . . . . ----. ----··-· ----- •• . Debut antes Value Honor SeriousJy .•. 1 ' By CA ROL. MOORE Ot Ute O.llY l'"-1 SJaH Children's }lome Society debutantes - 1971 style -are proud ol the honor but true to their general.ion. "rt was like Christmas all over again with so much fun to look forward to~" several admitted about receiving the special delivery debutante bids on the day of their high school graduation . Then lhe 18 select young coeds reflected more seriously on how each will be "getting more in volved in the com- munity ... opening my mind up ... com· mu nicaling easier with people t haven't met before .. _ per54'.>na!ly helping a worthy cause" during preparalions for her presentation lo society. Their names were revealed today by Mrs. Robert Hodson, ball chairman, at a traditional announce ment lea in the bayside borne of Mrs. Frank Trane. "I don't think most people realize what our debutante role really is -mostly doing gOOd for somebody else," explained Dove\I Smith. Like most of the debutantes, she already has contributed e x t e n s i v e volunteer time as a Candystriper hospital aide. Miss Smith also won a na- tional championship for sailing Lido lU. De-emphasizing the social prestige fac· tor, too. Kathleen Ann Nabers added th at the most import.ant objective for a young woman today is "a large understanding of society and knowledge for any field you may encounter." Miss Nabers, who belonged to several school service and tutorial projects and captained a Powder Puff football team, plans to participate in the Hawaii and London campus abroad progra~ while attending Cal Western. After an exciting year as Miss Newport Beach . Deborah Dorene Pennington is nevertheless eager for the "special thrill" of being a second-generation debutante. "In my work v.·ith the Chamber of Commerce, I met a lot of people I know need help and Children's Home Soc iety helps solve problems." Diane Maner Fraser, summer swim· ming teacher for the recreation depart- ment, and Diana Mae Mellott, president of her YMCA service club, agree lhat by ~·-t ~; l ' f .. I ·~ " metling 54'.> many people on the debut circuit, ''you realize more what you a.re and what you want to be.·• MidsetneBter graduates Pauline Boyd and Catherine Lee Chichester spoke or the ramily traditions and •·ge tting to know other people '' aspect.s of debuta1te days. Miss Boyd is the third daughter in her family to bow and Miss Chichester is ac- ti ve in American Field Serv ice work hav- ing been a ·•sister'' to a French exchange student. More comment on the "self-iden- tification and involvement" Iheme came from Lisa Ann Woodman, known for her craf t contributions to the society's Art Soiree. She predicted her debut would be "a different ex perience, anolher ap- proach toward eslabl ishing values." "With extra social demands, ii debutante, especially, must be honest with herself. pursue what she really needs and what is right far her." said Solveig Store, Tri lli-Y girl-of-the-year and Orchesis lead dance r. Other debutantes and their recognized activity are Diane Barrett, Assisteen service group; Carroll Brewster Beek, winner of ,the Eli t.1oore outstr.nding stu- dent award , and Claudia Ann Carver. honor student and homecoming princess. Also debuting are Jill Ann Corz ine and Victoria Ann Harper, both entertainers at convalescent homes; Sandra Holstein, Corona de! Mar High School cheerleader : J\.1elissa Beth fo.fcCray , rated second in her class at an Amer ican school in Europe; Judy Ann New, he ad song!ead er at Newport Harbor High School , and 1£sa Lee Wagner, Creative Child Center volunteer and California horsewoman. Parents of the debutantes and Dr. and Mrs. Edward A. Boyd, the Messrs. and J\.fmes, J . Peter Barrett, Barton Brewster Beek, Le roy Langhenry Carver Jr .• William Ellis Chichester, John Robert Corzine, David Ladson F'raser, Willia m Francis H. Harper, George ~1 eade Hols- tein III. Maurice Coyle McCray and ~1rs. Walter B. ~1cllotl. Others are the Mess rs. and Mmes. Richard William Nabers, Don Elijah New, Donald A. Pennington, Cared Noel Smith. John Slore. Loran Lee Wagner and Wilson Vernon Woodman. BEA ANDERSON, Ed;tor Mend11, ~ijnt 2t, 1'11 N I'••• 11 r Set lo sail tlirough , .. I' • ~ a once 1n a lifetime11 locial season ore {left lo right) the Mines Solveig Store, Kothleen Ann Nabers, Dovel\ Smith, Lisa Ann Woodman and Deborah Dorene Penn-, ington. They ore -,;, .. among I 8 Children's Home Society debs. D•ily Pilot Photos by LH P•yne Victoria Ann Harper pulls in fellow debutantes, Diane Maner Fraser (centeri ind Di•n• Mee Mellott (•I left). T ••ting the Hnes (•I right) •re Le•• Lee W •gnor (left) and P •ulino Boyd. Debutanles Catherine Lee Chichester (left) a nd Judy Ann New consider paddling t o their Dec. 28 presentation at Balboa Bay Club tind community service project this summer. Ann Dictates New Style, Chops·· Off All Long-hairs ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: If one more kid says to me, "Long hair Is great. After all Jel!US had long ha.ir," -1 will pe:.SOnally kick him in the leeth. Nobody knows what Jesus looked like. They did not have photographers 2,000 years ago and no artist ever painted a picture of Him. The pictures we see hang- 1ng in ctiurcbes and hospitals •re bued on somebody's Imagination. The best infonnatlon we h a v e regarding hair styles of that time is from the Bible. Corinthians. Olapttr II, Verse 14 : "Does not even nature itself teach you that , H a man h•ve long hair, It is a 1hame unto him?"' Any kid who wants to wear hill hair Tong ought to be man enough to do It without 1ayill& he 1s Imitating Jesus, - ANN LANDERS ~ LIKE IT SHORT DEAR LIKE lT: I swore 1 would not prin& another letter aboat hair, but y•r• (1 out of the ordinary, 10 I'm makhts 11 e1ception. Thanks for wrltbtg, and I'm rtDeWIDg my retolatkm. DEAR. ANN LANDERS: Recently you prlnled two tellers in your column from mothers who had lost their babies. They wrote to complain about the bad manners and poor judgment or people who 88ked fantastic questions and made IOmt very dumb remarks. t wall in a similar situation eight monlM ago, only my baby lived. Our ton was premature. He weighed 3 pounds, 8 ounces. Wi1hin two hours after the baby was born two doclol'll usured us he was perfectly formed and in el~llent con- dition. t was scarctly back from the delivery room when a friend called to say, "If the baby dies, don't fctl bad. Usually prtmlea have something wrong and It's better If they don't live." Our b•by wu in an incubltor 40 days. I never received one gilt or even 1 card in all that time. Everyone was afraid he might not make iL I was told by "friends" the baby would be "slow, sickly and he might not have teeth.'' Our aon ls now I months old, weighs 18 pounds and can waJk around in his crib, hanging onto the .skies. He has six teeth, is a bright, happy child and ha.s never even had diaper rash. Please print this. A lot of women need educating on the sub}ert of premature babiell. -BALTIMORE MO'l'HER DEAR 8 .: Heni'1 your letttr, plu1 my th1nk1 for belplDc lo educa&e tbe womea wlto need II. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am II. I have two sisters -one is 14, thti other 17. Seeing as how they are both older than l am you would expect them to be more mature, but they aren't ' Both 11isten are in bad with the library. They have lost their cards, lost book!! and ended up having a hassle with the librarian. They can't take any more. bookll out so they have been borrowing my card. Now I'm in trouble. They have run up fines which J am getting notices about. The lal!t notice IM)Unds as if the library wlll sue me If I don 't pay up. please tell me what to do. -VICI'lM OF SISTERS DEAR VIC: The flnl tblag you should llG ll lff th at die Une.1 are pakt. Slnct tlley an darced 11alut Yoar' Cll'd, ,., an 1espoa.1lble. Dis m.Jpt rtq1llre ,. IUp.level famDy -meellq, lib wlG. ......... Nert, m'le )'Hr' silten to re .. U.. library ud 1et relu&akd u welCOSM- vllllton. Inform tbtm Ibey may DOt .... _ your card hli the future -aDd make tr· stick. " Drink.ing may be "in" to the kids )'GI run with -but it can put you "out" (or keeps. You can cool it aod stay popular. Read "Booze and You -For Tetnagen Only." Send 35 cents in coin and 1 )°* self-addressed, stamped envelope wl$ • your request ln care of the DAllN ' PILOT. Your Horoscope Tomorrow Taurus: In-law Jokes Not Humorous "' Attuned to Teens ·j: Offeri~g h~lpin~ hands to the Fountain Valley Parks and Recreation Defart- : rnent 1n presentJ~g dances for seventh and eighth graders are members o the . 8?uth Coast Junior \Vomen's Club who are serving as chaperones. The Friday ·• night get·togethers in the Civic Center are scheduled on July 9 and 23 and Aug. 6 and 20. Attuned to the program are (left to right) Mrs. ~tichael Brusseau, :1 Bob Somma and :P.1rs. Bruce Mattern. :. Call of the Outdoors TUESDAY JUNE 29 By SYDNEY 0~1ARR The late, great psychologist. Carl Gustav J ung, who wa s Freud's leading protegP, often utilized horoscopes of in- dividual patients in an effort to get at the root of their psychologlcal problems. Jung al so iden tified "the Age's of Mankind" through 1.odiacal symbolism. Thus, today , we hear many person!'i ta lk about tlle Age of Aquarius. As far as Jung was concerned . there were the Ages of the Fis h. the Goat, the Ram and so forth, ARIES (March 21-April 19): Financial support you had relied upon may la ke a dif· ferent course. Refuse to hang July Rite In Offing Mr. and Mrs. James R. Crowder of Newport Beach have announced the engage- ment of their daughter, Doris Crowder to Donald E. Loeffler of Huntington Beach. an ad · ministrative assistant l o Assemblyman Robert H . Burke. Miss Crowder is a graduate of St. Charles High School In J\1 issouri. Her fiance is a graduate of Glendale College and attended California State College at Long Beach. fie is the 'On of Ed 1.-0effler of Glen- dale and the late Mrs. Loef- fler. A July 25 wedding Is being planned in the Newport Harbor Lutheran Church. ,. ' • .. • Slowdown • Progress Call to lhe outdoors has been heard and heeding the tradi· Students Engaged ~fr. and Mrs. Gilbert ~I. Hansen of Hunting1on Beach have announced the engage- ment of their d a u g h I e r , Barbara Susr.n Hansen , to Douglas 1-falg Irv.'in Jr. of Newport Bea ch. He is !he son of Mrs. V.'illiam Purdon of Newport BC'ach. The C'ngagcd pair graduated from Marina High School and attC'nd San Diego Slate College v.•here he belongs to Tau Kap- pa Epsilon fraternity. tional slowing down of ac- tivities are most clubs, though ~ome social affairs are belng pl an ned. YWCA Camping seaso n at the YWCA 's Camp Ta h q u i t z /.feadows near ldyll wild will open 'fhursday, July I, Registra!ion is being taken now at the Y headquarters in Santa Ana . Youngsters in the fourth lo ninth grades may enroll in eny of the eight-week sessions slated fro1n July I to Aug . .'.II , while 10th-12th graders may attend !'iCSsions on July 15, Ju- ly 22, Aug. 17 and Aug. 24. Outdoor life, nature lore, riding, swimming, h i k i n g, music and crafts are ortered. Color portrait Star Club A fashion luncheon and card party are on the agenda of the Star Club which will meet at 11 :30 a.m. Thursday, July 1, in the Laguna Beach Masonic Temple. Democrats Huntington Beach·Founlain Valley Democrat ic Club will ballot on new by-laws durin g a meeting at 8 p.m. Wednesday, J une JO, in the Huntington Beech home of Mr. and Mrs. }f. C. Sulliva n. B'nai B'rit h The sevrnth birthday of the Orange Coast B'nai B'rith Women's Chapter will be celebrated at 8 p.m. Thursday, July I, in the Newport Riviera, Costa Mesa. of your child, 1.49. Truly professional portraits. Select from several poses. • Large 5 x 7" size photo ••• 1.49 each • Set of 4 wallet size ...••• 1.49 set Two children pholographOd together ••• 2.98. A Penney axclualver Full color porlrolla In a 1lzt aullabl• lor framing ••• porlocl for gll19. All porlroil• dellv1r1d lo you 1t our 1lore by Penney 111ocl1t11. '-------------------'Ago llmil: 12 yoora. Bridal Age Reaches 20 NEW YORK (UPI) -The latest information on the me- dian age of U.S. brides at first marriage is a Bureau or the Census estimate of 20.8 years. The fed er a I statisticians report 58 percent of the ~iris marry sometime after their tv.·enlieth birthday. In the 25 and older category were 11.5 percent of the first lime' bride5. And undC'r 18? The ~tatisti­ tians put 13.9 percent in !hat age bracket. MAY CO join the fun! ma y company presents a model summer workshop It's a n1odel \vork- shop just for teens. Learn all about mode ling, be rt er posture, advanced n1ake-up and how to conirnunicatc w ith your audi- e nc e. And you'll n1odel in your very O\vn iashion sho\v. Five wee k n1 ode l workshop 8.50 Register now in the May Co Coed or Campus Shop. Classes Begin : m1y co. l\nnelfJ Costa Mna Store Only Harbor Shopping Center Hrs.: 9:30-T:OO & 2:00-5:00 D1 ily south coast pl111 tu1sd1y, june 29 7 p.m. Tues. 6-29 thru Sit. 7.3 on to outmoded co~pts. You will hti vf' lo tetir down in order W rebuild . TA UllUS I April 20-May 20): Today you \vi!l not find in-law JOk('s funny. One who may be well-meaning may be trying to usurp your parental duties. Stress independence. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Deliberate efforts are required to improve borne. property. LC'aving such 1natters to chance would be an error. \;northodox approach tends now lo succeed. CANCEi{ (J une 21.July 22 ): 'fhcre is httle doubl about your actual abilities-but key is to fi nd correcl form of ac- tion . ThC're are numerous demand!'i vn your time. Be s~lec\h'e. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Emphasis ls on practical ap- proach. Playing the clown naw WQuld be inappropriate, ex· NEWPORT pensive and would gain little or no appreciaLion. Thorough approach is necessity. abilities. You are intrigued by most signifkanl ytars. If unu!l.lal romantic interlude. !'iingle, marrisge is on horiwn. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. If married, there could be an 19): What appears necessary addition to family_ VIRGO (Aug. 23--Sept. 22): Some neighbors, associates make no secret of resentment based on envy . Your role now is to collect and utilize pertinent rlata. You are on right track. seems to be at a distance., .... ____ ;i;;;;; __ __ Check reservations. Be aware LA ST oC potential. Get started on . thesis. Prepare c r e at i v e format. CALL AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Someone appear.Ii to be going to considerable expe:lse Dehind the scenes-and not necessari· ly in your fa vor. Ut ilize in· tultive inlellecl. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Significant compliments are received. Stop kicking toe in sand. You desC'rve accolade. Knov.· this and respond ac- cordingly. SAGITJ'ARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): There is room for you at tlle top; know this and act like you know it. Exude co nfidence. Invest in your own 18): Get promlses in writing. Some in positions of authority are in magnanimous mood. l'hat's fine -but you deserve so1nething more solid than a niere promise. I PISCES !Feb. 19-March 20 ): Apply light touch. Don 't at) tempt to force issues. Improve ) public relations. Sludy con-1 tracts. A don1estic squabble is but temporary. ~la ke con- cession lo mate, partner. lF TODAY IS Y OU R BJRTHDA Y you are intuitive, have natural sense of drama, and this will be one of your ETHE REA INVITES YOU TO MEET THE STAN LAWRENCE BEAUTY TEAM FOR ETHEREA THIS WEEK MONDAY, JUNE 28- FRIDA Y, JU LY 2. RE'SERVATIONS FOR A PRIVATE CONSUL TATIONr BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. 10.00 RESERVATION FEE MAY BE APPLIED TO ANY PURCHASE OF ETHEREA. RECEIVE YOUR PERSONALIZED GIFT WITH YOUR PURCHASE. PHONE NOW, THERE ARE ONLY A LIMITED NUMBER OF RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE. 644-2800, EXT. 286. IN OUR COSMETICS. ROBINSON'S COUNT THE STIT(l4 CONTIST "'di W.cltond•Y, J""e XIII\. lllu•'I "• llmil •~ ill•llll, lnol YMI tl<lld Wiii fe01<1h1ltly 11") • 110 .H I l lSJl llllOTHl!ll KNITTING M"'CHIHI. Ho .iin,111.o.n, The KNIT WIT Soulll Co1il "l•U LOWl!ll MALL (Mii MIU SU-1111 • FASHION ISLAND • 6''·2800 .. 7 I 7 I I I ----·~---.. 'f Costa Mesa ED ITI ON VOL. 64, NO. 153, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES Further Study Court Postpones Pentagon Ruling By The Associated Press The Supreme Courl put off today a rul- ing on whether the New York Times and the Washington Post can resume publica- tion of secret Pe11tagon pa pers on Viel· nam and the man accused of leaking the papers to lhe press surrendered to federa l authorities. Tbe high court heard arguments on the case over the weekend, and sa1 today for what was to have been the last session ur.til the fall tenn. The court announced no ruling on the Pentagon papers case, but Chief Justice Warren E. Burger an· nounced the justices would continue sit· Ling to hand down further orders. Al about the same time, in Boston. Dr. Daniel Ellsberg surrendered to federal .authorities and told abou1 150 persons that he had pro vided the Times with the papers. "I am prepared for all consequences,'' said Ellsberg. whose attorneys had said Saturday their client would surrender on Monday. Ellsberg, a former Pen ta go n researcher now a research associate et the Massachusetts Institute of 1'e<:hno1ogy Technology in Cambridge. had been sought unsucct'ssfully by the FBI since in Cambridge.. had been sought unsuccess- fully by the FBI since Friday on a "'ar- rant accusing him of unauthorized pos- session or top secret documents and failure 10 return them. At issue in the court case is Lhe govemmcnt"s contention Lhat publication of excerpts of the study 1,1,•i\I endanger na- tional securi1y. The 'rimes and Post con- tend freedom of the press is threatened by the governrncnl's effort lo prevent publ ication of articles baseri nn the study outlining U.S. involvement in Vietnam. Both the Times and the Post remain restrained from publi shing more articles pending a final court decision, * * * * * * Papers Figure Surrenders To Federal Authorities BOSTON I UPI ) -Coming out or hiding, Dr. Daniel Ellsberg surrendered to Federal authorities today and admitted giving top secret Pentagon documents on the Vietnam War to the New York Times. At a hearing before a U.S. magis trate , Ellsberg, '40, was released in $50,000 bond without surety, meaning he did nol have lo post bail. No plea was entered. The government prosecutor. saying '"the charges generally deal with e.!L· pionage,'' had asked for S\00,000 bond "'ith surely. Ellsberg was specifically ch;irged with unaulhori?.ed possession and rett'ntion ol documents "vital to the na- tion;i l defense.·· "I am prepared to aos\\'er to all the * * * Pentagon Pa.pers Give11 to Solons With Warnings \\"ASH INGTON 1UPl ) -The Defense Department delivered its top .secret histnry of the origins of the Vie1nrim War In Congress today with a warning that thei r public disclosure would pose "grave and immediate dangers to the national liecurity.·• I consequences ... "said Ellsberg. 11 con- victed, he faces a maximu m pen alty of In )'ear!' imprisonment and a $10.000 fine. Magistrate Peter W, Princi continued lhe case to July I~ for a hearing an E!lsberg's removal to California where a warrant was issued for his arrest. As he arrived to surrender as promised to U.S. Attorney Herbert F'. Travers, Ellsberg said he leaked the papers to the press about 18 month.s after giving them to Sen. J. William F'ulbright ID-Ark.), chairman nf the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Com mittee 11nd an outspoken foe of t:.S. involvement in Vietnrim fromhthe s!art. Ellsberg, ~enior rrscarch associate at ~fassachusetl s lnstitute (If Technology tt111Tl. lo!d newsmen : "Alt these actions were clerirly in con- tradiction to security regulations, secrecy regulat ions and. even more. the in- formal 1on practices or the Department of Defense ··:-:everlhelcss, I fell a~ an American ci!i?.en. a rf'.~pnns1ble clr11en. I could no !f)nger cooperale in concerihng this 1n- formal1on form the America n public. I did 1his clcrirly nl my O\\'n Jeopardy. "I am prepared to answrr to all the conseciucnces of lht'se Occis1nns That in· eludes the personal consequences to me and my family, whatever these may be. Wouldn't you go lo prison to help end the war? .. Ellsberg Wa.5 accompanied by his wile and a lawyer as he drove up to the post nffice building which houses the federal I~ ELLSBERG, Page 2) ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 28, '1971 • a 1a er Bread, lfine and Thou 1'he econo1ny may be down. but a young stockbrok· er \Udo Giesen~ can still wine and dine his date (Tina Hastings) in an exciting fashion in Balboa - like on the wall in front 0£ his Cypress Street apartment. Who said sidewalk cafes are dead? They may yet reach new heights. Huntington Girl Fata lly Injured In Horse Fall Shonnie Royce, JO.year-old daughter nf Patrick and 1-Jilda Roye€'. I 9 8 0 2 Providence Lane., Huntington Beach. died Sunday from injuries she received in 11 riding accident Saturday. Miss Royce was riding her Arabian horse, Golden Boy. when the hnrse bolted af South Hillsvie1,1,. Riding Club, 16J34 S. Harbor Blvd. near Stanton. Ba rbara Je;in \Vard, 11. ol 706 Stoneridge, ;ilso was thro\\'n from the horse and suffered a broken leg. Mis.~ Royce never regained con- sciousness after the accident. Ht'r Falher 1s l'.1de ly known in Southland boating circlrs a~ the ;iut.hor nf ~everal illusl ra led books on sailing and I railerboa! 1ng . tlliss 11<\}te was born 1n Nel'.'port Bench ;ind allrndcd V·lardln1v School in Hun- t1n~Lon Beach. She \\'a~ active 10 sa iling ::ind sw1mn1ing from an early age. She had taken up horseback riding in !ht' last tv.•o yea rs. She was also active in lhe Marlin Swimming Club. Rosary . open to her sailing and riding fr iends, wUJ be recited Tuesday at 2 p.m. from the Hacienda Heights Stables in Huntington Beach. Funeral arrangements are in charge ot Di lda y Mortuary, 17911 Beach Blvd. Police Continue Search For Realtor's Murderer Funeral services 11re s c h e d u I e d Wednesday for a Costa Mesa real estate v.'oman found murdered in Del Mar six days ago. whilt San Diego police press a so·far unsuccessful search for the killer. Rites for Mrs. Jean Smith, 56. will be \Vednesday at JO a.m. in Bell Broadway !\1ortuary Cha pel, with Dr. Raymond I. Brahams offici11ling. lntcrment will follow I.he services for Mrs. Smith. nf 4fl2 Abbie Wa y, Costa Mesa. in Pacific View Memorial Park. A man hitchhiking to work, detouring around and below a st retch o( Interstate S freeway near the Del ~1ar Ra cetrack discovered the victim"! nude body on a grassy slope a1 7: 15 11 m. last Tuesd11y, A pair or blood·stained rnck~ taken from the scene a~ evidence 1,1,·ere evidentl y used tn bludgeon the popular Rcriltnr to death . Besides severe head injuries, Mrs. ~mith also suffered a broken left. leg and a fr actured rib on her left 1;;lde and cor- oner's deputies theorize 5he had been dead at least three days. Investigators believe the owner of Jean Smith Real Estate, 400 E. 17th St .. Costa Mesa, was proba bly slain not long after she left the home of relative! June 15 in Sa n Diego. So .far, the hunt for addlti-0nal clue.o;, leads or a motive In the tragic slaying has failed to provide any particularly useful materi al. "I'm S<1rry to say we have no new deve.lopments," said Lt. Gordon Oberle. of the San Diego Police Department homicide squad today. Police suspect Mrs. Smith met her fale shortly after leaving lhe home of her stepson, David Sm ith, who identified lhe body after hearing a radio broadcast describing clothes and jewelry found near it His stepmother was reported missing .June tn after she fa iled to arrive back in Costa Mesa. Calirornia High~·ay Patrol officers ticketed and finally impounded her car, pRrked on the freeway shoulder. ,June JR, near the spot where her bod y was even· tuRlly found . The terrain -marshy and slopini:i d(1wn beJnw the freewa y on two diffe rent tiers -hid her body fro m view at that time. A Harbor Area resident for nearly 20 years. f\.1rs. Smith was active in the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Board of Realtors and chambers of commerce in both cities. She leave! two daughters. ?>.trs. Flora Frey, of Costa Mesa and Mrs. Sharon Steinmetz, of Italy, plus the stepson who identified her body. Pentagon messengers carried lwn carton:<: filled with the 4 7 • v o 1 um e documents to the capitol office of Senate Presutent Pro-Tern Allen J. Ellender, (D· La .) A si milar set. of volumes was delivered to House Speaker Carl Albert. The Senate volumes were locked In 1. ''au!t in the office of Frank Valen. ~ecretary of the Sena te. Bnd the llouse !'op1es were put under lock and key in the House Armed Se rv ices Committee Rezone Bid Under Study She also leaves two sisters, Alice. Gin - now. of Lynwood, Ada Pari11, of Norwalk, plus brothers-in-law George GiMow, Joe Paris and 13 grandchildren. The famlly stJ.igest.s those wishing to make a contribution to Mrs. Smlth 's memory donate fund!! to lbe Hoag Memorial Hospital geriatrics ward. Only congressmen will be allowed lo rerirl them, and they may not take notes. Ellr.nder read part.~ of a letter from Defense Secrelary Melvin R. Laird ,;aying lhat disclosure would lead to "grave 1.nd immediate dangers lo lhe na- tional stturity," OW Fir efi g hting Me thods V sed Newpor1 Beach firemen dirlri't. have f11 r to go Friday whe n a care.les.<ily di:r::ca rded c\g11relle set. off 11 blaze across the Costa Mesa rity limit, within id ghl nf thelr Mariner°s Fire StaUon. F'lremen crosser! lrvint Avenue to t.he Llllr. between 18th and Magnolia Strut.!!, 1nd stomped lt out with their feet, ac- cording to the report. "No lnjurie.,," the rtport concluded, 1111~ 1ng dam11ge was lim!t.ed to 1 1mall area or parkway grass. Mesa Planning Commissioners Face Brief Agenda Pnstponement or a ma jor rezoning peti- tion on 30 acres of land r1ear Orange Coast College. and a delay recommended on three among aeven other items leaves the Cm!ta Mesa Pl1nning Commission wlth 11 brief agenda tonlghl. The mee.Ung starts at 7:30 p.m. in city council chamber!. Intensive study of various factors in- volve<! in the Leadership Homes Inc. pro- ject on Harold T. Se.gerslrom land at the northwest corner of Adams Avenue and Fairview Road will be required before it comes up again ror hear ing, according to planning olfici11ls. Segerstr om 111 asking that the land ht r«lesignated for R-4 mul tiple residential dtve\opment. It is currcnUy wned for in- dmtrial or m11nufacturlnR use. Specific ph1ns outlined l11st week before the Coast C-Ommunily Cnllege District show 843 units with 11~ much as 2.276 residents wh-0 would generate more than 5,000 auto trips per day. Traffic nnw is but one of several aspect.s or the project recommended for additional city study prior to a hearing on the issue be.fore the commission and city council. Cty planners uy a variety of utility and other easements crisl!CJ'osslng the property will also contribute to difficulty in its e.vcntual development. One other factor in requesting a hear- ing rlelay is thal. while the cily's General Pinn for 1000 recommends tht land for high density conslrucl.i1Jn, the profX)!'IP.d project may be revised to lower den3il.y. Prohlems with suffic:icnt. schn(lls in the Brea for chlldrf!n who w-0uld live there were also cited when the project came up for hearing before arKI was pos1pnned. The planning sl.11ff'11 recommendation is to study and resolve six differtnl. ~spects of the application hffore passing It on to cnmmls.,ioners for 11clion. "T"tw!y includ~ submission of s m11ster ph1n for the entire package, study of utill· ty services. study or all easements on the land. population forecast ind ill Impact on area school!, consideration of fire department service& required • n d determination of wht:U)er fees should be paid, or J and ·don1ted·by_developers for a neighborhood park. Baoed ~lving the various pn> blems. pl1nning staff rtcam· mends eve approv1I of t.he zone change. Zont exception permit! for two pre- .schools 1lso are on t-Onlght's agenda. but one or them will probahly be conllnued at the Wl!f'!I r~mmend1lion. Additional study h' needed for lhe re- quest by John 1nd 111.z.el M1goffln to bui ld such a faclllly at 2950 Mr:Cllntor:k Way in l'I commercial zone, with 11 mu· \mum of 70 enrollee!J, 1ccording to plan- ning offici als. The Magoffin!!, 3111 Mace Ave .. would op«ate the school weekdl'IYI from 11:30 IS.. PLANNERS, Pa&< Ii , Trustees Slate 'Goals' Meeting Newport-Mesa Unified School District tru!ttts will bold • apecb.l meeting at 7 o'c:k>ck Tue!d&y to review the diatrlct goal! and objecUves, the data proceJslng study and the 11"1t~72 district budget. Tbe board will meet in the lyceum of C:O.ta Mesa High School. A $30.5 million prt1iminary budget draft was presented al the· June 14 meeting of t.hfl board. 'ruesdaJ'a con- sideration Is expected to lnr:Jw:le a recom· mendatlon on 1alaries for leeching Md non-teaching personnel. A recom· mend1Uon for classified -non-teaching JStaft -will be received from the district Personnel Commission. The te:nt11lve budget document which Is not expected to receive ftual board 1p- provtl untJI the July R tn.1!Jtee meeting, rail.!: for 1 21kent per t lOO tu lncre1se. --• -..--,ol;1, • Today'11 Final N.Y. Stoelul TEN CENTS 0 Crowd Sees Police Slay Assailant NEW YORK I UPI) -Joseph A. Colombo Sr., reputed leader of one of New York's five Mafia families, was shot in the head and critically wounded by a black man today at an Italian -American Unity Day rally . The young gunman wa s shot and killed by police as a crowd of several thousa.M "alched in stunned silence. The assailant was not immediately identified. Witnesses said Colombo. 48, was mov· Ing among a crowd of well-wishers toward the speakers platform when the gunman gra bbed him by the neck, spun him around and shot him in lhe head. The gunman, carrying a camera and wea ring wha t appeared to be press credentials, had been standing nearb)' with a black woman, the witnesses said. He was in his early 20's and wore green trous~rs and a green shirt, they said . Both Colombo and the gunman Were taken to Roosevelt Hospital a block away. A priest administered the last rites of the Roman Catholic Church to the wounded man in the emergency room. The shooting happened at about 11 : IS a.m., 45 minutes before the scheduled r;tart of the Columbus Circle rally organized by Colombo and his son, Anthony, 27. Speakers pleaded with the crowd t() remain calm and not to leave the area. Anthony Colomho had pre.dieted !50,000 pe.rson1 would attend the second annual Unity Day rally but the crowd only nwnbered several thousand at that point. The y-Ounger Colombo had said the demonstration was "for ordinary people to show pride In their heritage and love of their counlry." The !peakers platform and building! in the area. including the hospital. were draped with red, black and green flags and bunting in honor of the obser.vance. Colombo, a f()undcr or the Italian American Civil Rights League and the m-Oving force behind the Unily Day observance, was admitted lo Roosevelt Hospit.al "in critical condition with a gunsh()t wound of the head,'' a hospital 5pokesmao said. The spokesmen said "a male dead on a rrival" also was brrw1ght to the hospital. UPf Photographer Dirck Halstead said the gunman pumped "several shots into Colombo's head as he was moving I.award a crowd of well-wishers near the speakers dais. "There was a brief exchange of gunfirll!! between the police and the assailant, who !~II lo the pavemPnt bleeding from the back," Halstead sa1rl. Another ~·itnes.,, Cart Cecora . !airl he ~aw a black photographer wearing what appe11.red to he regul11.r pres~ credential~ 111.anding with a black woman near Cnlombo as Colnn1bo trilked to a small group in front of the platform Cecora said he turned away momen· ta rily, heard a shot and saw prople "pouncing on the black photographer.'' He said he then heard six shots in rapid succession. Colombo founded the Ttalia n American Civil Rig~t.s. League after his son, Joseph Jr., was 1nd1cted on charge! of plotting to melt down silver coins for their greater value As metal. The son later was found innocent by a jury. Orange Coast 1'1eather The 5un will peek through the haze again thiJ afternoon and Tuesday, followlng the 1teady diel of Jow clouds •nd fog along the coast. Highs today 70 at the beaches. 80 Inland. Lows 50 t(I 60. INSmlf TODA V The Cotto Mes4 Civic Play· house wi.thtd it.st.If a hnppy siz;th birthdf!y t.hf! other day uJilh members of i!s post 30 productions un hn11d to ctlt· brnte. Set Entertainment. Pa ge 31. IMlll'lt 11 c1u'9 .... 11 1 CllKlllll Ue 1 Ci.•lllr.11 H·• C-ICt t1 c .... ,_.. i1 °""' Netl(f'I • lfltwl•l ,_ • l~lt<lllll-JI.JI ,hll !MI tf.tt 141,.M_ 1' A1111 LllMln IJ ""-•-· lt M11tl111 LI(-t ""'vlft JO..J, Ne"""" Nll'ft 1-J °''-c .. ~,., ' 1¥1'111 ,..,IW M ...,,_ ll·H llKt MlfkM'!. ._,, T1'"491M JI TNi.n »JI w ... ,..., ' Wfllfl Wl tll • w-•1 N.,... l•u WerN N9'ft W c Mandu, June 21. 1!71 State Court Won't Hear Edison Case The Orange County Superior Court may be the next battleground in the 18 month fig ht over expansion £If the Sou thern California Edison's Uuntington plan!. 'fh is move de v e 1 op ed follo"·ing the news that the State Supren1e Court has rehued to hold a new hearing of 11~ f..1ay 26 decision which found that the company required perm its from both the Public Utilities Commission (Pl:CJ and Orange Count y Air Pollution Control Dislrict fAPCDl lo enlarge the facility. 1l1e Court rejeeted the petitions for a rehearing fron1 bolh the company and the. PUC. The PUC last year ordered Edison to proceed with e:.:pansion r\aiming it (the PUCJ had ··paramount jurisdiction" in the case. but the county appealed this (lrder to the State Supreme Court. The court found that neither the PUC nor the APCD h0ad ''exclusive authority'' and that Edison needed permits from bolh agencies. The county district had denied Edison a permit contending that the company's plans did not meet air pollution control regulations. PENTAGON DOCUMENT FIGURE SURRENDERS TO U.S. AUTHORITIES MIT Rese1rcher Daniel Ellsbtrg, right, Hugs Wife Before Arrest Robert Burbank, Edison's Huntington Beach manage, said the rom- pany was now con,idtring petition!ng the Superior Court for a proceeding to determine the "reasonableness and leg ality" of the APCD's action in denying a permit. State Freetvays Still Maintain Legend Status LOS ANGELES {AP ) -The state, which wants to put a freeway within four miles of every location in the sprawling Los Angeles Basin1 has completed 620 miles of the concrete arteries and has 60 more under construction. To make wa y for these roads, more than 250.000 persons have bee n uprooted from their home s, according lo con- servative estimate, and the figure COD· linues to grow at 3.000 families a yea r. The near legendary Los Angeles Freeway system, wllh 14-lane spans and quadruple deck In terchanges. has many other statistics that are just as iitag- gering. Since 1940, the stale has spent roughly the same amount, $1.2 billion, on bu ying rights-of-way as it has -On constructing the freeways themselves. Rights--0f-way purchases this year will run $87 million. Since the state buys up to 10 to 12 years Jn advance of actual construction, this also makes it vne of the largest land- owners, and landlords, in the 1.03 Angele.& qiel.ropolitan jlTea. The state' currently has S,959 parcels, purchased Jor $207 ntillion, available for expanding the freeway systems. It also has 2,622 properties for which it is receiv- ing rent. They range. from single family houses to motels and parking lots. The state also sells a Jot of excess property. Engineers now figure roughly 40 acres for a mile of freeway and 80 acres for an interchange. But that varies according to the number of lanes, lane width, shoulder width, wid th of the median strip and !O forth.. The slate now has 1,381 parcels of land valued at $4 .2 million left over from freeway construction. They range from &trips only a foot "·ide to a 47.S acre pa rcel in Westminster wh1ch the city ls cons idering for a park. It is estimated that nearly 30.000 acres have been consumed by freeways in the Los Angeles. Orange and Ventura coun· l ies region. Combintd, that would cover most of SRn Franc isco. .r\levertheless, slate Rcqu1s1tion (If more lan d for freeways continues at its record pace. although there are signs it inay !low down. DAILY PILOT Roh •d N. w,.d ,.rn Otlll tl'>ll ,.V~IVW J adr. R. Curl•v \lie• ,.,Uidtnl ar d G....,.tl M-otf Tho"'"' K, ... ;i Eoo:or C~6rl•1 H. too1 Ri•l.o,d !I'. Nall "'""""· M1na111nu Eo.10•1 Co110 M••• Office • llO Wt1I !1y Str1o l Maili"9 Add r•n: P.O. Bo1 !SbO, 92b2• Other Offlc•• N-oort &Mtll: W C Nrwto•t ll>u'tvlfd Ltllun1 8t1cl'I: 71'. Ferru •vtnue 11..,.,,1ng1o.1 Sr1<ll: ;111: 1!11~~ llou lt•••ll S.fl Cle""'"N: JDS r.ortll El (;amonQ 111.•tl l•'""" 111•1 642·4)21 Cles1lfittl Atl• .. tltl•• 642-1671 COll•'""t, 1111, Ortnv• cont rvb•ftlllnt '""'"'""' tf< ntw• \!0•111. 0Uu11rlll0"'• tdllOflt ! 'm1•11• ., ad•f'"lt•,.,..." lltrl ll> ""'"f be •~ProdlltM wl'l!'IOul 11>1(111 f*• "'"-kin •· <otl~•lt'I· O*M'i'· '«O'd (llU 0011 ... p1lol I I ill•..,,.... lleK lt Ind (O"I M.,..., (1!~11, lultKflp!lo<I lw tt,.,.I..-'2.U ..,.,..,,,1 t>y "''II ll.IJ .._..,1.,, n\olllllrt ftlll""•-· •~JI """''"''· From Pagel ELLSBERG ... courts and TraYers' office. He wore a huge smile and dark pinstripe suit, blue shirt and dark tie. He kept his arm around his wife Patricia as lhey tried to get inside the building. Steinbeck Fil1n Screened at VCI The film Yersion of John Stelnbeck·s novel "The Grapes of Wrath '' will be screened at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. today in Physical Sciences room HM at UC Irvin e. For the admission of SI Hlmgoers wilt also see a chapter of the series "Fl<ish Gordon Conquers the Universe " The science fiction series will play along ~'ilh the remaining films of the summer pro- grams. Other films to be sho11•n in July are-: ''The List of Adrian /'11essenger." July 2; "Little Rascals, Laurel and Hard y,\\'. C. Field~. Keystone Cops." July 9: ··Alt Quiel on the \Vestern Front." ,July 12; "Tel/ Them Willie Boy is !!ere,"' July 16: '"The Caine t.1utiny," July 19, and "Alice in Wonderland," J uly 2J. From Page l PLANNERS. •• a.m. to 6 p.m. for chi ldren 2 1~ to 6 years, throughout the regular school year. Gerald G. Gist. 2\tl Valley Road . is re· questing permission to (optrate a Chns- t1an-0rienled preschool in an existing building at lha! location. for 50 children \\"Ce kda)"s in two class shifts Planners are recornmend1ng appro1 al of the project in a medium dtnsity residentia l area. subject to compliance with the Cll)'s controls on preschool operation. Taking Five In den ying the petitions for a rehear- ing this week, the state court modified ii!! opinion to incorporate new language on how Edison might challenge the APCD's regulations and it is understood that the petition to the Superior Court will cite this modification. Krishna Groups Stage Religious Parade in SF SAN FRANCISCO (UP!l -1-lare Kr ishna followers, pulling tlvee 45-foot hi1t:h juggernauls. chanted and danced their 1vay through Golden Gale Park on Sunday in their firth annu al re\igiotui parade. "Hare Kr ishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama •lare Hare" 11·ent the chant that believers sav leads a person into lhe inner folds of Krishna con- sciousness. \Vea nng sarlron colored robes. the believers also pulled a!ong 1vith ropts a 20.fool. high statue of !...-Ord Chaitanya. ln- di11n mystic who deY ised the. chant. There we.re some 300 of the believers and a crowd estimated at 3,flro taking part in the two-mile parade that left a !rail of incense among the park's shrub- lined lakes and trees. A.. C. BhaktiYedanta Swami. who found- ed the religion in this country, spoke hrieny both at the start and finish of the march which v.·as attended by Mrs. Vlorence Douglas. mayor of nearby Vallej(l •·1 feel the Krishna people are the servants of C.od." th~ mayor tnld the ga!hering. ··They're y,·orking unselfishly and doing very good work to help ease. !he problems of today's youth." "\Ve all have the power of pra~·er. This i~ lhe only thin g thafs going to ~aye this i;:eneration." , " • I Ul'I ToltloMll 'Young Peler Smith had enough on a Detroit f11mil y outing Sunday. deciding dad's shouJder \VAS the besl place to nap. \Vith bis pacifier in his mouth he dozed on daddy's back. oblivious to the world around hi'l) ll' ar Goes On \Vi th crucifix hanging from his neck. GI Jugs hi s "·capon bar k _lo sand-bagged Firebase Barbara after a palrol near the Dl\tZ . Vlhile co ntroversy continues here at horne on the secret paper l'aper, the \\'ar in Viet nam goes on. See story. Page 4. Would Visit Reds Agnew Opens Globetrot With China Comm,ents AGANA, Guam (U PI) -Vice Presi- dent Spiro T. Agnew said today he "'ould like to visit Communist China despite that nation 's "basically hostile" attitude lo the United States. AgneY.'. opening a JO.nation world tour. landed in Guam for an O\'ernight stay before fly ing on lo Seoul to represent Pre5ident Nixon at the inauguration of President Park ('hung lil'e .July 1. Ile lelt early Sunday from C.:alifornia and stopped briefly in Hong!ulu. 1'he \lire President said ' I <·crla1n!.v \1·ou!d enjoy visiting ~1ainland China." as his plane winged towards Guam . he told journalists he had a "~real curiosity" about China. Despite its "basically hostile" attitude . ""nf'1v said "!o visit and to confer ... · would he quill' a priuilege." 'f'his is Agne w's third journey abroad as \•ice president and wil l take him to Singapore. Kuwait. Saudi A r a bill , Ethiopia, Kenya, the De mo c r a I i c Republic or the Congo. Spain. ~1orocco and Portuga l in addition to South Kort'a. Jn Soulh Korea he wa s prepared to d1sruss the queslion of ROK troop 1\'i!hdray,·als front South Vietnam South Kore;i has announced it "ants lo pull nut onP di\'ision -about 1'5.000 men -of its 48.000 troops force before the end or the year. Agnc1v told rc1)()rters th<11 the ob- jectives or his d1plomal1c n11ss1on on behalf nr President Nixon 11·ere "rea lly qu11e general " "Principally. the objective is to touch base in a d1plom<1tic sense and to take son1e confidrntial n1P ssages from the pre3i dent lo th e ch1ef.o; or stale of tho~c roun!ries -nothing of any tremendous n1oment hut just a continui ng effort to rn11 intain lhc best pos~ib!e liaison ·with those chiefs of state ' Agnt'"' will spend four days in Korta 1111xing the ceremonial aspects of the in· auguration and some se nsitive discll.Ssion with lop Korean leaders on a 1 ariely of issues. lie m1~ht also n1ec\ 11 ith rlell'gat1ons from other nations attending the in· augur al. The \'ll'l' pre~iUent said he c:.:pe('I C'(I lo sec Park but added hi' 11a~ looking lor·w11rd principally lo meeting the ne\v :-:;outh Ki1rean prime 1nin1str r Kim ('hong f'll .. ,Ve 'IJ bf' thrre Jong enough tn diseu~~ ius t ;ihout c1·ery1l1111g that IS or inf Ptest between lhe f\\'o countries." Agnew s;iid. He riddcd i! ll'oulrt prob11bly include Korea's inlen!ion to y,•ilhdraw eventually its 48,000 bal!le-!esled lroops fro1n Vir!~ nam. including one division of about 15.000 before the end of the year. Burglar Nets Si nger's Duds A Co•t<i illesa t'fluntr\ 11nd ~·estern <'111Prt111nPr Inst 111nrt• than 211 items of t'lnthing \\"flf\h SR:'iO In a hur~l<ir o\·er lhe \\'eekend. 111clud1ng a hlack·and·11hite, !nngC"d ;1nd "Pfl111nNl singing ("O"tlln1e Hradforrl J) Horton .Jr , 39. of JfiO Vic· 10ria St . told police hi~ 11 par1rnrot door 1~as unlockl'd bu1 !lie intrudrr rhosr to lorcr his "';1y in !hrou.':h a hedroorn win· dn11 Off1crr Grorg_" \\'ebsl rr s:.1d Jlortnn·.~ lo~s included ~C\'eraJ pair~ of ll'Cstern trnu~er~. :i $125 pair of C'owboy bonts and a n1ono~ran1cd ~h1r1 embroidered with 11·agnn whrrl~ and ,1;u1t;ir~. Thr bur~lrir also ~lol r 11 pa ir nf his d;iughter"s pants Expert Watch Repair Slrip Blast }{ills Four Navy Men NORFOLI\. Vci IAP I -Four ~a1'y rnen 11·ere killed and seven injured tonay 1n an rng1nr roo111 explus1011 :11>011rd 11 l' S. \'PSSt'l operating off ~ iuR11tanan1tJ Ha y. (uba, Allantir F'leet hPadquartc r~ her(• ~a id. A spokesman for the Allaritic Fleet Amphibious Force said the t"Xplosion ()('• ('Utred 11bnard the an1phlhious transport doc k USS Trenton a.s thr vessel was undergo1og ~ha ke.down trau11ng about l\.\n 111iles south of the f;uanl<inamu na\tc.l sta· ! ion , The 11;i111r~ ul the drad ;ind \11Jured \1('r'l' withheld by the !\<ivy pending f\Ullfication Of nCJt.! o[ kin. l-iix o! thr ui1ured \1erc t'Vacuatcd !o lhe naval hospital at Guantanamo, lhf' r-.·a\"y said. while !hr seven th "'"·~ !re&ed on board the 'J'rcnton. The Trenton returned to port under he r own power. The NaYy said lt was in· vestigating to determine the cau!C of the explosion. Huntington 4th Sho'IV Scheduled lluntington Beach residents \~·ho want 10 1ake in a fireworks show on Independence Day ""ill be able to vie\9 the official city show \1·h1ch "'Lil begin al 8,30 p.m. at the pier. No other fire\1·orks display~ \VIII be allo"·ed from any -Of the city or state beaches in Huntingtor. Beacb. Lifeguard Capt. Douglas D'Arnall today noted that fireY.'Orks are prohibited fr om the eight and a hall miles of slate and ci· tv run beaches in Huntington Beach. "If Peopl e want to see fl rew orks on the bfach. they're more lhan welcome to lhe official sho"'·" he said. The ci ty's annual Fourth of July parade "'ill be held on the fifth of July this yea r. It is scheduled to begin at 11 :30 a.in. at Lake Park. Garbage Men See k Su1n111ons Thc long ar1n of the law may # soon be reaching do1\'n from g;irbage trucks. A proposal to give offieials of the General Services DrparTment . in· ('luding the reflL~e roren1;-in and his iis~i stant. !he authority to issue tic kets to residents wh o f::iil to follow d1pos<1I rules will go before the Ne y,·porl Beach City Council tonight . Acting City ~1 anager Philip F'. Bettencourt said the men woul d have the authority to wr ite cit a- ti ons to people who don't have lids for their cans or "'ho put things like building materials in then1. He sai d the authority would ex- tend to ticketing persons tor illegal dumping and tampering with beach receptacles. Student Head Slain Si\!(;O:\ !AP• -A pro.govcrnrnent :>1 udent leadrr was .~hot <inrt ki1J er1 todav In a Saigon Uni\'ersits court~·ard JO da.\"·S 111ler he \vas named deputy chai rman 'of 1he Saigon Student lJnion . \\"itncsses said Le Khac S1nh Nhut "'as 11·n1111~ 11n exami nation in a lrcture room 11hrn someone told him. "Yflur mother wants to see you outside ." \\'he~ he f'nlered the C'Ourtyard, t11n young mr n :-hot him and flpd after fir ing ;it ol11cr ~1 udl'nts \\·ho tr if'd to prc venl thei r rsce.pe. Rings Redesigned WATCH REPAIR SPECIAL e Cleaoed e Oiled s59s e Adjusted R19~11• • EIKtTlcahy Ttmtd W•t(~ WATCH REPAIRING DONE ON PREMISES We buy our •ing mounti ng s d irect from ring casting house s and have them finish ed by specialis ts, thus en<"Jb l;ng us to sell to you for less . DOM RACITI Jewelry Repair at it's finest 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SELL, TU.DE 1838 NEWPORT' BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA COME IN AND HOWSE AROUND PHONE 646-7741 lttWtlft Heritor & lroctdwoy I l ' 7 7 \ . ". Today's Final Saddlehaek N.Y. Stoeka EDITION * VOL. b4, NO. 153, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 28, ·197f TEN CENTS Joaquin Trustees Study Merit Pay Proposals Trustees of thf.'. San Joaqu in Elemen· lary School D1slnct. who have Yowed to implement a meril·pay system for all district employes, are currently studying proposals submitted by three entploye groups. Administrators, c I a ! s i fl e d , a nd rertificated employes all haYe drawn plans which spell out how an employe is to be judged worthy of a salary ad- vancement. Every school district employe recently received automatic salary increases Heu.ring Tonight based on the nuntber or yt>an; in the district and number of additional college credits earned. San Joaquin"s trustees are intent on eliminating a system v.·hich provides automatic increase!! and repl:ice it v•ith one that bases advancement on merit. Just how teaching merit is fairly guag- ed is something of a classic enigma in education. The San Joaquin Teachers' Associ ation has gone on record as being opposed to the adoption of a merit program. The group has 1taled that the ~· ogram would result in a less satisfactory educational environment which would be detrimental to the welfare of the students. But in c<lmpliance with board in· slructions, the group has prepared recommendations concerning procedures for teacher assessment, teacher evalua- tion, termination procedures, and iden- t1fication of salary levels. 'fhe group outlines three salary levels. The first level would be those who do not meet expeclalions for reemployment aJtd • a 1a , Capo Budget Unveiled A public hearing on the proposed 1971· 72 San Juan Capistrano city budget will take place at tonight's meeting of the Ci· ty Council at 7 p.m. in the council chambers The $3,306,329 budget is inflated lh is year by a $2 million capital improvement project funded by agencies of the South East Regional Reclamation Authority (SERRA I. r-.tcmbcrs ol the City Council have been revie wing the budget for several weeks. But no action has yet been taken on a proposed ~ix percent cost of llving salary increase for most city employes, In a memorandum to the City Council, City Administrator Donald G. \\'eidner said that in 1968, laborer p:isitions were given a 5.5 percent cost of living increase and in 1970 all employes were given a fl.5 percent cost of living adjustment. F'or that reason he is recommending that classified employes receive compensation this lime. If approved the increase in salaries would arnounL lo approximately $10,399 in this year's budget. The largest budgeted expenditure will be for police services. The city contracts with the Orange County Sheriff's office for police protection at an estimated cost for the roming year of approximately fl50,()()(}. The police budget al so contains an additional $25,000 which will be used lo hire a Director of Public Safety and to purchase minimal equipment ne<:e$· sary for the formation of the city's own Clemente Sewer Project Gets Top Federal Grant A m<1jor project to provide sewer lines from San Clemente to San Clemente Bluffs Stale Beach ha s made a top priori· ty list f\lr federal water quality grants, but the future of the major collector in San Clemente as the key link in the svslem is more murky. · Cily Engineer Phil Peter said \ate last v.·rek that the S220.000 grant from !he federal government for the portion of the lines in San Diego County is a certainly fnr approval. RUI ;i ~ln1ilar granl appl1 c:alion fnr a ba<lly needed hitercrptor line hooking into the state 1nain anrl ]l'ading the length nf !he r1tv tn lhe ne11· reclamation pl<int is nn a third l1s1. "Usually. it mca11s tha! heing on the. t'.11rrl list is of 1011· ririorily, hut I honestly lhink the San Clemente interceptor grant ,,·ould have to be approved H the state llne were to be installed.'' he i;aid. If the city's grant. which would cover 11 Sf'V.'age collector costing nearly a million dollars, were not funded, then the lines from the bluffs beach would dead.end . The grant for the bluffs collector main And four pump stations was placed on the annual top priority list during recent Orange Coast "'ea Cher The sun will peek through lhe ha1.e again this afternoon and Tuesday. following the steady diet of low clouds and fog along the coast. Highs today 70 at the beaches, 80 inland. Lows 50 to 60. INSIDE TODAY The Costa !.leso Civic Plau· hou,5e. wished itself o hnppy sr.rfh, hirthday the. other day with memher!! of its post 30 production! un "hat1d to cele· bratr. Set Enterta1nme11t, Page 31 . ........ ,. Ctlltef"'' I Cl>K\lllt Ut f Clt ull...i ll·M (t'"I•• II , ....... .,. ,, 0...111 Niii<•• f 14\ltrlll •••• ' '""''''"'"""' ,.,,, l'lllo"(t H•tt Mlt"lt(fH 14 """ l.t lldtrt 11 M.ilM• II M•rrll .. Llt.lllM• f Ml~ln •n NllllMI N1-.. "I Orl"t• CevMy t ,,,via ..... ,... • '"'" ll·H llKll Ml l"ttlf. 1'•lt T1!r<lll°" » ,, .. ,,.,. •rt ···-4 Wft!M Wt\11 1' Wlf!ltll'I NtWI 1J.1J Wlrll llkwl +S hearings or the state water quality con· tro1 agency in San Francisco. San Clemente's application fnr federal and stale funds also was submitted, but prelirrunary infonnation showed that because (If semantics and o t he r tcr.hnical factors, more work might have to be made on the city's 11pplication. If the main is bullt, it would occupy a trrnch the l!"'nglh of El Camino Real. The main v.·ould insure adequate sPwage capacity for thr estimaled aoo .noo ~lille park users each year, plus an· rlr1riatcd .i::ro\ving r\c1Jelopn1cnt in 1he SOltfh enrl of the c11v The citys overburclenerl rx1~1lng line. runs alon~ the beaches In flan Clemente, rutting inl;ind in the North Beach area to the new $2.6-million sewage treatment plant. Peler said that an allied project to the st ate sewer main. piping of San Clementt city water to the new bluffs beach, is rapidly nearing the end to negoliatlons. State and cily officials ha ve been discusing plans to furnish city water to the new beach which lies several miles downcoasl of lhe San Clemente and Orage County boundaries. ·•Jt looks like !he entire matt.er will be received soon," Peter ~aid "and all lhat vd!l remain is the Installation of the lines to the beach." If both sewer and water service is con· necie<l lo the bluffs beach, development of r'lre Marine Corps acreage which might go into pubUc hands would be. swifter. Currently, 3,400 acres of San Mateo Ca n· yon, plus 2.5 mile.s of beachfront from the San Onofre generating complell" to ttie Western White House are the objtct of surplus proceedings by the federal government. A decision on whether the l<tnds will become puhllc slill is pending from the Deparlml!nt of Defense. Thu& far. a Congressional Committee has recommended against any public ust'l of the canyoo, t1nd a lease arr11ngement for the bea ch section-excluding the enlisted men's health club and the San Onofre Suri Club parcels. Weed Killer Banned WASHINGTON !UP11 Tho Environmental Prolec\lon Agen cy Sun- day announced a tolal bAn , effective In 30 day&, on lhe cropland use of Amitrole, 1 weed killer Involved ln the 1959 cre:nberry cancer scare. police department. The council has during lhe past fe'lf weeks trimmed man y ite.ms and stretch· ed others. The city learned that It would not ha ve to pay for fire protection for which they contract with the county. Charges for fire protection will be part of every resident's county tax bill. But is also learned lhat another con- tract county service, building and safety, will no longer be sending the city part of the fees it collects for pennits. The budget, as it now stands, will need 11 tax rate of $1.20. This includes 90 cents for general purposes and 30 «nl• for bond interist and redemption . The lax rate is the 1ame as it was when the ~ity incorp:irated in 1961. Dowta the Mission Trail Diaper Derb y Set in Viejo ~11SSION VIEJO -There art-bound lo be some changes made after thi.5 year'• t<.llssion V1ejo Derby The contestants, after all . are in the dia~r ~eL The Diaricr Derby will take place June 29 bet~·cen I and 2 p.m. al the Marguerite Recreation Center. Racers will be in five categorie11: 11ix month and under, seven lo nine month~. 10 to 12 months, 13 to 15 month.5 and 16 to 18 months. Each contestant is allowed one toy for the race. For Information call the derby committee al 837~. • Hospital Dlrertor LAGUNA HILLS -Tom Winget, presi- dent of the Saddleback Valley Chambe.r of Commerce. has bet'ln named a director of the new Saddleback Community Hospital. An El Toro banker, Winget is 1 former president or the Dana Point Olambe.r of Commerce 11nd a former trustee of the Capistrano Unified School Di~trict. Winget Is married, has four chlldrtn, and resides In Dana Point. • Tree Donor• EL TORO -When Parklane Residtn- tial SchoOI opena in July the grounds will be Juli of trees donated by various civic and philanthmplc OrganliaUon•. Recent donor5 of funds to the "plant • tree" project are: the Irvine Junior Women's Club, San Clemente Garden Club. Ranchn Viejo Women's club, Laguna Hills Retired Teachers Club and Mercury S1vlng11 1nd Loin of Tw:t,in. Anyone wtshlng to donste 1 ftvl!: or 10 gallon. tree with sprinkler for $30 or lea• can call Claude Lindquist at the facility on 2.3«2 El Toro Road. Memorial treea also can bt donated. I for whom termination Is recommended. The second level would mean the teacher meets e1pectations I o r reemployment and should be placed on the present salary schedule including yearly increments and additional ad· vancements for cost of Uvin.11: and college credits. Those placed on the third level would exceed expectations for reemployment and would receive additional com- pensatloo beyond the regular salary. Teachers would be assessed by prln- cipals and their performance would be reviewed in a conference. Probationary teachers would be assessed twice and others, onece yearly. Evaluation would be based on how well a teacher directs learning including how v.·e!l he or she plans for instruction, centers classroom control on pupil needs, uses appropriate Instructional techniques. utilizes effective room environment, and knowledge of her su bject matter. Performance would include how the teacher evaluates pupils, how often and how well he or she participates in cur- er OAIL Y l"ILOT .. ~ON> IJr lltldilrd ICMllltt Goodbye, Mr. Agnew MicheUe Strauser, six·month·old daughter of Marine Lan ce Cpl. and Mrs. \V iUlam Strauter, has a smile and tiny wave goodbye for Vice President Spiro Agnew. He left El Toro Marine Corps Air Station Sunday for month·long world tour. r.1ichelle was in the arms of mother for the departure. See story. Page 3. Sa11 Cle1nente Firefighters Battle 10-aci·e G1·ass Blaze A ~lubbom brush fire v.·h1ch officials said was del iberately set charred Iii acres or thick growlh near the new Shorec!iffs city reservoir Saturday night in the. northern part of San Clemente. Volunteer firefighters from San Clemente and Doheny departments fought the hot blaze for 1everal hours before quelling flames In the heavy brush. Several firemen 11penl the rest or the night and early morning finding glowing hot spots in the dense growth. "The exact cause seems Impossible to dct.cnnine," said San Clemente Fire Chief Merton Hackett. "But we're con- vinced lhal the fire was dellbe:rately set." The blaze was the second major grass Ort lo hit the same area within a week. On the previous weekend firefighters fought a blare of similar sire near the cl· ty water tank which is nearing com- plelion. In last Saturd11y'1 fire the names Beach Blulf 11 quickly spread inlo 8 v.•ash known as Rat- tlesnake Canyon. San Clemenl.e fire engineer Don Hodgson fell into a si1·foot-deep hole con- cealed in the brush of the canyon . He pulled himself out. using his fire hose as a line. No injuries were reported among the firefighters, however. Tobacco Supply Cut ROME (AP) -Italy's 60,000 govern- ment tobacco 1hops, the only places where ciga rettes are. sold legally, were closed today by a 24·hour strike. The tobacconists complained that the government charged too much for tobac· co sod was opening too many new shops. They said the only way to beat the com- petition o( I.be black market was to lower prices. riculum studies and college classes, and how well !he teacher gels along with the staff, parents. and his or her observalfon nf adm inistrati ve procedures. If termination is recommended the teacher will have opportunities for review and will have a procedure to fol!o\f before tennination is completed. School principals and c I ass i fi e d employes also have developed programs for assessing their work. The board is currently studying all the proposals and will acl on them during their Cirst meeting in July. 0 Crowd Sees Police Slay Assailant NEW YORK (UPI) -Joseph A. Colombo Sr .. reputed leader of one of New York's five Mafia families, was 11hot In the head and critically wounded by a black man today at an lta!ian·American Unity Day rally. The young gunman. was shot and killed by police as a crowd of aewral thousaad watched in stunned silence. The assailant was not immediately identified. Wi tnes1es said Colombo, 48, was mov- ing among a crowd ol welJ.wisherr toward the speakers platform when the gunman 1rabbed him by the neck, spun him around and shol him in the head. The gunman, carrying a camera and wearing what appeared to be pre53 credenlials, had been standing nearby with a black woman, the witnesses said. He was in his early 20's and wore green trou.~ers and a green shirt, they said. Both Colombo and the gunman were taken to Roosevelt Hospital a block away. A priest adminis l.ered the last rites of the Roman Catholic Church to the wounded man in the emergency room. Child Molest Suspect Beaten By Marine Peers A you ng Camp Pendleton f..farine 11ssertedly dlsCQvered molesting a 3-year· old San Clemente girl received frontier "just.ice" from an angry group or his peers over the weekend . They beat him. Police said the incident occurred late Saturday night on Avenida Pelayo. The little girl'1 mother told officer1 1he noticed the man mole1ting her daughtel' in a bedroom . The assailant ned. when be saw the mother. Moments later officers received a call of a "man down" on a lawn in the same neighborhood. They found the asserted molester bleeding from cub and bruises and ap. parently under the influence of drugs. Other Marine.5 at the scene told poli~ they chased and beat the man . The Incoherent man was taken by am· bulance to the Naval hospital on Camp Pendleton for treatment of minor wound.I and drug into1Jcation. Police are considering several charges egalnst the man, tbey said. On of re Opens· W ed·nesda.,-. Stale Parks officials loday forec1st a 1moolh openin1 Wednesday of the new San Onofre Bluffs Beach, but Issued a stem waming to users of the scenfc area not to bring nreworU. kau11e of tht brush covered bluf!tops on the 3.S.mite stretch of beach coupled wllh the h1cll: of w•ter. brush fires would be especially devastating. officials warn· •d. Are• Park! Manager Jewen Caughell 1ald that flreworka are binned at all state· parks. "We'll have signs at the entrance in. forming persons of the ruJn and we lho are t.s11ulng an urgent plea to av'eryone that they leave fireworks at home." The ~nic coastal park. ceded to tbe st.Me on 1 25-year ·1e1ae recmtly,. will be open for c&mpil'li along tht 1houl4ar of old HlaJiway ·101, and fo r day beach use, via steep, graded trallJ: ltadlng lo the beach bf.low. · D1y use fees will be $1 per car, and camping will cost $3 per night. Concession It.ands for food and drlnka wlD be aet up, but no plumbing-thUJ no running water -it provided. Sea Kist Entf:rpriRJ, which operatt• conOO&&iorui at RunUngton Beacb Slate Park. w\11 operate the tummer use of tM bluff!! beach. Caughell 1tressed the firework,, also wlll 'be prohlhlted on San Clemente State Park acreage and beach as wtll ., tbe Doheny State Beach. Pyrotechnla ire 1WI aJlowed on COl.Zb- ty and city beaches. • • . .. f~~y PILOT Mondt1, Jurtt 28, 1 ~7 1 Lel•ure lf orld A li Praises A llah Parks Or'dinance Court Reverses ·Faces Major Test Clay Conviction A major t.rsl or the coun!y's new local parks ordinance is upcoining following a hearing to be held in the El Toro area on the application of the law to private plan. oed communities. Beach-goers Crowd Sands Along Coast By TERRY COVIU.E 01 tti. D•FIY 1'1111 st11f The waves of people flooding Orange Coun ty beaches over the weekend were considerably bigger than the waves of waler striking the shoreline. Alore than 400.000 sunbathers and swimmers spread their towels and bodies along the Orange Coast Saturday and Sunday, but the surf never peaked above f\vo feet in height. As a result of the poor surf cnnditions l ifeguards had an easy "'eekend making less than 130 rescues both days al all beaches. The most serious incident v.·as reported at Monarch Bay, Sunday. v.•hen a young boy was shot in lhe left leg v.·ith a spear gun v.·hile several youngsters were playing with it on the beach. Steve Shaw. 9. of 30411 Via Alcaza r, Laguna Niguel. was reported in good con- dition after lifeguards removed the straight spear from his leg which had been shot from a Hawaiian sllilg. ln Seal Beach calm prevailed over the v.·eekend where a riot had stirred the liands Thursday resulting in 65 arrests. Police Chief Lee Case said heavy police patrols of the beach Saturday and Sunday apparently kept peace among 15.000 beach goers. A riot broke out on the beach Thursday when several you ths beg an throwing rock.s .and bottles at three Huntington Beach undercover officers when they made an arrest on the beach. Sea] Beach police units rushed to the rescue and arrested 38 pl'rsons Thursday, and ran the arrest total higher on Friday. The rock throwing riot lasted and hour before officers from five cities finally ck>sed down the beach, Case said. All Seal Beach policemen were on duty Saturday and Sunday, wi th many assign- ed to beach patrols. But nothing hap- pened, Case said. Ne wport Beach drew the biggest weekend crowd3 wilh 80.000 Saturday and 85.000 Sunday. The weather was moderate, with af· ternoon clouds and temperatures ranging from a high of only 69 degrees in Sa n Clemente up lo 75 degrees in Newport . Beach and Laguna Beach. Warm waler. however, offset the cooler air. Water temperatures ran from 66 degrees to 69 degrees at all beaches. In J~untington Beach about 35.000 vi sitors went to the city beach each day, 'vhile 18,000 Saturday, and 14,000 Sunday, werf!: recorded-at Huntington State Park. Bolsa Chica state lifeguards counted 10,000 visitors each day. Laguna Beach hfeguards said their at- tendance figures shov.•ed 12.000 on the beach Saturday and 16.000 Sunday. while C"OUnly beaches patrolled by La'luna !ifeguards counted 3,000 and 4,000 Satur- day and Sunday, respectively. San Clemente cit} beaches were the choice of 12,000 swimmers Saturday and 18.000 Sundav. v.·hile 10.000 visitors v.'ent to the cot.ni y he::ich on Saturday and 12.500 went on Sunday . State lifeguards for south county beachei; rrported lJJlOO persons each da v. The state camping p11rk in San Clfmente \\'as also filled all v.·cekend. OI AMGl COAST DAILY PILOT Ou.NG:! COAST f\Jll..lSHINI) ;::OMl'AN'I' kob•rt N. w,.ii l'ra td..,I ,,,.. P...i>ll>lltf' J••\ l . C11,J1v \t1ctl PtnWonl ...... Gtnt<tl MIMOW T~o"''' K•1•il Edit..,. n.0,..,, J.. Mv•p~i"• l1UM91"1 Ed•IOf' Ct.1rlt, H. Leo' 110.~1•.I P. Not! ,,nit1"': Ml~"lftt Edi!""' L .. , .... hKll Offlc• 111 Fe•••t J.•t~u• M•ili119 eddr1u: P.O. aoo l>b&. •11152 S-Cl9Me•r. Offk • J OI North fl c, ... iftt lttt l, t l 61 l OtHr OHien (;~ti M~u · J..11) w .. 1 6•Y ~1,ttt ~fWpo!"I e .. ch; JJJ.l N••Pll'' IU~'l!Vll.,, )t"1!11"111ton eotdl: 1111) l •1<h 1..,.1, • .,d The on-the-scene hearing was proposed by F'iflh District Planning Con1n1issioner Arnold Forde v.·ho argues that substantial questions have been raisf'd on the eligibllity of n1any ft1 cilit1t'S in Rossmoor Leisure World, Laguna ll ltls. The parks ordinance calls for four acres of recre<it1on area Jll?r 1,000 residents be donated by <levelopers or cash lo purehase that ainounl be paid in place or the land. or the four acres, one and a half can be public school grounds, if they are available. Rossmoor Corporation, through its planning e~ecuti\'e Robert Li ndberg, claims that the planned co1nmunity's three clubhouses. a 143-acre golf course, golf driving range and a riding stable and trails should be included in the area's allotment. Forde slates the commission needs ad- ditional guidelines ()n the application of the ordinance to privately owned con1· munities that do not allow public access to their recreational f:iclli!ie.~. UPI Tll~P~OIO WASHINGTON (UP I) -The Supreme Court unanimously threw out !he drart defiance conviction of Io r mer hcavyv.·eighl chan1pion ~1 uhammad Ali today and the fighter declared his thanks lo Allah for the verd ict. The court in an unsigned opinion upheld Ali's rlairn that he was entitled to con~ sclentious objector status from the draft because of his Black f.1u slim beliefs. The ruling said tbe J usllce Department 1~as clearly wrong under the law in denying his religious clahn. In Chicago. Ali, ,,.ho \\'On lhe title under his original name Cassius Clay. said he learned of the 8-0 decision when a stranger ran out of .a. store and told him v.·ith tears in his eyes : "You're free t You're free! The Supreme Court said so." The one--time Olympic champion s11id he would say another prayer thanking Allah in celebration . "l said one already," he told a reporter. He is joined by Planning Direct or Forest Dickason in ruling out golf couri;es, drivlng ranges and riding stables as substitutes for dedicated park land or the equivalent money. PENTAGON DOCUMENT FfGURE SURRENDERS TO U.S. AUTHORfTfES MIT Res earcher Oiln iel Eltsberg, right, Hugs Wift Before Arrest In reversi ng !he conviction of Al i. the Cflurl drcl11rcd: "The I.Justice \ Ot>partmen1 \Vas simply 11TOng as :i n1al!f'r of Jaw in advising that the petitioner"s beliefs 1l'ere not religious- ly based and \\'ere not sincerely held." UPI TeleJhtle The commissioner from 1rvine argues fu rtl1rr that clubhouseii cannot be credi1ed but Dickason says some of the activities found on pubfic park sites are found there so they can be included. Forde asked for !he special hearing on the ground so commissioners could lea rn about such. facilities first hand as the planners will be faced with the same decision in ()ther private communities. Papers Figure Su1·rende1·s To Fede1·al Autl1oritie s The court said 1hat Ali's objec!ion In military duty v.•as based upon "religious training nnd belief". !he test for draft ex- tmpt stalus as a conscientious objector ··in order to qualify for classification as a conscientious objector. a registrant must satisfy three basic tests.·· the court said : 'THANKS TO AL LAH' Former Champ Al i jeclion is sinccrr. ·• The court said Ali met all three tests. The Supreme Court ri!rd f h e July 13 has ~en set a~ the date for the meeting in El Toro. but Forde suggested that it not be held within Leisure World. He estimates that instead o I Rossmoor 's clainYtlf ha ving 12 acres of park or equivalent for every 1,000 residents, only 11 total acres in the com- munity are acceptable under the law . Th.e subject has possibilities of becom- ing so coinplex that the Planning Com· mission may have to send it back to !he Board of Supervisors for a policy decision. Tustin Truste es Set Budget Look At Me et Tonig ht A $9.2 mil!Wn budget requiring a 6.9- ceni ta1 increase for the 1971-72 school year will b~ considered tonight by the Tustin Union High District board of trustees. The board meets at 7:30 p.n1 . In the conference room of Tustin High School. 1171 Laguna Road, 'Tustln . The tentative budget projec1s a 12 per· cent increase in enrollment next year tompared \\'ilh a JO percent increa5e In assessed \•aluaUon. James .!. Farley, district business mana ger said ''bolh in· creases represent a conservative estimate of rowth." "\\'ith the great increase in residential corstruction !akin~ plact 1n the lr\'inr and ~1ission Viejo areas, the pro1ected 1ncrC'ase of 950 pupils m:iy 11·ell be ex - ceeded," Farle.1• said. Of the total tentall\'e tall" ior.rea!iE» J 9 rents is neederl to •·provide for the 1n- cre:tsed operational coi;ti; re qu ired by the an!itipated growth."' FArley said . "An add11ional thrcc--t·cnt increase is rrquired to meet an increased slat<' srhOfll building fund loan repayment" fnr building and equipping Univl'rsity High School. The l'slimated 19il-i2 lax rate is $1.77 prr $100 of assPssrd rciluation . The bulk o! lh r it i m!l11on bud.get in· rrease over 19i0.71 expenditures is due !o an SB00.000 projected incrrt1.se i n teachrrs' salaries. Tea l'her i;a!aries ac- rovnt for $4 5 mil lion of !he budget lotal. Farley notes !he preliminary budget draft includes 40 addilional teaching personnel ''antitipa!OO for growth and special education programs, as well as additional custod ia l personnel."' Despite the irt crease in the teachers' salaries budgel category. Farley nole.!1 the budget does not include pay increases for either teaching or non-teaching staff. Any pay raises that may be grt1nted by the board •·ould have to come from the budgeted reserves. Reserves amount to slightly more than $700,000 in the pro- pnsed bud,11et. down $600,00J from the $1.3 million 19i0-7l fi gure. BOSTON (UPI) -Coming cut or hiding, Dr. Daniel Ellsberg surrendered lo Federal authorities today and admitted giving top secret Pentagon documents on the Vietnam \Var to the New York Times. At a hearing before a U.S. magistrate. Ellsberg, 40, was released in $50,000 bond without su rety. meaning he did not have lo post bail. No plea was entered, The government prosecutor. saying ''the charges generally deal 1vith es- pionage,'' had asked for $100.000 bond "'ith surety. Ellsberg was specifically Public Funding For Parochial Scl1001s Barred \\IASHINGTON !UPI) -The Supreme Court barred states today from earmark- ing public funds for secular education in parochial schools. The precedent-setting decision came in cases from Pennsylvania and Rhode l s land. Rhode Island had a plan to supplement parochial teachers' S.Jlaries. Pennsylva nia v.·as using par! nf tht 11d- m1ssion tax on horse racing and harness racing to reimburse private e!emen lary and secondary schools for the cost of text . books and instructional materials and for teachers· salaries. Later part of the cigaret1e tax v.·as ad- de(t. Tht> courl said bolh statutes 11ere un- l'on~t itulional under !he religion clausl'c; of the firs! amendmen1 brcau.~e !heir cun1ulali1e effect inl'oh·ed l'X('t'~s11·e en- tanglrn1ent between govern1nent and religion. Tn a sf'parale opinion, the rnur! ruled lhcit fed eral con~truclior. gr11n1:; To church-rcla1ed colleges did no! 1·u1!nte the separation of church and state required by the Constitution. Evelle Younger Dinner Slated About 400 supporters are expected lo honor C8hforn1a Attorney General Evelle J. Younger during a $JOO.a-plate dinner Tuesday night at the Balboa Bay Club. t\o speeches are expecled , but Orange County su pporters will have. a chance to meet the victorious allomey general. Funds from the banquel will help pay !or his successful campaign. Art Linkletter will serve as master of ceremonits v.·hile entertainment will be provided by Les Brown and his orchl'slra, Ben C. Deane. M Orange County developer. heads the committee for the hanquet v.·hich begins al 8 p.m. The ban - quet is sponsored by The Friends of Evelle Younger. Trial Progra1n 4-day Work Week Begins at VCI Physical plant workers at UC lrvine 10-said several admlnistratl\'e department.! day began a three-month trial ()f a lour· ()f the campus are studying more ef- day, '40-hour ~·nrk wrek. ficient ways of providing necessary From today through Oct. I, part of the 5Cr\•ices through changed work weeks. physical plant slaff -maintenance The physical plant department is the employes, gardeners, englneerx, painters, f1r~t to experiment with the four-day plumbers. electricians and others -will v.·ork v.·eek. L1ue noted. "'ork Monda}'s lhrough Th u rs days . The adJUSINI "'Ork schedule means a 20 Another part of the staff will start lheir pcrcenl sa,·ing to employes on com· week on T'uesd111ys working through n1ul ing costs. Fridays. All will start at 7 a.m. each day '"The L'n1vers1ty 'e:cpe<'ts to savf!: and Quit at $:30 p.m. Tak ing a half-h()ur lhrough redu ced travel rime bl>twren for lunch. "'hops and work sires. reduced cleanup Both groups thus ••ill h8ve three-day lime and faster complellon of con- Wt!kends. tilhtr Fridays to Sundays ()( ,;!ruction and meintenanct jobs which are Saturdays to Monday1. ',performed by the physical plant depart· Rt1lph Laue, UC! personnel mtinagrr, itnent." Laue said, ~ chargl'd with unauthorized possession and retention of documents "\'Ila! to the na- tional defense."' "I am prepared to answer to all the conscfJuenc.:es .. .''said Ellsberg. If con- \'icted, he faces a niaximum penalty of 10 years' im pri sonn1cnt and a $10.000 [ine. :\lagis-trate Pc!er \V. Prinri con!lnued !hr case lo July 15 for a hearing on Ellsberg·s 1'('n1oval to California where a warr.:in t \ras issued for hi s arrest. As he arrived to surrender as promised lo l".S. All orney Herbert f '. Travers, Ell sherg said he leaked the papers to the press abouL 18 months after giving them lo S('n . J . \Vil!iain Fulbrighl (D-Ark.), "'He mus t sho1v that he is con- scientiously opposed to v.·ar in anv forn1 ... he must !Show that !his oppos.ition is based upon religious training and belief. as the term has been Ci'.lnstrued in our decisions. And he must show that this ob- government's own contession that "there is no dispure that petitioner's professed beliefs "'ere founded ()n basic rcnets ol the ~tuslim religion, as he understood !hem. and deri\'ecl in substantial part from his devotion to Allah as tht> supre1ne being.·· Saddleback E1nplo ye Unit Bids for Raise chairman or lhe po\o,'erful Senate Foreign Saddleback Community Co 11 e g e teach ing staff and determined they Hrtalions Committee and an outspoken trustee!! tonight vlill be asked to approve "deslre to ha\'e thelr salaries tied to the foe or US. involvement in Vietnam t·ost-of-Jivin,, index under the •ame fromhlht' star!. an automatic cost of li\'ing raise proposal 1 " • for classified employes of the district. ormula \\'hich exi.c.ts for cl'rt1f1cated -Ellsberg. senior research associate at teaching -c1t1ployes.'' ''''' ·hu~ctts f s1·1 t ( T h ( Superintedent/Presidenl Fred Jf. 1 ' at · n 1 u e O ec no ogy Dr. Bremer's recomn1endatior1, if ap- t1\1JT), !old nev.·smen · Bremer said !he classified employes proved. \vould not affect salaries to be "All these actions 11·ere clearly in con· association president had polled the non-paid in the 1971-72 school year but would lrad1ction to security regulations, secrecy provide an automatic r~use m !he 1972·73 regula!ions and, even more. the in· fiscal year. 1;1~~~~~n practices of the Departn1ent of Tl1 ttrSlOn ScJ100J F'or the past !wo \C ars. tc<i f'h1ng ~al.:iries h~ve been incrc:tsl1d accDrd1ng !o ··Neverthele~s, I felt <is an American u1creases 111 the rost of living for 1he Los cltizrn. a responsible cili1.en, I could no Computer to Get Angeles area as derermined by the longer r.oopcratt• in concellling this in· bureau of labor stalls1ic.~. forn1arion form tJ1e American publir_ I That mea nt a four percent in!'re;1.'K.' in did thi s clearly at rny own jeopardy. Busy Woi·kotlt teacher salarlrs this year. Brc·n1er noted, "I ~1n prepared to anS\\"f'r to a!l lhe Saddle.back lrustees mee t at 7:4:'1 p.m. consequence.~ of these decisions. That in· f.1onday in the board room , 28000 eludes lhc pl'rsonal consequences to me The computer at Th u r s t 0 n :r.1arguerite Parkway 1n i\li~s\~)n Viejo. and my family, "'hatever these may be . Jntermrdiate School in Laguna Beach \\'ill Other ileins on I.he 11gend11 1nrlurle ap- \Voulc!n't you go to prison !o help end !he soon be used by 1he high school. district proval of 11 $4!.300 budget fiir lhe war"" adminlstrat1on and Capistrano Unified Associllled Student B.1d.v tor the com ini: El/sberi; 1\as accompanied by his 111re School District. as part of expanded com-year. The student body rcce1\'rS fund~ and a 1;11vyel' as he drove up lo !he po~! putcr services progra1n for the 1971 -72 from the sale of ASB c;ards. adn11ssion! of1 1rr building "h1ch houses the federal school year. to specia l ('vent~. as \\'ell as honk stor~ courts ;ind Tr.i\rrs· 1\[l1ce The Laguna d1strlcl reccnlt,\• entered an <ind lunch \1agon sales. Rremcr noted. lie v.or r a huge ~mile and dark agreement "'ilh Capistrano for !he use of The board \l ilt considrr JOltluig !he p1ns!r1pe su1!, blue shin and dark tie. He the computer. Capistrano \\'Lil pay $17.000 California School lloards /\ssociation fnr kept /us arm :tround his \\'lie Patr1c1a as for the compu1er lime. The dislrict v.·i11 the 1971-72 sehool ,1ear at a cos L nf $4!12 the\' tnrd to ge l 1n~idc 1he buildi ng. also receive $16,000 rrom the federal The board has not belo nged to the ··111 !h{' fall or l!Hi!l. I tonk the government next year to CO\'er part nf st;ile\\'Lde organ1za11on for 11111 YC':J r~ re.c;pnr.<,1h1ll1 y on 1ny own in1tiat1\'e of the data proces.c1ing C'OSI. At the request of the Cnmp!on Collc~e de!11·ering to rhe chairman of lhe fore ign The S33.000 in incon1e v.•111 rover the hoard. trustee.c; 1\'ilJ con~idl'r adri p!inn nr r('la!ion~ comnu!1er of The l" S. Sena!P 1.1ajority or the $53.000 cost of running the a resolution barking All 266!! Thr hill !he 1nforn1:1t 1nn f'onta1n('d 1n th(' so-called rl<1ta processin~ £'quip menl , v.·hich will do 1vould rcQuire app ri11·:1l 11[ hnardo:: nf all Pentago11 1•;1p11 'i. including ~everal high school grade reports, transcripts. districts involred in a lrnnsfer of Junior .!>tud1ei; on 11ego11a1inns which h.:ive not ~ludcnt personnel record.~ and district eol!ege district territnrv. brC'n g11·r11 lo an\' 11r11spaper."' Ellsberg equipment inven1ory . Al presenL a pt·tiliofi of 25 percent ror ~aid "Ln11[ thal l1mr. these stud ies have Future uses may include high school the residents or nn area tn hr :innr:.:rd , been tH'('e~s1blc only to mC' and to a few scheduling, emp!oye personnel files and may for ce annexation to ;inother districl . 11!hrr lndl\•idua r~. courses ror tiludents in data processing . Bremer explained. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'--~'--~~---'-~~~~~~ Expert Watch Repair Rings Redesigne'd WATCH REPAIR SPECIAL e cr .... ..i e ORed s51s e Adjusted • ..,,lot, • Et.ctrfccdlJ Timed W•tt• WATCH REPAIRING DONE ON PREMISES We buy our ring moun tings direct from ring c:esting houses o:'1nd have them finished by specialists, thus enabling us to sell to you for less. DOM llACm Jewelry Repair at it's f inest 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY. Sill. TllADE 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MOA COME IN AND IROWSE AROUND PHONE 646· 7741 htw-H-1.ltoadway I I 117 , I I I ii 7 I • : . Laguna Beaeh EDITI ON Teday'11 Flaal N.Y. Stoen * VOL. 64 , NO. 153, l SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 28, '1971' TEN CENTS ' ' ·-~ r ' '. "I'. eat • • • Dogs Take Heed DAll.Y ,.ILOT Stiff PhOI• Signmaker Earl Secor of Laguna Beach finishes lettering new dog ban warning on one of 33 signs that city \Yil1 post. They warn dog O\vners that pooches are not permitted on beach bel\Yeen 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. from June 15 until Sept. 15. Coordinating Council Hosts Musician Groups Six lively musical performances v.•i!I top the agenda at the annual meeting and elections of officers of Lhe Lag una Beach Coordinating Council tonight at 8 o'clock at the high school aud itorium 625 Park Avenue. The public is invited. Featured in the offerings are Judy Pov•ell and child ren in excerpts from the Lyric Opera·s "'Sound of r.1us1c :" the Laguna Beac h Civic. Ballet dancers in "Summer,'' !he hig h school ~lodern 2 Suspects Held In One of T\vo Coa st Robberies Police are l11vcs11~a\1ng lwo robheries In Lai:una Brach over the we ekend. one of which result ed in the quick arrest of lv.•o suspects. Police arrested Roy A. Reynold s, 24 , or Pomona , and Robert A. Smith, 27, of Arcadia. in connection with a S.30 r;trongarm robbery early Saturday morn· ing on Cress Street Beach. Officers said the victim of the crime, Gary Powell, of 289 S. Coast Highway, was robbed only moments before the pair were arrested. Authorities claim Powell identified the two suspects as the same men who held his arms and removed the money from his v.·allet. The second robbery occurred just off El 1'oro Road Sunday evening where a Pennsylvania hilchhiker was robbed of $1~2 al knilepoint by two men . Dance Group : El Morro School students v.'ith Tim Troy in excerpts from .. Mlssiss1 r pi ~1e!ody , '' Henry Curlis, young piano virt uoso, playing "Beethoven Sonata in G:"' and June and Sonny Budd v.•it h Louise Ric hardson in ''A Viennese 1-.lcdley."' i\1rs. Joe A. ! Joy) Dickerson hai. been non1ina ted to serve as president for next year. Olhers nomi nated are Mrs. Robert J oyce, Ist vice president , i'tlrs. Barbara Rabino~·itsh, 2nd vice president.: i'ttrs. Paul (Carolyn) Zehner. reco rd in g secretary: ~1rs. John ~tidaJ Cra\·ens, corresponding secretary, and Peter Andrews. treasurer. Director~ as nominated, are \V ill1am Cook. flilrs . Allen I Doro1hy1 Cran1p, .James Dilley, George Fo11·lcr and Frederirk Schnemchl Ex-0ff1c10 mrmbers a.~ nom1naterl are Roy !lr:ilm of the city counril. and Rill Fish and t-.1ike ~1oormcin of the high school Associated Student Body. SA Police Seek Murder Suspect Santa Ana police are looking for a man who witnesses say shot another man to death in a bar !ale Saturday. The fugitive is Ralph RigglM. SI, whose last known address was a.14 W, Shelley St .. Santa Ana The victim , L. C. Williams. 48 , of 940 \V. Walnut St .. Santa Ana . died of a gunshot wound in the head \Vhil e being rushed to the Orange County Medical Center. The shooti ng took place al the BrlsWI Gardens, 1301 W, 4th St. Suspected Mafia Head Shot Down NE\V YORK (UPI) -Joseph A. Colombo Sr ., reputed leader of one ot New York's five Mafia families, was shot In the head and criti cally wounded by a black man today at an lta!ian·America n Unity Day rally. The young gunman was shot and killed by police as a crowd of several tlmusarid watched in stunned silence. The assailant \\.'as not immediately identified. Witnesses said Colombo, 48, was mov· Ing among a crowd of well -wishers tnward the speakers platform when the i:;unman grabbed him by the neck, spun him around and shot him in the head. The gunman, carrying a camera and wearing what appeared to be press credentials, had been standing nearby with a black woman, the witnesses said . l~e was in his early 2il's and wore green trousers and a green shirt, they said. Both Colombo and the gunmac were taken to Roosevelt Hospital a block away. A priest administered the last rites of the Roman Catholic Church to the wounded man in the emergency room. The shooting happened at about 11 :15 a.m., 45 minutes before: the scheduled start of the Columbus Circle rally organized by Colombo and his 10n, Anthony, 27. Speakers pleaded with the crowd to remain calm and not to leave the t'lrea. Anthony Colombo had predicted 250,000 persons would attend the second &Mual Unity Day rally bul the crowd only numbered several thousand al that point. The younger Colombo had said the demonstration was "for ordinary people lo show pride in the ir heritage and love of their country ." The speakers platform and bui)dingli in the area, including the hospital, were draped with red, black and green flags and bunting in honor of the observance , Services Slated For Ben Brown, • Soutl1 Lagunan Services will be held in Beverly Hills Tursday for Ben K. Brown, 5(Juth Laguna n1otel owner and land de veloper who died Thursday &! the age of 54 ~1 r. Brown was 011•ner of the fa!">h1onable Ben Brov.•n t-.1otor Inn and restaurant and the adjacent Laguna Beach Country Club. 31106 S. Coasl Highw11y. He purchased the goH course in 19~. He huil l the motel in 1963 and ex- panded restaurant operations in 1968 . He hu:f resided at the motel for the past two years after leaving the Beverly Hil!s area. Mr. Brown is survived by his wife, Violet, of the family home: a son, Barry of Van Nuys, three gis ters and one brother. The 11 a.m. services will be held at Pierce Brottiers Olapel. 417 N. Maple, Beverly Hills. Private burial will follow. Mr. Brown, in addition to developing the South Laguna motel complex, was the princip«J promoter of the Five Points shopping center in Huntington Beach. He v.·as also active until 1965 in the Standard Tool and Dye Co . of Los Angeles. The family suggests contributions t.o the Heart Fund. The victim , Terry Brady, told police tie had heen picked up by two men at Broiuh•;ay and Coast Highway. Instead of Laking him lo his destination at Orange County Airport , Brady told officers the guspccts took him to a dirt road just off El Toro Road. The men rl!portedly took Brady'' money, ordered him out flf the car and drove aw ay. Lifeguards Teach Greeter Larsen Said Satisfactory Laguna Be:ich Greeter Eiler Larsen Blill remains in "satis(actory rondition ," 11 spokesman for Veteran!>' Ad.ministra- tion llos pilal In Lona Beach sakl this morning. Larsen, 81 , v.•as admitted tn the hospital I I day~ ago, suffer ing from a mild illnellll 11nd lor.11 of <ippelite . No d11te h;i~ bttn set for his return to the Art Colony. lnstruction In how to get out of a rip· tide or how lll protect fragile lidepool life are just two areas covered during the i;ix week Sea Cub and Mermaid program for youngsters eight through 12 sponsored by the Laguna Beach Li!rguard Depart- ment For the past II summers, the depart· men! has held the llix·we:e:k courses for the Sea Cubs <boya ) and the Merma ids (girls). Classes are held on the beach ror two hours twice 11 week. Thi!! ye11r, under the direction of guard Paul Golfus, youngster!i -65 in all -are receiving training in water aafety, tcology and first aid. "More people art re11eued from riptides than any other water hazard," Golf WI ex· plained. "So we try to get the kids to understand just what to do.·• II caught in a riptide, it's best not to fight it. Go\fus said. "It'll cerry you out a v.•ay and then Jet you go." After being freed . it's suggested to swim parallel to the beach and then head In klw11rd shore. Another major part of the water safety program, according to the instructor. i., to educate young beachgoers in the d;ingers of 1wimming around rock! and rttfs. Not all of the course Is t,f.Jk, Golfus makes aure all the youngsters get plenty of e.xcrcise -mainJy through awlmminC i nd body surfing. everse C•IL y l'ILOT "'"'" i.v tl(lllN 1("11i.r Goodbye, Mr. Agnew Michelle Strauser, six·month-old daughter of Marine Lance: Cpl. and Mrs. William Strauser, has a smile and tiny wave goodbye for Vice President Spiro Agnew. He left El Toro rrtarine Corps Ai r Station Sunday for month,long world tour. Michelle was in the arms of mother for the departure. See story, Page 3. Top of World Residents Polled on Busing Needs Top or the World residents are bein g polled this week in an attempt to determine the need for bus service to the hilltop area. Questionnaires prepared in the office of City J\1anager Lawrence Rose are. being distributed by the Hilltop Homeowners Association by a team of 20 people. Approximately 400 homeowners will ~ asked if they would like bus servic e, how of!en they would expect to use it , the most convenient bus stoPs and the most likely destination areas. Hi!ltoppers president John Di Fiore gaid he also would like to pol[ the 14 streets !hal comprise the Mystic Hills ;irea if volunteers can be· found to disl ribute the quesf1nnna1rrs. Volunteers may call htm al 494·1954, or cont;ict associati on vice president Bob Bartlet! at 4M·l8~. Rose &a id today he mel with members of the Hilltop Homeowners 8 month ago and sought their asslstance in obtaining ''realistic" answers to questions per. taining to lhe proposed bus service. If a real need for lhe service is e.oitablished, the manage.r said, he is gatisfled that it could be provided hy new buses meeting the spttificaliorus written by.the city in calling for bids. La!it week, when the city council met to consider bids from four bus compan ies, city engineer Joseph Sweany surprised councilmen by staling that the specifica· tlons had not been written with regular aervice. to the hilltop area in mind. He expressed the opinion that, while any of the vehicles being considered could safely make the run , maintenance of brake systems would make it pro- hibitively expensive. It was decided to lake all the bids under submission and to req uest statemenl.S from the eng i neer i ng departments of each firm regarding the feasibility and probab le maintenance cost of operating the vehicles on regular hilltop service. Bomb Package 'False ' Alarm A wrapped package making 11 "\l('ry ~!range noise" sparked 11 fl urry of activity in Laguna Beach Saturday morning when Posl Office employes suspected the parcel might contain a Ume bomb. The employes quickly removed the package from the building, the Post Office &noex at 2295 Laguna Canyon Road, and placed it in the center of a vacant lot. Police and firemen rushed to lhe scene. The city manager l'lnd· police chief were informed of the situation. And the bomb disposal squad from El Toro Marine Base was called to disarm the explosive de vice. Carefully opening the packsge, ttie tense Marines discovered a bat· tery operated electric toothbrush, running &moothly and scrubbing the wrapping paper. Water Safety AA pa.rt or the ecology lmtruction, Golfu1 plans to take the classes to tbe marine life refu·aes alOng the city &horellne and ahow the youngsters dlf· rerent form1 of life and explain the im- portance of leaving them In their natur11l habitat. "After all. it takes an awfully long tlmt for things to gtt1w," Golfus aaid. • ''We al.so teach the kids not to Utter a.long the beach aind we encourage them to .spreed the word. We e.~lally try 14) ge~ rid of a• muCh broken glass alcng Utt beach. 11 possible. "If we can make them aware of the lm portMce of not tpoilln( Ill• beach ' while they're young, things wUI ~ a lot better when they get older,"' be said. 'J'reatment procedures for jellyf~h stlng1 and bee, stings -the most com· moh or all beach firsL aid problems -la a\IO given to the Sen Cubs and Merm1ld!. ''We'vt found wet sand 1pplled to tM sling works Just about the best." Golf us said he will give demon11tr11ions of mouth·lo-mouth resuscllatlon and heart massage. &lthougb be doesn't ex.· pect many of the 1tudents to b6 ablt. to practice It, If 1J1y emergency occured. "Although, you never can tell." And, he adda, 1 lot of Urne I• 1pent get- ting the Cub1 and Mermaids lo 1earn the lifegu1rd cmuaency number, 494.f571. ' -· High Court 'Saves' 35 Convicts WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court today reversed the death sentences of 35 persons, including the electric chair sentence of Richard F. Speck, who was convicted of murdering eight nurses in Chicago in 1966. Speck was sentenced to death afttt a jury in Peoria, JU .. convicted him or kill· In g lhe nurses, one by one, In their 1outhside Chicago apartment. In reversing the death penl'l\ty, the court cited its 1968 decision holding that persons exposed to the death penalty could not be excluded automatically from juries in capital cases. It also cited two other precedents in reversing one bloc of 20 death cases including Speck's. Relying on the jury provision known es the 'h.ilherspoon case, and various other cases, the court reversed 3 total of SS death cases and remanded them to lower courts for further proceedings. A third death penalty case taken on for hearing is an appeal by John Henry Furman, under death &ent.ence for the pistol slaying of William J, Mlcke in 1967 in Chatham County, Ga. The other appeals to be beard involved Earnest James Aiken! Jr. of California and Elmer Branch of Tex-a!. This will be the first time the court ha• ever been willing to hear arguments on the "cruel and unusual punishment" line of attack. Oiild MoJest Suspect Beaten By Marine Peers A young Camp Pendleton Marine assertedly discovered molesting a 3-year. old San Clemente girl received frontiei: "justice" from an angry group of his peers over the weekend . They beat him. Police said the incident occurred late Saturday night on Avenida Pelayo. The lillle girl's mother told officers she no!iced the man molesting her daughter in a bedroom . The assailant fled when he saw !be mother. !\foments later officers received 1 call of a "man d0wn " on a lawn in the 11ame neighborhood. They found the asserted molester bleeding from cuts and bruises and ap- parently under the influence of drugs. Other Marines at the scene told police they chased and beat Ute man. The Incoherent man was taken by e.m- bulance to the Naval hospital on Camp Pendleton for treatment of minor wounds and drug intoxication . Police are considering several cbara:es against the man, they said. Orange Caut l\'eather The Bun will peek through the haze again thJs afternoon and TueBday, rollowlng the 1teady diet of tow clouds and fog along the coast. Highs today 70 al the beaches, 80 inland. Lows 50 to IO, INSmE TODAY Ths Co3ta Mesa. Civic Plair h.oust wished it.self a ha.ppJI 3i.xth birthday the other dar with members of its past 30 prod uctions un han<t to cete· bratt. See En.tertoinment, Page 31 . -. (Iii~•"'' • (Mc~in• u, ' eieuui.. ""' C-!Ct 11 c .... ....,.. 11 1>111t1 lfftk n ' ·~, ...... lntM"l•I-»11 ""''• •" -.. AIO~ L....,_ 11 M1l"9• 11 Mtrril" Lice-. t MtvlM ...,. M1tlt!MI KIWI 4-f 0.1"" (W"IJ 9 1,1 .. 1t ,....,... ,. '-"' tl·U SIMI Mll'lllh •·tt Ttlnltilll » ,,,,..tw. »H Wttll!w t '#~111 Wetll " '#t!Mfn N9wl 1Jo1S W.11 ......... ~ DAILY ~I t.OT !C Uinare World Parks Ordinance Faces Major Test A majO!' tesl of the county's new local parks <>rdinance is upcomlng following a hearing to be held in the El Toro area on the 1pplicalion of Lhe law to private p!tin· ~ communities. Beach-goers Crowd Sands Along Coast By TERRY COVILLE Of IM Cl[l'f .. llot 1!1!1 The waves of people flooding Orange County beaches over lhe weekend were considerably bigger than the waves of waler slrik ing the i;horeline. More lhan 400,000 sunbathers and S\\'immers spread their towels and bodies along the Orange Coast Saturday and Sunday, but lhe surf never peaked above two feet in height. As a result of the poor surf conditions lifeguards had an easy weekend making less than 130 rescues both days al all beache!'I. The most serioU!'I incident "'as reported at Monarch Bay. Sunday, when a young boy was shot in the left leg with a spear gun while several youngsters v.·ere playing with it on the beach. Steve Shaw. 9. of 30411 Via Alcazar, Laguna Niguel. wa!'I reported in good con· ditian after lifeguards removed the straight spear from his leg which had been shot from a Hawaiian s!iug. In Seal Beach calm prevailed over the weekend where a riot had stirred the sands Thursday resulting in 65 arrests. Police Chief Lee Case said heavy police patrols of the beach Saturday and Sunday apparently kept peace among 15,000 beach goers. A riot broke out on the beach Thursday when several youths began throwing rocks and bottles at three Huntington Beach undercover officers v.·hen they made an arrest on the beach. Seal Beach police unils rushed to the rescue and arrested 38 persons Thursday, and ran the arresl total higher on Friday. The rock th rowing riot lasted and hour before (lffi cers from five cities finally closed down the beach, Case said. All Seal Beach policemen were on duty Saturday and Sunday , with many assign. ed to beach patrols. Bul nothing hap- pened, Case said. Newport Beach drew the biggest weekend crowds with 80,000 Saturday and 65,000 Sunday. The v.·ealher 'vas moderate, "'ith af- ternoon clouds and temperatures rang ing from a high of only 69 degrees in Sa n Clemente up to 75 degrees in Nev.·port Beach and Laguna Beach. \Varm water, however. offset the cooler air. Water temperatures ran fr om 66 degrees to 69 degrees at all beaches. Jn Huntington Beach about 35.000 ''isitors went to the city beach each day, v.·hile 18.000 Saturday. and 14,000 Sunday, ,.,.ere recorded at Jluntington State Park. Bolsa Chica state \Heguards counted 10.000 visitors each day. Lagun11 Reach lifeguards said their at · • tendance figures showed 12.000 on the beach Saturday and 16,000 Su nday. v.•hile county beaches patrolled by Laguna !ifeguard ~ counted 3.000 and 4.000 Sa1ur - rlay and Su nda y. respec tively. San Clemente city beaches V.'C'rc lhP choice of 12,000 swimmers Saturday and 18,000 Sunday, v;hile 10.000 visitors went to the cot.nty beach on Saturday and !2,f,00 v..·ent on Sunday. Slate lifeguards for s0uth countv beaches rcpcir led 13.000 persons each day. The slate camping park in San Clemente v.·as also filled all weekend . OIAHGE COAST DAILY PILOT ct>.NG;l COMT f'UllLI~>'llNG> '-OMl'ANt ••b••t N. W11d ..... 1c1 ... 1 •nd f'Ul>I~ J1c\ R. C•rl•v V1c:e rm1c1"" •"" Gtn«•I Mani"' lll•'"•• K.,.a Eall"' The"'•' A. Jil~•ploift1 µ.•n•gl"' E••"'r C•1rlt, H. le<H Riolo•rd P. N•ll ... n;tr1~. MltNG'"' Eal1ori l•••" ..... Offl,. 212 Fo•••I A••nue M ~ili119 1ddr1u: P.O. l o• 66,, '16!'Z i1• C._...,. Offke JOS Nerti. El C1,..ine Rool, 92612 The on·lhe·scene hearing was proposed by Fifth District Planning Con1n1iss1nner Arnold Forde who argues that substant ial questions have been raise<! on the el igibility of many fa cilities in Rossmoor Leisure World, Laguna Jlills. The parks (lrdinance calls fll r four acres of recreation area per 1,000 residents be rlonated by developers or cash to purchase that amount be patd 10 place of the land. Of the four acres, (lne and a half can be public school grou nds, if they are available. Rossmoor Co rporation, through its planning execuli\'e Robert Lindberg, claims that the planned co mn1unJty's three. clubhouses, s 143·acre. golf course, golf driving range and a riding stable and !rails should be inclurlerl in the area's a!Jolment. Forde states the commission needs ad· ditional guidelines on the application or the ordinance to privately owned com· munities that do not allow public access to their recreational facilities. He is joined by Planning Director Forest Dickason in ruling out golf courses, driving ranges and riding stables as substitutes for dedicated park land or the equivalent money. The commissioner from Irvine argues further that clubhouses cannot be cred ited but Dickason says some of the activities found on public park sites are found there so they can be included. Forde asked for the special hearing on the ground so commissioners could learn about such facilities first hand as the planners will be fa ced with the same decision in other private communities. July 13 has been set as the date for the meeting in El Toro, but Forde zuggested that it not be held within Leisure World. He estimates that instead of Ro!'smoor's claim of having 12 acres of park or equivalent for every 1.000 residents, only 11 total acres in the com· munity are acceptable under the law. The subject has possibilities (If becom- init so complex that the Pl anning Com- mission may have to send it back to the Board of Supervisors for a policy decision. Tustin Trustees Set Budget Look At Meet T ontght A $9.2 million budget requiring a 6 9· cent tax fncrea5e for1the. 1971 -72 school year will be considered lonight by the Tustin ·Union ' l!igh District hoard of trustees. The board meets at 7:30 p.in. 1n the conference room or Tustin High School. 1171 Laguna Road . Tustin. 111e tentative budget projects a 12 per- cent increase in enrollment next year compared v.·ith a JO percent increase in assessed valuation. James J. ·rar\ry, district business manager said "both in· creases represent a c o n s er v a t i \' e estimate of rowth." "\Vilh the great increase in residentia l construction taking place in the Irvine :ind :O.l iss1on V1rjo ar('as. the projected increase of 9.">0 pupils may "'eJJ be ex· ceeded ." Farley said. Of !hi.' total tcnlativE' l.1x-incrensr . :l 9 cents 1s ncf'dcd to •·provide for thC' 1n· creased oprrationa l cnsts reciuirC'd by the anticipa ted growth," Farley said. "An addi tional three-cent increase is required to meet :in incrcasrcl sl;itr schoo l build ing fund loan repayment" for building and equipping Uni versity High School. The <'Stimated 197\-72 tax r:ilc is Sl i 7 per $100 of assessed valua1 inn. The bulk of the $1.7 million budge! in· crease over 1970.71 expenditures is due tu an $800,000 projcctrd incrrasC' i 11 teachrr.~· salaries. Teacher sala ries ac· co uni for $4 .S million or the burll!el to!al. Farley notes the: preliminary budget draft includes 40 additional teaching personnel "anticipated !or gr owth and special education programs. as WC'U as additional custodial personnel.·· Despite the i11crease in the tl.'achers' salaries budget category. Farley notes the budget does not inc lude pay increase11 ror either teaching or non·teaching staff. Any pay raises that may be granted by the board would ha ve to ctime from the budgeted reserves. Reserves amount to slightly more than $700,000 in !he pr0-- posed burlgel. down $600 ,000 from the $l.3 million 1970.71 rlgure. PENTAGON DOCUMENT FIGURE SURRENDERS TO U.S. AUTHORITIES MIT Re1earch1r Daniel Ell1berg, right, Hugs Wife Before Arrest Papers Figu1·e Surrenders To Federal Autl1orities BOSTON fUPI) -Coming cut of hiding, Dr, Daniel Ellsberg surrendered to Federal authorities today and admitted giving top secret Pentagon documents on the Vietnam War to the New York Times. At a hearing before a U.S. magistrat£', Ellsberg. 40. was released in $50,000 bond without su rety, meaning lle did not have lo post bait. No plea "''as entered. The govcrnn1cnt prosecutor. saying ''1he charges generally deal 1\'lth cs· pionage ." had asked for $100,000 bond with surety. Ell sberg was specifically Public Funding For Parochial Schools Barred \\'ASHl Nf:TON !l'PI J -TI1e SuprcnlC': Cou r! bt1rrcd st:Hcs today From earma rk· ing public fu11ds for secular education in parochwl schools. The precedenl·setling-decision came in ('ases fron1 Pennsylvania and Rhode Jslancl. Rhode Island had a plan to supplement parochial teachers' salaries. Pennsy lvania was using par! of the ad· mission lax on horse racing and harness racing to rennburse priv ate elementary c.nrl seconrlary schools for lhe cost of text- books and instr1Jclional materJals and for teachers· salaries. Later part of the cigarette lax v.·as ad· drd. The cou rt said both statu tes \\'ere 11n. i nnstJtulionaJ under the religion cla uses of the first amendment because !11rlr c'umula liYe effec t invoh•ed excrssive en· t an~ll!ment between government and rcl1g1on. In a separate opinio n. the cour t ruled 1ha! ledl!r a! cons!rur tion grants to 1'hurrh-related ("(Jl\cges did not violate 1h£' :;eparalion of church and state required hy the Const1tul1on. Evcllc Y oungcr Dinner Slated charged with unauthorized possession and reten!ion of documents "vital to the na· tional rlefense." "I am prepared lo answl.'r to all the consequences , , ,'' said Ellsberg. If con· \·ictcd. he facrs a maximum penalty of 10 years' imprisonn1enl and a $10,000 fine . il'lag1 strate Peter W. Princi continued lhc case lo July 15 for a hearing on Ellsberg's ren1oval to California \\'here a v.·arrani \Vas issued for hls arrest. A ~ he arrived to surrender as promised to l'.S. Att orney Herbert F. Travers. Ellsberg said he leaked the papers to the press about 18 months after giving them lo Sen. J, William Fulbright (D·A rk.), cha irman of the powerful Senate Jo'orcign Helations f,omm illec and an oulspoken foe. of U.S. involvement in Vietnam fro n1hthe slar1. Ellsberg. senior r('search associatt al r.1assachuselts Institute of Technology t~11T), told ncv.·s tnen· "All these actions y,·ere clearly in con· lradiclion lo security regu!aU(lns, secrf<'y regulal mns and, even more, the in- forination practices or the Department of Defe nse. "1\J'cverthclcss. 1 felt as an American citize11, a responsible cHlzl.'n, I could no longer cuoperatc in concealing this in- forn1ation (onn the A1nC'rican public. I did lhts clearly al 111y own jeopardy. "I an1 prepared to answer lo alt the consequences or lhese decisions. That in- c·!udes the personal consequences to me «nd m~· F~unily. \Vhate\'er lhese may be. \\'ouldn't you go to prison to help end the 11·a r~·· f'~!J5hPrg 11as accompan1e1t by his 11·ife and a la11·y£'r a.~ he drove up 10 the post ufl1rr building 11h1ch houses the te deral court~ and Travers' off1rl' lit' \\Orr a huge s1n1l e and dark p1n~!rip<' su11 hlur shirt an d <lark tie. lie kl'pl h1~ arn1 around his 1~·ife Patricia as !hey tried to get inside thP hui lding . .. !11 !hr Fat! nf l!Ki~. I took the rcspons1h1Iity nn 1ny 01rn in itia tive of <11.'hvcnng lo !hr chairma n or the foreign relations con1n111tee of the l'.S. Senate !hP infnrm;1l1nn rnntaincd in the so.called Pcntng11n pnpr.rs. 1nclllrling scvrral s1 udirs on 11t'got1at ions which hal'e not bl.'f'n givPn In any ncv.spapcr." E\lsberg !'3td "l"n1 1I that t1n1r, thcsr studies have bcC'n aci ·c~s1blc only to nic and to a fl.'W olher individuals. Ali Praises Allah Court Reverses Clay Conviction \VASHJNGTON IUPll -The Supreine Courl unanimously threw out the draft defiance conviction uf Io rm c r heavyweight champion ~1uhammad All toda y and the fighter de clared hisJ,hank.s to Allah for the verdict. The court in an unsi gord opinion upheld Ali'! (']a im that he was entitled lo con· scienlious objector sta1us from the <!raft because of his Black l\tusllm beliefs. The ruli ng said lhe Justi ce Depanment v.·as clearly wrong under the Jaw in de n~ Lng his religious claim. In Chicago, Ali. who \1·on the title under hi~ original nan1e Cassius Cla y, said he learned of the 8.0 rle<.'ision when a stranger ran oul of a store and told him \11ith tears in his eyes: "You're free! You're free! The Supreme Court said so." The one-time Olympic champion ~aid he. v.·ould say another praye r thanking Allah in celebration. "[ said one already," he told a reporter. In reversing the conviction of Ali. the court dec lared: "The (Justice) Department was simply "Tong as a matter of law in advising that the petitioner's beliefs \Vere not rrligious. 1.v based and were not sincerely held ... The court said that Ali's obje<:tion to military duly was ba5ed upon •·re!lgious training and bel ief", the test for draft ex· empt status as a conscientious (lbjeclor. "In order lo qualify for classification as a conscient iou5 objeclor, a registrant must satisfy three ba sic tests," the court said: "He must show that he is con· scientiously opposed to war in any form ... he must show that this opposition is based upon religious training and belief, as the term has been ctinstrued in our dreisions. And he must show that this ob- 'THANKS TO ALLAH' Former Champ Ali jeclion is sincere.·• The couri said Ali met all three tests. The Supreme Court cited th e governmenrs own concession that "there is no dispute that pe titioner's professed beliefs .,..·ere founded on basic tenet!'! of the l\1uslim religion. as he understood them, and derived in substantial part from his devotion to AJ!ah as the supreme being." Saddleback Employe Unit Bids for Raise Saddleback Community Co 11 e g e tru stees tonight v.·111 be asked to approve an automa!ic cos! of li\'tng raise proposal for classified employes of the rli strict. Superintedrnt/l-'resirlent Fred H. Brl.'mcr sa id the classified employes association president had polled the non· Thill·ston School Con1puter to Get Busy Workout The computer at Thurs Ion Intermediate School in Laguna Beach will soon be used by the high 5chool, district adm inistration and Capistrano Unified School District. as part of expanded rom· pu!rr services 1irogram for the 1971-72 ~chflOI year. ThC' Lagun11 district recently enterrd an .:ig:reemenl wit h Ca pistrano for the use of the rnmputc r Capistrano 11·ill pay Sl7.000 for the computer lime. Th e rl1strict v.•iH .:ilso rect'i1·e $16 ,000 frorn the (edPr al go\·ern ment ntxt ye.ar lo co1·er part of the data processing cost. The $3.l OOO in inro n1e will cover !he majori !~' of the $53,000 cost of nwnin~ the rla1n proces~i ng equip ment. .,..•hich v.·111 do h1gh schoo l grarl e reports, transcripl s, :;tudrnt prrsonnrl re('Ords and district eq11ipmcnt Inventory. Fu!ure USPS rna y include high school schecluhn~. empinye perso nnrl ri,ll!s and c·otirses for st udents 1n dala processing. teaching staff and determined they •·desire lo have their salaries tied to the tcost~f·living inde x under the same formula v.·hich ex lst:i1 !or rcrt 1flcaled - tto.:tching -ernployes." Dr. Bremcr's rccommend:ition . if ap. pro ved. would not affect snlancs Lo be pal<! in the 1971-72 school vcar but v.·ould prO\'ide an auton1atic ratsC 1n !he 1972-73 fisca l _vcr1r. Fur the pasl \110 )r<irs. teaching salaries have b£:e n inerc1;1sed accordin~ lo increases in the cost of living for th e Los Angeles ilrca as dt•!crmined by the hurea1J or lab0r statistics. That incant a fo11r pc'rCC'nl inereaSf' in teacher salaries thi." year. Bremer noted. Saddlcback trustees mrct al 7:45 p.1n . J\·londav in the boa rd room. 28<.00 Margul.'rite Park,vav 1n ~·liss 1on Virjo. Other items on lhe agcnd:i Inc lude ap- proval of a $41 ,JOO budget for the A.~SO<"iatcd Student BJdy for the {'oming yea r. The sludenl body rrceh·C'" funds from the sale of ASB card~. adn1iss1on.~ Ill special C\·ents . .'.ls 11·cll il'i book 5torc and lunl'h 11agon sale~. Arrn1er noted Thr board will c11ns1dr r J01n1nl! thr C:iliforn1a Sehoo! Boards A~soC't:'l l1fln for !hr l9il·7:! St'hool \l'.'.lr P.1 a t'tll'ol nl $4~12. The board has nnl hC'longed 10 the .'Sliltewide organi1~1t1nn ror 111 0 ~ears. Al the request (•F !hr ('ll!Tiptnn ('nllcj::e board . trustee's ,1·111 cons1th'!' <1rh•pl11Jn of a r<'SOIUtl()n backing AB 2fifi!I. Thi! bil l \\'OU!rl rrtiuirf" :ipprn,·:;1 of hoard~ of ;ill di..,lncls involvrd 1n a tr:.insl('r {tf JUll1nr N111rge district terri!orv. At prrsenr. il pctH1on or ~:. prrrrnt or the residents or an arc~ to be .:innl'xcd. 111ay forcr anne xation to another d1.slric1 . Bremrr explained. About 400 supporters ure expected to honor California Attorney General Eve!le .J '\'oungcr during a $100-a.plate <!in ner Tuesdn y n\~ht at the Balboa Bti..v Club. !'in speeches are expected. but Orange County supporters will have a chance lo meet \he victorious attorney general. FWld.s fro1n the banqucl \\'ill help pay for his succPssful campaign. Expert Watch Repair Art Linklctler v.·ill scn1e as master or cerernonies while f'nlertainment wlll be provided by Les Brov.'fl and his orchestra. Ben C. Deane, M Orange County clr \·eloper. heads the committee for lhe banq ue t v•hlch begins al 8 p.m. The ban- QUrt is .. ~ponsored by The Friends of f':\'elle YoungC'r, Rings Redesigned OtMr Off\'" C•ll Mel••• JJO Wfll llV S1"°'1 ,._, •Holl: llJJ l'ol1w_.1 11 .... :..,.1..r Mvnll"'IOll a.Kii: J111J llN<ll 9oull•tr4 Trial Program 4-da.y Work Week Begins at VCI WATCH REPAIR SPECIAL e AdJ1t1tH • Cl_... • Oiled s59s e El1tetTlcoOy Timed ";::::; We buy our ring mountings d irec t from ring c osting houses ond he,..e them finished by specielists, thus enebli ng us to sell to you for les:;. Je~elry Repair at it's finest Physical plant workers at UC Irvine to- day began a three-month trial of a four· day, 4().hour work wf'ek. From today through Oct. J, part of the physlcal plant 8taff -maintenance f'mployes. gardeners. engineers. painters. plumbers. electricians and olht:rs -will work Mondays through Th u r s d a y s . Another part or the staff v.·ill start their wr ek on Tuesdays working through Fridays. All wlll st11rl nt 7 a.m tech day and quit at 5:30 p.m. TakJng a half·hO'Jl" for lunch. &th groups thus v.·111 have thrte.-day •·eekend1, either r rlday1 to Sundays or Saturdays to Monda ys . Ralph lA!u,, UCI f)'rsonnrl man11,11c.I', I said &everal administrative department! or the campus are studying more ef· fl cient y,·ays of providing necessary serv ic('s through changed work wttk.s. The physical plant department is the first to txperiment With the four..cla)' y,•ork week. Laue noted. The adjust£'d work schedu le means a 20 pl'rC'enl 5aving to emp!oyt~ on con1· nl\1i1n~ CO~\S. "The t:nive.rsity toxptr ts to s1111e through reduce<! travC'I lime between shops and v.·ork sites, reduced cleanup tinie and fastC'r completion of con· litrucuon atld mai intenance jobs which are performtd by the physical plant depart- 1ntnl ,'' Laue said. WATCH REPAIRING DONE ON PREMISES 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, BUY. Sfll, TIADE 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN CCSTA MESA - COME IN AND IROWSE AROUND PHONE 646-7741 --"-· . ......,....., t I 7 I 7 San Clemente Capistrano VOL. 64, NO. 153, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES -' ... . ' . ' .. --· '\ ............ ~ ,.,... .. ;_, __ . .,,. ""' .. ·~ .. _ .......... ,., . -..___ - EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 28, '1971 ,_.._._ Today's FIBal N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS Joaquin Trustees Study Merit Pay ProposaI·s Trustees of the San Joaquin Elemen. la ry School Di!'=lrict. who have vo.,..·ed to 1mplemen1 a ment·pay system for a ll d istrict cmplnyes, are cu rrently studyi ng proposals subn11ttcd by three emp loye groups. Admin1s1rat ors. c 1a ss 1f 1 e d , and certificated em ployes all have drawn plans which spell 01Jt how an enlploye is to be judged worthy of a salary ad- vancement. Every school di~tricl en1ploye rece ntl y received automatic salary increases Hearing Tonight based on !he number or ye11rs ln the district and number of additional college credits earned. Sa n Joaquin's tr ustees are intent on ehminating a sys1em which provides auloma tic increase:; and replace it with one that bases advancement on merit. J ust how teaching merit is fair ly guag- cd is something of a class ic enigma in erl11tatinn. The San J0Hqu1n Teachrrs' A~soci ation has gone on re cord ai;; being opposed to the adoption of a merh program. The group has slated that the program would result in a less satisfactory educational envi ronment wh ich would be detrimental lo tht: welfare of the students. But in compliance with board in· structions, the group has prepared !'ecommendations concerning procedures for teacher assessment , teacher evalua· lion, termination p~dures, and iden· tification of salary levels. The group outlines three salary level s. The first level would be those who do nol meet expeetations for reemployment a11d Capo Budget Unveiled A public hearing on the proposerf 1971· 72 San Juan Capistrano city burfgcl will take place at tonigh1's niccting of the Ci· ly Council at 7 p 1n. in the council chambers The $3.306.329 budget IS innaterf this yea r by a S2 million capital in1provement project funded by agencies of the South East Regional Rcelamation Aulhority (SEHRA ). Mem bers of the City Council have been reviewing \hr budget for sevt'ral weeks. But no action has ye! been taken on a proposed six percent cost of livi ng salary increase for most city emp!oyrs. Jn a memo randum to the Ci ty Council. City Admin istrator Donald G \Veidner r.aid that in 1968, laborer positions were gi ven a 5.S percent cosl of living Increase and in 1970 all employes v.·ere given a 5.5 pe rcen t cost of Jiving adjust ment For tha l reason he i!'i recommending that classified employes receive compensation lhis lime. • If approved the increase in salaries v•ould amount to approxima1c ly SI0,399 ln this vear's budget. T~ la rgest bud~eted expenditure will be ror po lice servi ces. The city contnicts \1·ith the Orange Count y Sheriff's office for police protection at an estimated cost for the coming year of approximately ~1 50,(l(l(l. Tht> police budger al so conta in~ an additional $25,000 which will be used to hire a Director of Public Safety And to purchase ni inimal equipment neces- sary for the formation or the city's oNn Clemente Sewer Project Gets Top Federal Grant A major prniert lo provide srv:er lines rrnm San flemen!e to San Clemente Bluffs State R(':ich h.1s made a top prinri· tv hst for federal ~·atrr qualllv ,1?:ranls. hut !hf' futurt' of th<' maJOr collcc1nr in S.'.ln C'lemenle as the key lin k in the i;y~1 "m is morr murky Ci ty f.ng1ncer l'hil l'eter said \a le last ,1rrk (h11! thr 5220.IXlO gran! from the fedcr;:il govrrnmcnt for the JXlrlinn r1f the linr~ in San Diego Cr1unt y 1s a certainty fnr approv;il R11I a sin11 lnr gra nl appl1c;i11nn fflr 11 b:.idlv nrrrle<I 1n1erceptllr line hooking 1nlo 111(. !'ll.11r 1na1n ;:ind lf'arf1ng the leng1 h of lhc cHv to 1he nrw rerlamat1ll n planl is nn a lhird list "Usually, it 111e:1ns lhat OC111g on th!! third lisl is 0f lnw prioril.v. but I honestly thin k I.he Sa n Clemcn1e interceptor grant 1\'lluld have to be approvrd if the stale line were In be inslallerf." he said. If !he city's grant. which v•ould cover a sewage collector costing nearly a million dollars. were oot funded , then lhe lines from the bluffs beach 11.·ould dead.end. The grant for the bluffs collector main and four pump stat ions was placed on the 11nnual top priority list during recent Oraage Coast "'eather The sun will peek through the haze again this afternoon and Tuesday, following Lhe steady diet of low cloud! and fog along U1e coast. HiRh~ today 70 at the bf!aches. 80 Inland. Low~ SO to 60. INSIDE TODAY Tl1r Co.~t.n ~fesn Ci vic P/011· hn11sr !Li/shed if.st/I a lt.oppfl si.rth h1rrlrday rlir ofhrr day 11ath members of it.~ pas t 30 prf>d uc r1on.~ an hand In Cl'.le• brott. Sf't' 1;nte r1a1nme111. Pn gr. 31 •••11"1 u Ctll'-r"l1 t (M0"'41 UI" 1 ci. .. 111..i "JI-a c .... 1c• n (tl<1W&fil II ON•~ N1t~11 t l'll'Orll! "'"' • I"""''""''", M·ll ""'•!>Ct 11·1' N&<11!.C91'1 U °'"" Lt'"'"' 11 M•lllMI• 11 Mlr•UH 1.1{.tflMJ t -"'' N1tltMI NtWI t-l Ori1'M toilftly ' 51lvi. l"lrffr it ''""" 11.u Sl9C-Mlrkt!l M•'lt Tt!t¥!tlM M Thtl ltro It-JI Wtt!IMr 4 v1n1t• Wt•~ 1t We"'•"'' Ntwo \).II Wtrllt frltwt t-1 hearings of lhe stale wa ter qualily con· trnl agency in San Francisco. San Clement.e's application for ft'dcra l ::ind statt' funds also "'as suhm i!1rrl, but prct\minar,\' infnrmntion shr1wed that because of s('mantics and o th e r te"hnical factors, more work mig ht ha\•e to be made on the city's appli"atinn II rhe main i" built . II wnuld occupy a frflnl"h 1hP length llf El Caminn Rral. The main would insu re arfrquatr "e11•age capa city for H1r Pst1m.:itf'rl 111)().000 ~tale park u"f'rs i>aeh vear. plus an· !1cipalcd ,gro.,.,·1ng rlevelop mcnr in the sou1h enrl nr 1hr cily The r1ty.!' ovr rb urdcned eiti~!1ng line t un" along the be:ichcs in San Clemente, rutt ing inland 1n !he No rth Beach 11rea tr1 the new $2.6-million sewage lreatmenl pl ant. Peter said thal an all ied project lo the .!'late s{'"'cr main . pipinl'( of San Clemente city 1t·ater In lhe new bluHs beach. is rapidly nearing lhe enrl to negoliations. Sl <i1P anl1 city nflirials havp b!">rn discusing plans to furnish city w11ter to lhr rK'w heach which lif's i:;evf'rRI mile~ rfr111.Ticoast r1f the San Clemente and Orage Coonty boundaries. .. If looks like the entire matter will be received soon ," Peter said "and all that .... ·ill remain is the installation of the lines to the beach." If both sewer and water service is con· nec1ed to the bluffs beach, develnpment of rnnre Marine Corps acreage wh ich might go into public hands would be swifter. Currenl\y, 3,400 acres of San Mateo Can- yon, plu~ 2.S miles of beachfront frnm the San Onofre generating complex to the Western White House are the object of surplus proceedings by the redcral government A deeision on whether the land~ will hccome public !Jtill is pending from the Departmen~ of Derense. Thus far . a Congressional Committee has recommrnded against any public use of the canyon. and R lease arrangement fnr the beach section--f!XCluding the enlisted men's health club and the San Onofre Surf Club parcels. Weed Iiiller Banned WASHtNGTON (UPI) The F.nvironmental Protection Agency Sun· de)' announct"d 11 tolal ban. f'ffeclive in 30 days, on the croplRnd u:iie of Amltrole. " wcel1 killer involved ln lhe 1959 cranberry cancer scare. police department. The council has during the past few weeks trimmed many items and stretch· ed othe rs. The city learned that it would not have to pay for fire protection for wh ich they contract with the county. Charges for fire protection will be part of every residenl's county tax bill. Bul is al so learned lhat anolher con· tract county servi ce, building and safety, ,.,.i11 no longer be sending the city part of the fees it collects for pert1lits. The budget. as lt nOW stinds, will need a tax rale of $1 ,20. This includes GO cents for g&ileral purposes and 30 eents for bond interest and redemption. The tu: ra~ ii the s•me as it "81 whei'i"tbe dty' incorporated in 1961. Down the Mission Trail Diaper Derby Set in Viejo r..iISS lON VI EJO -There are bound tr1 br .~ome changes marle after this year's r.1ission Viejo Oerb.v. The co ntestants, ;:ifte r all, are 1n the diaper ~cl. The Diaper Derby will lake place June 2.9 be!ween I 11.nd 2 p.m. a1 the f\1arguerite Recreatlon Center. Racers will be in fi ve categories· six month and under, seven to nine months, 10 to lZ monlhs, 13 t.o 15 months and 16 lo 18 monlhs. Each wnteslant is allowed one Loy for !he race. For information call the derby committee at 837-4(134. • llo1pltal Director LAGUNA HILLS -Tom Winget. presi- dent of tbe Saddleback Valley Chamber of Commerce. has been named a director of the new Saddleback Community Hos pital. An El Toro banker, Winget is a lnrmer president of I.he Dana Point Chamber of CAm mcr ce and a former lrustee of the Capistrano Unified School Dll!lrict. Winget is married. has four children, and resides In Dana Point. • Tree Donors EL TORO -When Parklane Residen- tial School opens in July the grounds will be full of tre~ donated by various clvk and philan~opic organizations. Recent donors of funds lo Ult "ph•nt a tree.. project ire: tM ~ Junior Women 'l : OW, San Clemeltie Car~n Oub. Rancho Viejo Women's club . Lagun11 Hills Retired Teachers Clilh and 1.1ercury Savings and Loan of Tuiiua. Anyone wi~hing lo donate 111 five or tn gallon trtt with sprinkler for $30 or·lesl can call Claude LindQuisl 11t the faclUty an 234~2 El Toro Road. Memorial tttet also can be donated. ' for whom termination is recommended. The second level would mean the teacher meets expectations f o r reemployment and should be placed on the presenl salary schedule including yearly incremenu and additional ad· vancements for cost of livina and college credits. Tbose placed on the third level would exceed expectations !or reemployment l\nd would receive additiona l com· pensation beyond the regular salary. Teacher1 would be assessed by prin- cipals and their performance ~-ould be reviewed in a conferen ce. Probationary teachers would be assessed twice and others. onece yearly. Evaluation would be based on how well a teacher directs learning including how well he or she plans for ins truction, centers classroom control on pup il needs, uses appropriate instructiona,I techniques. utilizes effective room environment, and knowledge of her subjttl matter. Performance would include how the teacher evaluates pupi ls. how often ind how well he or ahe participates in cur- er OAll.V l'ILOT '11&,. ., •lch1N MHllly 6oodbye, Mr. Agnew Michelle Strauser, six-month-old daughter of Mariqe Lance Cpl. and Mrs. William Strauser, has a smile and tiny wave goodbye fo r Vice President Spiro Agne~'. He left El Toro Marine Corps Air St:ilion Sunday for month-long world tour. Michelle was in the arms of mother for the departure .See slory, Page 3. San Clemente Fii·ef ighte1·s Battle 1 O-ac1·e Grass Blaze A stubborn brush lire which officials sa id was deliberately set charred 10 acres of thick growlh near the new ShorecliHs city reservoir Saturday night in rhe northern part of San Clemente . Volunleer fire fighters !rom Sa n Clemenle and Doheny departments fought the hot blaze for several hours before quelling flames in the heavy brush. Several firemen spenl the rest of the night and early morning finding glowing hot spots in the dense. growth. "The f'ii:acl cause see ms impossible to dek!rmine." 1aid San Clemente fire Chief Merton Hackett, "But we're con· vinced that the fire*W1s deliberately sel." The blaie was the second major grass fire to bit the same area within a w~k . On the previous weekend firefighter! fought a blaze of similar !lze near the ci- ty w11tcr tank which is nearing com· pletlon. In las t Saturday'! fire the flames Beaeh ·Bluffs Quickly sprearl inlll a wash known as Rat- tlesnake Canyon . San Cle.menle fire engineer Don Hodgson fell inlll 11 six-foot-deep hole con. cealed in the brush of lhe can yon. He pu lled himself out, using his fire hose as a line. No injuries 11.·ere reported among the firefighters. however. Tobacco Suppl y Cut ROME (AP) -l\aly's fi0.000 govern-- men~ tobacco shops, the only places where cigarettes are sold legally, were closed today by a 24-bour 1trike. The tobacconisU complained that the government charged too much for lobac· co and was opening too many new 1bops. They said Ille only way to beat the com· pelltion of U!e black market was to lower prices. riculwn studies and college classes, and how well the teacher gets along with tbe sta.ff. parents. and his or her observation of administrative procedures. If terrriination is reco mmended th• teacher will have opportunities for review and will have 11 procedure to follow before termination is co mpleted. School principals and c I a s s i f i e d employes also have developed program.t !or assessing their work. The board is currently stuClying all •the proposals and will act on them during their first meeting in July. Crowd Sees Police Slay Assailant NEW YORK <UPf) -Joseph A. Colombo Sr., reputed leader of one of New York's five Mafia fam ilies, was shot In lhe head and critically wounded by a black rTian today at ao Italian-American Unity Day rally. The young gunman was shot and killed hy police as a crowd of several thousaad .·••t.c:hed in !tWlded 1i.lmeh The-•eilant wa~ not lmmediately identified. Witnesses said Colombo, 48, was mov- ing among a crowd of weJl.wishert toward the speakers platform when the gunman grabbed him by the neck, ii:pun bim around and shot him in the head. The gunman. carrying a camera and wearing what appeared lo be pres.• credenti als, had been !landing nearby with .11 black woman , the witnesses said. ~le was in his early 20·s and wore green trousers and a green &hirt, they said. Both Colombo and the gunman were taken to Roosevelt Hospital 1 block away. A priest administered the last rites of the Roma n Catholic Church to lhe .,.ounded man in the emergency room. Otlld Mol~t Suspect Beaten By Ma1ine Peers A young Camp Pendlel(ln P.farine asserted!y discovered molesting a 3-year· old San Clemente girl received frontier ''justice" from an angry group of his peeri:; over the weekend. The)' beat him. Police said the Incident occurred !ale Saturday night on Avenida Pelayo. The little girl's mother told officers shfl noticed the man molesting her daughter in 1 bedroom. The assailant fled when he &aw the mother. Moments later of(icers received 11 call of 1 "man down" on a lawn in the same neighborhood. They found the assert~ molesler bl~ing from cuts and bruises and ap- parently under the influence of drugs. Other Marir;les at the scene told police lhey chased .11nd beat the man. The incoherent man was taken by am. bu lan« to the Naval ho!pJtal on Camp Pendleton for treatment of minor wounclt and drug intoxication. Police are co111ldering aeveral charges - agailllt the man,. they ~d. On of re Opens W e«;lJiesday . . ' . Stlle-ParU· omcials ·tl'Xhly forttasl 1 smooth · openln& W~sday of the new San Onoftw Bluffl .Be:ac.h,. ·but issUetl a stem warning tO uiers of the scenic area not to brlna fireworks ..• Bttause of the brush i:dvered blutflllps on lhe 3.~mile stretch of beach coupled with the lack of w1ter. brn!h fires would be especiany deva~tatin1. officials warn· ed. A11a Parks Manager JeweJI taugbell e11:fd that tlreworU •rt barmtd al all st.ate padts. . "W~'ll han algu: at:lhe.~ ~ forming-~r.soM of tbe1rule1 and we 1Jso· are Wulni ~n 11rgem., plea. i> everyone tllat they Jave fireworb 1at home." The scenic COl.!taJ ptrk, ,ceded 10 the state on • 25-ym ~·• ~. •in be ope n (or cemping a\at1g Uilt~Mt of old Highway 101. and .for dty. beach use, via steep, graded tralfa leading to· the beach below. '. Day .u~ fee' will:~t ,pe.r·car, and campin, will ro.1l 1.l.i*nlllbl. ,.~ .,, l , .,. ., .. ·clnd;,;,1qo ~ r.r'~.8irlr\d;,.! wlil'\e Mt 111'· 'but iwl'plumblni-lhu, no runnin, 'llBr -b provided. S.. 'J<i¢~. which opor1t,. conceMlons -1l Huntingtan Beach St.ft P1rk. win .;ert&e the summer uae of lbt blulr. ~ C.ugMll lb: 1a1ed the f'irtworkl alto will bo prohihlted oo Ban Cl<menta State Park ace1ge 1ftil beach u well u the DolWty ~ta-ch. ~~ ,,. still ollowod on coon· ty 1nd clt,y beac:her. ' I . I Z DAILY PILOT ' M_,1 Jiint 211, 1971 .leinare World Parks Ordinance ·Faces Major Test A m1jot te8t of lhe counly'8 new local parks ordinance is upcoming folloWing a hearing to be held in lhe El Toro area on the lppllcation of the law to private plan. ned communltie.a. Beach-go ers Crowd Sands Along Coast By TERRY COVILLE ot f!l9 DlllY i-1111 11111 The wave1 of people floodlng Orange County beaches over the weekend were considerably bigger than the wave! of water striking the shoreline . More than 400.000 sunbathers and swimmers spread their towel! and bod.le!! along the Orange Coast Saturday and Sunday, but the surf ne ver peaked above two (fft In height. As a result of the poor surf conditions lifeguards had an ea!y weekend making less than 130 ,escues bolh day1 at all beaches. The most serious incident was reported at Monarch Bay, Sunday, when a young boy was shot in the Jell leg with a spear gun while several youngstera were playing with lt on lhe beach. Steve Shaw, 9, of 304i l Via Alc<1zar, Laguna Niguel, was reported in good con· dilion after lifeguards remo ved the straight spear from his lea which had been shot trom a Hawaiian 11l>ig. In Seal Beach calm prevailed over lhe weeke nd where a riot had stirred the i;ands Thursday resulting in 65 11rrests. Police Chief Lee Case said heavy police patrols of the beach Saturday and Sunday apparently ke pt peace .among 15,000 beach goers. A riot broke out on U1e beach Thursday when several youths began throwing rocks and bottles at three Huntington Beach undercover offlcer1 when they made an arre8t on the beach. Seal Beach police unit! rushed to the rescue and arrested 38 persons Thursday, and ran the arrest total higher on Friday. The rock thro\\·ing riot lasted and hour before officers from five cities finally closed down the beach, Case said. AU Seal Beach policemen were on duty Saturday and Sunday. with many assign· ~ to beach patrols. But nothing hap. pened, Case 1aic1 Newport Be tli'I drew the blggest weektnd crow::t. ,.,;~ 80,000 Saturday and 85.000 Sunday. The weather was mode rate, \1lith af. ternoon cloudii: and temperatures ranging from a high of only 89 degrees in San Clemente up to 75 degrees in Newport Beach iand Laguna Beach. Warm water , however, offset lhe cooler air. Water tempera tures ran fr om 66 degrees to 69 degrees at all beaches. ln Huntington Beach about 35,000 visit.on went to the city beach each dBy, 91•hlle JS,000 Saturday, and 14,000 Sunday, v;ert recorded st Huntington State Park. Bolsa Chica st11te lifeguards counted 10.000 visitors each day. Laguna Beach lifeguards sa id the ir at· ter,dance figures showed 12,000 on tht beach Saturday and 16.000 Sunda y. wh ile county beaches patrolled by Laguna ~ifeguards counted 3.000 and 4,000 Satur· day and Sunday. rtspective!y. San Clemen!e city beaches ~·ere the choice or 12,000 swimmers Saturday and 18.000 Sunda y. ~·hl!e 10.000 visitors went to the cot.nty beach on Saturday and IZ.500 went on Sunday. State lifeguards for south county beaches reporled 13.000 persons ea ch day. The ~!ate camping park in San Clemente 1,1.·as also filled all 1,1.·eekend. OUN91 COAST DAILY PILOT OUHO~ C:OA&T ,.Ul \.IS,.IHQ CJ)Mi-/flf1 le~••+ N. Wtt4 rr .. -., •"" """'\"*" Jt(~ I. Cvr!.., Vite Prokl .. I .... Otntt•I MllllOW Th•111•• )(,,n1 IEtllt<' TJiieMll A. ~11•i-lil•1 ~tll'll •• 1..,. Cli1'l" H. Le.. ~:,1.,,4 P. N11I Aul1'-'11 M-tlrlt 1:.11cira L-t-..... Offk• 112 ,., •• , ...... 11111 M1lli11f 1ddrt11: P.0 .111 •••, '2612 S.C ........ Offtt t JDI Hetttl fl C11nl111 ltel, '1671 OtMt Otfk" The on-the·!cene he11rlng was proposed by Fiflh District Plann;,1' Comn1issioner Arnold Forde who argues Ula\ substantial questions have been ."l:I St'd on the eligibility of many faclli1: .. 1 In Rossmoor Leisure \\'orld, l.agu na liills. The parks ordinance calls for fou r acres of re(Teation area per 1.000 residents be donated by developers or cash to purchase that amount be pa id in place of the land. Of the four acres. one and a half can be public school grounds, if they are avallable. Rossmoor Corporation. through i1S planning elCecullve Robert Lindberg, claims that the planned community's three clubhouses. a 143-acre golf course, golf driving range and a riding stable and lralls 1hould be included in the area 's allotment. Forde states the commission needs ad- d!tlonal guidelines on the application of the ordinance to pr ivately owned com· munities that do not allow public acce5s to their recreati onal facilities. He is joined by Planning Dire cto r Forest Dickason in ruling out golf courses. driving ranges and riding stables as substitutes for dedicated park land or the equivalent money. The commi!l.!ioner from Irvine argues further that clubhouses cannot be credited but Dic kuon says sonie of the activities found on public park sites are found there 50 they can be included. Forde asked for the special hearing on the ground so commissioners could learn about such facilities first hand as the planners will be faced wilh the same deci1ion In other private communities. July 13 has been set as the date for the meeting in EI Toto, but Forde suggested that it not be held within Leisurt World . He estimates that ln!ltead o f Ro~smoor's claim of having 12 acres of park or equivalent for every I ,000 residents, only 11 total acres In the com· munlty ere acceptable under the law. The subject has possibilities of becom· init so complex that the Planning Com· mission may have to send lt back to the Board of Supervisors for a policy declslon, Tustin Trustees Set Budget Look A t Meet Tonig ht A S9.2 million budget requiring a ll 9- cent IAX increase for the 1971-72 schoo l year will be considered tonight by the Tustin Union High District board or trustees. The board meets at 7:30 p.m. in the conference roo m of Tustin High School, 1171 Laguna Road, Tustin. The tentative budget projects a 12 per- cent increase in enrollment next year compBred with a 10 percent increase in assessed valuation. James J . Farley, district bus iness manager said "both in· creases represent a con se r va \I\' e estimate of ro\l/th.'' ''With the great increase in residential con:<>truction taking plare 1n the lr..:inr and ~1lss1on Viejo area.c:, th, pro1rc1en increase of 9:ill pupils tnay \\ell be t'K· cef'ded . ·• Parley s;iuL 01 the total tentativt ta>: increase. 3 !I cents is needed to •·provide ror the in- creAsed operational costs requirrd by lhe anticipated grov.'lh.'' Farlrv !'iiid "An add i1ional thrrc-rrnt increase is rrqulred to mrel an increased stale school building fund loan repllyment" for l:iui lding and equ ipping University High School The estimated 1971·72 tax rate i.' Sl.77 p('r $1 00 of asse~sed valuation. The bulk of the $1 7 million budget in· crea!le over 1970.-71 e:tpenditures J5 due to an $800 ,000 projected increAse In learheni' salaries. Tea chtr ~alaries AC'· co11nt for S4.5 million of lhl' budget total. Parley notes the prl'J iminary budget draft lncludl's 40 additi onal teaching personnel ''anticipated ror growth and special education programs. as v.elJ as adriitional cu!todial personnel.'' Dtsplte the h1crease in the teacher1'' salaries budget rategory, F'arlry notes the bud,11et does 001 include pay Increases for either teaching or non·teachlng staff. Any pay rai~e~ thRt m11y be granted by the board would have to come from the hudgeted reserve1'. Restrves amount to sl!ghtly more lhtn $700,000 In tht pro- po!!ed budget, down $600,000 fr om the Sl.3 million 1970.71 figure. --· PENTAGON DOCUMENT FIGURE SURRENDERS TO U.S. AUTHORITIES M IT Res•arcMer D1niel Elt 1berg, rigMt, Hugi Wif• Befo re Arrest Papers Figu1~e Sur1~enclers To Federal Ai1tl1oriti es BOSTON (UPI) -Coming out or hiding, Dr. Dan iel Ellsberg surttndered to Federal authorities today and admitted giving lop secret Pentagon documents on the Vietnam War to the New York Times. Al a hearing before a U.S. magistrate, EHsberg, 40. was released in $50,000 bond without surely, meaning he did not have lo post bail. No plea was entered. The government prosecutor, sayin g ''the charges generally deal with es· pionage," had asked for SI00,000 bond "'ilh surety. Ellsberg was specifica!ly Public Funding F or Parochial Sc hools Ba1·red \VASHINGTON lUPI) -The Supreme Court barred states today from earmark- ing public funds for secular education in parochial schools. The precedent-setting decision came in cases from Pennsylvania . and Rhode Isl11nd. Rhode Island had a pl11n to supplement parothlal leachers' salaries. Pennsy lvania v.·as using part of the ad- mission lax on horse racing 1.nd harness racing to reimburse private elementary and secondary schools for the cost of telCl- books 1111d instructional materials and for teachers· salaries. Later parl of the cigarette tax was ad- d•d The court s:iid both .!ilatute~ "·ere un- ('nn~titution:il under thr religiof\ clause.~ of !hr first amendment because their cur11ulat1ve effect involved excess1\'e en- t.anglemcnL between government and religion. 111 a separale opinion. the court ruled \hi1t fedt-ral i'1)nstru ction grants \fl 1·hu rch-ri:laled i'nlli:ges rlid nnl vinla te the seµar:lt1on of church and state required by the Constllution. Evelle Younger Di1111er Slated charged \\'ith unauthorized possession and reten11on of docun1ents ··vital to the na. lional defense .·· "I am prepared to answer to all the consf'quen ces .. :• sa id Ellsberg. If con· victed, he fa ces a maximum penalty of 10 ycar!i' imprisonn1en1 and a $10,000 fine. J\1rigis1rate Peter \V. Prinri continued the case 10 July 15 for a hearing on Ellsberg's remova l to California where a warrant was iss ued (or his arre~t. As he arrived to surrender as promised lo l .S. Atl orney 1 lerbert F. Travers, F.l!sberg said he !l'aked the papers to the press about 18 months after giving them to Sen. J \Villiam Pulbrighl tD-Ark .), chairman of the powerful Senate Foreign Relat ions Con1mittee and an outspoken foe of ll.S. involvement in Vietnam fromhihe s!or1. Ellsberg, senior research associate at ~lassachusetrs Institute of Tecbnology t~1fT/, told newsmen · "Alt these actions "'ere clearly in con· tradiction lo security regulations, secrecy regu lations and. even more, the in· formation practil'es of the Depart1nent of Defe nse. "Nevrrlheless. I felt as an Amer!ran c!11zcn. 1-1 respon~i hlc citlzrn. 1 rould no loni::er cooperalf' in conte.al 1ng this in· formati o11 form the American public. I did this clearl y at niy own jeopard y "I am prep:ired lo nns"·er lo all the consequenl'es of these decisions. That in· clude5 the personal consequences to me ;ind my famil y, v.·hatever these may be. \Vouldn't you ,;o lo prison lo help end the \Yar :-·· Ellsberg was al'compan1ed by hi5 \\'ift and a 1:11\yer as he drove up to thr po~t off1re burldin,lt v. hirh houses the federal courts and Tra\·1·rs' ofh1'e l!e 1\ore a huge smile and dark p1n•n npe $Ult. blue shirt and dark tle, He kept his ;1rn1 around his wife Patricia as th"Y tried to µet in~1 de the bu1!d1n~- "ln the fall of 196!1, I look the re!<p(1ns1b1l1ty nn niy 011·n 1n1Halive of del1\'ering lo lhi' cha1rn1an of the foreign rela!ions cClmn11ttce 4if the l' S. Sl'nal<' the infr1rn1atlon contained in the so-railed Pcnl::igon 11:1pers. 1ncludin,1t 5everal !iludies nn negotiations 1,1.·hi ch havl': nnt. bPen given l1J any n('w~paper." Ells berg ~aid. "Unti l that tirnr, th ese sl uiJ1es have been accessible only to me and to a few other individuals. Ali Prai se s A llah Court Reverses Clay Conviction \\.'A.SHINGTON {UPll -The ::;upreme Court unanin1ously thre"· out .the dr<1rt defiance cun \•il'lion of I o r m e ,. hra1•y11.•eigl1t t'ha1np1011 J\luhamn1ad Ali today and the fig hter declared hill thank!'! 1u Allah {or the \•erd1c1. The court in an unsigne1l opinion upheld Ali's claim !hill he 11as entitled to ton· seientious objector status fro1n th(' draft because of hill Hta(·~ Mu!lim bf liefs 1'he ruling said the Ju.~liC'e Oepar1men t "·a~ (·le11rl~· \ITOng undc·r the law in denying his religio us tlai111 In ChicaRo. Ali. ll'hO won the title under his original name Cassius Clay, said he learned of the 8-0 decision when a slranger ran out or a store afld. told hirn 1\•ith tear~ i11 his e\'es: "You 're frl'e' You're free ~ The sUpreme Court said ::;o." The one-lime Ol~·mpic champion said lie \vould say another prayer thanking Allah in eetebra!inn . "I said one already," he rolr! a reporter In reversing the i'Onvic!ion or Ah. the c.'Qurt declared : "The ~Justicel Depar1ment 11·as simpl,v \\'tong as a niat!er of law in advising that the petitioner's bellefs 11ere not religious- ly based and \1·rrf' not sincerely held." The court said that Ali's objection lo military duly was based upon "re!lgiow training and belief'', the tes t for draft ex· empt slatus as a conscie nlious objector. .. Jn order to qualify ror classification as a conscientious objector. a registrant must satisfy three basic tesls, ·· the cour t said: "lie must show that tie is eon· scientiously opposrd to war in anv form . .. he must sho1v !hat this opposition is based upon religious training and belief, as the term has been construed in our decisions. And he must sho1v that this ob- lJl"I TtlopM!o 'THANK S TO ALLAH' Former Cha mp Ali jeclion is sincere'• The court said Ali ntet all thrl'P ll'sts. The Supreine Court cited th c government's O\\'n cont'ess1on that "1here is no dispute that petitioner's professed beliefs v.·ere founded on basic !enc!s ol !he ~1uslim religion. as he understood them , and der ived in substanti:il parl from his de1•otlo n to Allnh as tht" supreme being .. , Saddleback Employe Unit Bids for Raise Sadfllebark Community C o J I e g e trustees tonight "'ill be asked to approve an automatic cost of living raise proposal for clas!i!ied employes of the district. Superlntedenl/ President Fred H, Bremer said the classified employe~ association president had polled the non. Thiu·s ton School Computer to Ge t Busy W orkout The compu!er al Thurston Inte rmediate School in Laguna Beach v.·;11 soon be us('d by the high school, district administration 11nd Capistrano Unified School Dis1rict, .11.s part of e:xpanded com· puter ser1·ices program for the 1971-72 school yea r, The Laguna district re centlv entered an agreement with Capistrano rOr !11e use (Ir the con1puter. Capistrano will pay '17.000 for the computtr time . The dist rict will a l;o receive $16,{l(l(I rrom the federal i.tove rnment nrxt ~·ear to rov er part of the data processing cost The $33.000 in inromf' "'Ill rover tht" majority of the $53,000 co~t Qr running the data processing equipment. \.l'hich will do high school grade rt>pn rts , t ranscript~. studen1 personnrl records and district equipment inventor y. Fu1ure uses m11y include high school scheduling, employ e personnel riles and courses for students in data processing. teaching starr and delern1ined they "desire to ha~·c th eir salaries tied to the cost-of-living inde:o; under Lhe s:t1ne formula \l'hirh e:tists for ccrtificoted - teaching -employes. ·• Dr. Bremer's recon1111endal1on. if ap· proved, would no\ affect salaries to be paid in the 1971-72 school ye;ir hut v.·oulrl provide an automatic r11ise in the 1972-7J fiscal year. For the pa s! \11·n ye:ir~. leaching' salaries have been uirreasf.•cl Dt'cnrd1ng !o increases in Lhe cost of li1•l11i.: !\II' the !Als Angeles area as determinrd I.iv 1he bureau of labor statistics. - '/'hat rneanl a lour pC'r<·rnt inrrc:i ~r in tear her salaries this year_ llrpn1cr 1101ed. Saddlehark trustees m<'et :it 7 45 pm. fl1onday in the board rootn . 28000 Marguerite Parkv.·ay in :-0.fission Viejo. Other He111s on thf' 11i::f'nda inchuJe ap- pro,,al or a i.JJ.300 budge! !ior the Associa\ed Student R.1dy for the co1n1ni: year. The student body rerei1 es tund~ from the sale of ;\SB cards, ad1ni!'sinn~ lo speci,11 events, as \\·ell as boo k slfire and lunl'h wagon sales. Rren1i>r noted. The boarn will con~1der J1J1n1n1oi 1hC' C'ali rornia School Roards Assl1t•i11t111n f1>r the 19i1-72 school ,1 ('<Ir at <1 t''lst of $~92. The boa rd h;is not be!o11grd lo !he statewide organiza!inn fi;ir t11i. 1r11r~ At the reriues! of !he C"nn1ptrin l'nl!rg!' board . trustee!! will rnn~idf't' artrip!!nn r1f a resn!ut1un ba <·king AH ~ram Th" tu ll 11·ould require approval of IJ011nl~ of i:ilJ di.~rrirts invnh•r(l 1n a tr:1n~ler (If JUl1UJ1· col!l'ge district territrir.1•. Al pre~ent , a pe!ltion or 2.'i perrrnt rif Lile rcsidl'.nts of an area to bf' l1nnrxed. 1n11y force annexation to another districl. Bremer explained, About 400 supporters are expected to honor California Attorney General Eve!Je J . Younger during R $\OO.a-pl11t1 dinner Tuesday night al tht Balboa Be.y Club. No speeches are fll:pe('ted , but Orange County supporters will have a chance to met! the victorious attorney generBI. Fund.~ frorn the banquet \\'ill help pay for his successful campaign. Exp ert Watch Repair Art Linkletter will serve as ma!ter of cercmonie~ while enlertainment will be pto\·lded by Les Brown 'Ind his orchestra. Ben C. Dt>ane. M Orange County rleveloper. head~ the rommittee for the banquet which he11ln~ at R p.m. Tht bRtl· ciuet I~ !pon!ored by The Friends of Evelle Younger. Rings Redesigned Cotll M~1•· .ll) Wt</ 9•1 .\h..,I ......... , 8.-.;~: uu ,.,_, & ......... .,., ....,,lll'll•Olt hldl: 1'11) •.-c11 l&<t!t••'' Trial Progra1n 4-day Work W eek B egins o.t VC I WATCH REPAIR SPECIAL e Cl ... ed e Oiied s5 95 e Adlutled • llKtTlcally TimH "-:,':; We Ouy our ring mountings d irect from rin9 cesting houses end heve them finished by specieli1ts, thus enebli ng U'S to sell to y ou for less. DOM RACITI Jewelry Repa ir al if' s finest I I ' Physical plant workers 11 UC 1rvlne to- day began a lhree-month trial of I four- day, 40-hour work \\'eek. From today through Oct. I. plrt of tnt physical plant stiff -maintenance e:mployes , 11rdener1, t n11neer1, p1lnter1. plumbers, electrlclana and ot~r1 -w\tl work Mondaya through T h u r s d a y s . Another plrt of Ute 1t11f w!JI stir! thtlr week on Tueaday1 "'Orklng through J,.rid11y1. All ,_:UI atart 11 7 11.m. eech d1y and quit al &:30 p.m. Taking a half-hour for lunch. Both groups thus wlH h8Vt lhref·d1y weekends, either Friday• to Sundays or Stttur(lays tn h1ond1ys. Ra lph Lau r, t:CI l):.'f$Onntt 1n11n:ircr. said several admlnistralivt depsrtments of the campus are sludying more ef. hcien! ways of providing necessary servlcts through ch1nged work week!. The phy~ical plant department ls the first to elCptrlmenl with the lour-day work "'eek . Laue noted. The adjusted v.·ork schedul~ mean3 :t 20 percent f!ll v1ng I& employes on com· muling co~t~. ·'The Un iversity eii:pe cts to 11ave through reduced tn1vei time between shops and work sites, reduced cle11nup lime and raster crnnple!lon of con· '-lruc!lon 11nd m1lntenanC'f-joks which are performtd by !he physical plant dep11rl· nil'nt. ·• Laut sai d. WATCH REPAIRING DONE ON PREMISES 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, Sl!LL. TRADE 1838 NEWPORT ILVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA COMI IN AND llOWSI A~OUND PHONE 646·7741 ......... Harbor & lro.dw.., I I I I I I DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS • l'MA POLICE OFFICER! SME POLLED Tl-11 5 GUt.l ONME. • • , ........ _ o·Zi ,_ _____ __:-::.';:;-;-.'"•'·-..;• MUTI AND JEFF MARRIED MEN Al<E SMARTER T>1AN BACHELORS AN D 1l-IEY LIVE LONGER/ FIGMENTS PLAIN JANE oM,YEAH 1 A 8ACHElOR IS A MAN WHO "l>llNKSBE~ HE AC'TS AND T~EN DOESN'T ACT! WEU.··-- You'RE MAKING A B IG MISTAKE! .. ly Chn t•r Gould l OON"'T KNOW WHO'VO.J ~.el.IT t'OSOOY C.AN BULLY A µELPLESS LITTLE LAOV WHILE l'M AROUND. By Tom K. Rya n By Al Sm ith By Dale Hale By Frank Baginski Ll'L ABNER ! GORDO MOON MULLINS 1.NIMAL CRACKERS DAILY PI LOf !7 ')O'L L \'1'Y1W 'W .... "I Wl-\ft l 'YO' P.f:ADS MAH PAPP'l'S WILL.:.' By Al Capp WEGOrTA LE'4VE!! By Charle s Barsotti By Gus Arriola ____ .., :SOc~l~ST T~IN0, •• Fl!<ST, :t J..Eo I• ., 1, !1 ' )'LJU Hrr FD~ ., A\" HAlJ<': ANO ~1~~1C01 EH!' • ~1D~61.JKNS es<DWJ " ~CCNO, :r. IHT -UJI! NOW"""! WHAT'S WRON"i? 1; h\~ VllFl"Y ·.t .. By Roger BoUen 1 YOU HAVE A '"TOf<Q:ID 'i<Ol'llA._,CE l.F'C.oM\N~ •••. 1 IT W'ILL 0E ~UST l.Jk'E M'THoNY AND CLEoPA\RA l \-40\HEV~ YO\.!DSE I I E R~ INTO AC.CIDE:NT JNSURANCECN ASP BITES!' C'~\Q~, SIP A 1.11'fl.E MOre OF Tells .. -~OU'UE GOTTA &ET <,WR Sl'l'BlSTH <JP/ =~ AS \.\'.X.l'l'E WEI.I.-• UIE'L~ TA~£ A IJrtLE 11'1~- I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by. A. POWER I ACROSS l First na me of ~ Pt rS ian matnemat1clan 5 Dlrrt\ !h' aHtn!ion of 10 Of am plt p!OPQl\I01'1S l~ V lrglnl~ --: 1st Arr>t ncan· born child 15 Silll' ovtr ln pr0!1unc 1 atf on l b·--Minor 17 Att of going OHi la H~vil'llJ Ill will 20 Suhsidlar)' line or l'l'trch8ndtst 22 Mea l tOl.l'St 23 Ae11ulrt to go 24 Anlmoslty 25 Ot t \ari d 28 Oyt lZ C.hanict!t'lted tiy: Suff it )3 Semi mOl'IPY 35 Bicyclt part 36 Lon; n1r1ow groovr 38 Ont who 11\0V I S I roi_nd •O Populace: Prtflt •1 8 ltttr dr119 .41, Notrd 1ctr r1s, lrgalty: 2 \f\'otd5 .. S Mu1Ly: British 50 P\tlflQt\ 51 c ~used 10 rotAtr swiftly 5l G~~r consent 55 Pos 11 ion of I ~•Sort rtl~tivt to thr ~ir1ound1ngs 59 TV snonsar's f O!\Ct lll. Z words ~l N. Amtrican marsh bird b2 Htraldit btnr1ng bl Not r~laYrd 04 lr8tk !17 hast ratio; b5 Rra l PSL8\P """" lib AllC.t S!Of' (,7 Genrral 1rputM1on DOWN ] "°'ms 2 LOllll drtss: lnfam~I 3 Un[J'ri<hJCtlvt! •Try ~JI 1g1in 5 Sointth!ng •3 Kind ol r:1tt ~5 Alr: Ccrrti. fCJl!I th~l IJ'ompts lhf mtmor)' l - Satttda~'i Puzz le Solve-cl: b Afri[~n Ant t loll'. 7 ~~lalwork;n; tnol 6 Nrther l~nds Gnmmune 9 Divulge 10 Hts1tattd 11 Consumtr lZ Systtm of WllM piPf5 13 Overdut 19 Come-out - --; 2 Wl)tdS 21 Cunning lool( 24 lnn 25 Flr shy planl o! ~e•!to 2b ScOtt 27 As cr~ry as --: 2 "Nords 28 Catllkt ma111111al 2q Go~I b ZB 71 30 Call ed JI E•a!le d ilonr1f 34 A ~ s 37 Ol!tred form~\ly J'1 Ont who ll'~YeS About ~iolently 42 IJ.ore c.unnlng 44 Proooun 47 M~l-t iror e (_l11Tt•1t A'I H~rmor1y 51 Mran1~11 52 roo1 1,ss ~n1mal 53 P1t1c.~ 54 F1Jnct ion 55 Tit Ufl 56 ··-Stnl!a: c~n . provintl 57 Mttrir. un it 58 MAr~~! &O ·-··Aviv " PEANUTS A > JOl4NNV l'.At.IE ifTU IUJ5 ~~OM HIS DATE W ITl-I I \V, 1--!E Fil ., "68EV 5Pt:NC.EI.? iilii STILL .lW .. KE ~ ' MISS PEACH • \<ELLY $CHOOL SUMMER. -P1...ACE M Erv 1 SE;.-,V1C.£ -"\~ 111.tJA , fi•t . ~ PERKINS -... -. • "' a ~ ~ f \) "' .. -t ... ! b.~.c,-~J-.o-.•. .:.-~----·- By Charles M. Schulz OF CO!JRSE A SMART COOKIE ! I Sll~PKr ""'i;:1e'sTI ~L µ.,vE ~ ,.WE a: VOU, ~ ro SIT DOWN ~ERE'5 A NICE 'SU~ER JOB FOR 'T'Ol '; 'SOD.\ F.JllNTAIN' MANA&E~, E:4-SY \.VOl<:K'.1 ALL THE rcE CRCA.M -.,CU CA N EAr. 75'-.AN HOU~.• 75 ¢ AN HOUi:t, £H ? By Mell iµt\115 A arr MOIO:E il-IAN I CARE 10 PAY. By John Miles ., ,.,, ' 11: ft• ~tii ~f , . lH( ST RANGE WORlD ~ MR •. MUM I "' ,. ,, I • I I ~I I It "" " ,, ' r. f •• ~ ,, " "' '" ' " •, .. • ' . " • n ' " " ' lllOUl.D <IOU IJl<t 111A-r? •• " ' DENNIS THE MENACE 'REY,PUTMM:K! YtJVJ/I ICTTH~Tam FAl~Y!' • • • ~It DA~ V PlLOT SC 'Technology' Has Different Meanings to Man y People By SYLVIA PORTER Q How mucb of • payoff will our mulli-b1!1 1on dollar 1patt pnigram b11vc for the 1verage person? A Only a m1nonty "1Jl benefit -and about one 111 10 \\ii! actually be harmed by this program Q Who 1hcn from our technology" benefits most &d \'ancing A Primarily businessmen and sc1ent1sts. not average v.orkers. Q. Bu1 will tethnology be able lo sol~e our nationa l pallutlnn problems" A Yes These are sample opinions of a CfOSS·SCC'l 100 of u s c111zens disclosed 1n a fascinating study by a team of Harvard Social S vs t e ms Analysts headed bv Da\'td Armnr The 1ntens1vc study recently obtained, which t covered lti High Gear citizens 1n the Bnston area both young and old , and from a "1de variety of o<:cupat1ons and income lt>\Pl s The study is part of a 10.-year Harvard proJPCI on tech nologv and soc iety to be <·ornpleted In 1974. exarn1n1ni:: v 1 rt u a l I y every 1n1portant asr~1'! of !ht! impact of technology on us as 1nd1v1duals Technology. rnnst of you would define quickly 1 s machines ' and mod er n technology ts t: 0 rn rule r s . New Bu111per Syste1n St11died By CAR L CARSTENSEN 0t tllt O•llY Pllo! ''•If ,\ new energy absorbing bumper system 1s now under development in response to the govemment"! s a f e t y regulations We 're working very closely with car manufacturers to develop high 1nlegrity sleet bumpers and back-up systems that w1!1 meet or exceed the Federal 1mpa c l re- (jUJrements," John S Judd, president of North Amencan Rockwell's A ut om o t 1 v e ProducL~ Div1s1on said The F'cdera! standards re· {jUtre that beg111n1ng with 1973 model cars front bumpers must withstand a 5 mph impact and rear bumpers 21.t.i mph "WE ARE no longer dealing with JUSl a bumper bu! an en- tire energy ab sorptio n system,·· Judd pointed out. .. tn order to get the Job done w1th1n the cr1t1cal time hm11a- lions, there are many complex lechnologicat problen1s lo be fiOl ved " APD developed Ame.r1ca'! r1rst spring bar bumpers and then developed the techniques that allowed bumpers to be chrome pla!c>d "1'nd,iy, \IC are still NX'Ognrzed as the le,ad1ng au!hor1ty on bumper design and qual1I\' manufae· lure'' Judd said APO 1s !he largest independent supplier of bumpers to the automobile In· dustry ALONG 'V I T H de\ eloping new high strength s I e e I humpers APO ;ilso h a s developed a s pr ing t ypc humpcr br::icket called a volute spring as their solution to an energy a b so r p t 1 o n i;ystem The volue spnng 1s a cone+shaot'd \.\'horl of c!oscl) co1led ribbon steel. ENERG Y ABSORBING BUMPER SYSTEM \n energy absorbing burnper systen1 1s being £lcv<•!op· ed by North Amcr1tan Rock1~rll s 1\L1\on10Ll\l' 1'1(1 ducts IJ1vls1on (A l'i)) in rc!ipun:.c to tile gnvr1n· rncnrs safetv regulations 'fhc !>yslc1ll ineludes a high integrity s tcC'I bun1pcr n1ade up of a 1>l:1t!'d bumper face and a box-like rc1nforcu1JI n1('n1bcr of high strength steel bch111d 11, and 1110 vnlute sp1 1 n ~ shnck absorber s located rn 1hc b1,1ckrt a1c:i 1'h1s system ac cord111f! to John S .lucid , pre..,1drnt of .A.PD. '"1s li ghter 1n l\e1ght than other <·or11·cpt;:; '1c have evaluated and it should be con1pellt11•c price '111sc " othrr concept~ 11e h a IP r1 ;i lu;itrd and 1t shoulcl be 1·ompc:t1ti1 e price wise ' Thi~ high ener~y storing <ir &hock absorbing. relel11'el v hght-we1ght spnng 1s cur- rently being produced 1r1 a vane1y of srnill!Cr s11:r:; 'The APD approach ' Judd ~aid "1s ligh ter 1n \\e1ghl 1t1<1n rESTl\'G IS condul lcd at (hf' {'O!npan1 ~ AIHOlllfll!I p Trchn1c,il Crntrr 111 1 r1l\. ;;;--~~~~~~~~~-,! NEWPORT SH ELT ER, L TO . A Ca!do•" • l 1m !td P~''"~''~'~ 1, Be•n9 Fo•M •d To Pw•eh ~,. A N• .. po d Eo•cl> Offit • e., ld'"'l 'GO LIMITED P•~Tf<IERSH1P U"l!T\ 0~ JI 000 E.t.C~ )tl,,~•"l'U"' Pyrrh••o ] U• +, 9'1• Cumulative Preferred Rate of Return SllF.IT tR 11\Jll "TRl l S INr:. l .. ) WHtcl•H Or!v• Su•tf 111 "l~WpOrt &•oth 'IW 71 41645·28 20 Tftl\ Adv,,1 ... -~· Ii "'"~'' •n D"'' !O \t i! ""' • •nhrl!~!1Dn ~I "" """ I• but •r ••ll U" k Such ollt• I• ..,.a. on1v DV !~• Ol!tnnt C1'cul•• lnYfll"'"'' limit""' to C1ll!ornl• rt•donr1 with 1n"1111 Income In t•cut ef ilO.oot •Ml • ••t -nh '"''''"of tis ooo Keep your cool with air conditioning. Rent a new Ford from Ford. Just call your local Ford Rent·A-Car Dealer. He's close to home. And In a 11ffy he 'll rent you e new Ford, Mustang, Torino or Pinto for a day, week or month. Low rates ... Insurance Included. FORD RENT·A·CAR SYSTEM THEODORE ROBINS FORD mo H«Mr tl"4. C... M .... C•llf. MZ.eGIO ..,_ WILSON FORD 11211 e.-fl 11•4 HM11tlllfh11 t-c.h, Ce llf. 141-6411 '.'IJ1ch 1\f'D ~ h•1n1p<'r !"sting df'111 r con 1<.,tc; of a twn ti•n 11c1gh1 on lhr t•nrl of ri n 11 · fn 1t lr•ni.: .1rm lhr rrnd1ilum rle\1C< p('r111 11 ~ lr~l i!ll! of hll!l1· pi r <.,1<>t£1n<> tnnunlrd r1 lhr r (ln :t 1 rh11 Ir' nr on J.1 ri~1d framf:' Tr-;tc; 1 :111 hr 1 Olldllf'!f'fl a! 1ar11nl! 1111p:u1c; ~1111111,,1 1ng <;pf'<' l~ 11p 10 I~ 1111IC'~ pr r hour \l'T(I PHOlll '( '1101\ SllO\I S fl/(; (;,\IN i' S 111111"' 1 t•h1rlr pro- riu<"lt<1n !a~1 11crk tntril"(f 2l2 42h 1 1i111~ !hf' o\u101nob1lc !11,1 n uf·1 t•1l11 r1 ~ A <:~rir1 1t 1n11 rrpor\rrl !orl ,11 Thr 11 eek ~ nut put 1nr lutlrd lR.:J R7R rass<'ng< 1· c.1rs :ind 4/i 54R lr\Jck~ Hnd busr<; Our in<: 1hr rre11011 s v.r1 k 1!12 ~20 (a r~ ;ind 45 378 <:11n1rnrrr 11( '\•'hu Ir~ 1vere p1·oducrd lhe Af\1A ~:11Cl CU1\1 Ul/I Tl \'E ou1 put in 1971 through June': 111 LOlaled 5 4!0 014 un1\S, I fl CI U d Ing 4.405.919 c;irs ,1nd L004 125 comn1ert 1<1l vehicles In the same pcriNI la.~! y e a r , 4 lil4 597 \'l'h1r lrs "'err pro- d11ced -3 715 972 passenger cars and !18!1625 trucks and bl!~f'~ 10°/o NNN CARE FREE LONG TERM LEASE lh ComP•ftV ollt••!tcl th•lft 111 aoo !(! t1u,aoo 111 <••II lltK•. 1714 ) 642-05'10 ITEK 1r yov woylcl l 1 ~t • copv 111 •t t.•fti Rr•••rth Rep(l rl o~ compt fty, IYll W1<I• or e•ll '"' tho\ Established 1856 H. HENTZ & CO. -Inc.- •8 Mirrt1btn Nir.., Yerk Stock l1clto114e Town & Counlry Oran9t. Ca li( Road Telephone: 835-3100 engineering, science research, lht> space program . Technnlogy. thereft:ire , 1s at !he very ct:ire of our economic societ} and is t'i!hPt a grf'at cn ntnbutor or a v1c1ous thre,il tc1 our l1\es ~or rnaybe both \\'h1ch would Y 0 l1 ~<i\ ~ Compare your a\!1t udes wit h 1h('sc Q. \\'bat h:J\'e been th< 'f greatest l'Oo trlhu11ons \rchnnlog\'., ,\ r.1.~chine~ h<11c mad(' our li ves eris1<'r ·rv m:1kc>s peo ple n1o rc av.are of 1\hat's hap· p1·n1ng <1round them , corn· pule rs n1<1kr business morr ef I tClf'n! <1lltD1nt1! ion creatr'.'i b<·11er "nrk1ng conit1t lnns In su1n :in o\ er" h('Jmin~ 1n<1Jon1 v hel1e1rq trchnologv does 1norc good than harm lln\\P \'£'r only a rn innr1!y lh1nks the d1 scovr.riPs from 11ur spare pn1grrim 11111 h:ive n1uch of a payoff for 1he a1 C:ragr man, nr t ha t lechnnlngy can p1rr i;olve our pnpula11nn prohlrrns Q 'Vh ,1t arr the great('sl dangrr~ of te1 hnology'' A \\1e havr bcc nn1e Inn depcnrlrnt on n1;it h 1ne~ The p;ire of modrrn l1rf' docs not permit t 11tH• rnnugh for [lf'Oplr IQ relate !n C:nch other F':tc· tory assemblv line~ drs1rov in· tercsl 10 \1nrk Q Who ~hnuld pay !ht high eost nf f1ghl1n~ pollution., A A :su;n1f1cnnt 75 percent rrpnr1 rd th cl' 1~ould ;icccu1 a fdX h1ke nf $011) a year !O help stnp w.il l'r pnll1111cm anrl sC'vrn llU1 l)f 100 ,Jrc ('001 IO<'Cd lhal driving 1n n11 r 1nner c1t 1r~ n1U~I Pl<'n!u;illv he hnnned \Vl11lc 1hfl~r f.'l\or1 nJ! tax .hike~ and n1nr;il or1111n~ r111 clnv1ng ~re f;i11 Iv hr :i \ 1 Iv con ccn!raled 1n \he upper 1n· lelltgcnrc brarkrLs, nr;irl v half nr those 1n the !(lwr<:t cduc:itrcl brackrt<; :1l~i1 11 n1ild go ill(l ng Q llow dn Ou· pr11f{''iSlOf1<; port:inrc? tr< hnO!nJ!v In 1m· A A "(1rnt1sl or n11 f'ng1nrf'r Is r,tlf'd ;unnng lhr l<1p four pr(lfl's,.1nns ;ilong 11,1th ph vsl· <'1.l!ls and ];i11 \ crs ~fuf'h lc-.;s i1npn1 t.i n1 :irf' bo<>1 nf's'i r ~ 1'ell !" Eu tr' Europe Coast Man Tal\.es Part In Program Complete-New York Stock List "°'" Ntl IMf•.I Ml ... UW CloM Cftl .. , .,,,. 12"" -'• 11' .. ., -.. ~l'. -'• '° + •• l1'1 -~ .ui,. + • 1J'1< -1 11~. + '. 3111 .,. • 91 -1 l'I'• -T'• 11'1 + '• " S2l, -1, 7t , -'• S1•• + '• 30'• -'• " It -1 19 , t '• 16 ... + '• :u ~ \, ~ n·. + '• " 11'1 -·~ :J2lti + '. 5'1'1 + '• l~o -lo 14>1 .. "" l-1•1 + \o 19'~ -'• ,, •• +1•. "°'' • , ' .U'lo -+ '• 11 1, -'• "' 11'• 1+'' 1)1 • ''"'' 11 .. :j ,, ' ' . '1'• I\ JO» • 1'. 19» -.. JJI, -'• ~s·~ -'"' •9" <.llo -•o l.J. -•• 11•. -" Jll•, + '. lO -" I• -I•, lJ _,_ '. " ' . "-''• -l o "" SC DAILY Pl LDT 29 Monday ~s Closing Prices-Complete New York Stoel{ Exchange List ..... " .. r-------------1 Ulilt I With L ... Cleoe c;111- •, :". ' ,, ,. ... , , . " ' ' '" .. " • '" .. " )"'t ' . 'XI 7• ' .. ' . '. loll , .. • " " '". " . " ' • ' . ''! " " " ,., .. ' ,. • ,. . " ' " ' . ,. l!IM ~· ' ~ " '" " "" • • '" .. ' ' . '" " " ' . • ':. ' ,. • " ,. . " -• .... ' .... ' ' " . ~ "' -' . ]~o 1M -! ,,, '"' , .... ')<>>;. - ~., 1~·"' <7 I? . ' '" ; .. • ..... -1-----------------------1 -10tll•I ,&V ...... l~ I "Ill' i.-C'-" Ott "• '1'9'k(• Jlill\tl 0--.-,_. .... 1) l"'' t"-r.· --M k D I. lTOCKt o.-t Htth L"' ~io.. Ne! W•ltl 111" _..., .. , ~-. .. -• t . , ... 111 6' t !'tSl Wll I 10-tM t !IMUtt' IO 1! ~r;; ~ '~~=;;z ar e ec mes ~ t:t Jr.!; 7li:1mfi11sn+~o::~--;=· u l/" li" ~t 1',? f. ,,. l'f'llt HIO"/ H•ll MilM-l~w:~,..,4 .,& " P, c , 11'• _ ,,. •11101e1 on• 11 atoci..1 ~ 111 • ..., ... , wir:lf• , a " ,,..,..,,. IU W1r WI I ,J ~: ,,~ -~ In Li h T d. l.... 00 • 9:• ,. l ~'t: u~ if: ~1~ g t 1·a 1ng ~": · . .!l; s:~~~JJ;~ n ,o 4'""' 14\11 -..._ Wr/fl Go. 11 ~ ~ ~ .. ~ ~ ff"" 1~ • f,r.~ = w .... .,., l6 ~ iz : /~ :!"' -\• NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks decli.ned in hg ht u~ ,. ... 1 oH ,. .,., U\11 JN + • 5!f~~· t ,,! 'r.: 1f" ,,_: -"' turnover Monday ~~,.~~•2 :i JI.,.,,,. m: ~ -" :1r.P. ~~ uo l1'1 36•• 36"'-'A ,_ ,_ d [ al t d [ u G~ ..... l ,I ... lb ~" 117f io 'I• " •1 J..JC:O .l.;<Jncer irector o spec1 s u Ie.!5 or u c;~,. Dll t11 ,. ~ _ ., w,.,. "' • ,, JO n,,. 1 ~ n -"" Burns Nordeman & Co said '"at there was no ,.. u 1"""" .o 1tl " v. -4 w,~,.., 'Jo J 1::: lil'o ff,Z :-, Ul UI H ~r:~ 21 • ~ u .+-~ w., ...... r 1 \ti ij ~ ti,,, ~" +: ~ cent1ve lo buy and traders were disappointed that u ,.~~ 11o11 t 1 .,. R.... ~~:V~ 1~ u ,., .. it , u<1 -economic recovery 1s not as exuberant as expected H /""~ ~ l', , 1i~ ~ .,, w .. ,.1c1"" wr n '• , .. .....,_ d d d u '"11~ 1s "" 1 ... +i..w"u"'°"/" n ?0" lto\. 'Ml ,. + "" However he note that there was no owns1 e u rao.j 1 20 '' 1:1"' 1 .. 111· ~~.~i1" t t:, -U V-~essure on lhe market either end he looked for u .. ' u 11 ~ "° 19 ~ 1'"' "' -,. w .. , 1 111116 ..i1 l.I,.. n, ,. • -"" 8~ 'u1u;J, ti 1i I'~ ffij'~ Jfil~:.:;: w .. \l\'u. 1 as ,, i ~"" Jr -"' tter market pnces later 1n the summer !-!" u~.rl ~ l • to + ""w1ot1111 pt•J::J s ,,,. Xl"1o .!I),. f d • h I f l d [ Sh " L~ JO .. • -,.. W•vbt~ I la ,, 20, '"" ,., ., .._ re ~nsc e 1rs vice pres1 ent o erar u"I"° 1,. ~ ..,. ~ ! 11 ~ _,.. w•v••~• t0 ,'l 1 :i.v, lo C d I bef th un "'' ce,.,11 l2t 1 .. 13 +i, w •• ~. 1Jf6 11 11'& 11 .. 1n• ..., son Hammill & o sa1 so me 1me ore e sum u11~ , '° " 62"" ., ... ,, _ .._ w""• ""' s1 6l .... lnJ~.o-& th kt 11 t d \..-U••ldo60Jl)1 ,.»'-21.A V,W-P'l"jof '' n" lr 11 _.. mer 1s <lU t e mar e wt resume J s a van<'.'e UC" uiu E )0 06..,, ....,, .. .,., _ .. whlr1 eo 1 eo 101 ... ~ .. ~ -~ b th [ th l " t h Id u M Iii Ul'o " " -P.. ~IC" oil!> °' ii , ,1 .. , .. _"" cause y en some o e economic s a1.1.s 1cs s ou ulM "' ,, l ,, ,. ,, wN1cn or• 1 19' lt'IO i "" ""' + "" b t 1 k I tU b tt • u M Pl' 50 r'll'l 2fl lO '° WI! i c ore l 1101 100 10 e g 1n o oo a 1 e e er u 1nCD11 1& 11 1J'4 13,, 1:v... .. ,,, w~ .c ..... ri:io ~ '' " -/1 At present Anschel noted that aside from econ ui.~ "L 1 n • l.I "" 13 • • w~1·• Moro 1$11 .......... 1 Vt •l n A.1W><: )6 h ), 1) ... -1oWM"1k1 11• 16"" u lo\ """ .. om1c concern the market 1s being hampered by lI\ vc"' c°"' 60 J1J u' 13 u • .,. "-w1c~ .. c°"o • 11 .. If Milo -<-I~ V-1 40 1'0 ll>i. ll ~ .ll... WleblS!t .1511 •1 ~ .. ""' s. ..i. ' terest rate uncertainties Tv.o weeks ago some o! von11o ce '° l 1J.ltt. u;;. 111> w 11 111 .... • I °"' 1~ 100• "" Cerp ' 10 ll .. d... .. -1-~I WI ll•mo C11 o 1t'" '' 11 • -... the nation s banks Jacked u p the prime rate by v. ~1~~"' ~ ~ ~ ~ \~ • ..-• ;:;;::: ~! ;;'" IU10o'<il'O.lo?()ltlo -... IL (bl'" b l b k h tt tk Vt(qrnwlO •Nl1 JJ01 ~lo -t.Wnf\'01r1 H r.\O 10• •o• 104 ")'~ po1n u 1 • .ue 1gges a.n s ave ye o a e v1E1~ , ,1 1.u •'•' 1, .. '"' wi .. n 01.11 , 11 JI • 31' .M ii-• l "!"•'117 ll.C tN tN Wlnnt>to ~ 11 .sr,.. .1it1n 11"" _,_ ,, ac to n v. 1.11 ,.. 1 1100 ''" ,,..., ''"" w1111"w , ... 11 11 ""' "~ Shortly before ••e final bell the Dow Jones In ""'"•do Jl 1~-. ,,,., ill -w11 ,. •t1t0 140" 'll• "°"" 1.11 v~ co,,., 'LHll H• IH\ + "W•("! ,,, 101 1: .. ':,. 1:,., .._ .,. dustr1a! Average was off 3 58 a.t 87310 Standard &: ~~\"U:.·;:1 n ; 1, H" 11 ... ":z:{:.,~ 1' J ,: .. 1::! 1n:":;: !' Poor s 500 stock Index showed a loss of 0 35 at 97 67 -W X "( Z-:Z:.1~'~",. ':, ~ ~ J"" ~ ...... ~ Declines topped ad vances 769 to :!i28 among the ~:~~~. ~·ir 0 ri,1 ;I :.; " :: _; 4 :z:,;'l1~ 1 ,.i.;. ,.. ,.,~ 1 621 issues crossing the tape w1c~ •n.10 ... M " -~ wr ,,.,.. J.o 30 1t • I•~ It~ -" Ww',',~~~. 1 •,1• " ll" 11 .. Xlill ,. -. Wurll•••• ., I ~ lV. J.o.;,_,.. 11 ..-11 ,,.,., 11 • 17"+1t >'lf'e•CD ltl 101 m-''"' ~™' -~'••••••••,.••,.•••a•••••••••••••••'w• krH I Xie 14 ~ ~ 3'.., -Iott lCI•• II<. Briefs MACON Ga IUPll -A New York CJ!y bank Nallonal Bank of North America ha.a provided a $5 6 rrullion loan for an experimental OOus1ng pro- Jetl 1n tvl.:icon sponsored by the federal department of Housing and Urban Develop- men! The houses will be built of type s of pre fabricate d modules ol unusual material! not previously used in com• mercia! housing to any great e){tent RICJ-rnfONO Va (UPI) - Nabisco Inc has taken an cip- lton on 95 acres 1n Henrico County as a site for a larg11 b1scu11 ;ind cracker bakery Construcl1nn 1s to start by lhe end of 1973 The p I ant u1L1ma tely will employ I 200 Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List - Sal• NII 1.;c. J Hl111 U. Ct.. Cl!" 11191 NM (.W1 1 Hl1ft &. .... C"" Cfll • ' lllU Net (llclo I Nltll Ltw Clew <;/\or ... llP5J'!••ti t. '151l>e+w4!• WallStreet Chatter Severe 1ntermed1ate tor rect1nns can be v e r y frightening but do not nP.Cessarily mean the begin n ng of a new bear market Ind calor D!gest says Among reas(Jns the market should turn more positive are 1n dJcation~ corpnrate eam1ng~ wJJ! unprove in the month! ahead possible tax cu t. a and tor restoration of I.he In• \:estment tax credH and the fact that July historically 1s .! bulll~h monlh according to the firm ~tock market sell1ng at. lhl!i: point nol only rl!flects profit taking but :t/so llq1udahon o( securities h> raise monf!y observes Jane\vay Pubhsh.1ng and Re.search Also the bulge in savings is being m1sn1 lerpreted as money ltcketed for the stock markel' as 110011 .as the market looks promising again It says Rather 11 greal dea l of money b111!d1ng up 1n 11av1ngs accounts 1f money that belongs lei people whn are d1gg1ng 111to a defensive stance 1t adds Who Nn othl"r ,,.,Wlpaper tn the Wl"lrld ca1 ts about your com rnurtlty like your community dally newspaper doea. ll • the DAILY PILOT --~ 39 DAILY PILOT Mond.a1, J unt 18, 1971 South Coast Repertory Orange Coast College 'Charley's Aunt' Hilarious 'Fiddwr' Cast Announced Gary Gordon of Los Angeles "Fiddler on the Roof'' will 1ege audilorum. Tick.el ina11 has wen the C'OliP1Prl role &f be directed by John Ferzacca orders v.·111 be ac ce pted By T0~1 TITUS Ot ni. D•llr ,_1i.1 s .. 11 They're billing •·Charley's Aunt" e.s Llie •·funniest corn- edy yet" at South Coast fl epe"tory -and they're not Vf!ry far wrong . There are certain old-lime comedies, and B r a n d o n Thomas' turn or !he century English farce 1s high among them, which lend lhPmselves perfectly to the \\•ild and woolly machinations of a directorial ~Vizard and an in- defatigable cc.<;!. SCR ctrar\y bas come up with such a magical combinatH:in. for in- deed, ''Charley's Aunt" IS un- Monday Evening JUNE 28 1:00 El Big News Jerry Dunphy. (1) ABC News Reasoner. Smith. 0 @) ffi Major Le.aaue 81:11blll continued from 5 PM. 0 Yirainia Gf1h1111 St!Gw Cutsls art M11jcrie lord. l(eir Dullea, Al Ian Drake i nd Dr. Lucille FG1e1. 0 Six O'CIGtt Movie: (90) "Mir•· de ol Mor21n 's Creek" (comeely) '.(4 -Betty Htrt1011, Eddie Bracken. Q I Spy m Movie Comlnued lrom 5:30 PM ID Star Trtk fE Child11n's Televislon Wor~sl!op ''Reading Series Confe1ente." ml fisher Family rn "otiderG 34 CD !+h's Jim HaWlhorne 1:30 (I) News Bill Huddy. (I) Trlrth or ConHquence1 (l)CBS Ntw1 Waller Cron~itt. fD Hodgef)Odge Lodgt €E)SellK'fed Fi!ms/Mu~tale al) Et Prof. S.iit1ri11 al ABC Ne-., t 7;00 IJ C8S New• V.'al1e1 CrGnki't. 0 DEllUT Wldt Sc r,am The11Te: "'Tiit Can.11 of Dr1cul1" (honor) '56 -fr•nas Lederer, Normt [be1 hardt. @TG Ttll the Trv111 D Whirs Mr Line? m 1 lwt lUtl m m o11inet ED I S•tC 1il] UJ. Stnt!I rortJp Rel1tion1 CommlltH He1rln1s on Mtlnland Chlnt @:)Christ tht Uvina Word €Il Angelltos Negros fB Mlguelito V1lde1 Show al MD¥~t G1m1 J:lO IJ{!J GunsmGkt (R) "lhe Jail".'' Betta Davis. in t rare 11uest rnle plays 111 unbllf"ed 1an~~ 'l"Oll\an who. wit~ hef !our sons, plots 01! IGn's death la 1ven11e /\tr husband·~ hanginz. Ci) Movlt: "The Gent11 Gunm an," Joh~ Mills, Dork Bogarde. 0 mm Ltf1 Jolt-! • Dea! ~o:I~~: ~¥~;:~,{~~ ((J~:~~;r:~:I -BLr1 Ives. t•n1lO~~er Pluml'l•"' Gypsy Ror.e let !he rough he"~ ~l~ry of Souln Flo,10' ·~~ ol t'1e man 11otG tough: !G 1!1' 1t1 beauh 1! Int tJrl\ o! l~e te~'ury. doubledly the most hllarious offering mounted on a n Orange O>unty stage an year. Robert Bonaventura , recruited on a short term basis from San Francisco's A m e r i c a n C-OnservzJ.ory Tl1ea!er t-0 direct t h i s summer-long revival, refuses to accept the play at farce valur. Instead , he has gone a step further. into the slapstick ;ind sight gag ,vnrld of bur- lesque where anything goes and the hokier the ln1erpreta- 11nn t.he better it 1s appre- ciated. Linder lhe demanding pace established by Bonvenlura , the m David frost Show Guests art .ictrtu Dthbie Rt~nolds, due-devil motorcyclist Evel Knie•"I, and roll· er dert>y star Mi~e Sr.e~. m Dr•rnet ml Pattern fOf LM111 s:ss m ~ettion de Se1u11dG1 9:00 6 Meybefry R.1.D. (R) Rula let allfS!s as 1 cit)' planner ~ comn to work with Sam Just 11 his air1 lriend Miltie leaves on y1e1tian. 0 Movit : (21111 "F.t1 11 tht Kunt- er" (d11m1) '64--Glenn Ford, /'itn- tY K'l"tn, Jane Russell, Wa lly COt. A rotrllnt llifhl ends In disaster, and the 1e1I cause of the accident Is revealed 1fte1 • rt·tnactment of the fatal flight Is staged. 0 (I)(!} ffi AIC MondlJ Movit: (C) (2h') "Wom1n .timts s .... en~ (comedy) '67 -Shirley Maclaine, Alan Min. Peter Siiiier!. <Amie t111mination of !ht modem fem1le, Kl In Paris, a wt1man'1 town par excellence. (I) At luut ®) Mcwit: (C) (2hr'I •Dttert Soll(' (mu~ical) '53 -Gordon M1cR1t, l'iathryn Grayson. (i) Felony Squid ED Bl1cll Journal £ri) 30 MlnlrttS rosonri• m Cinema 36: "Th• Clptur1." l'w Ay1es, Term Wri1ht a;) RGIM Ptra \ltl'Olllca 9:30 E (})Doll• D•r (II) DGrls "m· cu~1" ~· poodlt5 lot~ed In an tuto and finds h11se!! Ml court on 1 /Ob- l!'ry charge. 0 Bt•ler Wlf'd Nns m Quest for Adventure @ID Muslult/P1stor's Ont al la Cruz cit M1r!,. Crwcn 10:00 B ® SuspenM 1'11yhoUH "LGst Trusure." A story •bout three men frGm vari'd !l\d colorful b1ck- 110unds who join i.i 1 search !or m1ss1ng rkhes. James Slacy stars and Fritz We.ver is .speci1I 11uest 0 News Kevin Sa~ders. O Miwie: "Up tht C.-etk" (com· MY) 'SS-Petti Sellers, Darid lGm• hn$0n. m N"" P!llr.1111/fishman. (i) M11rtr1p .t.I Hamel hosts. Guest Is Billy DeWGl!t. ffi Current Ewe~b HigM111hh DI the r1n11s of lhe 4!h annual Wa!ts Sum· mer Gamts. hel~ at Cal Stale, LA CI!) ll TornillG "CKAltl .. IY'I .t.UMT•' /> COl",<!V by e•onoon fl>omo•. Cl•«le<! nv A:~r! ll""•vtMul•. de1lgnf<I bv llot>tr! 8•..,., llgM•nt o .. Rtglnolll Roal<., tee1>n•col dlf«I~• M•rHn ll•n>""• l'••••n!od Dr S01J!ll (0111 A:tff'lorv Wtdnt>d•n mroot n Su....,••• unPll />ut. I• •· tllo Tllird SltP Tnee!•r, 1111 Newpe•I lllvll, (flt!• Mew R••a<v•l•on• AOlo•lll.J, THI CASf I= 1ncoort B•llPl"Y lh>nelO llouuom J•~~ Cht1n•• • . ••. Str•t Ponor1<1" C1>1rlt1 Wv'tl'O•m .•• , ""' Monrc.ro 8r1U<IO ...,.,~no•I F,.ller IC •ll• li••d"n ,. M•-v• llooln'°"' .._mv Si>Plhi~• M•rv F •eml"ll Sir Fr•r><'> Cllt>"fV Oon Tu<"• ~,.,,..ef1 S~l •ll•i• C•"'••on Y01JnQ Oonno Lu~'" O'Al••dorfl P•I ll•own f l• 0.1•"•• J••,. Mono.,ette production moves for the most parl al full till "'Ith a high veloci ty pace and pinpoint liming rarely displayed in local theater. 'rh1s frenetic motion often gives v.·ay to ex· aggeratedly stylized romantic scenes. rendered all the more effective by co ntrast. The over;ill effect comes as though it y,•ere sub titled "Osca r Wilde Meets the Three Stooges" -for there are elements of each extreme of comedy. along with some Keystone Kops chase scenes thrown in. The plot ilsrlf o ff er s limitless opportunity for outlandish satire -11>1'0 young college men who recruit a buddy to impersonate the aunt of one of them so that they may entertain their lady· friends "'ilh the requisite chap- eronr. \Vhen a pair of greedy fathers begin pursuing the supposedly weathy "aunt'' and the real auntie shows up v.·ith the impersonator's long lost love, this comic concoction be- i:ins lo boil over. Ronald Boussom, one of 1'CR's most prolific young ac· tors, is outste.nding as the un· for tunate undergraduate trap· ped in a most outlandish im· personal.ion, Bousso1n revels in his role. exhibiting a nashing sense or timing and double-take reacli~n which embellishes his performance immeasurably. Every move and gesture is ca!cu!Ned for maximum effect at a most ex- hausting pace. 'Vrll contrasted as the scheming ynung Lotharios are Sll've Patterson and Tim r..1on1ch. P;itterson is th('_ un- disputed leader. the organ ize r who thinks on his feet , wh.ile l'.1onich, in his SCR debut. i:i equal!y impressive as the baby-faced, nervous nephe\v. Their romantic in1erests :>.re played with an overflowing senor flf prop rirty. ~lyle and demeanor by r..1acvt' Robinson anrl Mary Flen1lng. The la lier, by virtue of a delightful lisp. is the rnnre memorable of the pair, but thrir scenes together are marvels of co in 1 c roordinalion. D('ln Tuche turns in yet another s p 1 end id charac· 1er1zalion as the penniless nobleman falher '1·1th im- peccable. a11thnrita1ive bear- • BALBOA ' 673-4048 I OPEN 6:4S m L ••nt. ing. Less convincini t s Cameron Yowi.g as the boorish wealthy swain, for hi.! overly youthful face· has been overlooked in an otherwise tf· fective aging process. Pat Brown is delightfully droll as the real Brazilian noblewoman y,•ho observes the charade with glee, while J<'.Jlis lv1orrissette makes a fine in· genue ward . Sv.·iping the scenes from virtually all of them. howe11er, is Michael Fuller as the persistent butler capable of romic destruction wi!h a haughty ··very good, sir ·• Robert Breen·s tricky three· ""ay set is a masterwork of economy while Reginald Rook contributes some first-rate lighting effects. Costuming, by \Vatter Watson and Scott Busa.th. and Chris Real's period hair styling all combine for a most exceptional even· ing. Go see "Charley's Aunt." it is 1he summit in a season of nostalgic revivals and cer· tainly the most hilarious pro- duction of a singularly im- pressive year in co u n t y theater. The SC'R comedy conti nues lhroughout the s u m m e r , playing Wednesdays through Sundays until Aug .. 14 at the company's Th j rd Slep Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd. Jn dowhtOY.'Tl Costa Mesa. 'Johnn y' Cops Film Fest A\vard and will open Aug . 4 for a starting July I. Admission wlll Tevye in the Orange Coast four-day-only run in the col-be S2. College summer muscial pr<>-,;::==='=='================-~••:;:; ductioo ''Fiddler on the Roof " 1· NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES I Gordon, 33. is a graduate of '--:;;;:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;::-'· Los Angeles State College who has appeored in "M,me" ond I EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT 1 l ''Take ~le Along '' for the Long Beach Civic Ligtit opera. ............,. aliens Filling the other 1naJor J'g;~PQi l~l~l~8 !I ro!les will be Carol Gwenn. rH~R1t~tlXii!E bananas'' 00.1'11 ?ri ttt.r..- a!so of Los Angrles. as Golde . ,_ Ua1ttd •rntilJ t'hrL'l Speirs flf Orange as 2nd Comedy Hit !!,°",..!~,u "THE TWELVE ,. .. _,"1001 10-TzeJtel and Janel Gordon of El ~ctoeln"•lDo.tr' Toro as Yenta. the mat· CHAIRS" (G) ..... -. " ...... ,., IJ.JO. l4l.1-«l l 1ttOt chmaker. f\.·Hss Gordon "'a.~ "CN ln"100.)1).l.JO lasl seen in the female lead of ::;;;;;;;:.-r ATl.ANTA , <:a. !AP) -A ,-, fi lm about a disabled soldier "A Vie"· From the Bridge ·· for the Irvine Com m u nit v of World War I. '"Johnny got Theater. · his gun." has captured the Golden Phoenix award as the Others in the OCC cast io- best fi lm offered in the Allan-elude Ann Givin. Teresa M'i~hael York ta [nternatinnal Film Festi11al. Runamaker. Cohn Vogel. Dar-ren Kelly. SCQtt c rain e . ~lke...So..rnlllfr_ The Dalton Trumbo-Bruce Richard Rowlan d. El I e n Matilleft Do¥:ld Sutherland, D; an e 1c er. aren Benton, iy !1s : :...__.. Campbell production stars p · kl K Pl 1 lloiii;;;liiiiiii;ii;iiiiiiiiiii~D~oi~ty~f~•~om~1~:15 pm 111§ Van;i . Jason Robards and a ~cinhgt.;ke~arJk M5',1,rh!e:',·1 Ch8,.,";,k ·~-~a.~_llPIJ newcomer. 'fimolhy Bottoms. .-, ~ '• · " ' ·1 ===='--===========~~~-=~~-~;:;::=:, as Johnny. Virginia Mahn . Irwin E Ii= Lawton • Blanche Mickelson It was written and directed and Thomas Roman. by Trumbo, produced by ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii•iiiiiiiiiiiii Campbell. I The fil m also won the Golden Dove award as the festival's best film dealing with or contributing lo world peace, thus mainlaining its reco rd of earlier achievement. CHARLIE'S AUNT At the Cannes Fi Im Festival. it became thr: only film ever to win three major awards in the festival's 25- year history. \\ID. thruSUN. The only weopon he had left was- revenge ! , -~ ._..., DOUBLE·FUNI DOUBLE-ACTION ALL NEW FOR EVERYONE Fullerton Cliildren's Tlieater Auditioning milking ·machines, waler changed from ''Mother Goose" pumps, and sunrises. Chl!dren's literature lo "Dr. Suess." The Children 's Unlike other plays. there are Theater 'Vorkshop at the nri princesse~ or witches. h1uckenthaler Cultural Center There is, however, 11 chance in FullcrlOn is attempting ln for children. young people, .and make this same bridge from adults. lo experiment v,,-jlh traditional fairy talrs to .a 20 th drama and allo'v I he I r Century play in its summer creativity to eome to the production of "Names and surface. The cast will be com- Nicknames'• by Jame !l posed of 1111 ages and tryouts Reaney are open Tryouts w!ll be h£'1d today. The workshop is being pro- Tuesday and \Vednesday from duced by the Muckenthaler 7 to 10 p.m. at the Mu cken-Cultural Center in cooperation !haler Center, 119 Buena Vista with the Community College Drive, Fullerton. Dis!ric~ of North Orange \ hotwrt St.own ot 2-5:1 S·l :JO I Adull's &. J11nlan1 $1 .50 UntU 4 P.M. " "ONB ltlOBE 'l'BJUN 'l'OBOB" ~ I !Jim. l'E7tl! . ltlmll:J:" °' !ht-... _ l•rnilg w;JJ 111P,il HaW 10 Rt.AME A Fi" i 1 A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TtCH"'CotOR9 The play is contemporary in County. both conte;i\ and its style. The __::::::_::.:._ _______ _::===========!'<,======================~ Chlldttn 7Sc selling. a farm, is as romantic to the suburba n grade schooler as Klng Arthur's Court; but the imagination of cast and audience alike will be required to transform platforms and stepladder into a barn and silo. a roof and chimney , or a havstack. A chorus or uniquf' individuals will provide such essentials as cows. chickens. EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT• SHOWING NOW AT TWO THEATRES' STEVE McQUEEN . takes you for a drive in the country. The country is France. ~, The drive is at 200 MPH! ·'1 r ' ' . "LE MANS" \ I ' m Trull! Gr CooWQlltlKU (D It Takes t Thltf 10:30 O Mowi1: (111r 4~m) ~Sh•nRh•I ••lliea ""''"*• Upreu·• (mrstery) '32 -M1rle111 ' L.;:..::.::_:..:_.:;::;::,.:,=,;==;~ @!!I Cintm• 30 £E Do·Rt-MI 7;~5 s Ci.iution de s,gu ~dQ! 1;00 0 ®) m Ne.n 0 lJ) CD Th• NeY!\l'*Ml ''""' m Tl 1111 tlle Trulh ED World Prt!.I EID Men GI Vi1ien ll)Taenla EI!) Nino Oie1nch, Warner Oland. I m News B•ll loh~s. I m Cadtnl di Antvsti •s I t:OO f) CI. al News o ®:mN•., @ Dtllh Vtllrr Oeys o mmNein m MO'tl1: "Tht Mid Glleur (~· leiy) '43 -Turhin Bey, Evelyn An~ers, (i) B•I tM Clad; ED Out \11~itlll•1 Wllllt111ts.a (II) 1;30 IJ (I) Klrf'1 l ucy IR) H111')' prtJVei al)SI Jil1 Fuem To • diflltult h<lvse 11uest. when ht t t .30 O rr. M llrtnl .sttys w1111 l uiy wti1le his home Is ' L!U '" 11 beinc rederoralec!. D ~ m .IG~""' Cart0n 0 m Frvm t Blrd01 EJt Y!,. 0 (J) (I) Cl) Diel C.wetl Strikingl'' -~~:~1::,·~~;ir..ii. ' (Oc.U ... ,~ ••Cf<l"fS ,..,,,.., . .. ~ .. -·-. JACK NICHOLSON ~;, , , FlllE ERB!/ ·-~--UHSU!A ANDRESS """:·: \ PIEC£8 ~ll'· .. ~ t~"" STANLEY BAllEH"" -AND-IDAVID WARNER . "Melvyn Douglas is i ['ftiFEcT~ MAGNIFICENT!" :=;=.::;:;;::.-"'.""..=.:::.~··- -Juo1TH CRIST, :::::.::?e.... rnlCJ& New York MagaziM I Never Sang For My Father @'!• ~ Al.-IJll JI OCK HUD$0N "PRETTY MAIDS ALL IN A ROW" -COMING- '"RYAN'S DAUGHTER" "Sicilian Affair" M1gg1e tnd '-lilhe m Roller Gt!IMI Thurlderbirds n. land In the middle GI 1 Sit1h1n Terai Outliws. \'~=====:;==:;;:;;~;:::;:::::;;~~====~! flm1lr rllld when lhpY lry to htlp 1 friend who h11 lnhulted proptrf1 11:45 0 Mo'lla: "Dtslln1Uon 60,000" R gn1 Allen show Mic~e1 Roon1y, ldr1 m1) '57-Pie!ton Foster, Pit \\:"'1.lnt 1)1\'u (jlo1l1 Loring i nd f. te1 Bt•ley Conway, .. P' U l> luml 12:15 0 One Sttp ltyond o cv m 11 w., • vu, cooc1 Y1tf Th1 Jllf Wtt 1939 1nd to lht m Movlt: "Wtlrd W111111n" (mys· omir10t11 r1nlln1 ot ~b1i1. Mort ier;l '4.(-.lon_ 1:'11ney Jr .• E'ttlyn Hit1er look ewer lht world slage 1s An~tfl. tll1 CerfMns m11ch1d on P111ue Prlm1 Mi11lde1 Ch•mber!1ln tilled 1:00 D Me'li1: (C) "Crlpp11 CtM" Ji lor "pelct In our time;· and Amer (western) '52-G111rp Montaom•rt. ,,,..it~f.'-\: la ttptrl1wd untiasr por1cnh o! Richard [t1t1. ~ f\U.-~ lhlop" "'"'· rn Iii 0 CIJ ® -i"-o~"li~ Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES t:• U "81111bNn1 Ship" (m.,,Ury') '33 -Gal')' Grant. "OP1fl\l411 Mayfltt" ftdvtnturt) 'S0-8111 Wlllltms. m "Tiit Conlt•• ltlVltn" (d1a mt) '41-0out r11rll1nb k., ,-:im T1mlrofl. t :JO 0 (Ct "'Y111k" l 11tt1"Ht" (td· "l!lurt) '52-Jrl! Ch1"1iltr. J, 0 "Nl1htr.111 AlltY" (dr•m•l '47 -Triwit Powtr. io1n BKindtll. 10:00 (}) "Kl111 tn SMdM" (d11tnt) 'r.Q ~orst Budlllolz. Q. W. Fhclltt. 1:00 m "c.amv.d" (•dw11111111 ··~ Old; Powell, Mlctltllfll Chtirtl. t oo o •f" " St. Mt!l" (d11m•) '" -Mlehttl O'Sht•. Aline B1rt11. J:OO Cf.I "O'J of tM O.U.w" IWIS!tfll) ·~~obert it,an, Burl lvts. t:30 O (C) "Thi ltM lhnp1 ind 1111 LOU City ol CGkl" (•n!~rn) 'M- J•t Sllvtrhle!s, Clayton Moon. {))Ste 10 AM 11tll~I. S;lO m ·~ ti Oftcu!•" lrnystery) '.(S -Lnn Chan~y Jr , Lo~iw A!bfl1!on. ).} ~ '8ACK 8Y POPULAR DEMAND' LONG BEACH AUDITORIUM THVRI. ~VLT I l 1JG P.IC. rRI. JUL 2 1 110 P.M. IAT. JULT :II I• 10 P.M. IUN, JULT C 2 :l0 P.N. RESERVED SEATS , $6.50, S.75, 4.75, 3.75 ON 5.&L( • T tONG Bl.a.CH •IUNA. BOX OFFIC(. MUTUAL A.GI M- CI ES. A~l TICKITRON 0VTLIT5, SE ARS, IROA.OW•Y, MAY CO .. .6ND SULLOCl(S MAIL ORDfRS TO 801( OfflCf ': ... ;. ; ._ '. , A CINEMA CENTER FILMS PRESENTATION •• ' I : l ; lritten by HARR Y KLEINER Music by MICHEL LEGRAND £xeculive Procu-~1 ;:-_,o~RT E. RELYE Produced by JACK N. REDDISH · Directed by LEE H. KATZ IN A SOLAR PRODUCTION PANAVISION "Color by DE LUXE. A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES RELEASE [cl) ~::!~"'~~'o .•• ,,. '" I "THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR" J E D WAR D s . 80Xlm1Cl OPENS 7i1S SHOW STARTS AT DU5K ' I OAIL-Y ~IL.OT Sl•tl ~ltllll ' • LOOKS LIKE A FORTIFICATION BUT IT WAS ACTUALLY A DREAM AT WRONG TIME A lop The Bluffs of Dana Point, Th• Beginnings of 1 Hotel Hive Had Ftn• View Since 1929 Seaside Resort 'Loser' Dana Hotel Good Idea-Just 40 Years Too Soon By JOHN VALTERZA 01 Hit D•llJ ~llol S1~U If you squint a little and in1ag1ne 1 more lush landscape, the thick ('Oncrete columns and bulky roundation slabs look like an old Gf!!"man bunker on the French <.'OasL There Is even an all-too-authentic 1Y:RStika painted in red and black on one corner of the looming construction atop a prime blufr overlooking Dana Harbor. Obviously, 11 isn't a relic of \Vorld \Var II. But the bulk of Dana Point ·s showpiece hotel ·which never had a single guest is a veteran of another war. It is a loser. Jn 1929 -exactly the wrong time lo begin developing a booming seaside Hospital Begins Expansion Drive The directors of South Coast Com· munlty Hospttal in South Laguha baVe launched a fund raising drive to raise $1 million for hospital expansion. The facility. which serves Laguna Beach, South Laguna. Dana Point and l..agO:na Niguel, is t.o be expanded from the presenl 167 bed capacity to 268 beds. Officials also plan to increase the clin ical pathology, outpatient and emergency facilities at the hos pital. Hospital board president V i c t o r Andrews said lhe expanslon is needed to keep up with the rapidl y growing com· munlty. Complelion of the planned ex· pansion is tf:ntatively scheduled for 1973. resort -the hotel was to be the focal point o' a quaint. ro.tediterranean boom- town called Dana Point. It \.\'as the dream of Sidney ff. \Voodruf[. a successful developer v.'hose history included vast reconstruction pro· jects in Baltimore, t.1d .. after a 1904 fire disaster and San Francisco after the earthquake two years later. It was \Voodruff who shifted his at- tention to the South Orange Coast after more housing successes in the Hollywood area. And the hotel. to be known as the Dana Point Inn "'as the key. It even had hints fin today's historica l accounts) of ar· niation \.\"ilh the world's prestigious Ritz Carlton chain. Dana Point was master planned as California's ans\.\·er to Sorrento, Italy, \.\'here hotels perch on clifftops and guests use vaulting elevator shafts and tunnels to reach the lleashore and bathhouses below. Among the jnilial preparations for the lavish hotel was the digging of a 138-fool· deep elevator shaft and tunnel leading to Dana Cove below . Woodruff. who was leading the develop- ment o[ the enllre community at the time. committed $800Jl00 in funds from a 100-man syndicate for th e construction o[ the hotel. which would houst 100 guesls at a time. \Vhile lhe number or guests was modest. the projection for the number of drinkers at lhe palalial Spanish inn was more energetic, despite the existence of prohibition. One account gives the capacity of the bar and dining room at t.ZSO. The crash hit amid planning for the building in 1929, but the nev.·s didn't im· mediately deter the i m a g i n a l i v e developer, Work started. with appropriate fanfare as the thick coni:rete foundations were poured. A few dozen houses and other buildings began to grow as well at the terminus of the new Pacific Coast High"'ay. \Vorkmen finished the foundation on the 120-.:icre hole! site, and \Voodruff and hls associates began mapping plans for a break11'ater and .yachting harbor in "Stillwater Cove," as the small inlet was called then. A few months allcr the Jan. 30. 1930, construction starting date, the crash took its toll. The concrete at the Dana Point Inn stopped flo\.\·ing. \\'ith the demise or the sumptious hostelry, the rest o{ the city settled into sluinber as well. By then a dozen streets had been buill, flanked by rows of QUaint lanterns. Each street had a different color of light to correspond with a street name. Sources even say that shrubs were planted to correspond to the hues of the Jights. \Veeds and cactus began eating away at a maze of switchback trails with lo'v ~lone walls leading around the canyon below the inn. The 165-fool lunnel and elevator shaft at its end became a public nuisance. Today, the exit is fi!!ed "'ith concrete and the walls above share their space with iceplant, and graffiti and trespass warnings. MondaJ, ...., re. 1'171 s DAI LY J'l'l OT 3 Teens Bacl(ing Project Viejo Youtli Center Still Full of 'Ifs' ''We're going to ha,•e a teen center," Perry Snell told a group or enthusiast!c youngsters the first wetk of su1nmer Ill 1970. "It's not an If." But there turned out to be a lot more "if's"' lhnn Snell or any or the otl1cr fl.lission Viejo area adults inl'Oll'cd in the project ~·~d realized. ~tosl of these hurdles have been overcome in lhe past year, The county Would Visit Reds has agreed to financially b.ack the proj- ect. t.lnny n\ernbers or the community ha"e shown support fo r tht! center. But more than a year after its in- ception, the r.1 1ss\on Viejo Teen Center ha:. not left the drawing board. for organizt"'rs ha,·e bern unable to "acquire a 61le on wh ich tu build tbeir youth ck.lb. ··\\'e who have been working closely with lhe prr.ject are no less desirous of Agnew Ope11 s Globetrot • Witl1 China Comme11tary AGANA , Gunm (UPI) -Vice Presi- dent Spiro T. Agnew said today he would like lo visit Communist China despite that nation's "basically hostile" attitude to the ll'lited Slates. Agnew. opening a IO-nation \.\'Orld tour, landed in Guam for an overnight stay before flying on lo Seoul to represent }'resident r~bton at the inauguration of President Park Chung Hee J uly I. He left early Sunday from California and stopped brieny in llonglulu. The Vice President said ''I certainly v.·ould enjoy visiting Mainland China,'' as his plane winged towards Guam. he told journalists he had a "great curiosity" about China . Despite its "basically hostile" attitude, Ar!new said "to visit and lo confer ..• would be quite a privilege." This is Agnew 's third journey abroad es vice ;:~esident and will take him to Singapore, Kuwait, Saudi Ar ab i a . F.thiopia, Kenya, lhe De mo c r at i c Republic of the Congo, Spain. ~torocco and Portugal in addition to South Korea. In South Korea he was prepared to discuss the question of ROK troop v.·ithdrawals from South Vietnam. South Korea has announced it v.·ants lo pull oul onr dil'ision -about 15 .000 meo -of its 48.000 troops force before the end of the year. Agnew told reporters that the ob- jectives of his diplomatic mission un behalf of President Nixon \.\•ere "'really quire general.'' '"Principally. the objective Is to touch base tn a diplon1atic sense and to take some confidential messages from lhe president to the chiefs of state of those countries -11ol hing of any tremendous moment but just a continuing effort to maintain 1he best possible liaison with those chiefs of state.'' Agnew will spend four days in Kor~a mixing the ceremonial aspects of the .in· auguration and some sensitive discussion \'iith top Korean leaders on a variety of issues. He might also meet with delegations from other nations attending the in· augur al. The vice president said he expected to see P ark but added he \.\'as looking forward principally to meeting the new :;outh Korean prime minb ter Kim Chong Pi!. "\Vc'll be there Jong enough to discuss just about everything that is of interest between the two countries,'' Agnew said. He added it would probably in clude Korea·s intention to withdraw eventually its 48,000 battle-tesled troops from Viet- nam. including one division of about 15,000 before the end of the year. Until now, the United States has con· sidered the question of Korean troop \\'ilhdra"·als strictly a m11tter of nego!ia· lion between the South Koreans and the South Vietnamese. But Agnew fell certain Korean leaders v.·ou!d want lo discuss the subject with him during his visit. New Hospital W orkBegi11s Sa n Clemente General H osp i I a I 's masonry \.\'a lls and rough fran1ing \Yill begin construction within the week. spokesmen (or the Chapman Develop· ment Company said today. And as the construction conl inues on schedule ror the area's firs! acute-care hospital. plans are also under way to develop a large medical office suite on five acres directly across Camino de los Mares frorn the hospital complex. Developer spokesman Dick l la\lmark said financing and other details are near· ly complete for the professional building which \':ill have 26,000 square feel and will be capable of acco mmodating 25 medical offices, a pharmacy and clinical laboratory. The initial hospital construction has in· eluded the rough plumbing and electrical installal ions, plus detailed work on a basement storase area and foollngs for v.·alls. Besides the construction on the 114·bed acute -care facilily. Hallmark said work also is in progress on the board-and-care building ;ind lhe mnjor convalescent hospital on the same master·p!anned site. If \.\'Ork continues on schedule, he said, the first oatients wilt be admitted al Sa n Clementi General early next spririg. accomplishing the program," noted John Moers. center board of d l re c tor I chairman. ·'But we are disappointed In our lack of ability to nail down 1 site for tbe project.'• A! the original director of the project, Perry Snell had envisioned a center , cl~ to fl.lisscon Viejo 1Iigh School, whicb would provide leenagers a place lo talk. play pool and la ke part in organized ac- ti vities. Tbe facility was to include an outdoor barbecue pit, gnack. b a r • volleyball courts and conference rooms (or meetings and classes. Snell planned for the center to be open alter school each day until 10 p.m. and had hoped it would be in operation by the 5h1rt o( the 1970-71 school year. Snell left his post as director In the fall of ~970 because the project took too much tune. from his regular oob. The center board o( directors, made up of represenlalives from the ·r.1Jission Viejo and Aegean f.lills I1omeowners Associa_- tions, had originally looked at five po5SI• ble building sites for their center. The di'tectors \\'anted a site close to both the jw1ior high and high school, IS the center v•ould be built to serve teenagers atlending these a d j .a c en t SC'hools. Some of the five original land sites were not available, but ~gotialions were entered to purchase one piece of properly. lfowever, in October 1970, board chairman Moers told his disappointed group the property had been removed from the market and was no longer available. The site location was neve.r: disclosed. The funds lo make the purchase had been appropriated by the county supervisors to the Individual service district budgets, but not before an uphill battle by the homeowners groups. Before budgeting $60.000 to the center- projec1, county supervisors ordered Moers' group to prove the community supported the center. Petitions bearing almost 1,000 signatures of Saddleback Valley residents becking the project v.·ere presented IQ the supervisors. The $60,000 budgetel in ii.seal I97G-71 has since been absorbed into lhe in· dividual service district budgets for the area after tbe money could not be spent lo\.\·ard the center. About $40,000 had been earmarked for site purchase and the re- maining money was to be used to run lht center and hire a full-time director. Moers said he has asked the county to budget $47,000 for fiscal 1971-72 toward the center and he also noted hi1 group may have a site soon. The Tustin Union High School District board of trustees i~ considering allowing the center to be built on the Mission Viejo High School campus. The center directors have asked for use of a half acre of land at the centrally located school and the trustees are t:it• pe<:ted to lake action on the request in the next few weeks. ''If we do get the land," Moers .said, ''It is conceivable the center would open by the end of the summer. It would depead Qn the feeling of the board of supervisors and their budget hearing coming up at the end of .July.'' Moers noted that enthusiasm of the organizers lo build the center ha.s not "'aned, in spite or the past year or disap- pointments . El Rancho has the hottest price in town! • . S . '. B f LEAN! 99c tew_ ee ... ~~~~~. . . lb Compare I ••. see \vhy so many people prefer ours! Shrimp Rolls .. ~;, .. 99~ Just heat and serve .•. deliciou.s l Fla\•o ..• 11 oz. pkg. Stuffed Flank Steak .......................... '1.49 ~ Ready for the oven, etuffed with ts.sty dressing! They'll love jt! Seedless Grapes .................................... 29~ A nother or the wonderful joys of summer f ••• and El Rancho'a fresher produce! .. 2 QUARTS ••• WITH FREE PITCHER! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Delicio?sly refreshing! ••• and so convenient in El Rancho's new pour pack! Easy to store .•• easy to pour! ... chill it ..• f reeze 1t ..• enjoy it! ... and enjoy the 'vinning flavors ••. Fruit Punch, Grape, Orange or Lemonade! Save more on the 4 quart pack ••• 4 Quart1 , •• with free pltther •• , 69c. fight 8°01. Punth 'n' Bags . , , 39cl Prices in e/fccf !lfon., Tu ea., Wed., Jun,e 28, f9, 30. l1lo 8ales to dealers. And try our F·reIJh Squeezed Orange J1tice and our Fruh Grnpefrrtil Jiiict in. I.he new cont•cnient package ! No 11rescrvatives .•. tio additivc8 . , . Fresh 11€sS nuikcs the d;i,ffertMe/ Cheerios ................ 53c Get their day off to a better start! B;: T5 oz:. pl :g ... Crom General Mllll. Danish Margarine ................................... 39• Borden's makes it ..• nnd makes it BO \veil! I lb. pkg. Pecan Shortbread .................................. 53• Dcliciou111 cookies from Nabisco ••• great with milk! 14 oz. package. Dow Bathroom Cleaner ........................ 69• Save 20c on the 20 oz:. aerosol cnn ••• mhke your-work lighter! ARCADIA : sunset ana Hun1rnr1nn or i'ii'11 1. PASADENA : !'iS/, SOUTH PASADENA : 1~ii'rf. HUNTINGTON BEACH : /lli'it. NEWPORT BEACH : 1111 Newpor1 s1vrl '"d .El Rancho Ce111er1 .. 370 We~t Cl1lorado Blv~ ,,. Frenionl and Hunting ton Or " Warne1 and Al~onqu1n (Boardwalk Center! 1:1.•, 2555 Easl blu lf Or 1r.-1~11Jh11f Village Centeri -• ( DAILY l'ILOI Mond.t;y, .k1nt 28, 1971 Israelis • Ill Dither--Visit by Reported By Ualkd Prea l1teruUo111I tuatli newsp.pt:n: and radio,s carrltd aen&alioaal reportl today or a secret visit lo hrae.1 by an unofficial Soviel envoy to diacuA po.saible resumption of d.lplomatic relations broken during lbt 1967 Aral> Israeli war. The newspapers idenlilltd him u Vic- tor Loula, Ult Soviet national wbo is Moscow ctll'Telpondent of the Ulndon Evtning News, a shadowy figure descri b- ed by Israeli radio 33 "a pathfinder for ()fficial Soviet policy." The newspaper Yedioth Aharonolh r;aid Louis probably Wall behind the smuggling from the Soviet Union to the West ol the memoirs of Svetlana Stalin and Nikita S. Khrushchev. Yediolh and other afternoon papers a!Ml said Lou is may be on lhe payroU ol the Russian Secret Police (KGB). Troop~ Raid i 1-- 5 Villages In Pakistan By ARNOLD ZEm.tN DACCA, East Pakistan (AP) -The Pakistani army hall attacked at least five villages within 30 milea of Dacca in the past four days, killing Hindu men and burning homes and markets in raid.s before dlwn, reliable sources aa.id today. Arriving at one village, Boliadi, this COfTtspondent passed an army column leaving the place and saw dead Hi ndu men and the bazaar and houses burning. From nearby villages, rine fire could be heard and columns of smoke were rialng. Re:sidtnls of Boliadi said the raids 11tarted Friday, the day after the arrival in Dacca of four members of the British Parliament investigating CQRditions ia Eart Pakistan and refugee camps iD India. The people ln Boliadi said the soldiers attacked the Hindu section of their vill11:ge at 4 a.m. Sunday. A Hindu woman held her husband in. her anns. He had been shot in the neck. Another sari-clad woman moaned over the body o( her husband. Rabbi Arrested Reports of tht raysteriow vi!it followtd equally sensational reports 1n Scan- dina vJan newspapen late in May that Premier Golda Meir had lkrelly met Soviet envoy1 in Finniah Lapland while attending B socialist CQnference in •lelsinki L.lui! also was reported to haYe attended the Socialist conference. Yed.iolh liaid Louis arrJYed In lsrael J une 13 ostensibly for medlcal ex- Ul'L Ttlel'Mt. Meanwhlle, Pakistan Preaidtnt Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan said iR a n•· tionwide broadcaat today he planned "transfer of power to the elected representaUve1 of the people of Pakistan within four month! or so from today." "The prttile Urning will naturally de- pend 011 the internal and eztemal situa· tions at that lime," he added. Rabbi ~1eir Kahane, leader of the militant Jewish Defense League. was arrested in front of the Soviet Embassy in Washington Sunday for disorderly . conduct. Ka.bane was protesting treatment of Jews in the Soviet Un ion. In a ~minute broadcast, Gen. Y1hy11 reviewed the situation in this country before and aft.er military action began in Eut Paki!tan on March 25. Yahya announctd he had decided to give the country a conslituUon framed by expert& who already are working on it an.cl he usured the natio11 that the con· 11titution would bt "subject t o amt.ndmenta by the National Assembly." Third of U.S. Casualties Blamed on Poor Training Cosmonauts Say They Are Best Fed in Space NEW YORK (AP) -Nearly a third ot all U.S. casualties in Vietnam are the result of improper training, estimates a decorated combat officer who saya he is quitting the Army. Col. DaYid ltackworth. who served live years in Vietnam, said, "I think that our casualties were at least 30 percent higher because of poor training. or even higher than >.hat." He also said one out of every five casualties is a victim of "friendly fire" from his own comrades. ~10SCOW fUPl ) -The best-fed Sov iet Cosmonauts think they have gained a pound or two during their record 22 da y& in orb it. Tiw! three crewme n aboa rd the Salyut orbital station still miss home cooking although thtir menu JS the most varied of any Sovi et space mission and includes solid food like beersteak for the fir st time. .. We have no scale~ -they would be useless anyway." Soyuz 11 commander Georgi Dob rovo!.s ky told j!round con1 rol Sunday. ''But we think "'e haven't lo~t weight and ma ybe gained some. We 'll see when we're back home ." Wicks In an interview taped by ABC·TV in the f\tekong De lta, Hack\.\'Orth said he helped prepare a Pentagon study in 1968 showing friendly fire was responsible for 15 to 20 percent of American wounded. The in- terview was telecast Sunday on the network 's Issues and Answen; program. The colon el recalled one "well train ed'' outfit -"one of the finest un it.s in the U.S. Army." he said -which made "criminal" mistakes after its arriYal in Vietnam in 1965. "The number of dead that they had killed among themselves, men that were 5hot by their comrades, artillery that had fallen nn them -great mistakes were n1ade because of improper training." he 11aid. Loss of body weight during prolonged apace flight has been a common com- plaint of Soviet Co&monauts. Dobrovolsky, Vladi11lav Volkov and Vllrtor Pat.&ayev tried to &Ye.rt the problem with four meals • day -!erved hoL 'Paper•, p apers! Get y our secret pap er• here!' Hackworth, who branded the Viel· manizalion program a "public relations gim mick.'' has been awarded two Distinguished Service Crosses, ten Silver Stars and eight Purple Hearta during bis 25 yea.rs iwtb the Army. It's Hot • Ill Hell, Mich . Heat Wave Broils Nation; Bly the Hits 110 Colitornio ., UNIT•D .... II IMTlllNATIONAL $0\llMrn Ctllloml• q,eat•I u<I'-'• einwrltnetd nl"'l 1nd rnHnl"' low clcl.>dt wltll l'MllY .,,.,_ ,.......,,1,.. .,. ,_''"'" .... 611(1\1"' • , .. .uo-, •'"II "" ~ <tlrnbtd --"•1 t\1.,..r ..,..,. "'-w-ond. Solfll "-"'"' fOO OOIN-!I tM low1r Ullf!fl ·~ ""' " WI• Wlrm .,,., 1unt1r 1,. Ille 1n11.1nt1l11 ~•-t. b1 tM e1t1r-wflto t\11111 ti•U. WhWa ~ I~ I~ Out •! .... 11n. 1t"*Mfl ,..,_,.."'''' ""''lllld • 1-i11rl119 •nt 111 1111 ID~r •t llilv1 .,.. I 11111111 .... 11'1 fllt tlltihtr vtltlt~ ... '" ..... A~ •nf ¥1dnlrr 1 ml•· tyr,. If 1111'11 '" lrrl!lllon '"'"' -•rid ~ " ,....,._ ~ • ~ M r'!' ....,__ Thi 111111 -• 77..i ~-·P-tlllfvlltlll. Tiit ..... 0¥tf'l'lltfll .... _t_.I II ... ..... t\lft ""'°" .,,, .... -..11 _,""""" ,...., lootk>Clt; L-~ 71-11, Santi Monlu '1· ... ..,..... ,...,, Mt. W11-'°''~· "'llOIM" ...,. fl:lrertldf l).f;7, il'elrn Wl"ll ..... 9Htt1li.!4 .... , itn 0.... n.7t. llMI .. ,.,.,, M·1't, Anefllfl .. , "" ""'" """ ,.,.. 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Tiit nltll! lit-"' llll!t rt Otl te '"'6111not ClllUIO, Tiie t..._11ur1 •1 !fie YtYl tlV ((IOI l•k1t._.1 w•1 11111 '-"""" 11 11 ...,._ ••IY *-' '°" ,... -""""•n .. 111 111 rt lllf ••t ,._ -· .. tt ...... t'-"' Ind """"*r1ftr""'I .... ... ..... • .. , -" 11'1111 "'"' "' ~ tW!lt. 1111,i,.. "' IMICI ,.,..,,..,t1ur11 -· Co ... t•I Moltl'I """'~ 1(1(1•,, Llellt ~•,l•~ll w1nt11 lllet\I tn4 motlllnt hou•I bK-· Int ...... te -1'ftff't•I 10 '6 1$ -IOO!I ill tl'!tf-~ ladlP •1111 TlllMllP. H!tfl -· .. c ...... ,_ .................. ''"" ,, "' n, l~lfnd "'""''•'u•et '""'' trom '1 lo 1'. Wottr ""'"r1rvr. u. Sun, Moon, Tide • MDllOIY ~«and tow I.JO ,.m. '·' Tll•IDllY l"lrt!flitoll , .l :O •ITI, l t l"l•I! lvw •• ••••••••• l :JO I .Pol. 1 0 k...O llltlt ..... ,. ,., J .O 1.1'1. •.I l4lmnd ltw . ll !OO 1.m. tA $yn •llM J·U I .,,, S.11 I GI ,,IT! • MOO<! -INI 11 111.11'1. It h Jl·JD P.m, Temperatures •1 UIOTIO Plllll INT•INA'flONAL f-l tv,_ I nd -!Plltllon It "• , .... ,~ .. -lod tind!"' ... '·"'· PO'T. ••pr-~ 0..,. tr.. U.S, WN l"'r llu••u .i llfl fr1M;1Ko • l'lltll L• ~-. A lb<HlutMll!e .. • AM"°'ill .. .. e .. ian • .. (hi~-.. n ClnclMlll " " c ...... 1.ni1 .. ,. -~ .. • """'' " " For! Wortll .. " ..... " • .. -~ • " lnfltN"lla .. " K•""' City .. " L11 V""a " LOI A-II• " " Mle,,..l IMdl " " .. MUw1ull" " " MlllMINUI .. " Now Orll-~ " ... New Vert: " " o.u ...... .. .. Pt!m $0rl,,.1 '" .. ~l!-1111111 " " .. _ .. •K ~ Plthtlo.Jr•h ~ " Po•ll•lld .. • .. .. ~ " • S•t••"'•"lli ••• " SI Loulo " n S.11 Liit (lly " • "'" OI'" n • S..n '•·1ncl1Co " n S..n!t ltr.Mrl .. .. IM111o .. .. ,_ ... , .. • W11~l"'ton " " .amln11tlon al the Tel Aviv lchilow Holpital whose diredor, Dr. Arlt: Hatti, once served u &mbusador to Mo.scow. The reports said it was Hartl who ar· ranai:ed for Louil to meet with laraeli of· fielals Including Simba Dlnilz, Mn. Meir's closest aide. Yedioth sald Louis t.cld hla laraell bolt& that "further dialogue on pouible resumpUon of Sovtet-laraeli dlplomaUo relatiom may be htkl at b.llhtr level." The RpoN a!Jo Aid Louil cvried A Soviet dlplomaUc pulpO<t, the flnl llmt 1ucb a passport had been seen In laratl in four years. In LoGdon., The Evtnin& Newa said Louis bad left this capital about three weeks aao. u yiq ht wu bound for • ScandinaYian VAClilOll. The oewapaptr Haartll 1lid Foreign MW!ttr AblNI Ebon ~ Slmda1 to the Jiraeli cabinft en meetiDC w~ lM Ruaaiao tnvoy and that 0-. had bttn Ruuian hints eJ, a wlllJni,oeal.&.o dllcuss diplomatic retaUom. It &aid Ruuia had asked for wret WU with Mn. Melr and DofonM Mlnilter M-llo71111 bot that Dayan reluaed, lnalllio& the Uolted lllatu be In· formed U IUCb coatacta are mHL Reds Pound Five Outposts Fire Base Fuller Ignored in Attacks Near DMZ SAIGON (UPI) -Communist troops t1heUed fiYe allied bases bek>w the Demilltariled Zone <DMZ) today but Jg. nored Fire Base Fuller which bas been reoccupied by South Viebiam eae m.. fantrymen, military spokesmen said. The buea that were shelled included the last two U.S. outposts along the DMZ. -U.S. spokesmen 1ald artillery base Alpha 4 was hit by 20 rounds of 120MM mortar fire with casualties undetermined and the U.S. Base Charlie 2 received about 25 rounds of the 1.22 mm rocket fire and suf. fered light caauallies. South Vietnameae. spokesmen in Saigon reported rocket and mortar attacks against the government bases Charlie 1, Alpha 1 and Camp Carroll but said there were no casualties. Withdrawal of 3,200 more Gis last week reduced U.S. strength in Vietnam to 241.700 men from a peak of 543,000 in April, 1969, the U.S. Command reported. South Korean units reported killing 52 Communists in weekend fighting along South Vietnam's central coast while auf. fer ing one killed and three wounded. U.S. B5Z bombers made th rte raids on suspected Communist positions around Fire Base F'uller, rive miles below the DMZ, in a 24-hour period ending at noon today, the U.S. Command reported. A 100.man com pany or South Viet~ namese infantrymen scaled 1,6CJO.foot Dong Ha Mountain Sunday night to retake the baae, but spokesmen said they would stay only "temporarily". There was no fighting in the area today , the spokesmen said. Saigon spokesmen said government troops found the bodiu of 44 Communist Forest Fires Rage Across So uthwes t PECOS, N.~1. (UPI) -Fatigued civ ilian and military crews batUed six major forest fires today that swept more: than 27,000 acres or federal foreats and Indian reservations in New Mexico and Ari1ona. "Things don't look so good. The firefighters are. hard pressed, Records show the 1971 fir e season ia one or the worst in the century," Fire Control Of· ficer Frank Carroll (If tbe U.S. Forest Service said. soldiers in the junglea nur Fuller Sunday and today. The: 1pokurnen II.id 4118 Com- munists were: killed in the area in the put nine daya, while government Io&w:s were put at 29 dead and 135 wounded. A Communist force overran Fuller ear~ Jy 'Thursday after • four-day batUe klr the base that effectively controls the ma. jor approaches to a nwnber o! American Power Secured and Sooth VietnamtBe hues to the 10Uth. The South Vietnamese retook Fuller within 24 hours, but made no effort t.o bold it. North Vietnameae commandos crept back into th! hue Friday ni&ht and rais· e.;t, • huge Viet Cong flag atop Dong Ha Jl6untaln, but South Vietnamese artiUtry shot it away Saturday. PrimeMinisterSatoLogs Japanese Ballot Victory TOKYO (AP) -Prime MinlJter Eisaku Salo'• Li!Mln l·Dtmocratic party retained control of J•pan'1 upper houae in Sunday'a election, but Sato conceded the Japan Socialist party and ()ther op- poaition forceJJ showed "unexpectedly strong" innuence in 1uburba11 areas. The: 70..year-old prime minister, in a television interview today, .said his party gained support in city areas and its: can- didates won the largest number or vote.a in Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya. Sato returned to Tokyo from the aum- mer resort of Karuliawa, wht.re hi! aides aaid he had been working on a new lineup for his Cabinet. His present Cabinet bas been in office since Juuary 1970. With 116 of the 126 seats: in the Hou11e of Councillors at atake decided, Sat.o's party had won 61 seats -three ahort of its pre- election 11trength. The Socialists, Japan's largest op- position party, had won 35 seats, a ga in of one, the Buddhist-allied Komeito, or clean government party, IO: t he Democratic Socialist party four, the Japan Communist party, five; and the in- dependent party one. Ezactly half of the 252 seat.a in the Houlle of Councillors was contested in the election. The Liberal-Democrat.a held 136 seats before the election but 72 of them were not at stake and they needed to win 55 seats to retain control. The Soclaliats attributed their party's good showing to disCOfltent among farmen: over the gov e rnment's agricultural pOlicies. The 1 u b u r b a n districts haYe been traditional Liberal· Democratic strongholds. Polling officials said S9.3 percent of the nation's 17.6 million voters voted, com- pared to 68.9 percent in the lut upper: house election in 1968. Officials attributed the lower vot1 to public apathy regarding the upper house, which Is considered virtually power1esa, except In su ch important matter& as raU· fyi ng trealies and approving national budgets. Also, some officials blamed the low turnout on the fact that the election wa s held on Sunday inst.tad of on a week· day. Elizabeth, P r incess Ignore Two Threats YORK. England !AP) -Quffn Eli:iabeth 11 and her d.11ue:hter Princess Anne ignored death threal.!L today and set out on royal viaits to two ancient cities in northern England. Poli~ checked the rooflOpa Jn York ror .snipers who threatened to shoot tha queen as she drove In an open carria1• surrounded by cavalry swordsmen. Semi Annual Shoe Sale CHILDREN'S STRIDE RITE and LAZY BONES 69010890 Values to $17.00 WOMEN'S • VALLEY • JOHAN51N • Lady FlORSHllM • Vil ALITT • l'lllAUO • RIS9UI • INNA .llTTJCIS • HUSH PUl'l'I' • HILL lo DALI V•n to: $JO.OO 1090101790 Sizes to 11 .----MEN'S----. OPEN MON. & FRI. WINTHROP SHOES VALUIS TO TO $22 NOW s14•0 SIIIS TO 13 HITE TILL 9:30 P.M. l lll11tla•1ll,.,_ ..... u.. Atll.a..PW 54 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER 644-4223 I r r I ALBUQUERQUE SCOUTS SIT DOWN TO FIRST MEAL IN THREE DAYS One Boy Was Killed •nd 25 Were Stranded in Bo•ting Accid•nts Scout Saves Frie11d Befo1·e Drow11ing Ill Rivet~ Tragedy • Mo~d.iy, June 28, ll171 OAJ LY PILOT IS Water Crackdown Steelmen Will Seek Thousands of Factories 31 %Boost \VASllNGTO.~ IAfl\ -The Lnlled S t ee l°"'·o rker s of Amt>nca will press for at least a 31 percent pay hike over the next thrcl' years, I. \~', Abfol Spurn Pollution Orders WA SHINGTO\' IL:Pll Only a fraction of the nation·s factories hav e ron1pl1ed 11 ith a v•ater cleanup c r :o. C' k do v.• n "[ f'erl:unly 11ouldn·L r1·t'n under <,rllich th~y 11ert sup- cons1der askin~ tpr lt!ss 1n steel" than the rL..,·enl 31 per-Gt'l.(I I 'rasl1 posed to notify the govern- cent hikl• gained 1n the c;an \_., men ! by Thursday Jf they and :i!un11nurn 1nduslr)', :.81d wrre polluting ri\'ers. Abel. prt•s1de111 of the union. Rcn1ains Presidt'nt \'ixon announced Spe:ikln!-': on !hf' NB(' in Decembt'r th<1t lhe govern· tell·vision-r<id10 pro g r a 111 D d ·'\1 <'•'! lh•· Press·• Sunda1, i SCOVefe ment was turning lo ail 1899 Ah"·l saul ~u<·h llll 1n<"rcil~<' law v.·hich requires factories ll'll th!' EPA °"''hl"ther the far· tory inv olv ed should get a penn1t. Any factory failing In !lib· inil an app lic~tion by Thurs. day -the deadline -11 ould be ba rred from f u r t he r discharges. But spokesmen for the O:irps and E P A llCknowledged the governn"l?n t ('(ll:ld not n1ove ~1mu!tanpou:;Jy agz.insl thousands of firms. Jamt..s A, Grafton, an EPA eng inttr in the permit pr~ gram. said the ag!':ncy wa1 readyi ng a priority list of in• dustries and finns suspected of being serious w ate r polluters. He said the agency would move 1:1galnst these firms fi rst, citing fai!ur!': to submit a permit application as pe.:-Ual evidence o r non· compliance with the law. v.·oultl 11ul h<' inflalh)nar.v bu! !:i!L\IER PLU:0.1E. Colo. 10 obtain a pe rmit lrorn the an a11en1 pl to ca1ch up 111111 1L.l'll -Hun1a11 bones, pieces Corps of Engineers if th ry arc i11fl<1!1Uu. of flesh and pe rsonal belong· d. d d discharging in Io navigable .. \\'e are prac11eaa.v. buying· 1ngs wrre 1sco1•ere Sun ay po11 1·r11·t~I'. at the san1i' le1·er 011 a Colorado 1nountainside 11·atl"rs. todal' as 11(• 11ere 1n 1960,'' he \\'here a plane l';i.rr ytn g Thi" law originally was said... members of the Wichita State desi gned to keep t he Ped e_ ~rian Death Toll Neari E3 10,000 Mark Abel said the industry could Uni1·ers1\y !Ootball I e a m v•aterwa ys n2Nigablr but the \VASl-llNGTON 1 'IP) pa_i !he int-rcased v•ages by crashed last year. President said ii would he \Vlth the nation's ;: 11 n u a 1 sl('pping up production. He Clear Creek Countv Deputy turned on polluters. and thr prdeslrian death tu!I nearing cnncedl'd. howl'vtr, this could Sheriff Dave Lea rh !l'd a Corps of Enginerrs told lac· 10 .0 0 0 , 1 h e N rt 1l 0 n a 1 onll' he f!Ont' 1r the et"<inomy posse of 24 men lo the site tories lo submit permit ap-Transportaton Safety Board pullt•d oul ol 11s current after receiving re po rts that p1icat1ons by July I. tod ay ca lled on th e rederal I """''" ''m"•·n·. he•I "·en s1·1·d The ''"'P' '"''' I n d a ,. s urnµ. .. " V'-' '" u • ' -• govenunenl to pu t rnore TllP union head suggested !'ear the crash area. Thin y-however. thnt fe\\"er than 5ll0 emphasis 011 walkers' safely . the gu1'ctrHnent could pep 11p one person died in the Oc1. 2. of an Pstinu1 ted 40.000 lo The board said result s of a the eeono1ny by • • g i 1• 1 n g 1970. misb?.p, including 13 100.000 factories have sub-study conducted within ihe portion to pedestria n fatalities." the board said. Although several agencies wit hin DOT ar!': involved in pedestrian safeyt, no office or indivi dual is responsible for their coordination, the study said. "The absence of ll n y a ~~i~1:int•I.' to rebuildi ng our n1c111bers of the f o ot b a 11 milted applirations And the Dcparl ment of Tran sporta1ion "The last tiine I .~:iw Pl'!l'. c1l1\'S. 11Lll' 1najor cities. clean-squ(ld_ En vi ronment al Protertion showed little being done to im· his lips 11'1.'re tunung hhll' and ing uut !'h11ns <lgain and prn-Among the items raked up Agenr~· !EPA ) ac knowledged prove pedes trian safety_ GHEE.'\ H!VER. IJ t a h day on lhe treacherous Green organized nati onal pedestrian interest groups and th!': absence of authorized pro-- grams whic h seek to expand facilities for pedestrian trafric or lo improv!' the effici~ncy or pedestrian movement are serious drA wbackl lo pedestrian safety," It stat!':d. Ri rer. (l'PI) -Pe1e r r.1cCar1h~. a 13--year·nlrl scout ··1ust a mcril badge or two·· lro1n at1.1in1ng star Scout rank . \\'as a I ero in the swirling rapids of IJ.?sola- 11011 Canyon. .lln1 had losl his lite preserver in the confusion and v.as gnlng under "·hen Peter grabbt'd h11n. The 111·0 floa ted dnv.'ns1rean1 several mi I es before they drifted t.·lose enough to the bank for Ji1n to gr;ib ;i tree stump. But he couldn't hold Peter againsl the currenl. and the hero ~coul disappeared down the nvl'r. 1·iding rapid transit S)'S!en1s by searchers was a 1\'alch wi!h that there has bC'cn strong op-' · E f f 0 rt s di rec t e d he was gasping for air." )OUng for our i,:l (1('S. building th(' han ds fused lo the face al !he position from a. number of specifically to pedestrian st'~- Be rna rd1no told a rescuer . .Jun hospitals and the schools and exact time the Msrt in 4CM slate~. Under the program lhe ty vary between ont-~i~ Batchelor of Salt Lake City. all th('se things that 1ve need aircraft v.·enL dO\.\'Jl in heavy tilales check the po llut ion teen th and on e-ninete!'n'h . ' 1'1'o•ent~·one Bo,v Scot11s and lo impro1·c our soc:ie!~." timber, permit appl ications and !hen the effort that "·ould be 1n pro. four adulL<> 11·ere rcscurd b)"·---'------------------------------------------------------- Peter sa1·ed his t.•on1pi1n1on, Jim B !' r n a rd t 11 o. !I from drowning 11•hcn their lou·-man ruhber r;ift smashed 1~to a logjam of three stumps 'rhurs- r.el i<"opler Sund;1_1. a n d . reunited v.·Hti tour ~·oung scou ts who h;id been picked up hy t1unrnt'!'r1al boa1<'rs Salt1r· da}, left fnr ho111e -Albu- querque. N.r.1 Meredith Says North Whites 1\1[ost Biased Pete r.1cCar1hv's bodv had been found Sattu··dav. 55. miles do'ol'flrivcr frorn \1herl' the rubber rcif1s hiH! sw;i111pcd . 11 1vas lh'.' !1rsl inkl111g law en- forcen1!!nt oHit:i•rs had that there had been an acciden t. JACKSON', 1\-l is~. !1\I') - James H. !lletedith. retl1rning to live in the southr.rn st:ite 11·here he 1nade ci111 'ights History. says he t'on< luded alter residing six yra: s 1n J\ew Yor k Cily that the ·most prejudired \\"hites in Arr~ric:i are in lhe North. · The .18-year-old !\leredah $1,000 GI Bill Urged WASHINGTON 1 /\P~ -Sen. Charles fil e('. i\1alh1<1s tH· !lld. l, int roduced tod;>.y a GI bJIJ for \'ietnnn1 VC1~rnn.~ under which lhc fed rril l govrrnn1t•n1 11ntdd pa~ t'l<- soldi!'rs $1.000 pl'r school ye<ir plus $17a per month The $1Jhl0 would go Oil)' tor tnilion. books and O!her sup· piles and the S!ia for subsis tPnre. 1'1;ithias expl;uoed in a spet't'h for lhe Sfnat1. '"Toda_\·.'' !\l:tth1a.~ s ,1 I cl . "vetrrans recei1e onh ~17j a mon th as an l'<lUca i'ln:·J assista nce al1011anrP \''hich. when ns1n~ edur.1l1011 ( 1sts are considered, IS obi 10.1.'ily inadequ:itr ·• said thal while racia l animosi· tv slill existed in the South. tiie racial cl i m a ll' is ··significantly lx•Ucr" !han in 1962 1•:hen he became 1he fi rst black lo enler !he Un1vcrs1ty of t<.lississ1ppt. Federal troops 11ere sun1- tnoned and the National (;uard 11•as federalized durinf! Lhe en- t•ounler that occurred v•hen .\leredith enrolled al Ole ~1 iss. r.lcredith said he had visited ~Ussissippi six limes earlier lhis yea r and he never had Hnv .. occasion o f ern· b11rrass1nent. much less an oc- easion of hun1lliaLion , n1uch ll'SS an attempt al 11 ., l!e 1noved lo .Jackson with his \~Hi' and tllree sons earlier lh1s rnonth. !11erf'd ith said In an 111· ter1·ie\11 1hat on a ''person· lo-person. day·Lo--day basis, the South 1s a n1orc livable place for blacks !han any plaC'C for blacks thi'ln any other place 1n !h(' nation., Hr said the ral'ial ;it. n1osphere is'' ex t r e mel '! !ense .. in northrrn cilirs and that the gap 1~ 1argr bl't11·rt>n 11 hi!es and blacks 1n !he f\orth. ··The\' 1na1· ride on the subl'oa1:. hut ihry don·l relate at all.:' r.teredi!h said. Three other bo,vs a J s o became separated fron1 Lhe group Thursday alter the ar- cidt>nl and were !>1vept 25 rnlle-. do v•nslrearn. 11 hcrr the~ s>1·arn !o shore. One of the1n. 11nidt>ntlf1cd. refused to go further. and his IWO eo111- panions beJ:an \\'aik 1ng lhr 30 miles do11·nstrean1 In (.;reen R11 er The Bernardino ~<•tilh. 11•ho land('d on tht> opposite side or the ril·e r from the other three, also started <IO\\'llSlrcarn. TM two bovs v.·OO had lefl their ('(ln1pa~ion 011 the riverhank 1.:overed 25 miles nn fool. Jiv- ing nrf ri1·er waler <ind a Joar nr bread !hey snhaged from lhcir lnsl rafl. They "'ere picked up by corn rncrc1a l and pleasure hoa1t>rs S;ilurday. along with thl' Ber11;irdino bo,v and !ht> scout 11·ho liad refu sed to 11·:1lk "'1th U1cni. AU foul' were taken to Green n.1ver to a11•ait 1h2 rescue of the n1aln grou1) of .~routs and adults. Balc:helnr. one of th f' rest11ers said youn g Be rnartlioo had 11 alkrd 25 null'.' ..ll r r•o1ert>d l11rn~rH 11·1th df',ul l1rr nshi''\ lt>!I ;it aban. tinned hoalers' c;1111ps1tt'~ 10 1-;erp 11,ii 1n." Ra1rhf'lor s:11d •·\\'hrn 1\'e founrl h11n ht> 11;is flenrly hys!eric:-il hr 11as tt'lllo.· 1n l!'n murh. Sears I . · 1111· I 11''"" 111'"111'1 \\:111•r .. I I 1 t I ~ . I Sears I ....... ,,.,out••fffltO. • ,,;,i, "" \ut(•111ttlr<' \\ <tlt•r s(,ftt•nt•r YOU WORK LESS Keeps things cleanerwiLhoul erforl, climi· nates bath tub rings .. YOU SA VE MOi\EY Soap and clothing last longer. f\o.,(',oMlf JlllH:nl B•ilG., i•PiP" Gtnlleln Baby's Skin Smoolhtr, EaWerS*la,·ts F!'t1 t're1lt 1ad aean Dithtl Sparklt Ask Abowt Sean Coavenient Crtd.it Plus: Complet.e IDltallarioeAn.ilable! J11st AU:! Bv~na Park 8150 La Palma Ave, Ph, ~8-4400 So Coast Plaza 3333 Brislol St. Pb. 540-3333 Sadta Ana 1716 So, Main St. Pb. 547-3371 So is a healthy environment At Edison; we're working to bring you both. E lectricity is one energy we ca1111ot do without. Shut il off and 111ost factor ies \vould shut down. T he impact on all of our li\•es ',vou!d be devastatin g. E lectri city is also essential for cleaning up the cnvi ronn1e nt. It is needed lo (lJ>erate syslen1s to purify wale!\ (·]ca n the a ir, recycle usable n1a ter ia!s anti di~posc of wast.c. l·'ortunately, electricity is clean. fta1n eless and odorless and doesn 'l create by·producLc; of combustion a t its poin t of use. <Jn the other hancl, \vhen fu el is f)ut·ned in 110\ver plants, cer tain by-products of con1bu:stion arc released into the at mosph ere, This is also true when burning gas in homes, gasoline in autos or gas or oil in industrial planls. Emissions fro1n power plants are one of the thi ngs \Ve' re working to co ntrol. In fact, Edison \vas among the first companies in the nation to activate extensive air pollution research programs. \·Ve were also one of the fi rst utilities to use a low-sulphur, low-ash oil. As a result of these programs, we've been able to make significant recluctio11s in emiSslOiiS!romourfOSSlj:'filei plan ls. "-. .. Another step we're taking to improve the environmen t is ......_ g enerati ng electricity at nuclear power plant:s. Since there's no ~ con1bust ion in a nuclear reactor; tJ1ere are no by-prod ucts of con1 bustion released into the atmosphere. We are also making steady headway with other long-range environmental projects. These include improving the appearance of our transmi ssion towers and subst..ations and providing underground electric service. 9:e Southern California £dison Peaceful use of the atom. Nuclear power plant reactors, such as the one at San Onofre, above. release no by-products of c ombust ion into the air_ Two additional units are planned at this site near san Clemente, and are scheduled for commercial operation in 1976 and 1977. ' ' Emisston control Em issions from Ed is on's fossil-fuel plants in the South Coast basin have , been substantially reduced, including a reduc-i t1on of more than 50% in nitroitn oxide emis.-l s1ons duri ng the last two years. ' ! ,,._ .. _ ' t_;_._.,__,, ..... • • ·-~ - Conservation program. in add ition to electricity, Edison's "Big Creek" hydro- electric project in the High Sierra pro· vides flood control and irrigation water for t he fa rmlands of the San Joaquin Valley. Construction of Big Creek also created a va cation paradise for the public.. Burying lines. Last year 95% of alt new home subdivisions bultt In our 14· county service area were served by underiround wires. In the future, all new commercial and industrial projects will also have underground service . . .. .. • DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Tax Increase Budget? Maneuvering in the Legislature last week bi-ought the 1971-72 state budget in to a s1x·member b1part1s.an conference committee for an a ttempt at compromise between the majority Democrats and n1inority Repu.bli· cans. Jt's what one legislator calls the "annual poltt1ca.l pirouette." holding in the beginning the state would not be in as bad a fiscal btnd as it is today. Reagan's chance to hold the line against a tax in · crease ~'iJI come when the bill reaches his desk. He can veto line items. Whether the Democrats can muster enough GOP votes to override such deletions is prob- JematicaL It hasn't been possible in recent yeafs. ·-., Some idea of the difficuJty of reconciliation this year can be gleaned from a loo.k at the different budget totaJs. Governor Reagan submitted a ~6_.7 b1l!ion proposal. Budgets make dull reading at best, but emotions already exploding around this one make for interest· ing political draina. ' . ' ........ ' . ' It has a $200 million revenue def1r1t which be "-'OuJd remove through tax withholding and welfare changes. The Senate budget is $600 million higher t~a ~ the governor's-$800 n1illion with the revenue def1c1_t _10· e luded. The Assembly budget is nearly $275 m1ll1on higher than Reagan's-$475 million \l.'ith the defic it add· ed. Governor Reagan has not persuaded the Legisla· ture that his programs (or education and \\'elfare reform are acceptable. Reagan's \\•e!fare program . is the i:najor stu!11bling block. T he counties believe 1t will increase instead of Ughten their \\'eifare outlay. \Vithout backing from the counties, the governor can hard.Jy expect strong support even from his fetlo\v Republicans 1n the Leg· islature. Some of Reagan's proposed savings in welfare are admittedly contingent on changes in the fe~eral for1n· ula. And that decision rests in Congress. not m the Leg· islature. Ca11 YES for Young Help t.ratc:hing youth , ages 14 to 18, who wan t jobs \vi th en1ployers who nee d help is the highly commend· able 'vor k of the Youth Employmenl Service rY ES) now functioning throughout Orange County. Charging no fees to employer or employc. Y1':S is supplying young people for a wide variety of jobs, among the1n: 1\-foving, hauling, dcllvery, boai conditioning, sec- retarial, se1,ving, waitress. tutoring in reading and mu· sic, gardening, selling and, of course, babysitting. The range is aJn1ost without Limit. Anyone willing to pay a reasonable wage for the help of a bright young man or \l.'Oman should call one of the foll owing YES offices on the Orange Coast: lluntington Beach. Huntington Center, 897-7755 Laguna Beach, 362 Park, 494-3333 1iiission Viejo, M. V. High School. 830-2830 Newport Harbor, 594 Center Street, Cos ta Mesa, 642-0474 . ,•; The governor insists there must be no tax increase this year. But if anything like the Senate or e_ven the Assembly version is passed without veto, a lax in crease would be inevitable. Reagan is. now for income tax \Vithholding and talk· ing a b o u t it as though it "'ere. hi~ own idea ~ not ~ne he had stubbornJy opposed in his first years 1n office. There's irony in this, because if he bad accepted with· \Vestminster, 7322 Westminster Avenue. 892-0049 YES deserves tommunity su pport for giving young people work experience. teaching inltialive, responsi· bility, work attitudes and even grooming. And employ· ers can be grateful for the labor supply YES assembles for demanding as well as routine tas ks. Pla1is for Peace i1i Middle East A Prophet Time Beginning to Run Out Compared to Yi' ASHING TON -~n1ng of a new round of criticism suggests that time is beginn ing to run out on the Nixon Administration's grand design for a lasting peace settlement to quiet the volatile Middle East. Hope for a comprehensive agreement between Israel and the Arab states, along lines indicated by Secretary of State Wi!liam P. Rogers, has been all but aban- doned . Efforts have focused , in recenl weeks, oo negotiating an interim ar· rangement for reopening the Suez canal. Even that limited objective now seem~ to be seriously imperiled, however. More and more the United States-like many another would-be peacemaker -is emerging as the man-in-the-middle. whose actions displease all the hostile parties Jn the Jong and complex dispute. EGYPT'S PRFSDENT Anwar 5.1dal Implicates the United States in the oc- cupation of Arab lands as he rene"'S the call for extern1ination of lsrael , the Jewish stale, Mrs. Golda Meir , I.he Israeli prime minister. chides Uie United States for foot-dragging on Israel's arms requests. Rogers and his Slate Department aides, r uphoric a.ft er the secretary's trip to the Middle East, seem lo be persuaded that they are \\'eaning Sadat away from v1arlike ambitions. Events seem to con- firm their optimistic view when Sadat'~ purge of the Cairo government includes Ali Sabry. the most prcrRuss1an member Clf his inner circle. Then tht' blow falls : Sadat. after exor· cisi ng lhe Sabr)' influence, signs a 15-yea r treat)' with the Soviet which seems more All.en•Golds111ith and more alarming to anal)'sts here as its public provisions are subjected to close scrutiny. JACKSON IN VAN -Sen. Henry r-..1 . Jackson, D-\Vash., long a supporter of aid to Israel, opened a new campaign against the adm inistration's policies in a little noticed Boston speech recently. More o[ the same is in prospect from Jackson and from other critics, "The Soviet Union, by signing the new 15-year treaty with Egypt (one ()f more protocols to which remain secret), has firmJy establisheU a base from which to extend Russian influence througho ut the Middle East," Jackson declared in his speech at a fund raisi ng dinner for Israel. "This latest developrnent in a Jong prOC· ess or increasing Soviet influence in I.he f.1 iddle Eas! is yet another indica tion -if one were needed -that lhe State Department effort to wean Egy pt away1 from the Soviet Union by pressur ing Jsrael IS s dlsmat failure," the Senator .5aid. "f'AR FROM DRfVING the Russians and Egyptians apart , our S tate Department"s irreS-Olution has enabled th.e Soviets to ceme nt their hold on Egypt w1th an tnt ernationa! treaty, and un111it- tinglv hf'lped t!) establish there a Trojan H()rse that threa ten s our vital 1nteresl.3 in the strategic ~1iddle East. Jackson called on the State Department lo "face reality and recogn ize that the central issue in the Middle East is not the Arab-Israeli dispute but the continuing penetration of the Soviet Union in an area toward wh ich Russia has had historic ambitions dating back to Catherine the Great.'' In his speech, Jackson gave public ut. ll'rance lo some ()f the CC1ncerns OC· casioned here by c!ose analysis of the new Russo-Egypt ian treaty_ In some particulars, the treaty le)(t has apparent- ly been drav.·n from pacts v.·hich lie the Kremlin closely lo its Eur o pea n satellites. ARTICLE Z OF the Russe>-Egyptian treaty is similar to Article 5 of the treaty imposed by Russia on Czccbos!ovakia in 1970, af ter Rus sia moved with troops against the independence or the Prague government. The article calls for Soviet· Egyptian coo peratioo in a broa d "restructuring" or Egyptian society . Jackson said the !reaty provision lays the foundation for Soviet applica tion in Egypt of lhc so-called "Brezhnev doc· trine" which asse rts thal Moscow may inlervene to enforce a political con - form ity wilhin ils ~atellites and allies. In his speech, Jackson also reported that thi' new treaty provides for Russian military aid to Egypt which will be used !or "strengthening the capac11y" or Egypt Lo act against Israel. He noted that Russian aid In Egypt reached an all·lime high in the first ciuarter of the present ~·ear. By Robert S, Allen and John A. Goldsmilb Skyjacking and l(idnaping Kidnapi ng as a means to blackn1ail presents a problem 1n our technological age. but it is rooted in the deep past. Skyjacking is a form of it. ~inee crew and passengers are kidnaped. but H 1s alS<l related to piracy. Turkey and some Latin American rountries are focuses of p o J i t i c a J kidnapings lately, but it can happen anyv.-here. After kidnaping and then murdering (:'. 1n Israeli consu l sev-I r.ra l weeks ago. the .,,, l'urk.isb liberation Ai -... ; thugs picked a young ~- girl and holed up in ....-·:' ~. ·\ a house, demanding · ·~ ,. release of Jl()lilical "··~. , \ prisoners. This one didn 't work. A mob formed outside, and Turkish police threatened, if lhey g()t the criminals. tC1 turn them over lor a probable lynching. But troops crashed the apartment, killing one k i d n a p e r , wounding another. In a Mannix-type ----- Monday, June 28, 1971 The editorial pao• of tht Daily Pilot 1ttk1 to inform and 1li~ ulatt rtadtr1 btt prt.tmting this new1po ptr'1 o;rinfotu and com- m.entar¥ ora topic1 of i!1t~e1t and 1ignificanu. b~ protnd1ng a forum for the ezprt1sion of our readers' Of)lniofu, and. by prt1mtin11 the divtrlt vftw.. point.I of •nf01'1'Md ob.ttrvtr• and 1pakenncn on topici of th• dau. Robert N. Weed, Publisher • • Ro yce Brier scramble, the girl was slightly hurt. Kidnaping was common in anci{'nt times, and there were two kinds, Jl()litica l to force the hand of some faction. or by sea pira!.es for ransom. JULIUS CAESAR was the most famous victim of lhe latter. As a youth he was an exile from the dictator Sulla in the Aegean. These pirates seized him. demanding 40 talents ransom from his family in Rome , Caesar defied them, saying 4(J talents (about $80,000 ) was an insult lo the Jul ian family, and promised lo hang them if he escaped . His gall delighted them. But he did escape, raised 1 mob ashore. and captured his capt-Ors, and as he promIStd , hanged a few to their yardarm. This is Plutarch's story, derived from ancient sources. and it is probably fairly accurate. Later lht! emperors notably Trajan snd Hadrian, almost wiped o u t Mediterranean piracy, which had been 1 nuisance for 1 miUeMium or Lwo. Plane hijacking today ls often staged by those who want to go elsewhere lhan 1he scheduled destination. There is a scattering of nuts, who enjoy a few hours of absolute Jl()wcr in lht air. Cubtl is a frequent goal, but Senor Castro is noL very friendJy, llld may hustle lhem to the canefields. L~RAEI.., THE ARAB nations 11nd coastAJ Africans. have tight little bands or fanatlcal desperadoes. frequently operating to Eur()~. lhe-ir aim. rele11se of prl!Oners. Some of thest raid~ hava 111rned out badly, with innocent person s killed or wounded. In America aJC-guards have been employed, bu t they haven 't abolished the Cuban sport. In some Latin American nations Lhe crime is endemic, the purp<>se, politica l and factional, rarely personal. the pur· pose rel ease or prisoners. The v1clim~ are usually ambassadorial or consular officers, eve n foreign businessmen, and the act imposes on lhe host country an embarrassing siluation. No soluti on for many of these snatches is in sight. but the perpetr ators sometimes give it up. Modern technology favors the crime. Diplomatic officers cannot be protected, especially if they are taken al home as they are about to drlve to their offices. Airliners of course are sitting ducks for th e desperate or dangerous weirdos. But wt had better solve it if we contend we have advanced in 2000 years. There are few Caesars around nowa dayi1. Dear Gloomy Gus Since our Orange County prosecu· tor won 't really try to t()nvict a pallctman Clf a major crime. may· bt we should try a minnr one. Jo'eeding c-lgarettcs to a dog should at least be a misdemeanor. -W. B. "''' '""'1'8 nfi.nt "Htrt' """"' ... , -f llMll\' I~ •f ftl• ~ttW.llHf, Sll\41 '*"' ,., _.,. .. •1-1 ow. 011i., rri.1. A Demagogue Given a little time, irs eas.v to tell the difference between a dem agog ue and a prophet: the demagogue's po\1'er ends when he dies. and the prophet's po11•er only begins then. • How is it that Uncle Sam is dep icted as v.•earing \\'hiskers and a top hat -yet any American who tried to emulate him would be ridiculed? • What many sel f- publicized p h i 1 a n· thropists like to for- ~et is that truf! •·generosity" is not measured hy h o w mucti you give hut by how much you have left . • • • The. first real sign of senescence is not • fail ing memory. bul false memory - when one begins to reconstruct the past in accordance with fancy more lhan with facts . Al1hough adolescents have an enormous sense of empathy , one th ing they ca nnol in1<lg1nc is that they will ever be con- ~idcrcd ''o!d·hishioned. ·· • • The scime people 1vho ponllficate !hat ''No man is abovr. the l;:iw" usually' have no strnng-vo1cC'd obJcctions lo some nlcn being beneath 11 Speaking of laws. perhaps tile most acute estimate of them was made by Solon. six ccnluries befOre Christ. when he observed ; "Laws an.'-!ilie spiders' webs v.·hich , if ;inything small falls into them they ensnare it. but large things break through and escape." • • I'm convinced that the lns1it ut1on or marriage. as we have known i1. will be obsolescent by the end of this cen1ury, !Simply be<:au se lhe system c;1nnot stand lhc strains of. an increasing divorce rate. • • • The only wa y to be meaningfully "suc- cessful" is ah~1ays to compete against .yourself, against your previous best, rather than against others; in thi!> way, you win even when you lose, in gaining a knowledge of your proper limits. • • • A woman's mouth in repose tells far more aboul her than her mouth in action. • It always puzzles me when some-one convicted of a crime throv.·s him self on lhe mercy of the court as "a good family man" -so were some of the mos t abominable mass-sh1ugh!erers in history. • • • (Reminiscent of LiOCQJn's f.amillar Irony aboul the defe-ndant who ~lied hi!'! falher and mother and a$ked the rourt for leniency on the grounds that he w<is an orphan,) • • Why Is It that the same man who i~ looking for "home atmo~phere" in a hotel is looking for hotel service at h<>mc ? • • • 5(Jmeont. who hns offended you never forgives you for ii. • • • T wish wrilers would !'!top using "proverbial" when lhere is no prove rb altached lo It : llke "strong q; the. proverbial fortress.'' i 'V 1/· ' . • " ' ', .... .-;I • tt (•; ' ' ' . ~' I ',i 1£ t •,I' r ' ' .· ·I ' . ' i } '" .. ,. ' ~· / J' '; :-· /" .. ';·' A Substitute for Welfare System An extremel y important con1ribution tn ihe public discussion of the welfare prob· Jem '"'·as made by Andrew F'. Brimn1er, n1embcr of the board of governors of tbe Federal Reserve Board. in an address this month before men1bers of the graduating class at San Francisco Stale college. What troubles Gov- ernor Brimmer 1s the fat\ that the 1vc.l- fa re ~ystem is self- pcrpetuating. IL has "developed to !he pOint where several !1undred thousand cases now ex is L \vhere nlothers and daughters (and cv. ~n granddaughters) . . have grown to nlatur1ty depend ing on public assistance as a 11·ay of life."' "But the rnost tr.'lgic fe<iturc. of 1he welfare system is the largl' nun1bc.r of the nation's children in fa 111 1 I 1 e s dependent 011 welfare ... 'fhere is a gr('nt (la nger that lhe welfare system nlay sa p the v.·ill and determination or Lhese young people to make the necessary effort , through the acqu isition or marketable skills, lo beCome self-supporting." GOVERNO R llRll\11\IER docs not believe that the present 11't!lare syslen1 1·:.n he s11 lv:.gl'd 11.~ b:isic assUn\plinns are v.Tong. "Further 1inkcring w1lh the cx1~t1ng patchwork systen1 of publ lr welfare wil l simply continue \\h:it 1n f;1ct is nothing rnnrC' rhnn a system of charily and alms.giving thnt doe$ tnnr(· IO perpetuate nll ser y rhan it does In gf'!ll'f<ilr opportunity ln pl<1ee fl{ welfare. l":overnor Brimmer favors the. adoption or the. family assistance program of the kind originally proposed by Daniel P. l\fnynih:1n <ind urg- ed hv the N1xnn admlnistra\1on . ··\\'hat 1s necd.ed is a ra1ional system of inconie maintenance, hov,•cver it is described. It docs nol matter whether sotne would ca ll ii a negative incon1e tax or a guaranteed minimum income. Aside from providing enough income to meet present m1nimum nl"rds of dependent f;im illcs. such a S\'s1em must also provide incentives fnr those aided to cOnLr1bute to th<'ir 01~·n betterment. "THUS OPPORTUNITlES lo obtain lr;i1nin g for useful work and the presence of rncanin gful jobs, once trained. must be in1cgral features of such a syslem. AOOvc all . any plan adopted must provide avenues along which the children or those lamJHes currently entrapped in a "'eb of dependency can escape to self-sufficiency as they appro<1ch 1naturity." Since the basic purpose of the family assistance program is to encourage pea-- pit> to deve lop towards self-dependence and sclf·sufficienry. what needs to be evaluated with great care is the degree to which the proposed system will provide incentives that the present welfare sys. tern does not provide. According lo Gov- ernor Urimmer 's ex.planalion; "Th~ F AP would work in the following fashion: A h1mily's basic allowance would con sist of $800 fcrr the first two members and $.fOO per member for each or the neict three additiona l members. TIHl$, for a family or four the allov.1ance would be $2.400 a year.,, '·CASH PAVME/'ooTS to f::imilies would be> computed by adjusting thl' basic allo1vance to accoun t for the ea rnings nf the family. The first S720 of farn ny in· come would not affect the pa,1-menL, bec11u3e it is ns.sumed that lhere are b11sic-COSL~ of transporlaUon, lunches. clothing. etc , assoc1atcd with takJni; a ·- H yakawa job. Cash pa1.rnenls to fan1ilics \\'Ould lht'.n be reduced by 66 <:l'nts for each ad- dition;i ! dollar Or e<.1rnings ;ibtl\'C the $720 n1i:11r11um "Assu n\e a lamily ol four has a casl1 incon1e of' .$2.~0-'The first Si20 or this would be di srl:garded, leaving a balance of $1,280 A f~1fl ily's cash payment would then be rc<lu'td by 66 perrf'nl of th15 :''"'<ut\I nr b S!M5 . This sum \vould be !i''btr;1tl{'d f••n1 1he fJmily's haslc :illn1171rit·r nl '!.J'l1! rn1~k1ng its ca~h pay· nirnt pltrr r 1rn1"g~ Sl :,~:1."' In olher \l'i"ffdS. !lit• f,,r ti\ 1-.,~n1np S2 000 \l'ill hcrve an 111c0n1c 1 r S.).~:,, 111:-.•(•<1rl (Jf thr m1nilnum sc ~:•1s1r11ef' ~uiln1111ce o f $2.400. TH£ FAP l\I::(~UlH E ,11·:'.';r 1h;it ai{I recipl!'.'nls lie a1•a1l:ibl1· lnr 11·ork or tra;ning h<1 s <1rouscd !he 11·,i r nf son1e rritics that ttw!sys1cm n1igli1 h:i1 l' the ef· :}~~~. olfo~~~~~~~~ j~{'b~~ _ ;i ~:;v:~~;~,1;1'.' 1~i~ :~rn1!~- bc l icvcs the.s< fe;ir~ to bt' unlnundcd If ltlO~t' 111 cl1arrt of FAP ~Cl' !n II lh::it JO b lr;.11nl11g progrJn1s '1rt' rt•:1l1~1 1r ilt"id insist th<1I J<•bs 11!f··rl'd :irt Jlul :-.uh:.!.'.lnd<1rc!. Furtl1ermr.rr, he 1s 1·un11111'rd lh:1l l!1e ''.3<;\ majf')fl!/ nf pcnplf· pr.•f1•r \1 Hr k1ng tn not wnrk1nl'.'. 1•vrn 1\hrn lhrv !('l'<'IVC an inrom<' s1111!'1""nrn1 Anothj•r c<it1r1cn1 nf FA [' I( (11,1! lhr minunum t.fncfil 11f S2.·lllU fur <J Ja111ilv nf fnur LS a lrr.1d~· br.1011 ll)e pOll'rlv il'Vl'I. Hu1 C(lverr Ir nrin1n1rr .1 .. k<; lltn! 11-C' V.'eigh !he Cosl.<: l·:vcn 111 r;;11sr the 1ninirnu111 !11 S:J.!ifl(I •·11·11ulrl 1>;·.;tcncf coverage ol V1\P fron1 IH rn ll l1on lo l\~l milli<Jn per~· ins. <rnd incrc.'lse the net Cll~t frorn St I btlhon lo ~25 b1l11<Jn " \VHAT i\l'lSTIFIES me most abou l. !he fan1ily 11ss1:1l<tntl' progr.1m 1s !he fact that it has ~enc.rated so 11ltlc disl'ussJon . Liberals woo m1gt1l be expcricrl iO be tnthus1astk about suc:h a far-out proposa) :ire ~ilcnl. bC'c<1use it w<is proposcrl hy ::1 Rt·publit«Jn administration. Hcpub!1cans: l1m :ire silt•nt, no doubt because 1t is too liberal for rnosl (!f lhem. lf 1he . Democrats had any ~ensc. they '''ould pick up the ball and run wit h il. There is enough discon\ent \\•ii h the present \I GLfare s.vstem and enough in· novatlveoi:fs in the Fll P, so th a! con- ditions are Ideal for sorne hard. searchin g cxaminaU~n of the en tire problem. By S. I, Haya llewa Presidenl San 1-'ranclsco SI.alt College ,---By George ---, ' Dear feorgl'; Do~ •ou agree th:it improper thoug s come from reading today· risque publica tions? I OLD TIMER llea~ld Timer: Ge I don 't kn ow. I just con- duc t. an experin1enl and n1y chief rr.St>4lther, Herman. said he got itnpr r thoughts from re:iding thr 1Vorld Almanac. fl cl idn 't bElicft liim at first but you shou ld sec Isome or U1e $!\JU I've. und~ tined') 1 +rl--Your ~roblcms to r.C<lrgt and forget lhcm! On second t.hou ht. just forget them -yo u'll S.'IV(' II S!:lmp,) I CHECKING •UP• Wl1y Ca11't Women Sl1arpe11 Pencils? By L. 1\1. BOYD ltESEARCH R EV EA LS more than half the world's n1idgets lake normal·s1zed matrin1onial tnalt.s ... V.'llV JS IT the girl who v.·cars fal se f'yclashcs rarely makes a good c.:ook'' . . IN ENGLAND, I 'rn told, th(' wall switches flip downward to turn on the ·lights, not up1ol'ard as here .•. IJOD NOT ONE woman in 1.000 can properly sharpen a pencil . . . IT Al..5CI HAS BEEN dclcr1111ned tha1 the n1aJor1ty of striptease dancers are hrSltXlrn duugh!er~. IN THE lllCllLANOS of the Cenlrci l Sahara live the nomadic tribt>s mcn ca lled the ·reda. If a v.•ife among them is humiliated by her husb;ind in public. according tu custorn she has one cxtrc1ne recourse. She n1ay tear off all her clothes and fling them to the ground at his feet, By ctll. I mean all. She. then n1arche.s straightaway 1n the altogether lo her tent. Onlookers do not blame her. They feel the pro- vocation n1ust have been too much. They lsk-tsk !he hus· band. And he 's rcc1uired to buy her a 1vholc new costun1e. The stuff on !he ground can neve r be worn again. Am surprised lhe garment 1 n d us tr y ht!rcabouts hasn't JU!nJied on this pron1otion. 0 1"1 'l'llt: AVEHAGE: A S! hill la sts 18 n1onths. 1\ s~ bill. 20 n1on1 hs. A $10 bi ll , JJ rnonths. A $20 bill. 42 rnonth:<:. A $50 bill. 108 months. A $100 bill. just 105 months. All right \ how do vou account for the fact the ·$50 bill outlasts the $1 00 bill~ CUS TO.l\fEH SEH VICE: Q. "1 101.1: do most people like thctr breakfast eggs CO<lkcd?" A. Easy over That's what the restaurant men say Or is it ()Ver easy·~ . . Q. "How Jong ean those walking catfish in Florida stay out of the water?" A. All day and night Ir they can gel in!o dirt deep t nough to ke<'p their skin wet . • . Q. "How many coonlies in Delaware?" A. Three. At low t ide. \\'0~1EN BORN u n d e r Scorpio, Libra or Ari es definitely should be kissed goodnight on the first date. That's our Planet man's counsel. \\'hen a gentleman friend fails to do so, it's kn own these girls regard it as an af- front to their sex appeal. Such first date goodnight kisses should not last more than 15 seconds. however. They mere- ly ought to signify gentle af- fection, going a bit beyond simple respect bul falllng short of messy contamination. IF \'OU ARE 44 years -0ld, you were born a year before the word "Yo-Yo" was coined by that Chicago toy manufac- turer Donald F. Duncan .. _ STUDIES SHOW that type -0f town most apt to attract the retired citizen is any s tate capital with a university in ii . . IT WAS NONE OTHER lhan George Santayana ·who said, "The young man who has not wept is a savage and the old man who will not laugh is a fool." 1'ou r questial'l!l and com- ments are 1nelcomed and will be used in CHECKING UP wherever p os sible, Please address your letters to L. Jlf. Bo yd. P.O. Box 1875. Newport Beacli , Cali- fornia 92660, Indiana llonors Included in those sludents honored for scho lasti c achievement at I n di a n a University were two Hun- tington Beach residenLs. Da vid L. Chamberl:iin of 2 I 8 5 I Ne,,11land, and David R. Mon- tano of 9451 Molokai Drive. They were placed on the dean 's list for maintaining better than a B grade point average and for membership in select honor societies during the school year. 1970-71. Beauty Bulletin from Penneys: Sale! 2 great perms. 1. Sue Cory 'Balsam Plus' perm protects hair from dryness. Includes shampoo. cut , and sel. Reg. 12.50 Sale 8 88 2. 'Proleine' perm uses pure protein. Includ es shampoo, cut, and sel. Reg. 17.50 ' Sale 11 88 l\.!.!' .. t'I• HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH l'<Unt,~g•on ("""' 1•d'!oo•8<J1111 1 ra.~• '""'"" 1'-d""'''""'lll • • Mllnday, June 28, 1'171 DAJL V PllOT 1 Special buys for summer girls. These values are hotter than the weather . Special 299 S pecial sleepwffr purehltet. ChOOS«t printed gowns of combed cotton. Or pick b1by dOll ~amms or solid shifts ot polyester/nyton/cotton. In styles and COiors gak>fe. tor size.s S·M·L. $2 Wi ........ .,_.. IMdlJa: ---..... -,, .. SJM ..... ....,, c:dors. sizes 3 to 6>c; Girls' 3·piece shon and pant sets. Short sleeve lop, jamaica short and bo.x&f"-back pant in HI. Sizes 7 to 14, S.f Special 3 pr•. $1 l..ldiel' cotton ellltlc leg brief. In while for •Int ~ In eima .-~IS poh US. enne111 The values are here f!NfJlfY day. sizes 3 lo 6X G1r1s· two piece short sels ol coot easy-car• conon. Many styleg and colo~ to choose from. Sizes 7 to 14, 1.• 199 Girts' belly don PIJomW•f Pflnn~Pr.-. pol)'elt•lc:otton. M..,., l'tytet and coton:. liHI 7 to 14. CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE J \ I ' , IJ DA.IL'( PILOT Mond1y, Junt 28, 1971 Fiscal Ri sk Told By State Officer SAt."R • .\:O.IE\T() s1a1t• l 'onlrl•litr Flourno~ :;;11d ( UF'I) J!ouston today I II e IC'g1::.l:iltJ1'r 11vuld be Taking ··1crv f!;·a1c risks"' \\tlh lhC: ~lrllt' ::. f111.uK'Hli ~1tuation 1f it daJ n11t p~1~.' ;1 liudgt>t by the • Juli I d1·;1iJ lu1t' "!'he l1•11.1sl,1ture h:is nvt met 1!1:it (!e;1dl11lt' :.1nee 1%8. fl I 11 o , h u u '.Ii(' t~•nfercnee f"l'l111111111!'(· 15 n1ccung behind gu11nled door!' 1r1 write a c:11n1- 111,•1111::.(· \ t'l"!illlJI 1•f (; () v . flr.n:1ld lti'.1g/\n ~ pP1pose<l S6 7 and the assembly proposal Is $1 01 billion. Heagan had ask- ed for $6.7 billion. The conff!ence comn1illee is work ing to iron out differences betVi'eE'n the Senate and Assembly versions of the budget. State Ecology Ccimp Sites Ope11i11g Soo 1t bil!u•n budgcl t.1!" !~171 -7'1 i\\t;E!~'l \'.A.i'l-11' IL'l-'I\ _ perforin i;11nscrv;1t1u11-11rit nl!·d A hurl!(1•1 is supposed to tir <;o\' flonald R.eagnn ·s first·in-k h · t l ~rl!•Pl~'<i h.i th(· Jul,i \ begin-The·nal!on ··f'.:o.:ulog.v Cl)rps " v.or int e. S1l"rra . n11r! 1 coris nu1" ot the ne11 fiscril .1 c[ir to red woo <l s ancl upper '"' for conscientious objectors n\akt· ~urc tlK· Sl:'.llr pays tts will open for business Thurs-Sacramento Valley foothills. bills on lune day at three former prison in-The volunteers 11'il! ret:L•ive Fl('l11rn11'" 1\llose rdf1te-is tnate camps. $40 a month. 11t':1r forest r\'~pons1hlr.-for 11rl!1nf! the The State Dl'partinent of ranger-style un ifnrn1s :ind be f'hr1·k~. said l.Hlls (":Jn he put c onservation reµ<JJ"1S <tl least provided roo1n rind l)Oard :it Probe Set In Tunnel Disaster SY LMAR, Callf, (UPI! - The last of 17 victims of an underground gas explosion 11·ere recovered during lhe \veekend as federal safety of- fic:ia!s began a formal in-- vestigation inlo California ·1 worst tunnel accident . Only one man survived from the i:rew of l8 tunneling the fhe-mile bore 25(1.feet below the earth's surface when rnetbane gas exploded early Thursday. Sel'en bodies v;•ere recovered by city riremen Thursday and f'r1da y and 10 Saturd ay front tht' fire-scarred tunnel of the tl1cl ropolil.'.H1 Water !Jistriet. As the bo<l:es were brougl1t out. state and federal ;H1thorilies gathered evidence for their investigations. Leo Komar. investigator for lh1,· U.S. Department of -· Slaylngs Studied Yuba, Mexico Link Sought YUBA CITY (UPI) -Mrx-the slayings at Yuba Ci ty. l l Dr. Thomas Leavenworth ,\'-----------~ ican authorities reportedly are rtport~ that on !\1:1y 24 four ~utter C,011nty Gener al investigating a possible link school children saw a car llospital Jn e di ca I director, bet~·een t!:e slayings of 25 speed past peach orchards reported 1nranwhlle th a I migrant rarm hands in Yuba near a lev~ at nearbv Rio Corona remained hospitalized Cily and killings in Guadala-Oso and turn back when -block-Sunday because of chest pains. jara. edbyafence. There is a ''strong Sutter County authorities The children reported find likelihood" that the arre~ted a~k ed fl.1e.'<ican aid aft~r fin-in~ blood trailing the car, the man "suffered a mild heart ding bullfight tickets to a newspaper added. attack.'' the physician s"icl, Guadalajara Stadium in lhe.~:i:.i~:i:.iii:i::iii:i:i::::;;::::::::"".;;::~I home of Juan V. Corona. 37, all-- fann labor cootrac1or who is charged here with 10 gJayings. the Sacramento Bee said. Corona's fa rnily horne is at Autlan . Mexit'(t, a00111 12;) miles southeast of ( ;uadala· jara and the Bee said tllexican authorities <A·ere interested in lrying to link the slayings herr with the disappearances or men during the past two years at Guadalaja ra. The Bee also said Saturdav that there was a possible se- cond person being hunted in I See by Today's Want Ad s e G 0 I N G CA ,\4PING ;;; I low-a-bout taking alonR this 10 x 12 tent. Only used a le1-1' t1mf's and in excel- lent condition. $45, JULY'S BIRTHSTON E 1he {2u&~ Pow.e,11ng t.he l!l{)St stinru.latini" <J( ;ill color11, thl' Ruby h11 bttn ! aptly dediriited to lhl' high noon. •nd l,oright midsummer. It wqA thou1('t1t !l() t"Qnt.a in a glowing Hpark alruck from the planet ·1 Jtlar11 ; a ~park th11t«1uld not be qnl'nl·hed wntil the v•orld itulr gr,.v• 1,oJiL Th•· Rub~· 111 the birth- otl · 11\i" ;1 t·ouplc o1 d;n 'l · f•cm"c ,·,,,,,.,,,,. t·.··rr•r>· ''' 100 consc:ientious uhJcctors to v ~ ~ If n budc~·t is liltl'r than war have signed up for lhe Cal:i1•eras. ttun1bollir. and 111·11 tit' ~;iid. 1! could cause *~ h Teh"rr'a Co"''''"·"· program. ru•Ol er 140 arc ex-'-' " ·-~ Labor"s Occupational Safety I and ll eulth Administration. KIDS LOVE 1 expressed a1nazement ihat th• • R.ed Hot Flug!: 11'1 a shag 6 x 9 11nd can bt usf'il anyplace: ! Jton' for l'Ontentment .a nd peace. I ll"1·ur·1101ir birlhilonr; fo r Jftlti _ }rt.Jir.-,J,.,. n"d gnorJ. fn rftJ.Mr; 9 · l1ab1l 1tir;; potcrl!iHI I e g a I pe('te<l to join this suinnier. State ConsCJ'\'Jt1on Director claun;; Reagan c re a 1 e d the James Stearn~ tod:1y iuviled lunnel itself showed little UNCLE LEN • Pu: yow·self do1•n under damage. 11 all, in this U.S. Oivf'r ·-\\"e hi!i e tn in;-ike sure California Ecology Corps by ne11•srnen to a pre-opening tou r notlnng is spent illegally.'' executive order last Aprtl to of the Cal ::iv<>r:is F:tology "Th('y could start work to-scuba tank and Conshelf · \ d $ f d · 6 r'f'gu!aior: l!'s an ex-llr------------• said lht• <;(lp f·on trollcr. Ct•nlt'r ne<1r Angels Ca mp, a dav,oncethedebris1sceare a Ut ays In Sa wthCa••+P1,,, · ' h aid 'B ttllem escape trom it all , Olli tlf the way,' e 9 . ' ut l ri1!cl •I lh• S•" Oi•~c fwy, "It ~ 1cry import ant that !9th century gold n1ining town 11ie st<itr lt11·p a budget by th!' SF Mayoi·'s p1ade frunous bv l\I ri r k thcv won't.'' The DAILY PILOT Cell• M.,. S40-9066 Allhough the blast. caused[l===========J}..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J~~~~~~~~~~~~ by ignition or a pocket of F first of .Juh ·· he :.idded . "lf Twain"s short st(JrV, ""The ~()U lrr:it II as ;in artificia l Celelirated Jumping -Frog or b,1rrier. ~ou run very gra\'e Case Faci'J)lf C11la1·l'r<1s Coun tl" ·· risks \1ith the financing of the t'.! The ni'w ecolOg_v ct>nll'r is state.'' located at the for 111cr V<l lCl'ilo !n 1%9 and 1970 Republ ican.~ f{' ) c Conservation C:irnp fo r controlled the legislature and 1g 1 OlU~t minimum security prison in- DemocrA!.~ refused to supply mates. This c;:rmp -alon~ tbe l11"fl·thirds m:i joriti!'s in OLY\IPIA. \\lash. 1CPl ) -11'i!h two others lhal \Viii cacti h11use lo pass budgets un-The full St3te Supreme C<Jurt tx-c11n1e .. Ecologv C'l'nter.~" - !11 more money v•as allocated assernbled today to he<i r a l<tsl wt-re urdcred phased out :is to schools. minute plea for a delav in the the state prob<11ion subsidy n1cthane ~as, only slightly d;·imaged the tunnel. Fire Bat· tali11n Chief Albert Schultz said it twisted rail cars out or ~hape and wrecked a 200-foot long digging machine. Kornar said initial a~ts of his inQuiry \vould be C'Om· pleted by the end of the week. '!'he hnuses ran fnur days civil case seeking rccOvery of progran1 for county felons v<as past the J ulv I deadline before the full $2.3 millioo fee pai d expanded and [t1ver convicts Bank Damaged Beagan .,.,a-s able to sign a Anti!rust La 1v ye r .Joseph t·a111e into the stl!!e priso n bud g<>t Alioto. no1v mayor of Sau :;yslem. LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Ocnincrllts now hav1< <r 43-~7 Francisco. During the sunin1er and fnll, cherry bomb or its equivaleflt tr!ge in the Assembly and ton· The civil case. also in1oh 1ng the ecnlogy corpsmen primari-blasted a fou r-inch hole early trnl thr Sena te 20-19 former State Atton1ey General 1~..-will fi ght fires and. like l!><la.y in the rront plate gl&.!!s The six·n1ernber conferencr John J, O"Connell and his regu lar firefighters, be r e-window at Lhe Security Paci fic comn111tee -1hrce from each former assistant, George r1uired to 1vor k a ('Onlinuous N;rti<1n11! Bank branch house -chd nol rneet through F'aler, ha~ raised issue~ !hat fi ve-day \1 eck. \Vhen the fire southwest of the downtown the weekend . t11cn1bers met Chitr Ju!tice Orr1~ Ha m!lt11n season end~. !hPy 1vill \l"ri rk ;r area, police said. There were briefl.v Fr_.i.da~· and 1old the relt should be decided by the normal e1ght-hQur dav for five nn Injuries in the blast, which res! or the la\\'n1akers tbey full coi.lrt, days 11·ith two days off_ occu rred before 4 a.m. could rnake speci;il requests[---------------'------------------------! fnr budget items beginning to- day. Reagan and the lawn1akrr~ also plan ned to interrupt \\"Ork on the budget to lis1en !o a speech Tue sday by !he Re\·. Billy Graham. The Sena!e-approved ver~ion of the budget is $7.37 billion Newton's 2nd Trial Under Way OAl\LA.~D (AP) -Black Panther leader Huey P. \"e\\ ton is In court todav for a ~rcood tria l in the 19fii killing of an Oakland policeman, but 1he al'\u:il retrial may not sl<•r1 1n1mc<l1at11ly. Deft>nsr :ittornr\' Charles Carri' ha~ ;-;11d hr ~111! clusC'l_\ rx;J n11nt> the Jlldges a~s1gned Ir• 1ht· rrheilr1ng ol \e'>l\l)n ',<; r 1.i::h11-\f·r~ tri:il 1n 1%8. 11·h1ch \ nderl 1n h1~ n1an~!.-.ughtr r i'IJfll 1<·111111 in 1hr (fealh of n1- i1cer Jolin Frt·Y Uct 28. !%7. Tea~her ,\.in,; :;;120,1100 1'01 FHE:O.·!O,'\"I' n l'I 1 fl s c 11 n 11 I t ... <t t' 11 e r 1,r 11u1nP tconom1c~. 1-1 hosr hushand is !'er\·ing on ;i nt11;d ship nlf \"1e1nam. 1\·a,;; the proud pos- :-essnr Sund:11· {l! a "inning ~120.000 ln,;;·h S11t'<'pstakes tic kcl . '"In a g;in1(' or chance. this 1s chr rir'-I unu! t ever 11·on."' ~a1<l :\lrs. Hosalinda fa1ardn. She nn11 has 1o relay the goo<l ne\\"/i 10 her IG·year-o!d son Glenn. v;•ho was on a week- end fishing trip \\"ith 11 st'OUt troop. and her husband Benny, ,vho i~ a <'rc1-1• 111embcr on the USS Barrett. Custom draperies and slipcovers -Save up to25% ... . ·-··. ..... -. : . . -·.-. -... Choose from a beautiful collection of cotton solids and prints for your custom drapery and slipcover needs, and save up to 25% on Early American, Contemporary. Modern and many more. All at tremendous savings. Regular low Penney prices for our finest fabrication. Call collect (714) 523-6511 for our shop-at-home service. Dtoorate now. U.. .Penney• time pay1111nt plan. .. Do-it-yourself carpet saves you a bundle ~,. .}_ C11rpe1 A9 'xl2' floor for 4 2 .12 w.1h "05y 10 inuoll corptl ,,1~, ... iu11 rilor e and prp1s. Tou9h, to1y to cleo" polyproyltne •1.1rloc1. 'dttorolor colori. Special 2~q~Yd. 50 Sq. Ylf1. Jnt 149..50 "Cart•r~t" indoor 01.1tdoo1 carpeting of o terrific pric•. V ec I ro ® polyproyle ne olefin is 1tvrcfy, cleans eo1ily. _, re$11t1 mildew ond stoins. 7 decorator colors. Special 3~~d. SO Sq. YdL Ju1t 199.50 "M•tropolis" ins loll il yovr5elf, l1vel loop tweed ot polyproylene olefin resists 'Pilli ng. S!oin5 1erno11e eo&ily. extra heovy foam rubber bock. Snip-to-flt carpet in 3 color,. Special SO Sq. Ycl1. at Just 249.SO "ioml:ilint" Hills level loop indoor ovtdoor corpet it mod• of Herc vlo n® polyproy!ene olefin for 11rength oiid long wear iweother •eii$l(lnf, m i!dew proof. 5 decorotor twe•ds. Proftssional instollotio• is ••tilablt if 11Hdflf. Avail•ble At These Stores: Fashion Island, Newport C enter, 64M.23 I 3, Hun+in9ton Center Hun ti ngton Beach, 892-7771. Use P•nn•y's Tim• Payment Plan. • ,. .. .. ! • ' ., ' H ' '" M , ' , ' ' ' " H " • ., V< • .. " M M ,. M • " '" " , '" M .. " " M ' '" '" w " F • ~ ., '" • ,, ' ' m o• • ... .. • • m '" '" •• ' .. '" G , • • • '" ' For the Marriage Licenses Death l\'otlee• •ILLINGSLIY JOl'l/I Ar'lt1ur llliilr••u ley. "" •1, Ill J08 A ltMm.o. Huntln;ton 11 .. cl'I, Doi"' ti <IN1'11, June !5, 1911. Survived bY mttr..r, Me""'" lllllln11lty; 'lll•r. Htl*'I V•11 leov, Cl'lllHI 1trvlct •"<I l"'H m f<I!. T!.ltMl1v. 10:• •.m., W"tmlnlltr Mtme1rltl ,..rk Mortu9rY •l'ld CtfrlftfrY . JIOWL•lll ,lr1"V• llurr ... t !"owler. 2llJ Sin!• Allll ""V• .. Cott• M••· Deft flf -"'· Jut11 16. 1'71. su .... lwd llY Wlflo, Ht lil'n L. l"owlt r: oon. lll lcl'l1rd, of 11'6!1 W1v,.., l~1no; dt ..... Ttr, Mlrll)"rt I . N011tt1. Cootot Mt11; 1111.,,, t'-lld'll ...,.,_, -' Clrtlt Pint o, Ml-'t; ...... ,..,. lovlM tlOl.l•lfln, Muncl ... !Ofl. llllllOl1; 11\d l ilt 1 r1r<lcl'llldrM. S.f'Yk91, TUftd1v, 10 1.m .. ~tclfic VIM C"-MI, I-Ml, ... clflc VI M M 1rrutrl1I 1'1rk. DlrKIH 1W ".c;!fic VI-Merfl.11ry, GOlllDON, Ill. ..,_,.. G«N Gor-. Sr. Atl .n, el Hll kMI A"° Avt ., Cotti MIN. 0.i. cf llttln, Ju,,. ~?. 1'71. SurvlvM llY w~. M1r11rl'f, flf 1~1 l!ome; ,..,.l'IHf, ler11'1'4t Ml'Yer, Houolofl; '°"· •obert G. Gol'e.i" Jr., L1•1 TellOt; t1•"9M•r. L1vr• Gor,,.,ft. Ho\11ton; 1tll>d•v•Mtt, St lllfll Moli n. of Mh:l'l!91n; ""'llflll, Mr. •rid Mro .•. M. Gor1lori; 1h11r. M,.., "lr1lnl1 .. ll•rd, P"'-'11•. ArlmM. Mr. Got'lfOll ...... ··- c:ll l.0 """' OVM Pll x Ce-•IM - 11111 H°"'"' •rid vt11r1n <A World Wlr II .. ,.,;.,. wlrh lt\e U.I. NI.,.,, ._Ice.. T""r-v • .1.. l . M_.1 & I"" ~""'11rY In PllMl\lx. ArllOM. ,,..,.,....,,,, PlloMi .. M•u.Ol...,m. SmlM'll •1111 TV!!llll Morlwl n', $.tl~lt AM, Oltik'l'e". scorT l.llllan !P .. n ) S,on. fform.,. rMlilllrll <II COlll M•sa, $~n1lved bV 1lll1rJ, Mn, A.&tllM >IHI I NI Mtl, ffltVI '°11"91'1, llo!l'I "' ~VIVO, Coll! 1 Mr• ...... Pll'll .. , "" PMto. G,..v11ldt 11rvlt1•. T-•v, ! "·""·• H1rWr lltHI M-lel Ptrk WHl- d iff Ch •"' Mortv1N. ~. Olrtcteri. ICHW.l.flTt M1rlor;1 lfllf<'I Sdlwtn t. '"' Maolt! J!., c ... 1. M .. a. 01tt of "°'"'' JwM n. 1'11. 1vrvlv1<1 bv ~vo~nd. e»n1ld J. SU1W1rt1; lhrN .,. ... M..-1, M<I, Co• .. l'tl'CI c. W..Xy, J1Mc1 M. So:l'lwlrlJ, i..t~ of C11!1 M .. I ; Mrs • .J.oV<I A. w ....... ,, FtOJ1'1tln Val!ev ;..,,., Oolwld J. S<,.._.1r1J1 1r>d """ 1r•Nkl!lldrlfl. Strvlc"' Tun • CW•. I ........ IU ltt Coot• Mtt• c111 .. t. wn~ lhv. W!lll•m H, 8ovd ottlcllll.,.. 1MorMtn!, G-SMcil'lt td C1mtl1ry, lh ltt Co1t1 M ... MOt'TutrY. O!r-n. SMITH Jt1n SMllll, A.ltl St. ol .n .I.DOii W•y, Cotti M"""· Survlvt<! bY ,_ ~ltll'lltro, "''"' Frey, COiia MeM; Sh1ret1 s111n- m t t?. tftlv; 11•W>1'· Dlvld lmltll, It" Olfflll r.... l ll!tro, Allt t GI,,,_. LYl'I• .. 00<!; Adi ,.,,Jt, Nof'wt 11<1 b...-tlll rt• •n·!IW. c;..,..g. Glt1nciw """ Jilt "••lo; IS •••r>dtl'llld'""· s.rvie... WtdMod••· 11 •·""" !hll er ... ~1v Ct.1~1, wl"' Or. ll••mOf'ld t. l!ltan.,,,. cfllc ll li"", lflll'• rnent, P•t•lle Vltw Mt,....,ri11 P'1r~. ,..,,.,. fly •u11t1h tllof• Wlll\I"" I<> me•1 mt- ... erlt! <:enlrlbvllono, plH•t cor>trlllvt. "' t~e G•tlol,I<• Ward. Holt .,..111111, l tll l!lroed'wlY Mortu1rv. 0 1,.<IOro. WOSTA IL .,,...,., L11 Wo1'11I, ,1.g1 '1, ol n1 Utll SI., HuMIM!"" l!IH th. 0.lt "' cl .. !~, Jvnt ts. s~rvlvtd ~' wile. 1.,..e; ton, GrH : Vo,,...., ,.lvln; lllr•• 11tttro, Gree• 'tl'IOtl'IPIOI\, Mhdrl<I ... u111n. LVdll Han- ..... lleurv, IOfll9M, MM>d1Y. 7:IO t .M., $Mlll'lt c,.. ... 1. 1t ..... 1..,, MI U. r .,...,..,, f 1.M., SS Simon .. Judt C1tf\olk C'Wr(l'I. lntt rmtnl. ~ S~flll>ttll CtmlllO. Smlll'll MMh.11ry, Olrteloi'"I. ARBUCKLE 6 SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY '27 E. 17tll St., Coda Mn.a -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corana del Mar . . . 171-Nlt Costa Mesa .... , ... Ml-UU • BILL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Brncl••:r. Cotta Mffa u 1-sm • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 11• 1.q11no ea.,.. u. -• PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PAU CtwllllJ Mwtaii) t1oapel sset Poc111c View Dl'ho Newpon _., Cllllor* tu-n• • P!!lt FAMILY COLONIAL FUNJ:llAL BOMB 1Ml Beilu Att. WutmJD1tet llWSJS • SMITIMI MORTUARY 1111 Mahl SI. -Raalllstot Buda Monday, .4int 21, 1971 OAIL1 PILOT • Record Beach Man Breaks P1·ohation, Jailed Accr editation Told at CSCF SANTA ANA -A Hun· tington Beach. man who was oo probaUon for a Coata Meaa State Unit burglary when he h!!lped 1 0> defendant. haul television sets from a Tu!tin home. has been sentenced to JJix month! in Orange. County Jail. convicted man to serve th ree years probation oa completion of the sentence. FULLERTON --~ tion by the American Couocil on Education lor Joumallsm (ACF.J ) has been awarded tN Cal Slate Fullmon COmmuni- catioos Department. SUperior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan ordered the jail term for Jay Fre de rick Weinberg, 34, of 10041 FOt· rutal DrivP., and orde.nd the lfe ordered a nine month jall term and three yu r.. prir- bation for Richard Brown . J.t, of Los A.r1g,le.s, identified as lhe man wh.o helped Weinberg ~arry two TV set.s from lhe Tustin residdtnce. Weinberg 's earlier prob<1Uon WIS imposed Oct , 11, 19'8, when he was found guilty of breaking into f' o s t e r • a Pharmacy, 519 W. 19th St., Coll.I Me.sa, and taking drugs from the store, He served three months In jail for that The: ei l alloo put.a the dtp 1r tme nt amon1 60 ~led irultituUons out ol 1bout ~ acro11 the naUOll Se ki g B,d-offense: and wu ordered to e . n 1 s serve three years probation. ·-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--'--~-'---~~~~~~~~~~~ Water Unit OKs Budget For '71-'72 SANTA ANA -An 13.4 million budget for fiscal 1971· 7l year with no tu levy has been approved the Municipal Water District of Orange County. Gtorge Patton, dis t r I ct manager, tzplained that the bulk of the tpending, $8 million, will be for purchase of Metropolitan Water District water with income from the member agencies whkh serve water to 80 percent of ~ county. Administrative mst5 o f about $400,000 will b< aboori>ed by the dl.atricl's income from invMtmeotl, he added. Diners Sue Ross moor SANTA ANA -A woman dintr wbo claim 1ht wu sevtrtly burned when liquid being used to prepare her crepes auuttes 1pllled over her ba• 1ued the Jr0Prletor1 of the ROHJnOOI' Inn, S.al Beach, for 11 million. Janet JC. Fiah claims in her Orange. County Superior Court action that 1he suffered permanf:l'lt injuriu May 22 when aht was burned on the face, neck and 1holllder1 in Ul.1! dining room of the Seti Be1ch Boulevard rataurant. Damaaea of W ,000 an a1k· td by her huaband, Kenneth M. Fish and a totaJ ot m.ooo by the couple. who were. with the Filhea at the supper table -Jullo' c. and Joyce M. Peralta. Filh and the Peralta• bue their claim for d1maae1 on the "shock and angul.sh" they !uffered when Mrs. Fish wu burned. GG Man Set For Trial Republican Committee Names Trio SANT A ANA -Replace- me:nts have been named for three member~ of the Orange County Republican Central Committee w h o resigned from the G 0 P organizalion. David L. James, onetime cenltal committee chairman, and attorney Alex Bowie and junior college instructor Hi.ns Vogel. ell from the fourth di.strict, resigned, explaining they have moved from the district. James has been replaced by Carl Karcher, who has been an alternat.e: central com· rnittee member representing Rep. John G. Schmitz (R- Tustin), Bowie's replacement i.!i Robert R. Black. a Santa Ana auto dealer. Richard T. Brown, an aviatioh company exttutive was appointed to replace Vogel. On Projects LOS ANGELES -The: stale Divi!ion of Highways ls seek· ing bids on two freeway proJ· ects in Ora11ge County. o·ne involves the widening from six to eight lanes of the San Diego Freeway in the San Juan Capistrano area. Plarui also call for the rebuilding of an interchange at Pacific Coast Highway and Camino Las Ramb las. Bids for this project will be opened Aug. 12 in Los Angeles. The second project will cover the widening from 10 to 12 lanes of the San Diego Freeway in Seal Beach. The Sea l Beach Boulevard in· te.rchange al.so will be widened as part of this project. Bids will be opened Aug. 5 in Los Angeles. New Alumnus IRVINE Dr, Warren Bostick, dea n of the UC Irvine-Cali fornia College. oi Medicine, ha s been named Alumnus of the Year by lbe Alumni Fac ulty Association at UC San Fra!lcisco. FAMILY ASSORTMENT Keep~ 01y • 1r1di!ion.I llmilr •flair righ.t 11 lto<M. n.e,.·, • wllola -/ling of eotor i nd d•zzl• I" tl'llt gl'MI 1>91Tio1!c 1nd lh.rllf- lflg, ut. 11nd .. nt dilfl"Y o1 Freedom FJr-orQ. &mttllingfor.--yont! ... -... , ........ ,.,. 'llJ!l!!.11' VALU·PAK -· DELUXE EXHIBITION $1095 MAMMOTH EXHllmON $1995 $295 -·-·-$595 JUllLEl IXHllmON $1495 ILOCK·PARTY $2995 COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH Pl,.... W/0 P•""tn 1111 " .. ""' 11'111. ,.,_ Ht • Ctr. \tklOMI & "ltt ... 111 OclllOVI-PM'( Cl" ,,. o. ........ ,. ''"" A....,.k111 l .. IWI oll1Q 1u11 aotdl 11n . SANTA AN A -A Garden a..,'""' T""' ,,.. a.y S(..,, y,..., '"' lol/I Cw. WIMtr & "•dflc (111! MW'f· Grove. man accu!td of the 1111 .,.,.., • ..,,, !Pitt, tlllflltlfll murder of hi ll gi rl friend'• 15- month~ld baby hu been :~ ~~:_ ~"::. f;:: v.i. Mkt.> ordered to f.ace-arraignment ,J -ru •· '"" 11. on ~ charges July I in Orange County Superior Court. :r;:,:~.~~ Judge Robert L. Corfman set the arraisrunent dllt after ;;:-;~~·;~:;.:. H.~~w:,. the Orange County Grand Jury lndiceted Donald Lee Coall, Jt11111M a.11111111t c.,,. 39, in the killinl of Chadd tJW cw . ..., • •,..~, ..... Bryan Dunham, the infant son '" •~ '~• '* 0CMllVleW llltll LN-na 14Jotttr H .... 11 ....... "''"'' t.mlt L•'" Y1rttl1w" & S•llMft II. S!mon'1 1..e II. J~t't Mlft'I Cit* 1/1 C1r. G1rllellll A •rMlllllnl ll11ftllow l!llrtl o111S tot' '· If SJW M..-111 & .. rli.HI St. Wlll,...'1 a-rdt NII C.r. M•fllllit & Mll'ftl Al,,.. a111 Mtrfltt llfT' ~ T,... .-111 Ao. "/W cw.~.·- See the great outdoors the Penney way! Folding be nc j,.n-1obla 1at. Saots four a dults. Stu rdy steel from• 1vpport1 hard boord bench ond ta ble top. Tobie height 27", 1eot heig ht 1.51/::i", Fold1 into 1alf contained carrying co••· ~~()!Si.nteirn. Hos 2 pt. tank c;opocity. Doub!• montl•tt;1•. 11•• C<Ml,.n•410D lltO,,,.. Tw o bvrn 1r mod1I w ith burMn 9" cp<m. 1199 Colaman9 f'l.191. B8e 7999 Big 9';)( I 5' double trde room tent. .• Feotu r1• 2.-40 drill top, t ides end \". floor, 1hre1 Jo rg1 scr•en1d w in· \.'. dows. End wo ll height 44", cen11r ·\·'. heighr 7 f .. r. \\ ' . 1999 Color fu l 1 :Z'x l 2' dining 1oncpy, T1lescoping steel c11l'l l•rpol1 adju1t1 to I'. Both mildl'w a nd wo11r rt sit ta nt, In bh.1• and yel• low pan.el1. 999 l'oremo1t 5 Jb. n<"flic: 1le1ipin9 b&o. Feoluret pep!in eufersh~lt, flannel Hnil'lg, o 100" Tolol'llll zipper ond 5 lbs. of oll o c"flie f1Jtlng. 3 lb. nylon shell Dacron® polyester sleepin11 b1111. 19.99 Prlmutl1 tportsmon pf'O• pone 2·bvrnar stave, 14•• ~ .... .mlll'T'INt. tnc:Jude' "Weak1nd1r" cy{· \nder of prcpone. 14111 ennelfJ The values are here every day. Av1il1bl1 at tMs1 stores: Fashion Island, Newport Beach, Huntington Center, Huntin9to" Beach'. Shop Sund•y loo, 12 to 5 P.M. of Edna McWhcrter, tt, Lona .. H•,.... •m1. Beach. · I~~;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::: Officen who arre&ted Coal! r, ' May 29 at his apartment N.id Miq McWhorttr told them that 1he. returned from work in the early houri cf that morning to find bu IOn badly bnilsed, bletding and hardly brtething. The child dM!d lit. holpital an hour later. Valley Man ,On f.ouncil SAll?A ANA -Fountain Vallq CltJ C•unCllman Goorlt Scott hat -et.c:ted Yke Jnlldtnt ol the Orange Count)' Crlmlnll JUll!ce Coun- cil. Saltt ll an ln1tructor at jumdlt hall. 1l>e :at.member council 11 flllld<cl by the federal Safe Slrffll Act of JIM. Ill purpott 11 to ttudy means « more dftditntly combaWna crlmc In the _ .. ty. Hflmln Stitt, wtlo la on the coundl u a citizen 1t llr'Jt, ••• tlec1*I pr8.idenl.. Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: 1 * 11A1M OPPICS:• & Hnt, l.olAnat*• ~1!51 ·~ * ........ llQMllMCYPLACC:3133Wllahlre ltvd.,LA.• ... 12t15 LA. CMC CDTllt: 2nd I. I~• 13-1102 * HUNTIHTON HACH: 11 Huntlngtoft c.r.r • (714) 111·1047 * UNTAMALOM"1ft1CIADIMCY1 1IOI N. Main & • (714) 147-1257 * UllTA 110N1CA1 711 Wllshl,. Blvd,• 30$0741 * UN Pl0ft0110lt& l'aolt'lc • 131·2141 * WllTOOYUCA: hltland Shopping Ctr.• S31·2201 * PAlfOftAllA CITY: 181Cl Van Nti)'l BIYd .• 8"2--1171 * TMIUJfh.11751 Yentufl Boulevard• M.$-1114 * lOfM llACH:'"' 11.oowl • 437-7411 .. lloll--•-~1., 'o•~Hoon-1•1>4"' ASSETS OVER $800 MllllON Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Best Inflation ... Just Join 61he JmldB.s Oub Wl1!t a $2,SOO balanc:o In,.., oavlnga account. you are II lg Ible to become a member. Subst1ntlal aaving1 ire 1Vll11bl1 when purctiaalng many ileme Including 1u1omobiles, furniture, 1ppll1nce1, Jewelry. Plu• m1ny fl'M HTVicn-money ord•rs. Nie dtpolll boXll, llC. I ·----_ ___...____ ---' COAST ! ANO SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS L-~ --~----· Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COMPOUNOID DAa.Y AND PAID OUM'TIM.Y.' s.00•1e.s.13"- P•11book; No Minimum. 5.25"--5.39% TfltM Month CtrtlftOlltrl; Na Minimum. 5.75"•·5.92"- on .. vear Certit1e1111; $1,00l Ml™mum. 6.Q0•/·-6.18"- Two.YnrC.rttne111: $5,000 Minimum . • ElfacrNt A.nttwl laming. • INSURANCE TO $20,000 .• l • ORANGE COtlITT -- 'Landlords' Get OK Water Unit Leases P lieasant Hunt Club Bi g Trucks No ,v Ba1med On Culv er CSF Prof Offers Theory On 'Child' Earth's Origin SANTA AN . .._ -Orange The district owns 2,700 a<:res the cosl of stocking the S A~TA ANA -Orange Coun!y \\rater disuict dirtc· north of Prado Dam tn ;u.:reage with bird~ C.:01u1ty Supervisors have ai>-By GEORGE LEmAL documentation supporting it to matter in the IWl'I core tors think they have found a k1ver.ude County. \\'ater district f..1 an ager proved an ordinance Danning oi 1111: oa11y •u•r st•rt explain how solar systems deveklping bodies of matter_ Because the acreage is in Langdon 0 we n antleipates he;ivy tru('ks on Culver Drive FULLERTON -A theory were formed. debs _ build up hea~ way out of a linancial dilem· another coonty, the district that the district's sharl' of 1hr and Avf!ry Parkway. that wou ld rename the sun Johnson, in a p a per • J n1a They are going to become must pay taxes on it. Since 1ncon1e will pay taxes on the The C:ul~·cr Drive proh lbitioo "mother" and earth "child" presented recently to the New eletm!nls and eventually orbld landl ord s 1or a private 1966. the bill has been morC' enllrt' 2,700 acres. of \'thieles over 14,000 ponnds has been offered by a Cal York Academy of Sciences, around the central core from ph"a~;1nt rl ub. . than $100,000 and ttY.! net Hl· l)Wl'!'I said the 'o\"att'r ent11y wi ll eluninate the use of I.hat State F'ullerton professor of said the earth and other which they come, he says, i\ppro\rc! by the board is corne from agricullural ac· may get additional income tl1oroughfare be.twetn the San physics. planets originated in the core Jn the case-of earth and the lease of 1.000 acres of \he !iv~lies on the land ooly $&,000. from a lease granted to the Die~o Freeway and Bonil<I Dr. Pred ~1. John 11 on , of the sun and developed in other planets circling our sun. i.l1strict s Prado Dani proper· The lease with the pheasant Santa Fe Drilling Company Jn Canyon Road in lhe Irvine described by collegt-(1£ficials much tht-same 'i\'ay as an em-eltment! and eventually crbit ties 10 Linck Ha.1 ha~1ge's Trap hunting club calls for 10 per· prospect for natural gas and area bv refuse trucks enroule as ha v I ng "irnpeccab1e" bry-0 grows in its mother's in the mass of the sun, but tM Shooting and Pheasant llun· ('Cot or the gross incon1e to be oil on 350 acres or 1he Prado to the ~-oun1y dump on Coyote academic credentials, h 11 s womb. sun contracted, accordin1 t• Count v Bo v " Ccts l Year In Robber,· ~''-"~~-C_"lu_b __ ~~~~~~,_~P:':'d:_::l•:...::_'h:e~w~•:'':'_d:;:'':d:c~t ~le:":___":':m::_:p_co~pe~''-''-'~~~~~-C-'_"~Y'-"-"-'-'-d-·~~~~~~-""_v_e_iled~~•~-'h_•:•~.-Y:.__•_n_d:._~C:a~u=gh:l:u~p:__m_lhe:__:rola.:::"':":•:f~lhe~~P-''_1_.,_,_°'_·~~~~~·' SA~TA AN A -\ \\"est1n1ns1er \ou th 11 hu ad- m1t1rd being a n1ernber of a ,i::an,I! v•hir h attempted 10 rob tht' attendant of a ser\ ice sta- tion in that city has b('('n sentenced to one ~·rar 1n Oran,i::e Count y .rail Judge Robert l" o r f m a n flrdered that tenn for Denis B. Caton. 19 . of 8361 15th St., :iflcr accepting the defen- dant"s plra of guilty to reduc- ed charges of second drgrrc robbe r\'. Ca!on must serve Int' ~:ears proba!!on on his release Caton was one or a group \1·ho invaded a service ~tallon ;it 15440 Brookhursl SI. ~larch 2~ and attempted to rob a1 - 1endant Gary \\'a~ nc Tucker .111 knifepoinl Police said the attendant seized a tire iron and d ro,-t h15 al\ackers rrom t he premises. Caton was arrested a sh-Ort time later. Genealogy Unit Meets OR.A NGF. -Peoplt> in· tercsted in tracing or learning abot11 1heir fan1ily trees will have l\\'O su"h opportunilies °"·hen the Orange County Genealogy Society holds lls monthly workshop July l and sponsors a courS<' beginning Jul y 6. The mttltng , sch t du 1 e d from 10 a n1. to ~ p rn at the Lemon He1ghls 8 a p I i s t Church. 81~ !:'.splanado Ave. Orange, will concern new books in the soc1e1v's library. The course wiil run rour Tuesdays 1n July lrorn 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Anaheim Pubhc Library auditorium. 500 W. Broadway St. TAKES UCI POST Sociologist Roberts UC I Names Culture Head IH\ll~E -Dr. George 0. R.oherts. professo r or sociology and comparative cultu re. has been appointed direclor of the Program j n Co znparatJve Culture at UC Irvin£' effective Jlllv ! 11e will succeed Dr. Jay H. l\lartin who directed the ex· pansion of the Irvine program in American studie~ 1ntu the prograzn in comparatire l"U!turc the last three years Dr. l\1artin v•lll remain in the !acuity as professor of English and comparati ve literature. Dr Ru~rts. a sociologist. ha!"> helped develop the cur- ri cu lum in Afr1r;in culture' since joining the L:CI faculty in 1969. Earlier he had scr\"ed as chainnan of the depart- ment of sociology and pro- fessor of African studies a\ Ham pton Institute in Virginia and professor of sociology and Afril"an studirs at the State University of New York. 50th Anniversary CELEBRATION • SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT DIA GNOSTIC CENT ER GOODYE AR TIRE CENTER SERVICE DEPARTMENT PARTS DEPARTMENT BODY SHOP RENTAL LEASING ON EVERY NEW & USED CAR-TRUCK FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS ~ ~,~ 50 GALLONS f FREE GAS FREE 4 WEEKEND CAMPER TRIPS PLUS $50 CASH SPENDING MONEY GOODYEAR BLIMP RIDES 50 VALUABLE PRIZES IN All COMI IN AND HGISTIR NOTHING TO IUT NO OILIGATION Theodore Robins FORD 50 'r"lAR S OF SERVICE TO OV.N;E COUNTY UNDER. MME OWNERSHlft 2060 HARBOR BLVD. Costa Mes• 642-0010 tick-tock Just for opening your NEW PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT or for SECURING AN INSTALLMENT LOAN Either way, here is your opportunity to check the right time, the easy, co urte.ous way with Newport National Bank. Receive you r choice of a beautiful decorator clock .•. Free of Charge ••• for opening your new personal checking account for $150 or more or for start ing a new installment loan of $1 ,000 or more. Qualifying installment loans are : Home Improvement, Automobile, Mobile Home, Boat, Airplane, or Personal Loans. Add to the decor of your livi ng room , den, kitchen, bedroom or office with these sp<Jcially designed electric Deco rator Clocks. There Isa slight additional charge for clocks Band C. PRE SEN T DEPOSITORS may buy these fabu- lous c locks at a cost that's hard to believe! 1rs our way of sayi ng "thank you" for being a depositor at Newport National Bank. One per family. SERVING ORANGE COU NTY ,,, 9 CONVENIENT OFFICES 11Jn1C111T nrf!cr.,.,.,,, .......... "-'11:hrl~n a1 \11cA11 h'." 8J3 J 11 1 SAY~IM: OlrlCE .. . ......... Barj•!I' 11 J.1mborae •. b42 l i41 r.01 I fG E PAI!~ Off IC! . • • • . . . • • N•11,.(lfld 11 Commr.nfl'till~ . 811 ~'IO!J l AGUpjA HILLS Off!C( .... , , . .ltl~Y" Wo1lll. \1~.in1 Hill~ .. 830 J,'00 W(SICLtrr OH I Cl ........ "' .. !'LAI EH ~CH OFFICf .....• ·•,.,, ltr~urt Wof\d, SN! 8u<h ..•• S96-2TJ I .'·UN,.Y HlllS OfflCL............ . H1rbor 11 &t• .... 811 ·7290 :,UPllllOll Orn er .. , .... , . . . •. Su pe110f tl PIKfnlia, ••. 64 2·951 I llNIVf ll~ITY 01 r1cr '.. . (1,\ Ch•P!ll•n •l Sitt• C".o11t11 .••. 179-4140 .•.. , Wes1chll 11 Oaver. , , fi41 l II I ...... • " . ' . -· •P leg fir '"' w ma tio JUAI and H bill hou ron on !. SU "7 Ha B Sis qua the hea :o; t i .. , ··su fo au c Hee be fro hea .a 11 l '"' sho• foe c G que l\'it 100 He 0 mo foe Wa, Lon pie Bix Che A B" pee Bee foll A Oce resi '" mu and '"' bull"" .. ,t.\•ln "" "" Coren Tnll "' . r,.:, (lft~ II • 8e Clt <k Publh J1me '' l~• I " ••• E "" (•1'' Al•I ""'"• l-i. fl.,ldu1I 1•1• •• (~f 1•11 Publl1 Junt l l l n1 I ... ... "" '" 1"•1• ln111vlll 11'1• Cler• II I • lie Clu • Publl Ju"* 11 '" Hit " "~ Sitt l1'1i t n,iv,d Tnlt Cl•rt. •~ •e C lffk. Publl Jun• 11 '"' '" " , ... •• ·-'"" "'cllwld Officials Split On Prostitution SACRAMENTO CUP!) Ca.lifomi1 judres and law en- forcemenl -0fl icials are deeply aplit o v e r propo sed legalization of pros titution, fi rst results of a statew ide sur Ye}' indicated rect:nlly. ·Ass embl y man Leroy Greene, (0-Sacramento ), "the lawmaker who wa nt !I "the "orld's o Id e 8 I profession" rn ade legal, 1 e n t ques· tionn ail't's to l,WO California jueges, sheriffs, police chitfs and dist rict attorneys. He asked their opinion ()r his bill to liceme prostitull-s and house of prostitution and a se- rond bill to allow pr06litution on!}• in cou nties w h o s e suj)f'rvisors approved of it. ''This would be a farce." \4TOle Back Chief of Police Harold T. Kulbeth of :\lerced. But Sheriff A.B. Collar of Siskiyou County ga ve a qualified "yes" when asked if the state department of public health should license pro- s t i t u t e s and Lheir "apartments" if both v.'ere "su puvised '' by Jaw en - forcement and m e d I c a I authorities. Cottar said they should be licensed "proYiding there will be no priYileged information from the medical profession, health department anrl oth tr allied agell'Cies so far as law enforcement is concerned. It should be understood law tn- forcement \\'iii be giv t n full cooperation and information." Greene mailed the questionnaire la.st \\'ttk and \\'ithin a few dayi; more than 100 respon~s \\1ere retumtd. He said they would Nortl1erners Set Picnic Orea on and Washington are moYing to Lo~g Beach. Or at lea~t it may seem 11a for a da y v.·hen !ht' Oregon- Washing ton Stale Society of Long Beach holds its annual picnic lunch at 12:30 p.rn. in Bixhy Park (Broadwly at Cherry) July 18. A band concert by tht" l,..eng Bf'ach. /o.1uniclpa1 Band and a ~rformance by the Granger Btekley dance studios will follow the lunch. All present or f o rm er Oregon and Wa s hi n g ton residents and their familles are invited. Those 1ttending must bring their ewn lunch and table service. LEGAL NOTICE "infJutnet" him in ·with the prostHute and v.·ou '· be "limittd to the tradition· landlord-tenant relationship.' "Prostitutes v.·ould b prohibited rrom performin their services anywhere othr than the licensed esta.blisl menl ," Green told thf' c nc!al!. ''Tile place of busine! would not be the tradition< 'calhoust .' " Ph y l!! l ca I exam ination would be required at lea~ weekl v of the women or a: often ·as the department con sidertd necesaary. If tht" landlord or prostitute engaged in any "illegal activities " tnelr licenses would be-suspended or revoked. First rtSpor\Hs d I v i d t d t Yenly at 61-'1 on tht qut!tion of lietn51ng pro11 tit u tea . Thirty-eight judges approved the ide1 M"ld 28 opposed it. Fif- teen police chiefs supported it and another 26 didn 't. Sheriffs split M in fa vor while tht DAS opposed it 2-3. The officiaJs overwhelm- lncly IUppOrted allowing each county board of supervisors to decide whether they wanted legalized prostitution. T h e response was '15-30 in fa vor of local option. FiUv-five of thos.e respon- ding ·belieYe c u r r e n t an- llpro.<JtltuUon lawa "benefit society" wtillt !16 btlitved they don't. Forty-eifht of those polled felt that 1 fl t I e t y bentfJted by tM fining and jailing of prostitutt:t but 63 felt it didn't. Ne wport Girls Get Diplomas TY.·o Ne1'•port Beach girls have rect lvtd b a ch e 1or'11 degrees from the Unl\'ersity of Portland. They .are Emmy Loo Jolly. daugh~r of Mr. and Mrs. F. f\.f. Jolly, 221 4 Alli! Vlst11 Drivt , and Charltne E. Reouch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ferdln1nd R. Recluch, 11~ Rutland Road . Miss Jolly was awarded her degree from the school of education, whili Mjs_, Reciudl received her~ in English. LEGAL NOTICf: P4.ft7 P·lrl'I 'ICTITIOUI I USINll l PICTITIOUI S Ul lNI St NAMI ST&TIMINT NAMI ITAT•M•NT l~1 f(ljlawin• 11r1an1 1rt Hi~• T~t followln1 "'"°"' ••e ••int *"'•lnh1 as: bY1ln•U "" B&LllOA MEA CANT lll! CO., 2111! VI CTOAIA CHIC:LI A•TI., 6.11 V~ Ml ln St,, lllbo1, C1til. W it st .• c .. 11 ~I. Ct lll. ~DflCI E. Yett-I, Ill Ce•&n• SI., 0, . .,."""' .. DHn, ns N-.,., l en Olm11. Ct ll!. Jun~y J. Y1tt" 01 (•"'' H~ ltM~. (O<OfttdD ~•.,Sift Olm10, c.111. "'"· l)wtlfly °"'"· n! Htr1~ 111r T~ll bUl onl U I\ Mlnp <llrHlw<lMI l>y l 1r1t. H•-ar1 ... .,., Collf. H.E .. 5 J Y1t11, ........ neri T~ll .... 1~ .. 1 ~ Mint c-ond\lcttlll Irr I Haro<t E . .,..,,, •••lf>tr1.,111. lft,. •llltmtnl •H.-1 w;1~ !ht C..,nty M,., O.ottoY Doln C\ork ol Or 1nt• (...,nh• an: Juno t , 1'11. Thl1 1111-ffll fllff Wll1'> rtut C..,nlY !h 81\"orly J, Ml""°'• O"vlv Co..n!Y Cltrk ti Or•••• C..,MY .,, Jw!W 11, n n. C.••rli I Y l1ver1., J. M•d-.iK, °'""IY CeunlY llubll.>hld 0•1n10 Ca.•t Oehv •11111, Cit•~. Junt 11, H o~d JulV J. 11, Jt1! \,.,_,, "ut lhhld Or•n11 (.N l1 C.111 ,.Ill!, .. LEGAL NOTICE , . ., .. •ICTlflOU1 I USINll5 NI.Ml STATIMl!NT Jun• JI, )II •""' J ulv I, 11. ltll l»t-71 LEGAL NOTICE ..,.. .. l'l'll'10US SUllN••t N&1'1• IT&T•1'1•NT Ti-. fellftW IM HtlM><ll or• ..tnt O'llllE"·s Slll"Cl.O LlV Sl-<011 , 7111 buol"'"' • ., E'1T Co11t HllM•I Y, CD•<lftl dol M,r, J ONN'S MOTOlll, lU't5 Ofh..,y PIL c.,,, "76a ••. C1111o1•1!W I Mch. A••ln I" Hfl!or, d i) lllllY(I lle.td, S1mu11 l l<t ... ll H ..... 11. JOQIO 11_.... t.vlnt, C•lll "70-6• ''"d SJ. JI. CY1 .. n , Ct llf. Jd>n Htnry lftl• bu1ln1u 11 conductod by on In· ...,wtlt. 4' C1llt Vl1!1 lerl!1, 1~11 r1 • .,~.,•I. Clomon!•. Alvin (. H'lltr l~lo -.itl .... I 11 Ml ... C.....,c!MI 111 • Tnl• tTOTl'fT1tnT ....... Ill.., wl!ft !ht Coun· •••ln.,.hl. tv r i.'>. ef Oron~t Cavnt\ ''" Jun• 11. ••mull S. ~II "n 1~1• 1111 .... 1t11 fl lMI wllll "" c..,nty "'"bH•~ld Or•nit• ca11t 0 111v ,.111t, Clt1t tf °''"" c..,.,1y .,., ,......, 11. lf11, Jun• )1, '9 '"" Julv 5, 11, 1111 1J1'·'1 ,•v S1v1r,., J . Mid•, Dtllvtv (...,,.,., LEGAL ri:OTJCE '·"'' l"ICflTIOUI I Ul t"'lll NAM• 1T&T•-'l•Nt lnt l(lj-lnO Dtro<>n 11 dolnt llull~t I J : SEii.ViC( CENT(ll "G!.NCY, SCIO NO'WPC1rl Clnl•r Orlv1, Svlll SlJ, ... llubll•'*' Or•nltt' C.11 O.llv •1111, JU111 11, llll •• .,. Jwly I, n, 1111 lJt).11 LEGAL NOTICE .... PICTITIOUJ tUJIWall MA.Ma IYATaMS"T .,.hi 1-1 .... lnt ...,_ la Mins 9\!11Mtt N-e>ort 1,.,~. t'lUO t i · lif'l1n o su.111..-, 1111 Soult> li•ot•r. Ot ol nr1 •t111, ,.,, Frull l t., hnt1 t.lo. it. "'"'"*II"· '1ICIJ. ol.nt. C•lll. Tl'lll llt!l ll\lll !1 !>tin• con<lutltcl lly 1n l b't"• •rt Ml\n Groo...,. Jr_. llOlll k-~lvldu11. MllrY<I w, .. Tvstll'l. Ctllf. li•l•n o. Scl'l.tl•r l'~IJ lto!1I"•" It llllnt ~N •v I 1"~11 111!1ment rnw wllh !ht CounlV pt rlnu"'I'. C.lorli el or1~0, CD11ntv ""' J unt 11. 10 1. l~~• F~•n•lln Groov•r Jr. •v &tv11\y J M""e91, 0.,uty CDllAl'r Tl'lll t!ltffroll'll Ill ... w\ln 1f\I CD11ntr Clt 1•. Clork •Or•~ .. Counlv '"'Ju,.. 16, 1'11. Pu~lllhtocl erentl (Nit Dl ll Y "Ii.I. •v .... .,,.. J. Ma-. OIPll!V c""""' J.,,.. n. H ,,.. Julv 1, IL 1'71 lfll·71 c..,..,. LEGAL NOTICE •~1111,.,.. or1"" CMtt O•llJ 1>1i.t JuM ,,, M ,.,. Jwlp J, lJ, Im l..,._11 LEGAL NOTICE Monday, Ju~t 2!, 1971 DAIL V PILOT J J ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mobile o~ean • ID Use Soon CltARLOTI'E A~lALIE. St. Thomas. V I. -A 1nc~:!t underwater researth capsule, in which scienllsts can explorf' deplhs lo 100 fttt is txpeet~d to be in Op('rat1on ht're 1n about 12 months. The Virg in Islands Nationa l Undersea La boratory, to be attached W the botton1 of a barge, was conceived as a nev.•, Improved \'ersion of thr habitnt used last year and the ~·ear before in the Tektih:< pro- gra1ns off the island Cll .SL John, 1n 1-.·hich sc1rnt1sts set records for hving undr r water. The Tektite progr<11ns \\ere spons~rerl by thf' l T . S . (~vernment. and the \llrgt.1 Islands goveminent an d private industry. but the new l11boralory Is 11 proJe<:l of the Virgin Islands goven1ment ~lone. Ian Kobll rk. Special Assis· tanl to the Governor for Undersea Activities and himself a Tektite aquanaut, said the nlobile habitat will be used for both practica l and purl' rest arch. lie sairl the t.win·capsu le h;1li i1a1. wi11ch will contain a laboratory and t11·1ng <1~·­ <,inunfMiat1nns for f o u r persons. \\'tll bf> cap:ible of ni<i\ ing Up to stx n11l~s off shore. One of its ad\'antages O\'('t a st.&l1onary w1dersea researc·h posl, he said is thal lht: undt>rw11ter t-n\·1rooment will not he pcrmanl'rtl)y t•hunged by tl:r l'OOSlant presenct: u! human !wings 1n lhl' art'a. In pred1<·t111g that !ht· proj- ect will hf' 1n op('ra11on in about a yens·, Kobli{'k said aboui twlf :1 rnillion doll11rs has been raiSf'd through 1he guvernrnt'nl and pr i \ a le .sourc('s an1! lhc ha h 1 1 at d('s lgns ::ilrt'atly h;n ,, br.>('n cornpletect The-t1ro 1·\l1nders of tilt• habi1Al tnt'asUrr 20 fec>t 111• t'lght fee! :ind will hi' 111ountt>d horiz()nt;ill~ {Ill th-: b;1rg1.'. 1nth .1n und{'r-11at{'r 1{'hic!t' gar;,age Hfld a .,,,et room t"1(f thi: un-In <'intrast .,,,1th 1he exlslinlit derwaler ent rance hatchfs. h1nllt'ti·Sl\u .. hes that hiHe been Air, el('(.'tricity. p\urnbing. made ont v 111 .~h:illuw near 11 n d Cornn1unicahon.~ com-short! "'atl'I":.. plexes \\'ill be houM'd in a u!JIJ-"\Ve hal"P unl}' li<11f the pi<.· t~· buoy attached 10 U1e liar,11e. ture ri~hl no\\ ... h1· ~ul. Al the end of each nli .ision. f'trhaps the 1 1~! Job of U1e thP habitat wll l be ra ised tu laboraturv. hr said. y,•ill be tu lhe sllrfHt'f' and used as ;i study v.·hether lh c extemi\'e decon1presslon C"han1bt'r for 1k-epv.·nt('r dredging unclerw11y lht· aquan.auts. · in the terntory 1s likely to al· Ar11ong thP proiect!I Koblick frrt the buildup uf sand on the cn1·1sions for !he habitat are lx'aches. studies of sand fl ow . water!'~~"-~-"-=~~~~"-~==~-, pollution, spiny lobster'! <1nd olher food speci-e~. and Pl'Pn tlu· creation or ""fish fa11ns." A l'011lp)ete ('Cnsus of rnarine life out to .six n11les <'ould be made. Koblick said. ST AR S ~1clll•'\ 11rnnrr Is r•n•' ,,f 111f• • \1ortr1·, .1!.n•1.1t 11.~trnlr1 ~ .. r.~. J!1,. c11lu111r1 i~ onl' or thl' f)1\ll,Y Pl Lt lT·s J:rtlll 1••11 l•tr"~ ~ VIS·~ROWN NOW IN HUNTINGTON BEACH HELD. OVER ONE MORE WEEK! ENDS: SAT. EP-448 The Bermuda 145 sq. In. Picture Family Size Color Portable Largest RCA color screen for under $300 and packed with RCA achievements! High performance picture tube for true-to-life color. Thi! low price buys you Solid Stale stabilizer ci rcuits arid easy~lo-replace plug-in AccuCircuit sound systelTL I~ 1 GRAND OPENING r· BLACK & WHITE T.V. SPEffiL! • Sig sc.reen viewin portabilit y ttnd budget plealing pr ic , lu 1" prac- tic al ro11a bo wt lt•nd complete RCA 's win ning combiri•tion. Swper power grid VHF tuner a nd Pa n.O· Ply picture tube with built-in VH F and UHF •nl enn a 1. ONE OF A KIND-FLOOR SAMPLES NOW REDUCED TO CLEAR! SAVE! Pick·up-and-90 Funst!!r P•tt•n1I port•lil, , .. cli19. "''''· llui!t.ln UHF-VH,_ •11l1nn1. Mod 1I AP094W SAVE NOW' RCA PORT ABLE COLOR TV lh• ,._AOUAlE mod1I E~4 04. l i111iltl11 Oll Ulnfifi••· 10 hwr1y! RCA PORT ABLE COLOR TV f 1,..il y-1ii•.J 11" cl i19, "'•••V•• wOtl. j,1ncl•om1 w 1lnul 9r1i111d fini1h. Prit 1cl to c l111~ TV RCA BIG SCREEN CONSOLETTE' l lt 1)" d i19. "''l•U•I c:olor TV con1 ole!t1 wl!h hond•om e w1lnul f r1in..:I fini1h. N•w 11 1pecl1cul11 1o•in91. AMn I .... TV'1 et DAVl.5·1lOWN H1111tl1t11t111 1 .. cti $10,,. 011ly, ., ,f ,. I \ ,. ' . I ., I " I I .. ~ t ~I ' I t.1 .. ' FRIGIDAIRE! FRIGIDAIRE JET ACTION 1 -18 WASHER• AUTOMATIC SOAK CYCLE s21aaa Come in and regi ster. You may win a valuable prize. Nothing to buy. No obliga- tion. Just come in and register. J.t oclion 1-18 ... ~1ht r w1!li •Ylomo••c. •O •~ c vclt . 1 p<t c.• lo 11 po~ncl c•p•city. f•cwl1i•1 .Jel Cird1 •l>r•y •v•t•m ••n••• cloth•• be tt1t. Perm• p, • ., ''''· No 91111 to wt••· no oil to lt•k. ._ _________ _. ... FRIGIDAIRE FROST·PROOF REFRIGERATOR 2 door, big family size. Model FPCD.121 . Save Now! .. FROST·PROOF 2·DOOR REFRIGERATOR Fri gida ire model FPD l 66NTO , white, I on ly. SaYa! .. FRIGIDAIRE SIDE·BY·SIDE REDUCED Big fa mily 1ile, c.om pletely fr o1t-pro.,f. H urry : .... ~R IGIDAIRE FREEZER TO CLEAR Frigid•ir e mod el UFl5SS .. FRIGIDAIRE CUSTOM DELUE DRYER Perma Pre1~ care., c.oppe.r, I only. Big Sev1ng1! ··············· 1277 THESE ARE JUST A SAM PLE OF THE TERRIFIC BUYS DURING OUR GRA ND OP ENING SALE! BUY NOW AND SAVE! DEPOSIT THIS COUPON AT ANY DAVIS·BROWN STORE -HUNTINGTON BEACH, Brookhurst & Garfi•ld; COSTA MESA , 411 E. 17th St.; EL TORO, La- 9una Hills Plaza • YOU MAY WIN A SYLVANIA COLOR TV FREE! $ $ $ I IN PRIZES TO IE GIVEN FRIE ! NO OlllG#lllON -WINNl:lll Nl•O NOT fl. 1"11.ISENT TO WIN ADDRE SS, PHONE , FREE . GIFTS! FREE SYLVANIA COLOR TV -DRAWING JULY 2 rn1egrll:1 and Dependahllltl# llnr.e 1947 Rqlo Dllpaf.r.hed Tl' •n" A ppl.lnnr.e Ser., ice 548-3437 • SALE PRICES iFF&CTIVE UNTIL JULY 3 AT ALL 3 DAVIS.BROWN STORES! I f I Jf DAILY PILOT Monday, Ju11t 28, 1971 QUEENIE By Phil lnt.rlandl "This goes well wilh pure baloney, if you know what I mean ••• " New Ger1nan U Boat Prowls Europe Seas J\IF.L, Gennany IAP\ - Building up a new U-boat fleet. the German navy has de veloped a small submarine lhe sailors are proud of. Considering its size and small crew of 22. they say, it has more punch lhan any other underseas craft anywhere. l-boals. from the German ntime untersec>boot. we r e notQrious in two world wars , Now the Germans say modem equivalents are an 1mp<Jrtant fa l lOr in I he defense~ or the North ALl;intlc Trcc1 I~' Organ1za1 ion The new L2. nan1ed after a '\\'orld •.rar JI craft lost at sea, is !00 feet long and \veighs about 400 tons. It can ~o 17 knots : tOe cniisin~ range and diving depth arc secret. Lt. Cmdr. Horst Ewald tol d A visi tor tfl hi.o; "pocliet " l · "°"' "\\'11h eight torpedo tubes fDl"\l'ard , ;inri each 'lf !hem douhle lo11deri. 11.•e have 16 torpedoes ready If) 110 at any time. This 1s en o rm ou g l''eaponry for lh1s size Course Set For Reading A summer reading cour~e for adults and chi ldren "'ill be offered bv the \\'e<:l1ninslcr- Fountain \1allcy 't'MCA. The course 11.•il l \nc!ude speed re ading instrurt1on as \O;ell as information on preraralton of report s and tips on taking exams fnr student s, lnstructor Dan Hnsenwa sser y,·111 conduct a Free de1nnn<:\ra· lion nf "llow In Double Your Read1n1-: Spred in T11.<1 Hour~· on the 23rd. For fur1hrr 1n- fnrmat1on call the Y:'-H A Rl 893-651 1. Sc ttha , Skin Divin" Set ,., A cour!;e in ~cuha and skin d1v1ni;: ..,,·i ll be nflcrf'd thi s summer through lhe fnunta1n Valley and \\'t>:'l1 m 1nstf'r 'Y111CA~. ac:r:ord1ng lo direc1or Da ve Ken1pton, Rcgi~tra1 inn will open Thursday at the\' 11f/1cf'. 14776 Beach Blvd., Westminster. Fee for the live two-hou r ('lasses lli $5 for members and $7 for non-members. The claslieli will be taught and feature three ocean dive.~ by certified diving in!ilructors a"d one trip: lo Ca1al1na. submarine." By comparison , the skipper says. the British a tom 1 c submarine Churchill has only six torpedo tubes and although It carries 40 lorpedoes must lak{' lime to reload to fire again. "Bv thai lime, " he said. ''we -...,.ould be long gonf'." German s u b ma r i l\e' rs inter\'iewed at the Kiel naval base express belief !hat the dav or the submarine has daWned ;igain. particularly Fnr small. hard to find crafl !yin ,!( silently ln wall rnr long periO<ls under water. With an apparent standoff in nuclear weaponry. they see their c_-onventionally armed flee! gaining in importance. \\'Hhin Nr\TO, !he V.'c!il German na vy has lhe task of guarding, and H need be. (•losing the approaches lo the Baltic From the North Sea. ··1 am con vinC'!!<I ." Ewald di>elarcrl, "'1th his o t her officers concurring. "that if any weapons arm has a chance in our <'lperallonat area. It is the submarine.'' With hundreds of \\'arsaw Pa ct Communist a i r c r; f I pnised nea r the Baille, Ewald <1sscrtcd, "everyth ing else of any size would be blown out of the water. no matter how many planes they take down with them,., The comment reflec1ed a generation gap r u n n i n g through the 36,000·man navy. The flee! commander. Viet: Adni. Armin Zimmerm11nn, says missile-firing destroyers such as lhe recf'ntly acquired rrom the United Slates, ha\'e. the required sea to sea and sea to air capabilily, and the size to fiRhl in any weather 1n the storn1y northern sea)l. Younger Hf'r1 off1rrrs arj:!ue that th!> mrinl'y paid for the thr('e sl11ps, about ~:i m1ll1nn r;ich , cnuld halt' been spent for more lier! a 1 r c r a I t " tDrpedn sperdboa ts a n d suhn1arine<: A t:.boal such as \''! cn~\s aht)ut S9 million. F:walrl .~:i.1·s. Thr navy h11 ~ f i vr nperat1on<il sub,~ f1f lhe lypc 205 that Ewalrl cnmman1ls ~:i~htren boats are being hu1lt. Five older craft serve for lro:i1n1ng. "\Ve can run under..,,•ater with nn sonar d e t e c 1 in R de1'1l-es operating and wil hout using our radar, bo1 h nf which <1re gireaways," Ewald said. "\'i'e sail slncll.v b.v dead reckoning. And the boat Is simple lo steer. like a streetcar with automatic. We also have 11 safety eSCRpe fiyslem ." Area Men Service Around the World • ID U.S. Air Fortt Cap tain &a A. Aalhony, S<Jn of J'An. Walter Mc K i b b e n . 315 Granada, S&n Clemente, has bttn dtcorated with I he Distinguished flying Cross for aerial achievtment 1n Viet· nam . Captain Anthony dis lingu1sh- l'd himselr as a pi lor when he flew 11n u:tremely hazardous mission through a d v e r ~ e weather and under lhe con- stant threat of enemy auack 1n support o( free world forces combatting aggression. He was honored at Kirtland AFB, N.M., wbc.re hc now serves as an RB-571" Canberra reconnaissance pilot in a unit ol the Military Airlift Com- mand which provides global a1rl1fl ror us. military foret:s. The captain also holds St"ven awards of the A.1r Medal and two awards of the Air Force (;(i nunenda11on Medal. Airman Eduard J. Kech:ia , son of Stanislaus Kedzi.a or 5872 M1ddlecoff Drive, Hun· Lington Beach, has comp lete.d basic training et Lackland AfB, Te:s:. Ht has been assigned lo Chanute AFB, Ill., for tra ining in fuel servlca. Airman Kedzla attt nd ed Marina High School. Dale 8. Odtrman. son of Mr. and Mrs. Sa m u e I Oberman of 4615 Roibury Road, Corooa Del P.1ar. has been promoted te captain in the U.S. Air Force. <..:aptam Oderman is an in- structor ptlot at Laughlin AFB. Tex . He is as.signed to a 1in1t of the Air Training Com· mand which provides nying technical and baste military training for U.S. Air f orce pe-rsonnel. Army Private EroJ F . Just because it's always been so warm, helpful and trustworthy is no reason to ignore it. In fact, lately people real ize natural gas needs to be conserved, just like our other natural resou rces. Fortunately people are increasingly interested in our total eco logy, of which energy supplies are a vital part. So a few suggestions may be welcome. How to make conservation begin at home: These suggestions may each sou nd like a rather small saving, but together they're en ough to show in your gas bill. And if every househo ld followed them, the total saving of fuel would be substantial. (If you 're a thrifty sort, yo u may be practicing these economics already.) Cooking : Don't use a hi gh flame when a low one will do. Don't pre-heat the oven too long. Don't use the oven to warm the room. Cover saucepans while cook ing. Washers, di shwas hers: Save hot water (and the gas that heats it ) by running full loads only. (Same for clothes dryers.) House heating: \'\/hen autumn comes, remember to turn the thermostat down when you go to bed. Draw th e drapes at night; that cuts loss of heat through th e glass. Close firepla ce flues, air vents, etc., when not in use. And don't heat the furniture to a toasty 72 degrees while you're awa y all da y-or on va cation. Other fuel-saving tips: Make SUie all appliances arc operating efficiently. D on't overwork you r furnace by making it struggle to blow air through an ol d, clogged filter. Check to see if you r range produces a pure blue flame. (A yellow flame indicates improper comb ust ion, which means waste. Have th e range adjusted.) With these suggestions, you can do a lot to conserve resources -including your own. Uello•. son or f.tr. 11nd Mrs. Sob Ma tlock. llOM S. Butt• Road, Sutter , rece n t ly participated in e :1 er c I 1 • .. Danube "71" with his corPJ ol enginttrs un it in Germany. Pvt. Helton is truck drive r in Company E of the 3rd Infantry Division'1 l 0t h Engineer Battalion , n e a r Ki tung en. No Candid Camera, But Smiles Sprea ' . r·· ,,..... • ... ~-. ' Perpetual greeter E i I a r La rs en, wh ose friendly wave and s1nile are a La· guna Beach la ndmark-in· motion. shows Ro y Marcom and f\.1r s. Lloyd Milne how the technique works. It's no joke. Laguna Beach merchants are on the look-out for smiles. Not "Say Cheese'' grins, but the "Welcome lo our city," "Have a nice day," and "Glad you are here" crescents of happiness. It doesn't matter how photogenic, wide or cavity-free the smiles are as long as they back up willing, courteous service or show custom· er satisfaction. The community·wide "Smile" campaign, sponsored by Mermaids, the wo1nen's division of the Chamber of Commerce, will run from the Fourth of July to Labor Day, Sept. 6,,Jays Mrs. Jack Rowe, chairman. Campaign paraphernaJia -ballots, yellow and black tally boxes and whjmsical ''Smile! You're in Laguna Beach" buttons -have been distributed to participating store managers. These preliminaries were directed by Mrs. Zachary h1alaby. Internationally known motivation expert Fred Herman will re- mind store representatives of the benefits of smiling at the kick-<>{f program tonight at 7:30 in the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. For the rest of the summer, friendliness is the most important product and employes will have good reason to "Keep Smiling." Customers may fill out ballots telling which clerks give the best service-with-a-grin or make the day happier. \\'inners of this employe contest will be determined by drawing, but clerks nominated most often will have a better chance of winning. Eight best "smilers" will be rewarded by "Take a Trip,'' "Mr. Esquire," "Miss Mademoiselle," "Party Time," "Wheels," "House Beau- tiful," "Fresh-up" and "Body Beautiful" prizes do nated by area businesses. The drawing will be conducted after Sept. 6 an d awards will be presented at the first Mermaid luncheon, Sept. 13. "Smile buttons will be availabl e at stores and the chamber of· !ice for all citizens who want to wear them," Mrs. Rowe said. "This is a novel campaign and we're anxious to have it spread from ear to ear, person to person." Steering committee members are the r..1me s. Ro\ve . Robert Gill , Julie Bradshaw, Nancy Garkie. McClellan Cole, Lloyd Seilset, Floyd Lee and Peter Fulmer. Each week the chamber's "Smile Detective" will choose two employes whose grinning salesmanship merits a restaurant dinner prize. "Summer is the friendly season and Laguna Beach has lots o( visitors," f\.1rs. Ro\ve added. ''\Ve \\•ant to remind everyone, especially store personnel \vho meet th e public, that 'when you're smiling, the whole world smiles \vith you'." BEA ANDERSON, Editor M"""•Y• J~n• ». 1tn s P'••• u L 1 ~·~ ':t :'?~ ~ ; CAMPAIGN BUTTON -Mrs. G. M. Sheldon (lefl) ari_<t Pt1rs. Tom Johnston get a chuckle out of the stylized grin and reminder, "Smile! You're in Laguna Beach." Two-inch buttons may be worn by everyone v:ho wants them during the summer smile campaign, says Chairman Mrs. Jack Rowe. ( -- .. ill SEC RET SMILE DETECT IVE CHECKS ON MMES. DEE DEE ANDREWS, MA RCY GAR KI E Ann Dictates New Style, Chops Off All Long-hairs DEA R ANN LANDERS : If one more kid says lo me, "Long hair is great. After all , Jesus had long hair," -I will personally kick h!m in the tetth. Nobody knows what Jesus looked like. They did not have photographers 2,000 years ago and no artist ever painted a picture of Him. Ttw!. pictures we see hang- ing in churches and ho!pitaJs are baaed on somebody's imagination. The best information we h 11 v e regarding hair styles of that time is rrom the Bible. Corinthians. Chapter 11, Verse 14: "Does not e\>en nature itself teach you that, if a man have long hair, it is a thame unto him?'' Any kid who want! to wear his hair Jong ought to be men eoough to do it without saying he is imitating Jesus. - • ANN LANDERS LIKE IT SHORT DEAR UXE IT: I nrore I would not prlal uother tttter about halt, but yours it out of Ute ordinary, so I'm making an ei:ceptlon. 1banka for wrlllo1, and I'm reoe•in1 my relOl ution. DEAR ANN LANDERS : RecenUy you ~rinted two letlers in your oolumn from mothers who had lost their babies. They wrote to complain about the bad manne rs and poor judgment of pe<iple who a.skcd - fantaslic questions and made some very dumb remarks. I was in a similar situation eight monlhs ago, only my baby lived. Our 90n was premature. He weighed 3 pounds, 8 ounces. Within two hours after the baby was bo rn two doclors ass ured u., he was perfectly formed and in excellent con· dilion. t was scarcely back from the delivery room when a frit.nd called to say , "If the baby dies, don 'L feel bad. Usually premies have something wrong and it'• belter if they don't live." Our baby was in an incubator 40 days . 1 never received one gift or even a card in all that time. Everyone was afraid he might not make IL I was told by "friends" the baby would be "slow, sickly and he might not have teeth." Our son is now a months old, weighs IS pounds and can walk' around In hi! crib, hanging onto the sides. ~e has six teeth, is a bright, happy child and Jna never even had diaper rash. Please print this. A lot of women need educaling on the subject of premature babies. -BALTIMORE MOTHER DEA R B.: llere's your letter, plus my tha nk• for helping to educate lbe women who need It. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am JI. I have two sisters -one Is 14, the other 17. Seeing as how they are both older than I am you would ei:pect them to be more mature, but they aren't. Both sisters are in bad with the library. They have lost their cards, lost books and ended up having a haule with the librarian. They can't take any more books out so they ha ve been borTowing my card. Now I'm In trouble. They have run up fines which I am getting notices about. The last notice sounds as if the library will sue me If I don ·t pay up. please tell me what to do. -VICTIT\f OF SISTERS . DEA R VIC: The fl r1t thing you 1hould do 11 see thal the: fines ar1 paid. Slnct they are cbar1ed 111in1t yoar card, ,_ are re1ponslble. 'lbft mJP:t reqaJre a blgb·level famlly mee:tlng, Uke wfti parent.I. Nul, urge Y!IUr si1ter1 to I• to U. •. library and 1et reln1tated a1 wel~:· vilicor1. Inform &hem lhey may •t ... your card la the fature -aad make a t 1Uck. ' Drinking may be "In" to the kkla: you run with -but It can put you "out" for keeps. You can cool It and stay popular:. Read "Boore and You -For Teenage~ Only." Send 35 cents In coin and a long.: self-addressed, stamped envelope with your request In care of lhe DA ILY PILOT. ' ' • j: l I - "DAILY P!LOT Attuned to Teens - ., " ··--< • , +I ! Offering helping hands to the fountain Valley Parks and Recreation Depart- ment in presenting da nces for sevent h an d eighth graders are members of the South t~oast .Junior \Vomen's Club 'vho are serving as chaperones. The Friday ni ght get-togethers in the Civic Center are scheduled on J uly 9 and 23 and Aug. 6 and 20 . Attuned to the program are (left to right) Mrs. Michael Brusseau Bob Somma and Mrs. Bruce fl'lat lern. ' Call of the Outdoors Slowdown • Progress Call lo the ouldoors h11s been heard and heeding tl1e 1rad1- Students Engaged r.fr. and tl1rs. Gilbert r-.L }{ansen of Huntington Beach have announectJ the engage· ment of thrir d a u g b t er. Barbar;i Susc11 l!an~cn, 10 : Douglas Haig !r1rin Jr. of . Newport Beach. lie is the son of tllrs_ Wi lliam Purdon or Newport ' Beach. The engaged pair graduated : from ~1arina High School and · attend San Diego State College ~'here he belongs lo Tau Kap· pa Epsilon fr&ernity. lion;1! :;lo\\•ing down of ac- l1\'i\1es are n1ost tlubs, though soml' sor.:ial alfilirs are being planned. YWCA Ca n1ping season at the YYiCA 's Camp Tahqui!z flfeadows near Jdyllwild ~·ill open Thursday, .July I . Registration 1s being taken now at the Y headquarters in Santa Ana. Youngsters in the fourth to ninlh grades 1n.<1y enroll in any of the <"ight-week sessions slated from July I to Aug. 31, while 10th-12th graders may aUend sessions on July Ja, Ju- ly 22. Aug. 17 and Aug . 24. Outdoor life. nature Jorr. riding, swimming. h i k in g, music and crafts are offered. Color portrait Star Club A fashion luncheon and card p.::irly are on the agenda of the Star Club which will nicet at 11 :30 a .n1 . 1'hursday, July I. in the Laguna Beach Masonic TC'mp!e. Democrats Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Democratic Club •11ill ballot on new by-laws during a 111ceting at 8 p.m. \Vedncsday, J une 30, in the ~luntington Beach home of Mr. and fl1 rs. H. C. Sullivan. B'noi B'rith The seventh birthday or the Orange Coast B'nai B'rith Women's Chapter will be celebrated at 8 p.m. Thursday, J uly I. in the Newport Riviera, Costa Mesa. of your child, 1.49. :: ·. •, '• •, :· :· . ·' . ' . ' ) ' ' • . . Truly professional portraits. Select from several poses. • Large 5 x 7" size photo ••. 1.49 each • Set of 4 wallet size ...... 1.49 set Twochlldnn photogrephOd together ••• 2.911. A Penney exclusive! Full color portr1lt1in1 size suitable lor lr1ming •.• porfocl tor gifts. All portraits delivered to you at our store by Penney as1oct1l11. L-----------------'Age llmll: 12 yoera. J\nne111 Costa Mesa Store Only Tues. 6-29 thru Set. 7-3 Harbor Shopping Center H<1.; 9:30· 1 :00 ' 2:00·5:00 D•lly Your Horoscope Tomorrow Taurus: In-law Jokes Not Humorous TUESDAY JUNE 29 By SYDNEY OMARR The late, great psychologist, Carl Gustav Jung. who was Freud's leading protege, oft<'n utilized horoscopes of in- dlvidual patients in an effort to get at the root of their psychological problems. Jung also identified "the Ages of Mankind" through zodiacal symbolism. Thus, today, we hear many persons talk about the Age of Aquarius. As far as J ung was concerned. there were the Ages of the Fish. the Goat. the f{am and so forth. ARIES (r-.1arch 21-April 19); F inancial support you had relied upon may take a dif· ferent course. Refuse to hang July Rite In Offing Mr. and Mrs. J ames R. Crowder of Newport Beach have announced the engage· ment of their daughter, Doris Crowder to Donald E. Loeffler of Huntington Beach, an ad- ministrative assistant Io Assemblyman Robert H . Burke. Miss Crowder is a graduate (If St. Charles High School in Missouri. tier fiance is a graduate of C!endale College and attended California State College al Long Beach. He is the son of Ed Loeffler of Glen· dale and the late Mrs. Loef· fler. A July 25 wedding is being planned in the N<"wporl Harbor Lutheran Church. Bridal Age Reaches 20 NE\V YORK (UPI) ~ 'The latest information on the me- dian age of U.S. brides tit first 1narrlagc is a Bureau of the Census estimate of 20.8 ye;irs. Thr f ed er a I statisticians report 58 percent of the girls marry somet1n1c after their t111entielh bitthday_ In the 25 and older catrgory were 1 I .5 percent or the first time brides. And 11ndrr JR" The st;iti:=;ti- ti;ins put 13.9 percent in that agr bracket. MAVCO join th e fun! 1nay company presents a model summer workshop It's a niodel work- sho p just for teens. Le arn <ll l about niodelin~. better JJO~\urc, .1dvancc<l make-up and how to con1munica1c with yc>ur Jucli- ence. And you'll model in your very own fa shion ~how. Five week n1odcl \vorksl101J 8.5 0 Reg ister now in t he May Co Coed or Campus Shop. Classes Begin: may co . south coest pl11:a tuesday, jun• 29 7 p.m. on to outmoded concepts. You will have Lo tear down in order t.o rebuild. TAURUS jApril 2Q.May 20 ): Today you will not find in-law jokes funny. One who may be well·meaning may be trying to usurp your parental duties. Stress independence. GEi\11N l (~1ay; 21·June 20}: Deliberate efforts are required to improve home, property. LeaYing such matters to chance would be an error. Unorthodox approach tends now lo succeed. CANCER (June 21-July 22): There is little doubt about your actual abilities-but key ls to find correct form of ac· lion. There are numerous demands on your time. Be s~Jective. LEO /July 23·Aug. 22}: Emphasis is on practical ap- proach. Playing the clown now would be inappropriate, ex· pensive and would gain little or no appreciation. Thorough approach is necessity. abilities. You are intrigued by most significant years. lf unusual romantic interlude. sing!r, marriage is on horizon. CAPKlCORN tDec. 22.Jan. I!: 111arried, there could be an 19): What appears necessary addition to family, VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Some neighbdrs, associates make no secret of resentment based on envy. Your role now is to collect and utilize pertinent data. You are on right track. seems to be at a distance. I ;;;;-----ii.---. Check reservations. Be aw1:1.re LAST of potential. Get 5tarted on, thesis. Prepare c re a t i v e format. CALL AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fe~ LIBRA \SeP!· 2.S-Oct. 22 ): Someone appea{ be going to considerable expr~s ind the scenes-and nol nece ari- Jy In your favor. Utilize in· tuitive intellect. SCORPIO (Ckt 23·Nov. 21): Significanl rompliments are received. Stop kicking toe in sand. You deserve alcolade. Know this and respond ac- cordingly. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): There is room for you at lhe lop; know this and act like you know it. Exude confidence. Invest in your own 18): Get promises in writing. Some in positions of authority are in 1nagnanimous mood. That's fine -but you deserve something more solid than a mere promise. PISCES (Feb. 1g..March 20): Apply light touch. Don't at· tempt to force issues. Improve public relalioos. Study con- tracts. A domestic squabble is but temporary. Make con- cession to mate, partner. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are intuitive, have natural sense of drama, and this will be one of your ETHEREA INVITES YOU TO MEET THE STAN LAWRENCE BEAUTY TEAM FOR ETHEREA THIS WEEK MONDAY, JUNE 28- FRIDAY, JULY 2. RE'SERVATIONS FOR A PRIVATE CONSULTATION BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. 10.00 RESERVATION FEE MAY BE APPLIED TO ANY PURCHASE OF ETHEREA. RECEIVE YOUR PERSONALIZED GIFT WITH YOUR PURCHASE. PHONE NOW. THERE ARE ONLY A LIMITED NUMBER OF RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE. 644-2800, EXT. 286. IN OUR COSMETICS. ROBINSON'S COUNT TME STITCH CONTE~T W• W..:lft.,<:l•y, Juft• )ll!h. Th•••'• 110 llmlt OA 1u1un, a!ld vou (IUI• win (1bsoh.1l•IY lrff) 1 l ltt,JO (#W I IROTHll!R: KJOITTl"O MACHINE. Nt 1b!l91llon, The KNIT WIT South ,,..,, PltII LOWER MALL C01lt M•11 JIJ.1111 NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • • • ....... ~ .. • ' . ,.,~ "'ft.< j! .,, ~ ,:~ " • • ._f GOLDEN WEDDING OBSERVED Mr. and Mrs. Lee 0. Bogue ' Trip to Africa Tops Anniversary Presents An open house reception in their Costa 1\-fesa 2.partinent celebrated tl1e 50th weddi ng anniversa ry of Mr .. and i\1rs_ Lee 0. Bogue , high school LYNN SMITH December Date Set A Dec. 18 wedding in the Laguna Beach C-0ngregal ional Church is being planned by L} nn Smith and \Vi\liam Ji. Sco1L Parents of 1hr. betrothed are Mrs. Jan Paulson San Diego: Myron Srni !h, South Laguna: !11rs. ClaraOCI Scot!. Fullerton. and \Vilbur Scott. Placentia. !11iss Smith is a graduale of Lagun1' Beath High School and allends Oregon Sta1P L'niversity where she pledged Gdmma Phi Het:i lier flance is a grad11ate of Troy High I School and Fullerton Junior College :ind now is a senior at Oregon State. PESTS BORING YOU? . ........ . ,.,, .... .. " .... " . (" n"l lll~il. ...... ........... rw CALL ........ . " . •• : ........ LLOYD PEST CONTROL lttt11H ._._..,4-4400 s.. Cl•-d• •tJ-6400 Cotta M .. ~J.5922 STARS Sydney Omarr is nne -0f the "-'Orld's ~reat a,11t rolo· l!rrs. Hi~ column i~ one of sweethearls who were mar- ried in Ho!Jy, Colo., v.·here their pare11ts homesteaded. friends and re la ti v es presehtcd the honored couple wi1h tickets to visit a daughter and son-in-law. the Rev. and Mrs. James Ha I be rt, missionaries in Ivory Coast, West Africa. Another daughter, Mrs . Charles Riggs, lives i n Nashville. Tenn.. and sons, l?oix>rl and Orville, reside in Tucson, Ariz., and Bellflower. After the death of their eldest son, Lee Jr., in a World War JI bomber attack in Germany, the Bogues toured the 48- states to meet his former comrades. The Bogues came t o Southern California in 1922 and lived primarily in Long Beach where he drove the last horse· dr2.wn milk wagon. He i.s a retired printer. Man's Way of Ruining Land Called Camping CEOttor1 NOie: Ever 1ln<:e Etm.1 &on'llJKk'I col!Jmn 11 .. 1 -•red, , .. -•I• h•vt -.ired Jn ltom rt.6d•" ... I,_ 10 r..vt .,... Of .,,,>!,,..,. OI "1rt column• ·-•led. kow Erm.1 11 11~1"9 t -11..,.....,,,.0 ~ v•C•!l<H'I, 11'111 wt •~ 11~1nsr !he ""1><1rtunn1 tt.I• ..-•"'ii "'~! IO ICCl'dl IO ~·r llnl' wl)litt bY -ll>hlno li>o.. I ll•!!"" ltW>tlto l!lom~k col\lrnnt mo'1 on"" t..iUtl•l· ... , AT WIT'S END course. to only ttlf-contained And if enough people leave might be able to sit on our dart across th• arua and trailers. None of those little th~r homes in the cities to own back porches and look at listen to the rustle ol U. dowdy tents about. Well, after -=Pll="="='=th=em=, =th='="='='=ol="='=='h='='=ta=rs='="=a=tc=b=a=re=w=a=n=im=al='='=,....=·=ll'=e=ca=l=I =!\=camp==""=·::::; our 'camp-hop' got w settle· with ice and fresh linens, w .settled down for a befort dinner drink and flipped on ot stereo. Would you believe it That infernal rushing of th falls nearby made lt virtuall. imPQMible to hear the qualit; By ERMA BOMBECK In the begiMing there were clear stream.s. virgin woods and wild life in abundance, Man discovered it, pitched a tent and called it camping. Then man, looking at the trees. rationalized they should have some use. So he strung them wilh cords and fuse box· es, plugged in his electric blanket, electric shaver, elec· tric coffee pot. electric heater and electric martini stirrer. He called it camping. Then man. looking at the streams, rationalized they had rocks that hurt the kids' feet and squishy mud that oozed between their toes. So he erected a swimming pool, a boat dock. a shower house with hot water, a laundromat and a general store nearby that sold li~hter fluid for his campfire. He called lt cam· ping. Man finally took a good Jong New Queen Crowned Wearing the crown o f honored queen for Bethel 321,1 Huntington Beach Job 's Daughters is Miss Jackiel Johnson, daughter of Mr. and[ Mrs. Robert J. Johnson of Westminster. I Other elective officers are !he Misses Milzi Eilts andl Darcie Nicholas. senior and junior princesses; Joye Crosby, guide, and Robin Londeree, marshal. Appointive officers are the Misses Cathy Reed, chaplain;! Cindi Kruebcr, recorder : Susan Weber, musician; 1'erry Howlett. librarian; Brenda Couey, treasurer, and Barbara Gibbs, Kim Burdette, Debbie Castle, Pam' Blauert and Andrea Dixon, messengers. tor shelter and food, and ra- look at the animals. scurryin.c: tionalized they were a menace. So he upped the garbage collection at the campsite t() two a day, in· stalled street lights, power mowered the grass down to golf.green height and still. .• called it camping. A national outdoors magazine has warned th at "true camping" soon will become extinct if people don't stop demanding more and more of ~e comforts they seldom had at home. Not to mention a rise in camping costs, which heretofore has been one of the stronger en· ticements for going without a hot bath for a week. No, I wouldn't be at all surprised if Virginia and Ralphie pulled up their block- Jong trailer in front of our house this summer and told us how they "roughed it with nature." "We found this divine little campsite. Restricted, of "On Wednesday, the san< had literally destroyed m~ hair and I went to the Camp's Beauty Shop. The children went to the Camp's game room for an outdoor movie, and Ralphie went to the Camp's general store for sup· plies. You can't imagine how quaint and rustic that was. Imagine never having heard of liver pate! I mean one can camp, but c ne can still be civilized. "Let me see now. Oh yes, the children saw an animal on Friday , , . or was it Sunday? No, Friday. It was one of those rare little furry things . They tell me it was quite unusual to see even one. What was it, Ralphie~ A squirrel. That's it. A squirrel. The children were thrilled to death!" Jn the beginning. there were clear streams, virgin woods and wild life in abundance. 4th OF July CELHU.TION SQLE 1/3 off PANT SUITS AND DRESSES Others are the Misses Laura Sutherland and Denise Wolfe, custodians; Kathleen Keigley and Debra Martin, guards; Barbara Woesner, assistant recorder, and Rox an n e Richter, flag_ bearer. 3424 Via Lid•, Newport leach '7J0 1f70 BULLOCK'S ANNUAL SUMMER SAI.E OF WHITE SHOES We've raken • group of Summer sryles from every womt'n's shoe drpartm<'nr in Bullock's and slashed 1he prict's as much as l/i ! Choo~e from sandals, dress pumps, pant 1hoe!I, spec· taturs. Whitt's by rhe hundreds of pairs. I.ors o( pasrels, too. Ben~r Shoes, Sh~rwyn anJ Collegitnne S~s THE AMALFI• GHILLIE 22,99 ' The shoe of the ytar! lt't bttn red'uctd from S34, in our rrgul1r ttock. White, of coum, or nturra.1 beige or bl1ck p1tenr. Betrer Shoes, First Ltv~I CrMlt Cards Welcerne PICKWICK FASHIONS ANNUAL SUMMER CLEARANCE UPTO 50% OFF DRESSES COATS PANTS BLOUSES SW EATERS PANT SUITS ALL SALES FINAL ~s-,-1,-c-h_d_S_w-;m-,-,-;,-,-,;-,-off~, 19 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH ALL MDSI. IUIJICT TO PRIOR SALE ALSO FASHION IQUARI, SANTA ANA GIANT SAVINGS SAVE UP TO 48c YD. • EMBOSSED PRINTS & SOLIDS • PETII POINT P.K. PRINTS & SOLIDS • SHEER VOILE PRINTS • SUMMER FUN FABRICS ~~;~~:1.compu• •• 1u.D '::.:~d. 8 1 lS"/45'' wide " VACATION FAVORITES SAVE UP TO 61c YD . DAN RIVER'S "HOYA" PLA YWEAR DENIMS SAILOR DUCK PRINTS SHEER SUMMER PRINTS FANCY FLOCKED PRINTS FUN TIME FABRICS all the colors and many more fabrics compare value• at 1.29 yard. ceno" C:OHOR bl11t1d' l!il1 wa1liabl1 l'"/41" wide SHEER COOL FABRICS SAVE UP TO 81c YD. SMART SEERSUCKER SOLIDS SHEER EYELASH CLIPS LENO NOVELTIES Compere values at $1.69 yerd • 44"/41" wide TERRY CLOTH PRINTS SOLIDS heavy qua lity, mod colorful designs compare valu•1 at $1 .49 yard, MOClrtl•-' J!l"/l6" wlH 100% cotto• t6fHl*"tlH YO • YD. Ii HOUSE OF FriBRICS S.11tll c-t "-8ri1lol •' S•n Dit90 fwy. COIN M-141°111, Heuer Plcr">-1 ,Ii 11 lrl1tol s.... '--54J·l!lll o,.....i, Mefl.--Or1119•tliorp1 1fld H•rber lu-Pert! C...--.L1 r1l1111 ti St1nloR hl .. rte• IJ,,JJJ4 "'"9 P.t-12t:"'31l thf' DAILY PILOT'S grc11t fcnturcs. Bullock's Santa Ana ••• Mondiy thrCJUBh Friday 9:30 to 9:30, S.tutdly 9:30 to 6:00. 1 Fabian Sqatt, Sama&»., pbooe '47·7211 H•lltt ....... C......-Edin9•r 1t lttch 11 .. J ,, H ............ -1'7 .. 111 .. 'I • jft DAILY PILOT Wedding Bells Ringing fo~ June Brides ,. MRS, SULLf VAN SULLIVAN·HESSIE First Christian Church, Hun- tington Berich \Vas the setting for the marriage of Janelle li1arle Hessie and John F. Sullivan of LQng Beach. The Rev. Thomas \V . Overton directed the vow and ring exchange for I h e daughter of lil r. and li!rs. Thomas Hessie of IJuntington Beach and the son of Mr. and 11rs. J. Roy Sullivan of Nokomis, Il l. Miss Shawn Hessie was her sister's maid of honor . and bridesmaids l\'Crc the !\'lisscs Linda Alvarez, Amy Rob1n ~on and J;:inicc Gay. .Jennifer Davis v.·as !he flower ~lrl. of Darien, Conn. a n d Gardiner. The nE-w ~1rs Rnirnit i.~ :i gradttate o( New1}()l"l Harbor J-ligh School and Occidental College. She v.·as a 19£i6 Children's Hon1c Sn tie I y dehutante. Iler husband is an ah1n1nus of Darien High School and Oc- Cl(~ental College 11·t~re he was president of lhe Glee Clubs. They u·iU reside m Boston. WALKER-BENGEL Bilrney \Valker t'lf Clendora c!;:ii n1ed Judi1 h Bengel as his bride during cereinonies in the First United rv1 e lh o d 1 s l Church, Costa f'llesa. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bengel of Costa Mesa. the bride was atlc:nded by her sister. f\·lrs . Ga ry Jones as matron of honor and fl1i ss L<luise Lawler as bridesmaid . Best man was Nod Zarrabi of Persia and ushers were Mark Denge l, brother of the bride, and Dennis Frazier. r.1argaret Etheridge and Don. ny Willia ms \\'ere flower girl and ring bearer. The new tl1rs. \ValKc r i!i a graduate of Costa Jl.1csa High School. Her husband, son of l\1r. and ?i1rs. Hnward \Valker of Col umbus, Ohio. atlcnded Orange Coast College and the University of Ohio. by Pete J\·lartin as best man Ushers were Bill Rothen- buriter, Lenard Coleby and Larry Sweet. The ne1vly\vcds, 11o>ho will res[dc in Newport Oeocl1, both are gradu ::ites or Ne.,11porl Harbor l/1gh School. S!le is a graduate of UCLA, where she pltdgcd Delta Delta Dclto. anr! 1s a ~cnior at tt1e llollywl)(ld JJresbyterian Hospit:il Scl1onl or Ntirsing. lie a l lend e d Orange Coast College ::ind Arizona State Unive rsity. Cameo liouH f'~oro MRS, WALLERS They will reside in Glen-W"'--JW' dora. Attending as best man 1vas .,,,,..-.;.,,.,. • Joseph A-\Valker of J\lnt!oon. ,~~. Ill .. and ushers \\·ere Tho1n as t;' .?y:~ Hessie of l!unt sv1lle. Ala .. the ' bride's brother. Wil!ia1n Strei.t of Ne1v York City and Donald Bur ton of Boise. The bride is a graduate of Fountain Valley High School and Golden \Vest College. Her husban d is a graduate of f\lor- risonvi/le, Ill. High School and now is attending UCL A-They will reside in Westminster. MRS, G, A, GROSS GRO SS.HARRY " MRS, WALKE R W ALLERS-SW EET MRS, LESTER LEST ER.DAIGH Sononia \Vtll be hon1e fo r William Fitzpatrick Le strr and his bride, the former ;\'nn- cy Ann Daigh, who exchanged Si. Andrew's Pre~b.vteri;in wedding pledges in St . Church, Nev.'port Bea ch \1·as Andre11-'s P r c s by t er i an the setting for the wedding of Church, Newport Beach. David Les lie \Vallers and San-J\eading !he ceremony for dra Sweet. Reading Lhc :1f· lhe couple, daughter and son ternoon ceremony \1·as the of !\Ir. and fllrs. Jonathan P. Rev. Dr. Charle~ Di ercnficld. Daigh and !"vlr. and Mrs The bride. daughter or !l'lr. \Villiam A. Lester, all of and ~1rs. Richard S\\·cct of l\ewporl Bc.J ch, was the Rev. Newport Beach, askerl Miss Dr. Charles Dicrenfield. Kall1y tlolznecht to be her Given in marriage by her n1aid of honor. Bridcsn1a1dsi~----------,I v.·ere. the Misses Patriri" \Villiams, Cathy \Valler s and Barbara S1\·eeL Rearl••r;:hq1 p n 11;: prri1''' THE BEST The br'.deorooo• soo or 'l•·r ·•r 0 ,''''''''·" Is nne or !l1" Debra Lvnn llan·v ;'.'lti (;arv ,., '· · " .~, · Al · · Barbara \Vallers of NP\\'por1 11or\d"~ 111{1;:\ pop1dar to;n1<' an Gross \1•erc rnarrted 111 B ;:ti I>•~ f':f'ad it dally in th" each and Richard \Vcillrrs nf the Comn1uni1y lJ n i Ir rl JiA1 LY Pl l.\IT. M h"'' C'I h l l~B:,:"'~b:°";_l~s:lo:":d~, ~':":'~':"~':"':"~,d~,===========;1 Cl vul.'>l 1urc . Jlunl ing1on Beach 1\Jlh ll1e Rev. Chailcs L. Rose ofl1c1:it1ng Their parents are l\lr. and l\lrs. Cha rles E. H;ir-rv ;ind !11r. <Jnrl l\trs. Ro~rt ,J. (;ro~s. all of lluntington Beach. Atlcndants v.cre :'1·1rs, J:-i111C<'' 1'.1rrtcn<. matron of l111nur~ ~1L~scs Connie Truigho . \l:1r:. O'Riely ?.1d Grngc1· fit•rlgcr~. hrirl esmaids; .lolec·n f:ro~s.1 flov•rr girl : Robby Gross, ring I bearer . C::i ry \11ers. best m:in. and Rrinnie J!;irry. l\·1.-.ir· ty Salize ;ind Erl11 arrl /'llerlens, 1Jshcrs. The 11cwlywcdl1 1~·il! reside in Foun1a1n \".'.llkv Both 11re l\larina High School gradual cs I I BRU MIT-H ANNA I ,J. Scott Bru1nit clai111cd Charlotte Elaine Hanna as his bride duri ng riles in lhe Com-I m uni!y C h u r c h Congrega- tional, Corona de! f\1ar. Sol<!m- rt iting the rites was the J{ev. Ed1vard r. Allen. I Parents of the bridal couple! are Mr. and l\1rs. Paul A. Hanna of NC\\'port Beach and l Mr. and Mrs. Joseph I.. Brumil of Addis A b .11 b a . E thiopia. I ThE bride, given by her father. was attended by her sister. Miss GeQrgeannc Han-1 na as maid of honor . Bridesmaids were ~1 \11s N11.ncy Walker, Miss JoAnn Tumey of Westport, Conn. and Mrs. David M. Gardiner. Randall Harris was brst man and ushers were Brelt Saunders, Chrb J, tiic"'il~I DTERY 1 .... JTC" -Bl!'•N,t.1{00 -Kl/~fl l!'OW'llOS -Gf..11!111('1 - ,.llllLYC ll -VS l(l!OS Po~t t W ... f ll'f' D911d<1~ • C.~toUl6 0-n<• ,_ Ctff«l!w J. ....... (JllMlf 9'1 21 5 I , 17tfl St. c..te M-• Ml-2711 Crow11i 1ug Glory lle a11ty :-; a If• 11 s O~t N [V!Nllt(;S AN O SUNOAYS SHAG CUT ... SHAG PERM $995 The new longer.look! Bea U1ifu lly curle d by our car efree perm. Complete BUDGET PERM .... ,. a lwo" •595 (Normal Hair) Ma~ I uH Wtd l1lr1 W11\ SHAMPO O· SET STY LE CUT 346 200 Stvl!S! ptices sliQl'itly highAr SOUTH COA5T PLAZA-Phone 546-71&6 La .... ~·~•I -NUI 16 So1r1 o .... l!• ... 1 .... 267 [. 17th S t .. Cost• M•••-Phon• $48-ft \9 fa ther for lhe double ring ~~ ceremony. the bride \\·as at-..-'.; Lended by Mrs. L a r r y ' L::iPrade as matron of honor. Bridesmaids \\'ere the t.1isses J\.1eg Malcomson. Llsa Hodgkin, Chris Darley and Nancy Beach. Craig Curtis stood as best man, and ushers were Joh n Daigh, brother of the bride. Gary Dyer. Jerry Seigrist and David Smith. Both the bride and bridegroom are graduates or Ne\vport Harbor High School and 1~·i ll attend Sonon1a State College. She attended San lJ1ego State College and he is a graduate of Orange Coast College. McDONALD-B ISHOP Caren Lee Bishop bet:amc the bride of Hugh Ranald McDonuld in a late afternoon ceremony in St. r.Iichael and All Angels Episcopal Churth, Corona de! to.tar. "l'he nuptials for l he daughter of :'vlr. and Mrs. J ohn Frederick Bishop of Newporl Beach and lhe son of Mrs. Marietta r-.lcDonald a 11 d Cordon ~1cDon::ild. both of f'ullerton, \\.'ere performed by the Revs. Charles Weideman and John Davis. The bridc"s brolher. John Bradford Bishop, cind her sistrrs, Kin1bcrly and Suzann Ml M M ~ Id . t ,.._,.....__,.,,.._ ·-~ sses ary CLJ\.ln.t , sis er '. • '* 1 of the bridegroom; Claudi a Buehelm, Leslie J\.tlnor, Wendy Carney, Shari Ullman, Jill Nowells and Mrs. Larry WrighL Doug Bishop. Mo s e s Lebov its, Thomas Guiltiman, J ack Kinne, Eric Van Patten, Paul Saevlg, Jeff Ralston and Rex MalotL were ushe rs. The flow er girl and ring bearer were Baret and Alex Bertea. Tbe bride pledged Delta Delta Delta at University of Southe rn California wh e-re she graduated with honor~. He graduated swnma C\lffi Jaude ·~· from UCLA where he was a "•MM ,.,.._ member of the varsity crew. MRS. McDONALD MRS. COURVOISIER Bishop, were honor altendants_ -------------;;; CO URVOISIER·BR JSSO ____________ B_r_id_es_m_,_,,_, __ w_'"'--' _1• _' 1 E!inor Louise Brisso or Costa Mesa and \Vesley Ala n Courvoisier exchanged -vows and rings before the Rev . L.V. 'forno\v Jn Christ Lutheran Church, Costa Mesa. Parents of the couple are 11r. and Mrs. Theodore Brisso of Costa J\lcsa an d Mr. and Mrs. N o r m a n Courvoisier, Long Beach. !\·!rs. Robert Riegel \Vas matron of honor and Nelson Gross heider served as best 111an . CUSTOM DRllPE/t/ES from The "Wor ld's La rgest11 DRAPERY SERVICE The bridegrooin·s sisters, the Misses Janice and Cu·en (.'.ourvoisier were bridesmaids \Yith Miss Ruth Brisso. sister of lhe bride. and Miss Kaelcen 1'ilickely, or Chicago. Paul Oberjuerge and Ernest Taylor, cousins of the bridegroom, Paul Brisso, the b r i d e 's brother and Jim t.1 alson were ushers. featuring • , , The finest in Fabrics and Woven Wood Shodet I with (oil's exclusive 5 year guarantee. FR EE Estimoles on Drapery Cleaning, Alterations ond Hordwo1e. Serving Orange Covnty Since l 964 540-1366 • 642-0270 Graduates or Con co r d i a Teachers College in llli nois, lhc newlyweds will reside in Pasadena. • T 702 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, Ca. 92627 ,• .-· ., " " ,., ... ,.~!~. " BULLOCK'S ---.....'---"' INTRODUCES YOU TO-'f.HE BEAUTIFUL PRACTICE OF SHISEIDO le gives great pleasure to your ~lcin. Kin;,ono· clad CosmeliaJ1s·will be at Bullock's S,1nra Ana to introduce you to the practice of Shisci<lo. Rcccjvc a beautiful gift 'rith your $5 Sh isciJo purch:isc . Cosinc tics, l:irst Floo r ·-. '· . . II ...J J MATERNITY CQea1ta11ce DRESSES• 2 5 % HOT PANTS• TOPS• PANTS SWIMWEAR 11 FAS HION .ll.~TERNITY SH0~2' ,.INIE .AVI.. NEWPORT Cl.NTEI{ l ONG llACH NEWPORT 91!ACH THE CITY HAllllOlt SHO,.,.ING CIHTlll I SHAH"ICN I.A.ST llOO 1-<A RBOlt 91.1'0. OllANGIE COSTA MfSA " ; • Bullock's Sama Ana ••• Monday th rough Fiiday 9:30 to 9:30, Satur<l•y 9:30 to 6:00, 1 Fashion Squ&rt, Sania A.., pbono 547-7211 Nixon Editor's Nott: Tlte PTes- ide11t of 1he Un1!ed States stopped to chat wHh an ed- itor at a nespaper pla11t durrn.g his l ucha1w vi.sit last week. The editor tells about it in the followiny story. By SCOTT ALEXANOE!l Di ii• Jowrn11 l:r!lot •interviews' Editor Mo11day, Jun t 28, 1971 DAILY PILOT J7 ad!: '4 .• !.........!."* ''':I'." K s=--=--_. -. !150!" "":'!:l lf;;--;o,;;;;;o-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.oiii;;;;;;o Men in Service U.S. Air F'orce r..1aster Sf-rgf'anl. Joaepb ~1. Mayock. son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Jesser, 5772 Garden Grove Blvd , \Vestmlnster, has ar· ri ved for duty at Clark AB , Phil1pp1nes. -I Rose ls a 1970 graduate ofl Marina Hlgh School lhs wlfe is the former Ka l hy Shepheard of 1594Z Peol<1 Cir. cle, Hunungton Beat"h. U.S. Air Force C.11pta1n ~ &AFECO INSURANCE • FIRE • AUTO • BOAT • HOME FRANKLIN, Ind 1UPIJ -,...,_ · The President of the L'ni ted Serg(•Jnt i\tayock, a Jet cnK1ne 1ech111cian, is 1n a un11 or the ~lll itary Airlift Corn· rn;ind which provides global <lirlifl for U.S. 1n1l1 lary forces. He previously Sl'rvrd nt Castle A~'B . Calif . and ha s also st·rv- cd in Vielnan1 . Virgil N. Ko\•alenko, son of Mrs. Ruth Ko1'alenkn of 207 E. • • BUSINESS ""d SL Co"' ""'"· is on clU· Bob Paley & Assoc1°ates States dropped b~ 1) u r newspaper plant Thursday ••..: afternoon on his way to In- dianapolis and I graciously • gran1ed hirn an 1n\t>rvicw ':'f while St>cret Service n1cn \'/ere popping up all over thr pl;1ce trying to figure out what he was doing and "'hy. ly at Bien lloa AB . Victnani. Captain Kovalcnko , an in- for1nat1on uffi<·i'r, 1s assigned1 474 E. 1nH STREET, COSTA MESA t11 an Air Fort·f· '1riVISG!J'I 642-6500 546-3205 team lit> previousl.v ~erved atl'-======='"':::::::i===:;:;:::========= 1'he unscheduled intrrv1c"' took place on Busy Road 31 in front of our plant north of Frankl in. Frankly, I remember the Prcsidrnfs quesl!ons-1nost of thcn1, any\.\·ay-but I haven 't the slightest recollection of answering thcnl. Un t i 1 , yesterday , I'd never been in- terviewed by a Presi dent-or Vice President either. for 1hill matter. Fortuna lcly, 1hc Presi dent. .,.,,as a patirnl. LhoughHuJ 1nnn . l ie was Keenly . aware nr the fact that we v.·rren't ex- pecting hi1n. and hadn"t baked a cake or anything. Our alert news editor. Bob Recd, got y,•ind of a change of travel plans nn lhe police monitor and started loading his camera \\'hen JI .,.,,as learn- ed fl.Ir Nixon would niotor rather than fly to lnd1anapohs from Vernon. Ind . "Let ·s make h1111 a sign " The suggeslion was rnadc by our advertising rnnnager. Lar- ry Bro\\'n. And he did. The sign read. "Iii, t.lr. President and f.·lax." The ··r.1ax" on the sign was Jo.lax Fricdersdnrf. an aide to the President. t.·lax hails fr orn Fr;inklin .. He n1ade Ille 1rip back to Indiana \\'\th lhc President . Apparently the sign aroused !he President'.~ curio.~ity One Airman Stephrn P. l)o rnis. son of 111rs. Lois I.. Donahut' of 17861 Ara cia Trt'e Lane , lrvi11t'. has eornplt'led ba~ic training at L<ickland AF"B. 1'ex. Ile has bt'en assigned lo ('hanute AFH . l!I . For training In aircraft rna1ntenance. P<it!erson AFB. Oh1u. r The t·apta1n w a s corn- n11ss1oned upon coinplction or Otficer Tr:uning School <ll I Lackland 1\FB, 'l'e~. I Lawrence Bt'nner, !>On of f\lrs. Emrna F. Benner. 10005 Flo"·es St , Stanton. recen!ly was promoted tn Ar n1 y PRESIDENT GREETS CHILDREN IN SOUTHERN ILLINOIS Plaque Marks Birthplace of Nixon's Mother in Vernon r-;avv Prttv Officer Third Specialist Five. Ile is serving Clu ss ·Howard II. ~1 eMil1:in, a:; a mo!1Jr pool clerk with snn of :\Ir. ~nd r-.1rs ltu~h B Banery A, of the 25th r.1ci\.1111;1n or 526 \Vt's!n1instcr Artil lery's 2d Target Ae· Ave.. Ney,·port Beaeh . has quisiticn Battalion n car dt•pl11ved (o the \Ve s ! er n Bamberg. Crr1nan\' Pneif1c ;1bonrd 1hc nutlear al -Spee. Benner"s \~'1fe, Jill. is nf lhe first 1hings hf· a~kl·d when he popped out of his limousine v.·as •·\Vho"s J\lax ~·· I st.irted to explain. ··r-.1ax Frledersdorf." so ni eon c answered, coming to n~y rescue. '"Oh. yes, yes." 'The Pr!'si- dent 1101ntrd sky,,..·ard ll c"s up there in the helicopter."' ·'Is your paper new"!"' the President asked. !:irk a1rer;1fl i"arrier USS with him in Germany . \'Ol'<llll'!' pencil <1l the right time. 1 1-:nlf·rprisc for d111y y,•i lh the LI 0 SC""''lh l·'i""I f'i~c\ L•eulc"ant •1 '11o" W ··Jt 's flkay, !\Ir. President." didn"t record his \\'Ords but ·''· v, ' '' · Prie~·: son of f\1rs. Ed~a rd 11: I finfllly 1n<1ni-1ucd lo c11mc ,.,. rcla1· I 1h t "' ' ivc Y sure .. 1 le 1\1ni' F1rC'rnar1 \\'alter A. Rooney of 19361 Brookhurst 11p 11•1tll a ha!fw;iy decenl £JUC~l!on lh;il nnide scn~c. didn "l say no. Hoke, son of ~ir. and i\lrs. S!. Huntington Beach, has Rcas.surning the initiative, C.rorge P lloke of J25 completed the academic 1>hase \"ope. ii 1vas n'l about Viet· Alvarado \>\acc. Bal boa w"" of eo•nbal a rrrew t · d I d h. !he Prcs•'dc"I ron\•'"urd ask•n" . . " t ra1n1ng as n<i rn an it ia not in~ .. ... r 1 E' KC \35 s r · sensible <iurstions nboui 11,, grauualr< rorn ~ng1nt'man a -• trato orlrcs~ air what soever to do with the Neiv <1rea and 11,.1s gct!in" '"''"ers "A" School at the Naval refuclcr pilot at Casile AFB. York Tirncs or 1he nation's ., " · Training Center, Greal Lakes. e("o n1Jmy. It y,•as a real from just about everyl:M')dy but Ill me. J \\'as shook . l"d ncvrr · Arm y Private Alan L . .Jaffe . ga·~~~:c .vou cn1nv1n" your visit bc,cn in1cr\•1e1\ed by a Prcs1-Airman At-k J . Rose, """ ~n~rof ~,1,r. aSnd t.Jlrs. RohPclrl L.. · · " dent heforr, or. as I said. a '""" ""' · a e. 4 L an1es ace, "l!"s seven years old." The ha ck 111 Jndi<1na ?"" I asked. in \'ire President either, for lhat of Alvin E. Rose of 6851 Ox-Newport Beach, is assignt"d to t'Otn1nent ""'as from our an rffort lo shovJ him that \\'e niatter. ford Dri1•e. Hunt ington Beach. F! Ord, Calif. where he 1s gen eral manager. c<n1111rv editors kn ow a bit has completed basic \raining training under the modern "~o. it"s eight." r said, or at about intervicy,·1ng. But 1 did n1anage to lh<ink at Lackl:inll AFB. Tex. l!c has volunteer army field ex- !cast I think I said. Since l never secni to have a hiin for slopping by-four been as.signed In Keesler AFB. perimcnt. Fictitious Firm Name Deadline All firms operating a busi ness under a fictitious firm name (Civil Code Sections 2466-2471 ) •r• re· quired to file a Fictitious Firm N.1me St.1tement pror to July I, 1971 . Publication is not required unless there ia 1 chenge of information contained in the statement. Puttied •bout what you have to do and when you have to do it? Ask one of our ex perts .1t the DAILY PILOT. Call on the direct line •. , For Information Phone DAILY PILOT Le9al Ad Dept. 642-5678 "Is th is a daily ne\i·spapcr ~----------, lin1cs. It seemed like the thing Miss .. for training in the ad-He is srheduled to complete or a y,·cckly".'" he asked . TAKE THE I -~'':_.:d0~· _________ __:m~l~":is~lr:a~li~''.'.'~l~ie~ld~.:_:_A~l~r~m"'..'''..."."_l~r~a~l"~;n~g~S~e~p~l.~17~. ____ _I~~-'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""~ As editor. I kne1v it was a II dail y buL rm nol sure l s;iid NEWS QUIZ so. ·'Hn""~ the adv!'r\1~1ng?'' h!' W D y shot baek. e are ou · · • t¥1y answer "'as 1v1Jrld-shak-Eve ry Saturday in a11rf unrlouhtrd ly l>fO· Mauldin' s Own Favorite . • • United States National Bank pays you a whopping big • • . Still Relevant Two wars later, Bill Mauldin's cartoons still say it all for the guys who dre 11up front" doing the dirty work. Mauldin once selected the cartoon dbove es one of his own favorites from World War ll 's "Up Front " se ries. He said: "Once I thought I did a very funny cartoon (about) an old-time cavalryman shooting his jeep ... It has simplicity; it tells a story; it doesn't need words. It is, l believe, the very be st kind of cartoon." Mauldin is still doing some of the world 's ''very best kind of cartoons." A few strokes of his talented pen can make some of the most biting editori1I comments to be fo und on today's issues. If you're looking for relevancy, look at Mauldin two wars later. Look at the Editorial Page of the DAILY PILOT on Savings Accounts At United St ates National Bank, we will pay you a solid, wonde rful 4Y2%. Earn from the day of your first deposit. Com puled daily. Compounded quar- terly. No minimum deposit. Withdraw anytime. Eac h account is insured lo $20,000. Switch over to Uniled St ates National Ban k today! Want 5123 or more? We'll pay it. 5Y2 % and 5¥•%. Deposit you r money for one year and we'll pay you a guaranteed 5Y2 %. A two yea r's deposit will pay you a guaranleed 5¥4'l'o . Siar! with $500. Add $10C wh enever you want. - 159 offices 1n the Iii m1Jor Counties or Soulhem Canfomla Cost.1 Mea• Office 1M5 Newport Blvd. South Co.1st Pla11 3333 Bristol Street UNITED IU STATES ~ NATIONAL BANK I JI D.\ll't' PILOT Monday, Ju!'lf 28, l ' 11 Ji'AMll..Y CIRCUS ............ --··--···- ''Don 't b.e o du~my , PJ--you can't pul l yourself wh1 le you re in the wagon , You hove to get out to do it ." 136 Horace E11sign Students Hono1~ed liorace Ensign ~1 i d d I e School, Newport Beach, has named 136 stud ents lo the honor roll for the third scholarship roll for ha ving averages from 3.5 lo 4.0 we re: Chrislopher Auer. J a n Babin , Lauren B ow d I e Deborah Brittingham, Lis a Burden, quarter. Five seventh grade and three eighth grade students earned straight-A averages. Timothy Burke, Patsy Cobb , Christy Dey, Ann Dickey Daniel Doane. ' The seventh grade students \\'ith perfect averages are Jun v.•ilh perfect averages are June Gorman, -P..1eridith Hayos, Linda Kuhn, Christine Sippl, and Barbara Skinner. Eighth g ra d e straight-A students are : Kevin Bisson- ne!le, Linda Fr.ankl in and Sabrina Kazarian. Named to the seventh grade scholarsh ip roll for ma in- taining averages between 3.5 and 4.00 were: Gordon Adam.~. Ho I! is Byers, Roberta C a pa J b o. Heather Crossen. G re g Dawson, Brynn Dubrow. Sylvia Ec- cles, Brian England, Susa n Franklin, Lyle 1-laskcll ~ John Hedge, Kristin lloganson, J\1elinda Jfoose. Julie Humphries. llarriel Hutchinson. Jill J ohnson, Laura Johnson, La ur a Kirkpatrick, Tracy Lock ing, James Lynn, Randall MacDougall, Er! n Mack, Julie ?i.lanlove, Marosi, J o h n Valerie Afiller, .l\.forvay. Stephtn Martindale, Torrey Jane Moser, Ca th a r i ne Mulroy, George Ne w I a n d, Sharon O'Brien, J ean Palmer, John Pearson, G a y I e Penewell, Debra Peterson, Li sa Piroum ian, Doug las Prichard. Lis a Richard~on, 111 a rk Rowan. Joyce S 1 au k h I e r , Elizabeth Stivers. Gregory Vaccaro and Brian \Vhi!ford. Named lo the seventh grade honor roll for having averages ranging from 3.0 lo 3.49 \1·ere: Linda Allen. Peter Alltson . Conni Ande rson. Ed it h Anderson. r\ova Ball, Theodore Barben 111. Ellyn Beamish. Glenn'B<H1·man , Lori Bowman, John Bradst reet, Linda But- ter"'·orth. Susan Cline, Julll' Comstock. Barbara Co11•les .. I o s (' p h Distanislao , Thom;i s Dunlap, J-lenry Durkee, Linda f;nsign, Gary Ertz, Curtis Farrel l, Marji Friday . Scott Griffith, Ivy Hall, Carole Hand, S h a r n n Hanrahan, Hedy Hendrickson William i-lolmes, Robin !lope.' Kellie Jackson. Me r r I John.son, Robert J o h n s o n • Dari en Jones, Carol Kirkpatrick , Nan i Kopa, Stephanie Kranz, Kathryn Krupp, l\t a t t h ew Levine, Kathryn Lewis. Lel!:lie Lonand, Sand ra Maravich, Oieryl McClure. Deborah l\1cDaniel. L is a McDonough. Gordon McDougal. U:annf! Miller, Dana Mills, Nancy Minear, Ann Moon, Jenniff!r Moran, Dav id Mukai. Pame la Newell. Antonio Nungrary, Debra Ohle , Heather Oliver. Kathleen Owen, Robert 0 w s I e y , ChrUtine Pattison, Ca thuine Phillips. Jvy Pike, Wendy Pothoff, List Robln90fl. Rri>ecca Rudy, Loretta Schoettier. Jay Schwanz. Leslie Scott . Carol Semenluk, L a u r a Semonten, Diane Stng. Kay Sheppard. T a m a r a Smith. Walker Smith, Peter Som<n, Matthew Spurr. Dm>Cln Strauaa, Uni Strom. a.tll Sturnlolo, Alexandria Svtberland. Bl'lln Taku. Adam Tessman. B e t h Thomas. Mlctlael T h o r n e , Deborah Trapp, Phillip Tupy, Brett Wehn, Liset t e Wbltom, MldlHI Wllllnghom end Dovld Woolen. El,iitll ,...rs """"" to th• Douglas Eccles, Debbie Elias, Terrie Eliker, Susan England , Barbara Englar. Jeffrey Fier, Chari ss e Glenn. Katherine Grant, Nan - cy Gray, Lee Ho, David Kilmer, Nicholas Kovalenko, Kathy Lecluse, Lois Linn. Char lotte Ulwell, Marcha k, Deborah Marilyn McCord, Miller. Morgan Marlyn, Jonnette i\fary Miller, Candi Mitchell Monica Mye rs, Jon Nisbet : Ronald ORourke. Gregory Phillips, Su s an Pothofr. Paul Savaskv. Peggy Schraegle, J ulie Searles, Patricia Sebek. Cu rt i s Shelley, Matthew Spangler, Robert Starr. Thomas Straw. Tracy Taylor. San Vaccaro, Da vi d \\'amer, Mark Wh ite and Robert Yardley. Eighth grade sludents wi!h averages from 3.0 to 3.49 who were named to the honor roll were : Patricia Baker, Cr2.ig Barto. Thomas Bazacas. D a v J d Becker. Nancy Beckett. Robert Beckley, D i a n n a Boag, Julie Bo th a m 1 e y • Elizabeth Brick, Rober I Brock. Julie Brown, Kathy Burns, Deborah Campbell, J o h n Caroompa.s, Robert Currier, Kathleen Dixon, Richard Dosta l, Shan- non Duyndam, Eric Elder. Jon Field. Ronald Freeman. Robert Freitag, Terri Gibbs. Gary Gick, Debra Goodspeed, Karen Grasso, l\1ona Greyson. Julia Grimm, Timothv Hartma n Louisa HirsCh, R o i e r Holmes. Kurtis Kearl, Robert Kell , Jill Kelleher. J\1ary Kotob, D&vid Kup· rerman , Stephanie Kuri, Cathy Larson, James U>ith, Louis Libbey. Gregg Linhf';r. Lorrain e Loeser, r..!arc Lovig, Rene e Lynch. Susan Lynn. Lisa 1'1arks. ~l ichelle McGowen . D I an a McAlecr, Mike McConnell, Craig l\1oon. Christopher Moore, Kimberly Norton. Ken- neth Parkford, Kimberly Per· ry. Donna Peters, Debbie P itt. Terri Pittillo, Candy Rice, Ronald Ric hardson, Melvin Richley Ill, Sleve Root. Janet Rosener, Robin Ross-Duggw. Cinda Rudy, J anet Schraeglr, Laura Sell. Patricia Seng, David Shaw, C.:hristopher Simpson, Karen Smiley, Kathi Sprenger, Sandra S tevens . Pamela Stewart, S u an n s v .. enson, John Thome.~. Ho 11 y Tillman, Sherri Von Deldeo. Jody Wallace, Corrie \Vard, Gail \Vat kins. Katherine \Volf. Laurie Wood. Richard Yardley and Karen Vales. Coast Students Earn Diplo1nas Fi\·e Orange Coast resident.s V.'ere amon~ the 1.621 student_, rectiving degrees d u r i n g Northern Arizona University's 71st annual commencement in Flagstaff. They art. Karen McConville, Balboa Js.land, bachelor or arts: l\fr.s. Marguy Suzanne Lu1'all. eo~ta ~fesa. master r· arU in education; Carroll A. Hood Jr . master of :iris : ~iro· Dlria Y v onne Kieswel\er, b~lor of science in educn- Uon. all from Huntington Beach. . . . ....... -. -.. ' , .. • .. ·-'.• ' ~·~ . .-. ,..- '"/ ; ' ... ·-" • ' , .. I '·. ' " '1 . . Co rufortable Na tural or Contour Style Bras i\'atural Cup v.•ith a djustable stretch straps. D cup has rigid straps, elastic r elease. Sizes 32· 36A, 32·408, C. 32·420. Regular $3.69 Natural D cup3 ror $7.99 or$2.89 ea . Contour Cup Dacron® polyester and cotton with Wonderfll spun polyester. 32·36A, a nd 32:35 B1 C cups. Regular •3 for or 2.22 eacJ1 Price• Effective Sunday, June 27 thru Saturday, July 3 Ask About Sears Co11ve11ie nt Credit P lan• CUT $1 to $9! Worn en's Fla ts, Casual s, Li ttle Girls' Dress-Shoes $4.99 to $9.99 Children's Shoe Valuf!, Choose from a \\'tde selection of dress or school shoes. 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"' w ,, '" ,. w c u '" c ~ M ' T M K c s B Monda)', Ju11t 28, 1971 DAILY PILOT J8 310 Orange Coast Area Students Get UCI Diplomas Among t.he 1,1&0 studen t& receiving degrees at the re- cent sb1th a n n u a I corn· mencement of UC Irvine, 310 ccinle from communities along the Orange Coast. Seventeen earned the area graduates cum laude hoooni designation, tv.·o were graduated magna rum laude, and !'liX received highest- hono rs, gTadua ting summa cum Jaude. The following is a complete listing of the area graduates with 1heir home address, degree and majo r. .. n m IALBOA: l""I 5u:,,nne Bell, S!\ W, B•Y Ave_ lBS blnloolc•I sc!t ncn \; Jen·Ann E'll l<>tr. 5N E, O<e•f> FroM !BA erlll J<»ePh Erf>ut Elllolt, W E Ocee., l'rcn! fMA e....,11,~): Mlth•tl RlthMd TM.om<>tcn, .?131 5evllle SI rBS bloloolc&I •<l•n<e•l. ehd Ric~nfd Lawrence Wiiiging, 1031 Mlram1r Ori•• jMO). l'rom IALBOA ISLANO o Rol>lr1 Flrtcner Alltn, lO? A911e Ave. (BA sO.:!•I .,;,"c•'I, cvrn la~~•i R, SteYeft llallb~ck. 111'" On&! St, !BS b•nlnglc&I 'clenc~11 : l•w•rtftC e Brrn•rd Brtll'tlng, II. !70 Ame•nv•t Ave. lBA cornoMatl•~ culTu••l; R~lo!l Lowoll Cvmmln~s. 111 Olarnond Ave. tMOl; Barbar~ Lvnn G&vlord. II<'• Gr •nd Cenol (BA dence); Mlcneel Julian Morgan, J\~'!i s,,,_ o~lrt SI. (BS blclogkal >clence•\; E!l>erl C:ll!lon Sllecrlll, 110 Emerald AYa. (BA 'oc1al 'clenc..,.I; David Roy To•lcr. Jr, llS 101>"1 Ave IBS blcl011!c1l •clence•l. &nCI Marv Martha Wi iiiam>. 131 ~, Topo> Ave. (BS blclclllc•I 1denre•). l"rom COJIONA DEL MA R: Mor11nne Pelor> Brougti. ll9-B Fernl••I A've, (FIA art1 : N•ncy J. CDOI>, 3"! Evenln11 Can•on Roa~ 1BA orl); SllelleY Anno {Ort, IO l • S1ndc1s!le Drive !BA Frenc1111 Wiiiiam M&rtl Fruh, ~16 A J~•mtne Ave. {BA econcmlc•I; G~rgo Camrron Harvey, 721 11ellotrope Ave, IMl'A ClramoJ: Frank E. lOOclph, 711V. Jt•mlno Ave, (8$ ln1...-m01ion and compute~ •clencel; Richard An Tnorov Lvcn1, 101 Bayside Place (BA Engli•h); Mar'/ c:ornelle Mo•cn. .'illf'h Avocado Avt. !BA En11ll•hl1 Li nd& Brln~l•Y Moore, 701 M a r 11u e rll 1 Avo. IPhO deVelOC>mtn!ol arKI coll bloll)l)y\; Cll•rlont Noemi Nownos, 1 O l 6 SorKIPIPo~ -Drive (BA M•tcrvl: l<aTM Let Pyne NichCl!<m. 2801 B•v•ldt Orive (B A dr1rn&·•r11; lt(lll•ld RfY Rouel, 611 L•rk•our A••-(I A his1orvl; Oavld Jc/or> Rumbellow, 3001 SeT!in!I Sun Drive (BA o~v~lci); Oavld s_ Rvan. 11ll Peclllc Coto! Hlghwav (!!A ccmparUiv& llterolurel; Steven Loui• !>acti•, '1<4 E. (08•1 11 ti.hwev !MS 1dminlslr1!1cnl: Helen M, Sondv. II& Jasmine Ave, !BA como1r1!IYf 'ul!urel l Gre1chen B<8 Schl'ldter, •O'I Cabrlllo T•rrace IBA arT)J Wllll•m J<>Seph Schw&rlz , 31115 Inlet h it Drive (BS blolngical 1cltnce•), Sunmo cum laude; M"rv. Lvnn S~lnn"·l<lee. 781 D•I Mor Ave. IBA So•nl!-hl, cum l&ude; S1acrv Ann Spdin, SOS Dahlia Ave. IBA hl•toryl; Jl1l Tldiavs~v, 7!l Morning Canvon Rd, !MS 1dm!nli!r11lon!, Nfdlne A.Ike WM!m1n, HO lrl1 Av t . (BA Engll•hl. and Ch•rllne Romen Wlli-on, 2027 Al!ura Drive (BA hlltorY). from COSTA ME$A: Barb1r1 G1nt Ander.\On, lS\S San1a An1 AVt . (BS bl1>lo~lcal oclen<:.s), cum laude ; TP><>m•• Jud$0n Ant~cnv, 1680 Ltb•adOr Orll•e (BA d&nce·muoltl. 1umm1 cum lall'!e; Barrv Jee~ Bon· d&ru~, 1•d Andover Pl1ct (BS blotoolcal .clence~l: IHch•rd Lew11 Boll. 1942 M~ver (B~ blo lat lco! •tltfltes); Jc,.oh Ch r I•! o P h • r Btl!ram!, 1609A TYSl<n Ave. (B$ ~olO!llt•l sciences); Je!lrev Allen B~rg, :¥191 Yu•on A•~. frlA EnDl•shJ. c~m l~ude1 Gt•~ Earl Bovdltr, 1515 $ent1 Ant Ave. (MFA ••O! C1r1a ln11rid Brackman, '20ll Wall•ce Ave. (BA phliosoph~): Ronald C1rl Ch1ppel, 1,1 1 Suv1 Clrcl• IBA en,11•~1; Helen Anne Coai.. 7100 P~e.,on Wav (BS blolo~l(B! Klonceili .JQl\n Cat~• CutTI•, 111• Founlftln Woy WHt (llA •r!l; Mlch•el R, Follcn, 7027 ~ Coast Grads Wii1 Honors At Irvine Students lron1 Costa Mesa. Corona Del Mar and Laguna Beach were among the more than 1,850 graduates receiving bachelor's degrees in June commencement exercises at UC Davis. Degrees \1'erc awarded at Individual sr.honl and cnllege ce remon\vs to Chri~toplicr C. Nt.lson, political .~ c f e n c e : r.hchael D. Ol son, biologic;il sciences, and Kathleen D. Tate, sociology, all of Costa f\1esa. Also earning degrees were Keith R. Wiley, zoology. of Corona dcl Mar, and Pcler IL Seilz, political science, Laguna Seach. Korntl 0.1'1'11 IBS •l&cit\Ctl e,,_1....,r. T~lll'I, UOl R<>blnwooct Drlvti l!IS Gon<.lft, 103 V1ttno "l•c1 (PhD dr.1elofl. Jol'ln IC,tnl R .. vti C•A lll1lorYJ t lte11o l'MtlOft C:dl•n, 111 NYt1 P I 1 < e Bl•C~bu•n, 1}31 Svne• La,,. (B.t. Ofl). From _$1.lL lll!ACH' r.\arJln C••la ln11)1 lhr! D•I-FlcQveltl, 2n ltfla.( t>iclOO!<•l 1dtnct1l. <vm ltud•! C•IOI mt11111 f l\d c911 blelOIJl'b Rleh•rd Dt le d•ll Gor\lcll IUCMl'dlOll, 1.U Vtrtno (MFA dr•m1l; EdYlllo Vlrt lnl1 {v.,v, Cntrlone Adair Eisen '""e!le, 600 1-i"nfll l<, 16.., lC<;••I otl~ncn); ltoberf Pl•C& (BA "'1llOSOP11l'll Cf•Olvn Llfld1 Ann Tubb!, 16161 P1rk>ldoll L•ne !BA H•dla!flc•n. ~1 Vo••flO Pit<• (M!> Id· Pl11<e !9A hlllofYl; Rlcll1rd T. "9 Hlllc•eol Oflv& (BA >C<ll l ecorog~J; Alde<1n Place IBA 5.P1nl•hr1 'llvton Fr1nd1 LoBoulere. '51' &ltchwood Ferd, UC! hnte Cll tt Cl•cl1 (I A d1nc1J, 1no R1IP11 IC•llt ¥ Unt ••m•nn, mlnlll<t llOllll Cirl'l!l'l' ltlf>9 11aYt •, llOQe<!wn, 1o. \le•-Pl1<1 11'110 61-.n l.,oy 011<t, 111 Anl!f {BA l!l•IM L1ll1!h!n Couller. 1111 lino;Oln Ave, (lit. lf'Klll>l\ll Edw•rd Jonn llr1mt l; Gle"'1 Eo•I FrltWr11"•~1er, lOOI? Tnt1ev• 0.l~e !MS eletltl(al !B5 bloll)l)l<&I td enc••ll Judy Mtrlo P•Ycnoblclocry); $11Yldor, ROltt\111111 PhllOtOPIWll Ll l\40 !BA 1nJ 1 !lru-u EYe"Oll Co•, Q Pe'ochlno, Jt., IU Ckun A•t . {MD!, 1~ Albttl Pl1U !8~ blo1\\lllC1t 1nt lMtrl"9). tl•Y••· IBA MX!l l acltncfl); de! Pino, )'ll( Vert no PllCI !MA Tl1nolf'Y J•m• 0.~I", 111' O(e1nw1Y Klfltl Pl1c• 4BS blologlc1I K!e11co1I; I MI Ml(h .. I 01ln f"""'-•• !4) 1111 Sf, 1o<:l•nc~•l. Jamtt erenl Holll<le, '2)1 Hl••m SP1!1ilhJ; l.Obtrl Lui,.... l.uuell, IJll IN.FA t •MUv• .,,!ling!: C:a•I Heo"v B••l>I•• Woodru!I Cuf\n!ngh&m, 1606 IMOl. l<•llll1tn E11111>1tn FrlHN!rhn1u1S1', l'rom lllVIME: All<lP Kv~or #IQO. Lt... !BA IO(lil Klencn )/ Latry VS1'•no P!•ct (PhD d\emlltrYl; Dl•tz, 60S S, Coa1t H!e~"'"Y fBA IO(l1l W1rWlck Line (BA lino •"'1. Sh•ro11 US l lberl Pll(O IBS blglwlc1I plin, l?l Verano Piece ( MA Steven Hetl>lrl, 12l Ve•IM Pl1ce (llS Don Ill Emtn11t Sctnlol!, 7'11 V«i -&COl°'yl; Gr"°rv S!1ftlil1 Et!CklClf\, l1' {cVle Oo¥<nu., 101 Vl1 Kor on !MF A ,,·~, .!,0,,,",',,",,,,LA~O-~,·.~'A··o'.'~,,'! ' "' >>>> mM,.emolk•h L1A.ovce J•t Allon, '"' w • S> <o• -> , >" ' > '-"" ,.,, r~ " • " •<ltncn; Merril! Megdy .,,r911, bl~loCtlcel \Cltf\<el)I J•Ck R•Y Hollel'ld, Plec1 {MA mtThemellU )I JKq~ellnt I • · " •••' tnne~ oy dent• I 1>u<Joo!<>11Y >. Klll&rn~y Lane (BA P•Ytr.QIO!IYll l9')0l Re"ne OrA>'° ,,"',,, E.Mlllolil; <106 Vtto!\D Place (llS bl<>loolcal ll lPltl' S1pulvect1, IC02 Vftat10 Pia<• Ernbon. 10.09 Mlr1m1r CM' t lec1'!cel MOllll<i Mlrlo frlOlland, 336 Lu'°"I~ 1<11n1oen w. Gl•en1, !16 E. 1?nd SI. ee,bara Jea,,ne me· 1 ~ A.~erano •<i•<><•>I' l<tflnel" R ~Y tcemtn, i.1' !MA Sp.onllr. •"" PQrt\J'lll.lllH )I John •nt1l.,..d ngl1 Ell•tbelto Ann i G1to1t, $I, (L\A c;ermanl, summt cum l•ude; •rom TU STIN : l.., B1dd1rs, IMl tflA linall•")' .Jef!rev N. Ci00cl"1g, lUj ::aco i8~ )(M;lllt,,:,~lenC~I ; 1 f~•r~ Verano Place (MS civil tflflneerlng) 1-icwt rd Simon. ~1 Alcorn l &M (8A 113 Ctlll Orlv1 {P1'0 d&•e l<>Pmtnlal •nd li!ICl'tn! Sfml H•nna, 102• B w, llalbaa 1!·~,'!C~~~::AM';ri:='~,~vc;'~ Monrovl1 !BA ~1'1orvl ; Sandr• l<&Y ,,,•,i..-:i~,•,m, "nOor1 .. ~ eM•~!~ ~.fi:v. Ronald Le Rov JOl\ni.on, 32\1 V R•rio Jlh•l<'»O<>IW)I Oavld Avl•.,o•tn $miff\, Ctll tllCl\\llY)J Blvd. t MS .amlnl~tri llon), lt lewv 111ncock. 661 Plumer S! (All Engl!aJ\J; 1115;~~,..1• Sten• (BA hletorJ), <~m Pl&e• (MFA cr.,..rlv• wrltln11J1 1612 Vtt1no 18A m 1 I flt m e I I c ~ l 1 el>1•r Konr>11n 11a .. 11, 1'1' C1lllD1>1 Pollm H•rrli, Ul Vlt Genoa (M~>\, ~~:.CYLt:,~:. ~~~~~ 11:"ri'~:.~ ''Sv•~" Gree"!"-1-1,armcn, f!l·D, W, l•~~ei M•rv Etl•n Jvervtn" I 1t 11 Rebeltan Lov Cll1>mQtr+11n Smll!I, 1012 ~!imv~~11~'s°'::'i:v6~lv• f9~·~hlor~Ji deOGt )I -S.,. Ann Hou••· :rtn Bt!ll1 St, f8~ blolc\llcol Kle~cesll Norma Ruth In ~1. (BA f rencn ; C•rter !-10 me,, !Pltewood way \BA mamemati(i); Verone Pia<• IB~ blolooktl i<iencn>1 (BA ps~d'!alctYl. cvm laOJd., JOl1n Ce•T•lt n, l 7Nl BIQelOW !BA •r1l I 1631 1rv1,,. Ave, (B>\ •rtl; LfW/en(:e Jol!f> Wev"' B••lley, UU1 Polm1nlo 0 C , < '' '''' .. S Ka<tl JOMPfl l t mWr!. 2'l6S Alpln• W11v F••n~<'" <l•kei, 1~ lrvl•• Ave, <••O Alan Howard, 'JO'H Paloma Or!Ye IB.t. w .. .-tPhO ""~lnt~•lngl ; OeDor•n on&ld Ai r n erwe '· YOranc Jemes Duane tone, !Jl Veri ne Plac1 C8S b!o!oul<ol i.cien,eil; Mlcnool J, "' " " Donald Wed• Oo.-.e!I, 12'1 l • Co!Jn1 cloHI"),• Corel Rneo tlvl•nd, 1011 Mir~•r'1 B°"•cm .. n, 1611 Vereno Pl•~• 1>1ac1 (Ml'A erl)1 LIMa ICov IClrk~•m. (MA mainem11!cil1 Bd1~ P1trlc~ McCrY$1ftl, 111!1 coeit 111thwov 18A e1>glM<!rlnt l1 !BA 111,io,..,I; St l••dor ST, ll!A hlotorvl: Wiiiiam 1BA ~<$lOtY )i Brue• Heward Bc•Ton, ll4ol& ll;ocilt0$1 Woy 18A WCl•I !'iu!t!ven. 111• Vu•no Place !BS c.l!em!•lrY); lvnn Sl!lrlev Miii•¥, ~ Roll C. Maly, 800 9!lC<l Ave. f5S Merw11~ Clalte Fl...:111~. lJOI M•una Slt nlto lre!Cfl, 11, \loll Bol<ir St. (BA 1011 Vt!i oa Pltct (Ml'A crelll•• ecology); Ktnnoll! !loo•• l<r1rnm. l72l t>lo1Galc1l adencn l: Wll!lom l 1wr1nc• c~Yl!tl Ccve IBA hlotcrvf l bloloolcal 1cltf1Cu·Plillo50Pl'l~l1 St"'*"n L.,. ll.ce<J tMA, uieml•try!; Ttd ""''''''•' writing); Ho rry Poul Brvttev, Jr, 1lll V1r1na Plac1 (Pl!O l>')pul1rlon ind •·•· Summer, ?tll Ve.noa Pl•ce (MA "lencv Alllion Nleo, 91' 5~vllnl O•I•• L••ll• M"''''°"' llll6 Seashoro O·I~• Horno!on Gowrle'V. ,,~I Rod Hiii 1'.ve. ""Yvonne Ann 1,ner. 21"1 Loren•<> Avo. ver&M Place 1 BA m••nornallc•l 1 vlfonmen111 blolOllVl i Tom Murr•v m•themollc.>I: O•nnls A nth o n Y fl A Frint~l; Sui•nf\t Ce•llne Peul•on, IMO); Ol•ne J•on Nueenl, llOl (B$ 1'1ectrl<•I •noh-.e<11!1>11l cvm l1ud11 S•e~nf_n le• c~r lic.,, 1•~1 V•r~f'>Q Piece l•vflold, 103" Verene Pince IBA Sweon1'v, m~ S..nl•a Wov (Bii )ll Em•ield B•V J8A art); J¢Yc~ Ell•n E••lblull Drive IBA t •IH Lea ~tlen Otvld ll'olln Im bler, tSl!'I P&>a(ftn~ (flA Sponlshli Livrle El•li"~ 1~""1· 170 (B~ blOIOU•Cel ocience~JJ •<on<1mlc~); ~•YCl!OltKIV):.P~Ula M&rlt Sw"!, 5£1I P-r>troll, tl•S $ Cea•• 1119"w•v !M~A Nugrnl. 1303 Ea•Ttilull Drive (l!A ar!); Ave IBA mo!lltmo!lcs): O.n"I• Let Yori<ll!.wn Lane (BS bcO!l.,ce v •· S•ndre 1'.mlrl Ll<llretrber, ..01 Verano Place IBS bl1>loglca1 ul~nc11): crN llVo wrnlnt); B•rrv c,,.0,~1 Sellrr, lhC<ll~I Wllllom P•1Y, Mori Vl•I• JonnlOf\, !1126 E. Main &I. IMOlr ICrr,. clences\: David W, Jimenez, lC· No ncy R.urn Gorhern Cattawov. <4'1 Ver&nc Place t6S blol<111l••I "'"nee:'; Jiii Tl!r•l•eld, ll'OO P1tkVl•w Lt nt 11!5 &. C08•! HlllhwoY I MFA (''~"v• O•ntda CB#I Soonl•h)J r>e!h .Jc'"P" Ku~ud•, 1Ul0 N...,.oorl tcdi St. lllS blolOQlci l iciern:••h Lance"'ood Wev (BS b I c 1 a g I ca I Rov Je•old Livln, (MO! 1 Wllll•m ll!A Ena•i,111; Da""" °"ne Ttolno. 1oll wrl!lnq). Altir SIOD<!rman, 1111 G••n· LY""' Dia"' R<>e. 4JS Al•er "'-•• Ave, !BA econ<lmlc>1 ; Snaron Jon ICellet, lOlO Tu!lln0 Bl•d. .C•entuJ; Heciot M&•IQ Cov~llorl, 1~11 Gordon l~!lve, 1917 v ... an& Pl•<t H'l'O Ve••no l'l•c• (BA >C<lc!011Y ll J.,..an MYr" St. !BA Er.qllsn\; (MO!; 51~ ... r1 Jaon1• !i.IY~""~'' JOI P•1rlc1& t y~n Mack, lSI~? Wllll•mt (llA hl1Tory); Dl•ne M~rlt 8r!IHI Ver•n<> PIAte IMA Span•r.lo); Edmund, DIVCl!oblolooV); .Jtan Moher, 701 lltnnlt Vaidet, Ill, 101• Ve<eOC> Pla<t Liit Jame$ SIOPlt\, S9!'l N, c .... .t AVl!nldl Ceirl!~I !BA P l!'• IC' I ; ~! (!lA n"tcr1!; ~1PVl!n Nf l"'n Mur- l<Umlel. ~'II Avoc&do St, lllA French); C'hlP J• .. IOIJ Ver•r1<> l'lac~ (llA '"~'"1 Ver&no Pl•<• (QA So•nlihll l i wr m(t tBA PhY•k1J, •unm1 cum laude; J1nt Hlgnwov (6A orll; ilvron werren Sul· W•ftlfr"" Wiiton Sml!r., "21 El l>'od~n• r••· 1091 San Ju•n (PhD llClOlll1llon 1nd G1Yl1 P1vllne Lttson, lm Vttmont •clenceili John M"'" Chism, 11ll B. Mt son, !f!S intcrmtllon •<Kl com· ll •nnlng Wut, (6A 1r!lr ion, 9!!S Cumming• Pli te IBA hl\lor~ll Avt . (MFA or!)1 OcnMlto i-«ke S\\lln, envlrO-"'!!t M•I blol-0-llY )i D•n"I• Lt• Av,_ (B" li'~gll•hl: Vor•na Place IBP. P>VChOlogv): Shena oulor scltnt•I; ')(>fl EITOll WOOcl, 119J1 !l•Kom .$1, Rcl>en Motg•n l aytor, l~I O•Q !.I, IS1 Oomlnuo DrlYft tBA 1<>.:lol te<>!o~v \, Rolgle, 1~91 Ool Amo SI. CBA J°"nne Ci. Ltt. l'OiS-"6 c:nar!e SI. ~BA Racholle .Singer Crono. 16A Enull~l; 1 1 1 ces electrlcol 1nulneerlngJ1 Eslnor f!IA ioclal ~cltnco•). end Lolo E. summa cum tou<lf; Joton Michael ~nernhlrvll Jenn C~leM Senne, ll ,.1 "'><:l ol ecoloov); Jeon Cvrinla Linder, Rouert 11, C••"•• \BA con1oar•!fv& Br~ce HIXll! McAll 1ler-, 12 Vfta no WOf thY. 19111 (illlmen St. (MFA ti~• TllOm-. 160 Ru~v (BA all). Tavtor, 1G>-JJlh SI , (B.A olill~o<>nvl: Matrn• Drive !BA n h 11 ., 1 0 n n l' ) 1 1166 O~lord Laroe (BS til~l,o~itol col1urel; Curtl• We•l~v D11vi>. JJ11 ",',~~~00(;f'FM'•n~r,~~:1.•~,•,1r1~~=~.l~A Bg~~·-"• ari.J; Rltn1rd Yen1tn, .iJ9'1 S•lon ~d. M•rl1 Be!Ty Te•.,••~. 1807 Pen Abb•~ Lawrt •1Ce Rew Shel(l()n, 11121 Alt•den& 1dence•l1 Claud• Emmmel, ~ nd••v verooo Pi11te !BA n;~1orv), M•Chttl " • ·~ -(BA iocl•I ecology!, 11...:1 Darlu• S~lg•~I f rom MISSION VIEJO: Ptoce (MF .., dram4Ji JOl1n Alon c:.rcl• !BA 10C!ol 1tlonce\)I Jr., IJJ Governor St. (B.O. >0dol RQVmona Davmuae. nn u~r•nQ Pait • IMFA •r!l; An1ho~y Go-Qrg• Mucci, 603 Yorlchl , 70:1.4 Yer•no Pl•<• !BS Su1~nne 1-iu!lman C:horl!on, 17111 T~orne, 1111 Su•••>' L•,,. (MS ad· Oovld p,_11,. l ov•cr, 1661, M""Te9't •Cl!ntt•I; Loi• M&cDOt>old, 7014 Swaf> IBA econorr\+c,i, Al••" Ro>•n~o Dom· Vo•1no Place !PhD malh•m&t i,•J; b~ologlcal science•). Ar•n• (MA Spanhh & Portugue••l1 mln••lrotlonl; Fnd•rlck P e l•r Way !P~O D•>'cJoolC>llVh A;oinr Allt"' Drive (llA compArall•• llTerft1urel ; ln9uei, !911 Verono Pl•Ce ((II< com. Jame-. PAlrick MU•plw, l~ Verano Alhana1 Wo••ll l c:ov, 26lll E1m.,olda voegelln. J1 1-iNt\Clr hlafld (BA Th<1mpson, 16411 McFadd~n 185 •'et • D&niel Miii•• Me~Held, ?516 Elden Ave. PA<•llv• (ulturel; Anno J. MtcL-Achl&~ Ploce (B.A PQlltlcal 1dence; lbranlm ~r.,.,, LAGUNA l!l!!ACH1 (MFA mvslCI; J•me• T•acv Man1Tle•d, Engll1hL •umma curn loude; ond trlco! inglneer!ne l; Mlrk Chur.ICln• IBA "11torvl; Dow, 111 Verano Plete IBA hl1torv), Dlw«><I Mussa. l9l2 V8tono Place IMS Potrlcl& ll•<lo!crd Auoust, 9J' 1.1371 Remesft Or lve !MS olPCIH<al Oebr~ l ee Wrlg.\I, tlS Seagull Lone Jing, 1ldl C:hoflorni Orlve (B"> Sue11en Mav!leld, 1531 Elllen A••· megna cum laude• eleclri<AI ~nGl<>ee<lngl; 81urblrd ca~von !BA Frentnl; El•I"" engineering), and Lindo R•e St~woru, (BA hl•lor~l blo•O!llC~I o<;ltflce•\: J eme• Alie"' ~BA Enull!hl; Ocn"d lorne MtMlllen, M•l~Olm MCLarl'n Dow. 711 V•rano Mkllael A•An Ok•!lmd, ?6l3 VeraM EllloU Barn•rd, l ll!!'ll Tep o1 World 1-521~ Terrena D'lve (BA trtl. F•om SA "I CLEMENTE; Koren Wron M. !IS~? No•'Woocl Park Pl&<e (BA ?'IOl Baku ST, (BA •OCl•I oclence~), Place IBA ma1tiemd!ics); PQnald Deon Pl&C~ !BA Pll'CllOIG9Vl 1 SnMryn Ann Drive (MFA ••I\; l<lm~all Gl en Bond, Ftl)n'I NEWPOR T llEACH: Down C'ullt, 3H VAlenclt (BA m&l~erl\&lk>l, an<! Lo!kor O!!c, Zerbe, 11enrv A!tl<!rt Me,.rsc~•ldt. 33J B EPncroon. 1311 VPronc PIAte IM~ el•<-Porlu, !BA. soc•AI ecolG9vl: G;,;,e,1 1111 S•n•• C'<r> <BS blDIOgl,tl Jan'•• Vlncon1 Anoerse<'I, It l ' dramo); <ar~! A. Dean, XII Avenld~ :J!IO E-lrKI SI. (BA hi1tcrvl. Unlver•lt\' D"•• IBA gooar aPl!v), cum lrocal eng1neer1n91, W!l!lam David Buckh·a~non PovlPv. Jr .• 972 V•rono 1tle11ce1), cum lsudt; Joyce f'_ Brown, Bttk•hlre lane IB>\ PIYC~olOG~I Arlena !BA hl'1orvl; Jo Ann Doudna, f rom WESTMINSTER:: Rlcl!trd loude; Robert Stepnen Nnbllt. <&Sl Frfv, 3~00 P•r<vi•w Lano (I.IS Place (P~D develcoment11 t'ld cell 991 Cumming• Place (BA cla.-lcsl: Bruca Kriete Baldwin, tn~ J6 st. II• del P,.:lfl<O (BA WCI•! ecolCf,lVI, 0Pib~, n ta Mi i! SI. !MD)! B•enda Sant& Ana Ave IBP. cn•'Tfl•l•v\; booro;lc•I 1tlence•l; Su•an Ellt&D••h blologvl; Palrltlt Anne Ponm~n Noncv Pag• lluchon&n , IM)I Dlamor><I SI (MO); Jll...x!o•t Wallaco lll l'ldMu lr:, ~lid Kel!lffn GP••rd F'll~y. Jll w. M!!ler Hotlmtn, Joo.1 (;rttn Fem (I•· K"1herlne Anne Netherv, 1711 Tu•!ln Gcrrne<a&d, .S03 Vet•nO Ploc~ (BS Pe•r~e, 137 Vetano Plac1 (llS (MFA or!); 1106 w_ Oc•&n Ftf>r\1 (M5 de\otlQP· Pale<> d•<•l•lob&I IMA n11Torv!, cle (BS bloloolt~I K lence,1; M!ch1el Ave iBA mu1lcl1 blOIG9Tcol >clentesl: bToltKl;col science•); Marteret Morv Cl!rl• llodlltl' Carlov, m ll:VdY SI, ml'111•1 & c.1 1 b!clogvl• Otnnl• Wlndoar From SAN JUAN C:APISTl!AMO: t(evln 11.,.1r:1n1, llUl &rltnton Sf, !BA (hrl• Wl111om Ol1on, 7216 Pacific Fred'1'i< Al~~ Gon1ale" 911 Vera"" Rl!ollg&n, 12' Veraoa Place fBA soclt l !BS blolo;kal 1tlonce)); l'rtd irvlft Beecll, 11Jl w. B&bca Blvd, (MS elf<· Caralvr Ruin Moore, 21111 Ml1>lon d••ni•l. a...:1 JOl\n F••nltlln M<Cay, 9901 Ave. IBA ohllc>OP~Yl: P•U! We•lon Place (BA soclologyl; Robert Albert •c;•nce•J; ChaM Jr. (MF A trfflfV• writing), Ann• trlcel engineering)' Shirl•~ s, Hill• Drive (BA so.:111 1<1enc••l. We.ihaven Circle !BA ec0Mmlc1), Pe&rsan. 1218 Belfast Av•. lBA mu1lcl.1 c============================================================"-===========;===============================o; cum lovd•: l'a!rlCI& Ann Marsh Ii Pic~o!!, SJI Bernard ST. (BA <nllnrmetl">; John D .. vT<I p,~n- derga1t, JO!!I Loren Lane !BS biolo91c .. 1 s«rn<••\; C"rol .Jean Read•. 2BS Cornell Drive (BA Engll•n]: Nan'v Lo" Rlcha•dl, 7~0 e rentwOod 5!. llll'-1ocltl sclence•l; <arnl Sue Se!dlilI Rull, l-17 W. Wll•on ST. (6A music!; Barbera l urner Sml1h, 817 W. 11th SI. (MFA line arh); Carel Lvnn Nellon Slelden. ~111 HA1b<ir Blvd., iBA ma!hemat1c1); Br\•n Paul Stewert, 172 Albtrl Plact (BA economic•); lh..odcre M, Stump. 956 P&VIArino Avo, (MS ele ctrlcAI en11lnee•ln9); MadOt> Vlrolnl& Tarbo~. 1818 P~mcn .. Ave. (BS bloloolcal ..:le-nee•); Wiiiiam Lorence Ul!l&lls, ~181 Pocltlc Ave. !BA cl1>1lo l; Merk J oseoll Vclgh1, 19~ Megnolla SI. (llS bloloolcal •<lences); Mark Evan V•tOIM eway, 2026 11t•bar Blvd. !BA phlloooohvl; Virginia WCQJ Whitley, 991 Pr.,ldlc Ofive !PnD enlhropclog~); Mlc~ael Lawrence Whltlel<er, 111 Yor~IDW" Lane (B5 blOIOlllca! •clenc~11' Mkh•lle 51mon Zornehen, 61/A Victoria St, iMS blo1C>9ical •clence•), and S!evtn F. 'Zcrne!/en, 611A Victo•ia ST. (PhD P•Y<hobiolng•I. f rfm OA NA POINT' Mlcl\aol Dean Mll llg&n, 737'1 Yacht D•ive IB S biolog1ca1 1clenc•1l, F r a m FOUNTAIN VllolLEY : Elliabolh li&mmer Brown, 1111) Sa<>t& l'e Circle !BA Enolilhli M"rlent RUlh 11anlon, llllJ Santa Cla•e (BA 1>1vchalogv); F•itnk Alan MacDonald, !6661 Rt<IW(>Od St,, (BA malhemolic•I, c'1m l&ude: Elaln~ lou"e Pa•lerb, 166 1 3 L o ise n SI, (BA mat11emotl,s/onv1ic1, cum laude: JOl•n J erom• Rolden, 111!30 Cardine) Ave. IBA comporotl•• cull~rel: Cl•vdla LYnn Rowlett, 167U MC\lnl Ba•!rr Circle 1BS blologlce l "lencP,I; Eric ICen! Slalan, 18080 Sun"'! Cou•I (MS enolneeri"g); Arlnu• Allen Sloul\a, HMT.I Margarita Ave_ (BS blcloglcal •clence1l: GreGcrV Jock lncma>, 11111 La Ro•a lane (BA mol htmatlcs), and Greoorv Drew Vocca, 906 El Sal Cltcll tllS blolw lcal Klence1l. From HU"ITINGTON BEA CH: Marie A1uoc1t1a All•g••· 10101 O&n~ Dr<ve !BA SDen,,h); Rontft LIOVd Aru1unfen. 1110 M~ln S!. ( B~ blologlcal 1clence•I; GPorgr M0<haol B•.,dhurv, 1659'1 Tubuton Pl&ee !BS boolClllcdl •clenc.,j. cum l~vde; Rlch&fd (. Brownbock, Ill Lo•e St, !BS f leclrlcal engineer ing); Th..odo•e David Burda. 7161 Blue•all• Drive (IJA hi,!orv); Oon•ld Bruct Bvttcn. 1081 1'il!ll1ewood Orlve (BA M>Clal K iencf,I; cum !1\ldt; James Dougl6f Campbell, ??181 Luau Lane (BA hl~1orvl: Paul·lnwr~nce, du Nard. Jr., 110Jl·C Sl•nlev Lan• IBA <>hllO•cPl>V)I Ch r 11 11 n o Marla Ouranceav. Wiil! Collm~ Lane i8A <>h••k•/rn11tiernatlc,I; Fran• Edward Golden, Jr., IS/61 G•eco•v L"ne (BA r.1siorvJ; Deni•• Merle Guise,., 169 Al Welt Pc•t Drive (B A $pan1'hl; Charle• PMli<> Haraer, IB" m•lhernatlc.•l•<o-no•r»c•); J&me~ Tlmolhv H•rrhon. 16181 Edge.,01er Lane IBS blolcfl<ol sc•ence•l; D•la Ven Whv Hetiel, 1.01 Mun>ter Drive I BS blclcgiCftl oclencell.; Che•l~r I-lope, Oln Wtfner Ave. IMO): S•lly Ann l<rue~er. 16~11 Weol<>O•I Orlve IBA M'!orv); Oa•in Paul Love. 40J Ten1h 51. IBA phy1ic•I• lr•n l(en. nel~ ~o..-lck, 10•31 S•rnoa Drive (BS b•CIO!lltal ,e;encts lscx;lel •tl•n<••I; Robert B. Poar1on, U'i'I Via Anoel,ne Oriv• 16A n1'v•lu), magn• cum l~ud•; Ren l<~v!n, Pe~r1on, S11 I M&n;rum O•ive (BA m&lhemallcs)J Peler 1Crli1o!ler Pe<lor•1n, 16Sll ICellOQ Clrclt (MS b1oloolce1 ''lenc•sl: P1ul Edgar Run9e. 1:191 Rembr•nd! Otlve !BS blolgglcol 1 <lent• t)' L&wr•nce A, Sh<!p, 115 Main SI, (MFA anl; Tnc<n•• "'"'"onv Spena110. 1qio1 Glouce1ter Lane l!lA ccmpor"lve <ulh11~1: 5;0.,•v .So1r~<, 1Mll M•redlln Dr.vi IMS •"oin~«rno ); Jane Greene Slllwofl, 9ll1 Be•mud~ Oriv• CBA E"o!1'h!1 loui•e Ole/'" Degree Gr a nte r! I !.1nda Lee Lingle of 425 tl1erri1n11c \Vay, Costa Mesa ! has been granted a bachelor of l science dC'gree in J une com· mence1nent ceremonies a t Soulhcrn Illinois Universlty•s l Carbondale cam pus . STABILIZED ALIGNMENT S YEAR OR 50,000 MILi OUARANTR f95 HEFIE:'S WHAT WE DD: A. H1lght and •t•bllll1tlo n. ill lnnoll cool spring Jl.f,blll- 1.,<, "' 1'21 AdluU torolon bar. B. Cll•c~ &f'd iet uml>I<, c11tor, to•ln 1nd 101·0~1. C. ChKk i nd edjuu 1tffflng 1K1or D. ChKk and adj Ult w11 .. 1 beer• ·lnlJI E, Te<t car lo• p•opotr ot••r~ng & VEAR OR &0,000 MILE AGREEMENT Th1 pur~h••• cf • •U· blliied 1ll gnmon1 •n· t lllft you 10 1 c1>m p!t1• ln•Ptctlon 11nC1 •llgn· mint r.11 rv ~.ooo mlf•. or 1• olten •• nec•11<y· with no c h••o-to• ttr. 10JtUng or •<ll uotm•l'l'I p t 1ny 1llgnmt nt engi•• which mav bt rt~ultod. Thl••gr1eon•ntv Id fer 5 ...... 50.00 "'"" r&gardl-ol pf•1nt m l IMO-, / liJIXl@'ilD@ liJ DIXI AUTO AIR CONDITIONER DELUXE 149aa l nstalla!iDn Available SAFETY SPORT 159aa AUTO AIR CONDITI ONER SERV ICE 5aa Plu1 freon trod pan1 ii needed Sll11DK waoo• Pill SIMDKIZE YllTI WU Oi'EN DAILY 10 to 10, SUN. 10 to 7 ~: For 0 \'9r ~ ~~,~E. A,, HS k est nown name of tire quality TRl ... D W!AR-OUT' GU 1111.11,,'Tf.r. • ,.,. r .. l< !"" 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WESTMINSTE" Harbor Boulevard at Wilson, 2200 Harbor Blvd. Beach Blvd. at Mcfadden, 15440 Beach Blvd. \ ' • 11 • • MondlY. June 28. 1971 President Backs Strom Thurmond WASHINGTON (UPI) 1 - Sen. Strom Thurmond aof¥- times denounces President Ni1on'll policies but the acf.. ministration is strongly back- ing his bid for re-e-lectlon in 1972. Thurmond, erstwhile "Dix- iecrat'' and Democrat turned Re:puhlican, insisl.s he's "an independent at heart." Yet he became Nixon's key southern campaigner in 1968. The 68-year-0ld South Caroli- nian has become a public sym- bol of the Presid ent 's "southern strategy." The Thurmond-Nixon rela- tions may be surrounded by m8lly myths. It is undeniable that it also is surrounded by .5ttming enigmas. Thurmond , in recent senate speeches, denounced Nixon's decision to ease restrictions on trade with Red China and for relaxing the U.S. position on arms control talks ·wilh the Soviet Union. Yet a forth:night later, Vice President Spiro T. Agaew. four cabinet members and their wivtS and 25 GOP senators showed up for a fund· rais ing. puty for Thurmond. Thurmond turns a s i d t recurring speculation that hi:11 1972 chances have been hurt by the shifti ng fortunes of the administration and i~ •·southern strategy." "I'm doing fine," he told UPJ. ''From reports I'm get- ting now I'm stronger than I've ever been in the state." Even with no announced Democratic opposition and no Republican foe in sight, Thur. mond nevertheless is running hard in his state and also iJ hard at work raising cam· paign money. Thurmond i5 well aware that a handful of Dcmocral5 are either interested in op- posing him or have been men- tioned as polenlial Senate aspirants. They include Reps. William J. B. Dorn, and James R. r.fahn. fonner Gov. Robert 1'1cNair, State Rep. Rex Carter, and Slate Democratic Chainnan Don Fowler. Thurmond has been linked Jn the public mind with Nix· on's southern policies since he t!ngineered key Dixie support for the President at the 1968 Republican N a t I o n a I Con· vention. lt is this fact that generates speculation that Thurmond is hurt at home by Nixon shift.s of policy from conservative to liberal, or when a Thurmond· aponsored appointment fails to gel CQnfirmed. Thunnond insists he did not request or receive any com· mitmenl from Nixon for his 1968 convention support, and did nol promise the President his future support. The record shows Thurmond has publicly opposed Nix.on OC· lions frequenlly. Lasl July, hi"; \\"arned the Presidenl in a Senate speech that the ad· ministration's leftward shifts on domeslic. policies might cost him voles in the future. That speech was triggered by Internal Revenue Com· missioner Randolph ThrO\\'er°s cut-off of tax exempl·sLalus for priv ate sch<>ols -the •·segregation academies" - Dean's Roll Names Four Four Orange Coast residenU ar• among !hi"; 42 studenU who are on the current Dean's Honor Roll at Santa Ana Qillege. Those on tht honor roll mu~t have a 3.0 or better grade point average, vdth 4.0 the hlghest achievable. Students from Orange Colul area are: Diana Brand and Janet K. Nero, Fount.ain Valley; Arthur Qintreras, HUhUngton Beach, and Joan J . Rowland, Laewia Niguel, Post Filled By Countian 'I'be commercial s l a b I e operaton of Orange County , • newly formtd department of the Farm Burtau, tw elected Del Johnton of the Lake Fortsl Saddle Cl:ub, El Toro, .. chairman. Another count)' I l I b 1 t oper1tor, Billy Warne of Pu<od< HW St>blos~ oru.tln, was elected .-JC&Chalrman. Tht new buruu department outlines Its purposes a • estabti.shlng communication with government, inuring high standards of commt.rcl1l 1table operation and uniting stable operators. that were. apringing up across the JOUth. Thrower, a. Georg'ian. later submitted his resignation and Thunnond announced recently that Nixon would nominate a iouth Carollnlah ta succeed 1'hrower -Attorney Johnnie M. Walters, a tax lawyer from GAenville, S. C. Nixon an- nounced Walters' selection June 21. Earl\er, Thurm ond an- nouaced Nixon would nominate former Rep. Albert Watson (R.S. C.} to the U. S. r.1ilitary Colirt of Appeals. But Senate llbetz.h m o u n t e d strong opposition and Nixon abandoned tho.te plans. "Liberals who are against conservatism plaY"ed (Watson) up as a racist," Thurmond said. ''I didn't thia.k Albert Watson i5 a racist." Despite the Wat.son affa ir and the Senate's rejection of Nixon's nomination of South Carolinian CI em en t S. Haynsworth to the Supreme Court, 38 other South Caroli· nians have been placed in Washington jobs by the ad- ministration. These range from J. Fred Buzhardt Jr., <lf McC.onnick as general CC1unsel for the Defense Department to Pat Jfoward Russell of Rock Hill as a White House .secretary. Also <ln Thurmond's cam- paign ammunition list are 90 Nixon appointments of South Carolinians to variow feder;il .advisory boards and com· missions and 84 appointmenls to federz.l jobs within South Carolina or the southern region. Prophes i es about Thurmond's future cropped up after Watson retired fro1n Congress to run for governor (with Thurmond's ell· dorsement) and was soundly defeated by Democratic Gov. John C. West. After that, Chainnan Clarke Reed of the Southern Slate Republican Leaders forged a new southern campaign policy for the future -one in l\'hich the race issue l\"Ould be droy· ped. The Americans for Constitu- tional Action. a conservative but non partisan group, mnde a survey of the implications of Watson's defeat and an· nounced this finding: "The ramifications of the 1970 gubernatorial elections will have far reaching effects into 1972. Early indications show that Sen. Slrom Thur· mond is in serious jeopardy of maintaining his Senate seal." The ACA went on to say that throughout the south it found portents that the key cam- paign issue of 1972 would be Nixon's "broken promises" on civil r ighls issues. Thurmond calmly brushed aside all this in his lnterview Yiith UPI. What about neighborhood schools, now buried under more busing decrees'? Said Thurmond, "the courts did that." He added that Nixon •·has never repudiated" his campaign statements opposing busing of pupils. "f"m cer!Nn the people understand that.'' Thurmond said. "J think most of them do ," \Vhat about Negro voters? "l"m not c hanginjl anything," Thurmond said. "I have a]Y:ay:i believed in equal opportunity. I voted again~l the civil righU bills because they are unconstitutional, not because of the race question.•· Thurmond believes he is the only southerner in Qingress who has a black staff member. And he says he donates his fees for speeches to a penona1 scholarship foun- dation available lo b o t h Negroes and whites. With no prospective o~ ponent in sight, Thurmond is busy campaig'ning more than a year in advance. Collecting an arsen.aJ. for combat if a challenger emerges, he says: "When the time comes we'll lay all this stuff out and let them see what has been ac· <:ompllshed.'' Hansen Elected To Academy Dr. Martin Edward Hansen, of Newport Beach, has been re-elected to active mem· bership In the American Academy of Gfneral Pr1ctlce. the national as.wclation of family doctors. To attain rHlection every lhrtre yean the physician must have successfully com· pleted 1511 hours of accredited postgraduate medical study. 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RIG. $4.99 - Kingsford" CHARCOAL BRIQUETS ''Only the Best For Our Customers I'' • Selecl highlan d hard- wood. • Smokeless-odorless. REG. 99c 24'' x 72'' ·CHAISE LOUNGE PAD • Button luft•d, bttter qualily, knife edg• pod • 2" thick -great for station wogons, pool or beach •Bright floral polltrn•d cov•r. Upstart Gorman. l(O's Laver WIMBLEDON. England tAP) Unseeded Tom Gorman of Seattle upset Rod Laver of Corona del Mar. the world's top player, 9-7, 8-6, 6-3. today ltl the (JUSrlerfJnals or lhe All-England Lawn tennis championships. It was the serond triumph in two weeks for lhe 25-year--old Gorman over Laver, the No. I seed here. Gorman had ousted !he red-haired Rockel In the Lond()n Grass CollJ'ls Championships Laver, four-time W i in bled on titleholder, never c11ptured Gorman's service and wa s consl.slenl!y under pressure. F\lean,,.,hile. Billie Jean King of Long Beacti gained lhe women's semifinals w11h a 2-6, 6-2. fi..2 triumph over f'ran- roise Durr of France. In other women 's riu;H'lerfinals, th ird- .seeded Evonne Goo!agong of Australia, downed Nancy Gunter of San Angelo, Tex., 6-3, 6-2. Halos, Minus Alex, R eturn to Big A A change in spirit, gaod pitching and good hiUing Sunday gave the Cahlornia Angels their first doubleheader sweep of tht season foll owing on lhe he els of Alex Johnson's suspension. The indefinite suspens ion uf lhl' moody, angry outfielder was unan1n1ously sup- ported by the pl ayers after general manager Dick \Val.i;h took 1he action A11gel Sl'1te iii!! G•m•• Oii kMPC. (/10! Jun• 29 A.nQ!I\ v\. KAn••• (lly June :1'I "'ngtl• ., K•n••• Cl1v June )(l AM•I• vs, l(•n••• ('1V J uly I Angtl~ v\. K•n•as (lty Julv 1 Angel• "'· O•~•and Julv J .A.ngrls "'· O•klaod Julv 4 Ang•I• vs. Oa~l•f>CI' Julv S Angels VJ. O..~llnd Saturday night. 1 II om_ 1 ~s o "'· 1 SSon', I IS om, I SS<> m. 7·5! "·"' ~.55 om. 5 !5 ~ m. The Angels responded by halting Chicago's six-gan1e "'inning s1reak with 2·1 and 12·3 victories. Tonight 1hey're back in the fri endls r~) confines of Anaheim Stadium to face Kansas City's wilting Royal s. ""Yes, there was a difference in spirit.'' said manager Lcrty Phillips. '"The players realized Lhe tension there \.\'as when a fellow wasn't giving his best and it had a tendency lo ruh nH. This could be the turning pcint for us." Walsh. calling Johnson a Jekyll and Hyde. said he had no othe r choice than to w spend Johnson for his lack nf hustle. "We took the action after CQOsiderable thought." s;1id W.il sh ... \\"c certainly didn't want to suspend the American League batting champion but had no oilier course. "I talked lo him man\· limes bu\ it didn't do any good."' :said. Wal sh. '"\Vhcn rd talk to him he'd promise he'd go out and do the things expected of him. but once he got on the field he"d change just like " Jekyll 11nd Hyde. "Sure , Y.'I:' could have traded him but it ls unethica l lo trade a pla.ver ,..,.ilh a physical ailment Rnd we couldn't trade. Alex and promise another team he v.'ould perform.'' Phillips. revealing th;il .Johnson h;:id been given writtc>n notific:ition .June tfi, the dav following U1e tr;id ing de;:irll 1nc, that if.hr didn·l produce his hes! efforts, disciplinary ;ictinn \voukl l:ie t;iken. said ''l feel it's the only thing lhat could he done under the situation that existed." Shortstop Jim Fregosi. the team·s p!ayer representativc. concurred. '"A man gets paid to pla,v and hustle is part nr the game. lf you don't hustle. you shouldn't get paid. He was given every opportunity." '"ll was unfortunate for hi1n and the hal l club but the club had no ot her cholcl',"' said outfielder Tony Conigliaro, "The club gave hin1 every opportunity. '"J'\'C talked lo hun ror hours and I like the man but he had inner hatreds which \\'ere so intense that he simply couldn't pcrforn1 ." Pilcher Rudy Ma y, the on!y other An1er1can bl:ick on the team besides Johnson, upheld the club's ac!ion even <1fter admitting that he once asked Johnson '"Hey, ~1an, lo<1n me two grand" and Johnson had replied •·Wait until I cash a check tomorrow.'' ··'l"o mailer \vho you play for or y,fiat uniform you \\'car.'" said Jl.1ay. '"You 01ve it 10 Uie !;ins, but mosl of all to )'Ourself, to hustle." l\cn r-.i c!\tullen. another of .Johnson·~ l;'an1n1 ati:?s 5<1id "He's a valuable pro- f)('rty and a good ball player but the ac- tion had to be taken. Nobod y can put oul one hundred percent all !he lirne , but they should try. When you're pulling out your best and lhcn see so n1ebody else not. doing so, it \Vrec ks .vour confidence and de~lroys your morale.'' Johnson prrsurn:ibly had gone lo his hon1e in Detroit. Johnson's only apparent rccour~c now is to ;ippeal his c:ise to basrball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn if he is nol reinstated \\'ithin 10 days or possibly seek the aid of Mar\"in Miller, executive director of the Jl..fajor League Baseball Players' Association. SECOND GAME ANGELS CHICAGO .. h .... .. • h <Iii .O.Klm•r. 1n • , ' R•<h•rCI. n ' ' ' ' C.on•~•••· 11 ' ' • • s'"""'· cl ' • • • 1 C0<1gl•o. n ' ' ' • Mcl(mny. 111 • • • S~c~r " ' • • Mellon, Jo • • • S1eJ>hn•~. c ' • • • Reoc~unl. II • • • • (<>WAn. pn ' • • • ( Moy, Ill ' ' ' • MC)>t>. < ' ' • ' " W•lhAn1'. r! • ' ' ' McM~l!en. lb ' ' • e·n~mon, c ' • ' • l!ePoz, cl I ' ' l"<or Ion, p ' • • • 0"6roen." • ' • Fcrslo•. <> • • • • I! C•••• ' • • • """"'" '·" I • • • ' F •lher. p • • • l<e~·~~. c • • • • M•YO. p~ • • • • """ o 11 n 11 10101 " ' ' ' ll n9~I• ... . " Ji 0 -11 '"·<~00 ... .. , I 0 0-' ,_, M•V 1. Ho•I"' OP-Ar>gol• 7, L08-An9e" '· cnic •Q~ 1 '" R•<'•rd. McMu>len, 0 "6''"" ,._ "'""'"' >-'R-R~l>OI ll!. w w111!1m• (J\, Mon i•I, M<Mu<i•~ 110 I, R•c~~·a II). S-McMylltn. " ' • .. .. " ' Cl~r~ IW J,O) ' • ' ' • • ' ( .,~,. ' ' • • ' ' l"<Crl..., !l. 1·!1 ' • • ' ' ' FO••'"' ' " , ' , • ' Pert•now;~o I I 1 , ' ' • , l(coltV " ' ' • • • , ~•v•-E F"n"' WP-0! (la•~. T-2.<0 A-2l 10Q. Wo111e11's Open Winner Brain I-le1norrha ge Opens Doo1· for Cliamp ERIE . P11 . (AP\ -Don Carner. n( alight. build but str?n~ will, ":1<1dc two major decisions while recovenng fr~m brain hemorrhaite years a1to -to ret ire and to put his wife on !he pro to1~r. "I figured ou1 just how n1u~h ll cost t.o live ;ind decided working JUSt y,•;asn t wnrth any more," said the husband or the U.S. 'Vomen's Open champion from Lake Worth . Fla. "The imporlanl thing was to f_urthcr her career." he said of Jo Anne, his wife of sL-c,years who parred lhe Kahk.,.,·a Club course .,.,·\th a 2811 to win the $J.OOO top Open prize by sevrn strokes Sunda~·· '.'It got to the point where .. shc was losing 1n- teresl as an amateur . . So Carner shed mos! of his bu~1ness in· (crests . ex cept for some real est;i!c Rnd billboard holdings 11nd a par·61'1 J,?.olf course in Ma ssachusctls. and startcrl the (0,000-mile·a-year cross counlry tr~k with a car pulling a 31-fool lu:ii.ur y trailer the Carner~ call home. "JoAnne alway~ harl the ability but nril the conridence,'' he ~:ild of 11.i~ 32·ycat-old wife y,•ho Is five-time U.S. Amateur cha~pion. 1']'ve tried to build _it up. . "Winning this tournament 1s the ht!?· gest ego booster in the wor\d for her." 111drled the man who is older than the champion, but declines lo discu!>! by how much. "I can beat her i;it times,'' s11id Camer. a teaching profession11l \tt·ho met JoAnne ln 1962 when they were paired for 11 mir· ed-double:it amateur tourney. ''I can be11t her lour or five limes In a row. then I hit & slrinli( of 1~ when 1 ct1n"l. "She's the longest driYer on the tour - f:\•en the others girls admit that. She sets 1111 her strenglh from her legs. She's 11.s weak es 11 klllen In lhe arms. She '!I !llUl>- bom and thar1 what makes her R win· ner." U,I Ttltl>~tlt JOANNE CARNER SHOWS IRE Gorman serve<t consistently well, mov- ed swiftly and hit a stream of fluent backhands. Laver looked like an ex-champion. Oc- casionally he hit the kind or masterly strokes that made him king of Wimb.ledon in 1961. 1962. 1968 and 1969. But at other times he served double faults ln the high wind and was for ced in- to volleying and other errors as c:orman angled his shots and changed the direc-· Uon of play. Gorman Ill's\ began to put the squeeze on Laver in the 10th game of lhe first set. 111 that game, w1Ul Laver serving, the American had six set points but wu unable lo capitalize on them. In Uie course of that game Gorman twice lobbed Laver and had the Australian scrambling backwards and niissing y,·ith smashes. (Set LAVE.Tl, Page %2 1 UI'! Ttlroholt Reve11g e I s S1veet }louston's Roger llletzger is upended by San Francisco's Ken Hender- son in Sunday's game after Metzger had earlier victimized Hender· son on a double play. 11ouston 'von the game, 5·2. Making A1nerican Team Jazzes Up CdM Girl r.losl IB·.vear-0lrl girls are prohabl.v just getting our. of high school. dreaming about travel anrl college or worrying about what they are !?Oing to do. One exception. hnwever, is Kim An Iese~·. a gal ;il"•ays on the jump and a recent graduate o[ Corona del ~1;:ir High. Whi le some gals v.·ould be dazzled hv :i nt'w formal , l\im 's ryes are sparkling o\·cr her latPst ;iddit1on to her personal e lf.NH WHIT• --- WHITE WA S H ----- wardrobe -a jcr~cy with leH.ers USA printed on 1he back . . That garment symbolizes the bcg1nninl{ nf y,·hal ~outd be a path to L·he Olyn1pic (;an1c.!i nci<t ye!lr in ~1 unich. It ml'ans she has won a berth on the Uni ts;d _Stales track team which w1!1 meet R.ti'.c;.~1a and the world all·stars this weekend in &>rkrlf'y. She will be jumping Saturday against a :itl!'llar rield. including veleran Willye Wh ite of the U.S. (21-2). Russian aces Helen;i R1nga (20·101/z). Alla Smirnova !20-101 <1nd the Australian combo or Diane Pease !20-814) and Yvonne Sanders (20-5 l. Kim's best is 20-J·'l. However, her coach. Dave Rodda, believes she is ready 10 get off a 21.fnot.er and Kim is so self·confidenl she believes !he world record of 22.5 b within her gra~p. She"s jumped 21-5 In prac!ice anrl ha11 made a steady improvemenl since she took her first competitive leap nine months ago. The 5-7 m is~ h;is SP! the Olympie Games as her pcrsunal goa! ;ind admit.CJ that making the spor1s classic is the u!tirnRle for ::in athlet". Tn11. if she m::ikes it. she 'd br picking up where her fathe r Dick left ~)rr 1!1 yr;irs ;ign. Hr pulled a hamstring n1usclc 1\1.'() \1·eck.c; bffore thr lri11I~ ;inrl mi!lsrd ;in almt)st rertain gold medal in the I!() 1neter high hurdles. l\irn"c; proitrc~c; in th!' long jump h;is hecn f;:in1a c;t1c. She st:irtrrl 1ump1ni: a1 \B frrt ;ind has rvol\"rd in10 ;i stf'ady 2fl... footer Yr! ~he sli!J h11s rno1n for 1m- prn1'f'n1cnt In lf'r•hn1quc :ind <"Ondilioning. ~hr re1'ls .c;he h;1s 1hr !ool.c; for gc!ting nff ;i wortrl rrt·nrrl IC.1 j) -hu1 she"s the kinrl or girl v.'hn v;;int.c; to reach that pl;ilcau 11nl1 lhen stay tl1crr. ··1 drin't wanr to h;i vr onr big jump Anrl lhrn nc.v1•r dn it :iga1n," shr s:ivs. "Once J break the 1Yorld record I w;int'to know I c;in do i! agai n."' Kim is an in1paticnt ):lirl, sh(' says. anrl )X'rhaps that"s onf' vf the al!ributcs that \\'Ill ca rr)' her lo J\1unich in '72. Shf' pl:ins on sta ying nuL nr sehonl next year to concentrate on th e lnni.i jump. Rodda helicves Kim is reariy to surpass 21 feel lhis week against thf' Russians and he concurs that the world record is wl!hin her pctenlial. "She ha:it the physical attributes and the confidenC'e, /\nd she's a loose com- pctilor. which al.so serves to her ad- van tage. Sometimes you'd look at her at 11 big meet and get the impression she doesn't {'arc about the event. But I guarantee you she does,'' Rodda states. Kim feels that representing her country an.d doing lhe best she can 11re mighty big Uung.~. And she 'll have her fir~t shot at doing those thin~~ Sa turdny when !!he jump!! in· to action 11gaJnst the Soviet Union and the world all·stars. Donohue, U 11 ser s MOUNT POCONO. Pa. I AP) Tigerish Mark Donohue and the fabulou~ Unser brothers, Bobby and Al. head 11 field of 3.1 starter;s for the inaugura l Schaefer 500 mile championship sulo race that old pro .Joe l.eonard says will be 1t "survival of lhe fi!test." The lin eup for the $430,000 "In· tt ianapolis of The Ea~l" schedul~d for Ju. ly 3, was completed In final limr. tnals Sunday at the new $6 mill ion Pocono Jnlematlonal Raceway. Donohue. the 32.year..old Brow n Universi!v 11lumnus whose baby fa ce and easy.going manners belle hi.~ exploit~ on the !rack. put his Roger Penske-owned MeLaren on thl! pale at a 1fl.mlle average speed of 172.393 miles per hour. Hi~ fas! lap of 172.967 m p.h. \l.'llf ~erve AS lht track's 2.5 mlle st11ndord. though mo~! driver.~ say it may be yeitrs before anybody el!le equal.~ II . ' Robby Unser. olrlesl of Mom Unser'! driving ~ons, put together four laps at Monda;', Junt 28, 1971 DW.V PILOT JJ at Wi1nbledon Cleveland Vi ctor Mitchell Pro ves Golf Is f or Bird s Cl.EVELANI) tAP) -•·There was pressure all the way," Bobby Mitchell said after scoring a seven stroke triumph in the $150,000 Cleveland Open, his first victory in six years on the pro golf tour. ro.11tchell, a b;:ild1ng 28-year--old and a pro since he was a J5.year-0ld RSSistant in a Danville. Va . shop. put the he to the apparent case of his elus11•e first y,•10. ··1 kept think ing ahout la!it year,'' t.1itchtll dra\\led. ··rt kept going through n)y mind . I couldn"t shake it. I JUSt didn't y,•ant lo do y,•hat r did !ht'!l." lie was r~fcrring lo the 1970 Az!ll ca Open when -as !'lunday -he 11•f'11t into Ille final round wllh a four stroke lead - then fin ishe d second after threr-pul\1ng the fi nal three greens. This time ii wasn·t even close. J\1ilchcll birdied the fi rs t two holt-s from 12 feet , almost scored an ace with ;in eight iron on 1he third hole. lappe d it in ""and kind of left them behind ." he grinned. J\-litchell. El husky, easy-going guy. h.id 11 final round 65. si x under p;ir on !he n1uggy-hol Beechmnnt Country Cuub course, a superbly conditioned layout In the Cleveland suburbs. His 72 hole total of 262 was a fanta~tic t•edl"o "'"'"' •nd mnMV wonn.no• Sul\dAv 111 II>• 11.IO.OOO Cl•v•I~"" OPf.n golf 1ourn•m..,.1 Bollbv Ml1<"•1f UO.OOD M-6•·61·6!---?61 Cller lt• COOd• 111.100 el 17-67·~-169 eruc• Cr1mo!on 110.~~ 6•·M·61-6•-n o Phil ~<>lit'' $e.700 6•·61·61·61 n 1 Jor .. McG•t 10.100 67-119·6'·61-111 J•"V H•M« M,10Q 611 IO•l<\·61-UI G•n• l1111 .. 14.100 66·61.J0.6! '1? Siiiy Co'""' 14.llll 67..oi•·611·69-71J D•n Siie•\ 1•.131 6•·61 ll·ll~Ul llollb• Col• U,600 6•·6!·1010-71• Dt•n• 8trn6n JJ,600 M·U·61·10 Ui e ruc• D•vlln "·~•l II M!-61·6•-us G•• e,. ...... 1'1.!IJ u 10.m-·• ?IS Jonnny Pnl! 1?.llJ 70·611·10·61 '11 Iler! 'l";nt•• li!IJ 1•6!·10·66-?li 1-l•I• Irwin 17.l?I 6•·•• 11 -61 11~ 6 <11 G•rr•'I 11,:111 61 11 66·11-?I~ G•nrgr "'"""' 11,111 Mn 10·69 n 1 6t ll L.~nn 11.ill t• II IQ 61 111 llol> Smf!h 1•.lll 6• ~• 61 ll '11 l om Sh•w 11 I ll &9 ~/.IG-/1 11' 801> Murphy 11 .17! J'll /1).10.61 111 llod Curl l l.111 "' 10 11-66 -111 Mo""n RudOIPll 11.\11 l>ll·li>-6! 1l 111 Howlo JohnJ"" II,,/! o•~l/•6i. ?II eD~bv N•C~DI• 11,111 69-IO.•• 09· 71'1 J•..., J~m•••on il.110 110•0•-o• 171 CllOrl•• ~ch•D"<I•• II !IC 11'" IG-6' '11 Rob c.o~I~• 191.6 l*ll-6117-ll'f L~fn' Whll~ JOj,6 11 •l·n 09 7/t <~· Chi ~odrl11uoz 501'6 o•·6'·6' n .)ff !!oil Wvnn u~ n .,•.61·11-219 Do" Jonu•" 1111' 1011·61·11-71111 Ltt ltt•ln<> Wt 71>-t8·1111-llll ' JIM SE YMOUR Sey mour N am cd 1'o U.S. Sc111ad EUG l~NE, Ore.. -Frirmrr lluntinglnn Beach High anrl Colden We.qt star J11n Sevmour will ('nmpetP. in the U.S.-llu.~sitin tr.1f'k :ind rteld niert thi.~ wcckcnrl and the Pan Amrrican G.imrs l;1!cr !his sum· mer after 11 bl1ster1n,i:: t1n1e of !"tO O in !he 440 intermediate hurdles in the Nationa l AA U meet Saturday Seymour finished third In the r:ice won by Ralph Mann of the Southern Ca lifornia Stride.rs in 49.3. Wes W1tl iam.c; of the San Diego Track Club was second, also in 49 .1. Seymour 11nd Willia ms will represen t the U.S this weekend at R<'rkeley against the Ru ssians. Mann 1~ passing JIP the Rus.c;ia n meel, bul will compete with Seymour in the Pan./\m arfa1r later this llumrner In Cali, Colombia . The 50.0 lime was the fa stest ev<'r pos!e.d by Seyn1our. who competed for the Universi1y of Washington last season and rr.prcsen1cd rhe Husky Spike Club in the weekend AAU mee t. M11nn's lime eq-.oted 1hf' listed world mark, but he .still hlls a 48.8 pending. 22 under par - on rounds of 66, &4 , 67, &5 -and was the second lowesl wirutinl total in the last !5 years on the lour. .. Jl.1astcrs chan1p1on Charles Coody was a distant sceond at 269. seven strokes back and never really 111 contention, Coody had ;i final round 68. Australian veteran Bruce Cran1ptoo, Mitchell 's playing partner, was next with a 69 for :!70. .Jerry Heard, Jerry r-.1cGee and PhJI Hodgers fo[loy,•ed al 271. Heard had 11 67 w1th 1\1L'Gce and Rogers n1all'h1ng 68s. L'n1 led States Open Champion Lee Tre1•1no. ne.ver really a factor , had a fln al 71 and W<1s 18 slrnkes away al 280. /\ f t e r Mitl'l1cll 's birdie-birdie-birdie burst off the first lee there really wasn 'L any doubt. He finished wi!h the best round of the day. an extremely un usual performance by a man leading going into the fin;il round , "I thou_i:ht I could pl11y like r did the other three days,'' J\1i\chell said, "[ w;isn 't trying to protect. or anything, I jusl wanted to go out there and play good ." He did. Wills Playing Major Role l11LA Surge CH ICAGO (A P) -If the Lo~ Angeles I:>oclgers cat ch the San Francisco Giants before the July 13 All.Star J:an1e, it'll pro- bably l"l'~ldt from steady hitting and pi!L'hing -and the !ip1ril of Maury Wills. The 38-ye ar·old \Vil!s was the ca tal yst or his team 's 7·2 triumph Sunday over San Diego al Dodger Stad ium. The veteran shortstop v.·enl hitless i" fi\"e tt'ips to the plate Sunday bllt his 111anager, \Vall Abton. t.'ited his service Saturday night in the Oodgers' marathon doubleheader sweep over the Padres. The J)od~crs won the opener of Saturday·.~ twinbill, 4·2, and the second ~arne went 13 inning.~ before Rich Alten ·s ninth ho1ne run of the season gave Los Angeles its 4.3 victory 15 n1inutes before- 111idnighl. iViJ!s had four hits and ll'il.~ sprctacular tlri defense in th;i! second game, which he con.~idcred of ullirnate importance with a da.v gaine following sul'h a Jeng!hy effort. •·Sure, ! was t1rrd during thaL second gan1c ju.s! like evC'ryb(1dy fist•. but I want to be tl1e r111e veteran who doesn·l show il." he $aid. "If the kids look up to nie, and I hope thi:y dn, I want them to .~ee a man who c~n pJ;i y Y.'ith as much enthusiasm in lhe 13th 1nnu1g as in the first. "\Ve los l lhal. Y.'e may lose today . We may Lhen go on the trip with our heads down." Said Alsl on or 'Vills: "He's just been great, and I \Yant hun to play as many ol lhe next !5 gan1es as he can."' Sunday·s \"lttory moved the Dodge rs tn .,.,·1th1n 6'1 gan1c~ or front ·running San Fr:inciscn In the National League \\'e.~t. The hr~t of lhe 15 gt1mes be.fore tbe ll ll·Slar hrra~ "'llS hPre tr1day against !he tuhs. Al ll0wn1 ng. 8·4. fal"cd the (ubs' r.1 111 Parpa.~. 'i·7, 111 the opi·ner of an 1•1,i:hl ·,i:an1c road trip !hat winds up with a 11a1 r against the Ct1;ints 111 San l"rancisco. ··No Orie g;in1e or lr1p rs any 111ore im· por1,1n t 1h11n another," Al ston said. "OOt these nrxt l5 g;1n1es cou ld be pivot.11." The Dodgers. sl1 1J high frorn thf! (lr1ublcheader sweep, banged out 11 l11ts to support the four.hit pitchinl( of Don 5ul- lon . Allen hit his 10th hon1er, Billy Buckner nnd Su!!on drove in 1wo nJn!C rac-h ;ind \\'illie Vavis slugged two slngles ancl ;i double to boost hi.c; al'erage to .3.17, Tile victory was the.. Dodgers' 12th In their last 17 games and gave them a 7-4 home stand. SA H OlEGO DOOG•tl .. • h •01 .. • ' "' H•rrt•"<IOI. u • ' ' w;11,," , • • • C•mo~ll, 111 • • • • C••wlc•d. II • ' > M"'""· 111 ' • • • W °"~•I• Cl ' • G•""" er • • • • II -11 ..... lb • ' • ColtM<•!. lb ' ' • • w o.,~,,, 111 • ' ' l••, I( ' • ' ' Sim•. c • • • 0 llrcw"· ti ' • • • r.r1>1<w1•1. Jb • • • Sp•e/IC, lf ' • • • Bu<.-no•. rl I ' ' I ArlC", C ' ' ' • Su!!Of'I," • ' ' P"O•b.,., P • • • • !h•vo. p11 ' • ' • CD(lmb•• o • • • • S,.M, P'I • • • • o l(•llev." • • • • Tnl•I " , ' Toltl " ' " 1 S•n O,.qo " . . " 000 -J God~··· ... ., . 1 0 . -1 E-Comobell, H"n~rldlr. 01'-DodQtr• ' LOii-~ ... Olt<lo '· Otrdo•" .. 11!-ll•r!r:in, Sulton, w, O•vll, i-<11-11 Alie" l!Ol 58-W, OAVll " ' • " .. " Ph<><0bu• (L. l-1) • • ' • ' ' Cor:imb\ , ' ' ' • • 0 O("l•Y ' • • • • ' suno" IW, .1•'1 • ' • ' • WP -P~M. 1'9-51m,, l -1 Of . .. -11,1.IJ. B e ad S OO F i e ld 171.847 m.p.h. lo get the mlddlt spot In the fronl row in Dan Gurney's Oll't0n11e- E11gle. lie al50 had a IRp 11t 172-plu~ and Rd· milted "anything beyond that takes real guts." /\I Uns<'r. who~e two i;tr11ighl In- dianapolis triumph~ and 1$ championship w1n.!i h11ve brouli(h l him $75(),000 in pn7,e monr.v in le:ss than two yea rs. qu11llf ied his Johnny L1RhtnlnR Spectal at 170.365 to ga in the oulJJide berth. The second row will be 1nchor!d by Leonard , a 36-year..old veteran rrom Sa" Jose. Calif., who was clocked al 189 533, ~f11rio Andretti, lhe local (avorite rrom nearby Naiareth. Pa., and plucky llttle Gordon Johnrock, of Ml. Pleasant, Mich. The course, c11rved out of a 1,02.-,..acr• former spinach field in the scenic Pocono Mountains, has drawn praise from only a few and a mixture nf ttwt and crlttc:lsm from many. I I ' ·-· , Mon(l,tiy, Jul'lt 28, 1971 • .. .... ~ ... t> (' EV Wins 4 Games; Moves Into Top Spot. FoWltain VeJlt y's Americ an J.eglon Junior baMball team won four gamts -OYer lhe "''ttktnd and u a re.11ull mov- td into a tie for first place in the 29Lh District's National League standings. ln the first game ol a schtdul- ed doub ltbl!'ader and then turned in their unifcrms tor lhi!' balanct of Ute year. The .11econd Satu.rday lilt was forfeited aloog ~·ith a Sunday ga me with Anaheim- Kohne. \\'e1t.minster dropped a peir of games to PlaC'entla Satur· day. 10·2 and 8-0, bu t defeated Anahtim·Pl!'arson Sunday, 3-1. innings and settled down in the rinal two frames to gil'e Foun· taln \'al!ey lls secOnd straight one·run derision. In Swiday's action. fount?~n Valley tra!led 1-0 in the ninth inniug nF the 11pent-r. \\'ith on e away SIPve ~l11ehell ll'RS hit by a pilch and c:ary Varne y bunted for a base hit to put t w<1 runners on base . ~RT BEACH'S _ROY EMERSON FALLS DOWN AFTER RETURNING SHOT TO STAN SMITH IN WIMBLEDON TENNIS MATCH. F'ountain Valley Io pp I e d Santa Ana at home Saturd?.y, 14-4 and $-U. Sunday at La Quinta. Fountain V a 11 t y defeated the home \eazn, 2-l and 5-4 lo bring its season record to 10-2. identical Lo that of lhe FUilerton Dodger~. Coach (i t n e Marinacci's F'ountain Valley team. behind lhe strong pitching of Oa1•e Lynch and SteYe Fox. posted rour important yJctor ies. After !ht second au! \11/l s rceorded. S!e\·e Fnlz ca1ne through \1·i1h a iwo·Strl kP tn· p\p 10 right t•rn ter fiel d lo bring lht l\IO runs <icros..~. ~ain No Problem ,, .'for Distance Ace 3 ·' it:UGE:\'E. Ore. (APl -Two "?rid records hnd already ~n cJ;iimed whrn thrrt ·!1mr ccp1eg1atc n1ile chan1pinn .\l;ir- LY' Liquori look ;:iin1 on the AOialeur Athletic Union's na· tional title. It \\'as ra1n1ng. hut th:it dii:ln't bothflr Liquori. tht' VU!ano\'a star running for the Ntw York Athlt'tic Clull. "linfortunatt'I\', the rain n1akes you a l11ilt· 11,e hl. bul 1! doesn't bother \Oll ! h ;1 t mu ch.·• he J><l!d .:Fntlr ol Ill\' f:i stest tim~.~ h:ive eiUter been 1n the r;:iin Qr right afier, so I don'! mind ." Liquori . \\ho fi nis hed !l11rd in las! yrar"s AAU nu·et. had hts 11 ay this lime. v.·1nn1ng in 3-56 5. "f'l"e ff'I! i::orl<.l lht' l;t-.! l '!!ll- ple of wrek~."' said l.1qunr1. \\"ho said he w;:is look ine; forv•ard 10 111ccting world record.holder Jirn rl~;un again th.is yr-ar prollahly in EuropP. Ryun. v•ho set the world mark of 3:51 I 1n 1007. s;it out the AA U met'1 with ha1· fpvrr. Liquori is he<1dt•d fof Eur0pt" and "'·ill pass up 1he l 'n11Prl S\atl:'s' meet 11nlh !he Sn11r1 tjnion and a \\'f)rld ;ii! st:ir !earn tlus 11 t•f'kend 1 n Berke le~· J1011·e1er. the A tt) e r i i·a n team 11·i1J 1nclude Hod \1 1!burn ol Southern l'n1\'er~111 11hu set a \\'oriel 1nark of 13 0 1n a semifinal hf'al of !ht 120·\·ard hi,l!'h hurdles. c!ipfl!ng ·two- !enlhs nr a srt'ond off 1he rnark first S«I bv 1'1;irlin Lauer of \\"est (;e.r1;any 111 1959. AAU official!> s:iid 111ev hof'('d 440 .:,printer .lohn S111ith or UCLA wou!d :\lso cornpett· in the Ber~r-ley rncr1 . 11 h1rh O!)f'ns Frida~· Smith .<m:ipped bl" (110-1rn1h~ of a second thr ll'orld 1nark of 44 7 sel h.\' C'11 r1is ~li!l ~ in 191i9. \\'avne Collet t. a tramn1a1e nf Smi th ror L'Cl.A 's Xr 'A rhamp1ons, equalled ~hlls' mnrk. "\\'r f1gurrd it 11·:1~ !in1e for nnr of u~ 111 ~lep 1101111 and ~rr th.ii rernrd Onr nr u~ 11:1~ £<11ne to J!t>1 ii b1..1t I didn't ~1•111 \\ho.· Smith ~:i u! An Amrrit·;ui rrcnril fell in !hr 3 (ll~rnrt"> ~1r1·pll·1·h;1•e a~ Sid Sink nf Bn11 !1ng l1rt'rn 10ti1n1 ;:ind \liki• \1.1ntr1 ,11H! 51f'I,. S:t\';lf;f' ,,r !h11 flrr.1tnn Trark f"lul• al l curp;-.<•rd 1111' R .J() 6 mark t11·ld b1 1;r-.·r~e )'(•llO!I' for r-.tan ley and 8·29.S for Sav&'ge. ··1 11 :1~ as we ll prepared n1e11!ally as r1e e1·er been, hut I 11iis still real scared b{"fore tile race," Sink said. '"Thf're 11ere so many good men 111 it. I knew. ~l_v main problem is that I have to keep from psyching myself ouL " F'rank Shorter, who Jost the three.mile to Oregon's sensa- tional Steve Prefol)taine. the lllU·lllne NCAA ch;1111pion , came back 111 the six-mile to \\'in the !itle hf' shared last year with teammate J ack Bacheler or the Florida TrN:k Club. Shortl'r '.I On the six-1n lle in 27;':!7.'! and said later he 11·uilld :1t1empt a rare do11hlP. in the 5.UOU and 10.000 meters. a! !hr Pan Arnerica n Carnes l;iter this SLlmmer 10 Cali , Colorn· bia. Seve11 nieel reeords also fel l lluring !hf' lwo-Oa\' cham· pionships at the Uni~'er~1!v of Orrgnn '!' Ila.\'\\ :>.rd F' i r ·1 d , 11 herc inure rhan 211 .oou persons witnessed thi' l!l e1 rnts. The Ar\U late Sa1urday night those its 1e11111 ,,, reprt>sent the U.S 111 011· Berkele1 rn re1 The lt';,111 11 ill inrlu.Ut> llr. Del :-1n o ~1Pri"etht'r or the Ualt11norf' (Jl~·rnpil' L'lub. the 28-yea r~lrl hcmatolug1sl 11ho won !ht• tOll 1n a wh1d-aldC'd nine ~conds fl at. and Karl Salb of Kan!laS Univers1 1~·. who oLL.~!ed \l'Orld ri>t'nrd·holdi>r Randi· f\.tatson <Jf thf' Tf'.1:;-i.s Stride.rs wit h a t(l~S of 6i·2·1~ in the ~hotpuL Crahhc Nail s 2 S wi1n Evenl.s LOS A.\'G ELES fAPl Clarenrr "Bu.~ter" Crabbe. 1!1.1'.!: tlly1npic chan1pion who qu11 compelitive swimming to Ix· Flash (;ordon and T.irzan in thr mo1·ies. dominated the '\Prnnd ;H111ual Senior Sports lnternatiflnal s11·im n1 e et 11hich 11"ound up Sunda1· The 6.J ~t>ar..ild Crabhe 11·on l\l n r\"enis Niel ancho red a 1, inn in~ rt'lar Sunda1· aftr r hrr.1kinE: b1·· 1nnr(' "1h;;n 11 n·1u1ute !hr 'l'Jrld rrcnn! f,,r n11•11 a1;(l·1! 1)(1.1i4 :"11turd;11. fi :r1 I in 1hr 400·mt'tcr free· OCCCrew Plagued By Rain t!ENLEY. Eng! a nd - Orllngt' Coast College is ooe of 1T1<1re than 200 crell's having problems wit h the ltiver Than1es as the Roya l Henley Regatta nears. Ilea\')' rain.'! have 1nade the usually placld Thames a fast flo\l·ing menace \\'hich has t\\·ice npped the landing stages fro1n their moorings and put the normally hig h and dry catwalk to the press barge under water. "Th<'S(' 11· a t e rs certainly S\l'lrl around." said Orange Coast roach Dave Grant. "ll t·reates al l sorts of problen1s lor steering. and vou have lo keep a sharp watch out for the plc:isure laLinches or you can ~et run down." The Orange Coast crew ar- ri\'ed Friday in Henley and has bef'll working oul daily in prepflration fo r \V ednesday's ~t:irt of racing. Orange Coast Is the on ly juninr college in lhe Uniled Stales partk·ipating in the I lenle.v Hegatta. R11"l'r authorities h a Ye aj!rl-ed to a request b~· regatta of!ici.als to open \\'ide sl uiee ~all'S high up on the Thames in a bid lo speed the nood "':ilers beyond llenley. "The \l':-.tcr takl's four days lo gel by Henley from higher up r\l'er," said an official. '"l'he problem is we can on ly speed it up a little or we will have really severe flooding." fl egatl11 staff kept a 1radi· llonal stiff upper lip bu! a sfXlk{'Smiin 1'aid it was "a !ricky battle" to keep ahead 1n lh<' mopping up operations, Unless the lasr flowing "'aters ha1•e s«ttled h y \Vcdnesday's start of raci ng. therf' could be n1any up!\el resulL~. The uneven current.'! 1n flood conditions make one sir1P of the rh·er up 1o three tc11gt.h~ faster over the ont mill' :>JO ~·ard course. To try lo makt things more equal, officials 11 I Io""' e ct \\"eekend preliminarv races to takr pl11ce ol'er 2.000 meter~~ an unprt'('edente<l move in this tr;;d1tinn bound affair. Earlv tod.1\' II II;'\~ ~!111 pr.11ring r.1111. an•I 11 nsf'llied 11r;1ll1"r 11i1tl1 hea1·1· ~ho"'ers \v:-1s lorecasl l<.>r the TI1ames LAVER STAGGERED ... tContinutd from Page ZI) Also in the quarters \\'ill be Pasadena's Stan SrniU1 against Onny Parun: John Newcomb vs Colin Dibley and Cliff Richey against Ken Rosewall. Smith and Parun are in the same bracket as Laver. in the Army, display~ the kind of fonn in lhe third 3t'l which has made him the bookies' third choice al 7-1. Mission Viejo lost a Satur· day decision to Sonora, 9-:>, and Sunday was lhe vict im of a 9-0 setback at the hands of Anaheim Heffron . San Clf'menle had only a single \l'eekend gamt schedul- ed Saturday and litored early lo po6t a 5-4 ~·in over Yi.~iling La Qu int;i . The Harbor Dod gers, beset \\'ilh troubles all season, top- pled Fullerton Saturday, S.4, Lynch worked five innings in the 14-4 rout of Santa Ana Sa!urda.v. giY1ng up <lne run. Sunday hr 11ent a fu ll nine in- nings, striking out 11 and giY- ing up but a single ta lly. F'ox pitched a h"'(Thitter Saturday in posting a :>-O shutout and had n in e strikeouts in seYe11 innings. Sunday he worked the full oin~ Smith has had an easy draw, disposing of rarely heatd of players and not dropping a se t until Emerson took the first 5el Saturday. Smith said the gusty wind forced him to alter his game. "I like to bang in my first serYice but the wind made my throw-up diff icult Anyway. I'm pleased \l'ith the result, although it was a funny kind of malch." Ontario Bowler Seeks Smith, o 24-year-0ld private After a sloppy slarl, Smith lost only four points on service in the second set, breaking on the fourth deuce in the fourt h game and then in the sixth. To Hold Elims Lead Stewart A first game break in the third set put Smith in com- mand. One backhand cross- court pa ss !JO pleased him he raised his hands in a boxer's victory salute whilt the 15,000 fans .applauded wildly. In Upset Tbe big American ble\I' five MONT TREhfBLAT, Que. match points in the fourth sel (AP) -Scotl and 's Jackie on unforced errors before he Stewart came from behind in finally put it a"'·ay in the 16th With just eight games re· maining before the 120-man field is cut in half. the \Yest Coast ~tatch Game Elimin&o lions begins two \\'eeks of tor- rid play lonight at Kona Lanes ln Costa Mesa. Following tonight's action Ex-Pirates Place Third SYRACL'SE, N .Y . gan1e \\'hen Emerson netted his Lola 1'200 Sunday lo upset attempting to reach a volley. the f\.fcLaren team and win ltichey, who had his best the S{'(.'(lnd Canadian-Ameri· season last year. made use of can Challenge Cup series race the lob in the wind to turn this ye.ar. back the UCLA music major, who is ranked 16th at home to ~ o c c II The currenl leader of lh.. • armer range oast o ege " the Texan's llrst plact. Formula One series on the The only time Richey 11i·as in rtrn·ers Boh Newtnan and (;rand Prix Ci rcuit electrified trouble was fn the secood set Butch Pope, con1peting in the the crowd of 21 .000 at l..e whf'n his concentration ap-pairs "''ith(){ll coxs"·ai n race. Circuit \\"hen he overtook pea red to snap afttr he w~ finished third Saturday in the l . f If 11 d U.S. ro"'ing tria ls for the Pan favorile Denis Hulme just wice oo · au e . American Games. before the hairpin hlTn at the Cornell \\'On Jn B:O:Z.6 while end of the 52nd lap. Tbe r.1eLaren te:i 1n. "''inne r J-1 ix son Lcacls the ex-OCC pair had a time or or JO of 34 Can-Am races since 8:15.4. the star1 of 1967, kept tl1eir W G • J I Ne1\'man and Pope attended honor intact as Hulme and CSL 1·1c ( ers Orange Coast in 1966-67. and next Monday's play (28 games), the fiel d v.·i ll be pared 10 60. It will be reduced again afttr 36 games "'ilh the leading 115 moving on . Tht top fi11e v.·ill compete for tiUe honors after 52 ge.mes. Ontario's Greg Baderdeen is the current leader -the fifth in fi ve wtek&. He had a 879 four.game serie~ last week to push him tn the top. Baderdeen holds a 1.S-pin ltad over Anahe im's Marty Anderson. <f.1 77·4,152. Co.~!a Mesa's F'red Dougher- ty is in the r\o. 3 spot with defending champion G a r y Madison (San Bernardino) fourth. Dougherty. \l.'ith a 'i89 series. fell out of the No. l position J?.~t 11•eek . Other are.a bowlers in the top 16 include Costa r-.tesa·s /\'ick Sli.1:ailo I No. 7) and Dana Point's Clyde Lach er 1No. 12!. , ....... .... I. Gr" l1dtrd""1. On11r:., 1 Mo• rv Ando non, "'no~tlm J ,,.., D-h•rl•. Co•!1 MUI ,.lft~ •,In "I!? 4,Hl The Union Boat Club of -N~w )'orker Peter Rei•son LUBBOCK. Tel:. -FormeT Boston \Yas victorious in the Gory Mo111-.. 5•~ llornor<1Jnc •.uo drove lllf' bright orange ~1c· .Sou the r n !\I t I hod i st fours ll-'i!h cox:swain and palr.• s Oo\11 J~noon. L-I•••" ,,ns l.aren ~18F' sporls car lo Sf'C· tvi•i.n"l ""lo:S\l'ain evtnls OYer • l " toylor, ,..., 01"0 •hit ood and lhird pla('(' re-quarterhack Chuck HixSOtJ "'""" '-V 1. Hick s111111>0. co111 M•'" ,,o<11 ' the calm 2,000-meter cour.se, 1. Sit•• sc~w1rt109or, "omon• •.ou. s~'f:ively fired 11 23-yard pas~ lo with temperature~ hol'ering t John s~ .... Encino • 010 Wayne Oue:!ette had a bases loaded double to spark the :-~· c:ond ~a1ne victory. San Clemen te posted a one- n.111 11111 01f'r 1 .. 1 Quu1ta on thf' strl'n.~th of a bases loaded ctouble by Toby Reschan. ltesehan 's hit can1e in I.he se· cond inning \\'Ith the bases Joarlecl, t11·0 out., 11ncl a 3·and·2 t:ount. fli a.rk King and Tim Y.'rii;:hl a!S<J had doubles. !;teve Ashrraft had a home run al1d a double to dril'e in !hree runs and in addition con· tribute<! a single but Mis!lion Viejo dropped a 9.:; verdicl to Sonora Sa turday. Danny Brennan spoiled a no- hit bid Sunday "·ith the lone bas~ hit for f\-t ission Viejo against An<.tieim-Heffron. Craig Lundgren p i t c h e d \Vest minster to a 3·1 win at La Palma Park Sunday night with a fi\'e-hi tltr. Four hits, in- cluding a pair of run·scoring doubles by &b Nodland and Pat Espinoza, sparked a first inning rally. FIRST GAMI' l'011nt1l11 Volle' Ill .. • "' f;~,moii, ?o • • • Mll<ht ll, lb ' • v.,,, ••. JI> • • • /\lerlt•. Cl ' • • • Frin, I! • • ' ' EDl•n. rl ' • • • EcO;lu. r! ' • • • OuOl~ti•, < ' • • • H'•• u ' • • • L~nc~. p ' • • • tel•I• " ' ' t <trl lly l~nlntl ' • • Fo~M~·n Vollr,< l)O(I (IO!l 001-2 • L• Ouln•• 000 000 IOG-1 • SfCONO OAME l'ount•I• Y1lltt UI •• " '" sn•m•li. ,. • • • M11cn•ll, ID • ' ' "··~··· l~ • ' • Mori••· d • • F.,n, If • , • (a,,oll. rl ' • • Ou>:lfllp, < ' • ' ' HI•, U ' ' • Fo•. P , ' Totol• " • Smr. ey '""l~n • • L• Quinto OOCl 00? 1'00-• ' ' Fwn!•Tn VtlltV DOI llO G!l•-S ' • See l..tgion Page !I Hulme . wi nner of this }'e?.~·s Nebraska's Joe Orduna with arouml 60 degrets and an 1Q llov ounn. rt11110 j,(161 fir~t Ca n·Am race at Mo.~por!. O"rcasl. ~·ky, Po'r..,~~" •. r;i;o, 1111. c~~ ~~f:O~ 11fc~~: -------------0 1 d lh I .,. .1 1 secon ds remaining S<1tur-.., Mei81 J,961; 11_ l•rrv ~<h~l•ld•• n .. an on e po e pos1 ion Other l'ictors Saturd;:iy \\'ere 1Co•I• Mu •I 1.~n. )I Joe~ Br.r<h rur Sundav·s 75 lap !'Vent led day night lo give the \Ve s1 ti !Ml1110" v1.10H l,9111 ll P1u1 · -· · · lhe Long Beach Boat Club. in Sthudtor fl l ~orol l.~••1 6l. ""' for the first 52 laps. :13·28 victory in the 1 Ith annual d-·ble "''lls·, I"-v-r Boat l •11cn n~untln111on ll•8ch! J.11.1; 10. 'l'h uu ll'C ~·1'~ llo v Mclf!•1n (Hun!ln11ton lhochl J.JU; e 32-i·e:ir·old S('O! f'X· Co:iches All·America football Club of Philadelphia, ,·n fours 1J. F••" 111<c1111 rwesr,.,1n,1•t1 >.~;; I d d I · ·, I h h h 71. Oo" McG ... J1. IC01t8 M•••l l.1111; Mo1•e Sports Poge 24 en e lJ~ ('fl( t roug out I r game. "''ithoul coxswllin, 1e. Bob Prot>ort IHYn!lnglcn &••th! late stages of the race and 1-=--------------------------"'c"o'c· ----------------------~ finished 66.8 secf1nds ahead of tlulrne and a lcip ahead of Peter ReYson. the other Team !llcL?.ren drlver. Ste"·arl said after the racr he follo11'ffi a slra1 1'g~· 11•orked out by his learn to keep the car running throughou t tht Hiii 5 milf' e1·enl "Perhaps I coulrl ha1·p led earl\• in the till'!" bu! we·d Occided it \\'as very irTlport,1nt to 11·in this one. Sink \l'llll In II ~f1 4 lu 8 Zi ~ .~1.1 I(• '"The car never miss<'d ;i be;it from start lo fin ish. Aul it's still not handl1ni?: as "'ell ;i ~ 11 should. Jl "s l"ery ::o.hnrpt and not easily controll::iblr " \'111 \ry ~-~--------:;o....-,;.._.......;==---..;; Ba.seball S landings DEAN LEWIS Diag nost ic Center f or car check-ups. !'\ATIO'°AL LEAC.l'F: t-~a~I Di1 l~ion P1tt.!buri::h !\('"' 't'ork rhil'/l.8(' St Lou1~ :'\lontre<1I PJuladelph1:1 \\' I . .. 42 .,-_, '~ ~· :l.1 39 .a 2~ 41 311 43 \\"ts! Oh·i,.inn San Francisco 411 :.i; Dodgers 42 33 Houston .1s .'\II All;inta .1r. ~:l t:incinna1i ~1;1 4~ San Diego 2ii SO 5ulMl1f'1 •••u1t1 H&ullon s S•n rro n<"•o 7 Do<:lt•r> 7, lo~ Ol~o 2 C lntrnn•tl 1. A!l1nto I Cl\k•go '· St lou" I Phll•o'tlP~I• I·'· P l!!JD•"oh •IC Mon!rt•I n, N•w Ve•~ • Tod•f'1 Olmo\ l'f'I. "' s•12 51 4 51:1 "' 411 4i!I GB • .,. ' , rl"PW Yori( (G•n• .. I SI •I l'h•'~d•I~ .... rw ... •·"I, ,,19111 :DMt•,... r Oow~I"" I 11 •! Cti•t•uo 1P•oo•• 1·11 P lll1blltflh (Wft-•r J.~! •!St L""" l ll•u" ... 11, 11ltl! ~lntltin1tl rGull~ll • 7 ''"' (lon•ng•• 7 \I •I MOM•••! (~!olMml" ''"""Morton 111 1 twlnlgM "'ll•nll fHlj./I J·• &<>d lt•ll•• l l o• P.••Do>• C.01 •• .. °"''°" rwu-. l ·l AnO l l9'ln1em• •·•I, ;. twl.,.1thl <itn l'•o..cl•"° tM1tlthl 1 ID-•! •I S•~ O•l'tO lt(lll)f ~S/. """' A.\11':RJCA"l' L[AGUE Ba!1 1rnore Bo~t-0n OrlrOil Nev.-York Cleveland \Va shington Oakland KllnSllS City i\1innesota Angrls \lil"·auktt <.:hicago Ea~t Olvl~lon \\' L 4:'1 26 40 31 41 32 34 :19 32 39 26 45 \\'tsl l)l\'islon 49 :?4 36 3:1 31i 3A 3-1 43 29 ~u 211 40 5utl0tf'I R1•ull• An\lon l 8•11•mo•t 1 Cl•¥•11"!1 J, O•frOlt I W••hlno1on 7 I . N•w Ver~ 1 O ....... ,. 1-1l. (,,l(l-00 l ·l O•""''° J.J, Kon>'• {'11v o .. Mlnn,Ult• l·S, M\llf'/IV~tt ! I Ttclt''' G•m•• r c1. . ll.14 .!ili.1 .562 .•'6 .451 ,366 '71 .522 .... .«2 .420 .412 GB 5 ' 12 " 19 11 13'i 17 18 1812 '''""""0" (lll•••~•n 1-1) •I 01~t111d IOob"'" I I 0 "'~"1 '1•11101 (I!• !So1:1o•!f l·ll •l "'""*'' (R••"""'' I 0 " ,.qhl rh"""" fJOlln"'n "·i et e.emo l·Jl 11 Mllw1yko. f'11~n•n I.I 1. nl•l\I O•ho.i •loll(h ll 11 or llonlmott Mt NA llV lt• I I. "19~1 (1•¥•1•"" j11A"li 1·• •"!! l~ml> 1·)1 I I HtW "'°""' 1 P••~><.Gn .__,,•no H•tOlll (1.11, '· IWl .. leM w •• ~1 .... ,,., l8"1m1n l·t) •I I DINn ITl~nt c.n. II .~I ----------------- llTH ANNIVERSARY SALE!! BIGGEST & BEST YETI ~ DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD ., COS TA MESA 646-93 03 Moderri & Complete Servic e & P.trt1 Dept. 540 .. 9468 Moder n Body Shop for All C•r1 Orange County's Largeii t and J\1ost J\-todern To_vo ta and Volvo Denier OYllSIAJ DILIYlllY SPECIALISTS !T!OJY(OIT!AI ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS '71 COROLLA SPECIAL $1777 ~ Sii THE All NIW TOYOTA CELICA Sl'T. CPI. IMMEDIATI DILIVlll:'f ~ VOLVO 1971 DEMO $2998 t•l ••d•11, r14 i1 , h••l•r, 111t111111ic '··~·· USED CA._ Sl"ICIAL j $1195 194.t llNAULT 110 •lllie, ll••"r, f •l>ft<I. Hitt. f'l'IClJCIO! Penneys Scientific Testing Center can help to point out weak spots in certain vital areas of your ca r . In less than one hour we put your car through a "Series ol sc ientific , tesls (212 of them). Steering, engine. bra ke s, transmission, electrical and cooling systems. You watch the results come out on an . e lectronic typewriter. The written re pcrt shows the results of the tests. It ind1cales what tested parts of your car ~re weak 11nd what parls are stron g. A trained diagnostician . will go over the report with you. If you wish. he'll give you an est1ma1e of any necessary repair• costing big money. There·s no obligalion to have any of the work done. You decide what 10 fix and where to fix it. The COii? Only 9 88 Not bad for a check·up these days. Penneys Scientific Tes ting Ce nte r ll.n1J.t!11• ~harge it lit a ny of lhese Penney Auto Centers: BUENA PA RK (Or1nge1horoe 11tvi 11eyViewl CARLSBAD ULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORAN GE 'THE c1ry·· Dl1gno1tlc lanu op9n Monday through S1turd1y. Sears A .~1i-.. i1,,,"' ·'i1·11r ... t:,,,.,.,,,,;p,/( l ,l"f'flil l'/1111:. Silent Guard 40-Month Guarantee ;·. \· l'ri1·<'~ t~fft'CI i\"f' Su ntlav. Jun•· :=7 1111·11 'l'11··~11 a,. J1111 • ."2 1> Ba ,..•· l)u pl ex N YLON (;a111pc r 'rire 3 9~~111"1":. l'lu· (..1.:~H l·.E,'I'. • H 11r1·1 ,I !1) l1\n 101d l UI\ ~!f !I• 11"!1 • 1'-L"l1· v, 1d1 l1lll~·'-''t:i'lr1 n,1.: L)rn.11111 ir~ad rubh,·r ;;JZE .... 11 ..... PRH t: •.r .. 1 . j( IWI\ JI•;, • f l'l l\ll $1.l O 1n,1r,; •• $-1'1 fUI t-1.·11 ~- 1:,1;;; ' t.l>'•.M ,.-,•1 1 SIZE n.:.o ... IJ/t :1is-1:i 33.'li 25.'M• --;.;.~ ... l.&/F7K-l ·I ;!11.'l.'i :.!4.21 H.2:. ... 14/I , 7K-l·I •11 .'I,-; J 1.4'> . -·-~.~-.... l.'>lH711-li • .-•. 'I;; :M.<W• ·ruht·lt>1H1 Whi1.·wllll ---j_J~~/[7K-!4 7.7:: .. , 141F7K-14 II.:!~ •. ~ I •l/f; 7K-I •I -~~ll.l_!/1178-1 ·~- 8.8511:14/J 7!!:.l4_ -ll.25~!Ji/•:z._a..~ H."iS1 I ~/1171'1·1 ~. M.ll:ill. I ;,/J 7\1_-I ."o 'l.!H!/ 9.151{ 1 :./I .<ff-15 J."i!. .. r l;J,. .... n .. 11. Plua 4 40.'JS .11l.71 41.'1.; ]~.:!I -1.~.'15 :!01.•M> -48.llS Jh.il ;i1.'J5 311.'H• -. -"''·''·"• '.l.i.~I 4'J.•):i :1<.,11. 53.<l.:; 'Hl.·li> .'."ol>.'i~ 4~.:1 ' • 1.•r~ :! .. lll ., ---····· -'.!.~! :!.:.!I ::.:111 :.! 5;; :!.;".& '.!.'I! :!.hi :.! Mn "!.'ii• ·'·l'I t.•.,.•~•••<I ·"-"ft"" ~II '"' '"I""' hue ,..,..,,1 """'l j,., • .,J, .. , Joo•«• •• " "''"' .,t •• "'"'""""'h•r .-..,. llo• 1. .. ..,; fN '"'° I•" '" ol>r ,.,,.,n•I •«~I •hot.~ ..... •·m f.._, I~ ... o.,,., ,.,. •h< '"•· "·rl•• "·, ""~ '"" r..,1' ''" ,,,.. r"'I' '"'"" , ~ , "'" "' """'' P'", p1 ... I .,,., ,1 1· .. ,.,. Tu '~" •rf'••''"'' ,,.,.j "'~ ••r•" ""I"""''"'"""" "·· r, ',., •;i ............. -4.1 .... .,.,. .. 1 ~ ... ""' ~-I I M H,.. l"'"t · ·11 .. nMm...., "' ,...noh. "i"' ,,,, I \-t • ~·· ••• ,.. •m 1 .... ,"'"h'"'' .... '"'. '"""1... "•"• ~::I '''"" ""'"'""•.-.P'"<rl~>l'"''''t.""' 1 .,.,,,lh<I•~ ~: ...., ••• 11 ...... . ·•I ·':J ·l Express Highway Hauler 2426 f.1. i O'" 1.-, ·ru hr T} p~ l 'lu ~s~"''.? F.t:::r . SIZE 1'11.JCF. lt.t:.T. . w•U 6.70xl5 24.26 2.42 7.00xlS 33.75 2.87 6.50x l6 26.()6 2.61 T•belP.aa Bl•ekwall 6. 71h 15 26.06 2.68 • • Guardsman Tire Fnll 4 J->l y Dy11art)r® Rayon D rnar11r ' r ;\~·I I II '-' 1r d g1 \· (·.; a ~· 1 I!. ljUJI.."( r 11! t ·; 111) h ,1 r s h 11 I.." ' ~. n i1 thump, rH, hun1p 1 fu I l pl lt"i .l!.I VC: :-1~ld c:d strc1igth I ( 1r .l!.rcatc.r ::,,i!t'I Y 20% OFF ••.. -,()\ 1:1 /\ ''·'' l 1 7 .. 1.;, j I :. 7.1, 11 11.~;, 11 :-;f'ars R e~ular l..ow l'rit:r~ I F.E.T. ~:1.<1.; -1 •1.11.~1.;i;_ :!t.'l.i 111.'lb l.'11 ---:!11.•J:; :!1..-,J1 1.01 ----.!11.•1:, :.>:1.11. --_l.14 '\l.'1.-, :!.l .;ih -__ :.'.:!:.' 7."t.;, 11 'l"l IJi .. : 1 ... :.-i."i W I I rr•:WAl.l .. ~---1 ]0.'l.i :.!,l_ i h 2.01 7,7;,1 .1 :1~.·1.-. ~(1.:lh :.!.lit. --H.J,-,\.l I .1.-,_•1.-, ;!IL 7h 2.:12 --11.;;,·" I ·~ :1u.•1;, '.I I.Ir. 2 .. 'll! -· -!\.I."./!!.;!,;, I ;, :u ... ,.-. :!'l_.",h 2.37 ---H. l."1/1!.~'-'' I :; '\(I.'(, "11 .'lh '..!.4R ------H.n:,~ l ."1 ·l'.l.'J ~ '.!." •• lh :.!.7.l 01.IM)\ I .", ·"•-''.-. :17 ,.',() :.?.fl9 ·Brand New (:rusader 4 Ful l Pl y Ny lon •rult1·l··-~ u 1~1:). .... alf 91~?.'KT. \rul IH1I T1r" • Nt•\11 co11 •<>llr, hro.1<1 'h11ul tk•r • NcY.' rr1.·.id dt·",i.:n • N t'Y.' l•il (lrh-inc h whi re ~·,lt·\\•,111 rn match 1he "'1,l rh .. t d1~· 1,1•h1re !>ide- v.'.ill • d fl1d11V Ot"\.\' l .tt<o YOUR CHO ICE ·ruhr l .. ~~ Bl;u•i., ... 111111 ••.. 4.n)' ~izf' Listed 1687 l'lu• ...... l' t.~· h ~Ii'.~: • ' '· I.~! II 11.'I·,, I I I "' ;_ 1:,, I I :!.!ll . --., I I ., " )!.~:;,I ~ ! .. L" \\1 l1 il!•v.;ill~ l)nh ~-1 \l,.1·1· l'••rTir•· Highway R e tread s* 9 87 ft...-.0-..1, fll•r~ ... n Ph•·~~. •·.t:T. i'n<i Uhl T"~ Ul.A(:K.,ALI. IJ.87 .32 11.87 .41 11.87 ·'" 8.25xl4 12.87 .45 8.55xl4 12.87 .49 8.15xl5 12.87 .51 Whi1ewall11 On ly $2 l\1orf" Per Tire SHOP ~l,l~D.('<f;i,a,, ·,_;~ • Yo 5:00 p.m. •MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30 a .m. ta 9:00 p.m. •SATURDAYS 9 :30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. •FREE PARKING . Scars IUfNA f'AlllC COVINA HO llTWOOO OlTMl'I( A SOTO •11-4400, .t21 -45JO 966-0611 •69-5941 )61-5111 CANOGA l'All( f l MONfl INGll WOOD Ql&NGI ~40-0661 •4J ·J91 1 •Tl -1521 6)7-1100 'OMONA SANTA ANA THOUSAND OAl(S V ALlfT •1•-s1•1 S47·Jl71 497·4)66. 522-llJl 7•l-•••1 . •••·1110 ••co SANTA MONICA fOllllANCl YflMONT 931-42•2 394-6711 .541-1)11 ?59·1911 CO Ml'TO N (;ll Nl>Alf tONG l t •CH f'ASAOfNA SANT• ,t SPllHGS SOUTH COAST •tAli\ IJl'IANO Sotiotocrlo" G.,.roftl1•• •J6·1Sll, •ll-5761 l 4.S-1 004, 2 4-4 ·4611 4 l J -0121 •11·3211,JSf ... 211 S!A&S1 &OllUtK AND CO, 9444011 .540-JJJJ ··~-1927 .,., .... ~,. ... I ' . .• \ 14 OAll~ PILOT Monday, Jullt 28, l9n ~~~~~~~~~~~~- Al an 1 it o s Racing Entries TONtGHT'I l:NTltlt ,_ & , .. ,. 1'1'11 .... , l•d '"" IP Nltflll, 0.'*lt tll 111 & J,.. lllltft U l!~Klf Ml '"" & "ill lltctt .. I.If lt.lCI . l50 ~·rGt. 1 v••• did m•kHn•. C!elmt,,., ,..,, .. 11to0. c11lm· ll'OI ••let u»O. ,._.....,_., fM.d M-• IN1!\onl \II 1 .. tnUt f'..cK.lt (Alll..,..j 110 W 1 r Prlfl(tit t (P1rn1P I Yll1_,·, J-tl ((fOOO>J Min 811 8t f IWt <dl Prlu CMc ll t nll>! Joo•"• 8 t t !We!Ch~ Marolt N ,.,._, (Ptt<l CollHt Gr..i H1t rd'"'' l kida Ctnd~ (Ll..,,t ml ", '" " ' '" " ' '" '" "' " ' '" '" "' '" " ' " , '" "' '" ll'll'TH 11111(1!. llO Ytfd>. 1 Vtlr Cid mtld9ll>. PurH tltoO. Tht Yvonn1 "4allll>ll""''tll "'Pr-CPtrnttl llvnnln Ow+I (Adt"I llecl>l'I So !WlllOfO A Cll!t"' (Nt!t rl Moon VtlYtl (Wtrd! K.Olt<hl fOt tHtrd•.,..I •f1m1!01 Mu•• (Hori) .. cn1r11_tr IW!il{l<ll Ra"t lht 8!d IL Pht ml 1u1>1r-lnd (Alll•onl "' "' '" " ' "' " ' '" "' " ' '" SIXTH R...CE. llO v1rd>. l Vttr old 110 1111••• & m t rt•. Clt lmlnt . Purot 11600. C!1 lmor111 1>rltt \IOOC. Tin• Tirol'I !A<lelrl 119 Sllenr S«ne (M11>u<1•) 119 Gill• Glrly (Kanl1) H• M00<1 Burn! fDroyerl 11/ Ml'• Di•mond Bu• (Cro•b•) 111 Ann1me1r IWard) J 11 G•l•nll1 Olllov! 11~ Mi., De ~PPe<! 111.11;1on! 119 (1p1lv1Tor IN•l••f 111 Siena Gulneverr IW•honl 119 t!Vl!NTH II.I.Ct. '.!~ ••r<l1 1 Year Ol<h. Cl1lm lnv Pur~r t noo. Cl1lmin~ ori<• •~OOD. T"-M1t1lon ll'•rlo Re<•••· 1oon Ctnltr. (ounlry (arouH I !Clfdoul S11ura1v Hrro IH1rll G•n!lem1n Jr! (W1r1onl Trm~r Bunny (Alh><in l R-1 Turn 1 UP~I"' I Nimbi• No!r (PO'nfr) Did• Smoo1.,lr !Cro1cy! Prtco>r (Orrv••l 81r Ni ii !"'d111l I r Surr M00<1 (W~r<ll '" "' '" " ' "' " ' '" "' '" '" •10HTH 11.t.C!. 400 v1rd1. l ~rar ol<11 &. UP Claoml"' Punr 11100. c111mlng o•lc1 m ,ooo. lilt Bucc1<!ffr Toa lDll<I 1C1r<1011l 11• Lh,.. Pa1l"f ILll>h1m) ll / S" Lo•• !W1hon1 lit Mr. Ar(tO t0ttv•'1 1\9 Sorr•I \11 n D<!ck !W•rdl l l/ Gold Ltt M•ti ll-l•1dl<>11l lll NINTH R•tE. l!IO ••• ., •. 1 •r1r old•. ( l1lml"'I. Pur111 ~HOO. Cl•om!ng oro<e ·-· Sl\9lb• Su .. (C1rdo11I Un Cl\1•<1r ~Mdlo1,1i<lf Mini C"""•'I"" (W1rwn) l•o !Cro1b•I 810. l>•rr \"••nt•) Qu•ndo (NI •n Tn1I• 81r \W•lfllll) Oidn"I w. •d•<' I ~cgr.,"<J;~~r"~ "' "' '" '" '" "' '" "' "' '" FINISH IN BALANCE Study today's illustration of my finish pO$ition and note especially how my weight has shifted cnto the outside of my left foot and on .. to my right tbc. I think: that the 101ftr who fini shes in such balance can't help but make solid conlact with the ball on the vast majoritY of his .shots . Try swina:ing to this finish posi· tion. Don't think about anything else during your l!.Wing. ·Merely imaainc how it will reel to be in this position. Sec if this doesn't force you to make a better swing ovcr·all. ':'/. PRACTICE ·PUTS POWER INTO YOUR GOLF GAME ! l1arr1 p1op1r pr1cl1t1 t11<;hniqu1 from Arnold Ptlmtr's br1nd,n1w booklet, '"Pr1ct1tt ." To i•I your copy, tnd 10$ i nd 1 st1mp1d, re· !urn 1 n~e!op• \fj1\h your rtqu1:i.t to Arnold P1lm1r, cjo ll"us n1wsp1p1r. Uni, MV Loose San Clemente Clobbers Laguna Action returned to normal in the Saddleback s u m m e r baseball league Sunday af- ternoon and three games were played as scheduled. San Clemente de re. a I e d Laguna Beach in the opener, 7-0, a~ Te.r ry Nielsen and Bill Day J•mitcd Laguna lo three hits. foothill dov.•ncd ~1ission Vie· jo in the fir st afternoon game, ~2 Saddleback freshmen 1op- pled University by the same sr.ore. 6-2, in tbe finale . Nielsen and Bi!! Day splll the pitching duties for San Clemente. Nielsen started but left the game with a bruised pitching hand after three in- nings after stopping a hne drive with his bare hand. Nielsen gave up one hi! and Day two in rhe final four in- nings. ,_1ission Viejo matched hits ·with Foothill but CQU\dn 'l score. leaving numerous base runners stranded during the action. Each team had seven hits. In the nightcap. Laguna Beach's (;reg Kessler. playing for Doug Fritz' Saddleback fresh man team, hit a home run to pace the Gauchos to the victory. Jeff Styrrs opened on the mound for Unlvers11 y while Ruben Parsimo pitched fou r innings for the vitors. Paramo didn't give up 11 run or a hit and slrurk out seven halters. Minion Vl•lo UI •• f11,1, ?to Rommfl, lb Mn!hll. ')b W•dr. " G•I"'"• t! V•ndr•Dlf \I, " (fto1ro"""'!· II Orrbv•n1r1. rt ""''""" V•••O Foor,,,11 ' ' , ' " u""""h 01 .. B ll ucklr, 11 Pofl•rlO<'. If for(tO. l'b 1.,...,lb R. Pr•Hud, lb D. llycli.I•. lb sn .. e, r!·o H•ncoc:k, rl Srv•ro, •I'> H•IO. cl ' ' , ' ' , ' ' ' • " • • ' • ' ' " h rbl • • • • • • • • ' ' " • • ' ' • ' ' •• ' ' • • • ' . ' . • • • • Rustlers Streak Past N. l'eregud. < ll•O!tie,., c M<>l\onn, Jb To11l1 ' " SldtMltl(k Ul • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • ' ' ' • • • • • • • • .. Fullerton Ni11e, 10-8 Cl1u1. lb MIH. lb•" Ano•,.on. n 11;.,,1.,, <f W•lont, c Mcl(nl1M, ?b "'"''""°•'· rf P•r•m<>, o Uo•onu. If • • ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' • • • h •bl ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' • " " • ' ' " ' • • • • • Fred Hoover's S en i k. Rustlers moved to lhe front 1)[ the Metro summer baseball league standings ·with a 10-8 ''ictory over host Fullerton ~unda\' afternooo in action on the Ciil State 1Fullerton1 cam· pus diamond. 'rhcy are now 4·2 in lPsiguc pla.1•. tied for the i\n. 1 spot v.•1th \\"ard·s Pirates !3· 1· 11. Dave Klun~rcseter pitchrd six innings, giv ing up fnur h1ls and striking our s1ir ballers, He allowed nnlv nnr run before 1he Ru!'.llcr reserves began making errors. Deep Sea Fish Rci}ort KIRK JEWELERS COSTA MESA H..ttor C.•.,"""441°9415 HUNTINGTON BEACH flcNI ....... C...,_,fl·llOI ' The Rustlers pounded oul six doubles including three by Blaine Calder. Calder, a hard- h1tting first baseman, has had eight hits in his last 10 ap- pearances at the plate in the Metro league. Other doubles v.·ere made by Pat Curran. t-.1ikc Dodd and Klungreseter, The Rustlers play agam Sunday against \Vhittier. StnlW Rulll1n t 10) .. "•O•"· 1! $~Vb'n, !I W>i1on. " (""~·'· " (~,~~,, II> lloll!OQ, ( 51m"'~" Ir ""'''"el••n;e-, rf G<!OO, lb !IAml!lon, lb A11~m>, lb E n1~tV 11• B111ngrM1le•, • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' " • • ' • ' • • • . " lcor1 -V ln~1~11 ~ •~I ' ' • • • • • • ' • ' • ' • ,. • ' ' • • ' ' " • • ' • ' 5•n•~ 11u111''' ~ullr•IOl'I ' . ' '" 100 001 -1~" l (al 001 l.o--' 10 ) ""'"°· ll To111s Un1vors>1~ Sl<!<llOIM<~ ' ' ' ~ • • ' . 0000010 -l l. •00 110 •.-•I• I L•1un1 lo1cn H! (•.!I•"' lb Wl>U, lb 01•«~• ,, H•rrl1 u ~wpe,.t•. o Gle••on. lb o.rinol•. t {l"'b''"""· II or:1011P•.._.n, •I C.•llo•n,., r• I 01 11\ •• ' ' ' ' ' ' ,. Jin Clom1ntp II) J Sor,no..,..,n. t i !(lno 1b O•tcn1n e 5•••""· 11> Mc Ccmo, " Oouol•H , 1n e .\P.,nom1n. ll Kltrnan, r! '<••llen. ~ Dov, • lo!•I• L1our• fl••<~ S1n C.l1mpn10 .. ' • " • " " • " " " " • ' ' • ' " • • ' ' " h rb1 • • ' , ' " ' • " • " " ' " " • " " • • " • . ~' ' I ' • ' • • • ' • ' • •• • • ' ' ' " " • • • ' Area W restli11g Results Wrtllllnt FwM•ln V1IM11 Symm•• L•ttu• F111n11ln VlllllV ltttll IUI 1111 L• ,,.,.1,,, '' -Vwnt '"' -l!v 1111 l ·lJ. 109 -o .... {F l "'"" DY lorltl! 11•-L1nnlr.o l FJ IOU b• 1811 J·Jf. 11' -R.1 moo (Fl loot b• dK. l·I. l lf -Mo•l n !F l dr• .. 1·) lit -MOl'lul1kl \Fl w0t1 bv dt ( f·J. Ut -M<Ker ( F "''"' •••• l~t -Fodt ll, 11' -!'o"O ml!th a:= ~g"~~Fc~."'~ bv 1cir1111. ... ~~~.;;; ~:'~ ~J.:"Tu'' 1i'fi''~t;,.,.. "' "-M#!••• lfl dK. S!l•t Wlll IF) '" !°' -MO<lr• !Fl dK. W11hbum IE! .., \1 9 -Mlll•r !El olMtd l..cla II'"! :JJ 11' -Eno1 IF\ <!9'( 110\!rll.t !El ,-0. l J9 -l-!11ktll IFJ olnnf'll To••• l!.l ' " 14t -Hrr"""""' ('°) ~ Sn•O.• (El ll·ll. ' UI -ll!Jdven !Fl dfi. Aorilt l U!! I·• 161 -No w1 •1M. 11• -No -l1M. lit-Mlllltr !Fl -b'!' fOf'ltll. lft -!'o"o P11tcn. Hvv -11.!HI 11!'1 -n Irr tort.Jr. WfltMla1m lllh un 1111 t•M .. -WommKk !Wl <IK. kiwi (CJ .. !(It -Norkum•• !W) M . 8tk ... /Cl. J·). !1' -BIK-!W) ...., Irr t.rl•!I. l)'t -Fonron !W) 61<. Oollt r f() 11. • ,,. -Mtmllrm1 IWI o.c. Wt rr1'n IC I l l lff -Noon (WJ WOt1 bv tortflt. 119 -(ltfk !Cl clK •1~1r !W) I ·) Ht -M1rl1""I (W) 11-0 Jll1o0fl '" 11'1 -C11n \Cl t..:. Ilk.,. IWI .t.I IM -Ml!i.t W! -Irr t.rfoll. lft ~ Fft~kl\ou1r (Wl '"'"" b• f(lrlell, H•• -G1r•tlt (CJ "'""td Plttllo !Wl. Wetlmlm tl r •l•c-1 (Ml !111 (&>11 ""' ff -Mt lt tkt IWl ae<;. Mlllrr IC! I , ll~ot -Ml1t1" (WI drt, S1ro,1 !Cl J !t -No m1!CI\ 179 -Al1m•11n (W) won bv t•lt QY" Mtvt•1 ((I. J)t -Frank~t>.>H IWI won bv M1!:1~ ~~he~ubo ((! won bv toll .:iv•r Flour \"' 11' -'"'ton !Wl draw 01vl1 !CJ •· •• llt -Hi ndi•• /W) won lw 1111 ovar "flit~ tCL 1' -Smit~ ~W/ llft. jQhn1"" !Cl , ... in -WH!m!n1!r r WOii by !orf•/'· ltt -w111mln1,.r _, b• lorit • li~v -Wtll.,,ln11lf wo" bV !orttn, a.,,,,, or1 ... 1u nu Hu1111~11~ " -ll11ln11m• (HJ dee. 1-C 11>1 -Ro1tnltl<I (H) <ltC I l llf -Angel (HJ W"" b• !11+. 12' -lttr Otfu"'°" 1tY ti ll '"' -Ptlro ( l loll OY Or< 11'4. HI -Et rlol1 (t > lot! IN d•< 7.0 lJt -Smll" IH/ l01t b~ 10 11. Ut -Mtllol"¥ HJ Ott. u .1. Ht -HoP!tY (Hf llrfW 1•1 1" -Mtllll'<~ tH) IOlll t:iv Ot< t ••• 1'9 -Hunt1,..ion IM• b>r !o.,fll • Hvv -l•rblr IH) l<lV hv o•n 09N9ll W"I !Jill Ctf S1nll1" " -1tkltr \Gl "'"" bv •otrt ll. 1C!f -oon tG won b• rort111 111 -1m1n1n IG I won b• for!•" 11' -M. Brow" IGl "'"" bv o .. 1ult . ,,. -Woad CGI -~' 1001111. , .. -M. Ma•!I"' t(;! a •• ll·S 15' -NO l'll•IC~ Uf -0 . M1,,ln1 CGl -bY 111!. ll'f -No ,,..1,11, \" -NO tnl tdl. I" -Webtll< CGI -11'1 '°'""''· H.-, -MHfitr !Gl WOt1 bY tor"lt ll. TIMEX REPAIR Authorized OranR:e County SALES AND SERVICE Albacore WESTMINSTER BASEBALL BOXE S Seal Beach Flag Up In Area AJbacore, a magic name in ocean fishing circles, have made their first impres.sion of the year on private and com· rnert1al sportfish.ing vessels in !he Orange Coast area. A triple albacore kill came Saturday morning al the 60- nille baru: as Ron Bircher's boat ran into the longfins, .scoring a kill wilh feathers. Although Bircher was in :Wexico, skipper Gene Grimes and Bircher's SO!l.'I -Randy and Bryon -took care or the action. Water temperalure w a s reported at 62-63 and because Bircher is a member of the Tuna Club of Avalon, Los Pescadores and the Balboa Angling Club, he'll rake in three flags for ('atching the year's fi rst albacore, On the comn1ercial scene, the. albaC<1re flag ls also up on lhe Channel Isle out or Arl'.s Landing in Newport. Small in !'.izc, I J pounds, the fish was also Laken at the 60-mile bank on a feather jig. A spokesman for Arl's says, "everybody here feels this is a i;ood omen for this summer. Last year the first albacore was taken on July 17." Davey's Locker is schedul- ing an albacore special Sun· day. Coattn11ed Fro~ Page U 'lltfT G.t.M• P11111t1ltl VIII..,. Utl .. ' $1\lrt'Wlll. "" C1rrv11 , 211 Mll<l'ltll, Ill ll•rntY, Jl:I M.rl1Y, cf Frl!1, 11 OUl.t11, c l!c~l11, rl Eblon. rl LV"t", I LouO.-~l. 1> To1111 ' , • ' • ' ' ' • • . ' ' ' • • 31 II Scor• b• lnn!nt1 . "' • • • ' , • ' • ' ' • " • ' ' , , • • • ' , • " ' .. ~•n!•An• COCOIJO-• 1 $ Fwm11n V•llt• O•J •!IC! x -I• 10 I Sl!COMO GAMI" Pount1I• Utl!•r ltl !;lllm11 I. 711 M•l< ... 11, lb v .. r,,.,. Jh M••lev. cl Fn t1, I! Ou,.,111. c: Eo•tn. rf Edel••· d .. ' ' ' ' • ' ' • ' • • • ' " ' S<Of"I br lnnl"tl . ~· ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . • • • • • • ' ' • • . ' ' .. !Ant• Ano OOD 000 0 -0 1 l f oun11ln Valle~ lOI! 001 K -J ! 0 MIU len Viti• !!J .. 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J , SP•1n•m•n. • .. rr • 1..,...,,, :lb I l(l••n•~· tJ 1 R1•cll•n, c-lb l ~!eve Ml~j.,., cl t AfldorJon, H 2 Sco!l Mlk~s. rf 7 Jdl&Mftl " l1> 1 .Aron1. It 1 I(~~··· 11 J W~1l8~er. lb I w,,1>nr. c 1 Douglau. D 1 Nlel••n, 1> I To1•IS 3J • ' ' • • • • • ' • • • ' • J .... • • ' . , ' ' . ' . ' . ' . . ' • • . ' ' , . ~' ' . ' . • • • • ' ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' ' • • • • ' ' ' .. L& Ouon!1 ~n Cl•m•rtl• HlllCOCJ-~ t' 1.0000x -JS ' '11'11" G#Jllll w.im1•t1r ru • ..;<!Irr, 1~11 ltu-. '' LU-flfl, d """·· Dltenftlret, lb MDIII•""• rl 8i1~11n-, I R1y, l1> EW!I'-•, f!•P T11911lt. lb T1uT1r, c Tol1l1 .. j • ' J • • ' • • • • • • • ' . • • ' . . ' » ' l(ltt _, lnnlRK k tbl ' . • • ' . ' ' • • ' . • • • • • • ' . ' . . ' ' . ' We•!mln1!1r Ol!I CIC C0C -I I • Pl•ctn!ll "°" O!O 10( -lC 10 1 Sl!COND G.t.MI. W11tmln11..-(OJ llrad!ev, d TeuJrr. I! 1111~•1•~. J!>.11'C OO<ld. ...., 0111ont>•rd!, Ill NDC1l1"", rf•ll E111ln<11•, U·cl (l\allfNn, rf llu1190, <-<• Tunl•, '1>.lb TI00.!9.1> II••, lb •• ' • ' ' • ' • ' ' • • • • • • • • • ' ~ •bi • • ' . ' . • ' . ' . ' . • • • • ' . • • • • Wins, 9-2 J ack Strosnider not only pitched the Seal Be a c h baSfball !Ram l.O a 9-2 victory over the Doclgers Sunday afternoon but also contributed a home run to his team's scot· ing in going the distance In Lhe Long Beach Police League. iHl 811c~ If! .. ' lltnnln111on. lo l 1 Flemlno. lb • l MIU1. lb 7 O 5"glo, cl 2 0 v.n.o....,entor"I. 11 J C B"rne•, 11 1 n fro..ltl. c J 0 ~tro•rndtf, P 3 2 Ea1110, c!·Jb 7 I weu" •I J To••ll 11 9 scort or ln"ln11 k rbl . " ' ' , , • • . ' • • • • ' ' ' . • • . ' ' . 000011 -l 3 l411 Gol~-· 6 l0!1l1 ' . ' . > • Inn Int• • '1•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ' .. 000 000 000 -0 • s lll :Xt1~-t l0 O We•lmlntr1r l'l.c:tnlla GOLF TIPS WI~ Ltw.ff1n1UUP1 l'fl<llct Al TM Baseball's Top Ten NEWPORTER INN PAR J GOLF COURSE Sl .OD wltl ttih .d -t d.,. .lMElt1eA1'1 L•AGUa l'l1v1r Club G .... II H l'<l, 0 11,1. Min " :16! n " .l1J Murc~r, NV n 256 ~ '9 .3 .. Kallnf, ori al ltJ JI u .m Roi••, to:;C 61 1'6 J5 11 .31 1 B~IQ•<I, 11•1 " lli Sf 67 .JI ? R•ithllrdl, Cl\t 17 113 7' 16 .llO 011,, KC 16 762 •2 IO .J05 F-llot>ln00t1, II•! 58 20' 35 6t .JCl F. H(M'.,d. W•• 6t 161 14 II .291 W~lte, NY .U 211 ll U .2'6 Ho"'t 11.un• t'llva. MTnntooT•, 11; It, J•ck"'n• 0•-l&fld, U; C•sh. D•l•OOI. 1'1 II. Smith. 801!.,.., 15: Mtlton, Chiu~. H ; W Horr.,.., oarralt, I•: .Murcor, N- v..,.~. u. llUM lllltf In Kllltbrirw, Mln ne10l1, 55; J. l'-11, aa11lmort', •9; Oii~•. Mlnnnott. '11 Bind<>. 0t~l1nd', .U: F. Rotolnaon, 81111· morf, .U; Porroalll, Bo•lon, ~- l'llc~I"" I DKllltllll Cultlltr. 81111,...,,.•, ll·I, .t ll; fl hl•• 01t!1nd. 16-J. .Mt; McN1ll'I', ll•nlmor1, 12-'; .150• $lebl!rl. ll<>lton, II·•, Pt lml!r, B•lllmott, I~, .114. NATIONAL LEAGUE l'l1r1~ Cll.lb Torti , llL. w. D1vl1, LA Brockert, CM ll rotk, SJL Gorr, All F.Cl!ont, Cl\I G A• II M Pt!. 1• 29J ti 109 .309 1• ~4 All 10.S .l:!7 10 11.l 4l ,. ."9 7J m i.. 101 .338 1• Jl6 '' lOS .lYl " 71'.16 21 6' .J:lO c1...,,ent•, l'gh t.S 256 3' M .lll Sl•r111ll0 Fgh bl 7•7 •~ 78 .Jn C•1l'I. P1h 64 262 '* 13 ,311 M. AICllJ, SIL 72 7U 3! tl .316 """" R.yn1 511r111ll, PlrtM>urgh. 71; H. ,.,.,on, Allanll, 2]; B1nth, Clncl11n1tl, it; L. May, Clnclnn1tl, 111 Sond1, S•n Fr•n- clw;o, 11. ll~ni &1111111 In St1rQ1ll, Plthburg~. 1'! M. A1ron, .t.ll1n11. 60: Stnlo. Cnk1gO, 14; Tont, IT. Lauf1, l21 L. M1¥. Clnc /...,t tl, C. l'll<hl119 • o-<;lllolll E llli, 1>it1$l>ur11h, 12·l, .!QC; Gul~!I. Clnclnn1U, 1-4, .1:)1); J. Jollnwn, Stn F~•nclw:o, f.J •. l:lll• 818H, Pllhbllt•h, f.J, .7XI; SH vt r. N .. '°""'· f.J, .m. TODAY IS YOUR DAY TO OWN A 1971 CADILLAC {Large1f Selection) Pl.USE CALI. M0 .. 100 Sale!'EI TigrEt'D·! GRRReat savings on fiber glass belted tires. 36 MONTHS GUARANTEE WITH 14 MONTHS 100% ALLOWANCE FotUTl<!tl Pro11c:tion Gu•••n1e1. Your"°"'"~; ·· most tua PfC>l•C1•0n ~u•r•nle• cove" 111 • F o•tmou o••'>fn9or t11c\ (r>ccrpl our 11>ec:i1I •oblk•lion ,.,~ w ith >tu•••~t QUM•nr•el) •<>·""SI 111 rt>•d n•111d orO.!e<:~ t1U ur11. Votl , •rr p101ac\rd IOf tna •nH•e st11e<1 morHni at · gu•r•Mlt:e. rr your !Ir• •~•II dutln<} 1ne 9u11M>• In otriod. 1t1<1'n 11 to u1 and w• wlu. 11 ow option, reo1lr your t ire, o• n11ke.,, auo wanc• bne<I on 1n1 Ofl9ln11 pu.cna"' Prlct, t><ChJl).o Ing •Ppllc11:>1e f'tdefll L><<l>e Tl~, !OWO>t<I !I'll purcna1e or • n•w 1irt. Wt wl!I •Uow 100"'6 nf tilt nr!g1n11 "'"'"'"' pnct, excludln9 apoloc•· b lf Fed•••I Exci1t T d•. duf!nq tl'le l OO'~ &I· !ow;inca period . T!it r.,~ller, we will •llow ~0% or 2~'1o o! ina Ot •9on.11 Pu•<"•le pt.,;t, e~c1u<1rn9 •PPllC1blt f'e<1er3! I •tlln rJ~ 1owatd l~e ourcM•le o f 1 new !lr.,. (S.:t<.l18•i below). Feder ii Exe"" T •~ 1niu"Mon1 •llo w. •nte w1 10 Ill• m;iae on '"" lld•1~ of l!'lf. oo•cent nr th• ong•nal trod<! otma1111nq. l"OREM OST PROTECTION GUARANTEE CHAR"T.HERE "S HOW YOUR GUARANTEE WORl';S: Ent"" g~u•nloe Ottlbd ••.••.•• J6 monl~I 1 00"'->ilow•nct' pe,.od .••.•.•• 1.1, month• !i0%1llow1ncc0Hiod •.••••• I S·24monthi 2S% a11nwance period ..•.•.• 2~·J6 mont~1 "T •e•d L.llt Pro1t,11on. We buol<I !"1<! "~"'Y I """"""" llr~ 11lt lran oon •ndoc110•1. T!it~ \J~n•• wnrn vour II•• •tiould be rer11cen . I! V'l"r 1l•c "'""'I .., .. , !e•c•o1 fo r ""'"'"'"<! •"'l"•r>rnq we wol• "'"~"an 1llowancr Da•rd o n Ille onqln•I PU!t~OI• P•l<c. CkCIUOong •P· """"''" t •de••I l ~(•If l ·~. IPw•rP the PU•• •n••• OI • n~w 1••~. we ,,..,., •llow 1/3 au"n" tne '"'~ n11t O• l /4 Puring the •t ,Ond "•I' ot the •~•l•<I mon!n• ol ou•••nrec. r r aer11 (",. ,,,., T •• a<11u\l <nen( 1110 ... •nc• Wiii be m4<1• nn tne ""I" "' ~ne oe•cent c t '"" O•IQ•n•I 1• e~<I '""'"'"'"q. 1 ~11 gu.,dnlee " ""I l<inl l"'•llle. Ith ant" ,,.,, priva\a ~••'*'"<J'f' Uri or OO•Kn!11!• •ll l•e>n ... •10"~· 1595 Fore mos t i);! Mileagemaker II 4 ply nylon cord tire. Blackwall tubeless !uie 650-1 J 700..l J 695-14 735-14 775.1 , 825-14 560-15 685· 15 735.15 775.15 815-15 8•5-15 ft?d. !a~ 1.76 1.95 1.94 2.01 2.' 4 2" 1.7• 19.1 2 OS 2.lb 7.37 2.48 Whitewon SJ mor1 • ""'• 16.95 17.95 17.95 18.95 20.95 22.95 l 7.95 18.95 18.95 20.95 22.95 2•.95 Penneys Service 3 0•)1 Servlc• Speclal Mon .. Tues., Wed. Only 1 Q88' TI,. Life Sav.r Spec lat ;~ti~·· f1.on• ..... n1io-i. bookt .,djo.i~ and boleM.11111 4 wMll1. • Moo! ee,. 20%0ff Sale 21~"'~"'"''"' .... 81ackwan tubeless, C78-1l. Reg. 26.95. 'El Tigre' n with 2 belts of fiber glass on • 2 ply polyester cord body. Blackwall lubeless Size F78-14 G78· 14 560-15. G78-15 Fed. tax 2.54 2.69 1,60 2.80 Reg. 32.95 34.95 26.95 34.95 H78-15 3.01 36.95 26.36 27.96 21.S6 27.96 29.06 Whitewalls onty SJ ntofe. ·5ro-1s lN'auat>Mt'" bla-ckwan ortly. 22995* C1ntoml1n auto air condlt'°"8t". High powered cooling al 1 great price. 3 large rectangular front and 2 round side louvers. Pre-chill feature delivers cool air immediately. Trim, slim design. lncludeS adaptor kit. Expert Installation Av1il1bl1 • Most cars 15ss Flber11lass fan reduces ena:ine ~ For cars w ith air conditionln1. Yes, you un •hop 12 lo 5 al any of these Penney Auto Center>: Fuhion l1fend, Newport Beech. Hunt ington Center, Huniirigton Belich. Buy it on Penn ey's iim& p4yment pion. . . Monday, Junt 29. 11171 PAIL v l'I LOT IS Low, Low Prices on Re manufactured Sh ort Block E ngines 1~.S~ 10 1957 Chevrolr 1 ,::!35 Cubic lnc '$ l 5 9 ::-ihorl Bl oc k Eng ine U.ch•nv Plu.1 frfli&ht Plu~ ;,;ll Lither 6 and 8 Cyl 1 nd ~r :-'ho rt Rlock F.n1?.i n e~ , $1 79 to SI 99 With Trade·ln Plu.s freigh1 ' SAVE '20.95! R egular '1 69.9.~ Auto Air Conditioner •Faster cool-do\\'n !or ·-r11d11- now" comfort, high C.F.~L~!or grea1cr:.iircirculatiQn s149 •Firs most American cJis. Expert lnsral!arion A\·ailable WE SERVICE A.'il> KEPAIR ~ltl~ FA(~f(Jll y l:"iS'r ... LLt:o A.\U OR IC11'"At l::Q l 'IP:\I E"T Al ·ro AJH Ctl:'<r.'UIT IONERS ~ Pr:(:IAL ;;. Pl 1 I ;\"T II TO .. 11 K Ul~D ITIO'.'ER CHECK.\J P .'iaur$5.,-2! • Chf'rl an<I Tilhl· ,.,. ) our BrJ~ • Ch,.1•1. R~frigrr• :iin1 and Ad<J Ai. !\ece~o•I')' • \.h .. rl. Oil C:nm· p rr··l••n Ltn·I .. ,,..i~ .... b • t,hrr l. System fur Leak!> •Clea n Ynur f ;<>nllrn•rr Regulu 938 $1:0 ::-iears 12 -In. Jack Stand l'h Ton Hydraulic Jack 8 ~2o r Terr ifi c value. SA JT£ 'l! S pectrum Oil Filter s SAVE '7! T inting Light Rcgu l" 2 2 9 9 $:!9.99 I :?! IS l;o r 6 and 12 volr system. Chrome plat· ed oody. Trigger :-,\vitch allows rube [0 flash only when needed. SA VE •10: 4 -in-l 'fune-up T ester Regular 549.99 39?.,~ Includ es: Dwell Meter, Tachometer, Ignition, Tester, Al · re r na ror-G en e racor Tester. Price• Effectj~·e Saa., June :?7th throu'-b T ues .. June 29th Sears T IRE and AUTO CE:'\TER 36-MONTH GUARANTEE 36 mm~· ' . .... ,.,,, ·~ ., • ~.\ ~'™="""-1_,i.~""'~. ' .,~ S EA RS B A 'l~l'E ll\' «;! 'AllA NTE E ~ ,, 1 ~ Free re1)l:.1ccmcnt \\·ithin 9() day-.; 1lf purchase if ~ , ·~'.' battery prov<:s dcJ~c_rive._ A~·tcr ij{) Jays, \\'t: re-~ .,l< 1 .", •' , place the battery, it detecr1ve ::ind charge }'<JU l;~ ~· _ .,;. ' only f<ir rhe period or ownership. based on the ~! ' ' ' l .. :11~::~.~t ,_ 4ti~ regular price less trade-in_ at the timt;! of return, ~ .. ~;, ;;;:;.~ prorated over number ot months of guarantee. ri .• -....,,, ~ " 1'· "'\r>' . I ' . . ! ~··· - " I Sears High Voltage Battery Regular S 19. 1)<) 'J' rall C· i 11 llri I' 1· }~its 90o/o of American-Mad e Cars : 99 Reg. S23.9'l Trade In Price Volkswagen Battery ___ i 8 .9? '1 i!lo Trtrl""I" l\n"-4:,IJD-4,JO,, o\'.IO'l...\.1124'.r;;, •l'J8M19'1·\.'\6~ "' Coolant R ecovery ~--· ~·'l ·~......_~1 /' Helpsprcventovcr-~ hear in~. SAVI~' '1 .. '>2 ! O.E.R.* S hocks Rel(U larS4.99 •o riginal Equipment RcpJaccmenr 'i4 '/V .-, • • y L ,"). Dwell 'fachomeler Rrgul.11 r ~24.9'l 1999 11188 Powered by s tan - Jard mercury bar- iery (included). f ul- l y cransisro rized cir· t..Ul l. .SAVE '.5: Ex haust Gas Analyzer Regular $7.J.1)9 69?z?.R Make fast, accurate car bureror ad just· rnents; derect com~ bustion a ouble. Ex - tru ded alumi num housing. 'll'o.1o.T ... J,1~ """ ~ o'I-· ' ' Spa rk l'lugo 4 7 c each Jnclude ~: P0ints. Condens- er, and Rnt<>r. 199 SA VJ.; '8 ! Dwell l\(e ter Rrirul1r SJ..J .• Q(J f or 6 and 12 volr 5ystems. Battery in· eluded. Well cons1ructed steel. R emovab le inclines, 3 9 99 wheel lops. Holds up JO 11220 2Yi JOo s. Reliable JOO! SAVE '40 ON PURCHASE OF ANY REMAN UFACTURF.D CO MPLETE AtrroMATIC TRANSMISSION INSTALLED """Na Biddeo Kstra C~ """'C.oN! F.1ch1n11rA ""'Tran.lmi•ion completely dita&liembled ind rhemicallycle1nf'd H~•~'Y·llury ~1urn .... l.;f,.1ime 1;"'"'"1""' 1r mutn~, L>.it1 d ..... "'.i •. 1<'<'1• "' m..-..,.10.h ur W'Orl· 1UU1.•ln1• "' blu .. nu1. '""· '"" ()( • ....,..,.,. •hol<" <lli- A•n•I purch~• .. r own< •he '"'· '' ... ,u he rerla..<'d up- on '""""· 1,..... ol < hu~ If •he Jd~11ve mufller "'"' '"".itl"<l br Se"'" ....... i11 ")>Call oh<"..,.,. muf1le< ,...,h "" <h•fll<' ,,,. i.o.,, ~ t :re.l#.91 perttntap 6 ( .... rf'pl1~ment part.11 ia U.. indu..;rry Lifetime 4 ;uaranlee For A.1 Long A• You <>wn 1'oor Car ::-icars Heavy Duty Mufflers •Fi ts most American car~ 2 0o/o Off • L:.i.r~e, full-lengrh ru.nin~ cham- ber for ~uer .sound-silencing • :?2-ga. outer !>hell, galvanized • 30% thicker than 1 shell r11uf- l1crs Sear s 1..1/4 'f on Floor J ack 79?2 Easy to put rogetil~r. ake apart for sta r· age in sturdy carry. ing case. Divided pum1) with spr ing handle. SA JIE33%! Spec trum All Weather lOW-40 Motor Oil ReJUl•r2 QJ. $} 75c Qt. Caa 11 Carburetor Ai r 'Filter Ad,ow As } 99 #210:12 .'iA JIE '10 ! Tac hom et er Uwe U ~J e ter ~~:.9~" 3 999 12101;; Scales 0·1200 and 0-6000 RPM. 0.60° Dwell. Good-Bad Point Res istance. Works on any vol· tage. SAVE '15! Portable Engine Analyzer Regular $89.99 7 4?.;! Tests transistorized, conventional and magneto elec.trical systems -6, 12, 24 and 32 vole. For 4, 6 and 8 cyL engines. SHOP SUNDAY 12-NOON To 5:00 p.m. •MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. •SATURDAYS 9:30 o.m. to 6:00 p .m. • FREE PARKING aU INA "AlllC COVINA HOUTWOOO OLTM,.IC &. I OTO 121·4400. $21 ... JlO •••·0611 ..... J.41 161·S21 t CANOGA ,Alllf" IL MONTf INOllWOOD OllAN>';f .M0-0661 44:J..J•l 1 •71-2521 037-1100 Scars •OMO NA SANTA ANA lHOUIAHD OAkS VAUIY 620·Jl •I J 4 7·JJ11 407•4J .. , 122·1 l JI T•J-14•1. tM·21H ,,,0 SANTA MONICA TO••ANCI VlaMONT 931-4262 l t4-•71 I S42·TS l l 7Jt -1tl t COM1'10 M GUNOAU LONO l f ACN •AS.I.DINA SANTA rl S•llNCS SOUTH COAI T '1.Al A U'1A"6D Sotl1l•cll•" 0....-'"4 tJ .. 2s11, ~1-s1•1 241-1004, 144 .... , 1 -t.il.0121 •11.J 211,3S14211 :stAa.S, aoiava; AND co. 944°1011 J4~333 t11.1ti 7 ... Ttw....._, ... -. . " I Trans par Prefaced In Aloha Los Angeles Yacht Club's Aloha Series is a rnintature two-race preface to the up- coming Transpac1flc Yacht race from Los Angeles to Honolulu wluch starts July 4 If anyone "·ere loo king for a hke!y handicap v.1nner in the Transpat. 1he Aloha Series Saturday and Sunday offered no surprises. Overall winner of the tl'>o races Saturday and Sunday v.~as the Cal-40 ~1oonday skip- pered by Ed Lorence of LAYC . Cal-40s ha\·e been "in- ners of thr last three Transpac races. Thirt.een of the 20 entries in the Aloha Series we r e Transpac contenders. F'irst to finish on both races was Cornelius Bruvnzeel"s 5i- foot sloop Stormy Ffom Africa. How Unsafe Cata Boating Get? Ship Roek B.aee. Freestyle Scores Again f'reestyle. E r I c k so n-35 sloop c~skippered by Rod Lip- pold and Saint Cicero, scored iU; secood con11eculiv e Bever Cops Olympic Soling Title Ahmanson Series v ie t o r y Saturday by winning Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Ship Rock Race. Freestyle was flrst overall and in Class D in the Cru ising Club of America ( CC A ) division, and firsl in class and second overalJ in the lnten1a- tional Offshore Rule (IORJ di'<'ision. First to finish and overall and Class A winner in the JOii Don Bever o[ Southwestern division was Jack Baillie's Yacht Club, San Diego. scored NewsBoy from Balboa Yacht finishes of 1-1-2 in lhe Soling Club. Final resulls: r~reestylt; (2) America Jane. PHRF -(1) Sea Song It , Svend Nielsen. r..'HYC ; (2) Photon, Weldon Williamsoo, SSSC; (3) Pele, J im Emmi, BCYC. MORF -(1) Star Shine, Bill von KleinSntid. NHYC. Bahia Stars And Stripes Races Sailed Class lo beat 13 rivals in OVERALL (CCA) -(I) F -~yl L. td & c·nL> Sixty-three boat3 in six California Yacht Club's Olym-''==' e, ippo h.>Oro, pie Classes Regatta Saturday NHYC; (2) Chubasco, Don classes turned out Saturday and Sunday. H a sk ell , NHYC: ~3) and Sunday for Bahia t t-ded . th tt Firebrand, West & Cuckler, Corinthian Yacht Club's Sta"I nc u in e rega a was NHYC; (4) Trend, Jim Lin-lhe Tornado Catamaran Class and Stripes Regatta in dennan, BYC; (~) Running I wh ich is not yet an Olympic Wild. Don Ayres , N•IYC. N~"·port Harbor. The trophy Class. hut is expected to be CLASS A-(I) Qhubasco: (2) winners; admitted by 1976. Winner in Encore, MacDonald & Riley, o this t•lass was Neal Harvey of N YC . L I D · 1 4 A - ( I ) Little C2.'Jr!llo Beach Yacht Club in L~C. ; (3) Anes, Russ \\'ard, Twitch, Chad Tv,.ichell, BYC; r, ·t M.lk LID0-148-(l ) Paga n, • ucrr1 a 1 · CL •0s B -(t) F•·cebcand·, Th . 1w 1'.iarshall Gram, BYC: (2) e regatta drew 42 entries (21 T-nd·. t31 R"""•·ng W•.t•t. B t G · • WITH THIS AO ! ~ FIREWORKS 15°/o OFF. Any As~ Sl.,5 ., Onr! FREEDOM FIREWORKS Saturday's race took the fl eet from the Tran spac starti ng line of f Point F'crnlin 111arine \Vorld hostess t1ichelc Vannoy postitions Safe Boating \Veek poster in to the Yi'est end of Catalina support of the President's request to procl aim annually the o bservance \l'hi<.'h · I ''" """ a ao, aslon Ortiz, BYC~ (3) 111 our classes. Final results: CLASS c _ (tl Atac•·. John s ·d w b So p1 er e b, Don Webb. BYC. · LING 11 4) -(!) Don Cazier, BYC; t2 ) America KITE-ll) No. 900, Warren WILSON St., JUST EAST OF HAlllOJt IL¥D . !l1•lwttn Kmtrl & Ht•bot Shoppin9 Ct nitd All protttds l o t~t voui~ of our community, and back. Sunday's race \\·as a starts July 4. But one look at the <.:har ms of f;1iss Vannoy could make skippers coast.,.,·ise turnaround from forget all about the Rules of the Road. Bever. S\VYC: (2) Tie Jane, George Tooby, NHYC. Parson, NHYC; (2) Vortex. between Ken Young, CYC and C LASS D ( 1 ) Bruce Twi chell, VYC. · COSTA MESA OPTIMIST CLUI SEA SCOUT SHll' J06 Point Loma to Marineland and --=--------------------------------- return. Final results: ltogcr \V elsh. NHYC. Freestyle; (2) Andale, Gra. SABOT A-(1) Ra c in g TORNADOCATl1 4)-(l) ham8Gray,SSSC;l3)Brav o ri.1achine, Mark. Gaudio , Ne;1l J!arvey. CRYC: (2) Skip JI , Alford & Carter, BCYC. NHYC. SATURDAY -\I) Aquavit lMorgan-41) Chris Hansen, CYC: (2) Shibui (Cal-40) Roelfsema & Kober, ABYC : f3) ~loonday {Cal-40) Ed Lorence, A YC. Jr. Tropl1y To Scruggs Pat Scruggs of NlrYC v.·on the Stewart Carpenter 'froph,v in Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Junior Dinghy Series Saturday and Sunday. Runner -up was JeH McDermaid of Long Beach Yacht Club, and third v.'as Larry McDonald , LBYC. The series was sailed in Lehman· 12 dinghies. 185 Boats n1 Da11a Mari11a llawlcy,MYC; !3)TimTaylor, CLASS A (!OR) -(!) SABOT B-11) No. 7091 - CBYC. NewsBoy; \2) Cllubasco; (3) Ty Beach, BYC. TE1'.1PEST (8) -(I) Doug Encore. SABOT C-(1) Missy, Keith ar1.,. Tlllt Ad For Yovr Diw:a""I! After one month of opera· !Ion. rnore Jhan 18;) boats are now moored at !he new $4.2 million Dana Cove and Island mannas llarbor. at Dana Pu i n t Robert Dahlberg, president of !'\\anne Capital Inc .. !easee of !he 111;Jrina. said that Jl5 sailboats and 70 poy:crboats have sailed into the nianna 10 take occupancy of slips rang- ing in size from 25 to 40 feet. 'fhe ma rina. v.·hich will con- tain !.428 slips when completed in 11arch of 1972, is bu1ld1 ng boat skips at the ralf' of 100 per month. A number uf 2:i- foot slips will be av;iilablc for Steele, SCYC: !2) !'.1ike Dun· CLASS B (JOR)-(l) Run· Kilpatrick, BCYC; (2) Fidget ~·- nccupancy later this year, the marina are also complete. mire, SF'VSC; (3J Lee Wesson, ning \Yild ; t2J Blue streak, JI, Mike Arrigo, NHYC: (3) ' ~ ' Dahlberg said. Information on boat slip ren-SCC,YC. Gan• l.-lyecs, NHYC ,· t3) Des-No 00~ N t S ·th VYC .J • ,,.,,,,, eson mi , ; Dana Point Harbor y,•i\I be tal mav be obtained by calling FINN 16) -(!)Duke Jone.s, Liny II . John Hooten, BCYC. (4) Stella C Star, Stella Shirar, officially dedicated by federal .. r"4~96-4.:.:3~t=3·---------'."~·C~;;;.;12~/~N~'e~d~H~a~tt~, ~H~Y~C~. --~C~LA~SS~~D:_;t~IO~R~t ~:..;t~t~) _;B2C~Y~C~. _,;_,;_,;_,;_,;_,;_,;-l~iiiiii:::: slate and local officials July 3l ll - - as p<Jrl or a Chamber of Com- n1crcc sponsored ' 'D a n a Days·' celebration. Construction of a new hotel, two re staurants and boat laun· ch1ng Facilities are nov.· und<'r way fit the harbor. !loads and two p<!.~!-'.!ne lots surrounding Tea1n Race A Standoff 1'hr fir s! inst<"Jlrnrnt of the annual learn race bel'o\'Ccn Hho<.lcs-33 !oia1lors from Sani l .. ranc1seo <1nd Sou the r n C"ahforn1a :it Aalboa Yacht Club $:1turday and Sunday was n standoff. ·rnr northerners '~ o n S<'J.urda~'s race and th c ~outhlandcrs look Sunday·s race. final three races of the scncs \1 ill be sailed al San Francisco later this surn mcr. S:.in Francisco sk ippers were Phil ( ;rcgory, L;irry Smith and Charles ·r h c b a u d . TIL"prcscnling •the south on Saturday v.·crc Paul r.tarx . 11ark Ellsworth, Blair Barnet- te and Bob Kcttcnhofen. S;uhng for lhc south on Sunday were Al Clayes. Parker Dales. llob Law and Bill Taylor. O'Day Title Fo1: Hughes BFG'S;BEST ~ 4~1?LY NY LON · CORD•TIRE WIDE, STRONG SILVERTOWN CUSTOM Fits many Mmricks.. • Hornets, Comlltr, Valiantl, f a!cons, Rambler Americans,sil9 B7S.14 plus F.E.T. of 41.96 per'lirt. 0SAVE UPTtf' •30ASET $ Fits: mmv VW's. Mustvlgs. Corvalrt, Darts. Ba11.1cud11"s, Chevy ll"s. Rambler!, s izes 6.60-15. 7.00-1 :1. end C78-14 plus F.E.T. of $1.76 to $2.07 per tire. Skill a11d Devotion !'.!;irk 1 lughrs nf Balhoa \'acht C\uh 11·011 the quartrr- f1 n;1I~ 1•lim1natinn fnr the I) [>av Trophy Sund;1v Th<> ()"();1v Trophy 1~ ~.l'mbnlir nf thC' su1i.:le-handrd ~ a 1 1 i 11 .l! ~ h.1mp1011!>h1ps nf ~or I h AnH'rk:i. Fits many J avelins, Chevelles, Camaros, Cougars, Firebirds, Rebet., .Ambassadors, Corvettes.. 'Torinos. Plyr;iouths, · sizes E78-l4, F78-14sd F78-15, plus F.E.T. of f2.211o $2.42 per tire. ' ' ' ' ; -' Those are thr ,1·ords of a .~pcria\ con1mendation to Capt. J{obert F. J~onncr !lt'fl 1. Port of Los ,\nge!rs harbor pilot \1'ho has piloted 1nore than 4.000 oL"ean· going vessels during the past 10 years. ('apt. l~on­ ncr. from Ne\1·port Beach. 1\·as hailed as a '"trur ambassador of the port·' by L. /\, l·larbor f 'on1n11 s- sion President Frank ~ull1van 11·ho n1ade the. pre- sentation. Besides his skill 1n ship handling. Bonner v.·as cited for his tact and understanding 1rith sea- men from all over the maritnne \rorld. ll u~IH·-" wilt IT'prrsl'nl lhl' Southern Ca lifornia Yachtin~I A~soc1.1tinn 10 1hr sr1ni-fina!s a! Sil n Franl'ISt.:n in Augus1.1 T!u· \1111ncr 11[ thnt f'vrnt will ] rrprf'scnl <..:al1forn1a 111 1he1 O"Day final s I Other finishers in I he quartcr-fin;i.ls : t 21 Bob Carlen, PVSA: tll Peter Connally, ~llYC: (4 \ Al Nelson. SSSC. -1-------....- Charlie Cops Pritiken Cup Good Time Charlie. skir>- pered by George Schcnkman or Del Rey Yacht Cl ub was the winner of the Pritikrn Trophy Predicted Log race spon!>orcd by ORYC Saturday. ( ;ood Time Charlie fini shed the course with an error or .669 percent. CHOOSE FROM A CHOICE SELECTION TODAY \ We've just opened our new loft and we thought you ought to know. It's at 17815 (M) Sky Park Circle (near the a irport) $ Fits many Chevy't_ DodgeJ, Fo1ds, Oldsmobiles, Pontiacs. T-Biids, Buicks, Chrytlert,, Mercurys, siies G78-14, c;7a..1s, H78-1 4, H7S.15, p!us F.E:.T, ol $2.25 to lf2.80 per tile. -~~plusa.dlai.~~~.;hllv_hial$'. _ 4th OF JULY SPECIAL BUY NOW FOR THE LONG WEEKEND WE HONOR ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS Sc~ MASTER CHARGE = BANKAMERICARD) Safe-Long Wearing- Top Quality Tires at $988 Low Prices! only ALL SIZES FROM VW's TO CADILLACS Now$1944 only Moil Cara !di.c b••••• 11igl'tlly hl;l't .. l Tr1inff BFG Mtth1nit1 will: • ln111!1 New linirig• • Reo1ck FrGnt Wheel B11ring1 • Inspect Entir• Brake Sy$llm • Corrt ct 811k1 Fluid Uivel SAFE, WORRY-FREE VACATION DRIVING .Trained BFG Mtdtanics will: •Align Front End •Repack Front Wheel Be1rino• • B1l1r'K:e Front Wheels • lnapect Entire Brake System ONLY $11 44 All Cara COSTA MESA: ORANGE: WESTMINSTER: "" UfUAVlll" JONES TIRE SERVICE JONES TIRE SERVICE L J. LlffiE BIG 0 TIRE llADWTUll -2049 Harbor Blvd. 1100 Tustin Ave. 7352 We1tmin1t1r Ave. 1:l-1P fat Bay) (Across from n•w PNt Office) 646-44 21 l4fl.4J4J 532-338! 19:1-ssn DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS • MUTI AND JEFF MARRIED MEN ARE SMARTER THAN BA~ELORS ANO ~EY Ll\IE LONGER.' FIGMENTS PLAIN JANE oM,YEAH! A BACHELOR IS A MAN WHO °™tNKS BER:.1<€ HE AC1S AND THEN OOESN"T ACT! I YOU HA.VE ""l~RIO . RQMAt.lC.E. l.PC.ot-'ilN~.-·1 r IM A. POL.ICE . OFAC!Kt AM E "1U.ED Tl-41 s CAMON M E. WELL---- \bU0RE MAKING A B IG MISTAKE ' I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by' A. POWER I PEANUTS ...,.--~-::i,. ACROSS 4f, Not~ aclrtss, !rgally: 1 F"irst namt or 2 ~ords A Prrslan 4S Musty: m~tn,matit '1an B11l1sh S D.1ect the 50 Pl11ni~es At\enl•Ofl of Sl Cau5ed lo 10 or amcle rota te swiftly prODOfllOf'\S 5Z Ga~e consent 14 V1•91nia -: S~ Po11tioo of 1st 41l'~ican· a ~P•SM born child rtlalivt to tht 15 S!lll' OYf'I '" S(,10HndlrlgS IJ'llnl:nCIMIOfl 59 TV SflOl'ISor's 16 ---Minor conttrn: 17Actol 2 worrl~ goi119 out bl N. A."""ric an l~ l·h~•no 111 ... 111 rTl!tS h bifd 20 Subsld;!d'y bl Ht r1ldit lint ol bearing mrrchandist b3 Not rtlaxtd 22 Wta l tOlll"!>t b4 Track for 23 Require lo go horse ratinll 24 A.nimoslly 65 Rt~l t S\il\t 25 Otcl utd p!ptr ts Dyt &b ,.t.ric;eslot )l .CharJC\trltt<I h7 Gent•~1 by; Suff ix 1tp11t~t1on )3 Stnd lllOlltY 35 Bicycle part DOWN 36 Loog MrrOW groovt l Poems la Ont whO 2 long drnsi rnovts around lnlotll'll 40 Por:ulact: l Uniroducllvt Pre fix 4 Try out aga in 41 Bltttr druo 5 SomtthlllG .t) Kind ol ract tNI prOtllp(S 45 Air: toiti. fa!!\ ..... _, SatlJ"day's PU"Zzlt Solvt d: & 28 71 ii Afr1tan 30 Calltrl ~11\tforit 31 [~ailed 1 Met~\workln11 honCll' Ion! )~ A M ' B Ntthtr lands )7 Otr~1trl commune forriia!ly ii Divulgt )q Ont who 10 Htslt~ltd rnovts ~bout 11 C.oosumtr violently lZ Sysltm of •2 MOit t1J11ninq water p!PtS 44 Pronoun 13 Ovttdut 47 Makt mor' l 'l Come OIJl -curr ent -: 2 words I~ Harm0t1y 21 C.uJlfling lool: 51 Meaning 2t Inn 52 footl,ss 25 Fleshy PIM1t ~nlma l of Me~lco 53 Piert~ 2b Score 54 Function 27 As tr1ey 55 Tit Ull 11--: 5b --Scotia; 2 word' Can. pro~1nct 2B C.a!l ikt 57 Mt tric un il lll~llWllll 58 M11ktl 2'1 Go1I bO -A.vlv ' J LET ME AsK ~ov SOMETHIN6 JUDGE PARKER A s .JOMWNV IC.AME iETUIU.!5 l=Si:()f.A. MIS DA.TE W1Tl4 ~&.Y, ME !'."II. ::. A.BIEV SPENCEli! STI LL .. Wo\XE ! ' .. MISS PEACH • KELLY SCHOOL- SUMMER. P L-~CE M EIVI S~'-V1C.( - ~Alt.o~, , .. ,. ~ PERKINS ' 0 0 ly Cliester Gould I DON'T' KNOW WMO 'iOU ~E.BUT t<)BOOY CAN eLJLl\I A ~ELPLESS LITTLE LAOY WHJLE l°M A~OUND. By Tom K. Ryan 15 ABOUT TJMe:! " ""' ' • i ~ • l ' . " .. ;;- If 'lg~: By Dale Hale By Frank Baginski IXl IOU KllOW EXACTl '( WHAT ~OU'RE 60<NG 1tJ l!C Wi'IEN '1'00 6ROW UP? :--1 µEllE'~ A NIC E 5Ui\WER' JOS FOR YOU; Ll'L AINEI GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS By Charles M. Schulz A SMAJ<r COO<IE ! By Harold Le Doux 7S ~ A"'J /.10UJ;:1 EH ? By Men 'SOO:-" FOUNTAIN MANAG-E1l1 E"A~Y WORK, ALL Tl-1E ™AT'S A S ri MOJZE THAN t CAl<E 10 P>IY. ICE CJ~CAM 'iOU CAN EAT~ 75'-AN HOUR~• By John Miles ' ! '»O'lL KNCN'·I ~ W~~Et-.l 'IO' P.EADS MAH PAPP~'S ...._,,,_, WILL!! ·UJI! Now -.:::i ·' WH,AT1S WRONG? MR •. MUM ,, ' "'0 no ' r in~ " '° • •n '" . ' n '. • ~ • • ' • OATI.Y l'ltln' t7 By Al Capp W'EGOTTA LEAVE!! \ By Charles Barsotti "' ,,, ' • I 111 1 0 " • "' " • By Roger BoUen C'W()~, $tP A "11T~E MORE Of' Trlts ... q()OJ'UEGOfrA &E1' ~ srmlSlH OP! =~ As <.WI'!:' weu .. U1£'tL TA~E A IJM'tt 11'U"· \IJOU "D <JOU J.IKE TtlATi'-· -~· , . ' ' DENNIS THE MENACE I ' I ,_,, I • f I t& OAILY PILOT s MOl'ld1y, June 28. 1971 !Technology' Has Differe nt I i\'leanings to Man y People I • By SYLVIA PORTER 'Q. Row mt1ch of a ~yoff ..bi our mulU-bilUoo dollar 1;.ct program ha ve for lbe aier11ge persoo'.' • '.A. Only a mioority ~·1JI ; efit -and about one in lO w actually be harmed by t program. Q. Who then bent.fits most frtm our advan rl ng !ethnology? A. Primarily businessmen and srielitist.s, not average workers. Q. But will techn ology be able to solve nor nallooal p0llullon problem&"! A. Yes. TheSt' are sample opinions of a cross·section of US. citizens disclosed in a fascinating study b.v a team of lfar\•ard Social Sy !Pl ems Analysts headed by Da vid Armor. The 1ntensi\'e study. 1Nhich I recently obtained, covered In High Ge o r I citriens in the Boston area, both young and old, and from a wide variety Or occupations and income le vels. The study is part of a JO.year Harvard project on technology and society to be completed 1n 1974, examining v i rt u a 11 y every important aspect of the impact of technology on us as individuals. Technology, most o( you would define quickly. 1 s •·machines" and 111 oder n technology is compute rs, Ne w Bumpe1· Syste1n Studied By CARL CARSTENSEN CJ 111• Dcall)o 1'1191 Sltlf A new energy absorbing bl.Snper system is now under • df1"'elopmenl in response to lht government's s a f e I y ref,ulations. 'We're working very closely with car manufacturers to develop high integrity steel bumpers and back-t.1p systems that will meet or exceed the Federa l impact re- qu.irements." John S. Judd, president of North American Rock11.·ell's A ul om o t i v e Products Division. said. The Federal standards re- quire that beginning wi th 1973 model cars. front bumper~ mu~t withstand a 5 rnph impact and rear bumpers 2'h: mph. ""'E ARE no longer dealing with just a bumper, but an en- lire energy abso rp t i o n system,"' Judd pointed oul. "In order to get the job done wi!hin the critical time limita- tions. there are many com pl ex technological problems to be solved." · APO developed America·~ first spring bar bumpers and then developed the techniques that allowed bumpers to be chrome plated. "Today, we a~ still recQgn1zed as the leading authority on bumper design and quality manufac· ture." Judd Said. APO is lhe largest independent suppller o( bumpers to the automobile in· dustry. ALONG WI T H .devclopin_1.t new high strength s I e e 1 bumpers, APO also ha 8 developed a s pr i n g·t Y p e bumper bracket ca!lerl a \'()lute spring as their solution IQ an energy absorption 11yslem. The volue spring is a cone-shaped whorl or closely c oiled ribbon steel. ENERGY AB SORBIN G BUMPE R SYSTEM -.\n energy absorbing bumper systen1 is being develop· ed by North American Rock\ve!J"s .'\uto n1otive Pro· d ucts Division IAPD) in res ponse to the govern· ment's safety regu lations. 'rhe systern inrludc~ :t high integrity st.eel hun1pe r made up of a pla1cd burnper face and a box·likc reinfor ring mcmb<'r of high strength slccl behind it. and l\\'O volu!e spring shock absorber.~ located in the bracket area. 1'his syslcm. according to .lohn S. J ttdd, president of APO, "is lighter in '''eight than other concepts ,..,e have evaluated and it should be competitive price-"•ise '' This high energy storing flt shock absorbing, relatively hght-11.·eight spring is cur· renlly being produC't'd ln a \'arie!y of smal!!'.r size..o; o!hcr concepts we Ii 3 vp e\•aluated and it should be competitive price-wise." TESTING JS conrlucled at the rompan)'·s Automoti1'e Technical Cf'nter in Troy. '"The APD approach," JUdil said . "is !Jght{'T in "·eight than NEWPORT SHELTER, LTD . A. C1 lilc•ni1 Li m·t~d P1rlne,.l'lio 11 B1;n9 Fttt..,t cl Tc Pu1,kA•• A Newpttrl Boi e~ Ollie• Bu1!~1~9 . OOC LIMITEO l'""~THE~SHI ,-VHlTS O~ 11 ,000 l""(l'I Minimum Purc~6•• l Un•h 9'/e CumulafiV• Preferred Rafe of Refurn M...---------SHEl.TER INOllSTRIES,INC. 714/,45·2820 Tn<i 1dVtrtl1tmenl 11 rttltl\tr 111 &tit• lo tfll "'" • Jnll~l!tl""' nl An of!I!!" .. buy •• ul1 U"lll. Si,H:h elltt It ..,1~t 111ly -Y 11\t Oll•rlltf Clrcul••· tivHlm..,I l+mlltf 11 (1llt1r"l1 , .. 1c11"h Wllh 11111...-1 lneemo 111 '''•" .. no.MO '"" I "'" -rlh Ill ...... •f Ill.ODO. ~~==~I '::• d _._~Y~~R.~Of'J ·~. ' :Keep your cool with air conditioning. !Rent a new Ford from Ford. I Just eall your toea1 Ford Rent-A·Car Oealar. He't c10l:t to home. And In a jiffy he'll rent you a new Ford Mu1tang, Torino or Pinto for a dey, weak or ; monih. Low rate• ... ln1urance Included. FORD RENT-A-CAR SYSTEM TH EODORE ROB INS FORD JtH H-'-•M. c.... ...... c.i11. 642-0010 ... WILSON FORD 1 IJSI IM&ti ll•tl. H•ltrillf'H a.-lt, C•llf, 1•2-••11 ~heh ArD's hun1Pf'r le.sting de\'tce consist~ of a two.ton "·eigh1 on thr end of an 11- fon(-l(lng .<1rm. Thr pcnduliun t!f'\ 1rf' per mit~ 1e~I J ng of bum· J>(:r s~·s\('ms n1011n\r,1 c1!her <1n a \·ehic\e nr on a ri~1d rramc Tt>~!s c.in hr conrli1 cter1 al l'ary1ng i1np:i<·t~. ~1rnula1 1 n.t: spee1ls up to !5 miles pcr hour. AUTO PROOUCTIO:\ SllO\\'S BIG <iA I ~ l' S. n101ftr 1 eh1clc pro· duc!1nn I.1st 1vrek !ntalrd 2:'12.426 11n1t~. !hr /\utnrnOOtlr ~1 an ufacturrrs A ~~oc1aUon reported tnd:iy Thr week·~ output incltu'lrrl 18ft fli8 passenger cars and 46.5411 trucks and buse~ Dur- ing lhe prC\'IOUS week 192.52[1 cars and 45.378 cornmerc1al \"Chicle~ were produced. the Ao\IA said. CU!\1ULATIVE output in 1971 !hrough Jun!' 19 totaJed 5,410,044 uni1 s. 1 n c I u ding <l.4-05,919 cars and 1.004 .125 commercial vehicles. In tht same period last ye a r . 4.614.597 vehicle!' were pro- duced -:l.715.972 passenger cars and 989.625 trucks a nd buses. 10°/o NNN CARE FREE LONG TERM LEASE l y com111"v .,..,11..t c111111 U•.800 le llJS,OO'l 111 t ltll IRICR. 171 41 •42·05'0 ITEK If YCIU w&ullll 1i~t 1 copy of our 11t111t R11111tll R.eporl &II 111;, c.&mp111y, j111t wrih e>• t~ll. l stabllshecl 1856 H. HENTZ & CO. -Inc.- M1mben N1w Yerlt St~• lrc1to1111• 68 Town & Courdry Road Or•nqe. C•lif. Tel•phone: 835-3100 Offlc.n I~ ,,l~cl~al C ltlt1 engineering, science. research, the space program. Technology, therefore, is at the very core of our economic soc1e1y and is either a great contributor or a \•icious threat to our hves -or maybe both. \\'hich would Y 0 U say"' Compare your attitudes with these: Q. \\'hal ba\'e been gre:itc~t contributions technolog~''? lb• • f A. Ma th1nes have made our Jl\·cs ea~ier . TV make~ people morr a"·are of "'hat's hap- pening around them. com· pul<>rs make business rnore ef· f1c1c11r. automation f'reat!'.s better working condi tions In sum. an over11.·hel1n1ng majority believes techno!Qgy does more good than harm. l!owe\'Cr. only a minority thinks the discoveries fron1 our space program "'iii ha\e. much of a payoff for the average rnan. or l ha t technolng)' ("fin l'vrr solve our population problems. Q. 'Vhat are the irt'att'st dangers of technology'.' A. \Ve have heco rne loo dependent on machines. The pace or modern life does not perm1l time enough for peQple to relate tn e.:irh nther. f.:ic· lory assembl.v lines destroy in· tercst in work. Q. Who shnuld pay tht high cost of fi_i:hling pollution? A. A signific.:in! 7~ percent reported !he.v would accrpl a !::ix hikf' or $50 a yf'ar lo help slop water pollu1ion and seven ou1. of JOO arc convinced that rl riv1n1? in ou r inn<'r cl!iP~ n1u.st evcntuall~' he banned. \Vhil c those fnvoring tax hikrs <ind moratorium.~ on driving arc fa irly he a v i I y cnn- centr::ited in the upper in· telligcnce bracket.~. nearly half nf those in I.he lowest educatcrl brack£>t~ al.so "'ould go :ilong. Q. Hn1v do thr tcC'hnolo,e.y profrssions rank in im· port a net''.' A A scientist nr an rnginerr ls ra!ed an1ong the .top fnur profes~1ons :ilC1ng 1\•ilh phy~i· cinns .:inrl l:iwver~. Much less in1porlant ;irr business ex- ccu!11 rs (~. Arr pcflple too drpendPnt on ma•·hinrs lnday? Coast Ma11 In Progran1 A Ne\\•port Beach aerospace executive. John C. Glascock. has been selected to work with the cl!y of Anaheim under a 11vo-ycar municipal technology program funded by the Na· uonal Sci enc e Foundation. Glascoc.k, "'ho resides at 1~;13 Port Ashley Place, is data s.vstcms manager for Nnrth American Rock\\·e.11 lnforma· li(ln Systems Co. in Anahetm. He Ji' one nf four senior aerospace men participating in the program with the other three assigned to San Jose, F rrsnn and Pasadena. Thi~ program is nne of six pilot projects announced today by NSF that are aimed at us· ing aerospace technology to help local and stale govern· nients solve environmental and societal problems. The 1nitia l grants. totaling $352.900, we re made to six rompanies and ins1itutions throughout the United States. The Jet Propul si(l n l.abor.:itory of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena received $! 10,000 for the program in 11.· hi ch An<1heim is participating. It 1\/111 in\'estigate t h e ap- pl1cat1ons Qf ae ro space technolng~· t o ci l y management. NARISCO will providt Glas<.'OCk wilh the necrssary b<1ck·up ancl suppor1 t o Anaheim under the JPL pro. gram. Other aerospace com- panies "'ill \\'ork "·ith !he !hrce other cities. 11·~ \~ll~ea;~'.:;~ikc1~1~tpuen~~~ll~~ IJ:t·~;~ ... L'C: -·~"1"""1"11 :ind °cleric::il 1vorkers are far more jnclinrrl 10 think ~n than r11anagi;or!' ;ond prnfessional.~. Q. \\'b at prowam!i should i:rl lhr hi!!hPst !iprndin~ rrlorit y -l rchnolo~y-oricntrrl or .<;ori:i l \\'l'lf:ire-0riented pr~ gr;11ns'! WallStreet Ch a tter A. The top five priority pret-C!.--... -:--..=... ~ ~r:ims arp· ·welfan>, cr1m·e prev('ntion. inf'nt.<11 hr.<!! th, "Se.1·ere 1ntcrmcd1ate cor· pollu1i<1n .<1hlllement and urban reet1ons .. ~an be very hou.~ing . frighlcn1ng but do n? L \\°e as .<1 n.<1l1on arr Clh\"IOU~lv nf'l'essarily mean the hegin· nnt ~oin~ to hase budget and n1ng of a ~ew be;ir 1narkel, other derisinn.~ on anv cross· Indicator Digest says. Among srr·l 1on of Aml'riran Opinion~ rr.ason~ the n:a.rkct should Bui 1f \O\I agrrr "'ith rnn~t of tum . more pos1t1ve arc . 1n- thrs(' f1 ntl 1ne.~. ynu ;ire qu1Pt lv d1cat1ons corpnrale earnings ~i -rca m in~ IH'l\\" rra7.llv nu! of \\'Ill improve in the mnnths 11nr nre ~n n1any of ~11r prn-ahf':ld. possible lax c uts 1rr1s ;:ind priori tie!'. and tor restorat1on of lhe In· vt·strnent tax crrd11. and the Evans Tells Entrv Plans !''or Europe SA:\TA ANA (R\\l l -F.van~ Products C'o 's international J:rnup hos annnuncrd lhe crea· 1 ion of a post 'fl incrra!'C rnarkf'I penrlratinn in Europe and 1he United Kingdom. Han~ R.-i1ner, San Fr;-inc1sco. w11s nan1cd ma n a ~ In g dirPctor-European operations. <1ccording tn \\'alter C ,l('n- nison. Sanla Ana, international group executive vice. presi· d<:nl. Rainrr. "ho w<i!' bnrn in ll11rnhur,c. (;ermany. nnrl 1s a n:i luralrlcd Amerlcan c111zen, \\'ill br locatrrl in 7,urirh. Swllzf.'rl.11nd. Ile "'ill be responsible rQr expanding lhe company"!I existinJ: lmpnrt and export oper<1tinns in Europe anrl thf' United Kin,cdom . Operaung a fleet of cii;ht 26 .800 1on hulk c;irncrs. thr in· ternalional group is the fret 'Y.'Orld's largest importer or Lauan and h!lrdwood ply\\•ood and prefinlshcd and h11rdw(IO(I panels. rind is en,i:agcd in a 11.•ide range or in1emat1onnl tradP actil1itles. Th r in· trrna.tlona l ii:rnup is p11rt of Evans' h u 11 di n 1l m;iterials group whirh h~d 19i0 rrvent1es or S2f>S' mtHion. l.ast yl'ar Evans had r<'\"l'nurs nf $5-61 million. he added. Ev<1n~ Products Co J.c; a m<1- jor m a nu r .:i c ! 11 re r .<1nrl distnh11tor nf bu l Id in~ mt1t('rt.!llc; for 11se in res1drn- l1:il ::ind r11<1b1!(' hnmf ('f)n· sr rurt1nn :ind a mfln11f:1cturer of pre-cul homes. r a r ~ o f1.1ma.1:e-preven1ion devirPc; fnr trucks a11d railcar!, nnd foun· drr pr(lducl~ fart that .Jul y hist<1ncally ts a bullish month. accord1n~ to the f1rn1. ~1ro<:k m<1rkr1 scl\in~ <11 1h1~ Jl<lln! not only reflei:t s pr(lf1t 1:ik1ng. but ;ilso hqu1d;1t1on of secunt1es to raisr nioney , observes .Ja ne\\'.'IY Pubhsh1ng anrl Research. Also. thf' b1ilge in savings is bPing misin· lerpreted as money "ticketed for the stock market" a.~ soon a~ the market looks promising again, 1t says. Ralhcr. "a great deal of money building up 1n savings accounts 1r money that belon~s t~ peoplP whn are digging in10 a defensive st::ince," it add!" The economy will he lar~ely on its own r1unng I.ht mflnths ahead -unable In count on hrlp from the fiscal !'ertor, ;ind up against at least n1od<>rately adverse 1nter,.s1· rate and m(lneY·i.ttnw!h lrends, according to Abraham and Co. Consequently 11.·hilr it is still a s<1 fe assumption th::it thP bull market is not over yet. in- tcrmediate·lrend fluctu .<111ons arr likclv lo l)f! "'tdcr 11n'1 nr more prolr::icte.d than earlier anticipated The Ft'drral Reserve Board probably 11.'ill try to ._ccp shorl-term ra tes "from chm- b1ng high enou~h to thrt•at "n l::irse·!'ca\e d isintermrd1at1on fr(l1T1 the. thrift instilutions." Ar;nis Research Co rp , betle1·es. Pro1·1ded thPrp 1s ~me ~lacken1ng of <"Orporal r fund i ng Argus says "Corporate bond yields rn<ly rrmain in a re 1 a t 1 1· r I v mndcrate r.:ln~e "''et lh l' nr~·t ,:.rar ·· Argu.~ adds tin l1gh1er ralend;ir ~hould conl lnur the hnrd ratly 11.ncl urge, •·a l'itf'ady or neutral posture to"·ard common glOCk in- \'('stment~." New Glass Prevents I njuries By RUDY CER.NKOVIC PITISBURGH (U PI) -AS· year-old Pittsburgh boy, nm· nmg out to play, crashed through a glass storm door in hLs home and severed 2 jugular vein. He was dead or arriva l at 11 hospital. Last year singer Della Reese fell through a g!2.ss door at her Ho\ly11.·ood home She underwent se\'er:il hour£ of surgery for lace.rations thal required a thousand stitC'hes . A girl io an eastPr n Pennsylvania school died ofter being cut by fragments from a shower door in he r dormitory. Such accldents appall M. N Zeoll<J , market 111an<.ger 01 residential construction o I pre; Industries' glass division and chairman of the National Cor,sumcr Safety G I a z i n g Committee. He 1s known as .. Mr. Sa fety (:lazing ... '"These accidents could have been pre.vented, ii t.he doors had been equipped with safety glazing tempered , lamina.led or wired glass," he said. "The annealed glass shatters o n impact a n d cre:ites lragemcnls wh ich can cause serious injuries or death" Zeolla is actil'e. in a move· mcnt to create state laws re- quiring safety glazi ng in 2Jl sliding doors. Hazardous loca·' lions in the home include storm doors. sliding patio doors. shower and bathtub en- closures. Jn commercial and public buildings these locations in- clude glass entrance doors and adjoining fixrd glazed panels 11.·hieh could be. mistaken for doors. Fourteen states have passed laws requiring safety glazing during the past two years - Penn s ylvani<i. California. Colorado, New J e r s e y , De.law;ire. Maryland , \\lest Virginia, K en t u c k y , Ten· nes.see. Georgia. F I or i d a , Oklahoma, 111 i no is and Oregon. Zeolla said the safety bill Is pending in Ohio. Michigan and 1 t\la.~sachusells and he hopes bv lhe end of the yea r 2111 siates w11l ha\"e such leg1sla · !inn. I "Thal means 60 percent of the population 11.•ill be under that regulation." he said. "The public and legislators must be inf(lrmed nf !hel ha7.ards," he said. "The na· 1ional study ~roup appoin1ed by thr National Safely Council 1 -provides this information.I Our figures so impressed Jllinois legislators that they passed the law 11.·ilh on1y one dissenting vote.'' Zeolla said sl:itistics nf ttwse accidenlo; are. frighten- in~. "In 1960 100,000 persons we re injured in accidents in- volving shat1er!'.d g 1 a s ~ doors ." he sairl. "Lasl year there 11.·cre 225.000 such ac- cidents. "\\'1th all th<'se accidents I [111'1 1t difficult to understand why any legislator is opposed 10 this bill " He noted that President • .lohn~(ln sl'veral .vears aµn 1 es!ablished ;i national rorn- m1ssinn on product safely, tn in\·Ps!1~atc. Tu·o ~·ear~ af!O Zeolla Fta"e a dram.<1l1c dcrnnnstraton brforr lhc commis~lon Hr walked inlo the heannc room c.<1rrying a 6:)-poun<I dummy simulatin~ an I !·~·ear· old ho.I'. A door madR or ordinary glass was set up. Zeolla swung 1hr ciumm~· thrre feel -simulating a bnv n1nn1ng at f{'IUr Miles per hour i -.:ind aimed i! at the glass door. The glass shattl.'rrd. shower- lfl~ rragmenl~. Then he bounced thr dummy from !he s;imr di s l a n c r ag;1in~1 a door made of tcmoerPd gl as.~ The gla~s re!'ii~t<'d thr impart and !he dummv bounced orf . \liht~ :ill stairs adont lh~~ revised ~tandards. Zeoll:i "·illl res1 Pas1er, "Thi~ is a p e rs on a 11 y re11.•ardinR effort ""hen youl re~li7,e your .... ·ork has helor.d 1ow.<1rd enaclmen! of safety1 legislation,"' ht said. l lawaii Routes Air! Western LOS ANGELES -iBW) \\'rstem Airlines reported pre· l1m1nary May traffic of 400 million ~at miles sold. a 7.1 1 percent inc.re;ase over hie 373 million for lhe same monthl la~t yr.<1r S"al miles productd were dnwn :'l i pe.rl'tnt I Approximately .17 percent of lhr ~:iy traffi..: increase. camr from the cornpany·s Ha"·a1I route,. "·hich t1ff)Crienced a 13 percent increase 1n seat miles sold THE NEEDLE IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PEN And the m 4 n who know.1: ;ust how to turn the plzrase to get th e most oul of the barb is DAILY PILOT column- ist Sydney Harr is. Ile ha.! been called the modern -day fl e n r y ~f en ck en . lf !JOU're r enrly for his use of the acid adjectiv e and thou fJ h t • pr ovoking prose to {1it•e you the needte ... if yoii wat1 i to firid so11iething to think abo11t ;n tvhat you f"ead ... if you have a sense of liumor, you b I! Ion g with readers w ho clclight in telling others what "Syd said" in one of the nation's most • quoted columns. Some Sample Barbs Recently Thrown By S ytlney Harris: "One of the highest paid jobs In America consists of standing up in frcnt cf 1 mic· rophone, separati ng the good records from the bad cnes -ind playing the ba d ones." "It's sad but true t hat while alcoholics are the best argument for abstinence, so m any abst ainers are equally effective ar· gument for a little drink now and then." "Most of the so-called 'incompatibility' I" marriage springs frcm the f•ct that to most mer\, sex Is In act; while to all women, it is an emotion. And t his differ- •nce in attitude can b. bridged only by love." "The sole difference betwee n 1 'dedica- ted crusader' and a 'nosy reformer' con- sis ts in our agreement or disagreement with his objectives." "The mcst explosive combinaticn In the world consists of sincerity added tc Ignorance." "\Vhenever I am the recipient of an ex· cessively hearty handshake. I suspect ~tr. J\1u scles is trying to sell something, bide 5omething, or prove something." Check The For This Editorial Signature Page Help You Find Latest Quotables Created By 'The Needler' For His Col- A Regular Feature of It'll The umn, the DAILY PILOT Your Hometown D1ily Newsp1ptr Who Writes The Editorials? lt'a • fa ir question, probably one of the most frequently •1ked about the newspaper. And th• answer a t the DAILY PILOT is no one -no one person, thet is. Editorial w riting is a teem •ffort at the DAILY PILOT. It is tne er-t of ph rasinR thou;hts so that the fi nish.cf editorial represents the new14 paper's opinions on news events and problems of the day. The edltorlal1 do not eJtpress the opinions of anv one man. The newspaper speaks w ith one voice on ly after many have been heard. The voices are hea rd -loudly and clearly -in the informal atmos· phere whicn surrounds the weekly meetings of tlie editorial board. Out of these meetings come the foundations on wh idi CA/LY PILOT editorlelt are built. At the heed of the editorial board 11re Robert N. W•ed, publish•r : Thom11s Keevil, editor; 11nd Albert W. 811te1 , editori11I page editor. Oth•r ~ard members e re Thom11s Murphine, managing editor; Richa rd Nall, assistant managing editor; L, Peter Krieg, Newport Beach city editor; end Alan Oirkin, Huntington Beech-Fountain V11lley city editor. As they discuss news of the week or of weeks ahead, the talk r11nges over topics affecting each of the Orange Co•st communities the DAILY PILOT serves as well as tne state, ttie n11t ion and the world. There Is a three-wey test of any topic proposed 11s t+ie subject for an editorial: 1. Is it a topic which merits editorl•I comment? 1. Will the commentary serve the newspaper's readers in terms of their partic ular interests? 3. Does the new1paper know enough about tfie topic to make an intelligent, responsible comment? Often the ihird question is the most difficult to answer. And som• times th e answer is "no." Even 11fter consider11ble research and further discussion 11t a lat1r editorial board m1eting, a topic can be dropped altog1th1r because the newspaper still does not heve sufficl1nt knowledge to make a meaningful editorial comment. Discussio4. in an editorial board meeting can modify the conclusion, shift the emphasis or even reverie tne position of the board member who was the original proponent of a certain position end posture tne newspaper sliould assume on a given topic. But who actually writes the editorials for the DAILY PILOT? Ti'le editoria l boa rd calls on any man or woman on tne staff -the one most qualified to write on the specific topic selecttd for comment. A reporter whose assignments li 11ve placed him closest to the facts surroundi ng tlie editorial topic may write ttle first draft. Most often the original draft is written by one of the senior edltor1, And usually even a "first draft" represents 1evere\ rewritings by whom· ever i.i;oduces it. It will b1 reviewed 11s many as three times -once by Editorial Page Editor Bates, again by Editor Keevil and, finally by Publisher Weed (where "the buck stops," as ttle saying goes ) -before It finally reaches tlie publication stage. Each review usually brings some further editing and refining. Any member of the news team w ith knowledge to contr ibute on the subject is invited to put fo rth his best effort. Many voices blend into one. The editorial speaks In the single voice of the newsp11per. Who wrote it? The DAILY PILOT did. Page proof ls checked In composing room by Albert Bates (leftl, edltorlel page editor, and Thomet Keevil, editor. It's lest chance to correct typo- graphlcal error" ' ·-.. " , •' . ~-,, ,. J ., , -. ---'!...._\ " . • •. '· ' Though they call it "edit board" for short 11nd it mHts In e shirt-sleeve atmo1phere of Informality, the job of the editorial board i1 serious-and taken seriously by (left to right) Robert N. Weed, publisher; Alan Oirkin, Huntington Beach-Fountain Vtlley city editor; Thomas Murphine, managing editor; Richard Nall, assistant manegi"9 editor (he oversees the Laguna Beach, Saddleback and Sen Clement•Capistrano editions); L. Peter Krieg, Newport Beach city editor; Albert W. B11tes, edl· torlel page .ditor; end Thomas Keevil, .ditor. And Other Good Questions What la an editorial:" An editorial Is a statement of th e newspa~r·s opinion on a lopic 11 feels 1s of tnterest or concern to it.s readers. "The fire destroyed the building and three. adjacen! structures." That's a ne1,1•s story. ''The fire could have been prevenled ii the city council had con· demned the ancient bu ilding ..... that's an editorial. Why do you endor~e cand1t!Jtes for public office? r-.iany people go to the polls without knowing the candida~s v.·ell enough to voU on them -or don't go to the polls at all. for the same reason. \Ve feel these readers are open to reasoned suggestions. ~Ve know the candidates both peri;onally 11nd from their records because we think this is part of our job. \\'e share our gpecial knowledge with our readers when "''e carefully exercise our privilege tll suggest that a given candidate is best qualified for lhe job he seek.~. \\le also are careful to see that our editorial opi- nions, expressed on the editorial page. do not inlluence our reporting of the cam· paign -or any other news -in our news columru. ·~· Do your edltorlal wrlter1 have ru.11 freedom of tbelr con"lctlons er dot1 somebody tell them what to write'? No staff member is obliged to "'-Tite an op inion he does not share. He. is respected fnr his dissent. And dissent is frequent. though not bitter. among the writers and ed itors who produce the DAILY PILOT editorials. Why do you publlsb "editorials" wh ich disagree. with your stated position'? Often the comments of eolumnlsts v.'hose work appears on the editorial page are considered "editorials" by readers. The top of the editorial page: containing ~editorials is where the DAILY PILOT is!A.tes it.1 90sition. The rest of the page iJ turned over to readers' comment.1 (let• le.rs and Gloomy Gus \ and to writers and cartoonists with v.·hose views this ne"·spaper may or may not agree. These range from the satirical political com· ment of Art Hoppe lo the hard-nosed in- vestigatJon of \Vash1 ngton bureaucracy by Robert S. Allen and John A. Cr0ldsmith. Their comments are not editorial.!!. But !hey often counter-balance ideas et· pressed in DAILY PILOT editorials and, thllll , give our readers a more balanced diet of opin!ons on a given subject. Gloomy Gus ... Is He One of Us? R'1thout letter·TMiling reatf.ers I'd !o.o;e my voice. G.G. (H1m.s~lf) Gloomy Gus literally is the. voice of the people. No stalf member "wtlt.t'!." the Gloomy Gus fea ture . All of Gus's quotes are contrihuted by readers -many more tha n can be printed, in fact. That is not to say that none of the DAILY PILOT 'S some 200 employes may nol occasionally conlribute. a Gus quote. After al!, they 're subscribers too. -., r t • . "i ; \ :.... ! ! l ' FIMI revl•w of Intent and content of an Important tditori•I likely will find Publisher Robert N. Weed and Editoriel Pap Editor B•t•s mew1 ing under plaque on Bates' wall whicn kffps reminding them the DAILY PILOT editorial page ha1 high 1t.nd•rd1 to maintain. Pl•que Is fi rst place award in C11llfornla Newspaper Publishers Association competition for \t6L ~ DAILY PILOT ,Sotath Coast Hepertorfl . Orange Coast College 'Charley's Aunt' Hilarious 'Fiddler' Cast Anrwunced Gary Gordon rif Lni. Angeles "Fiddler on the Roof'' will lege auditoru m. Ticke.t mall has won Lhe coveted role of be dirttted by John Ferzacca orders will be a cc e pt e d Tevye in the Ora nge Coast and will open Aug. 4 for a startiftg July 1. Admission will four-day-o nly run in the .col-be $2. By TOM TITUS 01 ... 1>911' Pli.1 il•fl They'~ billing .. "Charley's Aunt" u the •·funn iest com- «iY yet" at South Coast llcpertory -.and they'1e not very far wrong. There are ce.rt.ain old-time comedies, and B r a n d o n Thomas' turn ot the century En&lish farce i! high .among Utem. which lend themselves perfeeUy to the wild and wooll y m1chinaUons of a directorial wiu.rd and an in- dtf atigable cast. SCR clearly has come up with such .a m.aaic:al combination. for in- dttd. "Charley's Aunt" is un- Monday Evening JUN[ 21 1:00 IJ Ii' "'-' Jtnf Dunplty, (])AIC ,.._ lltuoner, Smillt. e a m Ma1tr L•111• 11•0 Conllnucd from 5 PM. 0 VirJllll• 'ma. :h9 Gum •111 M1rjori1 Lord,·Ktlr D~Jlt1, N· l1n Dr1k1 i nd Dr. Llltlll• Foret, 0 Sil O'Clld MOiiie: (90) "Mir.· d. Ill kpn'a CNet" (cornedY) '44 -ittty H~. Eddi1 Brtektn. llJ I sn m Nowlt C'.ontinutd llOlll 5;30 PM. Cb lbr Trek fl'! Cl!ild111r'1 TelniJlo• WO!bllop ~Radift2 S.riei Coll!rrenu." tm n• F1m11y B)Motldn 34 &) ~ jij111 H1wthorne. I :•(])"-1111 Hurjdy. CJ) Tmtt « Clnleq11t11r:a Cll Cll Jlen W.ittr Cronkite. m !Wpptd .. L..d .. (E)SMdld nhn/Mnkal1 al) D """· Slattarit CllAIC- 7:00 G Cll,... W1tt1r Crankit1. 8 DEIUT Wl6e SU..111 Tllutrt: 'Tiii C.. el lk'lcul1" (l!om1t) '5Z --franc.is lldem, Hanni Eber· ''"'" (I) T• Tll tlit TIVUt 0 WW'1 MJ Uoe? m1 i-LKJ mrn°""" m cnmro uJ. s..w rOt11111 R9'0M Coitllltftllll Heut 1\11 Oil Mllnlllid Qllr11 Im Cllrhl: UI• LMn1 WINI! ·-·-m MlptltD V11du Sltqw mMew1e••1111 ):Jt IJ ([l lull&MU (R) ~1~ J1Uer: Betti Olvil. In 1 n r• ruut mle, p1.,. 1n 1mbitle1td ranch woman whli, with till' !wt sons, plots Dil- left't dNtti to IYMI' tiw husballll's h1nsin1. CIJ "°"41: "ilHi Cwrtit c1111 .. 11" John Mill!. Di~ BolHdt. D Cil m W'a 1111-• • o..i OJ Miiiion S MOiiie: (C) (Zh1) "Wind Auem l\t bef(lldtt" (dr.ma) '58 -!url IYll, Ch115topher PIUl!ll!ltf, G)'l)Sf lltl.MI Lee. The mufh·hewn story ot South Fkmd1 and of lht 111111 wlla tou11h1 lo u ve its betl.lty 11th• turn ot !ht century. ID Trvt11 er CotlseqMDCtt m tt Tabs 1 Thill fI!) Cl11111\1 lO e)O.b-MI 1:11 ml c..tloll * Staundo1 l:IOD ®lm-a rn m n.. ,.....,._ , ..... ID Tt Ttft ttia Tnrttt ID...,.,_ II!) ... " Vllio1 Ill•-" 11!1111• doubtedly the tn08t hilari005 offering mounted on a n Orange County st.age all year. Robert Bonavenlurl, recruited on a short term bails from San Francisco's Amt r i ca n Conserv&tory Theat.tr to direct t h I s summer.Jong revival, refuses to accept the play at farce value. Instead, ht hM gone a step further. into lhe slapstick and sight gag world of bur- lesque where anything goes and the hokier the interpreta· tion tile better it is appre· ciated. Under the demanding pace established by Bonventura. the m DllWid froll a.. Gullh 1r1 1ct1ess Debbi. Re)'nolds, dare·dtvil motorcyclist Ewl Knievel. 1Pld roll· tr dllfby star Miki SMU. m ...... cm httwl w """' 1:55 ml ClledM H ,.._... 9:00 II IUylllrYy lJ Jt. (II) hi• LI• lUISh ti I city ~tnMr whe COIMS to woB wittl Sim just as his &Ill lriltld Millie ...._ on vtettio11. 0 M..W. (fit) "'htl ts .. ltllll· .,... (dr1ma) ·~1ttin Fo«I. Ntn· CJ Kwan, Un• Russell, Wally Co.t. A IOOtif'MI fficht lttds 11 disub:r, and the rtll t111S1 r:I tn. actldent 11 l'M!lltd atter • rt-en1dmtnt ot Utt 1111! llifht II Jtll9d. "'tJ rnoo muc--1CJ (2111) ,.... 11-SMe" (comedy) '67 -Shlrley Mad.aine. Altn M in, Pr!tr Se!1e11 Comic ec1mln1t~ of th• modam ltmale, stt in P1ri1, • wom1n's town par ••ctl!enct. ([)At,_ ~-(C)(a~-­(musical) '53 -GOIOon M1cRn, IUthryn GraJV>n, OJ Ftkw!J Squd m 11act .11m111 m JO M111111a IE"'""' ma ... -= ~ c.,u..· ltw Ayru, Tlf!ISI Wrilflt (l!lhmPnYtnllb 9:10 II ([J Dn 0., (R) Dol'ls "m · cws" ib poodles locW Ill an lllte ind fillds Ml.if ii -.at 1r1 1 f1lb. beiy dltrp. 0 krllt Wtnl N.n m_,._ I[!) Mnicall/,..._,s Dl9* ID LI Cm H Mad9 er.cw IO:OO IJ(l)S..-""**' "lost Treasure.~ A JIOl'J 1bout tllr• """ f'mll'I Vtrled tf'ld colorflll bltk· 1rounds who join ln 1 111rt.h IM J11i$$1n1 rtdles. lama Sllcy ltlfS tnd fritz WIMI II •Ilda! fU9ll 1J Ntn Knin S1nders. 0 Mewit: -up UI• Cfwl" (ctM'll• ed'y) '5&-Peter Selle", Dtvid Tom· lirm~. m Mtws P'utnlm/Flshm111. Q) M1mra, Al Mtmel tats. lu.t b Bllly DeW()lf1. m turnnt E'ftiilb Ml1/\llitits af ttlt f1111!s cf tM ti:~ 1nnu1I Watts Sum· "CHA•LIY"I AUNT" A com.dY t>Y 7••-Thorfou, di•~"' by •-n a.,..v..,1ur1, d91lgMd ltY llallfrl ., .. ,., 1111111"9 llY •tt1ln11d •cdo., IK1>nlc1! lllft<llV M1rll" • ..,_,, Pr• .... ttd bv Sou,., CIMIJI 111:....n.vv WtdnorMl•Y• "''"""' Sufld1y1 untll A<l9. U 1: Ill• Third St•11 T,,..,.,., 1121 N--1 a1..i., Co1r1 MIMI, R•-vtllOl'la ...._UU. TMI CAST FIMDllrl ··-··-. R-111 eou1aom Jack CM111•v .. , .. SltW P1tt~•­ (111r1•1 wY~W..m .. •• Tim Mllt\l(tl flre .. 011 .... •. MIO>ltl f ulltr ICll!v V•rdlln .... ., M1evt llollln..,.. llmy S1>on1,.,. . M•"I Ficeml"' l lt Frt nd• (llHMV .. . °"" l uCM S1t""'•" SPlttleut C•me•on "'"""" Oo<!nor Lucia D'Alv1dort1 Par fl•ow" Elt 0.111'.lv .... Jl "it MOrrllUtt• production movts for lhe most part at full tilt with a high velocity pace and pinpoint timing rarely displayed in local theater. This frenetic motion often gives way to ex- aggeratedly stylized romantic gcene!!, rendered all the more tffectivt by contrast The overall effect come! M though it were !!Ubtitled "Oscar Wilde Meet! the Three Stooges" -for there are element!! of each extreme of comedy, along vdth some Keystone Kops cha.se scenes thrown in. The plot itself o f f e r s limitles.s opportunity for outlandish satire -tv.·o young college men wtJo recruit a buddy to impersonate the aunt ot one of them so that t!H!y may entertain their lady· friends with the requisi~ chap- erone. When a pair of greedy fathers begin pursuing the supposedly weathy "aunt" and the real auntie shows up with the impersonator's long lost love, this CQnUc concoction be- gins to boil over. Ronald Bow.som, one of SCR's most prolific young ac- tors. is out.ste.nding as the un- fortunate undergraduate trap- ped in a m<>st outlandish im· pe.rsonalion. Boussom revels in his role. exhibiting a flashing sense of timing and double-take reaction wh ich tmbellishes his performance immeasurably. Every move and gesture is calcula.1.ed for maximum effect at a most ex· hausting pace. Welt contrasted as the scheming young Lotharios are Steve Patterson .and Tim Monich. Patterson is the un· disputed leader, the organizer who thinks on his feet 9iilile Monich, in hi!! SCR debul is equally impressive as the baby-fa ced. nervous nephew. Th.cir romantic interesU 2.re played with an overfl owing scoop or propriety. ::.tyle and demeanor by Maeve Robinson and Mary Fleming. 'llhe latter, by virtut of a delightful lisp, is the more memorable of the pair, but their scenes together are marvels of com i e coordination . Don Tuche turns In yet another Ii p I end id charac- t.eri uition as the penniless nobleman fa.I.her with im- peccable, a uthoritativt bear· 111tr G11ne.s, ~eld 1t C1J St.te, LA OPIM m fJ TM111Mt 6t41 "''l. ...... lO:JO O....,..: (lllf 4!1111 "Slll~rfltl ....._ ,....._.. [&pralil'" (lllY*ttf11 '32 -M1rlt111 /'-~~~====°::;;: Dletridl, Wtmet Olend. HOW-IHDS TUISDAY - m """am .loflnt. Striking\'' -~~'·.:~::~~:11''"· IE c...Mtll ..... lllla$ f. COi.~ ";~'::'-!..:::~..'..'. .·. JACK NICHOLSON 11"1l II Cil 111-• B ~--nvEERBJI ~ ~ , ""IEJ:EB oo --.... ,-, ..... ""'°"'(!le> o m m~ -.1.HD- m '""41: °1'9 111 .. sllMI" (l!IY"' tery) '43 -Tll!Mn Sty, Eyetyn Al'lk•"· Cl)l..t .. QMl l!llJOwY ......... ma (R) "MelvYn' Douglas is MAGNIRCENT!" ---JUDITlt CRIST., New YOftc Mepzlne .. 8 CJ) Mn'l llcl' (It) HarTJ pm.s m!SI,.. ,__ T1 1NeverSan1 For. lly Fath•• t llllffiwlt hoUM t1J1St wtlt11 he ll:lO II (I) --1t1J1 with Lucy whllt his llocM b ... , '9dlcof•t9d. a § m..., t.1n1t ing. Less oonVlllCtng I s Cameroo Young u the boorish wealthy 11wain, for hit Merly youthful face: has b t t n overlooked in an otherwi.se ef- fective aging process. Pat Brown i.s delightfully droll as the reaJ Brnilian noblewoman who observe!! the charade wilh glee., While J2.nis Morrissette make! a fme in- genue ward. Swiping the scenes from virtually all of them, however. is Michael Fuller as the persistent butler capable of comic destruction with a haughty "Very good, sir." Robert Bree.n's tricky thrtt- wa y .set is a masterwork of economy while Reginald Rook contributes 1ame first·rate lighting effecl!. Costuming, by Walter Watson and Scott Busalh, and Chris Real'.s period hair styling all combine for a most exceptional even- ing. Go see "Charley's Aunt.'' it is the summit in a sea.son of nostalgic revivals and cer- tainly the most hilarious pr<>- duction or a singularly im- pressive year in c o u n t y theater. Tht SCR comedy continues throughout tht s u m m e r , playing Wednesdays through Sundays until Aug. 14 at the company's Third Step Theater, 1827 Ntwporl Blvd. in dowhtown Cost.a Mesa. 'Johnny' Cops Film Fest Award College su mmer muscial pr<>-,;==="====================; duction ''Fiddler on tht Roof," I NATIONAL GENERAL :tHEATRES Gordon, 33, is a graduate ofl'--:;;:;::::::~~~~~~~ Los Angeles State College who I h" appeared in "Mam<" and ( EXCLUSIVE ENa~~GEMEN'T l "Take Me Along'' for the Long Beach civic Light opera. ~ lleftS Filling the other major jrQ.R<:A.tm~,~~ ~ rolles will be Carol Gwenn, CHNi1~:H.JJff{ bananas'' CCID'l:h1 Delu~ .also of Los Angeles. as Golde ; ~-I Un111ll l\rtt•l1 Chris Speirs of Orange as 2nd Comedy Hit !!.."""~~ "THE TWELVE ... _,·100 1 tt,... T2eitel and J anel Gordon of El CHAIRS" (G) ~~."';:'._~»l'.>oi Toro .as Yenta, the mat-........,,. 11J0.10.1to' 1o.e. chmaker. hl iss Gordun was "'Gttin"1.0t1.~n ... io last seen in the female lead of -;;;;;;;;;.J ATLANTA, Ga . (AP \ -A -, film about a disabled soldier "A View From the Bridge" for of World War I, .. 1.°"""·' got the Irvine Com m u n it y Theater. hi s gun," has captured the Others in the OCC cast in- Golden Phoenii award as the best film offered in the At!an-el ude Ann Givin, Teresa ·ii'i"cshael York ta International film F'estival. Runamaker, Colin Vogel. Dar· ren Kelly. Scott G r a 1 n e . (lk£....Som_rn_er The Dalton Trumbo-Bruce Richard Rowland, El I en Mo-ti...ei Campbell production stars Pickler. Karen Benton, Phyllis •.:O;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiii~D~•~"~•~"~•;•~l~:15 P! • IklnaJd Sutherland, D i a n e ~~ Varsi, Jason Robards and a KS'cinhg•c'ke~arJk ~,w-,.·,h1e..",·1 ChBo·c";,·k . ~ ~( / newcomer, Timothy Bottoms, '• · " " ' 'l-==========-c======;:=-=-~~-~~;,=; as Johnny. \1irginia Hahn, Irwin E . If La..yt9q , Blanche Mickelson It wa 5 written and directed and Thomas Roman. by Tnimbo, produced by'Jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Campbell. II The film also won the Golden Dove award as the festival's best film dealing with or contributing to world peace, thus maintaining its record of earlier achievement. At the Cannes F i I m Festival. it became the on ly film ever to win three major awards in the festival's ~ ytar history. CHARLIE'S AUNT WffitlTuSll't The only weapon he had left WOS-- DOUBLE-FUN! DOUBLE-ACTION -ALL NEW FOR EVERYONE Fullerton Children's Theater A uditio11ing Children's literalurt mil kine machines, w a t • r changed from ''Mother C.oose'' pumps, and sunriSes. to "Dr. Suess." The 0Ghildren 's Unlike other plays. there are Theater Workshop at the no princesses or wit ches_ Muckenthaler Cultural Center There i!, however, 1 chance in Fullerton is attempting to for children, young people, and make this same bridge from adults:, to experiment with traditional fairy tales to a 20th drama and allow t h e i r Century play in its: summer creativity to come to lhe production of "Names and surfact . The cast will be com- Nicknarnes" by J a mes pose:d of all ages and tryouts: Rtaney. are open. Tryouts will be held today, The workshop is being prr>- Tuesday and Wednesday from duced by the Muckenthaler 7 lo IO p.m. at the Mucken-Cultural Center in cooperation thaler Center, 119 Buena Vista with the. Community College Drive, Ful!erton. District of North Orange Co11tl~•o111 Si.ow Dolly Fro"' l P·"'· I FHtiire Showe .t l •i :15-l :JOJ AdMlts & J•11lo" SI.SO UR1ll " r.M. GEORGE PEPPARD • • ''OllB MORE 'l'BJIIN TOBOB0 ~ 1.0. Jml!. JrOIClr '° ttoe- ttoe- lamil!j wiAtryoyl HoW~ ~AR&Gil ! UNIV!RSll PICTURE · TECllN1COLOR" The play is contemporary in County. both conte:it .and if3 style. The _ _:=:::::c._ _______ _c============"'=======================~ Childr•11 75t selting, a Jarm. is a_, romantic to the suburban grade schooler as King Arthur's Court; but the imagination of cast and audience alike will~ required to transform plalfonns and stepladder into a barn and silo. a roof and chimney. or a havstac.k. A chorus of unique individuals will provide !'luch. ~ssentials as cow5 , chickens, ·-·--.URSUIA ANDRESS STANLEY BARER.., l~Y]JWAHNER,. 1 !'PERFECT FlllllAY' -·---.. --.... ,_,_ :::=.--·--·-.... - !' -·-l'iil-' ·-·-l:!S .... Ill ROCK HUDSON "PRETTY MAIDS ALL IN A ROW" EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT• SHOWING NOW AT TWO THEATRES! S1lVE McQUEEN takes you for a drive in the country. The country is France. :1 ~\ The drive is at 200 MPH! l ~'.' \ .. I --~ • m flM ... ,.... (J' "'" • Cil Cil m Dkt c..e ---COMIHl- "Sidtltn Nf1l1." M•ui• ind Millie C1J b1W a.. T1MlllWMrds -. \l~~~~~~~~~~~~~"~R~Y~A~N~'S~DiA~U~G~H~T~E~R~"~I\ l1nd In lht ml6d l1 ol 1 Sicilian To:•• Dut!IWI. falllllJ ftud wt1111 th., try '° help 1 f1'tldwtro hn1ntr1r1t1c1 proP111J. lt:45 D ..._. "'D 1 1111 ...,.. e 1111t U. U-Mlt~Q J!ooNy, (dnm11 '57-Pl'lltDll fosttr, Pll Iii!«!• Lortnt 11141 F. IM a.u.,. Co11W•1. -u,119 ...... -•CD•" •• I • ., lood • ,_.""' ,_, ... 1939 111d to tilt ID......_: .,,.. ..... (lft'YI· ...,. rrttllnt ol Mbett. Moll t1ry\ '44-l.oft Ct111171 JI .. EwtrR Mk tDoli; Mt lht W8tld 1ts11 u Ank1t1. tM Cennfll1 llllf'Cfled *' Pr11111, 1 ::GO -lllowlt: -w......a.. -:...., -•"" l'rl• ·-........ ,."""' -·~ --··~---... """'°' Ill ow tl1111," tlld Mier· (wtlttm) ·sz~ M~. .-rd._.. ...... ,...,... .....,. portllltl °' Rlehttd Ep1. •• ~ 'P .. ..-- -• -CD DDCIJ!ll -"11 .... 1: "'-... Tuesclay diffllit ltMd .. • ... : n I ..,.. (.,.a.rt) 'J3 ............. _ ......... (lli\ilrltVft) ·so--em WiHl•ms. • ..,......._ ........ (dra· 1111) ••t--o..t: ftlrMnb >r .. •hn T'°"'""· 1:11• (Q .,. ..... llQl?f" (Ml· Mull) 'U--Jslf Ctla""9r. • ..... I '*f" (drtmt) '47 ~ ,_.,, )Mft lloMIM, ll:twl(ll"'lllll ........ (irl•) 10 -Hant hc:tlllotr. o. w. fbcW. 1•. "'Clf•.r (~) '45-lii:I. ""'911, MlcMll111 CWl'll. ?:GOD "I• fll a 111.t"' (drtfllt) '44 --tllc:llMI O'Shu, ~ ..... S:CICI ()) ..,. If .. Odnf' '"'*"') 'ff-Jlobert RJn. tlHt ,_ 4:al • (C) "11lit '--...., H4ll ... Liii Cl(J If IM' (wdnl) 'M- Ja7 SIMrl'l•tls. Cl.,ton Moon. (JJ 1t1 JI All Wq. l:JO .. .,. " ........ (lllJat•IY) '4J -ton Chaney Jf .. loul• Alllftttoft, .R ~ f,, 'aACK ay ll'Oll'ULAR DIMAND' LONG BEACH AUDITORIUM TllVJ18. 1U'L T I l 1JG P.K. nr. JUL 't J arJO P.M. IAT. JULY J I• JO P.M. SUR. JULY C J1IO P.JI. RESERV!D SEATS, $6.50, 5.75, ~.75, 3.75 ON S.llf AT LONG llACH ARINA IOX 0'F1Cf MUTUAL AGfM· CllS, All TICICITRON OUTllTS, SIARS, lllOAbWAY, MAY CO., .&HO IUltOCKS. MAIL ORO(RS TO IOX OFFICE. / A CINEMA CENTER FILMS PRESENTATION lritten by HARRY KLEINER.Music by MICHEL LEGRAND ·Execulive Producer ROBERT E. RELYE Produced by JACK N. REDDISH · Directed by LEE H KATZ IN · A SOLAR PRODUCTION PANAVISION.Colorby DELUXE, A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES RELEASE l!'il~~·=:•o :tWD ... •IT I "THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR" I E D w AR D s ' . . DAILY P11.af aJ l:'""'"'"'~~,,,,~,,.,, ....... ....,""....,,,... .... ....,,,,~,i. .... .,.,"'!,,,,, ... .,, ... ..,,,...,., ... l!l'!!:l!lli!l!"""'" ............ .,.,,,,,,.,,,. ..... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"""""'"""-="'""""'~...,,,.,.,,,,.,.,,...~.., ... ~~ ... ..,,,.,.,,,,...~Z<~•-~ ' Ha~py Si~t~ Birthday" Costa • Mesa Civi~ Playhouse SIX YEARS YOUNG -Making the firs t incis ion in Lhe Costa Mesa Ci vic Play- house's sixth birthday cake are Ton i Po pvits !left ), cultural arts supervsior for the Costa Mesa Recreation Department, and Pa ti Tamb~llini, resident director since the playhouse's birth. RIVALS REUNITED -Beth Titus fleftl and 1-!elene Briggs. rivils in the play· house's recent "1'hc .r.Jan \Vho Came to Dinner," ch11t \\'ith lia1 Graham. \\'ho pla¥ed the Lltle role. \vhile the n1un1my case . a prop from the sho\v, looks on silently. STALWARTS -Any given production since 1968 \\·oul d hardly be coinplete without the services of one or more of these r,gulars. From left, Barbara Garlich, Ed Little. fuiy Scott and Joanne \Volcort drink a toast to their mu· tuaJ effort, "The Irregular Verb to Love.'' ' WITH A LITTLE HELP -Guest d irectors have figured promin- ently in the Civic Playhouse's success. and fi ve of them get a sal - ute from r esident director Pali Tanlbellini at the Costa Mesa birth· By TO!\I Tl1'US ot •~• O•ll• Piiot si.u In con1n1unil y 1hcater. you really don't need an excuse lo throw a party. J ust putting on a show is reason enough in n1osl cases. Nevertheless, lhe sixth anniversary bash at the Costa Pilesa Civic Playhouse l;ist Thursday wa s something extra spcc!:il, as th eater parties go. ' On hand for the regular performnnce of ''The Beautiful People," I.he playhouse·s 30th production since its organiza- tion on June 24, !965. v;ere e good many of the actors, actresses. directors and backstage workers who have seen d ay party. From left, Hap Grahan1. !\1ary Eastman Rigney, Rich· ard 1\ndersen, Marthella Randall, Mrs. Tan1bellini and Bill Fucik. ,~ the Costa Mesa theater through its first half dozen years. Short-range nostalgia "'as the order of the evening as resident direc!.Or Pali Tambelli ni turned back the cloc k to . t Iler first show at the Civic Playhou se. This was "Send Me fl No F'lowers." which ran a scant lhree performances but ~ go t I.he recrea.1on depar!menl-sponsorcd thespian group on •. the boards and into the record books. T.,•:o ca~~ members from that sho w "·ere on hand, along with two others from the second play, ''Night Pi1usl Fall." Also sha ring in !he celebration v•ere five of the se.,·en guest ; directors "·ho ha ve staged one or more shows at lhe play- house -Marthella Randall, Hap (;raham. Bill Fucik, Richard Andersen and Mary Eastman Rigney. The bu lk of the directorial burden, however. has fallen lo P ali Tambellini. "'ho haS mounted 22 of the playhouse"s first 30 productions. as ""·ell as almost all of the many PIONEERS _ Resident director Pati Tambei.l inl ·ccenter) shares some birth· ch ildren';; and teen shows "'hich have been interspersed in-day cake v.'ith four perfornlers \Yho s a\v action in the playhouse's first t\vo to the playhouse schedule during that period. She is a shO\\'S in 1965. F'rom left are Betty Ev ans, Jack Murray, Shirley Dillon and veteran of more than two decades of acting and directing ¥.· Tom Tilus. .. in community theater along the Orange Coast. 'I' 1---'--'--'--'------------------------------ The Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse celebrated iL'I sixth ~- anniversa ry where it all began Rnd still transpires. in the Community Center auditorium on the Orange County F'air· grounds. Plan!I for the theater's ~eventh year ~re in the works. with an ambltious mounting of six one-acts from Noel Co ward 's "Tonight at 8:30" series launching the ne1v 1 1 season in September. f f'a...'?Cr:~~'l"'f!'.~~~i\!.fJ'.1~.J.llrM.t'M'J REM~MBERING -Lois Wilson. recently seen in the title role of "}:verybody Loves Opa1 ," reminis- ces v"ith Jack Murray (left) and Ron FWan about their comedy "The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker." PREMll:R[ ORANGE COU1\ITY ENGAGEMENT 141 tWI • ·~• TlNI !IHI lfA(M -o Pf.LIS. ··1·11 •: S'l'RAi'l·G•:R R•;TUll~S'' .,.,.ith ·r ony Anthony NOW [X(lUSIVEl Y! f:OWAROS HARBORc.::':.l fOUtl)O 11•0 •! ••U O• if tolt< •Ill ... 0\H I •llll 10.t" ' IM o·•~o ,, ... ' RIJB[Rl WISf PRODUCTION ' ......... , ,., MICliAEL CRICliTOll ~NDRO~DA STRAIN A UNIV[R5Al PICTURE ·T£CHNICOLOR' PANAVISJON" [g ~ 2nd HIT. Eroc 61eoden in "COLOSSUS: THE FORBIN PROJECT" (GP) Nelv Techniques Lauded Al !C GUINNESS · ~HI0\ 1 OIJIN'I JAC~ ~i'Nl\INS JOSl f H!I!! R ANIHON I OIJA'fl E ~-.. Cl AIJO[ RAINS · ijtfHUR ~£ NNlO'I ... OlllR Stu.Plf., •• ,., ~-,,.,, " PEI [R O'IOGl.E .. \•"'1 .,, · • ~<I ,.. f TH N ANO NOW -Bob£tgman encounters an old friend-himself as Elw P. Doud with long· ·eared pal "~larvey'' in a p ntin g used in the play· house's 1967 vers ion of th/ vintage comedy. Makeup Changes Outlined l!OLLYWOOD (AP) -"The onl.v good makeup is a makeup from 1,1ithin.'' says Boh Schif- fer, a veleran makeup man "·hose powder and paint ha s made stars shine before the cam~ra since the IMOs. His Lradcmark in the 40s v..::1s pcncil·lhin eyebrows and pou1y, blood·red lips. TodRy he says of lhat look : "It's fine for ihe sake or attention.getting, bul irs also extremely una l· tractive." In the 40s. says Schif (er. an actres.'i' face was coated with heavy matte makeup which gave an almost canvas-like quality. Mascara wasn't the current waterproof wwd-lype so easily whisked on eyela.~hes. fl had to be brush· ed on hot and was reapplied several times until it 'beaded at the end of lhe lashes. "It was terribly sensuous at the time," says Schiffer. H owr.ve r, the stunt b a(' k r I red , When t.1i~s MacDonald stepped before the cameras, with her n e w makeup on, the bright lights on her face made "all the gold spol.3 tum green." Schiffer aeys he much prefers today 's look of almost no makeup, and says today's ('ommercl&I m a k e u p com· pounds are over-rpriced. "" ~1 c;~8m• w,,, \.-.... _lj.. O,M .. ., ............. > ~"''"'•·• ro fi'!l "WATERLOO" ~O&IRllOll W!-Smf;(t llAV.ll ll•N IU'l•HHllSdllllO" .11.:.-caiM" ~~1 l!:!I NOW AT AN EDWARDS CINEMA NEAR YOU!, "ttl!O.ll l'tU!I NUl"'1 Ali Mac&raw • Ryan O"Neal J A IO>l'Wl G lilJNSl!Y·IJT~HllE~ ~~ John llariey •••r Iliff and I I "WVE STORY" ONE WEEK ONLY AT HARBOR 2 • "SUMMER OF"'42" STARTS WED., JUNE 38 • j '--~~:.;.;:..:.....=...;;;;.:,==--=====---' SchiHer. \l.'ho once a?Plied makeup to Ril& Hayworth, Joan Crawford . M a r I enc Dietrich, Belle Davis. Norma Shearer. Barbara Slenwyck and Je;1ncttc Macdonald. slill plit'.~ his trade at the movie stud ins. Hov.·ever. he haled the mat· led powder look and tried lo revol utionize it even then. He created a lumlnlsccnt makeup for Jeanette MP.cDonald with fleck3 of gold in the powder. "I don't like to see office girls spending their last dime on cosmetics." says Schiffer. ''The costs of many of them are ridiculow. You can't put that much in a cosmetic to/;=;:::=:============================================================:::; make them cost that much." But new techniques and makeup components h·a v e revamped the ma.lseup game. MGM Studios turned the in- vention into a publicity stunt, getting police to escort him to and from tile vault where the .:old was kept. His simple advise to the average woman on the subject of makeup: "A makeup th el isn ·1 pretty 11 n d com· plimentary to the perslln ahouldn"t bt applied." For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILOT I I ' 31 ~Aft. y PILOT MOlld4.J Jun1 28 lt/1 LEGAL Ncn'JCE LEGAL NOTICE ... LEGAL NOTICE 01 ly "' ., . ... , LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011C! LEGAL N011CE LI.AL NOTICE t.iOT tCE IS HEJ;!E&'I' G!VIEM 111• 1111 lollow "" lttmt ol IOUr>d " •••t<I P•Ol't IV Ill •• bton ~· d tlJ 1111 Polle• Dop1nm1nt ol 1'1'11 Clly ti Co•I• Mts• IOr t "'led In •~c•n tA nl«-11 Ct<tl d1v1 IWO tllodl II k•• ,,, •• blu1 tll~·· IWO bl~.. c",.. unkrwwn """ n col •ulom11lc NOTICE ~ FUllTHflt C.l\ll!N 11111 I l\O ,,._, •• ,,.,.,. 1.w:I 1rovu 1111 aw,....J.11 o or ""' p """"'' w tllln 11v1n (7) d1J1 IOl!ft' "' 1111 pUtl! u!lon "1 1tll1 Nolle• Ill• 1111, !M 1t& 1111 I v•I n 1111 Ind., If lllt ., l>I ""' "' In tl\1 CllY of CO.II Miii In wt! Cl! (flt t11t p OOl rfy 11>1 I bl Ml d •I pub t 1uctlOl'I et I 11'1'11 t ....:I d111 to l>I iltu'>ouncod DATED Jun~lll 1'71 R E N TH Cll ot"' <>lite P ub 1•111'11 01 11 CNol Do y '° lot Ju,.,. 11 un 1~1 n DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED I _,,, .. SUBURBIA PARK SPANISH SPLIT -LEVEL Locar~ 1n one of the mos1 popul11r And bt.ar N"li hborhooda Lii Huntlnitrir1 Beach {Ju't ask any of thi- rtsident!) Th1~ horn t featuA>1 4 Mr lamily room lormal '11n1ni.:: room 211 bAlhs Situa!M (In very la.r1e Int with f!xtra privacy Pric~ tn ~JI quickly 1.t S40 500 PhoM. 54~2313 tor add1t10M1 1nlor m1.t10n IO THCRCAL \'"'\.. LSTATCRS Bargain Hunters Attention no down tn Vet! t'lr low low down FHA H,re 1! 11 big 3 ~room on l11rg~ lo1 room for boal and cam(M':r Full prier onJy $22 jOO Walk to all schools Hurry on thl~ one. Call ~1151 (()pen e vrs) U~UlU I' tlflMH fl11! E•llie t7~ VIEW CAMEO HIGHLANDS You want oct11n virw'" Poplarp; 11nd brick wall pr vacy• Sla1u~ry hnt formal gardtn" Powdt r room <'It rntry4 Doub!r hrtplace• l en !am1ly room nU ~ nr gur1t mom" Ca 1J 675-6000 to srr 1hr Ciscel homt ONLY $49,500 SIMILAR HOME TO LEASE $4;,o MO UNlflUI' OOMH 111 .. E..._ 17"4000 ~' =0,,,,:;!j!:;::;:,;;_:>===~==~=Af~; I ! .;;;iiiiiiiiiC:..ii'ii'ii~il':..,.,"ii~ ... -. $16 soo v A CAN YOU Anynnf' qua!ttic! ~ubJtrt "' \ TOP THIS? VA Loan \\tth 6 "~ 11nnual '"-' _, 1 ~,rooms ;11,~, !amt y room pen::tn!age rah! Total pay only $ 2 2 900 1 Larae ment $l4S P'1' mOfllh Shall' backyArd wtth trult le.Mn J bedroom homt ghsttnll\K V.'llh HARD\VOOD n.ooRS l:ret! Clean aa a p1n IU'd 2 luxurious b<!ths modern bu.ii! in kitchtn Ready In oceupv 1mmrd1ately GI huyrrs welcnmr CALL Walker & Lee 2700 Harbor B!vd &I Ada.ms ~ DPf'n ti! 9 ?M LrKE A COUNTRY RANOl IN THE CIIT <4 Brdrm 2 B& 1 nn temflc lrir on cuJ dr -1111c strttt !'irw ~ha11: new pa.1n1 va CMf OnJy $32 5@ Arnold & Freud 383 E \7th SI REALTORS Costa 1\fr:M 641\ 77!1.5 DISTINCTfVE & unu~ual 2 BR 2 BA hnme In C.11rl~had Cahf wJl.11m rm formal din rm a ll f'l"C ki t frplc bfo1utifull11 dr:corated .\. landK11pt'<I rin i., Jflr Ort!an vl,.w ~Ip S65 000 Al t ~ /,_ wkPrnlg 54g....g231 011. n('r bP~tdf' him~f'lf mu~t ~ell NOW Su P"r l~ 11nrl nut p11110 1hag c11.rpers dr11po!1 and nl''IT nt Y m8r na All lrrm~ S2!1 ~;>(') R r o k er 714/S4~4i1 Coller! -REPOSSESSIONS- Sparkl n11; r!ean h<>m,s 50ttl'" newlv pa nl!':d & r.u-peted 2 :\ 4 lt S bdrms Srim r with po'.)')l~ 1'1-lA VA oonv terms from $20 001 In S40 000 COLLINS & \VATIS INC R84l Arlam~ Aioe 962 ~2.l G•n•ri1I IORISI I. 01.,0\ " .t.'r A I TOk' OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 1 ACRE RANCH COLONIAL 4 +DEN + 4 BA "HORSES" WALK TO LAK! BACK BAY AREA tl nbehf'vable' Quiet trre llnrd St to th11 gorgr: ous Qld world ch&rm pr <I maMl\Of' hedrooms -r hugP paneled f&.m ily room 25 picturf' 1A.1n dow 1n h\ Ing room v.ith 1n1quf' f1replacl" Lti.ri<e ~ sq ft dream kitch '"" Willi l)r al&.s~ ol)f'n~ 'i> eleva ted patio ""1th &Ptclacular v1rv. ZonPd for honl's Truly 11. sht>\lo p11!.t" Gre11.t 11rea f11r chll~ren Must 11ell tiulck. DIA L 645 0303 CLASSIC COTTAGE PLUS FULL GUEST HOUSE ONLY $25,500 JUST usn:n• superb locallnn Tr\.I' pride ot ow.nprship 17' ma~ter 1u1 l.1"11 Gigantic plc turr "" Ind ow lill\Tlf room Gt8C'IOU9 d1n1ru: Al!t:~ l!lttrll!I for brnlt ind trail er 2 brdroom I halh (11r1f ht1u1r (h .. n llnd t•l'IS" Pr1Cf'd tn 1,.11 r.: z 1Prm• s~ l'!dl.Y, 64:'1 030.:) I Olli \I [ 01 \11\ I , • • • cl ~· nearly decorAt~ 11 1 truly a lovt)y hOme clo!t to school ~! u~ M't what terma we ca.n work out • COATS " WALLACE REALTOR$ -54'-4141- (0pen Ev1n1ngsl CUTE-AS A Bui s rar Lot11 ot trees 4 lush lndscp11: 2 Extra bldp Ir. all Jn xlnt mnd Ownrr w/c&rry 151 TD Selllnz pr1CI! only $Z7 500 CORBIN- MARTIN REALTORS 644-7662 New Mod•I Home J BR 5 Ba JUSt completrd vltw of &y & Hills fonnal din brtakta~t rm !&m nn w wt>l bar pool Alro view lo 11 .11vi1. I -will build !fo )O 1r ntrrl' /VAN WELLS & SONS 2l'rC' \.;ilaxy Dr I)'lver Shores Orw n Dally f,.j(j 1 ,,)() BIG 11D11 LUSK PLAN This much so lfht model hu 4 BR z~i, ba 1 brkfst rm lonna1 din rm De11 w/ trpl i 1parkhng pa.rqlltt fin !hruou1 BOYD REALTY 3629 E CM1! Hv.'} CdM 675-5930 That 's Where It's At! On thr Myfront with 1 \ lf'W lh•I won t qu I 11111d & .a&l'ldy beac h to p Ill \Our small boat 1111 nn nr h&sk 1n thr ~ 1n yriun:tlf :l ~droom11 :\ '11 ba hs ~aut1tully re i1ecor11.tf'<I -llvtng room ronn11.1 d1n1ns: room break f11.s1 room .t 11unn:v ki1 chf'n llJ nn !ht ha.y Watch th~ J)llllSlrlR boAt~ In I~ jrtt:y •nd h11.)' All ttu~ enup),..j with e proper 11tudy with w,r bftr and t1rrpl1c:~ Prt \ IUe pa ho -Sl64 I)()() Call «7J 8~ oTHE REAL \"'-ESTATJ;Rs ''', '' Assume VA Loan l Brdroom 2 hath11 drps le hi ti~PI """ dll h I' 1hr panry '°'" bltnJi lmrned oecu $211 000 w 1$25 000 GI 3 Bdrm. Home ~I I.ii Ba.th a'l~ttd Pf..tic c1r4 prt111 drsprs qutrr 1f'r'Hl $23 ;i(V) Tr!'m11 Roy McCi1rdle Realter l~O Ntwriort Blvd CM 541-172! EASTSIDE CM 2 HOMES ON LOT 3 Bdnn !I\ B•th plLI! 2 Rl!'drm I Ba.th Tnp condl uon Good 1n\r51men! only '" 000 Lachenmyer kP '1tur Cali ~ 39211 E:\~~ g.u;.5549 BUILDERS 00tl'O\Jt1 pr \Ill" r>srk ~ " ~ bf:<lroom 2 stnry luxury IJ11 Ins: nrar ~11rh !r11m $32 9f,O Brokt r J.12-44~~ flr ~~140 G Monday, Junt 18, 1971 DAILY PILOf I~!.__ __ ,_ ...... __,J~I I~ .:.1 --·iiiiiiiliiii .... ..:;;J~~ I ~[ __ ... _-~!~_., Gen•ral G•neral VIEW! VIEW! VIEW! f'ront row Blulfs cond omin iu m. Lavishly decorated. with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, spacious sunny kit chen & breakfast nook . Even a car· peted patio! 'fhe best view available in The Bluffs. $51 .900 PENINSULA BA YFRONT Jf you are looking for a large ho1ne in an elegant setting. with a pier & slip & close to bay & ocean S\vin11n1ng, \\-e have \\'hat you are looking for! 5 Bedrooms. 5 baths, office v.1ilh outside entrance; maid's room; living room \Vith fabul ous :-;tereo system. Nothing finer anyn1here. $225,000 UNIVERSITY PARK Con\'eniently located. 4 bedroo1n \\'ilh fam ily room. ~lon1e close to r£'creation & snapping. Beaulif'Jl ly landscaped for '·the Green 1'humber " in the. family. Jns t repainted & ready to go. $39,950 -10,..n Do\vn . PROPERTY MANAGEMENT Our tna nagemenl d ivision handles 1.umerous properties in Orange & Los .t\ngeles Coun· ties. Our experien ce ~~· co111puterized accoun t· in g can help save you 1noney & make your income property rnore profitable. Please call for information. General COMPANY REALTORS ''SINCE 1944" 673-4400 General REALTORS-ASSOCIATES NE\V LICENSEES * AT HERITAGE, BUSINESS JS GREAT * Second Costa r-.1esa Office no\v open and in need of several tlC\V staff members. Step ahead. Excellent training program for fa st start. * JOIN THE HERITAGE TEAM * Let's get together for details. Call 546-5880, Larry Campeau or Dave Myhre. G•neral REMOVE SHOES PLEASE lk'tnre r nterJng !his ln1- macula!e Three Bdrn1., Two Bath ho1nl! 011 quiet fU l-r\!'-s..c 5trre!, Close In park. schools and Calho!Jt· Church. All Bdrms. and rlr!S4'ls romplf'll"ly carpell"ll. l..ar~r Dining Roon1, gle11m· 1!1.t: llARD\VOOD FLOORS and 11 br1gti1 kilrhrn with liil1 -111s 10,(lOO Sq fl pro- ff'5s1onally landscaped lilt II ll h HI. a~ Bernluda grFI~~. !\In l11rge pat1oi;, srir1nkli>r5 friinr anrl r€'ar. 1!1';ivy ~hakr r o n !-large 1louhlf' garag•' \illAGJNE ,,LL THIS FOR ONLY s:'.2,9j() 1.1 uh f'X("('llent lf'rms, Evenings Call &-16-iji9 GREEN THUMB G;1 rdPnf'r is ev1rlen1 in !his 1n1n1aculate ~1esa rlet l\lar 3 bl'i!room homf'. Pride of 011·nrrship sho11•s insid!' 11nd out This hon1e has a111oma- rir i::arage rlonr OJ>f'nrr. air- cvnd1rioning and extras plus extras. $32,950. Newport at Fairview 646·8811 (anytime) TREE-LINED BEAUTY In tn~la j\)('Sll .. 1 ht-drnnms pin~ t·11n1ily HM!ll. "1-J ARD- \\'OOD" fl11ors 1l1;il .\pilrkJ ... G•n•r•I Gen•ral LARGE FAMILY HOME Corona d•I Mer Price Reduction Ttus unusually sharp, lrt:shly "1.,..__,.~ , painter\ hOme has three '?"'~' ••O il.UOC"'" ]ovf'ly bedrooms. One or Now only S4Z.500 lor a ho~y 2 bfodroom, 2 bath hous.e 111th!n \o\'lllk ifl\j'. di~!IUIC'e "' beafh on well located R-2 loL Ca.II 673-flxtl. REALTORS 644-7270 SWIJ\1 ON A BUDGET Large heated pool fo r tons of s ummer fun. \'ou'll like this 3 bedroom. fa mily roon1 ho1n e \Vilh all its carpeting. draperies. electric built-in kitchen, 2 baths and it's close to school and shopping, !·las existing VA loan. Reduced tr sell nov.1, at. $33.950. "WHEN YOUR HOT YOUR HOT" Let's go South of the high\\'ay to see th is hard to ri nd spli l level delu .xc Dll PLEX . 0\1·n· ers unit 3 BR. 2 Ba, builtins. Palos \lerdes rock fireplace. large. beautiful private patio. Second unit, 2 BR atrium type entry. private patio \Vith ocean vie\v, Hurry! J\ttractive lJrms · Only $69,500 . 644-7270 A«4tbe-S#ldd ~1 ...... M,.,..;REALTORS 8 (For merly Delancy Real Estate) 2828 EAST COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. ________ ._ wh1rh lS huge-11p- p1'0x1n1atf'ly <ll' ll: 23'. See how th1.~ room v.as 11<1apted In acrommodarr-four boys. Th£> homf's many ff'a!ures ;;.!Mt 111(.'l\ldf' 11 flagJ<tone patio and huiH-1n barheCUf', Pll'a~ call j;l6....:l:U3 !or an apJW)lntmen!. $27.000 . $202. PAYS All Evt>ryo™' qualifies 10 assume this 6'i> loan ol S22.75Q, Sp;u·kbn~ 3 BR, 2 Ba honll'\ rib! .ru·rpt, frf'shly palntf'd, nf'1\' ~hag cpllni;:: &nd xlnt J'P!>1dential 11N'11. Forcrd sil!r. s11crif1N'. $~1.500, Call :,-r)-/l \21 1 n[)('n r1·r~. l \outh ~ (~ oast College P ark 3 Bl1. 2 RA l'.:.'\lras. Pml 213 \\'11kr Fn1·p~1 Ho\. S:\2,:,00. 011·ncr. i>-l:>-61'l'> 0pc'n. Corona del Mar ~TH£R£AL E.~'.f ~1;.£R,S HIGH ON A Hill 11us <tupli>i: is bu1n on two lots -Valuable gen1 fo r a bu1ld('t "•llh 1m11g1na11on. ThP Sf'llrr 111 1nn!1\"a led and the price has bePn rrrluced! !lrr,..·s a 11 (111dcrrul op- portl1n1ty lo hui!rl dream duplr\rs -an 1nvrst1nrn1 of a hletln1e. S&I .~. Ca.II us !or thP 'acrs 673-&)j(I, Costa Mesa Outstanding Location 1 hr, 2 ba. !ge k11i.:he11/rl1n'g ar!'a, frplc, brick pa·1n, trrrs, corner house w/s1de :,<ard for boat or 1ra1ll"r. 2 mHlUles lo major shop'i;: i.:cnlt'!', lr£'ell'ay~. ~rhools, .ii) ilC!"I!: p 11 r k. $,1J,:11XJ, :1~6-~0;\6. .-,~,7' ~,,-L~O~A=N~e illrAA Vl'.'rdr. arra. Lovl!ly :i Br. rlt'I\' rugs, drapes, (HI.In!. Va.can!. By Owner. OPEN Wide Open Space§ liousr:: &11 & sw. i0-1: OPEN HOUSE 1711 Labrador. Call T W d Th '. 5.[W\lj:,, ues., e ., u • Fri. -3 to 6 e FANTASTIC J::ASTSl DE, Jn 1h1.; agr of 11·all ,., ll'illl Charmtng older 2 BR on hou.~rs. Are :you looking for R2 101 , firepl. COl'd p11.tJo, a homr 1~·1thouL lhal hrm· B-8-Q, dbl gar + 11·6rk n1Prl 111 ler.l1n1.":? \\'ith1n shop + 15tnrage rm + laun. 1\;ilk1ng rli.~111.ncr nf 1he dry 11 1ga~ ,r,. 220, S23,500. hcach .:inrl :o;hnpp1n~ ilrtas. Bkr. 6·12-1816. 1h1s 3 and 2 ANlrm. rlupll'X. l -~L~A~S~T~C~H7A77N~C~E07J - ·You 1•111 nevt'r rC"gN'I it. RF:l\10DELED East s1rle COJl")!' anr! tllkf' 11 look at Cn~l;J Mesa 2 hr, hl'Hlrd 2 luxunous h;ith.~. Pal'k·llkc I General ,vani jusc .i::rr111 fnr Califnr-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;I ~eneral Call 673-85?.0 S7!.ll00, POOL. nr w hu1ll-1n~.1.11.500. nflrr. By oll'nl"r. Z..i6 East 20!h Strre1, 5-18-33.j,i, n111 l11·1ng. /\JlPraised ilnr\ !'Pad,\.' tu srll al S24.~. l!F.:TS Nn DIJ-,\11 ~nd m1m- nHn11 down 1n F!!A. A.'\'. X!f)U!'' Walker & lee :iiQO l larbor Blvd. al Adams .i1~"!M!l1 0pf'n 'Iii fl Pi\! Show This To Your Executives PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SJ Linda Isle Drive l·lome on lagoon. 5 Bn .. 41h ha., \\'/4 frp lcs ., jacuzzi tub. hdv.•d. nrs., sep. liv. rm .. din. rm., fam. rm. & brkfst. rn1 . $175 ,000 NEAR Everylhino;. J BR. 2 Bi\. Lg rrc rm &. kitchen. * 323 JASMINE * C\'l"lt patin. Drps, cpis. Chftrm111g duple~: immac. hl1in...-. 1,?a rai::r . SJ.l.~. 959 cnnd 2 Bdrms . 2 ha·~.: ChryennP, Oprn 11 o u s e ocean ~1tlr or \l<A').' r.rar Sa1-St1n 6-1fi...70.16 1111 5. ilJll. rrn!erl for S2M mo. I "~--~~~~-­BY 011n<'r, 3 BR, den. ;-.11"S8 I-ron! ii; \·aean1 -'l\llCk rliol l\lar tract. Bltns, Crpts pn~9 ~-~-Gnnd t e r m s , $~1!l,!l.i0. & o,_rps. si;,.:,50009. ""~&-982~8 MORGAN REAL TY any imr. ~ . ""· • .,, For complete information on all homes & 67~_6642 675_6459 i\lon/1-'ri. lots, pleas• call: f'RENCH Quartf'r. 3 BR, 212 BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR CUTI-::! BP.., 2 BA. l~r :1a1·rl. h1I, enrl tH'li! B!tn~ . .$1-46 m'l for £a1n1l,v en.ioymrnr . pl11.~ 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N .B. 642-4620 nrrr pat in. as~un1e Sl!l:i. mo tr1h1l pymnl1>. $ 2 3 , ~ 0 0. _jJ. R. A e11l£"r\a1n1nP11t, yo11 1 u ~ t I "!'""""'~""'""'""'""'""'""'~!"'""'"":""'""'""'""'""'""'~ l~'~'~Y~"~'~'c''~2~1.~lrn~. ~M~6~-R~l;~!l:-:i-fl-4?.0l I I p;1n 1 heat ll11:i; 4 hedroom. ';;G I J e1•i aae 'ea. OJ-'~ l<1n1ily room homp \\"hlch enera 1 Genera CAMEO SHORES BY OWNER • Clran 4 hr. 2 l llllllllllllllllllllllllll~dllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'l 11h"I") ha.~ II bar. rlrcks, Irr--;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ii _iN'nmaii'N'GAi;jCI Nr"' '.) hr. ;; ha, 2 ll'r! hilrs, ha. + xtras. \\"Jll assist ra('Ps sn<I ~ virw nl the • INTRIGUING AND h&F POOL $89.500. 673·fi0j\, \V/linancin)l, 546-4861 G ener al General lf'l\Ply hills. Only S65.000 CORONA PRACTICAL DUPLEX Dover Shores 1================1 67:1-S:.50. DEL MAR S•cl oderl.SPACIOUS SOUTH OF TllRJ-:E non:-.1., T11•n B111h DUPLEXES hnn1P on tYlrtiPr lnl. i;11r. HIGHWAY * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. TAKE YOUR PICKi mundffl hy t111cr ~1yopnrun1 tl1.'f's Con1'Pn1rnlly IOfated 2 nicely fum1shrrl uni:~ on BEAUTIFUL CAMEO SHORES! For the executive' l,uxurious 4 & den home on Jge corner site \\'10cean view. Unusual \vet bar, lge poo! & cov. lanai. $175.000 "Our 26th Year" Walk to Beoch BC'a u1 3 BR lx-ach home mrnp. w/hl!1n kit, 2 B.:i, pvl l)Al!O & garagr . Ideal Sf'l· 11ng 11·1th Jo11r niainlenall("e lr!s1:p1t & comp]. pnvacy. Largr 4 BR trl·lf'\'rl horne, plus I BR apt. 10'"~ rlo11'n, $63,SOO e ALSO OTIII-:R."" from $20.500. • Mont icello Condo. Choice Nr\\'porl IQ<', Prw<:'d in rho1ce 11dul1 ~rt1fnn. Pop· in i;rhno!~ and :<hopp1n11; in Co~la ,\Jrsa 's b Pa U 1 1 I u 1 CollPgr Pa.rk ar<>11 . Pn!'r<1 11 1 S29.$00 v•ith rHA or VI\ 1rrrn~. 0111;.i $26.5/XJ. Call :~J6-S.~.~O. ular 2 ht>droom halcony mo-I WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors Of>t'n e1 f'." de!, 1n tieau1l!ul C'Ondit1on. l , 2111 ~an Joa quin H ills Road Cilll no"' lor app1 10 sc<' NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 ¢2? ~!~:: S22,9SO , 220_ E.17tti 6~6-,0_555 nnr 101, srp;ir;i1rd by lovely yard. Varanry lar1or nil. Liv,. in onr rrnt !hp 01 hrr. Stt"11~ 10 .:ill shopp1ni.: a nrJ hf'a!'h. $.11.7:.0. Call 67.l-115a0. View At the Top Har bor V iew Hills PRIME BAY & MNTN Ex<'cuti\·e rorlltmp. luxury vir11• ho111e w/h1gh ceil1ng5, Loi.~ or hrick, "''rough! iron, !rad<'d window.~ & Olrl "'orld rharn1. 50l)J !!fl Ir. 5 ba1hs. 4-car gar. Slff.l,500_ Owner \\'J I! tradt' down. 5-18-724~ East Bluff • F:XCLUSIVE AGENTS e SALES -LEASES 2414 Vista De! Oro NP.,11porr Beach 644-1133 El Toro COUNTRY ESTATE Lrii: C'llslon1 bu111 .1 br, 2 ba Huntington &.•ch FANTASTIC POOL and 5C(I 111. It. Recrea1Jon RumP\13 Room "''ith huge built-in Wet bar and pool 1ah1~. m1llu! rh111 • hon~ for ttal fa.1n1ly pnjoyn1en1. Add 4 bedrooms, 2 b11 ths, brand new "shag" W!W cll.rpt'tin& •nd ex1shng GI l..olln any· Ont can assume suhjtcr lo 7'17'· annual pen:entagt' r&!f'. Bf't!t>r · !hls on!': to· d11y. Min. of SD'Xl down re- quire<!. Walker & lee 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adami S-1.;..fl.165 Open 'Ii! 9 PM SPANISH VILLA 4 + DIN. RM , + POOL $42,000. Atllh<>nric Spanish Villa, en- flos"'f! garden atrium, fam. rrn 1\' wei bar, all enclosed 10! for romplf'tr privacy. Fuu price S-12,000. Subnut. Call 847-1211 SEYMOUR REAL TY 171~1 Beach Blvd., Htgn Sch Open 'til 9 P~1 CONDOMINIUM ~ BR, '2 BA. $24.750. Ex:lsting 6"~ F'HA loan, S158. PITJ. Xln! area, extremely clean. Crp!~. drps, FA hr, serv porch. p11.tio, 2 car gar, closr to shopping-abso!Ull":· I:· bcautifuJ. I' 1llage Real Estate '62-4471 (::;:) 546-llOl DOWNTOWN Custom cottage. 2 & den, hrd11•d firs. 50' x 150' tree 11hi1drd lo!, alley a ce for boat & trailer. 8\k to City park. fo'HA/V,, or naml": your tt'rms. 847-8507 Less Than Rent In1m11cu!atl! 3 bf'.dmom close to San Diego freeway. Bring your nwn ~pade and plant )0Ur 011·n back yard, Vets - ahou1 Sl98 mo, pays al!. 89.l-11.):13 515-0158 REAL ESTATE by McVay Less Than Rent P ayments just $178 on this 3 hdrm .• 2 ha., homt>. Cor· tll"r lol \\'/boat or tratler sp.ar.e. Lrg. fm. rm., lovely frpl., pal10, laundry rm., bl1n . kL Take over low in· trrf'.~t loan & move 1n im· m"rl1a !ely, Only $Z7,500. ACT }-'AS7. 5.1!1-7724 or 892-.5912, Sreing is belit>ving, !\1o~·e In th1:; lovely .l bedroom for S.12.50 SUPER CLEAN 893-853.1 ~:>-0458 REAL ESTATE by McVay SELLING YOUR HOME? F t('f' appraisal • \\'e buy l''JUlfll'.:S. Personal a.Uent1on, 2J yn;, cxpcncncr. General General ~ I d I Evcn1ni;:s Call .1,17-.,056 I --~;:;-:;-----1----..----Li stings W ante !---------NOW *CHOOSE-FROM 3 *I 11111·e ~old most of ou r i.:ood THE WORLD Step§ From Park IS THE H·1rh<lr ll•t:hlanrls, ,'lA 1 HP. hl'llnj;1"-\Vr sf)l'r1al1ze in . AT YOUR FEET & Swim Club 2 ha ,\ 1\rn ........ S:tlnoo I Ea~t~lrlr & :-:r"·pnri MriJ,>ht~ Rra11 r, -1 t>rlrn1 . Lu~k ~1.,ntr. Ocra 11· ,\'I IS· H 111 S· H ~ rhor Srr lh,.nl illl tmrn luxur1nus i hr. J ha. LU~k 2-~fnry. DR. f.im rn1, l·i·ar i:11r,lt!r. lfi' h1rl ponl, grr1t '1r1~· p.:it1n " llrl'fllf. <'Ol'!lf't" !iii, U111· 111;,lr Ill pr1 v~ry /:.· furnish· 111~· th1·nf'r• h-11-fl lr"ff; J'fln1•h style hnmr on 2 8 Evrs. &12-0427 \11f'W 11!'. l\mrn111rs 1nrl 1 -:--oc=""°-o-c--..,~---c~ llPilm 1•r l11ng. frplr. 1nrl....,r 4 BDR:-.t. 2 ba. Glt n illar. BRQ. 1n1rrC'flm. hhtn h1!1ch. Spar, pn!rl. kit. fam. rm .. COL LI NS & WATTS ~ tfl 1~ morlrl tif',,I 4 hrlr TIME :'. FlH , 2 ha /.in\ rrn. fl"l(!I IJITipt>rr1"·"· Call lflr ~ Crer <'l!n r lan • fflrmrr n1orlrl I • 1' ·"""' 11rrir111sal. sprinklrr S,~'5l•'lll & Jl'""ll In bltn RIO, d!hl\'Sh r . pantry, 1-srrir' 11:irhr1r \'1r11 l1nnir f ror <unimrr rrn111 s. (~fl'~I ·I [pl ln1 111i1<' E11J>:1 C\1 $1','""' hr1rnr r11nni·11n11r v1rw: on ,\ r•rvy fa1ndy l'l"ll'lll nf! ~ l1,.rlrn1m. 2 hl'l!h OCEAN 1 .1 RR 2 ha. f11n1. rm 1!\ll f<•r 1;111d. ~J!.1.!l.·fl .:iddillnn, lh('rc '' a ~rp11r. pnlrl , L.v. rm., frr•I., upgd. 11 tr 2 hr. 1 h:. g11r.,I h<\inr. rpl. flr ps, 2 paUos. lu~h r"ally 11111riur r11 un1r .~1 fRO:-;T OUPt.1',:\ \\';ilktni: fpl . F Cn<ta ,\fr~11. S~4,i~il 675·3000 k1lfhrn A lnrni;1I '11111111: r!1stanrl' to P\rryth1n~. Rrl-r1111. ti7.~-.'lfi63 lil2 2Z.l3 E\·ri;, ii "ll1all r".lt1hh11usr" hillh & lantl.•,(:p. ~d loc , $28.500 Oll'llPr !°Vi2~:/0\ T"Mn1 t.· g1;int l1v1111.": n-vin1 I 1rr '111rry no th L~ onr' 111th a hru·k llrrrla<"r $6~.::il'l 646-7171. C<irprls thal rnu!rl nrvrr I ha\'I' brrn ~lrppf'r! on cu~tnm rnn ··rrtr & ~prinklrrs lrnnt A· rrr1r All associated BROKERs-REALTORS 2025 W lolboo 67J·J66J BAYCREST !hll' &.· ~,111 O\I 11 ttu• lanrl Inn ~~~=~ fnr Jll~I sr .. ~oo Call ti!'!Url' HARBOR VIEW HILLS l.1k" nrw C'u~1<im hl'lrl1" in il's gonr :iir)-2,11.1. Pop11l11.r Li!Jnll11 Lusk homr . f)nr nf t"!'"fl'lrl~ f1nf'J<l lf)("ll· ~RR·~. fnn1il,v rno111 . 21, tlflll<, f'op1plrlrly Aart1~. ~. C.:ir garagr. Pool, rrdrcnratrrl g, rrarly tnr you 111'11 S7!l.5()0 to mnvP in s:i~.900 f;,16-7171. 1 ~~=1 ....-- $150. Down $200 Mo. Coldwell Banker Big 4 bf'drnom 2 b11th wrner ~NO(O,~••llY 1 -==s'="2~a"",~o~o~o:.--­lot 1-'rel'dom Homr 011 221-02 }-'HA program. l\lu.~r h111·~ 5 prnp!c or morr 1n lauill)' tQ 8JJ.0700 644-2430 4 Bdrm + Den REAL TY COMPANY 642-1771 Anytime S BEDROOM Collri.:e Park arra homC". U hl\s ii "\\'hopp1n,i:·· hig 19lti ~Q fr & 11 VA i1 f)pra1sal of $31,llfl(), Jul.v \~t 1t will he vacan1. Who's f1r~1 wah a bi,i: f.:im1ly" •• Fairview 646·881 l qualify. F'ul] prier FIX 'EM UP Custl)m d+'s1gn, "Beau'Hu,".1•!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'-"'!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!! $24,000. I ·1 Houses & h11chelor uni1, l'('nlral hall rl11n, Ni1lur'll Investors Attention (anytime) near ~hopping & hosp ital. vooorl cah1nl't.~. btal1 • 1n C·l lnl w/2 BR. l\ii ba. Newport I Exc!'llrnt n-ntal l!l'Ca rangt', ovf'n, rl ishwash"r, housr. l-Blk to beach: Great •f Prire . s~.500 p1rrure \\~lldO\l'S. ext r II Jururr poren1i11l~ 52:,.oo'J. . • Rr=1Jonom1~ Corp. 675-6700 ~1h~. brk. open Iii 9 Pi\I, ,.George W illiamson F11rview \\'alk 10 BraC'h. kt"Cp hral1hy .... ~l}-1710 REALTOR 646-8811 11 nd s11nr rn hnol! T11kr l"\vrr TARBELL 2955 Harbor 1 673•4~.:.0 64;,...1,164 Eves. . ) I low gov't liian, m quail· NEWPORT l•ny11m1 '·"'"'· "'" Th'" '· "'" SHORES BEAUTY , Hard to Believe! I"'""""'"'"""'""""""'""'"'-young. Broker 84z.....t4;:i.'J. TheN': is l'I nice 2 ~mom DUPLEX HARBOR VIEW T..,00 IQUll.N': IM!I of g racious hon1e Available in Costa Oul 01 town ownrr \\'llfll~ Jiving in thl!! 4 brdroom. den Mesa on fhf' East 1irte at thr immed . SR!e 2 largr. 2 BR • HIGHLIGHT 81 bonu~ TOOm hou~t on the low pri('f' nl $21.000 -Wilh c11n11.I. Prirf'1I well al 54!!.500. an rxl~tino fHA 22102 loan unit~ • 2 roly firrplacP.~. Drram~ become reslity 11•hfon "" h"'.... 11,. . .. 1._,,, , 1 1 1 h' Can 673-8550. or S\8,300 60 x 125 1001 Jot wn ~ ~ •.,, you cas yoor f'Yf'll on ! l!I bui hill!I anrl 1111j11rrnt to \'lsr.,11 :i hf'dmom Spani!ih ZonNI R-2 Call 64&--7171. \0 TH£ REAL "\. £STATERS plush ~rcr11 golf roursr. style hacirnrl8 with covtrl'd \Valk lo $hopplng, C 11 I I p!ll10 and lui;h low main-- '·. ' ' ' '• l'lt \o ·THER£AL \'."\.. ESTAT£RS :;.10;.8424 10J'M'ln eVf"g, J 1PMn("1!' ya"I. Nothini:: lf'lt J--...O:""~='""~~f"- r.o do but move into this STEPS TO OCEAN 'I , , I , '•' 81\CK BAV-Nf:\VPORT I Chllrnling l Bil. 1 Ba homt <'Ill flU!tl ('\11--0~~('. Good t~rmg O"''""r. :»S-94i1. ~mertl'I model. WAik to 526,000 LAGUNA BEA"CH rM pool only l htock aw11~· JUST LISTED Brt'!!.thtakinl!'. vlt'\\', cu~lom hninr 4 l.11ri;:c hrrlrooms. r11n1ng f'l"ll'.lm, JC!"llrmrT k1tch· en, i;t&me room <A·!th h11r, p11ncl1 ng & heamrd ceilingli. for summrr ('1"1(11111'~~ 11nrl mrr11ni;:: frit"nd~. All fur $57 450. Cllll 5'1fi...1113. oTH£R£AL '."\.. ESTAT£RS . . l Brlrms • Xlnr ronrl. CAYWOOD REALTY 6306 \V, ((l!ll'T Hwy .. N.B. 548-1290 4 BR. den, J ha. Nr JU,rquct $!25,000 Club & boat r11mp. S.'i9.5ro. Pete Barrttt R•alty M11nh11!1 Re11lty 67>4600 642·5200 ~~----~ ---'---"--"---- ·fBllA\~ I llEAI [ES!.._~9 - Attention Buiiders! Chn11:e fnrl'vrr Vlt'\\' lnt in hills nf l\-lesa Vrt'llf', l,{>vrl , "rt! 11:radrd, rrarly !n huil<I upon 1n alrrady de\·rlo()('d r11s1n m neighhorhoorl. Uni" or a kind lC'lt at 1h1~ 1 ... 1.., prlCE' ol S2l,!l;{) C 11 I I a.!&-23lJ for <in <1prn111tmrn1 In M'f'. Wooded Retreat f>o .vou sit and daydrrt1.m allliu! a h'11n" ltl th,. mO\UJ· t11 1n1< -,.. plnt·r lnr QUlf'I a1111 1<r('l11s1nn~ Thl'n )OU mu~t ~rr th1.~ mnst unu11u a.J <i11plr.~. ~ hrdrmm~ w11h a g11r,_1 11par!rnrnl anrl 11 1 hf'<l1"00m unit. Surmun<lrd by gref'nPry an<I lo\\'ering !r<'rs. Yn11 ran 11lmrn::r rnrget you are in thr heart of !!I m<'trof)nli~. $1'.·1.900. Call 67:1-11.~)j(I. 1o ·THEREAL \'."\.. ESTAT£RS ' 'HI" IJ P1 f',V 2 ~tora~r ~hrtl~. Thi.~ prop· I ----~-.----- rrty hils 11 hr. l· fac!l11irs Gl'S lor 11 ~'<lmmt>rc1i1! doJ!; kPn· Brin,r: ynur pain! hn1sh 11.nrl nrl nr l11llid f'il~ll.Y br cnn. ~llVP m(lney! J BR 2 Ba vrr•trrl 1ntri 11 ~n1all hor.~e honi,., ideal loc. $JOO !otaJ r11nrh. Prire Sl'.lll,()!)) w f dn iir ,o;ubmi! )'Our term~. trnn~. For r11rthPr info 01>.ncl'" mu.~t sell. P,ra~r c:.I! R E, f\nox \\'ilh e 847·8531 e Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. The Real Estate Mart :l-ll -262 l Evrs wknrls 5.1i\..!l·1Ji Irvine Fountain Valley YOUR CHOICE 2 BR -BUNGALOW o~n1er 1r11nsferred. \\'ill 5ell Cusrom1zPd rhruout nr ht'ach, lh1:i; lowly 3 bedroom, fam· shopping & sch]s 0 n 1 Y Hy roon1 h()me in Turtle $2·:,950. and )'l'.IU O\\'n tht Rock. Nicely lilndscaped !:inll. and draped. S.15.~.i(} or lr11~r. e 847-8531 • oplion or lease at $350 per The R&al Estate Mart mon!h, PRICED TO SELL 8ra111. home w/fand!y rm &. (ired hill OPEN House, Daily 1-5, h11.;:r cnv'd patio. A prestige Hon1r & l ncom" u ni I. nf'iithborhood. Ownrs rrans. 5u ' " J · C"'I Univ, Park Center. lrvi!lfl -;i\l 13 11 ~m1nP , "·' · Must srll. V I C F. I ~-1 E Can Anytime 833.{182() oi:r o, .xr. •<JO • Call Di11ne, Bkrll·A'l'f. Macnab-Irvine Realty Compsiny Coa~I Hwy, Cr!~. 6i3-2020. JM2-2.l.15 days 962-8013 eve 2 STY TownhouM. 4 BR. 21i DOVER SHORES NTC~: Home in a i;::ood area FOR SALE OR LEASE-Lge BA. 2·100 IQ fl, 2 pat1011 + EXCLUSIVE ~CM $21 ~ D \V c J s 11 tnum, 12'.f' family n n, llv "' ·1 · '"""'· · .. · · · 4 br, lam rm. bHns, fen ced A real Amerlc11n Beauty In R£'alty. 638-:i820. yard. frp!r! &. drpd. Nr rrn. fnrmAl rl in rm. $40,750 &1.l-1337 Own{'r. 11 mos1 unique det'(lr. \Vhi!P. XLNT locaHon, fine potPn· beach. VA loan. Salt price 17---~-,---- \.l.TOughl iron lrncrd pool • 11111. 2 olrl£'r uni!~ for $38,000. Ue $3.'ill mo. Avail L•guni1 Beach R"par11.te play yani. 4 BR's $4(500. 673-4696. Aug. Isl. $2-3938. • drn • FR • formal DR .1 -W---d--d-R----I H~u~n~tl~n-g7to-n-.B~,-.-.'h __ _ 11 ., "everythln12:" home for 00 e etreat I;::;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;::-;;, tlel('ant enrertainlng &. fam. Do you lllit and d11ydrf!an1 ~' ily ple11Rure. $1 12.000. 11.hou1 " homP. in fhP. moun. Macnab-Irvine t11 inlll -a plaee !or qulc 11.n'I 1ec.lu11ion? Then you '42-8235 67S-3210 mu11t l!tt this mnsr unusual K ING_O_'_T_H_E-HILL duplex. 3 bcdroon1~ wHh II gue1n apartment and 11 1 With view 1111 a round. 3 R(t-hedroom unit. surrounded rm. :t ·Be11rhl"ll w/key lit• by grl":enl!f')' and towf'ring Cf'~•. Braur. hrl'('1.y &:. rlean trN>S. y.,u t:an 11lmO!llt for· 11..~ 11 whi~rlr $41.l.!t.1(), ~t'I Y'"'ll 11re in !hr ht>a r1 ol Home Show Realtors 11 n1rtmpoh!. SM.900. C.1111 ''Ar1nrh11ir ltou!ll'hun11ng'' 673-Rl'(I. 3.~ E, Cm15t H1,•y.1 Cd,\.t 67S-722S Sel.1 idle itt>:ms now! Cllll 642-5678 No1•1! \O ' THE Rf.AL ~ESTATERS \,,,, ..... ,,, , Walk To Ocean 3BR +2BA $22,750 Nott11n~ fo do hrl'f', ju:<t 1nove 1n. 20'x2.i' l1v rm w1!h mlr· mred "''&ii. hrlck fpl, wl w crpts I.· dl'P!l. hlhn RIO, hul!'.r Pfl.lin. ·Submit. C a 11 IM7-1221 SEYMOUR REALTY 17141 8"ACh Blvd .. Mtgn Sch Open ·~u 9 PM Daily Pilot Wa11t Ads have b!lrgain.s galore. CAPE COD Whil,. shingll":d. New Eneland styled home in Woods Cove. Only 4 block~ In heach. Spaciou11, a ll wood Mme, ~t't 11mona;s1 lush lansdca~ ing with bric.k palh~ & Cine f"(lverrr! arbor. J Bdrms., 3 b11th~. 2 Df'n.~. Olnlna: room. lirrplacr:: large 11'0rk11hop /.. 2 car 11;ara.gl":. Availablt' now for only 549.950. A&tan REAL ESTATE 1190 Glennl'.Yf'f' SI 1~!·~·:-~ ;;:~..{Clli Leguna Beech * $38,900 * Seu or Jeue w/opdoa Vi•w, custom built ~. Level yard le. patio area. Xlnt, close in loca tion. PLACE REALTY 494-971M 2969 So. Coast Hwy .• L..B. PATii WALKER 2--1 Units • Tradt>. All 2 BR. L~e m111_ Lots of stor&gl":, ('l'P1s, drps_ near Slater , H B. 842·1418 inn Beach Bl~·d .. H. B. * A STEAL * ONLY $21.900~ 3 BR! Patio! lrg yard! fnHt trtt&! VA i FHA tPrnis' HAFF DAL REAL TY &12-1.W5 Eves: 5-U-2446 1 L•gun• Nigu•I ' * BEST BUYS * -I Bdrms., 1.sry, •. $13,500 ~ Bdrnls., 2-Sty •.• $34,200 3 Rtl r ms., lam. rm. $31.900 Laguna Niguel R•i1lty 8JG-SOSO 496-5791 Lido Isle First Time Offered * * DELIGHTFUL * $73,500 An ou:standing 2 & <len with quality appoinnnents. One or Lido's mosl charming hon1es .•. illake us prove It. SP!': today. Call now. 673-8550 \RTHEREAL 'C ft.~! f.1 J.E.~~ *WATERFRONTS* 4 BR. 5 ba. 30x1G4 w/pitt Ir slip & sandy brach $198,500 OFF LIDO C-1-H, Vacant ..... $199,500 Condo 2 BR . 2 b11. Pool & holrt slip avail •.... , $'99.500 LIDO REAL TY INC. ,'\317 Via !,ido 673-7300 REDECORATED 3 Br, 'l Ba. homf', lrg lot, mllst seU or tr11dt'. 67.3-7185. The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace I I • " -•• ;~:.:s~f~D~Al~L~V~Pl~LO~T~~~~~~~~~M~oo~d~·,~·~'~''~·~218~, 1~·~1~1 ~~~~~~~~1 ~~~~~~~~~~1 :~~~~~~~~~:1 ~~~~~~~~~~1 1~~~~~~~~~1~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~ :; 't _..... I~ :-1 -~-"~"~I ~~1 1 ... ~~ I ~ I _, .. _ I~ l'---_1_ ...... __,J~1 ;;;;;;1 ;;_;; ... ;;;;-;;;1~;;11!1 [ ~·"1""'"'"""' ][~]1....._I -..._ ....... ___,!~1 [ .. W' ........... ][!] M••• del M•r I Condominiums 8usin•ss Hous.1 Furnished 300 Houus Unfurn. 30S Hou .. , Unfurn. 305 Apts. Furn. l60 Apts. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfurn. 365 1---------for t•I• 160 Opportunity 200 '------------------LAST chance to uve 01·tr ----------'Lido Isle Coste Mesa N•wport Beach B1lboa p.,,1n1ula Newport 81.tcl'I Costa Mesa t S21))) Q1\ner lt'll\'lni: SU.le WEEK-END ,,...xt ''"eek 4 BR. ne.11. crpt!., RETREAT ,.. FA.\10L:S BRAND NA!'.IE ~IOBJJ F hn L"d DELUXE CANDY StJPPLY \\"ATERFRO:-JT 4 Br. 224 SPACIOUS 3 Br hornr. film I EASI'BLUff' Condo ~w .c 2 BDR~1. Jrplc. bll.lrony. 315,' ~ • me. 1 o .area. I • dtp! & dtt(lrtiting. C!Q~ to I school. Open Sal & Sun :~:. Coey 1 ~droom beach home 915 Sonora I lo, "''f'l'ktMers, in\•esiot-', CP:\RT OR FULL Tl.'lEI Via l.1do /l.'orrt Call (ZlJI rm. sr ..... r m. pool rm. 1~w BR, 21.1, BA, lam. r m. f~ .. Bay. $2~ mo. l..ea~e n .. ;irly flf'.,.. l BR -i-APARTMENTS DISTRIB UTORSHIP 9.~4--0920 or (213! 27(}...4547. Cp!g, drp!, bllt1s, Jn cd yd. earpf't. drapes, pool , tennis, yf'a.rly. ln11u1re al .Apt. C, hide·a·bf>rl . l-4<1" h.:r th: i·nir~. NOW AVA ILABLE bi>chtlnr! Only $14 .900. & ~ Br. 2 ba, many custom 1 sharp 15 ,. tack .\0f"" sh!\g featur~s $31.500. M surne "'' v.· \'JI.Cant Th s!caJ of $-6 •• 1,1o 67:1-1.)21 nr ~S-7771. rlrp~. All bll11s. Enrlrr~Pd Atr Coor!. frplr'1 • 3 S>4-im· I PART OR FULL Tl.'IEI Newport Beach ~"·' .,;i-'~ niarkf'I!, ...rhool. Lf-11SP J uly 1 ~-~-~. r-;no. '.,(I' In bi.ly & pnul :-;ow available in Costa ~1esa 3 Br house. Older chlldrrn ~~~~elud'5 maintrn.11.nfe Corona del Mar S11~1nin Y••11.rly. Adulls, no I ~;~~13P~ll~ ~ ~:~~ ip~u: ~14 !'HA. PrlJl. c:i n l } , · · e and surroundtng ar'a1. All .'IOEJLf~ homt, Lldo art"a, OK, Cpll'". dhl(' gar. large prt~ Gil-11796. ha rd Roonl. locar1ons &.re rummrrciaJ or NPady ntw 1 BR + yd. Sl~5 '62-8131 evPs. RF:AUT. mod. 1011o·nhouM>. 3 AVAIL ll 15, Z BR, lpl. h11 3 ._'.',' 1-Rlt-lurr-, -,-,-,-, -U~.,-1 -0,-,~rl. 1 & z Bf:DROO:-.! 5;Jl)...50~i a llfell1nP' 1 '°'--0-0-~-----1 Larwin Realty, Inc. Me•a Verde 21:.iti:? Bror>kh1u1'r . Hnl{:n Bl'h f.:rcto.ry lurnt_!;h~ by u~ hide·n·hrrl. 4;e ba1h, rrpls, 3 BR -t t•11 n1 Rm, fn cd yard Br. 2'~ Ra, lrplr, IJhllQ. Yrly nnl.1<, 1st & la~1 PIJOI . l\'o chlldJ'Pn or pi•l,;. f'fl.(),\f SI.JO. Qual1!1erl P"r&e•n " 1 I l drps Yellow bltn5, Enclosed Cpl~. drp~. s22;;i. ,\\'1ul rnol. 2 car gar, all bhn~. Hr!11roupe J blk lo bch ~H0':1 16th St /'.". B. MEDITERRANEAN BELO\\• FHA· P opular T-plan 3 br. l'l t>a dbl pa tio, lge .vard 1\r library t.· ~rhl~ fHA a ppr ~ I~ II I S30.4.Jll, Sf'Ulnt pncr. S29.~:i0 &~2-:.i\5 S46-541 l anytime I b('c<Jnle d1srr\bulor f..,r oLJr pallo, :io· to b11y & p<Yil $215 71\:l/71. -~~94 __ ::.1 __ -1 rrpts. r!r.:tf)I'~. Lea.~r S29:. 67:..:;&15 !il6-46fi4. ·• ranrl.v 1:'\r•!le!. Plan1rrs, mn, )early. Adl!s, 00 ....,15 _ . 11 I :'!2J-4710 or Mfr.JS'Jl VI LLAGE T<lnt~IP Roll~ • .'lllk Duds. s;J-~19fi ,~ RENT, I.EASE. SELL. 81g f'VP~/11 k,ids. e 1\I ODEH>l. rhf't'r!ul !urn CX.'EAN rRONT l BR/2 B1t, Newport Beach Duplexes/Units sa le 162 etc 1 \\'INTER REt'\T Al..S :'\O :SELLING .'JES.·\ \."erdr. DuplPi( ~·ew :i. \'f'lry high rnl'fJme potrnTJal •Rr~t8 Now Ava~I. ~~L tl ER. 2 B:\. frp!r, pr11· ~rl 2 Yn iJ mu~! h.:t\'P. 2 1.., 8 hrs Sl"" r hse lrp c, ""am Cf' . BR. 2 BA Pr11· yd \\"/~\· P"r 1'f'f'k spare 11m' trlays ""· • cf}1i. 1hruoui & rlr~petf ~r or ,1,.i.1. • 2 Br 01·er gar uni pd Sl9J. sh1Jpp1ng f,. SC'hool~ l C<lr I 51-1· CA!'\H REQC"IRED • I Br hsP Ul!J pr1 s11:i gar 1:1.\l \\'1n1er;rrrrr Pl . Ynr jn;~I? ,'nrormation 1-1·ri!e: • I Br C'Tl7.Y 11pr uttl rd Sl45 .Apt B Do nnt d1~r11 rh l"n;>.nr . D!STR !BVTOR DIVI SION ALA Rentals e 645-3900 111 ,\pl A PrinC'. •nil ... -.,· ~J ·· po Box 1739 Houses Unfurn. 305 S-t9."l'rfl :,.1i;...21,1:7 l>"forr ,A.\! "en. ·' C 1 f t1i122 · HEY ,, 9 '" P\I J n1 ina. a 1 • . G 1 nr 8 · er '"' ' Jni·lurlP phone num!K-r enera AQUARIUS DUPLEX -,El, PORT -';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. Thi~ custorn h11 111 rQn· BEACH.lbr,no\·acanc1e~.1 TO BUY OR FOR RENT temporary house ~eris ,our S'l~.~. Appt. by 011 nrr SELL A BUSINESS {'reatn·" talents and .1m I !H7~1!l7• 'HOLLAND BUS. SALES* l BR Home lllO ag1na 11on 10 make 11 a Income Property 166 1 "Tiie Broker 11o1lh Emp;i1hy" CrPts. drps, beau!. yard: Jahu!oLI~ home Lot>a \01 . 1716 Orange A1-.:!., C.:0.1. Child ok. t145 x 160) to add Anything 8 Cn!t Bp i hse. 2 hr, ""' 645-1170 · 540-0608 &.11ytime * 3 BR, 2 BA rrpt hnerl rlraprs .:r.11 • s c •o $180 you can dream ur Get ·rn!. rf Jnfurnl~herl' K it· I \\'e ncf'rl sales pcnp:e . iv rf'f, , kids Pf'!5 Sin· cunou.~ .:rnd Call fi.ll>-i l7J 1 e 1 ~ ,:Ir;; 11 r lcon1r rhPns furn " mo olrl LPHOL~TERY ~hop & * Walk to Beach $170 ~msh ;e:.ifn ALg~ Jo~~ !!~p I lurnirure Flore-Doing g"'Yl :'\ICE 2 Br. G~r. Lg yrd. 2~~-~~ .sa e, PP' a Y hu~111rss Evfrything one Ch ild sn~11ll prt neerls -tools. mac1nery, e!c * Spac1ous 3 BR $200 Sl 9,9SOIST HE_P-RICE-PRJ\tt: propE'r1y on \\'t•t & good lea~e . Ql11ck s!!.lr. B!r n~ nrw cpts drps lrg Bav St. C .\I Can h111lrl l.\ j V1lla~e Upholstery, Ap[lle vard. Gn r. K1rl~/p"' 0nk. f('r this very Jovl'ly 3 hecl· ld rl · room. 2 barh Mme Tbe unlt~ 2 o er ren!e h1Juses l Valle.v. By O\.\ner 1141 * 2 BR·P ri. Beach S2SO loan rs high "nough so you ;_, ~~r111'" pg, storage on 2-l2·3.Vl8 CD.\!. Oce&n Viey,·, Child & .,., .J...., 01 resent 1ncon1e laund,omat w /agency, pr! ok can a~sun"te '1ith pa) mPnis S29-t0. $38.00Cl by oii·ner. of Sltl!l per monr!i, 1•h1ch 5'1~i:l6l , s.;;.2876_ ;\e"'P(lrt B.:'aCh . $'19.950. * 2 BDRM $140 includes all. :\!Nern buil!· Good 2nd bus1nes~ or work Bltn, cpts, drps. lots o! slOr· ins, det"p pile carpels. a !~o COSTA '.llESA -T 110 4 plex-\'oursrlf for xlnt incomr . age~ Gar. marchin;: rl rapes. Double . es, 12 garages Pr 71 ~ lime~ O .... 'rl .. r. $;37-6417 or &12·386.1.. * 1 BR. Util pd. $1SS garage to boot. Call I low gro~~ S20.(:io11 c.:r5h GOl'-'G COITEE 5 H 0 p :'\ICE. Laguna. Bl!n!, cpls, W I k & L Con51rlPr GI 962-4219 I roR. SALE' drps a er ee I Lots for Sale 170 I •• 547..00.ifi .... * N.r new 2 Br SJJS ~--~-~---°"7:1 Bln1s, cp15, drps, eh1lrl ok. 27!10 Harbor Blvd. at Arla.ms p R J !II E :.·tou nt.:r1n-OcP11n Money to Loan 240 545-9491 Open 'tll 9 P.\I I \·ie-..· 101, I acrP +,in ex------------1 R .E . LICENSEES elusive res1d. area 1n San 1st TD Loan BLUE BEACON * 64l-Oll 1 * No to~rn poles her!" -no Ju&n Capistrano I ncls scoreboards or time clocks. membership tn p1·t com· 77c INTEREST work when & v.'here you mun1f)' rec. Cl'ntf'r $25,00l. plea~ -an.y.vhtre 1n Calli. _Call wkdys. 644-5000. Be~1 comm1ss1on in s!atf' Mob.<lo Home / 2nd TD Loan Term! based on equity. QUINTARD RLTY • fi42·2')91 Trailer Parks 172 642-2 171 S4S-061 I * MUST SELL * .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m l Sf'n•ing Harbor area Z1 yrs, BY O"°'NER CL 17'! HB Sattler Mortgage Co. Bea.ut1tu1 3000' BluHs Condo, ~ J.16 E. 17th Street vltw ol 1-1•a!er & lights. P REST IGE t1<0 bdrm 2{'I x Grttn Belt loc, Fabulous :,3 1n adul! park ne)(t to I 25-.;18 rlen. AEk1ng $52.500 Orean R!'ady 10 occupy I Cash Fast! &J.l-1600 or sn.111;::: 011o•ner \.\Ill pfl)\"lrlf' Of'\\ I carpet. Sifl'.'IJ. J ack t..:0111) 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds n4 . :l63-sa11. I FREE APPRAISALS CLIFFHAVEN 3 Sr, 2 ba, trpk. OPf'rr beam C'f'tl1ngs, bltns. \'le\v der:k. !llA:'IJY EXTRAS By 011-ner. I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! &16--:Ji2~ or fi..12-0040. Ranches, Farms, BLUFFS Cond~ br, 3 ba Grove• R~ducf'rl !or qutck 1>1111" by 011•ner $·12,;)(IQ. &1-1-486'.l Newport Heights 180 CostB Mesa Investment S48-7711 anytime LOA7\S: LOA.."S? LOAl\S' \\e g1vP !he mos1. Pri1·arP, d1gn1f1rrl . Bu:y, trade. :5.PIL A11,·.:ry tr('lm rl0\\'rl!o,1·n 11 reil 2·1'.!6 ;\'<'Wfl<'rl Slvrl. Coa~! Pawnhroker fi.l2 -8·102 HAiVDY~lAN \VANTED • 1 Br x ·1nt location, chdd anrf sm. Jlf'! $10.J. ALA Rental• e 64S-3900 e Spacious 2 Br frn<'d yd rnrls car k1rlslfl('! Sl·lfl. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 Rental·Eastside 3 bruroom~. 2 barhs. tire. place. rarpe1ed. double rar garagf'. S2.10. Ca ti 546-:?S-12. ,\sk for :Vlrs. Street. LAGUNA • J Br, 2 Ba, crp!!';, rl~. frpk:. 2 car gar. kids 'pet $211 ALA Rrnfals • 645-3900 2 BDRM. 522,900 APPLE VAU..EY 3 br, 2 ba, !'anch !~nee, \gt 101, hnr5e barn. Trees, r 11y "'aler, lights & gas. B1g fa n1 rm. dtn'g rm. kll, liv. li:;f' our bldg. furnished. ~TUM hef' lo Mortgage•, GARDENERS DELIGHT appreciatr Quick sale by Trust Deeds 260 • 3 Br, 2 Ba, fer.c. yd , Yi'aSh· l'o·ear ."Jt.,..-port Hght~ Cozy 2 BR., largP kit. 1" nook Newly decora ted in~1de & out, spic &. gpan. Vacant, opPn for offer J BDRM. 129,lOO Cl1ffh<n1"n. near Cl1 rt Dr 1'1'c~n bltns. h:i th "''ti!<> tl t. carpelln;:, HI\ !Ir~ P.rar ya rd l~rgt" f'OOllbh for Sfl · 'raJ pools. (ALL 0 li•li·24 l4 A~-. 7REALTY ~t1r r-t,.potl Po ol Orr lr • ownrr Tl·l/242-~3.~~ S-10.000 ls.I TD on C-2 parc:Pl er r1~'Pr S2()) Real Eslate Wanted 184 II ~olrf er $f-0,ll)') SLrnn; hu.1 rr ALA Rentals • 64S-3900 1s constructing bldg, fPnr~. Lf;AS[ or Sell, 4 BR~ * CASH BUYER * lnrf,.cpg, eic Pays $1200 Bltn~. NPw c-rpt, S2J.) mo. 11rtb'. incl. 9'i-. Discount 16121 E1·an! Cirelr, f'.V. Don't li~t your home, !ell ir to us. lft', Bkr 49.1-l l\1. 5-1-0-6!1~7 Corona del Mar L £ASE-OPT!O:'\. Var a ni. *LAGUNA SJ2S r lr.1n.;:; l•r;.:f' brrlrm~. lan1,. YtAR[.Y· B.1r ti p,tr! 11 I\ rrn z hal t\.~, l<1r;;r [r;!, '-r !1plC'. l~1r;i'.'." '1.:rrrt C1111~1d · OCC 01~nrr ari.x101is dr r1'e h\ housr. 3-J BR. S 26 5 . LOVEL\' 2 I h111·hf'lnr·SIOO m(), util 1r1t·I ! yr ISP. 532,._,375. 2214 \\' ~9 or l'ves: 64.'>-5178. •tr:Y, 3 hr & 541}...~266 family rm. DPcora1Qf-" i;1 ylp · n c t a n l r on I. 67.'>-tiOSO, East Bluff home. Ava.i! July 3rd. 4 Rlks 1 1-BDR.\1 . clo~ To hf'fl<'h & 6i:~l~lf) In ht'11ch. S300/n10 on lsr. shnp·~· l-\1aiure P"~::"n, Qc~'.A:-.lF"RctlcNc'T~3-B=c-.~2 Ba, \ 4 Bdrm, lrg yard. V1ew. trl: Btwfi & 8 pm. fi.l2-31127. ?°n tr.in~n Rllr. 6i3-2222 ~r l.sr. S3:.!:-....$:!lj, (;norl kH1s S450/mo. r>.rar p Brk.. BAYVIEW-Northblutt 4 BR. Costa Mesa ,r., pr! Qk, 2214 \\', 0cf'an· Children ok. 644-5607. 211 BA townhouSf". lam mr, lro111. fiT.-..6()60. 6T.>-~O_. _ Huntington Beach fpl, lease $400. 644--0273. * SUNNY * J hr apl, S1:15. Ar!ult ~, 3,1 .vrs _ NEW 3 BEDROOM * ACRES * -t , no pers. rr L rf'q. SrP S37J Brand nu rrr-levrL 3000 2 8 1 1 d " '* Motel-Apts, * llHl''I", F17, 1560 Placr1111a, 1 I 11. ri: iln1 rm, 1n111.i;; .. ~r .. sq fl, •1 hr, 3 ba. r.1:: liv rm rash. Jst. S:IOO lf'asr fi.l4· 1 li2 .SrudJ<l "'· l Bedrooms N B, 2-100 llarhor Blvd . C.M. 1714• 557.8()2'0 RENTAi. OF'FICE OPf::-J 10 Ai\1 TO 7 PM' *** LIKE LIVING IN YOUR OWN HOME .,. 2 Br, 11-. Bi. uolurn, (Jit.s, rlt"J)S. Pnrl. pa!ln. WILSON GARDENS Apt• Ph. 1>12·61<1! .itl .1 pm. v.1n1a.rb!r ll·plr. S!f'p f1011o·n I LO\I/ RATES -.-\\"'l"Ncr=r.=.=n~n=EcNcT=A=r=.s=--e=- "f'flr fr;rmal rlln rm. !Rm Santa Ana Heights I S2:1 \l'rPk-$1!10 :O.lo. Rf'nl NO\V fnr Sep!! nn., 1<rl h~r. h1ll 111rd l.· • ...__ I Daily flare~ '""11 EY "F.AI ·ry "12 '!"·" !=~~~~~~~~D:r l Knnie rm. Ct)n!lnUflllS clran. 1 4 BR, Crpls, Drp5, l'rplr, , ~' · A813 " . , ,~ ... ,, .~, ~ LgP fnerl yard. Ch1Jdrrn 01-\, ... Color T\' Au·Cond ROOM Y 2 BR furn upprr. * Span1'sh Elegance 1n~ l)VPn, ·' c.:rr J:llr · ., • j e Pml Pool Table <"!'pL~/drps. Alt 7pm, t:?l3i 1.S.7.1 mo. iJ.13-9930 al( Ii. • Sou~r!.; Sl ll:l u!il prl. No !l;Jngles 4:'.0-5667. l Houses Furn. or 2376 Ne"'J)(ort S!vd. Sm.:r.H (·h1lrf OK 642-~l Nf.:AR hearh. J BR. 2 BA. I Unfurn. 310 :Y\8-9i:i.i :'11013ILE hnn1p 1 BR. nr nr w. bluns. crr1. drps Beaut yr!. H t . t H bo t-:E\V (l\V"'ER-11nrlrr Lido .:rrra nr ha~. Arll1s, no rovpr~rt pat 1 o. S•l25, un ing on ar ur l\'EIV :'1-lANAGb.\i\ENl' pets $200 1110 673·~796 9"2-5121. RENT A ~ESORT :;_~r, \1v 'g CASA de ORO Newport Heights 2 BR hnu.~P, I '~ hlks In rm, rl ln R rm, 5,1 doek. \ hf>a ch. SJ7;,. mo + uttl. \l11ny Kl r11.s. 5.16-224:?, I CASUAL C.:rl1f. L1v 1ng In R CLEAN I or 2 BR . Adul!~. no Adults. Lrase. Relerences. M V ""'arm .'1l"'d11errancan atmos· pe!s. 4?: kiL SlbtlS.0. 2~71 esa erde phrl'f'. Sp.:r rious color t"O· F.:. 16th S!, NB. &16·1801. 54~244.i. I I d rl & 1~-~~-----= 3 BR. 2 B.:r, rl ln. rn1. Pool orr lnH lri apts -csa::nr ~pt. Unfurro. 365 • SZlO 3 Br.Pl ha. crp!~/ S27.1 Uni, SZ95 furn. lurnishrrf fo r sryle & rom·l-''---------- drps, "·;i1rr !'Oftner. N!!ar fi.12-7000 or 5'1&-\3S.l Ion • lleA1crl pool • Kitch· General be.:rl'h: OOll·i lID-t e.1 w/ 1nrt11·ccr hgh11ng •I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 4 BR. Tu\,ohse. r rpts/rfrr s. Condominiums Deil.lxP R ·O. Adu!ls. No pets.!• 2 Unfurn. 320 \ RR -:"117.l furn. P'!OI , xlnl are;i, S :.!,l a mo. YEN DOME 645-4573, General UT!LJTJF.S INCLUDED 36,'i \V, \\11lsnn &12·1971 IM?lfACULATE APTS! 2 BDRJ\1, I BA , new crpt5 & EASTBLUF"f' Condominium. ADULT and rlcps, gRrrlrner. Ii hlks from FURN B11rhel11r-8eam rf'll· F AMILY "-o"on New 4 BR. Tenni~. Pnol. I h = " beaeh Slli~•. ;'JJ&..71)'\3. 1ng, frp c, TU /, ~hn"Pr, , s3;i,;_ 6-1~ .. IR:\4 dispos;il rrpr~. 1 m rn a r Close to sMopp1n9, P•rk LEASE. \lann.:r Hi Brf'il, San Clemente Rrspnns' Rrlult only 1 ~1 t.r. * Sp~cious J BR'1, 2 ba ~1 1d /na.: f")CC Upancy. Jn. lasl m'l + s:;o r('fundrihlr l * S1vim IXXJI, put/green qu1rr: 8·16-4~'.'.7 2 BR . CONOOM !NlUM cleanrnl'! deposit. i l 2 5. * Frpl, 1ndiv/J~tlry fac'la Huntington Harbour New shag carpets. drapeg, ~48•4093. 184S Analie1m Ave. ---''-------1 • 4!lli--l.l~2 • I ................................. jCOSTA ilTESA &l:Z.2824 * \VATERFRO:"\T -3 Br. 2 I 8'. ~unrlcck + hn.:rr dork. Townhouse Unfurn. 33S GARDEN LIVING Qu1f"t, a nrac., pleasant Utll Just for Single Adults Lrase nr lr11~" oplHin . s.i:I[). Huntington Beach pain. Hr.:rtrr! pool. SOUTH BAY CLUB 01,·nrr 644-1132 or f..14-7•1:1~. 1 BR .• $145/mo. APARTMENTS 3 Br. 11i h11, pool &. rre Ii-vine Brookhur.!'! & Arl.:rm~. s220 ADULTS Newport Beach mo. u!ll pair!. 64~56:.. 7111 \\'. l~th S1 , ('?II. 880 lrv1nf' A\·e. ,.. SU:O.l;\I E:R r:E.'\TALS • 2 BR. 2 Ba. rn hse, 2 mos S325 J BR.. 2 Ba. lnh~r. 3 mos S375 * TliRT!.E ROCK * 3 BR. 2 B.:r ............. S~~ 4 BR.28a ............ S: .. > ,.. liNrvf:ns1n· PARK • .i BR. 21~ b!'I Lnhse ..•• S3i:l 4 BR. 21.1 hi!. 1nho.e .... S.~,;o 3 BR, 2 B11 . furn •••... S400 3 BR.. 21,;, ha. · ·· .... · .... $.l5fl (!n •ioe and 16thl Duplexes Unfurn. 3SO HOLIDAY PLAZA (714 ) MS.OSSO Corona del Mar DELUXE Spacious 1 BR Capistrano Beach furn apt Sl.13. Hea1erl pool. SPACI OUS .C BR. 21.i BA. &J! Ample p~rking. Adull.'i -no DUPLEX ap1-Ne11o•, Capo tiltns. Crpt& & drps. lmmac. re1s. 196:'1 Pomona, C.'I. 8f'ac-h, S17.5 mn, 11o·fgar, 2 fi.1H7!l!I. fllJSl/l.'ESS mf'n~ "p I" c 1 11 1 hr, rrp!s, rlrps. Adult~. 11 kl)' rale~ now nlfrred to fi41>-207~. Costa M e sa :0.1ESA HO\lE VERDE RENTAL \v1th 3 BR 2 BA on ".'1rryone. l,n11· es S:\6 "'"k l·c0 0-,-.-n-o-d"e_l_M_•_, ___ _ Sfo,1 La rk 11-1 orr!, 2301 f\1 pt 1 'ijjjjijjjiiiijjjjiiiijiiijjjjiiiijiiijjjji s1 ... r1 . &11>-741.·~. 1• Quiet Adult Living Shag CPI • d rps • bltns Beaulllul Pool e AU UUl Pd 2 BR. $170 Arlulri; only-no peta 2.i1 Avocado .S t. 646-0973 COUPLES or ROOM.r.1ATES Nrw !!;Upl'r 2 BR, 2 8atti. frp!c, 11'P! b<1 r, beamed ttil· ings, pancllin.1:. pr iv a t t pa lio, all rt'I"'. lacil. Adul!.~ N,, pets. r.111rrrpd couple $200. 2 ronmrn.:r1es S225. • • 646-0073 * • LARGE 2 BR. 2 BA. APT. UPSTAI.RS CHILDRF:N \VELCOM'E All electric Gold Medalllon kHch. 246& Santa Ana Ava. 642-1131 Afternoon e REGENCY e li\1{'.1AC. 2 BR, l Ba, Sh;ig C'rpt 'g, sell clean. ga.11 olll'!n . rfshYi'hr. encl gar patio. a77 \V, \V tlson. ,,,_ C;ill :...i~-361)5 -o=u~IE~T-Nica Viewl 2 Br, drps, 11Ll erptg, B8J<f"r Harbor ~hop'g, Locked gar. Adults, no pt"ts. Sl'6. 64.).:J.i]J nr fi·l·l-0753. NICE & QUIET 2 BR, c-rprs, dps, balcony, Jocked i:.:rr. f';'r bus & the· .:r1re. :\dl!s. no pe!~. Aval] .lul.v l~I. ~1 ·!.i• mo. 64:r~.i15. HARBOR GREENS 3 BR. 2 Ba. house ...... S325 $25 Per Week & Up ~., -GARDEN & STUDIO AP'l'S RACllELOR !..· 1 BR. Q.,°'" I SM;;;.~. 1 Bach. l, 2, 3 BR'i. from SUO. TV & rnnid E<'rv 11v111l. 2700 Pettrsoo Way, C.M, ·l:i{I VJt'ton11, C ,\1. 546-0370 qui rt s.rrePI . l/a~e "r d h II n1nn1h-!o-rnonrh 11t $250. · · . ., re ·, , .c .• ~" ~ ~ _A'""l\-4-lll --,-1 ~rt Beach Rf::ALTY Univ. Park Cen1Pr, Irvine Call Anyl1me SJJ.1)820 BEAUT!f"Ul.. 3 br. 2 M. beach rlplx, bllns, frplr, + 'lftr.:rs S3Z:, mol)Tly. 644-7214 Newport Heights ON TEN ACRES FUR N. 2 Hr ap1 U!il1l1r5 l 2 LRG I br, u n f u rn , paid. $160 per mo. 22n.a & BR. Furn._& Unlurn. Crp!s/drps, b 11 n 1 & ~iaple SI. 548-5913. Fireplaces I priv, patio&. =~=-~-~=--~I Pools Tennis Con!Jlf'l Bids!. rlshwshr, healed pool, I SHARr, <"le.:rn I BP.. crpts. 900 Sea La ne. CdM 64~.2611 ('hdrl 01\. 'I ll u11J's pd. Sl;JJ drps b yard. Sl.35. NO pets (:\!J c.\.J'lhLJr nr Coast Hwy) 64:r-0984, 307 Avocado, Ap t 3 BR., 2 Ba's • atrium • • S.'12.l 2 RR rrrifurn, mirldlr 11grd I c''.'"l~0-~0~1:2~~~~=~~~-l!!!!!'!!~~~\!!)!~i!Ji~~!!j 1 _9_·--~=,,.-===~--I 3 BR., 211 Ba. /flm . rni. · 532-l adl1. Enl'l g-ir. Sl2.i mo. Im· SHARP 2 BR-S160 *COROLIDO APTS* • THE GABLES * 4 BR., 211 Ba. Jam. rm.· S.tri m11 c11l111r. 7.10 Tus tin Htrl Pool. Arlu!rs. 6~2-9520 2 BP.. Studios & strcrr IP1·e!s. 2 Br, .l'i Ba 11o•/ gar. $155 ~ BR .. 21 1 Ba, fani. nn. · SJj() !~~~~~~~~~~~ SIS:> & UP. Dshw~hr .fo'rplr Adi!$. Cpr.~. drp~. bltns, fnrl ~BR ., 21 ,. Ba. farn . rm .. !37a Huntington Beach Dhl carport. LARGE:; Pool. yrf .,.,., patio. \Vtr prl. 2439 I BR. 2' 1 ha .• !amrly mnm. Ap1rtmcnts 101 Rent ~] (al! 673·:1~78. {Jr.:rn1:@ Avr. E. ~110. scparale hon1e •• $33j-$3&.l _. '-------~ l Q ' j H PARK yr;ur t"ar & w.:rlk; nr SPAC 2 Br 11 pts. S\40. Htd 1Job'l\1tlil, - - -'l~.rahur "SINCE l!:l.J6" lsl \\'r-strrn B.:r nk Rlrti;:; t:n1\'r!'l'1tv P11rk Day s 833-0iDT Nights a UJn a ermosa flcran, nr "hop·~. !\'rw .:rpts. Pool. Play yd. Cpls, drp&, 2 Br. 2 B.:r, hril.m N>rl. )l;rny Blln", p.:r!10. kids ok. A...cp_ts_._F_u_'_"_· _____ J_6_D Spanl~h Country Esiate Liv· :-: r.:r~ ;llO·A :'llargi.ierue. 199R l'\l~ple So. 1 54~-7660 1ng ,~ Spacious Arrs. Trr· tii.'!-481?. nr :.1~.i~1'~ 2'214 Colle::-p So, Iii 64&-2287 racPd pool; s1111~en ~~s RRQ · · -----" b I "I I · 0 1 J BPP,.\! n1rc [la t1n· ln1s nf Lr.F: .1 Br. t>J1n~. nrw cpts &.: .... n c ic1,,:r., e ,1\·1ng • n v • · · 1 1 B f $150 f s1 is ('iihJO{'I~, bl ln~. c;arp, & drp". fRl'ln>: San!a An11 fnr a~ l111le !15 r un • u r n drp~ j\n prl ~. I Counrry Club, Arlul1~. 281 ONE MONTH l Br unf $175 furn $210 f)on Frankl•!\"''" ,-, ,2.,2 !'olrs.:r Dr Nn ~-.',44-5637 ALL l:Tll. l:\'CLUDED _ • '._i, .... _ --· · General Rent 8rau11r1l1 Furniture complete w ith plalrrl c.:ini!le. "nulfer is h~th". frplc t:\rrp1 1nn~I drp~. 1~ ~fl. f!· Avat!a.hle . I Spf'C'la.I Bnnu!; 11 sih·f't· ;..~;\\' 2 RR, rl1n1n~ 1·1~:: 2 RR, Jl1 RA, ~harp, crpts, your 100"/o . yours If JOll hr!ng !his li d ·.1r1,• ~·HlO Y~;1r'I~· lc:i~',1'·, I' now , Slfi.l m_~_91~ Vall!nc111, P urch ase Option \1·hPn :.."u \ISll n1ir mnrlrl~. \\1n1rn1 f"!ral ~.~1,:rr,. fi•J·ll~l Apl. l\n l, ·'l-11-7 16~. rr rrl 1oorlr rir l'1•\i:11'~ rik. 1111' .., \\ C II . • .i "(\'~" a.\ a lor In Laguna Beach I ~ 1·rry ntrr rr Vif!" i\· SP!, ... r. f,, l.;i 1·11 .11 Rtatly Jnr. I ;;.;-".-'~~-,.-:;:-:-::::---~c:•,~.:·,~~r-.~la•l ~:,·~·-~.-l-~O, , ___ '_1'_'_"_1_'1--~~ I atP :,io,_· 11 ! FOR LEASE IN ... ~ .,. '" "r' ,,;;:" -B LUE BEACON \li-.:-.\-\"FP,J1E r:t.~TAL l . AT \'JCTOP.IA BEAC'll lnl!. item SPle('r1on. 4 h!ks ~ Cl[ San D1egn f"n"Y t OR!r.:rse-l"li>lii>.e-nC'~:-11 u • BEAUTJ~·u L l & 2 BR 24 Hour Dely. on Br.lrh. l hlk \\'.on Holt rlrr. 2 HR, J HA Cnn1rmporary Ga rdtn Apt~ CUSTOM to 1621 1 Park.~lrfl'.! Lane . l'noh~rn1r1ptl I lf'\I of ha v ,, I r~uo~ •. fr p l_r s ~ pool. Furniture Rental iil·l ) 8!75441 n(P11n Arll1sonl1• fi71-fl!l'l2 _1150-~!6.i C.:r.H ;)'11)...::il63 517 \V. l'Jlh, C.:'11. ~4~·31~1 OC£,\N Vlt:IV 2 B~\l-CLEA,-; 2 BR $1 15, /lolesa Luis Rey Do11n GIJU Colir~~ :~:*::6•~s~-:0:1~1 a1a*;£j Hl 1\11::· "11h .1 hrrl mnni•. 2 tn1"11(' J l-.drm. hon1P. i ...... Bush1ess J h:i lh-. ,,11 a ,11,.r, <. ,.0,1 , ll!Pd on lnr nce-11 n "'dP n( v.i lh spectacular v!t"w of O ''" lty ' B h Palomar mountains anrl , ppo n '.1:00 .fi\w ;llllM:lf·Sil•l~i A1a;1.1l>IP J uli ~Th at $230 hu.~ · al \·1c\nria "11'' · Anahrim 774.2AAfl LR G 1 BR rrrlt r, )(!r.:r. RA. s!ovP. rPfr ii.::, nt'w '('pt.<~ \'ct rl", rlrc1 hl11ns, rrpt11, La.Hahr.:r 694-3708 rlo~ers. S140 r".°I, pa11n rlrps SQOlnio. 67.l-6ll;> or ,:.:r r;ii:;r , upper. Adlr~. no pe ts '!::!! ••• fl"r rnn ('..ill ·,\I!:' ;,41>-41 11 Ou!~t11nrl1 11;: nrran \'l""'· 2'1 orP&n "'a1tr Po11o·.,r & I • DISTRIBUTORS g ENT AL FINDERS bath.•, 2 ... 11nken tubs. 2 f1rr· lrl"phone on prop t"rl y . NEEDED 'F T L di d .1 BP.,:Zh;ihn11~rnr ... f'h"'ll& "~ T ree o an or s h ,. • plaCf'-", I in mstr, bdrm. All CN.V'N fJE"f 11rr,.. rt,1\ L:rn .1 rd o••m'-, ol DISTRI. !-<lflprr.;: .;lf'I\" « ft1<"' lnrl. '"' .. rrrl rrrl.:r r e"l:rerinr. Ant11111e a~·a1lat>lr Shrlt"r JndLJ~tr1es I Bl..TORSHtPS n01,. ~v.:rd. 645-0111 S221 •no. Call all 5.30, stainrrf ;<le~s .,.,.1ndo1-1•, Cnlnr· lll4I 64~2&20. abl!' in ,.,,, .:rre•. "<rw 4l"5W.lttll.Ca1t• MM• ,>.J:'>-521~ • 1~-==~-~~~--erl sk)'hgh1s. Kirchen 1-11 11 11 1 Acre fully ltnpm\·eri un· :0.Jl"LT!·~ULL/Q;.. 00 AR -----RDR.\1. eld<'!'ly or c en 1 f' r I\' at!;ic:hmPnt_... t'!trground u!1!. nr Ph0tnL'(. arf1•r r1i;,.erl Purid tng I,, u1t I FREE i I pPn;,.1onrr /l.n r"<crprrnns huilt-in" Including :-;ur"!le By owner.".~ 'I" ~~1 C1i"~. so l<l lhrou,h AtHn. Landlords-Owners c~ 1%5 rarrons S <. h "'°""""' ,,..~.., ,. ~ Def'drd arcr5s in pat way. Cemetery 1 \Ja11r .'l .. rchandiseri.. U \\·,. "rll relf'r 1tnan!11 ,,, ~·nu .}1~-2R~~-leads ln the b~ach Loli/Crypts 1S6 IJlldhl1ed. )'OU '11i1 b(I pro. YREE of r:h.:rrgt . , ,)l;1,ny CLEA~ 2 BR. carpor1, "a1Pr 't'nt.Y. LEASE 1·1drrl 1-1 11h 1111 P1J111pn1,.n, c!es1r11bl~ Tenants on o ur flrl , Pr"l"r ni<!inrr rnuplP. 5:1;;0 !110:-.lTH anrl loratJons, and he 1ra1n. ii·ai lin~ iq. ;>.;IJ pe!~ lnl~nt ,,k Slj(), mo. !IH~SJON REALTY ,.d in a ll phasest1l 1h1s high· ALA Rentals• 645-3900 ~1r,. .:rrPa ;,1~1;. 983 So. Co;is! H"')'. Uti;:una ty lur:rari1·t" bus1nr11~. (:'\0 Corona del M a r \\'e'll hl'!p you ull! 6"2-S6il f'HO~'F: 1 n~1 4~·07'.l.l SELLl.'>;r.1 Yf)ll n1u~1 ~Tl"· hablf', ha1 I" 11 .Good r11r. anrl 4 hours a wee~ spare t1mr, * CHARMING * OLD \\"OP.LO ADOBE; QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 FOR 58.lf', douhlf' Crpt No 2S in .\taustilf'wn ol ReJlO!r, + endowment rar" l'I! \\'t~lm1nsrtr :'11 I" rn n r 1 a I Park. Be!t 1Jfler \\'r 11p ~lr~ LR Jacks, 125 V)A La Joll1. Ap!O!, CAii!. 9:D.lt and hi'; a ble ro make an im-H11;:e frplr. Cnu niry ;.:arrftn mPr!111re 1nve.<.rn1C'n1 nl Cnmplettly furnished. S400 PACJFIC V1t11,' ;'>1rm Park. • choice 1.,ts, Bayview Ter-S~.00 lsf'cured1. S..nrl Prr mn !>to S mo l~e $©\\.4UlA-LGti~S8 The Purzle wilh fhe Bui/I-In Chudie race S.36:> ea fS400 belo1-1· na'rlt , arldrrss. Anrl phone CORBIN • MARTIN markf't \•&Jue). 642-1452 num'ot!T, to Nrwport Inter. Realtors 644-7&62 n.:rr 1on11.l D1~rr1but1ng O>m· Coata Mesa Commercial pany Dept • 2UA. JiOO Nf'w. ----------- Property 158 por1 Blvrl . Z\e11opor1 Beach, 3 BR. rl1n 11rea. ~'lr11~. Ea!l- 1--1-N..;V_E_S_T_M_E_N_T_S_ Cah! !l2Q;O ~irlr nl't \\'t~tm1n~1f'r, Ne-..·ly -'0"'1"s"TR01"s"u"·T"'o"'R"s--dtc s~ 5'16-8226 wtTH "~tAJOR" NEEDED Laguna Beach TENANTS·LEASEBACKS ''BETIY CROCKER" -~·,w OITICE mnl li·mUllon do 11 a r ad· _S_U_M_M~E-R_L_E_A_S_E~ COMMERCIAL l'!rtl~ anark pack PM · Ir APT Bl.O"GS d 11 ct s . t\EED ,..0\\'' l.ti1·P)y bP11ch homP for &Um· W. R. DUBOIS, I NC. JU.li•b:le mf'n or 11T)mtn ltl mrr lta.se • 4 BR. 3 BA . (R.E. Brokers~ 83J..944.'i your 1rt"a 10 !ef\'lr.e fas!· bfo.:ru!U11! l'M'\.\' t>l <:lrt:an, Its~ Condomlnlumt mov1nc coin operated pro. !harr a bloek tram hearh. for s•I• 160 duci& in company fittUred lul!y lurn i~hrl1 Pvrn tn -----------loca.tlon11, commerc11tl or d1~ht' it> l1ne11s lmrnrrlu11r COOL CONDOS 111.C1ory, PART OR n;u, orrup11ncy n 11·nr r 1, nn Ail'-oond "TIBURON" 41 l"f!· TL\I E. 6 ffl 12 hnur5 '{lf'r prem1.sr~. 31JjJ !l!nnfrrey . A.le& nQW tm maf'k#t. Xlnl '4-'l"tk. N" .<.rlltn~. CASH Rf:. S L11gun11 (If r h n n, ma.i n!. tree 2nd homr near Ql."JRED .v;o(); !o $7!1'.l:> 4'.1~4i5f!t f.lr$. B 11 1),. y, beache1. Cllll RHa!e Dlv OJ "-'till" for mnf'P Jnlorma\Jon 1 t\n11·r ll A~snf111te 1.af'Wln lor ~t bu)'l!. P n Boit JJ .).i. Torr11nr~ ~ Larwln Retlty, Inc. Cahfflrnta ~:,05 1 1 ~ 3 RR. 2 BA. lam rm, frpl- n.562 Brookhuri.1. Hntcn Bch .173-32.\J;. Jl'ICludt1 ri h n n ,. hflln'. "H"P11n \·1,.111, TO\\ ~5411 anytime numtxor / s.--::.o yr !~t 5.l&-500i Turn~ 11f'm~ 11110 quick For th11 t ltt'm und,.r SJO. j \rr ·n M-lri ynu sell r &12-56i8 cull, call 642.-5673 try th,. Pt1 nnv Pinrti"-'--~IJ th" fllrf lhlll 0 Reom:rngs letters ol the fOUI" scrambled words be- low to forr¥t fOV' 3imole 'fO'Ofds. I LEWFOU I I 11 I I I LWAYER-1 1 E I· . 1 I' ~NIN YI 1 1 l . Fomny life , Mostfommes do . l . . . not feel It contr ibvtes to gra. r--::--::--=c-::-----,c iovs living to hove -O"f e~ I S E T 0 H 0 1•.-Y m .. ~ . ~->S I I I I ' I 0 Comolet. "'" tltvc~I& (ltlded ~ litl"'IJ ln tf>e misi1nq word . • • • • • . 'fOU d!!l'91op frotl'I ~te-p No. J below. PRINT N~8£11:£D tEnEll:S IN l 4 i lH(SE SOUAllES ff UNSCl!AM!l.E .480VE lEnERS 10 GET ANS WE P I I I . I I I SCRAM-LETS AN~WERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 A!•t> I Bach $9.1. Arlu!rs. f>l6-'l2!'10 ;-.48·6J.J7 _,~,..,"=~'c1''---------l c;;;;-;;,..;:;:~-----' cn-n--;;-;:c--,,.,---~~~~1 :-Costa Mesa .l BR. 2 h.:r. lge . av;JiJ J uly 10. Irvine Arf lt<. Bltn~. Cotlrgt Park. SU.'l.'lER ~ublr t-Park \Vf~I Apl~. adult serr1on 111•:ul nn11 lhru Sf'pl, :! hr, 11, h~. drpss..,,1ng rm, ~m. i;rpar11tt FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. rl1n'g rm. 11 ir rnnrl. 111! "IPr. 2 & 3 BR's r!~h\VShr. ~lf-rle;u11ng 01·Pn Private pa!.io pool • lndiv. Ponl, Jl'ICUZll, rrnni5, l'nllr.v laundry f~c: h.:rl!, lw.:rut. Rrc. rm . ln11<l..,, Near Orang!" Co. Airport &: "' rlo~~'-"· plrnry o:if park 111~. UC!. Adults only, Sl1:rS7:l ~f'r M'fl. ~42-141.J 20122 Sanla Ana A\•e. !1)5. 71.1 1-Jf>~.l r1·rs ,\· 111\nrf•. :'llgr. 1\-frs .• Joachim, Apt 3-A Laguna Beach Q U JE1' g ardf'n 11pl . rlown row n, dt rora!or lum1,.hrrl. oce11rr v1rYi, 1 hlock to b<'ach, nr11' cRrT'f'!'. dra~.\, p111l'lt. Ma ! u r P 11 rlutt 1. Ye11 r le;1111 P. S22.5/mn. 4!l4-40'19 day..,,, 494-JS39 evr~ & wlmd11. 1 BR Bpi 11vail l blk, trnm octen, $1 50. f°fl r 6 wk~. tram .July 3 to Au1 1.'i. 494-0141. Lido l•I• ~fi..6215 Park-Like Surrounding QUIET -IJELUXE 1.2 k 3 BR APTS Alao ~·urn. Bachelor Prv pll llos * Hrd Pools Nr shop'i * Adulls only Martinique Apts. lm San111 Ana Av~ .. C~f ;\fgr. Apl IJ.l &16-5.."A2 JUST RE;\fODELED I Br-hou11r·S IO.~. rrplA·r11ng~. \•alrr pr!. \..18 BernBrd SI. "A'". fi.'16-4\211. SJ 'l:1 fi1fi-4!l.l~. fi41)...Jf.8!l SHARP 2 BR-$145 I P~tto, hltn~. pooJ. Adlt&, l4:J F •. Bay or ~2-9320. • • .<;TUNNING GARDEN APTS: Pool . l BR, inf11n1 or i:,n1J rlo:ig ni.; Sli'l. fi.lj.5,'i'JO 3 BR, f;1m sl:zf' apt, bltiur, rlrps, \.\ lw cpl. gar, zir ~hnp·g & ~ehls. 962-41FJJ. 2 BR, nf'w <·.:r~r. vt ry f lran 2 k1rls ok. Slt~. mo. j70 Shahmar. j3R-f741 . BRAND nf'w 2 br apt. Cpu & rlrp~. 111! bhn~. pn, aaragt ;..J6-Sfi.lll Bmkrr, 2 Br 11.pz, hlrn11 & .om" rurn1111rr. 1 C'h1Jd t1k. S140 rr1n. 64&-?2711 3 BR, 2 B.:r, NP11o1y p111nfed, crpts. rlrP!!, bltns, p 1 1 i o, carport, Sl70. M~7. 2 BR, 111 811 i tudio. Encl palio. End ol cul-de-sac. 3.19 Ca:br1Jlo 642-.l!U.l. :-:c-... -o-------1BEST 111"1'11 modt.rn 2 hr. I BR. Sto\·P. rtfrig, gir, 6 BAYfRONT Apts. On thf' &dull!", nn prri;. $1.Jll C11.JI SIJO. 240 A1"0i:11rlo SL, C.~f. hf'!!.Ch. Summ"r or :.r~rly ;111! Sun 329 C11hr1lln, apt B. C•ll 544-fil111. lf!a~rs. AvRJJ&.hle now l C.~I &111-21,;:;, fi42...{)261. -N'°'E"""'L'v"o°'E~co=iv.=r~E~o-·I ]-;\fn m1n1mum l-Brfrm 2 Bryan! \V1rst Rltr. s1;.2723 DELUXF: 1 BR, $135. Nr I Br -..·/gar. Sl.i..i, frncM )'d ,-,.---=~-~--·--I Ahopp1n1. Aduhs t>nly. G11r \.\'/pa tio, u.111tr pd. 2ll8 Newport Beach Nn prl8. J.)(l E. 21s1 PlaCf'n!111 Av ... "8 " &l&-4n0 30' tra1IPr wlr11blln11-U11t 646-H'llf\. SPACIOUS Dt'lti."<e I Br. Blfn p.:r1rf. $4.it11k. rhrldrPn nk. 2 RR , 2 bll. Blrn~. G11.r&ii". 2 l'lll'IRI', rt"hw~hr. rPfri,e:. •hll f\i"J--AAOO ('Ir 11 rr fi. MZ.7117. c-hllrlrrn, No ptts, S165. rrpi.~. rlrp~. g11r Nr. So. F RE L 1~1-11 Ort ~!&r. 548-82i8. Cnasr Pl11:111 ~:>-2.121 . 0. .SU TS you Cllll l)t..I~=~~~~~-------·f pend on, Call the Supt"r-l\l\IAC. 2 flR, 2 BA, hlt1rtl'. 2 RR 5rurJ1n-;j;1-:-drps, cmtJ, ;:, 11 J • ~ m !l n .. Daily Pilot LB und~ t11cl. ~t,.s11 Vtl'df'. JX"'I. ur1J prl. NG ri«ll C111:ssified 64W678 • p18ee s1 ro. 54.:.-7'.l61: ~7-2876. i;41i·l~97 rl11y~ f..12-214'.l. .ll<'lll T ~rt t.· rh11ri;P II' /:.•I! f:.11-~711-N""'' ~nr i-.~·t r,.~1111~' ~2-."ill7~ -- " ' . ,, .. . ~. J '1t ::3, ic;1 1 DAILY I'll.OT ![Ill [ l[Il] Apt. Unfurrr. 365 ~t. Unfum. S50 Carpet Service Haullng liolp W•nttd, MI F 710 Help Wonted, M t..P nl /.,--------Costa Mesa Newport Beach FURNISHED-Pvt _ entrance MODERN OFFICES to cozy. qua.rters J.flCI bdrm. * COSTA MESA * ba, silting rm wlv.'t't bar & ~~~~~~~-1-~~~~~~-~,.....~~~~~ SlAMESE maJt cat with JOllN'S ~I Ji: Uphols~ YARD, 1arage, clt'aru.tpa. ACCOUNTING C LERK. croued t~ Vld bent tall. C!.eaners. Extra. Drl Remo.... tree&, dlrt, lvy, l.oc9.1 KJ"Owing 00. in the Vic Sla~r Ir Beach HB Sliampo<> tree Srotchgua.rd • kl P I O a d" r • backhoe· rtctte.lloo field. G re a t &41--0775. t So 11 R ct a rd an Is). 1,,,84•77-=>;'6,,C-.~~-----I working cond.s. So 1n • fOUND-Hub cap. Cout ltwy Degree.sens &: all color TRASH & Ge.ra;:e clean-up, pa)TOll v:pe-r. ttq'd, O:l. at Newport off n.mp, kloks brlghtenen: & 10 minute 7 d11ys, $10 & load. Free e11. wilt lr'aln you to M..ndle in. A WOMA~'S WORLD How YIOUld )'Oil 11kt &ti .. portunltr to join a new di· vl:!Jon ot one or the t.unt erowtna: nat'L oorporatlom in the U.S.! Do you ha..,. 11.ny sales mgmt, exper.? Have you ever done any ""' cruiling, training or hirlnl1 Do you honestly want a ca- reer where the oppor. to earn equals your e.Uort f W• may have Ju.t •Udl an op.. por. !or )'OU. We need eom._ one 11,•ith salee mgm"~ ex~ per. who wants that real future. This Hi no fly by nighl or gE't rlc'.1 q u 1 c k seheme, but a. wry did ca~r oppor. which incl. Wary & incentives lo the right pe-nion. Call Mn. 00\VNSrAIRS-lr& l Br, I~ Ba, f1 65. Crpts, d r p s , dhwfir, no pets. 2 chlldttn ok. Upshtirs apt a\'ai.I Aug. I. fl.75. MS-.!215. LIKE A HOME J br, 211:1 ba, 1600 sq fr, new shag cpts, cl~ets galore, elec blln.1, sep din rm nr occ. $195, 5-16-11~2 ' e FABULOUS 2 sty, 11v rm w/spiral strs, lrpl, 2 Bdrm, J ~~ Ba, $185 tropical poo!. 145 E . 18th St. 6-12~lli03. 3 BR, 2 Ba fan1ily Ap!. Crpts, rlrps, pool No jlf't.S. s11a1rno. E\·ei,; & v.•knrls: ~7--1057 2 BR faintly t!n1ls $15.'i. Rede-c. Co11v. lOcation. Villa Me~a Apl5, 719 • \\'. \Vi.Ison. 6-\&-1251. LllG' 3 Bil, 2 BA, nc\v shag crpts, Sl79/mo. Newly d!"C. Nr. OCC. Carport. 557...£151. East Bluff OCEANF1l.ONT 3 Br, 2 Ba, 1 Yl' l8e. S325-S375. Good kids & pet ok. 2214 W. Ocea.&- fronL 675-6000, 67>-1410. Santil An• CAN'T BE BfAT SINGLE STORY South &a Atmosphen 1 BR. -2 BA111 Carpets & drps Alf' Conditioned Private PaliOll' llEATED POOL Plenty ot lawn Carport & Storage t!IDDEN VILLAGE Z'JOO South Salta Santa Ana e , 546-1525 ntri&, new plush crpl.s & . deLw thru-.ouJ. $!:.IS mo $75. &. f l;lO .per mo., So. Caltt. incl util. 543-3893 0 r fll'St Nauonat &ink Bldg., 54&-5990. 261 Brentwood St, m E. 17th St., C.M. 64.2-148.S C~t. 1670 SANTA ANA AVE. CM PROFES.SIONAL Sida;. 4X fro~~ ~:Me=so:i Jt, 1q ft. Aif'.olnd, crpts, drps,l~-'-'-'=:.C,,"-'""-"'-= gd paridng. Xlnt loc. 350 E. Busln"• Rental 44l 11th St. C.M. PEIE BAR-. REIT RL TY 6-12-4353. A IT RAC 1lore & o!f1ce I ~~~~---~~-·! spaces. $50 & up. Dwntwn MALE desire& same 25 + to San Juan Capistrano, nr share turn. 2 br apl CdM. mission. .(93...1153. Call: \\'kfeve 6 4 4-5 8 51 .1-1~nd~u-,-,-,;~.=l~R~.-n-,-,=1--4~50~ &14-7387, dysl&l<f-563.l itxpenaive. Wlll leave at bleach !or while carpets. Anytime, 5-iS-5031. put to compu1er. $425. N.B. Police Station. Save your rrtoney by saving MOVlNG, garage dean • up C&!I Mary Lee, 540-6055 me exrra trips. Wit! .;lean Ii: l.Jte hauling, ReaJ50nable COASTAL AGENCY IND:-Sm gray tabby cal living nn dining rm l hall 1-'ree estimates. 645--1002. 2790 Harbor Bl at AdalTllll wearing nea collar on Placentia. nr Hosp l ta I t l!i, Any nu f7.50. couch GARDENING, hauling & 546-l326', 969 Magellan, C.M. $10, d1a.ir $.l. 15 yrs. exp. ls cleanup. Exper, Coll. stu-ADMINISTRATIVE What counts, not metilod. I dent. Free est. 534_1M6; TRAINEE WHITE female chihuahua do Y..'Drk myself, Good rel. -Solid career oppor. w/major vie of J!unlington Village 531-0101. Ho us ecleaning firm. Exceptional on the job ttacl in HB 846-Zl61. I~~--~--=--· I al I J ,. di ·• t ----------I Dia1nond Carpet Cleaning COLLf::CE Glrl 11•1u do tr n ng ea 1ng recuy o FOUND Tennis Racket Vic Avg size room $8 hsework Costa i\1e 1 a, aupervbion ol orlice func- NICE room, Univ. Park. Pvt NEW INDUSTRIAL Westcli.11 Repa.tritlg &: lnstallaUons Newporl Area. 4 h r 1. tio~ &. up, Preft'f' married, entrance & ba, Garage BLDGS. 5484193 Free Est. 645-1317 m1n1mun1, S2 hi'. Call' bet. 6-stable w/9.)me military or N k. 11" * CO•TA M •A W LL-I d . · L. DlUFOAM CARP-CLEAN 9 pui. 5-16-4478. b\l'!liness ore exper. B.A. Ji(l!lef'. o coo mi:. J . .<J E.<J * A ~• oun in v1c. tn· £.• DEGREE RiQ'D. F'eE' Pa.id 833-1306 or 833-6407 1200. 1516 & 1740 J1q Jt units. coin Jr. Hi. Con'lna del Mar, Reasonab!e Rates, l--,~,7,,~a~C~l,-a-..,-,-,~,.,~,.~,-..,--1 LARGE bdrm, near So. Private olliCt's, plenty ol please identify, 644-2523. Tomlin Svc * 557-9669 Carpers, \\'indows, f-lcor etc. by employer. Starting to Coast Plaza private bath & parking, rtear SD Freeway. FOUND German Shepherd, e STEAi\t KING e H.cs1d. & Con1n1c'l, ~8-41.ll f700 , Also Fee Jobs Nai;;:le. 830.7587 entrance. 5'io-5615 C. NA'ITRESS REALTOR 4-6 nio. B!k & silve1· vie: up to '100 sq ft $32.50 Bay & Beach Janitorial 3 1-IE'ated poo\.,. 1 Blk beach A-lramr house . COSTA. M.ESA &t2-l>t85 OCC parking lot. S>tS....3348. Guaranteed work 64:-r..3189 Crpts, windows, f!oon; etc. IRV1NE PERSONNEL At.lBULANCE driver, must Large Oubhouse etc. BBQ Pvt bath. Lady ~f'd, pvt WAREHOUSING or r.1-l in-BOY'S bikC! lound near Carpenter Res. & Comm'\. &16-1.wll. $£RYlCES~AGEf'.K:Y be 2L Exp. prel. Musi know Child Care Center cntt. $65 mo. 548-.~20. dustrial spuce for rent or l\tlllil'r School. Call & iden-1----------EXPERIENCED housework, Orange Coast Area. S~. Great new 1, 2 & 3 Bdrms S R I 420 lea~. 1000 to 6000 IKJ •it. tily. 642-80'.ll. CARPENTRY s:i.50 hr. Call eves, 4S8 E. 17th (at Irvine) C.J'.r. 1 _s_t.,.~t~im=-m~"':-:-· Otc-=S-3':-=:5'7:. ::-:--I SOUTH COAST ummer enta s Prime C.M. location. Call PART Collie male, vie J',fINOR REPAIRS. No Job 548-~ AUTO SALESMEN VIL LAS • F"ORMAL rxecutive 3 br, r.1r. Thomas eves or wknds; Wilson & Avalon. C r.1 Too Small. Cabinet in gar. Ironing ACCOUNTING Openings for 2 lllllesmen. tx• NEWPORT BEACH llOl MacArthur Blvd, 2 ba, nr beach. Enter over1~"~""~'~'~"~·-------S43-859G. · . · agell & other cabln~ts. perienced or not. Villa Gra nada Apts. 546-8823 water. Heater pool, pines, FIBERGLASS Mrgrs &: ===~~-----/ 5'15.8175 U no answer leave IRONING. 20l'. ea. If Y.'anlM, ORANGE •Top commission Four bedrooms with balcon. Westminster fountaitls, 4 pvt crtyds. woodworkers welcome. 2500 BOrfOM. ot \\'el suft des-msg. at 646-2372. H. O. PILI & dehv. ~ ea. wa.y. • Demo plan I~ above & °"'low. Graclou1 Beaut lndscpd, lighted & sq ft & up. Xtra + haUll'd cribf', Vic of COa.st H11,•y & Anderson. Ref's. &16-95~. e Hospilaliza.tion living & quiet llW.fTOUnding Ji\·li\lAC 2 BR. 1 ba, upper. compl furn. To sub-le!, July lire sprinklers. 893-3575. _N~""'°=~rt_B_lv_d_. _6_""'6 __ 34_·~-iA7N=y-,-,-j-ob~.~R~,-,7id~ .. -Cn~m-m~'I, ''P~a,..,-;n~17;0-9-.&,------I cou NTY • In:iurance I famil ·th .~il"-Cpts, Drps, Stove, Lge F-OUND k or Y WI ""' wf'n. & Aug. $400 mo. C.M. J\1-1 corner. 1Z7' on 19th cue er .5 Pan i e 1 Indus., Apts. All ty-• Paperhangt·ng • Profit-aharir\i' N C d 1 l\f Hi h closet, Encl gar. Quiet area, bl "' ear orona e ar g e PANORAMIC vie1v of en-St 90• on \Vhitlier. 800,.,. lt fen1alc-ood vie. 12th H.B. \\'Ork. Reas. }~rce est OPENING Ask for 1'1r. Roberta School 1-~· I bar & nr Huntington Cir, Adlts. • "" "~" ""o ' Atl · irep ace, wet tire bay & jetty. 4 br, pool, bldg. $~/mo. 642--3400. ....,v-LUO"t. 962-1961. PROF. painting. Exter 1 as Chrysler-Pl;ymoutb b ill I ki h pl' 894-3590 or 8!13-1445 ~ u · n IC en ap 1ances. furn or unf. 2 1narb!e frplcs. R t I W t d .. 1.,. IRISl.J: Seller found N.B. EXPER. r e rn ode 1 in g, siory, low as $225 w/gd 29'2!1 Harbor Blvd. &35 AMIGOS WAY 64.>t.2991 Apts F•rmoJ d•·" cm. '""k'" 1,·v en a Ii an• -pa•·nt A•·g rm $18 A. I• ~. M,.. ., " "' please cal! before 11 am or cabinets, repairs, main!. No · · Lr ss "-""' Co!ciwell, Banker & Co. Furn. or Unfurn, 370 rin. 3 rm mas1er suitE' all \.\'ANTED: Furnished room aft 8 pm 673-7521. Identify. job 100 &mall. Re as. spraying accous. ceilings, 2 ACCOUNTANT BE A UT Y OPERATORS: r.tanaging Agent S<ll-5221 hav~ vieY.•. Fully main-or smali bachelor apt for Z1 646-422~ coals $15. Roy, 847-1358. Earn more money rent H l·n t B h Costa M esa tained. $1000 mo furn, l800 y••r ·Id m•I• •mpl"Y•• of Young Afghan dog, VIC 19th I===·=-~----~ t H Ir W t un 4 g on eac " " & Meyers Pl., Costa Mesa. CABINETS & room ad· PAINTER, no1v school B.S. dtgrff in account· space a a •• ' 3 BR, 2 Ba, $250 ""r mo. I yr @ uni. or lease option. 0\\'ner the Daily Pilol. Near S.D. Call and identity 642-9959 ditions, remodeling. ·teach<'r . Exter/In1er,, ac-ing, 3-5 yrs. exper. in 673-4186 . .. ~ 962-7409. freeway in ff u n tin&'. ton, rous. ceilings, airless equip. II f I BEAUTY op ERAT D R S ricw. Drps, shag crptg, F . v 1 "-1 Black & white Bulldog w/ 5'1S-122Q, 64&-5219 IV k R 0 ,, ,019 a aspects o genera I CLEAN Bach. apts or slping ountain a ey or ....... s a or guani. ea~. '7't<>-IJ • t• · I d' needed w/followlng ;. c.~. •-'· din rm. dsh11•hr, dis pl. . .,1 5,, "'7 •--n•-m·• ..o ~·3 c t C 1 accoun 1nn inc u 1n9 "' •• ;riv patio, encl gar, !ndry rms. Steps bch. $75/wk & Mesa, 11 possi e. ~ ~·=~~,,7·--~~·~~~~-~--t,_•m_•_n_,_•_n_c_r_o_• ___ P/;INTI NG: Honest, general 'i:C.ger, subsi. Highestcomm.~1010. rm. Ch1!drt>n ok. No IX'fs. UleBliJl.AU ZJ up. 315 E. Balboa Blvd. FAMILY wish<'s io rent or LONG haired blk and wht P'ATIO SpeclalisLs. Add guaranteE'd 'vork. Lic'd. diary records, payroll, BEELINE Fashion Director. 673-9'345. rent w/Qption 4 or 5 !>r _k_il_,._,_v_i•_H_B_>f_S-_1265_·. __ 1 ,,.,t,·-t~" to yo••r hom• Local ref's. Cail 67>5740 aft 16.'i82 Golden \\lest St. Avail Ne"' Beautiful Garden Apart-"" "" " fixed assets, financial Full or part time. No invest, 7/'10. 962-269-l. mf'nts. Private Patios, Pool, BEACON Bay J Br, encl home w/pool in Tustin. 1'1ale, Siamese Kitten Harbor with a custoni palio design-, _5·--~~-~---1 statement presenta-earn while )'OU learn. Car Spa, Garage. Furnished, palio. frpi, pri a r ~a ·i:~'"'~"'~•~are~·~·~SJ~>-~9~!9'~~~ Highlands area N.B. &12-5m ed especially fo1· your home. No Viasting tion & etc, nee. Call 633-957-J or *FRESH AIR Unfurnished, S300/\vk.£i73-50!!5or21J;TH Lost S55 QuuJify. Experit>nce. *WALLPAPER* 539-5435. \Valk 3 blks to Beach~ 1 BR _ $l55 2 BR. $180 5-3427. [ 1~ Satisfaction. Eason & Sons \\'hen you call "Mac" SR BUDGET BILLING clerk. lite book· Bcaui. big 2 BR apfs, w/iv 3 BR . $255 Adil!, no pets LIDO avail July. 4 BR, close Announcementt ~ 9 l\lu. old Sealpoint Siamese i-""~"'~""~'~t~-"-·_54_1!-'1_76_9_. ~-I j.18-14•11 6-16-lTII • keeping, experienced pref· ' crpts, drps, hltns except re+ 515 E. 2bit, c.r.t 642-49()5 10 club & beach. Call ~.;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;I male cat. Nan1c Cubby, RESID. Concrete Specialists. PAINTING, prnfc5slonnl ferred. Pennanent position frig. $l50. No singles, no A/'11.AZING Adult Livi 11 g wkend5 or aft 7 pm. • Reward. i\1ruina Highlands Farher & Son Te am. All "-ork gl.18.tn. Color ANALYST for reliable girl. 544-nlf 1~""-"~· _53_~_1_7_11 __ ~-~ t BcauL 1 & 2 BR turn or unI 675-2990. Auto transportation 525 C.M. 646--5990. 539-9456 anytin1e. s pt c i al is t. 96 2 -6143, Call betv.·ecn 3 & 5:30 on1T. SPAC l Br, quieL Frplc, encl Apts. Sei t clean. ovens, • BEACON BAY 2 br DOG: Shepherd Lab 7 mo's, • e CONCRETE. floors, 1 ="~'--~"~'~l.~~~~~~~1 Will be responsible for BOYS 10.14 gar, (•pls, drps, xtra stor. D/\V (in 2 Br) displs, shag apt-July $115, Aug $135/wk. Stu~ent needs ~de to ~na-Black w/tan paw~. male. patios, drives, sidewalks, PR 0 FESS I 0 N AL Pain· d•v•loping, compiling to deliver papers In the !an All clrc, Adi ts. ll.ffi. 8I71 t dr ,. ui · & sauna 673-6898 hl!lm wkdYS VlC, Euclid F: Reward. Ph: 642-3157 slabs. Reas. Don 642-8514. ting-in!er/exter. Hones I & preventing costs da-Oomonto, •·· J··•n Cap!• G rfeld 11 8 962 5083 cps, ps, ac .z.i ' Lincol.n, arT. between 8 &: k u & · •002759 _, " a 1 ' · • • baths. l-fuge pool. FOR rent-furn bachelor S:30 am, share exp. 494-5531 W H l TE Samoyed/1'lusky CEl\IENT WORK, no ;job too ~~;5350, c. ins. ,,..a-' ta & budget reports. trano and Capistrano Buch BEACH BLUFF APTS. Merrimac Woods beach cottage. For in-'"'earing tags, c.~1. vie. small, reasonable. 1'~ re e /--,,,---,--,,--.=--I Position al10 entail• area. 2 & J BR, '2 BA, pool, p;it io, '125 Merrimac Way, C.M. formation call 541-3759. An5'vers to Teddy. &12·6Tl.1. Estln1. H. SluUick, S.JS-8615. Stucco & Eaves $50. manpower & material DAILY PILOT ~.;;~.~~7~hopping, 842-8·177 or • NICE e NEAR BEACH· 1br,1~1, ba, , ~1rsona11 Ii'] UJST Beagle 'Sam," Lie. PATIOS. walks, drive, install drln~~~~ge studenls°s4~549. r,rojection1 &I theifr rd 4g7-4.:17.0 Thr most beautiful vie1v of )~""°:;'~· ~A;d~l"~· ~21~75~S~·~C~•~~~t) ~·;;;;;;;;;;;~· ;;~ No. OC-33973. S50. reward. new lawns, saw, break, ationships Pus un&· BRlCKl.AYER; good o n $140, 2 BR, 2 ba, Crpts, Drps, the hay & ocean in the Hll,'}', Lag. '194-4481, 528-6743 For i nJ 0 rm a 11 0 n call remove. 5'18-86138 for f's!. ACCOUS, Ceilings, Avg· ing requir•ments layout £.. aU phases oI brick Bll11s. liabor area. 2 BR. 2 BA 533-4456ext332or635-l46.1. 1 --,~-~~~~~-home $70, Also, inter paint-rate analysis. Should work. 644-1895. 894-2152 * 8fl7-5t91 apts. for lease. }135 up. LIDO ISLE home, 2 Br, 2 Personals 530 Coocrete·Stone-Briek irig. rree ~t. 847--1128. be familiar with PERT BOOKKEEP Ba. Mo. of July, $1000. Noi---,.,,-,.,o--:"'.-:0'.00'.':'.::0-~ LOST Thurs afternoon from No Job Too Small hod . ER t u 11 l BR $125, Gas & 11·a1cr inrl. &12-2202. children or pets, 675-587L 'fir FUU.Y LICENSED * Balboa Coves·Z man ~llow 642--0478 f'ree Esl. PAINTING/papering, 18 yrs cost met s , compu-charge, Prepe..re p & L. 1 \\'/W crpts, drps, stove. CLEAN economical, close to Vacation Rentals 425 Re no"1:1ed Hindu Spiritualist li fe raft. Reward, fi7$.4585. "UALITY Cement \\'ork. Let 1n Harbor aiea, Lie & fer techniques & office girl olfice, muat type well. Adu!!, no prts. 842-8383. sh""'g. 1 BR. $12~ irM:ldg Advice on all matler1. "' bonded. ReJ'i furn. 642-2356 machines. Must b6 Good benefits &: pay, Send k-'--'--~;....~----u" LOST-Myl18h Bird, black George do it. Li c' d • f ·1· · h : .: . aguna Beach utll. Adlts, no pets. 540-0623, BIG BE'ar Lake Moonridge, Love, Marriage, Business bond•d. "'~lS'5. PA IN TING/papering. 18 am1 1ar wit govern-resume to P. 0. Box 1111, . 1 l d w/yello\v beak. Says ...,.,... y · H bo LI t t• 5411-4157. 532 Center SI., 11.tgr Brand new vacation chalet. Readmgs g ven ays a "R.J ... Reward. 64&-l7al. rs. lil ar r 111'1!a. c & rnent-type con r ac Ing. Newport Beach. ' ' ,. LUXURY ocean tront l BR. Nr.w car~ls, elevator to bcncf'l & 1m l. Year Jse wlortio n. $350 mo. Refs. 499.-2688 evrs & ,,·kcnds. NEAR BEACI-f-Ne\v l br, 1~~ ba, pool. Adult~. No pc1s. Lse. 2175 S. Coast "'''Y 4~-148l or 52fµl743 LGE dee. ~ludio, \li('11•, frp!, bltins. $135 lse. \\'orking 11,·oman nnly. 4!}.1-42,12. Mesa Ve rde DLX 2 &. 3 BR, 2 Ba. enc! gar. Sl5ll & up. Renlal Ofc: J095 ~\1ace Ave. J.16-1034. ·Newport Beach --,-...,..-~ * Steps to Beach * 2 BR. 2 ha., blLns. Orcan vie1v. Adults only. No J)l"I~. Yrly $275, Avai l. J uly 1st. * * * * ,.. J IlR. '2 ba., hltns. Chilrl rrn "'elcomc. S:IOO Yea rly , Avatl- able no11·! Call: 673-3fi63 &12·225~ E\'es. associated BROKERs-.AEALTORS 2025 W lalbaa 613·3663 PARK NEWPORT APARTMENT5 Bachl'lor, I or 2 Bedrooms, and Townhouses. Spa, pools, tennis. From $175. Across lrom Faid1ion Island at Jam- boree & San Joaquin Jlill!i Rll&ds. (714 ) 644-1900. A New Way To Live in Newport Bea ch OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENT5 On 16th Street br,vn Irvine and Dover Dr. (7141 642-8170 * BRANO NEW * $155. 1 BR. Frplc, indoor/out kitchen, heated pool. (Acl"OSlS from S.A. Country Club). See a! 20-132 5an!a An& Ave. or call 557-0211. • NOW OPEN • 20432 Santa Ana Ave.. Spac- ious 2 BR, 2 BA wlfrplr, pri. pa tio. U)ads ol closets. J~td pool. (A cro95 lrom S.A. Coumry Clubl. $190. ~7-021 l SEACL1F1'~ Manor Apts. l BR. & Bacht'lor apt. Crpts. rirps, bllnr. garb disposal, 11;, Ba. Pvl patio. 1525 Placentia Ave. Ask about our dir;count . 548-2682. LUXURIOUS bRy f r o n t duplex. 3 BR, 2 BA. eptJ, drps. No children or pets. $325. mo. Refs. 4!lt-8608 eves. Apl E. FoUy equip'd, Beaut view \1·eek, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Child Care bonded. Ref'll' tum. 642-2356. BUILD 2nd inc. sell Buie ~-*c-~1-.,.-,2~B=R-. -.,---/ overlooking .,,.,lf course. 31.l N. El Camino Real, W}IT shaggy male cockapoo FOR clean & neat paintlng, PIE'a~e Submit Resume H & o·,hoc Shaltloo ~•. •-Sa Cl t / hot t ·1 1 NB I • DAY care !'.Ion.-fri, n1y .-,..,... 'I'" UP. POOL. $1.50/wk. 833-1075 aft 6 prn. n emen e "'' fi r ai · n No. in terior & C'Xterior. Rens. & Sa.lary Hlslory To 1860 Newport Blvd. ~ • ·N l ;:::;;:;:;:;-;:;<:;:;;::--':;,.ll==~"~'-;'~116~.;•~92-00~~7~0~= 20450) REWARD. 642-1923. home. Spanish spokrn. 2152 1 Call "2·2l81 R N t• I C 'I .,. °'18 rates. Call D ck, 968-4065. Daily PilO'l Box 178, CM .,., entals to Shar• 430 INCREASE YOUR BUSI' 2" a iona • .h • .... ~.,... · · • ~H~u-n""t;~n-g7to-n-.B~o-a-ch;---II b I Contractor * LESCO PAINTING P. o. Box 1560• 2 CHILDREN 8 & 9, Sam- ON BEACH! NE\V 2 BR. APTS From $2.10 Furniture Available Carpets.drapes-dishwasher heated pool-saunas-tennis rec room-ocean views patios-ample parkin&; Security guards. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 111 OCEAN A VE., H.B. (714) 536·1487 Ofc Clptn 10 am.ti pm Dally V.'lLLL\J\1 \VALTERS CO. \VANTED 3rd girl (25-32) to or more w a u oui; new r 1~ Rell'/Aprs. 645--2399 Costa Mesa Cal!!. 92626. J:30pm. Need sitter desper. share ~ in H.B. near bra. Call Dawn. 494-lOOJ, SeMe.&andbpairl MY Way, quality home Equal Oppor. Employer I 64" •nn3 4 '"•oh. 1100 , .•• 1 0 t t· l. e:ri;:I. 605 or 545--0:!87. Plas ter, Patch, Re,alr '""."""~~""""""""""', -'-"'~Y·=~~7"·~·~•~1 ~P"'.c.:.· -·I "" '"' repair. \Valls, ceiling, floors 1, 1 · 968-5791. PREGNANT? Ado Pt iu n . etc. No job too small, PLASTER-Parch-Rm Adds. Adm. Sales COOK-EXPER, 3rd responsible, st raj g ht abortio~, v a' e ct 0 m Y Babysitting , _>1_7=--00~36~·,_2_<_hr~'"~'~· ="~"',_· -I Accous . ceilings, stucco MILITARY l\fust be ovior 21. Apply tn pel'SOn v.·anted lo share 3 rounscl1ng & information. --.,_,,..,,,,......,.. ...... ---i • Additions * Remodeling rettn. Free e ~Ii m & t es . USE YOUR ABILITY TO person, Surt & Sirloin, 5930 Br. 1011,·ntiouse Y.·ith pool.1..:.6'~2=-474~36=·=~-----COSTA MESA Gerwick & Son, Lie 1 _8_35-~39=3=1,~0t~>-4~588-•='='-'·~~t HANDLE & TRAlN MEN. W. Coast Hwy. NB. NB 646-526l. ALCOHOLICS Anonymou~. PRE-SCHOOL 673-&Ml * 5-19--2170 * PATCl{ PLASTERING YOUR MILITARY TRAIN-COOK/Housekeeper. 5 ,,., C.M. BACHEWR wiU share home Phone 542-7217 or write Special Summer Program LIC'D Constr. RE'modeling All lype~. Free f!stimales ING IS WORTII MILLIONS, Wk. Elderly couple, v.·/.same. C.M. area. Call P.O. Box 1223 Costa Meu.. 18tt' &: Monrovia, 1A day + Additions, Plans, Layout. call !>ID-6825 & w•: WOULD LI[(E TO 1 _N_0_•m=ok~i~""~·~6'11;.~~904=L,._ __ 1 art 5, 64~2'15, full day ACs&ions. Planned Karl E. Kendall, 642-3811. Plumbing BENEFIT FROi\t IT. COOK -FRY [g_) program, hot lunches. Ages El 1 1 G 0 ~'x Eve-work o:A0 Jt72 WOi\f AN & child to i;hare 3 [ , .,1 ·-• r=~ I ectr ca NO DE "REE R ..., -• · .....,.., ~ .,,.. ....,.., 2-6, hn 6: 3{) A!'.1 ~ 6 P~I. LE\V Takas & Sons Plum· p•··R NEC•·ssARY COUNTER Sal Ir br condo w/"""l & rec · L · L • es g l, Muat """ $!8 wk-COMPARE! 642--i!Y.Al LIC'D Electri<'1an, matnt. bil'lg repair, repipe, ren1odcl facilities. 536-1142, n('w cons!, Free es I. ENTER OUR COMPAN-have relail pholo exp. Send BABYSIT7ING my home, serv. Alw, reald. industrial. r •r "l 'O. lES TRAINJNG PROGRAI.,T, qualifications In your own LADY lo 5hare my home r 64 2-4-174. ,,.......,, " w/,o,ame. All privil. Own rm found (frH ads) 550 any ime. many yrs ex per. ~-====-c--c--'7 --=~~=~-==~~-I HEADED BY DAVE LOOK-hand w r i Ii n g. Write .. ~11(.'d yd, loys, lunch . J!eas. EL E CT RICI AN. licenser!, PLUJ\>1BING REPAIR. 1NGL1\ND, COMMUNITY classiried ad No. 47, Daily & ba. $?0 util Incl. 541!-00'fl. MALE dog, black cocker Vicloria Harbor area, c .,\1. bonrird. Small in!,s, nuunL No JOh too ~mall LJ::ADER, INVESTl\1ENT Pilot, PO Box 1560, Qma Offic• Rental 440 cro!'is, i mog, Black flt'a col-6">1413~ & repa irs. S.1S-fl203. -="•-,,~&1=Z~·7ll,;2Scoco·=.--I ADVISOR, R. E. BROKl:R; 1'1es11., Ca Hf. 92626. Jar Wed, J une 23 vie t ·c~o=L~L~E~G~E-g-"71.~Se-,~,,-. -po-,. ~G-d7-~.------COLE PLUMBING TO HELP :"l'AllT YOU ON c RED 1 T CHEC KER Parklike Beach Livtng AAA Reta.ii Location -2333 Mo'narth Bay Plaza. Laguna a~ Mo1hf'r·~ aid n n -•-'-"-"-'"_9;...._____ Z.I hr servlcr., (i.IS-J.lfil THE R!GUT PATii TO Fl-Pleasant outgoing girl wnO for Adults ~~r~~~~t ~~~· Cadd~~r~~l~N~igo~<l~·~'~' .... ,...,79~l.=496--c:-"637.e~·:C I beach-S..11-6001 Or 673-2459 CLEAN Up S pec i a 1 i i; t . ~R~oo~fl~n~.---'----1 NANCI/IL SECURfTY & likes phone work. ti1odern Casa Del Sol exposure. In an exploding f OUND Eye gla~s in hlack V.'fr<!ferences. hauli ng odd JObs, new fence ---'--------/ PRESTIGE. \VE'LL GrvE small olc of natioruJ co. 1 I: 2 BH·/urn/Wlf. Pvt !)&· rcuill area. Near in· case. Dana. ftl1nt al Sllvf'r VERY reas. Infant care in & n~pa1r. Reas. 5'18-G95:i. T. Gu y Roofing, Deal Direct. YOU 1'11F. BOOK KNOWL. Lite typ ing. Start $360, • . t r & Coast Hwy RD lNG I tlo my own work. 645-2780,-EDGE. THE PRODLICT & ,.._,, 'l , •. •• hr'l, {rplc in 2 BR, elrvators, lersection ol MacArthur & 1..r1n r n · my lovely h1rge dean home. AL'S GA EN "-dl "ary ....,., ,,.,()..6()55 dsh11,•shrs, crpts, drps. Pel.5 Coast Hwy. 5 5 8-O 7 44 496-3548. C;\I 64&-5531. !or gardening & s ma 11 ~"-'-~9_590_· ~-~----! i'1ETHOD, THEN YOU El\!. COASTAL AGENCY •-rpt c>. ,· ..... ni $14". 558--0262. ' f El\lALE ~bte & white col· B • S • landscaping service!, call Sewing/Altera ;lons PLOY IT. 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams "' l" '" " us1ness e rv1c• "•"5"8 •-1 N YOU R COMPENSATJ ON :n66t Brnokhurst ~t. HB. o•-•v •po-•vailablo """ lie, Approx 1 yr old, found ...,..,.. ...., · =N ng ewport, kl DELICATESSEN l\1an. Mo•I ~ -.~ .,...., CdM Cb&t M Do er EUROPEAN Dressma ng . MAY BE $21),000-SlOO,OOO, * 1714) "". 2 ""53 * mo. Will provido !umlt,, .... downtown Htg Bch. F/C Bkkpr, All phases incl • a esa, v E ti c·• t r·11 d A be reliable. full time. "--;"' """ ...... ~" N Shore!, Westcl!U. :.xper Y us om 1 e • c-• Start Immci:Hatel y ~ * K IDS WELCOME * at $5 mo. Answering service s;,.,..3443, fin . ~tmts. o corp. taxes. r A G ='~"'-·-""-"'-· _67_>-_1_84_9=·~~=l • Company Car Plan Harold, Hi-Time Liquon:, T available. 22l Forest Ave, Wht.to p••ppy -. "··yon P.U. & deliv. 642-1798. * LAND.<JC PIN * Al . 642 5845 495-E. 171h St. C.M. i\1ove 1n oday. Attractive " """ .....,, -,-7.",_.,-.,.--c~===-IN · te rat1ons -· • Full F'r1nge Benefits LRguna Beach. 494-9466 Drive, C.M. 5'10..9'1.k> We'll help you sell! 642-5678 cw lawns, sprinklers, llr-DENTAL RECEPT. 2 & 3 BR npt~. S159-$189. liiE$K~pa<;;-&v;;Ji;"'-~"'lii;i;iioii;i;ii;jijiil;iiiiirliiiiiiiiiiiii;ii,iii;iiiiiiiiiiii; I bors patios fences, walls. Neat, accuralf!, 20 yea.rs exp, • Plush Offices All Extras. POOL. pchl ok, DESK space avatlable S50 Llc'd contr. 'Master Charge, Tile CALL NOW De!.k only, Denial exper. ;!~~~~SI)~;;~: Apt A. ~is!~ =~!':: * * * * * * 1 71~3~""~·-'~oc~'-''~·~536~·-1225~· ~-CERAMIC tile new & 547 ·6771 =~1tri:r~ be5:e~it1~ availabl• 17875 Beach Blvd. ,,-------------------..... !AL'S Landscaping. T r e c remodel. Free c-st. Small area, 8AM·6P1'!, MS-3540. • OCEAN VIEW-FROM Huntin~on Beach. 642-4321 removal. Yard remade.ling. Ask for Mr. Perry 11"'5 J e r f•••o •• io· bs welcome. 53&-2426, DENTAL ••! • t ~-•-1•-.h • r. urn or un "' · Trash hauling:, lot cleanup. a..., g,an • .. , ...... ,.""' CASA PLAYA, 14th • PROFESSIONAL Bldg. 45c. Trader's Par:ad1'se Repair e:prlnklel'l!. 67l-Jlli6. Tree Sel'Vrce ARTIFICIAL Lli\18 MFGR. &: preventive control nU?H. Walnut. Call 536-8?.67. i;q ft. Air-cond, c:rpts, drps, MATURE, CLE AN CUT Chalr exp. nee. People gd parking. Xlnl Joe J;:c E. * LAWN SERVICE * GENERAL Tree Serv, Ya.rd HI -SC H 0 0 L GRAD. oriented practice. 96i.-2436. Newport Beach 17lh St. C.M, PETE BAR-I 1' nes Front yard S10. per month, Clean-up. Sprinkler repa.in:. SERVICE COMPLETED. VI ST A DEL MESA REIT RL TY 642-4353 back yard alllO, Weedin&:.R c='='='·=&t=S-=584c....:8_. ----·I We will train for molding ol DENTAL a s a Is ta n t • a. yard cleanup. 962.-8612. = plastic ftrtilicial leet Phone perirnced, flJr South Laguna Apartm•nts DESK gpace available $50 Tutoring ottlce, Mon. t h r u Fri. 1 & 2 BR. Furn. & Un!. Dish· mo. Will provide turnlture t1' mes Exper. Japanese Gardener, for appt. 648-£i116 ' X·rays. Send resumt to P.O. washer . Stove and Re!rig. at SS mo. Anl!'we.ring service Complete yd llt'Nice. Neat MUSIC lessons: Keyboard · 10a.m-3pm. Box 4431 Dana Point. Shag crpt'g-Ll'g Ree center. available. 305 No. E I &: JU!lla. Free est. SG-4389 Theory· BeginJng.Advanct!d. JOii ........................ ... RENT Starts nss C11mlno Rra.l. S a n dolfar:S JAPANESE expert gardener. Ornamentation & period In-ASSEMBLERS DENTAL Orthodonti c Tust in & Mesa Drive Clemente. 492-4420 Cmpl yd it!rvlce w/ pwr terpM'lation. USC a rad . =:~~d~1~~rri.xp tr . * 545-4855 * * NEWPORT BEACH * equip. Free tial. 645-1796. 65-6879. A~mbles electric -mech- A •-Ci · c t J G •PANl5H TUTORING anical ~vices & sub..u5em. DONUT Girl Wanted, 25-45, Santa Ana cross ..,., .. , vie en er. apanese ardener ~ bl 1 bl Al~l'g-Prk'i:. 300 to ...._,.,_ ..._._ Li 1 liy ln / Exp'd. Yard work All age11. 673-2380 ies. nterpret9 aii:sem Y nile ah!Jt. no exp neoe1tt. VILLA MARSEILLES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Adult Living Furn. & Unfum. Dishwasher • co!Qf' ~t. ed 11.ppUallC'el , phtlh shl.a; carpet • eholc. of :a color .cheme1 • 2 baths • 1taJ1 showers • rntzTored ward- robe donrw • lndlrect 1.igh\. Ing tn kitchen • brcakful bar • huge private fenotd patio • plush l&nd.lcaplf11 • 1000 sq ft 35c , '"u-c su., .... n a equ Will trade 5 ac:re1 w or Clean-up, Planting 64&-061g draw In g s, specification Mr. Donut, 135 E. 17th, CM. ~~ * ·673-5862 lovely Baycrest home N.B. without cabin 1 in Cleveland SPENCER·s , ·wn "-,,,,·,.. prints, parts list. 1 Yr pre-DRAPER y lmt.alttr, -~~~-~~---1Has pool & beautiful land· Nal'J 1-"ores!, Vii ml ort Or· ...,. ;x .. ~ viout electro mtthanical A ·1 f S •L ·" H f ho e r,... -'"Wn ••-•loan ~11•11 cuttom, e~. S&laried. 5 val or u1r e1q scaplng. Trade !or srn;u.icr tea:& wy or sm, us ~~~--~· ~~~';.;.,~«~, ~~·: 1 ;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~! usembly e)(J)er; Soldering Attractive 5th floor auite nouae. 548-fEiO.t. thla area. 54S-1604. ups. Reasonable. 548-5213 techniques. days. Call for lntervw., 5-6 I ki N B pm wkdYL Window De!lfrtm, over 00 ~~ .. !:,~ ay. v~catJon Jot, beaut. Rogue 3 BR, z BA, C.M. Home, JtWN Matnt. Hauli~.~~~ Job Wanted, female 702. For Appainlment 549-00.0. ~===-=·~--~--RIVtt, pawd rd, utllJ, boat· $26,950.-$9.350 equity, Want , ... wm, clC•al•n--~f; ~ .......... 1 ___ ..,.. __ o----·I Call lnduatrial Rela~n. • NEWPORT Beach De.luxe In&, salmon fl!hlng, Want tr11vri van, camper, unit.a ree est. I -"ftr"'"' PRAC. Nun1e1, Compar:'o:ui, {714) 49~9-401 * DRIVERS * View offiCt11. Air-cond. Priv. «m home, mobile home, car or 11ubmlt. Bkr. 64.&-96661 1E '=xr=E=R-. 7H~,-.-.~ll.~o~G~,,..,.--.,-r H1kpl'J. Uv• In or out. No Ex .... rlence B&. 2400 W, Cout Hwy, ?. 49&-1940, eves/wkhda. &12-mt. Complete Gan.len\ng Ser· Monthly rate~. Emplr paya TELO·l'IC .. . 3100 NEWPORT BLVD, NB Coughhoy round pool, 4• vice, Kamalanl, 6464676 fee. Health &t Family Care I\ Necessary! *ON TI:lE BAY * TRADE ·l.96; MG Midget deep by 18' ct r., pUmp, fll-Exp, Japane1e G&rdener Agency, l805 N. Broadwa,y, Mil&t have dun C.Ut dm. ~l464 or 541-5033 for VoUtswa gen bull or Van. ter. ladder l test kll. Good Complete Ya.rd Service S. A. 547-6681. Ing record. Not u.ndtt 25. Attemoon11 at !tie Sturted T cond. Will tra.cle ror utility fue e11tlmRle 557·9264. A IDES FOR CON· Industries Inc, YELLOW CA8 CO. Shirt Cafe ln Newpor1 trailer ar t 830-0905 VAL'£SCENCE, • J d e r I y Lagun• Beach . 186 E. I6lh S1.. C.M. BeRch. J APAN~E GARDENER, care or fa.mUy ca re . Equal opportunity emp oyer l <;;-;;;:;;;;;;:;;i;-'.;;o~ii;;;:-·I BRIGHT 2 BR. 2 h{i, in ni<"I' bt'tck Bar-B.Q's . '4tP Maf.. 11rea. Cp!s throu11:hnul, rull N pools ' lArlAI. gar., Sl&i n10. 42•15 Hllarla 3101 So. Bristol St. Cj)UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 38' PACEMAKER flush deck: for Newport or CM ares property. Call aft 6 pm ~9-0tl8. 11' AC fncd X med. :Z st4lla, any kind of garden •'Ork. Homemakers, 547-GGSl ELECI'R.ONIC TRAINEE Ni::w 3 Br (Igel 2 Ba hofTlf', 12\ll 435-5606. Learn a /ucln&lif\i new llltns, c,)11, dl'P!I, bnway, G•n•ral Services ~E~.I ho;{ 1 Work. SIG A Al!T'O mtcha.n~. pa.rt. time aklll. Ple1»ant ch~ err u t :llnis + vh!w. ruvenddc for __ l.Y. t e erences. potiltioru avail, 3 ahlfts. for worldnc cond1. U te work. Orange Qy, 687-8747. TillNGS by MOO!t'-Lt elecl., Call 836-8364 dealtt qualUi~ & recent quick ral.se1, Stnt fl.JO. plumb, fence. tile. ln1tlrul. BOOKKEEPING AIR, A/P, 11uto mech gmda. Scope Call Sally lla.rt, ~ Cnrpcntry • palnt rlc. pflyrolJ, flnnti. 111tal. Secy, lunt-up le alr. !IM--OU5 9-3 COASTAL A.G!:NCY 54S-0Dl. gen'I ofe. 673-6401. Mo~Frl. 77"" Jt~-· -r r1 r l ,. ... __ • !°"",;"':=,"· ~··~';o•~pP~t,.',-,,,.-,,31/D. I ('i\ Mi. N. of So. Coast P1au) WESTCLIF'F 2 B.R. 11, Ba S1nt1 An• T11,·nh~e. Arllts only-no pet!. PHONE: 557-1200 Ji21! Bedf11rd Ln S.18-75..13. * * * * * * ' ... --.. DAILY PILOT • I J[Il] I J[Il] I J[Il] '--[ _.....,_-__,Jtm L-[ _.,,...._.-·__,J[Il] I - Help W1ntod, M & F 711 Help W1ntod, M & F 710 Help W•ntod, M & F 710 Help W•ntod, M & F 7IO Help W1ntod, MA F 710 Afttlquoa IOO Mlscellaneous. 111 Pianos/Organ• Exec.. Salta CAN YOU RAISE A FAMILY ON YOUR PRESENT INCOME? ~~~~~~~- IMMEO. OPENINGS: Young ml'fl l v.umen lookinr ..... MAINTENANCE MAN P ROFESSIONAL phone Our 1a11:r: ap! comple." In solicuor -Dana Point, San Nt:\.\'Port Beach nteds a Clemenle, C.p1.11trano area. resident maint. man. r.IU!t \\'ork In your ou·n Mtnf!'. Be11 deal in area, PhOM be a n1aln1. en1inerr , SECRETARY ExctUt:nt salary, a:ood typ.. in11: + 1horthand, local, CaJJ Loraine, \Vestd1U Penonnel Aj"ency, ll43 Weatclill Dr., N.B. MS-mo -------ANDREA'S ANTI OU ES Ju1t Received NEW SHIPMENT AUS'I'RALJAN, ENGLISH Ar: FRENO{ PIECES 2380 Nl':'WJJ(lrt Bl., C.~t. .......,, JOHN'S BIKES -NEW- * Supar Organ Sale * OBED!E':\CE clasi in stu 1 Tradr.11u. 1nox1 h-om rt'hl'f?. \V,d . June 301h, i 30 p.m. tta, .!luper clean. I of 11 kl~ Open 10 aU dog._ ovr r s mo'.11 ~c. lacl';r modt"ls. H-100 ~. old, Classes held 1n the N 8. l'.;-182, 1-~00 &. C-3, RT·J, A-lrvint' al'l'll ~6-4928. • Tra.uunz in your •troni-I ~t aptitude U'l'a preft>rably wllh apt maint. 83.)..]46.) br/v.·et:n 9;00 a .m. backgt'Ounct. I n t t: r 111 e w' .. Md ... ~noo"'""~·..,..,..,..,..,.., co1umbl• • Premium Steyr • Roman• lOO's, hi-J's, C-2, CV. i\lanyi----------1 w/ ~hi' spk:rs. Also Ul1<ry BRI'ITA.'\Y Spat11e! pup5 -3 & CoM. Havr l day a! !he 010 old, Al\C rtg Stron.-: l~ach & shop 11·11h lhi. Low-dua! c.:hamp bl~l-•n:s. :ood ,5 ~rices. Ttrms. \\' 1 ! J hunllni,: llnr • \~/J2&-3.U2. trade. Open Sun. 12-1 HA.\!. ~!To1~·A\~ K t:Nt'ELS - .f.!Or\O OP.GAN STUOfO:>, Ger1nan ~hrpherd~. Ptl & 285-1 E. Coast !{11y, Cd.\], i.hO\Oo ,;:lock Boa.rd a l I IF YOU CA..'.:'T ANS\\'ER YES, NO\V IS TiiE TIME TO !\!AKE A CMA:~GE TO- WARDS FINANCIAL SE- ct.iRITI'. \\'HE:-1 YOU JOl:'-1 OUR ORGA:>:IZATION, \\IE WILL ?.1Af\E IT POSSIBL E , FOR YOU ro HAVE A RE· WARDl~G & SECURE FU- 11.iRE, I Free 'fl•a1n1ng • lnct"ntl\'f' P!.&ns • Advancemt'nt, ~ p&y & trequent ra~:o. I t 1'nvf'I w/30 days paid vacaoon e Sttur1ry y"/f.rtt medical care. • T~ USAF of1t'ni tht"Se ~netlt.s & many more. ~ your local Urufed Statf's Air Force representative for drr.a.i:~. or Call 17141 646-3466 e Plush Off1<'t's JA...;JTQRS, t':<per. on I y. e Complete Frlngf' Benefits P/tl me nile \\ork tn San THE EAR~J;>;G C..\PACI-Clemente are a . l.Wl TY OF 1'1EN QUALIFIED K r aeme r , Anahe im, TO SUCCEED IS GD"ER· 630-1601. ALLY HA)tPERED BE-1-""-.:.::'---~-~~I CAUSE TH E y CA:'\'T LAD\' expez'. UJ rlrivlng 3/~ ton ptck up truck !or route QIANXEL THEIR T AL E\'T v.-ork. Shorr hrs, gooO pay, & HARD \\.'ORK I~ A DI-Laguna Area. Call Fri A:'ll RECTJO:'>I THAT •1u E-A.\l 496-636.l AOiIEVES F J'.\'A...;CJAL I;\-f ,.. ..., ' • DEPEt\DE"CE. DAVID B. LA DY. mn-smoker w/car. LOOKJNGLA..'l\'D FOl;-<D l hPlp my mothe r days. rnE SECRET OF' CHA~-1 6-12-12~7. 8:30 I 0 l pm :>:ELI\'G H!S TAI.DI TO-• _•;k;';'~'·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; DAY. DAVID IS E:'\JOY· • l:'\G THE RESPECT AT- TRIBUTABLE TO A R E. BROKER & CO.\f.l[U}.'ITY LEADE.'R. CALL NOW 547-6771 i..R~al Se-c.'y f C Bkk;>r EsCTO\O' Ofc'?' Sf'C y Consrr. Supv v R.E. ng Clerk·SH Ask for Mr. Heath I, 3tai Typist G.D. Ins I•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!. Recept. PBX S7no $700 S6JO $630 ""' '""' '"" '""' >tOO Tu<!sday on1)', Junt: :?9, lOam k 2pm OAKWOOD GARDEN 1700 -16th SI. Newport Beach. Calif. Male over 22 with retail sales f'xperienC't' App!)' in ri-rson berv.ttn 4 & 7, The Idle Id, 2306 \\',Ocean front, Ne\\'por1 . MANAGEMENT X-:'lnLITARY OFFICERS BE1'\'EE:'>I AGES 25-30. TF YOU HAVE P.ECENT- l.Y RETURNED FR 0 111 VJEnl'A.\I \VE HAVE A JOB THA'r '\'OUR LEAD- ERSHIP QUALITY \VrLL t'lT RIGHT INTO. YOU \VJLL ACT AS A RECRUl'f- ER FOR A LARGE LAND l-"\TEST)lENT CO. l:'>ITER· V!EIV PEOPLE \\fHO RE- SPO:-.'D TO OUR ADS. c .. \i'>'T BE AFRAID TO l\IEET OBJECTIONS. • Sa.lal'y + Bonus Plan • Plush Offices • f ringe Benelits • Sta.rt Immediately CALL NOW 547-6771 $400 I E.XCELLENT typtst 1••1th NEWPOR:T Ask for misc. clencal duuts for Per1onnel Agency I small bustness operation 1n a33 Dover Dr., N.B. !!!!!~M~r~·.,,K~e~n~l~A~d~•~m!!!!!s!!!!!~ Costa Mesa . Hours flexible. 642-3870 I V.'rlte ClassU:ied ad l"o. 111.1 ,.,.,,..,.,,.,,!!!!!!!!!!!!~':': , Mature Hostes1es , TO INTERVJE\V Daily Pilo1, P.O. Box 1~. Legel T•ne. to $450 C 26 NE\\/ RESIDENTS Costa i\'Iesa, al1L 9 ~6 F /C Bklcpr $600 up -Part 'l'ime- EXEC. SEC'Y. The .fob you Gen'I Ofc $500 CAR & Ti'PE\VRITER NEC. ha\"l' dreamed ol g"tting. Recept. $433 Call 547.3095 Plulih modern ore. '.'11ake use Many Other of all ;,.'Our talents. Start Positions Avail. $550. RUTH R:YAN AGENCY Call Sally Hart, ~ 1793 f\'ewpot!, Ci\1 646-4854 COASTAL AGEr\CY Ji931 Beach, HB 8·17-9617 7790 Harbor Bl at Adams LITE HOUSEKEEPING EXPERIENCED two truc:k & Supervision tor 2 girls 10 & driver. Shell station, li!h & 12, Lido li;!e. 642-68.10. Irvine, ~ewport Beach. tM•>- Medic.al Med. Sec'y 5550+ Know medical lerm1nology, type 60 \v ,p.m. & SH 90-100 \1 .p.m . Lots of paid Summer overtime. Can he tempor.ery lo.-3 or .\ nio's. Fee Paid, t"EE JOBS REAL ESTATE LOAN PROCESSOR ASSISTANT •.. Some Exper, Prl'f'd SEC'Y EXEC. Daily 10..5 • Sun. flOOll·5 e ANTIQUE • SHOW-SALE J UNE 24 25 26 '27 10 apds SM.50-$287 00 5 speed$ ~85 3 spds, ml'n & v.·om.en $53.50·$70 -REl'AIRS- -UNITEO - CALIFORNIA BANK 2712 \V. Coast Hv..)' Newport Bf'ach 646.2431 Th)j: co. pre.Ii. is 1Uil ittkil\i his pr 1 v a t e confldential .lfi:'y, Trelntndous oppor. v.·/pre~tij:e lrvtne a re a hrm. Top Wary '-be~fits. Call 1t1lss Laura, 557-6127, Abizail Abbo! ~~nnel Agt:ncy, 230 W. \Varntt, Suite 211, S.A. BO A11tiQ1J~ e~hibitors Ana.helm Cnnvention Att:na we do expert 1~palt' on alI ma.Ices & models 2340 NE\VPORT BLVD. O f &H·8930. 'l1'<'trtc•:._:8~'3=·=»t"'-9---·- WOUL D YOU GREAT Dar.e.s -AKC. 800 W. KateUa acrms from DimeyJa.nd. ThUh:, Fri, Sat. l·lOP:0.1/Sun l.J.6PM. NEW HOURS BELIEVE fe male ra\1ri pups. Chamr> 2pm to 10pm ?.1on-Fn Sat-Sun 9am to 6pm FREE ORGAN LESSO:\S s!ork, .Show qua l 1 I y . Equal Oppor, Empl~r SECRETARIAL, a:en'I t1fc, bookkeeping. 1 Glt'l ofc. Appliances I02 645-4720 -Wi1J Takt-Trade.Jns - &l!" long as ycu llkt ! No 1~:::-1.c•=i2=-"='='='------- 1strat1on. Noobllga11on. Ju .. 1 JULY •ltll pups, German P/time 4-5 hr' a day. $3 hr LADY Kenmore auto Startin{. 2X ~ days. Send wa.sMr, late model xlnt e Come. ~londays 7:30 p1u .~tiorr llaul'd po1I1trrs Born REAL Estate Salespel'SOn, resume P. O. Box 404, So. • AUCTION e COAST MUSIC .;,/!~ AKC. l\e nn el , 642-2851 &12-1~~~ _c:...c::_:..._ _____ _ cone! $7j. Frlt:idalre elec expetifonced, Dana Point &. Lag\.lna, Ca. 92677. d HA:\t\ION D organ. n1ocie.J o. Cl XI I _ryf'r. latl! model, xlnt cond .,..n emen1e .. n comm, SEC'Y-Assiatant for local $50. Guar & delive~. HOUSE M-I U •. \lane pt'f'~e1, 11alnu! schedule. TerrifiC' o ft 1ce Orthodonti&t. Sta.Te 546-8672, 847-8ll5. w/back grill. Sl lOO. E\'el> COLDEN RetT1rvt'rs, AKC Champ 1111<' Sho\.\ & !1tld :)-12-8377 856 locations, 2-3 people per o!-qualifica tions & exper. P. 0 . ';'~7~~;~1="~·~~---~~ Horses fi ce. f\To overloading. EBB Box 1686, Newport Beach. MATCHING v.·asher & i&s Auctions f'very Fri night. 15 . M . 8281 _______ _ TIDE REALTY, 492-2311, dryer in \\'Otktng cond!lion . 7 pm. 3015 \V. \Varner Si., SA ew1ng ach1nes -BE.~UTIF'UL 1, Arab. 5 496-166.f and 493-163l. SERVICE CENTER ~:\!tor pair, 548--0843 alt I Follow i;earch lighl J L t N 1. yrnrs Carr;. in~ S.i()(l Appy RECEPT. Busy delightful AGENCY . . \\'e buy, aeU & consign. as 0 ICe foal \lust sPc S.:.00. 714. ore. for attractivt person. 500 Newport Cenrer, N.B. APT. aiz~ refriZ". RUN il't'&t, 1 __ •_54_»_'2_4_1_54_7_·77_33_•'-.I %8-lj{)fj Desirable loc 11.uo11. Excitini * Eloctrch $3.50 hr. SJO; tv.1n n.augahyde head-* AUCTION * SE\~"!NG ,\IACHt:'>IE 0 • Bo d . I" """'' 13 -Unclaln11~·d Jreighl. 40 branrl H RSE:> .-u· eo. w mo, co. S.WO. l"•ld>"i ,,_,, b•lpf"' s, .50; oval rug $5. 1 d L ,. ~ Call Helen Hayes, ~ ~ " ,... "" 557-4639. Fine Furnllure new 1971 dt>lux auto, ~Jg.lag rf' int ll'~t ino .... ee. COASTAL AGENCY *Sec'y Legal $550 mo. &. Appliances sr,v1ng machines. Bulton.,_:.>_7_--06_25_. ______ _ Need R.E. experience ANTIQUE gas 1to11e, iOOd A ti >'d 7 Ill) holes. ;zig-zags, blind hen1.~, ,-YEAR "id son·el n111Ie. 1o 2790 Harbor BJ at Adams R $500 cond. llOO •• b·< ·U••. u~ ons n ay, : p.m. v * ocapt. to mo. '" " u • W d • A · 8 mono'"'"n ,~ A bi' Q ' ,. t•d RECPT. Lit. SH 642-2639. in y s uct1on arn ........ 15, e... r11 " Ul\r tr .,p1r1 $300. 5-l.l-1223 Youog co. eyping, local, «ill * Sec'y to $450 mo. MAYTAG ,1.., """'· "" 207'\o N"'"°''· CM 646·8686 FULL PR ICE $35 EA. fiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Loraine, \Vestclitt Personnel !Trainee) SH req'd, condition. $39. Cost& Meu.. Behind Tony's Bldg ].1a!'I Age:ncy, 20-IJ WestcliU Dr., *Sec'y ~~. PEDDICORQ'S: Daily, 9 -Cash or sm. monthly pay. Boal• and , .. :Jr I N.B. &1.S-2170 Exec. to $600 mo. I •c~o~m.::::,=,.=,~,.------1 5:30 -lots Ct odd iron items, ments. Supply llmued. Ist Muine Equip~t lC.., Receptioniat-Sec'y Good i;kills Equipment 108 cheap -. drums, gatbage com_e, 1st call basts. Phone l ';;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;:~~ Lt bl-.kpg, exper pref. 546-3489 * Ina. Trne $3SO mo. cans, chairs, old 1ools, rope, S ~ 1 PP '., n g & Receiving, 11 A"cu••t• ~·p•"•t OMEGA model B4 e-•--,,.. cable, antique auto ligb.,, ;H.rS238 2..i hOurs. General 900 RESERVATION &. Contract ... • '3 •uac • Girl. Musi be career mind-* Comm'I v.'ith ltns cond e n1e r1 v.·heelchair, etc. 20592 Sporting Goods. 830 SCRAM LETS -·' 21 & Rater $125 wk baseboard. Also fillet Rt Laguna Canyon Rd, Laguna • =. over . 1'ery neat at-polycontrast PR""'" olh•• Beach. 494_1629 _ HUNTING Rifle -Rem1ng1on tract w/a p l ea 1 a n t P..elated insurance eXper. 1 ... ~ ' automat 3G--06 4 teltphone voice. Full llme. * Hou1eketptr $1 .90 hr 1~~~,~~l~li~t~!~207 EXQUISITE v.·edding ~01•.'0 carryingiccase si25 ~;:·. ANSWERS Pilon/.! M11:r., 540-966j, Lile \\'ork -Facility 1 ,~....::.;,:::::..=:::..:::::=.c_ on cover or Feb. Bride's =-=,,,::c,,......:...:c:=..:._c~::. Fl'tt &: 'Fee Positions Furnitur• 110 11aa:. Unique White-blue GREEK Knee board, Foam \r 1 Ll \\' N SALES: An aggressi \'e man Helen Schaffer Jon.,. cathedrai length train' spoon. 5'1". Almost Ile\.\ "--Of'b< ·\11·1'1~·~ -!MY -can produce v.·hile learning i\IORE tha.n sacrilice 8' blk _..... ' ~5918. .,.,.11 c · »i:.. how to crealt·. Opportunit)I 644-4981 naugahyde mta .&: l~vtseat, size 9/lO, A!enron !aCf'. Jo';un1ly hff': i\los1 familie:;. f I I · b '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""""""""""I Baby pearled appl. Veil to TV, Radio, HiFi, do nol '"'' 11 ""nlnbul••" or a career, no JUS a JO • I ~ ne\"er ukd $150, le~ than +<~ S ' " S&\00. SERVICE Sta. Salesmen. 0 r i i 1 n a 1 cost! Also ma1ch. Elegant! AJ1. :> & tereo 836 gra1'Jous II\ in~ 10 ha\ r C II H I H "I" ,,n-• ~eat & exper. Apply Ill ' wlo1ds 54S-8235. l\'HINE "I eVC'Cy m••I. a e tn ayes, ~\1"1NJJ hide-a-bed, s• cotfee tablt, STEREO. 19il unc!l\1medl--.:..C"'-_:::;_· __ COASTAL AGENCY person, 200 V.'. Co&gt Hwy, 2 end commode&, Compltte MUST VACATE!! lay _ away. <.~a rrai·d CAPTAIN 2700 Harbor Bl at Adam.! NB. Spanish kin1-1• bdrm set. Promintnt Inter. Dtcorator turntable. A,\t/F;\I strreo. Lirl'nM>d • ~:11d;ir . Loran, 30 SALES GJRL-ASS'T ritGR SERVICE Sta. Saltsman &, 213/925-3622. mu1H liquidate by July 5th, radio &. tape playrr. Air yeais e."per1ent"" q1l or I bk --' mechanic. Over 21. Apply ~~'-"'.:.::.:::.______ qu•1 furn lamp ,,.,,, , Sharp, Good sa. es 11:r11u. ALL like new _ C.Olonial ""'· ·· s, ir s, i; peak er s \l'/cro.~:H'lvrr J>O"rL Protess•onaJ .')port Fine contemporary lashion 2800 \V. CoasL Hwy, N.B. r.laple dining Eel, hutch, access.; ollice desks, lilt,;, sys1em. Still hranrl 11r''· f'1~h1ng t ;u1r!r .\lexic;111 & ~hop. Xlnt oppor. Appl)', SERVICE Station attendant. !able, ' chairs, pr ha.nimg t_.-pe11.·r11er. JO To 50,.~ f"e· sold for S::\9 11/1rarrnnr.1-Ct'n!ral A111rr1rao 11aters. i\Ion thrll Fr!, J0-12am. Exp'd only need apply . SheU lamps, pr Hallan glass duc:tions! Open dai!y 10-5:30 Pa.1-oll balancr of Sl:'Q rw /\J~,) lirt'nsrd niu!ri-engine APROPOS Sta . 171h & Irvine, N.B. lamps, Colonial haniing tnc. Sun. 1831 \Vestc!JU, NB. sn1all paymtnl11. c r r tJ 11 Cn111rnt>rr·1~I Pilol. land t,,, Fashion Isle No. 29, N\\'Prl STENO-Good typing -lamps, v.·a.ll lamp~. 33 IQ \VATCH Repair Sum.mer dep!, 893--0:iGl ;;c;j. 1\(!n11111;;rrat1 fc rxperi- EXPER. IN SU RANCE SEC'Y, for medic:al ofc. Call 64fr39G3. EXP'd fiberglass repalrn.an. Clipper ?.1ari~ C.Orp, 1731 S. Ritchey, Santa Ana. "Ja~ B{.;h . :shorthand rtq'd. Apply yd,, 64 01, new rubber rug Special! $4.50 Clean. adjur.t, 19il ZE;>;ITI·I & Adniir:.I f'ncr. Be"r ot rl.'[erences, $520 l ~i;ii;;....,..,..,..,..,..,..,. Crocker National Bank , pad. 54~332. polish, standard movements close-out sal". Lo wer.I 616-::'!'177 Avco f"ina.ncial Ce n I er, '>~IAP=.:;L~E;:.,:::w=.,,~li~t-,.-,--,..-U..~t only. Coost Pawn & prices. l yr pir1u re tube. I • LEA~l;>;lj • Ins. Biller Know .\ledicare & all pn- vate insurances. F /C Bkkp• to$625 PER..\.f. position \YI v.· e 11 e5tab. dt'veln-pment co. Xln 't advancement pos i11on. Beaunful ofe5. 1n lrvi~. Call ~I1ss Ro.itann ,, 557-6122, Abigail Ahbot Personnel Agrocy, 2.lO \\'. ~ EXECUTIVE P ersonnel Agency CALL BETTY BRUCE 1 c'~v":::.c"'~'c· ~'="~;~::..:'~lie· ~'~· ~":...__ 1 A cctng Su pv F'ORE.\IAN -Lumbtor yard. Mui;t be f'Xper. _well qua h E scrow Ofer fied Call Jun Gorman 893-5105. E xec. Sec'y GJRL Friday v.·anted -ruU or pa.rt time inc. s. & Ra e-Ins. Sec'y 1r.11: Dept. ;it Co11st Catamaran. 33012 Ca! 1 e SK'y /Recept Perfe c to , San .Juan Ca.µi strano. Light typing, Mk1ng Sec'y pleasant Pf'rsonal1ty. GIRL f"RtDAY·Documt:nta.ry Payroll Clerk him productr, Ne w po r I Beach. Top clf1~ skills, Sec'y/Pera. sense o! humor, non- smokl'r. some tra vt l .I Recept. Re t.um t. salary rt.·' qulrrmt'nt~ !I') Class1 htrl ad A/ Rec. CALL to $1000 to $650 to $600 to $600 $575 $500 $550 to $450 to $450 MARY BAUGHMAN Frnt Ofc $500 Kno1v Hat1le.y, a ll insuranc· es & some transcription. Med. Sec'y $569 Know ~led. 1erm1nolog}', type tiO w ,p.m, & SI-I 80 \~'.p.m. Medical Records Technician to $615 Currenr rtgistration &. ex. per~ reqd. Recept. $375 Expt>r. young mo!her need· Pd fnr pcdiafr1ciar.'s olc:. 41,., Days. HEALTH & FAMILY CARE AGENCY 1805 No. Broadway Santa Ana !\'o. 16\ D~ily Pt.lot, P.O Box Jj6(), CoMa '.\1e!a. Ca. '.J262!i ZllE;:!\. "omrn & chlldren HELP! l\lfllhtr!e~s home, 3[ Sales Mgr Sl4,000 \1an1ert !Dr a ~~nd and .~urf gm. chtldrtn nl'rd 111'.me IB SEE or t'h. f'ngr/ cornnierr1a1. !\i• e" per. yng h~tkpr now' !\ice 1 · nrf't<< 1~1.11 <liil-.'..15'.l hous.e. nr bc::h, pvt nn. I Asst. Contrlr $13,500 ;'llECllANIC <ir 1narh1n1~1. 962-.'ll&9 42-5 )Ts rxp. degreed! re11rPd or ~em1 rt!lr"d P111·1 JJOt..:SEKEEPER !or couplf' t11ne :.1e11dy JOh, Call Bob Live-In, .saii'll')' up to s~ro Programmers $11 ,500 Q111nn. 962-32.66. mo. r.tusl be. able to dri~·r <Auto-coder, PL-11 ;\10TEL 1\1/\ID~!'iunny Arre.s turnishefi car tor if'OC'tf")' ?.lo!f'l. 23i6 l\'e11"port Bll'd., shopp1n£;. Good plain cook . Whse Supv $12,000 ;..i~9-·- Prttrr par!y ur.der 5;'i • ' · '~'·1· ood t OPENING tor l'-OOd Sti"\'let w/g dispos1r1on. App Y Mfgr Mgr Elec. $12,000 1n person bf'fort 7pm, 1032 ;\lanager. Call for appt. Sa t Do S h $7800 -="~ .. ~'="="=· ------n 1ago, ver o re 5 , Lead Man ln1p. N.B. 6-~·56Z7 PASTE t..:P ARTIST ExpPr. tfSKPRS Empl}'?' pays fee . Ge(lrge Allen Byland Agen- cy 106-8 E. 161h, S.A. 547--0395. HOUSEWORK Work 4·8 hrs a day, ].5 da.ys a v.·k. l2 pPr hr. No lee. HOMEMAKERS 180.S No. Bra.dw•y Santa Ana 410 W. Coa1t Hwy., NB Suite H 645-2716 ?-t AINTENANCE 1\1.\N v1 a nted-:'ol i & s ion Viejo Recrf!ation Center. 2 yrs ex-1 pcrience In nia in1en11nce v.'Ork ~·rt. ?.1ust be over I 2.;. Call 847-4084 Jor 11ppt. Trader's Paradi!!t' colun1n Is for you! 5 Lines, 5 Days for fn graphll"s l'l'qu1red. Call &16--0l&I. PBX OPR: ~ll'f'l &. greel I C"IJ~fnm"r~ G('JOl'i p u h l 1 c rPlauon spo! Hun')' iri on this one as 11'~ !he one you have bl"en looking for. Start SIOO. Call Jran Bm1\n, !>l0-~i(fa5 COAST AL AGENCY Z~ Harbor Fii a1 Adams SECRETAR·Y Suite 700, Fashion l&land. S37J. Sota & chair, blue Jev.·pJry, 2-126 Nev.· port. Yr par1s & serv1cr _ Anll'nna 21' CllP.l:i cr.,\FT Com- E qua I 0 pp o t" I unity flowered quilted .$200 Ta-&12-8402. in::IRlle<I 11 /all rnn~nlr~. n11111drr 11 /l>llfJ. n.1-· bridge, Employt'r. ble & 6 chaiJ.s S.1 j O. /\BC color TV, !I02 ! AUante. lll'1rt ""Iii· ~700. fl('r Jno. 1·2 Years stenographic ex· l•-i;;;,O....,..,..,..,..,..,. V.'tekendg or alter 6 P.:0.1. _ MEMBERSHIP H.B. 968-3~~. .-~.~-7.Jtii. perienc:e,11.·11h abill:Yto typt: SUPERVISOR 673-1932 BALBOA BAY CLUB T\liO i-::LH , model 1110· Glasria1, 6hp Johnson. 60 "'Pm & lake shorthand 111 AIR, Payroll, cttclit, v.·ork-~fU~ SELL quilted ao!a & Phone 644-1312 1 pea k er s, ma t r hi n i:: fi<'t 'k, strnt: & ('()ntro!s. ro.OO ...,,'Pm, perform clerical ing supervisor. Lea.ding lo-chair Sl60., 60 .. roffte !Able ==~~=-----Ban.1l11y cabinet $450 total. Sabor-S1an tl111lrr, run rac. & st"crt:tanaJ work !or pur-cal lirm, tltany xln't be.ne· J,50. W 0 1 l e n a a k !Ape REFRJG, ll' Westinghou.se 6-J2-j76:i. ge11r_ 'l satls. 646-2259 chasing-sub contrart admin· lits, fee Spilt. To S'F.JO. recorder 2 track $4:5. TV S:..O. Giil.SS top 5' table, 6 ZE:-.'JTll 23" B l\V TV ccin~0lf' PEDAL Bo<Jt-sea1s 2, dual istratoJ's. Type 11urchase Also Ftt Jobs S4(}. 646--0923 chairs s.·i0. Di.shes for 8 $8. s11•1vel -rype S-ln 2086 l\.aJ-pr<lal~. !11/rrgla~s pontoons orders & correspondence. 232 Tu! Rd c '" · 2 90-· IRVINE PERSONNEL NEAR n•w -,,-,, ••c-ane · ..... !Rcr Av ... B, C:'>I 54S-.'i.12 1 SJ ·,, 6·1&-. ,Ii ____ _ take dictation, opera!e office •u ~v ..-= machines, J i J e, 11.rnswer SERYJCES •AGEJ\JCY UoMI mst SUOO. -sacrifice AU. like nev.·-\Vheel cha1r 2S' ~·lonTl'rry Cla~sic Original phone. & escon \'tsi:ors. for $450. plus Herculon aofa $98. \Valker Sl.'i Portable 1 I/ I lh<'k~ l\Y-2, I l')-1 Png, ~88 E. 17th ta1 Irvine ) C.:'-1:. /,, lo\'f! sear 64:....0036. a tr COOIC'r w/stand $27. Free lo You 6'12-202j days.6-1~2.; ('\'es. Please Apply 642-1470 r.·1'-A=T~CH.::.:rN=G:..::,.:::..:i.=~.--,,-~-i-&16-__ 83_9_7_. -------1~-------' Boat, Motor & Trailer In Person I '·::i·~~~=::i~~==~ I uat, Quality construction, BOYS desk, '''eddini: go11.'ll, 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 s:ioo • 642-~i2 3333 Harbor Blvd TELEPHONE iood corxhtion, ao!I cold, hand embroidered organza, l-8-0-.-t~s=,=M-4-;n-t~./::..:::::::...__1 Co1ta Me1a RECEPTIONIST $12.i. 64H.J.19. cu~1. made ~·/cathedral BEAUTlfUL S P al pl"inr Service 902 ATLANTIC RESEARCH Systams Division D1v1sJOn O! 'The SUM'JUl"hll.nna Corp. Equa.l Oppor. Employer ;\!UST BE ABLE TO BE COLOR TV. Db!e BR set. veil. brides maid dresses. altered lemale, looku1g forl---------- Ef"FECTiVE \\IITH A TEL-Sewinz machine, bunk beds, 646-IJ.ill. ''Sugar Daddy or '.\lorn my", PRE VE 1'' TI V E main· EPHONE k PROJECT A mi.!ic, 645-4858 afl 5, SO Gal elec v.·a.ter ht'aler Sl';. plays like dog, houserraJned, ltnan~e-by G\I d i ts e I PERSONABLE l.\IAGE TO l ~W~•~d~-S=u~"=·------Heavy· duty pov.•er J"ttl L-Ovahle, l'\-IB-1031 n1tchan1cs. Rt>ggie'll Diesel OUR PERSONNEL. $100. HIDE-A-BED S9S, ;\Jedi! mo\.\'t'r S7.i Both xln! rond. FREE! Exceptionally t·urr ~Iar1nt' Service. 64~610. PER \VEEK PLUS, vel\'et [O\'tstat S5,'i, 7• couch * * 968-9384 * * kiltefl'!!. V.'eaJX"d & trauied. Boats/ Marine $.:f.l, Like new . 642-81TI. RANGE 36" \Vedgev.·ood, :.43--161.). Equip. 904 's=L=U~E=~.==-"-~,:..;:~n~,.~.,-_-, I i riddle, $50. 12~ S1ereo .C i1arn1. cuddly pupp1r~..J",l ·,,-.,-,-.. T~l~'D:.....-,,-. ~-U-b_....;~ •"' " k ]Q" j 6tJ 6"' 01 •• !> -• t II\ U)' )OUr loves.tat. Good -nd. ~"". 11'.fleil en<, · · · ,......., <t:>. 11·ks 3 males 1 lemale \\ti! lri ,_ .. .., _, · · · o ,~,al, marine t"Quip & • 53&-70S0 e Beltl\lassagtr. hea\")'duty. be nitd s11e. 8~7-6-lil. 11 r•'f'~~flP!:, .eriy f'Onrl $50. Excellent condition. BL c•· B ('\"II 11· I f " I IDUNCA:"'l PHYFE dining ,\ '" ll"m urn1 ,,.se ':i 111" 0 ·<1<..~11E"' 11• CALL tahle /,, 6 chairs. Good cond.1 ____ •_63_l_-4_l_56_• ___ 1 Decl a11·P<i, 1r.r!rinr r111 To i;rl ,\n 1:::-;. Daily P ilot, P. O. I Bor.us ffl('entlve Plan • Full fr1ni!e Bene!its • Plu~h Office!\ r\'e1r Homt • Start lmmed1ate!y (714) 558-0144 968-7901. LEAV[:>/G 'tare. e\'erything home 847-j:i2!1 i Bf,, l:l.-0, t.os1:1 ;\lri;.;1 92626, SECTY. R .E. ANTIQUE roll-top desk, ,)(, mu~t go. Bilr stools, lamps, Ft::"-l/11.E Beag!r in\.\ i>up.:'.1Ert"Ct.:l~'~J-V-.,-I~ S ,, " A1k for Mr. Ad•m• "''2 ,-,, f'crf'lan~ po~1tton in ar ... ve ecur1,·e-typr, beaut cond. rugi, f'[C, = -' · pies. 6 <1eeks "lrl Pr0p\ !'J(I II P arirl 1'.IO II P fl.ralror'i; oflirr. Beaut1fu! Sacr1hce $5(X}. 557-062i * N.B. TENNIS CLUB '.'1'15-.~1j7 S1r.i;:Jr Li:'l'rr rontro!~ Con. new officrs iri i\e~'Port Cen-TURRET LATIIE OPERA-. I I'! I TOP., ,xp'd :>l ll•t m•k• 0...,,'11 DlNETTE &e1 , }'t llow li hlk, full mbrshp. S.13·0720 3 Kf'ITF.:'\S _ l plJn• "hill' tro r a ,. 11 1nsrn1m"nL~. tl'r. Oingenial ,tall of n1a· . , d h I rt JJ A f f stt-up, .<pply T•pmanr STJ. Playt r '"""" i d crmd, PEDAL Boa r· Seals 2, dual malt', 2 ,1;rry mt..;. CaJ'Jen 1 1 n 5 • 1" _ ~ 8 rlf'll' turf! pE"rsonnel. ront o · · s l 19--0 31) fie .. posinon requ1rin11: ioocl Corp., 54j V.'. 16lh St, ~.B. $300. 9!).g..1071. ?('dais. fiberglas.s pontoons rra111rrl. Sli·ll'S arga n ;)-'1 telt'phont voice, SH & JS~! _:'i4_,,_ .. ~_.,_1_· --~---·I BEDR:vl SET. rti cond. \\'h11e S12j. &16-9076 11 H11'F. male cal, Jrf'e 111 liE:'\Oll ~i" n; loii rut 9,,..;J('r Dec, abi.htles. Real estatf' TYPIST w/golrl. $8i complete. Ph: M i1cellaneou1 g:oo.J homl' l.: ~!c<'rn. 2&' _nn thr hoht. expe rienct not f'S!lentlal, bu! Personable ga l\'/id i Pn'I 5-l~>-3686 Wanted 120 • 9&8-S:.!SJ * 22 Ii fooL ;\Int l'Ond L· hC'-.::::.;._~-----sh;i pr S!Ol1. IM2-:.!fJ:;1 helpful. Prtfcr youni mill'-ofc sktlls. ?.loi;tl y CU5tomer Garino Solo 112 FREE 6 be11u11ful k111rns · • PLANTS v.·11.nted, some for · ·' -B -P nl'<l. local resident. }''or in · relations. Starl lJj(I. , 7-12 ~·k~ old Pi1rt Si.11.nie~r oats, ewer ttr\'iew call ~1rs. D.1hl Call tl1ary Lee, 50-6()5;j GARAGE Sl.lt-Antique pi11e spec1man az. Jor lg. con. 54~1.153 ~Vesley N. Taylor Co. &H-4!HO COASTAL AGENC'' d inette vl/6 chall'5. im J"";:·,~,~~~·~A~l~ro~po;"~&:b•:o:g~·1 ~~~~~·~~~~~~1 f-LAT bo!!om arag bo11t, I :'YT ,·-ff ho Bl A-' refrig, m•pl• •"d '"bl•• • ing baske~ 646-0356. old, lre~h enginr, •Ii) c.i in SECRETARY "'" · ar r 111 "ilms " "" 1421 Chf'\'YI, cu~101n tor , SH misc decorator items. 21121 \\'A.'JTED · Sma!J desk. [ 1 1 ~1 5 Yrs e:.per. Xln t I: 'YP· TI'PIST-i\lon /,,Thurs, 12 to 8. • · r.ti and Supplil'& I'll.ring. inJ!"'('tf'O ru r 1 er , 1ng skills. A's in English & 4. lntt>tn1111onal POB 2202, inzhllmpton Ctr, H!i Ekh a.l7-7!m Endt>r!y J njrctot~ flowed I N, of Hamilton, \~". o!M ---.--1 -1 -----.-22-l ~iiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiij;;:;;,;;1 !\la.th. Salary ;,()0.$600 di!· Nc11 port B!ach, u11ca n1trument1 f'ni:;-1nc by .Joe RP .11 th . J b l ~-'=====~=o= Brookhursl. 96241197 H 11 t · pending upon exper. O n e UPHOLSTERY SHOP 1..:::.::c;,::::::::_=:::::::___ 850 11 c:ra t rilr1ng .s!l't>t1ng. Barry & Assoc ., 3020 Nev.•-E GARAGE Sale. Re!rif . Pool STELLA Harmony Guitar. -P~et_•~·-G...:..'"-'~'-•~1----·I Cl\~a/e recing rear box. porT Blvd., N.8. 6TJ-3551. F O R ~l\fAN , EXP 'D, table, Furn, & ?.!isc . 1968 Goodcondition $25.00 BANTA.\! chick• l l. Gcf'se heavy duty ovtrrlde. NEEDED. 642-9683· Anaheim, C?it. Fri & SAL 646--1588 ~1a1 11lesi; .sterl h11 rdv.·arl'. SE:C'Y, f"tm, pl-Hml'. ma.r·l l~l'~A~!TiiR~EV,S~S'-ES'<,~c;,,~,.:;;,.-;:M~•~•'..'I~~~~~~'.'.',~~:_ ----------1 Go~lini $3. Ducklings $2. tilonn 1ank. t"ustom \\'('Orf r1ed , 25-40. tnsurallCe olfict" iran food k t"ocktails. All Mi1cellaneou1 111 CO:'>IPLETE Drum &el $l2j. 2612 i\le~ Dr. ~Upper Ba.1-1 de~·k. golrl medal fll'ke e)(f)('r. Mr. Snyder 962-I;,{)2 ol1i f1.~. Ne,1, dl!,...nd•bl• • C ,54 __ ....., __ i_. -------ICata 852 \1'/COl1\""!tf!ion orari• lrt'm. f . 1·~ SA RIFICE barialn, fi' R.at· Off' F · "' 906 INTERIOR DECORATOR Ex~r necessary. 546·3489 I0-12am "'lon/ ri. ""'ngcnilll. Good tip•. ,111111 IC• urn1ture/ By· •ppr. S 900Qlo lf ~r . ,_.., tan divan, 3 p1l10"·11 & O 'ARWE & f ?.lexican Restaurant, 517 \V. h' Equip. 124 ~ Snoopy, f'Ofi/-S..fi-!iOJ~, 9-12. S5. Call today, •. 642-J678. Sell idle ilem5 nnw! Buy the ne"'-w~•tul!=~c~~~ Help W•nted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 l ~iiiiiiiiii mate 1111 cMlr. Cost $350. Point Slaniesl' brothrr,;, ..:.::..;::::::·c::.:.:: __ .--.--1 19th S1. C.~1. lM!IJ $100. World Book LIKE new, tl'.'O 60x34 v.·aJnut looking ror n)c,. hon\e .. Botll BOr\: for. !iale-.10. d1rsel \\'AITRESS, exper. ?>1011ly El\Cye. S225 valuf', M!ll SJOO. dt~ks $75 ea. 4 black arm neutri·td " fmnr fee! t1f'· cabin <"ru1srr, as 15, fll'f' ~NE PERSONNEi. SERYICES•AGENCY Secrewy Ins. to S6CKl A«tn&: Ork Mach lo $550 BCl>kkeeptt ~ $500 S.rvilor/Ylia to s:.ilXl Rft:ept/Anahr1m to 14n Sa,ln On1 Dnlr: to S6SO Ao:oUntl~ $U1 Qerk/lf.atb aptHude S3SO r-is. Ouk SJl~ T)iri•t $37) r IC Bootdrttp:r $600 48& E. 11th lat IMne) C.\f '42-1470 A fOOd wa.nt ad '-e IOOIS Enw.tment ' NICE AND NAUGHTY lf You Want To Ha ve Fun & Earn Good l\1oney Besides, Come On Jn &. Apply \Vith Us . Evening Hou rs To Fit Your SCh edule. No Ex· perience Necessary, Great Trai.nlng. Who Could A1lc For More? APPLY DON THE BEACHCOMBER 3901 E. Coa1t Hwy., Corona del Mar t A.M. to S P .M. !Except Sund•yl -.-__ - days. Bahia Cori n I h I a n 646-4671 . chairs S'2S e11. I f!Xecutive r d 1, 1 Id _, d11rn11.gl'd. Boal may be seen I ~:",",,C.,-~-----1 , .. c av.·e . ery ov1n11:. e... y Dock ~1 6-611 ''acht Club, 1601 Bayside NEWPORT Beach Trnnis chair $75. 673-400fi h F 67· .547,1 al e a~lt'n;, l 4 Dr, Cd~t. Club family TMmbenbi p, l ;;,1~U~ST,,._S~E~L~L~~b~!kC';::;:~,:::;.~:l,;'~u~"':_!P~'~"~· ~r,..~~":::'.:~~I Paclr1c: Coas1 Hv.)'. Htg " • nauz,..,. .. e Dogs 154 Bch Sraltd bids mu~! he 1n S4Th. incl tran&ft:r ftts. sofa.&: Jove ll'lt. 3 mew; old . by -1·171 :\tail bid~ 1 [ l[~J ,w.=""~"'~1c,.,,--....,'7-.,,.,,.lc6~0~>-lKl88:'.'.'.~·:..._ ______ ,GER~tAN Shortha ir Po1nrr r. All t'1 "1~ · 14411 5° MerthandN · · /\KC 1 Id 1 1 d 11 a r ~11rancr. . . REG Brnwk pool tbl. Sl7Zi, Pianos/Organs 126 • yr 0 ma e, rainr Anaheim Bh•rl. Anahl>tm, '-------~ Stinrr11y bike $25, sntq , 10 hunl. 833-0175· C11. 92:'ill8. Ch1lm No I•••••••••• drts~f'r $50, Ven lmp, plpen, SALE: New Spine!, wa.lnut, * SAt.10 YEO PUPS-7 "'k!., 37CZ'l'6&.i Antiques IOO l~"':::.-~"'='=9-------S~9:i .. Sr..in"'Ay, Kaw a i • adorahle. AKC, h11ve sh0(~.1.:::.:::::...::cc ______ I Wurhtur, CoM, A 11 t n , S42-5t08. \\'A:VTF.0: trailer Jor 20 tf, ANTIQUE "'alk-in popcorn 5:;RO~R15SIO, ¥,laypen t l2. Lawrty. RE.VfALS. 3.000 lb. ho booth P ~ t .i.... ru e.....-• m mattrtiz FIELDS P""O CO. GREAT Dane-black 1 1~ * &16-4fi.'\8 * · '' ''c opera ... 14 S8 TV stand S.l 116 381h SI. '""" "' r t d ie a r 1 condition. Would mile Coad 18.1.1 Ne'N])OM Bh·d. ~ a 5· nmmt 38' PACEl\IAKER: flush decon.tinr llf't!l, pool-patio =N_::,,.8 • --------Ctlsla Mt~ 714/64~J2j() Lovable pt!. 893--06~ dPck, In hr.~. Ov.'nl"r Call bar conve~lon. Phone 53 Pc china 1t t, unof)f!ned. HA\\1~10ND, s t e i n w 11 y, SWt·E Terrltt P1.1p~. Ch11111p. 11.fl ti pm ~9--04\P: 494-4!177 Aflf'r 6 P~!. "Simplicity", \Vhite: w/11/-Yamaha. New It u~ed 1!red, AKC. ~!urdy, lnyaJ , 20. Soulh Cnru;t. flybriclrc , AJ\'TIQE dbl ·' B 1t ASS \·t r f'lige. ~-"23!i alt 5 ' p11nM of most mak,1. &-sl consta r.t. M9-7.i47, r111rl1n .t· ht11fi Besl olftr v.•lrnd1. b • BED'' v.·/ral11. P ro t U.YJ In So. Calif, a.I Schmidt GER~tAN Jhnrlhair poinle'\'I , &4·1-~1'lf! pollaheti. :\1nt cond. Sl65 in-HOUSEHOLD articlt'I in-l\lu1uc: C(I., 1907 N, /.ta1n, 2 lemalt s. Af\C l--'---~---- \'l'!led/.11ell Jl75. 417~1084, clud lna: rnifinal oil palntfnc S11n1a An,11. • • 893.9-H:i • • tr Chris Cr11.rr Runahout '41 and be 646--073 rl;i~~Jr . 8,.1111! ro11t1. M.Jns 7' HARVEST TABLE 01 r aood!es. 2· CLOSING OUT AKC Black 11t11.1~farcl-l yr, -"='~'".:'~"~'='-'·c.·""'_c_··---·I • 714/"""' 7;)87 a.ft !·.~" SEARS htavy duty ' hp roto Bra.nd nt w \\'urU••·c pl--• Champ. , ....... k. 1-v--..,., -' "'"' '"' ''\VHITE ELEPHANTS" The fastt .i.l dr.1w in lhl': We't apader, l1kt ne1.,. SlJS I. ori.3n1. f'antaa:tte deala. 6-16-0142 ovctTUnnlni; ~··1ur hou.11t~ •. a D1uly Pilot Clauilied 1 ----~"4~9-~J~t~l3:..._ ___ ~--*-="-'--068:.:.:.1~*~--IDATLY PTLOT for actlOn' "Cll~h". ·"'II llll'm lhru Ad 64~71 Ca.ll 5'IUJ678 "cba1't'! It. F'or bl'st resul!.s! 642-."6711 CA.II f..ll-~la It Siive_i __ ll.1 l l~llnt Cl11~~1fll"'1 J1 II• ?" 1'171 ll •• Ll Y PILOT :J7 TrA1'15PQrtatktn 1~1 I§] l_•_""'_~s.i._i§JI _ ~-""'_-~]§] '-'-"'"""_s.r._j§] ...;[_ .. _ ... _ ..... _. ~'§]~[-_._""•''_" .. _''-;;,;l§]mM~' ;;'-";;"'_w;;s.re;;:l;;;;§J;;.l. 8o•t1, Power Cyc le1, Bikes, Scooter• Trucks 962 Autos, Imported ).10 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, New 980 Autos, N•w 9IO Auto1, New M 14' GL,\S.-:, ,l, 111' tie(', 1r!1·. s:1:i0. 1nn1 l rh~. llB. i-:1 1nrudf' S~Z-819-i. THINI '68 GMC Suburban • OMTy AU J lo rli.~· ""111 all are \'-8, DATSUN '71 240Z :!2'!91., !itl!l.7rttl , ... -,-,-"-' -,.,-,-;,-_ 84 1<:al. 10.i hp .(:rt ,\' l .scoop 1!11 11, S2~."itl. 1213! j!ll.i-9616. '6!1 17' 1/0-.lro-tller!-;-ury rn1r \\/p11r 11•1 nl. 40 hrs on ena. Xlnt conrl. 536-43313 HONDA ... lo rn tl"s & cle:.11, Grc.ru Jor Au1om,111ll' trVlS., 6000 miltll, "FRIEDLANDER" Whatever. full !act .... ·arranry. Red .,,.; Sl9'S blk 1nt<'r Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 C•I 25 + Ca tlina 27 GuarantM! !hf' IO\\'est rates in 1°" IU.al ntW'T, •1 537-682~ e S~J.7566 MacHoward 139-9600 OR 531 -06-08 1970 HONDA !i.'1 Ser~n1hlf•1'. New elu1c11 & r ;·r e r. t ~ Coi'Tlf>r lst & lle.1·hor overhaul. $4 llOI (l If e 1 _ ', ____ s._ni11 Ana 6~4-~38. So. Calir. "Carhnfl Cf UIS-I o-;~;c::c=,-;-~""'o-c~~=-1 • $4595 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \\'. C0;i.-rt H\1y. l"e11·por: Bearh IH. 'Fi;) Tr1L1111ph ;JOO T-100, $450 , ing club", l.ocat1on Newport Also 1970 tlloto.Guzzi 7::,0 Harbor. 714/9G8-l8~0 for inlo. 1, l l~ DOT DATSUN 11 arr111g, ~""' 646-3490; BLUE \VAT£ R \' ACllT &I! 6, 546-0198. RECREATI0 :-1 CENTEn OPEN DAIL y Cl lARTF.n.i:. ·10 YA~IAHA 100. di.rt or ROY CARVER, Inc. Cruise or !1sh bo!lls 10 40' AND da~/11t><'k ro•sf(·aH &l!i-9000 .stN"e!. 500 ml'!! new. P\•1. 2925 Harbor Blvd. SUNDAYS Jll). fH;...3:v:4. J Co!'ila ?llf'sa !"l46·4444 1883.5 Beach Blvd. Boats, Sail 909 IT•LIAN "" ~""" b<ke . "'J '64 INJERNAT SCOUT HW>ti~M ""'b U.S. J\>\;i110hall's s;ii1, 70' }ears old. Good (_~nd1tio11 • 142-nBl or >'0-04~ S40 830--~:Ji. ==~==~:--'~=~~ scn>w yachl "Phyll1.~ l\" '67 DATSUN 4 DOOR 1ex-;...10_1QI to ht' s•llcl at '69 !IONDA CB 450, JO" ~ ~JK'cd, radio. hf'ftlf'r. l\',l:W· 11 I f I I I ' k b I""'' S791 flar.1u-k ln1porrs, !198 nu111·11u1·11111 or,·ri~1 .11.1 •II'~. f)f'gs, sissy Ar, ....,., I :-;,,,, C11a.~1 1111),, Laguna 1023 ABCJ 1st, l\11111 al •lu(.'k~11ll'. iUl :1.'li-t!'J2.1. R.~ach. ::.-1&-.ll);ii ur 49-1-9771. Barwick lmporl~. 9!1S So. No. L1!10 Pa1·k Ur .. f".B. J9;0ioorc RULTACO Sherpa c ... ,, llw)., • -.,., B••,h. Bot f l~J;; FORD ~. 1011 u., ...,..,_., a open or 111specr1on "S". t.ood t'(Jnrf. rtac{" 1 1 ~6-~0JI or .}94·9771. daily lOa1n-~ipin. For into l'f'!Hly $:l9i 962-13::..6. P c-ku pl Ollf: lwd. 4 tho11sanr!;~--~------- 1·all Avery 8: Co_, i ~~=c inil••i< on n·huilr f'nii:. NPerfs '6R DATSUN 2000 Convf'rt , ·10 TR1u;...1p1-r Daytona :100 ,,,,,,,.,. ..,,,, ••""k I f'" 714/675-,1199() ~ 1.11 v• · ·.Ai. ~spd, tv\ag '''heels. Xln1 1·r. 1700 miles. Xlnt cond. Afo ' •1• "'I"' ~!ALI B U 0 11lr\ggl"r S!'l:,O. 494-1224 " c•r • pn1 . .,. ,.,...;i,.m t·ond, $1400. 114/630-2185 11.11 11·/Lrailer. Good sails. 1·150 I !l f. 9 \\' 11 1 T E Do 0 .>: e 6. ~-on rent, lluntington B.v th1• \' ~' t\£11'1 • '--="'°',-c---c----or best oiler. See at ;in .• ~ .• ..,,, 1111• lllll" u·ans,i -El7() Datsun pick·llp Sea , '69 Kirkwood, :ZOx·r), 2 "I 1•w\/'\l'I ·•"r 0·1-'1'!1eodore Rohins ford. ''"'"' r.,, 1· · ~V\N. ~'~ -. ' .) Of Xlnt cond. l..o niile~. """" BR, JI ~ ba , 6~3-29fil. R'. 21X)(l Harbor Bl\'d. Cosla J\lesa, ---.• ,.· · ~11!·7592 &l:t-0010 &I TRIUMPH ~ '61 Chr v van riunprr -f"e1v $650 or l\1ake o!frJ'~ h k I ' ISLANO~R 23 (i.!6·3-lll .after ~::'JO P~l r ni:.:. r·s, ia!T , ll!'f'.~. 1 111~1 11 /lrlr, runnini:.: lites. niain ~II. !radf' ok . S·l!f1. 6·1:r.4983. ~he<'l 11·uirh<'s. ~lp! ;,_ S2600. · Mobile Homes 935 \\'i\NTEV; Bl•st-up P1cko.1p. \\'n.'i·krd. n11nrd or retil'rd. Asli for Carl ~6-~1:\92. Day~ S2 7 -63 ~0; Eves 711r:.o'7-JjJO or 213 422·271.l. AQUARIUS 2 -23- 13' SA ILBOAT 1970 DE;\IO Cal! 612-tJ.",11 SLIP a\1ul, Nrl\JiOl'I, I(} 32' ~1lln.'!; 5!oop. Trade r!'nt ''" slip for usr of boa!. Bob :i:1j-~l!~I. CONTEMPO- LAGUNA HI LLS 2.l.101 RIDGE ROUTE OR. ·;._, FORD 10-whc<'I DU~1P icorner ol !\loulton P kwy) lrtlck. $1000 or best oUu, Prrstii.:e adulr comr 1unity ad-1-.83-.,7-_1_753"°"· ,---,--,---~=I Jal'.e111 to Leislll"f' \Vorld. Autos W a nted 968 WE PAY TOP FERRARI FERRARI AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V_ Coast 1-1~')'. Ne11·port Beach FIAT XJ JAGUARS CHOICE OF COLORS • IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • 642-9405 3100 W. COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmport1d MERCEDES BENZ I RENAULT 970 I ;\1F:RCEDES BENZ ho11.v & trun parls for pre-J!ltiU \!kl S!'da11, inr•luding Jn.ink lid, 2 r(•ar fenders , 3 door s, S•11ll(' chr"O!llf', glll.$.S, w 1 n cl ow l::UROPEAN vacation car. 1~7U Hrnau11 10, 6000 1111. S l ~.',O, or be~1 orr. 5-i·l---079S ROVER n1oulrl 1ngs, bUl'kf'! Ir 11 T • !~9 Lanrl Ro1•rr &!!. Xlnt seals. dnQr panrb. All {'onr!. Nr.Pds tirf's. $2&.'IO ff'flsconable. A !ind f.ir lirrn. Aft 5pn1. fH&-1903 r esto rf'rl!. 496-4123 ,1---S-U_N_B_E_A_M __ Capistrano lli'in•h. Or ,1n!J e County's l ,1r ge~I Selec tion N ew & Used Mei cedes 8 t'111 Jim Slemons Imps. Wainer & M ,1in St. Sant.i An ,1 546·4114 '68 ?.1ERCEDES. nu '64 Alpine convt-~.000 mi. ne~· paint. o'dr11·e, ?.1ich·X ~;~;1~~ I TOYOTA NEW '71 NO DOWN ('()[. 21-1.ikr Uf'11 . l~Or\DED~ Pvl pt~. NEV.'PT ."LIP. Sa1·r1f11·1• -Rest ofr or 52000. IH-1-:tl."i~! or 642-5016. Reauriful surroundings, all Juxury appointments, Ther. apeutic pool Saunas. exer. 1·1~ gym, 4 billiard table.s, niuch !lHlch 111ore! Sc>r b<'aur. furn nu"Xl('ls ir! park-like ... e11ing. CASH • Complete Stock ol tire~. reh!t eng. Very clea n PAYMENT CALL SW-3900 or 830·7900 RA;'11ADA 2·1x60, 2 BR + Den , 2 BA. Lge porch. tor used cars ,t, trucks, jusl call us for ln.•r estimate~. GROTH CHEVROLET · DBfl $.1500. "62-Pf'ugeot N!-hl1 A ' _"_'_"_' _'_'_1"_"_"_'-300~· 6~2-4-Mi9 , . or 6~5--1172. $69.01 MONTH• 36 1110s. Del. pay price. $248t36 or cash p r i c e $2003.55, incl, Ta.'< & L:c A.P.R_ 14.54 %. Seri&l No. 13-1341. 20' \'1k 1n~ sn1llloa1. Xlnt cnnr1. N1-.v sails & n101or. $2,000 ;,.17-:2\!kl day, C7~l~i8 Thb1k SM 1965 .l\1ERCEDES 2205. Xlrit carporl, Fully upgraded ex-Ask for Sales Manager "FRIEDLANDER" rood, """' x"""· SP"d•l susp. Orig o"•ner. 842-2779 lras, Beau!l!ul v 1e11', 182ll Beach Blvd. l_...:u1dscaped_ ~·1nest .<\du ll Hunti ngton Beach • l\!TE' 121-tiond co 11 d , Pnrk. Below cosls a 1 847.6087 KI 9-3331 S'l:lJ. 119 .Jf\dr, l:li;llioa ~20 o·o O" O"I '2" 11" •"f ~ •'"JIJ. ,,pacf' J ;) J · L I ANNIVERSARY #SD K ,,l,,T. "E'cW'7/:,T:;~Riti3L. R. R EAS .1 Nnrle Pk11y. Es l'. on d id o il~/7~1~·!1341 . fi.16-0203 d~s·U73-~71.I f'Vf'~ cNcE"11"-~20°x-·.ic2~2~n=n-.~,~b-,. S!IARP 1!1' Cu~t h111H ~!0011, ~a tl~. (i hp inlr, Exira~. S2.:t:iO. '.•I~-IOi·I ----------LIUO II, .!:•>O!.I i~uuJ . Ready to 111ove in. $11,!l~-.0. Tt rn1c_ I ;rf'rnlf'al Park. 17:-.0 \\')uttier, c.:.t. 548-1698 aft ~Jprn. ADULT PAR!\ -C.:'11. '6!1 :S-;'""1 r'IJ..)!IC' ~11~~162·1 l~1ncPr, 20x:i2. 2 hi·. 2 ba, ---llnlrd 11 indo11s. ,,-1r slnr. Vl::i\TURE, used, !ully e11111 two ~x7 storaRe shed.o.. fenc· fnr ri!.r1nR. lots of .Y\Ias. f'rl yr!, l11rlsep &l5--0'i'R3 SJ9j:._ !16il-9fi:i.'t. UY owner -:.!Uxfi(I. ~rr up Jn :'llODEL Saihng &hoo11rr ailull pk 11·/~kirllng & ,1w11· PINTO \\' AUTO Tran~. s:, d.1~. ~ 1n1!C'. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2()6() llAHBOR BL\'r>. COST!_ :\IE.SA 6-12-11()10 ANNIVERSARY •SO AUTOS WANTED Top dollar for clean used Ci'l'S. Sec And,v flmwn, r;:irl io f'flnrrol, ready 10 s&1I. •nc. $67:iO. f);\&--0~(>6. THEODORE B<'sl orr. ;.,.1g....2s.-.1. 2 OR l\lohile lor sale. Lo11 ROBINS fO CUSTO~I KifE No. 5~9 I ~p~re rl'rll. 8.19-42!!6 el'es /,; RD tl!u~I ~<'II. S6.i0. Af11>r 6. all rt11y iik--('ni!s. 2000 HARBOR BLVD. '12--0181 1---COSTA )IE.Ci/\ 6-12·0U10 ,,. JO' x ·1'..i' plus CP. C!Of.{' to AUROn A 2t' !gl~ "·(l(lfl i;I •. ~ hi<~. Lido VillaKP. Lo do, \\'F; PAY TOP DOLLAR -1. :xtras N1,•p1 slip $1800/o r-lllil li kp rent 673-11796 FOR ·r'()p USF:D CARS 1 J750 llACH ILYD. !Hwy. l tl 89.1-7566 • 537-6.S24 '69 Fiat s:,o Spidf'r. lo mi'~. am/Im radio. xln't cond. Sl·IOO. S~it-6257. JAGUAR '67 JAG 2 +2 RadlQ, lu•atrr. 11utoma:ic 1r;u1~, a ir c·onrl. Chrom' \1 hrf'l1;, !1ght gl't'y \\1!h hirge intrr. Only 29.00 mill's. $3495 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V. Coast Hwy. /\ev.-por! Brach '68J AGUAR- Irr 714: 4(14-Z!li! ---I Ir vour rnr• i~ e.x tra clean 1 --------c~'l 3-I Motor Hom•• 940 sr~ u.~ f1N1 ' 1 own<'r, Xl\E 2+2. aulQ, PllT 3 Glass sloop~; a • I BAUE!! RUJCK ,-• c d DI ~· 1 ~· CON DOR ~tr,i:, a.~1ory ,.1r on • r, Ericso n ·"1· .ion ;._J. 2.l l ~:. J7t!1 SI. T11kl' small clown or 11·ill rin· .,.. Avl'n Rkr, 61 ;)-1(!!90 -+ CO!iia :\!rs, '•18-776.·, I an('r Pv1. Pty., Cali 540·3100 15' s,\ILBOAT. darrnn .~nils. Thr yachr 1ha1·~ l101 11 boat. --1\IPORTS \\'A;-.'TI-:~ or 49-;.7J06 Call Ken all 10 ~1 .11n!ess f'ferl r1rr111~~. t..-01n-1 B!LL COR\\'JN FORD Orangr (\,1uiiiirs am. ple1l' 11 f1l'lr. 96R-Kt.7 _ Orani;:-e Coun1) s Condor n 1s-, TflP S RUY ~:R 1-.,--_,-,-.-00-,-,-1-.,-,-1-,-._-R-,-" Boats Slipt./Docks910 1' lnbllll'I', :.!.~ S . .\lain ~r., R!LJ. \1 ,\XE\" TOYOTA m0<1f•I, xln't ('nnd, \\/lo ' Pr11nf:P. Cl<IS(' lo H1r!"' n111-1.,,,,1 l'-·•"I< "l>•I ~ _,.._. • n m1 .~. Sacnflrf'_ r>lust ~f'f' to Roat SJ 111 lor rf'nl, I JO· lri·e11'a)·s. 639-!S:() Llr Ir Rrrio·h P h. '!·l·i-11.l.i."i :ipJ!r"r $!6JCI fl R'.\l , s1c!r lie up to :10·. 1~1 7.(}l~I. ----- Cfl11_6i5:1_!:1:i -SI.· Ii ~LEF.Pf:R ni<Jh>r hQlllt' SPORTS Car-Spntf' nr"' l\'111 1~-~-;~:·~'~1;0~1·;;;;~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~ 1~---. pa~ •'Rsh-$.i(l(l lllll\lrnun1 Boat s, Speed & S ki 911 lnr rrn!. ~200 r>t'r 11 1'f'k + f;.1~2r:1 ;1fh'l'/\rori..-Gr 'ti!! Xl\F. 2+2 "·/shrk. 11 hr n:w-prr 1n1!r. 53,1---8~92. "kn<!•. 11 /hlk ini"rior. Air. S3200 CP.l11:'1\LO:-.<;, 1rt.1nnn! 11111• f'62-S~ll "o\\·R·lf.6. 221 \'rn 1.1dn i\.irrl. 1.·d<J I 945 Autos, Imported 97t..1 ,;;;;;;;!!~=:".".~~;;;;;;;;;;;;; - 1s1 .. ·_:z1.1 r;o .... 1.-.1:_:'ll\-0(11fl I Tra ilers, Travel I? \'\I C1\.\!r!·:fl \':i11. l 'PrMtw JENSEN 1:1' f-1~h nr !i k 1 t~•lll '11111 l\'A:\'Tl-.0 p;• . 2()' T A\le, Eng1nP. nr1•' trA11~. l1r;i1<ri:.1 -----------co1rr 1111<1 1r·1ilo>1· I 1 c .. 1 ~ (~ .cr>0rl t~ind. 6-l.'>-0·M6 or sarrl!1C'f' $1)(~ 61: .... lfi:'~ f.!:ri'02fi --------~~--c=-- 11rf'<.. 1.1100 1rrif111hlc 111-JENSEN 1ro.•l n1rn1. $~!JOO J i r ni /\!JTHORIZF.D SALES -SERVICE 1•1 11'~1"'1 1r.11lrr. 1!167, ;:i ll i::~:~-fl'.I~ .•. r ri111p. S~:il or IJf'sl uffrr.; -----A-U-0-1~---1 C'uJI 67'.l-:1~1.-el -------~-~-1 ":"--------Auto Service, Parts 949 ·;1 Al"DI 100..-LS. 2 J.lr. aulo I~ Tr.nsporta!ion R tr"''~. J ~,000 n11. Hrrrnt NEWPORT IMPORTS Camp.' •• Sal./ Roni 920 l\I ERCF.OES enz hocl)· & 1p, f'lr. Xl nl i ond. Tnn1 p11r1s !or pr<'-1!~ l!l() 3100 \V. Coasl ""'""'· 0 0 VWCamper Rentals $75 • week-Sc • mne M a c Hou >ar..l ?> AllTO l T~UCK LEASING 124 No. Harbor ill Bolsa Sa"t" Ana -531 -0607 Pop-Top. R &· ! l. $2700 or make offer. Co1nplr1r w11h tent. C11ll nf11.'1· 6 111n 1 - T.l7'6449. '59 Dodge 1/2 Ton PU •, ion. R',o, ft . Ol'rrht•ad 1.:an1p· er. sleeps 4 ~· range. ice hoJC. 01•f11. "'1N'd, etc., 1''-rY CIPR" C11H :..17-979'1. ------1 '69 F"ro-•. I on C111nfl('r $. i1 Ry 011·1'\('r. 962-136fl or -' ~1·rlll 11, 1nf'1 11rl1nii: tr1111k lid. 2 Newport Beach ' I ' I l _'c''c_._c1~'°~'=·,,.,,--~~~=~-I ;;o;;-;;:Lia"Uii<"-wa /'!'HJ' t'l1l t'I'<,. f {ll)T"l\, !\Olllf' '""""· ,1.... • '"rt o " AUSTIN HEALEY KARMANN GHIA mould111.t1<, buckf'I fro n 1 1-----------~,.111,, door panl'I.~. A!I 'fi l A.II. Spr\tf', N p" '7l KAR~IANr\ Ghil'I conv. reasnnal>IP. A !i nd fnt P if'f'lli'1>, & hrk~. motr>r. lmmacu!ate. 7,500 mile.~. rf'slorers .~9 6-412 3 , Run~ xlnl, $:175. Al l Ii (;real present for grad. C11 pistra1TO Brach. 5'16-12.1~1. l-"-'""-'-"-·-o-c===--- 1!110 \'.R f\~,~,,-,-.,--,-,.,-,-,,.-I .61 AUSTIN il<'alf'y 3000, Xlnr LOTUS par!~. !itar1er SIO. Genera-rond, T<Jp & ton11eau. Nr11·1----------- 1o>r SlO alun1. heads SIS. for t1n·~ & harrery, S 9 !i 0 pair. \\'ill trade for 40 Ford 96&--1228. PU. bO<'ly part~. 1136-:.672 '.\fn11 "'herl~. air, rr '71 LOTUS T 'ue. BMW w1rh b111ck 1n1enor. 4-~Rlr! ! 1971 V\V Super B112. -,----------I 1nil<'s, olf of 11{'"' S.111· ~11,00 r ngine 1600 cc. Dual porterl Aulomotil't Excellence head~. Unt:ler 1000 m1 'J, & $~50. To1n: 54~3558 or alt 7 pm: :14~·1610 Fi\C. l'('hlt '63 Buirk );p!'ciAI NEWPORl l!YIPORTS nuro + r" n,. Rf'bl: 'G!'l 1 ROY CARVER I (.'hry<lf'r or p I y nl 0 u ! h I nc. 3100 \\'. CoaJl H11·y. J"rqt1C'fl1I P 5'~711 292."i l-£11.rbor Blvd. Nf'~·port Beach · Crn;la Mesa 5•16-4444 1 ---L~-OTUS ........ _ l§J • '70 BM\\l.Rl"ll. sunroof, AlITHORlZED Ao\1/~'"l\f, lo n1i. Perlec1 SALES & SERVICE cond. 67:>-ti275. BORG WARD BORG\VARD LOVERS. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W, Coast llW)'. Newport Beach MG MG AUTHORIZED SALES &: SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS . 3100 \V, Coast H~')'. Ne\1•port Beacl. t.iftl THINI m ,,~,, ''FRIEDLANDER" lllH liolCH tHWY. JfJ 89.'l-7ri66 • 537-6.S24 '6.11 ll-IGH GT. Candy ,\pple Rrd. lll1nt c1.nd1rlon. •on a pprovtd credit Bill Maxey Toyota 181181 BEACH Bl.. 847-8555 HUNTINGTON BEACH Anniversary Sale 1971 TOYOTA $1777 ~to.II Lewi& 9 TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.:'11. 6-16-9303 i\1UST ~acrir1rf' 1' o yo 1 a Cor<inA '67 ~-<lr se1'lan . Auto. J 01111Pr. Pl'! ply, lftghest o!lrr. 832-7979 J 1!169 Toyota Corona. 4 dr. 4 ~pd. r,t-h, xln't cond. SlO:Xl.1 6'1~37611. '69 CO nO:\A dlx, 4 spd, lo n1 ilr:~• rBdial~.\ i m ina c . Sl.\Z.1. !'>M----8034. 1""-'00· 1"1 I ---=T-=R""IU~M=P""H,--- ·61 t-lGH r<l str. x'Jnr rond. I----------- al, x'tr;is Jo mi '.s 11!1er 5 p.n. THF. TRIUlolPl-1 '"·339-1 VB STAG MGB NOW ON DISPLAY I Corne in lor 11 lrf'! drive! .\lt.B Rao:111g ~l'f'en 19fiti. FRITZ WARREN'S I <.:!ra11. 11 1/"f' 11·hl.•. S lO~. SPORT CAR CENTER ~2-122·, J1l l Fi·11) f..· 1,kndi: 7101-:. lst !°'1., S .. o\. 5-17-0761 1 1%7 :'llGB ronl'l·Lo 1111, 11 1r<' Opeu rlA1ly 9--9: c!o~ed Sunday ---\\'hli:. Xln t ('Orn!. \\'his\ pnce '65 TR4A IR S ~~7-~717, ~9-21·10 'r.6 :-.lGB, 1011 rr11·~. 11"1' pa i11t, 11·1re 11·hls, S112j C)11nr1' fi.l·l -6.i2!1. PORSCHE WE BUY USED Porsches DON BURNS PRESTIGE PORSCHE, AUDI JJ(1.'\l Harbor Hlvd., G.C. (Just S. ol r;.(;, ffll)'.J 636-2333 '65 PORSC~H=E~c= Cp. All !aC'I equipped. Chrome ""heels_ local 11re1 11<'rvice records. For lhe par11cular buyf'r, $2995 NEWPORT IMP.ORTS 3100 IV. Col\~1 l111•y, Ne11·por1 BtllCh Am.-r n1 sll'l'ro ratllo 11 irf' 11 hl~. tonn<'au, r11r irn w/I hf 1111. Btw. 6 & 9 ;-.Jon-Fri h7,1-Xll:O, -l~l!i-,.--.,..1!70rL7')cr~P~H-~T~f"l_4_A 11 Ifl&1 L \\'1r" 11 hcPls. 11r11· Ill\'~, rr.t;. P r1va1e paJ'I.\. +;j,1.!11.19 '59 TR -l $27S &l·l-1692 VOLKSWAGEN '65 V\V 1600cc engine, rehuil! April ls!. Ho!lry 2 hhl. Pllr~che dist. & roil. mai.: \\ h"cl~. <::Ut>l"nl paint ex- hnust & 10111 or extra.~.·Brst 1 offrl' or trade Jor V'V Bus. 5'\S-5.'lS!i. '69 YW BUG ,1·1mag 11·herls. d lr. !YXU·I 7~i1 $1395 lull price. Cail 4!11-774-1_ I 1966 V\V ~·/all ne:w 1129 CC •·~m. PlllO's, f'IC. Porscllel t'ng. Spare whls & more. 4!H--0021 or 673-2169. . ----'00 V\\'. Nl'1v eni.:ine 1300, '&I V\\' Bu1, '68 1600 l'nR. Ex-] 1ra.•, heel, !1;1!'tl"(I, hig 11res. 1 $7~/offer. 675-::i9-18 '66 PORSCH~: 912, 5 if)<!. 11C\1· clu1ct1, brakes & tires, A;\1/f'J\·I. steN'O !apt', rert 1 ,,1,'c'°;-;·;-;540-~-'c'-'"-'-,----­ "'/l:llk lnl. Good cond. $2995. '67 V\\'. gd d, /1('\V fires, 646-11?.6 <'hrome wit! 5~.000 ni.i $85(). PORSCUt f11ctory 11peci11J\~1 . 675--8850. I 9U-91.2-356 •ervi~frtpair. 19ffi vw ug. Sunroof, radio, PerS<lnal all., Ed .C &. r heater. cond.._JOO. !.36-5803. 675-4973. I 1962 PORSCllE HiOO N coupe, clean. Mu~t 8"11 im · med. Best off Pr. 675·1570. 1960 Cl.ASS TC P o r I c he roadster convrrt. Xlnl cond. 67J...2647 '67 V\V Bug 11·/'TI hi,-:h !lt:A!J;, Sl50. & take ovt:r pay15. 642-6759. I Sper1al w/11' <'!Imper, fully !A_n_1;~q~u~•~•/~C-:'.'l•~•.,•.,l<~•,-.,-'-S-:-J l'rf\lip, 1011 1nl!r~. nuin)' l!HO r ord P.U. v..s flath,ad. xtra~. 213 86i-i669 '\"C'& & J,.'Olld engiM. Nttds "'Ork. l\'l't':kl'ntiA S300 or be:~l ofler 8-16-5672. e DAtsun C•mper ~h ii~ e Trucks , 962 Fbra;ls, alum wlntlo11'S. Sum- mer 111le 5175 .Ii up. 1940 f ord P.U, V-8 llathead, 5..'\0-7310. l:'IOCI f'n~ine, Ne-edJ ""Ork. For All.le '61 1Aflbel111.. -or wllli11g to tfac!r !or good 10-~ htkr . t'l'f'ds waler pump. Call brfore Sam or 11fl !)pm: ~s.fi:iR."J. CAPRI 1961 PORSCHF: 912, 5 e '65 l\1ERCEDES 190 4-dr Oood ronrl. SJ·l50. -~~an. X\n t cond w/new Call li•M-6IOO MERCEDES BENZ spd. ~~~-~~~ JOO'.! VW chlls~ls tA'/lrRns & i 111.nk, littn.sft!. Perfect lor dunp bu,rgy $125. 64>1628 I --'68 VW Bug, v.rhlle grl. cond. New brks mu ffltr & baUrry SHlOO. 6~[).5-lro ~V~JUf_CU_" ----," ... --,,,, far! Jult fell.Ch for )'OUI phon@ & cart On Uy r .!or, ca~g!t\ed 64'2-.'5671 Oillrttr .·,-1-c"_,-,-n-2000--,-,-,0•. -,-m-/-lm~. tires. $149J. 644-7321 or '·~,J~l'(=1=RSC1IE-S:-Xlnt rond. 1,, m1'1. Private pl'lr1y. 8.l8-4:i75. Re.d lo,. cd tlt"f!5. new palnL 83i·9696. S2.)()0/offcr. fuller 6'12-140.l ~~~------i~IERCEDES Benz 190 SL, _ Cycles, Blklt, S.'.00. or bl'st (Jfler. llJ6.7i672. Scoot1rt 915 's:. CHEvv vln:ti ,tick, ne-; l·1-10-,-0-.-C-,-.-.,-. -,·,,·,-~-,-n~ lirt~. l(J ml. Xlnt cond. $975. OVER DEALER INVOICE I That's What We Pay for Them Folks I ON ANY OF OUR BRAND NEW 1971 MERCURY MONTE GOS Coupes, sedans, hardtops all brand new and deal new and add priced to sell! Take invoice only 3°/o! Get a year end- now on any one of our brand Monte gos. THAT'S RIG HT FOLKS ONLY . ' 3%-.. ER DEALER IN VOICE ON ANY OF OUR BRAND NEW MERCURY MONTEGOS WE ARE -OVER STOCKED! YEAR END SAVINGS NOW!!! JOHNSON & SON . , . 1 I M il~ 5o'utl!-ol °'o" o;...qo F·,·rwoy -· Uncoln Continental .. Mark Ill • Mercury • Couga1 Turn un119et1 rrcm 11 Into quick Xln't cond. S1500. 673-4818 SPEEDSTER r:.~h . CRll i;1i-..r;r,711 flll 6 P~f. Very Cl,Rn, 673-3756 mi. s11:,, ~1ust Sell! 497-l084. .-~')6-.41172 + f or btAt r~sultJ;? 6112-567a your 1d -totli.y! 1 .. oiiiiiii .26'26 HARBOR-BL VD., COST A MESA 540 5630 6·1.' 0981 -, ' -.... ,. ' • l I r l • • OAlL. 'I PlL.O , Mond.Q, June 28, 1911 _..,_ 1§1 I l§J I l§J I l§JI l§J ~I ·_" .... _ ... __.l§J ~I •_" .... _ .... ~!§]I -....... 1§1 '~'"-"''_""'·~!§] 970 Autos, lmport..i 970A.uto1, lmpor~ '70Autoa, Imported 910Autos, Imported 970 Autot, Imported iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos. lmport..i 970 Autos. Imported 970 -----DATSU "THE SMALL CAR STANDARD OF QUALITY THROUGHOUT THE WORLD" JUST ARRIVED! 1200 CPE • BELOW JS THE COMPARISON CHART .•• Lot Costa Mow Dotsun >how you the 2-door or 4-door Datsun 510. It's pocked full of extras .•• ALL AT NO EXTRA COST. Features such as tinted glass, white walls, reclining bucket seats, full carpeting, flow-through fresh air system, dise brakes end fully independent roar su>pension end an OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE •.. ALL AS STANDARD • ,,.. J .,.... .,,.~ ._t ... IUlftlelJIM •I Hie fleHI! EQUIPMENT. Come in and test drive now, while selection is good. A~1~~~.u~.:i~:T:N ~·tL~,!~1'g:s 1971 Datsun 510 Sedan Comparison Chart Size Whe•1· Aeeel. Front Ovefhe•d Flow-Thru Turning Engine Base Length Width Heigh! Weight O·liiO Ind. Rear Disc C•m Fresti Clrcle Meke Cu. In. HP. '"· '"-lo. '"· lb•-Lb1/HP. Sac. Susp1n1lon Brakes Engine Al• fl. . . ,.,.,. ... ,,, ·-17.3 .. tl.S , 1IO.t ,., .• IJ,I .... 11.l 13.5 YES YES YES YE5 31., -· IT.S H 11.S '112.J ·11.4 SU iii10t4 .21 .7 ''·o YES YES YES YES J1 .• COL.T C·ODOA 97.5 100 95.3 180.8 81.4 53.8 2120 25.5 13.3 NO YES YES YES 30.2 FIAT 124 S?ECIAL 88.0 76 95.3 158.8 .... 53.8 1 .. 2 25.1 18.3 NO YES NO NO 35.1 GREMLIN" 199.0 "' 98,0 161.3 70.6 51 .8 21133 20.5 15.3 NO NO NO NO 32.8 OPEL KADETI NO. 31 65.8 " 95.1 181.8 81.9 !55.4 1717 30.9 19.8 NO NO NO NO 34.8 PINTO 97.8 75 94.0 1fi3.0 89.4 so.o 2013 25.5 16.5 NO NO NO YES 31.5 TOYOTA CORONA 4·000R 113.4 108 95.7 1118.9 81.1 55.1 2170 20.1 13.5 NO YES YES YES 31 .5 VEGA SEDAN 140.0 90 97.0 169.7 85.4 51.4 2190 24.3 14.5 NO YES YES YES 33.0 VW SEDAN 96.7 " 94.5 158.8 81 .0 !9.1 1808 30.1 18.1 YES NO NO YES 3ti.O SUPER YW 96.7 60 95.3 1110.8 &7.4 59.1 1918 33.0 18.3 YES NO NO YES 31 .2 YW TYPE 3 96.7 " 94.5 170.1 83.2 57.9 2221ii 34.2 18.5 YES YES NO NO 38.3 ALL THIS AT NO EXTRA COST e Reclining bucket se•ts e Five·main-be.aring 96 HP O'f'erhaad c am engin e e Up to 25 mile, per 9•llon e 0-60 in 14 1econd1 e Fully independent rear 1uspen1ion e Front di1c brakes e l l .4 foot turning circie e Standard all-synchromesh 4 -s peed tran1mission I optionel •u+om•tic a va ileble I e Tinted 9la11, whitew•lls, f low-through fresh •ir. system, e All et no extra cost. DATSUN SlO 4°DOOl SEDAN W• •r• introducing • new higher trad•in allowance during our big axpansion pro- gram. DATSUN 510 2°DOOR All •nfc rn'111.lmn ~··•••dccrr•Ct •i '"'"'cl ~'J~l•"g lfoweo•r. •b>clule ac:<u.,~v u nnol l» gu•••nt.,.d, •nd ell ~lhcot1on\ ••• ~UbJ<<l !O G~•n~a '""""u: nghc.. •r1on1 r"grne·~•om WO~el Oro,. •fl~•• lo ng..,+·R••• Swmg A•lc• $ Winner of the tr•ach•rous East African Safari. .+ Ti x & Lit. & 0 & H e 1 MILE SOUTH OF THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY CORNER 01' HARBOR I. Attention Datsun Owners I I Your 01hv11, 111 lrfllt, 11 -rffl mco re 11 CtJll MU• D•h\111. ITry v• 1o'ld .... l e SERVICE e AND WE MEAN SERVICE! PON DEROSA To Your Complete Satisf<"'"'" At All Times! ONE O' THI MOST resp.erect & reca111rne11ded Dah1111 1trYlce deph. le k11ther1 Celif .. Wlfll 41111llfle4 llce..Hd foctory trained tech11lcia1U. "THI P:INIST OF J40Z MAINTINANCf" I 540-6410 I .t.M Y lljlUIST IOf\15 AIOUT SIRYICI CALL TMIS SIRYICI HOT LINI 540-0213 I A.M. TO S P.M, ONLY A COMPLETE WELL STOCKED PARTS DEPT. Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 99o Autos, UMCt Autos, UMd 990 I Autos, Used 990 , ___ ..;... ___ _ VOLKSWAGEN '69 vw Conv. automatic trans .. ra· dlo, heater, the love bug. ZAU-238. $995 Harbor ·American , 1.46-0261 1969 HARBOR. CO!>TA MESA VOLKSWAGEN '69 VW Sq bk-Radio, parcel shelf, chrm lug rac~ MW valve job & motor ·work. \V/guarantee 4,000 mT or ro days. 1 owner. $1800 or ol· fer. 6 lo 9 pm. 833-8233. e 1970 DELUXE VW BUS. Ai\l /Ft.1 radio, trlr bitch, seats or full-length bed, $2150. 642-5751. '69 V\V West:talia camper, AM/FM-extractor, Perfect Pop-Top. R & H. $2700 or cond, $2700. 96.S-5495. make offer. Complete wi1h 1 .-o'-~ ... "-'~v~Wc...,d~e~lux-'-~b"-'-.-,-,-w tent'. Call a!ter S pm l · engine, trans, & tires. $1100. '68 YW CAMPER 1:11~49. .... 962-3987 .... ~LT blue V\V Bug n!'eds '63 V\\' Bug. New lire~ &:. a good home. Clean. $1.00J. Png. Air ccnd. Xlnl cond. Call alt 6. 557-9117. $699 or be~ of.r. 962·2436, '66 V\\' dhl cab pickup. New '67 V\V Sillll\001" lfiOO engine, soft camping Rehll eng. lo"' miles, new top, paint. 497-2097. hr11kes $1200. 962-7006 '69 V\V Camper, pop-top. '67 V\V, reblt eng., new Afo.1 I f l\!. 4 nE'W tirrs, l\tus: brakes & bait. Good see it. $2,fl9i 642-~~ C'ond . $8.'iO. &16-3333. '66 VW Bug, Orig owner. V\V Bug '68. JmmacuJate. 1 \\'ie!I cared for. t ng111e 01vner. $1200. 911m-4pm call rttently reblt, dependable, 5-IS-5:'1.'>I; eves 673-5000. clean, $78(). 496-45-li:.. 1 1~007s~vw=~c~A7>~1P~M~o7b~ile-.-.,...,.-. '67 VW, very gd concl. radial tires, $2700. lOllO. Lue blue. 644-4792 VOLKSWAGEN '64 YW BUG 4 speed, radio, heater. Unbe. lievab!e, under 40,000 actual miles. Chel'T)'! Barwick Im- ports, 998 So. Coast High- "'ay, Laguna Beach. 5464051 or 494-9771 '65 vw Diamond button & tuck inter.· Just rebuilt 1500. Holley 2 BUICK • B11ick • e '70 Electra 225 Hardtop Sedan e '6:1 Limllf'd Hardtop Sedan • '69 Electra 225 Hardto p Co""' • '69 Riviera GS Hardlop Coupe AU have Factory \\'arranty All have Full Po"·er All have Jo'act Afr, E'tC. Sale Priced brl. carb, Porsche coil & M H dist. i'>lake o!fer. Ca l I ac OWafd 846·~:>42 or 847-6?i3. 839·9600 OR 531·0608 '67 V\V, nrw reblt eng. New Corner l 5t & Harbor !ire~. brks, p11int. bat\., Santa Ana shocks. Never "Tecked. 1 l!l6& BUICK Elec:tni 225 -t dr. Owner. Wife·& car. Pvt pty. "·'" •. f11 r:tory 11\r, P/i:., Pih, 11050 . .,.,.,....33 ... 1. Ki10!1 cond. S2190, 193 • V\V '69 BUG -Ai\1/Fl\l, York!O'>l.'n Li!nr, C , :\I . sun r "o I, Xln t cond . 5-1:-..310~. m""''""· P" P ' '. l --C~A~D=IL~L-A~c-=--613--41:i2. CHEVROLET CONTINENTAL COUGAR LINCOLN OLDSMOBILE '69 IMPALA H.J. 1969 CONTINENTAL 1968 COUGAR XR7 '67 4 DR CONTINENTAL '57 OLDS. 88, ''""· radio, , MK Ill 2 O. H.T. XLNT COND, BST OFR. h!r ., P"''r. fiteer. & brks. Fact Air low mi., Loaded, ELE~A~CE PERS<?NI~I~D PRICED FOR QUICK SALE 644-6484, 644-2942 a utn. trans. Xlnl cond. iJOO d. T ·, _,1 d E:o;ot1c lime !rtist mist !1n1sh Beautirut platinum finish ·63 CONTINENTAL, Clean , 1 _o~'~h~'~'~'~"~"·~··~·~"'~'-=1'1=7 ~- .r., a e smru own or . h d k I h . h d k b I h AU ""W•". l-•••h. * 1~2 OLDSMOBIL" trade. Call 540•3100 or "'ii ar gray green eat • Wlt ar lue eat er igen. ,,... , •:>J ~ ,,., "" 49_1_7)00 er & landau roof. Lo-'.ded uine'I upholstery and l11nda11 * 673-7411 * t:xre-ll!'n! Conr1itioo ' · "'i!h all the finest :"11a.rk Ill roof. Auto rrans, radio, hea t. 1 --"'°'M""E~R~C=U~R=Y~-$j{J(). 493-4716 1963 Chevrolet, less tha n 300 fea1ures. f ull po.,.,.er, equip. er, pw fifeer, e1c. A real · J · d 1----------'6.ll TORONADO. hke new, mi. on E"ng, ac air. st ped, including 6 "'ay pwr clean car. WKR058, 5aJe 'h,·11 IV'"' r -d J J '68 WAGON Col Pk Ai· ''"" S2250. or trade for la\• -· " o •.ia e or .I:' seat & door lock&. AM.Ft.I priced, St843. Johnson & -" •·-... ...,.. motorcycle. 4:12-7664 sierco radio, till ~teer wheel, Son. 2626 Harbor Blvd., rl eck, full pwr. Perr cond. ~P_•_•k_uP.:.._<96=-3'i8~·~3=--I 892-9863 or 896-3051 \l'Ork. PLYM'OUTH 1"166 Chevy II Nova. Green. automatic cruise • control Coiu a il1esa. 540-5630 Leaving are11. J\fust SE'll and aulomanc temp control '67 COUGAR-Pis. P/b, a ir, MUSTANG $600. Call Steve 962-fiilii. air conrl. YCL021, Reduced ~lri-eo ta pe. 4.\,000 mi. Im· '6-1 Cl1evy JI , 32i 111"/~~ r,;cing lo ;517.l. JohnS<Jn & Son, mac rond. \Vill sell this \\'k 1970 MUSTANG <'11n1, Thomas ~uspens1on . 2626 ll11rbor Blvd., Costa $1475 or best offer. 96S-2313 COUPE $7:.{l 5-I0--27:><1 Mrs11 , 5-10-5630 or 962.--0360. SUPER SPORT ..'.::'.'....C~H~R:;Y=S-:L"E~Ro--l1i<ioora,5iltJ,JN;;'ciiori1C.,N<· ~ciio;;n"-11;;.,;;,,;;;1a;;1. I .:::..::::::::;:D~O~D=-=G"E"""--1 Bcau1 11u1 Royal Blue mete:- RIH, air, lull po1•:er. Runs !Jt: w1!h "'hile 11nt1qur. ·~ ' d 11111\ll p,., pl}' '"' ,.,01 ,__________ lancl11u, au10. trans, radio, 1968 CHRYSLER 300 . · . U'i't-<H('. 1· --'&t Dorl o s~~ o1I healer, po11o·er ~tecnni;:, ere. *!Ir '70 CUDA-Unemployed, must i:ell 340, 4-spd, Cflll &!2-62•\1 PONTIAC """'1"9°'6"°9"'P"o_n_J,.la-c-:G"'T"o"- 2D H.T. 2 D H.T. CORVAIR c I ""~; 1~~~1 .... or, ",· A real hcauly, 0-19ADG S''LE PRICED a 1 .....,. J<JU, c..XI. 1 I. t p'""1.~ ............ ~ ~,, I m I II ~ Pl\1 u 642 8792 S~3. Johnson & Son. 2626 ,. ' ""'" " -" P " ic Atrrac11vp i;i:old 1n1sr mcrul· 196.l CORVAIR l\1onza con· · Ci! -· tiarbor Blvd .. Cosla :\lesa. f''(ff'nor 11 uh <!.:irk green lie finish \\1lh black hucker vc r 11t>lc. Smooth·sh!lttng '68 DODGE Van. Sports11Jan, 510-5630 b!ll'krr ~,.,a,~ & ron.•ole. La n. VOLVO sears. & Janria.u root EfJu1p-4-sfl('cd; nf'W batcery . Runs Rill. Au!o trans. 84i-5ll2 r1.1u roof, aulo tran~. rarl10, 1969 CADILLAC II 7 ••z 1127 '69 MUSfANG, Pov.f'r riisc I prd 1\'lth auto rrans, Radio, \\·rll -peppy on fn"e\\"Ry. ll pm: "'' -l!'al rr, f'i'l''' .1o1rcr. row brak. EL OORAOO bra kes, Air cond, Of'lux in· ,S}. THINI ~'YO~o· "FRIEDLANDER" heater, pow strrr, pow hrak· Gct~ 2;, miles per galk.1n . FORD rs. fa ctory air. styl,..ri sieel ,·xo·r1c QUALITY terior, Vinyl top. f'"rfrc1 X ... c~. f'ff·. Clf'Hl"I 1hroughou1 -SJOO or hcst offer. Call Bill ----------"'/1rrls, ere: •• 'TG!l:.!3. Sa le S1 1 ik1ng silver moondust fin· 7.XV20J $1795. Johns0n ~ Schreiber after 5:30 p.m. r:or.d. 7 1 4 / 5 4 7 -9 191 • pl'lrl'd Sl~). Johnso11 & So:t, ish "'Ith black leather l.t Son. 2626 Harhor Blvd., 2ll-923-44!'1i">. 714167l-333it 21126 lla1·t~r Blvd., Costa lanclau equipped with line~! Costa :\!csa 5-IO-~i630 r---~---~~--1 1967 i11 USfANG I11stbac:k· 1\1es11. ~Q.;i(;30 luxury fea1u~s. including 1 ---~C~O=M~E=T=---I CORVEnE black "'inyl !op, AM/f':.1, •10 GT=o----1 full powe.r, factory air, am-11 1 r, -4 · s p d . A l\I : 1--~~~."6-0lii8 1017,;o~~"'~.~,~.-.. ~ba-c.,k-,....,,..~d~i-o. '65 vw Sqbk·Xlnt. air, xlnt cond. $993. IVM IAAC)t UIWY. ,,, $900/ofr. Tim. 4!l'J.430'J • 494-7182 • 89J..7566 • 537..GSZ4 fm 511!reo, radio. etc. Sre & 1969 CORVETTE 2131498-2512; aft 6pm Ram Alr, 4·spced .• Fi!'@!t0ne C OING O\'trsca5 \!us! q•\I wide ovals. sharp-all black! 970 ~A~-~1 --,~_.-,-~9~7"'0 'fll Volvo in good corn!. Autos, Imported . utos, mpor ~ / 1 1 w comp overhau . Nt.w '66 YW -4 apeed, radio, paint. (TSS623) $995 new '70 YW IUS ' pass. custom paint.. white 1ide walls. C042· ASH> $2795 . '69 YW F'og lights, At.I, Ft.I Tll· dio. mag '"'heels, vinyl root. !XKU541) $1295 '66 vw IUS Custom p11 lnt, c u stom int erior. white side wall tire•. (TRB079) $.17~5 \ j • • These ara have paist'd the 1VW 16-polnt safety and pttformance ·test. It is fully checked and thor· oughly reconditioned. \Ve euarantee 100'~ that ·we'll repair or replace all major mechanical parts• for 30 days or 1000 mtln, whichever comes first. •Engine • Tranamluton e Front Axle • Rear Axle Asumblis e Erake System • Electric&! System.. \ ,,,........, 11"4. Cam--· ht."." paint & Litts. Askin&: $450 or bst ol.r. 646·5648. Anniversary Sale 1971 VOLVO $2991 ..DeMLewiA W VOLVO l~ Harbor, C . .id. 646.9303 VOLVO '63 Pl800. B!aupunkt radio. Xlnt cond. Ori.ainal owner, 833-2694. Autos, Used 990 • Monte Corio • • '71 Coupe, Full Po'>l.~r. Fact Air, tilt away wheel, gport Whttla. etc. e ·11 Coupe, Turbohydm, Fact Air, Pawtt, etc, less lhen 500 miln. • '70 Coupe, Turbohydro, Fact Alr , Ptiwer,, etc., only 10,Doo mUes. See al Macffoward .~ or 531.Q608 C.Omer ht a ~Harbor Santa An• 'li7 2+1 VI, P.S., Feet air. XJnt con4. 11700. l38-SS4C 01: -HOUllt RunUna?' W•tch the OPEN HOUSE Ollumn. ' ' dr1 ... ~ ~oday_ Sale pr1«!1. ' • -. •. CONVERT. 673-8616 470Af Z $:">175. Juhnson & ~harp 66 Come!, "·h11r S\VIF1' & STYLISH 1!XXI Ml 1971 M•-h I "'""''"8· 6 m"•. Sacrifice! $·IOO & take over S Bl d "·/hlk Top, good Tu't'~. xlnt . . · ... " .. " ..... Payments? ~466.J alter S on, 21526 H11rbor v ., cond. $650. Call 67;}..5311 t!~shy ccmpe t1 ·1on yellow THEODORE olrt, cru iseomar1c, 8.000 &. weekends. ~C~';'~"'-"'~1,~,.~·~'"::.:;:'~·56~J~O~. --1-~"'"";.,;ur;;oo,..--1 'vtth blnck buckrt sea l~. mlle11. Air, ir;1ereo sys. Pri. Largest Selectio" CONTINENTAL E<1uipf)!.'d the '-''ay yau like ROBINS"' FORD pty. $3.900. 675-7200. 1:'nso~:=.~~~.S:va". ,"',,,'N"ear"' OF LUXURIOUS "'."'.-O::--,:e-:-'°'""::"."~.,..,.-l 1t-:1so C.T.D. engillt", 4 speed '1nCn Harbor Blvd. : .ovuv MUSTANG '69, 302 eng. 3 pert <19f>.562.'l CADILLACS 1969 CONTINENTAL tr11ns., AM-f'M radio, heat· Cosla Mesa. 642-0010 l ~n;;·==""'·o;-,=~~~1 In Orange County l963 thru 1970's ibeij; ~CADILLAC "'"""""'° ......,. 2600 HARBOR BL., COSfA MESA 540-9100 Open Sunday '66 CAO. SEO. OE VILLE 4 dr., in shlnina; black wUh full po"·er equip. The Kelley Y.'hole&a.le Blue Book 1s SlS00.00, now on sale for only $1~. Hurry for this on@. Lie. SBD155. Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor Blvd., Costa Meu. MQ.5630 NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 4 0. 50. r r. 1i!1 strg wh«'I. Like new .64 F'ALCON HARDTOP. bBrrtl carb, new hrks. /ar t e PONTIAC '67 GTO. 4-spd, Z W' air. r&h, $2200. 830 14lh SI, t \ Cl CHECK THIS VALUE rhroughoul, D · 59. see k Beil!.utitul yellow, Kir C(ln· H 8 536--P s, owner. ean. $1375 . I Srr1k1ng Bermuda blue. niist r1rive loday. Johnson & Son, ditioning. new .. 260 VS" · · 2727· 673-53!3 l1 nlsh, w!1h dark hlue lea:ti. 2626 ffarbor Blvd., Costa engine. New a ut omal ic '63 MU!ITANG-Vg, auto, pwr 'TO TEMPEST 400 T-J7 er & landau roor. Lu."ury l\1ei:.11 . 5-l0-5630 traNmi.ssion, new tires, {all 5leering. $800 or blit o[r. l-sperd, like new. Sacrifice equ ipped, throughout, Auto. '64 Vrne cpe-:)41\t (!rig mi with warranty) maintaine!I Call Cindy 54()...(221 aft 4 $2150. 494-3034. trans .. radio, h!r. pow steer. 300 hp, 4-spd, AM/FM. by aulo dealer for his wife. OLDSMOBILE ·oo Jo'IRE:BIRD, 11ir, P/S, pow brakes, 6 way poiv mag!. Mint ccncl, $1650. Phone 642-9405 ask tor auto trans. 1 0 w n er , s!'at, 11u10 T<'mp rontrol, air 673-JUI. CaJ;ey. J59'j. '69 Oldsmobile 34~168 ar1 6 "kd11y5, cond: Plus 4 M !ch~lin radial '64 VETTE. Re-Hdto 4 spd . 1959 GALAXIE '68 PONTIAC '"•''"'. Xl"t ply tires, see & drive today, P 98 Holiday IA'" '"' " YPTU2:!. Sale priced s2443. new brakes & trans. $1200. 4 dr, P/1teering. P/brakf!&, cond. fully equipped. $1395. J-h-.""" ~-So-, 2626 H•"'--n i\1AGS 548-8371. Air cond. Radio, heater, C'OUpt, l''ull Power fact Air, Call "AA n•1~ " ... ,., .. "' " • ""' xtn nict:, low Tn!!es and """"....,.' · · Blvrl .. Cos1a i\lesa. 540-~ COUGAR Body It Interior in good con. 1 '67 PONTIAC '-•-1 ·,,,. , d"ti $250 bH tf actory wuernty. ....,...., '10 CONTINENTAL 1 on. or 1 0 er. only $3l9S C1e8Jl, lo mi, 1 owner, Jo.. COUPE 1967 COUGAR 2 0 HT .549-0214 cal. Si l~. 67.14.i95. EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN MUST SELL '61 f'ORD Econolint va.n, MacHoward '69 Gro Ju!lge, 4 Speed, Vf!ry Siriking Burgu ncly mist linish A'tractive. polar White exttr-panelled, carpe~. p I u 1 cooc:I condition, $2JJO or best "'llh black land1IU &. match· ior. with stlW:r blue bucket xr:ra1. Call 496-7118 &J9..96CXI or 531.Q608 oiler. 548-0918 ing le11ther interior. Equip-sea~s It comiole. Auto trans, '63 GALAXJE, 4 dr. hdtp. Cor~~~ ~~ RAMBLER ped "'ith the linest. f ull rad.IO, heater, pow titer. pw PIS P/B RkH lo ml's. Po"·er, lac!orv AIR, SteM:I brakes, factory air rond, S425·. 642-i'lss. ' OLD , ., drl ~ 1 UCB S 66 Cut11511 ... P/s, air '63 Rambler, $•90 tape SY$tem, new tiN"s. plus ve to see ,..,w n ce. ·I,,;,--,,=-,=:-==='°' cond, aulo, nu tires. I '" m"ch nio-. C' •. & drive 1h ;, 466 aale priced $1445 John-67 Ford W1n COUNTRY 1 --'-'~'·:,;;."~lo~k~. ~8.l.1:;:.:·2206=:.....-1 ,_ _ • So ·2626 H. .... SEDAN Gd. ccncl. $1150. owner. Must 111.c, highest o[r. T·BIRD beautiful car today. $5175. !!On It n, ar.,.,r * 67~ • 832-7979 6CllABY. Johmon 11 Son, Blvd., Costa Meu.. 540-5630 , 2626 Hatbor Blvd., Costa 1969 COUGAR. Vinyl lop. 71 FORDS: Ga 11xIe1, '67 Olds 88, 4-<lr hrdtp, lo MeM. 540.5630, Ant~. PIS. New li~/ Mustang11, It TorlnoL Hertz mi's, New tires, Air, Power TIRED of that Old tunuture?' 11hork1. Low mi. Must SeU. Corp, f714l 772.--0552. Must sell, 536-9711 . ' It'• really Ml that hard 626-7570. LINCOLN MOVING to Jfawall, 19611 to replace. Just W8.tch tM. VACANCIES Cost money! Olds Lux. sedan. po>A·er, air, fw'nlture It ~llAntO".Js RMt your houMJ, apt., atol'W! 'fi6 Lincoln Cont ~. k> ml, lo m iles. Ex. rond. ~ co!umna in the Oassilled bldg .. etc. thru a Dally PUot orig owner. Tmmae, loaded ror that l!em undtt $50, Section. Classified ed. w/xtra1. &1i.41.l( try the Penny Pincller ___ , 19:57 T-BIRD, or1R ownr, $600. Special me111ll ic pa int 50.000 orig mi, Xlnt cond. $7195. 64 2-9 ~i 0 , eves 675.-7409. Mr l\lyrrs. 0:i7 T-BIRO A-1 cond. Vinyl lop. lmm .. c. * &l&-7668 •