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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-07-19 - Orange Coast Pilot7 • • • eac er fill -S . l I• l k Top U.S. Athletes ~seek New Channel To Aid Prisoners DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * MONDAY AFTERN OON, JULY 19, .197 1 s~ene? tt was photo club day Sunday at the Oran~e Cou~ty Fair a~d this fai~ maiden \l.'35 one of the models. She was listed si mply as Jan A-48 in order to conceal her true identity from all lhe ·photogs. Her name remained a mystery today. For another view of photo club day, see Page 2. Recall Campaign Open s Against Supervisor Baker By A.LAN OlRKlN Of tlle D.lllY Pllfl J1.il A recall •f:ampaign. complete with a four-page• tabloid news !tleet and press release. was !allfl(:hed againsl Orange County'a Second District Supervisor David L. Baker today. The news sheet features four-inch deep headlines-''llECALL BAKER -\VHY?" on the front page. It claims that the supervisorihas double billed t.axpayen in travel expense acc.ount.s. that more than· 90 percent of hia polltical contributions come from "major landowners and developers," that he has faUed to proti:et public beach access, met secretly lo in· crt1se his aalary .and favors general Sunday Ba thers Pack Sa nds of Newport Only ~.000 were ex:pe~ al beachell today, but crowds of 95.rm Sunday and 00,000 Saturday "looked like the flight of the lemmings.'' Nrwport Beach lUeguard !J'Qkesmen.salrl this morning ., avialicm. Including jet. ope.rations al lhe Los Alamitos Nava] Air Station. Baker:s legislitivt assist.ant ruchard Ruiz this morning branded the charge!! as "hogwash and innuendo." "Mr.' Baker has bttn in political office eight years and in those eight yeRrs has left a Public history," Ruiz said . "For those interested in truOi all they have to do is look at the record.'' 'I'he"~press relea&e lists 'two men a11 ro- chairmap,of the,&a,ker Recall c.otnm.itLee -Dooald J. Swenson, 33 • ..an Anaheim electmH!· tedlnitian. and William S. McKnight . 39, Stanton, a salesman for a baked goods firm. Mcl<night could not be reached this morning. but Swenson, who &aid he ran as the American Independent Party can- didate in the last 69th Assembly Dl!trict electffln said ht and McKnight both work· ed in the Ci.tiiens Referendum and Recall Cmmnittee that was formed earlier this year after county supervioon rtportedly discussed raising their salaries 1t a clog. ed door executive 11eSSion. The meeting ~ oU 1 recall cam· palgn ag1lrf~l &Jter, Board Chairman Robert Battin nf the Ftrst District and !Ste RECALL. P1ge !I ' -.. ' Nixon Urge s Caution On China Trip WASHI NGTON (UPI ) -President Nixon cautioned ranking Congre.56ionaJ and administration leaders today against raising eX"pectations that his plan for a visil lo Red China might mean an ear!y end to the Vietnam War. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said I.he President made it clear in meetings with Democratic and Re p u b I i c a n Conf:ressional leaders anrl v.·1th his cabinel that his ..,isit to China was to "discuss matters of mutual interest between the Peoples Republic of China and the United Stat.es." "He declined to speculate on the effect l.he!le disc~on will have on llny other matter and said such speculation would not be helpful," Ziegler told reporters. Participants in t.he meeting echoed Ziegler'.'! statements. House Speaker Carl Albert said there was no suggestion from Nixon th~t the visit was tied to an end to the U.S. role in the Vietnam War. At the Stale Department meanwhile, Japanese Ambassador Nobuhiko Ushiba said Japan .and the Uniled States plaMed to \\'Ork to try to prevent ouster of Na· Unnalisl Chi11a from the United Nations. Ushiba said following 1 meeting with Secretary of State William P. Rogers that the objective of the United States was "quite clea r" that the United States wanted le keep TaJwan in the U.N. The United Stales was expected 1t least tat.illy to give 1ts approval to &eat Red Chin1 in the world body. Ziegler said the President was expected to reach a decision 50metime this month regarding U.S. policy toward 1eating (See NIXON, Pare t) 55 Boats End T,ranspacifi c Fifty.five boats had crossed the Oiamol\d Head finish line in tht 26th biennial Transpacific V1cht Race by 10 a.m. (OT) today. Nonna! tradewinds brought the yachts boiUng across the finish line. at top speed! Sundly but by this mornJng, the ·wind!I had died again, alowlng the 13 boats still left 11t sea. TaUenders In the neet were et· peeled to finish Wednesday morn- ing. n,ey are Leprrchaun , Woodwynd ind Bold Host.. f"or othtr details, stt Boating. Page 30. u·e~all Ca1npaign l.Jann~hed Against Supervisor Baker , ... , Athlete Envoys POW Aid Sought By Sports Fig ures By DON McLEOD Auocl11M l'rffa S11rr Wrlllr WASHINGTON If Ping Pong diplomacy can open China, a group of America's most prominent athletes think they should be able to turn the same trick in '.'ietnam. Athletes like Johnny Unitas and Brooks Robinson have asked Hanoi for permission to \'isit and discuss Americ11n pr isoners of war and men listed as mis.s· ing in acUon. "We 're taking no stand on the war." said Carmella LaSpada. coordinator of Amer1ca·s Sports Stars for POWs-MlAs. "We're just trying lo bring peace ." The membership reads like a sporl.'l hall of fame : Unitas. Rbbinson, Arnold Palmer. Joe Frazier. Joe DiMaggio, Ted Williams. Arthur Ashe, Peggy Fleming, 811!y Kidd. Bobby Orr, Ri chard Petty, \V illiam Shoemaker, Althea Gibson. Joe Louis, .Jesse Qv.·ens, ,_-fark Donahue, Bill Muncey. John Petraglia. Don Schollandcr. Bill Toomey and Jerry Wesl. "We do not represent any political lac· I ion ." lhe group said when it announced its fOfmation last spring. •·we are 11ot coming as spokesmen for the American government. Our desire Is to speak to the North Vielnamese as one man t.o another. They sent a letter t<> North Vietnamese Premier Pham Van Dong in May asking permission to go over. If they're accep- ted, they want to send a delegation of about five name stars on the goodwill mission. Meanwhile, the athletes are wor king up a program to give a boost to the some 2.000 children whose fathers a.re missing or captured in Vietnam. They plan to see that the kids get a remembrance from their fa vorite sports hero on birthdays, Christmas and other special occasions. They hope a kind of pen-pal arrangement with superstars will give 1 lift le sagging young spirits. "It'~ also a long range thing," Miss LaSpada said. ''After the v.·ar they'll be forgotten and will need us more than ever, particularly those v.·ho have no dads. "It's through our concern for these ch1ldre111, not just the American kids but the Vietnamese children as we!! -that we hope to communicate," Miss LaSpada co n!inll('d. For the prisoners, I.ht athletes seek Mme heller assurancet'I of their well being, maybe mare mail, and hopefully the telease of the sick and wounded. High School In structor Admits Student Drug Sale By ARTHUR R. VINSEL curvaceous. Utian.halred 1peclal pollce ot llM o.11Y l'11tt 1111t operative known as Mrs. Teeny-Bopper Facing a maximum term of five years were used to gather evidence against lo life in prison, 1 Costa Mesa High Polk. which police considered conclusive. School business teacher who turned hi s His trembling voice i.!l recorded on tape ta.lenU to illi cil moonlighting today ad· during two transactions in which LSD milted he sold drugs lo students. tablet.'! were so\rl le both prosecution Carlton Pulk. 29. pleaded guilty to two witnesses, it can now be revealed. coun ts of salt of narcotics and dangerous "All we want is to make sure he can drug s be.fore Judge Beach Vasey In 1AB never teach a,sain:' remarked Costa Angelea County Superior Court it Loni Mesa Police Detecli\'t Sgt. John Regan Beach. after the verdict. He was ordered to return Aug . 20 for Cost.a Mesa invt.stigators had Polk senttnclng. under surveillance for months before ob- Polk had been scheduled tor jury trial talnihg the crucial evidence required to Friday .but 1'?1fU oo"4Jnuecf;;Jeading .~· .... ~dl'uR flft,;!l\afll:& •"-> specultiti<in he wWld ch8ng'e his earlier He was arrested ·at home because the plea of Innocent. tr1nsacUons occurred there, although There wr.s no discussion or pleading for they or any others were set up through leniency 1t the time. campus contacts. "JIJ.!l a atralght plea of gullty," uld a Maximum sentence Imposed •under the court clerk in 11umming up the pro-la.w for ule of narcotics or d1ngtroua 'ceedlngs which took only a few momenl11. drugs la flvt year• to life in state prlaon. Polk Yiu arrested April '11 1t hit Bel· Offenders convicted for the first of· mont Shore bachelor p&d. which was fense are generally given lesser terms. allegedly a popular spol. where aome of Polk, a teacher at C.OSta Mesa HJgh his ~1ustang campua 1tudenls con· Sctlool for three years. ·"'WM &usptnded eregat.td. I Immediately by Newport -Mesa Unified An 18-year~ld student and 1 (See TEACHER. Page !) --.. " r • • I Bell Systmu,~ Settlement Seen Today? WASHlfl.'G TON I UPI) -Negotiators for the Bell System and a half million telephone workers have reached a set- tlement to end a six-day long nationwide phone strl ke, inside sources said today. The sources l'laid an aMouncement possibly could come as early as a 3 p.m. EDT news conference called by the Com- munications \Vorkers of America. There were indications. the sourcu said. that phone workers might return to work before a comp!i caled two-week toni r?.ti flcaUon process is completed. Terms of lhe reported new cootract for American Telephone and Telegraph Co. repairmen, installers and operators were not disclosed. The main issue in the ~pute had deen wage increases and how !hey would be spent. In going on strike, !he union argued the company's proposals would widen differences in pay between me.n and women employes and perpetuate regional and job pay differentials. Meantime, negotiators f« postal unlolll' and the new postal service alao were reported near agr~ment an a contract far 750,0l.XI U.S. mailmen aft.er ·• mara.thon bargaining iession that lasted beyond 24 hours. Weatlter The wealhe.rma.11 sees variable high clouds today and Tuesday along the Orange Coast, with temperatures st 70 along tbe beache! rising lo 85 inland. Lows along the ~t eo1 66 inland. INSIDE TODAY . Orange. Cou_tt.~U ~iy~~·ef mijf.. : , &1iry'1,;wn,:10ho are eitht'r' rfeTu prisoner of war or who arc mis1tng in action, tDait and ke~ the homt fire• burning, Set 1tory, Page 14. 111111• . . " . • -• ... ,~ • ,.,.......,, .._ • C1t1i.r"l1 • o .... c......., • ClltalflM . ... SYl'1'11 ,.,._ .. CM let n ·-..... 0.-!JI Nl'lkn • •1tet1 ..,.th .. .......... "'" • ·-.. •11Mf11l-I u --.. ,,_ " ·-• -" ._... ..... tf.11 """ LMMrt " --• I DAJlY PILOT s Pilot"s Gamble Fatal Air Racer Killed Trying to Land Flaming Fighter from Wlrt Servlctl arAY -A ptlo( 1'lh:I gtmbltd an tand- tng and lo6t wu killed Sunday when his bllz.ing Beatcut era.shed during lhe U.S. CUp Air Race.s, as an announcer begged F antily Theme Enhanced '71 County Fair Cotton C'andy puffs vanis.htd, twinkling midway lights darkened, and popcorn poppers stilled as the last of the record crowd of 89,038 people filed out of the Orange COUDty Fairgrounds Sunday night. ~ing Ult day, 17.321 , people had visited the final day of the six-day rUil, nearly twice as many a5 had visited clos· ing day last year. A fair 9J>Okesman attributed this year's record tumout to the "family theme" which began with the largest crowd ever assembled in the amphitheater -3,000 - to hear singer Pat Boone last Tuesday. Young people flocked to the fair ~ year to hear musical offerings ranging from rock to dixieland. Saturday, a diaper derby and twins contest reemphasized the family fare planned for the 1971 edition ef the Orange County Fair. But despite the shift in ~pha!is, reminders of the agricultural heritage o{ the yearly event were e verywhere. The rural olympics on Saturday, including ""'atermeloo eating, pi g calling and hay baling contents proved to be crowd pleasers. Proof I.hat oranges !till grow in Orange County came wi th the gift of an Irvine Valencia orange to every fairgoer. Future Farmers ef America and Four~ H members ccmpeted in exhibits o[ their farm projects. Steve Cookson of the Brea-Olinda FF'A. took top hono rs in the sheep div ision of the li vestock competitien. His 100-pound grand champion Hampshire sheep netted him $375 in the livestock auction. Jeanne Sellers of the Fullerton FFA entered a 1,135 pound Charolais·Hereford Cross which earned the grand champion award and netted her $1,702.50 in the livestock auction. A total er $106,345 changed han& as the prize livestock -435 animals in all - went on the County Fair auction block. The city of Costa Mesa display, entered by the Costa Mesa Chamber of Co~ merce, too k top honors in the city-county exhibits in the agriculture and com- munity building. The Costa Mesa entry won a $250 first place award in competition with entries from 14 cities, five coUilties and four Grange chapters In Orange County. The display represented the agricultural and industrial features of Costa h1esa. Final paid allendance figures totaled 1'1,119 this year compared with 68 ,438 last year. The nert highest year in fair history was in 1956 when 69,602 persons paid to enter the fairgr00t1ds. The following is the daily attendance breakdown for this year's fair: Tuesday, 6,271 ; Wednesday, 7.800; Thursday, 20,182 for Kids' Day; Friday, 15,592; Saturday, 21.872. and Sunday, 17.321. From Page I TEACHER ... School District Supt. Vi'illia.m Cun· ningham following his arrt~t. He had been (rte on $6 ,250 bail since the raid on his apartment, v.·here police said they confiscated relatively small amount.s er marijuana and variou.s drug pills. t.SD included. OU.M•• co.t.n DAILY PILOT H ............. -... ..... ... Ca ,. oa.utG• COAST PUIL1SfflNO COM'Nt'I ••Mrt N. w •• d Pr•....W ..... PW! ....... J,,1,; k. C11,ley \'ic.e l"AllMll .....i O-.i M__. n.,,, ..... :w: ••• a llllt• lh•"''' A. M11•phtee Mt .... lnl Edt- Cherlet 1-4. l M t -ich1•d P. Ntll AMhlenl Me!let1"9 Edi~ ....... CM .. llMM: :UO _, ••Y Slrfft ............. '"""; »'3 •-t levt_,,. .._.. hldl~ ?ft ,_, ·-MIMI~ ltKf'; 1111~ l•dl toui.vt ... 1411 (ltfn•llt ; .1DS Hor11! I! I C..Olrle AMI . l>AllY PILOT, ""'"' wllldl h "°'*,.. ,... N.,...,,nn . It """"'"'°"' t1111y •toiPI ,...,. ..,, ... ..,., ....... ,..,,. .... L....,u. leKI>. ,._I hKi'. °'919 -.i, H1111lltoflen •.cri. ,_..Ill ..... ,.,., ..,, ,......,. .. , c.,.l1tr-t"tll '""'hlltO.. ,..., wllll -"'9i.n.I .. II ..... '.W:'-1 ,... ... ~ fWefll 16 •I m W•I ...., l lrWI, C...• Meu. , ......... 11141 '4J-t)J1 c1-"'" A•-"tlllt "41·1•1• S. C ....... Al D1'"' a11t: T1l11•1• 4fl-44JI C~I, 1'71, 0•~ CNll """'IAl>l'llt C-.0J. ... _.. •'"'ti"• ~t""!•t­ ........ 1 -""' " eo • ...,1.-11 ,_.,..., _, " .... •'"'"' .. ,,_, ..... , ,... ............ ~llM -· i....,. Ci.ti ,_ ........ ti N ....... IU(fl '"" c..tt .... <Alllemle. ~.;,. ... fW Utrlfr U,l'J ,_ ... ,,, ~ IOltM 12.'1 ,.,. ... l'f'J fl'llll .. ry .. ,lfle, ..... •1.n -... him lo bail out and U,000 spectalors watched silently. Mike Geren. 32, or Kansas City, Pt1o., was found dead in the shattered, charred wreck.age of the Wcrld War JI Navy Polic e Se ek Hit·run Dog The California Highway Patrol is looking for a hit-run dog. Patrolman Ron Gast ~polled four small dogs on the Newpor t freeway near Chapman Avenue in Orange Saturday. He managed to carry lhree or the animals off the free way but when he tried to catch the fourlh he was bitten on both hands as the dog \vtestled \ts way to freedom . The CHP issu('d this bulletin: ''Wanted: a foot high. shaggy gray mongrel with black and while markings." If the dog is not fotmd. Gast wUI have to undergo rabies shots. From Page J RECALL. • • Supervisor Vw'illiam J. Phillips of the Third District. The drive aga.insl Battin and Phillips appeared to lose steam several weeks a go and the move against Baker was a bandoned because of a law preventing his ha vi ng to face a recall within six months of the re-election in January. "We were able to get 8,000 of the 10,800 signatures we needed," Swenson recalled. "We had to stop then because ol the legal technicality, but oow Baker is eligible for recall."' Swenson said that no ot.her leaders or the Citizens Referendum and Recall Commlttee v.•ere involved in the present campaign against Baker. Asked who else was leading the curre.i t drive, Swenson replied, ''it's basically just the two or us.'' TI"le news sheet contains reprocl uctiolUI of newspaper steries and headlines and a cartoon of Baker which brands him as "double bill Baker" and sho1o,·s him tak, ing money from two taxpayers' pockets for legislative trips. Service Station Robbed Twice Within 7 Hours When a service station is held up by an armed bandit, that's news. But when the same station is held up twice in one night. that's a calamitv. John J. Bradley of ·Fullerton was the first victim in the Texaco service station at 11962 Beacll Boulevard, Stanton. At 9:20 p.m. Sunday, a tall thin man with long blond hair \\'a\ked in a nd demanded money . He hacked up his requrst \l'ilh a .45- caliber blue steel automatic pistol, police reported. Bradley ga1·e him SJOO and he walked away. At 4,30 a.m. today. a tall. heavier man ll:ith black halr walked into the same service station. Hr told attendant Jesse Whittaker of Garden Grove where the money ""·as hidden. indicating lo police that he had carefully cased the place. Because of his knowledge Qr hidden money he got $150 and he. too. walked away. No car was seen or heard during either holdup, police said. fi.ihter all.er it plun&ed to earth. He had a parachate b>Jt chose not to use it. trying to limp back to the runway at Brown field, v:here the 1.000 mile race · around a 1&-mile pylon.marked course was held. "Gel out now .•. get out or the thing •. , " the announcer screamed over the PA system as Geren tried to bring the plane -smoke and flames pouring from its engine -in safely. Climbing upward to about 1,000 feet in an apparent attempt to stop the fire, Geren lost the gamble when tht F8 Bearcat broke apart and fell . The \vreckage smashed int o a vacant area about four milts from the eastern end of the ruov.·ay, starting a series of grass fires due to a spray or flaming gasoline. Despite the tragedy, the JOO.lap race, only nine laps from the finish 1o,•hen Geren crashed . continued. Merced orthodontist Dr. Sherm Cooper look first plact, averaging 33fl.I\ mile:1 per hour in his British·built Sea Fury He also v.·on last year'.s U.S. Cup Air Race at Mojave. Serond place v.·1IU1er \\'as Frank Sanders. of Santa Ana . flying another Sea f·ury. v.'ho clocked 324,03 miles per hour on the average, according ta race of. ficia\s . Third place winner wa! Darryl Creenamyer, of San Fernando. at 320 1nl les per hour, while lhr~ plane.s among t he 16 entered dropped ou t due to mechanical failure. The Federal Aviation Admi!Ustralion said an investigation is planned into what caused Geren's plane to burst into flames and finallv crash. ·•1t was'like a ball of fire fl ying through the air,'· said one witness. Some theorized Geen -a last-minute replacement for the scheduled pilot - \\'as aboul l.o bail out and merely attained a safe altitude to de so when the Bearcal broke up. No radio communication with the an- nouncer who kept shouting at him to get out ef the blazing aircraft was reported. Officials of the sponsoring American Pylon Ra cing Association said they had l ittle background information to offer on Geren, a TWA pilot. Fro•n Page 1 NIXON ... Peking. Ziegler said the new policy would be announced by Rogers. The President first met \\·ilh the Congressional leaders for an hour and a haH. then l'.'ith his cabinet for an hour to give details of his trip. scheduled to take place before May I of next year. Senate Democratic Leader r..1 i k e ~1anslield and RepUb\ican Leader Hugh Scott told reporters that the Pr~ident asked the lawmakers to refrain from un~ necessary speculation or legislative ac· lion pertaining to China in the months ahead. Related story Page 4. Mansfield observed that there was "a lot of preparatory groundwork still to be laid" before Nixoo goes to Peking. possibly shortly after the first of the year. .. The President will have to v.·alk very carefully and Congress very responsibly so lhere will be no slip in any way that could hinder the (summit) meeting and the ~sibi!ity of realizing the hope of the President on his journey for peace ,'' J\1an.tj'ield said. Colrnunisl Under goes O per a tion in P eking NE\V YORK (LiPJ) -J\ew York Times Vice President and Columnist James Reston has undergone surgery for acute appendicitis in Peking 1o,•hile traveling in Communist China. the Times said today. The newspaper said Reslon's ""'lfe reported the operation was successful and there were no comphcauons. OCC Garbenstangel Challenge Accepted Golden West College today accepled the challenge of Orange Coast College and there will be a Collegiate Di\'ision in the \\·orld'~ first Build a Better Garbenstange\ Contest and lntemalional Rally(', Darrell Ebert. fine arts instructor, spoke for the Huntington Beach col\egt when he said ewe v.·ill field a team to build "a garbenstangel like no one has ever sttn." He said his students have •·secret plans they are sworn not to reveal ·· Ebert's gargenstangelers will be pilled against team!I from Orange Coast College coached by Bill Abernalhy. an inslruttor ln OCC's technology division, and Dick Hemandei. director of speclal programs for minority student~ .11l OCC. Abern.11thy And Hernandez. were fir11l lo organ.ire team11 of garbenstangeler1 to build Rube Coldbergian contraptions for the summerlime silly season event to t>f' ro-sponsored July 28 through 31 by the DAILY PILOT And Scuth Coast Plaia. The co-sponSClrS have agrttd lo furnish competition lee shirt! for the learns lnd will pul up !pedal prizes for lhe be~t garbenstangel built by them on lCK'Rtion at the carousel Court in South Coa.st Plata ~hopping center. No11ck Trophy Co. of Costa Ptfesa Is rle$iRninR a specull ptrpetual trophy which it will donate to lhl" Collegiate Division or the rontest. Casil prizes of $100 for Optn Division (:itl,1 ~gesl and $75 for Junior Division (through 12 )'tars of :ige) will be offered. along with trophie! and merchandise prizes from tht South Ccast Plaza retailers. Garben~angtls either bllill or recon- ditioned for digp\ay and con1pefition by the tonte);tant~ "'ill be exhibited and Q\){'ta!ed on Thtirsday, Friday and Satur4 day 1July 29 throu~h 31 ). The comrdy le:\111 or Skiles and Henderso n already h;is agreed to serve a~ judges of entries in all lhree division.a of lhe contest. The C{ln1ics will be assisted and kibitz.. ed by Gene Tardy, Golden West College: graphic arls instructor and builder over the pa st 10 zears of what he calls Do Nothing Machines. But ('.ene's machines. recognized by the Garbenstangel Rallye's promoters for what they really art -garbemtangels - v.·ill be on continuous display throughout the great Rallye. In fa cl. a mechanic.al man buil t by T11rdy l'.'nd rensmed GRry Garbenstangel for his appearance at South Coast Plata will tmC('.! the Do Nothing Machine ahow. f.1ore judges ere expected lo bt an. nounced later. And, according lo OCC and G\VC spakt smen. the Cclltgiale Division ch11tlen1tf' is still open If other schools would like to eoter the com· l'lf'tltive arerni. "Yl'e'll ga rben~tangel tht'm to dtath," declRrtd ont Orange Coagt College 1pokC!Sn'lin. •·We're rtady for all com· tr~." DAILY l'ILOT lltH l'llt'" Another View Police Nab 7 Marine s On Drugs Seven C.:amp Pendleton Marines fa ce charges of possession of marijuana and dangerous drugs today aiter a routintl t'heck by San Clemente police turned into a ful!·scale ra id early Sunllll)1• The arrests took place al 5 a.n1. after 1 patrolman stopped to in ve stigate a mao allegedly rummaging !hrough a car. l\loments later ether ptitrohnen arth•ed in tronl or an aparlrnent building at 119 <.:oronado Lane and assertedly smelled n1arijuana smoke t·onung frtm a oe.arby apartment. Those arrested -all h1ar1nes fro m Camp Pendleton. 1o,ere :'lllchael Charles 1-liles. 20 •• John Philip Werner, 20: John Angeles, 21 ; ~lichael ~Fuller, 21 : John Lee F'arn1er. 20: Richard J1y ::ittang, 23. and Omar Evelt Hiles, 20. Inside the apart1nent officers ~aid they found marijuana plants growing 10 a pot and a glass jar. a quantity of assorted pill& and capsules wbich were being analyzed early today. and paraphernalia allegedly used to smok e marij uana. Some of the l'Ontraband was retrieved from a toilet where one of the Marines assertedly tried lo destroy evidence, of- ficer claim. All seven men v.•ere scheduled for formal charges today in South Orange County 1.1unicipal Court. Gaggle of amateur photographers focus on "Jan A-48" during Su n· day's photo club_ day at the Orange County Fair. She kept them up a tree about her identity. Note feminine photog at lefl. She wasn 't wasting any film. Several of the Marine! were from a medical battalion at Camp Pendleton. Others v.·ere members of a health and safety company, officers said. South Viet Gove1·nment Police Checking Leads on Beach Pervert Suspect Re11ews Cease-fii·e Bid From "'ire Services SAIGON -The So uth Vietnamese government today renewed its proposal for a cease-fire and the reunification elections with North Vietnam that Presi· dent Ngo Dinh Diem refused to hold 16 years ago. Although both the government and the U.S. Embassy spoke sman said it was a reaffirn1ation of proposals made in 1969 and July 8, by South Vietnam. the rene\val of the bid took on new signifi, <'ance in light of other moves a1n1ed at a peaceful settlement These include a new seven-point peace packagt put rorth by the Viet Cong at the Paris peace talks July I and President Ni.J:on's forthroming visit to mainland China to confer with Red Chinese leaders. f\feanwhilr. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said Sunday the United States must maintain a "realistic deterr('nt'' force while strengthening its Asian allies in a "new era of negotiation." The Defense Secretary talked to N'porters Sunday night. al Andrews Air Force Base, Md. after returning from a Out of Control Car Kills Girl A 9.year-0ld Orange girl v.·as killed Saturday y,·hen a car v.•ent out of control and hit he r v.·h1le she \\'as playing on the sidewalk in front or her home. The Orange ccnunty Coroner·s Office !;aid Patricia Ka lvesm;:i.ki. daughter or f\tr. and J\1rs. \\'il!ian1 Kalvesmaki, of 2227 VIila Real Avr . v.•as dead on arrival at Chapn,an General Hospital. The c;:i.r which killed her was driven by a 17-year-o!d boy. Police said it v:ent out of control on a ste-ep downgrade and roll- ed over before slamming into a borne next door. lo.day tour of Japan and South Korea. Laird said he notified leaders of the two countries that the United States re- mained rommitted to the "two main pillars'' of the Nixon doctrine -main- taining its own strategic and ronventional inilitary deterrent in Asi a w h l l e strengthening U.S. allies there. Al the daily breifing for news cor· respondents, U.S. Embassy spokesman Roy W. Johnson was asked if tile United States saw anyttung new in the South Vietnamese proposal. "So far, 1o,·e have n't found anything new In it." Johnson repl ied. "It is a reaf· firmation of a statement made in 1969. I t Is also a reaffirmation of two points of the .five,poin t proposal made July 8 in Par1.<i. We see nothing new in it." There was no in1mediate comment from the Slate Department i n \Vashington. However, sources familiar \vith the peace negotiations said they ex. pect North Vietnamese and Viet Cong en· voys to rebuff the Saigon proposal. The latest South Vietnamese statement v.•as made in a communique issued by the f oreign Ministrv to mark the 17th an· niversary or the· 1954 Geneva agreements that ended the French war in Indochina. divided Vietnam at the 17th Parallel and provided for reunification elections. The South Vietnamese government refused to sign the agreements but observes the an· niversary as National Grief Day. The communique today called for •·reunification of the two zones by means of general elections in bo th North and South Vietnam under 1ntemational supervision.,. "\Vhile wa iting ror reunification." the communique said. ''the tv.·o sides can meet to explore the development of rela- tionship between the two zones. "Pending lhe reunification or the coun· try, which would take som(' time to materi11lize. at least the tv.·o zones should be able to coexist peacefully to promote \\'eifare and happiness for all the people.'' Huntington Beach pc!ice !<>day are folJ01o,•ing up leads reported this weekend in their search for a man wahted for rape, kidnaping. sex perversion and chlld molest. Detective Sgt. t.Ion1y McKenn-0n said his division has received 17 calls since Friday when they released a description of the suspect. ~ He said 2Jt the leads are being checll:ed thoroughly by a 20-man team of in· vestigators. The suspect is wan1ed for the assault or two girls on July I and 8 in the vicinity or Edison High School. Capt. Grover L. Payne, detective com· mander, said the two girls, who are between the ages of 12 and 16. wert riding bicycles at the time they were con· fronted by the suspect who was on foot One ·wu, hospitalized following lhe at- tack. The suspect Is a male caucasian bet1o,·een 25 and 30 years of age, possibly yeunger. He is about five feet 10 inches ta ll and weighs 161.l to 165. He has bro"'" hair which curls at the sides and possibly ci. receding hair line in front. He also has a moustache. Pa yne said lhat on one occasion ht' wore a strav; hat Y.'ith a narrow brim and no band and on the other he was ""'earing a blue basebaU cap with the letters ''LA" in v.'hi te. Detecti\'l'S are asking anyone w1Lh In- formation regarding this mM to call them al 536,5352. Anaheuu I\in gs n1en Win Drrnn Award The Anaheim Kingsmen placed third Sunday in the $18.600 \Vorld Open Drum and Bug le Corps 0.lmpetiti(ln in Lynn, ~1 ?.~~- F'ir.it place \rent to The Lancers or Revere. J\1ass .. and the Vanguards of SMta Clara. received second priie. lll·T ·TIGHT MOXEY IHD IHlllTlON Browsing hOun from 9 to 1 dally P to ' Stt. Diamond Earri11gs , ............ h s395 tot•I -'t~t . ht le 141{ While 5UAIANnlD . ..... TO A,1'U.llE AT 40% MOii ---NEW AND USED ITIMS----· DIAMONDS .•• to ... GUITARS STEREOS ••• to .•• GUNS CAMERAS ••• to .•• TOOLS ANTIQUES ... to ... TAPES ALL AT VERY LOW PRICES DOM RACITI OUR MOST UNUSUAL OIAMOND GUARANTEE e W-. 'f•• M, • 41--' t-.. •• wlll t__... ,.. .. dHi--4 tel .,,.... .. 40.,_ MOil tltall yee ,_i; fOt It 91' .,_ .._, ..... C1t11 ,., d• .. ••II .._.: ..._., COMPAll. 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • RND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SELL. TRADE 1838 NEWPORT BLVD COME IN AND BROWSE AROUND • PHONE 646·7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -lttwtlft Harbot & l•oadway ... • 1. I I' I . ' I I ,, lo I I' I 1 , ' San Cle111ente -• Today's Fblal Ca EDrTION VOL. 64, NO. 171, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES • IXOll 'Routine' Cheek Marines Seized On Drug Counts Seven Camp Pendleton ?o.1arines lace charges of possession -01 marijuana and dangerous drugs today after a routine check by San Clemente police !urned into 11 full·scale raid early Sunday. The arrests took pl11ce al 5 a.m. after a iia trolman slopped tn investigate a man allegedly rummaging through a car. Moments later other patrolmen arrived In front of an apartment building al 119 Coronado L<ine and asscrtedly smelled marijuana smo ke coming from a nearby apartment. Those arrested -all ~arines from Camp Pendleton, \\'ere i\1ichacl Charles Miles. 20 : John Philir Werner, 20 ; John Angeles, 21 ; Michael Lee Fuller, 21 ; John Lee Par mer. 20: Richard Jay Strang. 23, and Omar Evell Hiles, 20. Inside the apa rtment officers said they round n1arijuana plants growing in a pot .end a glass jar, a quantity of assorted pills and capsules which were being analyzed early today, and paraphernalia allegedly used lo smoke marijuana. Some of !he contraband was retrif'Yed from a toilet "'here one of the Marines asscrtedly tried to destroy evidence. of· ficer claim. AU seven men ""'ere scheduled for formal charge! today in South Orange County Municipal Court . Several oI the Marines were from a M urine F ncing Snnity Hearing In Rape Case A San Clemente Marine charged with the attempled rape of a pair of female hitrhhikers near San Ooofre y,•i ll face a Superior C<:iurt sanity hearing Thursday in San Diegn. Sgt. Eugene Lamoreaux . 29. of 2.15 Monterey Lane, was arrested on the char11es in lale June after the lwo yriung p-ir\s totd of being picked up in San Juan Capi~trann and driven to the secluded San Onofre area in San Diego Counly . The l\1arine allegedly attempted to fore£' the 11irli; to disrobe, bu! they fled . Lamoreaux pleaded innocent ro the charge~ a\ his arraignment in O~anside ~1unicipal Court. Only Ju!y Ii , the same court niled the ~larine sane and flt to stand trial "n the charg~s and increased ball from S6.250 to $13.500 . San Diego Superinr CAurl .Judge Roscoe '1.'i\key is scheduled to coriduc! the san11y hParing Thursday. IF the upper court finds Lamoreaux legally sane. he y,•jJI be remanded to Ocesnside for a pre liminary hearing to detennine if he will stand trial. Ex -senator Succumhs WASHINGTON (AP) -Former Sen. Gerald P. Nye (R·N.0.), a frequen t critic nf Greal Britain and an opponent oi American involvemenl in World War II, has died at age 78. His wife, Marguerite, said Sunday that Nye died Saturday in Georgetown University Hospital aft.er surgery for vascular difficulties. Neiv Proposal medical battalion at Camp Pendleton . Others were members of a health and safety compan y, officers said. Pa y Increases, Annexing Bid Face Council Pay raises and an annexatinn study are again on the agenda for the San Juan Capi!trano City Council tonight at 7 o'clock in the city hall. The council will again consider whether or not to grant a cost--0f-living increase to city emp!oycs. They voted Monday to limit any increase to four percent or less. The council will also discuss a request from the C<ipistrano Beach, Dana Point and San .Juan Capistrano Chambers of Con1merce for an in-depth study on the annexation of the two coastal com· munities. Questions to be answered include the cos t of the study, whether or not the city st.aff or an out.side consultant :should make it. possible financial assistance for the study from the communities involved , and 1vhether or not there i5 enough in· tercst in the annexation to warrant the study. Girls Lose Food Supply to Thief For thousands of San Clemen6P. residents and visitor:s, the weekend's fiesta y,•as fun, but local girl scouts found ii somewha t of a disappointment Sunday. During the hours that the midv,,a y was closed for the night SQmeooe broke into the group 's boolh and stole a supply of food Police said the I.heft at Old Plaza Park y,•as discovered shortly aFler noon Sunday v.·hcn volunteers opened the booth for business_ The m1~s1ng supply of ho1 dogs. buns ::ind punch y,•as \'alued at $10. officers said. WATCH FOR YOU R NA!tlE AS WINNER The DAILY PJLOl' today offers the fi rst of 200 free tickets to be given to readers for the 1971 edition of Orange Co unty's annual Home and Garden Show . The :show opens July 311 and continues through Aug. II at Anaheim Convention Center. Ticke~ will be given away at the rate of 10 pairs a day for 10 pnbllcation days. Watch the classified advertising section (all classHication:s ) for special ads listing names of ticket winne rs. If your name is there, you win one of 20 tickets lo be given each da.y of the DA1LY PILOT giveaway. . " . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ·;,1. MONDAY, JULY 19, 197 !" TEN CENTS au ti on • r1 China Visit '~ Goals Told To Solons CYMBALS CLANGED AND HORNS BLARED IN FIESTA LA CRISTIANITA PARADE E•'.'".J°lortul .~I lo!<al ,,$1'.rlnot• ~"'. )Y•ll,R•p•!Mnled ·ln. llt.h An~1111~Eve~t -~ • ~l l H .. ·' '1 \, ' ' • , • • •' I• Cle1nente· Parade ·nest' By JOHN VALTERZA 01 ~ Dl ll'f ~11•1 lltll Saa Clemente 's fiesta banners were coming down throughout the city tOOay after one of the best celebrations in years, said chamber of commerce of· ficials. Saturday's large parade was the highlight of .the three-day celebration. Local floats dominated the list of win- ners in the procession ·which tra veled al ong Avenida Del Mar and El Camino Real to the delight of about '40,000 nnlookers. Revised Density Plans To Ease Aegean Squeeze A homeowners revnll against plans nf the developers of Aegean Hills in the i;outh El Toro area ma y have been nipped in the bud by :ippeasement action on the part of lhe developer. Orange County Planning Department officials said today that the. Alscot Development Company will present plays Tueaday ~howln,£ a st!l!IJ1'1 ~ucUoo in the number of townhouse unit! per acrt in the 419-acre development norttiwe,Jt of La Paz Road . Original plans called for from 14 to 20 units per acre. They have been re\'ised downward to 8 to 10 un its per am!. a demity only slightly higher than single family homes. Planning offlciaJs also said the revi6ed plan shows 14 acres of local parks, com-. pared to five planned ~ore. The hearin1 is aet for I :30 p.m.· Tue~ day. Tht parade, three-day c a r n J v a 1 , midway and schedule of special evenl'i all were organized under a new format this ~ar -less emphasis on sponsoring cllamber of commerce manpower. and more from local community :service groups. Chamber Manager Robert Evans said the idea ·"worked fantastically well." Of· ficials at the group have said they ex· pe<-t R fuJl.Oedged fiesta AS&OCiatlon lo assume the task next year. IX>zens or large trophies w e r e ~resented to the winnet:s in many categories in the parade. The awards. in· eluding the man-size sweepstakes trophy, all were bought through sponsorship fees rlon1tted by local businesses, clubs and in- dividuals. The Royal C<ivalicrs Youth band -a frequent wiMer in past pt1rades-won the S\\·eepstake.~ trophy again this year. The Diplomats band and marching W1it won !he seC'Ond-place. over-al! award. Sap Clemente's Municipal Band, which was !he firsl marching unit in the two- hotrr parade, y,•on lhe Mayor's Trophy. In the noat categories. San Clemente'11 Sister City Association won the best-use- of·lheme category. and the San Clemente Jaycees, presenting Fiesta Que en Barbara Cheatum and her court on a towering float. won the best local float category. Of!ter noat winners included San Juan Capistrano's Cha mber of Commerce, Knott's Berry Farm, the King Neptune Piesta and La Chri:stianita Pre-School. The latter entry was a large, moving sandcastle with preschooler1 waving greetings from the top. The theme of this year's parade ~·as ''Fiesta Fun Time By the Sea." Other winners included ; -Bands : the '11nd Army Band, St. Genevieve Hjgh School Band arid Ozzi!''s Chargers, all first-place in l he i r cak!gorie:s. -Drum Squads: Sequinettes. -Majorettes: Deb Stars. Sequinette!'I, Twirlers of Oi and Royal Cavaliers, 111 first-place winners. -Drum majors: Ozzie's Band , Glenga rry llighlanders. Diplomats. -Color Guards: Glengarry Highlanders and Royal Cavaliers. -Drill Team: U.S. Naval Training Center. Pace Setters, American Heritage and Royal Cavaliers. -Equestrian first-place winners In their respective categorie5 : Harvey Robinson. Dottie Prall. Joe Meade, Norma Reeves, George Schniede. Maria Johnson. Art Balcom, the California Rangers. Rand y Freeman, the Barton family and Laura Hontos . A total of 450 formal entries, Including thousands of participant.a were in the parade lineup. WASHINGTON (UPI) -P,,,.IM:il Nixon cautioned ranking CongresQonal end administralion leaders today agairut raising expect.ations that his plan £or a visit lo Red China might mean a.n early end to the Vietnam War. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler lald the. President made it clear in meetings with Denocratic and Republican Congressional leaders and with his cabinet lhat his visit to China was to "discuss matter! of mutual interest between the Peoples Republic of China and the United States.'' "He declined to speculate on the effeet these discusslon wHI have on any other matter and said such speculation would. not be helpful," Ziegler told reporters. Participants in the meeting echoed Ziegler's statement5. House Speaker Carl Albert said there was no suggestion from Nixon that the visit was tied to an end 10 the U.S. role in the Vietnam War. At Uie St.alt Department meanwhile, Japanese Ambassador Nobuhiko Ushiba said Japan and the United States planned to work to try to prevent ouster of Na· tionalist China from !he Unit ed Nations. Ushiba said following a meeting with Sec retary of State William P. flogers !hat the: objective of the United States 11•a9 "quite clear" that the United States wanted to keep Taiwan in the U.N. Thi!! United States wu expected at lea.st tacitly to glve· tt.a epproval to Rat Re4 China ln the world body. Ziegler said the President was expected' to reach a decision sometime this month regarding U.S. policy toward aeating Peking. Ziegler said the new policy would be announced by Rogers. The President first met with the Congressional leaders for an hour and a half, then with his cabinet for an hour to give details o{ his trip, scheduled to take place before May I of next year. Senate Democratic Leader M I k e Mansfield and Republican Leader Hugh Scott told reporters that the President asked the laWl"Q.i)kers to refrain from un~ necessary speculation or legislative ac· tion pertaining to China in the month! ahead. Related story Page (, Budget Paring Slated Tonight By Capo Bonr<l 1'rustees of !he Capistrano Unified School District will study ways to trim their S9.4 million budget al tonight's mee ting in Serra School, Capistran& Beach. Super intendent Truman 8 e. n edict presented a llst of 11lternatives to the board Monday, indicating possible Items for deletion. The board also will decide how It will use an additional windfall of $250,000 it will be recei vin g because of a recent rl.u in assessed valuations. Officials had made a conservative estimate about the lncre:ise in assessed valuatlon and were pleased la.st week to fi nd that their estimates had been low. . or .. ge Coast \\'eadaer Park Bond Package Eyed The weatherman see1 variable high clouds lOday ind Tuesday along the Oran&e Coast, with temperatures at 70 along the: beaches rising to 85 inland. Lows along the coast 60, &6 Inland. City Managfr Ken Carr will report on the possjb!e date for a new, AH·in--0~ parli:s bond package Wednesday -a measure which alread y has the unofflcial blessing of St1n Clemente City Coun- tllmen. Carr wj]J report kl councilmen the sug· gest!'d dales for 1 parks and rttreation iiackage -the ~ond one th is year - called in an effort to raise construction funds lor a new community clubhouse, 1 youth recreation cenlC'r, beACh Im. Provements and new neighborhood parlt.'I. The pfOPO.'C(I new bond issue would ha ve one notable differenct. councilmen each projed, the new election would In- volve one vote on •II four. The dtclsion c&me after h a r 1 h l crlliciMn. recently by 1 San Clemenlf: wpman complaining that only the clubhoost was proposed for C(lDSb'uction. Jn their own po:tt mortem of the. faitiJlg bond issue last April councilmen agreed that voters generally chooe ooe one of the four optioos, often defeating the others. Councilman 1'homas ·O'Kce.fe blamed tM fa ilure of the .lour revenue ~on "self ishness" am~ the voters. Jn the meanttme, f'.lf\ly mnn.ant.s of U'C matter of weeli:s. l'n the meantime, onl y remnants of the old landmarli: clu~e remain intact after wrec kers early \11st week removed the fire charred portions or the buildin& 11t Avenida Del Mar 11nd Calle Seville. Carr said l11te tast wttk that ~ proj. 1 • rcted Construction 1Wltng lime remains vegue until the fonnal c:ontracL wilb builder Ray McCulin is e:reculed. Wotk is expected to begin within a matter df weoeks. · The fUJld8 for the clubhouse. projfFt w~ . come from the city'I 1eneral tuDd ao-4 count. and woold be,piid Nck on a yetU'" I ly ba!i:s · from about~ $50,000 annually . ~ed rmn·a new~tnkent.tax rate m.' ~· Councilmen have . unofficially agreed that if U!e bood i.Mue were to pass and the du'bhol.IM bonds eold, the general fund would be ptld .bac k' and IJie rate woold either be rot. or Its revenue uted for other public works and recreation pnijtctl. ~ .AND'THERE 'WERE P)!ETTY GIRLS IN 'THE PARADE P1ttl Currey {W1vln9) ancl Ou.en &.rbtr1 ChNtum ' INSIDE TODAY Orange Count~ wive.t of mi!f. tal']/ men, who are either held pri.toner of war or who are mi.!.ti'ng in action, wait and keep th~ hotM firtt burni,.g, See &tor11, Paae 14. • Intl, ' ... "... . C.lltorlll• • ci.u1u.. .. ... <Miit• .u ci..1t1 *'tktl • ldll•ltl P1M ' ·~""" • ..._' » Pi-• M ... ,._ ,, Alltr ~ IJ -.. JMl..._I ,._ I Ori-COURIY t '1'1~ ,.,._ M 5-" V•lt ''"" ....... 21 Tt!wllMll a.. --.. w .. ftltf • -.-.. "'..., 1 .... W.rW ..... • 7 •; - Z DAILY PILOT MondQ, Jl,lff 19, 1'11 Po1111ibly Todafl Moulton Insiders Report Bell Strike End Unit to Use Toro Wate1~ WASHINGTON (UPI) -NegoU<itors for the Bell System and a half mi\lion telephone \\'Orkers have reached a set· Uement to end 11 six..(jay long naLlonwid~ p~ slrike. Inside aources said today. Family Theme Enhanced '71 County Fair Cotton candy puffs vanished, twinkling midway iight.s darkened. and popcorn poppers stilled as the last of the record crowd of 89,038 people filed out of the Orange County Fairgrounds Sunday night. During the day , 17.321. people had \•isited the fins.I day of the !iiix-day run, nearly twice as many as had visited cla&- ing day last year. A fair .spokesman attributed this year's rtcOrd turnout to the "family theme'' \\'llich began with the largest crowd ever assembled in the amphitheater -3,000 - to hear singer Pat Boone last Tuesday. Young pe<>ple flocked to lhe fair this vear lo hear musical offerings ranging from rock to dixieland . Saturday. a diaper derby and twins contest reemph~ized the famil y fare planned for the 1971 edition of the Orange County Fair. But despite the shift in emphasis, reminders of the agricultural heritage of the yearly event were everywhere. The rural olympics on Saturday. in cluding ... ·atennelon eating . pig calling and hay baling contents proved lo be crowd pleasers. Proof that oranges still grow in Orange County came with the gift of an lr\'ine Valencia orange lo every fa irgoer. Future Fanners of America and Four· H members competed in exhibits of their farm projects. Steve Cookson ol the Brea-Olinda FFA, took top honors in the sheep division of the li\'estock competition. His IQO..pound grand champion Hlllllpshi re sheep netted him $375 in the livestock auction. Water District, Firm to Build Big Reservoir The Moulton-Niguel Water District has entered an agreement \\'ith North American Roc kwell Corporation to build a ID-million-gallon reservoir near the rompany·s unoccupied Laguna Niguel plant. The wate r fa cility. to be con~turcted within the next year about one mile northeast of the plant. will prov ide \\"ater to all por11ons of !he Laguna Niguel area served by the district. OHicials of the dislrict estimate the ~vater storage facility \\'ill cost about SS00 .000. Under the agr~ment adopted last \veek \\'tth Nortil An1er1can Rock\\·ell. the district w1!l purchase somt i;e1-en acres of land at S.J.000 per acre from the aerospace firm . .A.n access road linking the reservoir 11•i1h the NAR plant v.·i ll be paid fnr jointly by the company and I.he water district. The main water pipe will be in· :o;t a!led under the access ro11d. OIANGI COAST DAllY PILOT OllANGt; co ... s1 l'Ul l ISHINC. COMl'AHY l.11.trt N. w.,d l'•n.d""t 1..i ""Oii"'"" Jtc~ II.. C~•l-v Vic• l'r9'lol""1 ••-' G-••I M-..r n. • .,.,, IC11~il Etl!Or Th•"'-•1 A, Mur•i.;., M1Mgl .. Et•,,... C h11l11 M. l oe1 l.ic l>.1rd '· Ni ll ..... 1.~1~1 MIMf l"Q l!G•:ll•• a..,... ..... Offk4i 211 For e1t A••"~• M•ilin'J •ddreu: ,.0 . l o• 11~6. 91652 s.. ca.-... Offko JOS North El c,"';,., Jt11I, 92•12 ~Offket ( .. ti Men · UC Wfl! l ly Strl'tf No..,.,•! I M<i.: Jlll NtWPflf"! l ou tv••d ~.,.,11,.1er1 ••Kii; 11111 .... "' a&ult~ff· l) ... IL Y l'l~T ....... """U1 lo -'-!"9 HOWl·l'rn i., ti ....,.ll!Mt di lly •• ,,,, ko.,_ .,, .. _.,..,_ .. tllMI fer L.....,1 '"'"· NtwW ! llltft, e.... -.. H'""'""'°" .._,., "-•"" v111oy, ,.., ci.n-1.1 CWll..,_ olll S,llllt llttll, •'-w1"' -'""'"°' .. 1..... ,.,IM .... l ,.-lflli..t ,1 ... 1 It •• a ""''" .. , srre.i. c..11 Mtw. TMJt I I C714) '4J'""'J21 Cl•lflM Ul....tt ..... 642·1671 ... c ...... Al • ., ........ : ftla••••• 4tl-44JI ....... .._. ,.. 1.,1:1wu111 f1l1.a IN 4f4-f4U ·t..,...ltf!I, !f11, °'"""" C...11 Jlvtlllt~ll'lt ~.,. He -11'11"111, lll11tl .. t-. OlllltWltl l'Mt1~ ~ H wr11_1, llorl'" f'MY W •~ wlllwl;I lf'ICl•I ,.,_ ""IMl9n ti <..,,.I -•. ........ t .. M "°""' ,.II .. H-1 toodl ONI '9ft1 M-. Cl"'-"'11. a..Mu! .. lllt liy urri.r :'It.a -"'"' ~ VpllJ d .11 "*"""'' ,..;IUi.ry ._llMtliwio, ll.fJ -!Mr. --r The sources said an announcement possibly could come a.s early as a 3 p.m, EDT news conference called by the Com- munications Workers of America. There were indications, the sources said, that phone \\·orkers n1lght return to \\'Ork before a complicated two-"·eek long reJ.ification proetss is completed. Terms of the reported new contract for American Telephone and Telegraph Co. repairmen, installers and operators were not disclosed. The main issue in !he dJSpute had deen \.\"age increases and how tlley would be spent Jn going on slrike, the union argued the company's proposals would \\'iden differences In pay between men and women employes and perpetuate regional and job pay differentials. Meantime, negotiators for postal unions and the new postal service also were reported near agreement on a contract for 750,000 U.S. mailmen after a marathon bargainihg session that lasted beyond 24 hours. But a snag develo~ in neg otiations aimed at ha lting a United Traruportation Union (UTU) strike against the Southern Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad. Related story p2.f!e s. Moulton-Niguel Officials Okay Tank Landscape Directors or the ~tou!ton·Niguel wate.r District hal"e agrttd to landscape the unsightly waltr tanks in A1ission Viejo . The four re~T\loir tanks will be landscaped by the district along a plan drawn up by the Mission Viejo Company. District officials l."!timate tht \\'Ork will cost about $25,000. The reservoirs to be covered "'ith shrubery are at Los A!isos Boulevard and Trabuco Road : between Valpariso and 1.Ape de Veg1: betwl.'~n Primavera and Preciados and at the intersection. o[ ~l arguerite and Oso park\.\•ays. The job \l'ill be paid for with distnct funds. although the t.liss1on Viejo Com- pany will handle the design specifications and will award the bid for the project. District officials hope to have the pro- ject completed within the year. After the landscaping has been completed, it \\·ill be maintained by the di5lrict. Borrotved T1•anis Ridden a t ram to the Festi~al or Arts yet? These jaunty vehicles were borrowed by the city of Laguna Beach from the community or Lake Forest. The festival formerly operated its own train services tn haul spectators. These are being operated by the city with the festh•al underwriting the operati on to the tune of $1 5,000. Thousands fl ocked to the first 1veekend of the art spectacular. Recall Campaign Opens Against Supervisor Baker By ALAN DIRKIN 01 tfo1 OlllJ 1>1i.1 S!1H A recall campaign, complete \\'ith a four·j)age tabloid lle\\'S sheel and pre!"! release. was launched against Orange County's Second District Supervisor Da vid L. Baker today. The ne\VS sheet features Four.inch deep headl ines "RECALL BAKER -WHY?'' on the front page. It claims that the supervisor has double billed taxpayers in travel expense .accounts, that more than 90 percent of his political conlributions com e from "major landowners and developers." that he has failed to protect public beach .acces,,, met secretly to in- crease his salary and favors general ;:i\·intlon. intludinR jel , operations at the Los Alamilos Naval Air Station. Baker's legislatil"e assistant Richard Ruiz thi.~ morning brand~ the charges as •·holP''ash and innuendo-" ··~tr. Baker has been in political o\f1ce eight years and in those eight years has left a public history." Ru iz said. "For lho.se interested in trutil all they ha1·e to do is look .at the record." The press release list.s '"'o men as co-- chairman of the Baker Recall Committee -Donald J. Swenson, :U, an Anaheim electronics t.echnician, and \\'i!liam S. McKnight. 39, Stanton, a salesman for a baked goods !inn. !\-1cKn.ight could not be reached this morning , but Swenson, who said he ran ai; the American Independent Party can· did11te in the last 69th Assembly Distri ct election said he and f\.1cKnight both work· ed in the Citizens Referendum and Recall Committee that was fanned earlier this year after counly supervi!IDrs reportedly ciiscll!Sed ra ising their salaries at .11 clos- ed door executive session. The meeting touched off a recall cam· paign againsl Baker. Board Chairman Robert Battin of the Firs\ District and Supervisor \Villiam J. Philhps or lhl' Third District. The dr1\·e agatnst Bal\1n and Phillips appeared to lose steam Sf-Vera) weeks ago and the move against Baker was .11bandoned because of a law preventing hi~ ha ving lo race a recall 11·lthin six months of the re-election in Jan11ary. Mission Hospital Opening Delayed U11til Au g ust Equipment installation at the ne1• ~lission Community Hospital in !\tission Viejo. scheduled to open today. has been slightly dela yed . .11 hospital spoke.sman rrported. The SS million facilit.v "'ill now tipen druing the rirst week in August. he said. The hospital. \vith 126 beds in it~ fir~l phase of contruction, is localed on a 15 acrr site just off Crown Valley Parkway. The spokesman said the unanticipated delay was caused primarily because some of the medical equipment has not yet arrived for installation. He noted that almost all of about 200 staff n1embers have been hired . The facility i~ being built by a group of 1n\·estors who have formed the !\lission Viejo '-ltdical Ulm· pany, To meel water demands during an up- coming road construction project , Moult on·NigueJ \Veter District director• have entered an agreement to use 11 v.a\er main belonging lo I.he El Toro Watrr District To use the line. '-1oullon·Niguel 11111 construe! a permanent transmission line between lJS ov.·n district and a water n1a111 in the £1 Toro 11·ater entit1• The 1110 v.·atcr lines to be connected ruu parallel to Los A!1sos Boulevard 111 l'o1isstun VieJo near the Burrough!! plant. Tiic line v;iH run under Uu~ stre-el 1'1oullon·r'\iguel Oistriel manager Carl l\yrnla explained the connection will be needed later in the year \\'hen the county road department begins to realign Paseo de Valencia In Laguna Hills. \Vhen the county is accomplishing the 1vork. the-~loulton·Niguef \\'Bier main running und£>r the street 1vilt bf! out of :o;ervlce. The county 1vould norma lly pay to ha1·r a ten1porary by·pass line t·on- .structed during the road project. However, Kymla said the distr ict felt a perma nent line connet'ling the two water district~ -\\'hich could serve as a by· pass hne -\\'as nerded in case or emergencies. The interconnection project will cost an estimated $22,000. The county will pay $14,000 of the price -\\'hat they normally \\'OU!d have paid lo construct the by-pass line. The project is expected to be com- pleted by November. Lag una Guards R eport 'Calin Surf Conditions Laguna Beach lifeguards had a relaci1·ely serene weekend as calm EUrf. sinall S\\'ells and ideal skin diving con- ditions nece.ssitated the rescue of only nine of the estimated 60,000 beachgoers. A. lifeguard spokesman said all of the rescues \\'ere minor and there \\'ere no ln· Jurirs reported. \\'a1er temperatures Saturd11y and Sun· rl:1~· remained al about 70 degrees, ht rrporte<L ·wilh ocean swells a mild one to thrrr feet in a ~outherl.v direction The-placid :.ea madr underwater '1o;1bilitr goorl and hunrlrcds of :-;k1n d1\·rrs took ad1·antage of Lhe ideal dh'ing t•onditions Thf" quirt 11'eekend "''as inlerrupll.'<f br1eny Sundav afternoon \\·hen an Ahalone Point skin di\"er called the Coasl Guard lo report he could not find his companion divf"r. Valley Preservatio11 Pla11 To Be Unveiled for CofC '"\\'e were able to gel 8,000 of the 10.800 signalW"es we needed." Swenson recalled. ''\Ve had to stop then be<::ause of the ltga1 lrchnicallty. but no1-1• Baker is eligible for recall." S11·enson said that no other leaders or the Citizens Referrndum and Recall Committee were involved in the present campaign again~! Baker Clemente Galler y To Show Works B y U.S. Torero Pamtings by 11n A1neric-a11 matador pills '-1exico's forenlo!>t bullfight sculptor and a prominent l...11guna Beach seascape artist will be blended into a spt>Cial ex. hibilion throughout August at the El Torero Frame Comp.any and Gal!ery 1n Snn Clemen!t . But "'hen lifeguarrl uruts froin Laguna Beach and Newport Beach arrived at the area. the mis~in.R; youth v:as quickly lound 1valk1ng along the beach, 3 Burg la ries Told in Lag una A bold proposal lo prMen·e fh·e South Orange County canyons in the ir natural .stale wilt be outlined at noon Tuesday for the Saddleback \'alley Chamber of Com· mt'rce. The presentation will be gi\"l.'n by 1.aguna Grttnbell repmenlatives McKay .\11lcheH and Paul Colburn. Tl',e noon luncheon meeting wi1! be held at l\of&n~ nings Reslaurant, 24031 El Toro Road in Lagun a Hills. Stretching as far inland as the Sad· dleback Valley, tile flve canyons form a chain beiinning .11t !\ferro Beach north ol taguna Beach. The chain reaches inland up Aliso Creek to Codes Comers and !hen doubles back to Al.Jso Beach lo the south of Laguna. AL the heart of lhe proposal is thr 500- a<'re .S~can1ore Hills area at I.he in· !~section of El Toro and Laguna Canyon !loads. Tht natural areas in\"otved in the Greenbelt proposal include Aliso, \Vood. El Toro and Laguna Canyons and !he Sycamore Hills lriangle. The Greenbelt committee \s now al· tc-1npting to raise funds for the purchll.'ll': of Lhe properties. OCC Garbenstangel Challenge Accepted Golden \Vest Colle(le today acctpted the <'hallenge of Orange Coast Collrge and there will be a Collegi1te Division In the v.·orld's first Build a Beller Garbf:nstangel Conte51 and International Rallye. Darrell Ebf:rt, fine arts instructor, ~poke for the Huntington Beach college "·hen he said GWC "'ill field a team to build "a garbenstangel like no one has evrr seen.·· He said his students have "secrtl plans they are sworn not to reveal ." Ebf:rrs gargenstangelers will bf: p1tttd against teams from Orange Coa~t College coached by Bill Abernathy, an instructor in occ·1 t.tchnolo1Y division, and Dick Hernande!. director of special programs for minority student.II 1t OCC. Abernathy and Hernandez "''ere first to organize teams of 1arbenst1ngeler1 to build Rube Goldbergi1n ronlrapllona for the 1ummertime ailly stalOn event to be ro-gpon..t0 red July 2$ tbrough 31 by the DAILY PILOT and South Coast Piil.i. The co-sponsors hive 11rttd to tumlah competition tee shirt.I for the teams and will put up spttial priies for the btst gar beratangel built by them on loc.1tlon 11 the Caroutel Court in South Co11t f>lau shoppl n( center. Noack Trophy Co. of Costa Mesa Is dc1 lgnlng a 11prcl1l perpetual trophy wh ich II will donate to the Collegiate Olvlslon of the contest C11.,h prius of SIOO for Open Divia!on (a.11 age~) 11nd t7~ for Junior Dlvl.slon <through 12 year!'i of 11£1') "''Ill he offrr'°d, -~ along with trophies and merchandise prizes from the South Coast Plua retailers. Garbenstangels either built or recon- ditioned for display and competition by the contestants will be exhibited and oper1ted on Thursday, F'riday and Satur· day <July %9 throui::h 31 \. The comedy tean1 of Skiles and Jlenderson already has agreed to serve as judgeR of entries in all three divislona of the contest Thi! comics will be assiRted and kibitz ... ed by Gene Tardy, ('.olden West College graphic arts instructor and ,builder over the p11st 10 tears or what he callt Do Nothing Machines. But Gene's machlnts, rtc01niud by the Garbenstangel Rallye's promoter1 ror what they rt:ally art -garbt:nstangels - will be on conUnuou,, display lhroua:hout the ~al Rallye. In r•ct, a mtchanical m•n bullt by Tardy and renamed G1ry Garbenstanatl for hi.I 1ppear•ncc at South Cout Plau \r.'111 emet:e the Do Nothing Machine show. More Judges are ezpected to be a~ nounced late.r. And , acco rding to OCC and owe spokesmen. !he Colleai•te Otvltlon ch1J\en11c is still optn If other 1chools would like lo enter !he com- petll ive arena. "Wt'll garbens\angel tlltm to de11th.'' declartd one Orange Coast C<llleae 11pokes1nan. "We're re1dy for all· com· tr~.·· -' Asked who else \.\'a~ leading the currerit. drive. S\l;enson replied. '"Jt's basically JlJ.~t the 111·0 of us " The Of"ll'! shee1 contains reproducuons of newspaper stories and headlines and a cartoon of R::iker 11·hich brands him as "'double bill R<1ker·· and sho11 .<; h11n t.ak- ing money from t11'0 taxpayers' pocket" for legislati\·,. trips. It :tppear, to be a professionally pro- duced news shee1, but Swenson said he anrl '-1cKnii;:h1 set it 11p together. He rlecline<l to 1>ay how man~· cop1l's ha•I b~n run ofr. how n1 any l'o'Ould be print.e<l. 11·ho printed them. or ho1\· much the prin· t1n,li: v.·ould co.~t. "People ha1·t been kicking In $.J and SlO," hr !llid. Robert R}"An. a Southern California nian who began figh!ing bull s in ~lexico as a leenap:er -and la!er acct>pted into !hi-once sill·Latin profession -1vil! ex· h1b1t sel"rral pa1nt1n~s. \\"ith hi.~ \\Orks will he sculpture bv Humberto Pf"ra1.a. l'o'ho~e bronze st11tu11rV is nn Pf'rmanent di~pla~· a! !ht' r-.ll'xirO f"if y bullring and !he r-.1onumental buJI. ring 1n Tijuana . Sevtra! of thf' sruiptor":; bronzes will be nn rlispla~· Bennett Brarlbur~· of Laguna Bearh - rt:'cf"ntly nan1ed by 1he .'l:atlonal A.c;id c1ny of Arts as one of ,._..o of the nation·.~ ouls!andin~ artists in 1971 -\\"ill also display paintings at the sho\1·. Cameras and sound equipment were <·ollec\ed by burglar:< in three Laguna Bt>ach locations over !ht \\'eekend, police report Rig11;r1>I loos occurrM al the home of ~lei tame~·. 1008 Van Dyke Drive. \\"here loot tncluded surh varied items as a moviP camera. 1elPsrope. projector. rug. clock. hottlf"~ of ""hiskey and clot.hing. \ alued hital!y at 5822 Sterl'n Dl.Jcote reported the lo~s nr $56~ ll"orth of camcr:i E'qUipment front his rnom a1 the Hacienda Hnlrl Fnda.1· night :ind ori Sunday ni,i.:ht \\"illiam Chambers arJvised policP that a !ape pl11yrr and tapes worth $150 had di~ppeared from his apartment at 26!! Broad way, lllT TIGHT MOHIY !HD 1.Hr,ITlOll Diamond Earri11gs Brow1ln9 houri from 9 to 1 dall y 9 lo ' h t. '"· ... ",.,., s395 totol welt ltt. s.t I• 141f Wltlro $014. CPUARANTllO TO AM'lAISI AT 40"!. MO Jl l NEW AND USID ITIMS~ DIAMONDS ••• to ... GUITARS STEREOS .•. to ..• GUNS CAMERAS ... to ... TOOLS • ANTIQUES •.• to ... TAl'ES ALL AT VERY LOW !'RICES DOM RACITI OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUARANTEE ~ Y•• Hy II lfl11--4 ~... .. ... wlll ,._ .... l'hllt ,, ...... ,.. .,,,.1 .... 40~9 MOJl l ttMI• ¥•• '4114 .... ,, ., , •• , ......, •ect. Ca• ye1 4• 1111 w.rl ..... wllel'01 COM'A-1. 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SILL, TRADE 1838 NEWIORT BLVD. DO.OWN COSTA MISA - -.. COMI IN AND IROWSI AROUND l'HONE 646·7741 .__ HarMr • lroodwoy I J ' 'I 1. I' I I [ I I 'I 11 I' I I t t'ants Post Bach Ex-mayor Blames 'Ti1ning Errors' By RUD I NIEDZI ELSKJ llH !1'141 01111 l'Jlll 11111 Lasl July Morton A. Baum was a young man on his way up the political ladder of suc- cess. At 32, he became one of Seal Beach's young e ~ t mayors. He had new ide33 and he personal charisma gave hin1 an enthusiastic followlng. Tuesday he may become an ordinary citizen again if a reeall drive against him l! successful. In the intervening n1onths he has been accused of presiding ()Ver council meetings in a dic- tatorial manner. of conducting unnecessary city hall purges and of asking for ;l mean- lgless audit of the city books. lie has been scor ne d privately as a political op- portunist, his name has become associated with civic turmoil and he h0s been revil- ed in cartoons and poems circulated among his op. ponen!s. Today, BBum. who still feels confident he will remain on the council until his term runs out in 1974, sa~·s the trouble began "'hen he started "ask· ing annoying questions.·• "I bP~an asking ouestions about the budget and I v.·as given a quick shufne. I wanted to know about the apartment plans on Electric Avenue and I was told they were good for the city. And I v.·anled to know about t he Redevelopment Agency.'' Baun1 said he \vas con cerned about the city's 5mal\ to\vn character, its schools and environment and saw the1n in danger of heing erod· ed. He sairl the old council had A way of gelling !hings done quickly .... ·ith Lee Risner, the city manger he "'as in· Etrumental in fir ing. "! was t.tlld not to bother myself about too many things. 1'hey were expecting an automatic 'yes· vote on things that had already been decld· ed." Baum claims. Shortly before some or the old council rnemhers "·ere on their way out, Baum claims the city signed an aRreement v.·ith a developer for stretl and SC\\'aee improvements \lo·hich cost the ci!y a great deal of money. Later they approved a 12 percent pay increase for Risner. Baum said he objected to both action.'> because "they smacked nf a lame duck agreement.'' A "·eek after he was elected mayor, Baum said he participatect ln a private meeting Y.'ith Risner anri former Councilman L 1 o yd Gummere. lie asked Risner to resign because he "was too ('fl\renched and tno ingrained \lo'ith a method of doing th.ings that rl irin't square with the realties of the day" His oppos1t1on tn Risner pro- \•ed to be something many residenls nf the city "·ould never Ir\ him forge!. "Th:i1 Saturday. signs hf'~lln appC'flr:nc: on do11 ntov•n i::hopwirulow1' 'Sn1·r Our City /11anager.' "Batun ..-;ays. "This \vas !IUpposrrl 10 ha1•e been a privnte n1erting. No one was supposed to know :ibout it and nn\1' a rampai@n was mounted lo forre tne not to fire Lee Risner. I .... ·as fac· ing a massive assault." Jiily 27, 1970. Baum and fonner Councilman Conway Fuhrman, along with Cowi· cilman Thomai; !lojlard votrd to fire Risner for a variety or reasons, including a I I e g e d absence from his job while on LOOKS FOR WIN Seal Beach's Bau m private business and allegedly not furnishing proper financial reports to the cowicil. Three days later Baum lost his ow n job as pharmacist for Seal Beach·Leisure W or I d because his employe r s asserted he was in a conflict of interest as mayor and pharmacist. The city council at that time had two men on it from Leisure World. The political turmoil that v.·as generated in the city sought Baum out at home, sometimes as early as 5 a.m. "The phone v.·ould ring and people would call up to annoy us. For a ·.vhile it go so bad v.·e took the phones -0ff the hook. And some people were getting a perverse pleasure out of reporting some of the more salacious st.atements made about me." Looking back at his con- lrovcri'iial actions "'hich in· elude Risner's dismissal, the city books audit, and his de- mand for the resignation of all board members and com. missioners, Baum concedes that he might have made some errors. but only in tim- ing. ··eertain!y not in my policy decisions. I should have taken more timi? to explain my decisions and perhaps should have acted more cautious ly in some areas," he said. "II might have paid to move a little more slowly and to at. tempt to explain some of my actions rather than assume they were all self.e.videnl." Baum believes he will win the recall election, even though 628 recall signatures in hii; third councilmanic district were certified. There are 1,800 registered voters in h i s district. "I believe it v.•ill be a clO!le race. I hope I \\•ill be able to reach enough people to discuss the real issues." said Baum, who believes his opponents have atlacked hts pe rsonality and have persuaded otheri; that he is a dictator. If he loses, Baum asserts he \\'ill conlinue to be in\'oJved . "I stll! live here. I intend to play an acli\'e role as rnuch as I can," Fuhrman has already been nusted through recall and 11 new council majority has betn rreated thrnugh the election of Frank Sale!! and Edward Smith. Jn ~fay, whlte ap- prnl'ing the date or Baum's re call election, the council stripped him of his mayoral· ity by 4·1 vote. Thomas Hogard. who voted in unison with Baum and Fuhrman on many of the con· troversial items, is also facing a recall election Aug. 24. Phone Co1npany Seeking To Keep Down Picketing SAN FRANCISCO (UPI! - The struck PAcific Telephone Company, alrr:11dy successful in limiting pickctln,:: in S11nta Clara County, hns sought similar restraints in tv.•o more Bav Area counties. The firm riled a lawsuit in San Francisco askin11: for in· juncllons llmttlnf{ picketing in San Mateo and Alameda Coun- ties. A temp:>rary restraining order issued in S11n Jose limited picketi ng by the Com- munications Worke~ or America at Santa Clara coun- ty (acilitles. Tfnii order al l-Owed three picke~ at each side of an en- trance and exit . Other strikers were '. bannt>d from w\lhin 200 feet of the ln~tallaUnns. The uniOfi w11s also ordered to rcfr from hindering com· pany vehicles ()t threatening supervi~ory em p I o yes re· maining on the job. Meanwhile. violence during the strike ha! .spread to· San Francisco when a carload of food was dumped, tires of a company car were slashed and its wi ndows smashed. Police said the lncidenls oc- curred early yesterday at tht cnmpany's printing plant here Compa ny s p ok es men reported earlier vandalism ar other racilities. A bullet was fired Into an unmaMed equipment shed al Point Reyes, knockin1t out 3t locel circuits. A c I r c u 11 breaker was thrown at tht central equipment office In Concord but emergent)' generators pre\•ented any in· tcrruption of service t o customen. ~~~~~~~~~~~\ 'd~ Like to Ask And y ,_ Mondi!, J11ty 19, 11171 spi I led coffee? it wipes right off shag carpet treated with soi I control Scotchgard® . and it's yours at savings • • • sq. yd. insta ll ed reg. 12.00 For the first lime, Scotchga rd ticomes lo carpeting ... exclu - sively .a l May Co. en!ertain with abandon . When coffee, sa lad dressing, ice crean and ketchup spill •.. no problem. SpiJl5 di5- appear from lhis Du Pont nylon pile shag w ith the swipe of a cleaning cloth. Sco1ch.~ard f> carpet proteclor designed especially for broadloom \vorks the magic. And it's exclusively at May Co. Yea rs of rambunctious guests, childre n or pets wo n't phase this beautiful three-tone ca rpet. I-lave it i n~talled over rubberized waffle or sponge rubber padding. Sa le price includes paddin~ and all necessary labo r. There are no extra costs. floor coverings 32-a!I 18 stOf~ use one or our conveni~t credi! pl.in\ C.all for lhe Cd rpelmobile. Sre this broadloom in you r home. Call {~I 3) 62 1·821 1, e xt. 2997, e r thr !>!01c ncJ1c~t you. No oh!ig,11ion to buy. \V1bhirc 9)8·4::'.!11 [a~tl.lnd • 33 1·3)I1 ( 1en~hdW l?J-43 ] 1 Art.Kl1 .1• .. 45·4000 '-ou!h R~v J;"Q.:::!j l 1 l OPJn&I PJ.1.z:a 883·7~ ! I ".in Oir )'.:(1 :•9].::''jl J \Vf'~I L.A.• 475-4'1! I Auena P.11k 8~7·4000 \\'h1nlrr • ')45-111 1 L.~kewoocl b33·011 I 5o. CoJsl Pl,1za•546.'J321 I .iurel Pldld. 7bb·4 I I I 5~n Betnardino• 884·511 1 Cdrlsbad 7 .!9·7'17 1 ,..lontcl.iir b21·2'J! 1 Oxnard 485-951 1 "Scotty girls will be present to demon5trdte the remarkable qualities of Sco!chgard• at inclic<1tcd ~tore. may co. south co.it plau, 11n dl9g0 fwy. at bristol, cost• men: 546-9321 1hop rnond•y thru fr id•y 10 •m to ':JO pm, ••turd•y 10 •m to b pm; sund •y noo n til 5 DAll '( PILOT IS • . . • • MA't'CC> . -, . • • • ' • • . ' . " •, ,. ,' • • • • ' " ,· fj DAil Y PILOT SC Vour Money Vete1~ans Can Find r Much Civilian Aid 81 SYLVIA PORTEil Evtn if !ht "'1ndup of the V1elnam "11r dO('S not ac- celerate from todav·<; pace, VeterllJ)s are nnw returning to c1vlli11n l1fr ii! the rate ol 80.000 lo 85.000 11 month - and, righ t oul of 10 are seeking immrrl1ate Jflhs. • "'hi ch veterans can be in- terviewed by or referred to possible employers. -The U.S. Civil Ser,'ice Is giving special preference to vfltcrans for federal jobs an d so arc many state. county and n1un1cipal governments. One prf'ference is in !he form of ex1ra points on the job test ~cores .so veter11ns score higher and are eligible for pr1tH hiring. Some federal jobs are open only to veterans. - ' ' . l)l I Complete-New York Stock List · AW ..._1.H ".._..]pl 1.0 -~M Mw1'6< .... ""'" llK ... -K M llM" lf>t .U _,, ... II• """'-Ct!T• AIM!.,. 1 10 Aft>lltr pl," ~·-1,60 ~~1:1 AllCll H(I(~ I t.nnr• ,tit! krd ( l•Y 1,70 ,t.oaa>eCt> 1J ApeoO l.1tf AN(O Co .!. ~~t ~:"!1.06 A"l •I I stl AopllMI M~o AllA Svc 1.0. Art•!• .Olp Arca11N "' t .Ar<;ll O•n 1 Arl1 ,.Sv l .OI ArlaM 0 5tr A•~n ll llvOv A•mco Sii I "'"'' p!l.11 Armr pf• I~ Arm1r C~ loO A•m(~ p!J IS Arm Ru 1.50 Aro Corp 9CI Arvin lfld 1 ""'l<I Ool 110 AlhlO pl? 00 Aud 8 rew AHdOC.llfl A'ld SP 1.20!> '"''"" r,.,,,,. AIM°"t .I~ AllCvEI I.)) AU ltlcMld 1 A!I Rkn Pl l A!l llc~ ofllO A!l••C~tn I At!11 Coro ••'-• ltltl 'Ml.I HI• L9W CllH C.ft •• ''"' 71\t -,, ;~·· ll~~ = \1 .. ,.. so.. ... llCo )1 ... .lo Ot 1~ u~ • • lfl• lPo II)'• 10.. :r.: n .. .:: :t ll'· \l'.o W" ~ .!. ',; 1!'" 11 ... •'. •'.1 • 7l't ?l'I -•;, •I •I 4t 1f'~ ]l'li i ., ,,, 10'. ! ~l 1~• JC'., I '• ll'o 16'•• '2'1 <ll'< f 11 11•, ""' ., J~ J~ =1 ,~ 8>.; I 'o I! I) -'~ 11'• IT\o 'l I• 1l'• ?l~ -,, 1 7'~ H'--'• 11' 11' _,,., 5T'o ,,.,. -·~ 66 "' i ·~ /\o I'~ t " I Jj>. "'• ll'• -·~ 100 6t»o "" "!~ -··· I! j .,., '" 1~ ?J~: rl:: llt? t ~ ;g :i\: n:~ n~ .::' ... 1 !?;'; ~·~ :v·~ -'. I] lll. '-'• '~'" -1'• 1S 10'~ I"' !G -'\ ll r.:-: ff~ r~ : :r 5 J(I•., lO'> JO .... -.. • 16:\o 16 14 .. I "' ' ,,~ l''t ,,, -'• l •'I> ,. , •• ,, u 1011, "Iii 10'"' Ru! 1n J9il. 1·r1er<1n<; arr coming home 10 a lowering con1h1nat1on ol problem.<;· ant1- Vl'lrran prrJud1t r bv l' S. employers. uncertainl.Y abflu 1\·hat lhey Y.'i'lnl In dr.. In· adequate occupat1onal training ror civili an Jnbs. a s11ff ~ 2 ptr cent overall unemployment rate. As a re~ult. in the 20 lo 2~ age group. the Jnble.ss rate for veterans 1s nearly 15 percent, and for youn~ blacks a disgraceful 21 prrcen1 As a result, soine 60.000 vcteral\S are drawing unernp lnyment compensat ion and n1any are mnving lo wclf<1re roll.~. -In Brthesde. Maryl and, !hr National Jnututts o ( !lrallh"s Bureau of Manpo"'er Er1urat1on is steppi ng up Jts ~pecial Health Careers pro- Jlra1n 10 counsel and guide qualified veterans into he111!h ('areers in hosp1lals, puhllc healt h agencies, research in- s111u1 ions, schools and private industry. NEW TESTER Wilson Ford Exhaust Emission Tester can diagnoSe extent A TO llK 011 Autom 0•!• Ault>mtn Ind A•co Corp I'> •I ,,,, d -I '• 1• 1~, 1•., I'• of car 's pollution in matter of minutes. Test is free . -In St'attle, the University of Washington School of f.ledici r1e has set up 11 com- puterized clearing house refer- ral center for veterans tra ined in the health field . In High Geur Beach Ford Dealer What i.~ being done lo tackle this challenge? -Prrsident !\'iion ha s jusl 8nnounced a Jong lis t of new job-findin_R. job-trfl ining helps for velerans including : exlra ben efits for those in on-the-job vocational training progr;ims; a doubling of JOb counseling, training and p lace 111 e n t services for scrviccmrn still on active duly ; a requirement that all gove rnmrnt agencies and contr;ictors li~t all new job openings "'i lh the l:.S. Employment & Tr a i n i n g Service, Jn su~: there are now 35 major public and private job- finding progr11ms for veterans under way, says a spokesman for the Jobs for Veterans Program in Arlington, Va. Works for Clean Air -All 5'l sl<1lf:~ :i nd ~()O large cilies have now launched special job !1nr1in1:-lraining ef- forts under the Frdcr11I Jobs for Veterans Prograrn launch- ed last October. Examples: H o u s ( n n ' s newspapers are dona ting free v.·ant ad space for velerans; Buffalo 11 nd Ne"'' York City hove set up "ho! line"' da ily job butl c!ins in whic h employers list available jobs and the orders arc automatically cnn\·r~·rd to the USES and nihcr ai::rncics pro- \'1d1ng special help f o r veterans. -In California, the AFlr CIO's Human n r sources De\'elopmcnt lns!ltulc ha~ established special lean1~ nr experl.!1 at four mil1lary rcl'l'[l· lion and rrocrss1n~ ecn!ers !n brie f return1n~ .~cr\•icen1en 1n the San F'ranciscn area on op- portunities in the ir hnrne to>.11ns. -Cities thr nal i(ln nver arr. hold ing .~pecia l "job fair~" ;i! 10°/o NNN CARE FREE LONG TERM LEASE I Y C•m~•ftY •!>'r•l..i ct.~lft Ul,OOf 10 1!)1,00D •II c•it. IRK•. t 11 •, '•1-os•o Whal , !hen, should YOU , the ve teran, do? Register at &nee 1crith one of the 2.400 slate employment service offices throu ghout the country. By law . you will get preference and priority both in JOb counseling and placement. Check \.l'ith your nc11rest Veter a ns Adm inislra!ion regiona l office on ~·our rights and el igibil ity for a wide range of e d u ca tion-e mployment. training programs under the GI bill. Attend job fairs 111 your t1rf'a .. Ask the employment or VA office to steer you to then1 and to n!her s erv icci:: available. Chec k also on loca l employers who have set up special em p I oy rn en l pro- gra m ~. And wri1e to your rcprrsen- !;it1ve.~ in \Vashingtnn whn~e duty 1L is In spon~or 11nd vote inro !aw tr:i ining-cducation-joh prC'grams for \"OU. Loss He ported l'aec,cll cr l~y Arnrrit•11n f'il<'l'~rllrr n r r-.·ewpnrt Bc;irh httd a l n~s nf $123.:!llll, nf'I nf appl1cablr 1ax errd1t.~ '1f $69.()(\(1, <ir 2 crnts a sh;ire un r1·ven u1?S nf $2.!l.lli,ll:ill fnr !hr JH'st quarlrr ended flf:irch Jl. 1!171 l ..ns~rs in lhc lik r l~ifl rrrinrl amnuntrd to S.141.AA.1 nr 6 r rnls ;-. share on revcnur-~ of $.tOifl :u17 IH lhr Ins~ !;i~t ~ rar. $21fl .306 nr 4 rf'nl!i a sharr w;is altrib11t11hlr !n discont1nu rd opr ralinns By CARI. CARSTENSEN Ot 111• D•lry P'litf Sl•lf \Vhile a great amount of lip service is given lo the fact lhat cleaner air is a neeessity few seem to be doing anything abnut it. Hov.•e\·cr, Hun11ngton Beach Ford dealer Dick Wilson is laking strides lo make clean air a realily. \Vllson Ford Sales has installed a nl!w elec- tronic device th11l c a n dia~nose lhe rxlcnt of your car's ex ha11st. C'n1iss1nn illnrss In less than f1vr minute~. \Vilson offrr.~, rree or chargr. an opport11n it,v In pul your ca r throui:h I he I r i'~miSliion Exhaust Tester. The uni!. io just n11null'S, \VIII revc;i! the degree of .vour auto's health-good or had Il isn't the answer 10 pollution bu! \\'i lson is c·oncerned and hc·s lilking strp~ in the right d1rcct1on. His free lest ls good thrnu11h Au,1?t1Sl and 1s offerC'd lo O\\•nrrs of all n1akes and rnodels of t:ars. REC VEHICLE SEM INAR HEL BY CHEVRO LE T A loC1k ;it f11lurr ulc:is ;ind nrw 1h111k1ng on !he presrnl st;itP nf An1rrie11·s r11pidl~1 r.~­ p:in d1rig rt't:reat1 ona l vc:h1 rle 1nd11.~try were prnl'irlrd hv ('hrvrnlcl in a recent firsl-of- J!S·kinr! .~.\ 1npo:<11 1111 . Thr 1wu-1l::iy session Urou,i.:l1l lnJ.:elher r('prrscnt11!il'fs of n1nrr 1han 100 rrcrc11t1nna! \'rhirlr .1nd r q u ! pm en t fT'l:inuf;ict urrr~ to exchange 11rw.~ 1\·11t1 C"hr1 rnlrl nn the prrsrnl .~1111r nr !hr bus1nrss. 11.s fu!Url'. ::ind 11:1.\·s of br1n,i.: IMPO RTA NT MEET ING FOR INVESTORS SEEKING HIG HER INCOME Spec ial Se1ninar ''8% Yields are Back'' 'rl1is ip. )'our opportunity to le&rn more ahout bonds. now offer ing unui.ua lly attractive yield R ""hen measured hy historic i;:tandard11. We'll alf:o <lii:.cuf:R the current c han~e 1n the yieldi;: of tax.exempt bonds \\1hich have re· turned to the 6% level. Our informative lee.tu re u·1ll rx1,/a 1n: • Maluritiei;,, coupon rate11, yields • How municipal bonds can cut your tf\XeR • The capital gain11 featu re of bonds • How to •elect and p'tlrchase bo nds , S..t.OI CllMf.OITf f ll (IO~'I' iu'• 1f>•h "' 1)(1 ""' l~u·•~»·, ),,<y ?1"~ •' 1 ~"' ""~ I JI') o m ~•n Cl•m•n!o l~n. J,ou•••"''"" """''"' ll! ""'"'~• (•D'•r>d••n, ·~ 1'11 ~~~~.or: T~~"""' J °"~"'Y LACUNA "ILLS holy )tit~ ot 1 )') ~,., ~'I"' '!Cl P•o't'<\..,Aol M•h•IJ n)JI r,,.., O• Vol•~(lf. Jn.)OU ' l ... UI SO•'I'. Ju•v 71'>~ I ".., \,,I• 'Wll "·~••}•'O"•I llllt. IT•o M•r.~I', lJ))I l'•\OQ ~· \/••W>l:•• \ ... J.)t.I klfflt .. · ~t•nlo M <>"•l·o~ DEAN WITTER ~Co. INCORPORATED M1mb9r Ntw Yott &t nck £~thtl'Qt. Int • mutually helpful in producing the best possible products. Chevrolet hosted the RV Symposiun1 as a su pplie r of vehi"les and chassis ror lhc in- dustry. \1 1ghlip;ht s of the symposium wrre semi nars on key areas or the industry and presentation or several General Motors s1yl1ng ideas for future Vl'hirlrs. The symf)Qsiurn 111.~o fealurcrl a cross-section of rrcrC'.atinnal units by the manufalurers. Among the GM Stylinjl idea., 11•as a "piggy back" shelter and l'qui pmcnt carrier that ('an be slipped on or off a Chel'y Voin, freeing it fo r short trip ·r1ri v1ng near the cam p i;ite. Another conce pt sketch displayed was a van "chop- ped"' behind the second seal and fitted with a highly sl y!ed n1otor home conl'ersion body. Since Chevrolet docs not build rC'f'rcational v eh i c I e borlfes, lhe "dream" vehicle:!. and other interior styling ideas v.·ere conceived and shown sim ply to show the division'!! advanl'.C'd thinking 1n lhe fu~ld <inrl In ~tunu l<1 le others. Jt was c111phasin~d. A n 0 I hr r ,!I ':' Ill p OSllllll \'ughli~ht. w;ii; 11 srm1nar on 111nt.or l'ch1cle ~afety ~la n­ r!a rds as the~· aprl.v !o the 1!r.~1 ~n :inrl m11n11fa cture of recreational vehicles. The inr1ividu:il ~ f? ml n SI r .~ \1rr(' cnnducLerl hy Chrvro!rt ('11,l!lncer~ :inr1 Gilf s1ylisl~ in the \"arlous prorl uct arc~~. Thty a !~o included questio n and answer ~r1ods. Bankamerica Reports Goo<l First Half SA.\ Fn 1\,\('l~CO -IB\\'1 - Hank«mf'r1r 11 C'"rr·~ prr·form;ince for the hrs! h;i)f of J9JI reflectf'd a sus!a1nrrl .t:rn u111 in r;irn1ni::.~. dt>pos1ls ;ind rr$011 n·r~. Prr~idcn! A. V.' Cla11~rn rrpnr(rd Friday. <..:on.<nl1da !('d 1nl'nn1e brfore .~rcun tif's transaction for !he six month.~ ended ,June .10 in- r re:ised by 7'1 prrcent 10 $7R.835.000. or $2.29 per ,;harP. Clausen said. Thi!' co mp;ired "'"1ih $7~.:l04 .000. er 12.1.1 per ~hiirt. for the s11me perifld last year. "The grnwth in earnings for the firs t half or 1971 wa.~ relalrd to lhc co n t i n u e d devrlopmenl of our global ac- l ivitic~ and s I r o n g com- mitment to lht dnmestic real estate market." Clau~en s11id. Bankameric11 Corp."s nel 11')· romr ff)r the six monll't~ 11moun1et1 to $82.!>::.0,l)OO, or $2.40 per ~hare. This com pares With $73,5.fl.1,000, or $2.14 per sh11re, :i year ago, Ch111sen said. Profit~ on sccu rili~ were SJ ;715,000. ln other June JO figure~ reported today, dcpos1l.s rose lfl percent lo '27.R19.R04.000. up from $2..1.353.366.000 RI mid- year 1970. 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" " . r}-_·-~---., I I 1 • ---. --.:- / M""'1, JufJ 19, 1971 Monday's Closing Pri~plete New York Stock Exchange List • -------------- • SC ht. H•• t ..... """ \.• ~ a.. Finance Briefs A broad-b3$ed market 11f.. vMce Is unlikely to be forthcoming until v a r l o u 1 f!Conorruc, stock market, and mohet&ry uncertainties art cla rified, de!:p1te the pro- bability that interest rates ~111 peak soon. sa}':i Neuwirth Mana1emt.nt & Research. Confine commitment.! to carefully selected g r ow t b equltles selling at rea10nablt valuations of proiected earn· 1na~. the finn advltes. Jnve1trnent policy toward common alCX'ks at this Umt 1hould ~ keyed to the behavior of long-term interut rates, according to Araus Restarcb Corp. Although the chahcts ot a bond rally thi& summer are reuonably ,oocrj thf! firm 111ys. the bond market's vclatlllty wilt force inveatort lo "1iUiy loolt " t · • • Mond11. Jt1l1 1,, 1971 RICK VOLK PUTS PLANE THROUGH PACES No Time for Consultation With Your·Conscience He's a Winner Lido Isle Pilot . Co11quers Da11ger By BARBARA GIUS Of t~t Dtlly f'Het lltff What kind of man rlirl.s v.·ith death? "A winner." says Rnbcrt "Skip" Volk. Lido Is 1 e's aeroba tic pilot \1•ho, wilh his OeHavi!lanrl Chipn,unk, chal· Jenstr.s the el cn1":i1s. "The earlh and sk.v are pretty tough con1petition." says Volk. ··So. why e\·en try If you don't think you can beat '!?rn.. Why try ir you can't . ,., win. The words flow frorn the mou th or 11 conquerer. Volk ic" a .sandy-haired, clean-cul 40 yi'ar-0ld who looks 30 and acts yo1,1nger. "I have two speeds: F ull pov;e"r and co!lapse." he quips. · Volk has found, through diligence, pa tience, .and hard work, that a man can co nquer danger if he i~ capable, and lf he sets his mind to coming out on top. Jn a stunt pilors case, lhat"s important. Vnlk and his v.·ife. Kay , and their three daughters have liv- ed in Newport Beach fo r four years. Mr~. Volk remen1hers when Sk ip first took up stunt flying thfee years ago and shudder!'!, "It bothered me. then. l"H ad· mit. B\Jl now. I watch him practice diligently and I know he"1 good and I know hf''s careful." As his "secnnd right hand.'' she has seen him through hls many sport enterprises and she knows his capablllt\es CdM Seniors Designated For Honors Jo'iftren students f r n n1 Corona df'I Mar !!11th !;("hnnl h11ve bf'C'n d e s 1 g n at " r! members n! 1he ~nt·ici~· of Out.sti!lnding American H if~h School Students find fire el igi· bit to compete for $262 ,!XXI in scholarship awards. The J!ra.duat ing s e 11 i n r ~ designated a~ n1c111be rs or the honorary socie1y arc· Mark E. Aldrich. Thrrf'sf' E. l\aM!eker. David Bergeson, Lucinda Bottorf. flichard Da\·, Jan C. Friend. Don \V. Killian, Scott Horn be a. k. Ch:11rlf"s C. Grimsha.w, Karl Killef~r. Janet Stan!on, l<rn Nei~~f'r, I.ff Se card, Konrad 8 . Clark and Jim F". Cote. The recognition W,!11! not in· eluded Jn lhe vear.end honors award banquei listing . Students Volunteer Social Aid almost as wel l a, he does. \\'hen she kisses him goodbye before his tours, she says she thinks of no more prospective ill fate than does the wife kiss- ing her businessman husband. "1'he girl~ enjoy having their daddy fly," s a ys Mrs. Volk. "Th!'y even fly with him on his Jes!! perilous adventures. when he's not doing cartwheels in the air." Volk has never regretted th;i t he has never ha d any sons. "Actually, it's 11 blessing. TI1e poor kid would have to ex- ccU at evervthing, or else put up with unrTierciful taunting,'' laughs Volk, The only soo of North J)akota country folk, Skip is a colorful exarnple of rebellious progeny. His parents would r11ltier have walked two miles 10 the store than ride in a car, aceording to Volk." They were very fearful of any Vt'hicle thal was me c h a n I ca 11 y operated.'' he says. But Skip feels diffe renlly . lie has long regarded the n1achipt as his r a vo r lte mcdiuni of enlertainn1ent and accomp!i.~hment. Bt·fore IH' took to the air, he 1ll'si~ned. built, and drove rac!n•~ boat.~. After his introduction to sport flying by a friend, the late Art Scholl, Volk began to trach hin1seH the loops, the rolls, and the dives that chill his audiences. "It's an art," he say~. "and gMd art conies nioslly from srlf·!r;:iching." \ln!l;"s so-called hobby has turned intn a pr·ofit·mnkinp; husinf'SS for lhe NewrXirt Be;irh rl'Sidents. who now dflC.s n1ore than 70 ;:ierob11tic sho,,..·s a \'Car for n1ore than ·1our 111iilinn spretatur~. ··since l"n1 do ing such a hea vv sche1lule or sho1rs, i1 would h:n'!' to be called work. b11t 1!".~ fun \1·ork ." he savs. "Flr x1bi li t.v" is what turn~ nn lhr a('l1un fur an af'robal iC" pilol .'' s;n ·s Volk. "A boal r;u·cr ncl'd s a lake, a jockry gOf'S hnr.~e raC"ing, and a brnn- t·o h11 ster goes In a rod('{!. Ru1 Skip \"olk <"a11 go 10 ;ill thrrr place.~. The scope is unlimited for a theater.·· Volk dcscribes hi1nself as a '' s11p<·r·p1•rfecl ionis1 . '' ·· Vou"\·e got to he one whrn you know a mistake could cost your lire." If so111elhi11g goe~ wrong during a perforn1ancr, he at· l<leks the proble1n after the 1>how. whether ii call.~ for practicing a p ar1icular n1anc11\·er, or attending to the Chipmunk's ma intenance. "A good stunt pi\ol must have the will lo put on a show with precision . I ~et awfu lly angry with n1ysetr when J blnw something." Volk does nol deny that tension mounts as he begins to m11 n1pulate his plane. Perhaps i!"s because, as a pilot, he knows his hands havr to be ready to corre~pond lo bis mind, almos t simultaneo usly. Social iervlce a g t n c 1 e s In prepa ratio n for a show. thmughout Orange Cou n!y Volk take! cart ot till the 'rttetvrd morr than 3.600 Hem~ on his "squa wk. list" bour1 of voluntttr assistance v.hich enu m rr at es the Jrom Golden \Vest College n1ech.anieal deficiencies thal ttudenls la.st semester. need to be checkfd for utnlost ~ work ol the 49 studc.nL'! safety. reUtved the stra in on tight "MMl i m port ant l y . qel1C)' budgets 11nd gave them however," sa)'s Vol k, "I ~al Cflhlact.s and a "fee.I' alway!! try to gel ~ome good lot Jcp: thty are preparing to ~Jeep the night bf'rore. A pilot eatt.r. has tn be very quirk. There ' Ali of the student!. a.re no time for con~uhation with ·en~Jtd in the collcge·s two-your t'On~cience." r• ioclaJ lf!rvice program. Volk lrcls fortunrile tn have ~ by Mrs. Dianne landC"d in Newport Reach. ~:t..opltill ' p<"rm::inf'ntly. thii1 L'I. ' ff e~ their &&'loci11tr in "~t.\' \•a.caHnn~ 11rP fpw anrl arta dcatt:I they Me required sealtrred. ·r.rltin~ 11v.·ay lrom • Powerful 2 Speed 20'' ELECTRIC FAN 2 0'',~2 speed fCn to let you rela x in cool com f~rt ! St:el case, "nbreakable carrying handl e. Hea vy d uly induc l1on-lype motor. 5 yr. guaronlee-U.L. a pproved. Why swe ller when you ca n ha ve comfort ct a bargain pri ce? REG. $17.99 TU!S. &. W!D. ONL YI SAVE $S,00 Vinyl latex INTERIOR WALL PAINT Custo m ma nu fa cture d to Lin -Brook's rigi d specifica ti ons. Sel f p ri min g, fa st d r ying fl at finish . Choose from 15 deco rator col ors and white . Easy cle a nup wi lh waler. RE G. $3.4? SAVE $1.50 TUES . & WED. ONLYJ SPECIAL PURCHASE! Extra large 4 ft. x 8 ft. HARDBOARD DOORS Not only ore these doors a fontastic value -they're great for more than just doors! Use 'em as dividers, shelves - they're big enough for a dining. table. Don 't miss out on th isl REG. $4.99 lUIS. &. W!D. ONLYI SAVE 51.50 3/8'' ELESCTRIC DRILL 1 OOO rp m, 2.0 amp fan-cooled t o· ho using. Doub le reduction mo or. ie-cosf ~rumjnum gears, geared chuck & key The hand iest too l you'll eve ; own. REG. $9.99 SAVE $699 $3,00 TUES, & WfD. ONL y I ' I • • @ SAVE so•;. Vinyl SHOWER CURTAIN DICHONDRA SEED 12'' x 12'' V 99 86 '/. pu1t ti1cho11d•a. ' V A b~olu1,ly wee r! f•ee. V Ea1y·tO·use shake r can, REG . $1 .99 SAVE $1.00 99~lb.Con TUfS, I. WIO. ONLYI Full Blooming PERIWINKLE G1 t ot for gr o un d c o v tr and hill1ide plonting. £ o 1 y !o qrow -beou1iful l av •nd e r • blu • flowt rs: REG. B9c SAVE 3'1< TUIS, I. WID. ONLY! SHAG CARPET TILE It's r osy to install o wall lo wolf foot .. wormer. Big 12">:.12'' til es ore mode of tough nylon. G o-with-every room colors & they're self c dh e ~ive ! 8JJy'enough for your whole ho use...!.. you'll never beat the prie r! REG . 66< TUES. & WtD, ONL Yt Finest quolity -h'ovy duty "inyl !1 fade.proof &. ,,iildt w res ista nt, 6 ft, long x 6 ft. w;d ... Tremendous selecl•Oti of polTern~ ond colJ•S l'Q choose from. REG . 99c 49' TUIS, I. WIO, ONlYI 2 Gallon METAL GAS . CAN Stu rdy, lock seam constr uct ion. With dis.op• :iroring spout e nd re fl ective fini$h for highway safety. REG. $1.39 99' '--.--1* 1i least 3.'kJ houri o[ it All !or.us is to 1tay here and • .,,_,~ ..... ---·n 1n • ·----·-----·--~ ------=l!!:!:::=:::~~· -...~ -. -· ··---: ... . ... ---------"· =-------.. --· ' 1, , , ' • • • I I , I I I I I I' I I I . , . "' . • --• • Teday'• Fina) . N.Y. Steeb VOL. M, NO. 171, 3 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALll'OllNIA MONDAY, JULY 19, 1971 TEN CENTS Laguna School Taxes Higl1er Than Predicted By FREDEJUCK SCHOErt1EKL Ot 1M o.u, ~1i.1 Sttll The Laguna Beach Unified School District tax rate will increase 35 cents this year, four cents more than the previously predic led 31-cent increase. The addit ional four-cent increase is to make up for the loss of $76,000 due to the low assessed valuation that the district received last week . District officials ex. peeled the valuation to increase four per- cent , but the actual increase was only t.2 · percent. Trustees agreed in a study seWon Sun- day morning to include a $50,0C:.J reserve in the budget for lhe 1971·'11 fiscal yur and to add another U0,000· in rtserve monies for the 1972--73 fiscal year. "It's going to mean cutting into many of the accounts," commented Dr. Charle' Hess. business manager. at the con- clusion of the session. He did not specify which accounts wouJd suffer the most. A revised budget will be submitted to the board at Tuesday's 7:30 p.m. meeting at the Education Cent.er, 550 Blumont Drive. All of the schools will work next year with the same number of staff as this put year, trustees agreed. "Of course, just due to pay iJicreme11is we'll be spend more money," commented Dr. Norman Browne. "Since we will be unable to increase staff," said Dr. William U 11 om, 1uperlntendent, "we will have to absorb growth by increasing the 1iu. of classes." Ullom has told the board in past sessions that he feel! enrollment will be way up next year in all the schools. Another sticky question which faced the board was teacher pay incrtases for next year. One leading district staff member said '·thert's no way we can offer pay ln- creases to the teachers. All we can do is give them some more fringe be""fits. '' Art Fisher, president of the Laguna Beach Unified Faculty A 111 soc i a ti on ILBUFAl told board members: ''The staff want.-; to know how thty are felt about by you. thf! board.'' "One way you can show how you feel about the teachers is by offering pay in· crease!. Of course, there are other ways," Fisher said. Browne suggested that Ullom draw up a Jetter explaining the rnoney difficulties and a "subjective statement of con- lldence" which would be sent to the 130 district teachers. The board agreed to the plan and met with Ullom in a session kiUowing the mttting to determine the wording of the letter. ~aution • IXOll • r1 JOO Acres Burned Campers Linked 1 To Laguna Blaze l Persons camping in the hills are believ· ed to have started a fire which blackened JOO acres of brushland behind Arch Beach Heights in Laguna Beach Friday af· ternoon. Forestry officials said today "so me evidence has bttn found '' and that in· vesligalio~ are taking place at the site. (If the fire and at the Orange County Sheriff's crime lab. 50,000 Flock To Festival Openings The opening \.\'eckend of !be Art Colony's ;:irt festivals atlractei:I record crowds as more than 50,000 tourist.s flock- ed to Laguna Beach lo see the work of a few hundred artists. r-.tany of !he festival goers \.\'ere at· tracted to the Sawdust Fe s I iv a I , However. officials could not give defini!e attendance rigures as there is no ad· mission charge A spokesman said it \.\'as ''jammed all the time" and noted that hundreds or person~ .,..·ere wa iting in line each da y "''hen the festival opened at 10 a.m. A Fes1iva1 of ArL~ spokesman re ported that 18.000 persons had attended that event durinp: the opening \veckclld, \\'llh most of !hem comi ng on Saturday. The Art·A·F.:tir atlracted !>lightly more. than 2.000 during the first three days. an official said. Laguna Greeter Larsen Better After Setback ApparenUy recovering from a !em· porary relapse that placed him Wlder in- tensive 'are last week, Laguna Greeter Eiler Larsen was well enough Sunday to telephone friends in Laguna with assurances he 'd "be home soon" from the. Long Beach Veterans Hospital. The 31-year-0ld Greeter, who has been hospitalized !Ince June 17, was placed in the intensive care unit at the Long Beach facility when he developed heart and respiratory difficulties. "I don't kpow wh11t happened." he told frivids by phone Sunday, "but it'~ al! right now and 1'111 be home in a couple of wee ks." Hiker Now at Bottom DEATII VALLEY (AP ) -A Lai Vegai; man who began a 228-mile desert hike Friday from Death Valley to the Las Vegas Strip. trudged by the lowe!il point on the American continent Sunday after covering about '5 mi\el. 8111 Collins, 47, • film producer, reach- ~ Bad W•te.r, about 279.a feet below &ea !~el. Two students from Las Veg11.s who 11.re accompanyi ng ColliM in a camper ~ported that he hAd "all kinds of b!Jster• on his feet'' but continued to hike. Temperatures reached l2() degrees over the weekend Jn the Jlre.a . Collins el'pedl to arrive In La~ Veg111 r~xt Sunday. . ·------.-.:. .. -· --.,, Ho\.\·ever, no chargei; have been brought against any persons believed ti) have been in the area when the fire broke out. The fire started about 2 p.m. F'riday near the top or a ridge behind Arch Beach HeighlS. Gusts of wind forced the blaze toward the bottom of Aliso Canyon •. The. blue was b1tUed by 130 firemen from the Laguna Beach Fire Depart- ment. Orange County Fire Department and State Division of Forestry. Sixteen pumping units, two aerial bombers and four bulldozers were also called to the scene. Fiemcn wede still busy putting out "hot spots" in Lhe early hours Saturday morn· ing. Getting I.he blaze under control wa~ made diffi cult by the rugged, inaccessible terrain. Fire offici11ls said in the early stages or the fire, operations were hampered by 11 water shortage which wl'ls not resolved until a large tanker truck Brrived. The sole injury was to an inmate of Orange County Jail who hit his leg with a brush hook. No structures were. damaged. T wo Labor Union S pokes 1nen Air Loc kheed Y iews \\!ASHINCi'J"tt.J f AP) -Two labor union !'ipokesmen took opposition today on le-gislati(ln for a $250 million loan ,1;Uaranlee for the Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Floyrl E. Smith, J'lresident or the A~soclatlon of Machin ists and Aerospace Workeri;, urged approval of the loan, in· tended to guarantee continuation of the LlOl 1 Tristar jet program. But Joel R. Jacobson of the United Automobile Workers said job prospect.9 generally will be better if Congress 're-- jects the legislation . Both testified before the House Banking Committee. Jacobson, community relations director of UAW'.s Region 9. said Lockheed has laid off more than 25.000 workers, more than the total number involved In the Tristar program , in the past year and a half. \ M IL Y ,.IL.OT ll.,I P"91'1> Rock Locked In a . freak accident Sunday in Laguna Beach, Uiis auto driven by Kathy Ann Chadwick. 19. 3126 Bonn Drive. skidded in \.\•ater \vhile turning left from ThaJia onto Glenneyre. It struck the rear of a. park· ed car· .and went over·the cufb into·the·parkirig lot al 917 Glennfye.. striking the rear of a ·C1.I' owned by reaJtor Milt Hanson. The vehicle came to rest atop a rock. No one was injured. Sailor Injured In Three -car Laguna Crash A 19-year-old sailor from San Diegl'l wa.s treated for 11 foot injury al South Coast Community Hospital Sunday night following a three-car collision in the 100 block of Lagtina Canyon Road . The injured youth. Jeffrey Grunwald, was a passenger in 11 car driven by Elizabeth Anne Derrow, 20, of Clare.moot, who ran into a \'ehicle attempting to back into a parking space on the busy roadway . The 5eC(lnd car, driven by Dav id Hal~aver, U. of Anaheim. in tum struck a parked vehicle, police 1aid. Miss Darrow said she did not set:. the backing car unW it was too late to avoid the collision. Higl1 Ri se Legality Suit Runs Into Court Delays An Orange County Sllperior Court hear. Ing of char~s that the Laguna Beach high rise election of Aug. 3 is illegal and should be halted ran into delays today and was awaiting a ruling at press time. Judge J.E.T. Ned Rutter has been assigned to lhe. lawsuit filed against the "Ye.s on Aug. 3" committee and City Clerk Dorothy Musfelt by Laguna real estate broker Vem Tashcer. Rutter 's first action this morning was to place the hearing near the fool of his crowded calendar. He ls being asked by Taschner to order a halt to preparatioM for an initiative election which would, U successful, Iim!t high rise consfruclion in the. Art Colony to slructures of three. stories with a building ceiling of 36 feet. Taschner argues that the inltiative is in violation of state Jaw. He names com· mittee members Marjorie Darling, Ralph W. Benson, Dr. Phillip W. Runde!. Mer- rit A. Trease and Arnold Hano as codefendent.s with Mrs. Musfelt In his writ of mandate. action. Laguna City Atto~Tully Seymour, committee attorney llliam Wileo¥en and Newport Beach la er E. Gene Crain for Taschner were In 1Judfe. Rutter's courtroom thil morningt / New Sewer System Costs Revealed A proposed sewe r system to serve the Arch Beach HeighUt area of Laauria Beach C'flllld cOl!lt 1700,000 city coun~ilmen were told in a study session Friday nlghl. A report on the sewer system was presented by Carl Carlson of Boyle Engineering which has been workinl on plans for the sewer system for the past two years. Boyle was conlr•cted·to do preliminary 1ludies on coMtruction of sewers In the area following a health department report in 1983 that sewage wu percolatin11 to the turf ace of the. I011 due to failure in underground aepUc and cesspool systems. Noting that approximately 7DO pro- perties would be Involved In the project, Carlson 111id ttie •ver1ge UAe.ument to 1 property owner would be 11,000. -------·--~ ·--~- On top of that cost 1.s· bdok-up charee whlc:h could vary from $200 to 1700, Cartson said. The hiah hook·up cost ls due to prG- blems of C(IMecling the house Unes located under concrete, lr~nching under retaining walls and the Cillt 'of filling old septic tanks and Ce!SJ)OOl1 wtth 1and when they become ioacUve. Boytt ih&s ·been.· IUryeying the Arch Beach Heights aru. n d concluded I.hat many properties ~ ~OOlefit by ton- nectmg to sewer ~ 1\lnnlnl along the rear property Unes.i~ · • "If a house is on a• .tbt:t 11lopes down from the 1treet. we • let gravity carry the sewage to 1 M[l.11; lint in b3ck. OUlerwlse , if we r1n ;thl:ftln line down the 1lrut, we would';•°:.to ·di.a · dew• very deep -maybell ll Tec;L That'• ;;.· 1 ' ~ --=-.. ·~ . ".:."f :!:~--- l too costly," Carlson said. The rear lot line sewer 1ystem, would allow au sewage from Arch Beach H~lghU to now with gravity, and thus eliminate the need for a pumplQg station "which costs more money and are known to break down," Carlson said. ,Councflmen will take up'Uie•wer rn•t- t.e.r at Wednesday's regular' mtetlng.. , They wlll have to decide ,.'hetber to con- Unue the sewer project and & · rrioratorlum on any ne'w development wilhlri the area. · · The moratorium on bulldJog wu ap- proved at the la1t council meet.Ing. upon rrcommendaUon .of the buJ.\ding de~rt· ment and Ule health depArtment due to leaching from septic systems. ."We knOw . the porblems . ~,lst,'1 Joe Sweally, director of public wprkl told oouncilmen 111 the 1tudy se11slon. "The -......... _ sewers are needed and we're reeom- mendlni the city council proceed with the l.!i&essment district. "We will only send llnea to t.hole-pro- perties on slfeets that ire df:veloped. The others will have to walt," Sweany added. Carlson told the gro1.1p -which in· eluded about "° re&ldent.11 from .Arch B~acb ~lgbts -.that the ae•er 1y1tm could bit ~',;lthin ,_ ye.ar:lf the a0.1bei<t "Wis received now. ;The d ly has a~eady paid 117.000'·for the initial 1tudle1. 'Mayor. Richard Gol~bera Hked U !be bUUdina:·mor1torlum Mtould hold untU the sewen are IMl•lled. •·Yu.~· replied Jim Wfnter. se.nlOl'o bulldln1 lns~or. "Well. It doesn~t tlook tl~ w•· hive niucti dlolce,'' 0o1dberr11id. ''No ·It doe1n't." Wiottt ukf. ' " . ' ---- China Visit Goals Told To Solons WASHfNGTON (UPI) -Pmidenl Nixon cautioned ranking Cong~naJ and administration leaders today agaimt raising expectation:. tliat his plan for a visit to Red China might mean an early end to the Vietnam War. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said the President made it clear in meetings with Democratic and Re p u b l i c a n Congre.ssional leaders and with bis cabinet that his visit t.e China wu to "discuss matters of mutual lntereat between the Peoples Republic of ChiDI and the United States." '1He declined to speculate on tht. effect these discusslon will have on any other matter and said such speculation would not be helpful," Ziegler told reporters. Participants ln the meeting ttboed Ziegler's statements. House Speaker Carl .Albert said there wa.~ no suggei:ition from Nixon that the visit was tied to an end t.o the U.S. role in the Vietnam War. At the State Department meanwhile , Japanese Ambassador Nobuhiko Us:hiba said Japan and the United States plaMed to work to try to prevent ouster of Na· tiona!ist Chi11a from the United Nations. Ushiba said following a meeting with Secretary of State William P. Rogers that the objective of the United States wu "quite clear" that the United State., wanted to keep Taiwan In the U.N. The United States was expected at least taciUy to give it.s approval to seat Red China in the \.\'Orld body. Ziegler said the President wa$ e1pect.@d to reach a decision sometime this month regarding U.S. policy toward 1eating Peking. Ziegler said the new policy would be aMounced by Roger.1. The President first met with the Congressional leaders for an hour and a half, then with his cabinet for an hour to give details of hls trip, scheduled to take. place before May I of next ye1r. Senate Democratic Leader M l k e. Mansfield and Republican Leader Hugh ScoU told reporters that the President asked the lawmakers to refrain from un· necessary speculation or leiislative ac- tion pertaining to Olina In the months ahead. Related story Page. 4. Mansfield observed that the.re. was "a lot of preparatory groundwork. still to be laid" before Nixon goes to Pe.king, possibly shortly after the fint of the year. Orange we.titer The we.alberman aee:s variable high clouda today and Tuesday along the. Orange Coast, with temperatures at 70 along the beaches ri!ing to a& inland. Lowa along the coait 60, e6 inland. INSIDE TODAY Orangt: County Wives of milt· tory mtn, who ore either Mid prisontr of war or who arti missing hl.action, "Wa2ntnd keep the homi /fret bMming. SI' ltor11. Paoc 14. •rr1t1, • ... "'"' . C1H'°"'ll I ci.wfl<M ,..,. e-k• n °''"' "'41k•• • ... .., ... ·-' .,,,.,,.,_, » 'IN-tf -" ,, .. L.Mlwt lf -. ""'*"" NfW' .t °'"'" (tuftty • s.,,..i. l"lrtw M I _,. H•tf 111(.k Mll'tcm. H Tlll¥hl111 U "'"''" u WH!Mr ' ,,_., ,._ 1J.11 WIPlll N .... --- -·. I DA.ILY PJLOT ......,, Jvly 19, jtn • Possibly Today Moulton Insiders· Report Unit to Use Bell Strike End T 01·0 W ate1~ WASHINGTON <UPI) -i\'ee,otiat.ors for the Bell System and a half million ttJ~hone v•orkers have reachtd a set· Uement to end 1 sla-day long nationwide phone atrlke, inside 50urces said today. Family The1n e Enhanced '71 County Fair Cotton candy puffs vanished. twinkling midway lighl!: darkened, and popcorn poppers stilled as the la.1t of the record crowd of 89.038 people filed out of the Orange County Fairgrounds Sunday night. D.irlng the day, 17,321, people had \·isited the final day of the si1-day run, nearly twice as many M had visited clos· ing day last year. A fair spokesman .attributed this year'! reeord tumoi.;t to the "family theme'' which began with the largest crowd ever .assembled in tM amphithealer -3,000 - Lo hear singer Pat Boone last Tuesday. Young people flocked to the fair this year to hear musical offerings ranging from rock to dix!~and. Saturday, a diaper ~rby and twins coolest reemphasized the family f11re p!aIIJ"led for the 1971 edition of the Orange County Fair. But despite the shift in emphasis. reminders of the agricultural heritage or the yearly event were everywhere. The rural olympics on Saturday, Jncluding watermelon eating . pig calling and hay baling contents proved to be crowd pleasers. Proor thet oranges still grow in Oranse County came with the gift of an Irvine Valencia orange to every fairgoer. Future Fennera of America and Four· H member! competed in exhibill of their farm projects. Steve Cookson of the Brea-Olinda FFA, took top honor! in the sheep division of the livestock competition. His 100.pound grand champion Hampshire sh~p netted him $375 in the livestock auction. Water District, Finn to Build Big Reservoir The Moulton-Niguel Water Dislrlct has entered an agreement with North American Roc kwell Corporation to build a 10.mil!ion-gallon reservoir near the ct>mpany'a unoccupied Laguna Niguel plan!. The water facility, to be consturcled within the next year about one mile northeast of the plant, wlll provide wa!er to all portions of the Laguna Niguel area 6trved by the dislrict. Officials of the district estimate the water storas~ facility will cost about S500,000. Under the agreement adopted last 'A'eek with North American Rock9o·ell, the district v.111 purchase some seven acres of land al $5.000 per acre from the aerospa<'e firm. An access road linking the reservoir v.'ith the NAR plant vdll be paid for jointly by the company and the water di!trict. The main water pipe: will be in- t1talled under the access road. OaANCll COAl1' DAllY PllOT Oll#.H~i:. COAlT 'UI Llafflltl) COM,#.NV 1t,1,..1 "· w •• , ..... :0 ... 1 ..... l'vtoll,,.... J 1ck It, C11rl1y Yk.~ ,rnld"'1 t flCI C-rtt Mn.ag.r TlitMll IC11<oll lil!!OI" 11itN•• A. Mvr,lol11t M.,..91"' (<llllH' Cl"'''' H. l1111t lt!th1rd r. N1A ,1ou1st1ftl Mt,...1119 lo1:.,, ..... ., .. .._1r1 ot&. 112 fo•11l Av111 ~r M1ili ftt .. ddr1u : ,,0 . l o.: fl66 , '2651 S.. C~ Office JO' Nerth fl c,,..;,., lt11I, 91•72 .,_.,...., (Mii IMH ' llC WH t II'( Str~ ~...,,..,, 1.-cll: ll» 1"tWllOI'• I OU fvt rcf ~!1'191.., l .. dl: 1111J 6tttll IDWl ... 1"' C)AILY ,tr.OT, wUJI ..,,.ct> 11 n-mtitnM t ... H ...... ,,...,, II ..... ~ •illy 1Wt.,t ""'· toy In -••'-... 1,...., .... L"""'t 1 .. <~· H1 .... 1 l.ffCI, Cltl1t Mho, ~ .... 11,.,1.., ~ """"'f in Yt l,.,., l t ft (.._It / c ....... ,,. ,,..,, ............... ""'"' - r .. leMI .. II*! Pr"'<INI print .... ~fll II t i UI W•l ... , S""~ C..11 M-. !:: ;;:; n1 11141 ff2""4JJI Cl-I-MNf"lt ... l42·W71 S... ca.-•• All '""' 1•tt: , ••• , ..... 4fJ-4411 a..,.-.._. Al ._,,,1w111 l1h1t s 4t4-MU ·~Wit. '"'· Or...-'"'' ..... 11111111,.. ~r. Nt -11 .. i.,, !thn1t11i.n1, Mhwltl _...., .,. ,,_11~11 _,.., _,. ... ·~ •lll'lwl -!ft Hr-""'"!""' ., ~-t ...... . ''"'""' , ............ Ill ft Nt-n h •(lll ~ '"'' 111-. (•IHol"llf1. IWocrl,.i..., w t•"'"" 11.• ..,.,fllrr1 .., o-e11 . a 1'f _,..1y, ,,,,u....,. .... ~ ...... u .tl -""'~· -- The sources said an announcement possibly could come as early as .a 3 p.m. EDT newg conference called by the Com· munications \Yorker" of America. There "'ere indications. the sourcr.!I said, th11t phone v.·orkers miSlJt return to \\'Ork before a complicated two-\\'eek long rtJ.iflcation process is completed. Terms of !he reported new conlracl for American Telephone and Telegraph Co. repairmen, inst.aUers and operators .,..ere not disclosed. The main issue in the dispute had deen w&ge increases and how !hey would be spent. In going on strike, the union argued the company's proposals would ·widen differences In pay betv.·een men and women emp!oyes and perpetue.le regional and job pay differentials. Meantime. ne gotiators for postal unions and the nev.· postal service al$ were reported near agreement on a contracl for 750,000 U.S. n1ailmen af1er a mart.than bargainir1g session that lasted beyond 24 hout.!I. . But a snag developed in negotiations aimed at halting a United Transportation Union (lITU) strike against the Southern Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad. Related story page 5. Moulton-Niguel Officials Okay Tank Landscape Directors of the Moulton-Niguel water District have agreed to landscape the unsightly water tanks in Mission Viejo. · The four reservoir tanks will be landscaped by the district along a plan drawn up by the Misslon Viejo Company. District officials estimate the work will cost about $25,000. 'f'he reservoirs to be covered ~·ith shrubery are at Lo! A!isos Boulevard and Trabuco Road; be!wetn Valpariso and Lope de Vega : betv.·een Primavera and Preciados and at the intersection of ~1argueri~ and Oso parkway.!!. The job will be paid for with district funds, although the Mission Viejo Com. pany will handle the design specifications and will award the bid for tile project. District officials hope to have the pro- jtci completed within the year. After the !andscapin1 has been completed, it will be maintained by the district. Borrotved Trauts Ridden a tram to the Festival of Arts yet" These jaunty \'ehicles \Vere borrov•ed by the city of Laguna Beach from the con1munlty of Lake Forest. ·rhe festival formerly operated its O\Vn tram services to haul spectators. These are being oJ>erated by the city with the festival underwritin g t 1e operation to the tune of $15,000. Thousands flocked to the first \veekend of the art spectacular. Recall Campaig11 Opens Against Superyiso1· Bake1· By ALAN OIRKIN 01 l~t O.lly l'lltt Sllll A recall campaign, complete with 1. four-page tabloid news sheet and press rele&e, was launched against Orange County's Second District Supervisor David L. Baker today. The new.!! sheet features four-inch deep headlines '"RECALL BAKER -WHY?" on the front page. It claims that the supervisor has double billed taxpayer! in travel expense accounts, that more than 90 percent or his political contributions come from "major lando"'ners and developers." that he has failed to protect public beach access. met secretly lo In· crease his salary and favors senerel aviation, including jet, operation! at the Los Alamito.!I Naval Air Station, Baker's legislative assistant Rich.ard Ruiz this momins branded the chargl!!:I! M "hOg'"'ash and innuendo." "Mr. Baker has been in political office eight years and in those eight years has left a public history," Ruiz said. "For tho~ interested in truth all they have to do i.s look at the record.'' The press releue Usu two men as co- cha.innan of the Baker Recall Committee -Donald J. Swenson, 33, an Anaheim electronics ~hnician, and \Villiam S. McKnight. 39. Stanton, a .!!alesman for a baked good.!! finn. McKnight coold not be reac.hed this morning, but Swenson, who said he ran as the American Independent Party can· didate in the last 69th AlSembly District election said he and McKnight bolh work· ed in the CHizens Referendum and RecaU Committee that was formed earlier this year after county supervi.!IOrs reportedly discussed raising their salaries at a clos- ed door executive 11ession. The metting touclled off a recall cam· paign against Baker. Board Chairman Robert Battin or the First District and Supervisor William J. Phillips of the Third District. The drive against Battin and Phillip.1 appeared to lose steam several weeks ago and the move against Baker was abandoned becall.!le of a law preventing his having to face a recall v.·ithin six months of the re~ection in January. Mission Hospital Opening Dela yed Until August Equipment installation at the new· i\lission Community Hospital in ?o.1 ission Viejo. scheduled lo open today, has been slightly delayed, a hospital spokesmpn reported. The $5 million facility will no\v open drulng the first week in Aug~t. he sald. The hospital. with 126 beds in its first phase of conlruction, is located on a 15 acre site just off Crov.•n V.!illey Park"·ay. The spokesman said the unanticipated delay '.\.'as caused primarily because some cf !he medical equipment has not yet arrived for insta!1111ion He noted that almost all of about 200 slaff members have been hired. The fac1J1ty is being built by a group of investors who have formed the l\1ission Viejo fl.Iedical C.om- pany. To meel water demands during an up- l'Om.ing road construction proj e c t , r-.1oulton-Nlguel \\later D1strt{'l directors have C'ntered an agreement to use a v.·ater main belongmg to the El Toro \Yater Distritt. To use the line. Moulton-Niguel \V111 ronstrurl <i perrnanPnt !ransmi~s1on hnf' bt>t\\'t"en 11 s own district and a \later 1nain in lhe El Tnr·o water ent1tv Thf' I wo .,..•ater lines to be connected ru11 parallel to Los Alisos Boulevard u1 /\1ission Vie10 near the Burrough~ plant. TI1e line \l'ill rw1 under the t;treet. /\1oulton-Niguel Distr1t1 manager Carl Kymla e.xplained the connection \\'Ill be needed later in the year when the countv road department begins to realign Pa~ de Valencia in Laguna Hills. \Vhen the county is accomplishing the \vork . the l\loulton-Niguel v.•ater nlain running under !he street 111ill be out nr service. 'I'l1c rounty would normally pay lo have a temporary by,pass line con· structed during !he road project. 1-fowever. Kymla said lhe di~lricl felt a permanent line connf'cling the lwo 11·ater districts -which could serve as a by· pass line -was needed in case or emergencies. The inlerconnection project will cost an estimated $22.000. 'fhe county \\'i ll pay $14,DOO of the price -what they normally 'vould havt paid to ronstruct the by-pass line. The project is expected to be com- pleted by November. Lagiuia Guards R eport Cal111 Surf Conditions Laguna Beach lifeguards had a relatively serene weekend As calm 15urf. srnall swells and ideal skin diving con· ditions necessitated the rescue of only nine of the estimated 60,000 beachgoers. A lifeguard spokesn1an said al! of the rescues \\•ere minor and there were no tn· Jllrie_~ reported. \Valer temperature.<: Saturday and Sun· day remained at about 70 degrees. he reported. with ocean swells a mild one to three feel in a sootherly direc!ion. The placid sea made underwater \ 1sibility good and hundreds of skin f!i1·ers look advantage of U1e ideal di\•ing <'Onflitions. The quiet weekend was interrupted brieOy Sunday afternoon ~·hen an Abalone Point skin diver called the Coast Guard to report he could not find his con1panion diver. Valley Preservation .Plan To Be Unveiled £01· CofC "\Ve v.·ere able to get 8,000 of the 10.800 signatures we needed," Swenson recalled. •·we had to stop then because of the legal technicality, but now Baker i.s eligible for recall." Swenson said that oo other leaders of the Citizen.!! Referendum and Recall Conimittee were involved in the present can1paign againsl Balier. Cl emente Gallery To Sho w Works By U.S. Torero Paintings by an Americ.<rn matador plus Mexico's foremost bullfight sculptor and a prominen! Lasuna Beach seascape artist ·will be blended inlo a special ex. hibilion throughout August a1 the El Torero Frame Company and Gallery in San Clemen!e. But v.·hen lifeguard unlls from Laguna Beach and Newport Beach arrived al the area. the missing youth was quickly found walking along the beach. 3 Burg laries To1d in Lag una A bold proposal to preserve fi\'e South Oranse County canyons in their natural state '"'ill be outlined at noon Tuesday for the Saddleb.ack Valley Chamber of Com· merce. The pre~nla tion v.·11! be gi\'t>n by Laguna Greenbelt representatives McKay tlfltchell ::ind Paul Colburn. The l\OOn luncheon meeling will be held 11t Man· n1ngs Restaurant, 24031 El Toro Road 1n La'iuna Hills. Stretching as far inland as the Sad· d\eback Valley, the five canyons form a chain beginning at Morro Beach north oI Laguna Beach. The chain reaches inland up Aliso Ctttk to Codes Comers and tht>n doubles back lo Aliso Beach to the south of Laguna. At the heart of the proposal is the 500· acre Sycamore Hills area at the 1n- tcrsect1on or El Ton:i and Laguna Canyon Roilds. The natural a reas involved in the: C.reenbelt proposal include Aliso. \\'ood. El Toro and Laguna Canyons and the Sycilmnre Hill~ lriangle. The Greenbelt commi!tee is nnw at· ten1ptin g to raise funds for the purehare of the properties. OCC Garbenstangel Challenge Accepted Golden West College today accepted Lhe challense or Orange Coast Colle&e and there will be. a Collegiate Division in the ~-orld's first Build a Better Garbenstangel Contest and lntemational Rallye . Darrell Ebert. fine arts instructor, i>poke for the Huntington Beach colle(!.e when he said G\\'C wil! field a team to build "a garben.<:tangel like no one has evtr seen:· He said hi! students have "secret plans they are !Worn not to reveal." Eber\'s gargrnstangelers ""'ill be pitted against learns from Orange Coast College coached by Bil l Abernathy, an Instructor in OCC's technology di\'lslon, and Dick Hernandez, director of specl a1 programs ror minority studcnl~ at OCC. Abtrnalhy and Hernandez werr first lo organize teams of garbenstangeler! to build Rube Goldbergian contraptions for the swnmertime silly season event to be: co-sponsored July 2fi through 31 by the DAILY PILOT and South Coast Plaz1 The C:O-!lponsor1 have agreed to furni.11h competition tee shirts for the teams and will put up special prizes for tht best ~1rbenstangel built by them on location at the Carousel Court tn South Coast Plaz.a shopring Cl'nler . No11ck Trophy Co. of Costa Mesa ia de~IJ!ntng a speciAI perpetual trophy which II will donate to the Collesiate Divi~ion nf !he C'nnlP'!. Cash pr!us of SlOO for Opt>n Division (111! agesl and S75 for Junior l)lvislon /through 12 year~ of ag~) will bt ,pffered, -.... along with trophie! and merchandise prize.!! from the South Coast Plata retailers. Garbenstange\s either built or recon· dilioned for display and competition by the contest&nl11 11'il\ be exhibited .and o~rated on Thursfl!ly , Friday and Satur- dn.v (July 29 lhroucli 311. The <·on1edy te."ltll of Skiles and Hender.son already ha~ 11:gyeed to serve as judses or entries in .all thrf'e divisions of the contest. The co111ics will be assisted and kibitz. ed by Gene Tardy, Golden \\'est College' graphic arts instructor and builder over the p<ist 10 zears of what he calls Do Nothing li.1achines. But Gene's 1narhines, recognized by the Garbenslangel Rallye's promoters for v.hat they really are -sarberutan11els - 1'.'ill bt on continuous display throuehout the 1rea1 Rallye. In fa ct. a mechanical man built by Tardy and r!-named Gary G1rbenst1ngel for his appearance at Soulh Coast Plau v.•ill emcee the Do Nothing ~fachtnt ahow. ~iore judges 11re expected to be an- nounced later. And, accordin& to CX:C tind GWC spokesmen. the Colltglatt Division chBllense is still open If other schools would like to enter the com· ptlltlve artna. "\\'e'I/ garben.!ltaniiel them !o death," flcclertd ont Orange Coast Colle1e spokesman. "We"re ready for 11!1 com· ers." Asked who else was leading the curre11t dr11e, Swenson repli~. ''it"s basically JUSt the two of us ." The nev.·s sheet contains reproductions of ne\.l•spaper stories and headlines and a cartoon of Baker v.·htch br1tnris him as "double bill Baker" and shov.•s him ta k· in~ rnnnC'~' from 111·0 taxpayers' pockeis for legislati\"e trip.~. rt ,<rppears tn he l'l professionally pr~ duced news sheet. but Swenson said h~ and tl·l<'Knight sel 11 up tog~ther He derlined tn say how many copies had bf-en run n!f. how many would~ printed, \1·ho printrd Them . or ho11> much the prin· l1ni;: v.·011ld cost "P{'ople have been k1ck ins in $5 and $1 0." he said. Robert Ryan. A Southern California man v.•ho began fighting bulls in ~·!exiro as a teenager -and later accepted in1o the once all-Latin profession -will ex· hibit .several painting~. \\.i!h his \\'Orks \\'lll be sculpture bv llumt>erto Pera1a. v.<hose bronze .statuarV i.~ on permanent displa\· at the r-.1exicO City bullring and the 1\lonumenl::tl bull- ring io Tijuana. Several of the sculptor"s bronzes will be on displny Bennett Bradbury of Laguna Beach - recently named by the National Academy of Arts as one of tv.·o of the na\Jon·s outstanding artists in !!171 -will also display palntinss at I.ht> show. Cameras and sound equipment ~ert ('O!leeted by burglars in thrtt Lagun.a Beach locations 01·er Lhe weekend, police report. Biggest loss OC'Curred al the home of r.lel Camey. 1008 Van Dyke Dri1·e, where loot included such \'aried item! as 1 mo\'ie camera. telescope. projector. rug, C'lock. bottles or whiskey and clothine. \"alued tota!lv at $822. Sle\·en I>JCote reported the loss or $569 ll'Orth of camera equipment from ht.': roo n1 at the Hacienda Hotel Friday nigh~ nnd 011 Sunday night \V1 1!iam Cham~rs advised police that a tape player and rape~ \1•orth $150 harJ disappeared from his apart1nent at 269 Broad'.l.·ay. lllT TIGHT MOHIY !HD 1xril!lOR Brow1ing hours from 9 to 7 dilly 9 to 6 Sat. Diamond Earrings 1 ... "' " .~.. $395 10101 w.tthl. S... 11 1411'. White CIUl.U.NTllD TO APPIJ.1!11 AT 40% MORI NIW AND US!D !TIMS~ DIAMONDS ••• to ... GUITARS STEREOS .•. to ... GUNS CAMERAS .•. to •.• TOOLS • ANTIQUES ••. to .•• TAP'ES ALL AT VERY LOW PRICES DOM RACITI OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUARANTEE W"'11 T•• '-Ill' • 111--4 fTe fll '' we wUI ,,_,.. th11 411"'01tl ... ,,,,.,.,. .., '40•'. MORI ttt..1 p l ,.till for Ir or ye1r _..., '-lldt. Cu y1141•wtill ..... wtt.,.l COMl'AIL 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN. IUY, SILL. TRADE 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA ---·--~-··· ~·· .. COMI IN AND IROWS! AROU N~ PHONE 646·7741 a.rw.... Harbor &: lroodwey • I 1 I I I I I ' I I I i ' I i, I I I I \. I --. ' -·c~ Saddlehaek-. . ' Today'•-..... VOL. 64 , NC. 171 , 3 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES ORAN<;E COUNTY, CALIFOl~A ... .. MONDAY, JULY ·19, 1971 TEN CENTS • lXOll • r1 aution ~Routine' Check Marines Seized On Drug Counts Seven Camp Pendleton Marines face charges of possession ()f marijuana and dangerous drugs today after a routine check by San Clemente police turned into 1 full-scale raid early Sunday. The arrests took place at 5 a.m. after ii patrolman stopped to investigate a man allegedly rummagin g through a car. Moment s later other patrolmen arrived in front of an apa rtmen t building at 119 Coronado Lane and assertedly smelled marijuana smoke coming from a nearby epartmenl. Those arrested -all Marines from Camp Pendleton, -~·ere ~1ichael Charles Miles. 20; John Philip \.Verner, 20 : John Angeles, 21 ; Michael Lee FuJ\er, 21 : John Lee Farmer, 20: Richard Jay Strang, 2.1, and Omar Evel! Hiles, 20. Inside the apartment officers said they found marijuana plants growing in a pot and a glass jar, a qu antity of assorted pills and capsules which were being analyzed early today. and paraphernalia allegedly used to smoke marijuana. Some nf the contraband was retrieved from a toilet where one of the f.1 ar1nes assertedly tried to destroy evidence, of· fi cer claim. All seven men were scheduled for formaJ charges today in South Orange County Municipa l Court. Several of the Marines were from .a M urine Facing Sanity Hearing In Rape Case A San Clemente Marine charged with the attempted ra pe of a pair of female P1tchhikers near San Onofre will face a Superior Court sanity hearing Thursday In Sa n ])iego. Sgt. Eugene Lamoreaux, 29, of 235 Monterey Lane . was arrested on the charges in late June aft.er the two young )'.!lrls tolrl nf OC>ing pirkecl 11p in San Juan Capislrann and clrivt'n to the secluded San Onnfre area in San Die go ("nunl.v. The Marine allegedly attempted In force the girls In disrobe. but they fled Lamoreaux pleadrd innocent to !he rhari;::es at his arraignment in Oceanside Municipal Court. Only July Ii. the samf.' court n1lerl the t-.1 arine sane and fit !o st;illCI trial nn the rharRes and increased bail from $ii,250 to 113.500. San Diego Superior Court .. Jurlgc Roscoe Wilkey is scheduled to conduct lhe .sanlly hearing Thursday. If the 11pper court find s Lamoreaux legally sane. he will be rem.:inded to Ocesnside for a preliminary hearing to determine if he wHl stand trial. Ex-senator Succumbs \\'ASHINGTON (AP) -Fonner Sen. Gerald P. Nye (R-N.0 .). a frequent critic of Gresl Britain and an opponent nf American involvement In World War II, ha s died at age 78. His wife, Marguerite, said Sunday that Nye died Saturday in Georgetown University HospitaJ after surgery !or vascular difficultiel!I. New Proposal medical batta lion at Camp Pendleton. Others were members of a health and safety company, tifficers said Pay Increases, Annexing Bid Face Council Pay ra ises and .an annexation study are again on the agenda for the San Juan Capistrano Ci ty Council tonight at 7 o'clock in the city ha!l. Tht. council will again co nsider whether or not to grant a cost-of-living increase to city emptoyes. They voted Monday to limit any increase lo four percent or less. The council will also discuss a request from the Capistrano Beach. Dana Point ;:ind San Juan Capislrano ChamberK of Commerce for an in-depth study on th e annexation of the two coastal com- munities. Que!ltions lo be .anawered include the cosl of the study, whelher or not the .city staff or an oota1de-etmsultant should make it. possible financial assistance for the study from the communities involved, and whelhcr 01> not therl! is l!nough in· terest in the annexation to warrant the study. Girls Lose Food Supply to Thief For thousands of San Clemenfle residents and visitor!!, the weekend's fiesta was fun. but local girl scouts found it some\~1hal of a disappointment Sunday. Dur ing the hours that the midway wall closed for the night someone broke into f.hc group·s booth and stf.lle a supply of food. Police said !he lheft at Old Plaza Park 'vas disco\'ered short!.1· afler noon Sunday when "oluntcers opened the boolh for business The missi n;? supply nf hn! dogs , bun.! and punch was valued al $10. officers said WATC/f FOR YOUR NAME AS WINNER The DAILY PILOT today oHers the first of 200 free tickets l.l be given to readers for the 1971 edition of Orange C.-Ounty's annual Home and Garden Show. 'fhe show opens July 30 and continues through Aug . 8 at Anaheim Convention Center. Tickets will be given away al the rate flf 10 pairs a. day for 10 publication da ys. \Vatch the classified advertising section (all classification s) for special .ad!! listing names or ticket winners. If your name is there, you win one of 20 tickets to be given each day of the DAILY PILOT givea way. • Clemente Parade By JOHN VAL TERZA 01 the O.lly Pll4ol 11111 San· Cleinenle's fiesta banners were coming down ·throughout the city today aft.er one of the besl celebretions in· years, said chamber of commerce of- ficials. Saturday·s lilrge parade was the highlight of the tbree-Oay celebralion. Local floals dominated the !isl of win· ne.rs in the procession which traveled elong Aven ida Del Mar and El Camino Real lo the di!Light of about 40.000 onlookers. Revised Density Plans To Ease Aegean Squeeze A homeowners revolt against plans r.r the developers of Aegean Hills i,, the ~th El Toro area may have been nipped in the bud by appeasement action on the pa rt of the developer. Orange County Planninj? Department officials said toda y thal the Alscot Development Company will present plays Tuesday showinl? a .!!harp reduction in the number of townhouse units pe r acre in the 419-acte development northwest of La Paz Road . Original plans called for from 14 to 20 unit! per acre. They have been revisl!CI downward to 8 to 10 unit! per acre, a density only slightly higher than aingle famity homes. Planning officials also said lhe revised plan shows 14 acres of local parks, com· pared to five planned before. Tbe liearin& is .aet for I :30 p.m. Tues- day. • · The ' parade, three~ay e a r n f•v a I •. midwar and 'schedule of specia"l events all were· orgllnized under a new format this year ·-lesa emphasis on .sf)l:lnsoring cham,ber of comriierae manpoWer. and mtire .from local . community· 'serv~ groups. c.hamber Manager Robert. Evans saitt the iC!f!a "worked' fan tastically .well ." Of· ficials at ·l~-.group have said Chey ex· peel i fUU-Dedged fiesta· Association to assume the task. next yeAT. DOzens of large trophfl!s· ·v.··e re pi-esented· to· th"e winners ·in · 'many categories in the parade. The awards. in· cluding the man.size sweepst.akes trophy, all were hl?ught through sponsorship fees donated by local businesses,."clubs and in- di viduals. 'fhe Royal Cavaliers Youlh band -a frequent wiMer in past parades-won the sweepstakes trophy again this year. The Diplomat! band and marching unit won the second-place, over-all a···•ard. San Clemente "s Municipal Band, which v.·as the first marching unit in the t\\"O-- hour parade. won the Mayor's Trophy. In the f1011l categories. San Clemente'!! Sister City Associalion won the best-use- of·lheme category, and the San Clemente Jaycees. presenting F'iesla Que e n Barbara Cheatum and her court on a tnwering float, won lhe best local float category. Other rloa l. winners ln'cluded San Juan Capistrano's" Chamber ·of ·comm erce. Knotrs . Berry Farm, the King Neptunl! Fiesta and La Christianita Pre-School. TM .latter -entry was -a large, mpving sa!'dcast!e wit~ . presci>oolj!a's wavtpg gree tings from the lop. The theme of this year's parllde was "f.iesta fun Time By the Sea." Other winnars included :' 7 Ban4s :· the 72nd ' Army . Band: S).. Genevieve High School Band and 6uie's Chargers. all first-place in t h•e i r c,ategoriea. . ,-Dfum Sqtiads : Sequjnettes. -Majorett·Ps : Deb Stats. Sf!9Ilinetle~. Twirler!! of Oz and Royal Cav!He'.rs, -all first-place winners. -Drum majors: Ozzie's B 11,n d, Glengarry Highlanders. Diplomat!. -Color Guards: Glerigarry Highlanders and Royal Cavaliers. . -Drill Team : U.S. Naval Training Center, Pace Setters, American Heritage and Royal Cavaliers. -Equestr ian firsl·place winner.,-In their respective categories: Harvey Robinson, Dottie Pratt. Joe Meade, Norma Reeve!!, George Schniede. Mar ia .Johnson. Art Balcom . the California Ran gers, Randy Freeman, the Barton family and Laura Hontos. A total of 450 formsl entries. tncluding thousand.'! of participant! we re in the parad• lineup. Park Bond Package· Eyed City Manager Kl!o Carr will report on the possible date for a new, llll-in-one parka bond package Wednesday -a measure which already has the unofficial ble5..'llng of San Clemente City Coun· t llmen. Carr will report to councilmen the sug· gtsled dates for 11 parks and recreation p.:r.Cka ge -the second one this year - C'alled in an effort to raise construction fund~ for a new community clubhouse, a '·nut.h rttreation center. beach im- Pr.ovemenl3 and ntw neighborhood parks. The proposed new bond issue woulrl b11ve one ootable differ eJl('e, councilmen each prnject, the new election would ln- \"Olve one vole on a.II four. The decision came after h 11 r !I h -=--r ' "' -·-.. criticism. recently by a San Clemente woman complaining th•t only the clubhouse was propo!llMI for construction. ln their own pruit mortem of the fai ling bond Issue last April councilmen agreed that voters generally cha.." one one of the four options. often defeating the others. CQuncilman Thomas O'Keefe blamed the failure .of the four revenue iMuea on •·selfi>flnell" BfnO!lg tM 'Voter11. Jn the meantime, only remnant.a ol the matter of weeks. ln the meantime, onl y rem nants of the old landmark clubhruse remaln intact after wrl!<:ker1 early last week removed t.ht fire charred portions of the buildinll at Avenlda Otl Mar and Calle Seville. Carr uld I.ate l111t week that the prof· ·--~::._:. : ---· . tcted' 'conft,n..lction atarU.ng 'tlme remal.M vagut until ··the formal contract with builder Ray McDl111in is e1~uled. Work is expected to begln within a matter of'week.,. The funds for the clubhouse·project will rome from the city's genei-al fund · .aC. count. and would be pjlid Wk on a year· ly ha1fl1 fl'OQ'I· abou( ·'50.ecKI .annually · rectived.fro\'n a ·nt•, lO<ent•t.a1 rate In· create. " DAtlY Pit.OT tlilrrtt,..... Councilmen have unofficially agreel"f that if the bond Iss ue were to pass and the clubhouse bonds 30\d, the general fund would be paid back and the ra!A! wnuld either be cut, or ill revenue used !or other public works .and (tC.re:aUon pro Jedi. .AND 'Tl'tER! WiRf ,ii.ETTY GIRLS IN THE)'A.RAQE . P'1ttl C·urrey (WiVfng) .. nd OUten 81rb1r1 "ChflfJ.lm ' . ' ·---~ -=-:;::.;;_· ~---"" ~ ""'t""'"------.Jlt"" ----~ -. . . . _ _..z..:.__ -----...----- I China Visit Goals Told To Solons WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon cautioned ranking Congressional and administration leaders today against raising expectation.'! that his plan for a visi t to Red China might mean an early end to the Vietnam War. Press Secretary Ronald Zieglet said the President made it cll!ar in meetings with Democratic and Repu bllcan Congre56ional leaders and wlUt his cabinet that his visit to China was to "di!CUss matters or mutual interest between the Peoples Republic of China and the United States." ''He declined to apeculate on the eff«t these discussion will have oo .any otMr matter and said such speculation would not be helpful," Ziegler lold reporters. Participants In the meeting l!Choed Ziegler's sla tements. House Speaker Carl Albert said there was no suggestion from Nixon lhal the visit was tied to an end to the U.S. role int.he Vtetnam War. At the State Department meanwhile, Japanese Ambassador Nobuhiko Ushiba said Japan and the United States planned tn work to try to prevent ouster of Na· tionalisl Chi11a from the United Nations. Ushiba said following a meeting with Secretary of State William P . Rogers that the objective of lhe United State!! wa1 "quite clear'' that the United States wanted to ketp 'Taiwan in the U.N. The United States was expected at least Lacitly to give tt1 approval to seat Red China in the world body. Zieeler said the President was expected lo reach a decision sometime this month regarding U.S. policy tov.·ard &eating Peking. Ziegler said the new p:>licy would be announced by Rogers. The President first met with tile Cimgressional leaders for an hour and a half, then with his cabinet for an hour to give detai ls of his trip, scheduled to take place before May 1 of next year. Senate Ol!mocratic Leader Ml k e Mansfield and Republican Leader Hugh Scott t-Old reporters that the President asked the lawmakers to refrain from un~ necessary speculation or legislative &e:· tion pertaining to 01.ina in the months a.head . Related 5tory Page 4. Budget Paring Slated Tonight By Capo Board Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District will study ways to trim their 19.4 million budget at tonight's meeting in Serra School, Capistran• Beach. Superintendent Trum.'.ln Bene d I c t presented a list of alternatives to the board Monday, indicating possible items for deletion. The board also will decide how it wi11 use an additlooal windfall or $250 ,000 it wili be re ceiving because of a recent ri.st In assesstd vllluations. Officials had made a conservative estimate about the Increase in asse!!Sed valuation and were pleased last week 19 find that their estimates had been low. Oruge Weather The weatherman tees variable high clouds today and Tuesday along the Oranee Coast, with temperature1 at 70 along the beaches rising to 85 inland. Lows along the cout 60. M ln1~. INSIDE TODAY Orange Count~ wives of milt· torv men, wh o are either hekt prisonf!r of war or who are mi!atng in. octton, woi' nnd ktep the ho~ j ires ·burnino. S~e .1toT1{, Pogl'-14. -' l lr1b• .. ..."... . C..H!lntll • a-1.... ..... .. C-'C1 D IM1tll loltlkM t ' 1-'lt(lll Pt" a •~1trt•l11-1 .JJ •14111« M "-t(-,, ARI UMtt1 1J ~ ...• SJ N1tlloWll N-I 0.1111-1 Ce11111Y t &wt.II Pwtv '4 loMrh t1•tt lll(lt Mtrlwh d Tt ... ltlM U -.... u WH!Jlfr f W91Ml'I lttwt 1J. U w ..... Newt .. I DA.IL v PILOT SC Posrihly Today Moulton Insiders Report Unit to Use Bell Strike End Toro Wate1~ WASHINGTON lUPIJ -Kl!gotiat.ors for the Bell System and a half mtUion tt.lephone \.'i'Orkers ha\·e ~achtd a set- tlement to end a six-day long nationwide pbooe strike, inside sources sald today. Family Theme Enhanced '71 County Fair Cotten candy puffs vanished, t?>inklirig midway lights darkl!ned, and popcorn poppers stilled as the last of the rl!'cord cro~·d of 89.038 people-filed out of the Orange County Fairgrounds Sunday night. During the day , 17,321. people had visited the final day of the six-day run, nearly twice as many as had visited clos- ing day last year. A fair spokesman 8tlributed this year's record turnout lo the ''fam ily theme'• which began with the largest crov.·d eyer assembled in the amphitheater -3,000 - to hear singer Pat Boone lasl Tu~sday . Young people flocked to the fair this year to hear musical offerings ranging from rock to dixitland. Saturday, a diaper derby and twins contest reemphasized the family fare planned for the 1971 edition or the Orange Qiunty Fair. But despit.e the shift in empha!is, reminders of the agricultural heritage or the yearly evenl were everywhere. The rural olympic:s on Saturday, including watermelon eating, pig calling and hay baling contents proved lo be crowd pleasers. Proof thal oranges still grow in Orange County came with the gift of an Irvine Valencia orange to every fairgoer. Future Farmers of America and Four· H members competed in exhibits of their farm projects. Steve Cookson of the Brea-Olinda FFA, look top honors in the sheep division of the livestock competition. Hi! UIO-pound grand champion Hampshire sheep netted him $375 in the livestock auction. Water District, Firm to Build Big Reservoir The MouJlon·Niguel Water District has entered an agreement ~·ith North American Rock"·ell Corporation to build a 10-million-gallon reservoir near the Ct"lmpany'1 wioccupied Laguna Niguel plant. The water fa c1li ty, to be conslurcted within the. nrxt ''ear about one mile 11Qrtheast of the pl8nt. will provide water to all portions of the Laguna Nigul!'l area served by the di.c;tricl. Officials of the district estimate the "'·ater storage facility "'ill cost about $500,000. Under the agreement adopted la~t week with North Americ11n Ro<:kwel!, thl!' district ~·ii! purchase some seven acres of land a1 $5.000 per acre from the aerospace firm. An access road lin king the resrrvoir \o.'ilh lht r\AR plant will he paid for jointly by the company and t.he water district. The main ""'Bier pipe will be in- stalled under the acces~ road. OltA'4•1 COAST DAILY PILOT CltANG.O COAST l'USllSl'llNG COMl'AN'V' ••her! N. We•d l'•to:oMnl t nd l'~l>IW• J1c~ It. Cwrh y Viet '"'lbtdtnl t nd ~"I M•ne~r n.o..,•• ic: ••• a Edit« n..,.,, A. Murphi~• MHlt1illnt a.1.,.. Cli•rl•• ~. toot ll itli••' '· Nell AHllle~I M•MOlno Edl~O<I '""'" lttecll Offk• l12 Foret! A·•~u• Me<li ~q echhen! ,.0 , l o• 6~6. 'l652 s... c.._.. Offlc• JOS N•1 th El c,..,;~• lle1 I, t 1611 O"-OHien CM!t Mnt• D Wt'1 ltl' SltHf N_,..-1 IN<~: llJ.:I "-" eov ft~trd Hvnll"lllOll 8Ndl; 1)111 ktcil fDul•••r<il OA.lLY .. ILOt, wfl~ """' 11 """9S..... 11\e NtWl• .. fMI, 11 """11ti..d 4hlly ••c .. t '- <tty In ...,_•tit H IOo"' fw l'9U'lt llMcll, H._I ktct'I, CHtt Mitt, Hvntlooel""' llwdl. "-"It> \It !...,, lt~ C-1•/ C..,..,,_ '"" StHIH•rt, ,_..,, w1111 - r .. l9oltl ftlltorl .. rlfttl ... I l"lfll .... 1'111>1 la et UI Wtoel ltr s1 ... 1, '911t MtN. , ...... l 1714) 64J-4JJt Cl•lflM Ar..rtW .. 642-1671 S. C ....... All hpe1t-": , ... ,.. '''"'''' &....-..... Al O.,m-n: , ... , ........ ,.,, ·c.rir1. "''· ~ Cat11 ~llo!Wol"I ~-... -,,....... 11i...1r111er1 •• .,,_._, _,,., w r•"'11......,.1o """"' """ llo ~ wlf!Wul ._ .. I ,.,. ...... ., .,.,..., ..... S«..w ci.M _,.._ ~llf et H•wll'9rt ••~ tlllf C:.lt M9M, C.I~. S-Crl.,iltfl .., u"..,. tl.tJ _l'lllY, .., Otfll n 11 "'*""'"' 1t1Ullwy ... 11,..,....., U.t.f ""°"""'' ··-----··---~---·.,.. ··---'---. • The sources s&Jd an announcement po~sibly could come. as early a! a 3 p.m. EDT news conference called by lhe Con1· munications Workers of America. There were indications, the sourt-f'.'I said, that phone workers mig ht return ta work before a complicated t\vo-wcek long r2.tificalion proces5 is complcieg Ttrms of the re-ported new contract for American Teltph-One and Telegraph Co. repairmen. inslallers and operators 11ere not disclosed. n1e main issue in the dispute had deen wage increasl!'S and hov.· they v.·ould be spent. In going on strike, the union argued the company'.!! proposals would wklen differences in pay between men and women emp\oyes and perpetuate regional and job pay differentials. Meantime. ntgotiators ff'f postal unions and the new postal service also were reported near agreement on a contract for 750,000 U.S. mailmen after a mare.thon bargainii1g session that lasted beyond 24 hour!!'. But a snag developed in negotiation.!! aimed at halting a United Transportation Union (UTU) strike against the Southern Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad. Related story p2.ge 5. Moulton-Niguel Officials Oka:y Tank Landscape Directors ol the Moulton-Niguel water District have agreed to landscape the unsightly water tanks in Mission Vitjo. The four reservoir tank1; will be landscaped by the district along a plan drawn up by the Mission Viejo Company_ District officials estimate the work will cost about $25.000. The rf!servoirs to be covered with shrubery are at Los Alisos Boulevard and Trabuco Road ; between Valpariso and Lope de Vega ; betwel!ll Prima1·rra and Preciados and al the inters«lion of l\1arguerite and Oso parkways. The job will be paid for '~·ith district funds, although the 1'1iss1on Vitjo Com- pan y will handle the design specifications and will award tJie bid for Uie project. District officials hope to have the pro- ject completed within lhe year. After the landscaping has been complete<!, it will be maintained by the dislricl. Borrowed Trauis Ridden a tram to the Festival of Arts yet? These jaunty vehicles were borrowed by the city of Laguna Beach from the community of Lake Forest. The festival formerly operated its own tram services to haul spectators. These are being operated by the city with the festival underwriting the operation to the tune of $15.000. Thousands flocked to the first weekend of the art spectacular. Recall Campaign Opens Against Supervisor Bake1~ By ALAN OIRKJN Of 1111 DtllJ l'llet lttlf A recall campaign, C'omp!ete "'ith a four-page tabloid news sheet and press release, was launched against Orange County's Second District Supervisor David L. Baker today. The news sheet features four-inch deep headlines ''RECALL BAKER -\\rHY?" on the front page. It claims that the supervisor has double billed taxpayers in travel rxpense accounts, that more than 90 percent of his political contributions come from "major landowners and developers," thaL he ha! failed to protect public beach access, met secretly lo in- crease his salary and favors general .'l.Viation. including jet. oreratlons al the Los A!an1itos Naval Air Station. BakPr's legi.~!alive assisl11nt Richa rd Ruiz this morning branded the charges as ''hogv.·ash and innuendo!' ··~1r. Baker has been in polilica\ oll 1<:e eight years and in those eight years has left a public history," Ruiz said. "for those interrsted in truth all they have to do is look at the record." The press release-lists t"·o men 11s co. chairman of the Baker Recall Comn1ittee -Donald J. Swenson, 33, an Anaheim e.Jectronic:s technician, and William S. f\.lcKnight, 39, Stanton, a salesman for a baked goods firm. McKnight could nol be reached this morning. but Swenson, v.•ho said he ran as the American Independent Party can- didate in the last 69th Assembly Distri ct election said he and McKnight both work· ed in the Citizf!ns Referendum and Recall Committee that was formed tarlier this- year a!ter county supervisors reportedly discussed raising their salaries at a clos- ed door executive session. The meeting touched oH a recall cam- paign against Baker. Board Chairman Robert Ballin of the f1r~t District and SuptrYisor \\'illiam J. Phillips of the Third District. The dr1 \'e against Battin and Phillips appeared to lose stea1n 1;e\•t ral weeks ago and the move against Baker was abandoned because of a la\v prevent ing his ha ving lo face a recall ,,·ithin si x months of I.he re-eltction 1n January. Mission Hospital Opening Delayed Until August Equiptnent Installation al the new tl!ssion Community Hospital in J\1ission Viejo, scheduled to open today, has betn slightly delayed , a hospital spoktsman reported. The $5 million facil ity "'ill no1v t1pen druing the first 1reek in August, he said. The hospilal. with 126 heds in its flrsl phase or contruction, is located on a 15 acre si1e just off Crov:n Valley Park .... ·ay. The spokesman said the unanticipated de!ay was caused primarily because some fJf the medica l equipmtnt has not )'l!'t arrived for installation. He noted that almos t all of about 200 :staff members have been hired. The facility i.~ being built by a group of investors \\'ho have formed lhe J\!ission Viejo flll!'dical Com- pany. To mcl!'l "'altr den1ands during an up- coming rOad construction pro j e c 1 , fl1ouiton-Niguel \.\'ater District directors have enlt'rcd an agr~ment to use a \\'aler main belonging lo !he El Torv \\'ater District To use the !Jne . Moulton-Niguel will Ct"Jnstruct a permunent tra n~ssion line beh\'een its own dlstricl 3nd a \\'ater main in the El Toro water tnlil y 1'he two waler lines !o be connected run parallel to U!s Aliso-; Boulevard tn !\fission \'iejo near the Bur roughs plant. The line will run undl!'r tlie street 1.'loulton-i\'igu<'I Dist:·ict nianager Carl Kymla explained lhe connection will be needed later in thf! year \vhen l~ eounty 1·oad departrnent begins to realign Paseo tle Valencia in Laguna Hills. \\'hen tllt county is accotnpl ishing th!!' \\'Ork. lhe Moullon-Niguel "'aler 1na111 running under the street will be out of ~ervice. The county would normally pay to have a temporary by-pass line con· structed during the road project. Ho·,yever. Kymla said the di.!ltrict fell a permanent line connrcting the l\l'O water districts -\l'hich could serve as a by· pass line -\\'HS needed in case of etnergenties. The interconnection project will cost an estimated $22,000. The county will pay $14,000 of the price -what tht.V normally \.\'OU!d have paid to construct the by-pass line. The project is expected to be con1· pleted by November. Laguna Guards Report Calm Surf Conditions Laguna Beach lifeguard.'! had a relatively serene weekend as calm 1urf. small swells and ideal skin diving con- ditions necessitated the rescue of only nine of the estimated 60,000 beachgoers. A lifeguard spokesman said all of the rescues wf!re minor and there ~·erl! no ln- jurits reported. \\'ater temperatures Saturday and Sun - day remained at about 70 degrees. he reyr.rted. \\'ilh ocean s""·ells a mild on e to lhrre feet 1n a so11therl v direction. The placid sea rl1ade underwa!f'r visibility good and hundreds of skin divers took ad\'antage of lhe ideal diving conditions. The quiet ""·eekend was interrup!ed briefly Sunday afternoon when an Abalone Point skin diYtr called the C.oasl Guard to report he could not find b~ companion diver. But "'hen lifeguard uni ts froin 1..aguna Beach and Newport Beach arrived at lbt area, tht misi;ing youth y,·as quickly Valley Preservatio11 Plan To Be Unveiled £01· CofC "\Ve v.·ere able 10 get 8.000 or I.he t0,800 .!-iignatures ire needed ." Swenson recalled. "\lr'e harl to stop !hen because of the legal tec.hriicality. but now Baker is eligible for rtea!l." Swt>n..,nn said !hAt oo other leaders or the Ci!izcn.~ Referrndum and Recall Committee were involvtd in the present campaign against Raker. Clemente Gallery To Show Works By U.S. Torero Pa inting.c; b.1' an Ainerican m;itador plus t.1exlco's foremost buUfight sculptor and a prominent LagunA Reach seascape artisl will be blended into a special ex- hibition throughout August at lht El Torero Frame Com pany and Gallery in San Clerntntf'. found walking along the beach. · 3 Burglaries Told in Laguna A bold proposal to preser\'e five South Orange County canyons in thtir natural stale ~·ill be outlined at noon Tuesday for I.he Saddle-back Valley Chamber of Com- merce-. The pre!lE:'ntalion "'ill be gl\'tn by Laguna Gre-enb!'l! representalives McKay J\·l!tchell and Paul Colburn. The noon lunchton meeting ""'ill be held at ~11n­ nings Restaurant . 24031 El Toro Road in Laguna Hil!s. Stretching as far inland as the Sad- dleback Valley. Uie fi l'e canyons form a chain beginning at r.1orro Beach north of Laguna Beach. The chain reaches inland up Aliso Crttk to Code.s Corners and then doubles back to Aliso Bl!'ach to the south of Laguna. 1\l tht heart of the proposal is the fKXl- .aC're Sycan1ore Hills area at the in- tersection of El Toro and Laguna Can~'on Roads . The natural areas in\"o!l·ed in the f;rteribel1 propo~l include Al!so, \Vood. El Toro and Laguna Canyons and the Syc amore Hills triangle. The Gretnbelt committee-is no\\· a!- tempting to raise funds for !be purchase of the propl!rties. OCC Garbenstangel Challenge Accepted Golden \\'esl Colleg• today ac~pled tht challenge of Orange Coast College and thtre ~·ill be a Collegiate Division in the \.\'or1d's first Build 11 Bttler Garbenstangel Contest and International Rallyt. D1rrell Ebert. fine arts instructor, ~poke-for the Huntington Bt.ach college ""'hen he said GWC will field a team to build ''a garbenstangel like no one-: has tver seen He said hi! :students have "secret plan.!! they are sworn not to reveal." Eberfs ga rgenstangelers w!\I be pitted against teams from Orange Coast College coached by Bill Abernathy, an instructor in occ·:s technology divi!lon. and Dick Hernandez. director of special program.!! for minority studenU al OCC. Abem1thy and Hern andez "·ere first to organlte t•ams of garbenstangelers to build Rube Goldberglan contrapllons for the summertime silly season event to be co-sponsored July 2e through 31 by the DAILY PILOT and South Coast Plau. The co-sponsors ha \'e ag-rttd to furnish competition tee shlrl& for the tearna and vtlll put up special prizes for the be.st garberuit.angel built by them on location at the Carou&tl court ln South Coas t Plaz• ~hoppina ctnter. N<>11ck Trophy Co. of Costa Mesa i1 de~ignlng a special prrptlual trophy ~·hich it wlll donRle lo thf' Collegiate Divi.!1ion of the ronlelll Cash prizes of $100 for Optn Dlvi!lon (all ages) and $7$ for Junior Division i through 12 year!! of age) will ~ offert'd, along wilh trophies and merchandise prizl's lrom the South Coast Plaza ret11ilers. Garbenstangels either built or recon- ditioned for display and competition by the contestants will be exhibited and Optrated on Thursday. Friday and Satur- day (July 29 through 31 ), The comedy team of Skiles and Henderson already has agretd to strve as judges of tntrles in all three divisfons of the con test. The comics will be assisted and kibi t1,.. ed by Gene Tardy, Golden We111 College graphic arts instructor and builder over tht past 10 zears or what he calls Do Nothing J\1achines. But Gene's machines, recognized by the Garbensta.ngel Rallye'1 promoters for what they really are -aarben.stangels - 1vlll be on continuous display throughout the great Ra.llye. In fact. a mechanical man built by Tardy and renamed Gary Gubenstangel for his appearance at South Coast Plaza ""'ill em~e the Do Nothlng Machine sOOw. More judges are expected lo be an. nounced later. And, aC'CQrdlng to OCC and GWC spokesmen. \ht Colleglale Division challenge ifi still open if other srhoals "'Ould like to enler the coni- peti!lvt arena. ''\\'t 'll garben!ltan.1:;f'l thf'm lo death ." declared onr Orange Coast Collejte spokesman. "\\'e're ready for all t1'm· er11" .. -::--.;:.:..:.r ---·-ac"·--· -- Asked \rho e!.'it 1\·as leading the current clrile, Swenson rephOO , "it's basically JUS! the l\l'O of 11 ' .. Tht nP11·s <"ohE'<'t contai n~ reproductions or newspaper stories and headlines and a <'artoon (If Baker whif'h brands him as "rlouh!e bill B11ker"' and shn\1·s him tak· 111~ mnnt y fron1 111·0 taxpa_1 ers' pockets lor lr,l(l.~h1ti1·t !rip( II :ippears to he a proles.c;io1tally pro- duced newt. i;hcel. but S""·tnson said ht and MrKnigh1 set 1t up together. Hf' dccli nC'rl 1'1 '") how man~· copit>s had hf-en n1n olf. how man.1• would be printed, 1vho prinlPrl them. or hov.• much th!!' pnn· ling v.·011Jrt t'OSI. ··Pl'Ople h.'!1'e hetn kicking in $$ and $10." hr i;aid. Robert Ryan. a Soulhtrn California man who began righting bulls in ~1exiCQ as a teena11:er -and later accepted into the oner all-Latin profession -wit] ex- hibit se\·eral pa intings. \lt'i!h his \1•orks \\'ill bf' sru!pture bv Humber1o Peraza. \\'hose bronze $!atuarY 1~ on pe-rmanent displa y a1 rh, illexico Cit.I' btillring and !he ,\lonumental bull- ring in Tijuana. Sf>vpral of the sculptor's bron1r:; will he on '11.~pl:i.11 Rennrtt Bra'1 hury or Lai;una Bearh - rPcen11y nan1ed by thP Narion.11 Acade1ny of Arts II!! one of two of the nation's ouk~1anding arti!>ls in 1971 -will also display paintin~s at the sho1I'. Cameras and sound equipment were rollected by burglars In three Laguna Beach locations over thl' Wttkend1 po!lce report. Biggest loss occurred at the home-: cf \let r:arne-y. 1008 Van Dyke Dril'e, whert: loot included such \·aned items A.!I a nlO\'ie camera. telescope, projector. rug, <'lock. bottles of \\'hiskey and clolhing, ,·alut'd to!al!r at $1122 ~tf'1·cri Dul'ote reportf"d lht loss or S."J6~ \1:onh of camera ,.quipment from his room at the Hacif'nda ! IO!f'I Friday n1gtH :inrl on Sunrlay nighl \Vil!iam Chamber!r arlrist-d police that a tape player and tapes \vorlh $1:.0 had disappeared from his 1partment at 269 Broadway. lllT TIGHT MONEY IND 1xril!lOff B~owalng hours from 9 to 7 d1ily 9to6S1t. Diamond Earrings I "·OH 1I .. , .. , $395 t.,•I welglt!. Set I• 1411 Whht ..... GUAllANTlfD 10 A,,llAl~I AT 40•,t,, MOlll ---NIW AND USID ITIMs----. DIAMONDS .•• lo ... GUITARS STEREOS ... lo .•. GUNS CAMERAS ... lo ... TOOLS ANTI9UES ••. to ... TA,.ES AU AT VERY LOW ,.RICES DOM RACITI OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUARANTEE • ..... ,.. ~., • .A--4 ft-u -wlll ,,.,.._ tilllt .ti. ... eH t9 .,,.. .. 40,. MDIII tll.• .,.. ,.., hr ft ., , • ., _....., lt«ti. c .. , •• , ...... , ..... ....... , COM,All. 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN. IUY. SILL, TRAD( 1838 NEW,.ORT BLVD • DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -... _ .. _ -.... -. COME IN AND HOWSI AROUND ,.HONE 646-7741 --"""'°' & '"''"'""' ' ·-----~"":')I-. I I . ' I I I 1- I I ~ I I I l l k Huntington Be-al!h Fountai11 Valley . .. . , . 'l'oday'a Fl••I N.Y. Stoeka VOL M , NO. 171, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE 'COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUL y-·19, '1971' TI:N CENTS Recall Move OpJns Against SupervisO:r Baker By ALAN DIRK.IN Of "'-Cl911r P119t lltll A recall campaign, complete with a four-page tabloid news sheet and press release, was launched against Orange County's Second District Supervisor David L. Baker today. The news sheet features four.inch deep headlines "RECALL BAKER -WHY?" on the froot page. It claims that the aupervi!Or has double billed taxpayers in travel expense accoonts, that more than * * * Supervisor Aide Cite s 'Innuendo' Richard Ruiz. assistant to Second District Supervisor David L. Baker. to- day responded to charges leveled against the supervisor in 11 recall campaign. Ruiz said that he did not know the !wo principals in the reczJI campaign but commented, "l'm sure there is an av.'ful Jot of money behind il. One thing is ob- vious someone has gone to an awful Jot of research, but they have come up with in· nuendo." The aide said that contributions to Baker's elccllon ca mpaign were a mailer of public record and asked. "are the con- tributions supposed to be good or bad?'' The rec2.IJ news sheet charges Baker ''double billed the taxpayer." "It was all about ho11i· Mr. Baker hand!· td hill expenses v.•hen he was in Sacramento on state and county business, the state to hold public hearings in the newspapers and is in the auditor's of- ri~.'' Ruiz gaid. On the charge of Baker favoring general aviation at Los Alamitos Ruiz. recalled that the supervisor signed a peli· lion against creating a commercial airport al !he naval station Md in- troduced legislation which would require the stat to hold public hejrings in the local area before any commercial airport is established . "It's simply hogwash," the supe rvisor's assistant added . The news sheet also carries a. headJine, ''Surrender At Salt Creek." and charges that Baker failed to protect public access rights to the south C()Unty beach . "He wasn't even here when that vote came up .'' Ruiz said. Baker represents the Second District which covers the northwest portion of the county. The area generally includ!s half <lf Garden Grove ar>d Stanton. all of Los Alamitos and Seal Beach and most of Huntington Beach and Westminster. Police Checking Leads on Beacl1 Pervert Suspect Huntington Beach police today ere following up leads reported this weC'kend in their search for ;i man wanted for rapt, kidnaplng, sex perversion and child rnolesting. Detective ~gl. Monty McKennon said tiis division has received 17 caJls since Friday when they relea~ a description of the suspect. He said eJI the lead!! are being checked thoroughly by 1 20-man team of in- vestigators. The suspect is wanted for the assault of two girlll on July I and 8 in the vicinity of Edison High School. Capt. Grover L. Payne, detective com· mander, said the two girls, who are between the ages of 12 and Hi. were riding bicycles at the time they we re con· fronted by the suspect who was on foot. On!! W&S hospitalized following the at- tack. The suspect is a male cauca sian between 2S and 30 years of age, possibly yoUflger. He Is Rboul five feet 10 inche3 tall and weighs 160 to 16.5. He has brown balr which curls at U1e sides and possibly a reced ing hair line in front. He also has a moustache. Payne said that <1n one occasion he -wore a lllraw hat with a narrow brim and no band and on the other he was wearing a blue baseball cap with the letters "LA'' ln whltt. Dete<:lives Ne asking l!lnyon!! with in· formation regarding thill man to call them at 536-5352. Apollo 15 Tested CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -With h1unch one \\'ee.k awey. eniineer1 hope lo r~solve the only remalnlng Apollo 15 testing problem lod&y by putting the comm..nd 11h1p Endeavour through a 1pecial launch pad test. 90 perant of his political coatributioos come from "major landowners and developus," that he has failed to protect public beach acce!S, met secretly to in- crease his salary and favors genera.I a\•iation, including jet, operations at lhe Los Alamit-Os Naval Air Station. Baker's legislative a55lstant Richard Ruiz this morning branded the charges as ''hogwash and iM1,1endo.'' "Mr. Baker has been in political office eight years and in those eight years has ,,.-<t' .. •• left a public history," Rull ~Id. "For those interested in truth all they hive to do ls look at tlie record." The press release lists two men as co- chairman of the Baker Recall Committee -Donald J. Swenson, 33, an Anaheim electronics technician, and William S. McKriigbt. 39, Stanton, a salesman for a baited goods finn. McKnight could not be reached t i.his morning, but Swenson. who said 'be. ran a~ the American lndepeni:lent Party can· Me .Jan, You Tar.:an It was photo club day Sunday at the Orange Cou l'lty Fair and th is fair 1naiden was one of the models:. She was listed simply as ''Jan A·48'' in order to conceal her true identity from all the photogs. Her name remained a mystery today. For another view of photo club day, see Page 2. Marii1e Copters May Still Use Mile Square Facility By JOA!\'NF. REYNOLDS 0! I~• OtllY l'lle! S!•ll Jn April when President Nixon said Mile Square wnuld be comple1ely !urned over to civilians, some nearby residents assumed the Mari ne Corp~ helicopters would be gone in a matter of months. But that's not exactly the case. The big he!icoplers from the Santa AM Marine Cofl'." Air Station will continue lo use the Helicopter Outlying Landing Field IHOLF ) Yor a few years yel, sz.ys Capt. Mike Glenn. Glenn is the maintenance engineer at Santa Ana and, as sud!, is In charge of receiving complaints and keeping track of housing development.s that might en· croach on the flight patterns around Mile Square . He estimates the helicopters will leave Mile Square in three In five years. Jn April of this year the President's Valley Ma.y End Bike Tax Jn defial'ICt of Ille old dictum 11bout delllh and · ta1ea, Fountain Valley City coull'Cilmen are thinking 11bout elimina(ing bicycle: licemiing fees. City M'8.llager James Neal 11eid "we've proposed 11n ordinance becauMJ we'd rather be ln lhe poel- tlon m licensing bicycles lhlltead of trying to collect the fee s. i•J think this Is the tlr1t time 11 tax bas been eliminated," he ad- de<I. Currrntly Founl.llin V • 11 e y resident& pay $2 when they purchase a bicycle llcen!e. The proposal will be he8rd 1~ the council meeting Tueaday night . Land u~ commission declared the tra ining area excess property. Presently, the Senate Armed Forces Committee is rons1dering the parcel and if it. is decl ared excess by Congress, the Marine Corps will have to get out. But not until they ha\le been able· to relocate, and as GleM notes, relocations liM that take time and money . "lf we had the money, we'd probably go tomorrow," he said. Like the other military air facilities in Orange County, Mile Square faces con· 1tant pressure from a growing population and developer;5 who wa:nt to build housing area,, and schools in flight patterns. Originally, the facility wa.s used by tht Navy, which built it in 1942. In 1949 bolh Mile Square and Santa Ana, which was a Navy blimp facility, were shut down. When the Korean War started both bases were turned over to the Marine Corps and reopened in 1951. santa Ana is the facility et wl\lch· the various helicopter squadrons are based, but Mile Square is used for training e1pecially In touch and go landings - quick laridlng.s and take offs used ·by combat pUota. There are two kinds o( helicoptel"I bas- ed 1t Santa Ana. '!be CH 4' (Sea Knl&:;bt) •nd the CH II (S.. Stallion) aro both heavy helicopters LI.9ed for troop and equipment transport. Glenn said helicopter pilots are train&! et Pensacola, Fla .. Jn light 1hlpa and then · transferred to Selnta Ana for tbeJr training In th~ heavier helicopters. "We try to do mere of the trainlni here •t Santa Ana," be 1aid. ''But we have too much traffic. Mile Square is the (ln\y other prepared aurfact we have for this UM:." He noted the Marine Corps does have a mountain Jaf'4jns lite In the SMta Ana Mounta ins, W,1 tt ii u1ed for the ad- •an<ed Ira~ ~;r;· lf!o I lield al (See ·I) , . .. didate in the Wt 69th AMembly Dlruict election s.aid he and McKnJght both work· ed in I.he Citizens Referendum and Recall Committee lhat was fonned earlier this year after county supervbors rqx>rtedly discussed raising their salarieis at a clos- ed door e1ecutive session. The meeting touched off • recall cam· paign against Baker, Board Chainnan Robert Battin of the First Di.strict and Supervisor William J. Phillip$ of the Third District. The drive aga.imt Battin Nixon and Phillips appeared t.o lose at.tam several weeks 1go and the move against Baker was abandoned because or a law preventing his having to face a recall within six month.s of the re-election in January, "We were able to gtt 8,(XXI oft.he 10,800 signatures we needed," Swenson recalled. ''We had to stop then because ol the legal teehnicality, but now Baker ii eligible for recall." Swel'l600 said that no o~r leaders of Aslis the C1t.uens Rt:ferendum and .Rect1l Comm.1tttt were involved in the present campaign against Baker. Asked who else was leading the currut drive, Swenson replied, "it's ba&c:ally just the. two of us." The news sheet contains reproductions of newspaper stories and headlines and & cartoon of Baker which brands him 11 "double bill Baker" Rnd shows him tai.- (Stt RECALL, Pa1e z, Care Optimism on China Trip Dispelled WASHINGTON (UPI) -P~sident Nixon cautioned ranking Congres&onal and adm inistration leaders today aiainst raising expectations that his plan for a vis.it to Red China might mean an early end to the Vietnam War. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said th! President made It clear in meetings with Democratic and Re p u b I i c a n Congressional leaders and with his cabinet that his visi~ to China was to ''discuss matters of mutual interest Phone Strike 'All But Over' Insiders Say '"1'1\llilhimlir'l!l!Pn -"Jltpttaton for tht Bell System and 1 baU million. telephon1 workers have reached a set- tlement kl end a six-day Iona nalionwide phone itrike, lns1de sources utdltday. the JOU.reel s1id an announcement possibly could come u early 1s a 3 p.m. EDT new1 conference called by the Com- munications Workers of America. There were indications. the sources said, that phone workers might return to work before a complicated two-week Jong P&tlfication process is completed. Terms of the reported new contract for American Telephone and Telegraph Co. repairmen, installers and <lperators were not disclosed. The main issue in the dispute: had deen wage Increases and how they would be 11pent. In going on strike, t.he union argued the company's proposals would wklen differences In pay b!twee:n men and women employes and perpetuate regional and job pay differentials. hieantime:, negotiators for postal unions and the new postal service aOO v.·ere reported near agreemenl on a contract for 750,000 U.S. mailmen after a marathon barg.aini11g session that lasted beyond 24 hours. But I snag developed In ne.gotiatioru: aimed at halting a United Transportation Union (UTU) strike against the Southern Railway ~nd the Union Pacific Railroad. Related story PZit ft, Ex-senator Succumbs WASHINGTON (AP) -Former Sen. Gerald P. Nye fR·N.D.), a frequent critic of Great Britain and an oppo!lent af American involvement in World War II, has died at age 78. His wife. Marguerite , said Sunday that Nye died Saturday in Georietown Univertity HospitaJ after surgery for vascular diffiC1.1lties. between the People.a Republic ol. China and I.ht. United Stat.es.'' "He declined to 1pecul1te on the effect these discussion will have <ln any other matter and said such s:peculati<ln would not be helpful," Ziegler told reporters. Participants In the meeting echoed Ziegler's statement.a. House Speaker Carl Albert said there was no 1uggestion from Nixon that the visit was Ued to an end to the U.S. role in the Vietnam War. At the State Department meanwhile, 55 Boats End Transpacific Fifty.five boat! had cro&&ed the Diamond Head finish line in the 26th biennial Tran&~lflc Yacht ~ ~_.. o.m. ll' ) "*Y· ; N<irmal tradcwtnd1 rougbt the yachta: boiling across the finish line at top speeds Sllll•Y but by this tnOl'1\lllg, the winda 'Oii died qaln, llbwlnJ the 13 boalo ll!u lifl al O,a. · Tailender1 in the fleet •ere ex4 peeled to finish Wednesday morn- ing. They are Leprechaun, Woodwynd a.nd Bold Host. For other detajJS, see Boatlng, Page 30. Beach, Firemen Battle Builders Over Wire Fires Another round of the alwninum wire controversy will be fought between bullder1 and firemen July 28 when the Huntington Beach Building Department Board of Appeals meets. The board will rule on the advisability of pigtailini -a method of connecting copper wire leads with 1Juminwn wire to prevent current arcing. The meeling is sel for 7 30 p.m. in city council chamber!. Huntington Beach Fire Department of· f!cials believe aluminum wire has been responsible for numerous outlet box blazes during the past year. The pigtaJling method was advanced by builders as a solulion to prevent further failures. Members <lf the lire department have recommended asainst plgtailing 1inct tm method ha5 bee.n termed "ill-advised" by Underwriters Laboratories. 4 Hopefuls to Compete For Seal Beach Council By RUDI NIEDZIEUIKI Of """ O.ltr PIJ91 lttfl Four candidates have atepped forward to contest the eut of Sul Beach C.oun- cUman Morton A. Baum ln Tutiday'1 recall elttUon. They are Mrs. Beverly Casara. 38, housewife; 'l'bomaa Brady. 37. rd.ired 1toC:kbroker: Thomu Blackman. 39, teacher, and Mike KAlpp, 35, le..:her. Votera will be deciding two Juuea: Whether Ba~ lhould be recaned from offke ind who should be bl.a replacement (See related 1tory. Page 23.) There •re 2,15.1 eligible voters for Tue.9d1y'1 recall election. Voters tn Counetlm.anic Dittrict 3. whlcb 1s the downtown area oorth of Pacific Cout Highway, can visit the polls rrom 7 1.m. to '1 p.ru. The foor polls an l..,.led Ii to! Driftwood Ave,. tlO Driltwoex:I A"" 3U Se.al Beach Blvd . and at McC•ugh School. "I'm 1iot golna tc aay wbJch way the people 1hould vote on the recall," aaid Mrs. Oa$•re1, 420 CoNt.IJne Drive. ''By now they should know to decide one way or lnother." Mrs. C&Wu said lier m1ln plank in the pl1lfonn concrrns the redevelopment agehcy, a coalroverslal city 1pney which would create hlgh·rlse, high demi· ty buildinp In the old-Town lltctor and coiled lazes from Mveloper1. "I believe we need to take out the hl&b- rlse and high denalty provl1ions fJ11m the ageocy ind then dluotve It," said Mn. Castrea, aa&trt.lng lhat the apncy already hu apent $225.000 ln ad- ml:nlslratlve e1penu1 without &lvloa citizen1 any benefit. Baum , although , foe of I.he rtdevdop- rnenl a(ency M IZ'oundt tbat It.. would IS,. CANDIDATU, , ... ll ' " : Japanm Ambassador Nobubii:o Ulh.lba said Japan and the United States planned to work to try to prevent ouster of Na· tionatist Chi11a from the United NaUoot. Ushiba said following a meetin& wltb Secretary of St.ate William P. Rog!rs that the objective of the United States waa ''quite clear" that the Unlted States wanted to keep Taiwan in the U.N. The United States was expected at least tacitly to give its approval to seat Red (See NIXON, Paie Z) Valley Set To Discuss Mayor Term Fountain Valley City Council member5 are $Cheduled to sturly proposa11 lim.itin& the term of office of the mayor and the city'• population at their meeting rues. day night. 'Mle meeUng will be held at I p.m. at city hall 10200 Slater A~e. The ordiMnce amending the. terms of office of the mayor and mayor pro tem wu proposed at the last council meeting by Councilman Al Hollinden . He has suggested that terms of office be limited to one year with succession allowed, but no more than a total of two years in a four.year Lenn on the council. CUrre.nlly, the presiding oflicen of the council are elected for two-year ttrms from the five-member council. Hollin- den 's proposal also calls for the election of mayor on a secret ballot. The proposal which will ultimately limit the Size of the city Is the result of a nine-month study by planning department stall member.;. Planning Director Clinton Sherrod 1aid the master plan for apartment6 has been revised so that some portions of the city previously planned for high density hous.- ing will be instead used for single family residential, commercial or industrial uses. He estimated that, if th!! council ap- proves the changes. the ultimate. popula· Lion of the city could drop from 71.000 to about 63.000. Columnist Undergoes Operation in Peking NEW YORK (UPI) -New York Times Viet President and Column.ist James Rt:ston has undergone surgery for acute appendicitis in Peking while traveling In Communist China, the Tlmes said today. The newspaper 1ald Ratol'l's wile reported the operation w1s 1uccessful and there were n<1 complications. Oruie Weatller Tht weathennan aee111 variable high clouds today and Tuesday along the Oranp Coast, with temperatures al 70 along thft beaches rising to U inl&nd. Uiws along the coast 40, 68 lnland. INSIDE TODA l' Orang!! Count]I wivts of milt· t4TJ,I mtn, who art either held pri.rontT of war or who arc mia1i'11g in action, wail ond kttp th.t homt firts burning. Stt 1toiu, Pagt 14. •frltlt ' ... ""' . Ct llffflltt I Clt NlllM M-41 c .... iu u OoNltl "'-lk•' ' ...... 1 ,._ • l11"'1Mfl-I 0 ·-" --" "'"' LMlwt 11 , -.. lletlfftl lltwt J Or•-c-tr f IJl~lt ,.,.., H ...... ,,.. l!Mt ...,,,... d T .. Wltlw U l'll""" lJ w .. n.i., ' w_., lltwt 1~11 --. ·-----·---·~--·--'• __,,___,_~ -·-.---=-::= ~~ .. :....;::=:::;:--..;;;;;;;:: • --.-o:::::;:..,,...----------.. i_ =-··-..---=z!._""f" .. ~-------::==;;;;;:;::::"';::;:c-::-:o:-:;.,= -.. ----Fe ' -''T _____ 7 ---. ,.---·=-__ ----·· -.,---. • .._ -. . --I Teacher Ad1nits Guil~t Instructor Faces Sente.nce in Student Drug Sales By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 Ille O•!IJ l"ltel 11•11 Facing a maximum term of five years to life in prison. a Costa Mesa High School business tucher who turned his talents to illicit moonlighting today ad· mittf'd he sold drugs to students. Carlton Polk. 29, pleaded guilty to two From Page J RECALL ... ing money from two taxpayers' pockets for legislative trips. It .appears to be a professionally pro- duced news i;heet, but Swenson said he and McKnight r;et it up t-Ogether. He declined to say how many copies had been run off, how many would be prinled, who printed them, or how much the prin- ting would cost. "People have been kicking in $5 and $10," he said. Told that the tbree page press release al so appeared to be professionally written, Swen.son explain~ that he wrote it and gained the experience in publicity "'hile running as a candidate in the 69th Assembly District. He gained 1,700 votes in that election, he said. Asked if he was involved in the recall drive against former supervisor Alton Allen two years ago, wh ich also featured a news sheet, Swenson said. no and pointed out that Allen represented the Fifth Dilltrict. Asked if Baker's present role in county government in which the supervilor bas been appearing to buck a majority coali· lion cf Battin, Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers and Fourth District Supervisor Ralph B. Clark , Swenson responded, ';No, not really. The main lhing we are interested in is cleaning up our government. People are sick Bnd tired of people-in political office who are spending money as if it were their own," The pres:i1 release, issued by Swenson and McKn ight, claims that Baker':i1 performance as a supervisor is "morally reprehensi ble .'' "Double expense account living off the taxpayer on trips to Palm Springs, San Fancisco, Squaw Valley, Las Vegas, Sacramento and Washington , D.C., is morally reprehensible at any time," the press release · .states. In another paragraph, the press release liays ''according to Baker's own report, all but a small part of his political con· tributlons come from big land owners and developers. They will probably contribute heavily to keep him in office. "Baker bas failed to see that people get neighborhood park lands that legally could be theirs. This neglect means big· ger profit.s for developers and Jes! open apace for children and their families." United Cru sade Reports Goals The West Orange-County United Crusade has set a goal of $510,245 for its i'>txt campaign. Conner C.Ollacott, area ca mp a i g n chairman, in announcing the fund ra ising goal, also named his campaign chairmen. They are Mrs. Jan \Vilhelm, Fountain 'Valley: James Gibney. Garden Grove; Robert Burbank, Huntington Stach; Howard Hawkins. Seal Beach : Olinto Ric- t'i and Richard Wilson \\'estminster. The fund raising campaign will start in September. The mone y will be used by JJ member agencies for comm u n 1 I y liervice!. A spokesman for the Crusade said the goal .,.,.as determined after studying lhe effect of aerospace layoffs tn the west county La~t year·s goal was S560.000 OUN•I COAST DAllY PILOT OAANGE COAST l';UeUINNtO COMPAAY I.ob.rt H. W-' Prnldto'll.,.......,"'*" Jtcl: a. C11rlev VI<• ,......,.., • .,. ~ M•~•gtr Tlio111•1 ICMril ., .... Thoi•"• A. Mvrp~i110 M• ... I .... M lMr Al.,. Dir\;., w-.1 O••nte °""''Y ff!IW All>erf W. 111,1 Auoci.10 1<11""' ... ..,... a-111 OMc. 1717$ •••d1 l oul•••r4 M1ili111 Addra11: r.o. 101 7t 0, •2l41 --l~ 8•dl: 22J l"or•I ·-Ceilll MM•: Jlll w .. , a.r u~ M-t tM<I!: :nn ~_,. ~lw .... Jt" ci-te: Jm Htrlll fl C-l!oot tlt•I IDAlt..Y l"ILOT, WI .. ""!di 11 COl'llbl .... "'9 ,._,.,_, II l•t•ll ..... dtily U t .. l 1- dey Ill ... ,..,. H !I"°"" for l ...... t INCi!, • """""' ..... °'"" ""-'· 1-1 ... 11"'"" 11.-c:t1. ...._..._ v,1...,, s.~ c_i., c•tr-..... htk114't1Ktl;, ....... wl"' -... .....i ... lllol'I. ""101Ci.el ... 1t111.,. ,i-i I• • •I U. \IWlll ... Y l!l'MI, Cott• """"· T1f 1t RI Intl M.l ... J.11 • Cl ................... , ... ,, counts of iale ol. narcotics and dangerous drugs befGTe Judge Beach Vasey in Uls Angeles Coun1y Superior Court at Loog Beach. He ~·as ordered to return Aug. 20 for sentencing , Polk had been scheduled for jury trial Friday but it y,·as continued, leading to 'U.S. Backing' • speculation hf would chM1e hi• earlier plea of innocent. There w?.o; no discussion or pleading for leniency at the time. "Jwt a straight plea of guilty," said a court clerk in .!lumming up the pro- ceedings which took only a fe~· moments. Polk was arrested April '!l at his Bel· Thieu Describes Role In 1963 Purge of Diem SAIGON (AP) -President Nguyen \'an Thieu said today that he agreed to join Jn the 1963 overthrow of President Ngo Klnh Diem only after he was assured by «lUP leaders that the United Stales and other counlries SUPJXlrted ihe coup. The coup was led by Gen. Duoog Van ''Big" Minh, who headed the South Viet- namese government immediately after Diem was ousted and assassinated. Minh is a leading challenger to Th ieu in the presidential elections Oct. 3. Thleu gave his version of the coup to Valley Children To Visit Dunes Children in Fountain Valley will be able lo participate on a field trip to .Newport Dunes Friday under the sponsorship of lhe city Recreation Department. A department spokesman said children from si:ir to 14 years old who Jive in or at· tend school in Fountain Valley are invited lo attend. The trip will be from I p.m. to 3 p.n1. The fees are $1.25 for children aged six lo 12 and !1.50 for those 13 and 14, Rtgistration mu~t be pa id at the recreation department. 10200 Slater Ave-. by 5 p.m. Tuesday. Participants will be supervised by department staff. A1n 1nonia Kills Pair ~tORGAN CITY, La . fU Pll -Two men cleaning out a storage tank in wh ich dead fish are allowed to decompose Into fertil izer we re overcome by ammonia fumes Sunday and died . Three other men entered the hold in a rescue attempt and also were overcome. They were hospitalized, but not seriously affected. St. Mary Parish Sheriff Chester Boudin identified the dead men as Johnny Mack Johnson, 25, of Morgan City, and Robert L. Evans, 26 of Fellsvillemere, Fla . From Page 1 NIXON ... Chtna in the v.·or!d body. Ziegl er said the President was expecled to reach a decision sometime this month regarding L.S. policy toward seating Peking. Ziegler said the new policy would be announced by Rogers, The President first met v.·ith the: Con gressional lead ers for an hou r and a half, then v.·ith his cabinet for an hour to give details of his trip, scheduled to take plare before t-.1ay l of next year. SenalP })('mocratir Leader J\1 i k e ;\-1ansfie1d and Republ ican Le:ader Hugh Srotl told rrportrrs that the President asked lhe lawmakers to refrain froin un· ne<:e.~sa~· spt'tu!ation nr 1egisl atl\e aC· lion pertain1ni;i to China in thP n'onlhs aht-ad. Rela1M story Page 4 ~1ansfielcl ohser\·erl that there \\'SS "a 101 of preparatory groundwork still to ~ laid'' before Nixon goes to Pekin g. pos.sib!y shortly after I.he first of the year. "The Ptesidenl Y.'ill have to walk very carefully and Congress \·ery responsibly so there wiJI be no slip in any way that could hinder the jsummit) meeting and I.he poss.ibility of realizing the hope of the President on his journey for peace," Mamfie\d said . Vietname.se reporters at a <'iosed nei\.'S conference at headquarters of the Joint chiefs of the South Vit'tnamese general staff in Saigon. Thieu called the meeting, restricted lo local newsinen, to answer a variety of charges aired recently by Minh and anolher Thieu opponent for the presiden· cy, Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky . Thieu natly denied that he is using the government radio and television netW()rks and othe r government facililies to pro- mote his campaign, This is a major cha rge made by Minh and K~·- Although the 1963 «lUP has oot been a prominent campaign issue. one of Minh's charges is that Thieu and men under his command arrived too late at Gia Loog Palace and allowed Diem and his brother. Ngo Dinh Nhu. to escape, although they were caught later. Thieu said the attack on Gia Long Palac e had been assigned to a general and not to him. At the time, Thieu was a colonel. Thieu asserted that he opposed the kill· ing of Diem and that Minh and another coup leader. Co!. Do Mau , promised that Diem would be spared. Th ieu !'>aid tha t at a pre<"oup rneel!ng \\'Ith Minh and Do !\lau he set for1l1 several conditions before agreeing to join then1_ "I stres.~ed that it \Vas not necessary to kill Diem." Thieu said. "G€n. t.,linh and Col. ~!au guaranteed." Two U.S. Grants For Huntington Park Approved Tu•o Federal grants totalling $753,602 l1ave been made to the !'ity of Huntington Bea!'h for acquisition and development of additional land for the Huntington Cen- tral Park. Rep. Craig Hosmer (R·Long Beach) said HUD made the grants of $607.898 for acquis.ition or about 37 acres and $145,iO.f for developinent of U;e land. The two parcels to be purchased arc the Sully Miller and Bruce Broth ers garvclpils \l'hich constitute Phase II of the park. Located between Slater and Garfield • A. venues and bet\\·een Gothard and Edwards St.reels. the park will eventually provide picnic and camping raci!illes "·ith lakes. wild life sanctuaries and a nature centt>r. t.and acquired to date is about 244 acres. Beach Policemen Aid in Roundu p Huntington Beach police o/11cers aided in the roundup of 5even people in a .!leries of Lo~ Angelrs C'OUn!_\' drug raid:: lhi:: 'reekend ll'hich als() nt>tl{'c! an e~!1n1ated S30.fl00 \1·orth of an1phetarn1nes. ThP arrests were made at t\\'O !()('(Ilion'! Salurday in Redondo BeaLh by office.rs from Hu ntington Beach, Los Angele:;;, Redondo Beach and agents from the State Buresiu of Narcotic~ Enforcement. Jn a statement released this morning, l-luntington Beach officers said the raids 1l'e re aimed at breaking up a drug nety,·ork which "has been suppl ying the greater Huntington Reach ar'a with large quantities of drugs." VC Rest Area R ed H eroes Get Black S ea Holiday MOSCOW (A P) -Vo Thin Trung is a month slipping Utrough enemy.occupied \'iet Cong sniper. He has 38 kill5 to his territory, hiding themselves in jungle credit. For years he has lived and fought trenches and bomb shelters during raids in the Vitlnamese jungles against by American aviation." American and South Vietnamese. Once they reached the North Viet. Vo Thin is only 15 years old and he namese capital, the VC were floy,·n to neede<l 11 rest. So lhill summer he traded Moscow. and t.hen to the Black Sea . In his rifle Md black pajamas for a .\nother VC soldier now playing at 1he fishing rod and swimsuit and is now resort Is Chun Van Ch uo'ng, 15. He playing In the sun at a Russian hollday replaced his father on the front , Pravda camp on the Blttk Sea. said, and "was decorated for blowing up The young guerrilla is one of 10 Viet an Americen tank wi th a miM of his own Cong teen-agers who ha ve been reward· manufacture." ed. for valor and riflcleney on the bat-The youn g Viel Cong are spending their tlefield. with a summer vacation Jn the summer "R and R" ar Artak, tht': Soviet Soviet Union. Union's most prestiglou~ t:hlldren's "They ht1-ve come from regi<>n~ Y.'here carnp. It offer~ children free water ~ki· r,ven now the soil Is smoking from bomb 1ng, i;kin diving, $aihng 8nd good food And shell bla!ls ," Pravda reported today. and soft bed~. The Sovirt C.Ommun~t parly organ said Russian ch ildren coinpete (icrrely to I.hat in choo~ing I.he would·he v11cationers, get a $Ummer at Artak. Thost who makt physical endurance wa8 as nece11ury as are chos1:n for Lheir superior "'Ork In combat ticellenct. school 11nd lheir perfQrmance in the "In <>rdtr to reach Hanoi," the p~r ''oung Plonttr8. lhe Communist )'outb said. "ma'-' of them spent more than a org11nization which runiri the: camp. mont Short ba<'helor pad . which was allegedly a popular tpot where some of his t.1ustang campus students. con-- gregated. An 1a.year-0ld student and a curvaceous, titian-haired special poll~ operati\'e kno'o\·n as Mrs. Teeny.Bopper v.·ere used to gather evidence against Polk , which police considered conclusive. His trembling voice i.s rec<Jrded on tape during two transactions in y,•hich LSD tablets were sold to both prosecution 11·itnesses, 1t can now be re vealed. "All we want is to niake sure he can never teach ?..gain." remarked Costa ~fesa Police Detecll\'e Sgt. John Regan after Lhe \'erdict. Costa Mesa investigators had Polk under sur\'eillance for months before ob- taining the crucial evidence required to convict him on the-drug sale charges. He was arrested at home because the: transactions occ urred there. although they or MY others v.·ere set up through campus contacts. ~iax.imllrn sentence imposed under the law for sale of narcotics or dangerous drugs is five years to life in stale prison. Offenders convicted for the first of· fense are generally given lesser terms. Polk, a teacher at Costa Mesa High Sc hool for three years, was suspended immediately by Newport • Mesa Unified School District Supt. WilliWl Cun· ningham following his arrest. He had been free on $6.250 bail since the raid on his apartment. where police said they confiscated relatively small amounts of marijuana and various drug pills, LSD included, Despite the fact he was commerce· oriented and taught business. police said Pol k's apartment decor included a rather novel poster. The picture showed the celebrated Bank of America branch at Isla Vista, near the UC Santa Barbara campus, being burned by radicals. From Pagel SQUARE ... Ca mp Pendleton, but it is for use by light helicopters. The Marine Corps controlled the entire parcel of land bordered by Edinger Avenue, Euclid Street, \Varner Avenue and Brookhurst Street unti l 1967 v.'hen they leased all but 127 acres to Orange County for $21.000 a year. \Vhen they do vacate the property. they Y.'ill give the county the first opportunity to acquire the rest of it.. Mile Square Regional Park is under development and lhr lease is good for another 26 years. ~1eanwh ile, the heli«lplers continue to fly in and out of the facility day and nighL Glenn said that in 19613. 4,400 aircraft conducted 5,100 operations at ~1 1le Square. In 1970. 1.300 craft ac· counted for 2,400 operations there. Glenn said the s!()y,•-dov.·n of the Viel· nan1 \Var and lh e v.1ithdrawal of Marine Corps lroops has accoun1ed for the decline 111 activitv. but he ~al'S he doubts 1L will decline tOO much more_ "\Ve ha\'e to maintain a certain degree of readiness:· he said. filenn ;ilso n0ted that the mission of the aircraft \\'Ing 1s to provide support for ground troops al Camp Pendleton. "Sn if we mnve. we can't get !oo n1urh fl1rlher away from !here than \re alread.v are." he added. Glen, \1'ho is a he hcopler pilot hirnself. sars th!! residents of the area around ~!Ile Square ha\·c shown an 11n· drr~tanr!111~ of the oper(ltions !here. He noted Iha! the t-.1arine Corp~ pro· lested 1\'hen del'elopments bejilan to go In TJ('ar lhc facilit~'. People buying in the ;:irr::i now sign ;i ~1a!r1nent aekno1~led~ing !he pre~rnrr lif hel1cC1pltrs The fligh1 pu1te111 for touch and go lal"ld· in~s 11' :in rll1µse that hes across the ~out,hl'11 ~trn1 p<irrion of !hr square. cros.~· ini; \V~rnrr anrl EucEd f.lenn said the ;il1it11dl' 101· the pattern is between 200 and 600 fret. Another Vieav Gaggle of amateur photographers focus on •·Jan A-48'' during Sun- day's photo club day at the Orange County Fair. She kept them up a tree about her identity. Note feminine photog at left She wasn't wasting any film. From Page 1 CANDIDATES .. destroy the small-town character of Sea l Beach, has not done his job, ~1rs. Casares claims. "He has had the time and the op· portunity to dissoll•e the agency. but \\'hen the vote came up he voted to table the matter. The mln in1um he could have done is live up to ttls oath of office." said said. ThomP.s Blackman. 42! Ber~I Cove Way. is in favor of the_ agency. He believes the clty can use it to good ad· vantage. "lt is my opinion that the agency can <ind will l:lf' <i useful servant for the ~ pie of Sea l Be&eh," said Blackman. "The money generated by the tax increments will be spent in the clly. "I belie\'e that the redevelopment agency will provlde funds to beautify our city and help to eliminate our sewage problems," he added. Blackman charges that Seal Beach has been needlessly throv,.n into a period of chaos and unrest. He lhinks Baum y,·as responsible and that the election is com· pletely justified and necessary. "i'-\urh of the controversy has been caused by a group of sm.'.lll activisls who have property bordering the Pacilie Elec. tr1c righl·of-way and hal'c concentrated their pov•er through Baum. lie has at· tempted to destroy the redevelopmenl agency in order to please hi~ group of supporters. without regard lo the best 1n· lercsts nr !hr cit\','' he sa1C.: . The third C"andidat(' i~ Thomas Brady, 11i07 Electric /l.vr. Br(idy. who has been assisting Baum in che l'1rculat1on of anti. recall posters. is urging a "no" vote nn the issue of recall. ··1 OC!levr in :i philos oph1 11h1ch rlo~el\• parallel~ thal nf Ra11111 bt1t th:H dorsn t nll"ll ll J'm \\t1h him lOO perccn1:· said Brady. .. A vear agn \\'£' weri~ refrrred lo as <i hunch-0f ,qctil :~ts. hut now 1he n1her l'rtn· f!1d:'11f'~ :irt' p:~rroting !he 1hu1gs 1\e s1 ;i nd for . "llr quality nf Ille. anl1·h1gh rr~r. :1111i-growth. small lnwn 1de11!1t1 , open ~l)IH'C and other env1rDn111rnt;il issues ' If the rer:1ll 1s suc rrs:;ful, Br:idy c!airn~ hc.1vill be the on!.1· cand1d t1le 10 ~arry on that philosophy. lie would prefer lh;it Baum remain a counC'i\man, but would like lo offer the people a choice among tJie recall candidates. ~like Knapp. 645 Sandpiper Drive, \!te\1·s hi1nselr as the on ly candidate in· dependent of all factions in the city, He .!.3\"-" Baum 1nust be recalled because ev'er since he took office a year ago "the city and the council have been in turrnoil." •·IJe has taken illeg3! actions. He has spent our tax dollars in questionable \vays. His controversial methods have 100 often broughl our t·ity govenmenl to a nead standstill," Knapp a!1£>ges. Knapp, ch;iirman of the planning com· 1n1 s~10n . savs he kno\\'S how to deal with sE:nsitive i~~ues. and, as an independent lhinkcr. will no1 be influenced by the politically correct thing lo do. "There is a t•aln1 anrl reasoned a~ proach to the problems before the city. All sides and all issues must be studied and only then wlll our problems be solved riulside of a prejudiced point of vie\\'," he said. Beach, Valley People to Vie'\' J<~ree \\'ay Plans Residents or Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley will be able to view the latest infonnation 011 adopted portion~ of the fl ou1r: :19 1Jlun1.inglon Beach) f rfeway beginning this week. Tile Freell'ayn1oblle cir th(' state D1v j\ion of Highways will visit the two !'1t1es to provide 1nforn1a11on about the rrN'11 31· It "'·,ill hi:" at 1he l!un!ingtnn Center through J11l,1· 2~. T11e ho1Jrs \1i!I be I J a.n1 . lo 8 µ.111 1reekdays and Sa!ur· ii<•.\'. 10 a.m. to 4 pm .July 28 to .1\ the display will br a! \\'arner Avnnue and ~1 agnoha Street 1n Fountain \'alley, The hours 11'ill be the same. lllT TIGHT MOHIY IHD IHlilTION Browsing houri from 9 to 7 daily 9 to 6 So t. Dian1011d Earrings 1 "· ••• " "'"" $395 t•tol wai9hl. 5•t 1" 1411 Whir• Gold. GUARAMTllD TO Al'l'lA151 AT •O~'• MOS:I ---1Nrw AND USED ITEMS----. DIAMONDS .•• to ••• GUITARS STEREOS ..• to .•. GUNS CAMERAS ••• to ..• TOOLS ANTI9UES .•• to .•• TAPES ALL AT VERY LOW PRIC~ DOM RACITI OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUARANTEE e WW. yo• ~•Y • 161---4 tro111 •• •• wlll '",.,..,. t~n 1ll11111011lf to oppror .... 401/1 MOlE tho11 Y•ll ,.tlf for It er y•11r 111011ty ~k. Co11 you d• • wt'll •IM- wliere> COMl'A-1. 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SILL. TRADE 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA COME IN AND BROWSE AROUND PHONE 646·7741 letw•ni Horbor & lroodway ___ ... ,. _.,_"",_____-· .. .,. ..... _ ----~ ---~---. _.. .. ~--·--........ ~ -·-----~--.. li=:c:--'-~-""!ICr.~~ ----:--~· ·--• -·-· •.. ,._ )•, --::.-·.=-!.-'I - -.. ~. -----::-> .,J,J.)11 _...._ _.........--" , __ _ ·--.; ... ____ !':'' ---~·--. -~ -I f I I I ·' • . I I I Cities Vote ' ' To Put Of~, Harbor A~~ A special Tuesda~· n1eellng of the Orange County League of C1!ies called !o vote on the harbor district issue has been cancelled by Leagut President ~:d Just because. ··ihe 01·ganization should not be Jeopardized by one issue_ ' The Tuesday nieeling v.·as scheduled dur111g a tu1nulluous session last Th\lrs~ day night 111 Laguna Beach at whal was' supposed to have be('p a social meeting ' preceding rhe Pagean1 of Ma'sters. The league had vo1ed 13-l2 !he week bt!ore io support a bill in the legislature v.·hich would put the fate of the harbor <hst nct up to tile volers_ The vote wl!s against a n1easure fa\•ored by the board of supervisors \\'hich would enlarge and strengthen the district as a separate taxing agency Jus\ said today thal. "the league or cities is so split over this one issue that the organization's Julure is in jeopardy. \lie have been discussing the issue for I fivt years and it is nearing a solution. ·rhe future of 1he league is more im· portant than the haste to de cide one ques· tion." Just al so said the rigtil Of cilies to vo!e by letter al Tuesday ·s now-cante!led session was of questionable validity under the league·s by la\\"S. He added. "a 13·12 vole as v.·e had last t i111e and would probably do again is not really of great value to the legislators in deciding how the county stands on the harbor dis1ricL" The league 's next regular meeting is Aug, 12, after the legislature had ad- joomed. Poll W atelier MondlJ', July }q, P'?l H OAJL 'i PU.OT :; Gan1ble Fatal Air Racer Killed Trying to Land Flaniing Fight-er Frorn Wire Senite• OTA Y -A pilot VJho gamt>Jt;d on land- ln& and lost was killed Sunday whtn his blaz.!ng Be:arcast cra11hed durin1 the U.S. CUp Air Races, as an announcer begged him to ball out and 12,000 1pect1tors watched silently. Mike Geren. 32, of Kansas City. Mo . wa3 found dead in the s.hat~red, charred y,•reckage of the World War II Na\'y fighter after it plunged to earth. He had a parachute but chose not to use ii. trying to limp back to the runway at Brown Field, where the 1.000 mile race aroun.:l a IO·mile pylon.marked course was held. "Get out now ... gel out of the thing , . " the announctr screamed over the PA system as Geren tritd to brinr the plane -smoke and flames pourinc from its engine -in safely. Climbing upward to aboul 1.000 feel in an apparent altempt to stop the fire, Gt:rtn lost the gamble when the F8 Bearcat broke apart and fe ll . The wreckage smashtd Into a vacant area about four miles horn Lhe ea:itern end of Lhe runway. startina: a serir.s of gras!'i fires due to a spray of Oan1ing &asoline_ Despite the tragedy, the 100.lap ract. only nine laps from the finish y,•hen Geren crashed. continued. Merced orthodontist Or. S~rm CooPf'r took first place, averaging 330.11 miles per hour in his British-built ~a Fury. Ht also won last year's U.S. Cup Alr Race at Mojavt St cond place \vinner was Frank Sanders. of Santa Ana . flyin g anothtr Sea Fury. v•ho clocktd 324.03 miles ptr hour on the average, according to race of- ficials . Third place \Vinner \\'as Darryl Athlete En'7oys POW Aid Sought By Sports Figures By DON McLEOD Auocl•lM ''"' St1!1 Wrlttr \VASH INGTON If Ping Pong diplo macy can open China. a group of America's most prominent athletes think l11ey should be able to turn the same trick in Vietnam. Athletes like Johnny Unilas and Brooks Robinson have asked Hanoi for rermission to visit and discuss American prisoners of war and men listed as n1iss- ing in action. "\\le're taking no stand on the war." sil.id Carmella LaSpada. coordinator of htro on birthdays, Christmu and other special occasions. They hope a kind of pen-pal arrangement with suf)'r3lars will give a lift to sagging young spirits. "It's al so a long range thing," Miss LaSpada said. "After the war they'll be forgotten and \\'iii need us more than ever. particularly those y,·ho have no dads. "It's through our concern for these c.hl!dreJfl, not just lhe American kids but the Vietnarneae children a~ well -that Y.'e hope to communicate." Miss L!Spada continued. Greenamyer, of San Femando, at D miles per hour, while three planu :unon&; the 16 entered drop~ out due to mechanical failute_ The Federal Aviation Administration said an investigation is planned into what caused Geren's plane to burst into flames and finally crash. "It was like a ball of fiie flying through the air," said one witness. Some theorized Getn -a last-minute replacemenl for the schedule<l pilot - "''as about to bait out and merely attai~d a 5are altitude to do so when the Bearcal broke up. No radio communication with the an· nouncer who kept shouting at him to get out of the blazing aircraft was reported. Officials of the sponsoring American Pylon Racing Association said they had liltle background infonnatlon to offer on Geren, a TWA pilot. Police Seek Hit-run Dog The California Highway Patrl'll is looking for a hit-run dog . Patrolman Ron Gast spotted four small dogs on the Newpor t Freeway near Chapman Avenue in Orange Saturday. He managed to carry three of the animals off the freeway but when he tried to catch Lhe fourth he was bitten on both hands as the dog v.Testled its way_ to freedom. · The CHP i3sued this bulletin: ''\Vanted : a foot high, shagiy gray mongrel "''ith black and white markings." If the dog Is not found , Gast will have to undergo rabies shots. Ca1npers Bla11ied In Fire Behind Hills of Laguna Voters \1'alk past soldier to cast ballots in \.'alparaiso. Chile. Marxist Jlresldent Salvador Allende lost son1e ground Sunday as three opposi· lion parties united behind one candidate to oppose the socialist can· didate of the rullng party in a key federal election. rt was the first time since Allende took office last November that opposition parties united against him. See story, Page 4_ America's Sports Stars for POWs-MIAs. •-\\le're ju3l lrying to bring Peace." 'fhe membership reads like a sport11 hall of fame: Unitas, Rbbinson. Arnold P.!lmer, J~ Frazier, Joe Di"'l•liio. Ted \VH!ian1s, Arthur Asht', Peggy Fleming, For the prisoners. the alhletes seek some better assurances of their well being, maybe more mail, and hopefully the relea3e of the :i!ck and wounded. OCC Garbenstangel Bil ly Kidd. Bobby Orr. Richard Petty, Persons camping ln the hills are believ- ed to have started a fire v.·hich blackeoed 100 acres of brushland behind Arch Beach Heights in Liiguna Beach Friday af- ternoon. So11tl1 Viet Government William Shoemaker. Althea Gibson. Joe Louis. Jesse Owens. Mark Donahue. Bill Muncey, John Petraglia , Don Schollander. Bill Toomey and Jerry \Yest. Challenge Accepted Forestry officials s;i1d today ··~on1e evidence has been found" and that in- \'estigations iire taking place al lhe site of the fire and at the Orange County Sheriff's crin1e lab . Rene\v s Cease-£ ire Biel "\Ve do not represent any political fac· Golden West Colle ge today accepted the the Collegiate Division of the contest. tion." the group ~;iid when ll announctd chal!enge of Orange Coast College and Ca3h prizes of SIOO for Open Division Jts formation last spring. "\Ve are not there will be 21 Collegiate Division in the <.:oming as spokesmen for the Amtrican ·world's first Build a Better Garbenstangel <all ages) and $75 for Junior Division 1-foll'ever. no rharges have been brought agHinst any person!> brlieved 1<l have been in the area when the lire broke ouL The fire started about 2 p_m. Friday near the top o! a ridge behind Arch Bearh Heights. Gusts of \1·ind forced the bl aze toward the bottom of Aliso Canyon. The blaze was battled by !30 firemen rrom the Laguna Beach Fire Depart· ment. Orange County F'ire Oepartn1ent and State Division or forestry_ Sixleen pumping units. t1-1.·o aerial bombers iind Jour bulldozers were also called to the scene. Ftrmen wtde still b\Jsy putting out' "hot sp'1ts"' 1n the early hours Saturday niorn- ing Getting the blaze under cnntrnl \\'aS n1ade diff icult by the rugged, inaccessible t~rrain_ Fire officials said 111 rhe early ~t ages of the fire . operations were tia mpered by a water shortag~ which was 1101 re sol ved until a large tanker lruck arrived f'ron1 \~'ire Ser\·iees SAIGON -The South V1etnan1e~e government 1o<la,\' rcne1-1.·ed its proposal lor ;i i.:ea~e·f1rc and 1he rrunif1cation elections with North Vietnan1 that Pres1· Oen\ Ngo Dinl1 Diem refused to hold Iii years ago. Although both the govern111en! and the L.S En1bassy spokesman said 11 was a re;iff1rm;ition of proposals made 111 1%9 and July 8. by South Vietnam. the rcne1val of the bid took on nev.· s1gnifi. cance in light of other moves aln1ed at a peaceful settlemenL These include a new srl'cn·point peace package put forlh b;.-the Viel Cong at !he PHris peace talks Jul.v 1 and President Nixotl's forthcuming visit to mainland Cl:ina to confer "'ilh Red Chinese leaders. Meanv:hilc. Defense Secrttar.v i\-lelv1n R Laird said Sund<1y the t:nited State.~ 111ust maintain a "realis1ic rietrrrenl" force \\'hile s!rengthf'ning its Asi an allies in a "new era of ne&otiat ion." The Defense Secretar~' talked lo ---~---~--- government. Our desire is to speak lo the Contes! and lntemational Ra\lye. (through 12 years of age) will be ottered, reporters Sunday nigh! a! Andrew s Air North Vie.tnamese as one man to anotht'r. Darrell Eberl, fine arts instructor, along y,•\th trophies and merchandise Force Base, r-.1d. after returning from a 1'hey sent a letter to North Vietnameac r. ~··e lo• the Ho•ti·ngton Beach colle•e · ! th So th c t Pl lO-da,.• tour nr Japan '"d !louth Korea . I v Do M '""" ' " 11 prizes rom e u oas a:r.a • Premier Ph m an ng 'itl ay asking \vhen he said GWC will field a team lo retailers. Laird s:i1d hr no11fircl leader.~ of the permission to go over. If they're acccp· build "a garbenslangel like no one has 111'0 t'llUntries Iha! the Un1 !ed S!<ci!e~ l'l'· 1ed. Lhey v.•ant !o send a delegation oJ ever seen .'' Garbenstangels either built or recon· rnained con1111il!ed to lhf' "two 1nain about five name stars on the goodwlll He said his students have "!lecret plan.s dilioned for display and compe!iUOn ,by pillars·· of the Nixon doctrine -n1ain· niission. they are 3~·orn not to reveal." the contestants will be. exhibited and taining 1ls own strategic and conventiona l Me,11nv;hile. the Athletes are working up Ebert's gargenstangelers wi\! be pitted operat~d on Thursday, Friday and Satur· military deterrent in Asia \I' h 1 I c a program to gi\'e a boost to the somt against teams from Oran&:e Coast Colle&:e day (July 29 through 31). strengthening U.S. allies there. :!,000 children who.se fathers are missing coached by Bill Abernathy, an instructor The con1edy team of Skiles and Al the daily breifing for new!> ear-or captured in Vietnam. in OCC's 'technoloCY division, and Dick Henderson already has agreed to serve respondents. U.S. Embassy spokesman They plan to see that tht kids get a Hernandez, director of special programs as judges of entries in all three divisions Ro~· \V. Johnson was asked if the United remembrance from their favl'lrite sports for minority students at OCC. of the contest. Stairs saw anything ne1.v in the South Abernathy and Hernandez 'M-·ere first to The comics will be assisted and kibitz.. \1leLnamese proposal. nrganize teams of &:arbenstan1elers to ed by Gene Tardy. Golden West College ··So far, we haven ·1 found anything new .A.na fi eiJJJ Kittgsmen build Rube Goldbergian contraption.!! for graphic arts in!tructor and builder over 1 In 11." Johnson replied. "It is a rear-the summertime silly ~eeson event ~ be !he past 10 :i:ears of what he calls Do 1 t1rrnat1on of a slalemenl 111ade in 1969 ll W D A J co-sponsored July 26 through 31 by the Nothing Machines . is also a rrafflrmation of lwo point s of itl rtllll . Wal·( DAILY PILOT and South Coast Plaza . But Gene'11: machines, recognized by thr five-point proposal madr ,July 8 in The co-sponsors have agreed to furnish the Garbenstangel Ral!ye·s promoters for P11ri.~ \Ve src nothing new in 11.·· Tile Anaheim Kinismen placed third con1petilion tee shirts for the teams and v.·hat they really are -garbenstangels _ There \1as no immediate con1n1r nt ~unday in the $18,600 \Vorld Optn Drum \Viii put up special prizes for the best will be on continuous display throughout from the State Departmenl 1 11 ;ind Bugle Corp~ Competition in Lynn. garbenst•niel built by them on location the great Rallye. \Va sh1ngto11. llowe\'er. sources fam tli a1· Jll:;-.~s at !he Carousel Court in South Coast In fact, a mechan ical man built by \1·ith tl1e peace negotiati ons said they C.\· Fir~! place v.•tn! to The Lancers of Pla?.a shopping center. Noack Trophy Co. Tardy and renamed Gary Garbenstangel peel 1'orlh \'irtnainesc and Vit:L Cong en-Revere, :\fass .. and !he Vanguards of of Costa Mesa is designing a special for his appearance at South Coast Plaza \·oys lo rebuff lhe Saigon proposal. Santa Clara, received second prize. perpetual trophy y..•IUch it will donate to v•ill emcee the Do Noth.Jng ~tachine show. ~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ El Rancho has the hottest price in town! FARMER JOHN ••• 1 LB. PKG • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • WEBER'S ••• PACKAGE OF 8 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ltave you r.;el! a wien.i&-<:OI tJt. week ... with F&rmer John 's awa.rd winnin1 !ranks, \.\-"ebe1''s fresh hot do1 bum, at El Rancho's pric.tt.! Fresh Lamb Chops SPtl~ LIMB! U.~D.l CHDICE Serve it broiled f<1r :i rc1l) ta.~~ tre:.t: • • • • • • • • • • • $14~ Shovldo< C.I 99 Lamb i:> d~Hciou~. C and so nutritious ! II. ••••••••••• Surpr.ir.e your folks this u-·eek 1vith Lendfr, meaty barbecu~ lamb riblcts! Stuffed Breast of Lamb ............... 49:.. .?ifr..ke~ ror a deh<·iou:> tr!at, hot from Lhe ovrn •. , 11.ncl it's ready to b•ka! Lamb Stew ........ 29:.. Lamb Patties ...... 49~ i:or a ta~t.y "Shepherd'! Ple"'I Lean ... precision rround, shaptd Prict:8 in rffect .\Ion .. 1'111.,., l{··rd,, Julv 19. ~O. !I. No itnlt.~ to rleoltrs. Orange Juice 2 QUARTS ln our senaational new conta.intr! Freah l(j'ueezed: Pure Juice! (Qt. 59c) Mug Root Beer ............ :~.P.AC«........ .... 69c Eleven ounce no return bottles ... delit'htful accompaniment to hot dopf Del Monte Dill Pickles .... ~ .. 0.t .1.u ........ 49c Your choic~ ... K08h~r halves .•. Rerullr Dill halve11 or whole! Cri!pf Granny Goose Corn Chips ........................ 43' ~fake your wienie b&.ke a complete meal 1 1\~r. 58c aize pack.a"*" Springfield Ice Cream . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... 69•· Smooth, CN!&my l Favorite flavon in the ea.ey diJ> squan half-pllonl ARCADIA : s11n1•1 "'' H""''"'''" or :w1:: PASADENA . i'li'ii· SOUTH PASADENA : ;}i'i/. HUNTINGTON BEACH :':r',: NEWPORT BLACH · u" N•wi1or1 il' ., ""'' r1 R.u1rhr. r.r.11:i>1 \ . 320 Wrst Color.HIO Blv~ .. F1emonl .1nt1 H1111t1ngton !Jr .. W.1rnrr JIU1 A!110flljll.l1 l:11 H!li'!'.tlk L'~nlo I /'.J~J l.i.llilu lt Dr l .1.tlJlult V1llJge Ceuti:r) ., " '· ., l ·: -··-\.--------::=::;;;::::: -·--.--.......... ~---··-••. -··-~~ ----""""" -... __..,__ --.-------_,... ~ -' -~ ~ -;!--~ ..... _ -... ~ ... • I J ~t ·1 I 1 I -4-DAILY PILOT - \ \ I ~ps Santa Ana's Streak Intact Hy 'J'HOJ\tAS ,r.1URPHINE 01 IM DlllY l'lltl Stt tl RICKY·TI CKY POLITIX : The c1ly of San!a Ana , with a long his tory nf losing <1nnexation battle.~ to JUSI about e11ery ci- ty jurisd1ct1 on that surrounds ll. ap- parently has Its record int act today. Scott Eyes End of War By May 1 WASHINGTON (AP ) -S en ate Republican Leader Hugh Scott says the timing of President Nixon ·s visit to China fnd icates the United States will have no combat troops 1n Vietnam by May I. 1972. Going a step further , lhe Pennsylvania senator said Nixon's announccn1ent he v.·il! visit Peking by next May 1mphrs possibly !here would be no U.S. fore<'s at all in Vietnam by that hnie. "except those necessary to t•arry ou t such agreements. as. hopefully. lia\·e bC'en made." "Do you think it i.~ feas1blt' th<11 <ul American presi den t can go to China \.\ h1 le there are .:iny troops lef\ 1n South Viet· nam?" Scott was asked Sunday on ABC's "Issues i:ind Answers." Faces of Misery • • ·• ... ;: '.~.'. .... -. Jordanians Drive Out Guerrillas By Uo.lted Press lnleruU.al Jordanian troops Joyal to King fius.~e:in won ool over Palestinian guerrillas today, forcing dozens of terrorists to flee to the lsraeli-0eeupied west bank where they wert offered refuge by Israel. Iraq closed Its border with Jordan and asked the Jordanian ambassador to leave Baghdad . A guerri lla spokesman in Beirul said the Jordanian army waged a \'irtual massacre on the terroriL~ls and fol't'ed some of the su rv ivors to lsr.:ieli -hl'ld 1er- ri{ory Y.'here they pr efe rred ··to die at th<' hands of Israelis th;in be sli:iughtcred by their Arab brothers." Latest to v1ct1m1ze the County Seat's expansionillt machinations are a group of citizens "'ho live out in Irvine teritory. They aren't professional politicians. cigar<hompers or experts in smoke-filled rooms. They are just a bunch of regular folks who would like to form their own ci- ty. "l think thal he could gn 1f th!' rei:ison for keeping some troops in Sou th Viet- nam is coupled wilh the prisoner-of-v.·ar issue at that time." Scott said -as he often ha s -that he thinks Nixon has set a withdraw;il plan but nol a firm date for total U.S. pullout from Vietnam. Carrying their only possessi on s. some of the eighl· million refugees from Pakistan trudge dov,rn a dusty road in India toward a ve ry uncertain future. The Is raeli milit;iry com mrtnd In Tel Av iv said 71 guerrillas had surrendered since Saturday. 16 of them today. and had !old their interrogators more would follow. Israeli commentators sai.d it was the end of the guerrilla moVement rn Jordan. I ' THE IRVINE people filed all the papers and got a!! the governmental ap- proval When , lo, Santa Ana hauled them inlo cotirl. Santa Ana's cries of anguish were generated bcc8u~e the Irvine people included some choice industnat land out beyond the airport within their proposed new cityhood boundaries. Sant.a Ana <'laimed this was its "Promised Land'' -allegedly promised to it scme years ago by the Irvine Ranch in order lo enrich the County Seal's municipal tax base. Alas, in action Friday, Judge Raymond Thompson failed to agree with the yells f)f foul and Santa Ana got the can tied to Its annexation ta il again. As I un derstand the jurist's words. he ruled that if there ll'as a pact between Jrvine Ranch i:ind the Santa Ana City Council. then that 1vas a council of a long lime af;(o. And old councils cannot bind future council~ by their actions. And lhe judge said !hat being sn. the reverse is also true and Irvine cannot be held !o a pac t v.dth an old council bv a new council. Indeed, ifs all pretty cOm· plex. BUT P~RHAPS the mo:;l importanl thing is that the judge ruled the Irvine , cltyhood question should go ahead ' through normal processes. That would 1 seem that the next move will ti, for the Board of Supervisors to set an electio11 date and the folk s out in Irvine will gel their chance lo vote on cityhood. All this has lhinrs buzzing up in 1he County Seat. While Santa Ana ha,c; li:lken anolher dive on the political-lei;lal dunking ~ machine. 1ome observers believe it v.ill once again COIT\t> up for air, ready for more inside maneuvering , THOSE OBSERVERS nf 1he "San!a Ana Never Gives Up'• school strongly believe lhe maneuverers will make a strong bid lo figure a v.'ay lhat the Bn11ni of Supervisors might relurn lhe ques1inn of Irvine ci!yhood tn lhf' five-member Local Agency Formi:ition CommissiOfl. NO\V the LAF'C already approved the plans for Irvine cityhood. But hark ~ Thin1s have changed a bit. A nf'w LAFC has just been form ed with Councilman Joseph Hyde or Los Alamitos !akin~ 11 seat and chi:i irmansh1p or that august body. So me partic~ up at the County &at question v.here Hyde's i:i!Jegian<"e may (a ll and they p<i1nr out v.hen he took the ~a\·el. Santa Ana smile.~ y,·crt> wider tha n Sout h f\l a1n Street. THESE SA~1E nb:;r rvrr; ~u'1~<"~! 1h;il the LAFC n0w stands 3 to 2 \\Ith Santa Ana·s inlf'rrst~ Jr so, and lhe Board 0f Sl1perv1snr~ should ~omchow rl'lurn thr Ir vine cltyhood question In thi> LA Fr for a nl'w rulint:. you might predicl w11h ~nme degree of cl'rtainty th.:it there will bf' unhappiness nut on the ranch Thus the plot thickens , We shall see. "The President. definitely has a plan in mind. I am sure of that," Scott s;ud. "And that plan envisions a withdrawal at B certain lime and under certain con· dilions. Thal is ;i li llle differe nt from saying that an i:ib.i;olutely fixed and im· movable d.:ite has been set." Under Nixon's announced withdra v.•al plan all hut 184.000 of the U.S. conti ngrnt in Vietnam is due out by Der \. The President's next timct:ib!e i,c; expected tn be announced in mid·November and could involve all the rema ining force. The closest Nixon has come to an- nouncing a flat-out end to U.S. in- volvement in the war was his April 7 press conference statemenl: "In my campaign for the presidency, I pledged lo end Amcric;in involvcmenl in this war. I am keeping that pledge . You should hold me account<1ble if I fail .. , " Meanwhile, Rep . Paul N. McCloskcy of Ci:ilifornia. who s<i ys hr \\'Ill challeni:ie Nixon in next year ·.~ R c pub Ii can primaries, said the President's visit to Peking could hBl'e ;i s;i lut ary effect on the Paris pe.:ice ta lks only ff the Nixon ad ministration drops its insistence on preserving the Thieu-K.v government 10 South Vietn,11m . "I think if the Presidrnt w1ll ;ihanrlon that .,. negotiating p<isi tinn rhal \\'I' c;in ~tt!e the Vietnam war 11.·il.hi n 30 to 60 days." McCloskey said on NBC's "Meet the Press ." AnOther potential cantlidate for the White House. Sen. Henry M. Jackson I [). Wash.), told 11 'T'emp<1 , Fla., news con- ferentt he hopes communications with China will le;id to a cease.fi re in Vietnam and that Peking will he brought into the arms-limitation talks. But he expressed fe;i r~ a U.S .-C..:hinc.~e wi:irmup might br in~ Russian reprisal.~. ''Thty could mi:ike further mo ves in the 111iddle East ," he saif'l . "Russi11 is par.:inoid on Chin.:i . They en· vision 800 mill ion people with nu clear arms." Jackson said. Wicks ';\1aybe t itc)· re ,')·[>iru Agne1v ·s ! ' Red Raiders Hit Giant U.S. Base Close to Saigon SAI GON (VPl)-Communists att.ac:keci the big American base i:it Phu Loi 13 miles north of Saigon today ~l'en as President Nixon 's <'Urrent program lo Ytlthdraw 100.l.IOO more U.S. troops out or Vietnam by Dec. I passed the halfway mark a month ahez.d of schedule. The U.S command announced today that 2.'13,300 American se rvicemen ~'ere 10 Vietnam as of last Thursday. \Vithdrawals averaged 4,000 a week all year unlil mid·.lune when t~v were cut back to 2.i60,.. week because ihcy are so far ahe ad of schedule. Comn1unist lfli-mill1meter rockets hit Phu Loi today in the second such attack in 1wo d;iys. A Communis t force ;idvanclng under lfl7mm rocket fire assaulted the Phu Loi base today but was driven off. One American and three Communists were reported wounded. Along the Demilitarized Zone tOMZ) dividing lb~ two Vietnams. U.S. 852 b,Jmbers today pou nded North Vietnam- ese rocket installaUon.s to the north of P'ire Base Fuller 11 few hou rs after the Communists bombarded the re.construe. led outpost with mortars. The 852s hit the si tes. used to fire 122mm rockets that final ly forced evacuation of Fuller a month .:igo. aftl'r striking at suspected Communist .o.lorage ar('es near the A Shz.1.1 Valley llhe North Vi clni:imese barri:i~r of 82mm mortar rounds did nol damage thP rnountaintop Fu ller base which forrn~ the nor lhwest corner of a defense line along DMZ. military spokesmen said. Chilean Marxist Support Slips VALPARAISO. Chile I A Pl -A spec ial con gressional election Sunday fa iled to give President Salvador Allende·~ leftillt government the vote of confidence it hoped for as the oppo.c;ilion candidate won by 4.6.37 voles. The election in Ch ile's second mo.o.t populous provlnct' had been billed as a 1cst of popularity for Allende's pl.:ins to lr;i nsform tht' country into 11 Soci al i.o.I. .o.t atl.'. But the ~1.:irxist president se1d the tesult would not revt>r!'f his coursr. O.o.cnr M;irin . .:1 6."l·yA.ar-old phys ici11n barke d by both the Christian Democr.:its and the right-wing National party, receiv- ed 141,450. Storms Mar Sunny Nation Northern U.S. Da1np, Dreary; South, West Sunny, Wa.rm Callfor11ia IOUTHllN i:.AL lflOltHll WllTMll S y UN!TID l"llSI INTllNITIONll .....,.,. lllw t1111,1!11 •I'd Ioct l loa ulll•d .,.., 1"9 <J>ts!t l o•ct<e~• au"na '"• I ... Ml<l>ft t fld lot I na•'•' boll\<t -· ,,,. f!l11h -· ... , .. """ 1 ... •lltdod .,...,,.lllh! lew Wt• M Al '"' ~1 "'' t or •....r "'"'" <•"'• wll"I" I '"'°'"of.,... on~•~•r ,. ... "-Hiide "9c;ktd ._ '"' '"°'' •e """ t1'it lnltnd llMI t lld '"'Kllll o• loQM !& l!\Od.9f'tlf rtl lttltf! ..... DI Omo<! Summar11 Mt('ll[W Of HO.l.l H.lll()H.ll Wl.l lHlll SEll"lCE 10 l: 00 A .M. EST 1 • 10· 71 ,. W'I WlllH[I f0TOtA IT$ k low 0""V" •~Ihm U<n'•lll In ){!ul .... t" MIC~le*" •~•tld (ll:lvtiV 1-l•I •t>(I ,...,_,, •"Cl 11'u"df"tor"'I Wot• ••l>"C'" +o "'' e•"• •' Ntw E"'llltnd lll<t I• '"I di ., "•c•t1t te.,11! ''"'"" Ill _.,...,,. oi.1 • ...,..,. """ •• ,,., ... (Olef'•Otl hid •• Coa•lal '"""" toe!•• l !.tll ll't•ltblt "'''''" ,.,.,,! • ..., ........ 1~. ""41•• M<...,,,.,,. .,.,.!ftlY 1 •~ n '""" 11' •lfor"!Xl"• IOO•v fnd 1-tV. Mlt"' '""""' Ml t • (81!11 ......... u ............. _ ~ !ft ti l"I•"" l...,p .. otu•11 tfMf ~•C>f"I •• lo It W1lfr tfm...,.•lur1 ••· Temuerature• a1 UlrOTIO ~•ISS INtllUlit.TtO"llL Ttm<>t•1111,., t nd arKl~ll•Hon ter '"• 1•·1>ou• H•laa tn<ll"" ~r • t .m '"'"'"'"••• &olu 801!"'1 8Yll•lf! C~lt•9o Cl"e1n,,.11 Ot\11~ Otnv.,. 0-0.• Mel"'' F'•!r!Mtft~• Ho"ol"'tu ,..,, .... oo111 Jun•~ lc:tnw1 Clh l ll ....... L01,1i•Yllft Ml"'"'"'lt Mlt ml Mll,.•IJIC" M•ftM1i'Ollt H"'"' Or lo•"I H1w Vo•t OO-ltnem1 City °"'""" "•I'" Sorl~•• l'Ml1deh>ll•• ""'~nl• Hlth Lt• l"l'ft. ll'!CI ,. " n Jt ., ,f l . " . ~ ,. " ,, 10 " " 107 ,. II •I . " It ., -" " ~ . .. ·" ·" ·" ·" 1.11 "' t<I .llt ,., ., "1 u ~:If " . -" " " U JI .!» ., n u " .u !DJ 1111 " " l!J " IJ ,, .en ,. ., moil"' •u""r '~'"' •• 1,mot•1tu"1 1 .. lh• t111 w••o 1•-!od I"' Wl\lll"l!IOfl ,..., O•t-tO"I S11t1, ~loo••· Tides "11",.,,''~ Por!l•flll II lo<! ,en • • So u •~••n f t +l •&rn l t ~•<I MOHOAY llor>a 11 !I .OJ . " ,,.,°"""'n•o!i. ·~~"~ •>•II ,.1111 -""'" "''" I U 1."I l I l l(h"'(lnd 11\ullflf•oM .. •" 11•0<'.l<t"d I&< tneo,1ntll1' J ~ •tlllO"• W•f!fl• ''''"••a ·~0 ... ~" ..... '~ond ...... I) H . .... S•«•"''"'~ Hiii ... ~rt<'ll<'·~ ''>' , ,.0,.,.. ••••""I~~ ,,..., TUllO .. Y ~' lo.u• U U Colllft•nl< fl '"•tull CGllll •"II F'I"'•~• r r.11 ~ .. ~ 10 111'1 • "'· I t Soll ~·•• C••v 01 •• ,. • Cf!OIM t1~111Jr•1 1tld _.. l t•I· ~1.,1 ''"" ~ 1• o "'· 11 Son O••ioo 11 •' ~ ""-'f1(191'1,_..I •llttdtd •~ •••• l.,. '"""""'"'"'' '"""'" ••••• '<>!l•v s.-~ ..... ,,,.., JlOll"'· 4~ s ... ~ru•<:.,(O " U .,.._., .,,. l'IOl'lll•11 f'1d ('"'''' llloi:kl•• I!>' '"" "•"?" '"tludt<! • •••a·~• ol 40 &"'C.~"" lr>w J 11 "·"' 1 i su111t u •• Dean Acheson Critical In T\1iddle East political development!!. the Israeli morning newspaper Ha'aretz s;iid Joseph J. Si_sco. Assistant Secretary cf State for Near E:istem Affi:i irs, will gn to Jerusalem at the end of next week and 11"11 confirm Washin'!ton's wil1i ngne~ In supply additional F4 Phantom fighter· bombers to Israel. Of Late John l(ennedy The ne\.\'spaper said Sisco also ill e.x- prcled to eonvev a per!\Qnal message frcm President Nixon to Pri me Minister Golda Meir asking lsri:icl to cooperatr with U.S. efforts to reopen the Suez Canal in a bid for an interim Middle East peace settlement . NEW YORK (AP\ -Former Secretary of State Dean Acheson says 1n an in· lerview published 1n Life magazine that John F. Kennedy \\'as "out of his depth " in lhe presiden cy. The Life article . published Sunday, is a partii:il text of an interview Acheson gave !he Britis h Broadcasting Corp. It ha s not been televised yet. "He did not have incisiveness and he ~·a~ oul of h i~ drpth where he w a~." Acheson said of the late presi dent. "I h.:ite lo sa.v this beca use J know it's goini.: lo be mi sunderstood, but hi.~ repu ta tion 1~ ,l!Te<1tcr because of the lragef'ly of h1.~ dcalh than it wou ld have bee n if he had lived ou t two te rms." Acheson salrl Kenned y "did nol seern tn me to be in Hny sense a gre;it 01.:in. I di d not think he knew a great dral abou r any nf the m<ilters wh ich il':r> des1r.:ible !h::it ;i chief of st;ite or a presidenl r.f thr L'nited States should know about. He was not decisive .'' \\'ht'n the interv iewer, Kenneth Harris, said there was a ··legend that he was a \'ery decisive man indeed '' during the Cub;in missile crisis. Acheson repl ied, •·well, it is legend, it is not the fact." The former secretary of stale, who serl'ed under Harry S Truman, wa s sent to Fr ance by Kennedy lo keep President Charles de Gaulle informed about the cri sis. Acheson, now 11 Washing1 on l ;i w~'rr , w;i~ al so critical of 1he presiden1 's b1·01her. thr li:ite Robert. f . Kennedy, then altorney general. Hrporling that Robert Kennedy had said a deci~ion to bomb Sov iet mis,1les in Cuba 11 ou!d be ;i "Pei:ir l Harbor in rever~e." Arhcson ch.:iracterized the opi- nion ;is "high school though I.., "Thi~ is 110\ really v.·hat I \\'<IS lookin~ for in the lea dership of my country at this point ," he decl ared. A Jordanian militi:ir y spokesman said Sunday the guerrillas who ned to the west bank were Israeli spies. Al Fatah, the largest guerrilla organization, denounced Hussein over iL~ Cairo-based voice of Ass ifa Radio tocl.:iy and called for the expulsion of Jordan from the Arab League and the impo.~i tion of i:iri economic and diplon1atic boycott. Politica l sources in Beirut ~aid Hussein m~y D~\V a hea vy price in Ar<ib enm i1y for his fn rces, dt'fc;it of lhe guerri!l;is in their late~! fighl ing which fli:ired in no rth Jordan terrorist s<1nctuaries Tuesda,v , Palesllnians planned strPC'! rl emonstra - t1ons ag.:ii nst Hussein in Bciu.11. An ex- plosion near the J ordanian emhassy In the Lebanese c.:ipita l injured three persons late Sunday and prom pted a police investigalion 1nto the pof>SibiJity of an attempt to bomb the embassy. FURNITURE CARPETS LAMPS ACCESSORIE S • PASADENA: Colorado al E( Molino-792 6136 POMONA: Holl, l!!I of Garey-619-3026 SANTA ANA; Main at Eleventh-547-1611 ,.,.,, "'E'!J'"' !i.i' L.t~" lodtY w1'11t tff111••" tt Ml •...,•Ht (O\ltl!v AfrOO'! I~ _.iv wn.w .rw~UMI •'-"'-¥l~1'1o.., to ., ..,.,"" t! Htodlt._ '"" ,,.... f fl •"' t•" fl<ll • "'· V•~tGVT•r 11 "1 1 ~"II--';;;;;;¥ ~...Mll'.JbM' .i.owata... ••• ---....W:l4--.......... _ _ ___ ,._ ~ r!!t1,..LJ I 1 m, '1!1..!J,l!~m..:._ "{••hl,..!O'I _ _..,.,,.._ •! _ .g __ ;~ c;_c_=-,.:----:-=c-=;c.-:_;:---:_;:c""--:-:-::-----::--::-:::--:::--:::;::---:::-::---::::::::--=---::::;---:=:--;--c;=-:-c--,. I• e --~~ ·-,_,.--0 !'' • ~ -... -·-·' ~ . ~ II' ~-;""---~·-·-"!"9 ~=· .... , ...... ..,._!.... 11 l'J>· """-=:=:::--·=--,.. -~,_ -. -··---··-· -~;;--. --.:....~--- I • 7 Ne rt Beadt Today's Fl•al . EDITION VOL. 64, NO. 171, 3 SECTIONS, '40 PAGES ORANGE CA:JUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY ·19, 1971 TEN CENTS Scl1ool Board Eyes 'Salary Improvement' Bid A salary schedule granting a 2.2 per- cent "salary improvement" to au employes of the Newport·Mesa Unified School District will be considered by the school board at its meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Lyceum of Costa Mesa High School, 2650 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. If approved. the pay increases would be<:ome effective retroactively to July I. The salary chart stays within a $560,000 total amount &et aside by trustees at Hirth Sees Bond Vote In Newport By L, PETER KRIEG Ct lht Dally ~!IOI .11t ll Newport Beach ~1ayor Ed Hirth said tnday he expects the city council to schedule a bond election to raise funds for the $7 million civic cenler when it meets next t.1onday night. The mayor also disclosed that he and Vice Mayor How3l"d Rogers and former mayor Doreen Marshall are forming a citizens' committee to promote passage cf the bond issue . Hirlh indicated that right now he ex· peels the council will ask voter approval t.o bond the enlire $7 million project. but said the city's financial col'ISUllants 2.re working nov.• to determine lhe exact figure. He noted thal past discussions had cenlered around the possibility of using revenues from the saie of the city dump property -perhaps $1 million or more - to help defray the cost. "We will know the answer te this, and a lot of other questions, next Monday night," Hirth sid . Hirth said he. Rogers and Mrs. Marshal ! "hope to put togelher a com· mittee of citizens dedicated to the culmination of this long.planned project." He said the names of the committee members V.'i!i be released "late next week ." "I think the need is great, the people "'·ill understand it, so r think the chances for passage are excellent ," I.he mayor said this morning. Newport Okays Lease Transfer Of Yacht Basin Newport Beach councilmen ha\' t unanimou sly appr ovf'd transfer of the lease of the Balboa \'arht Basin to I.he Jr\'ine Company after tenanls there said thev had been promised the same deal thl'Y had before. Councilmen held up the transfer tv.·n l\'ceks ago when the s u b t en a n I s , operators of the yach1. hasin and Eddi<''s Care, said they were in secure over the proposed deal. "We have been Assured that our one year lease will be renewed for the re- mainder of the Irvine Company lease," Donald New, president of Basin Marine, told councilmen Monday night. Eddie Flach, operator of the cafe, con· curred . 'The yacht basin. on city properly. has been leased to the Joseph Beek family through.1987. The transfer Is from Hugh Haley and Margaret Messinger, to the Irvine Company. Oraage Coast WeaClaer The weatherman sees variable high clouds today and Tuesday along Lhe Orange Coast, with temperatures at 70 along the beaches rising lo SS inland. Lows along the coast 60, 66 inland. INSIDE TODAY Orange County wive~ of mili- tar11 men , 10.lt.o ore either held pri.son'er of war or who ore missfng in actwn. wail and keep thr home fires bun11ng. S,e Ktory. Pagt. 14. llH~o f ... 11... JI (1hHlrftll ' (llUHIM l-4_.. Ctmlct " Dtllll Nelkt• f 1•1'-'1•1 ..... • '"'-"'•lft-u JiftlftCI 1• 141 ... KIH II A"" L1"41tn II I _... u .. 1111MI N..... I 0r1.,.. Ceu11tr t 111 .... Jl.-i... t4 lJlwtl JI.ft tfKll ~... ii rei.~11..., n T,.._i-D Wrlltl<I• ' W1'"1"'' Ntw1 11•11 W1rM Newt • their July 6 meeting £or ulary lm- provements, Including increased COSt! of health in- surance and normal annual step in- crements granted teachers, the pay in- creases amount to about 5 percent for lbe 1971-72 school year, a district llpokesman said. The proposed salary schedule baa not been approved by the tea cher represen- tatives to the district's Certificated Employes CoUI1cil. The Newport-Mesa Education Associa· lion which controls all the teacher seats: on the CEC, last week indicated the teachers are al "impasse" with the board over the salary items of their Feb. I con- tract proposal. This means the board must appoint .11. factfinder tc serve on a three-member panel {() investigate the salary issue s and make a report lo the board and the public. The findings of the panel art not binding on either teachers or the district. DAILY ,ILDT Iliff,,_.. Me Jan, You Tar:ran It was photo cl ub day Sunday at the Orange County Fair and this fair !llaiden was one of the models. She was listed simply as "Jan A·48" m order to con ceal her true idenU ty· from all the photogs. Her name remained a mystery today. For another view of photo club day, see Page 2. Higl1 School Instructor Admits Student Drug Sale By ARTHUR R. VINSEL f;icing a maximum It.rm of five years lo life in prison. a Costa Mesa High School business teacher who turned his !&tents lo illicit moonlighting today ad· mitted he sold drugs to students. Carlton Polk. 29, pleaded guilty to two counts of .sale of narcotics and dangerou!I drugs before Judgt. Beach Vasey in Los Ange~ County Superior Court .at Long Beach. He was ordered to return Aug. 20 for sentencing. Polk had been scheduled for jury tria) Friday but it was continued, leading to sperulation he would change his earlier plea of innocent. There was no discussion or pleading for leniency at the time. "Ju.st a !traight plea of guilty," said a court clerk in summing up the pro- ceedings which took only a few moments. Polk was arrested April Tl at his Def. mont Shore bachelor pad, which was allegedly a popular spot where some of hill Mustang campus students con. gregated. An IS.yearoQld student Md .11. curvaceow, titian-haired special poli~ operative k'nown as Mrll. Teeny-Bopper were used to gather evidence against Polk. which police considered conclusive... HUI trembling voice is recorded on tape during two t.ransactiollll In wblch LSD tablets were sold tc both prosecuUon witnesses , It can now be. revealed. never teach aga in ," remarked Costa Mesa Police Detective Sgt. John Regan after lhe verdict. Co~ta Mesa lnve.stig.alor!I had Polk under surveillance for months before ob- taintng the crucial evidence required lo convict him on the drug sale charaes. He was arrested at borne bttauR ~ traruactlotlll occurred there. although !Ste TEACHER. Pqe !) Police Enforce Street End Boat Ban; Lift Ten Enforcing 1 ne• ordh1anoe baMlnC street eod moorlnp, N8'.pm Be1ch police and General Service 0e9artment officials U\iJ mornini . spent one hour picking up IO •boata ftom 1iJ strei!!t end beaches, •ccordln( le> Harbor and TidelandJ Director GeorCt Dewet. · "They were upeetJnr t lot more .boats, maybe even a hall--dty project." aald Dawes, who added that then •ere pn> bably so few boat.a left. 'becaute people were given "enough time, to move them.'' All pick-up tcltivty "wont verr quietly;" •aid J•cob Myoderee, General Services direcf:Or, Crew• ·worted-tfrorit 8:30 it.m. to 8:40 1.m. · ''All we want i.s to make sure be caq Boatl were pi(ked up at 'be11chet ..t tlh SL. FttnllJ!!'! St.. 11111 SL. G St .. H SL Sunday Bathers Pack ••• r SI. likf takrn to the city yard for 1tor1ge,. S Those· boita not claimed at the pol ice ands o{ Newport ... P'~Wllhln six month• will be auctioned. Only 30.000 were f:If)eeted at btachet! The ~ct. 1dopttd last· month. today, but crowds of 95,000 Sund1y and went ~· tfl'ect Thursday, but city of· 60.000 Saturday "looked !Ike the ntghl or Octa.ls !JOl!tpoaed the pickup until lhi! the lemmin,g11." Newport Beach lireguard momlnl to 1Uqw dinghy owners to haW' spokeemen aald thia morning. lhe welli'ilttid IO'TMVt their bolts. under terms of lb.: Winton Act, the state's law governing teacher~strict relatiom. If the board adopts tht. proposed ulary schedule. a begiMing teacher with & b~chelor's degree and a teaching creden. Lia! would· be paid S'l .339 ne.zt year. A new teacher with & bachelor's and masler's degree and 60 graduate units could earn up to $8,989. A teacher with the same combination of degrees and 12 years' teaching experience of which Phone ~ven mu.st be in the Newport-Mesa district, would earn $14,897 .11. year. The salary range proposed for high r;chool principals goe$ from $19,412 to $22,218 a year. Salaries for middle r;chool principals range from $17,527 to $20,334 and for elementary pr incipals the range is $16,492 lo S\9,298. Administrative salaries range from $19,276 to $22.082 a year for directors: $17,174 to $19,980 a year for coordlnatcrs; Pact $14.461 to $17.253 a year for superv!50rs and $15,001 to $17,807 a year for the district librarian. Of the 53 salary levels cffered on the teacher's salary schedule, JO offer salaries between $9,045 and $10,990 per year. To qualify for the $9,045 pay lltep, a teacher would need a bachelor's degree and 45 graduate units or a master'I degree and 15 uniL<; and have at least two year's teaching experience. Ol('d Union Official Reports Settlement SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A tenta1ive (on.tract agreement has been reached between manageme.nt .aid union leader! In lhe six-Oay-old naUonaJ strike against the Bell Telephone System , a union offi· cial said here today. Reid Pearce. international represen· tative for the Communications Workers of America, ~aid the settlement would be a11noonced officially in Washington by Joseph A. Beirne, union president. Word of the reported settlemen t be- gan circu lating more than a.n hour bf:. fore Seirne sched uled & meetina in Wash. ingt.on to make a statement. Pearce said, "Pickets will come down at 8:59 a.m. PDT Tuesday. Worken;; will return Wed11esday momlng at first avail. able shifts." The walkout. which beean 6 a.m. last Wednesday, has had little effect on serv. ice for customers of the largely autl>' mated domestic telephone network, but put a crimp on repairs and new installa- tions. 1.1anagement personnel have rnamed switchboards a11d repair trueks in a number of places and some non.CW A operators have been reporting t.o work in others. Vandalism and sabotage, principally cable cutting, has occurred. Negotiations were carried on at both national and regional levels over wages, fringe benefits and local issues. Current wages average $3.43 an hour. Family Theme Enhanced '71 ~-FaiP, Some s~ulpture People Start at McCullock's Art Collon c.ndy pulfl vani!bed, twink!in( "'16"1 JICbLO' dorktned, bl' _. poppers .Ulled a. the Jut of t6e rtcord era~ of lt,03t people liled out of lM Orange County Falraround! Sunds y night. During the day. 17,321, people had visited the final day of the sixoda~ run, nearly twice as many as had visited clos- lna day last year. A fair spokesmAn altributed this year'!! record turnout to the "family theme'' which began with the large.st crowd ever assembled in the amphitheater -3,000 - to heir 11nger Pat Boone lasl Tuesday. Youna: people flocktid to the fair this year to bur musical offerings ranging from rock tc di.Jl:leland. Saturday, a di&ptr derby and twins contest rttmphasized the family fare planned for the 1971 edition of the Orange County Fair. But despite the shift ln emphasis. reminders of the agriculturaJ heritage of the yearly event wert everywhere. Tite rural olympics on Saturd11y, tncludinl watermelon eating. pig calling and hay b11\ing content.. proved to be crowd pleasers. Proof tha t oranges still grow in Orange County came with the gift of an Irvine !Set: FAIR, P11e 21 55 Boals End Transpacific Fifty-five boa'll hid a'Oised the Diamond Hud flniJ!i line In th< 26th bll!lllllal Tr1n1pa<lllc Yacl>t Race by ·10 a.di. CPDT) tod1y. Ncrmal tea-brooght th< yachu bolling • ....,. the fillilh line at lop apeeda Sullday but by thlJ mornm,. the--windl hid died .again, aJowtnc the 13 boats still left .at sea. Tailenders In the neet wert. es~ pected to· finish Wednesdlly mom. In,. They art Leprechaun , Woodwynd and Bold Host. For other det.a!18, He Boating. P1ge Xt. ffoUNDACt P~ · -'Of''" DllU'I' "i.t'!ll•tf Some people think it ii -modern art. <>then cringe, 11.'18Url'dng lt must be the reinainl fl( I terrible i!<ewll' ~· 111!!1 olben llJJ>poso>U ·I• a•pla)llnxlnd tantasy or • wreckln'1 yard rejeef, Ahnost no one passing J e r r y McOul!och's Balboa Penlnrula apartment f11ils to stop, whi!!Pfr and point. Slanding on McCulloch's front porch, ln bizarre contrast to tbe placid Pacific Ocean across lhe sand, lr; A strangely garish compo!lle or color and chrome B.tltcmotive parts, molded Into a towering sculpture. The sculpture was created by McCulloch '1 friend . Bob Sansom. It Is un- titled. As art director for the "Carl Burnett Show," Sansom created It las a joke for 1 skit MiM Burnett performed parodying motorcycle movies. McCulloch and hill wife told Sansom they liked it and he promptly gave it t.o them. "We've hauled It around ever r;ince.'' McCulloch \augM. As 811 art tea cher at Whittier High School, Mr.i. McCulloch appreciates it& pop a.rt te!ldencies. Her husband. a drama teacher at Lagun11 Beach High School. uyr; simply, "I dig it." It stands nobly on the porch at 107 19th St., its 11even feet of chrome and red . blue and yellow steel illuminated nightly by 8'lroboscopic lights originally hung at Chrlsbnas, but left up because "it's kind or fun that wa y." The McCullochs enjoy watching people gape aM ~use while waJking by. Many people knock on the door to give Utt CCIU· ple their commenll -positive .11.lld negative -about It. The land)ord and the neighbors also stared ullheUevingly when lt first rolled M casten up to the porch last ~ tembtt. "But ar; IOOl1 as they saw tbe telephone Apollo 15 Tested CAPE KENNEDY (UP[) -Wllh launch one week away, engineers hope to resolve the only remalnin1 Apollo 15 tellling problem today by pultlng tlle command ship Endeavour through a 1pe<:lal J1unch pad test. I • • ' DAI\. Y ~!LOT 11111 ,MM SCU LPTURE OR ACCIDENT? To Eich His Own In N•wport booth, they believed lt." says McCuUoch, whose living room features a normal..siz.. ed. albeit J'll"op telephone booth u!ed 111 • parrot c.age. Visible through a window behind the 8Culpture, the booth wu originally used in a school play. And although he h.u also UMd the r;culpture in a play, too, McCulloch and his wife , Judy, see it a.s more Ulan • mere prop. In fact. the unique weldins has cultural 5ignificance. he gays, for "&utomobil• parts are one of the bfg thin1s of our Lime -of our century." Baker Recall Launched 8l ALAN DIRKIN Loo Alaml!Do Naval AJr Sta~on. ,... ...., 'o" ... " Bater'• leglslallve ••lr;tant Richard A recall ~amp-.. complete with a Ruiz th1I momln1 branded the charaes as foar·paa• tableld DIW'll ileet lnd preS! .. hop uh ml iMuendo ... rt1eue. Wll laoncbed •1aln!t Orang• "Mr. Baker bu been In political orfict CGutity'1 Second Oittrk:t Supetviaor eight years and tn tho5t eight years has David L. Bater toi:lay. left a publk history," Rutz a.aid. "For 11tt tiewll 1hett f&1tures four-inch deep those fnte~sted In truth Ill they have to htadllnea "RECALL BAKER -WHY?" do is look at the record .'' on the front page. It cl1lm1 that the TM press release lists two men as co- 1Upervlsor ha1 double billed taxpayers \n chalrm1n of the Bakt.r Recall Cammlttee travel expense accounU, lhat more than -Dontild J. Swenson, 33, •n Anaheim 90 percent of his political contributions eltctronics technlcl1111, and William S. come from "m11jor landowners 11nd McKnight. 39. Stanton, .a &11.lesmt1n for • developers;" Uu1t he h11 faUtd tc protect baked tooda rlrm. ' pubUc heat h 1ccw, met aecretly to Jn· McKnight mukf not be reached this CTNISI ht1 nll.l'Y 11nd f1vor1 aenenl morning, but Swenson. who aald he r1n avtat.lcr., lncludin1 jet, operaUatis at the 11s Uie American Independent Party can· cfldat. In th< Jut 19th A&enbly Dlstrlct election u id he &nd McKnight both work· ed In the Citiuns Rtferendum and Recall Committee that wu formed earlier this year after county supervi!lors reportiid}J discussed raisih1 their Alarie& at • cio. ed door executive seuion. The meeting touched oft a rtcan cam- paign against JJaker, Board Chalnnan Robert Battin ol the First District and Supervisor William J . Phillipe of the Third District. The drive aga inst BatU11 and Phillips appeared to lose .team several weeka aao and lhe move a,gain!l Baker was abandontd because of a law prevenUng his having to face 1 rec:al1 (See RECAU.. Pa1e !) ::..· .~ 1 ;'~:.,,. -~-=--.. -~-... ' -:---:~::=:::=:;;;;:;;;;;·';:·-~;;;:-;;::::;:;-s-··--·---· -------~'7:--~----::-!.---: ._ . .-____.,~.:----=---:--··.-..: --:-~i)'.' ~J ;J>i& • 7?-J-=.----l . ( • f DAILV PILOT N Th~f Steal~ Kitclten Sin:k o.rol Frfleman has I MW Mme under construclion in Newport Beach , but somebody e!se -A burglar -has his ne-v.· kitchen ap- pliances_ The victim told police somt0ne broke into the residence at 22Q9 Heather Lane Saturday, talnng $660 in valuables lnc!udtng lhe oven, dish·washer and garhage disposal. San Joaquin Schools Slate Twin Sessions Double st:ssioru: are certain for nearly all first and second graders in the San Joaquin Elementary School District this fall . Superintendent Ralph Gates wha estimated that 286 classrooms -31 more than the district has -are needed to house the 11,926 Septembt:r enrollment. "If we double up in uadea one and two, we'll probably be able to operate grades three to six on a regular schedule," said Gates. He has told school trustees that a!! schools will be crowded in the fall, but three may escape double sessions. These are Valencia in Laguna Hills, Gates in El Toro, and Del Cerro In Aegean Hills. Although the primary grades will 11till operate on a 246-minute schedule. Gates aaid, "Schools will be operating from 7: 30 a.m. to -4 :30 p.m. to 1cCGmmodate the two sessions." Trustee Jim Nelson stid he favored twin atssions over bringing in more port.able Classrooms because "portable5 don't pr{lvide the best learning en• vironment." The district is currently us· ing 58 portable classrooms. Gates said that in a survey of parents, portables are preferred over double sessions when possib:e and double ses· sions over cramming more children into already overloaded classrooms. Bulletins No~' In Newport's Water Billings tf any Newport Beach resident.! are choking over their water bills. they can relieve the. dryness by drinkin& in in· formation frtm free pamphlets to be enclosed with the pleas for payment City 1ovemment is using the water biJJ. Ing system to distribute public in· formation bulletins describing c i t y services, emergency procedures, municlpaJ projecls and govtrnment facilities. Tbe billing llst, however. is not available to private groups, thus saving residents from a usual barrage of junk mail. A proposed annual schedule o f distributed materials will be prepared each January by the city manager and staff and then submitted to the city CQUn· cil for its opinion. The end result of the practice. other than convenience for the city, has benefits for the res ident also. He has something to read while he wonders where. all the water wen t. Hiker Now at Bottom DEATH VALLEY (AP ) - A Las Vegas man who began a 22.8-mile dl!sert hlke Friday from Death Va!Jey to the La!\ Vegas Strip, trudged by tht lowe!t point on the American continent Sunday af!er cov ering about 65 miles. OIAN&I COAST DAllY PllOT OltA.NGI. COAST P'U•LllHING COMP'A"'Y aob•d N. W••fl ........... , ........... ~. J1 <~ It Curlty Vito ,.._,_...,. Ind ~•I M,.,., ... TJ.0.,,11 K11"il EO!lol" T\o..,•• A. Mu•ph:,,, ~"'9'nf Efll'Dr l. 1'1t1r 1Cri19 r;....,....1 Ifft~ (•!Y ffl!O' NtwpMf ..... Office llll N1..,porl C o~lo•••d M1 i!i"t Aclcl,111; P'.0 . lo• 1115, 91661 OHIM Offkft. C.0.11 MtU U:! Wft1 llY 1Tl"ttt LA""" lfl~· n: ~-.. 1 A~..,,,., ....... tc ... IO; •Mt~: !Il l'. IHc~ l ou1-'wl '<f t.n c-i.: ~ Hortll El c-;,.,. ll.111 Tst1••••• (7141 '4J..4 JJI CJ•lftM M1Mtlel .. i4J0 Sl71 • Supervisor Aide Cites 'Innuendo' Rtchard Ruiz, assistant to Second Dl.~trlct Supervisor David L. Baker. to- day responded to charges leveled against the supervisor in a recall campaign. Ruiz iiaid that he did not know the t"·o principal! in the rec2Jl campaign but co mmented. "I'm sure !here is an awful Jot of money behind it. One thing is ob· \"ious someone has gone to an a1-11ful !01 of research, but they have come up Y:ith in· nuendo.·· The aide said that contributions lo Baker"s election campaign were a matter of public record and asked. "are the con· tributions supposed to be good or bad?"' The recall news sheet charges Baker "double billed the taxpayer." "It was all about how Mr. Baker hand!· ed hi!: expenses when he was in Sacramento on stale and COWlly buslnt.ss. the state to hold public hearings in the new~papers and is 1n the auditor's of- fice.," Ruiz said. On the charge or Baker favoring general aviation at Los Alamitos Ruiz recalled that the supervisor si(IIled a peti- tion against creating a commercial airport at the naval stati'on 2.nd In· lroduced legislation which v.•ould require the stat to hold public hejrings in the local area before any commercial airport iJ established. "It's simply hogwash," the supervisor's assistant added. The news sheet also carries a headline. "Surrender At Salt Crttk," and <'harges that Baker failed to protect public access rights to the south county beach. "He wasn 't even here when that vote <'ame up." Ruiz said. Baker represents the Second District which covers the northwest portion f'lf the CGunty. The area generally includes half ot Garden Grove and Stanton. all of Los Alamitos and Seal Beach and most of Huntington Beach and Westminster. From Page 1 RECALL ... within !ix months or the re-election in January. •·we were able to get 8.000 of the 10.800 signatures we needed," Swenson recalled . "We: had to 1top then because of the legal technicality, but now Baker is eligible for re<:all." Swenson said that no other leaders or the Citizens Refe rendum and Recall Committee were involved in the present campaign against Baker. Asked who else was leading the current drive. Swenson replied, "it"s basically just the two of us." The news shee.t contains reproduction! of newspaper stories and headlines and a cartoon of Baker which brands him as '"double bill Baker" and sho"'S him lak- ing money from t1vo taxpayers' pockets for legislative trip..s. It appears to be a professionally pro· duced news sheet, but Swenson said he and McKnight set it up toge ther. He declined to !'iay how many copies had been run off, how many v.:ould be printed, v.·ho printed them. or how much the prin· ting would cost. "People have been kicking in $5 and $10." he said. Told that !he three page press release also appeared to be professionally written, Swenson explained that he v.·rote it and gained the experience in publicity while running as a candidate in the ~9th Assembly District. He gained J ,700 vote3 in that election. he said. Asked if he was involve<l in the recall drive against forn1er supervisor Alton Allen two years ago. ""htch also featured a news sht et. Sv.·enson said. no and pointed l)ut that Allen represented lhe Firth D~stncl Asked if Baker's present role in counly government in v.·hich the supervisor has been appearing to buck a majority coali· lion t>f Battin. Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers and Fourth District Supervisor Ra.lph B. Clark, Swenson responded, "No. not really. The main thing we are interested in is cleaning up our government. People are sick al'ICI tired of people in political office who are spending money as if it were their own." The press relea.5e, issued by Sv.·enson and r.fcKnight. claims that Baker 's perforn1ance as a super"i~r is "morally reprehensible.'' "Double expense account li\'ing off the taxpayer on trips to Palm Springs. San Fanr.isco. Squa1v Vallt'y, Las Vegas, Sacramento and Washington, D.C , is morally reprehensible al any lime," lhe press release states. In another paragraph. the press release says ''according to Baker's own report, all but a small part of his political con· tributions come from big land owners and dtvtlopers. They will probably contribute heavily lo keep him in office. "Baker has failed to s~ that people gt't neighborhood park lands that legally could be theirs. This neglect means big- ltr profil~ fnr developers and less open space for children and their families."' Columnist Undergoes Operation in Peking l\'EW )'ORK (UPI) -Nev.· York Tin,es Vice Prtsldent and Columnist Jame~ Reston ha~ undergone .surgery for acute 11ppendiciti~ in Peking while 1.ra1·elina in Communist China . the Timei; said toda y. The ne1t.•spaper 1ald ReslOn't wife reported the operation "'All i:uect11ful tJnd there were _no_ ~P)icatf!m&. ·-. ~"; ' --~ . DAIL Y l'ILOT Still P'l!OI• }' u ••• ••• 11 Jamie Lester. 3, keeps his cool \\"hile coating his throat and face \\"Ith vanilla ice cream. Jamie, \\·ho~e horne is in Bakersfield. is vacationing in Ne1vport Beach . McCJoskey Open s Presidential Drive in East RANDOLPH. Vt. < APl -Rep. Paul N. McCloskey IR-Calif.), began his cam· pa ign for the Republican presidential nomination Saturday with a one . day swing through neighboring Ne 10/ Hampshire and this Vermont town of tooo . The third·term Congressman fron1 suburban San Francisco told a luncheon group in Hanover. NJ!.. !hat President I\'ixon·s pendlng lrip lo !he mainl;inrl 0( China would not affect ~1 cCJosky's decision to seek the no1nination . J\lrCloskey said he felt a trip lo Com· muni~t China would not change the realities in Vietnam and would nol affect the negotiations lo end the war In Paris. McCloskey said the issues in \1·hith he differed 1vith lhe Nixon adm.Jnistration in· eluded more than just Southeast Asia , "Truth in government . that is 11'hat this carnpaign is all about." he said. At one point during the da~' the ex· Marint asserted the N ix on. Agne w - Mitchell team was arrogant toward the Congress, the judiciary and the people. f'rom Page 1 FAIR ... Valencia orange to every fairgoer. Future Fanners of America and Four- 1-1 members competed in exhibits of thetr farm pr0Jects. Steve Cookson ()f the Brea-Olinda FFA, tnok top honors in the sh eep dh•ision or the livei;lock competition. His JOQ.pounrl grand <'hampion Hampshire sheep netted him $375 in the livestock auction. Jeanne Sellers of t.he fullert0n FFA entered a J.135 pound Charolais-Hereford Cross whiC'h camed the grand champion av.·ard and netted her ~l.702 50 tn the IJvestock auction . A total of $\06.345 changed hands as th e prize l11'es1ock -435 animals in ;:ill - \O."ent on !he County Fair auction block . The <'ity nf Costa ~le~i display, entered bv the Costa :.1 esa Chan1ber of Con1· nierce. took top honors u1 U1e c11y.coun1y exhibits in the agricultu re and con1- 1nun1t r building. The. Costa .\·les:i enlr\ ll"On a $250 fir~t plFu'e awan1 in rompel1t1011 11ith f'l1lne~ fron1 t~ cities. f11e l'Ounties sind fnur (;range chapters 1n Or11nge Cou nt~· The display represen ted LhC' agricultural ;ind md11stria! features of Cost.a ~1e~a. Final paid attendance figures !otall'1l 'i !.1 l9 !his year CQn1pared v.·ith 68,438 lasl )'Cat. The next highest. year in fair history v.·as in 1956 when 69,602 persons paid lo enter the fairgrounds. The follow ing is lhe daily attendance breakdown for this year's fa ir: Tuesday, 6.271; \\'ednesday, 7.800: Thursday. 20.182 for Kids' Day; Friday, 15.592: Saturday. 21.872. and Sunda~·. 17,321. l'ro111 Page l TEACHER. •• they or any others 1-1·ere set up through campus eonla cts. Maximum sentence imposed W'lder the la11• for sale <>f narcoUcs or dan gerous drugs is five years to life in st.ate prison. Offenders convicted for the first of· fen.st are generally given lesser terms. Polk. a. teacher al Costa Mesa High School for three years. wu suspended immediately by Newport • Mesa Unified School District Supt. \Villi~ .Cun- ningham following his arrest. HP had bctn free on $6,~ bail since the raid on his apartment, \\'here police said t.he y confiscated relatively small ~rnount11 of 1n1trijuana and various drug piJls. LSD included De~pite lhe f2.ct he 11as commertf'· oriented and taught busines.(, police ~11id Polk "s apartment decor included a rathtr no1•el poster. The piclurt. shov.·ed the celebrated Rank of Amtriea branch at Isla Vista, near tilt UC Santa Barbara campus, bei'!C_!t!rn~ l\v, tPci4':1J!. . ~ _c..4,. . .. ·-. ,, - Nixon U i·ges Caution On China T1·ip Vi.' ASHING TON <UPI I -President Nixon cautioned ranking Congre.Wonal and administration leaders today against raising expectations tilat his plan for a visit to Red China might me&Jl an early end lo the. Vietnam \Var. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said the President n1ade 1\ clear in meetings \\'1th Ot>mocrat1c and Re p u b \ i ca n Congressional leaders and with bis cabinet that his visit to China 1vas lo '"discuss matters of niutual interest between the Peoples Republic of China and the L.'nllecl States." "He declined lo speculate on the effett these discussion wl!l hal'e on any other matter and said su<'h speculation v.·ou!d not be helpful," Ziegler told reporters. Participants in the meeting echoed Ziegler's statements. House Speaker Carl Albert said thrre was no suggestion from Nixon that the visit \Yas tiecl to an end tQ t11e U.S. role in the Vietnam War. AL the State Department meanwhile, Japanese Ambassador Nobuhiko Ushiba ~aid Japan and the United States planned to work to try to prevent ouster of Na· tionalist China from the United Nations. Ushiba said following a meeting witl1 Secretary of State William P. Rogers that the objectJve of the United States wa~ ··quite clear'' that the Unitecl States \\'anted lo keep Taiwan in the U.N. The L'nited States was t'Xpected at least tacitly to give its approval to seat Red China in the world body . Ziegler said the President was expected to reach a decision sometime this month regarding U.S. policy toward seating Peking. Ziegler said the new policy would be announced by Rogers. The President first met \vith the Congressional leaders for an hour and a half. then with his cabinet for an hour to give details of his trip. scheduled to take place before fl.1ay I of next ye.ar. Senate Democratic Leader M i k e :\lansfield and Republican Leader Hugh Scott told reporters that the President ;isked the lawmakers to refrain from un- necessary speculation or legislative ac· tion pertaining to China in the months ahead. Related story Page 4. ft1ansfield observed lhal there was ''a lot or preparatory groundwork still to be laid" ·before Nixon goes lO Peking. possibly shortly after the first of the year. Out of Control Car Kills Girl A 9-year-0ld Orange glrl was killed Saturdav when a car went out of control and hit her wh!le she v.•as playing on the sidev.·alk in front of her home. The Orange rcounty Coroner's Office s'11d Patricia l\alvesn1aki. daughtl!r of t-.1r . a11d ~1rs. \Villia1n !\all"es1naki, of 2227 Villa Real Ave .. was dead on arri11al at Chapman General Hospital. The car v.•hich killed her was driven by a 17·year·old boy. Pohce said it went oul of conlrol on a steep do\.\'ngratlf' and roll- ed over before slamming into a hon1e ne.xt door. Yet;; Getting Jobs"? ~',\SHl:\GTO:\ I !;Pl ) The 11nernploy1nenl rale for Vietnam era 1 et er ans aged 20 to 29 has declined from 11 percent in FebruaT}' to 8.1 perC{'nt 1n June. Thf' R111·r:iu or LAbor stat 1SL!CS said lls latest figures indicated 1he unemplo~· ment r;i1e tor male nonvele ran s 1n 1he ~;in1e ~~e JOiroup al::;o fe ll, from 8 7 pe r· cent 1n February to 7.8 percen~ last n1onlh. A1totlte1• View a . ~r " DAILY l'!~OT S .. U Phi .. I Gaggle of an1ateur photographers fo cus on .. Jan .<\·48 '' during Sun· day's photo club day at the Orange Co unty Fair. She kept them up a tree about her identity. Note feminine photog at Jet't. She v>asn"t \Vasting any film. 3 SF Officers Protest Study in Favo1· of Pot SAN FRANCISCO I UP! I -Three top San Francisco law enforcement officers today unanimously opposed a recom- mendation of the San Francisco Crime Committee to legalize marijuana. "Beacuse something is 1~-rong , you just can't legalize it out or existence." said Police Chier Alfred .f. Nelder. "You can"! take a defeatist attitude. "Marijuana is detrimental to the user.·• Nelder said. "Recently, prior to testifying before a congressional subcommittee. I canvassed numerous heroin addicts. All said they started on marijuana. Each was asked if they advocated usage of marijuana. All said no."' Nelder noted that the crime comm1tler. report cited !he cos! and time to pro· secute marijuana offenders as a reason to abolish the laws against adults using it. "II v.'ould be just as ambiguous to say v.•e should legalize murder. because of the time and cos! lo law enforcement in cop- ing with murder," he ::;aid. ~1atthev.· O'Connor. rrgional chief o( the State ~arcotics Bureau, said mari· juana was "a dangerou s, unpredictable su bstance. Accordlng lo our studies. marijuana used <'onslstentl;.. and 111 substantial amounts disorients l he personality." O'Connor said s1ud1e~ <if n1ore tl1an 1,000 1ndiv1duaLs 1nade by the state bureau of crin11nal stat1st1cs 1 n Sacran1ent ~hO\\"ecl that. 12 percent of !hose arrested for rnarijuana offen5es v.·t're arrc~ted for n1arijuana offen~es 11·1th1n f1\"<' years "Se1·rral Haighl·A::;li bury ~1udies here reflected that of persons invn\\"ed u1 !hr initial usr. of rn;injuana, a large prrcen- !:igr 1\·111 go on In nthrr drug~ -1nclud1ng heroin -\1'1lh!n If'~:; th an a !h reC'·1rai· rrr1r1d,"" he ~aid - f)1$!rir! A!t orn<'y .John .la~· 1-'erdfln said he v.·;is al~o against Jrgal1iat1011 '·because n1:inJuan<1 ha~ been proven In have dele\f'/"IOUS effects.·· A minority on the crime commHteC also disagreed with the 17·member ma· Jori!y reports. Dr. Leon J. Epstein. psychiatry pro-- ressor at t:niversity of California f\1edica! Center, said wme of the marijuana Jaws, particularly the harsh penaltie! for mere possession, appear unreasonable. Newport Kidnap Suspect Slated For Sentencing A n1an ""ho admitted kldnaplng millionaire developer John D. Lu~l(s nephew and holding the youth for ! .1 ransom today pleaded gui lty to re I charges in Orange. County Supc .. ~:­ Court. Judge Byron K. i°l'Jcr..1illan dropped kid- naping charges against Ralph Timothy Polter. 22. \\'est Los Angeles. and ar· cepted the defendan1·s plea of guilty to armed robber\'. Potter 1~·ill .be senlenced Sept. 2.l He faces a possible str.<i te prison term of not less than fh•e vears. Potter \\'as ~rrested aftrr he abducted John {;. Lusk. 18. las! Oct. 30 <111 Lido Isle ;ind imprisonerl the v0uth in the lrunli of Lusk·s car The ~o'uth spent nearly 12 hnurs imprisoned in thf' rear of the 11ehi· clc The victim·s unt'le ('Omphed \\'ith the demand rhat he senrl $20.0i'() via the fam i· ly maid to Polt er who met 1he .... ·om an at Los Ange.Jes lnt~rn2.t.ional Airport Poli<'e s1ezed Potier as the woman delil'ercd the rnone1 . He told officr:rs hi" had the Lu.<,k boy c"aptive in \he trunk of a car parked at lhe Disneyland Hotel tn Anaheim The youth \\'as freed and found In be unharmed. lllT TIGHT MOHIY IHD lHrilTlON Diamond Earri11gs !lrowslng hours from 9 to 1 d1ily 9to651t. ' ... •·• " .,,... 5395 totol wtit~t. Set I• 141f Whl11 GUAUNTllD TO APl'IUISf AT 40•,'i. MOaf NIW AND USID'ITEMSfl DIAMONDS ••• to ... GUITARS STWOS ••• to ••• GUNS CAMERAS ••• to ••• TOOLS e ANTilj)UES ••• to ... TAPES ALL AT VERY LOW PRICES DOM RACITI OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUARANTEE WtlH Y•• My • dlCl!ft011d' t r•"' n we wit! •11•,_,.. tMt 4101111"4 to .,,flllst "' ./110 ~'• MOit! tflo• yo• ,old fer It tr ye•r Mtllty bo<ll:. c ... yo"' do .. ....ii .i ... wlltrt? COMPAJI[, 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM ~ FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY. SILL. TRADE 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA COME IN AND HOWSE AROUN D PHONE 646-7741 1.rw.en Horbor & lroodwcry -• Costa Mesa ED'ITION N.Y. St:oMa VOL. M, NO. 171, 3 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 19, 197 f TEN CENTS Scl1ool Board Eyes 'Salary Improvement' Bid A salary schedule granung a 2.2 per- cent "salary improvement" to all employes of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District will be considered by the school board al its meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Lyceum of Costa Mesa High School, 2650 Fairview Roa.I , Costa Mesa. If approved. the pay increases would ~ effective retroactively to July I. The talary chart stays within a $560,000 total amount set aside by trustees at Fair Gates Set Record Of 105,000 Cottnn candy puffs vanished. tw inklmg midway light.s darkened, and popcorn poppers stilled as the la.~t of the record crowd of 89.0311 people filed out of the Orange County Fairgrounds Sunday night. D.Jring the day , 17.321, people had visited the final day of the six-day run, nearly 11.1·ice as many as had visited clos- ing day last yea r. A fair spnkesinan attrihut.C<"l 1his year'" re cord turnoul to the •·family Iheme" which began with the !argc.~t cro'>'·d e1·cr assembled in I.he amphitheater -.~,000 - to hear singer Pal Boone lasl Tue!iriay. Young peoµle flocked to the fair \h ill year 1o hear mu sical offerings rangin g from rock to dixieland. Saturrlay, a rli;.iper derby and t"·ins contest r~mphas11.er1 the family fare planned for the 197l edition of lhe Orange County Fair. But despite the shift in emphasis. reminders of lhe a(l'icultural heritage or the yearly event were everywhere. The rural olympics on ~turday, including watermelon eating. pig calling and hay baling contents proved lo be crowd plea ser.;. Proof that oranges still grow in Orange County came wilh the gifl of an Irvine Valencia orange lo every fairgoer. Future F'armcrs of America and Four~ H members com()Ctcd in exhibits of their (arm projects. Steve Cookson o( the Brea-Olinda FFA. took lop honors in the sheep division of the livestock competition. His IOO·pnund srand champion Hampshire sheep nel!ed him $375 in the livestock auction. Jeanne Sellers of lhe F'ul!er\Qn FF A entered a I.135 pound Charolais·Hereford Cross which earned lhe grand champion award and Tit'lled her Sl.702.50 in the l!vrstock auction A total of 5106 ,34~ changed hands as the prize livestock -43[1 animals in all - \\'enl on tht' County Fa ir auction block. Tm> city of Costii ~lc~a displa~. entered by the Costa Mesa Chamber of Com· mercP. took lori honors in the city-counly exhibits 1n the agriculture and CQm· mun11 1 bu1lr!1nR The. Cost;:i Mesa f'nlry won a $250 first place award in com()Clil.1on ~·ith entries from 14 cities. five counti es and four Grange chapters in Orange County. The display rcptr.sentcd the agricultural an~ Industrial features of Cost.a Mesa. Final paid attendance figures totaled 71,119 this year comp;ired with M,438 last year. The. next highest year in fair hi~lory "·as in 1956 when 69,602 persons paid to enter the fairgrounds. The foUowing is the daily attendance breakdown for this year's fajr : Tue!'day, 6.271 ; Wednesday. 7.800; Thursday. 20.182 for Kids' Day : Friday, J5.fl92; Saturday, 21,872. and Sunday, J7.32L Deep Water Well Now Operating In. Costa Mesa Costa Mesa's firsl deep water wf..ll is now in oper;itlon and pumping more than three million gallons of fresh water daily into the city's system. The well. located near Fairview Road And Sunflower Ave nue. is drawing water tmm AfiO feet below the surface of the e11rty. n ls e1tpected to rupply f,Q percent of the water use:! by the Cost.a ~es.a County Water District during lhe winter and 25 percent used in the summer. 11 went into -Operation last Wednesday . "Thi!! water Is significantly le9..~ ex· peol\ive than the waler we gel from the M'!lropolit an Water District," q id Costa MeS3 City C<>uncilman Alvin Pinkley. a mP.mher of the water board. Pinkley ;aloo Mid the well waler ill ''twice as soft" ill\ MWD water. The well cost the w;iter di11trkt $90,(IOO. Pinkley said t1 3ee0od "'·t.ll may be driJltd sometime next YNT. their July 6 meetin& for aalary im· prov ement.s. Including increased ~b of health in· surance and normal annual step iJJ.. crements granted leaehers. the pay in- creases amount to about S percent for the 1971·72 school year, a dislrict spokesman said. The proposed salary schedule has not been approved by the teacher represen- tatives lo the district's Certificated Employes Council. The Newport-Mesa Education Associa· tion whJch contro~ all the teacher .seaU; on the CEC, last week indicated the teachers are at "impasse" with the board over the. salary items of their Feb. I con- tract propo.sal. This means the board must appOint a facUinder to serve on a three-member panel lo investigate the salary issue!! and make a report to the board and the public. The findings of the panel are not binding on either teachers or the district, under terms of the Winton Ad the state's law governing teacher-district relations. u the board •doJ>b the ~ wary schedule . a beginning teacbet with 1 bachelor's degree and a teaching credeD- tial would be paid f7 .339 oerl yur. A new teacher with a bachelor's and master's degree ind 60 graduate unit& could earn up to $8,9119. A teacher with the same combination of degrees and 12 years' leaching uperience of which Phone seven must be in the Newport.Men. district, would um $14,897 a year. The ulary range proposed for high school principals goes from $11,4U to $22.218 a year. Salaries for middle Sthool principals range from $17,527 lo $31,334 and for elementary principals the range ls $11.492 to $19,298. Administrative salaries range from Sl9 ,276 to $22,082 a year for directors; $17,174 to $1~,DM a year for coordinators; Pact $14,431 to S17,2M a year for super"f1Mr1 and s1s,001 to S~7 .807 a year tor ·the district librartan. Of the 53 sa:Jary. 14'\lel! offered on the teacher's aalary schedule, 30 offet salaries between $9,045 and SJ0,990 per year. To qualify for the ~.045 pay step, 1 teacher would need a bachelor's dqree .and 45 graduate units or a muter'• degree and 15 unib and have at least two year's teachin&' experience. Ol('d Union Official Reports Settlement DAILY "ILOT $1111 l"ft ... Me Jan, You Tar%an ft was photo club day Sunday at the Orange County Fair and this fair maiden was one of the models. She was listed simply as "Jan A48" in order to conceal her true identity from alJ the photogs. Her name remained a mystery today. For another view of photo club day, see Page 2. Reputed Hessiai1s Seized 111 Mesa Nightclub Attacl\: Several persons reput.ed 1o be member• nf the Hessians motorcycle gang "'ere ar· re::oted and !'ievrral more sought today, followi ng a vicious nightclub att.1ck on a couple in Cn!'ita Mesa. The male victim was kicked and beat.e n with fists and cycle chains. while his girlfriend wa!'i knocked down and kicked in the brea!ll!!i when she tri~d to in· tervene, police said . Neither victim required ho.!ipitaliz.ation rollowing the in cidenl. at The Earth, 780 W. 19th St. Police said no one including security guards went to the victims' aid . Ronald R. Ramirez, 21. of 351 S~ Batavia Drive. Orange, and Edward L. Peterson. 25, of 435 Lilac Lane, Orange, ~·ere booked on suspicion of assault with ll deadl y weapon and strongarm robbery. They ~·ere arrested near I.he: scene of the 1:45 a.m. incident, according to police. who said shorUy before noon they 1!,ad picked up anolher Hessian and his girlfrte nd fn r questioning. Detective Capt. Robert Green said the ma le victim . unidentified due tn his fear of reprisals, accidentall y jostled one of the Hessians in the men 's restr oom. He said that according to witnesses lhe cyclist responded by insulting th~ vie· Urn 's hair lenglh, punching him in lhe mouth and following him outside. Once there. several more suspects join- ed in, administering the beating wit h motorcyc le chaini that left ugly welts on lht 2fi.year-0ld vic tim's back and Moulders. Detective Arnold Appleman 1 a Id several '"·itnesses provided in forma tion bul their identities were also withheld . Detective Capt. Green said no one at the nightclub -featuring rock music popular "'ith the yoonger set -called police. The victim had to walk to a piy phone down the street to SW11D\()n help. SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - A tentative contract agrtt'!llent has been reached between management aAd union leaders in the 11ix-day-<Jld naLional strike .against the Bell T"'lephone System, a union offi· cial said here today. Reid Pearce. international represen· tative for the Communications Workers of America, said the settlement would be a11nounced officially in Washington by JOl'leph A. Beirne. union president. Word Of the reported settlement bf'- Zoning Items, Coast Route • f.t~~{N~:. A ione exception permJt for ·~ ments on ex.isling church land and a r!7.0M. petiUon for 843 more ~ an •• cant property near Orange Coast College go before the Cost.a Mesa City C.Ouncil tonight. The items are but lwo of a wide varie· ty, including anticipated discussion of the current Coast Freeway controver!y and Newport Freeway priority scheduled for the 6:30 p.m. meeting. Plannlrf commissioners have already recommehded approval of the reroning of 30 acres belonging to Harold T. Segerstrorn at the northwest corner of Adams AYenue and Fairview Road. Now zoned for industrial use. the pro- perly would be switched to R4.CP to allow construcLion of 843 apartments with about 2,000 tenants envisioned. The city"s General Plan designates tha t region for multiple density development. The properly 1::0 largely undeveloped nnw, but is occupi~ by a few warehouses and industrial operations. Planning commissioners v.·ere !ess enthusiastic about a proposal by the J. \\'. Klug Developmeol Company Inc. lo build 55 apa rtments on church property. They recommend denial of a zone ex- ception J)('rm1t for the property at the ,.;outhcast cnrner of Bay Street and Fullerton Avenue. which is in an R! residential zone. A number of letters from parishioners or St. John the Divine Episcopal Church have been received urging councilmen to act favorably on the permit application. Residents who have single family homes in the surrounding area are just as adamant that Jt should be denied , to prevent traffic and related probltms. Sunday Ba thers Pack Sands of Ne wport . Only 30,000 were u:pecled st beaches Loday, but crowds of 95,000 Sunday and M.000 Saturday "looked like the flight of the lemmings," Newport Beacb lifeguard spokesmen said this. morning. Baker Recall Launched By ALAN DIRKIN OI ""1 O.ltr P't .. t lfllf A recall campaign, complete With a four-page tabloid new11 sheet ind press release, was launched again~l Orange County's Second Di&trict Supervi!IOr David L. Baker today. The news sheel fe11ture.<1 foor-lnch deep headlines ''RECALL BAKER -WHY!" on the front page. It claims that the supttvlsor has double billed taxpayers in traYel expense itecoonL'i, that more than 90 percent of bis poliUcal contrlhuliorui come fmm "major IAndowners 11nd developers," that he hfls f1iled to pr~ect public beach 11cccr..<1, met secretly to In· erease his salary and f11vor1 gener11J aviation, Including Jet, operations ,tl tht Los Alamitos Naval Air Slatlon. Baker's legislative assislant Richard Ruiz: this morning branded the charges •s "hogwash and innuendo." "1"1r. Baker has been in political office eight years and in those eight' ye.an has left a public history," RulJ said. "For those interested in truth sJI they have to do is lodk .at the record." The press rel ease lists two men as <» cha irman of the Baker Recall Committee -Donald J. Swensoo, 1'!, an Anaheim electronirs t«:hnlcian. and William S. Mc:Knlghl. 39. Stanton, a aalemnan for a bak~ goods firm . McKnight could not be rtachcd thi11 morning. but Swen~, who said he ran .a11 Ulf: American Independent Party ·C.tn· • -· T "I'-· -' ·-- did•le In the Jqt 19th AIS<lllbly District eltt:tk>n sakf be and McKnight both work• ed ·tn the Citizens Referendum and Recall Committee lhat was form~ earlier ttu11 year aftt.r eounty supervisors reportedly dixuued r1iling their aalaritt at a ~ ed door u:m1Uve esslon. The meeting touched olt a rteall· cam- paip against Baker. Boa.rd Chainnan Robert Batun of the Flrst District and Supervi!IOr William J . PhllJipl of. the Third District. The driYe 1gai:ns t Battin and Phillipi8 11ppeared to lOM steam several week~ ago and the mave ag1lnst Baker wa11 abll.ndonP.d bec.auae of a· law prevenUng bls having to face a recaJJ l&te RECALL, P11' I) --·X:· ( ---· ... -~,,.. gan c1rcul11ting more than an hour ~ fore Beirne schfduled a meetin& in Wash· lngton to make a statement. Pearce said, "Pickets will come down at 8:59 .a.m. PDT Tuesday. Workers will return Wed11esday momln1 at first tvail· able shlftJ:." The walkout, which befan I a.m. last Wednesday , has had little effect on 1erv. ice for customers or the largely auto. mated domestic telephone network, but put a crimp on repairs and new installa- tions. Management penonnel ha~• maDDtd rwitchboards and rq>air tructa ~ • number of places and some nm-CWA operators have been reportin1 to work .la others. 1 Vandalism and sabotage, prineip&lly cable cutting. bas occurred. Negotiation!! were carried ()ft at bc4 national and regional levels over wager, fringe benefits and local issues. Current wages average $3.43 an Dour. Straight Guilty Plea Mesa Teacher Admif,S -Drug 'M68nlighting' By AllTHuJt &. Yl!OUL Of Hie D1liw Htflii4f -= Facing a maximum tertn ·of flYe years to life in prison. a Co&ta Meat Hl&h School business teacher who turned his le.lenls to illicit moonlighting today ad· mitted he sold drugs to studenls. Carlton Polk, 29, pleaded guilty to two counts of sale of narcotics and dangerous drugs before Judge Beach Vasey ln Los Angeles County Superior Court at Long Beach. He was ordered to return Aug. 20 for .sentencing. Polk had been scheduled for jury trial Friday but lt was continued. leading to speculation he would change his earlier plea of innocent. There wa.s no discLLSsion or pleadi.ng for leniency at the time . "Ju.st a straight plea of guilty." said 11 court clerk in summing up the pro- ceedings which took only a few momen ts. ~olk \\'as arrested April '17 al his Bel· moot Shore. bachelor pad. which was all egedly a popular spot v.·here some of his fl.1ustang campus students con· gregaled. An 18-year-<Jld student a.rid 11 curvaceous, t.itian·haired special police nprrallve kno'>''n as Mrs. Teeny-Bopper were used to galht'r evidence against Polk, which police considered conclusive. His trembling voice is recorded on Lape during two lranl\actions in which LSD tablets were sold to both prosecution witnesses. it can now be revealed. "All we want is lo make sure he can never teach a.@:ain .'' remarked Costa Mesa Police Detective Sgt. John Regan after the verdict . Costa Mesa investigators had Polk under surveillance for months before ob- taining the crucial evidence required to convict him on the drug sale charges. He was .arrested at hame because the transacUons occurred there, .although they or My others \\'ere .set up through Husband Stabbed In Apartment, Wife Arrested A quarrel between a huaband and wife at the Ala Moana Apartmenl.8 in Costa Mesa Sunday left the c:ouple M:parated - at least temporarily -today. Hli •u in the hospital and stie was in jail. Mn. Eunice D. Holcomb. 47. was book· ed into Orange County Jill on ,wpk:k>n of ma.ult with tntent lo commit murder fBllowing !ht. lneldtnt. Andrew 0 , Holcomb, 37, WU i!.ted In satisfactory condlt.lfJn at Oranre Cumty Medical Center. He WU st.abbt'd in tht back and shoulder . wltb a kitchm knUe, atcortllng lo Detdve capt. Robert Green. lnvHtigaUorp into the llt~bblng wblch occurred in !ht couple's apartment 34 al ~ W 1 WUson St., was ce>nUOuinc todl,y, Capt. Green fllld. • -._ . ..,. -~uacon~. Mulmlun senlhice lmpoood llJlde!o the 1.i. w for sale of 11arC<>tla ar dugerowi drugs ls five years to life in •tate prtson. Offenders convicted for the first of. fense are generally given lesser terms. Polk, a teacher at Costa Mesa Hlgh Sc~ool for three years, wu sU3J)ended immediately by Newport -Mesa Unified School District Supt. William Cun· ningham followin g his arrest. He had been free on $6,250 bail since the raid on b.is apartment, where police said they confiscated relatively small amount.s of marijuana and various dru& pills. LSD included . Despite the fact he was eommuce- oriented and tau&ht business, polict gjd Polk's lpBrtment decor included a ratber novel poster. The picture .\bowed the celebrated B.lnk of America branch at Isla Vilt.a:, ne.ar the UC Santa Barbara eampw., being burned by radicals. Out of Control Car Kills Girl A 9--year-0ld Orange girl was killed Saturday when a car went oat nf control and hil her while she was playing on the sidewalk in front of her home. The Orange. coounty Coroner'g Office said Patricia Kalvesmaki, daughter af Mr. and Mrs. William KaJvesmald, ot 2227 Villa Real Ave .. wi.s dead on arrival at Chapman General Hospital. The car which killed her waa driven by a 17-year-old boy. Police said it went out of control on a steep downgrade and roll- ~ over before sJamming inl<> a home out door. ·eoaa Weatlaer The weatherman aees variable high clouds today aM Tuesday along the Orange Coast, wltb temperatures at 70 alont the beaches rising M> 85 i{llartd. Lowa aloag the coast Q), M Inland. INSWE TODAY Orange C()untv 10ive1 of mili- tary rmn, who art tither ~ld priaontr of war or who ar• mi.tstng in action, 100it and keep tht home fir~• t11.1r11inq. $H slory. Pao• 14. •. ,.,.,. • -.. ... , .. • ............. • "'-• --.. • "-.... ''''Ill .. .,,,., H ·-• ...... ""' ... ~-• c:'.tt • . .,..,.., ..... • .. ·-·"'-' • .. l"IM-• -• -" w._.-, fll..,. 1s.11 "'"' ..... .,.. " Wwll ..... • - -- Cyclist Hit oti Fairview Jose Fraticelli. 15, Santa Ana, cries out in pain after being hit by car today on Fairview Road near Orange Coast College in Costa l\.fesa. He was taken to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital v.:ith broken leg follov.•ing 8 a.m. accident. Police identified driver of the car as Pauline Allbef, 60, of 727 \'orktO\\'O Ave ., Huntington Beach. She \ras not cited. Investi- gating officers said the boy apparently lost co ntrol of his bike \1·hen he rode into some water on the 5lreet. lie fel! in the street and ~1rs. Allbef could not stop In time to avoid him, police said. McCloskey Opens Presidential Drive in East RANDOLPH, Vt. (AP) -Rep. Paul f'.'. ~lcCloskey IR-Calif.), began his cam- paign for the Republican presidential nomination Saturday v.·ith a one · day t•ring lhrough neighboring New Hampshire and this Vermonl tO\\'n of 4.000. The third·tcrm Congressman from suburban San Francisco told a luncheon group in Hanover, N.H .. that President Nixon's pending trip to the mainland of China would not affect McClO!ky's decision to seek lhe nomination. McCloskey said he felt a trip lo Com· munist China would not change the realities in Vietnam and would not affect the negotialJorui to end the war in Paris. r.lcClos key said the issues in Y:h ich he differed with lhe NUon administration in- cluded more than just Southeast Asia. ··Truth in government, that is what this campaign is all about," he said. At one point during the day the ex· Marine asserted the N i x o n · A g n e w • Mitchell team was arrogant toward the Congress, the judiciary and lhe people. Signups Slated For 5 Day Camps RA!gistration for five remaining Costa Mea;a Recreation Department Day camp sessions ln the summer proifam U; being taken daily in Civic Center offices. Fee is SIO for the v:eek·long sessions at Vista Park. \\'here g2roes. arts and c1 afl.!I. cookouts and other summer fun from 9 30 a rn to 3 30 p n1 . is or~anized. Bus tran.<oportat1nn is a\·ailable f;ee from ''ar1ous !ocal1(1n5 and punch JS pro- '1ded for the day.camf)f'rS, who bring i:;ark lunches Final stss1on b<-f:1ns Aug . 16 and any add111nn.~J 1n!ormat1on m.:iy be nb1a1ntd by calling the depAr\rnent at RJ4.5J03 ac· cording to Ton i Pnpo,11.~. OKAN~I COAST DAILY PILOl lt•••rl t-1. Wttd ~, .. •"" ..... l"vOli9'1ef' J1ck ~ CMrl.., ';. Vic• ,_,._, INI ~ti MtAtgtr " Tliit'"'' 1Ct1~il felll&r Tliic,..11 A. M~rp!.i~1 MIJ'ff"'t [do!Or Cl'l•r!11 H. loc1 1t :t.!.1rd '· Nill ..... 1,11r" M I N11"'\i fti'C>t> C•lh M-Offk • ]JO W11I 11, Shoot M1il:119 Addrtn: ,.0 . le• 1~110, 'l6l• OtMr Offk" H....,w:t •••(II: llJ:l N-""'' •eu"IYlld ~ IM~. m , .... , ... Y ... UI W11<1 ..... IO'I StKll 1111: llH<~ ao.i11v11ol &tr\ Cl«Mnl1o: JO,:; Nort~ El C:tmltlO 111111 55 Boats End Transpacific Fifty.five boats had crossed the Diamond Head finish line in the 26th biennial TranspA cific Yacht Race by JO a.m. 1PDTf today. Normal tradcwtnds brought lhe yachts boiling across the finish line at top speeds Sunday but by this morning. the winds had died again, slowing the lJ boats s!lll left al sea. Tailenders in the flee! \1•err ex· peeled to finish \\'ednesday morn· ing. They are Leprechaun , \\'oodwynd and Bold Host. F'nr otller details. see Boating, Page 30. Ne,vport Kidnap Suspect Slated For Sentencing A man \\'ho admitted kldnapinp; millionaire developer John D. Lusk ·~ nephew and hold ing !ht youth for $20,000 ransom today pleaded guilty to reduced charges in Orange County Superior C<Jurt. Judge Byron K. r-.lci\-iillan dropped kid· naping charges against Ralph Timothy Potter, 22, \Ve.st Los Angeles, and ac· cepted the df'Fendanrs plea of guilty to armed robbery. Potter will be sentenced Sept. 23. He fa ces a possible stt..ale prison term of nol Jess than five years. Potter '"'as arrested after he abducted John G. Lusk. 18. last Oct. 30 on Lido Isle and imprisoned the youth in the trunk of Lusk's car The youth spent nearly 1'! hours imprisoned an the rear of the vchi· cit'. The victim's uncle C<llnpliPd ~·ith the dt:mand thal he send $20,000 via the faml· ly maid to Potter who met tht woman at Los Angelts lntern<>Jional Airport. Police sie:z:ed Potier as tilt \\·o rn11n dt li\'ered the mont~· He told officers he had lhe Lusk boy capt1,·e in the trunk 1if a car parked at thf' Disntyl~nd Hottl in Anaheim. The youth \\'ilS freed and found lo be unharmed . Tivo Labor [} nion Spokesmen Air Lockheed Views WASHINGTON (AP) -°f'A.•o labor union &pokesmen took opposition today on l"i'.islalion for a $250 million loan guarantee for tht Lockheed Aircraft C.rp. Florri E. Smith. prCllid!'nt of the Association of r..f11rhinists and Aerospace \\'orker~. urged approval ot the loan. 1n· tended lo guarantee cont1nuat1on of I.he LlOl 1 Tristar jet program. But .Joel R. Jarobson of the Un11ed Auto1notJ1le Workers said JOb prospects generally will be better if CongreM re· jects the legislation Both testified before Uie House Banking Committee. Jacobson, rommunity n!lations director of UAW's Regi<Wi 9, said Loclchttd ha., laid off more than 25,000 worktrs, more than the: Iola! number involved ln the Tristar program. in tht put year and a half. A t: AW spoke.mian uid hi! union repreHnls no Lockheed or Botlng employts. but Mlme 1t McDonnell· Doug las. The.st are the thret cnmpanles con~idered competitive in the: bl& jtt bus f1elf1 Th!' maclunisl.<i h11e reprettnlalioo at all thref' companies "\\'e are concemf'd and alarmed about the luturt of t~ 40.000 workers 1''e represent al Lockhttd." SmHh toh1 the ('Olll mlttee. ".lu~t a.s tht futul'f' n! our members depend~ on Lockhttd, the future of Lockhet'd depends on 1t1th pi;.1.r:intre.~ " SF Officers Lash Study Favoring Pot SA.\J FRANCJSCO fUPI) -Thrte tnp San Francisco Jaw enforcement offict rs today unanimously opposed a recom· 1nendalion of the San Francisco Crime Con1mi!lee to legalize n1ariJuana. •·Because sonie th ing i~ wrong. you jusl ean ·1 legalize it out ol existence." said Police Chief Alfred J . Nelder. "You can ·t take a defeatist atlitude, ··~\ariJuana is detrimental to !ht user.'' :'\elder said. "Recently. prioi to testifying before a congressional subcommittee, [ canvassed numerous heroin addicts. All :-.aid they started on marijuana. Each was asked if they advocated usage of n1arijuana. All said no." Nelder noted that the crime committee report cited the cost and time lo pro- secute marijuana offenders as a reason to abolish the laws against adult.5 using ,, .. ][ would be JUSI a~ ambiguous to say \\·e should legalize murder, becau!e of tbe time and cost to law enforcement in cop· ing 1vith murder," he said. .\latthe1v O'Connor, regional chief of !he State t>.'arcotics Bureau. said mari- JUAna 1vas •·a dangtrous. unpredict11ble :.ubstance. According !o our studie s. marijuana used consistent\}" and 111 substantial amounts disorients t he personali!y." O'Connor said studies ,,r more th•11 1,000 indi\'1duals madt by the state bureau of criminal statistics i n Sacran1ent showed that 12 percent or those arrested for marijuana offenses \\·ert' arrestl'd !or marijuana offen1es 11•ith in ri\·e years. "Several Haight·Ashbury stud ies ht"re rl'r!ec!!'d 1h11t of persons invol ved in the initial u.~e of marijuana. a 111rge percen· tag!'_ 11•i ll go?" .to other drug~ -including h~rn1n -11·1th1n less lhAn a three-year ptrifld." he said. · District Attorn!'y John ,J;iy F!'rdon said ht" was also against ! e g a 11 "l a 1 1 11 n ··titcaus!' marijuana has bten provtn to have deleterious effect~." Water District Board Approves Warning System A $95.000 telemetering system whi ch gives early warnings on major ~·ater lt_aks, ~·as approv ed Thursda y night by ti1rectors of the Costa fift~il County \\'arer District. The syst en1 utilizes telephonic con· ntctions running from major \\'ater pipes to a large strern 11t !ht w•ttr district's Placentia Avt>nui' plant and In tht police departm~nt. \Vht n 1\~ter pressure drops at any p1pt, a red do1 p111pninls lhe loca· lion or the trouble on 1hr .·rreens. Madsen Company of Orang,. \\'On the contract. $95.965. to inslsl/ the lelemetering system. It is expteled lo be in operation within six months. Ecology Prizes Awarded Tonight Recipients of awards in Mayor Robtrt '.\i . \Vilson's EcoloiY Begins 1t Home cleanup campaign "'111 be honored at tmight's Costa ~l~ City Council meelin8 following Junf' judging. The prizes -including • number or ba5tball tickel.!I -will bt handt<l out al the 1t1r1 of I.he 6 :\0 p m. session Judging is conducted monlhly and will be rtvlewed on an ove rall basis at the t nd m ~ year, wlt.h top \\'inners from the 12-monlh period receiving even larger I ~,,:,. .. Supervisor. Aide Cites 'Innuendo' Richard Ruiz, assistant to Second District Supervisor David L. Baker. to- day respondt:d to charges le1·eled against U'lt supervisor iri a recall ca n1paig11 . Ruiz said that ht' dtd not know the t"·o principals in !he rt>e?Jl campeign bu t commented. •·1·m ~11re there 1s an awfu l lot of money behind it. One thing is ob· \'!OLIS someone has gone to an a\vful lot of research. but I.hey have come up with in· nuendo." The aide said that contributions to Baker·s elec!ion campaign Y•ere a matter of public record and asked, •·are the ron- lribulions supposed to be good or bed?"' The recall news sheet charges Baker "double billed the taxpayer.'' "It was a!l about how Mr. Baker hand!· ed his expenses "'hen he \\'as in Sacramento on state and county business. !he st.ate to hold public hearings in the newspapers and is in the audiklr"s of· rice." Ruiz said. On the charge of Baker favoring general aviation at Los Alamitos Ru iz recalltd that the supervisor signed a peti- tion against creating a commercial airport at the naval station Md in· lroduced legisla tion which would require the slat to hold public hejrings in the local area before any commercial airport is established. "It's simply hogwash ,'' the supervisor'• 11ssistant added. The ntws 11heet also carries a bead.line, ''Surrender At Salt Creek," and charges that Baker failed to protect public access rights to the south county beach. ''He wasn't evtn htre when that votr came up," Ruiz said. Baker represents the Second District 11·hich covers the north~·est portion c>f the (•ounty. 'lbe area generally includes half of Garden Gro\'e and Stanton. all of Los Alam!to5 and Seal Beach and most or Huntington Beach and Westminster. From Page 1 RECALL ... ~·ithin six months of the rt-election in January. "We wert able to get 3,000 of thie 10,800 signatures we needed.·· Swenson rttalled. ''\\1t had to stop then because of the ltgal technicality, but now Baker is eligible for recall." Sv.•enson said that no other leaders or Ule Citizens Referendum and Rtcall Commlltet were involved in the present rAJTipaign against Baktr. Asked who tlst was leading the curre11t drivt . Swenson replied, "it's basically JUSt the two of us.'' The ntws shttl contains r~rOOuctions of newspaper stories and headlines and a cartoon of Baker ,~·hich brands him as "double bill Bakt'r" and sh0~·s him lak · i11g money fron1 two taxpayers' pocket~ for ltgislative trips . !t 11ppears lo be a professionally pro- duced news sheet , but Sv:enson said hf' and McKnight sP\ it up logether. He declined lo say how many cop1ts had been run off. ho1Y many would be printed , ~·ho printed them. or how much the pri n· ting 1vould cost. "Peoplf' have been kicking u1 S:l and $10."' he sa id. Told that thf' three page prf'SS re!ea st also appeared 10 hr proft":s~1onally 1\ri11en. S\1e:ison explained tha1 ht \\'f(l1e ii and gained 1he ex:pe nence m publici ty 1vhi!e running as a candidate in thE-69th A~sembly Di st ric t. Hr gaintd 1.iOO \'rite.~ 1n 1h111 rl rrt1on. hr .'-.1 1rt Asked 1f he wag invo!ve<l in the recall drh·e 11ga1n>.L fnrme r ~upervisor Allon AllC'n two ~·ears a11 n, \\'h1ch al 'io featu red a n!'WS sher!. S\\·enson said , no and pointed out that Al!en represented the Firth Dl3tric!. D.AI\. Y PILOT S11tl PlltMo Another Vie-au Gaggle of ainateur photographers focus on ·Jan .".·48" during Sun- day's photo club day at the Orange County Fair. She kept them up a tree about her identity. Note feminine photog at left. She \rasn't \vasting any film. Nixon Acts to Cool Off Optimism on Cl1i11a Trip \\'ASHINGTON 1CP!l -Pr~sident Nixon cautioned ranking Congressiona l and administration leaders today against raising expectations 1hat his plan for a visit to Red Ch ina might mean an l'arly end lo the Vietnam \\'a r. Press !:iecretary Ronald Ziegler said the President made it clear in meetings vtith Democratic and Re pu b I 1 c an Congressional leaders and \\'tth his cabinet that his 'isi l lo China ~·as to "discuss matters of mutual interest between the Peoples Republic of China and the J..;nited States." "He declined to speculate on the effect these discussion \\"i ll have on any othrr matter and said such speculation ~·ould nol be helpful," Ziegler told reporters. Pa11icipants in the meeting echOt'd Ziegler's sta1e1nents. Hou8r Speaker Carl Albert said therr was no suggestion from Nixon that thf' visit 11'a!'i tied to an end to the U.S. role 111 the V1etnan1 \Var. At the Stale Departrnent n1ean11·hilr. Japanese An1bassaclor Nobuhiko Vshiba 1'aid ,Japan and Llle United States plannf'd to work to try to prevent ous!tr of I\a- t1ona\.Jst Chi fl.l from the Cniled Nat ions. Cshiba said following a n1eeting "'ilh Secretary of State V.'ilham P. Rogrr~ tha t Ve ts Ge tting Jobs"! \\.AS H!i\'GTO:\ 1 l Pl f Th l'! unemploymen1 ralc 1or \'1elnarn era veterans a~ed 20 to 29 ha s dechnrd from 11 J)f'rcen t 1n Ff'bruory to 8 1 Jlf'rcent 1n JllOI". The Bureau ot L<1hor s1 a11 ~t1L's :.:11d tis latest figur rs tnrl ic al<'d thr unen1 pl1'\\. inen! ral r for n1;1 le nnn1 etrr11n s 1n the 1'ame age grn11p also frll. from 11 7 per. <·en! 1n February to 7 8 J)f'rcenl last n10111h 1h" obJCCtil·e of the Lln1ted Stale! ~·a s "quite clear" th al r.he L'n ited States "'anted to keep Ta1"·an in the U.N. The L"n1 ted Slale~ was eKpec1ed at least 1acilly to give its approval to seat Re<.! China in the \\'Orld bOO~. Ziegler said the President .,.,.as expected to reach a decision sometime this month regarding l' .S. policy toward seating Peking. ZieJ:lrr said thr ne"· policy would be announced by Rogers. The President ftrs! mrt \vlth the Congrrssio11al leaders for an hour and a hall. then "ith his cabinet for an hour to gi\"e details of his trip, scheduled to take place before ~lay 1 of next )'ear. Senate De1nocrat1e Leader r.1 i k e \tan~field and Repuh!ican Leader Hugh :X·o1L Lold reporlrrs !hat the Prf'sident as kl'd the la"'makers lo refrain from un· necessary speeulatinn or legisla\i\'e al:· t1on pertaining to China in Uic monthl ahead. Relatrd story Pa).le 4. tltansfleld obFcrvl'fl that 1hrre was "a lol l"J1 preparatory groundwork still to be \airl"' before ,'l1xon goes to Peking, possibly shortly after the first of the }ear. Cycle Equipment Taken From -v-an ;\ mo!orc~clr riiter is minus his heln1et. face shields and a steel shoe for :.lead~ 1n~ h1n1self on track turns toda). fol\ol'.1ng a \1erkend bu rglary at 1he Oaan11:c lount~· Fair Jack R. \\'11rd. :!41152 ~:1 T1radorc Lan!'. \lii>.'IOrt \'irJO. 1olrt Cosla .\\t~a poll('t the Item~ 11cre arnon g $2i5 11rirt h nf t qu1p· menl stQlen out flf J11!' 1•a 11 on \ht' r;i1rgrounds. lllT TIGHT IOHIY IHD 1xril!IOH &r..-slnt houn from 9 to 7 d•ilY 9 to 6 Sat. Dianwnd Earrings ' ... ··· " .. , .. s395 tot9' w•lthl. l•r h1 141 Whitt GUAlANTl€D TO Al'PRAISl AT 40~e MOii ---NIW AND USID 1nMs----· DIAMONDS ••• to ... GUITARS STEREOS ••. to .•• GUNS CAM!RAS ••• to .•. TOOLS ANTIQUES ••• to ... TAPES ALL AT VERY LOW PRICES DOM RACITI OUR M OST UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUARANTEE • ~ ,.. ~ffY • 4' ...... ff.I"' ..... will ,__._ ttiOft dl•1110MI Ho •pp,.i .... 4g•t,, MOil tMI• y•• ,_!ii ftr Ir •• ''"' _..., Mc.k. C111 T•• <lilt .. wltl e1- wilet17 COMPAll. 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST LOAN. IUY, SILL. TRADE COME IN AND IROWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -letwo,. H-I. ltoodwey .. ----ry--· -· Ftita By The Sen 1'his f!oat. the ~·ork of San Clemente's Sister City Association, \Vas \vinner Saturday of the best theme d ivision. The San Clemente parade h ighlighted the Fiesta La Cristianita \Vh ich annually co m1n emorates the first Christian baptism in California. The bap- ti sm occurred near San Clemente. Boys' Club Adds Special Bus Run 111 Summertime The Boys' Club of Laguna Beach ha.'l e special early afternoon bus run lo the club so that local youths may use the facility more throughout the summer months. The scheduie for afternoon bus is as iollo...,·s : J 30 -U>ave Boys' Club J ·33 -L;iguna Beach High ~rhool parking lot J ·38 -Thurston Intermediate School parking Jot. I :4-0 -ParksAvenue and Alta Laguna Boulel"ard. 1 :42 -Alta Laguna and Teinple Hills Drive. 1 46 -Te1nple Hills and Canyon View Drive. 1 48 -Thatia and \Vil.son ~treet.s J ·5fl -'rhalia and Catalina Streets l :52 -Catalina and Cleo Streets 1 :53 -Catalina and Legion Streets 2·()() -Arrive Boys' Club. Buses following the same route will depart from the club at hoth 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. to return youngsters to home. Vets Getting Jobs? WASHINGTON (Li PI ) Th e 11nen1ployml'!nl rate for Vietnam era \eterans aged 20 to 29 has declined fron1 11 percent in February to 8. 1 percent in June. The Bureau of Labor statisLics said its latest figures indicated the unemploy- rnent rate for n1ale nonveterans in thl'! same age group also fell, fr om 8.7 per- cent in February to 7.8 percent la st month. Da11gero11s Trasl1 Teens Threw 'Litter Bag' Aivay GR.'\ND BLA.'JC. r<1ich. (UPI) - To1111ship police conducted an around-the- c!ock weekend search for a yellow plastic bag containing a five-pound canis!er of the . deadl y poison. cyanide. hoping curious children v.·ould not find il firs!. Y.'hat police didn·1 know '''as that t\\·o €cology-mi nded teen-age sisters had sare- 1.v disposed of the bag and its contents on- ly moments after it dJsappeared. Officers focused their search on a two- block area in !he Warwick Hills section of l0\\-11 near the home of Dr. Hardie B. Elliott. a pediatric surgeon, who reported the cyanidf' missing. Ellioll, \.\'ho used the cyanide granules MriS. Nixon EyeiS Girlhood Home fir~t lady Pal Nixon has been taking an acti1•c interest in !he developinen! of ht:r girlhood borne al Cerritos as a n1useun1 . !\lrs. Nixon recl'ntJy sent two perS(lnal f'missaries from her prr~s staff. Connie Stuart a11d CoraJ SChn1illt. to the com- munity where sh<' spent her early chikLlxxld and teen-age years to look 01·er the "Pat Nixon Park" adjoining the little l\"hite frame house d~icated last year. flfrs. Nixon hopes the museum will be used as a 1neeting place for tht' local girl :>eouts and can1p fire girls . Later on, the Cerritos Chamber of Commerce. \.l'hich is developlnJ! the prnject, hopell: to use the young girls as guides. for rodent control in his backyard, said he placed the bag on !he back of his wife·s car Friday night and forgot he had done so. His wife left in the car Saturda y and after driving about t1vo block.'l re1nembered what her husband had done. Elliott said his wlfe then retraced the rout.e she had driven but 11·as unable lo find the bag. Ho\vever. t1vo teen-age sisters who !iv- ~ only three houses away from lhl!' Elliotts had picked up the bag off the street. thinking It contained ••just another discarded beer bottle," said their father, Bruce ~1acArthur. i\lacArthur. aulo industry executil"e 1vho described his family as "soniev.·h:<t oriented lo11·ards antilitter aclil'i!ies.·• said his daughters brought the bag horne, showed him it,, contents and then dispos· ed of it in a trash barrel behind the house. t-.1acArthur. president or the {;rand Blanc beautification league. said he did not learn of the search for the niiss1ng e)anide unlil reading or it in the Sunday ll('ll'Spapf'r. He said he felt '"terrible'' about not having notified police earlier. but added that he hadn't considered "\vhal a potential danger" the cyanide ronst1luted. Elliott expressed rl'!!ier upon learn1nc the deadly package had been fou nd '"Tht' thing I was fearful of was that it \lr'OUld fall into the hands of children,'· he said. "Therr 11·ere plenty of 11·arning label! on both the package and the canister but I 11·a!'> afraid Ilia! sonic young children \\'OlJ)d get ahold Of i1.'' DAILY l'ILOt llt tt 1'119,_ Sheltering Paltris .A.n estimated 40,000 perso ns \vatrhed San Cle· mente's annual community celebration highllght Saturday. the F'iesta La Cristianita Parade. l-lere a groun o-f the city's pretty girls a re grouped on the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce float, one of the more colorful in the lengthy parade. The float had an earlier tryout in the Huntington Beach F ourth of July Parade. Invasion of Bees Feared Evil Tenipered Insects Seen Migrating from Brazil \\'ASH!.NGTON (UPI) -Evil tempered bees that sting man and beast for the ap- parent pleasure of causing paln threaten to invade North America. The African bees migrated from their nati1·e land to Brazil in 1956 and spre;id rapidly over an area about equal to Ole continent.al Uni ted States. The warning about a possible invasion northward came from Dr. M. J. Ramsay, a research scientist at the Agriculture Department. He announced IJ1at $-4-0,000 in contingency funds will be made av.e.ilable -at the urgent request of the American Beekeeping Federation -to study the pTOblem and see "·hat can be done to pre- vent its spread into Central and North An1erica. Nixo11's Beacl1 Giveaway Confusing Area Ranchers President Nixon seems t'Qnvinced thal his action giving six miles of San Onofre Beach and San r-.tateo Canyon to the pubhc. will succee('I. But ranchers throughout the affected canyon ren1ained in grave doubt this week about the future of their large in- vestments. "\Ve really don't know whars going to happen," said Mrs. Iva n Austin, whose husband Is foren1an of the large Eckey Poinsettia Ranch which has been in lhe canyon for decades. The ranch, plus several other large ;igriculLural operations. lie on the land \\'h ich the President has vo\ved would be given to the public. /or recreation purposes. Since lhe original announcements, ranchers alternately ha1•e heard that their leases would be honored : that they 11·nuld h;11·c to leave the land wi1hin a shnri ti1ne and that the canyo111 would no1 be relinquishe<I. "'\\"1.' just don't know "'ho to be:ieve a ny 111ore." 1-lrs. Austin said. She sa id that the confusion also makl'!s it difficult lo pl.e.n Uie 5easonal operations of the world·s largest poinsettia ranch. .. We don"l know wht!ther to plant the next crop of flowers or not. If the land is taken away from us, we would lose a buhdle in those new crops of flowers," she said. Vegetable ranners in the same canyon are jusl as concemed about their new crops. she related. As 1he issue stands now. the President has vowed that the canyon and the six miles of beach inde!'d will go to the public for recre:ition purposes. The House Armed Services Committee, however. has ruled against any deeding of the affected lands and hos stressed the canvon should not be included in the deal. slate Parks officials, \l'hO \\'OUld ad- minister the land if the President"• orders are carril'!d out, have said that the fa rms and ranches would probably stay as !hey are. But the promises have not yet been made offi cial. North American bees -varieties of Italian and Gennan strains -are com- paratively pleasant They will not attack unless a pos.s;ble intruder is at tlie hive and are gentle when they swum. Not so the African bees. If irritated, swarms will atlack humam or animals u far away as 200 yards, more often than not with no apparent provocation. Ac· rording to published reports, a young ~'Oman once was stung to death in Brazil. African bees have a great capacity for S\\'anning, it was said. and the stroneer the colonies the meaner and more ir- ritable its members. If swarms unite in flight. as they oflen do, they beromt in- creasingly aggre6sive and ready to at- tack. The queen btt can lay up lo S,000 egg11 .e. day, compared witli 2,000 by North American bees. making it easy for them lo develop strong colonies rapidly. They inevitably take over the hives of their unwilling hosts. The bees made thtir South American home in remote, sparsely populated areu of Braz.ii, but the agriculture department recently received art un- confirmed report that the African bet was sighted in Panama. Some scienti5Ul fear they wiU mignte overland to the United States within 10 years. Others ml'!ntlon the possibility that the bees might isJand hop to the Southern Florida coast and proceed north from there to colder regions. Lightning Kills 4 RED RIVER. N.M. (UPI) -Lightning struck and killt!d four Texans touring the Carson Natlonal F orest Sunday during a heavy rainstorm. Tu·o other persons wl'!re hurt :i@riously. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! FARMER JOHN ••• 1 LB. PKG. '111 ........................ " .......... . WEBER'S ••• PACKAGE OF 8 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• R...e your.self a wMrf· •• ~ 1"!ek •.• with F annu J ohn's _ award winning franks.. \Ve.be.r's fresh hot. dog buns. a.t El Rancho's pricesJ Fresh Lamb -Chaps Serve it broiled fnr 11. rt-a 1 tAste treat'. • • • • • • • • • • • $142 -Cal Lamb is deliciolL<:.. and so nutrit inos ! •••••••••• .99~ Lamb Riblets ........ 0~c~.~~[~ .......... s9:i. ::Surpriu your folks Lh i.i \\·eek v.•itit tender. mealy barbecuecl lamb riblet.s: Stuffed Breast of Lamb ............... 49:i. .\lakeis for a delicious treat. hot from tllc oven ••. and it"s ready io bake! Lamb Stew ........ 29~ Lamb Patties .. .. 49:,, J:"or a t.asty "Shepherd's P le'" I Lean ••• precision ground, shaped Pticrj in. f /{cct ftfQ'ft..., T,,r.~ .. Tl-'rd., Jv.J.v l:J, .!O. 21. No salrs lo ril'nJRr&. Or8nge Juice 2 QUARTS In our sensational new container! Fresh squeezed ! Pure Jnice ! (Qt. 59c) Mug Root Beer ............. s~~~ ............... 69c Eleven ounce no return bott.lu ••• delightful a.coompaniment to hotdop! Del Monte Dill Pickles .... 22 .. ~.1.~ ....... 49c Your choice ••• Ko.she r halves ••• Reau.lac Dill h&lvea or whole I Crisp! Granny Goose Com Chips ........... __ ........... 43¢ M&ke your wienie bake a complete meal! Rea-. 53e air.e package. Springfield Ice Cream ............................. 69• Smooth , creamy ! Favo rite flavors in the euy dip square hal!..pllcel ARCADIA : sunset and Huntington or i:/i\I. PASADENA: ;'!·'1' SOU TH PASADENA : ::/i:/. HUNTINGTON BEACH: " /11i\'f, NEWPORT BEACH : 1111 Nr w ~or1 s1.~ "'" iEI Ra nr.ho Cen teil ~· 320 West Colorado Bl~d F rern~r.: :-in~ HLl •tington Or : Warne1 and Algonriu1n ,Boardw3lk Cente r1 ••• 2555 [asfh!ufl 01 '[a ~1 1,11:lf IJ1llJgc Crr1tr.1 • --="'-'"-"-'7_'.!_-~-·--_.,:r; .. ,--..... ~_..,.,...":.':~,,,~=,,,,,-~· ~· .. -... -_._. ----ca --·~-.-...,.. ... ---.. __ .__.,__ ~--·--- I , ' ' -- \ \ •' I ~ps Santa Ana's f Streak Intact Hy THOMAS MURPHlNE OI IM 0.llY ,lie! illlt RlCKY-TICKV POLITIX : The city of Santa Ana, with a long history of losing annexation battles to just ahout every ci- ty jurisdiction that surrounds it, ap- parently has its record intact today. Scott Eyes End of War By May 1 WASHINGTON IAPl -Sen a I e Republican Leader Hugh Scott say$ the Urning of President Nixon 's visit tn China indicates the United Slates will ha ve no combat troop~ in Vietnam by May I, 1972. Going a step further, the Pennsylvania senator ~11id Nixon 's a nnouncement he will visit Peking by r1ext May implie!I possibly 1here would be no U.S forces at a.II 10 VieLnam by that time. "except those necessary to carry out such agrttments. as, hopefully, ha ve been made ." ··Do you lh1nk it is feasible that an American presiden t can go to China while there are any troops left in Sou th Vie1- nam~"' SC-Ott was asked Sunday on ABC"s •·issues and Ans'.l·ers ·· • L ... - - -. • • Faces of Misery Jordanians Drive Out Guerrillas By Unlled Press Inte.rnatJoaal Jordanian troops loyal to King Hussein "'o n out over Palestinian guenillaa toda y, forcing dorens ol terrorisLS lo flu lo the Israeli-occupied west bank where they Y.·ere offered refuge by Israel. Iraq clmed Its bord"r with Jordan and asked the Jordanian ambassador to \eave Baghdad. A guerrilla spokesman 1n Beirut said the Jordanian anny waged a virtual massacre on the terrorilst.s and fon::cd some of t.he survivors ID Israeli-held ter- ritory Y.tiere they preferred "lo die at ~he hands of lsraehs than be slaughtered b:.: their Arab brothers." The Israeli milit.ary command In Tel Aviv said 71 guerrill::1s had surrendered i;ince Saturday, 16 of them lOday, and had told their interrogators more would La test lo victimize the County Seat"s e xpansionist machinations are a group nf citizens y,•ho live out 1n lr\•ine teritorv. They aren ·1 professional politician~. cigaf~hnmpers or experts in smoke-filled rooms. They arc Just a bunch or regular fo lks who would like to form 1he1r own c1· ty. '"I think that he could go if lhe reason for keeping some troops 1n South Vi<'l- nam is coupled with the prisnner-ol·wri r i:;~ue at that time ·· Scott :;aid -as hP often ha~ -tha1 he thinks Nixon ha.~ set a \\'1thdr<1wal plan bul no! ;i firm date for loti<I U.S. pullnul from Vietn;im Ca rryi ng their only posse!'s1ons. some of the eight· n1lllion refugees frntn P;ik istan trudge down a dusty road in lnd1a toward a very uncertain future. follow. Israeli commentators said it was the erid of the guerrill a movement In Jordan. In Middle E11st political development~. THE IRVI NE people l1!ed all the papers and got all the governmental ap- proval wtien. lo. S;inta Ana hauled thf:m into court. Santa Ana ·s cries of anguish v.·ere generated because the Irvine people Included ~ Cho!ce industrial lari_d QUt beyond the airport within their proposed new ci tyhood boundaries. Santa Ana claimed this \\'as its ''Prom ised Land"' -allegedly promised to it some years ago by the Irvine Ranch in order to enrich the Cou nty Seal"s municipal tax base. Ala.s. in action Friday. Judge Raymond Thompson failed to agree with the yells f>f foul and Santa Ana got the can tied to its annexa1ion tall again. As I understa nd the jur1s!"s \\'nrds . he niled lhat if there was a pact be!wcen Irvine Ranch and the Santa Ana City Council. then that was a council or a long lime ago. And old councils cannot bind fu!ure councils by their ac!ions. And the judge 5aid th;it being so, the reverse is also true and Irvine cannot be held to a pacl with an old council by a new couoc1L Indeed . it"s alt pre!ty com- plex. BUT PERHAPS the most important thing i.~ that the judge ruled the Irvine cityhood question should go ahead through normal processes That would seem that lhe next move will be for the Board of Supervisors In set an elect1011 date and the folks out 10 Irvine will gel "their chance to vott on cityhood. All this has things bu1."zin~ up in the County Scat. While Sant.a Ana has taken another dive on the politic.11.l-lega\ dunking machine, some observer5 believe il will once again come up f1r air, ready for more jnside maneuvering . THOSE OBSERVERS of !he "San!a '"The President def1n1tcly has a plan in mind. I am .~ure of that." Scott s;iid . ''And thal plan en visions a withdr;i v.·;il at a certain lime and under certain con- ditions. Thal is a little different rrnm saying that an absolutclv fixed and iin· movable date has heen se l."' Under Nixon"s announced 1v1Lhdrawal plan all but JR4.000 or the U.S contingent in Vietnam is due out bv Dec. I. The Presidenfs next timetable. is expected lo be announced 1n m1d-Nnvemlx>r and could involve all the remaini11R force. The closest Nixon has come In an- nouncing a flat-out end to U.S •n· vo!vement in the \\'::Lr \\"as his April 7 press conference statement: "ln my ca1npa1gn fnr the presidency. I pledged to end Aincrican involvement in ihis \l'ar. 1 am keeping that pled_Re. You should hnld me account.able if I f;iil " Mea n\\'hile, Rep. rauJ N. McCloskey nf California. who says hE> will chnllcnge Nixon in next ycnr"s n e p u b I 1 c ;i n primaries. said the Presidcnl"s visit lo Peki ng coul d have a salutary effect on the Paris pence talks only if the Nix on administ ration drops its insistence nn preserving the Th ieu-Ky government in South Victoa rn. .. I think if the President will abandon that ... negotiating position that '.l'C can settle the Vietnam Y.'flf 11·1th1n 30 to 60 days.'' McClosker said on NBC"s "~1eet the Press." Another potential c;inrlid;ite for the \\'hile House. Sen . Henry M. Jackson 1 D- Wash.), told a Tampa. fla .• news Cflfl.. fcrence lir hopes rommuriications wit h China will lead to a ceaSC'-fire in Vil!lnam and th!t Pek ing will be brnu~ht into the arms·li111ital1on tal ks. But he expressed fe;ir.~ ,11 US -Chine~" wannup might bring Ru~s1an reprisals. '"They cnulrl makt lur1her moves in 1he Mirldle East." h<' s;ud . Red Raiders Hit Giant U.S. Base Close to Saigon SAIGON fl;Pll--Cnmmunists att;icked the big American ba<;e ;it Phu Ln1 13 miles north of Saigon !oda.v even ;is Pres1denl ~ixnn"s current progr;in1 10 withdraw 100.t,()() more U.S troops nut nf Vietnam by Dec.• l passrd the halfway mark a rnonth ahe:>.d of schcdulP. Thr U.S command announced lnd;i_v lhat .2'\3 .:"100 American servicen1en were 10 Vietn;im as of last Thursd;i_v. \Vithdray,•als ;iver;iged 4 000 a week ;ill yrar unt il mid-Jun!' when thc.v were cul back tn 2.7fi0 & week because th ey are so far ahead of schedule. Communist 107-mil limel<'r rocket~ hit Phu Loi today 10 the second such attack in two da ys. A Communist force advancing under 107ntm rocket fire assaulted the Phu Loi base today but \\"as driven orr. One American and !hree Com mun ists were reported wounded. Along I.he Demilitarized Zonr 1 DM Z) dividing the two Viefnams. Us. A52 bombers· today pounded North Vietnam- ese rocket installations lo 1he nnr1h or Fire Base fuller a fe w hours af1er the Communists bombarded the reconstruc- ted outpost with mortar.~. ; Ana Nev er Gives Up·· school strongly believe the maneuvercrs \\'i ll m;ike a ~trong bid, lo rigure a way lha t the Board t>f Supervisors might return the question of Irvine cityhnod to the five-member Local Agency Form11t1on Con1mission. '"Russia i.~ parano1rl nn Chi n::i Thrv Pn- visinn 800 million people wi!h ntJclcar arms," Jackson s;:iid. Wlcks The BS2s hit. the siles. U!'l'd to lirr 122mm rockets that finally forced ev11cuation of fuller a month a~o. ar1rr striking at suspectrd Communist F:lorai::e areas near the A Shw V;illey. The North \·ietnan1e~e b;irrag" nr R2mm mort ar rnunds rlid no! d;im ;igc thf' mountaintop Fuller base which lnrn1s the northwest corner nf a defense linr al<:1ng DMZ. military spokc.,men said. . • . • ' • ~ . . • ? • • • • • • Now the LAFC already approved the plan5 for Irvine cityhood. But hark~ Things have changed a bi1 A new LAFC has just bee n formed with Councilman Joseph Hyde of Los Alamitos taking a seat and chairmanship of that august body Somt part1e'.\ up at lhr Count\ Srat quesl1r>n \\htrr Hydt''~ i'll1Pg1anrr may fall and thP \" pnin r 0111 \\hen hr tonk lhr gavel. Sant;i An;i smile.~ wr re '.l 1drr !han Sou1h ~111 10 Street TllESF. SA.\I E 11h-.rr\'l!r< ~UJ!0!{'$1 l h~t tbc I.AF(' nnw st:ind~ :l tn 2 with Sanla Ana ·s 1ntrrr~t ~ Chilean Marxist Support Slip s \'ALrAR.\rsn . Ch1lP 1 .,r . -A (prcial enn~rr~s1onal rlcct1fln Sunday lail<'d In give President Salvador Allendr ·~ leftist Ji!Ovrrnmt'nt thP vote of confidence 11 hnp<'d for as 1he nppo.'l1t1nn candidate wno b.1· 4.6.17 vntr~. If ~n. 1111d rt1r Bo:i rd nf Supcrv1.~nr~ ~h<:1uld ~nmehow rrlurn !hP lrv1~r c11yhnod riuest1on ln Lhe LAFr fnr ;i nrw ruling. you might predict 1\"llh som~ degree of certainly that thrre will br unhappiness nu! on tht ranch '\Jn y be rlr c.' re . ..;,fJiro ..-1g Tl<'lt: • ... ! ' Thf'" election 111 Chile 's seco nd most populous prnv1nrr had Jx>en bdlrd ;is a tc•1 nr popularity for Allendr ·s plan.~ tn tr;i n~forn1 Lhr rnunlr\" 1n!n ;:i Sll('i t11i~t ~l;i lc Bui lhr ~1;ir~1!'l. president said the rrsu\1 v.ntdd n111 l'evrrsr hi ~ rnursr ()'rllr ~·li!l"ln , a fi.).1•r.ar-nlrl phys 1ci;i n h-i. \..rd hv hnlh th" <"hn~l lilfl n1·mncra1.~ ;ind !hr r1ghl·\11ng N;:i11onal pi!rl.1', rrcc1v. ed 141. 450. Thus the plot thicken~ \\'e shall $PC Storms Mar Sunny Nation Northern U.S. D.~1np, Dr enry; So u.th , West S11n11y, W ar1n C0Ufor11lo •ouTWll" Cl.Ll ~OIWIA W(ATMf'I •v U"IT IO "IEJI IMTEllN•TIOW•L , • ..,.,..,,..,...,, t>nv•'"" In '"' "'"' 'll• ano "I•• '"""•'"~ """"' '"'I°"'""""'' '"• ~'""'" C•l•ln•nl• ••t-•1tlCI" a rf•I d"D"• "''<!fly ot•"•"d •> '"'"""" """ '"'"'"• '"11"""''f>O'"•" ~!>"'• '""' <loud• on<! 1ni:11 •oo ""l•d ""°' '"' rn1111I '""'""' ""•lno ·~• """"'""· lk>' wnnv tl:lt• b•fvodtd ~,,., "'' llelC"'' •"" loo. """'''' i>P<a•• """" '"" "'"" -·· .... , "' . .., '"• .. DO.:.it<I averf\IQ~! -.... .. "' IN M•t ... o th• 11• 1•11 .,..,., c:•I"• wl!~ln t Otct ,.. "' '"' •no!nf • •• "'<IUI"-flOCkP<l IO '"' '""' 1<1 b••! lM lnl.,'11 -I •Ml ""'""""' of tloht IO l'flOdt•••t tv• 1,,1,.11..., o• 1.....e l\tllfl4'tl 1!tt•"OO" l"und••'"""'"' ·-••td -""' ............ w ............. ........rt lU•tl ''"'''""0 '•l•I• '"""""' to l+.t .IOI. 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I• n1 ... 11 • ., " ~ .. 14 J ,, • " " " M n 11 .n • " .. ,, .02 .. . ., • " 01 " • ., • the Israeli morning newi.-paper Ha'aret:i Dean Acheson Critical said .Joseph .J. Sisco, Assistant Secretary r:f Sta te for Near Eastern Affa irs, will go to Jerus;ilern at the end of next week and will confirm Washin_gton·.~ willingnes!: tn su pply additional F4 Pl\antom ftghter- Of Late John l(ennedy bombers to Israe l. The ne'.l'Spaper said Sisco alS<I ;~ ex- pected to convey a personal mesS<ll-!f' from President Nixo n tn Prime Minister Golda Meir asking Israel to cooperate NE\V YORK (AP) -F'ormer Secretarv nf State Dean Acheson sa\"s in an ir1· lerv1rw published in Liff' ~agazine th::il .John F Kennedy was ··out of his depth "' 10 the presidror~·. The Life article. published Sunda y, i' a parl!al text of an interview Acheson g a ~e_ 1he Hril!sh Broa1lcast1ng Corp. It ha s not been tclev1s<'d yrl. "'lie did nnl h::1ve inc1 ,iveness :inrl he \\.'R~ our or his depth whrrr hr \\as., Acheson s;i1d nf lhr lair rre<;1drnt "I ha le tn .<;;1y this brL"ilUS(' l know 11 ·~ g111ng tn be n1isundcrslond, bu t hi~ reputa11on 1s grr<L!cr because of the traged_v of 111 ~ dr;ith th::1n 1t would have l}ecn 1f he h,1d l1vrd nu1 lll"o tcrn1s . ' Acheson said Kennedy ' did nnt seen1 tll me !o bf> 111 any sense a ,ll:re;it man J did not thi nk he knew a great deal about a ny of the m;:il!ers which 1r~ desir;ible 1h~1 a chief of ~t11te or a pres1den1 of !he L"nitrd States ~hnuld know abllul. He was not dC'CISJVe .. , \\'hen the interviewer. Kenneth Harris. \\•ith U.S. efforts to reopen the Sutz Cana! in a bid for an interim ~1 iddle Easl peace s;i1d there was a '"legend that he 11·as a settlemen1. \l'r.v drc1~1\•e n"Wln indeed"' during the A Jordanian military spokesman s;i1d Cuban mi .... ~1!e crisis, Acheson replied, Sunday the guerrillas who ned lo the '"\\"el!. 11 1s JeJ;end . 11 is not the fac1.·· we~t bank were Israeli spies. Al Fa lah, th!' largest J: u e r r i 11 a The forn1cr sec•etflr\.' of state, \\'ho · ' ' organit a1ion. 1lel)()Unced Hussrin ovrr 11.~ ~·ervcd un<ltr 1 larry S Trurn.an, \\'as sent Cairn-based voice or Assifa Radio today lo ~·rante b~· Krnncdv In keep Pres.idenl and called for the <'Xpul sion of Jorr1an Ch~rles de Gaulle informed aboul the fron1 1he Arab l-eag11e ;ind the impoi;ition crisis. or ;in economic and d1plnrn<1!lc hoycntt. /'olit1c;il sources in Beirut s;11d Hussei n Acheson, nnw R \Vash1ngt nn l;iwyer, . \\as also crilical of the presideors nia.v p;iy ;i he::1vy prirc 1n Arab f'nm1t_v br·nthcr· the late Robert p Kennedy, lhen for his fnrcrs. drfc;i l or lhe guerrillas in their latest fightin,ll: which flared in ;iltnrney ~corral. north ,Jordan terrorist s;i nctuarie.! f·:rrnrt1ng-Lhal Robert Kenned~· had Tuesday s~1 d :i dcc1s1on ~o bomb Soviet missiles in Palesti nia ns planned street dernflnStra- Cuha \l'nuld be 11 "'Pearl Harbor in iinn~ against Hussein in Be irut. An ex- reverse." 1\chcsnn char;icteri7.rd the npi· plosion near the .Jnrrianian en1bassy in n1on ;is "h1i::h schno! thnu~ht. ., the Lebanese capital 1nJ11red three · Ttn~ 1s not rral!y wh11t I wa~ look ing person.~ la!e Sund;iy and prompterl 11 fnr 1n lhe lrader~h1 p nf my country Ill p:-ilice invest1gat1nn into the possibility o/ Hu~ po101 ," hr d<'rl<1r<'d . ;in attempt to bomb th t emb;issy. '-~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- FURNITURE CARPETS • LAMPS ACCESSORIES PASADENA: Colorado at El Molino-7112·6136 POMONA: Holl. East ol Garey-629·3016 SANTA ANA: Ma in at Eleventh-5•U.l611 Summur11 \cv•~•'" (•ll lft t "I • ~•e .,..,_,.,,,..~11. "'""' ·~''' '""~ oom• '~""""""""""" .... a.,,.., '" """in'•" '""'0"' W•d"• •<•""'"" ·~~""''" w••• O"<'·ct•a ,,., • ""'~~ """""m" '"""" C•l••O•"•t •o •~• ~u" '""'' •"d ~'o<•<I• T"' ,.....,..,.,~,. '"""' '"'• •ll(l•v 1(11' , ...... t.,., l<1<Plld•d o •••d•M nf • ~"O'H' •I .Y.1•0110!1• ("U"'" l."DO'' •~ {~frilO•~ to f) -·~•l fl ""'""'"· ~ .... ·~" ~1... lc!oo ~ ..... """ ~ ..... ~-<.e"" ...... \"" rl11< I !I o "" "'• t•Yf ' &1 • "'· i~ m •"" , • I !~ o ,., ' I I In ft "' ' • ) .. ft "" !• l•lo r ft'! e ,., lrt11 11 0 ... ~ ........ "'" ~· l""'' ~·"~•••C"• ~•n DIOon S•• ~ '""CIO(ft ... ,,,, v~nc~uv•• WHMnf' ... " .. " .. .. " " .. " " .. • n , I • • ).le"" di ' . --.,)'~-""""' .. ~ ·-.. ,. -.. ~ I ... , .. "' 1. '- . I ' y d • id " d ,_ "' el ed d Id " '" " " ry ,, nd to ,_ ·-gr " " al cc ,, he I ' its ay '" on U,1 TtlnMt. ATTACKS AGNEW Rev. Abern1thy Abernathy flits Agnew Rhetoric ATLANTA {UPI I -'T'he Rev . Ralph D. Abernathy Sun- rlay described Vice President Spiro Agn!.'w as a ··stumbling block"' lo black progress. tak- ing issue \rith Agnew · s criticisni or !\'egro leadership in America. H<id il not bern for good black leadership. ma n y Negroes ""·ould ha\'C turned to violence long before now:· Abernathy said. ··there are so many people In this country l\'ho arc unemployed, who arc jobless. 11·ho are ill.housed and we're not just engaged in the rhetoric or lhis but "''P are trying to do something aboul it." he said. ··u·s stu1nbling blocks such ;is Vice President Spin1 T. Agne1v th;it keeps us fro1n making greater strides and pro~ress. ·· Abernathy said thnt it wa~ only black leadership that preached nonviol('ncc a n d sanity to the people. Agnew said at a nr\\'S con· rcrencc in Spain Saturday that '·many bl11cli people in the llnited Slates are tired of con- stant C'Qmplaininj:! I from black lcal.lers I and v.·outd like to see ~0111c constructive ;ict1on fron1 tr~~c people ·· The vice prc~iden! did oot identify !he black leaders he h;id in mind .. , don·1 thtnk anybody i~ listening to what ~tr. Agnew has to say about black leadfnbip," Abernath.v aid. "I think our r ecord speak! for Itself. NBC Alters Ne,vs Lineup PAGE :i 1·6 -r\BC 1\larj NEW YORI\ !AP) John Chancellor is due to become the solo anchorm:in for week· day editions of F\1f3C·TV"s Nightly Nl'WS. The !\"e•v York Times said today. ChanCf'l\or has rotatC'd with Da\·id Brinkley anrl Fr11nk ~lcGec sint'e nC\1 snu1n Chet Huntley retired to his n;itivt' f\1ontanl la~i y<'ar. breClkJng 11p the lluntley-Bnnkley 1ean1 !hat had received high rating~ for many years. Mass Vocrinatittg War Against Bug Ragn1g in We st DALLAS, Tex. (AP\ -All horses in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, New f\.'lexico and Louisiana are to be vaccinated against a. mosquito-<:arried disease that kills about half the horses it slrikes. A quarantine Lhat was 1m# posed on horses in Texas after the disease spread into the lJniled Stall's frum Y..1exico and South America has been extended to the other four states. <'~'ld the federal govern· inent has made $5 million and additional manpower available. A regional emergency head- quarters opens loday in Houston to coordinale efforts in f1\"e slates to fight the disease -Veneiuelan equine cnrephalomyelitis, or VEE. Plans for the five-state pro· gram 11·ere developed Sunda~c al a meeting in Dallas f'[ federal officials, st a t e veterinarians and o t her animal health leaders from the .statss. The $5 million 1n federal funds and 2.:.ldiliona! man· power became available Fri· day aflrr Se~:retary ti f Agriculture Clifrord Hardin declared the VEE outbreak a national emergency. Georgian Clai111s l\leiv Land ATLANTA (UPll A Georgia state legislator said !oday he had found proof lhal about 200 square miles of land now clain1ed by Tennessee and North Carolina, i n c 1 u d in g much of the Chatt:innoga business district, actually is 1n Ge<>rgia. Rep. Larry Thom a son rrturn('d from a weekend JOurnry into ··some of the \1·ildesl country in I he southea~t" clunng 1\•hich he s.'.lid he fl)l1nd l\110 border n1arkers v:hi ch \\'ere not on the 3:lth parallel, the legal line separating the three states. Hr said one landn1ark, kno1111 ;is El!icott's Rock. v.·a~ found in the middle of the Chattanoog;1 R11·er, and !he otht•r, called Conm11ss1oncr 's Itock , ...,·a s located •·in a hole on the side or an old road. co\"ercd v.·itl1 v.•aler and "tnick bnars anr\ \\'L'Cds." Co n1 nl l s s ionrr's Rock , Tho111a ~un sail. still horr ;in 1nscript1on sa.l'rng tt rnar·kcd the J5th parallel .. After sering !!us <'\'itlenct: lhrrc 1s nn doubt in rny 1111nd Jh:1t thr-J5th p:iraBel i.c; ''"on1 one anrt three.fju:ir1ers n11!rs nrir!h In one-half 1nile north nf !hf' current (;('(Jrgia bordrr."' he ~aid. ""Thill n1e;u1~ "'e 011·n abnut 200 squarf' miles of land Tf'll· nessce and Nor1h Car{llina now clAim, including n'uch f"lf the Chattanonga bu s i n es s dis!ric1. much of its res1clen. Nuder Attucks USDA tia! area, all of Copt><'r lli!I and at least threC'-fourth .... Lookout ~1ou11ta111,'' Thon1ason sci id. lnspectio11 of Food \\'hilc the Peach :; La 1 e lav.•maker \vas m;oiking hi~ safari in a srrious atrf'mpt lo S<'ttle the. 165".>'f'er-QJd houn· \VASlllNGTON !UPI) ferenee on the study said dary l1sputc. North Carohna ~aturday, '"the consumer has and Tf'nnessel' r. ff i" i a! s no way of knowing the quality treated the mattrr ;is a JOkr. or his meat and poultry or the -------- Monday, July 19, 1971 OAJL V PliOT $ Labor Negotinting Continues in U.S. WASH!NCtON (UPI) Negotiators wcr~ rt p ort e ti near agrecrnenl today on a new contract !or 750,000 po~lal workers, but elforts lo seltle the four-day railroad strike h.it a snag. Sources close to the talks bttwecn the new U.S. Postal Si!rvice and a coalition of :;even unions said before da\j,·n that agreement mighL be only '·five or six hours away." The J)(lstal contract was to expire at 12:01 a.ni. today, bul negotiators agreed to '·stop 1he clock"' at midnight Swiday bf>caus(' of the favorable tone of the lalks. Atle1npts to set!le the strike :-gains\ the Southern and L1nion Pacific railroads and <1verl a .strike against three n1ore hnes Friday v.•ere block- ed by an "insurmountable obstacle."' according lo John P. llilt1. Jr . spokesman !or the 11ation"s rail carricrs. Hilll .s1Hd the Unit ed Transportation Union demand· ed their nonstriking 111en1bers be paid on the basis of old \1·ork rules during the current "'alkout i\lanagen1ent has "\\'hy they havr to gag over gnats, \\hen flephants stampeding l ca n 't derstand, ·• Luna said. About 9,000 UTU members truck lhe Union Pacific and 1he Southern on Friday and !he carriers immediately plac· ed into effect on all other railroads \\Ork rule changes they say are needed to el1n1inate outmoded, expensive 11 n d inefficient proactices. Snmc UTU n1embers were laid orr ', '"L"TU leaders are now ' demanding that , once an even- tual setll einenl 1s reached. e11en \rorkers who ha11e been laid off or \vho have re!used to work under the new work rules. be paid from 6 a.m. Ju· 1y 16 (v.·hcn !he strike started) 10 the sell!ement date as if the old work rules had continued in eff~cl," Hillz said. '"This v.•ill sin1ply not be the case." The union has targeted three 1nore lines for a strike this Friday -the Chicago & North \Vestern. the Southern Pacific and the Norfolk & Western. ordered the old rules suspcnd·,------------1 ed. '"Thi.~ blockbuslcr is coin· plt>lli'I)' un:icceptable to the 1·arrier~ and coul d e;isily le11d tu a stalemate of the negotia· 1•ons." Hiltz said Sunday at rhr L11bcr Depar\1nent. The lalks 11·rre called off until 2 p.ni. EDT !oday. liTU President Ch a r I e !" Jock Bidwell 's Summer Sole!!! Well, J•c.k h•s don• it egain! The GREAT SUMMER SALE h•s erriv ed! There •re fant•1tic bar9•in1 in every d•partment. For •11.•mpl•, bermude 1hort1 ere now 1/1' pric e! Al10, J•ck i1 1ell'in9 hi1 knit 1h irt1, wesh 1leck1 •nd c:lr•11 1lack1 for '4 0•/. off !what • bet• g•in/, And to top it •II off, there's • qreet 1election of dress 1h irl1, both lon9 e11d 1hort sleeved, t•le priced $6. ••ch OR two for $ t I. Oh y•s. there •re el10 GREAT SAVINGS 011 suits end sport cot11f1. Come see Jt11ck •1 1000 •1 you cen-he'U help you st11le through GREAT SUMMER. n~ ......... 11e.· ..- 3,.67 Vie lido, Newport Beach 673-4510 Time for Luna. in Dallas for a regional meeting, said, "Talking like lhi.~ is "'·hy railroad negotia- !1ons like this lake two years." Througl1 QUICK CASH a DAILY PILOT ---- Ralph Nader, reporting on a t \Vo -y e a r i n vestigation. r I a 1 ms the Agriculture Department ! USDA) is pro· moting meat. poultry C1nd chemical inlerests at the con· sumer's expense. extent to which bar m r u 1 .. ------------------------------------------------------------. pesticides have intruded into DAILY 10-10, SUN. 10-7 The stud y. rnade b.v a learn nf seven '"Nader's Raiders," conc luded that it is a mislak<'n public belief that pesticide~. food additives and animal drugs are regul11ted carefully and that the stamp of L·snA inspection means meat and poultry are pure a n d unadulterated. In facl. according !o !he book-!engrh. report released during the weekend, J ax rc}ulations by USDA allov.·s :~v:lde.spread sale or tainted Tne:lt and poultry, and sulr jcct.~ !he consurner to a game of '"Russian rtou!cl!e"' \11th pr-st i cidcs and other t·hem1cals. The Agriculture Department replied that many of lhc pr;ic. t1ces cited by Nader have been corrccled The department :ilso ~aid lhe report was mi.~lcading because it •·purposely detils in certain specific problem ;ireas l\"hich are n01 typical. either or lh<' conditions that exist in the dcpartmf'nl . . or lhc food industry.,. Depar!rnenl 0H1c1als have b<.'cn ~ay tng privately for years that lherr 'vere nC1t enough in.spectors to maintain adequate supervision tif all 1neats sold lo consumer~. But Nader in a new~ con- his en v i r on me n l . The responsibility rests on govern· men!." Tor11a<locs, Storms Hit Great Lakes By United Prtss lnl~rnalional Tornado's and thun· derslorms along the southern and v.·cstern fringes of a cold air system centered over the Great Lakes caused injuries :.nd property damage i n \\lisconsin, low;:i. l ndiana and 1'linnesota Sunday. One person was killed by 11 1..-.·1ster near Eau Clairt>, Wis .• and another died v.·hen lighl· ning stn1ck his boat at ~lonroe Reservoir near Bloomington, Jnd. Tbe Eau Claire area tornado whipped through a trailer l'nurt and injured two persons a~ well a.<; claiming the Ide or a man about 50 years old. Authorities said the victim was burned to death when his trailer \\'as lifted into the air and slarnmed against the one next 10 ii. An explosion trig- ~rred by a broken ,llas Hnr set lhe trailer :ifire and he v:;is I.rapped tn~ide, YOU WORK LESS Keeps things cleaner without effort, cl1rn ;- nates bath tub rings .. YOU SAVE MONEY Soap and clothing last longer. Grllllt ,., &aby'' Skin SmMtltt:r, f.adtr Shavt' """' ~parkl~ AskAboat Scatt Conveatent Crtdil Plan5 CompletehltallatiffAYa.ll.able! Just Ask : r,.. ,.,,.,. • ..,., •1'••• ,. .... •I ., .... _ ll ... , .. ,. •••••• .. ,., ,,.. .. ... " ,., .. -· .... ,...,_. ,i,. ..... ,.,. .. •t•"''• •• , ••• ,,. ••• -L• '"' ........ _. .. "''"' .......... -................. ft-• ..... "' ·~· .. _ _, ,. ........ . .... , ...... _.,....,,_ ..... .. _ .. .... FISK AIR FILTER J88 IAUI •' ., . •TIHAO FOllT!Jl[ll "'"H STtf $ • 11 Sl lll(S fl'I( AD .... IOI M • lJ/31 l~CM TACilO OE,-ll< •Ol,.loll .....,TE-...A\ L c •~•1 1•001 ...,,,..,.,... '4 MOHTM OUA•ANTn CUSTOM "" .. ~ ... ............ l6 MOMTlll GUAIANTll 'HMlll 1795 11 ~ ... ·-· ... · A'J MONTH JOllMIUM JOlUS• G-UAIAHtll r • • Casto• Troller HITCH 7" n •• ,, l>•tr s.1.i1 1:~•l11 IJ.« 1··c~"'"''" 1i.n 11 .t~ ...... , ... ~ .... 100•..-., ···-, ....... ···~··· IU8lll!;S II A ( SllE C78·1l {1 .00) £71·14 17 .35! F78·14 /i ,75) ~7~:]! j~-~~I Hle.1118.551 H78·15 (8.551 J78-14 f8 .I SI J7a -1s 8.85) L78·15 !9.151 TOP CARRIER S'' -· Mukf'f-T"". Tep ~· PLUSl£0 PA!C[ f)C . l A)( l ACH lit.CK Tiii[ •to 2.00 :~ 2.37 2.54 '28 2.69 ... '30 2.95 3.01 '32 3.05 3.12 S'>A 3.27 BRAKE RELlllE ''""'" "' 16 9 5 ,* MOST J.MlRICAM COJllf'ACfS TRANS FLUID ,.,, •...... 23c PILM • , •••• 49c Cerri""• 111-0n Jll.ff DllTION .• 49c TIJl!LIU. fl At SIZE 6.50·13 $)3 $)6 1.76 C78-13 /7.00) $)8 $2) 1.92 I E78·14 {7.351 $)9 $22 2.21 F78-14 (7.75) $20 $23 2.38 F78·15 (7.75) 2.42 G78·14 18.25) $22 $25 2.56 G78·15 !8.25) 2.64 H78-14 (8.55) $24 $27 1.7'4 H78· 15 !8.55) 2.80 ._ .................. . ...... ~ ..... """ "" ....... . ...... ·~ ·-......... -··· ................ -··--·--.. ····--·"-··-fl••'"'"'" .... _. ___ ., .................................... __ ,._ ... ,.. ...... _ ..... -............. ---o( ___ ,., ·-""'"' ...... -· ., __ ··--.. __ ,., ..... ._ .... ·-........ -.. .. I ~.".",';'!. ';':,',!~:~:.':'.',~,·~· -·-··---.. ,,.,,~ • .. , ·-~ ... _. ............. , .. ··~ ................ ·-···· ................. ... -···-·-•» -·-............ .,, ......... -..... , ..... .. ___ , .... ,._ ......... _..H .00••-·" ...... _.._ .. ,_ -., ___ ....... _ .................. """'"" "'·~-......... -..... ··--·---·"··--.. ---.............. _,._,,_ "••-'• ~,.,,. • w,., .. .,..., ___ .,,_,,.,.._,. .... -· .............. ~ ... , -· VISTA WAX J33 --~ 11 OIJJf«I •Al1ftCto•-0.•1Mf .. J J - Costa Mesa ~ou th .J;oast. -Plaza Phone • SANTA ANA Edinger Street •t Bristol, 1400 Eding1r COSTA MESA WESTMINSTER Htrbor Blvd. •I Wiiton, 2200 Harbor Bl vd. 811ch Blvd. at McFadden, 15440 Beach Bl. r • -. ,, ' --4-• ' I • -~-. --.. -· . \ ~ --~----- DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE A Great T110 ne11 s d e1r.lnpn1c n1s lat1 \ll'('k -one out of the \\'c~f('l'll \\'h1te l!ot1~t' lh(' ntlH•r nul nr SaC'ramrn!o - 11 crr heart11:1r111111,:.: 111 :Ill J L'LIC'iil l<Hl n11ndcd cit11.1•n,. (l11C! 11a ..: 1h:.ot Prr.,1ci1'11t \'\;.,1)t1, dc•;pJle nppnsitinn fron1 1he .\!arn1c·~ .itHI a (·n 11F;rc•s.-1unal t·o1111ni!!r<". 11•111 turn n1·rr :-.1'\ 111iles of C.1111p f>cnr\Jctnn hcachfront and ~r1eral 1111111 <.:'J nd H"l't'.~ (1f adJarrn1 tirrf'a.t:c· In pulll1c: use. lt v.ill be r11t1rr :111 nu lr1ght ,e:dl or a lon~·1C rn1 lcasr T/1(· ntl1e1· 1tl•1n \1,'I\ rrr11":1I 111 !hr J.rg1!-l aturr or 11. rno\r !I) <lt''Jllll'(' lhr C'l~l1 1 <11Tc ~trin of pr1rnc 'anc\y hf'ar h at (';1p1~tril110 !~c·:l! h hC't11l'rn [);111.1 Pn1n! and San l lr11:!'11tr. lt \1o :ild lit' .1d dcc! !IJ aliJolning J>oheny State Hca1 h ·rhc ~talc 1 ;.in hu\ 1l fo r ;ihoul ~2 1111111011. 11~111<:: hoth authnr11cd b1111cl 111onrv anrl !crfrr:.I functing. 1r 1t rlors not the> u\1nc·r~ P\lll't! to ~C'l l 1t 10 d('1 ('lop<'rs ror arountl S'.i n1tll1nn 'I he p111Ju' al had hrcn 1r1rtll'rf a.s "ton ('o.sl· 11." ll11t 1101r ll1P r1• L' a t ha111e thr I t•gi~lalurc 11 1JJ l'l!r!\Cl111 r thal :.:nurt IH•:11 h 11J[I never be' rhcapcr ln .. 1c;1rf 11r n1111111;.: 1•1 ll'1n·p lot :ii c·1n1lrnl of th<' t:n,1sl· line. 1!11' I r.c1.~l;11111r ... 11n11lcl hr g1\':ng leaders hip anci ur:rnc;. l•1 •:.1tf' h•' uh .~11p11'tl11111 ;11HI clc1·elopr11cnl for p11h!11· u·r 11 li<l t l~c <ippr1rt11111I\ 1n <lo :;n in hoth the C'an1p l'eJ1dJ(•tor1 a11d IJ<,J'.c11,1. ~t,J !c Beach proposals. Ai rport • the Sea'! 111 Orange County. rl;irl ing of n11d·l'rnt11ry n1igrat1on to P.leasanter clime:=. still hasn't solved thr complex en· v1ronmcntal prohlen1 of pro\·id1ng full-scale air factllt1cs for its Spare .<\ge popuJat1on. All searches for space for a maJOf airport have end· Opportunity rd 11 ith 1hc 11C1£.hhor" ~hl"lutinl! '''\'e need the facility, but don't hu!ld 11 11<':1r n1c··· No1\' an H11r-rr:;11ng prnru~ar f(lr a nearby. but still nut -nf·l·o11nty . airport ha s bt'r11 n1ade . .". l..os Angeles e11~1nPcr111g fi1 nl ht•nd ha~ rc'11vcd :ind updat('d the idea of bt11ld1ng a11 .. 1111<•r11<11 1nn:il a1rpol'I 1n the sea ." He tn11 ~10 11.~ a :i:; hv fll'f'·lllll(' 111.'ln ·n1aclc i.~l and, !h!'t>E' !o f11C' 1n1ll'S off,hnr(· Jrl Sn 11 l'r·rlro Bil.1. 111th foul' or fl\e 1·un11;1)'-. c<11h 1nnr1• th;;11 1h11~c rn1lc." Ion~. .\l1f11111 g!t the lnnd111;..: :ippr'11.'.ll'h pat1crn he en· 1·1~.IJ.:('S 1111uld la ke !li(' 111l('rna!1nnal 1 la"" jt•1 a1rrr;ift ov('r 1111nt 111.c1011 Rrath ;J! a ht-1ch1 of ~.:ioo tc131100 fre!, Ile brl1r\1'" n1 1i!>c pnllt111n11 \1oulc! hC' no problt•ni. \l'(.'C''"· onr of thr n1:qnr ~1 un1hling hlnf'k" 1n var1011o; i la nd nr · float1nJ.:'1 :urporl (O ntcpt,, 11ould be through undC"rgro11 11d t11 brs. .\ncdlary hrt11·/11 , 1 l:inllc<l \10111<1 i11cludc hC'rlh 1n i;: ;irrac; for !>Upf"rta11krr~. a plt'<l:·ULt' hnat harbor. an art1· fl<·i:il hear h \11th J!O(lci )'i111f en:.!111 crrC'd 1n. a free por1. offire budd111 )!s ;1nd ap:1rt1nrn1 ... 'l'hf' ~1rrorl \l'(lul d be SU l!Oll tldcd \lllil tll'll kel p ])c•d!> \0 rClll'(' !he f1 shrrv. ('n\I of lhr pr111r1·1 11011lrt hf' aho11 t $1 :1 b1ll!on, lhl' cng1ncf'r e~11 1n;i t1·s. ·rhal 1\<1t1lci 1v11 he ('\c<'"-~1 1·r ac; rnodrrn airport 1·01i.s1r11r t1 r111 ! n~t s i.:o 'l'hf> prclt<'tl to11l d generate ahout ~o .ooo nf'11 1obs lhf' l1r 'L \C<ir. he> be· Jicvc~. :ind 4h.OOO thf' ~c·1 ·c 11HI \'f':lr, .)fi 000 t'hc 1l11rrl 1\ hill is 11011 in th1• l.P).,l~i aturr ('Cdl1ng for ;i So11th· r rn Calif'nr111a .\1r ·rr·r111111al .\J,;l'nry 1·harged 1\1th pre· rar1n.e: ;i lo11g·1C'rlll plan 1111· df'Vf'lnp!\H'lll and c:ons1rUC· lion of .r.;11£·h .a tn:i jor 11llt'1'1 1atio11nl ;i1rpnrL So the island air·pnrt l'ntif'c>pt JS 111orl' than ju.s t the s1uff of r1rca1n c;. It t·ould hr1 ·01n c r('alltv in time And given fa~t accc~.s frorn 1)rani::e County, it 'could sol\'e one of our 1nost ,·c.x1ng rroblc111s. 'May 1 offer a word of advice?' What's Good. P1·ofessors a1id Tl1ei1• Teflclii1ig LfJtrd / Bad A boiit Tlie Movies Svdncv J. Harri s • I The cult of "f1l111 ' 't1iri11i:: thr l;1~t fc11• ~cars has :il11a1s lr!t n1r r;i tl1cr lnni::ur· tied, and frrl1ni: 1·1frrior. il' tl1nui:l1 ! "ere the nn !y Am!'nr;in in ;:i room \lherr p1·ervone JS chattcnng a11ay in fluent frl'~l'.'h. Al!hough 1 r ·•Jrov n1ov1es a~ a lnr 111 nf relaxal1nn. I l1:i1r ne1 er OCen :ihlf' 111 lake thl'm S<>rinti~lv ;is "high ;irl," or ti) J:f't 1nuch 0111 (lf lhf'm 1n the 11;11· 11r intellcrtu11l contrnl. E1·rry .<.er1ous 11 ril'lh· while book 1h;i t I ha1 r srC'n as a rn1111e 11·:is 1n;ulc 11·or.•e by 11. not brltrr Sn 1t plr:i~C'rl 111r rnnn11011~lv R f('IY 1nnn1hs a,c::o tn ptck 11r r1 r11p1· nf The ~c1v 'forkC'r n1aga1inr "'1 a plilnf' nnd find a c'ntiple of parai;:raph• 11n11rn h1• P;iuline Karl. onf' of !hf' !1nc.~l ;ind 11u1,.;l highly rC'~pcctrd film cri!lf<., echo1;1::, 1ny Jong- unspokrn senl 1ments. "\10\'IES \RF: r.oon a1 a11,"n." ~!i" point ~ nut. ··1he•. rr n1Jl J:"n'! ;it rr~lr1 •1 .. 1• thou1:h1 "I' 1nr,11p!ual i.unk.n!! Thr.11f· good fnr 1n111•1·d1:llt' <.!1111111:1° h•1I l·•· 1 ,. nnt a i:"tul 'IH .,. ... 11! 1n1 t1h I'!.: p1•11pl;, •rt !hf' oihrr ~· · • H' )1'~111111 ,1h"li1 :i :.uh· J('('1 • F11!n ll'rh• 1p1, 11 rll \; h,1• 1 ~ur J:?•cf~ .. 'l'IPI 1·1 '"11111 Ill 1h1 \\,•\ .. r tlr1rlllp•nr 11! nf r•1r.n .i· \l,,11r d•111 r hrlp \"IJ lt1 111\I1l·t• <' '1 II 11110 'lo< nf r.ll:1d . 1 hr·\ •i"I ' (II• I" I 1>\1!1 ll I" 111<111 111 r r. ri 11r! 1 iir 1 11, · \ ,1. " 1"'1 'I ·I' ,1 1t ii ~011 nr1·1I 1n 111'o!: 1r1 t·it1•,11rr 1111 IJC'.~ thr.1' raise." G us \\ii h .~un11nrr sehnnl :inrl summer- 111n1• <lf'l111r1rs, 1ngc1hrr "11!1 ;i ~1'(·:11 u11~11ri::i: 111 Jhr nun1hrr 11f bi · l'\r·lr nrlrrs t>Ver.1·11i•herr. why can't 11r l1 :11r h1kr J;ior~ n1 ~11'kf'd off on n1H' .irtcri.d l1igh11:i1s 1111hn111 wa1t- 1nh for tbe cnunl) 111de prflJCCL~ -\1 T. \\'. '~" l•••ut• •••I•<" •••erto' vi • .,...,, ~01 ~·•<Ult1IY 1~011 Of !~I OIWI PIOOf ~•nd rout p11 or••• lo Gloemr Guo. P•llr '""'· tnends draggrd me In 1h1~ ~rr1n1:: 11:1s ''F11 e Easy r1ercs," ~n 111dC'lv praised hy connC1issrur~. I 11;is look1ni:: fnr"•;ircl tn 11, lx:cause I genui nel y 1111nL In apprcC'1 .<1te mol'irs more thrin I 1ln. ;111r1 t11 rrctify 11·hat 1 suppo~e 1s a flaw in rny 011 n 1m· ag1nat1 ve pnwrr.~. \\'rll, ~It, 11 11.~~ <in 111lrrrsl1ni:: rn n11e nf ils sort. Tile <i<"!ing ;ind d1rrf't1nc: "rrc tin(' The rhotni:r;iph,v 11 ;1~ con1pcll111i:: R11t 11h1•n 11. 11as (11'1'1·. I wa~ lrft w1lh nnth1ng. jll~1 ;1 11111" 1·1J;:nrt1e !hat iinv !'rimpcill'fll ;,hnl'l-~lo1v 11r11rr could hare kr;nckccl out 111 11 h<1i'r·1lozcn p11scs. IT\\ -\Si\ \10\'J.\fi 11.c:nr!tr, in Hs 111111 11·1Jv, bu! 11 !rild nlf' nothuu: J dtdn t knt111 II !l'l:J1!P n1J frr"'h nh~cr1a11on~. ;ifl r r sr• 111~ 11, 1 11a~ !ll~l lh(' .~amr a~ I 11::1~ brforr -hut "Rrl ' 1~ ~11pµnsr(I In tr:in~fori11 ;.nri r,11;11111 nnr Thr rrr.1t11r prn(·• .<, is ~uppo.~rd 10 rhange lhe ~pee· 1 .. 1r Th ~ i~ 11 h1· ! sh1bhnmh• inst~t !ha! I: I•~ 1·<1n hr r1;:inrl.v 1'nlf'r1::1 111111r11I, h11I ti pn 1r11l 1nns !n cla1n1 lnr thrm thl' 1:i-1 n11,11rp1 r th.it !hr f1ln1 b111f~ rnn. !1P<J;il/.\' pr;11tl(' ahou! f 511<.p('f'! 1h;it 11111-.t •I !hf' '"llf'C:r ~1111irn!< 11 )111 nrr ,<:u r 1110 l111n;1lll' 1n1nl11rl 111 ''film· 11~" 11 11< .i -.1J11-.11tu1o• fur 111! 11 1~11111·11111 r nl t1,1d1· 11i.'1al arl lonn· 111,.n· 11\1111 ;1~ ;i11 f \· I• 11 1011 ,.( 1!1,·111 I lk r• t hr · t 11111 1111 1 1 If·" ' ,11t1 \!1d11r,1rr11•11llrj;P 11110 1<;1, .. 11rp1·1,. <'11 1.i l\P;ir (r11111 1111• lhal '1'1 111111~ a111J t'r(;.•1t1;i ' 1111s ;ir·111all• ri piny, 11 r111rn 1•1 <1 1nan n;1n1rd Sl«1kc~pr;irc. Fair1iess to Jlfinorities To !he l'.;c11!1•r The rr1:.-p.1pC'r~ h:11r rr rrnll: puh\1~h· ~d <1rrnun1~ 1na1 1nr St.11" Rnarrl nf Ed1u<1!1on ha~ pn~1[lfnrr1 arlnp11nn of Iha liOf\11] :0.( •rll('f' lt•>.l huu~'· L• ,1llf'' f11 (' lfl ei.r.ht. ancl a~J..rrl rh1· < ;1l1.r.·1>1a !'>!;irr 1 ·11r- r1c11h1n1 (ommr~~ll"ln ,,, 111:11,r :iltrral1nns !'n lll:i! elhn1c m1n1111lu·s ::Irr l'rnprrly trP<ilrd. \~ a mr111hrr nl p,,.. ~ 'nn11111,. on fr11m l'lfd ttl l!llii ;i11r! 1 l::->11111,.11 ol I,•(' ~nf'1 !1I l!r1rnre ~n111n11!1tr r1 .. 111 l<i1,: ti. 1'11ii, I ~a~ a ~1rnll~ 11•l~•nr111 i"I 1111• r1i:l11l1 g1·:irle ha.~1r· trx1hn11k ;n l 11 'rd ~•;,•r~ h 1~1 nr;.. r;illr1I '1 •. 11•11 r1 11:" J l'CL' ( Fra nkl1n 11uhlll :11 1111!~ 1 TlllS BOOK 1·011~1,111t rrl .1 hrf':lklhrnuµh In lhf' prnprr lrr;1t111r11I nf 1'lhn1t n11 nor111e ~ l)nr hf lhr :iu1hn1~ .lnhn llnpe. F r;inkl1n. 1~ r'hn11man 11f 111r [)rp:i~tn1r:i1 or Hi~tor\' 111 1hr I n•1rr~1t\ nr l'h1c<i,e!J a nr1 a hiark hic!on~n 11!1~ J~ ;i 11o·irl 11uthnrit\' 11n (\.111 ·· T11,, "'h"r t.1n a u1h11rs' are .IC11in \1 l 1n:h•1 •1( l (I.A end Ernt>sr ~l;:i1 h1 ll11r1 .-.rd I 1111rr• 11 This book ~cot 1n:ro thr L.11J!u1 n1a Qtloles Ashlf'y llalr. l .. i\ ·· ' F111i\• a 1n,rrl of our orio:11nrttrl h!" i~ 111n11l'l~lr1I ~v or~11n1z,11 1ons c.<.~1111:il1; 1••.11 a"l to the imrrol'emrn\ 11r lh \ " r "1r finr.<:I. n10M cari:ihlr, m11,t sri ill\ 1 0•1 · ctrned youn~ people rn11 m,;1..r ii 111n- r11r:'lf"!ll:il, ;r rlls!in•' 1r rnnlr.~11' nn" The Bookn1a 11 LUii!\ lfllm •••~ort •rt "'"cnm• N••m•ll• "'''"" ••~u•O •••••v •~•it '""""'"' lo lllil word• or "" Tno •••M !o cond1nu '•''•" 10 I•• •ooc • o• .1,~1n010 I ·~" " '"'''""" All l•Tltrl mu•I on· ~·~~· ., •• ,,.,,, ond ml•l•nt od~'fl>. ~u1 ••mo\ .,,. "" wn••• ~ en <tounr U ,,,u1c•t•1 ro••o• " '"""' ur, Pot I·• ..,,11 ..01 b• ovb1 .. noe 4 l.h in11111" 111 ~r11trn1bl'r. 1%7 In lhr ~111111nrr nr 1~·;0, ci 1·<1nipl('1C'lv 11r11· r•d111nn 11:i~ , 1il11n•llrrl hv 1h(' ;1ulhnr,., ::1 11d r uhl!<.ht'f<;, lnr :1doJ111on h\11 rr,:rrttahl.v 11·a" l'l1 n1111:i1rd 111 lhe prcl1n11n<1ry l'rrren1n g \1 \ Y II ES PF.CTPLLLY su~~r~I 1hat th(' nr11 rdlt 1on no11' bP cnn~1derrd H r h1~ 1s not l'lll~i;1 blr, anrl 1n 11r11 of lh~ r1cht h1utcrt:ir~· rf'.<:1ru·1ion~ th1~ ~·rar, l'l:ll' 1 SHt:J.:r~t an Ohl 1(111<; r1·nnf\tl'\\ - 111111-.·11 11111 thr prr,f'n1 i'd111on in 1hr f;1 l1!n1111:J ~rhfl.nl~ h1111• 11~ <1r!npll(•r1 r '\• lrn !fit fur fnur n1nrr \"fir~ Tt11~. 11hilr drj1r:11111: tho• rhilclrrn nl a 17!11 rd1llrl!1, 11 111 rl nn! 1lrpr11r thrin nl a balilnCC'd 1rr;11mrn1 nf f'lhnif' 1n1n11rtl1f'~. T~r l!lfii rrlltion 11·.11~ r;irrfulll' ff'l'lr11rrl ;11111 tf\J<f1I fo llu11111i: :i rr;ior1 hi' l'1nf1 ,1r~ l1 ll'nn nt1n1kr. l\ll :in \1·111ii; .1'\d 1 11:irlr~ Srll,.1~ flr .\1::1~ l11ffrl'ly 1n 1 11"'1drrj 1h1• !11 .. 1k :11 !l1r tnn1n11~<.f'n f1'"rltr.~ al !he \'e"·fYlrtt'r Inn 111 Januar.1 , 1•11,7 ~A,\11 1:1.r ~1(11 LL!lt 'll 1~·~•\t nf 111,tnrY Governor Asking for Accountability \\'h;:it con.~t1t11le!1 11 fu ll·ll m" tr;ichinti: !n.1rl ffir llll11·rr:,111 pr11lr·~;;nr.1;" Crn. Hfln;ild Rr:ic:in r;i1 '1·d lhrs riuestinn :-.harpl ,v 111 ;;i ~pf'rrll 1n ,JunP hrfnrp the Cnn1111onv.c11lth Cl11h of S;:in Fr11nc1.'>cO : •·1 n Nrw J.:i!ll. hour~ rnon1 ;iboul (';1Jtfnrn1<1, York, :O.l1chi· n1nf' !'r 1cn 1n thP clai;s. pPr 11f'C'k. or thrf'r l('t'!Ul'C cnursr~. are 1rarli· tinn;illy re~;irrlrd ;i~ ;i n ;ipprnrn:ite lf'.;irh1n g ~or klnild. Ry adding !hr tune sJl('nt dcvrloping <·11urse~. inlf'rl ir"·in,i: i;tudrn!s, and for surh :i1 ti·•1\1C'" ~~ in- rt 11idual study, lh1.~ 11,11;.!11 hnng:o; the t1nH' devnlrd to \('ac·f11ni: in .:>hnul ;io per- ('rnL for an ;11<'rJ1gr facult1· r11rn1brr, 11·Jth the other t1rnc a1~Jlablc [Or rr~r ;irrh. ··111 !hr ~l;itr rnllrgr~. 11hwh rlri 1101 h;i1e rq1111·alcn1 rr r;irrh nhl1g;1l1011 ~. 12 hn11rs or four tli '"!"llllll lrr111rr j'r1111"1·~ ::ir·r rri:arrlrd '1 5 th r norm and 1~ hniil , I~ lhr .~tnnrl;ird 11 nrklrn1d ror l'l11!11llill'.<I~ cnllrJ;c 1:-.cullies . "\C('OHDl,\·r, TO (!\I; ,,I 11h1· un1vr r<;11y's1 nwn puhl1r;ir1nn>. rla~<rt1nrn lf'a<'hln~ hnur~ 111 thf' 1111d·:lO's rrin,l!f'rl fr()n1 li .1 h•n!I~ 11crl..h· fnr U!I· rlrrµr:idu:itr.~ !n 15 2 h1lU!'1' at the po.~l ~r;irtu.1lf' !r1rl · 0 11rinc; 1hr 1nlrr1rl\ P>! \r1r~ un f .. r•11-i:ilrh fr;u ntn!:: lirt~ hrrri nrglrrtrrt n; c1011·ni::r;1rll'd l n~n11•.1n tn thf' p11bl1r or I!• 1t1n·r 1rrrc~C'nl1n,e lhC' pub l 1 c, Havakawa • ,. - universities illTO!'iS !he country ha1e dran1;.itically rrduccd their 1each1ng JIC· t11·i tics "A reC'C'ntly cornp!rled N1d1l or c!;is.~roorn cnntact hours by thr llniver.~t· 1.v of (';ihfornia faculr~· nn the n1nr un1vrrs1ry c;unpuse~ rrveals ;in ;11·rr;igp or only 4 .1 hours in the cl:i.~.~room e11rh 11ir"k , .. Thi' un iversity supplies ligurrs Y. h1<·h ,11~1:est al hcsL that the overall ;iyrr:i~r \Jme .~pent in the classroom bv thr rci:ular faculty was fi 7 hours per W('rk lnr 191\!l-70 c11d is PX)M'Cled to br 7 2 hours for thr current year, r;:ithPr th;:in rhe tr<iditional siandard of nine. Friu1valr.nl figures for the slate college<: ·"how an avcra~e teaching time or JO :'l hour.<: ralhrr than the traditional 1wcll'I'" TME (;OVER1'0R arldcd. "I havr l•\ng 11rg11rd tha1 the universil.v need not turn ;>.11:1\' a ~lnl!lr siudenL ;:i.~ Lhry Lhrealened 1•1 rln 1f hudge1s ;ire not increased. All th.11 1~ nf'1·e~sary i~ lh<it 1he facul1 .1· spenrl 111 lhf' i·lassrnom !hi' numhrr nf hnur~ the1 arl' rxp{'('!rd to dr1·01e 10 traching." 1'hrel' d::i1s later. Dr. Ch<1rles Hilch. prr~1dcn1 of !11r n1or ran1µuscs or 1.he l n1\·rr.~1ty of Cahfnrnia, g;i1·e a reply hrfnrr th r :-.an1e ('0111mon\\'C<ilth Club . \\ 11 hnul qUf'.<:!1on1ng 1hr (;overnor ~ Ii.cure~. Or. H11f·h s;:i1d th;:il cl11ssroom hour~ as ;in 1nd1c;:it1on of wflTklo;:id arP rntirrty misleading : "Learning on our Pollution Is Just 1t1 .1!111' ~;. 1\1\\E\' ~:1n1!;1r;. l·~ngr.1c,.,1·ing i·nn~11ll:inl rnllu1111n 1 r~1:1t. l~ ;i d;!riril pr1ihlrn1 \11111 1111111.1c1111,1d•1· II il -.)1.11nr• tn ~nil" \I i nns1rlt'r lli f' 1111111111 r nl fil'n plr 111- 1nhrd lilt· 11111<' '11 .. r1, 11111' 1·1 • 'l"'1"1rd nn Jltllluuon: I l1r pol1l 11 ,11 lnrl1111~·" 1 • <.t1ni:: n11 rhr p•npn<al~ for l··~"!:1J 1on . 111'!: 11r11~11:.prr 1 ,illlf'il lJ.::!1" "~i'""'f1C pnlh 1!1n11; 111r 111;ii:.111111• 1 ·1~1·11 l.11u1n c,1111p;11~11~ rrl1·. 1111: nn thr• 1111r1!1l'rt thrr:il~ In hr:1l:h :ind l'lrn .<:01111;>(, th1• un11rr ily pn>ff'< ,,,.._ SC'ek111g pnl lu11011 t(•,f',11•h i::1:111t( 111 1n;11111a1n !hf' n1a111rr .,( li11ni: 111 11h1t•h 1hr1· h.11r hl'ion1.-:11·r·11'{h11111·d tlu• SHI· lir11t ;1rl111-i, :i:-. 111··1,.,1hf'' .·11•p.11~11111 i: 1nd1l:'ltl!<;: for 1111111cn·s hlw·r.1111111. lorr~t prc~,.r1r~. pnpub1111•n 1·nnt r11I anti 1·1~r1 11 1l· n1rnr nf !h" izru-. .. 11a1tnn:il pn1rl11rt thl' ;:inft·ll11ilt;ir1 anrl thr :inl f',.(,1ol1.;l1111rn! L11t1nn~ 11h11 u1d1.•r rmil111:n11 ;1~ lhr ii l11~1 r:i11nn or rlrt'.1rl:-n1·r .'lnrl 11 r1111g pnor1Llrs. i\.\;O TllE l\l'nJ•:,\Sl\I; .1l'd 1n111 pro1lnR fcrlrr;il hllt'f'.'tllf'l'il\'IP'i 1l1111111nc JI rolr 1n pnl l11IH'\l1 11'\d11•1J'l:1 I 1n:i n:ii::r111r11t cnnfrrrricc.~ 11( ;i1 1nn1t'.1 ~ 111 111111,1t111g 11nd \'f'S1fllrl1[ ... 1fl :<ll,11 !'1' l'l(l\l'r'-t' p11hl1l't'I. rnnrrrrnce nf ;1!111n1r~.; 111 1n111.111ng :inr1 <lrff'nd ink l;i11 ,u1!:-.; 11111111c1p:il, 1·11untv :1nr1 :<!:11r h1111rl if'C prncr:i111~ 1nrrr;1i;.111i: t<l'\f'~ fnr !l'\:l111frnanrr ;:inrl "l'f'1 ;it1n•1 r.f m11 n1r1pa! 1r1·at1nent filf'1!1t1c~, public Guest Editorial j drYf'lnp111m! or pollution rnntrol drl'ice~: rhans1n~ prndurt1on ICC'hn1qu!'~ and fom111la11ons In e li minate nhjl'rt 1nn.~ In rrod11r1~: del'eloping adm1nislrati1·e and l111anc1n1: techniques to control poHutinn : t"n1rrgini;: new rt1ucati(}na1 c0tir.;c~ and l'I f'n c·urricula: the nµportun1ty for any ::1nr! every indi1·id11al 10 Or :i srlf-in· trrt·~l('fl crusader 111 a throrttically com- innn rause. THIS OOES NOT EX HALST !he lislinR nl 1nt11v1rtual~. a~enr1f',<: and gro1Jf"' who 11 1,ulcl t"w-nffPc1ed by 11 solution 1n [)O\hJ· t1nn. The rn1Jol:ma bcCnmc.<: :ippar{'nl when "'1<' ;1~ki:; thr IJUCsl1on as 10 11i'hrther 1h1s pnl.1 Rlnt ngglon1eration de1rlnpccl tn ~olre. pollu1111n or tn exploit pollu!inn . H;i1hcr lhan reAcl with II liirocl :in~wrr, 1·nn~1rter the conundrun1 nftrn heard on lhr rn1ntional cirruit· l!ow 1~ it y,•e can izrt a man on the moon 11nd yrl cAn't rlr;in up pollution" -11nrt then con!!1der 1l1r <lflS\\'l'r a~ prnnouncrrl nn 1he polilical r 1rr1ll!. All v.·t ot'rc1 1s 11 nation:il <'tlffi· n11tn1t'nl to do the JOh and &1 national 1----------ll~I (•ro1·!1r f)rar Cf'nri;r \1.1· pn1hh'1ll ,~ lllf"ll, c;cnrr.r <11nrlv i::n "t"' 111rr m"n Im ;:i, l1lr.1•r!r hlur ''' 1 d f:i· h•1111 11111drt ;ind t 1•1 111'1 1111 •ii ·1 ;ihour 111111rc (an 11111 ht '1' 1 u· I \..11111\· \1111 don 1 !1~11'1111 c I I 1•r1 "11.11 ITI 1rr11 ... 11< h11t !OUld 1011 n1~kr 11n r~<rpt1ri11~ r ·~1 r'1•''" ni; lhr tlf! <Irr•~ "r 1;11' :i i'l:ir1111r11t TOODLES !)r;ir Tl'MldlC'~ rn11r~r. 1·n11 pnor clrar' I \1·1ll 1r1· tn ,i;:1111tr ~nur Irr! hark 10 the 11i:hl ri:ith. And 11i·1ll hP ri11:ht n1·rr. a~ I ar n 1urn1nR my rnl111nn over In llrrrn ;in , 1nl' rh1rf rr.<:rarchtr, and l\m \\ hrre in \hr wnrld did Hrrn111 n ~n~ • r.:in1puse s i!I not f'Oof1nrrl tn lune in the clas.srnom and th;iL 1.~ lherefnrr not 110 11ccur<ill' nr rea.sonablr way to measure a pr·nfes.<:nr's workln;•1l" llr Htlf'h 1.<: ngt11 111 s:i.ving 1h;u hours in lhr clil.~srnnrn arr 1101 a 1nrasure nf a pr<>ff'S'inr's v.nrkloacl. ,\1 nst prnfrssnrs work fiO hour~ a 11cr k -l)r H11eh ~a.1·s i)0 tn /10 If half or 6(1 hours IS dC\'1>\e,j \0 te;i{'hin.c rlul 1!'s -lt•cturcs. lecture prcparat1on. rrad1ng nf ex;1111s and tenn parer~. SU[)(.'l'l'ISIOn of indll'!r1ual S!Udl' - anrl lhr olhtr half l'l rtsca1't'h. a µro- Frs.~or 1s c·rrt<1111I\' ,1:11111g lhr t:ixp<i~<'r 11·hn pavs h1.~ salary h 1~ n1onr\ 's 11inr1h l h;i1e no r1011ht that 111nsl professors do del11er their moue~ 's v.orth. RLlT I Tfl\NI\ ·r 11E <;nYC'rnor an1t the .i:rnrral puhllr are asktng. "ltn11i· r1n 1ve know "" i\1<1n1• prnfl'ssnrs )!O !n !heir r:irn· ruse~ nnlv two or thn.·e rlays a wprk The rf'sl <•f their t.1111e thrv m11v hi' doing rr>lf'<irch Bu! sn111r .1rf' nil in .\\lashin~1nn f11111~llni:: i::r<lnl.~. 01her.s are 111 pr1va1,. pr:icL1rr JI.~ thrr:1r1s1s nr t•nns111tants In hu ... inrs~ nr ~01 ('rnmrnl. O!hrrs are rr111nrlrllng their r<lrnp1•rs for next st1n1· n1cr's lrip t.n lhr 111ounl<lins. At. nnr un1vcrs1lv c;irnpu.<: T k11nw nf p<'ri;,11nallv, thr tr~l·h1n,i: load arrr;qzr<: out 10 fi ve hour~ a <JUartrr. Snmp rorn-- fessnr.~ rn~rt lon.i: h<111rs 111th thr1 r s1udent.<:. ()thrr.~, hn11irvf'r. r1n not evl'n pos1 of11cf' hours. lr111·r lhe 1 an1pu~ the n1nmcn1 1hc1r lr<:tures arr n1er ;incl rnake thcmSl'il'es tnl ally 1naccess1ble to .~tudenls. AS FOR TllE S~PER\'I Slfl:'\ 111 10· rt111dual S\lld.1 , this m~ans a lot of 11 orl.. in sn111r 1·1111r:;I'." r,p1'l'iillll, ~l1hnuph nHt nf'r.r~s;iril.1. 111 thr l;ihn1·a10r;; sr1enr1·'· But ii c•;:u1 ;il "n n1ra11 .... rrlll}: a ~turlcnJ 211 1nin11tr>~ ;ii 1hl" heg111r11n g <if lhf' 1rrm. g1 1· i ~g h1n1 <i rrad111g 11<.:I 11nrl nf•1·rr .... rr:n~ hi1n :1g:.11n -1h1·n g111r1~ 111~11 :i P"~" :it thf' rnd or tt1e trr111 11n ;i 'p:1"-~ r10- r:>por1" .... y~1 1•111. And !ht• t1o t1i>r 1s 1h,<1 snn1e dep:ir!n1rnt hl':id <.: nnd c!r:in~ <11 (' totalh prr111l~\i1r. 1f not ind1Hrrtnl, ;i, In hn11 their· pr"h'""-"ls 'p1•ud tl:11r 1 a1 '" lh:il tht• 111:1 11 1th11 1111·h.:; h:ud fr.r h.~ ~turlrnl " s\;inrl<; no lu•llf'I' rli.1111 r i1[ ri"·jJgn111nn ;1n1! pr11rnnt1un 1h;111 1hf' 1n,1n 11 1111 ihl('.<: :i~ 11Hl1· f.,r lht•111;1,111"·'1hlf'. \lhr11 thr r:n1i.'rnor 1~ :1~!..111,e, 1ht11. 1< .111 m1n1111un1 of <i!Tour1t.1l11l1tv. Lt'L"" i;:r1 , h .. ~f""ms 111 hr ..,,11 inti:. ;:it lra.sl ninr ho11f'' <if <la~srnn111 pn·~rnrT lrnrH r ilrl1 un11r1 ... 1I\ prnf('.~~nr. 12 h1111r" fr11111 ril1·h <.1::11•' 1 •11· lrgr prnl1'\~nr. 11h;itc1cr else he dot'~ !Ile f('S! nf 1115 11111(' I l)f) :"\fl'r K'O\\' ii lhP t;r•l"rn,,r 1, ric:llt 111 ~ri1111c lh<ll llu• ~:i1111:;:~ i'l;r1\rd \l'ill rP<ihlr 11nll'f'r~il1n.;, 111 <;.C'n r 111~\\V mor1• ~lll!lrn's \\ 11hn111 1111·rr;1,rrl < '"1 Rut I rtn lh111k 111~ rrriue.;,1 fHr ~0111r ~111d '1f p11bl1c ;,1·,·ountabil 1t;, 1~ ;i rr<l ~r111<1lilr nnl'. II 1 l;is.;,ron111 l1n11rs :ir·r 1;,11 ;in a•' "1r:11 r n1ra .;,11re of 110rl.lo.HJ .. 1hrr 111r:i~11r-" n111s! hr fn1n1ul;i1rrl \~ rrnff'~~nr~, 11r r:innn! s11nr1v ~a1 !o lhr Hl\flil\rr. ''\\r 11·l"lrk fin tn IHI h1H1r;; ;i 111·rk. Yn1i'1e g•1I 1u l;i~e ntJr 11!'lrd fo1 it ' I~~ ~ !. 11111 ;1 ka11" l'rc~i1lt'11I ~<in t.'ranrisc(l Sl31r Collrgc a Dandy Problem ::1 i;:-reement to spend 1he mnnC'y nccrs.~ary tn dn the job. \.\'hen !he pnl1t1ci<1n sn ]lfln1lf1cate~. lhP f;llp!.'rlic1al ;:i,ci1·or111r.~ rnr ~;:\l'\11~ the penlo,e:y . .<:a1·1n~ thP enl'1rnnmf'flt, sa\ing the world -or v.·h;:itcver c11u~e cllm· m;:incl~ I.he mincl ;it lhc mnmrnt -give ('n(h11~111s11c ancl u n qua I 1 r i e d en· dnr~mC'n\. RLT .\EJTH l-;R THE pnhllcian nor the rnlhus1;1sl ,£11·rs an\ rr11l thouglH ;is In thr diffrrcncc~ belwecn our proj'.!r11m in ,ert a 1nan nn the moon and nur pollul1on ;iharrmrnt rffnrLs. So 1hrv f;:i,11 In srr ih:it in rhe rnoon progra1n lhrre "as, r1r~t . a .s{l('('d1r and defined oh1rr111·e. srcon1I, thr drlti:;;1 L1nn of lhP progr;:irn In com· pelrnt individu;ils 11i·ho c.~tabl1shcd 11n1e ~hl'li11lei;, µnoriliN< and alternalll'CS Lo ar;hirvr !he nhJN'live iind !hrn dPtern1 in· f'r1 the C'otlr.st> ::111cl pa<·e of :irtinn: anti thirrl. a large !)11dgr1 w1lh !hr dll'l'f~lflfl nf h1nrl.<: frnnl otlY-:r attlv1t1f'S as well as in· crr;i~ed lax;:ition. Sp<itl1ght1nio: th r s e rh<ir<1f'trnst1c!'I h1,ehli,eh1 .<: v:hy !hr pollulion problem con· r.111ur." to ;icccleratc In Intensit y and 11i·ithou! 11 rf'al solution in sight THF:RF: IS NO rteftnit1nn or lhe ~llhJf'f'I or thr ~n;:il. Thcrf' 1s 1'111 ::1~1'f'Cml'nl t'il'f 11·h111 1s in I'll' :ichte\'l'.'rl Thrrr 1~ nn illfTPP· 111rnt nn lhr en1·1ronmr11t I\(' 11<in1. s.n an\' 11nl,111nn nf ;in~ 1nd111clu11t'.<: rlesire l~ labclccl a.q µnllutu1n \.\'ll h no spw1f1c ,i:nal iincl 1>o 1th ;i 1 ;1r1rty nl ri"s1r~. rnany ol whirh ;irr N'lnfhclJniz, "''t i;:rrindly rtrlc~11\(' au1hon!1 to ;:in 1nd1\·iclual In handlr nnf' nl 1hr<r l'lrhulo11 ~ f'Ol'lf'('rn~. one nf lhe n1;1ny IAN'" of thf suhJerl called pnHut1on Sin ce 11ir. il~~!l nlr lh:il !hf' hf':lfl nr 11,·h;itl'l'('r RJZ{'llf'I er!.<: nn" nf 1hrsr Jobs 1.~ an 1ndLv1dua! of f'"<Ci'pllrmal talen1. pel'\"'rpl!1'e ilnr1 rx- f)l'rir nrerl, WI' Jilll'f' him !hf> Joh lli'lth f('W rrstrA1nL~ Ho1ve1·er. unclcr 1he r111r~ nf the game Lhr recipient ttf thr ;iulhor1tr 1~ -· nnt J'lf'nn1ttrrl 111 rPl11-.f' ll1r priqr1 I nr 1., dPn.\ h1.~ ron1pr11 rir\, ,'in hf' nr,·r'rl~ i 1 Jnb anrt prnn1ulg:11r~ 111lr~ .1nrl rr~1· lion~. \n :i short t11n(' rnfnrrf'111rn1 nf llP· rrJ,:ulat1nn :-11bs!1tutcs for ;ich1c1cn1ent ol the obJ('f.:ti1 e. -TllF. F.AS IF;ST \\'\\' !n ::11n1rl ha11nc In "'\pl;11n f.'111111·1' In :lq11111pl1~h lhf· 1nh 1~ 1n h11 r lhf' rrspon•.ih1!111 p;1rl1111li<1·v l11r f1n;1nc10~. ~harrd bl' potl'n11:il !r1(!• ~ The fun11ng of thr 111~nn prnrr:11n 11 a~ f;irgr ::ind dirf'(·\: thr lun<l1ng of I!" f"•ll•1 111111 pmhlern Is of un~nov.n flll:lnl1!1· ;ind sh.1rf'd hy Congrr~~. ~t<i11' \rg1•l;1\urr~. c111~s. industries and 1n1t1111!11:il~. ThcSf' basic d1ffcrPnrr~ b!-t1>orr11 lhr 111an-on·the·1noon pro~r:irn :ind 1he pnltu· t1nn coo!rnl ~rarn ;ire t'r:il. l'n!1! th"i 1.<:.s11P of pnll11t1nn ii;. pta<·rrt 1n prr~prr!11 1\ the pron1iSt" of po!l11l 11'n c (1 n I r" I , r!'~:irdlr~~ of hnw honr<:tlv n1f'11n1 1~ t:il~e. Even 11or.sr, thr rxp(.c1a!lra1 nf n (1 uallty en1•1ronrncn1 1~ ;i delusion Indust rial '\'111 rr Enginrrr!n.c: ~londay •. July !!), 1971 The trlitririn l pnpr of tht Drii/•1 r 11ot srr ks llJ 111forn1 onrl s•rm· ulnle Tt.nrlrrs '1)1 rrr.~c11r1ng !Ins 11r1.rsrnrt r's or1nion.s n11rt rn111· mP11!nr11 nn tnr1rJ nf tn'rrrt t (IJ!tl ~1grn(rcut1rr, b11 rrnr11/111 g fl (nr1:1'1 fn r /hr> r rp1 r~-;i11u 11/ fl If frf/•ff'rS np111 'fl!I.~. ()1Jf h1f r•rr.~r,1flf11'J ti r r/1rrrsr 11c11" rr111·/~ nl P1fnrmtrf nh.~rrrrr ~ rl"rl .1;•nhr~"1r11 nn tnp1rs of r/1e dny. Rnbcrt N. \\'err!, P11h !1shrr Mond<1y, July iq. Jq71 OAJLY PILOT ,. CHECKING •UP• ~~~·~~L Youth Flips Wig Ov er Robberies . ~·l.l·'·C ·.·_~""'· __ WH,.1····.~"~ P011;1rANO BEACll, r1a Russell. however. was in been dropped. "They I.the pohct') k('pl tell-.. ,,_.,~·l. -' ~ 'l f A Pl -John Owen Russell, San Franc1~0 when 20 or the "~r;_lhere are !hf' parent:1 1ng me to conft'i'iS to JUSI one 1 · 51. · ~· 21, houghl a short ha11:'.'d wig ;~· · l . ' '' robbt.nes wrrr rominitted and of 5'lme of my lnend.!i who or 1wo." Russell said .. TI1ey ' · -1 ~ ~ anolher rnan has been ar-wond er 11boul me , 11nd the pre.~:1ured me to the point See i11g Eye Dog~ i'.; ,..: \~i O l(ll .. ~,,".~··~ bh·ause rniployl!tS were rrs1ed 11nt1 tonfl"ssed tfl most la wyrr·s r"e.,.__wow''' whPre t was 1·ry1ng, and for a r: .. I'\ ~ . reluctant to hire a !on.i: hair. of the "blon 11 w11: holdups. Russell's niRhtrllare st artP<l while \h('re 1 almost thought i,;f oQlls ~~!';~-1 a~~;h! :~kb~~ul~:~ ~~~s~1/1;:; l"fll~~:l~ipS;~~:il~~io~n~y0, ~:ir~~ ;~e~~tnr~e rh;;a:~:~l be~n~n rn~ ~~~!~~ ~h~~~~ ~~~~r~~~u~nan~ ; ' 1i , c~1··· robberies he dJlln'\ f'nmnl1! R.u.~srJI'.~ arrcsl "a terrible bed hy the blond Jr:Unmen. In period of blackou t 0 r td.~~. ~~ _'·,,·; There 1s al~o a pill' of lrg.,t traJ:efly." Rus.sell's n1otort'yele helmet .sonieth!ng." i,~l, ""5 · '~•>·) [res. "11111 °0 y ICR•I 'Y•lcm w1'lh 11·as the blond wig he wore.on F'o'1 L•urle,rlale. Polit" s,1. j :. / ' -S~A·~ ,·.:~1;~"1J-~ Ru°S:;f'll was :;tn-pped b_v lhl' vnlu~'f' of arr~st~ ours has his summer joh. Drugstore Bill Capko said lh~ ml!lr~ who f · ~-; lli1l1e1' as he rode his 1notorry-i.~ ,1:01 n1: tn ha vt' an lniusticr personnel spolter1 lhe wig and confes~ed to the robberirs ~: 1·le ni•ar hit-suburban Wilton oreur o<'casionally. Vortunat -thi s lecl to his arrest. bore a close rc!'lt>mhlance to 11ow for ch1!db1rth'''' A Just (.E,ARt,r~ t.l<inor!\ home 111.~! Ma\'. Thev el ~. it happens very rarely,'' Ru.<:sel! was picked up and R11<:sel!. f•1ur d;i\s Q a!·1·11s£'d h1n1 of hf'1.ng !hr Shaller !'!!lid. fn und himsell !n a hncup. "Thtir size, built1, age 111llt •·\\'herr:ib.('luis In 1h1<: rnuntry b!ont1·\.\1l!,i;rtl Jr:Unm::in 1>.·ho ha<l Aul. noted Russell. "there Witnesses idcnlifif'd h1n1 a.~ the two different wi.11;s 1hev us· ;irP Hi•' f 1· we .~! thun lirlrl up .10 stores in th e For! llrl' still a few people who !he m11n who l'OmmHlert 10 of Nl 11re similar," Capkn S11 1rl Do11 't Eye Ligl1t s B) L. \!. Rc'IYU n11slaken 1den1.uy." Russell, whO dropped out nf Broward Community Cnl\eize hf-cause he s11ll thinks 11 clnurl h::ings OVtr him, Sl'l ld he WIS ~ratcful tu F'ort 1.a urlerc1ale Detective Oz..:1e Oa venpnrt. ''whn su1cerl'ly believer1 1n me -I 1h1nk" D;11 er11Hlr\ t·unt111111'd in. vestl ~aling ,11ftcr Ru~~ell wa.~ arrested and was one or the pol1eemen responsibll' fnr ar· r est1n,11; thr rn11n who even· lually confessed. But Ru ssell ~a1cl he r1oesn't bc>l1e\t' !hP rnn11nun1ty ha~ cleared him so he'! leaving the art'a. IN Zll il l T of t'I ,.rv lflO d11n1rl's. LhP ,,1fr 1rl!.~ 1he Jllrli!f' "~1} h11~hand JUSt look of/ 1r1Jh11u1 1•1 rn ~n n111ch .1~ a Ill IHlH l1·a11','' l'I 1111rd, lo that 1·fl1·t 1 .. Clll \! ~: IS :1 1111u1i,: 111:10·.<: ~;11111•, 1'\tdrntly l'nl11 •' ,t,111,111•1an~ ''" ~1·11·n 11111 uf 10 1·r 11111·' h1·rf'.1h•111!.~ ;1r1· r111nn11ttr·d h1 /"('O]ll(• u1u!i1 '..':l (11•1'\l•1r111:;~" I\ Alnog thf' l.:uirlrrOal(' <irea don't bf:l1eve the ch 11rge.~ h111·e the hntdup.s. "JI wa,<: JU!'lt 11 rase nf !'at1f1t' Cu<Js!, 1'111 1uld. 1-----------------------------------'-----------------------'-------------------- A'D UO\'J" FOHC;t-:T 11 h:-il I lr·li·11 Hn111;11111 ~;111! · lt1r• hard'''' la,i... nl an\ i,:u·r~ 1 fr I• I" p1-,11 I' to ii 11•;111 111.il }11•, lllli !ii 11111\ ;11 •• ~! rt1IU~ .. ·\ SJ,1,1 E <,IHI. 11111'1 Iii• 1111 lh1· 111.ih11ul 1111 rh1· phrinv lr.1('1 ~lt('h I~ tl1r \l'11n11~ rl;11111 nl 111011 111;11 1111111111:11 1''" prrl i)r l 1:i1il l'np1•no1• 1\1111111g 1111•11 111 rnrn;1r11·"· Ii(' ;i1 <'r s, 11•1 rlo11ht 1111' lllill<lt II I ,II"!' llnll('\l, !!1111(•11'1". th11~•· 11hu ;1f•'l1'1, hr ~.l\S, f.111 11110 Hllf' flf l11r· e;ltt'gnnrs I Thi' 111:u1 11h11 <; in lii lf' 111111 h1n1 ~t·lf 2 Thr n1;1n 11h1)·s 1n h1\·e 1111h h1~ n1olh1•r :l Thf' nH1n 11t10 s ,1fra1rl nr !01 r ,1 ThP 111.in 11hnH' 11n111'lr1 of ln1e 1~ t·nn· 0 •1r~1 ::ind f'xptn1t~t1on ~ Tt1e tn;in 11h11 lll<i1 wan1.;; a11r1111r111. Th1·1· ahound. ~ounJl lady. Bc11 .1r<' \rHl\T \\'OL'L O HAPPE'\ 1f all !l•r 11·r In :\ntarr!i<·;i 1nrll<'d'' Thr ~cicnce bn~s f1~11rr·d lh<ll olll The 11nrld'~ ~r;;~. !hi'\' ~HI. llflliiiJ Ti'f' 10 h,~i1 1111• ~l;l\111' nf l.1hPr1v \1 (l1dd 11<11 1· 10 1111 lll'r lir;1rl h.11 ·f,. In ht'f'P lhi: 11.<Ll!'f Olli of l1rr no c·. ("CSTO\T l·:B !-i EH\ ICE : tl 'nu ,-.:,.r·1n~ Fir r!ng~ 11;.i"h lh(' lr;illll' l1ghl~ nr 1hr lr·;if f1f'"'' /\ Th" 1r.1lf1r' .. 11\1;1\' •\11 •t II iil'tl1i:r In ("l'!l'' Ill ("fil'1lT:lil\ I' 1111' d n g , .'> 1l,.r1,11111. 11111 lhr n1;t,l1 1 ·~ . , . Q '\lh,1r·<: th" :11r•:tl.!" 11111r ~ n1othcr stil~\ )11 lhc hn:-p1l:il TllAT TH~: A\'f"ll~'T 1-:i.:1p11an<: did not \\'1\h 1111h '"·IP hllt r11bhrd thrn1scl1 r~ 111tli oil is w1drl~ k11own Lf'<:S 11 Hh'h' kno" n is thr fact tha\ ru1h1t."11u•n thf'r<' 1,1.crr r~1u1rt•d h1 dc(·rcf' to p ~ r 111111 '' th1•111~f'il 1'~ at lf'a<:.1 nn1·1· ~ 11r1•f.. 100. 1\11 rt·11lne,1 lll<l!lf'r Tn /1gli1 ;:i1r pol111t1•ln Thi' p1•'1·r r,[ h1"tnr1 r1f'rno1is1r::i!r< holl' lnni? 1n<in has hrf'n •'!•fl · c·r1n1·d 11 1t l\..._h1s ('nl 1r11111111111! TllE 'l'llEATnlCAl. J'LA V 1 ~ lhl' .'<11rl nf l11rr·;iturf' 11il!'t'l'll1 \Oii f111d lhr ff·11'CS\ :1d1(1i·111rs Tllr <1nr1or.1I !hr sii; i..; \\lif'n' \(II! f111d \hf' !110SI Or sn :;;11· 1h;, «!11npu h'r ho~•s. For 1'\l•r1. llMl l'rrh..;, 1hrv t11rncd up 1·1 nrl11•cl11!'S in 1hr 11lavs. t-11t RR adJC'f'ti1rs 1n !hr 1hesis. Tl1rv ;il:;n lr::irned bus111css lct- !('fS. cona ined fewrr arl.1cr111•es th:-in do la11·s, pOC'1ry frwer than d(I advt•riisemcnls. t..\\V\\~ .. \' SA\' I h e i r Tf'l'nrds indira!e lL 1·nsts an :11 rragr 11r ::i.1100 to r:itch ;i f1r~t·de~rr;· 1n11r1li·rrr .. IT \V/\S NO,\'E olher than 1ha! (;ern1an grntlrn1;in {;nnhold l.f'<:sing ll'hu s.~ut. "'A young l:;rl~ 11ho lll1nk~ 1:-: like a .1·nun~ 1n:in y,lin r011gr~ ' ... ALSO F l \'.O IT ll011'WOr1hy lhi!t no 11i:111 111 i'll;:iss:icl1usrtls 1~ Ai11J111•d to n1arry his rnoLhcr. Ill l;1\\' J'fl11r 'J!IC.o;/inn.~ n1ul cn1n· l:1r1n~ <lre 1rclcomcrl onrl 11•11! hP userl in ClfECK- 1 \ (; / 'p U1/Jf'Tf'Uf'T ros.~1b/e ('/rnse nddrrs.~ your lrt- trrs rn !.. J\f . Bo11rl., P. 0 Rnr 1875, l\'eu.'port Beach 92660. Ne,v ~letaJ ~lay Bind !\'] uscles to Bo11cs ~~ .. \T"J"\.1-:, ll::i.~h !l·r1~ - S1·1f'lll1~11~ :itlrn1pt1ng In f1nr1 ;:i hf'ltrr 11;11' In :ill::-rh a1·11f1r1al rlr1 i(T~ 111 1111111;111 h111w<: hrl1r1C' 11ir ~· :\rt· 1111 lilr 111.:111 11·;i1·k II 1111 il !II'\\ 111111' 11;11 111~'!.d l'.'llf'rl \old \1l'lal Curll pt;,ll<' I \ \j('1 Thi~ 1n<'::1! 11:" r1!•1fl11p<·rl h·. lll lt''ITl1 i•f ~('11'111 hi<; .IT I h1• l 1111rr\111 111 \\,1~h1nglnn and R ;it1rllr-'\nrth11<'S\ !.abora1nrif'~. Afl<'r IR 1nnn1h<: or rr~f'l'ifl'h. 1hf' lf'?.IH 11;i<: ;111;irrlrcl ;i t:fili 000 i.:r<inl 1n rnn11nur 1111'11' prrqef'1. \'\1 (" rle1·11;"r~ u~rrl 1n 11n1m;il te<:!~ h;i1r bPen a(Trplrrl 11 r ll h1 t1~sur<: ll1r lf'f\111 ~:i1<1 T1~~l1" 11;1~ gr-01111 111tn ;in(! ;1n11111r1 I hr ~'~Pl'rl!llt"'nl;il \~ti 's and 11;1~ 1":1lcif1rd wh ich l11nrl<: !hf' 1111pl:ip1~·d n1aler la l 11~h1i1· to 1hr hnnr \1:'111· c::irh i.1tlf'n1pt.~ lo ~nl1r · lh1" problcm fa ilrd bcC'aU\r \Ill' :ir11f1c1:il mater1;:il 11as rl'l<'(l('d h_1 lhr 1J~~ur~ r;11J~f'd irt'll:lf1+1n. df'll'flnratrd nr cau~C'd prnblem.<: 1>.llh :irl- J<lrCll! t1,5...~ue. Our color retouch special. At a very special price 6.66 Add a little color to your life via ti nt or a colo r retouch . Just 6.66. Helene Curtis "Springtime" Permanent with Shampoo, Cvt, end S1y le Sel $1 0 NE WPORT BEACH r····~ I •·~ l HUN~!"~~~,;.o,~,.~EACH )•d ~IN" ,., 1"111 • Girls' Coat Spectacular. Great selection at affordable prices. Lay-away makes it easy. Th iel< •n thi n cotton corduroy. foam· laminated, with canon-backed acrylic p ile lining. In assorted colors. Sizes 7-ii!, ,• Rayon chenille C-Oat vli!h polyestet q u illed acelale fining. Assorted colors. "6X, SI B 7-1 1!, s20 -~· .... :v '@ =· ® (i ... , ' .. ,,, ~"' ...... ,; ,,. , ¥ ~ J,.r---' <~·" I • ~· J _, 'J • .J (t'f .,,,.,,,, """" ! ,.r...L j"" _,..i-:;-', .) <># " .t ,"":t ,,. ,./. ·' ~ -.. -... ... 'Pull' acrylic pile: lining ol acetate q uilted to polyester. Assorted c olors. 4-6X , $16 7·1 4, s20 ~·(i) ' ;?s .. A .,; > ,'' .. ~ . .. ,. •ii' ·' ~ ... Vinyl coat, acet at& quilted to polyester tining. Assorted colors. 4·6X $15 7·14. s17 ennelfJ The values are here every day. CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE! .. • No-rib cott on corduroy, foam lamin ated, w1!l1 lining of acetate quilted la polyester. Assorted c.olors. 7.1 ... s1s . . \ -. -· -· I I DAILV ,!LOT Mondq, Juh 1'1, 1q71 Looting, Bouabing Riot Police E11{I Ox11ar{l Rucl{US OXNARD (AP) -H101-cl11d policemen and !'iher i ff '~ deputies swept down the ma111 street of the city"s Mex1c11n- American section early today to put down a disturbance dur- in~ which stores "·ere looted. 11 bank. school and ph:irmac.v '>l"ere fi re-bon1bed and police and firemen werl! pelted with l'O<'ks. Nineteen JUVcn1Jrs <111d '.!O adults \\l're arrested o n \<arious charges sternm1ng from the disturb;incc "h1c·h of. flc1als said invo!'<Cd 100 Hi 1511 young person~. Tbc 47-man arres11n~ fClrcc n1oved in <1bout an hour aftl'r a smaller gr~up of police and rircmen were driven back and forced to \\'tlhdraw frorn the arra 1"hc ''iolen{'e began Sunday 11ight afl1'r an announced .1n- t1µolice rally 1n a park next tn the school f <1 i 1 e d to 1nnterial1ze. Groups uf youths began forming on the 1na1n stre('t. Cooper Avenue. Police said the you ths brokr Into ncarb.v stores and set fires. then attacked police and fir('men sent into the ara. All fi remen and officers \\·ere Clrdered out of the area nitl'r being pelted with rocks ;111d bottles and hcanng rtfle shols. Pohce Lt. t.1arlin Valentine said the reports of shots early in the disturbance could not be confirn1ed. ~1ost busines~s in 1hr !>0--- ;.:alled ··<.:olon1a · d1;,trict had broken "'indows and 01ere 11ere numerous thefl s, though large-eale looting did not 11t- l·ur . s:11d Valenl!ne. Leon "'.'> PharmaL"\" 111 11 .~ destroyed by a fire bomb du r- ing the period firemen t·ould not get into the area. police said. In addition. the Bank of A. Levy and the Juanita School received minor damage from fire bombs, and trash receptacles v.•erc overturned and set afire. ·r11e only injuries reported \\"Cre to a juvenile who had a puncture wound and to a fire1n:in and a c1l1zen 1n a patrol car as p;irt or thr Police Dcp<1rtment"s r id c. along progr::in1, both of who1n "·ere hit in the fac:? by glass from shattered ""'indows in their vehicles. All v.· er c treated and released at a hnspital . LUCY, DESI .SEH RITES BEVERLY HILLS tAP) Lucille Ball and Desi Arnal, divorced since 1960, sat in her hackyard garden and wepl as 1hey y,•atched their dnughtl'r s ll'edduig. ··1 swore I wasn't going Ui cry," Miss Bal! said aftPr thf' <'e remony Sa turday. "but I couldn't hel p my.self '' Arnaz. whose hair has v.·li1tcned since the days \\•hen he CQstarred with Mis.!! Ball on the "I Love Lucy" !elevision series, said, "I couldn't stop ery1ng '' Phone Firn1 Eyes Arson LOS ANGELES (UPI f - Scattered reports of van· dalis1n against the strikcbound P<icific Telephone Co. were Joined Sunday by a possible :·.rson fire of a telephone pole, damaging a 20()..foot cable. Since the Con11nu11ication \\'orkers of Amt'r1 ca struck lhe company last Wednesday as part of a nalionv.·ide ~tn kt·. phone cables were severed with sa ws and hatchets last \1•eek in the San Fern?.lldo Valley. --_ ..... " •• -<t Monagan Urging Bu{lget Balance SACRAMENTO fUP!l -auU1or of the school aid Asscrnbly Republican leader 1neasure and chairman of the Ca1npsite Deaths Police Eye Three Mm·der Suspects AUBURN (AP) -Sheriff 's •·we have three t1amcs ~t 11obtrl T. Monagan :.aid !od~~Y F.duc2.tion Com1n1ltee, said th ·,, t•'m•,'' 8 deputy 6aid. deputies say they have singled Uie leg1sl<1 Lure f1rsl should llepublicans on the c:on1millee ··the three are all the same out three suspects in the · balaiicc the budget a n d voted to get the bill to the age as the composite drawmg. slaying ()f two persons and 't · Plocer determine how mueh is needed floor. The suspects aren in wounding of three othe rs at a c nt but they are flilill in for welfare and Mcd1-Cnl "\\le all knew when we were ou y, l onely Bear R iver the area." rel'JS1ons before voting more putting it together that 1\ <"'---"='-----"'--~ campground. Release of the drawing of a mnney for education. would havr about a $Z50 Sally Banana s An arrest is expected this grey-haired, middleaged man ·\~·t' ean't continue to spend milllon price tag," said R II I week, deputies said. No other wearing glasses unleashed a rnoney 1f ,,·e 've already got a Greene "The committee has ea Y 5 • • • new developments we re flood of reports sinct thr. deficit of $;\Of! million," said taken the pos1t1on that this 1s Bananas, That Is reported Sund ay in Placer and campground killings t.1onday the Tracy lawmaker. ,,_::ho~w::._:m:u:c~·h~e~d~u~co:t:••:n~n:e~c:d~e<l:·_"__c,============'_:N~e~'~':d:a~eo:::'.'.u:n~ti~es:· _____ _::n~;g".h~t.:..:'.dep'.:'.:u:t;:e:•~oo=led::_. --- The ?.ssembly had set today for special action on a n1easure grantn1g schools S2Jl.J u111J1on 1n new funds. But ~1onagan said the $250 million piled on top of the 5465 mdlion budget deficit would leave ver} little for other forms of lax relier. '"There is no \vay that an}one could reasonably vote for it at this lime,'' said Monagan. "I WMI them IDcmocrats\ to resolve the S465 1n illion question first " !-le said the legislature also inust consider the costs of Medi-Cat and w e I f a r e revisions before deciding how much could be added lo schools. But Assemblyman Leroy f; reene iD-Sacramcntol, Shag carpet sale. ,. Save 16°/o ! ' Pillow talk .:5 I ~49 t a e 1-i.yd. R"9-I.It. You save 16%. Foat cuddling 'Heire3s' 'hag a dds warmth ta onv room. Nylon pile is s-turdv and long wearing. R.esi311 stains, cleon1 easily. 11 decorator colors. Save$100 on50sq. yds. Bring in yortJr floor ~osurtl'M9"" for a no-obligation corp et es&ftofe. ln!foJlohon ova;l.ab1e We 're 'Personal Touch' pillows. We're filled with soft, comfy ..,.,,,.,5'.Dacron • polyester. if nteded. Choose us in Soft, Medium, or Firm. He1 e are the p illows 10 please every member oJ the family. Three sizes. lh1 ee degrees o! t11mnc ss, so yo u can pick ;us! the righl one ror each s leeping personality. Penn· Presl Collon cover w ith nylon ;zipper. F1Ue d w•lh Dacron"" ootyeslet lrberf1ll w11h foam co1e tor added durablhty. Slandard size Ouecn 20~30" enne1f1 CHARL.t: 1 H~ VAL-UC:.:. A• YOUR LOCAL PENft..E:Y STORE I Do it yourself and SAVE! 59E~day 63. 72 buys enough tile to cover a 9x12ftoor. Woll-10-woU 1ho9 w11ho,•I ( o I , •ns!o!lot1on. Corpe! tol es mo ~I! •1 eosy. Nylon pilt. Foorn bockirig wi!h non.c urli ng self. adhesive. 12'"x 12" sile tile!. Choose l•orri 8 Tri-tone colors , Sale~ Reg.UL You scrw 16'}{., lvxuriou• ->fl""O 8ree2e' shog wilh the new look of pririted polterns. Continuous filorntnt l'lylon pile gives long life, cleans @osily. B mvhi-lone color!. Save $55on5Qsq. yds. -11.nne'I• .:>hop Sunday noon to 5 p .m. at these Penney stores For c•rpe+ estim•te ce 11 todey: FASHION ISLAND. Newport Center lb'4'4-2l1J l HUNTINGTON CE NTER, Huntington 8f!a ch 1892-7771 l Buy it en Penney1 Time Peyment Plen BAND CONCERT TONIGHT 9 P.M. AT FASHION ISLAND • -----• ui·" .~ r~ .. -• ___ ....;:::= ·---.. l Conviction In Beating Confir111ed Ari.'AHEl~l -A11 appellate cou rt h11~ upheld the cnn· viction of an Anaheim man 1o1·ho v.·as l'iU('{'Cssful!y pro· secuted for what arrt•s!in~ of- ficers said wa'I the sava~e beating and burnini.; o/ his 13. 1non1h-0ld snn Justice Rnbcrt C<1rr!nrr"s wr1ttrn opinion for thP FfJurt.h D istrict Court of ApfX'<1ls eon- firnis the st<"J.C pri.son lcrrn 11[ one to 10 yPars handrd Bobby L.l'on Jackson, 2.1, af1rr a Superior Cf•Urt j11r,v lnal ;ind dism1.'lscs ::il1urnc.v Hon Steelman's argumen: !h11t a doctor's tcstunnnv during !he trial \\'as prr1udic1al lo !us clirnt 111e phvs1c1an. re11t.'w1ng f'V1dcncc that l1ll!c Dc1vut !'.'.ric J;ick.~on h;id first and sccnnrl degreP burns over 2.1 pciccnt nf his body, t11r) fri'::turrd rnrrarms, a d1~l('ndt1d ab- domen wh1l'h indl<':.tlrd injury ln llle J1\'er. !1•.i) broken ribs anti a hlood riot nn the brain. comn1entcd that rlen1t't1Ls nf the "battered child syndrnrnc" were revela n1 to the case. Hea lt h Ai1le ~turl y on Tap ~ANT A ANA -A proposal by county Bo a rd of Supervisors Cha1rm;in Robert Rat11n tn .spend $100.flllO for a consultant to s1ud~· the cnun- ly"s health care progr;ims ""Ill have to take its chances "'ith (lthcr budget ite1ns. Board members ha1·r votrr1 In includr j)(JSS1b!e lundlllJ: of the proj ect in policy con - .<.idcrations :>J budget hearings beginning July 22. ..... -.-· .-.--,.. --- For the B i 1•t l 1s JU>jE 1• (•I •nn '''' M4rA••nur Pn.,••• 11 1 c_,11, V"I• T ... on. ~•n C''"'""'"• LEGAi. NOT ICE I'" 10"6 l'"!C11flOUS IUSINE~~ N ... ME ~l A TE,..ENT n .. 1.,110"'""" n•non• are an .. og hu•lt ~•• .. 0 II RE>l!AL~. ]\I No N!WPOrl 11vrl . N•,,,~•t B~,.,~. c~111_ l(•nG C.oo~•• Jt. !1>11" Eav•w•'"' Lr;., 1-<unlonglon le.>tn. C1lil l~" huolnfU !~ b•!ng condu~1"9 b• '" l"O•••IJ11~I !(onq C<'JOO••. Jr Thi• ''"t•m•M <1,.d ''"'n th• Cf,u•!v Cl•'' rl Or•nq• Counlv nn j,.,. I. 1011 Bv 'l•••'IV J M•ddnw. O•oulv Cou~•v Cl•'' Pu~"'""~ l"l••~a• (ol•I O•llv l'dn• Julv I. 1). I?, 71 1•11 1''1 11 " LEGAL NOTICE F IO~t F ICT H !OUS IUSINE•~ NAM E Sl,O,l ~MENl th• '"'""''"" ~•"ons 8•• IJo•ro ti"""''' Beacon Bav ·' Fence F cu<l Suit Loon1 ~ S'\;'\TA A~A -A feud over a h·nce that d1\•tdcs t"·n Re<.":"nn Bay homes in i\c" JXlr! Beach will bnng the pr(")J)Crtr owners into Orani:e Counly Superior l:ourt .ltlh '.!fi fnr Judgr J. E T. !\·,-.rt n, l!'l''s views on the disputr. J~Hlge Rutter h:is ~rantrd a lc111porary rcs!ra1n1ng nrrlrr which prevents .JeHn and R:ilph F.ric::;nn, 939 r-:n1rralrl B<ly. Laguna BrReh,.. from rlcs1roying thf' right-f()(l[ "'all thal srparatcs their property :>J 14 Beacon Bt1y fro1n the hnn1r of Virginisi ;ind Ray r:111ott, J.1 Reacon Bil.I The F:!liolts slate 1n their C"nn1pl111nt !ha! the Ericsons. \\'ho are rcmodel!in_g the pro- JH'r1.v next door h II Ve thfe<ilC'nCrl to ren101·e lhe 25- ye<ir-i!ld 1\all. lf the \Vall 1s replaced. the E:lliolts pninl nu!. 11 can only be ~ubstituted h.;· a s1x·f()(I\ structure under c1!y he1.i:ht la\\"S lh<it h11\"e bern passed subsequent-!n (·nn.'itruction Of the exisling "'<JI. R ecord J UN( ll M• on!i Mr~ O~«>< Jo•epn J .. JI VII E'plnOLI. 8•1<n. l>l>v. JUl Y l (lurliwnrl~. CIP•>lflllO. M• •~d .... ,, 11-<MrlQ PM<'a"''· \llA '"'•<•end1, Son Cl•m•Me a•" Mr •nd Mn l(enn•ll• 11.lcn&r<! !-<Al], $" W B••n•rd. Ca>1A M.-~. !IO• Mt one! "''~· Mocno•l Foorl<•ld O"''"'· 'IQ w M•roull•, Son Clemen,.. !IOy JUlY 1 A\, •ru1 Y.n O•vld M •>w••I '1nl.,., .. lo•l! El Mar Orovr, M•>• o" "'''II' !I•'' Mt •~d M". P•I•~ Hor•v Vo• l'l V•• Mon••<IO. ~An Cl•m•ni. qotl M• "<Ill M" Jo\epl\ Tl><>"'"' WMIJ J• 1o1n C&ll• E• 1,.,. G• .. nO• q«I Mt """ M" j""''' M<O<lnal~. 1folll An<1•111,,o c_,,. M"\'0" V•rio, ])Oy J\JL Y l IJ• •n~ M" i:::c~'"'' W•vn• w•,oM ?}tin L• (•~"" D""" l'nln•. ""' N"·• •n~ M" Mt<J"•I ~••:f•ra. ill'll I:.,, g;.,,, S~n hiAn C•l>"lr•no, ft"• JULY I /.I'• •nd M<~ Jnnn l>Y<"'"• l•"''""· ;Mn~ C•I'• Alm on1•. C"o•1•r•no ~•M~ Q''I LE(;,\L NOTICE F "lln FICT!llOU\ BU\1 '-IE~S N<tME ST,O,TEMEf<l lo• ln''""'"g <ttl\On '\ <101n<t ~""""" ME~A Vlll~G( llQ•/Ol!. 1~11 El "E ~11>(1 !;!l Mt,!;!ROC! VFlEltlNAPy (~m'""· c ..... M••• t<O\P•T AL, •n M•>• O• Cnll• ,....,. Con•l~n!·n• ~·n•Mo" 1!111 Lo l ''" D• I)•""" P Btrwn, !'Ill <>tc·f,{ l•n•. M•!"f"' V••t<\ ~· l u••,n T~I, bu.,nU• 1, ""'"" rnnautt•a b~ •<> T~" nu<in••S " b••"<> c~nQ.,<'l'll hv An fndivolJu•I l<>D,VJIJU~I c.r~-,l~M'<" Sln!•lc• ,.,.,,~., r l'•nwn n v ~· Th'' ~,~, .. ,.,..,1 fll•n ""'" •~· r"''"'" l n., """"'"' '"•~ *''~ lh• cn.,~•v Cl••I "' nr•n•r Cnunl• on j.,1. 1. HI! '(I•••,., (")·&~Of(..,,·~•• nn J• '• ~ llH 6v lh vnlV J ¥•11dO• D•ourv C""n!\ !Iv 6""''' J. M~onn• Dfotl!Y (n•·•IV c1 .. • l••" P•,n• .h•~ <""••••O• (n~1• O•·' <'·•nl I Pull" "'n f)o~,.,,._ {n0<1 O• v r,,.,, Ju•• \ 1, I ~ .• 1. 111! ll~i 11 Jul, 1; 11. l6 •n;J ;...,~~" /, l~tl J'IG< 11 Dent/a l\'otices (,O,MP /\U{l'o, L~ooin~ Hiii • ""'" "' o•••·· 1~1¥ p,n•rr ~ Cu••o ilQe •O ~f 1r(ll C•rd I• 1~11 S'"'""~~ I'• "'"'· ltU ,., .• , L.-n•. (M'" Mo"° 0 .. f e< OH lft J"" """'" l!o"''• N<N Yo•>. n•nn•-· fr• .,I I' 1911 ,urwoved b• .,.,._ Ln•1, "'"• 1-<11onl•" r••"' Ynr~. ni.r~•. !.vlv" Qorn r • .,,. ~•"oMor, Of!bbl• nin•~o<. M" (l"•nao ~IO'•d• Gr••• ~.ng .. , g,n Onrn•n• Poo• S•n G•b•~ hroth~" "'""'· N•" Je"''" M•• ~nn• '"''" It '""'"· nl '..<in G8b"tl, gtotl(lo•ren••· ~o«no V•!I•~ N•W "n•> '''" •J, M• And Mr\ Wllloorn F•~!Of. !1n G•n lor,a•v l7 N...,n. P•<I'•' V••w Cn.-o., •••I '"'""''· W«l""'~••. 10 AM Bo•I lhn•aw•~ '"""'I !n!or""'"' D"'" 1-<lt11 M•m<>•••I P•r•. w>.1n1., F•"'"' ,., •. """ •n"'" .... ~in9 ta m••• """'""'' •Ontd hu!"'"'' oloo"• '""'"~u·• •o '"• C~dd'""' Hr ~liety, Btll B•a~d"'"' Mn"~•rv, Olr .. IOt>. Fa trt • (••nl Ln~ ,flifr l71 IC!" ~1 .• H""'"'" t~n1..., Bo~r" 01t1 n! d••I~, Jul• "· 1911 Su•v•vlll lrf totnrr, L••l1 J "•1· ,.,, mo1nor. l!obl"'• Sl>H'I hrolt.o•. lnren F•''"" Suvke•. f0<11~, ..,.,o,.,,••· l <>M. Pe..., f1mllv Colunlal Funot-1 •n•.-m•ot P•t<"~ Vo•W M•mnt1"' P••- PbcihC Vl•w Martu•••· Q1rot10" GOODM .o.N I~"'"~'" T GOOl!m•n ?Ill (n"•o•, 0"••, fQ«• Mo,., 0••• M n••1n. '"'' I~. ,.II >•tr•'''" hv •nn. Ir.en r.nnO m•n. ~t.O<I• l!IAnd. r10•0 fr·•~~!. M< •"" M•' """"' •!"'"'· C.n•i• 1'~··•· <"!Onnt•I '"'""''-Wiii n• hri~ l""~oY )ll<• ?(), 11 ,0,,M Sn••••·-L•a•1n• ~••1 0 Cnoorl lnto•rn•nl, l'•io1•( Vl•w M•mM ••I P•r• ~"•"« La9U"I Be•c~ Mn"" Gl!EEHE M~rY G•,...n•, 1191 I•, <ti 111 S! J•m•< LM P•1ce. ~ .... oor! Be•r" D•"• o• o1r•'"- ____ =io_ __ _: _ __;:_. __ 1 lu!v 11. 1911 ~<••••••d 1>• •-..n """""'"" 1· l•rO•,. Mul~•uo ~not E\lell• G"n•r. I "'"'oort Bt•<"' •o". Il l••• G·•e", L• aun• P.e•cno ••••" G'"""'h•le""' ''"' l aro•l-or•~otcnu~ron ~"'"•te• Wed"••~•V ,.,,,,,.1 A F•lf0MAN f'.ot'dtn•n. 1!1S-C ...... . ' I' ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCl.JFF MORTUA RY 427 I::. 17tb St.. Costa i\tf!l&a 14G-48U • BALTZ l\tORTUAJlfE.S Corona del Mar 67:1-!4$0 l'G,.c•l•nd Mema•••I P•r-. cn.,•oo 11•11 Bt~Hlw•v "'"'"'"'"· Forw••dona Oot...: IOr•. 14AASE ~'"'""(~ H•••! l~l1~ Y1Howwoorl Ir ..,,,.. O•" o< a••'"• Ju+v "· 1t71. 'u• vl"M bv •nn. w .-11 ... """'"' •"d "••~ o••nd<M•n•f" S•tvlr.,. •<Ill••· M~"""'"· 10 JO •'I'. W••lclll1 C"•n•I, w"" D•v Costa Mr1a 646-2~24 • D•• G••V 0111r1a11na. '"''"''""'· Do·~ H'"' M•morl•I P•ro W••lf"f! C~•<>f'I BELL BROADWAY Ma•'"•'• A""·•!1•,, O"•''"'' I JENl(!'-IS i\10RTUA RY I D"'(~I ~ )'""'"' l•ll'l r-.n~" L••· J JO Broadway, Costa i\1csa 1•rn, O•"• Poi"' oa1• M a•••~. ·"•'• LI 8•3433 111. 1q11 s,,,v._.,, ~· "'"" M•"'· ""'" M•" N•'•li. J•n~'"'' l"no ~••<h FV • """' .. rv<c•• w·tl .,. h•ltl Tu••~·•• CORMlcK LAGUNA Jvlv "1, 7 PM, In th• Ch•n•I o• '"" fl.1C • C~•l'l't<, ln911wOD<I P••~ C•m•'"'" ~"•'· BEACH MORTUARY 11r L•aun1 tte•<" f'MJ••u••v, 01'1<10 ... 1715 l:.lpna Canyon Rd. ' Kl!M" ltONf'I W, 11:...,,.,. A~ ,., (If )"!~ r.1 494·~415 11ron••, C.n•I• ¥•••-0.1~ nl df•lll, Jply • 11. 1911 , S1irv•vl'll l\y '"'""· An• ~ O:•m•. ll•uoMor, G'"';" Ao, l(l)f"llf• PACIFIC VTEW S•••• ·~· on• a••nOd•uolll•1: ,, ...... 'IEMOR[AL PARK I M"I.. Dotlf A""llll>ft. N•Wl>Gt! PA~<JI: · Mrt ,.,..,Ill\ l(••••n Slll•!l!A. ll!tl• l!lv~· Cemelery l\1ortuary "'""'" •"•'•'•an b• ••mllv. 11.11, co,1• Cha""'I M•t• Ck•<>1i. """o"" A"!I Mona•• •.i 1·~ Y•I• ,.,1 .. m~nl. l tot>•d•v. "•t<l!t VI•• 3500 Pa<'iflc View Or!ve- 1 ,,.._,,,, .. , ""'~ 8a•n to,oa Mft• Mo<· Newport l\each. Callfnniia tv••v, 01rK•o•~. llL[lll '44-!700 (,">"• It-~· l(•••n l•I'! Fl Maf D•I••· e /,01""'" V••in O•I• n• ll•••h Jul• 1•. l•fl Su•v•vM llv Ni•b•'HI. n•nl: mnr,.,. •. PEEK FAMn.Y 11..,,. W"'•lo•. Moaml F •~•·tl•: 1•1ter1, COLONIAL F'UNERAL L"'• O.snr•• •M II•• Full•• bo"' nl .,. Ml•"'' ierylc••. 100.v, >.lo"CI~•. l "'-" OOl\f11o n•"!•r Vl•w Cn•o•I. '"'"'"'•"' l>ot•li( 7111 &la.a Ave. Vl•w Mtrnd•·•l P••~. P1>t•ll< VI ... !Jto• l\'eslmla1lH 193-UU 11"''"· 0"'""10·~fT EITION • l •I• [ ... "el'•\11!'1. Wl P•t!llC Plat•· S'tlT-'10RTUARY l""• """'" o.i. 01 "'"""' Jvt• 11 I 11 '' l• "1t11 \u••1YO<f II• \<IA. J•~" I" ""•"""• m i\1 1'11n St. rc.r•••" b•n'll•r. Jo•n H••1••·· w.,, .... 53'"'139 w1.,,,,.,.1n: '""" 0••01Vlllio"" ~ •• .,.1,., I Tu@<d ,v. 1 .,.. P•(illr VI!"' (II•""' Jlanlington Bud! l!'••~l"oo<\•'l"f, ""''"C viow ,., • ..,~.101 '-------------~ P••k. P •c1l1c Vlf!W Mortu•••, ()l•t c•o•1 • _D4/LY ~9 Co u nty Board Delays Book Ruling Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH SANT' A ANA -A decision by the Orange-Counly School board tn accept gift.~ of six book Ulles has been deferred until !he September meeting of trustees 01er the objection of nr. nale Ra llison. The Santa Ana denhst who has been at lhe center of the book approval controversy u1 recent weeks, u r g e d a1·- c·er1<1nce of thl'f'f' hooks he had 0Hcre1t. anrt three he 11.'as rrescnllng as g1fls of the San- ta 1\na Register newspaper. A ~ s 1.starll Suj)C'rintendent Roher! B. S1ncla1r noted the books were undergoing the rnon Sense"' by i\tanrung charge Ula! a OOOk about Dr . pohtir11I lf'nn1ni:;s nf ~11hJf't"I' usual re1•iew proceSj appli'11 Johnson. l\.1artin Luther King was of l>ociks were not the pnlvJocr 1.o any gilt l.-0 the neparlmeni The book! presented by unsuitable for usr by studentl'l of school trustees. of l::ducallon. Halhson as Jolts from lhe in juventlf' dt>ten11nn schools • Jt i~ important that \ou Rtglstt:r iocludf' "The Law ' because" King · · , was a t•orn · presenl ;a dtl"C'r~1tv of OO:ik~ Superintendent Ho 0 er t h~ Frederick Bast1at. '"The n1uru st." for u::.e by 1·h1ldn:n \ll;it v1.11 With More Comfort T hey know • l1t'l'llUrf! lldh"'ive t•ll h1 !0. F.\s"l'•:•:Tll" Po•dtr fl ,,., d,.rllu•~, • 1 .. ncfr, llcm .. r. 1t-r•rl1er holiJ \ou lf'O'l 111or• rouilortahlt> .•• h&l rnnr,. 11n111r•Llv, W h)' worry•(;,.~ ~·\<:•r i:;t:Tll 0fnturr Arlhf!,.1Ve 1•,,.,1J«r. Prnntr~~ tl•1t tit llrr es.Yn- ''"' '" hr•l!h. ~e your dt11 tia,, re~ulllrly, Peterson ~ugi,;rsterl lhat due 10 Mn1nspring of II u nt a n (;f'orge 0 . Robert.~. director educate," Hobcrts ~ a 1 d the \"atat1on srhedule of the Pro~ress" hy lll'nry Wea\er of the liC lrvu1e program 111 '"l 'nihH• fear of tspos11r t• 10 boarr1 and the lihrarian ~·ho ts And '"Tl1e <:ud of The companttve culture. defendPtl thought 1s unwarr:1nlrd and Ir -----='--===-"-'"'-, re\·1ew1og the book s for ac· Machine"' by Isabel Paler~nn . King nollng, "The fa cts of this your debate aga in~~ ecrl<1111 ceptab1!11y, a rccom mrndation Rallison has urged approva l man's life would indicate the books 1s unn('cessary. enu!d not he made until the of lhe girts since the ti tles chtirge he was a Com rnunist 1s "Your energies ~upervis1ng SC'plen11>er rneeiing date. would help to offset !he not so." thl' edu<'a tional systl'r11 ou_chl llall1son's .i:if1.~ In lhe county "libe ral tcnctcne1es" of other Hoberts urged tllc Unard '"to nut t11 be cln11rlrd h \ intludc "A Puppet No J\1!)rr" titles ownl.'r1 by the county conside r lhe rarn1ficat1ons of d1 sf·11:.:.1oris nr v.h;i1 <'o111 h.1' Tony l\emeny, "It's Very schools librarv. statement.~ !ha! are rnarll' thaL 1nun1srn anrf c;ip1!rtl~n1 :irr Simple'' by Alan Stani: 11nr! r.1ean"·h1le, ·the board heard 111al1gn 1ndivirlua1.~·· and SllJ:· !hr Black LCJ repre~nlall\t' KIDS LIKE UNCLE LEN "('.olor. Cntnrnunism anti l"on1-repercussions fron1 R11Jl1snn's ges!ed that cons](terations or said. ~~~~~~~~~---'----'---'-'-~~--=--....::...__:____:____:____:__~~~~~~-'================ Our colorful white event . All Penneys sheets on sale. Starring no-iron Penn-Prest. Li mited ti me only ! Penn-Prest!l percale white aheels 50-i. poly11ler/50% combed ootton ~,,.,, tlal or lla<.•a-!11 c-o!tom, reg 2 'J:l. .. ................. now 227 r11U !1a1 01 El;1~la·!•~ bo1tom. reg 3.99 ..... now 3.27 I' 110 .... ca~es. 1eg. 2 lor 2.0'l.. ..now 2 for 1.67 aue~., llM or E.lasta·l1t boltom. reg. 6 !?9. now !i.73 Ou een p t1ow tases. 1eg. 2 !or 3.09 ... now 2 lot 2.53 ~ ng i1<1! nr flast a·' t bo!lorn r"''l· 8 99 now 7 37 ""ng pillON cases. reg. 2 tor 3 3) .... now 2 101 2.78 Pe n n-P r est ~ bleached mus lln 50•;. poly11te1/S0°/o cotton ~ llat or Ela;;•a·l•I 1'')11<.irn, reg 2 39 .. 1 ss i ,.11 !tat nr Etasla·li! hotlom. reg 2 99 .. now ' 18 t:.t ~-'"9 ;>' • 1 F" now 2 lor 1.,H -,,l':ide• bleached cotton muslin 1JJ tourit • / n toal !l" t 1 •a !11 1·0"1, 1eg 1 !.-~ "'" 143 11~' o• El ~o,•a.t 1 bo"O"' re i ~ ;m 11nw 1 ~7 •1 A·' •c~ ? 'r· 1 '·'• now ? to• 88c ' ""'"pillows arf' p r1c.rd ::,o low vou can allord to buy txtrris 1esrl1ent poly~stt>r 11ll1ng, rolton t1r.k•nq. Standa1d $11". 2 •o• 3aa Comtortable 1oam latex tilled pillows va lue priced. Convenient Penn-Pre<;!" r . 11•ester/co t1o n zip-oft cover. S1andard size. l~-· ~___, 11----- ((--P-=~ ennelfJ The values are here every day. Pen n-Prest" muslin fashion colors 50% poly1!ter/SO% co"on .............. no w 2a2 Twon !tat Of E l'l<;la·!•I bo!lom, reg. 2 93, .............. . Full Hal or [l..i<.ta·1•: bntto•'l. reg. 3 93 ................ now 3.JZ Pd•nw t i"e-.. •~Q 2 tr>1 :' ~i -···now 2 lor 2.02 Ouep11 t1at or E:+w.;.i., 1t 1•0•1,,m. rf9. 6 49, ............ now !i.32 Ou"t'n P•llow casr•. '"'l ;> 101 ;' fl:O . ······-l'IOW 2 tor 2.37 ~· r'l'l llat or l l~<.ta-:·· hn•.,1"1. 1rq 8 49, ............... l'IOW &.96 ~ ng p.110 11 c.a~"·· '''l 2 l••r J 13 ...... ,. ....... now 2 tor 2.62 Penn-Prestn muslin Blossom Boutiq ue prints i w" llat or L .. 1,.,1 I \ l'nlln1n, te<.J.: :J'.I. Full t1a1 01 l lilsta-!,t ho11om, 1eg. 3 '.lJ, ................ f\OW 3,32 p ,110·"' L .t .e«, '"'l. :' i!'lt .' >\J, .•. .. . .............. l'low 2.02 Oto•"'" ti"! or I !i.< 1a l·t botrnr1. rr1. 6 ·lJ ............ now 5,.JZ O··•""''' pollo-N {A~"'·· '"1 :' ror: a:• ...... .now 2 tor 2.37 l\•11g tl;il or Ll.l>!a ' ' hO"'".lm. 1• 1J 8 49 ................ now e.91 K•ng pillow ca:!.es, 1e3_ 2 lor 313-....... -... now 2 for 2.82 renn-Prest'.l muslin 'OJ.Jotone' stripes 60% polye11er/50% canon ;~"~~'.',;; ';'"~·'.''.'. .......................... "'. 2a2 I 1111 !lat or LIA;t.l·I•! boll om. reg_ 3.99,. ........ ,. now 3.32 F'1Jlow ca~"S. '"9-2 tor? 4'l .... ,. ............. n ow 2 lor 2.02 Oue,.n llat cir l:l<1sl'1·l1t bo!tom, 1eg. 6.49 .. ., .... now 1.32 1<1n11 !l ~t ()1 E13Sl <t-I •! bo!1ol'\1. 1eg, 8.49 ........... l'IOW 8.95 King pillow ca!oeS, reg. '2 lor 3.19,.-....... JIOW 2 lor 2.fi2 nrrJ La bel' pillows, Oacrone> p o1ye~ter tilling. polyester col!on cover in blue stripe. Standard size: Fu ll 5ss CHA RGE THESE V ALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE! • .. ----• , ... ,~ ..... ~ • --• ---... JO DAILY PILOT Moncby, Jul)' l,, 1971 DA's Riled Delinquent Dads Facing Crackdow11 By T0.\1 BA.RLl-:Y 01 lflt D•UJ P'lle! l h lf SANTA ANA -"O~ratlon Delinquent Falhers" 1n Los Angeles County has been duly notrd 1n Orilnge County and chdd !>Upport evaders 1n this area may soon be the targrts of il similar crackdown. '"\\le inay not carry our sweep to Lhe lenglhs that they did in Los Angf'l<'s County ."' t-onunenl<'d IJ1·put.\ J)istr1et A!tnrne\ fh rluird Parslo\\ of Orange -Coun1y·s fanuly !lltP- p<irt d1\"is1on. •·uu1 we·rl' th1nk1n~ ol picking out a few of our had apples :ind St'cing if " sllrf jail term "'on ' t inrluence a lot of olher lathers 11 ho think arrrars 111 chi ld sup- por t p<n n1cnts are a trivial 111attcr " Lo~ A n g c 1 es authorities ~wepl 266 ;1llegcd evaders of c·h1ld su pport payment.II into I.heir net two wee~ ago in the biggest such crackdown in the area's h istory. Some defendants have drawn jail terms and many others have been placed on stiff financial agreements with a "pay or jail" provision. ..lrs never been really necessary for us to do lhls." Parslow said. "Ours is a year· round fffort and while lt may not be as spt>ctacular we lhink it"s ~n pretty succe.<;sful ·· Pars]O\\'·s office named 501 defendants in child support ac- tions for the month of June and 331 of the men named \rerl' targets or criminal com- plaints. "'Vi'e look on our program as pretly successful, but it err· tainly wouldn't hurt to pull in a few of the hard core of- fenders." Parslow said. "It 's sornething we're \\'Orking on and we may "'ell be able lo take so1ne action on those lines in the next couple of months." Parslo111 belie1'cs thal 1nuch of the motivatlun behind the Los Angeles t'ounty sweep ..:amc from v.·omen's organiza- tions ''v.•ho /Jaye been really stepping up the pressure on lhe districi attorney's office. ··Y.1e·ve had the san1e urging from Orange County 1vornen"s groups. but we've got along \Vith them pretty y,·ell." he said. ..V.'e're as anxious as they are to nail working fathers "·ho don't contribute to child support and I lhink the ladies who come to sec rne about it recognize this." .. These "'umen·s organiza- tions are getting their point e1cross in Sacramento." he said ... ~fanv of our legisla tors are being t-0Jd in no uncertain terms that thl' mother who i~ rnrced to "'ork to replace the chlld suppor! pron1ised by her rormer spouse is getting a raw deal." 400 Expelled for Drugs Lcl'wson Re-elected Tu UC/ Unit By GEORGE LEI.DAL 01 lfl• DeUJ P'llel Sle l1 SA1'ITA A.r-;A -High schools in Orange County expelled 400 students for drug abuse viola- lLons during \hi' 1970-71 school )Car. the Orange Counly Scho- ol Board was told. Herb Brayer, director of the County srhools o£fice·s Drug Abu se .l:.:duL.ation progra1n, said the nun1ber of expelled studrnts in Orange County .. sl1011cd the continuing need for such a special prograrn '' Brayer also showed eharts Tliur.!iday 111dicaling arrests on drug charges \\'ere continuing In climb indicating nu .. ab:>.tr1nent'' in the rlrug use 1UVINI::-John B Lawson, prnbleni. executive l"ice president of the the drug abuse slalislics, but told the board about the pr1r gram which was launched J an, \, with a one-year. $51,000 l\fiHll. The county provided $20.000 Jn personnel St'rvi<'es ;ind $31 ,500 came fro1n the California Council on Cr1mlnal Justice. Brayer said the first six mon\hs of the countywide drug ;Jbuse education program had rf'sulted in contacts with a!l of the principal s 1n 27 of the 34 school districts in Orange Courity . Among the JO s c ho o I districts which are set te launch programs this ran. t~ t1nly ones along the Orange Coast are Founta in Valley, Ocean View Elementary, Hun - tington Beach High School and Laguna Beach U n 1 f I e d districts. Key to the 5u(·cess flf the program, the <"ounty school board was told, 1s I he establishment of I e at her training pro gr a 1n s, in- volvement or con1n1unity groups and tailoring of in- dividual progran1s su1l1ng the needs of participa!u1g districts ln late August. groups of from 20 to 25 ttacher.; in each di.stri ct will be 1n y,•orksbops on d!"ug abuse education, Brayer noted The thrust of Lhe countywide progran1 is detern1ined by 1 .... 0 groups which meet monthly "'Ith the center's staff . One 1s a sleering comn1itlee 1r1- volving representatives o f ea rh of the 34 school di.strict~ 1r1 Ur;1ngc County 'The other is <111 ;idvisory comn1itlee n1ade up or luctd. L'Ot111!y and ~late profes~1011;d agfncies including narcotics enforcement personnel Brayer said 1oda.v, the eon- !inuing prnblern of drug use h.v teens and subtcens 1s nul renecterl in arrest stat1s11c~ He said '"7;', percent or :<.ludc n1s caught using drugs are nol arresled. TWe yean ago tver\ one y,•as arrested, "'helber ~r not they were fir~t lime drug offenders ·· Brayer lold the board 1hfl u.~e uf drug~ bv youn~er students was 1nlTl'ilS1ng and 1hat educat11\!1 ;1! lhe kin· derga rten lcvrl ··1 ~ not ton soon " Thus. l11c n1aler1<1!s ol· fered by the i·ounty center for use by d1s1r1t'ts are geared for ;111 age le1•el" Brayer wus reluct<.1nt t(l reve ai tht• expuli;1on rates b~ school d1~lnt·t sir1ce the 1n- formal1on 1\'as given to him in l"Ollfidencc. lie noted the ll"il\"S different dislricts h;indle dru!: abuse ranging frofn eul nght L'Xpul:.11111 to gu1d.inre rnadr t·on1par1ons of 1 n cl 1 vi du a 1 d1str1cls n1('aninglrss. Philc<>-Ford Corp., Newport Of the 400 students expelled Be!lt:h, has been re..elrcted to in the county this past school _ =" _ t.:...:!::t:' a second tern1 as president or year. 78 were expelled froni Does More Than Help SnrlllK Attorney Heads Ne,v Irvine Citizen Unit the UC! Foundation. the four Tu stin L'nion l11gh JHVINE -Glen \Vood -fonned lo p!"OVJd(' Irvine Swelling Of Hem' orrho1"dal' . The UCl Foundotion is con1-School Di strict schoo ls. mansee of Irvine, has been residents with a rnt>an!; or oh- posed of reprrsentatives of 12 Brayer sa id 200 of the ex-elected rhairman of a ney,•ly tait1ing in£onna1 1un about arid "f'! D T J fi ti citizen support organizations re11ed students had attended organized citizens· grou p call-influencing the t1c1·c1oprnru1 01 \ .1SS1!,eS.. uel _ ~ _ n ec ~n at UC Irvine. 11 is charged srhools in districts along 1he cd Irv ine Ton1orrow, devoted the Cni1·rrs1ty regional patk \lsoCives Prompt,Temparary Reliel inMany 11·ilh enc our :1 gin g and Orange c; o as I . Hun11ngto11 10 i1npruvin'l, the quality of life and a planned network of b1cy - eoordinating pri vale supporl Bearh l!igh. l\1ewport-rvlesa in the Irv ine area. clc trails. Cases Irom Pain, Itching in Such Tissues... for the Irvine campus. Unified, 'fustin High, Laguna Attorney Woodrnansee said. r-.1embership in 1 r v l n e nOctors have founcl 'a .. l"l'mark} 'and ilcl1ini::~ in these t.illS'fte!I: Other officers for the l97l-72 Beach Unified and CapLstrano ''\Ve look forward to providing Tomorrow is open to all Irvine ably successful medicatio n that 'l't:sts by doctors p roved lhis f I Unified School Districts ac-an independent public forum residents over 18 ycar·s of age. actually helps 1;h1ink swl'"lling truP in mnnycaSf'"S. '-... isca year arc: cuunted for approximately for issues and opportunities ~tetnbership fee is $ l. of hf'morrhoidal tissues when i 'fh<'medicalionu!leefwas Prer>- -John tit. Rau, president uf half of the county e>pulsion ,,,11,.,,11 affect the q"ati·ty of ti·fo 1,05.11,,,,15 .. ,·shing f"•'lllC•' .10 infected and inflamed. And it aration H. And no prescription D "' t ·' · A '· u 1 1 ~ "' u -dot:• more. Jn many cases it is ncrded for Preparation H•-<'·Vlu nuustncs. Santa na , foe drug use tot at 1·0 '970-7!. · · " f i· t t '1 ' • 1n 11ur con1m un1ty. orma ion may con ac "rs. &:Ives retie( for houra !mm pair:t. Ointmcnt orauppot;itoriC5-,._. -George L. \Voodford Jr.,1 _~B~1~a~y~er'.._(ld~;d'_":no~t~c~l:abo~c:a~te'_"'on"__:S~t~u~dy"._~gl'.'~°"~P~''_:"'~''_~IJ':c;~n~g-P':"'·l~'o~1~, ~83~3~-1~03~6~·------'======================= president of Newport National Bank. Ney,·port Be<ich, second vi ce presidenL -Aubrey Horn of .Newport Bearh. secretary. -\Valier Burroughs, presi- dent of Orion Management Corp., Costa Mesa , treasurer. Briggs Na1ncs Newport Aide FULLERTON Mrs . Marion MacDonald of Newport Bearh hsts been appointed ad· n1inistrat ive assistNlt lo Assemblyman John V. Briggs, I R·F'ullerton I. She has been fhc lawmaker's secretary since 1968. Hurry limited quantities! Washer/dryer closeout! Save 38.90 ~fij:: on the pair -· Custom draperies at uncustomary prices. Save up to 1/3. Orig. 219.95. Penncrestaprogrammed washer. Six programmed wash settings. J water level selec- tions. White, coppertone, avocado or harvest gokf ..• color costs no more at Penneys. NOW $198 '' I , I [ I I I , I I 1 I ' ' fi Now you can have custom draperies at tremendous savings. Uo lo 1/3 off on a fabric collec tion that includes: open weave casuals. homespuns, antique satins, sheers and many more. Don 't pass up this chance to save on draperies made to your order. Our finest fabrication at regular low prices. ' Call collect (714) 523-6511 for our shop-at-home service, free. ~!!~· Decor1te now. Un Penneya time p1yment plan. -- '-t . .!_:_ -- Ortg. 209.95. Penncres ~lmperlal 17 table getting conYertlble dishwasher. Use a roll·away now, as a built·in laler. Maple culling board top, 3 level wash system, rinse agent dispenser. White, coppertone, avocado or harvest gold. NOW$178 Penncrest• Imperial lop loading dlah• washer. Orig. 189.95 ........... ,_NQW $158 Penncreste lmperlal convertible dish .. washer. Orig. 239.95 ---··--·· .. NOW S198 Penncreste Imperial undetcounter dish- washer. Orig. 209.95 ..... _, __ , •• NOW $168 Clock radio buys! Orig. 24.95. Penncre1te AM clock radio. Save 10.07! NOW 14.88 Orig. 33.95. Penncre1t• AM/FM clock radio. Save. 14.071 NOW 19.88 Air Conditioners PannctHte s,ooo aru alt __ . ____ $99 Penncrest9 18,000 BTU atr Cond!Uoner 218.88 l\nnelfl The values are here every day. Save 52.95 Ci'tg. 329.95 Penncre-1teaU channel 111>- lermodel color T.V. offers bright, beau- tiful viewing on an 18 inch screen mea--- sured diagonally! Walnut finish over the hardWOOd cabinet. NOW$277 Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at these Penney stores: Aveilab!e at tl'lese stores: BURBANK CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD CHULA VISTA COLLEGE GROVE DOWNEY FU LLERTON GRANADA HILLS• HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON PARK' LAKEWOOD LONG BEACH NEWPORT BEACH NORTH l/OLLVWOOD ORANGE .. THE CITY'' RtVCR SfDE TORRANCE VAN NUYS, Clock radio•, color TV:s and air conditioners •110 available at these stores: BUENA PARK WEST COVINA Clock radios, colc>r TV.'a also avallable at thet•·1lore1: COMPTON• INGLEWOOD Air condlUontrs also •..-.il9ble et U.... etores: SAN BERNARDINO-SAN FERNANDO Buy ft on Penooys timE" pa, 11 ' ·1-' _...,~_, -'""-"" ·----• ' ,;..r,;._..;.. ~-------... ~ - FASHION VALLEY-SAN DtEG() LOS Al TOS MONTCtAIR VENT URA \'1ESTCHESTl R •• •Not Dotn O!"! Sorioa,~ ' -- FAME -LESS FACES Hf\EN 6. SHAHE~ NATHAN MILlfR RA LJl'l1 C. OEAN$ Think You Do n't Know Them? You probaby don 't reco~niz:e a single name or face in this group and yet, if you're one of the DAILY PILOT'S very "Well informed editorial page readers, it is this talented team of wr iters which helps you keep informed. They write the Ed itori- al Re search Reports. Though their own ndmes don 't appear on the articles which are publishe d under the Ed itori al Research Reports heading, these are the real pros -diggers who go after all the backround facts which put today's top issues into perspective -without thought of seeking the fame that goes with the name when you 're a national colum ni,t. They're Your INFORMERS ' Yes, they could be your "informers ." It's features like Ed itorial Research Reports whic h make the DAILY PILOT much more +h•n ju•I the mo•I important hom etown newspa pe r available to resi dents elon9 the Orange Coast. The DAILY PILOT is the total package. It makes whatever happens in the world ''local news" and delivers it daily right to your home . Let this team of dedi- cated "informers " help you keep in formed. Reed Editorial Research Reports on the editori al page -and all the other informative special features ir'I other parts of the DAILY PILOT ";' ··-• . , Monday Jul y l'J 1q71 OAILV PILOT JJ Pregnant MomHon1e Builder 'Liz' Will Be Cos t ly to Repair ORLANDO, Fla. !AP} - Juanita Sizemore, a pregnant divorcee with four young children, couldn't afford to buy a house, so she decided to build one-by herself. She has a I ~-acre tract that her parent!'! gave her last spring for Mother's Day. Since then she's been pouring ct- ment. sawing lun1ber and nail- ing boards. Little more than the foun- dation is done, but Mrs. Sizemore. about 30. and her children ha\~ moved onto the property. Quarters. lernporarily, are an old car and nobody seems to mind . "It sounds k i n d nf grueson1c. I know ." said the dark-haired, pig-tailed mother. "But really, the kids 11re hav- ing a ball." HONG KONG (AP) -The once great luxury hoer Queen Elizabeth will cost twice AS much lo rcpall" and refurnish as it c01Jt to buy thirdhand, her owners said today. Shipping magnate C. Y. Tung bought the 83 ,OVO·ton vessel at auction 1 .. 11 Stp- ten1bcr for $3 .2 1ni!Hon after the previous owners. who tried to turn her into a tourist at- traction in Florida, v.·cnt bankrupl. !\I a news conference given by lsl2J1d Navigation Co .. the parent con1pany for Tung's group, it ""as stated that the cost of cnn\ ert1ng the lonnt'r 1>ndt' of the <.:unrad Lhr ... into a floating university and repair- ing her will top $6 million. C. C. Chou, supervising engineer (or Island Navigation and the man in charge of the big rel1!. said the cost uf refurbishing 10 be carried out o\·er to the next five months will probably be more than $4 million. director for the company, said when a.sked if Tung was belng ph1lanlhrop1c over the .ship that he did not think the magnate will make money on the deal. The ship, now sailing undt'r the name Seawise University-a name derived frorn Tung's initials of C. Y.- arrived in Hohg Kong earlier in the day after a 14,000-mile voyage from Port Everglades. Chou said the liner will be brot1ght up to slanduds re- quired by marine regulations over the next four n1onths in Hong Kong and a good deal of refurnishing will be earned out. There also will be CK· tensive engine room repairs. After that, he said. the Seawise University will go into drydock either in Japan or Singapore, depending on dock availability al the time , for further work which will take a month. Toys are sl·a11ered i,yith cooking u1rnsils and carpenter's tools Ol'er the shady lot. "We're trying to save money so we can build [he house." she said. On top of 1h;:it. he sc~d. the con1pany already has had 10 cCirry ou1 repairs in Port Ever g I ad es , Fla., and emergency boiler r o o rn repi!irs in Aruba follo\ving ;t breakdov"n at sea which cost S2 million. He sl\id the ship's cond1tion. laking into account she is 33 years old, is "quite good." It Liang, subman11ger of Island Navigation, predicted the vessel could last another 20 years if well maintained. J\1osl prev\ous estimates h<t\'e given her a far shorter futurr. A CHINESE COMMUNIST FISHING JUNK PASSES SEAWISE UNIVERSITY Former Queen Elii1b1th Arriv11 in Hong Kong for Conversion As for her building c~­ pcr!ise, '·Thf' library hris books of all kinds ahout buildin~ houses " s11id Mrs . Sizemore. Y. S. Kung , ma n a g i n g Kung. who traveled oo the liner during part of the her voyage from F'lotidF> In Hong Kong . said the refit will be "a stem to stern" operation "combining the art a n d culture of the East and West." "We plan to keep its present famous and o u ts tan d i n g fea tures .. , after the refit the Seawise University "'ill be ready to sail again as one of the world's greatest oce2~1 liners," he said. The crew for this ship will come from Hong Kon; and Formosa. Buy in July. Our freezer sale will save you cold cash. Save 21.95 " '···· Sale s19a Reg. 219.95 Penner••!" lmpe,11111 cu. IL chest f,eezer. 628 pound capaci1y, movable baSkets, 2 wall supported dividers. "power on"' warming light. White. 2vocado or harvcat gold ..• color costs no more 2t Penneys. Salt pricff efftcll•• through S1lurd1y. ennelfl The values are here eNery day. Sale $198 Reg. 219.95. Penncresl "' Cu1lom 15 cu. ft. upright lr1ez.er. 541 pound capacity , slide ou\ bulk storage basket, "power on" warnin g light. White, avocado or harvest gold.,. color costs no more at Penneys. P1nncrest• Custom 18 cu. ft. uptighl lr1ezer. Reg. 259.95, Sale 1238 Penncr••l" Cu1tom 20 cu. rt. upright freezer. Reg. 289.95, Sale 1258 Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m . at these Penney stores ---... --,...------ A•oil•ble at the .. 1lore.: FA SHION ISLAND , Newpod Center, HUNTIN GTON CENTER , Huntington Beach. Buy it on f'tnneys tim'e payment plan . . ---.....· ..... --1r..-1 -·-·-_. ,,· ~, -~--..-~ ~ --------_. I A -~-·-- ' , ' ' , ' , • • • • . •. ~ } ~ /. I .. DAILY PILDT Monday, J~ty 1~. }q71 Bevy of Beatities 1i1iss Mexlco, ri.·Iarle Lopez·Corzo is fo !lowed do\vn th~ ste_ps by M_iss Ireland. 1i1arie Hughes and Miss \Vales. Dawn Cater as they arrive 1n '111a1n1 Beach for ltiiss Universe Pageant. The ne\v queen will be cro\vned July 24. LA Mental Hospital A ids Foreigri-born Patients LOS ANGELES (AP\ - Officials at a incnlal health ecnter are trying ;in 111- trrnational approach for lhf' emotionally disturhcd thr.y take calls for help 111 lour languages. They've s!(lrtcd ~ 24·hour progran1 uf tT1sis c a \I a~sist<i nl'C wl\h 1ntr'fv11:wcr!' \1·ho speak Sp;1n1sh. J<1ri<1nesc. English and two d1cilccts of Chlnese-~lani.larin and Can- tonese. The idea behind t h ~ program. s;1y..; .Jack Shakcly. an official at the Res1h.1vcn Cornn1unit~· J\lental Htfll1h Cen1er here. is aid for lhe for rig n·born rrnot1on:ill_v disturbed v.·ho can·t explain their problems in English . "\\'hen .vou're fnghtened . alone. nerd help and run·1 i:on1n1un1ca1e. even a ~rn-~11 problem seems hugr ." tir sa.vs Kennet h S1ein. .rssoc1n1r clinic programs director at the tentrr put s II another \vay: ":\!any people have sufficient 1.·0111n1and of English for daily business or social use. but to 1·xprrss deep feelings th ey ncl'd to return to their native lorrguPs." Although the center opened In 196~ under a federal grant, the n1ult1-language program began onl_v about six wPeks ago . Shak~ly sa,vs. adding that "v.•e wa111ed to see if it worked bl'fore we publicized it.'' During the day, about ill rnultillngual professional staff n1em brrs arf on hand to lake ealls at the rlin1c. located near the heart of Los Angeles' Chinatown com1nunit,v. After 5:30 p.m .. the phone.~ are manned by the center's nurses Although the nurses ;ire not mu!tilin11:ual. they 're backed by about 10 unpairl vnlunleers ll'ho are. The volunlcers can be called at home and literally plugged in· to the problem at hand on a three-way conference ca 11 basis. "Mos! or the calls nO\\' come ln from families. but not many frorn the prospective patient hin1selL" Shakely said. "The families usually just want in- formation because so m ~ friend or family member is acting strangely or depress- ed ;" The volunteers. most t1f !hem in their early twenties. are recruited I h ro u gh ncv.·spaper or m a g a z in e advertising or by st a ff men1bers, ht says. One such volunteer i!; a Chinese-A1nerican. Ch a r 1 y Cheung, who says one problem the multilingual a pp roach helps overcome is a feeling of ~hame in "nld \'.'Orld" families v.·hen one or the family needs help. IMPORTANT MEETING FOR IN VESTORS SEEKING HIGHER INCOME Special Seminar ''8% Yields are Back'' 'J'hi~ is vour opportunity to learn more about bonds, 1~ow offering unuAually attractive yields when measured by historic s tandards. We'll al~o cliscuss the current. c hange in the yields of tax-exempt bonds which have re- turned to t.he 69V level. Our l nfnrmaf1.1,·e feflurP wi/Lfxplain: • f\1aturit.iefl, coupon rates, yields •· How n1unicipal l>onds tan cut your taxes • '!'he capital gains feature of bonds • How to select and purchase bonda Se/£ct a loca11on and lrmr heloiv (Jud call for rrservatio11$ at (714) 644·2292 TUESDAY, JULY 20-7:30 P.M. H1.1ntln1ton l••ch THURSDAY, JULY 12-2:00 P.M. Gard•n Grow• ShPar1011 BPec·h Jnn Tiu> Gr'PPnliriar 21112 Pftcific Co1'1s1 !lich11 ay Speaker. Scolt U'ltrrrnan 10:1.111 Ga1·ilrn Grro\·r Ol"d. Sflf'Akrr· l\it ~1, Tapplln THURSDAY, JULY 12-7:l0 P.M. N1'1¥poft IS•1ch T>.•11n Willrr & Co. :J~,Q Nr1-1·1l<lrt C•·n1rr Or. SpPakcr 6r)l'(> Lr!ll'!'1 ~n11 DEAN WITTER &: Co. INCORPORATED Mtmb1• N•w Yori!; Stocit f~change. l"'e NV A Has Publi~ Relations Quirk SAIGON (UPI) -The North Vietnamese Army has a public relations problem and the NVA newspaper, Quan Doi Nhan Dan ! People's Army Da ily), has taken note of the problem in a recent issue 1n language which rnight have originated in the Pentagon. People's Army said. "our army has developed flne tradi- tions and has constantly renecled its nature as a pe<.ip!e 's army. The great ma- jority of our cadres cind con1- mbatants have not only fought heroically and earned glorious n1erits, but have also proven to be good disciplinarians by constantly complying wilh the army's regulations and orders and wi!h slate laws and by respecting the people ... "Jluwevcr, in certain places at certain 1non1ents, there are a srnall nu mber of instructors and combatants who have relaxed dtscipline. "Outside military billets, there still are soldiers who dress outlandishly. speak im- politely to others, behave lhein.sclves in an uncivilized rnanner and violate slate Jaws, disci pline and public sanitary regulations. ··Not only docs this erratic behavior bother the people, but it is something taken ad- vantage of by lhe bad eletnents as well." People's army saiP, "each combata11t, when he leaves his camp, must never forget that he is a people's army soldier. Whether his conduct, atlitude and deeds are exemplary or not will cause our people to form a good or bad impression of our army as a whole .. , .. Concerning the methods of educating and improving the sol diers' con du cl and behavior, many units have ... had soldiers review the 10 oaths of honor, the 12 rules of relations "'ith the people and the 10 'dos and don'ts' for soldiers when they are out of billets ••• ··ro obtain realistic, far- reaching results, the pro- paganda and educational task niust be closely related to the measures for enforcing discipline , •• "The assignn1ent of military pollce units to operate In the troop cantonment areas. the constant control and assess. ment of the situation. lhe prompt commendation of good men -good deeds examples, and the organization of the masses to crit icize and strug- gle against soldiers' erratic conduct and behavior will be simultaneously preventing bad phenomena and accelerating the improvement of soldier5' conduct and behavior." Two Classes In Organ Set Two cou rses in elementary and intern1ediate organ writ be offered at Orange Coas t Col!rge in the daytime thls fall. Registration v.·ill run Aug. 19-27 for new st ud ents. Persons wishing more ifl- formation should call 834-5735. You'll see real value at our furniture clearance 'El Royole' fomily room furniture, handsomely styled rn rugged e osy Cort vinyl with distressed dork ook finish over hardwood!. Cushion! of 5hredded polyure- thane loom. Pooulor $ponish look, Sofa in black, oli"e or gold. $219 Orig. $249 •..••. , . Now Love Seat in block, oli"e $169 or gold. Or;g, $199 .• Now Recliner in block, oli"e or $139 gold. Orig. $159 , ... Now Hi-bc)ckchair in block or $119 oli ... e. Orig. $139 ...•• Now Lo-back chair in ol;ve $109 or gold. Orig. $129 .•• Now Ottoman in blo ck or olive. $35 Orig. S45 . , .•...... Now Penneys furniture prices include delivery within local delivery area. All 3 Pieces for '11yon /c ofton <.,ovrr. Sofa, Love seat, Chair, Contemporary Tub chair. Seo• ond boc ~ cu1hioro' of Forlrel-h polyest•r wropped polvu•l'lhoro•. lro block or 0)1.,e. Orig. 11 ~9. Now Save$30 Boys' storage corner group: Uphol1tered 1ofo bose' on co1!ers, fit1ed to.,ers plu1 wedgt bol1- ter1, iroro er~pririg mottre1se1 arid t O•· ner toble. w;1h unroge. Save$40 French Provincial corner e;roup: Upholstered •ofo bose1, Verioille1 ihopl'd bolsters, innerspring moltresse1, onliqu• white corroer lo- bJe. 0 69.S329.Now $289 \ Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at these PE;!nneys Stores Avoilable at the following stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Center. HUNTINGTON CEN TER , Hunting ton Beach . Use Penney's Time Pa yment Plan . . --------·--·---..... ..,._.~----.; ----·--------, . ..._ . ..... -. ·"· • Four-legged Trarisport Even horses have to "·ail for stoplights. This signal is at Jamboree Road and Eastbluff Drive near Up- per Newport Bay in Newport Beach. It is the city's newest. ll s!O\\'S the horses down a bit, but also enakes for safe crossing or busy Jamboree Road. The $30.000 signal system is the fifth on Jamboree Road from Coast Highway to Palisades Road. Puppetee1· Pulls Stri11gs Near Pagea11t of Masters \Vhile hve n1odels re-create art masterpieces in the Pageant of the !\.!asters onstagc al Irvine Bo"'l in Laguna Beach, a new troupe of performers has taken over the boards al l he nearby f'oruru Theater. Puppeteer Tony Urbano and his col- orful stringed fr iends v.·ill be presenting da ily performances of their special Senior Citizens Plan Fall Trip Across Country The Southern California Senior Citizens Club is sponsoring a 37-day ··Fall Foliage Bus Tour" which wil! leave from Lo& Angeles in late ~pten1ber. The tour will lake passengers across the United Stales and Canada. Plaees \·isited ·will include '.\tamn1oth 1\{ountain and Reno in the U.S. and Banff. Ottawa, i\lontreal and Quebec in Canada. Alter cutting through Canada. the tour l'.'111 head through New York state, \\'ashinglon D.C .. the Great Smoky l'\1oun- tains in Tennessee, Arkansas, Oklahoma Citv. New Mexico, Arizona and back to California. The bus will be fully air conditioned 11nd has restrooms. Price of the trip includes al! lodgings at hG !el and motels and cost of insurance. J urther information on the tour i~ a\·ailable from Mrs. Grace C. Dehm, 5679 No. Sultana Ave ., Apt. 5, Ti?mple City, California 91780. (213) 285-5921. Supervisors Eye l\1cdi-cal Suit A proposal that Orange Caunty initiate 11 la"·suit to recover as much as $3.3 rnilhon withheld last December in Med1- Ca! cul~ by the state will be before the Board of Supervisors Tuesday. CQunly Counsel Adrian Kuyper said 1hat Sacramento Superior Court Judge \\'1ll1am A. Gallagher has ordered similar l'Utback payments to Sacramento, San l\.·latro and Alameda counties. Gallagher made a preliminary rul ing on !he issue June 2 and on J·.1ly 1 ordered the Slate [)epartment of Health Care Scrv1crs 10 reimburse all of 1he money \Vlthheld fr o111 th e three counties since Der . 15. 1970. Kuyper will rec11111111e~rl the~ .oran.ge Cnunty initiate a lawsuit or JOln with other countries in a corut action. Mesa Councilmen OK Stop Signs Stop signli have. been approved for ~ix Intersections by the Costa Mesa ~ty Council, but members gave !he red hght to a seventh proposal. The action involved declaring Royal Palm Drive to be a through street from Adams Avenue to Baker Str~t. thus permitting stop sign inslalla!ion. They will be al Ehn Avenue, Ponderosa Ave., ~1ioorca !)rive. Peppcrtree Lane, plus Primrose and ~1yr11eY:ood streets. II plea for 11 lour-way stop at Californ iai Street a11d Minnesota Avenue was re- jected in favor of pa inting 65 feet or curhs red to improve vision obscured by parking. Scouting Wives Schedule Meet Festival creation, •·A Royal Concert.'' through the sun1n1er. The rollicking little \'ariety sho11', will richly costumed marionettes cavorting on a stage-v>'ilhin·a·stage opened Friday to an audience co1nposed almost equally of youngsters and oldsters. Vie"·ing the proceedings from a red· \•eh·el box onstage "·ere lllaxine the Crow and Scooter the Squirrel, two of the stars of Urbano's television puppet show, Dusty·s Treehouse. A th ird TV star, Stanley Spider, also floated down for a look. Drawing chuckles from the audience were a shy, rollerskating bear named Creampuff, a red-haired lady soprano \1•ith heaving boson1 and a clo wn ~ceking the unlikely job of a babysitter for the Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe. A "production number " feature~ the Marvelous Mechanical Minstrel Sho w, with performers in brilliant orange coats, along with Pierrot and a Princess and a quartet of dancing dandies and their partners in frilly yellow dresses. Professor Claude Schwartz entertains Smoothly on the piano. after certain pro- blems "'ilh the instrument's collapsing lid and a trampoline artist with the Likely name of Jack B. Nimble performs some amazing tricks -most remarkable or which is Urbano·s skill in keeping his strings untangled through all l he. strenuous activity. Musical Service Set for LA Pair Killed in Crasl1 A memorial musical program \.\ill be held Aug. I at 3 p.m. at the Immanuel Presbyterian Church in Los Angeles for organist, Clarence f.1ader. 67. and his wife, Ruth, also 67, who died Thursday, victims or a freeway collision. Mader. 1.1·ho taught organ at Occidental College for f i l tee n years, was the organist fur the lmn1anuel Presbyterian congregation v•hile he and his wife lived in Los Angeles. 1\frs. t<o!ader was also an active organist and p 1 aye d for the Westwood Presbyterian Church. Th Py \.\'ere fi ve.year residents at 537 V1;:i Es· trada, Le1Sure \\'orld . The n1 11s1cal rnernorial will fealUN! 1\1ader's O\\'n or,1:an compositions. In lieu of flov.•ers. donation.~ to Occidental Col- lege are requested, in care of ~frs. Janet Beers. Ora n Clear Day Valley Sets Top County Park Fees Park development fees paid by !and developers in Fountain Valley v"ill be the highest in the county because of an ordinance approved by the city council. Acting on a recommendation from the city's Planning Commission and Parks and Recreation C.Ommissioo, councilmen approved the boost in fees whicti will bring an additional $475,000 to the cily's park development fund. According to the new ordinance, the fee per lot for single family tracts will be $400. The same fee will apply to each space in a mobile home park. ln mult iple uniL areas, developers will pay $130 for single bedroom or bachelor units; $190 for t\.\'O bedroom units, and $250 for units with three or more bedrooms. According lo a study made by the Fountain Valley planning depa'rtment, the city of Huntington Beach has the next highest park development fees, charging $318 for single fam ily units; from $106 to $251 for apartments and $150 a space for trailer parks. Wayne Osborne. dittctor or Public Works for Fountain Valley . told council men1be~ that $271,000 Y.111 still be re• quired from the general fund to allow the ful! development of all parks on the city's maister plan. Pregnant Girls To Have Special Huntington Class Pregnant girls living in the Huh!ington Beach Union High School District "''ill be able to attend a special class next fall "''hich will help them cope with their pro- blems. f.ligh school district trusltts have approl'ed a ne\1' program which would gh·e them pre n at a I instruction. counsel them against dependency and costly health serv ices. and provide educa· lion in regular school sUbJC'Cts v.•ith sf)e('ia! C'nlphasis on child rare. District Supterintendent Jack S. Boper said thr distric1 has rrached an ;>.grtt.· men! v. ith a local convalescent hops1tal to provide class facilities at no cost to the district other U1an minimal custodial upkeep. OAILY PILOT Stell IM19 NO ONE KNOWS HOW OLD THIS VINTAGE SAN JUAN CAPIST!tANO BARN REALLY IS Sturdy Pine Structure Still in Good Condition But Its D•ys Are Numb.red Famed Barn to Be Razed Progress to Wipe Out Capistrano Valley Site By P.UtELA lfALLAN 01 Ille Diii• 'ilot S1_,I A favorite spot for Sunday artists \l'iil be torn down to 1nake \Vay for a straighter, wider highway. A picturesque old barn on li1e Norio f\vata property just off Del Obispo Road in the Capist rano Valley will be razed t11is sum1ner by the Orangl' County Road Dep.1rtn1ent. Nobody know~ how old the barn really is, C, Ru.~st•ll <.:ook, who \Vas born in San Juan Capistrano ne11rly three qt1arters of a century ago, remembers the structure but said it \.\'as "before his time." "I think it was built by the people whl) fanned the land in the IB90's," said Cook. The barn is stJll in good condition. It was n1ade of .sturdy pine boards. some 20 feel high. and once had a row of windows. The "'indows are boarded up now but one can still see how they once slid open on iron ntnners fastened by horse shoes. Ligl\t filler in from the roof as well as 11 quaint skylight perched on top of the barn. And though the roof leaked in \vinter. 1t was a surprisingly coot in the sun1mer. "\Ve"re sorry to lose ii," said ~1rs. lwata. The Del ObispQ project. scheduled lor the '71·'72 fiscal year by the cOWlty , may Costa Mesa Will Opei·ate Newer, Faster Computer A nev.·C'r. faster computer operation "'ill be in~talled al Costa Mesa city hall in early November. The new 1nachinc will handle a \Vider range of programs at a much faster rate than the NCR 3!5 cnn1pu!er now used, ac- cording to Tom Kelley, systems analyst for the city. "\Ve're "·ork ing on several new pr<r grams now thal can be fed into the new NCR Century 200," Kelley said. A six·parl package of information col- lettcd by the police department is one item geared for the. new machine. Data on Pach individual parcel of land in C06la t.1esa vo'ill also be expanded v•ith the Cen- tury model. Kel!ey call~ the land parcel data a land record system. Jrs one o< tus b igg est ac· comp!ishments. · We havl' ~t leas! 65 itemized details on e\'ery parcel of land in Cost..a ?-.1esa .'' he exp!a1n<'f!. "\\'e can fe ed the 1n- fom111tion to the parks departmen1, pollcl', fir('. rngineer~. whoever needs it.'' The c11y slrect and p11rk·,1i1ay depar1· ment is currrnlly using the bank of land DAILY ,ILOT ....... ft' ltk ... ,, lot;Mfllff Information lo set up a list of vacant lot.• for the weed ab11tl'ment program. \Vith lhe help of computers, each lot owne r wHI be n1ailed a notice before weeds are cleaned off his land . Land inforn1a!ion include!! such Item ~ Bs the owf!er's name, sddress. if he had a S\vimming imo1 or other special im- provements, and details on the lol itself. Surve)'S are made each year of each land parctl to keep the romputer up to date. \\'ith the new compuler Kt I I e y estimates he can store considerably more dala and pull it out faster. Costa f.fesa has used computers since 1966. and is one of only four Orange County cities v.·1th its own computer setup. The city's machines are all leased. The ne1v Century 200 will ~t the city about l.5,000 a moolh. "It's a third generation computer, !he mo~t up-to-tlate." says Kelley. ILll m- stallment was 11pproved several n1onths ago by lhe clly council. Water District Directors Bid On Bond Bids Although the bid winner for $.1 million In construction bonds WR! • brokerage finn, the big prize at Thursday's m~tlng of the Moulton-Niguel Water District directors went to the district'! consulting engineer. Dan Boyle, of Boyte Engil"lttring. won $12 for picking an interest rate clo!ct1\ to the bid-winning 6.509647 per~t rate pro- posed by t.lerrill, Lynch, Plerct:, Fenner and Smith. Each of the district directors and geveral of the staff membeni had gambl- ed a dollar on being able to pick the cor· rect rate prior to opening the bid~. The players had all submJ tted their guet1s and, when lhe bid.'! wert opened, Boyle's number of 6.51 wa11 the "'inner. Coast Planning Study Scheduled An $8,300 grant for a planning study or the Orange County coastal area hu been n1ade to the counly·s Ocean and Shorelin@ Planning Steering Committee by the Southl'rn California A!SO(l•tlon o f Governments <SCAG ). yet be post.paned ror anoOler year, •c~ cording to roads deparlment divUrion engineer ~1urray Storm. But 1.1•hen its done it will be a fou r lane highway rrom Coast Highway lo San J uan Capistrano city liml!.'i, a length of aboul a mile and a third . The cost oft.be project is estimated at $300 .000. Stonn admitted that part of lhe widen- ed road \viii be rernoved fron1 use when the coast freeway 1s built. •·But we need the widened road now and we figure th e coast freeway is about 10 yeani in the future. \Ve'Jt get our money's worth," ha- ~ald. \\'here the highway meets the San Juan Capistra110 City limits the proiect will be L-Ontinued by Utf> city all the way t.o Trabuco Creek bridge. "Our project is about a mile and a half and will CQSt $200,000," said 1'. J. Meadows, Director of Public \Vorks for the city. He explained that the city's pro- ject will be a (\.\'O Jane road although the right of way has been obtained for a four. "It 1v11s too expensh'e to put in a four lane road at iliis time," he said. "\\'e had too many st ruct.ures that v.·ould have to have beefl removed and it would ha ve cost almost $400 ,000. Despite the county's t I m et ab re , Meadows said the city expects lo go to bid in August. College Board Changes Nights For Meetings AL their annual rl'organization meeting \\lednesday, Saddleback College trustees voted to change the regular board meeting days to the flrsl and third Mon- days of each monlh_ The action was taken on !hl' recom- mendation of m!lrgr president Pred Bremer, who said !he change would pro- virle •·greater continui1.v for conducting board business " The trustees had been rneeting on the second and fourth f\.!ond11ys of each month. Wednesday 's session was • special meeting. The change will not take effect unlit August. thus making the nexl regular meeting of the board Aug. 2. Beach Trustees Choose Leaders Trustees of two Huntington Beach area elementary school districts have chosen new presidents. In the Huntington Beach Cily School Dl1trict Jack K. Klapp has replaced Steve Holden as board president. Louis E. DaHarb is the. new clerk. New Oce11n View board president Is George Logan who replaced Robert ZIM· grabe. It. Jame..~ Shaffer was elected clerk. The new officers will hold their posl· lions for one year. Sailing Class Ope11 at Marina A cla5'1 in beginning and advanced uft. lng: open to aU south county resldent.s will begin Tuesday morning at the Dana Point Marina. \\'ives of Cub iind Bov Scout masters in lh" Boy Scout f,(j11ncil'.s Et Camino Real distrid "'ill learn 11 bit more about !heir: hu~biinris' :"C'outlng resp<1nsbililies al a m~ting July 22 ;it lhe Community Presbyterian Church, 415 Forest Avenue, l.ai\.lna Beach. The 7·30 p.m. nleeting "''ill be "slant· ed" tow::ird the \l.'lves t\f lhf' mastf'r~ to i\',. them 11 be11er under.:;t11ndlng of thf' 11~hands' leadership of boys. You can see this vie\v rrom the tip of the Balboa Peninsula in Newport Beach. That is. if you are looking north throu~h a 300 mm telepholo lens. In the foreground is Ne\rport J.larbor. Then con1e th e hillside homes or Corona de! f\1ar overlooking Bay- side Drive and the harbor. And, in the background, ~ the skyline provided by the multi·story buildings at Ncv.1port Center. SCAG i11 conducting 11n overall coa11tal planning project for Southern California and the coun!y committ,ee will aid In the. vrogram. Supervi~r Ronald Casper1 Friday praised the program gaying, ''It may ht!p to head off 11 state takeover or plan- ning ol our shoreline." Sponsored by the Dana Point ''acht Club. the week-lonf( class will meet daily from, 9 a.m. till noon and from I p.m. lo 4 p.m. The class will end Saturday. The fee for the rourse is $10 ind persons y,·ishing to register may contact ('r(!rdon Sutorius at 493-3698. • •~. -) I. f>t'• . --~ S) Jl ... ...._.. ,..,_. _.,:•"'-r. J> • -_, -··--·---· --- I J DAfLV PILOT Monday, July 19, 11171 Wives of Vietnam War: They W ~it ~nd Keep the Faith By BARBARA Gl\JS 01 IM Olotl'I .. hM ll•ft Feotllli the bill of Ult wife •f 1 prisoner of war entail• mort than coping w i t h frustrating s 11 enc e, the handwritt..en M!Yen·lint letters thlll arrive -with luck - once every elher month, and ketping the faith. For fi ve Orange County wives -three whose husbands are POWs and two whose husbands art listed as n1issing in action {MIA) -it's !Jkt trying to control the field with half a team. 'CAN'T ISOLATE SELF' Elaine Pyle "U aU )'&I.I 've eot M your "At fint, when 1 beard lhal 11:round and your spirits up.'" mind the war, people aren't m y husband had been 1bot "The children and I have going to want you around. down, I was In total dJ.sbeliel,'' grown clOl!er, wondering,'' she "Somehow, after the initiAI says Walli tiark, a Newport continues. "My older daughter shock is ove~ you must learn Beach mother el t w • has t 11 k e n on much to broaden yeur srope ef in· teenagers. r~ponsibility for the younger tereru. I try lo follow Dar~'• Her husbaod, Lt. C o 1. ones, and Scott, the nine-year advice to me , 'Do what you Stanley Clark, has beeo li.st,ed old man of the house even gets have to do l~keep ha1>PY· Just. as a MIA for t.h.rtt ytars. angry with me when 1 pull don't spend all my money,'" \falli's husband was, •he down the garage .door. 'That's Elaine i! a very active reflects a devoted father, a man's job,' be says." POW-MIA lecturer. always setting aside time to Janice has found her "Bu~ eYen though my be with his kids. Her husband'a absence forces her heart's in the cause," she teenagers remember their dad to become great I y in-- says, "I find when I do toe and miss him. dependent. rnuch away from homt, I'm "A woman cannot assume a "Before Don left, r had miserable. Phillip, my five-ralher's role, especially in neYer balanced a checkbook, year old, needs me and by the communicating with a S()n," and now I have bought a car time I gel home from uys Walli. ''A man'! mind and a house." .When ht does v.·hatever l've been doing, I'm works differenlly than a CQme back, she feels it may loo tired to be a very attentive woman's." take some patient training to mother." She finds this teenRge period rela::: that self-reliance ltarned Although Phillip was enly 'CAN'T BE FATHER' a difficult ont for her children 'WASN'T PREPARED' so well out of necessity. three mqnths old when Don W•lli Clark and herscJr and yeams for Linds11y Mill•r Janice has saYed her money left, Elaine feels he knows his them to haYe the guidance of a :ind will be flying with her 'JUST HOPING' Janie• Lyon As mothers, singular parenthood confronts lhem now, when, before, the trials and joys of bringing up children were shared. Seeking companionship, they learn to cope in this couple-oriented 50Cicty as a single unit, very married and very alone. dad pretty well. She has told strong father. She asks, daughter Suzannr. 12, to Vie- me,'' she continued, ''but now him about his dad and directs alive. Unfortunately, wives el ''When two parents have a cillng her posilion , not wholly tiane, Laos. Aug. 1 in hopes of all the ol.her wives. Their love lhey accept my word. They Phillip's hopes to future fun MIAs can't say that." rough time communicatin~ the wife she'd like lo be, yet gelling some information from keeps their faith alivt and it i5 ''They keep my spirits above water,'' says Lindsay Miller of Tustin. whose m a r in e husband, Lt Col. E:dison ~liller. ha s been a prisonf'r in North ViPtnam sinec October 1967. Their fi ve sons, ages eight !hrou,i::h sixlf'en. fill all the hours of Lindsay's da ys. respect their dad and wouldn't "when his dad comes back." Janice Lyon and W111li Clark with kids this age, how can a very married. she ha s become the Pa!hel Lao regarding the their fait.h thal ke eps their do anything he wouldn't want ''This is where the POW are the waiting wives of men woman alone do it well?" totally a mother. whereabouts of her husband. spirits above st>R. level. With themtodo." · · · 1· Th '1 d · II t wJves are al an advantage,'' missing 10 ac ion. e Y Janice Lyon of Irvine. ha.oi "That's the way Don would · on t rea Y ex p e c some effort they'll follo w the Shirley, is new to the Harbor says Elaine. "We can say to operate in limbo. Their plight been in limbo for three and a want it,'' she said, .. •first.,' anything. I'm just hoping." advice that Elaine's husband Area. The Pitchford's formerly our kids, 'when daddy t-omes cannot be paralleled b Y half years. Her husband. Air he'd say, 'do ~·hat'.~ be st for she says. "But I feel I have to ~·rote lo her: "l know you as l'·,,,d ,·. Phocmx , "Since l d , ... , o • be a J t•y." " home, not if he comes home.' iv,,_ • re vemen · force Maj. OonoYan Lyon. the kids. second. w11 il fnr me, • a happy perso n, sn slay tha t don't know many people here. because we hear from our These women know no such w;is ~hot down over Laos on ar)d then, do what's necessary Until more information i.s way, and be that V.'BY when I rny social life -what therewis husbands and know they're elemenl of final ity_ hi s first mi ssion. Jn r('('on-to keep your feet on the released, she will wait , as with come home." or it -centers around PO ·i-~~~~~~~~~~~~.,--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ''People always ask me "·hat I do lo keeri my mind off Ed. Wall, there's no time v.·hen J"m not bUS)'. but !hf'n, thrrrs no lin1e \l'hen I don't think about him c1thrr,'' she says. A mili tary wire of eighlren years. Lindsay says, "I knew I would have 10 learn lo beeome self-sufficient at some things \1 hen I married I::d, but I wasn·i prcpaf:'d for !his." She laugh.~. reflectin~ on !he lime "when I probably most wanted Ed here." II was v.·hcn !heir sixteen vcar-0ld was learning to drivC. "/ wa s a v.•reck. but lht car v.·asn't and now !h at hr·.~ got hi~ license. he·s taking c11re of a lot for mr. ·• Shirley Pi1chrord of Nc"'porl Beach has bcrn h('ad ing her household single-h11ndedlv for nioi-e than five v('ars -Her husband. John. a iTI;ijor in the Air Force, "hasn'I even i:;ccn a mini-skirt" she says. For Shirley. a n101hrr or foru. her hu sband's 11hsrn1·e has been "a miser;ible but valuable experience. The kids and l ha\·e grown clo!'e r to one another and IA.'(' all v.·ait for his J,Htts. "They used lo listen to 1heir Dad more than they v.·ou\d to MIA International, a Tustin- based group whose aim is peeding lhe return (I r American POW.c;. Perhap s tha\"s because ifs a comfort In know you're not alone in your situation. Those worse off make you grateful for what you 've got." Elaine Pyle of Tustin and her pilot husband. Capt. Dar- r el Pyle. had been married almost two years when he Jefr for duly in Vietn:im . Al th a1 lime. thei r son. Phillip. nov.' five. was three months old. F:laint had never known ~·hat \\'<IS txpected of a wife \1 hen her husband v.•cnt off to fight a war. "l"d never been 'broken In' bcfnre Darrel left." she e.\· plains. "\Yell, I am now '.'' Elaine. like Shirlry. find.~ that she Is most C'Olnfortablr with \V ives in similar situa- tion.~. "!light away. you're fin cnrnmon grnund." she i:;,.ys "You don 't have to cxpl111n you r life av.•ay because they know what it 's all about. Thry actually make life a l!tllC' easier." Yet. a prisoner's wife cannot isolate herself says Elaine. Fra11ce l\iay he Fourth Nuclear Co111bat Natio11 WASHINf~TON !APl -U S. military sources c x p e <'I fra.nce soon will bccon1e lhe fourth nation lo p I ;i re strategic land-based or s11b- marine-launched nu c 1 ea r missiles in cornbat readiness. The French already ha\'e 45 Mirage nu clear bombers. and the missilrs represen1 a sr- t"ond ~enrration of FrancP·s independent strategic strike forcr. U.S. aulhori11rs h ::r v e prrdictcd Con1n1un1sl rh1na v.·1lt deploy its firs! mrd111m· rangt> rn1ss1trs 1h1s 1rar, jn1n1ng !hr Un11cd ~la.trs, Rui:;sia, lir11;1in and Fr11n<e 10 tha1 nuclC';ir cl.:is~ Reports in thr l 'r11l.1~on s;iy France's in1rrn1rd1alt• ran~r b91listir missilP I In n~1 1 l~ (l two-stage, sol1d-f11rl 11·rfl pon with a maxlm111n rra<'h nf more Lhan l.~100 in1 les, far enough 10 hi( ~1ns('o.,.,·. The fir st ~roup of nine JRBMs is about ready. l l S. P1'en ils prCSC'OCP might dray,• a he(l vv nuclear first-i:;trikr frnm th.e hugt> So\'iet rniss1lr arsen;il if an Easl-Wcst clash shnu[d devrlopc 1n Europe. But the Fench have forged ahr:id with tht'ir nucll':-ir .... capon dc\'elnpment under !he post.J)c t;aull i;o1·rrnrnrn1 11 S lr;:iders had hoJl('d Fr:int·r ;iftrr 11,, r.:'l1J!IP wnulrl reiurn tn thr NATO m1h1arv cnn1n1:ind. hu! this has nn! h:ipprn('d al!hough Fr<1nce TP· ma1n.c; ;i riolitlr al n1e1nber nf lhr :ilh.:incr 1tctTnll\, Fr:irll'+' ha~ rni1rl+' it cle;1r it doc~ not w;rnt t() 1'r1.c<1~r. \\'Ith thr nthf"r NATO n!l!inns, in m11111;rl ;inrl hal:inr· C'rl fnrrr rC'dU('l1on tnlk.~ with the Snl'1r\s- 11 Honored Fro111 Coast Sourt'es i;;i1d. and a .~P('ond h I" h I b t:lrl'rn Or;rnne Co 11 s 1 groups ou" e opPration<1 y " the end of this ~·ear. studt'nls ha ve rec t> 11 e d degree~ frnm Cal romon11 . A third grot1 p h:is h<'t'n They arc poslponed ind£'fini1ely, ii was from rn~ta Mcs;i · Nichnla~ said, perhaps to a wa1t pcrfec-F. Drlorenzn. fi h a r r ;r r lion of an imprn\·cd missile. Dclavarian, 11nd Timothv W. Mranwhile. l' S m1l itarv \\'ilson. · r;ources said the f1rs1 of li r~ fro1n Newport Real'h · Nol11 m is s i le-firing ~ubmarines Doyle. Stephen C. !labe]n'ol·. planned by the French is ex-\\'il11arn ~1. ll utlnn. and peeled lo bcco1ne co1nh11t· Dhircndra K. Kapadi11. ready within the nrx! few Fron1 San c I c men t e months. Charles A_ Ralhfon. The submarinr. rnuch like from l'n11n1ain V ;r 1 ! e y · the U.S. Polari.~. is rcpor1ed to Br11cP L. Rebrr. have held its first submerged From Laguna Beach · Frrd missile-firing l+'s! May 29. T. B:irnPs, Str"'llrl S . Over U.S. opposition, Gl'n . Soderlinrl Charles de Gaulle fathered an fro1n \Vestmin~ter : P11ul !:: Independent f'"rench nuclear Kaun1p. force more than a decade agn. r-----------,1 The Kennedy administration objected bceause it wen!ed to limit the 11pread of nvclear "'capons and coordinate Western nuclear powt>r . But Dt Gaulle viewed th~ nuclear force a!f 111 mPans of promoting france's status 1111 I big power. He argued his country needt"d R nuclf'ar force because hi' 'Yt"all un- c.:rtaln the United Sta'1rs would rL•k lt11 own 11afcly to 1ld Fr1nct againsl Rus!f1a . U.S. strategists ha\'I! mn- ttnded France's nucle11r i;trik, force woold ~ ton small In FOR ADVERTISING IN OUT 'N ' ABOUT PHONE NORM STANLEY 642 ·4321 df'ltt llts<:k by H.11rlf and that '----------~; " . , -, -·-_, , ( 'Why thousands of.Americans will spend .$~900 .for a Mercedes~Benz thats three _feet shorter -than American luxury ·cars •. At Mercedes.Benz, we define luxury' ft hlt differently than most automobile makers. To our v"ay of 1hinking, size for the sake of si7.c is not luxury. It is waste. If adding an inch 10 a Mercedes.Benz \1'on'1 con1r1butc to some function, Mer· ccdes-Bcn1.cnginccrs \Yon't add it. Eric Dahlqu1sl, in a recent issue of Afo/or Trend, commenlcd on the size o[ the American luxury car. "Stunned by ~uch mas~. rhe passcn-' gc rcntcrs to find that size does not equate \Vi !h room ... " The Mercedes· Benz 250 Sedan is t ltret fee t shorter than the shortest of 1hc do. rnesric luxury sedans. Yet it is a curious fact 1hat the 250 concedes almost no1hing inside. ~fr:rctd~i-Rtnl f''1,l:H!ttrl hfllf<'t hf>lh /r1u1ds hr:/011£ o>r /ht •l'/1ttl. So /11fv hiull /011• cr1 /1ca/ caunol.1 iorto a IU>Rlt stalk nnd po"110.,rd rt 11 fingtr's lc11g1h n11 'ay. In iis recommended position, the seat seems too far from 1he ,vhccl. And it's too unyielding lo be called "lu~u rious." Bu! that strange seat position lets you drive 11'ith the \vhccl at arm's length and your ba~·k. firmly against 1he seat's. And that gives you better control. The "unyielding" scat, it turns oul, \\'as desi gned by orthopedic surgeons to give firm support. You'll appreciate it more afccr seven hundred miles than you do after seven. If you press the floor ~\vitch 10 gel your high beams, you'll get a squirl in the v:1ndsh1eld 1n~tead . Tha1's because a curious-look in g ,stalk, posi t 1oned precisely a finger's r ·l'-<'--length from the v.·hcct, embodies four dif· fcrcnt conirols. "T!inu;lt 1!1'111 rr11 11t1•/11rlv b1e rnr, 1/1t a,r111"'"nolnt1a"" wt// rl1u11t(d a•1d quite fl'""",. r•Pf'/jj:/I for ri"PIUfr .. 111011 hy /lie cliai.Tfri•r·rl• ••'tu (xtr111n t ." -,\\QtQr T11e cn,::inecr is king A f.1 c,-ccdci.-Benz IS a~ different rrom -,. dornc~t1c lu-;ury car as automobile!, each \Vi th four wheels and an engine in front. can be. Mercf'dcs-Bcnz is one of the fe1v 11ulo- mob1Je makers le ft 1n the\vorld where the engineer 1s still king. Design decisions are made by an eo- ginecr, not a styling \vh iz or a marketing \\'ilard. Al Merccdr-s-Benz, lhc engineer- ing department s1ill 1ells the sales depart• ment \\'hen a new model is re;idy. The result is en au1omobile that has been built to an enginccnng ideal. And an automobile that is fundamen- tally different than any built in the States. From oddity to necessity . To the uninitiated, 1his aprroach may appear to have d1sad1·antages. Your first time behind the \1•heel of a 1\1erccdes-Benz is likely to rroduce a va11:11e sense. of disorientation. l-l 1gh and lo\11 beam~. tum signals, \\'indsh1eld \virc r~. :ind 1hc1r t\vo-srccd control all can be operated \\'lrhout tak· ing your hands from the \~·heel. Or your eyes from rhe road. Such oddit ies, admiltedly. take some gelling U5cd to. Bu1 there's a reason for every one. And. before you know it, lhe oddities have become neccssi1ies. No domestic sedan ••• Il is at the wheel a man discovers tht pcrfonnance characteristics that make Our 1511 Sr:dan. Tht .. ditorJ of Motor Tr .. nd m111a~i"r: «11/td ii" ... 111 .. mosf ta../roJ111b/" high·JPt"d '"don w"'v• ltJ/td." Mercedes·Btnzunique among the world's motor cars. Mercedes- Benz enginttrs believe that a car's abilities should be limited only by road and conditions-not by · its own des ign . Every Mercedes-Benz has fully independent suspension f ron1 and rear. A design corJcept used, without excer11on, on 200-mph grand pnx c;irs. provides the ma..,;imum po.!isiblc cornering pov<er over a variety of road surfaces. No do1nestie sedan h::is ii. Every Mercedes-Benz is equirped \V i1h four mas~ive disc brakes. Standard, not optional. Because, to our way of think· ing, it's unthinkable to relegate the best brakes you can build to the op1ion li.!.I. No domestic sedan has them on all four \vhecls. And e\•cry ~1ercedes-Bcnz has:. steer- ing s~·stem so preci~ly balanced that the car see ks a straighl path on its own. No domestic sedan can match 11. Even the Grand Mercedes 600, a three-ton limousine, notes A101or Trend, " ... \viii outrun and outmaneuver many 5ports cars." Join the club But 1l1e final 1vord on the d istinction between f.1erccdr-~-Bcnz and domestic luxury cars hclong.s 10 a grour of ~ier-. cedes-Benz 011·ner.s. O\vners so cn1husi;is1ic that they·ve formed thirty-two chapters of the Mer· cedes-Benz Club of America. Each year they hold more th:in 60 lo- cal competitions and 3 national rallies. It's theiropportunity, in performance events. lo extend their cars lo the limits of which a Mercedes-Benz is capable. Not everyone joins the club., Mt"rcedt.s-Bcnt owners who rafl1 their cars a rc a relatively small share of our owners. But. !hen, no domestic·lux- ury car even ha,s. a club. · · $6,900? Our pur~uit of engineering ideals has p l aced Mercedes-Benz au1omobiles among the \Vorl d'5 most costly, The suggested retail price of the Mer· cedes-Benz 250 Sedan, with automatic transmission, is S6,51 JI, \Vith such popular options as power steering, \vhi'e sidc\vall tires, and radio \11 it h rear-seat speaker, you caa 1!iipend over$6,900. And thirteen of our models cost more, including the JOOSEL 6.3-dubbcd by Road &-Track "merely the world's greatest sedan ... "-at $1 6,3551. But if vour lastes do not run to the convention;u luxury car, we think you 'U A"v l•i.rurv cnr rnu look ~nod in /ht co11n1ry c/11/J dri11t111a}'· Altrccdt$·Btn~ loolu sood i11 p/11tt3 likt lilnc Rock, Road America and1 la11u"o Sica. find Mercedes-Benz automobiles well worth !he price you pay. And if you'll fill out the coupon be. low, ,.,.e ·u send you our least expen~ive produclion. A full-color Mercede~-Beru: brochure, absolutely free:. '"~•I <N•I Poff "' ••Irv. e«:l"•"t of U1tll'T><>Cl•!ion, ... )IHlo walll 11-M, "'~~roottOR>. •Ul~1twl .._,If ''"-'-• 11 ..,.. ~c 1n1.~&...or Hnnb ABmica. lDc:. ,--------------------------~ t 0 JIM SllMONS IM,OlTS, INC. I · 120 w. wa.._.-"""" S.m A11•, Coflfonrl• '2707 I l'lcue send mt yoor full-«ilor brochure of the Mfrcedts-Benz motor c:;irs. D Pte;i.<.t include the Mcrcedcs·Bcni Guide to Euro. pcan Del ivery. Addrc~s-------------- City•---------St1!e.'----- t t I I t I I I I I I Zip Ttleptton. : -----------------------~! Jim Slemol'.-s Imports, Inc. 120 W. Warner Avenu:. Santa Ana, California 92707Phone: 714-546:411' ,.:; -, -~- I I I { j ' ' .. • No Age Bracket for Helping You t b -usuall)' • diaadvantage in ~findjng a summer job -i11 a mulitple blessing for Harbor Area junior and ,eJ'l.ior high . school students who are tfevotinf their vacation timt to rolun· tMring In community tervices. ~ youngsters h11ve the extra time, ene~gy and cheerfulness required to tutor l C?hlld for whom English is a second JRnguage, teach a hMdicapped child to fwim, write letters for an elderly shut·in, plant shrubbery for city beautification or Coonse! al a day camp. The Newport Beaeh Office or the Volunteer Bureau of South Orange Coun- ty is channeling the l.eeflage anrl subteen f>tllhusiasm into positions where age is not. a job criterion. "Youngsters aN! naturals for these person-to-person relationships;• ~ a id Loyce MacDonald. executive director of the burf'au . ··in return, they can sample a lt"mpting career field such ai; leaching, mffiical assistance or public service. "What could be n1ore revelant to the business of J1v1ng a full life ?" Mary Timberlake. a June graduate: of Corona del Mar High School, agret0s. Her favorit.e job is working with children of different races ~t the Creative Day Care Center "to help them gain self.respect and respect for others." •·1 wish more young people would l!;f't Involved in this type of work," she said. "Besides helping these ctii ldren and the !lchool, they woold be getting some good personal experience." Twelve-year-olds Conr,11d Jone! and Jnanne Lewis are among lfl young people from St. M;irk's Presbyteri an Church in Corona de] Mar who work each week with physically handicapped and mentally retarded patients al Fairview State Ho.cipitat. They visit the palien1s. entertain them playing musical instruments. assist with folding laundry. work with blind patienl!I on mats. help with feeding and pushing wheelch air patients. Since Mis.~ Saskia Lodder, 16, of Hun· lingtnn Beach first volunteered a1 the \!elrrans Adminis!ration Hospital in Long Beach last summer, her civic involvement h;i~ expanded. She was Marina High School's delegah1 lo the Orange County Red Cross Yo4.lh Congress in February and attended the group's leadership center last month. Volun1eers work under professiorial guid;inc-e and, in the case of handicapped children, progress is Jn direct proportion to the number of voluntttrs who take the lime to provide extra practice sessions or &PE'Cial outings. The fact that their new t1ummer com· panion-'I also are young iidd.~ greatly to their determination to succeed. Mrs. MacDonald Indicated volunteer placemMts are available in Boys Clubs, YWCA, community centers, day camps. pla ygrounds, hospitals. clinics, con- vales«nt homes and blood mobil~. For special talents there are art displays tn bf created and children's stories to be tape-recorded for public libraries. ' Observing blood donati on is port of on-the-jo b experrence for Red Cross volunteer Soskia Lodder who watches Staff Nurse Dorothy Metoxin assist California Highway Patrolman Jerry Ell ison. D1ily Pilot Photo• by Ricli1rd Ko•hl•r . ., .. ·t . ;.A :r; ' I I • • .... . . • , \ ... • ' ·~ ~ ~ .. ;": ·~·.~ ··· .... -.. ·•·¥< • • Young patients show more determination in learni ng drill1 when volunteer- oides ore close to their own oge. Conrod Jone• (right I refl ects a smile of triumph' at Fairview State Hospital. VOLUNTEER MARY TIMBERLAKE REAOS TO KIMBERLY MOORE, ALBERT FLORES, STANLEY GRIDAY Recharging Instead of Replacing Dead Battery Advised OF,AR ANN LANDER.c;: On occasion ~·nu havp printed letters from young girls "'ho w11nt to know if it's t1dvisable Ill marry middle-aged or older men. When .1·nu respond J wonder if you ;:ire awan! !hat there are 41/r single girls 30 years of a1:e r;ind older ) for every eligible male in lhp same age group. Surel y, ynu know. Ann , that somt men arP worn oul at .a and others 11re ex· lrrmrl.v virile al 61). It's dangerous to ~11 e ;idvice en thi'I subject especially ~1nrt thP '·dl"'l'd·Nittery" ~x partner knnws nn sender. Hr tor shr 1 cri.~~·crO.~$ l1lp r razy. So plc11se. -TE LL IT LIKE IT JS . nEArt Tf'_:LL: Righi you 11r«". Btrf I ~till been lying around too long. DEAR ANN LANDERS: J asked my college.graduate daughter why so many college kid~ are hostile to lhPir parents thP~e day~. Her ahswrr wAA very in· trre~t1ng. This is what shl' said: What do you think of her commenl~. my face for IO 1ninutes. Af!erward~ 1 Ann Landers? -ALSO f"ROM THE looked in the mirror and did11 't see any GLEN MILLER. ERA color .~ I turned the lamp on for another DEAR ALSO: Your dau g:httr makes 10 minutes J looked in lhe mirror again the ml8take of lumplnJ all parenls and and 11aw no sign of color so r decided it all college 1htdents lOgrther a!I If they was ll cheap tamp and went to sleep. wt>rt. <'Ul from the 111 me cloth. The com-About five o'clock in the morning I lo us every week bul don 't expect us to petition In 11<1me 11chool s Is lt8S severe woke up wilh thi!! terrible pain, My fare v.·rite tn you. We're too bu s~'· And don 't th11n in olhera. Not ALL mailboxes are felt as if it were on fire . I got out of bed, dare show your face around here unless empty. Nol ALL parent~ graduated with looked in the mirror and my face wa~ 3. Dont's gel any clooer tha n 21,2 feet from the lamp. 4. Do not stay u11der the lamp for mort than three minutes at a time. - LOBSTER FROM LITTLE ROCK DEA R LOB: Con~lder yourself lucky to have come out with le81 than third degree burns. than dead. In th is c11st, better red you graduate cum Jaude . We did.' OOnors. And ncit ALL kldll smoke dnpt. flaming red, My eyeliW! were so swollen I "What parents don't re;i !i1.e is lhal cnl· Th anks f6r "Tiling . could hardly open them. "The Bride's Guidr." Ann Landers' le~e was a. brc<'f:e "'hen thev v.·rn\. It"s Pleasr-print the lollowin~ inrormalinn booklet. answers some of the most fre• far rougher today. There is sn rn tich DF:AR ANN LANDERS: This lrl tr r fnr people whu Ne not accustomed to us-l]urnt!y asked questions about weddings. mnre to learn. 1·he pressure is !errifir. might save somebod.v a lot or pain. ing sun lamps: To receive your cnpy of this com· Thr cnmprt1t inn is n1urderous. The fe11 r Please print ii. Uist night I borrowed a I. Read the in.5lructions carefully and prehensive guide, wri te lo Ann Lander1, of fa ilure hangs {Iver their he;ids like 11 Fun lamp from a friend The instruction~ believe wh11l they say. In care of the DAILY PILOT, encloslna a , · •ay 11 dead hattery can be rech11rJtd· ~d il'l;'--Mliu to--n:f.b•"'T"Nl-ff ft fiasa~ - "Tno man y parrnls say 1n the ir ch ild ren: 'Here is the monr-y. lin lo col · le~e and don'I bother u.~ for four yr.ars. txin't expert u.~ to vi~il you. Ifs too f11r. ~' ~·.i,. .:11'\14 IJ.:~ 41llf!!'!&;;;'-Wrilt• bla ck rloun , And to top it off , !ht ma'ijQox i;aid two minutes for ~ first lreatment. l 2. Don 't expect to notice &ny Change in .long, self·addr~sed, stamped envtope i8 emJ?b-::..U.~~~.Y~-b~~l'r. JJ...\..to~dn't bet~'G. 1Mp-~..t~·~ Ml_:;•~~~~!~&, ·-=-·:.~· .. :~ 3$--ctn-"'°.in!eY:: .... ' .r.::._~~r""Y~--.~ -. ~-•. ,.F / ,.. • • C DAIL¥ PILOT --- Hot Ideas for Long -hairs Mesan Makes Ends 'Split' Great-grandma was a pretty smart old gal. l ier fountain or knowledge Included such home remedies as cures for warts or the com· mon cold. She seldom had to look at a recipe to cook, but once in a while when a formula was a little Mm- plicated she'd don her specs and look it up in her "receipt" book. One thing she never had to check on was how to care for her crowning glory. Her Jong hair had an enviable sheen and she never had split enls. She knew how lo rid her hair of these "frizz.ies." She'd singe lhem away. Blazing a trail back to her method is Edward J. Estel, a Costa 1\-fesa hairdresser. Although he probably won't set the \vorld on fire with his technique, he does hope to spark enough interest in long- hair wearers so they too v.·ill end the frizzies. ''Long hair is ln .'' Estel emphasized. "I love It and t love to work with it,'' he said and then qualified the state- ment with "good hair." lie claims that most women with long hair don't really know how to take care of it. Conditioning is an important factor for keeping hair from tangling which is one cause of split ends. he explained, ad- ding lhat "so many con· ditioners on !he public market do more hann than good." He wouldn't recommend any one brand. although he ronstantly emphasized the imporl.allce or conditioning after each sham- poo. "B.:ick·combing doesn't harm the hair if it is con- ditioned.'' he pointed ou!, while listing over·shampooing, too much sun, the way hair is c.ombed and the use of rubber bands as other causes or fritzies. "Eliminating split ends by singeing ," he aso;;erled, "not only gives hai r a better sheen it also helps it grow. U can'l grow wilh split ends as the hair just keeps splitting up the shaft." The singeing process starts with sectioning of hair as for a permanent. Then each strand is twisted tightly from the scalp out to the end. Next. with a fairly firm grasp wi!h thumb, index and middle fingers, the hair is stroked upward lo ~xpost! fr1zzics, Then comes :;ingeing. Estel prefers working wi!h a long wick, though some use a lighted randle. "The !rick,'' he said, "is ho\V you hold the 'A'ick. Jf the flan1e is direcllv 11nclcr the strand. it might burn all or the hair." Aft er the tr<'atment. the hair Is shtimpoocd, c<1ndilionf'd, dried and brushed. "It should be repeated about every tv.·o to three months. ttepending on the hair," he advised . Estel cautionrd those \\'ho To avoi d d isap po1ntm ent, prospective brides are reminded to ha ve their v.·edding stories \Vith blnck and white ~lossy photo- graphs to the DAI LY PILOT \Vomen's De- partment one \\'eek before the wedding. P ictures received a fter that time will not be used. For engagement announcement s it. is imperative tha t the story, also accomparued by a black and white glossy picture, be s~i b­ mitted six weeY..s or more before the v.·cdd1ng date. If deadline is not met, only a story \\'ill be u sed. To help fill r equirements on both '''cd· ding and engagement stories. forms are a vailable in all of (he DAILY P ILOT oUices. Further questions \Vi\J be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. LITT LE I I might be ten1pted to try a do- 1t-yourself job, not to; "it m1gl1t be hazardous." He stresse<l th.:it this prucess only be done by a hairdresser who is !rained. Estel is with the beauty salon at ~lay Co., South Coas t Plaza. J le said all of the com- pany's shops ha ve adopted thi! proce s s and that the l1;;irdressers are being !rained in the technique. A 'Shear' Delight In answer to demands of a large and rapidly expanding nun1bc r of worncn no1v making their oll'n lingerie, a maker of shears and scissors has just introduced lingerie shears. The main features of this new item are the long, narrow blades which pcrn1it trimming close to the stitching line ::ind a serrated edge on one of the blades to prevent the lingerie material from slipping \\"hilc being cut A sµecia l fin ger g u Id" permits greater cutting t'On- trol and accuracy. Tricot, vne of the principal materials used by the do-i t- yourself lingerie sea1nstress, is 11 very lightly woven fabric requiring suc h specialized shears \Vhich can gently grasp the fnbric \\•liile a srnooth cul· ting stroke is con1p!eted, the tnanufac!urer sa)s. Clubs Combine Forces, Push Projects Seo ms tresses Offered Help The importance or knowing OLD LADIES FROM PASADENA FOR SWIFT TERMITE and PEST CONTROL CALL 1 Llo~ds l Summer may be vacation time for many, bul Orange Coast groups continue ac- tivities throughout the season. Host Families UCI Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. will speak at the introductory meeting for the lnt.ernalional Student Service·s host family program Monday, July 26, in the UC! student center Ir. Area families v.·ho wish to become friends w i t h in- ternational students at the university are invited to learn of the opportunity. Sponsoring the 8 p.m. meeling is Town and Gown . Hoag Aux iliary In stead of closing down for !he summer, the. Auxiliary of Hoag f\1e.morial Hosp i I al, Presbyterian shifts into high gear and continues on . Volunteers. both men r:ind women, find their (I w n replacements and the work is uninterrupted. An orientation session for prospective members is scheduled for 10 a.m. Thurs· day. July 21 . in the hospital conference center. unrlcr the dirl'ction of ~lrs. Joseph ~1et­ calf. Alpha Ph i Headgear DQwn Through the Ages Is the title of lht> Lalk to be presented by Mrs. Ethel Mabie for Alpha Phi Alu1nnae or Laguna Hilts Thursday, Ju- ly 22, in the Laguna Hills Clubhouse 3. Mrs. Mabie, \\.'ho has ap- peared on lc\evislon and before many civic ~roups, will describe approximately 70 per- iod hats from her e-0\lection during the noon luncheon 1neeting. Joint Effort Pooling their resources, t/1c \Voinan's Club of Laguna Beach, Soroptimist Club and \Vestv.·ard llo Chapter of the l)aughters or the Brllish Empire contributed funds to plant four eucalyptus trees in the Pepper Tree f\1ini·park. Also sharing the expense v.·as the Don Ilose family. Representatives of I he groups at the p 1 a n I' n p; ceremony \Vere the Mmes. R. \V. Ketteringham, <; o rd on Banner, Fay Bentson, ll~irricl Hayes and Miss Lily \Vright. Alpha Chi Om ega correct pattern size v.·il\ be cording to h1rs. Roscoe C. emphasized during a Jccture- Long, chairman. The shop '\'iii demonstration by 1'.1iss Tryll:i be closed during the month of Joninzman tomorrow at 11 a.m. August and will rl'-open Tues- A stylisl for a pattern com-1 day, Sept. 7. pany, r.tiss l\linzn1an ,1·il l ex- Sec retaries plain the making or a bnsic muslin as a fitting guid<' and An al\omey and judge \\·1\1 hflve muslins avnilablc for try· ::-harl' the pod iurn Wednestl:iy. nns . • • • y1111n11, mldd•~agrd "r.cl wh~I hove y1111, rrom ~II ~re~• of the •ouml~nd, ~re M~.nq •llv~nl•ge ol our 1•ee knlt!l"g cl"""'· Wiiy ool vou? Tnere-. no obll<;J~!lon. The Knit Wit Sourh Co11! Pint LOWER MA.LL Co11• Mn• ~!·llU LLOYD PEST CONTROL loq~no l1ac.ft---494-440D Sein Cl•m•l'll---492·&400 Co1IC1 Mna-4142-5922 .l11ly 21. 1vhen members of !he Sponsorin,e: the Sin1plicity llnrbor Area Lcgnl Secretari es reprcs<'nta111•£''s ;;ppe.;irance Is Association galhcr in tbc ~P~e~o~•<e~y~·~s._J'F~os~·h•C;o~o>__lls~l~ao~c~L-_1_1...,,,....., ... ..,..-...,...,...,...,.,,J~============= r.fissinn Viejo Golf Cluh for a 1---- dinner rncetin,e:. Speaking on dissolution pro- ceedings \\'ill he Superior <.:ourl Jurlgr J. 1·;. T. !tuttrr and Attorney (.;i\bert N r f\1ucller. ROBINSON'S Children Urge Cleanup Newport Harbor Alutnnne of Alplia Chi On1ega will splash into social actlvily Thursday, July 22, during a Swln1 and Salad luncheon. The annual ;if. fair v.·ill take place at the University Park recreation center, v;ilh swimming begin- ning at 10 a.m. and the lunche«ll\ at noon. Mrs. Flor- ence Cooling v.·Jll host the gatherlng. Xi Xi Pi r.1en1bers of X1 Xi Pi Chapter, Bela Si~ma Phi will MID- SUMMER NE\V YORK (UPI! -The letter to \Vaslungton. 10-year.(lld Melodic. the senator in D.C. v.•as from a glfl named Jay. \Vho didn"L r.;tve l11s age, then told how he '"\\Cnt about l '~ 1niles !<1st night picking up 1rash Today I v.·as going ahou!. 2 miles. Keep u11 lhe good work ." he concluded. It said ln part. "I wish l The \\'i~consin sC'n Ator i~ could hve a litlle longer . . . i::etring lrltC-rs bec.1l:se of his from whLit. I hear wr will only lr<ulrrship in t h e 1·n- live tv.·o 111orc years and I v.i ll \"Jroninentn\ fJC'ld and his role only be 12 years old . I \ron 't as Earth D.'ly founder last even be fully cduc::ited " year. Melodie v.·a.s C'Xpres~1 ng ti) Sen. Gaylord Nelsun, D-\Vis , Cindy, a fourlh gratlrr in rin her personal concern over Oregon school. wro!.(o lhat the v.·hal pollutiori was doing 10 J~.Day "should mean every day " the world. And the children as v.·ell as The senator says that since thinking adults arc concerned. E.:irth Oay "a continuing Another letter from "Your s!re:nn of letters JXlllrs into Friend, Jay," to the Seni:11or n1y office daily from Rradc l started out. "I v.·011lcl hate tn school <ind high sc h o o 1 die wtY.>n I ;im so roung. I :;;tt1dcnts all across !he nation would like to help stop pollu-rxprcssing thelr alarm O\"rr tion.'' Lhe pollution of the air and the ~~~~~~~~~- " ON SALE NOW! Reguler merchan- d ise from every department, includ - in g : e PANTS e PANTSUITS e BLOUSES e DRESS ES e LONG DRESSES AND SKIRTS gre•t sa vin-gs on •ccessories jt w•lry, hendbegs, & bett,, --0- P.nty Hose t/1 Price 25 -50°/0 off a nd MORE ! waler. 1he destrucUon or the LB Leagu e 11·elcome guests for an f'\•ening bC'aUIY 0 1 Ilic IA"d··a~ d of aamrs at 8 \\'cdncsday, Ju-" " ., ... r-an A store-wide clearance sale " \hf' threat of rst111r!1on for so now is in progress at the ly 21. f\lr~ .. John ,\loquin \\'ill ma.ny of ou r wild creatures." Turnabout Shop of the Laguna open her Costa r.1esa home for Now . st1rne of lhC' letters -Beach Assistance l.Aague. ac-the even t. m1sspelhngs and all -have-;;:;;:;;;:;;;:;--.;----" --------------1 IJtrn compi led in fl narierhack _r ., ,..,,....,..... • ...,. - - <'allcd, "\Vh:it Arr ~le and You I ~- Gonna Do?" In ;1 thought-pro· ~ voking foreward lu thr book. the senator sa)'S th:i1 ·what 1hr young are 11sking "is c!rar antl sirnpl e -"Do we rrnl!y ha1f' to destroy tomo rr1)W 10 101 r today?'" The Hn~v.·er. hr 1, says, is "no" but 1hPn f'ornes ~ the next question from wh ic h • the book lakes its tille. ~, JULY'S BIRTHSTONE 1he }Qµ&~ Pt111e11infl' tbe mt11L 1limul11tinR" o~ 11.ll color11, th11 Ruby h11 betn I aptly dtrlit Rtec\ to thl' hlirh noon and briR"hL 1n id11.1mmer_ It....,,, thnui;:h l to r.nnl.l\i n • ir1nw!n1t 11park •truck fro1n th,. pl11nrt ' ! ~lai •; 11 •park th1ttnnld not bf! qut n(hrd until th11 world it~1t JrrflW told. Tht Rnhy it tht birth- 1t.one for contentn1tnt and pt!lct.1 117~ar '101!r birlA1l11>1~ for Ifft . /R•A1r>" (lnrl poorl fnrtu"~ ;W kt SEMI-ANNUAL SALE rPffiO~~@ ...A ~~rr &~kl~~~ e e USE YOUR BANKAMERICARD e e 8.99 to 10.99 QualiCraft Shoes NOW S1ve ov•r 50% en Amt rlca's le1din1 fashion shoes! Hurry now to 1njoy lht1e tremendous v1lut!, StlU a fin1 11l1ction, althou1h not every 11ty!t In 111 slzf!S . 5.99 to 7.99 2 99 Casual Group • Fashion Island South Coast Pla t a Newport Center Costa' Mt1• Hunt ington Center Fa1hlon Square Hvnt ingtoQ Bttch Santa Ana ' ,, I I ' ' Tllll: Cl.ASSIS PICK YOUR PERM FOR SUMMER WITH OUR 1/2 PRICE PERM SALE IN THE BEAUTY SALON REG. 35,00VALUE ........ NOW17.50 REG. 25,00 VALUE:,, ••• , ,.NO\V 12.50 INCLUDING CUT• o RESTOR COND ITIONER REVITALIZES YOUR HAI Ro • CONSUL.I OUR KRt:(. DcPERT I N PERMANOIT HAJ R RCMOVAL• ROBINSON'S '1-.NEWPORT ' FASHION ISLAND" • 644 -280C • -- -· .. . . . MoncWy, July lCJ, 1971 DAILY PILOT J 7 Co okbooks Add • Your Horoscope Tomorrow Lots of Spice Capricorn : Make Concession TUESDAY JULY 20 act accordingly. Protect sell. Good lunar aspect now coin· cides wtih possible romantic involvement. Be g e n e r o u s without being foolish. Young person could be m a k ing unreasonable demands. Do some personal checking. built on practicality. Although generally regarded as a quiet Individual, you poiSCSS inn ate sense of showmanship. l\l a;or cycle is concluding: you are favored If willing to finisb what has been started. Ry Ell\lA BOMBl':CK 11 is incredible to me that cookbooks are outselling books on sex three to one. J like fie· lion ;:is well as the next one, but nol fllr a moment do I buy that old line !hat the way to a 1nan·s heart is through the kit· t'hPl1 I questioned this at our local bookstore. "Are you trying to trll me Ursula Andress is be1ni:: replaced by a Col. Sandrrs chicken leg ?" I asked. "I am not trying to tell you anytl:tng of the kind ," said the book huycr, ··1 am only lrying In warn you cookbooks are becoming quite sexy. \Vithin the next few months you can look for 'The Sensuous Souf- flr .' 'Everything You 've \\'nntcd To Know Abo u l Artichokes But Were Too En1harrassPd To Ask' :ind 'Frigat nrs~rrts F' r ;:ink l y D1scussf'rL ' We m;:iy sell this onr undrr 1he cou nter:· "Oh, come on," I said". "I c;:inno! believe those would be best sellers ... '"Then you haven't read the current tearjerker w h i ch clauns, 'Lnve Is Never Having lo S;iv It Needs a Little Sa tr?" .. Th::il 1s the most ridiculous thing 1 h<i ve ever heard of." I said. "When P l;iyboy features a tuna casserole in the cen- trrfold. then 1"11 behcve food is replncin~ sex." I chuckled tn n1vseH all lhe 1.1"a.11 homr. \Vhcn 1 arri~·cd my hu'ibanrl "'"S pcrr1ng tntn the Ol'en "\Vhat"s for dinner?" he askcrl '"He llo. rlr<1r." I s;iid. kissing him on th!' car. AT WI T'S EN D '·You're not pulling that old onion·in-lhe-oven trick on me again. are you'..'" he asked ir· ritably, "just l-0 m11ke me think something wonderful 1s coming?" .. , thought tonight we'd have a tray in the livi ng room .. , Just the two of us." "A tray of what?" "I don't know," I said Im- patiently, "Maybe a few cold cuts and l 'U pla y my Jackie Gleason album and ... " "'\Vhere's that cold pork chop f hld behind lhP jar of mayonnaise? It's gone ~" he shoutl'rl hysterica!ly. .. Look ." I said snuggling on his chest. "We'll even turn do14·n the lights and ... " "I suppose the kids ate tho~ marinated herring," he said miserably. "I swear if you can'l keep tabs on a few goodies, '>''hat's left in life:' "Maybe I'll send the klds tn lhc playground" ... I slopped suddenly and looked al him . He was stuffing down a piece of banana cream pie wilh a look Of tenderness and CX· citement I had not seen since I fixed the pO\.ver mower. "Maybe. later tonight. I could make some popcorn," I said huskily. "You and Julia Cliilds know hnw to drive a man crazy," he \\·hispered. .. f'' I " ' ...... ~, ,,;. ·• --1 • ;.' ''.', ..... ~ ; ' , ~ "''11' ' •"-•' .;i ~l· ACHIEVEMENTS RECOGNIZED Mrs. Henry Crane Club Bestows Highest Honor By SYDNEY OMARR Although Pisces is said to rule the feet. I have noted that many women of lhis zodiacal sign can do as much y,·ith their eyes as son1e do with their en- tire bodies. Pisces women are physically drawn to men born under Cancer: they are good, in ll financiAI sense, fnr those born under Aquarius. The Pisces woman is dramatic in a quiet, subtle manner. She usually adores the theater but de1ests theatrits. Some famous women born under Pieces include E I i z a b e I h Taylor. Samantha Eggar and Keely Smith. ARIES (March 2l·April 19): Wh at appeared settled, may now be ready for somP. starting innovations. Stress the new; throw off bias. Libra individual can show way. Mate, partner has right to be restless. Be understanding. TAURUS I Ap ril 20·May 20 ): Journey that a p p e a r s necessary may lead to wild· goose chase. One who seems to be ignoring you actually Young career v.·omen anx-AB\\'A convention in Anaheim pays close attention. Applies ious to succeed in business in October. particularly to associates, prn- "'1thou1 really typing could She started her career fessional superiors. lake a !rsson from Mrs. Henry because of her Interest in GEl\1JNI ( ~1ay 21 ·June 201: Crane. newly chosen Woman· children. "I decided to open a of·the·~·e;ir by N e w p 0 rt nursery te p r 0 vi d e com-Finances may be jn state of Beach"s Chapter of American panionship for my 0 w n flux : gel tighter hold on reins. Business \Von1en's Associa· children and toys are a very Be fair hut firm. Applies t1on. lucrative. mnrket considering especially whrn dealing with During some 20 years as a the number of children there one born under Sagittarius. working v.·ife she has owner! a are." Ch<'ck budget, take inventory. VERGO ~Aug . ZJ..Sept. 22): Friend who 1s generous with your money may be of fair· weather variety. Examine motives -including your own. Costly procedures can be eliminated. A q u 11 r I u 5 in- dividual may play key role. LIBRA ~Sept. 2.1·0cl. 22): Direct energies, a f fer t 1 on toward one who 1s ap- preciative. Revelation is due which exposes vital secret. Take action in calm, cool manner; avoid panic, You will get needed support. SCORPIO (Qct. ?J.Nov. 21 ): Lnw-key approach is best: check records, statistics. Ac· cent new knoy,·ledge: be will· ing to make n e c e s s a r y revt!iions. One who appeared .rigid displays greater flex- ibility, works in your favor. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 l ; We! I · me a n t n g relative may nol be ton wise c n nrerning investments. Friendship and monry can nol.'• prove 11 dependable cnm· bination . Efforts gain greater recognition. finish task. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19 ): Handling of funds comes under closer scrutiny. Plan ac· cordingly. Avoid attempting to force issues. Lunar cycle is in· dlcative of need to lie low. Make concession to mate, partner. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20..Feb. 18 1: Define goals: v.•hat you reach for now is apt to be achieved. Be sure you know what it is you really need. Get rid of !'upcrfluous goods. m;:itenal. Trim down tn essen· tia!s. ~1any will respond. PISCES tFeb. !G-March 2G): toy store, ope rated a child BcsidC'S 1he s;iti,~faction of \'nu will understand. care nursery, bcPn a br<1nch ineeting people, J\.1r~. Crane CANCER (June 21-July 22\: Fas hion Fall s cashier for a life insurance commented !hat a no I her What was an emotional rut company :ind sold candy and reward nf wor king is the now becomes a fascinating Q (l\her merchandise. helpfu l encouragement she challenge. Lunar cycle is high : n Ho mespun "Sales is a challenging field gets from her husband, a circumstances favor y n"' vachl bcok•c They h 1· d The homespun, handcrafted wilh equal orportunities for · · ave Ive special e f Io rl s . Additional mrn and wonien who are able in the H;irbor Area for 25 fund s will be released. You look is headed for the fall and tn sell themselves as well as years. settling in Corona dcl make gains. winier fa shion pi cture. A-tar four years ago. Lheir products." ~he said. Many woolens 1n l he ABWA member!ih1p i~ nf)f'n LEO /July 23-Aug. 22 1 Be "1 "as pleased to l'?,et my to all wonH•n in business In· aw;i re nl legal implitations: American designer collections IF TODAY JS YOUR BIRTHDAY many describe you as being musical. You are receptive to the. arts; you are sensitive, but also have a base. To find o•JI Mori 1bol!t WOll'MI! 1n'1 ••l•ologv, ordlr S~<>My Ome1«• .,., pa11• bookie•. "'f~t "'frytft AllO<.• ,_.t•D!ovv. Stnd bl'rlft~lt~ Ind 11 c•n•• ... Orn•rr llooklt!, ·~· OAILV PILo-, 111»1 JHC. Grind C1n1rt1 Sttl!M. NtW y.,..~, NY. 10011. Crownin g Glory b eauty salo11s m,EN IVIN INGS ANO I UNOAYI APPOINTMENT NOT ALWAY& NECESSAR'I' SPRING PERM SALE! Bouncy, breezy beautiful curls Flattering new fa shion look. $S95 Very Special. Reg. $15 .00 now BUDGET PERM •• , • •lwoy• •59s (Normal Hair) FROSTING SPECIAL . . . $1450 SHAMPOO·SET STYLE CUT Mo" I ,u ','"d ltltf Wtt\; S295 SJ45 S150 •£00 Stfh!.1 /Jl!l f.IS :i.7hrly hlgher ...,s=ou=rH~c=oA=s1~P~LA=ZA---o'ph-on"-'e 546-71 86 Lower Level-Next to Sears O pen Evenings children involved tn that hne teresled in SC'tkin11, additional study sp ec 1 a I documents. had that straight-0fl·lhe·loom ., wock b"'"" " ''"ghl '"'"'"'In q"''''' lh•m '°' Che<k "'hind-S<•n" im-look. v,,, n"bby. 267 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa Phone 548·9919 them to bp ntore dip!om<1tic advancement and in keepin,ll plication.~. One who advocates And head topping~ fre-Open Evenings & Sunday anrl ciiosiderate er personal up to dale on business pro. clandestine meetin~ need' quenlly shown with such out.· w CARE bo k ~~IJtio~:t~l~~.Son~1~~.i p, ~~o~\-c~e~d~"~"~'~· ________ _'.''.'''~'.':'.'~"l~w~a~IC:'.h~in~<~·-K~no~w~t~h~is~;_f~il~s~h~a~d~l~h~AL~h~an~d~-k~o~il~l•~d~loo~k.~~~~~·~~~~·~~u~t~y~o~u~l ~L~o~o~~y~o~u~r~b~e~st~I~~~ ~temper, is the mother of tw in chtldren. Mrs. Crane\ aw a rd r ecognizes her busincs~ PX· perllsr il n d considerable participation in the flrganiza· !111n . La.~t year ~hp "'a~ \·1cr prcsidenl and chairman llf educat1on;il pr11Jcct.~ ;:ind niembersh1p for her chapter. * we of fer the gutttflhteetl WflY to ... Fnr rall '''car. 1hrec of the ne1v \\"1de brim h ats are rl 1splayed hy a Ne1v \·ark model. The one she \\·ears ts by Brookfa1r. As the local c;:in d1datP, sbe Is en lerr.d in the American Busine~" \\'nman-ol·lhe-year cnmpe11tion. The winner will bP annnunred at !hp nat1nna1 1F YOU HAVE ADDED UNWANT ED POUNDS ANO INCHES THERE' ts ONE SURE VvAY TO GET !ACK TO A SUM PERFECTIY SHAPED SUMMER I SAVE UP TO $1 .19 YD. Great s11vin gs on simply smashing summer fabrics. You 'll find Dan Rive r Hoya, vciile prints , eyelash cli ps, seersucker soid co lors. Good se!ection1 in den ims, linen.look prints, all sorts of sportswear and duck prints, sun and fun novelties. Cotton5, Rayons, Poly•sters, Flax Blend• ill guaranteed wash able 35"/45" WIDTHS 1. REGULAR PR ICES TO $1.69 YD . YARDS II HOUSE OF FllBRICS So1ttl Co111t l'I ... • -&rotlol •'Sin Ootqo Fwy , Co1ta Mn• -S45 °\:SI• O roftqOl1tlf Moll -Ortnqt!~o•fll '"d Ht•bor fullorto11 -:S24·2ll4 H•11•t l'\•1• -17+~ 11 B•ttlol , ... , ....... -54l-55:S1 lu1110 1'11rti C•11lor -l 1 r.1..,~ •' St1~•0~ lw•"• 1'11rk -l.Zl·•>.ZJ I FIGURE ••• ST ART NOW AT GtORIA MARSHALL'S WHEll:E TRAINED f lGURE EXPERTS QUICKLY SHAPE YOUR FIGURE TO ITS NATURAL LOVELINESS AND KEEP IT THERE! '""I lost 57 lb5". in l'IKOl'd time ot Gloria: Mor,noJl's," w,, Coral ~i!bourne. •1n ""f firn JO .,.r,its I lost 10 lr"1Che1. My husband wos flobberoosted. My idendl dldl'l't Nc:Ognixc m. .Personali.uJ cAttenti.on Quick .f.asting J?.esults NO MEMBERSHIPS NO MESSY SWEA TSUITS NO DISROBING WE ARE NOT A HEALTH SPA GYM! GRAND OPENING ATLANTIC SQUAil£ 714-6990 -k fJuarant ee J /(educing *We guarantee in writing you will reach your goal or let you hove FREE of charge a ll further visit1 until you do. DON'T MISS THIS OF FER ! • ITILL ONLY $1.SO por treatment llat Cltadd Mt Hfr JOllf' 11 i.dlti ti. h ... flnt 10 'o'l1t•. lnlt Iii -rd tloM • illlt u ,. ..... -JS ~ ; ' ~ t ,. v' ''I , '" • ",, .._de ''°"' hod 9! .. ft ~P hope •f - st-lth g Dad: l"t• a peti"' •Ir• '· bw1, It did l>appen at GLORIA MARSHALL'S, JI,. Iott 23)/i hie~" ctftd 21 pewft.tt. */J£.,.~ 11?,,,1.,, I /J/J .::J:!!_~f /{g,'«ffl,/J,(g_.....:,Fl..:.G,,;UR=E~CO:;cN,,_',._,l'R~O!!L~SALO~~N!!!S'-- ~ 11.. ..,u', WINin1 fiPI• """""°" .,..,._ Dtlty t -t ; Jiit. t . S .1 ..... ,;,·~·· l.•1•...,. .. 430 PACIFIC COAST HWY., NEWPORT BEACH·-642-3630 u ll&c~• "'" °" lttMI l lV C!llt) 1840 Wnt 17th Strfft, Santa Ana -543.9457 'LW> !N I AMII•!~ C:t¥!ft•, (tM,,..W, bewl!ty, Oielllltlt, LIUW ... , C.11 V .. tt, ...... •tttll. Ntw(l9M lt1ch, Ntrth Hl!!J...ail, Oftltnt. 1"1.u ..... '-• 01.,., h1111 A111. 5•~•• l1ft;111, l11111t1111, T1n1111. r ... r1nc1 ,,.. Whlttltr. fel CQ(IYtlQ~I. ~IT. GIOt!I Me'"•~•ll Mot Co In(. •• • • • --------.:>- • I I \ • '. ·, ' . '~··· Honeymoons Are Lovelier . • • 1\1r. and l\.lrs. Joserh Bezdek of Hunting ton Beach are planning an Easl ~oast vacation in the fat as their second bone ymoon -a fter 50 years of n1arriage. Their golden \Vedding anniversary-was celebrated at a family dinner party. Married in Vin cennes. Ind., the Bezdeks came to llunlington Beach 21 years ago to "take it easy" after he retired from the liquor bu siness. They have two grandchildren and three grea.t-grandchi ldren. Vows, Rings Exchanged By Summer Newlyweds on Pnor. MRS. BRUCE FOAT FOAT-EASTMAN 'J'he Rev . Dr. Ray Gery of· ficiatcd v.·hen Susan Spalding Eastman and Bruce Norman Foat were married in Christ Church by the Sea, Newport Beach. Honor attendants were her gisler. Elizabeth Eastman, and his brother, Stanley Foat. Teresa Bailey was llov•er girl 3nd Richard f oal and Silsby Eastman served as ushers. Parents of the newlyweds are Spalding Baker Eastman of Nev•porl Beach and the lale 1trs. Eastman an d Harry foal Jr. and f.1rs. Louise Cuppett, both of San Pedro. Thr !J~'de. a graduate or Principia College, and her husband. \1•ho received his degree from California State C.Ollege at L-Ong B{'arh. honey- moon ed in Jlawa11. .. ' J,11,., l"tletti 'MRS. C. D. WILLIAMS WILLIAMS-MILLER Jacq~llne Gall r.1 i 11 er became tbe bride of Charles Duane Williams during a garden wedding al the Laguna Beach home of her parent5, Mr. aod Mrs. Bob N. f.1illcr . Miss Diane Judy was maid flf honor and the lo.1.isses Kathy Ught. Carol Dugger and Cheryl Mann served a s bridesmaids. Trent D. Pulliam 1tood u best man and ushers were James Miller, brother of the bride, Fred Floyd and EDUDett Martin. MAHRLING-BRANDT Home in Huntington Beach are Baron Lee l\-1ahrhng and his bride, the former Kathreene Louise Brandl 11'ho ex changed vows before the Rev. \Vhit l lerrington in the Church of Christ. Costa Mesa. Parents of the bridal couple are Mr. and f.1rs. Deenc T. Brandl of Hunti ngton Beach and Mr. and Mrs. Rober t B. /o.1<1hrling of Fountain Valley. f.1rs. Fred I-faller was the matron of honor; f.1rs . Cliff Mahrling. the bridegroom's s i ste r-l n -I aw and f.1iss Deborah Br a n d l were bridesmaids. and T a mi Endsley was lhe flower girl. Attending his brother as best man v.·as Cliff fllahrl ing and anolher brother, Hichard Mahrling with Ri ch a rd Brandt, the bride's brother, were ushers. The bride is a gr11duale or Fountain Valley High School nnd her husband is a ~raduatc of Westminster High School. MRS. MAHRLING MRS. MARK TYLER TYLER-BOLTON Patricia Nell Bolton and lo.1ark C, Tyler rxchanged vows and rings before the Rev. Otarles Smith in Calvary Chapel, Santa Ana. The br ide. a former membf>r of the Young Americans singing group oow performing Ydlh the Kids .'\(';.:! Door, is the daughter of r.1rs. Griggs Bolton of Santa Ana . Mr . and f.lr~. Clrment 0. man; Richard Bolton. usher : Cara Down5, no"·er girl, and Timothy Zimmerman, ring bearer. The newlyweds, graduates or Cororia de! r.1 ar and Fullerton high school5, wi!l n1ake !heir first home in Hun- tington Dea rh. Ht~nH P~olo MRS. CHARLES DUNLAP DUNLAP-ZERWEKH F1r!>l Christian Church of Pomona \\'SS the setting for th1: 1na1 riage of Lynn Zcr\vekh anrl Charlrs Richard !>unlap. The Rev. Or. Richard \Ving officiated al the ceremony for lhe daughter of fllr. and tlirs. Donald E. Zer"·ekh of Costa !11esa and the son of ~Ir. and .\Ir ~. Jock Dunlap of Pomona . '!he hridc wa~ :1tlcnc!ed by "f\ll ~i; Kathy Stranigan, rn111d of honor, and il-liss Ka1h.V Lci;l ie. Hay Van dcr Nat \1 <is hcst 1na n and u~hers were Chris Lindsey and the bride ' s hrothl'r11, Jim and Tom Zer wckh. Presen tly a student at Orange Coast College, the bride graduiited lrnm Pomona J ligh School. lier husbnnd at- tended Mt. S :.i n Antonio CoJ\cgc and Oarcmont High School. ZIRION-BUTLER Pamela Butler and Kirk Z1rion follo"·ect family tradi- lton \l'ht>n 1hcy \\'ere married in SI. Andrc1v"s Presbyterian Church. .'\t'\\'porl Beach, on the wcdd1n.g anniversary or hoth tht>ll" p:ircnts. The Hcv Dr. Raymond l}raharn.~ pt>rformed l he <·cremony for 1he daughter of ~1 rs. John T. Butle r of Newport 11r.<lrh ;ind the late f.lr Butler <in<l f.lr. and tl-1rs. Chnrles Z1non or Clipper ~I il!!i The bride was )(1ven 1n mar· riage by her brolher .. John Butler, and attended by her sister . f\!rs. K11thy Rog er5. matron or honor and v.·edd!ng soloist. The Misses Linda l\1tch1ng 11nd Linda L'Ai "'·ere br1de~m:11di; Ray Z1r1on \\'as be5l man for hi.'i bro1her 11nd u.'ihtr5 \\'ere Bill Strachan and Thoma5 Buller. the bride's bro'ther. The bric!C', a graduate of t'niversily of California at . . . . . .. . . . . ....... --.... ~ . . . . . ' --. . . . .. THE SOFT SANDAL BY PENAUO The •trappy look for the •umm•r leg • • • hero done in mere ribbons of cri nkle patent rin9ed to- gether and heightened by a shapeliness of heel. Fem• inine with pants. Graceful with dresses. Your summer answer for all the looks you love. In a range of sizes to fit everyone blissfully. 19.00. Fashion Shoes 8 Order by T••pllo11e or UM He11d-, Moll Ord•r Cowpo11 THE llOJ.DWJ.T, Qwo111lty Item ..... HAMI Ip!-prh1t l ••••• ,, •••..•.••••••••. ····••••••••••. Add,_ ,,,, ••• , •••••.••.•••••••••••••••••••• , •••..••••• City • , •••••••• , , • • • • • • • • • • St•t• • , •••••••• Zip •••••• 0 C .. 11-1 etKIOM S • , • , ••.• 0 c.o.o. My l roctdwcry ~•mber 11 •.•••••• , , ••••.•...••••••••••••••••• Pitt•• 1'11! ••In l~Y H•Nlllno d•~r~._ 8dd1Honll IM10f'ld T~• •l'IM<l-Y deli w •Y &r11. Jl<ld )k 1er~lc1 <~•·~• 1111 ord1r1 und" l!.00 11'1d •II (.0 .0.'s. Find your size here: 14 I 4V2 15 151'2 I 6 I 6V2 I 7 I 7V2 I Bi BV2 I 9 19V2110 1101'2 111 111'/t 11.21 75~11m----~I ~1-~l~X~I ~x~1--xr-x I XI X I XI X I Xt X I X I X I X I X I X I Narrow I IX I X x: X I XI X I Xi X I XI X I X I X I X I X I X I Medium I X IX I X I XI X I XI X I XI X I XI X I X I X I X I X I X I Wide I x IX I X I XI x I XI x I XI x I XI X I X I X I X I X I x I The newlyw.ds will re~ide in Costa Mesa and continue U1tlr studies 111 Sadrlleback Co1le:ge. The bride gradunlerl from Laguna Beach High School. Her husband Is the 50n of Mn .. Sylvia William~ of OlaUa. Ill. where he attended Tyler of l/un!ingtnn f"\cach :ire parents of 1he bridrflrnon1 who studied theater artr. at Orange Coast College. Oo<•i,, t co ch" in Mary~ HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT vdlr f!rr h 11 s band 11!-· 1cni.Jed College of the 7777 Ed ing er Ave. #47 Fo shio n lsl1nd Redwoods in Eureka and will j7 1 ~) 892-ll J I 1714) 644.1212 rnroll .in Brook.'i tn sUtute of ~+---i.t.ch ochool · Attendants werP the bririr'.• i;isler. Jann1cc Collon, m~11d of honor; Rohrrt John son, br~l ~.::~,',:.g" Ph Y in Santa SHO P MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 10:00 A.~TO ;:30 P.M. SATURDAY 10:00 ~.M. T,.? 6 P.M. SUND AY 12 A.M. TO 5 P.W J • ...... ...... OAtlY l'ILOT Sl•ff l'~oto MIKE McLEAN SIFTS STONE CHIPS Anthropology Student1 Study Newport Site Newport Digs Fullerton Students Unearthing Secrets By GEORGE LF.:IDAL DI lho Oi<IY P 1ICll S!11f Somc111ne within th1· p:i.'>I 1.000 years a tribe of Luiscno Jndians Found the 11 inter climate of Newport Beach ideal for rcspitr fron1 ltl!' harsher 11·1nt crs of lhr1r :.uni· mer hon1c in 1hc Sant<i Aria !11ountains. This sun1n1rr. ::i ('!:;:-..; of archeologi.'>IS fron1 C.il State Fu!Jcrton cirr p<11nst:ikingly scraping a11:1y thl' soil H1t· Luiscn os n1:.iy have left behind many winters ago Christopher Drover. ;in anthropology instructor at C.:il St<1te Fullerton and 2 ll students, will spend six v.·ecks at a midden site abo1•e upper Ncv•port U<1y. The nuddcn - an lnrlian ar!tfacl drf}OSt!orv -1s clearly marked by an 80 x 110 foot oval of dense dark green brush ''The darker. taller vegcta· lion clearly shov•s 11hrre lhe lnd1ans c<1mped." Drover sn1d, ''Si nce 1he rcn1a1ns of the f'O· l'an1pmenl -garhngl' ;ind shellfish remains. hav e enrich- ed the soil.'' The site. first loi:u:rd n1 IDlO, has never been syslc1nat1cally dug before. Now. with lhr assistance nf Archileol1Jg1cal Research Inc -an lr1·111c Company subs1d1.1ry -!hr Cal State studrnt:r; ""Ill unrnrth the secrets of the now <'.~t1n<"t U.u~eno tnbe The d1scoverv nr hundreds or she JI fish in °lhC :<illl f II h1c·h rnuld nn! have been flooded by the sea su1cc thr P!ristoccnr f'ra is key In undrr!-ltand1ng !he 010\'rrncnt ~ of thr lnd1:in~. Ba~cd on otl1cr rcscar<"h nn !he Orange County ab11rig 1ne:r;. DrovPr ~peculatc-5 the lnd1;in<; :r;oughl the warmer. !r~~ cu1n· pl1ra ted l1v1np: offered hy 1he Back flay bluff s. 111 11·1n\cr \\I hde !he prl·~cn•·e tir ~"rnt' ~hr!I 1nd1ra1rs 1hi· lnrl1:_i11<; relied in purl nn thr ~llcll r1sh nch v.·;:i tl'rs of 11ir l\c11·port Bay, !he digging lhu s f:ir h;i:r; unearthed relntivcly f (' 1v shells, rompared with olher sites !hat have bc1·n f'X- cavatrd Orovl'r concludC'~ the oc- cupants or the midden he 1s researching rnay t/1us h;i1·<' been more hunting ont'n!cd than other lnbes lh<1L fre- quented the Orange Coa <;\ ~nlimctcr by cent1n1cler 11udents are scraping a\vay the earth, sifting ii through screens !o find 1iny bits of 1oo!rd rock. bits of shell and bone maler1;.il. Wilh luck and a lot of h;:ickhrcaking 11nrk. Drover l1opcs to find remains of the two to three foot p1t.<1 the In- dians rn;iy have du g to provide :-.heller from the mil d climate. 'The architect ural clues would appear ;is ditches in the clay ~ubsoil about three feet below lhe present surface topsoil. No hnpl' 1s held that trace.<1 of the bru~h coverings the Ind ians plricrd O\'er 1he plls v.•ill br round. Drnvrr \1·ill continue work - ing the site ilf!cr the student -; ha1·~ completed their tv.·icr \\'eekly visils to sift through soil 1n !lvo-metcr sq uare pits. The proiect will comprisf' his n1aster"s degree thesis lie does not expert the f'n· lire midden \\'111 bt· dug up So norlh·wuth and easl-wesl axt'~ lines h;ivr been drawn and each area thaL is being st udied n1apped. Later researchers 11ill be able to work previously unexplored areas by referring lo the rnap. Drover noted. Drol'er said he doc:s nol ex· pee! lo unearth human rc - rnains ··prob<ibly becau se they r1thrr cren1ated their dead or 'bunerr them above ground ., Thus. examination of the 11ny fragments of shell. stonr and bone mu st pr oc1d<" thr <·lues lo help explain !he hie.style of the Lu iseno. Since she lls havr rings. hkr 1recs. a11alys1s of the rinl!" tf'll~ 11 hen lhl'y died Study of l•its ol shell.~ ran le!I 11 hat tunr of year !hr_v \1·crr killed indit'ating the times {lf yr:ir the Indians rrl1rd on the ra.-.111' acriuired diet or sea creature~ Prrdominancr of 1n 1 1 I l' d ~tones 1n the mtddc11 m1~h1 :;uggest a tribe of hunter.~ O!her tools m1gh1 pla('c a tribi' of acorn ~athcrrr~ a n d grinders as the prcviou~ <H.:- (tlpanls of the si!c The fragments students col· lcct arc baggrd datly 1n th ree <'ategories . Laler th ey arr washed and c.italogued ac- cording to their local1on 1n thr .<1011. 1\11 11·ill br ~tored in the Cal State museu1n Drover noted. M;.ip!) detailin,e Lhe loc11tions of the finds 11·1!1 allow later resea rchers to "reconstruct" the site. Foreign Aid 'No Issue' With Greek Elections ATl!ENS (UPI) -The Greek government said Friday that 11 decision on whether to holrl elections \\'nlllrl not be connected with foreign aid. "\Ve may hold el ection:r; tomorrow. in 20 n1onths. or 1n 20 ycar.<1, but our decision v.•ill be based on nation11I interests and will not be connC<-"\rrl in enyway ·with aid, no matter where from or how 1:rf'al.' sa id Pr c m i e r f;rorgr Papadopoulos. llis sta!cmcnl lolln,vcd a 17· 12 vole by the US !l ouse Foreign Affairs ('omm1tter Thu rs rl a y rrron1n11·nrl1n~ suspension nr i\ rn r r 1 ca 11 military aid to Grcl'CC :1s a means nf hrin~inR ahout in· tcrnill drmocratir rrfonns 1n Crercc US mi111 :1rv 11irf tn f.rrrcr !his. )'l':'lf 11'~~ ~rl :ii SI !II • million. The Papadopoulos govem- ment came tri power in April, 1967. in a military coup. "There is TIQt enough f;;OlC c.n earth to make us sell the in· tcrests of our ('OUntry and to f'ndangrr its survi11al,'' Papadopoul~ said. The Premier said I hr govemment n•a!f 11uthorized throuRh the 1963 consl1tullnn to decide when to hold elec- tions. A claust or lhe ('Oll- prestnl regime and approved by lhe people in a referendum authori11'~ !hf' governmrnt to ~rt a rlnte for 1\s full ap- pl ication American mil1t;iry aid to Gref't'e w;is partially SUSP'nd- rd following the military 1akr- ovrr in \9fi7 as a mranJ of hringin~ pressure l1nvard rr- turn lo Democratic rulr, ' ' ' .. ........ , -• -........... .,.-41,. 4 ........................... ..._ ......... '• .... ~ ..... •. Buried Nuclear .Blasts May Prevent Earthquakes WASHINCTON (UPI) Two scientists suggested today it may be feasible to use burit!d nuclear explosions to prevent earthquakes. But lhey noted at Lhc san1e time that l:irgc nuclf'll r blasts in hnrd rock 1n1ght tr igger destruct1vr qu akes. The sc1cnt1sls. M. N:iri Toksoz and llarol d ll. Keh rer of !he ~tassachusetts lnstit ule of Technology, d1srussed con- ce1vablc 11ses and haz~rds cir underground explosions in the current issue or the \\leekl11 Journal. Science. They said underground shots by !he Atomic Energy Comm1ss1on in Nevada released rock "striun energy'' or the sort that btulds up frozn t1n1t' to 111nr 111 places to cause earthquakes. 'Therefore. thrv s;i1d. s11rh explos ions "migh.t be effective in period1f'111ly relensing 11r- cumu!aling tcctoruc s t r a in energy in nclivc areas and. thus, could possibly prevent n1<1jor e<irthqu;ikes." On the n!her hand, "an ex - n!o:r;ion thHt releases very large <1n1ounts or s Lr a in rncrRY \vould have the same effect 11s that of a large earth· quake." ~t uch depends. according lo Lhe scientists. on Lhe hardnes.<> of the rock m which the ex- plosion oceurs and the amount of previously e1ist1ng sub· terrancan stress in !hf' vicin1- 1' · Tht'Y haseU their calcu la- tions un the relatively 1011·- µwer undergrou11cl explosions at the AF.C's Nel'ada test silt'. 'They did not allude direclly to the fi ve n1egaton explosion 11->quiv:1len! to fi1'l' rnillion h>ns o! cheinical explos11e f plan11cd for Ottober in a hole more lh<1n a mile dt•ep tn 1'otcan1( rock under the Aleut i:,an Jsl:l nds of Amchitka. The House Thursday. on a 70 lo i1 vote. turned down a n1ove lo halt the Aleutian test. Hep. Patsy r-.link. (0-Hwaii ,\ 'vho proposed the ban . said the unpaet of such a blast ts unknown and 1rarned th;it 1l could trigger tidal waves that 1111gh! re:u:h as far as her horne :;late . An e111•1rnn n1!'ntalis! group has gone to court to try to stop lhe bla~l. In the Nevad.1 t'3ses studied the relr,1sed strain energy, as recorded by sensitive in- strun1Pnts. ''wa~ less than lhP equivalent seismic energy of the explosions themselves in all but one case." the authors .... _ ... said. gr11111tt'. ;,in extrcmt•ly hard rock. Thi' •·excessive strain l'ncrgy relt•asc," Lht> scientists ~·11d, has been att ri buted to •·the possible triggering of an earthquake." The A.mchitka explosion will be scl off in basal!, also a dense rock. Thr AF.C contends thal re (urrent earthquakes in the Alculian.<1 pro\'1de a nalur:il safety valve [or strain e11erg1e1= Ul that region, 1'oksoz and Kehrer found ··~neourag1ng '' indicalions for use or nuclc<1r explosions in earthquake control But they al so w:1n1ed againsl large tests in hard rock unless the undergrol1ncl stress le\'els "are known to be low ." Me8an Lauded Costa r-.1esa resi dent Lawrence ft Muellt'r, 320 Buck nell Road. has been nam- <'d to thr Academic Honor5 t.ist al Ferris State College Big Rapids. r-.1ich. .. I l'ricr" }:ffrt"livr. :-iundny, July Ill 1hr11 :-iaturdtty, July 2 4 1\~k AlHn1l S r or" t :n nvrnirnl ( :r1•1lit l'lana ."i.1 Vii 14.50 .'i'J-Yd.! "Shagmoor" (;arpclinl( • 100% Dacrori" polyester yarn~ i:+vt• you II l•o '14 ('4' ...... ''d . egu _,, '"I" ' • superb resilience,•warmth • Clea.ns easily and quickly withoul d.,tnrt1onlO 49· of pile • 21 wonderful colors, vivid or ~hy " lnst.allatioo.with Rubber Pad Included Sq. Yd. ' ' . ' . 'I Layaway Ciwo8e Ro Ida Your Sl'llection •tfl Sept. 11t, 197 l .. . CAflV PILOT J9 Boys' W es_tern Style Jeans SAVE 21 %! ' J 11.gu1 •• '2.99 :$ .. .. • Perma ·Prests cotton-nylon . deni m. Vu lcan ized double • knees. Siz:e 15-1%. Regular, alim. • .. S1>ort and Knit Shirr.a t:·3 s5 l:t • for n ee f 1 ·~·" f ' ·\I" 1 \I l Short sleeve plaid :spo rt shirts..: Perma-Preit® polyelilerJcotlJ>n; striped knit shirt.a. Siies6tol 2.' B~s· Waat Dqif. • Little C;irl"' Swi1n or Playwear • Were $3.99 to $6.99 -1.ittle gi rls' swimsuit.<1 In an array of slyles, color~ and fabrics. Sizes 3 to 6x. • Were $2.99 -Lillie i::irls' playwear In Perma· Pres('!l fabrics. Slyles include tennis dresses, shif\ :selis and more. Si1e.'i 3 to 6x. lrifan.U' anrl Childtm't DtJJL JULY WHITE SALE! Regnla• '299.95 SAVf; 11 % to 22%! PM'Ttla~PreAl(I) Wltite MmJin $2.39 Twin l<'lal/F'i lted ........ 1.'17 $2.99 Full Flal/l'illed ......... 2.37 $1.59 Pi l lowcase ~ ............. , t .47 $4.49 Queen 3.99 $6.49 Ki n~ S.99 $1 .99 Cases J.79 $2.29Cascs 2.09 Color s, Paltcrns Also On Sal,.. /Jornn !icJ Dey,, Sears 18-In. Portable Color TV • F'8lur<s a n a utomatic <olor purifi.r that 2 6 8 99 sharpens color receptio n • Automatic chroma control for extra·vivid color and keyed autom1tie aain control for 1teady pictures. Mode l 41101 Rtldio and TV~ SHOP SUNDAYS 1? NOON to S PM • , MON°""Y thru FRIDAY 9 :30 AM to 9:00 PM . , SA1'URDAYS 9:30 AM to 6 :00 PM -FREE PARKING• ........ , ..... ,,,_..oo, '""uio <•-~ , •• , &•O·alll ·-w+-t ltl, t.n-1141 • C'OYIM,11 ,_,, ·-· .. ,.,,,, -·· IU.llM.~111 • 'IOOu•woo. ····-! -•11-UJI ION9 •l&(lf ., ... ,,, otY•r!t & toRI 1••·'"' OfllffOI ...,,., ... ····-.. U l-111 I, Jll.s11 l -· .,,_,,,, ~· IOJf-4'MI , .... " .... , ...... ,, l&lfT& -· lf4-1111 lctvnl CO&H l'U.l'.i ..... JllJ --·...-· lt1 ........ lll·IU I Totl&l'ICI J&J.11 I I .. ~ ,...,,.,..,, "4-1111 "·~_,. ,, .. ,,,, Sofl1fCKti. Go,,a,u;1I .... OJYwrM..y """' • I • ·Ip;---.• -"t ·• . ' f0 DAILY PILO T Monda1, July }q, 1'171 Sears ColdspotALL-FROSTLESS 14.l Cu. :Ft. Refrigerator-Freezer Regular 1269.95 • l:rmt never forms Jn either sccrlon, so there's never a de-$ t·rosting chore. Roomy freezer secrion 1tores lOS·lbl. of food '"itb handy Joor shelves. •full-width crisper holds 25.2 qts. 3 refr igerator c.lnnr shelves put bottles at your fingerci ps. •Reversible doors hinge ro fie any k itchens. #68400 Sear• Ca~ Sirrvir. .. , . , protC'Cl.S 1he '¥slue of your Coldspor Rcfr1aer· iMor-Preezcr. Our highly uaincd IC'Cbaicians M· sure servicc llUi$faction with ~rwnalized, pnr fnsion&l wc. WC' str· '¥iCt' what we sell, ""'her· c vcr you live u r may move 11'11hC' 11 S A .... ,. . .. " .. " .... ~ .. ~.,..,,,. '~·~·"'' ",;.;,r~~ .... , !Y.' ·>l • . ,., .. ~~ . ' . ~;..~ SAVJ~ '20! ~: ~; AU-F'rostless 16.0 Cu. Ft. ff Refrigerator-Freezer .; :~~~~r $269 ~· • You'll nevor defrosr either section F '.I •Big 127-lb. freezer with door shelf ,if·j •Roomy 2 ~.2-qr . crisper; door ~~ I shelves ~ I •Reversible doors hinge ro fie any {1·~ { ~i rc hcn; open from right or lefc f i 1 # r,sc1J o '.f:r I ... 1 .• , .. ·-; .. ~ l ~"·t,;....,.~~;-~ =-.. ·; .... ·1'. ... ,¥1.J:a;Zi .• •: ~·"' .yJ • 1· OS .~ I 4 .8 Cu. Ft. Side-By· Side Model ~J SAYE $30! $309 Hr~ular S:J:l9.9.i •Three srurdy sreel shelves, three door shelves, big 17.6-qt. crisper. • Never needs defrosting • J:ull -length freezer wit h nvo baskets. 5 door shelve. for handy storage. #69010. SA VE $%0 I Campocl Model Rf'f(lllar Sl69.'J.:i $149 • 7.7 cu. fr. rtfri~riuor-freczer wi1h push.buuon dcfrostiog. 11.3-q c. slidc ou1 rt isrer • Frecier holds 19.2-lb. of food. • 1-fandy door shelves. #90810. ·--. . . -· ·-. ~ . Hurry In Today For Some Of • ' . ' . ' ••••••••••••••••••• Kenmore Deluxe Zig-Zag Head and Control Regular 1179 $ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e •This cleganr versariJe machine does • suerch sritch. cam designs, double • needle, auromaric bucronhole mak· er, blind hem, overcasts, sews on : buttons ••• also straight stitching. • •The styling is classic ..• the 1ewiog modern. You can do practically all : of your sewing now with this Ken· " --~' ,• EVERYITE $JO to~ Regular Lov1 i ' f ' . more. #1601/6802 • Carrying Ca•e $20.95 extra ],"(jit'V"j , • t·~<· Bhl'lfl ~ ... •nn ~ ,' • Zif·Z..J Stitl"h H'!'Jnm1n1 ~lit~h quk"kl~ . ..................................... t. Prices Effective Sunday, July 18, thru Saturday, July 24 AskAbout Sears Convenient Credit Plans. •. • -~-.. ..:.,. ---·---- , f, f Our Exciting Appliance Values! ElrlONSALE! *400FF r Lo~Low Prices! -~ #'/7,J?-.11. Kenmore Deluxe Upright Vaeuwn Am1&ing Low9 LowPrieel Revolving brush and beater bars at 4500- 5100 RPM. Step.on switch. Automatic rug pile odju.scment 2 dis- posable dust bags snaps in bag mount. #3250 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~~~.~ ........................... . .• • , ... "1-.:J.. .... ·---· •• ~. , ......... ···:::::==··::::::. ... ------··------· .. ------····· ··-=······==····· .... ....... ·•··· ····=······=·-··· ._2::3' ····-----·=······ ••••••••••••••••• ..................... ..... ...... . ..... ····==····==····· .................... ····==······ DAILY PILOT %1 Mott lle!m At RedaeM Prtee. Sears Coldspot Air Conditioner SALE! SAVE '20! 5,000 BTU Air Conditioner Regufa.r $119.9:; $99 • Kenisan air filter helps keep out ir- riratingdusr, djrr and po Ilea • Rugged rust·resisranr cooscruction • Usesstandard llS·v house current #7105 SAVE'20! 3,000 BTU Cools Two Rooma Regular $179.95 $159 • Kenisan air filter helps keep homc air clean, fresh and comfortable •Lightweight for easy installation. •Uses scaodard 115·v. house current #711% SAVE'30! 14,000 BTU Multi-Room Model Regular $229.95 $199 •Two fan speeds let you choose fa.1t cool-offs or extra-quiet cooling •Comfort Sensor helps hold room temperarure ar the level you set. 230 volts #7160 SAVE'30! Big Capacity 18,000 BTU Model Rtgul.1r $279.9> $249 •Two fan speeds for comfort control •Comfort Sensor helps hold room temperarure at the level you choose • 230volts • #7162 SHOP SUNDAY 12-NOON To 5:00 p.rn . •MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30 o.m. to 9:00 p .m.• SATURDAYS 9:30 o .m. to 6:00 p.m. •FREE PARKING .. , aUINA PAllC t2•·4400, S11-4SIO CANOGA PAU: 14~•1 COMnON '3~1511,6.114761 COVINA f6M61 t IH MONll 441-Jfl 1 OllNDAf.I. J4S·I004, 24 ...... 1 f HOUTWOOO 46•·5941 ... GUWOOD67f.1J21 lONO llACM 4l5-0111 NOIWALIC 164-7761 OLY'M"C & $OTO Jtl•SI 11 OIANGI 6J1·1100 PASA.DtNA 611-J21 I, t.Sl-411 I "co 9Jl-4161 ~ONA 61,.S161 SAN PllHAfCDO 161-7121 MHTAN SPllNSS t•4·t011 SAHTAMOHICA JH-6711 SOUTM COQf P\.A.V. S40-JJJS THOUSAND O.t.h 497 ... SN, ~11JI TOUANCI J4:J.111 I \'AUIT 7U.•••1. •M-.2211> WIMOlfT 119·191 I ........ ---.,,,,..--·-·---,·--=-------=~----· St'<11·s Stor• Hourt Shown Abov~ Do Not App ly To Appl/one• ond Catalog Ord• Store. All Ille!•• ... ,,Uo""' ........ a. .. s"" Cnl'lll .. AM ,.,,fr._. .1.D.1.111\ I 111.1.GNOtl .. Kl·7111 GA-DIN GIOVJ IJt.'700 MONTUlllO ,,,.,,,. A\~111·~· ?IJ.fi.St IJf.l.1".1.0.1. MU ti MO.ICllll .oNllOll 141 .. llO .I.IC.I.DI.I. 441""'100 N.t.(l!ND.I. MOii. l»ltlt Otf!MIO "6-')Cl11 I Utl ... 11111! ll J.J!SJ lt"WIMO•Nf •1'.o.tl ,AlOt ¥llt0fl VJ.._ CHINO 617.1 Jll tlfGMLAND '"" 714-Jttl ,AltAMOYNT Jll·llOO CUlVll C.ITV 111.1 241 ltUNllNGTON If Ac.Ii f6t...Dll P\ACINnA fl4..0110 CYttlSS t l6-Ul0 t.t.GUNA 14/lll IJG.IJ)O a100frl00 lf.l.Ol .in.J411 OOWMI V •11-•111 ll~IWOOO 6lol.7llO IUIOA J.44.Jltt f\IU.QIOH SU.I If! Ull ALIQJ Jf74f4,J IQWINCI fWliitm ....... I "'" rR110 w .wn SHlllAAN OAltl tl14'• WNUMl U, .... Jt U"-AHll .. s.1tt7 WIJT C0¥1MA l'\AtA ...... Wllf(MllRI .,..,...,. Wtnt"Nllll ~ Wiii"'•"" ..... --· t~- 'WE'LL GET A JUDGE ON THE LINE FOR RELEASE' LAW Fund Founder Mulvey and Aide Charton 'Help for Poor' LAW Card Aids County Suspects By GEORG E LEIDAL 01 tt'f O•llY P'Hot $1••1 Three lo ng haired-teens in a camper van pull to the side of Pacific Coast llighv,·ay as nasi1ing red lights swirl about the night. T 111 o officers. suspecting narcotics vio lations, cautiously approach the van, fingers caressing guns "'hich may or may nol be needed in the moments to follow. Tension moun ts as officers obserl"e lhe husky trio of sun- ll'lnned youths. A quick move b:» thC' youth on !he right and a thud is heard in the nea rby brush. "EvC'rybody out and against the v11n,'' the offic er b;:irks. The trio alights. The brush reveals a small packet of a su bstance that may be mari- juana. "You're under arrest," one cop l>a ~s as he begins to re<id JI. s1aten1ent informing the trio cf !heir rights. Cooly. the driver of the vehi· ele asks the officer 1£ he may !"how him a card in his \1·allet. 1"'he cop consents. The ca rd , one of 1,500 issued in rerent months by the Legal Aid '\.'arranty Fund of Santa Ana, shows th e youth's pic- ture. On U1e back , the officer rrads a statemen t telling hi1n the youth knov,·s his rights, and understands he does not have to consenl to a search or Iii~ P"f" "'. Strangely. the card reliei·es the policen1an. He holsters his dray,•n gun. Police along the Orange Coasl have come to l;no\v !he card nieans the bearer 1s not likely to give him trouble during the arresl. ·whom regularly take cases brought to the LAW :F'und. Thirty to 40 of the call s handled each month , come from persons already in jail. Of these, half may be eligible for release on their own recognizance usually due to the efforts or the law students who visit the jail. at anv hour -0£ day or night. "if the circumstances warrant an OR release," Chrton said. "we'll get a judge on th<' line who orders the release." Then, depending on t11e nature of th e case. LAW Fund \Viii help a member find an at- torney, who may tnke the case at reduced rates, since the law students do most of the rou tine leg work . Charton estimates that fully a third of the calls handled bY the LAW Fund each month, 01mc from persons along the Orange Cost. Another 10 to 20 percent co1ne from outside Orange County. LAW ·rund has set up a nationwide network of attorneys willing to help people in trouble with the law. Not all the problems handled by LAW Fund are criminal matters. J\lcmbers seek advice on ci\'i l 1natters. divorces. judgments and collections. h1any me1nbers are doctors. businessmen or othrr pro- fessionals, Char!on noted. Of the crin1inal cases thcv h3ndle. niost are related tO drug use or possession fol!ow- ed by public intoxica tion . tre~passing, petty theft and even Indecent exposur e . Almost no robbery or grand theft cases come th rough th e LA\V Fund officr. Charton not Pd. The card is viey,·ed by piJllce and LA\\' fnnd m<'mber.~ alikr '"A large percentage of the as a c1vi1i7.ing force in the ar-cases th;i1 come !hrolig h our rest procedure. A person cnr-office invo!v1· issurs of illegal tying ~ufh a card is not likely :<:e:irrh ;•nd S<'JZUT"(' <ind t>n- fo run or resist arrest. rosta !r.1pn1rn1."' Ch;irlon s :ii d . ~Iesan Louis r.1ulvev cnntrnrls. l\c1e1·1h1 ·1e~~. ad 1· ice !o r.1 uh·e1·. three ;·rars :u..:o rne1nbers 1~ In ("noperatc 1vi!h heg;in drvelopi11g ·the l.A\V police t'\"Cn 1f !hry brl\rved Fuod shortly after hf' 1\·as :ir· thr.v arr hr1ng i 11 r g a! I y res!ed_ The :Jl-Vl'<1 r old former s,..ari:hrd. B.v krrp1ng cool. engineer y.•as ihr 1·ic1im of a n1en1hl'rs arr tnlrl. thPV can sticky di1•nrcc proceeding and ;11·oirt esc:ila1ing the initial :-ir- 5pent 60 da.vs 1n a Ri verside rest In ("IOC of rf'sis1ing arrest. Cn\Jntv \Vork can1p Cha rtnn .s<11 d. the other ad- \\'hile !here. r.1ulvey was 'ice rnernbcrs ;ire gil'en is "to struck hy lhe fact th at all p;iy their parking tickets. No those in jail "'ere either poor, Judg(' \1'ill rf'l ease a person ar- ii;?norant. alone or a co1n-rested on :i "·arrant for ig- bination of all three. None nnrrd parking ti c ket s,'' ?.·ere "·eaHhy. "Anyonr with Chnrton .said. any money or fr il'nd.s who c:1n But !he advice to members get it had been bai led out or .slops th<'re, T"IC'phones in the frl'ed," Mulvey con1ends. office are labeled with a w11rn- The experience led Muh·ry 1nJ? In th e l<i1v students tn s rend his $300 separation Each caller is to be !~Id that payeheck -his en1ployer did 1111.•.v :ire spr:ikin~ 11·ith a la\I,. not look kind ly on his arrest );{lldl'nt 11·ho is no t qualified to and jail sentence -forming dispen~e leJ?:tl ad1•ice. but that q,e Legal Aid \\.'arranty Fund. the l;:11v fund 1vl ll he I p The LA\V Fund provides rncmbers find an <J !torney. help in getting release from The rneasurr keeps the pre-tri al confinement and hr lp enthusiastic ;111 d idefllistic tn finding an att.orney, usually futt_1re la11·ycrs froin violating at reduced rates. !heir profts.~inn's code of Members pay $12 a year -ethics and the tav.r. $10 if they are students -for But , despite 1his restriction, the card and the knowl edge the LA\'i Fund experience is that if they are arrested, proving valu;ible. Mulvey con- whether or not they're in-tends. Instead of working as a nocent or guil ty. someone will law clerk in some "dusty back care about getting thc1n out offil'e."· lhe ;itt.orneys·tO:be get and finding them 1 e g a I on the line experience working assistance. on crin1inal :ind other matters. That knowledge. r.1ul vey And, ll1erc "s no limit to the contends. keeps tJiem fron1 an1ounts or h u in a n un- making trouble during an ar· dcr~tanding and one-tQ-Qne rest. caring the la1v students may Each month, some 150 extend to people in trouble. persons seek help from the r.1ul vcy'.~ idea became a J~AW fund. The bulk of these reality y,·hen USC law pnr are young people, but fessor Garry Bellow assigned members range tn age from 12 preparation of !he LAW Fund to 81 , thJrd-year Pe pperdine fncorpnratinn papers to Arthur law trtudent Lloyd Charton V. Treverson . \y.·o years aJ!o. u id. Charton Js vice president Bcllo~r . 11·1ulv('v said an- of the non-profit LAW Fund. licipared !h•• c0de of ·ethics He. and five other law would hnl'r tn be etianf(rd In etudents. perform the bulk of nJloy,· law ~!udrn!s to work In the service offered & o such a vcn lure, nnd the members. They wotk under change \\'as madC' ln thn(' for _ the. direrJJml ,,t a ~nel Q.f 57 _the 1~.1~,ws . .Qr ~l~<l.lJlf> . .t '&~ ~.-. • • tflt~'if ornca: -month!> rtRl'll--' · -~ ' . \ ' Sealy mattress or box spring O ur own Malibu twin or full 3 12-coil innersprins mattress has healthful. ex· I ra firm construction. Beau- tifu l yellow damask cover is quilted fo r added surface comfort . Corner guards help prevent sagging . 44. 9 Q regul arly 69.95 2-pieCe q ueen size set, reg - u larly 199.95 139.00 3-piece kin g size set, regu- larly 279.95 179.00 may co sleep shop l 4 S famous la-Z-Boy Reclina Rocker " Cha rming Tradit ional de- ~lgn recliner that rocks is .from l a-Z-Boy's Americana collection. The three posi- tions incl ude upright, TV or rec lining. In gold or o live velvet with fruitwood fi nish trim. $19 9 regularly $244 n1J y co recliners 147 . . . -... ~ '\ \l . t/' -. -'~ ,. '· '· . . . ' . NOW IN PROGRESS AT ALL 18 STORES sem i-annua I transitional sofas all with soil resistant Zepel ® Shown is just one of the gracious styles lhat blend wi th most •ny type of decor. I-lave your selection custom covered in a wide choice of exciting fa brics ••• all of which are protectecl with Zepel® to resist ::>o il a nd stains. 85" fea tured sofJ. has pil- low-back slyling. Olher designs include qu ilted Lawson, 84," q4'1 loose pillow back and 1 oo·· loose pillow back. $ 3 4 9 regulM!y 544 ~ to $504 may co furniture 14 1 !l't' one of our (OllVr'n•(•n1 \ h.1l •• ! ~. , I:.· . , " ' ' ' • ,_ ' .~ .I .1: • • T I .. , : ·'I : l • ' .. i: :.: ,_, I may co. south coa1t plau, sen ddiego fwy. at bristol, costa mesa; 546-9321 shop monday thru 1aturd1y 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., sunday noon 'til S p.m . ....... fWI'"""' ---~ . "' -· . -""\-~ . ..,.... --_____ _....,_,;_ '""·'--. • • . ,;; Wants Post Back Ex-mayor Blames 'Ti1ning Errors' By RUDI NIEDZIELllJU Cl ~ .,..,,, Pllet lllft Last July Morton A. Baum was a young man on his way up the political laddtr 0£ suc- cesa, At 32, he became one cf Stal Beach's you n11e1t mayors. He hid new ideu and hi!! per10n1l ch•r1Jma gave hlm 1n enthusiastic fclkJwlni. Tuesday ht may berome an ordinary citizm 1pin.· if a recall drive q:airut him la successful. Jn the intervening months he h.u btttl acroatd of pmldin& ever council meetings in a dic- tatorl1l manner, cf conducUng uMeceuary city hall purges and of a1klng for a mean- lgless audit of the city books. He has been 1corned privately aa a political op- portunilt, his name h as become aa:soci1ted wilti civic turmoil and he ha.s been revil· ed in cartoons and poems circulated among his op- ponents. Today, Bawn. who still fttls confident he will remain on the councll until his term runs out In 1974, says lhe trouble began when he started ••ask- ing annoying questions." "I began asking questions about the budget and I was given a quick shuffle. I wanted to know about the apartment plans on Electric Avenue and 1 was told they were good for Uie city. And I wanted to know about the Redevelopment Agency.'' Baum said he was ~n cerned about the city's small lOY.'n character. its schools and environment and saw them in danger or being erod· ed He said the old CQuncil had 11 way of getting things done quickly with Lee Risner, the city manger he was in- &lrumental in firing . "I was told not to bother myself about too many things. They were expecting a n aui<>matic 'yes' vote on things that had already been decid· ed." Baum claims. Shortly before some of the old council members were on their y,·ay out, Baum claim s the city signed an agreement with a developer for street and sewage improvements which cost the city a great deal of money. Later they approved a lZ percent pay increase for Risner. Baum said he objected to both actions because "they smacked ot a lame duck agrtement.'' A week after he was elected mayor, Baum said h e participated in a private meeting wilh Risner and former Councilman L I o yd Gummere. He asked Risner to resign because he "was '°° entrencht!d and loo ingrained ~·ith a n1ethod of doing thlngs th1t didn't squ111re with the realties of the day." Hls opposJlion to Risner pro- ved to be something many residents of the city y,·ould never let him forget "That Saturday, signs began appearini;t on do.,.,, n town shopwindov.·s 'Save Our City !'.fanager,' "Baum says . "This was suppo~ed to h11ve been a private meeting . No one was supposed to know about it and now a campaign was mounterl lo force me not to fire Lee Risner. l was fac· ing a massive assault." July 27, 1970, Baum and fonner Councilman Conway Fuhrman, along wi!h Ceun- cilman 'MKlma1 Hogard voled to fire Risner for a variety of reason11, including a 11 e g e d absen ce from his job while on LOOKS POR WIN Sul Bt1ch'1 Baum private bwiness and al!egedly not furnishing proper financial reports to the council. Three days later Baum lost hia own job as pharmacist for Seal Beach-Leisure W o r I d because his employers asserted he was in a conflict of interest as mayor and phannacist. The city council at that time had two men on it from Leisure World. The polit ical turmoil that was generated in the city sought Baum out at home, sometimes as early as 5 a.m. "The phone would ring and people would call up to annoy us. For a while it go so bad we took the phones off the hook. And some people were getting a perverse pleasure out of reporting some of the more salacious statements made about me." Looking back at his con- troversial actions wh ich in- clude Risner's dismissal, the city books audit, and his de· mand for the resign ation of all board members and com- missioners, Baum concedes that he might have made some errors, but only il'I tiln· ing. "Certainly nol in my policy decisions. 1 should have taken more lime to explain my decisions and perhaps should have acted more cauUou1ly in some areas," he said. "It might have paid to move a Jittle more slowly and to at.- tampt to explain some of my actions rather than assume they were all st:lf-evident." Baum believes he will win the recall election, eve n though fi28 ~call signatures in his third counci\manic district were certified. There are 1,800 registered vote rs in h i 1 district. "I believt! it will be a close race. I hope I will be able to reach enough people to discuss the real issues," said Baum, '''ho believes his oppon enla have ati.ackecl his per30nalily and ha ve persuaded olhen that he is a dictator. If he loses, Baum asserts he will continue to be invo lved. "I still live here. J intend to play an active role as much as I can." Fuhrman has already bt!en ousted through recall and a new council majority has been created through the election of Frank Sales and Edward Smith. Jn M!y, while ap- pr oving the date of Baum's reca ll election, the council stripped him of his mayoral· ity by 4-l vote. Thomas Hogard, ·~1ho \'Oted in unison with Baum and Fuhrman on many of the con- trove rsial items, is also facina: a recall election Aug. 24. Phone Company Seeking To Keep Down Picketing SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The 1truck P11clf!c Telephone Company, 111lready 1ucees!ful In UmiUng picketing in Sant.a Clara County, ha s sought similar reatrainta in two more Bay Area counties. The nnn flied a lawsuit In San Francisco 1sking for in· Junctions l!mltin& pi cketing in S.n Mateo and Alameda Coun· ties. A temporary reatralning crdt.r lnutd In San Jose limited picketing by the Com- munications Workers of America 1t Sinta C11ra coun· ty facilltie.s. The order allowed ·three pickets at each side of 1n tn· trance Ind etH . Other strikers wer1 banned from Within * fllft of lhe tnatatlaUant. The union w111 also ordered to refl'fJn from hlnderlnic com· pany vehicles or thrtatenlna supervisory em p Io yes re- maining on Ute job. Meanw hile, violence during the strike has spread lo San Francisco when a ca rload Of food was dumped, Ures of • company car were slashed and its windows smashed. Police said the incidents oc- currtd early Yfltlrd•Y aL the company's prlnU.O, pl.ant hen. Company 1pokesmen npcrted earlier vandalism 11 other facilities. A bullet was fired lnlo an unmanned equipment shed al Point Reyes, knockinl oot !It: local circuit&. A cl r cu It breaker w1s th rown at the ctntral equipment cffi~ In Concord but emer1ency re.neralor11 prevented any ln- t.erruption of service t o customers. Kicls Like to Ask An~.Y. , ··-~ -, --' . . . . . . . . ... ·-. . . . . . . . ~ . . . . • • Monday, J11ty l~ llffi DAIL V Pll.OT .. --'---'---------------' .... =--~· spi I led coffee? it wipes right off shag carpet treated with soi I control Scotchgard® . and it's yours at savings • • • sq. yd. inst~ll ed reg. 12.00 For the first time, Scotchgardl!lcomcs to carpeting ••• exc lu- sively at May Co. entertain \vith a\)andon. When coffe e, !i;dad dressing, ice crean and kelchup spil l ••. no problem . Spills dis- appear from lhis Du Pont nylon pile 5.hag \Vith the s\vipc of a cleaning c loth. Sco1chg.1rd® ct1rpel protector designC'd especially for broadl oom works the magic. And it's exclusively at May Co. Yea rs or rambunclious guests, children o r pets won't phase th is beautiful three-t on~ carpel. I-lave it installed over rubberizccl waffle or sponge rubber padding. Sale price includes padd in.~ and all necessary labor. There .a.re no extra costs. floor coverings 32-a.1118 1to1ts use one of our convrnient rrerl 11 pl.in~ C.ill for lhe C.irpelmobi/e. Stt !his broadloom in ~our ho111e. c·.ilJ (..!11) t.>~~·8:!1 1, £':.:f. 2997, or 1h1· ~hire flL'Jfl'~l you. No nhl1~,it1nn to buy. \Vil~hu1• 916-4 ~I I ld~ll.i('ofl• 331 ·33 I I C•c>11,fi.1w "ou1l1 Ii.iv '.111 l>u·y,., l!urn.1 /' .. rk ld~t:\V!J<Kl 1 ·•111!'1 l'l.1111 ( .111,11,)d !'IJ-4 It I Arcadia,. •45-4000 ti'O·:!i 11 l Ofi.1niy1 Pla2a 883-7.21 1 -"17·.•·, t I \\r•\I l.A.• "'75-4')1 1 A..'7·~fl()(J \\1urtiM ,._ 945-1 111 ti ,l l ./ 11 1 I ~n. f 0.1~1 P1aza•546-'lJ21 ;1,h ·I I! I ~.1n Ht'1n.Jr<l1no• 884·51 11 7.!').;'1Ji/ fo.1l°/lll~f.i1r 6~1 -.2')JJ 0).nard 485·9511 'Scotty girls will be present 10 demonSl.tdte lhe remarkable qualities of Scotchgard• at indicated ~lore. may co. soulh coast plaza, un dl990 fwy. at bristol, costa mes.a: 546-9321 ,hop monday thru fr id•y 10 •m to ':lO pm, ••turd•y 10 am to b pm ; •undey noon tit 5 --__ .. _. --'<"·------flll..-'t. ---'{'.-.fl.'--. · [ f f OAILV PILOT s ~ond.1y July IQ, 1~71 Your Mone11 Vete1·a11 s Can Find Mucl1 Civilian Aid By SYLVIA PORTER fi:ven if the windup of lhe Vietnam war does not AC· celerate from l od;iy·~ pare, veterans ;ire now rrturning to riviti11n lifr at thl' rare of 80.000 10 85Jl00 a n1nnlh - and, tight out of 10 are seeking 11nme1!1ale jnb .... ""·hfC'h veterans can be In- terviewed by or referred to possible employers. -The U.S. Ci\·tl Servit'e \~ grving special preference. to veterans for federal jobs and so fire many state, county and n1un1cipal governn1ents. One preference. is in the form of extra points on Lhe job lest scores so veterans score h1~her and are eligi ble. for pnor hiring. Somf' fedf'ral Jobs are open only lo veterans. But in 1971. \'Cler;ins ;ire com1nii; home to a 1nwering ron1b1nat1on of prnblrrn~ anti· vetrr11n prejud11•p b.v l' S. f'mployrr". un<'crta1nty abnu \1hat rhr:.-want In do . ln- adrriua!t' occupat1nnal training for r11•1han JObs. 11 ~11ff 6 2 pE'f crnt overall unrmployment rate. A~ ;i rr"ul!. in 1hr 20 10 24 a~e group. the Jnblf'"S rate for veteran.~ IS nearly I:> percent, 11nrl for ~·nun~ bl;:icks a disgraceful 21 prrcenL A~ a rrsul1. son1e 6{1,000 veterans arP dn111'111g unemployment •nrnpens:ition and m2nv are moving lo welfare rolls. · -In Relhesda, Maryland. !hr National lntitutes o f Health 's Bureau of lr1anpower Erlucation is stepping up 11s special Health Careers pro- gr;in1 to counsel and guide qualified veterans into health careers in hospitals. pubhc hr:ilth agencies, research in- stitutions. schools and private industry. NEW TESTER -Wilson Ford of car's pollution in matter of Exhaust. Em issio n Tester m inute;. ·resl is free. can diagn06e extent -In Seattle, lhe Universi tv flf Washington School of Mr.dicine has sel up a com· pu !cr!7.ed clearing house refer- ral center for veterans trained in the health field. In High Geai: Firm Tells Beach Ford Dealer Huge Jump In Income \\'hat is being done lo tackle this challenge~ -Presidtnt Nill:nn has just announced a long list of new job-findin,i:. job-training helps for veterans including: extra benefits for those in on-Lhe-job \1oc:i tiona! !raining programs; l'I doubling of job counseling, !raining and placement serv1~s for srrvicenien still nn active duly . a requirement that 11!1 governn1enl agencies and conrr:ic!ors lisl 111! new job npenin.i:.~ '>\'i!h the U.S. Empln,\'rnent & Tr a i n in g Servirr In sum, there are now 35 n1ajor public and private job- finding programs for veterans under way. says a spokesman for the Jobs for Veterans Program in Arlington. Va. Works for Clean Air -All .lll stair.~ and 300 l11rge ci!ir~ ha\'e nnw launched special job finr!1n.i:-train1ng ef- forts under the Federal Jobs frir Vetcr;ins Progran1 launch- ed last Octob('r. Examples: Hnuston's ne""·spapcrs arr rlQnat1nl'( free want ;id spal'e for veterans: Buffalo and ~"""' York Clly have sc! up "hot line" daily job bulletini; in 11,· h i ch employers ]isl available jobs and lhc or drrs are aulomaticall~· ronveyf'd to the l'SES and nthrr agrncies pro-- v1d1ng special help for veterans. -In California, the AFL- ClO'~ Hum<in R e ~our c es Development lnsl1lule h .11.~ established i::pec1al team~ 11f experts al four niilit;iry rrcep- linn and proc('.~.~ing cenlrrs lri brief re1urnin~ scrvic('men 1n the S.:in Francisco area on np- portunitics in their hon1e !owns -Cities thr nation nvrr ;ire hold ing ~pec1al •·job fair~" ;it - 10°/o NNN CARE FREE LONG TERM LEASE I Y Com..-ny ""'•tfd Cn11~ Jll.eot 19 lllS,llOO •II t i ... IRKR. 17 1 ~1 ••2·05•11 What, then. should YOU, the veteran. do? Register at ence. with one of !he 2,400 slate employment service office.s throughout the counlry. By law, you will gel preference and priority bolh in job counseling and placemen!. Check with your nearest Vet er a n s Administration regional office on your rights and eligibility for a wide range o f e du cation-employmenl· !raini ng programs under the GI bill. Attend job fairs in your are<i. Ask the employment or VA office lo steer you to them and to other s e r v ices available. Chrck also on local employers v:ho have set up special em p I o y m en t pro- grams. And write to your rcprrsen- latives in Wa shington "'hose dut~· it is to sponsor and vnle into law training-education-Job programs for YOU. Loss He portcd .Hv Pacesette r A111cric;in Pac:rsettcr 11 f Ne'>l•pnrt Beach h;id a loss nf $12.1.280. Ott of appfic;ibif' J;ix crcrlits nf Sfi!l .000, nr 2 crnls ;i sharp nn rPvenucs n[ $2 .9.11i.R.11\ for !he first quarter ended l\larch ~I. 1971. Lossc.~ in the like 1970 pPriM an1oun1ed 10 S.14.l.611~ or fi cents ,., sharr on revenue.~ of S:l.07f},:lfl7 Of thr ln~s li1'<1 .vcar. $2.1R .. 10fi or 4 rent s a ."harr \l'a~ allr1bulable tn rl1scnnt1nurd npPr at1nns. By CA RL CARSTENSEN Ot II" D•liY ~lltt lt•lf \l.'hile a greal amounl of lip service is ,ll:iven to the fact that cleanrr air is a necessity few seem to be doing anything about it. Howe ver. Hunt ington Beach Forr! dealer Dick Wilson is tak ing strid~ to 1nake clean air fl reality. \V ilson Ford Sale!'; has installed a new elcc- Ironic 11e\'icc that "" diagnose the f'Xlcnt Of your car's exhaust en1ission illness in less than f1 vr minutes. ~1i lson offer.~. frcr of charge. an opport11n11y 10 put yotir Cflr through 1 h r 1 r En1ission Exhausl Tester. The unit. in just 1n1nute s, will re\'cal the degree of vour auto's heallh-J:ood or bad. It isn't the ansv.•er to pollutio n but \\'1lson is conccrnr1l and he's takinR strps 10 !hr right direction. His free test is ~ood through Au~ust anrl 1s offered lo owners of flll 1nakes and models of tars. RE C VEHICL E SEMINAR HEL BY CHEVROLET A look at fu!l1rr 1rleas anrl nrw 1h1n~1ni:: 011 the prcst'nt stale nf An1cr1f'.<1 ·~~ r.<1r1rll y C'X - panrl111i.: re><·rca1innal \•chicle 1nrh1strv \1•ere prov1dril bv Chf'1·rnlct in :i rece nt f1rst-0f- ils·kin rl ~ymrosH1 n1. The lwo-day ~r.~s1nn hro11~ht to)!r ther represenl.'.ltivr<; of niorr th;in 100 rf'Cn~al 1nnal 1Th1rlP anrl e q u 1 pm e n t m;inuf:irturrr~ tr:i exrhangc l'lf'>I s with ('hC'vrolrl on !he pre!'cn1 stat!' of the bus 1nr"~· ft.<; future. t1nrt 11i·ays of 1)(-ing mutually helpful in producing the best possible products. Chevrolet hosted the RV Symposium as a supplier or vehicles and chassis for the in· duslry. HighlighL<; of the syn1posium were seminars on key area:i; of the industry and presentation of ~everal General Motors st~·ling irleas for f u I u re \'Chicles. The syn1posiunl also fraiurcd a cross-section of recreational uni1s by lhe 1nanufaturers. Among 1he GM Styling ideai; was a "piggy back" shelter find equipment carrier that can be sli pper! on or orr a Chevy Van. freeing it for short trip r!ri ving near the camp site. Another concept sketch displayPd ""'as a van "chop- ped " behind the ~econd seat and filled with a highly styled mnlnr home con1•ersion body. S1nl'C Chevrolet does not build recreational vehicle borl1es. the "dream" vehicles and other interior stylinl'( ideas '>l·ere concf'ived and i;h(!\.\-'n siinply to show the divi:r11on's <1<i1·ance1I thinkin~ in the field <ind lo i;tin1ulate others. ii ""'as rn1ohasi1rd. An n t h r r ~ y 111 fl os1un1 highlight w;is a srm1nar nn n10111r \'chicle ."afe!y stan· <iar<is as they apply lo !he drs1i.;n :ind m;inu farture of rerrea11onal vehicles. ThP ind(vidua! s r m ; n " rs \\'C're cnnrlucted hy Chevrnlrt engineers and GM ~lyhsts in th e \ arinus prflr!uct :1rr11s. ThPy al.~o included question and an swer periods. Bankan1erira L 0 S ANGELES-cBW)- Net income of Great \Vestern Financial Corp. for the six months ended June 30, Defore ex traordinary items, tolalf'd $13.402.000. or 90 cents per share, Stuart Davis, chairman of the board and chief ex- ecutive officer, unounced. This compares with earnings of $5,066,000. or 34 cents per share. for the first six months of 1970, restarted lo reflect ac- quisl1ions complelt'd on a pool- ing-of-in1e re sts basis. Excluding the results of LFC Finaicial Corp., which was .icquired on Dec. 22. Great \Vestern F'inancial's ea rn ings for the firs l half of last year were $7,712,000 or 59 cents per share. Re~utts for the first six months of 1971 incl ude lhe operations of Great Western S<'.vings and Loan Association of San Diego from March 29, the elate of its acquisition. l'r1nc1pal fa c Io rs con. tributing lo the company·s in- creased earnings in 1971 in· elude increased loan '·olume and lower operating expenses. Earnings fQr the second quarter of 1971 before ex· tranrd1n:iry i1cn1s were. $7 .. ill2.000, or 49 crnts pl'r l'h<t rc. com pared \111h $2.285.flOf}. nr 1:. rent~ per :-;hare for the srrond quar1er or !!170. Extri>11rdin11r~· items for 1he first six mnnlhs i n c I u de fcdcr:il inf'ntnr lax credits tot;:il1ni:: S2.382,000. and pro- 1·1sinn or $1.000.CXXI made dur· inJ: thr first qu;irtcr for possi- ble lnsses sustained diJe tn the earthquakes which occurrerl In Snuthrrn California. After f'X · tr;iordinarv 1n~s fnr 1hc $\4 .78t000. pcrsh;irr 1!f'm~. net f'a rn- six months were nr 9!'I f' fl n I ~ IMPORTANT MEETING FOR IN VESTO RS SEEKING f Reports Good , Fir1'l Half Cros.~ 1nCflffi(' for !he first su; rnnnlh~ of 1971 rr:ichrrJ an all-timr hi~h of ~12.i 4.17.tlftfl. 1·h1~ C'omp;irr<; 111th ~o~s 1n- rnme of J.111 5:1!1.000 for !hf' firs! half nf 19i0. HIGHER INCOME Spec ial Seniina r ''8% Yields are Back'' 'I1ii~ if'. your opportunity lo learn more ahoul bond~. nnw offering unusually attrartive yields when meaRured hy hii;;toric AtandardP.. \~'e'JI also dii;;cusi; the current change in the )'lelds of tax.exempt bonds which have re- turned tot.he fi'i'< level. Our informative lecture u·1'/f PXplatn: • MaturitieP., coupon rat.es, yield,. • How municipal bond!il can cut, vour laxes • The capital gaini< feat ure of hn~rls • How to eelect and purchase bonds II 1 o .... •M I II) n"' ~-~ ('"'"'e"'' I""· ·~v ..... ,.~. lllJO<TI 11S 4v•~·~• ~·~l•M•••, •'It 1111 ~n•••t• '~'"'"' J °""'r<v i•H JUA .. (A~ISTllAllO Til1111$0.t.V, !ulv n"ll •• i 111 n"' E• •"~"' ••·••-.•· •"I J•HI (•"'·•~ (>O•"'"""· ""'1111 ~11t••1•: Mt•v•n M N """ llGU,.j, llllll tl!~\()IV, 1 .... ll'l'n .. ) 1' t "' IU<IO JOI r•"'' ·-·· !lido !T•I .... n.11 )IS)! """" II~ V1l1n( .. •n '(11,j , ..... ~ •• J ...... ,..,., •• d l &OUN & NlllS ~c\1\; FRA ,~CISCO -1 R\\'l - R ;i n k ;i rn e r 'c a (' n rr ·, p<'rfo rn1anre for the fir~1 half nf 19i1 rrflrctrd a su~t.<11nPci µ1·p11,th 1n e;:irnin,gs, deposits find rc~ouret'~. r rrsidcnl A. \\! Cl;:iusf'n rrpo1·1ed Frid<1.v. Consnl1r1atrd in•nn1e before ~rcuril1rs tr;in~actrnn fnr the s1K mnntlls ended Junf' .10 in· creased by 7'·1 p£>rcent 10 $78.835.000. fir S2.29 per share, Clau~en :r1a1d. Th is comparf'd 11i·11h !73.304 .000. or S2. l:l per ~hare, for lhe same period las\ year. "The grn~·th in earnings ror the first half of 1971 11i'a.~ rrlatrd to the con t J nu e d rleve!npment of our i;:lobal ac· tiv1t1es and ~tr on~ com- m1tmenl tn the domestic real esla1r market." Clausen sa1d. B;inkamenca Corp.'.~ ne1 10· come fnr 1he six mon!h~ amountcrl lo SR2.5~.ooo. or J.2.40 per share. Thi.~ co mpare~ \vith $7:l .53:l.OOO, 11r $2.14 per sharr. a ye:i r ago. ClAusen said , ProliL~ on securities 11i·ere $.l.il~.000 In o1hcr .June :\0 figures repnrterl loda y, drpns11s rl'ISe 19 percent to $27,819.804.000. up from $2.:l.:lS..1.366,000 111 mid- ye;ir 1!170. Vt'GAS FARES CU T S/,ATED LOS ANGELES -1 AW ) - In a COOp<'T:llive rffnrt wi th the La.~ Vegas Chflmber of C fl n1 m e r c e and hnlcl operfl1ors, Western Airlines has f1lrrl fnr an "off peak " larf' reduction of nior!' than 25 percent on Las Vegas-Los Angeles. La s Vegas.Long Beach. and Las Vegas-San franc1sco routes. The new fare. which is sub- Jecl !o governmental approval. would become eHective Aul'(. 29 11nd would provide reduc- tions Af $14 on round trips betwrf'n Las Vegas find Lfls Angeles or Lnn.i: Beach and nf $20 for Las Vegas·San Fran- cisco round trips on Mnnda y, Tuesd11y and Wednesday. The cl1scnunt would al~n apply on fliJ:ht.~ tn Las Vegas only be.tween • p.m. and midnight on Sund;iy, Arden JWa y fair Recl eern s Series Cnnsnlidatrd rt ~ "u r <' P s flmnunted to $.12.~')l;.091:.000. compareri 11,•ith $27.~17.2llf\Jl00 LOS AN1:E:LES -I R\Y) -, . ArdPn · Mayfair Inc. ;innou- il year Ago. u:ians increased eed lh~l ii has redeemed all of hy S l .302,133 .000 to i wvtt~D•"· )VIV 11"<1 ; r."', ~""''WI•~ ...... "'ntl llO<I t T•I Mono•\. ?1\ll ""'"' .., v1r...,t•t H• l(lrl) ~1•1• F••n~ M Do•"~O I \l.s outs\Jlnding ~eries a CflO· I lli .•!il .7&5.000. vertible prefrrenre stock. con-lnvt~~tn1en!.~ in ~rcun1ir~ 1-i.~l lnl'( nl Jll.000 sh.:trr~. at the wpre Sfi.:IS.l.204 .000. nf which rl'demJllion price of $100 per S ~ · ~ 2 (ll."111 .000 rrpre~cntrd sh;ire a.~ specified 1n lhr cnr-DEAN WITTER IX: Co. INCORPORA.TE:D Mem~ New York S!oclr; Elc.,1nge lnr 1 r1irrrt or J,:uarAflteer1 oblil'(a · pnrn1r rhartrr. for $.1,000 ,000 !inns of !he t:.s. i;:o1·ernn1ent. 10 cit.~h from !ht-cnrpnratr n 1 v i d f' n rl ( t n 1 ~ I i n I! funrl~ Many Feel Temporary Aid Best By DEAN C. ~IJLLER U~I l 111<n•n l!tl!or NE U' YORK 1U PI ) -\\'hen ll company plunks down $125 a I week for a secrr.!ary that's on·I ly about t11i·o-thirds of the cost story. Because of taxes. hiring costs, government regulations "and fringe bencfi t.s, that secretary cost s !he company Sl 84.35. At least thars the figure determined by DOT girls, the temporary help div ision of Dictaphone Corp. DOT claims busines s 1 organizations lose mooey every year hy hiring "pcrman· er\fs" when "Lemporaries" could fill the bill. \Vhile DOT obviously i~· grinding an ax since 1t sells lhe l service.~ t>f "temporaries,'' its 1 figures and reasoning are couched in logic. As OOT points r'iu1. the lem· porary gl't s only fin hnur\y rate and none. nf thr fringe ' benefit goodie s. There is no expense. nr relatively no ex-1 pense. in the hiring and separalinn processes. $275 COSTS Hirin)i costs. according In the cornpany, ;ivcrage out to) about $:!:75 prr cmplnye.I Among those costs are ad· vertlsi ng and r r c r u i t i n g , testing . s c re e n i n i.: • in· tervie""·ing. applical!nn rorms. reference and credit rherks. pay.roll preparations and proc-1 ess1 ng. Fringe bcucf1I~ ""·hich. l'IC· cording tn OOT, amount \n about 31 7 perrent •I the per manent e1npln1e's b;isc1 salary, arP J;:rn1,1·1nJ: yea rly 1'hry inrlude pens1nn. nnn· 11rnrll1ct1ve t 1 n1 e . vacation , hnlidil}~. sick IPave, profit sh<1r1ng and bnnuse~. Finally. therP's 1he turnover or separation cost aver.iiging ;ij;ifl per c1nploye. These cn.~t.~ include 1erm1na! in - terview. procrssin~. termina· t1nn pay. unemployment pay l find reactivation nf the entire hiring c~Tle _ Lei's take a lnrik ill 1\·hat OOT says 1! really 1 cns!s to hire th;it secretary ;:iside from the $125 base pay. OTHE R CC)STS T1n1 P :;pen1 1111er\ 1t11 ing and prl'Cts~1ng p;iper~ cnsls $j 29 L"i:fl l rosts :1111nun1 In ;inn1hf'r Sfi 75. \1cd1caJ :ind pen~1nn payn1('n!s r11n In SJ:! fi.l ~nn. prndu1-l!l'r 1.me 1 l1!1n,i:: nail s and ta!k1ng on lh<' phonr to the hn~ fnend 1 1~ ;inothrr $..1118. Jlol1rla)S and Vflf'a!\Qn~.1 S.1.1.25. prnftt ~haring and ;iward-.. ~2 J:l Turnover and srp;ir;i11nn. annthrr !14 42. "\\'hrn ;ill !hr iTal cn~[s nf pcrmri nrnl h1r1ng 11rr figur<'d l 1n." roncludrs nohcr1 H ('ookr: flf DOT. "Therr·s 11 101 tn be said fnr lemJlfJrary fi r ·nex1ble· :r1taff1nf!." Da 1·id Warren. man;iger n[I employr relations al the General Elect ric hP11dquarlers in Ne1\' Ynrk. agrees in part. He hires some temporaries. NO REAL LOSS .. Ho11i·ever." cautinnf'd War· rrn. "~he permanent employej ls 1·ery desirable in any bu.~iness 11r office whirh i~I ]flr~e or complex . U ii takf's you half a day In Pxpla1n snme routine job lo a ~1rl you may never see again there's a real loss thl're." Warren noted that irm- porary help comp;inies often can't provide :r1peci11c sk ills . Legal ~ecret:iric~. for in· stance. Ln.valty is another as!'r! 11r the p e r mane n I cn1plo,\'C, or 1no.~t permanent! employr~. Tiie !empor;iry is here loday ~one tomorrow. "I've tried tempor11rie~." said another J\.fanhattan ex- rcuti\'e. "hul their "1<1"h11t's !hat' syndrome \~ t n 01 fru~traliniz. Ahliut the lrnth lime you have 111 explain where the file i~ localPd you l reach for the phone and hire I permanent cltrk-typlst Which • i~ whal I did the other day." I Fin"I Stocks In All Homo Edi tions I Who Listens To Landers? • ·- ; • SINCE SHE'S ONE OF THE TEN MOST INFLUENTIAL WOMEN IN AMERICA • • • • • • Just About Everyone Does That's Who You Con 'Listen ' lo Ann Londers • Do ily in I DAILY PILOT ] Tho ,,........ . ._.._ •• ' --lilt.... S.17.8611.l'{lO V.'err J'Hlld ,11! !hf: Arrlr11 -M;i ylR1r fl r,. r a I e 5 .11nnual fate of $2 20 per share. more than 220 guperrn .ykets. -"7"'-:-=--=--~-----."--------------------..:..J _____ :..,..:.-.!':_· )._..:::.. •. 3 · __ ,,....==--· _ -_1 x. > -. ·--~·.r . -'-'-----•• • ~----------· L. - . . . . . . . . -' Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts! --·~ ·- Hare's here's here's CHARI.IE BROWN ••• and LUCY ••• and LINUS .•• and here's here's V!OLET ••. and SCHROEDER, , , and la3t but not leul. here's SNOOPY Pho11e 642-4321 (Circulatlo11 Depart1ne11t) to have the '"hole Pea11uts gang co111e anti visit y ou dull ~'· " ,_ --"---''----• .. , . . ' - -·------t.- • ' .. •. DAILY PILOT RICK VOLK PUTS PLANE THROUGH PACES No Time for Con1ult•tion With Your Conscience He's a Winne1· Lido Isle Pilot Co11quers Da11ger Bv BARBARA GIUS Ol 0 lfl• 0111\1 .. llOt S,.fl What kind of man Oirts with death? "A \.\'inner." SllVS Robert "Skip"' Volk . Liri0 I s I e 's aerobatic pilot \l'hn. \V ilh his DeHavill;:nrl Chipn1 unk, ch;:il- lcnr.rs lhe cl einr nt~. "The c;irth and skv are pretty tough con1peli tion ," sa vs Volk. '"So. why e\·en !ry ir"vou don't th ink vOu can be.it •em. Why try if you t'an't \\'in?" The worris now fron1 the mouth of a conquerer. Volk is l'I s11nf1y.h;iired. clean·cut 40 year-0lrl who looks JO and acts you nger. "I ha ve two speeds· Full power and collapse." he quips. Volk has found, through diligence, patience, and hard work, that a man c;in conquer danger if he .is c;ipable. and if he sets his mind to con1ing out Ofl !op. In a stunt pilot's case, that"s important. Volk and his wife, Kay, and thet r three daughters have liv· ed in Newport Beach for four years. Mr:i;. Volk remen1bcrs when Skip first took up stunt flying three vears ago and shudders, ''It bn°1hered me, then. I'll ad- mit. But now. I l\'at ch him practice diligently and J know he"s p;ood and I know he"s careful." As his "sr-cond right hand." me has seen him through his ma~y sport enterprises anrl she knows his capabilities CdM Seniors Designated For Honors Fiflren s1udent~ r r 11 in Cornna Ori ~1ar 1 hgh Sch()(ll ha1·p been rl es l J! n a I e d members of thr Soriety 11f Outstanding An1rrican Hi~h Srhoo! S1udent.~ find arr rligi- ble to con1pele for $262,000 in scholar~hip awards . The gradual1ng sen in rs desiwiated .as n1e1nbers ol the honorary socie1y ar<'· Mark E. Alrlrich. Thrrr~e F:. R<iedeker. David Brrgeson, lA1cinda Bottorf. Rich11rd IJ;;1v, Jan C. Frirnd, l)on \'I. Killian, Scott II o r n be n k , Ch:irles C. Gnmshaw, Karl Killefer, Janet S1:1nto11. Ken Nri~srr. Lee Secard. Kon rad B. Cl:irk and Jim F. Cotr. The recoFnilion \\'a~ nnt in- cluded in the year-end hnnors award banquet listing. Students Volunteer Social Aid almost as well as he does. \\'hen she kisses him ~oodbyc before his tours, she says she 1hinks of no more prospective ill fale than does the wife kiss- ing hrr businessman husband. "Tt1e girls enjoy having their rlacldy fl.v." says Mrs. Volk. "They even fly with him on his less perilous ad1'en!11re~. when he's not doing cartwheels in the air." Volk ha.~ ne\'er reg1·etled that he has nevt>r had any sons. "Act1u11ly, H's a blessing . 'J'he poor kiJ ""'oulJ have to ex- cel! at everything. or else put up l\'ith unmerciful taunti ng," laughs Vol k. The only son of North Dakota country folk, Skip i~ a colorful exan1ple of rebellio11~ progeny. His parenls would rather have walked t\vo mile.~ to the store than ride in a car, according lo Volk." They were very fearful of 11 ny vehicle that was n'echanicall y operated," he says. But Skip feels differently. J~e has long regarded !he n11i.chin e as his r a v or i l c medium or entertainn1f'nt and accomplishment. s~rure he took to !he air, he designed, built, and drove r;icin~ boat.~. After his intruduc1ion t11 sport rlyii1g by a frif'nri. th!' late Art Scholl, Volk began to te<1ch him~lf the loops, t.hr rolls, anri the dives that chill his audiences. "lt"s an art." he !l.avi;, "and j;(ood art cornes moslly from self-tr;:ichinJ!. ·· Volk's so-c::tllecl hobby h11.~ l11rneri intn a JH·ofit-making btisiness fnr the Ne1-1'po1·t Br::trh residents. who now does more th;:in 7Cl aernb;Hic shows a .vear for n1ore lhan four n1 illion srier1alor·.~. "Since !"in doing s11rh a hea\·y schedule of ~hows, l1 \1·011ld hfll'f' to be <.:11llt'd ~'ork. but 11"s fun 1-1•o rk," he sa1's. .. F'lr~1b1lity" 1.~ \.\'ha t turn~ on 1he act1un ror an 1H'roba.11r· pilol."' s;ivs Volk. "A boa1 r;:icrr ne!•tls a lakf', a jockey gues horse racing. and a brnn· i·u b11sler goes !o a rodro. Rut Skip Volk l'31\ ~o !o 1111 threr places. The scope is unlin1ited lor a theater." Volk describes hin1self as a '' .~uper·prrfecl ionist. ·· "You"ve got lo be one 1vhrn JOU know a mistake Cf'Uld co~! ,l'OUr life,'' If sun1ething goes "''rong during a perrormante, he at · lac·ks the problen1 after thr show, whelher it calls for practicing a part i '" u I a r n111neuvrr. or a1tending to the Chipnn1nk's tn11intenanl·e. .. A good st11nt pilot llHIS\ l1al'e the will to put on a show 1-1·ith precision. I get a1vfu!l.v angry with 1nyseH hen I blow soinething." Vol k does not den. that tension moun ts as be ·ns to manipulate hi ane. e aps it"s because, as a ~ilo hr knows his hand~ hav be ready to correspond to his mind, almost simultaneously. Social servi~ age n c I e ~ Jn preparation for 1 show. throughout Orange County Volk takes care of all the received more than 3,600 Hems on his "~1111Wk list" ,houri o( volunteer assistance which en u m er at es thr from Golden West College n1eth11nical deficiencies Iha! ,1tudenl!I last semester. need to be checked for utmost 1be work of the 49 !'!ludents safety. reUeved the. strain on tight "Mo~! import 11 n t I y . .,gency budgel!l and gave the1n howC\"er ," says Volk, "1 perM>nal contacts and a '·feel ' always try to get ~1ne good for jobs they are preparing to sleep !he ni~ht before. A pilnl enter. hai; to bt very quirk. Then'' ·All o' lhe students tire tin t1n1r for l'On.~ultation W!1h .~nrolled in tt"le college"& 1wo-your ron"-('irnce " year ~octal service progra rn. Volk frcls r<lr1un:tle tn h.11 1·r .dirttkd by Mrs. Dianne l:indcd 1n J\'.r1-1 1xirt lk:irh. Lopatln, . . pc'rmllnf'n!I \\ lh11! i~. To f3rn their assoc1:ale 1n "My v11e'.11t1on'! 11rP frw llnr! art.II degree they are required ~tal1crrd ·<;n1t.1ni.r 111w11y frn m to have 1t leut J:kl hours ol it 11 II !?r us l~ to 8lAy here. anrl t-1\.~ fitJd .MfC' .. t', /-~ j 'J§l..~Q"J.. -. -· t,; , I l"f ~ ).)\--_.-..,.._ ... , -,., ----...... --r- HURRY! SALE PRICES HONORED ·TUESDAY & WEDNESD/iY ONLY! Powerful 2 Speed 20'' ELECTRIC FAN 2011 1 2 speed fan fo let you relax in cool comfort! Steel case, unbreakable ca rryin g ha ndle . Heavy duty inducti on -type molar. 5 yr. guaranle e-U.l. a pproved. Why sweller whe n Vinyl latex you can have comfort ct a bargain price ? REG. $17.99 TUES, I. WED, ONLY! SAVE $5.00 INTERIOR WALL PAINT Custo m manufact ure d to Lin -Brook's rigid specifications . Self pr im;ng , fast drying flat finish. Choo se from 15 decorolor co lors and white. Easy cleanup wit h wal er. REG. $J.(? SAVE $).50 TUES . & W ED. ONLYI ' I SPECIAL PURCHASE! Extra Large 4 Ft. x 8 ft. 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Brazil's great ambassador e LllNN WHIT• -----=-=----WHITE WA SH ------- or soccer and goodwill, is a man who ha• garnered more world readlines than most presidents and royalty get in a lifetime . Yet.· Nascimento -better known u Pele -still maint.ains the humility of the impovershed conditions he knew as a child. "I was born in humility. I'll live and die the same way," he told this column. Pele is the favorite of childre.n throughout the world because the feeling is mutual. He recently agreed to send his cargo of personal trophies to Europe for display because 1\'s part of a fund rais- in project In aid yoongsters. In his native Brazil he spends much nf his spare time working with children, helping them w1lh soccer or· whatever. Ricently tn 'Guadalajara· ht! broke nH en interview with a newstnan to chat with a youngster who was hobbling 011. crutches nearby. "There is no· limit to my feeling · for kids -above all ii they ere handicapped in any way,'' he says when the incident is recalled. Pele originally planned lo retire after l!uffering injuries in the 1966 World Cup. However , the 28-year-old w n r 1 d superstar wA ~ encouraged to stay in com- petition through the 1970 Cup. His Caucasian wife was nne of tho.o:e who most encouraged him to remain ac- tive. But. now Pele says Sunday's cham- pionship decider with tLaly will be his last \Vorld Cup venture. He plans lo play two or more years, possibly. "l still love the game. But now I have a family and I miss being v.·ith it. Too. I want It spend more time working with kids so it is most unlikely that I'll st ill be playing in 1914 {the next \\'or1d Cup yea r)." he rtveals. Pele is soli d Financially -probably wit h more money than is in hi s nation·.~ lrrasury. And as a soccer rhiyrr he may be the greatest who ever lived. Yet as a mAn. he ·.~ still the humble fellow who first brnke inl.o thr limelight in tile 1958 World Cup as a 17-year..old . And thrre'~ no reason to ~lieve he'll ever be any different. Boxer Dies After Stabbing SAN FRANCISCO (AP > -Orlando Zulueta. 43, a Cuban fighter whose JS. year ring career included an unsuccessful bid for the world lightweight crown in 1957, was stabbed lo deal~ lhortly before midnight Sunday, police fakl . His body , " knife wt1und in the left chest, was found on 1 sidewalk outside • Potrero district c11fe where • group of Hells Angels motorcycle club mtmbeni had been holding a birthday party fo_r • member, police LI. Robert Whiting said. Two men and two wortien standing near the body were taken Into custody for f!uestioning. Police said they were Hells Angel.':. forty-three other members of the motorcycle club were booked for in· vestigation of ch1rge11 of disturbing the pe:ace. police said. and 15 motorcycles were Impounded by po!lc:e. Patrolman Daniel Lynch , • personal friend of Zuluet•, aai1 he was on patrol whm he a.aw what apr.ared to be • fi&ht out~idt the cafe 11nd eomeone c11me up tn his car •nd told hlm a "'3n had betn •tabbed. Eitrller Sunday ni~hl police had receiv· ed four different c:2!1s complainlna: of britWling at the e•fe. . A bloody five-inch kniff': was found 1n a iisin!ry oft the bar kitchen and police believed it wali the niurder w~1po". Zuluela, who had been workinR •~ • •arehouseman, Jlveit 1bove the: b11r and h;id Ill Ont Umt beM • p3rt·tlme ~1rkeeper th~e. police pid. • .. ~ -... ' Mond1y, July Jq, 1971 DAIL V PILOT rt 238,000 Bid Pele Tearful Farewell 1UO de JANEIRO {AP) -With a tq,.. ltained face the the trlbtlle o1 2311,000 f&n11 rtnglng in hls ean. the man comidered the world's greatest toeeer player-twirled his famed No. 10 Jt.ra.ey above his bead Soaday and n!lir«l from Brull'• national team. tried to lmaaine whlJ UU would be Wre, but it aurpa.ssed anyfllna: I could think of." delel'll8 blocked b.iJ efforts to notch OM final goal. can change my mind , and my ckcleion ii made," he 1ald later, "If people knew abl>ul my private life, they would un· dent.and. But I guus l am asking too But he Ms not ltlt socor. forever-be 11till plans lo Play with SantOl!I, hil pro- fessiona1 team. Mobbed with admirers at the tn- tennlsaion, Pele jogged around Maracan• Stadium to the sll'ains of "Para Frente Brazil" Forward Forward Brazil •ml ''Obrigado Pele" Thank You Pele. much." • Soccer fan'> throughout the world Pelt, the Black Pearl who posted I .~ career goals, was ehoked with emotion as he told newsmen he decided to retire after his l,IOOth game to give his nation• chance to develop younger ptayer1. Pele played the fir::it l\llJ of 8f'l!ll1i1'11 match against Yugoslavia and thm sat out the last halt u his funner teammates erased a 1.0 deficit for a 2-1 Ue. Throughout the fir1t hair. Pele'• team· mates tried lo maneuver h.im into llCOting position .but tbe tenacity of the Yu&oslav The two songs ha ve become symbolic of Brazilian aoccer superiority tll'IC9 Bra:til garnered lhe World Cup last year. Hundreds of spectatoni wept openly and shouted fo r Pele not t.o retire as he trotted around the field. watched on ttlevision Sunday llli.'l Pele bade farewell. In Seville, Spain, officials cancelled the bullfights so fans could witness Pele's performance on television. In Loodon, the Daily Mirror called Pele •·uniq ue. irreplaceable. He is one legend that will never diminish." "It ii all too overwhelming," he said, ball .Mlbbin1. about tda fareWt"U. "l had "Even alter today's farewell, not.hing I ....... _ • ·""~'.!L.1 • ' -.,_. -.. " • <.-~,t~· . ' t ~~-'r.~ ·1.f ~ .. , - • I . , . . ( • DODGER JOE FERGUSON TAGS A LUKE WALKER PITCH IN 9TH TO RUIN A NO.H ITTER Open Winner Places Faith In Destiny CHICAGO (AP) -Bruce Crampton, 35--year old Australian, is a philosophical golfer who believes if you are destined to win a tournament, you will do it, no mat· ter what. He was in four traps, missed 6eve" fairways with his tee shots and was among trees about as much as 11 lum· berjack Sunday -but be won the Western Open golf championship and it.~ SJ0,000 award. A clo11i11g 34.37.71 for • five·under·par 279 did it. The 1lightly·built but sturdy Aussie, who fon;ook his parents' wishes that he become a tennis player likr themselves, now has won 10 tournaments since com· ing lo these shores in 1957 MKf ha..~ passed a half million dollars in winnings. Thr \Ve.stem , however, was hi~ first victory since taking the $50,000 jackpot in the Westchester Open a year ago. H 1~ best linish previously this season wa1 th ird in the recent Milw1111kee Open. In I.hr next month 11nd 1 half. Cramplon will have shots at a pair of $50,000 wil'I· ning plums. He defend~ his t1lle ln the S250.00 Wf'slchester -richest tnurney in !he world -thi~ week. And by winning the Western, he qualifierl for the World Series of Gnlf in Akron in September, plAying for the SS0.000 first prize again~t Lee Trevino, the U.S., Canadian And British Open king ; ,Jack Nicklaus, !hf': PGA champ, and Charita Coody, and Masters winner. "I'm all e1ciltd about this victory and will ge:t 1 lot of calls from friends here and abroad," aaid Crampton. "When this phase pages, then I'll be ready mentally to take on Westche.ster . "As for winning it again -I ju!!. don't know. But Super Mei kept winning ind maybe Super Kangaroo ca1, too." Crampton referred to Trevino and hi1 fantastic victory streak In the last month. Trevino cooled off at Olympia Fields, however, clMlng with a 70 for 211 and a share of 32nd place. Ht won 1870 and gave his caddy $2(1('1. ConsecuUve birdie putts of five and ll feet on the ~venth and eighth boo!lted Crampton ou t of a tie for the Western lead in ·the final round and he was ahead by himself the reat of the wa y. Spoils No·hlt Bid Dodgers' No. 13 Surely Lives Up to Reptitation Pl'ITSBURGH (AP) -Bookie catcher Joe Ferguson of the LO! Angeles Dodgel'8 wears No. 13 on his back. "lm't it unlucky ?" he was a!>ke-d by a teammale Sunday during batting prac- tice. "It's going to be unlucky for the pitcher today." replied Fergu.son. 11 was. Luke Walker of the Pittsburgh Pirates had 11 no-hiller going in the second game of the double-header thro.:gh eight in- Jwlv 11 Jv1v IG JulV 11 Jul• l'2 Ju•v 1l J u•1 l• Dodge r S late Alt G•m".., 1(11 16-lf) °""'•" •• ""•twr1~ Oodv•to ., Cln<ln""tl Onall•rJ 11 Cindnnotl Or>c110" u Clrotlnn.oH Or>clv•" vJ. lrt v•• Oodv••• v• llrov•• J:M 1.m ! o m. ! • "'· J • "'· '_!) • "'· 6:SS "m, ning .\ and had allowed only three runners to reach ba.'>e". Bat Ferguson. the leadofF baller in lht ninlh. hit Walker's first pitch fl vc: the left fi<'ld wall for his first major leall:'Je home n1n . Thf> Pirates swept both games, J...1. and 7·1. and have now won 11 straight game!!. Rut Walker's performance overshadowed the team's. "Never heard of him before," 5-ald the Pirate lefthander who had not pitch'Cd since .lune 29 due to elbow problem.':. "I had always worn it and didn't want to change now," he said. Walker hid any remorse about the homer. content with the fact that he pitched better than he hu si~e SIP'l"ing training. "Sure l 've dreamed of a Ito-hitter," said Walker. "I'm sure every pitcher dOf:l'l. But there's nothing to reel bad about. If his homer had won it, then It would hurt. "But he hit a Ji1ood pitch, a fast baTI around the bell. I'd throw It to anyboey again." The Pirates scortd three run11 In the third inning off loser Bill Singer, ..-11, on a two.run triple by Vic 0111'41Hllo and • 5acrifice ny by Al Oliver. The Dodgen: and Pirates meet again tonight with Claude O"-ttn IM, pitchln& OODO•ll l .... "' ' " . . • • • ••• J • • • , 0 • • V•111M1M, tt Mo11, II w t><i•l•.d 11•11 .... J .. w "••tor, 111 l.tfellv•f . Ill O.rwl~.r• .... ..,_, 11,,....,, GrllllMll, ... -11 ... 1 Wlllt .... T"•' ....... llttJ~ ' ' ' ' J ' ' • ' , 1 ' I I t t ... ' ' e • • I t f I n I I I PITISI UIGM Cl~1.•f O.v•lltlo. 111 .. Ollwf. ct 111,..11, If ""'*· )II Ni M.9Y, C ,~-1,"' A.UM', U W11k .... • •• • Ill J I I t ' ' ' J J I 1 I I I 1 t J I I J • I I J I f I I J I I f , . . . .fl 1 II , l -~r 0" -.,....... I. Pl!ttlloft~ 1. lOl!I -°"""" I, l l!ttbu..i. J. JI -CllNt. JI -O•volfll•. M• -M M•v ., _, IS, "~•V"" I, I~ -A. Oii...,., M9bnt>• 51-• \,_, J.11 Moelltr Wtlk~r W, 1.J ll'Nl llt•l\0 j jJ JDJ J l •• 0 J t I I I against Pittsburgh's Nelson Briles, 5-1. Walker, bidding to become the first pitcher to throw a nohitler in 62 year~ of baseball ifl Pittsburgh, came closer than anybody as he mystified Los Angeles before Ferguson hroke the spell with a first-pitch 9hot in the fin;:il inning . The southpaw. bothert>rl by A barl elbow on his tnrowing arm earlier this year and in Manager Danny Murtaugh's doji! hol1se because of it, struck out six and a11owed only four runners lo reach base. Before Ferguson's blast. his first major league homer. Walker had walked Ferguson in the third and allflwed two more base runners in the fiflh . Richit> Allen reach«l first on an 1nf1cld error and J im Lefebvre wa~ hit by a pit.ch. Wa!ker. 4-7 . who la~t started June 2!1 , hiis betn used sparinJi1ly a.c a starter by ~1urtaugtt s1nre h1~ i1ml miserie:::, this season He w a.~ tht> Pirates' top pitcher last year with 15 victories, t No Longer Unluck y ? Something New For Halos' May Rudy May lost a title Sunday night. Alan Foster just loot another ball game. It used to be that when May look the mound for the California Angels, the team suddenly stopped scoring. That all changed Sunday but it took nine innings and Ken McMullen's two-out, two-run homer to allow May to sne11k into the wiMer's circle again. May no longer calls himself Mr. Unlucky. He willed the name to Fo!ter. Jult I' J~IY 20 Jul\t 11 Julv l':I Jutv ll J~lv 1~ Angel Slate All 9 1.,..1 M IO•l'C (lll f A"'lll• '"· C!tv~l•l'ld A"9tl1 VI. Ot!tall A,...11 .... Dt1 .. 11 UJ O...n Oti• A~o•l1 ti t1/l itnO•t All~•I• •1 lhlllmor• 1 u o "'· 1 ·s~ o "'· 1:11 ''"'· The Cleveland right-hander lost his t1eventh straight &tart when McMullen drilled his 12th homer of the year into the left field M!BlJ with two gone in the ninth, breaking up 11 brilliant pitdiing duet. In three of those losse-5. F'os-1er ha:oi been shut out and t·he Tribe gave him just one run to work with Sunday. Cleveland wilt try lo do heller for Sam ~lrDowe!J tonighl when the brief twn- game series conclude~. McDowell , 11·9, will be opposed by Rick Clark, 2.Q since being recalled from Salt l..ake City three weeki; ago. ··To Rain any re~\ I've 11:ot In slart winning the close ones" Miiy said After eveninc his rerord at S.~ while Foster's dipped to ~9. "I R'JCS..~ tonight's gamf': is ;:i l!OflO S.!Rrt. huh ~" r..1av hal'I permitted nnl y lwo runs in h1.o: last 3~ innings and ha."I Rllowcd only 31 t:Ll!VllAHO 11' , ~ 1tl UM1n(lor, cl f O o o A,lomor. l~ l...,.,,)11 l!OOll>••"·" 11 r~''"'· '' ' o o o Go,,111.,, >r ... Inion, lo O J '!•Ol1non. r J Cl•rO. I! 0 1 O MeMull1n, )ti B1v•Niu•, lit 0 O 0 Solnet•. lb H~loomn, II 1 O O O ll•oOI. r! sv ..... ( l 0 l 0 '~"'"· .. A. ~ ... 11r ,D l 0 0 0 11 Moy.• To••I l l ' ' • To111 •• • ~ 1tl I I I 0 ' ' ' l I 1 I J 0 0 0 ' ! 1 , ~ 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 ' ' ' I 0 e 0 '9 l J I 000 001 l'IOO-' 000 !00 001-J 0., -C::ltvrlond J LOii -(l~••l•nd !. A•· 1111 .l 111 -><•n••~ J ••om., l"<I -McMulltn ll Sii -Alom1•. 5~ -G~""' I., I< II I• II SO A F~\!Of \,_, J-1 JI M••W,t ~ I l l I J . ' ' T -?M J. lOioCI ----- ' " hits in his last 51 rounds oi pitching. Bul four or his last six outings have ended as no-de<"ision affairs for t.he A n g e l southpav.·. "I don'l know if I'd be able lo pilch with a big lead or not," r..1ay said, "but one'of these days I'd sure like to try." The Angels victl\ry was their ninth In 11 (!lames and allowed them to reclaim tNrd place from the faltering MiMeS<lla Twins. McMullen has been one ~ the big reasoos for the sudden Angel tume.round. He has hit safely in 17 of his last 10 games. But he is also the first lo reelize ttiat the Angels are still 15 1n games bettind the pace setting Oakland Athletics. a figure that all but precludes a chance to overhaul their northern cousins. "I guess we'll havt> to settle for se<:0nd place," McMullen offered, "unless they have a complete collapse." The Angels gave May a ]..()le-ad in the fourth when Sandy Alomar got the first hit off Foster,· a double to center. He stole third base -his severtt h theft ln nine games and his 29th of the year - and scored on a sacrifice fly by Tony fr0n1.a!ez. Cleveland tied ii in the sixth when Ed· die Leon walked and Chuck HinlOn delivered his second straight double to scort: Leon . It remained that way until the ninth when C.onzalez signaled with one out and Mc!\lullen followed with his game-winner. "I wasn't trying to hit it out." the Angel hero said. "\"ve never hit a homer in my life when 1 was trying lo. l was just \rying to hit it hard whert it wouldn't M caught." The left field seats turned out to be I pretty good place. Prefontaine Lashes Out At African s DURHAM, NC. {A P) -African distance runners, v.·ho shocked !he world in the rarified air of Mex ico City in the 1963 Olympics. proved they could do 11 well near sea level over the weekend at the Pan-Afrir:i·t: S II track meet. Led h~· estabhshr.d star~ like Kenyan .. Ben J1~'ho and Kipchoge Keino, anrl buoyed by nev.·comer Minis lfter of J-:thiopta. the /\fnl'<1n.~ humbled the United States' be~l in every race from 800 to 10.000 meters. However, American team~ won the men's an·d women 's tt'am competitions. The men displayed strength in th11 field rvents and sprints, postlng a 111-78 vie· lory over lht> 14-nallon Pan Africa team end the women turned back " team or world stars 79·53. The only American breakthrough In the-distance evenls came in the 5,000 meters. and it was inconclusive because of 1 freak error. lfter, with a substantial lead, miscounted the laps and stopped with one lo go , thinking the race wa!I over, Oregon'.': Steve Prefontaine passed him by and went on lo win. • Running against the Africans left a sour taste in the mooth of Prtfontaine. ''You can't taKe their acromplishmenu away from them," Prefontaine uld. "But I don't have a great deal of rei.pect for some o( them 11 runners." The handful of men who are world· class distance runners come from a Ught coterie with ils own rode of ethica. Ac-- cording to Prefontaine. the AfrlcAn!!I', perhaPI' because of the:ir relative new· nes5 to lnternaUonal competition, do not subscribe. "They really worked me over In the 5,000," he said referring to the three Alricans who ran against him. 1bey mAde the pace very erratic And they used their elbows when they pas.std. "And in the 10,000 lfter ltl Shorter set tht pace all the way, whlctt is hard to do . Most runners understand that the work al 1e1ting the pace has lo bf' shared. Ml• -1rv s+ ... ~•. c1111-., 1rv w.,._,, Lm!IY••. t -1M ,.-•.no . GENE ALL EY SCORES WINNING RUN AS LA DROPS 2. "And thtn in lhf' 1500, Naflidi Ren ra" the first 800 mtlen1 to M'l tile pace for Keino, tht'n just dropJ)<'d out, without tvPn J[l)in!l throu_!!h the motions of finishing. I think th11t when we meel"' th<'m again, things a.re going to be df fercnt." . ...... -· ---1 .,... •• _ .... __ .• ~-.&---• ···---" --.....,..r ... ---,,,, -~· --·~--.. ~·-..... -----~-·------~ . .... _ ---··--------· ·~---f·~--( • + .... ....... _ ...... . : ... .-.7.iC.. ' DAILY PILOT Race Car Crashes Into Fans MF.SSINA. Sicily A speeding car veered off the track and into a cro~·d or onlookers at 1 tourism rlas.s auto race Sund!\y. killing two spectators and injuring 13 others. 'l'hf' driver nf lht' f'iat- Abarlb. t;iuseppe Calarese, v.·as only slightly hurt. e /\"el l 'irlor \\1 ASfllNGTON Ken Rosewa ll . 36 -year -old Australian. captured t he $50,000 \Vashington S I a r International tennis tourn?.- ment Sunday \\'ilh a 6-2. 7-5, 6- 1 victory over Marty Riessen of Evanston, Ill. Rose~·all played n e a r 1 y flawlessly in winning the best- of-five set to take the $10.00ll first prize. Riessen got JS.000 aa runner-up. Rosewall lost service onl y twtct in the three sets. Ilia steady clay court game lntiin.idated and frustrated the 29-year-old Riessen who lost the .service tooch he had sAtorday when he defeated top seed!d Wtmbledon Champion John Newcombe of Auslralia. Riessen missed :is first serves. Rosewall. v.'ho is known for his soft ser\'e, had &ix a ces in the match. e Matador Gored TIJUANA Bullfighter Curro Vasquez of Spain was gored in the r ight leg Sunday, but insisted on remaining in the ring until he had killed the bull. Va.squez performed poorly against his regulation two bulls. and paid for a third bull himself to make up for his ahowing. The bull caught him in the right thigh. tossing him. Vas-LAGUNA LIFEGUARD TERRY KLEIN AWAITS PAN·AM GAMES. quez remained in the rins, -------------------------------------- blod streaming down his leg. and although he took four .sword thrusts to kill the bull, the c rowd -mostly American tourists -awarded him tv.·o ears as a rew2.rd for his fortitude. Gold Cup Winner Horse of Year Candidate Lagunan Has Foot In Door FRED SCHOE~-t'EIU. OI 1119 O.llY 1"H1t S11tl ' .. Fountain Valley Clobbers - Newport Legion Nine, 23-2 .. Manager Gene fttarinacci's Westminster Sunday and I.ht dislantt In ab&orbin& the ._, Fountain Valley American latter losing a 10-8 decision. with Toby Reschan (2) and Legion baa e b a 11 entry Manager Joe Rich.8rd!on's Mark. King (1) the .nly klHr• prepared for its Nationtt l fledgling Mi.ssion Viejo bunch able to bit safely, L~guna Bt1ac~-li~e_guarfd ~er-Leauge title showdown nexL was splitting ll.5 weekend tilts Rich Douglau w11 I r y n.lein fee 5 uc 1111111 a 00 in Saturday •gainst the invading b J · Los Al · hardlu"k 1-•o on the moW\d the door for the J972 Olympic Y osi.ng at anutos, 5--0 ... v.- Games because he will be a Fullerton Dodgers by pasting Saturday and dumping ID-Sunday for San Clerne.nte participant in the 1971 Pan visiting Newport. 23-2 Sunday vading Sonora, 6-2, Sunday. when he held Anaheim Ruedy Amer1·can Games next month. 10 h.ighlight the J...et:ion's Fountain Valley's an-to just four hil.!I . weekend hostilities. nJ GI T Klein, 21. will leave the Art nihilatlon or the Newport ag-However. o y enn suma Colony July 24 for Florida and 'f'he Foonlain Valley nine gregation was spearheaded by and Scott Mik.IM hit 1afely for ' ·, now 13·5 and ('Ur rently th 21 h"t t••··'· h'-L •L .. ,· ., r will later i·et to Cali, Colombia e -' a ... u.. w 10.:11 pro-1 • .ue • s1 o s. in a do"-flRht for the National d -d J7 u balled · Loo · W t · t · for the Pan Am Gaines. He is "' u~-= r ns in. mer s es m1ns er rune ooe of J t water polo players loop leadership, along with The winners enjoyed their almost turned the l ti ck Fullerton and Ranche-G d Sud from the United States who biggest success in the third in· against Bolsa ran e n ay Pacifica, which is a half-game I d · I bber. l vrill 2.tlend the rompetitions. ning v.·hen they piled up 11 a ter Satur ay s co 111g a Jn recent dayi the UC Irvine in back of the battling pair. runs. the hands of the Fullerton goalie has been spending most In another Sunday senior Carrying big clubs for the Angels. of his waking hours before and circuit tilt. visiiing Sa n hosts were Steve J\1itchell, I n Su n day 's t i ff. after work, practicing water Clentenle was dropped by Gary Varney and Pat J\tarley, \Vestminster let a 6--0 second polo. Weekdays from 5:45 to 8 Anaheini Ruedy, :1·2· all with three hits apiece. inning advant<1ge get away as a.m., Klein v.·orks out at El Saturday San Clemente had Southpaw winning pitcher Balsa Grandt. post!d four runll ·roro f.larine Base. On tangled with the host Fullerton Steve Fox scored two runs in the third and thrtt more in v.·eekends, he joins the other Dodgers with the Mme team himself and struck Out 14 Nev.·-the fifth. 10 members of the Colombia-prevailing in that one with an port batters while allowrng on-Bob Nodlund went ll-'ild at bound team for practice. 11-2 win. Jy three hits and a lone walk. the plate in the Sunday set· "Practice ls the most im-Area LRgion teains had only San Clemente was able to back a s he smacked three portant thing, now,'' Klein fair luck in American League garner only five s<1!et!es all singles and a triple in four .11p- said. "We have to develop a. action a.11 evidenced by weekend and all five were pearances. Gordon Blakeley i;trong sense of teamwork.'' Westminster and Mission Vie-singles. also had a three-bagger !or He said the team will have a jo. The explosive Fu 11 e rt o n the losers. good chaflce of placing high in The \\'estminster tca1n of Dodgers broke a scoreless The only Westminster erlra- water polo competition. "Our manager Gene Loomer engag-deadlock in the bottom of the base job in Saturday's contest toughest competitors will pro-ed the host Fullerton Angels fourth with a five-run out· v:as a leadoff triple in the bably be Cuba and Brazil.'' Saturday and lost. 17-0, with burst. third stanza by Mike Dodd, "Most of the team members Balsa Grande ho s t i n g Terry Nielsen Wffll the (See LEGION. P•C• !I) in the Pan Am games will 1>e.....::..:.::..:.:_:__:.:_ ____ =-_ _:c..: _____ _::_ ___ .:_ _____ _: __ _ in the Olympics nex t year in MWlich. Germany.'' KI e in said, and added: .. that's why I feel I have one foot in the door." Klein originally started his sporl!I career with baseball. but threw his arm out and had to give it up. He tried a little basketball, but ended up in· terested in water polo while attending Fullerton H i g h School. He continued playing water polo with Fullerton Junior College, and was a member of the learn which took the 1970 'late championship. This past year he played on the UC Irvine water polo team. v.·hich v.·as the National Collegiate Athletic AM<x:iation (NCAA ) champ. OU1er nie1nbers of the lrvine team -Mike Martin and Ferdy end Rick M?.ssimino - v.•ill join Klein on the trip to ()Jlombi<1. 1·he team v.·ill be C'Qached by Ed Ne\\•land, UCI \VAter polo coach. 1595 4ply • tire with a 24 month guarantee Foremost@ Mileagemaker II Blaekwoll blbe .... All are rnembers of the C.: u t ona-lrv1ne-NevqXlr\-Area- \('INA l water pnlo <:lub. The cluh participated in the llorse er the Year H he \\·ins directly, Fogelson, a director Pan Am trials earlier this established as a lop candidate the \\'oodward. I'm convinced of the Hollywood Turf Club -year. from v.·hich 21 top water • Sox Populnt• for Horse of the Year honors, hl''s the finest horse in the na-had played hot-fool with the polo players \\·ere selected as BOSTON _ 'f'he Boston Ack At·k begins a vacallon to· lion right new" track's racing department all semi-finalists for the games in Red Sox went over the million day and v.·il! resun1e racing in Ack Ack will carry only 126 week over !he is5ue of Ack August. From the 21. 11 were He walked out of the ring. and was taken lo a clinic !or surgery. where he v.· a s reported in satisfactory con- dition. l~GLEWOOD Firmly lite Fed. To x Price 000--13 .....• 1.60 •••...•. 1 !5.9!5 650-13 .. ;.,, L76 ..•..••• 16.95 700-13 •••••• 1.95 •••••••• 17.9!5 6'15-14 ••.••. 1.94 •••••••• 17.9!5 735-1 4 ······2.01 •....••• 18.9!5 11 s..1 4 .••••• 2.14 •••••••• .20.9!5 875-14 .•••.. 2.32 •....••. 22.9!5 560-15 •••.•. 1.74 ••.••••• 17.9!5 t-85-15 ••••. ,1.91 •.•••••• 18.9!5 7:35-15 •••••• 2.05 ..•.•••• 18.95 77.5-15 .•.•.. 2.16 .....•.. 2Q.9!5 81.5.15 •••. ,.7'.37 ········22.9!5 845-15 •.... -2.48 . -. --.. -24.9S mark in attendance for the !hr fall lo shn\Y his Ul !en1.s In in the \\'oodward under its Ack·s 134 pounds. ~~~t:1sia!~s. represent the fifth year in a row Slrnday tile eas!ern Eslahlishmenl. v.•eight-for-age rnnditions. IL appeared Whittingham Klein has the tough job of v.·hen a crowd o[ 22.602 Lurned · ... ... • d , h So agreed "'· r, 'Bud y' Ack. Ark. wilh 8 i 11 planned all \\·eek lo run the being goalie for the team. "I out for their game v.·it ~'1\!w1>.uktt, boosting the home F'ngp!son. the 111ulli-milhonaire Shoc111aker <1board as usual, horse bu t 1t wasn"t until Satur· just kind of landed in that spot al\endance figure for the ov.•n<'r !rum Dallas. Beverl.v made it 11 v.·lre-to-wire run in day morning that he made il because l'm not a real fa st Oll 3'!7 II.II d " I S I Lh G l l c h ,. fl h official. He <1!so declared two swimmer."' season to 1, , . 1 s <1n r a in pnngs. an1 e .n t up, s a 1ng o sue 1 h be 1·1 d · his astute trainPr, Charlie of his other stars. Courrar JI. K ein as en a 1 eguar tn L d front runners as Judgable and "' B h I the e.<>t • 1'1e;\·i~O en 1' \Vhittingham. then <1 t i on' 11 from the barn nf 1\-lary F'. Laguna eac or P I d. n . F'igonero in the process. .Jooes. •nd Burl B•"har•cli"s 1hree years and this summer ea 1ng rnMey 11·1 ner 111 ~ MEXICO CITY -~1exico thoroughbred rirclcs A 71 -1 longshol, prict. on the Advance Cuarc!, out of the is watching the sands at Irvine look a 2-1 lead Sunday in the The ~1-1ear-nld Ack Ack. a board. v.·a.~ a surprise second, ch<1se. Cove. final of the American Zone ha n d s 1, in e c!ark b<11. bra1ing nut ~1anta . one of the Cougar \1•11\ run on the turf ;====-~====c:;=~,I Da\'iS Cup lennis lournament. shouldered an unprerrdenttrl bf-st mares in 1he t'Ountr1·, 1n rne Sunset Handicap July 2ti upsetting Brazil in the doubles 13~ pound$ ;ind shot dov:n the v.ho finished third. · and Advance t;u<1rd, alonR match 8-6, 7-fi, 6-2. oppos111un in the 32nd runnin~ "lie 11"asn·1 nnv more tired 11·1th Cougar. 11·1H conlinue rac· • /tlc-Neel!I Dead of the $17fi.000 llr•lly1l'ood {;o!d at the end of this r~CP th;in he 1ng <11 the upcon11ng Del ~lar NO. 1 ON THE COAST Cup hanr!1rnp S11turd11y 11 as at thf' ftn1sh 1)f the Santa meeting SACHAl\1El'rt'O _ George "Y.'e'll prnbatih· run Ark An11a lland1cap. but hr \\·a.~ ll1gh v.e111:ht in the Gold Cup Earl ~IcNeely, 73. hero of tile Ack in the \\ioodw~rd al Hfl· f\111ng tu, he!;I Y1111 l'"11ldn 1 h1~tor.1 11~s 13:\ p nun d s 192.4 Y,'orld Series. l!'> dead mnnt Oel 2."' s:i1d \\'h1I · l1,11 c ~(l[ one niorr ot111c·e i•f ~"ilhbL'UI! 111 J,38 and Your Hometown Newspaper Is oifter a lengthy Illness t1nj;(hn111 "'althou~h \1e in1gh1 run out or h1n1." ~aid l'h;illMon in l!MO wnn with the Funeral scrviees for ~le· ruri hu11 back East 11 v.·erk or !-ihoemakcr after riding his load. l\al'ak 11. (ln)y the th ird The DAILY PILOT Neely. v.·ho died Friday, 11'ere. so bef!lrc. fourth f,old Cup \\'inner horSt' to 0 hr ;:isked io shoulder scheduled today. •--·~1:1e~·~11~h:':"~'~"....'.'.b~e~n:a~m:•~d -~w~·h~il~li~"~''~"~m'.'.._~_:'~"~d:_~ln~·-~l.~~'~· ~J,~ni~sh~e~d~'~'~'~'"~L~h.'.i'.j"~'~''°;;;.· ~~~~~iiii:i ~lcNeely drove ln the v.•ln· 1 · ning run ror the Washington SenatGrS in the final Rame of their +.3 5eries win over \he old New York Giants. It v.·a~ the onlv World Series \1•in for WashiJlgton in the history nf the Am~rican U-agut. e 11.S. Tied f.tlA~11 -El Salv;idor gain- ed a l·I 11e v.·ilh lhe lJni!ed States Sunday night in the first round of lhe O\yn1pic soc- cer qualifying lou.rnamenl for lhe Caribbf-an and North American continent zone. Rafael Bucaro. o u I 5 i d e right. tied the game ~·ith a shot from the left side at 10 minutes of the Sf:'rond h;ilf Bucaro, El SalYador's 011\~tan· ding Cront -line playrr during the g1me. v.•as injured laler in the second period. He \\'as on the sidelines for six minute~ ,_1hlle his team pla)·ed with en· ly 10 men. TODAY IS THE DAY TO LEASE A 1171 CADILLAC Ba,seball Standings A~1ERICAN LEAGUE East Dlvl1\on w L Pct. GB Baltimore " 34 .626 &lstl'n " :ti! .Sll2 4 Detroit 43 43 . 527 9 New York " 43 .484 " ('levetand 39 ,. .419 19 \Vashingl()n 36 ,. .400 201 ~ \\'est Oh•lslon Oakland Sil " ·"" K11ns;is City ., 42 .523 JO Angels 45 SL .469 15'1 ~1 lnnrsota 42 49 .4(12 " C'hicap;o :1!1 " .4'3 1811, ~1i11••aukte 39 " .433 1811 i11ne .... llHWl!I ll•l!•<t>Qff I. Do~l111<1 l .t.n1tio J. (l,.,,•11...t 1 l(An•o• ("V l ·I, Oetr~I! 7 l N•'" Yor~ l·•· (~1(110 1·1 Wi!lll"O!On l, Ml,,,.,11011 J M'lwoukH' $. llo.,Dn• ,..,., .• o., .... ,..11 ......... (L~,,., )·)) •1 eo110" jTI •"' (I.)) c:111r100 !M••~"·'a" l·I •n<I Jonn 1.101 u Nt\PI Yo•• !lio.!ltm•tt 14 IOWI l~ort!I" 0°1), l 1w!nlfM Dt l""ll (LOii<~ I• .. ) II l':l "U I Cl'Y (llloo~'r 1 ••. ~"'n1 Mln,...Wo• !Pt"• 11 .. , 1• w11nl1111.., ~8'""'" ,.)I "llM (l•v•l1n!I IM<O..-ll 1·1! t ! A,,...io !""'"'" 1ml•n ~ •1 ~19M ll••U•ncttt (P O&-..i 11·'1 11 01~11 .... (C Do-. ..., I O! NAT10i"\AL LEAGUE Easl Divl~lon W L Pel. GB Pitl.Sburgh 62 31 .667 Chicago 5(1 42 .54.1 11 1},. St. Louis 49 44 .527 l:l Ntw York 47 4.1 .522 1:111, Philadelphia 41 5.1 .43fi 21 1".I ~tont reat 36 57 .387 :lfi West Oh'i51on San Francisco ~7 311 .600 Dodgtr5 50 4:l .526 7 Hou~ton 46 46 .500 911 Atlanta 47 50 .4115 11 Cincinnati 44 52 .458 13 1.li San Diego 33 61 .:151 23 \\z S~ .... IY'I llltlllH (lllc;1•0 I. MQnll',11 ; 51. LOl!h I. NIW Yori< S Pllll1d1tolll1 1.7, HOu\!o" 1>10 Plthll«ro!\ j .7, DMlltn J•I (:lnclnn611 ), $111 01-O, 111, )I~ lnNn11. 11\n, II"" •• ,,,. pi>d ~•n ~r1n<!Ko !-1. At11n,. 4-4. h i ••"'• 17 llllllr>GI THIY'I OllMI 1111 01-(llo~rll , .. , ., CllKIMl !I (M•,.l!I •101. night \111 Fr1ncolno !Cvtnh"lUl!I !-Cl 11 Allln!I Cllt•· bor 0.1f, nl111! 0...tfl f0ftftn 1CMI •I l"l!l•l)!Jf't!\ !8fl!t1 J.1), .. 11ni -••I Utr,,..m•vrr 1.Jl II CM<H O IHoUI· m•n l·•l "''"" v.,..111 ti•~K.111 *'J) 11 51. Lowi1 CC1tlton ll·!I, -.l1M PllllM1itofllll {Wllr t.I! 11 Hou1i.... IGri•I D-0! • n11111 llTH ANNIVERSARY SALEll BIGGEST & BEST YETI DEAN LEWIS !TIOJY(OIT!AI ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS '71 COROLLA SPICIAL $1777 DEMO,#'''' ~ Sii THI ALL NIW TOYOTA CILICA SPT. CrL IMMIDIATI DILIVllY ~ VOLVO 1971 DEMO $4098 164 SEDAN "'wtom 1ti~, A1 di1, H o1t1r $JJ71 1966 HARBOR ILVD., COSTA MESA 646·9303 us•• cu ,,,.," 2.4 MONTHS GUARANTEE WITH 5 MONTHS IOO'li.ALLOWAN CE Foromoo P1olect•on C uarantfe. You• t'o•emo11 i111 1>101e.c t•o" q"JtontoP c.o~t1\ au I n•l'm"•l P•» ""~"r !i•e• (t•<cr>I ,,.,. H>"<i•' •P· lll•<•l1on l"P' w+1 n \eC>dt1le. 9u• .. Ml l&e•l ~Q"""' All IUdd "•'••d or dP!ect lallu•••· 'You ••• !Hu!tCl<HI "" 111• cnl"• ""ll•t• ""'"'"' ol Q'1U•n!Ot. If )oOUt t"• r~··· (1Ufln<1 "'" quud'11~• pe11 ua, oOHPl/1 ol \,. "I And""• woll, •I 0011<•1>t•nn,1e1>d1' 'fP'" t"'· "' "•••~ ·'" ~1 1 ,,..,.,.c~ I'·"•" "" IP•• Ull~, ... 1 nu""••• ll"te. t •clU<.llnq~"l""•l>I• f ede••l L ,r l\f' T ~~. tflWJr1t1n• r1011chd\O nl • nnw 1 .. e. Wt """I allow ICIO'o..,, 1 n" '"' <1•n•I ""rt/I ~'" nr •r•, e •t i ull • '"" ~IH>llcabl• ! c!l•r•I t ~<is~ l ••· •I"''"~ lhe. lOO'lo.1l1owar.ctoer+c.a. fl'•te.illu, we w 111 Allo w 50.., ,..,, }~~ ol 11\t ""Q•n1/ purc11_.1e p.,,t, ~·c ludlnQ 1ppl>c,.blo f •dt••f E • L"t 11~. iowai<l tl•c purLh••tol 1 r>c.,... 1+re.. (!.<le c1>1n n,..ow). I ei>er· •I l.l<che T1~ ·•!l1u<1mt!ll l 'IOW· ·•"~" woll IHI n111>e un the n11" ot Ill• percent 01 t he 01•9lndl 11e1d ••malnl • Whilew1ll• only 13 llW>f'e. Plus Fed. tax end Old t ire l"O Rf:MOST ""OT£CTION GUARANTEI CHART. H£A£'1 HOW YOU R GUARANT££ WO RK5o £nliftfUlflnl1111••IOd ;14 - IDl>'to1llOw1roc1 perlo• '-'mo~ ~O'll. allowo nc1 perlo!I '1-1 l "101. 2s-,.. a ll OWi net pt flO!I t4-Z4 .. o .. Ttll<I L;f .. '"•o•«t;,,n. We buU<l In· !'1 tVety t•o 1et110U !oft UI• l'I C-!•On !nditoto•s rney 1ogn11 wno" vnur Ii•• 11\ou o IHI rep!-"CP.d . IT YOU I !Ir• ......... out (t l<ttpt f f)f ln- co .. ect 11 1qnme~tl w•will m1k• an 111ow1nce tuo11d on the 0•19111 ... l>IHCh••• price, ••clt1Gln9 •DPllCI• b it Fe~1 .. 1 C:KCll-9 TlOK, tow1•d '""' pu1ch1 .. or 1 new '"'· We ,...,11 .. 11., ... I /J <:1urln~ tne flu! t111f ... 1 /4 durino \'lo 11cond ,.all o l !ht ~!I ltd monlll< nl gu1r1ntoe. F"11tt - ,., f"c"~ lax 11>ju11mon1 1now-1nce w o!I ne rn»<i1 on t~• b11I\ r-.1 Jh~ !>efCf'lll o f lh• orlg!fUI U Sld •tm1i1>1nq. I n1, nu101ntet II not tr1ndertble. It I• nn1v IO< 1>rl~~t• p,tUe.._ ''" Of I"''"'"""' '' ''' "" ,...19ons. Mini size AM car recfio . fif.t under oil cki1hbootds.. Has .5" extemol speok•r. Reg.24.95 NOW 1488 · Penney Service 3 days only Mon., Tues., Wed. only 35ss· For our Foremost® Custom brake se.rvice. Here'• wltot we do' ln5to)I new lining5, new front greoM MOil, ,..build oft wheel cylinders, resurfac.e brake drvmt. repock front wtie.r beoring1, rnore. Mod •rn & Compl•+• S•r,,.ic• I P•rt• D•pt. 540·9468 $995 Modern Body Shop for All C1rs 1,61 TOYOTA CORONA H.T. \ c.::, you can ahop 12 to S Sundays, too, at these Penney AUt:oCl!nter9t Orangr County's Largert and ~fost Modern Toyota and Volvo De.ale.r "•"~· HHl•r, _ 1_.. ll'TI" tni . s;:ASHI O N ISLAND, N•wport C•nf•r. HUNT INGTON -· OYIRSIAJ DILl¥1lY sr1c1AtlJT;r="~~~~~~"":'~~~:;!;!i;r;;::;;;;;;:;;;;::;;;;;~~J!.--:==;=~C~E~NET~ER~,~H~"~"~'~io~g~t~on B•• • lls• Penn•yi Tim• P•ym •nt Pl•"· .lli~ ... --~-'"'·~-... --.;;..;;..~::r ... ~_.:.a• -· :..!f~ll-•-... , ___ :.!.!--• • i:. -· ·~----;._ _-..;ltt ~ .......... ... ~---.. -· • .~ Alamitos Racing Entries I'~ ¥MG•y, '•" "· 1'11 l'l<1I PDOt 1;4J P .M. JI lllttlllY d911bll Ofl 111 •IMI IM '''"' U 1.1.M:I•.., "h •IMI tn1 r1cft FlllST RACE -WJ yird1 1 ve•r ~la m1loen1. Cl•lmlJ'8. f'u<1• $1\IOC (lilm· 1"9 l>•ltt "°°° . RollrG*d illfl iCro.llvl llO lr..ckolero ISm•!!ll 110 Ttlol• A °*t~ H'>'•ral II) GD Ttuly Co IW•l..,nl 1?0 llobb•• Heea Bor (CordoJ•J 111 War PrlnttUI {Ad••'i Ill (ord•"°" ll't•n•" 1:111 110111 CiD Go {A!li!IGnl 110 Dor~ Moon Cn•t ll•on1ml 1?0 5ECONO ltAC o: -350 v1•d1 ) year ('i~1m~n': l>~I~·. fi':riomlnv. f>""" 1:1000, .'.tln K.iion IAG••rl ' in 10<> eru<• IP•""'I lit F 1~1 01;n ((IOlby J 111 ll'<ld• B••r loo !l11n1 lit Cnfc ll~~JI CSllOUH) Ill G.old lr111ot tJ'ernerJ 111 Oii Altr1 lP•v•) 111 Atl~nlf JH !W1t•onl IU Trr• No!• IWrlvn•J 111 l•d• len11ne ttl1n~•I l!f lHllltD 11.t.C( -J50 Yl•G>. A· y11r t>!d mAld•n• Pur\e llfOll C6n<11'• Je1 IC•o•D•\ no t:;;.1: .. f,"1fc::cW:1"1"1 : : : Dt•I C1Y !l,.>hl ml Ill Moon VtlY•I !Wlrd! IXI B• !.v•• Ch•< !P.,~r) 111 C1""• ltld Bl" lHlrH l!O B•9 True~,,. Ula"\>! na l'OUllTH RACE -t lO Ylrai.., 1 Yoor olds ond UP. c1 .. 1m1,... Pu"e"<.SlJOO. { 1.1,.,1no 'P••<t j:>()OO Ploll Mutho CU•uvnn) in Wl>low R~ue•! (Ad•" J 111 lhe1trlon CL•""lml !lj Bunn•'• W•rrlor {Ban•'! 111 Tllo 01,,.,v (Wollon) . 119 Gobulno Hlor!\ 111 Sooe<lv Stven ((ro.01! 11S W•t on J'ov.,lv !Ptrntr! 119 FIFTH llACE -s.r; 11rds, , Y•&• old• ond up, P ur•f UOQO. Tho TnorOU<1hbrl:d J<X~•YI 1nvl111lonfl. Piun~er 1!1y l~•llerl) 1\6 Pacl!lt cnar,., iGront) 111 Tight SOUttlt (Harr!1l lll ~~~·.1L~:Tu1~"?Y1(1~~~f~> \lt ll!!le Die~ BN IC•mnu•) Ill Dtvn Magic \GUll111nl lit Cynago Ci•• CM1horn1v J 110 Crill (l1mbtrr! 1!6 Borleo Roc~et (Yo••• 110 SIXJH llACE -000 ''"''· 1 ¥01r cld•. c111m1,... Purl-0 snoo. ci.1minlil orlco SJJ.00. c11 llo• Go ear (1'1r•1 117 Glngot'! Trhh (Wllion! l U Stormln Harmon CCro•b•I 110 P1pp1'1 Plink IB.,.k•f 111 Tomp.e11 Bunny \Alll•C'") 111 Ou.,.•s lo Do /l 1>n1ml 111 Argo E•pron Ad1lr) 110 UUro•v•tem (W•rd) l?O Nimbi• Nol• t Ptrntrl I ti E••• Vlrluo tOtt•trl 117 SEVENTH ltACE -J~ v••d•. J Y•"' Old• and ""· (IA1mlr111 Pu•K SUOO, CIAlm!M prk o nm. Romc~lnq Rock (Cor<111<1) ln w1r G1l1•I• Cllal>amJ llt Our Cecl•!an fH1rl) Ill C••orl Sln<l>torm (lhn~•l Ill L J91>!nlng Rl<lv• fAd1lrl 11• OoU S!'w>t-• /N1!1r) 116 L1t!le Ptrctnt (Smith) llt R°E"rG'"~'! ~•"C'.r ~·;~1~ •• d,. 1 y~~; aid• ar>d up. Allow•nt"'. P""' uooo. Th• LM Alami!M·RO.lmoor Sol"!"" lirnl•!. G~ A Miio tl11>h•m\ 117 Sn•d()W Man (Ad1lr! !11 O•v•<I J~n• 1Slr~"''I I» llee<I" Tonie> IAlllsont 111 C•ndy B•r Diii tC1rdo1~1 !)7 S<io~r lloc:kol IW'M\on) 1'10 1 llllt Conloua [Ptrner) 111 Blondy lt<n:~ot!t (Hori' 1U NINfH llACE -•OO v•rd<. J v•~r nl<1s and up Clolmlnq. Purse snoo. Cl&lmlng prlct ~1000 lloc•ef tnlun (liph1m! 110 Chu C~u lloD ((••<IO••I !II B••••ln Cleo iH••ll II] Ch••v• Em (Dreyer\ 11• The Vario! (Pogo/ 1'0 "!"rue V•ndy ~$ml!nl l:IG llncle Ed9or (~llllM) 110 Glad L•d (J'l •n•rl 117 The A~ Palmer Method lRACTICE STL\IGHT-IN PllTIS I know of very few golfer~. even. amona the pros. who can. pult aucccsstully without practicin& this phase o! the pmc reaularly. Everyone bu a basic rhythm to his or her 1troke, and it takes some dfort to maintain it from week to week. : : _. -i .... When you practice your puttina. you should try to re-apture this baiic rhythm. An.d the bell way to do this is to pnc;tice tt.raigbt·io putU. Ir you praci.ice brealciag putts, you'll tend lo become too conscious or your line and the for~ of your stroke. You'll ovulook. the · fundamental need to merely '°" instate-your basJc rhythm. Move on to lonac-r, mon: difficult putts, only alter you have reiaiacd the proper pace or your stroke. J/S. • C ltJ t N.+.f'l.-;._ .,.._IHI Arnold Palm1r'1 "HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR PUTTING." A copy ol this hint·~ktd book11t b your1 for 20e wh1n you 1ntlo5~ • stamp.ct, Hlf·Mldreutd tn¥t1Dpe alone with your r1qu1st ta Arnold P1lm1r, in cart ofthi1 n~Ptr. LEGION BASEBALL . •• ~Continued From Page %8) who was left stranded at the hol oomer. Nt.,..rl Ul .. ' BAum•. c V1lentl~t, 7b f re901I, p Ad1mo, ID ' " Jcort ~Y l~nint• lOT•IS • • • • ' R1ncho·Pitc<ll(1 NewPorl ' 100 OJD JCI0-1 000 Q(l) 1 00-I Si n Clom•n!1 U I • • • " . ' ' 0 • • • • (llrK, lO·P Sh.,p, ss OY!!v, rf Scnrupp, lt>lD Yo1t, ti Adlmo, 10 B1vmo. c Cal<1well. 1t V1le~11n., u 0.llMY, D·tl frflll;lll. p-71> Toi.ls • ' ' ' ' , ' ' ' • • • • • • • • • ' fl rDi • • ' . • • ' ' ' . •• ' ' ' ' • • h rbi ' ' n • • • 0 • • • • ' . • • ' FOl.tftlllft Vtlt•Y OJI Snimoi!. 11:> Corroll, lb Mllc~ell. lb .. ' ' ' , ' ,. rbl ' ' • ' ' ' • v ..... ,, lb Lv"cn. "" M.,lev, cf HI•, u Ouelette, c (Dltn, II Frilz, II (aloman, •' Ouo•nblck, rf Foo, a . ' . ' ' . . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' , ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' . ' ' . ToTlll ~· 73 '1 $(°'"9 by lnnlnn ' .. 00000000'-7)6 JJllOOlOlG-1J71 l ' ' • ' ' • ' ' ' ' • " N1w1>orl !11 .. ' • • • • ' • • . "' Ctor~. JI> ~"""· .. Ou!!•. ct ca1a-11, 11 S<MU'J'<l, P•:ltl Ymt, cl °*l•""v' 1> ' ' ' ' • • • ' • • ' ' • • • • • • • ' ' 1tln9. lb l>Vml, U lle1cn1n, C·I! ()o"gl1n, ID Wl>llfktr. 1D K11a11. c! Miki.,.. !t·< Allen, rl Nlet.1n, p ' " Score DY lnftlnt l To1111 • • • • • • ' • ' • • • • • • ' ' . . S.On Clomen1e 000 Oto 00!-7 l full. OoaPtf• 000 !iOO •h-! I t 51ft Cltmenl• UI • • • • • • • • • • .. ' ' • • • ' • • • • ' " "' Kint. lb Tl"ml. IJ lle>Cl>•n. c Kolo!1, <f Oou;l•n," S<01T Mi~l1;11, It AUen. rl St•v• Ml~lot Nl~l1en, 11> Tol•I• • ' • ' ' l ce11 l1r '""'"'' ' Sin (1"1'!1on!• 001 00\ 000-7 Anlhl om Rued• 010 010 00~-l Min ion Viti• !O) ... • ' ' • • • • • • • • • ' •• ' • ' • • • ' • • • • • • • • • Two Players Ejected, Foothill Rips University Pritt . d Rlc~1rd1en, •• TollM'rt. lb A1!\cto!I, !b Grim11, It Whitt , lb lorron. rl llevnold!. c Mo•11n ., lOlob ' n • • • • • ' • • • • • . " . • • M!ulan v1~10 000 oco OC0--0 6 ! LOI Allml!o• tlO 010 020-.l 1 6 Mlu l1111 V!1l• 161 •• Ml'°"· !I Pr!c1, ti Tolberf, P A!l'!Crl". lb Grl-t. c wnhr, lb»• ftsn-11n, r! Jb Rlt~1rd•on, n 11••"4)1<1•. ,, M~!!l!I. )D To!ol.• • • , ' ' ' ' "' ' ' • ' • Controversy and conrusion dominated Sunday's slate in the Saddh~back sum me r baseball league. 'l'\vo of the three regular contests In the loop were call· ed off by either cancellations or postponements v.·hile the third ended after five innin~s amid bad blood as Foothill ~topped University. 13-2. Meanwhile. in lhl' Long Beach PolicC' c i r cu i 1 • Kaulman-Brnad-~1arina \\'as bf'!lered by host !\lolor Patrol, fl.J, in a game al Long Beach's Si!verado Park A scheduled m e et i n g hetwecn !\l1ss1on Viejo and Laguna Be;ich in the Sad· dlchack league w;is cancelled '''ith the San Clemenle·Sad- dl eba ck Frosh con te s t pos1ponfd until a later date. In the only game actually pl11yed in the Saddlcb<ick !ielup, visi1ing University was socked by Foothill. Hol tempers flared in the 1np nf the third inning in the 1;ni-Foothill confronta1ion on a dispu ted c::ill al second base. II al! resulted in University pilchc Danny Ruckle, who relieved an Inning earlier for starter Jerf Styers. being ejected from the game. Ru ckle v.·as followed to the mound by Jack Harringlon and Kevin Moughan a s Fnolhill banged out 10 hits and scored in every inning. The losers managed single runs in the third and fifth frames. Steve Fargo go! aboard on an error to lead on lhe third fnr Uni and then advanced on Rick Pcregud's wait<. A routine ny ball hit to center field by Ruckle was dropped wi!h Fargo scoring. The ()!her Un i tally was plated when Percgud singled f'argo acrosl! after the !alter had hit a leadofl double in the seventh. LEASE A 1971 CADILLAC "SUMMER SPECIALS" """" """' =-+------ Vnlvtn!ty UI .. 8 R~c~lt. n Mo"gna", <l·lt>-o f1t9<1, lb·C II. J'u•gud. lt>-11 D. llucklo. !~·~ H6rrl"~lon. I> Hancock, 11 Sllv&, •I l.lorentt, rl 11.1 .. " tLPoregud, ( ' ' ' ' ' ' • • • ~ rbl • • • • ' . ' • • • • Sonor1 Mfnlon ' ' ' • ' ' " s,or• by lft"I"'' ' • • ' • • • • • • ' ' .. 100 ot'(I 000-1 6 l Vl~!o 00' ~00 ~I ~-6 l Wu!mlft1!tr IOI ·-· 1D s1v .... ,. 8•Milo'", lb • ' ' • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • • ' 8r•dltv. cl·1'o cna~mon, 7b wt.l!e1.-.. n Nodlund. ot QoOd, Jl>-1> C•~•.,.t>trdt, lb AndrOWI, '' •• ' ' • . "' • • To1111 llow•n. 7b '-'••~a~. ii Ch&moton. " l~~•ll, < B•;dt ,.one. cl ~1nDo•d10<M. 1D CJm1>, U l•ttle. a Hohoner, lb C1111t10t. rt l•l•h ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • • ' ' 21 11 l't r•I 0 • • • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' • • " ' " . ' • • " Unl~eritlv 001 01 -? 1 1 ~oom!U ••l •• 1) JO 1 (r PunllO, II 81t~t1•¥, ( (, ll U"llO• 1ti E"'""'" a LOO""'"'· P·lll 101e11 • ' ' ' • • • • • ' ' • • • • • • ' ' , • ' • ' " • • • ' .. r ,.r,.,t,..., •nve11 D1l ~ Jl&-11 11 Wt""''"'I" r-n !WI t>".ll--o • Wt,lmln1t1r UJ • • • • • • • • • ' • • 1<1ufm•n·lt111!1-M~rl•1 Cl! •• ' ' , " rb• O•WA!, rt ~·,,..,~. lb /.'•Ill" " So,&, c Diiion. lb f lllwn. P ••rhrD! l 0 0 0 • ' ' • • • • ' ' ' ' • • , Bur<f~lte, •t ' ' ' • • • • ' ' • • ' ' ' ' • • • • • ' " l<ort Dy tnnlne• ~•~die•, 1h·<I W.,ll••Y. " tlo<Uv"" o 1f o~,"~"'~' lb Jl~d'"'"' .. ' bl•••l•v, 7h o Ci llun"" II E•aino1A, Jh lunnoron p (~•P"'•" JO toomor. 11! lot~11 • ' ' ' " ' ' ' • ' • ' ' ' ' ' • • ,. ' .. 1(-~lm&n·B·M Molor Petrol ' " . !OJ 010 0-l 1 S 051 l!O ,._, l ! O Wfllmln•!" 060 tlOll 10\-! 1' • Sor.a Gr•""• DO• C3J lt)(-la 17 1 Sounds like a switch, doesn't it? But we'l I show you how ou r hard-working, ambitious distrib- ulors are -day by day-build- ing undreamed-of incomes. Our great product is the PASER MAGNUM. 11 makes today's car the car of the future. And ii will build a really wonderful future for you! Contact: ARMSTRONG BROS. 7438 E. GARVEY AVE . ROSEMEAD, CALIF. 91770 213/280-5344 Mtnl!llldu•l'O e.,. JtE I tNOUSTR1E5, INC. I 01tltt, Tt~11 ---. .. -==-'--'·~ -~- ' ' • ' • • • , • DAIL V .PILOT %8 Deep Sea Fisl1 Report DANA WH .. 11" -711 •fl91t1> )DI lih (OIO, ~'~ W'>• 1)1 m.t~•••i, iU bl ... , ...... , !l ""!Jt>ul. NIOWl>O•T IAtl'l W.INlll~•l -1(,7 •"'olltfl: II~ •llN<<><•, OU r.o;i. 1 w,. 1ot11a•, 2 bO<llto, lOJ m••-or•I. (D•••I"• LOC~o•) -171 "'"I"'> UC WU . ~l! ... L •EA,CH -1)6 •r>Cil•r\ 11 b•n. 111 10<• coc. 1 n&!il>ut, 1 ll•r· rtc.,O•, 10 OOl'lllQ. B•r9o-!•S *~glor• • l:Hln•CV<l•. b b011llo, t 4 o.u. 41 Rustlers Lead by 21/2;: Pirates Breeze, 6-3 Senik"s Rustler~ ((iolden West College) inipto'led on lheir Metropolitan Le ague summer baseball lead SW"IClay by handing the second place La Fonda's Dons & 4·2 setback on the winher.s' diamond. wora'1 , ... 1 .. (ti .. ' W•I,,.,,. U Cnu<cnw•ll, le> foel~tt, ?ti J'flme<. r1 1<.1b*Sko, <" ~•m~!IGn, lb Bowen. " ~~mono, rf Fuln•m, •I M t lt1nl•1. )D 11u11, lt> • • • • • ' ' ' . , . lo rtl ' , . •' ' " , 'I ' . ' . • • • •I ., ., ~ SAFECO INSURANCE e FIRE •AUTO •BOAT •HOME • BUSI NESS $AH P EDllO (Mo• ... '• L1noon9) -·~ on9l1" 1•8 <>llMtoto (11..0 StrH! L•nO•n9I -170 &'''""" 110 &lbAr~tt I~ o.oto<o o~-. ll ~~1 10~1 rn '""° bin, o m•~k•••I• l Dla<O "" """- OCEo\i'llS!DE -_)(), l"Q!e•1 16 b•· Ward's Plratcs !Or an g e Coa:;t College) also managed to break Into the win column by taking a 6-1 d''t'ision lrorn the La Fonda .Ju111<lrs at Sant:1 Ana ·s Memon2J Park. I/Ii~" D IOl•I' ' ,. . \cor• •• lnn•nf> l o Fo""91 JO> 100 OOll 001 -J ' .. • • " • I ~ I Bob Poley & Associates •OtU<IO, oil ll<ltHIO, 1•6 b•>I, • t"'l>ul, I Y"llo..,tou, II» 1lb*c01• So\l'llfA MQtll(A -1\1 •~vi.,. 11 i.ou. 9 ~•llb~l. So•OC -IOJ onolrt• :16 b.,1. n1 macker.,1. t) rll(~ coa, t h•l•tkll So\N 0111!00 tMunic101I 'l••I -._) 1nvler1 2,Jae 110.ccre 'AllAOllf COVE -101 onot••> •II l1Uco b•n. 10 l>llobul, t,ICM) '"'" (GI! lMPElll,l.l $EA(H -$6 I ngle" II """· '6 moc~net tPle•Pol•! L1nGl"'il -16, 1nglt r! l(lf l llM<Or"· 1 b.of• r1Cud1. l2• bl,,, Ii nori1t11. I bll<~ "'' b.o'>. l v•llo..,11•1, I whit• ••• D•u l'•clllc 5P<>rll1'1>i•tl -nl onoltr• UJ 1lblcor" l corroc.><M, ~ 1>.ou, JO ,.,.,~ ••• 1. DATSUN, TOYOTA i\;'\l'D ME TOO: lleavy Duty Shick Absorber Lifetime Guaranlee If lira\'\' Duty ShOf'k Absorb· t>r liills au,.. to f<1ullrv rn~· lenals <1nr! worktnaosti111 l)r wparou! while ori~io:il fl<Jr· ('hasi•r O"'ll$ ear, 1t will bl" rrpl:it·ed Ufl'm rt'lurn. /n-e of Phar,et, <>r 1111' purch:ise prirc will be rt•ti111ded. Jf t/1e de· f...,..hvr shnt:k ab.;;ortttor wa~ ln~lalled b\' S(';,rs. wr will 1n~tall nt"w ~rn11·k ab"'irbt'r 11 Jlh no charge /or laOO.-_ Coach Fred J-1 oov er' s Hustlers now enjoy a 2',-gam(' bµlge uver the Dons. Rusller leflJiandcr D a v e Klungrcseter fanned 14 Oons in chalking up a complete game win for Hoover's cre\v \1•hile Blaine Calder (hil ttini::: .567) wielded the biggest stick f(lr the winners wllh thrtt hits. Sears Auto & Tire Center 0 w1ra'1 Pl!are> WO no :l0~-1 474 E. 17TH STREET, COSTA MESA S•~•k llu1tlero l•J .. 642-6500 546-3205 lo 1b1 I ; :1?===--~="""'=="""'=--i=< llD'ffrl· (1 Coda. 10 C~l<l.,r, !O llUll'l>ll, t cvrron, ti S•mp,.on, II Shubin, 11 Rom,,.,.,1f1n<:t•, lb Embrt~, ., K lun~ts.iet, o Totfl1 ~.~.~ llu•ll•" l• Fon<I• Con\ • ' ' • • ' ' • • ' ' ' ' • • • • ' ' ' ' • • • • • No. I on the Coast • • ' • • • • " ~ . ·1 Your Hometown Newspaper Is The DAILY PILOT lCl 007 100 IOll Gm-" I D06-1 t D SAVE $20.95! Fast Cool-Down Auto Air Conditioner • Foi stt-r rool·down lor "nghl now" con1fort lhgh CF'M for air r1rcul alioo • Sletk. clean des1Rn Mount~ nl!atlv under dash. • Fits m051 American c;;ir) [Xl"!f1 l1stallahot A'laJlabat Regular $169 .9> /\sk /\bnat Soeer:!I Coa¥eni ent Credil Pian.: ll cavv 0111, S hock., · SA Vf~ t.1 Volk,wagcn Sca t Covrr ..... ;,, ,.p 3 :! Regular ~.99 Rtiutar Ut" 1999 PriW"s f.:ffN"tive Sun .. July 18 lhru Tues. 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In blue. black. brown , Lifetime Guaranteed For As Long As You Own Your Own Car Heavy Duty Muffler 20o/o OFF Heavy-Duly M.,fler Lifetime G•raattt If nwfllfor fai\1 due to • !~!.!In malerlalJ ,.- workmanst11p or hlowout, r111t-0Ut or wt ar-out whllt orlnl[inal purch1ser owna thll car, ii will be rep!~ upon return. frH. ttl c hargt. If the defectivt m11ffltr ••s inalalled by Suri, "' will insl.llll the ~ mulntr •ki 11 o cllllrff! rorbbor. ·-·-__., .. _,, ... _.. -·· • Sea n Regal"" Low Pri«if Largo. f1U length t11nina l'INimbtr for bettl!'r toUl'Kl·sil~ng 22fl ou1t:rlhelt1alva11.1if'G011both sldel for lon11l'r •tar. F'11s rnoi;t A.rlM!'t"lean Cars. Etpen lnstall•Uon Available \ ·-----·--- -_ _.., ,..rl ....;.,,.,..~ _. -_,,.... ,--+,_.A••"lf•• ........... ---~'lt--· ',. ) , !If DAll Y PILOT Windward Passage Sweeps R ace Sett"led Whi/,e Man y -Contestants St ill at Sea By ALMON LOCKABEY O•tlY Jl tLOT -II"' lttl0< Despite the fact that a third of the 89-boat Transpac fleet was atill at sea early today, th! 26th Los Angeles 10 Honolulu race is virtually set- tled as far as I.he hardware c0Hect1on is concerned. A freakish weather pattern that set in hours after Mark Johnson'! Windward Passage had finished her record-break- ing passage last Tuesday 111gh1 l!lrned the race into a Qass A etas.sic for the first time in JO years and made WP only the l'iecond yacht in lhe history of the event le wind up v.·ith a clean sweep of first to finish. first on overall handicap and fir~! in her class. The only other yacht 10 ac· romplish the feat was the Class B entry Dorade back in 1936 ~n the race started from Santa Monica on a rated coun:;e ol 2.210 m!!es. Dorade, a f.2-loot yawl owned and skip- pered by James Flood com - pleled the course in an ch1pscd time of !Jd· 07h ; 20m· 04s, 'some four days short of WP's record. Even Dorade 's cor- rected tin1e of It 03 29· 4( was two days short of WP·s elapsed time. \Y ith the brisk tradev.·1nds returning lo their normal pat- tern Sunday. yac.:hts were begmning to fin ish in dro\•es. Thirty five of the 69 starters had finished under sail Sunday night. Th e 73 -fool ke!c h Graybeard. v.hich narro.,.,ly c.~caped sinking after losing a rudder and being holed·throush T ranspae Dra11aa Graybeard Saved Onl y By Buckets, Courage last Sunday , was towed to port Friday, stilt sh1pp1ng water and auxl11ary pumps pumping a three-inch stream from her bilges. But what flf lhe handicap standings' Of the first 20 on the han- dicap listed hy the race corn- nuttce Sunday, lhe rirsl ni ne were Class A yachts. The Class C Cal-40 A r go n a u t llnished Sunday to sa\•e her \!me for 10th overall and fir!>t in her class. Ele11enth and 12 places overall were snagged by the Class B entry Encore , co-sk ip- pered by Dick Blatterman and Bill Lawhorn of B11lboa Yach t Club. and Arian;:i , a Cill-38 sloop skippered by (:eorge Thorson of Los Angeles Yacht Club in Class C. Tolis Viribus. a Ca l-40 skip- pered by Hichard E\'anson was hnld111g 13th over:.ill anrl I h i rd in C I as s C Bo b Be au champ's Co!umbia-57 Doro thy 0 frorn NHYC, one or the Class A entries . had drop- ped lo 14th place in the han- dicap computations. William V (;oodley's Newport-41 Dakar From Del Rey YC was the first Class D yachl to finish but rated no Ratntning Takes Kite R egattu Phil Ramm1n ~ of Nev.·port Harbor Yacht Club v.on the Ne11.·port Fleet Championship r('gatta or 1he Kite Cl;i ss Saturday ilnd Sunday. The v.•inner will go to lhe Kile Class nat1on11l l'harn- p1on.~h1ps to be held at Lido Jslr Yatht Club Aug. 14-15. Final results: CLASS A -! I) Pi1. Phil [{nrruning, NHYC; (21 Wild f recdoin. Hugo Sch m i d t , NllYC ; I JJ Too Much, John /iileClure, NHYC. CLASS B -R-r-.1-M, Mark Gaudio. N!IYC ; 121 Lemon M. r-.1 ike l\foonc, NHYC; <3) Good Crief. Elaine Sligar. BYC. Sparl<le Victorious In Flats Alex Irving 's ta.foot sloop Sparkle fron1 Balboa Yacht Yachl Club was lhe winner Sunday in Voyagers Yachl Club's Huntington Flats race, a feature of the Massey Series for PHRF and r-.IORF rated yacl1ts. Final results: PHRF -(I) Sparkle. Alex Irving BYC, !2l Tomahawk II, Jon Arens, SSSC ; (JI \Vind Child. Lee Armstrong , VYC ; 141 Odin. Bill r-.l cNaught on, SSSC; (5) Num-Num II, Hay Booth. BYC. l\lORF -111 Aloha II. Glenn Reed, SSSC ; 12) Star Shine. Bill von K!einSm id, Nl!YC; t3l Sequoya, Jim r-.t oorc. SSSC: 14l Bl•bo llJ . Bnb Dllrnclt . VYC . (5J Ven- tolcra. Bill Kit chens. SSSC. UCI Sail Race Ends Freestyle Triumphs Again In Balboa Yacht Club Race Freestyle, an Ericson-3S c1>- gkippered by Saint Cicero and Rod Lippold, continued her winning ways in Balboa Yacht Clllb's 66 Serie~ Saturday by taking overall and Class D honors in the Dr illing lslands race. Winner in the r-.lidget Ocean Racing Fleet division was Big r-.taggie, skippered by Mike Volante 11 . t.1lke Hirsh, BYC. MORF -II) Big f.faggie; (2) Serena. Phil Doan. NHYC; (3) Goldilocks II, Eddi e Arnold, BCYC; 11) Slar Shine, Bill von KleinSmld, NllYC ; (5) Dark Star 111, Jeff Farwell, NHYC. Klingins1nith Wins Mother's Sabot Race Harvey of Pacific Mariners Pat Klinginsmith of Lido NllYC; (2) \Yendy Bents, Yacht Club. Final results : Isle Yacht Club won the NHYC; 13) Gay Koll, LIYC: OCEAN RACING OVERALL r-.1other's Sabol Race in f4J Stella Shirar. BCYC; (S) Anne Layman, LIYC. -111 Freestyle ; (2) Trend, LIYC's All Girl Regatta, J im Linderman, BYC: tJ) Saturday and Sund11y. Ragtime, John Hall, NHYC. Finals results: CLASS A -( 1) Ragtime: MOTHERS SABOT RACE - !21 Serapis JI. Bill Barry, (I) Pat Klinginsmith; 12) BCYC: 13) Sparkle, Alex Dorothy Ray, LIYC; (3J Bea Irvine. BYC : (4 \ Charisma, Ril LIYC N \\lllliam Powell, NHYC; 151 ey, ; (4) ancy Heal-dcn , BYC: (5) Jeannie Talisman, Bob \V il!iams. BYC. hug~ah. scsc. CLASSB -(l l 'l'rend .(2) LID0-14 _(I ) Ka thy Firebrand. George \Y es I , Wat.son, LIYC; 12) Jo Van- NHYC: 13) Sanderling. lfope, dervnort, LIYC. Poole & Kirk, BCYC.1BYC ; KITE Judy Camlin, 14) Running Wild. Don Ayres. NHYC. NH\'C; 15) Ana r-.1aria 11, Al SABOT A -11) Vicki Call. Schoe!lerman, BCYC. NJJYC: 12) Slle Polhoff, LIYC. CLASS C -11) Puff, D;ivid SABOT A -(!) Wendy Stone. BCYC: (2) Andiamo , Caml in, NHYC. Bob Sodaro, SVC ; 131 Callisto, SABOT C -(11 Joy Pike. George Chalfont. BYC : 14) ,-----------====-, J ezebel, Vilan Couch, BYC; i5) Holiday, Page Noll, NlfYC. Colleen II Wins Race Colleen JI. an Excal!bur-26 sloop skippered by Ed Connor of King Harbor Yacht Club, won the Pacific Handicap division of KHYC's Portuguese Bend race in the Matl Walsh Series. There 25 boats in the PHRF divis ion and three in the Midget Ocean Racing Fleet. F inal results : Ten plastic buckets purchas- ed in South Africa because they were easy to stow ?.'\d rnighl be of use were all lhal kept lhe 73-foot k e t c h Graybeard from a watf!ry grave in I.he Transpacific )'achl race. bailing brigade while the others fought to plug the hole with matlresses and even clothing. higher than 15th in the han-~----=----~=; r-.tike Sayre was the \Yinner of the UC! Sailing Association overnighl race from Newport Beach to Dana Point. The r<ice was sailed in Shields (,1ass Sloops. Final resillts: (I) Mike Sayre, 4~4 points: 12) Micky Deering. 5; 13! tie between Peggy Wall and John Billings. CLASS D -11) Free.style : 121 ~1alahini, Jack Bostwick. BCYC; C3) El Tesoro. Ralph J\1ack, BYC: (4 ) Andale , Graham & Gray, SSSC ; 15) KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN PHRF -(I) Colleen TI ; (2) Virginian IDR-24 ) Gene Ford. KHYC; (3) Su-Dy II (Cal-25) Andy Lockton, CYC; (4) Hono /Ca!alina-27) Bob Finch, KHY C. dicap standings. Graffiti is A Joie ••• Really SA TU RDA YS IN THE DAILY PILOT The situation became so critical al one point that Skip- per Killam outlined plans for ab:indoning ship. JI seemed unlikely that the crew could keep going until Coast Guard assistance arrived. Others in the First 20 Sundav I night were Blue Slreak iClasS Cl. Quasar !Class 0 ). r-.1amic '::::::::::;::;:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii rClass C.I Chinook (Class Cllr and Vivan\ !Class Cl. ) Class standin~s rated by !hC' computer Sunday looked like this: I f>.10RF -(I) Sea Sea Rider (Cal 2-24 ) Jack Tatum, KHYC. 'J'ht story of I.he 10 buckets and the courage and stamina nf the Graybeard's 15-rn211 crev.' -including owner-skip- per Loi Killam of Vancouver B.C. -was the hasis or a £.fa saga aired in Wa ikiki ~'riday as she was warped alongside lhe dock at Ala W&i Yacht Harbor v.·ith pumps still pour- ing a three-inch stream or wat- dr from her hull. The accidcnl tha1 resulted in the eventual holing of thr Graybeard occurred on the seventh day or lhe r;ice as sh.? was running before a ~-knot v.·ind and heavy !eas some SOU miles from Honolulu. F'irst indice.tion of big trou- hle was when a welded strap on the outboard rudder tel go. A.~ lhe 11.·eather abaterl slightly crewmen were put 1n lhe v.·ater lo knock a ~ft plug out or lhe trailing edge or the rudder through which 11 line was lashed and the bitter ends brought back to the port 11nd starboard winches for steer· ing. The jury rig worked for a few hours until the lines S2'wed a hole in the bottom of the boat. allo\\'ing the skt"g and rudder to drop off. \Vllh wa ter pouring in through the rupture. all hands turned to .saving the boat. The boat had thrl'e electric bilge pun1ps but the.v could not keep up with the inflow of water. The bu ckets "'cre broken out and 10 of the ere"' started a The water was coming in so fast thal the boards on the cabin sole were e.floal in one foot or water, First relief came r-.1onday "'ith the arrival of a Coast Guard C-130 aircraft ~·hich dropped three pumps to the Graybeard and a barrel of fuel lo keep them running. But even these v.·eren'\ able to keep up with the flow of water. The bucket brigade wo>.5 con\lnued until anothrr plane came out and dropped two more pumps. "We all JU.SI kepi our hrads dov.·n anrl bailed." said crev.·man Earl Thornburgh. 43, of Santa Barbara. "No one ever even !ooked up." First Coast Guud vessel to reach Graybeard was on \\!cdnesday. Crewmen fr om !he culler Chatauqua helped lhe Graybeard crew design another jury rudder and the ketch w;1s able to get under way under her ov.·n power, followed by the Chatauqua. unt il it rendezvoused with the Coast Guard lug the neKI day . Observers at Ala Wa i Yacht Harbor. Honolulu . said the hole in lhe bottom 0 r Graybeard ~'ilS a.s big as a man's head. Despite attempts to plug the hole. the yacht \1•as still shipping water and had fn have pumps runnin~ con- tinunusl~. even alter it made port. Local Hobie Cats Win Class A Malibu Race A pair of local Hobie Cat-14 (3) ll ribie Alter, Capistrano. ~ailor.s Sund"Y cont inued thr1 r llOBIE-148 -Ill Gary CLASS A -(1) Windward Pass;.ge: 12) Blackfin: (:\)I Warrior: (4J Ondine : 1:.1 Buc- caneer. CLASS R -11) Encore. 12 ) Loco Vicnte II. iJ) Fickle 1 Duck: (4) Ya Turko: (5 \ Blue 1 Northern . I CLASS C -Ill Ar~on::1t1l: 12) Ariana ; (J) Totis Vlnbus; (41 Blur Streak: /Sl Quasar I CLASS D -111 Dakar: 121 1.'Allegrn, !3) Intrepid JI , 141 Yellow Jackel. ~5) D£'fian( All <'lass h<1ndi cap stand1 n~s are unoffl{'1at. pending 1he finishes of several boats still at sea. Bill L:iwhorn , onr of thr skippers on the Class B winner En<·ore wa~ quoled as saying: 1 "It looked hke our race until !he wind qu it. We had bern 10~1?1n~ 100 miles R dar ;ind suddenly Lhe booom feli'out." I Adams Cup l~ep 1'o1d r-.11ss 1-'lct cher B1,·,1rh nl Balboa Yill'hl Cl11t1 1\ i I I repre~ent Califurn 1a in 1hr Adan1s Cup finals for 1he "'omen 's North Amerir'an s1111. ing <'ha1n111ohships in l\l;1111r neKt 1nonth l\11ss Hr?1•h. sa1!1ng undrr the banner 11f the Snuthrrn Ca l1forn1a Y<i<'h1111~ 1\:.Mw!a lion. be at out four ri\'als 1n lhf• scrn1 -f1n<1 ls hl'ld al S;inL11 i\1 on1 ra ~:iv Y;.irhl Cl ub Satur- da.v and Stine!? .. \ Thr ~erie\ 1\·a~ sailed 1n S;in!ana ::!Z- ,;loops. i\1 1ss Bc:ich s rrl'w 1~ ~U\Jf' Ta.\lrir and her sistrr, Jl1 •i:u:~ Beach. Lead Finned battle for RUpremnc i 111 t!ir Strauss, Malibll ; ~2) Ben VIARt:GGIO, ltaly ~Al'\ Class A division "' ·-tv.o Rose. Nev.·berry Park : (3 1 William \\'ishnick of New York finishrs in the u;il Tom McDonnell. Burbank. City "·on 1he V1arfg_l;1(1-Ha ~1111 -1 f\.1ahbu lnvitatil·11 Cal llOBIE-14C -(I ) Doug Viaregg10 rnotorboat r:il'<' Su n-1 Regatta at l\1ahlh. r-.1urr:iy, Los Angeles: !21 A. day to strengthen his ll'~d m \\inner in lhP ( Li~~ -"' D. Hollenbeck. M;alibu , (3) the v.·orld off-shore chan1- d1v1si on was Richard l.oufck Mike \Vi!son, West Covina. p1onsh1p of C.nst;i r-.1esa . closel y pre.~scd ============-'-=='"=======~ by Jfl.year-old John Hoss-Dug- gan of Newport Beach . final results. llOBIE-16A (I) Pa t ~1cCormick, Lon g Bca~h; (2) Bob Lakin. Long Beach: (3 ) Bob Wa ll11ce. Los Alamitos. HOBIE-168 -1 t) John Car- rie, Coronado; !2> Mike Den- nis, Coronado; \3) M i ke Steele. Balboa. HOBl£.-14A -II) R1ch11rd U:!ufek . Costa Mesa . .John Ross-Duggan, Ne"·port Bee.ch ; lHackinac Race Nea rs Finish -~fACKJNAC ISLAND, Mich . s::; ,.... (AP ) -The computer that is used to figure the cor~cted time s1l1ndlngs for the two M11ckinac hdand yacht races'"'-"' predict& the urlie1l finishers In thf Chicago race wiU be at the island tale this 11flernoon Looks Like Fun Doesn't It? IT'S CALLED WINDSURFING Requires No Su rf Only Wind & W1ter GOLF TIPS S.e A 10 Min. Movie And ln1pe<t ..,,.._.. ... ...._ l"r~Atn.. NEWPOR TER INN PAR l GOLF COURSE ., ... ""' ... ., -ti .. ..,. ., Wlndsurftr 1t Neal '1 Sporting Goods F1shion lsl1nd, Ntwport Bt1ch July 19-27, Cell 673·1070 Fo r Information. JI _~~~~~~'--~~~--"'--~ Slie F.£.T, 7.00-1 3 $1.99 7.35-14 2.01 7.75-1 4 2.14 $16.95 17.95 19.95 110.95 16.16 17.96 t ize 7.00·13 b!ackwa!I, plus trade-in and federal excise tax of t 1 .99 8.25-14 2.32 21.95 19.76 RUGGED NYLON 15.60-15 1.60 18.95 17.06 7.75-1 5 2.1e 20.95 18.88 CORD TIRES 8.25-15 2.37 2295 20.06 ON SALE FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY )3 WAYS TO PAY'>-( BUDGET TERMS) ~MASTER CHA RGE) Safe-Long Wearing- Top Qu ality T ires at $988 WHITE WALLonly ~~"; All Sizes All Cars ~ BRAKE SPECIAL l<1l1c bt1i•1 th9MIV hlQh•f) Ttelned BFG Mtch1nic1 wlll: 1 • Install Nt1w liriing1 • Repack Front Wheel Be11ino;11 • lnsoect Eri1ue Br1lte Svstem • Cor1ec1 Brak• Fluid level 1!Jil!bh tf OUTER WHEEL BEARINGS REPACKED Now77.-. ONLY v A'.l AMl!!PIC"H CARS COSTA MESA: ORANGE: WESTMINSTER: JONES TI RE SERVICE 2049 H11rbor Blvd. {II l ly) 646-4411 540.4343 JONES TIRE SE RVI CE 1100 Tus tin Ave. (Aero•• from ntw Po1t Office) Sll ·l38l L. J. LlffiE BIG 0 TIRE 7352 Westminster Av•. 893-lS72 BANKlMERICARD '11141• TIRE ROTATION NOW 11~ ONLY ALL AMlllCANS CA.IS ·-,. .. -... -> .......... _ .. '·· ---~-~--=--·---. . ----• .• ----~ -·· --· ' ... j r-;· w .,. "" ma anti Nor ftd Ft ]" N " Yor job .. DA.IL 'f PILOT 3 I Northwestern Campus Radical Fighting for Her Joh \\'ASHlNGTON tAP l-&me- one ktpt v.alch as cainpus radical •·Margie S 1 n g er•• marched In the lorelronl of ant!Y. ar dtJ1lOt1:,lral1uns ~l Northwestern Univers1tv and fed reports about her io the F ed eral Bureau ol Invr:stigalion. Now, on the basis of those reports, the 22.year-old New York woman fa ces loss of her Job as a substitute post&! Auto and Tire Center clerk. •·.r.1argie Singer" is an ahas adopted by the woman. Y•ho refused to pernut use ol her re1:1I nan1e whih.· her \JW)tf works lo reverse a Civil Service Commission order for her to show cause why she should not be fired from her $3.51-an-hour job. Four months after r-.1iss Singf'.r 11·as hired I as t Nove1nber, the eommiss1on Sears v.Tote her a Jetter askmg an explan2.tion or 14 specific acts in1•ol111ng her part1c1patton 1n ca1npus demonstrat ions and her membersh111 in I he Students for a Democratll· Socl('L}'. ll set no deadline but asked for a prutnpt reply . According to L h e con,. mission letter, a routine check of ne\\' en1ployes h a d uncovered h~r SDS 1nen)· bl·rsh1r. and 1l R.~ked the FHI lu investigate. !"". • n1 b e 11 ~ohnson, director of the con1 - m1ssion's Bureau of Personnel lnves11gjtt1ons, conflrrned th:.it the details or her antiv.·;>.r ac t1vit1es at NorU1western were supplied by the FBI. "This l·asc was handled by the FBI he said, "as is any cas' v.·hcrc loyalty is involved. Neither the FBr uor the Civil Service Cornrnis.siun ha s disclosed the source "' t!ie ------ 2 }'iberglass Belts PLUS 4, }'ull Plies o[ Polyester Cord uureau"s file on Miss Slllfer, but specific details outlined in the complaint point to a wt ll· placed informant. Reports lhel the FBI main- tains continuous surveille.nct, 11ith the help of a network of 1nforrners, on rnilitant radicals 11ere confirmed earlier this ~Car \Vlth publication O( the ··Media documents," part of a colleclion of official papers stolen !\1arch 8 from a small FBI offict In ~fedi1 , Pa. fl. staff member of the Senate rnnslitulional r1ght.s subcommittee. which ts in- \'esllgf\tlng the act.ion agalnsl J\1iss Singl'r. said, •·This case dt>mohshts the Ju.slice Depart1nent's aS!l('r- t1o'n that the only reason for surveillance of political bodies is for intelligence lo protf't't against civil disturbances. 1'he effect ls ID pen a lize ciUuns. __ v.'ho participate in various dis.sent activities.·· The complaint against fo.1iss Singer Includes such a specific alleg&ions as: -"On October 15 , 1969, you participated in an SD S - sponsored march against the ROTC and in the peace moratoriun1." -"On r.1ay ll, 1970, you "·ere observtd 1t Lunt Hill during the invasion ol NROTC headquarters and engaged 111 disrupting traHic."' 'J\110 other charges said "you \\ere person2Jly ob!lerved spit· ting on a mul~hip1nan 1n uniform, and · you w ere observed to spray red paint on nne nf the official visitors" at Ro TC commencement ex- ercises. Whitewall Dynaglass Sealant •.. the Tire We Drove 100 Nails into and Drove from New Yo r·k to Philadelphia! 40 Month Guarantee • \Xl ider and deeper tread insures long mileage and sure traction •Sealant V.'ith chopped fiberglass gives puncture proof protectio n • Sporcy triple-striped -whitewall prorecred from curb scuffing All!§tate Passenger TirP. Guarantee ·r ..... t1 1;r.. ·r ...... 1 v;· ....... o,,t (;11•r11n1r.. f;u..,r10nh•r f:n11r an11·r•I A.-11in•I~ J,ll Cu11r11n 1 rr1I A111 I n•I I lir<· 1~durr~ frvm nurm.11 ·rrr•d wc·~r nuf. fHJd h:a.rJs nr 1!tk1 I< 1 n For llow l .. o n,r: Thr 11um- m~1eri~I nr "'nrl..m•n'l"r· l">f'r n( month.• .,peclf1rd. J"or. llnw Lo>o1 • For tb<" J1 1e of 1he ori}::in~I ire..J. 1Ah111 Sc11,.. \\'Ill Uo: lrs r •,bw,11e for 1/Mo.: 1ir..,, 1r- pl1(e 1r, chJrp;in.i;: r~ rur- rrnr •rllinit ptitf" plu• FrJ- r r1I EicrJe T111: l~ss 1hc- 1olln•·•n1t 11llowantr: ,AJln••D<',. 2 Fiberglass Belts Plus 4 Plies Polyester Cord 11., .... ~.i. SIZE T ...... 1. Tro<l.,.I• '"•• l"oic .. ··-t .T. Tu.beles• Whitewall _t~l!:_14.f1.3.'ix 14 1-t~l:i 33.71 J.72_ FiR-14[7.75xl4 46.IJ:i J:i.2 L 2 . .'i7 _!_'.2_8-I 4/8.25x 14 41/.(J.) J7.4b 2.77 HiR-1''[8.5Sx 14 .'i::!.9;") J9.71 2.94 J7B.14/B.BC.x 14 55. '):i 41.96 3.IB_ f; iR-l ."">/R.25l8. l 5"" I :i 50.1J:i 38.:?I 2.1:13 Hi8-15[R.5:i/8.4.1x l:. 53. '),'; 411.46 1.02 .Priel"S Eff'f'rli\•e Sun, i/IBthru Toe!i., 7/20 .'irnr• Co n t't>niPnt t :r,,dit Plan.- Whal ~"'•r• ,.-;11On•111 r 1(hlll_1tl" fnr Iii<" l<rf', r<'"· pl!W"e u. chnjliri,it only Int P"'I"""'"" ol £111Ten1 ~c ll­ •n.&; rricC' rlu~ f....-l<"r~l Er- ,,~ ... Tix 1l11r ••p•..-,r nrs 1r .. ~d usie d. Rep1u 111 11 rurn:ru"" 1c no chat,cf>. ,\fun1ho 1:u11r&n1 .... ,J ~.~ .:7 in \9 ... Int;. 10~ .. _J 78-15 RJl.1xl:i L78-1 5/9.00/9. I 5x I:._ !j(),IJ.) 42.71 3.'L 51),Q.l 44. 9() 3.2R 36 l\lonth Guarantee SUPERWIDE "70'' •In per formance rests against major compet- itive ti res, the Super· wide "70" proved to be: •The longest wearing for greater mi leage •A wider tire for great- er srabi I iry :? Polv~ .. ler Pl if'~ .f'l u~ 2 F il•t>t}llai.<. Helta lll"1t11l11r ~J';',1).-, 1"racl r.-l n Prire $2846 ~;·~~ "'" i .1 •• 1 ... "1 .. ~ ... n f'I•• :·,11 IT, ''"t•)lol '\ir~ , •• .i ... 1. r ........ SIZE ! R ••• l•~r '•'' p~ l'.-1•• r.r~ 1 . l'U B E l.t~)Yl!l!J'~WALl, -t:7fl.14/:.J:;, 1.1 Ji.'I~ '"" :::.~• -F7fl._l•l/7. 7.;-.1 1 1'1.Q~ 1'!.•16 :l.1~1 ---_ l.711:_!~.:::~ ... 14 1::!.').; :tz.~ I :?.Il l -_!!7fl.l4fll.;,;, 14 4:;.Q;, J>l."'1 :to~ -~;0.1:>/ll.2.'"•,J~ 4t"·" ~l.71 ~-Hifl.J;,/8.5~,1; 47,Qi l~.'lf· "' 4-Ply Nylon • Contoured safcry 5houl der fnr easier. !i fecring and saf- er corner 1np; • Lonp:-wt-aring D yn:at uf 1rc.1d rubber 11, •• 1a .. SI ZI·: ___ ~-1 ';!.~'" "Rerr;nlar $18. 95 Trade-In Price F.E.T. --~-Tc•c·1,,.1,..~ RJ ... k .... 11 ______ _ h.'.u,1 .1 ____ Ill,</.; 1.:>.111 1.71>_ 11•1 ·,,1 .1 _____ l'J.'I;, j:;,~ 1.91 7~1-·'l"l I _____ 21.'}.; 17.SU,_+_:!JH :-;-:"1~--___ 2.ltJ;_....__~ll/.lfic•_.....__2.14 11._:;,, 11 2r,.Q,; :! I.;,(, 2..12 ----C..hll~I ; _____ l'l.'l:0_....__1 ~.Jf> ____ l.71 itJ.'Hi Liii --'·.Ii'..!.-"·--~. ·rnh"l"••_W_hir!. .. _•11 ______ _ h.;~1, I.I h.·1·.11, -----~l.'l~--1.01 __ :.1.~, I L ;,!:;,<1r, ~.!II Z::!.~h ::.l·I -----11.2;., 11 _____ :i_n.c.0•7-<_+_24.71> ____ 1.:1:::_ 11.:..·.,1 1 __ ~~;. __ +_21.u, 2.:-41 ____ 2J.'~5 19.J"o __ .,__I.74 ::!11.'l; _ _,__::!~.lb ____ ::!.Ir. H.~·,,1; ____ .11.'l;.,_ -.\---::!.!.~.6 ____ % •. 17 _ 11.·.;,1;. :\.l.'J~. II .. -, 1:; 7 ;, Sears Steel Belted Radials 2 Steel Belts With Smooth Riding Rayon Cord li~1 ll Tuh"'leh Whi•ew1\l l'lus t I Q-1 F.t:.T, An•I Old T;,.. Tread lifetime plus 40,000 m;le tread wear -ou c suaranree ·ru1J1<:1 • ..:ss WlllTEWAU, ...... ,. -,.-,.:-, rm, · ··.....; 1 7;..1~ _S.111 I.Q I 111.· •. 14 1-ll :.~ 111.;.14 s.1.1 :l.411 :o.>-14 S-1':1 .:!..i4 :!15-14 s;..i l.IJl ----IQ!",_r;, "1.. '·"' :u1; ... 1:; ·~ :.1,1·, -. -21::;.tri "' :J.O'I Sr.ar11 All •l•I" Hadial Pa'''""•rr 'fi"'" Gu•r•nl;. .. 1-Tllf.AD t.lff;Tl1'11 F, Gll ~IU,)'01;1/; ll hot ·"""" Wm O..• A• ~ ..... °"'"'"' (;•onotftd Al ''"" All"" foil-. '""'""""I""• ... ,,,.°'''"'""' o 1,_ .... 1 .. 11 1~ mlf<rool ot .,,.kmot!>h•P· ~wod <b.,."'<I io ,;,~,. n .. .,..., '""" ... , H•~ 1-a•TWl.ltoltbtot••'"" •"-"'""''"""<I oho ..,,f,,.. ,,_,...,_ nud. l'1''"~"1r•"''"'''•""•hor .. ·~··~TUI bo• r .. .._ r... ADJlJ!ITIS1;1n ... ~ .... p ... _.y,,.. N • !ltt,<botti'111 a.iF fo. .. """°"* (l~VIM<O' _,II be ~ • ... S,wo .. <ttodw>'d ,.,.,1.,. <••l<oi ....... 1~ rho l l ~A TW f.Tll'.AllT F.AaOtrr A!'ID '""--'."" "°'"" ... ,w .. _ .... IOADH.IJ'.AllDl;lJAll:A.~11: '"""'.,....vii,,.. pn<o. '"''"~'"" - f:•a ... o...i ~°'""" T<Hd ---rl,.oi>l•'o.lo ralf.s<,wT .. U..~·•rfl"' ...t ..... , .. 1 ... r • ....,rooc11w..o.. ....... w1w .. oi11 ... -11..-. , ............ ..n.ooo ... tt. SHOP SUNDAY 12-NOON To S :OO p.m. •MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p .m. •SATURDAYS 9:30 a.m . to 6 :00 p.m. •FREE PARKING IUIN,\ '"llC all-4400, '121-4J)O CANOGA PAIK ........ , COMrTON ., .. ,,.,, 6.i:l..S761 -- (OVIHA •••-0•11 11 MONT( 44)-)911 GUNDAU 24S•1004,244-4t11 NOUTWOOD ..... .ll.41 lNGllWOOD 611-1111 lONG If.ACM 431-0121 . . OLYMl'1( •SOTO 'l61-S211 OlAHGI 6)7-2100 l'ASADlHA all-l21J,JS1-t211 -- suas, ao11uc,;; AND c.o. l>OMONA IAMA ANA TMOUIAHD OAKS VAW"I' 6'lt-J161 1•7-:11171 .... 7-41166, 122·1131 763-1411, "4·1120 ~co IANTA MONf(.l YOllANCI VllMONT •ll-4'l62 .a••-•711 J41.•1S1 1 , ••• 1.11 IAN'TA ntntNQI IOUTH COAIT fUIA Ull\ANO S.tldMtl1111 t •• , ...... t444Gl l ......... ••S·1'21 .,,..,,....., ... ' ... •· I t 31 DAJLV PILOT DICK DACY I I 1 f I ~ ! ~ • • • ' . ' ' ( . .. TUMBLEWEEDS (I OOTTllf. CIVILIZATION ~WES, ACE ... FEEl. l.IKe RI OIN' OUT INTO °™£ P<SERT />NO KEEPIN' f\11'HT ON GOIN' .•• 11t l MUTT AND JEFF ::·'-Q1 :"l ; •'I . "" PLAIN JANE Monday, July l~. 1q71 , . ., ...... ,,., •.. ,. ............. . . ,,~ ... ,,._ .. I DAIL y CROSSWORD •.. by ' A. POWER I ACR OSS v+9oro•1sly l Mont Slane, 43 Split wo~fl !or ont along \ht '1 F irsl h•$l1or 9'a '~ o! Ro<11 t •~ 'N~lktd ~uoss 'Pea•~ 4& ~e~icint \l1~l 14 ·--c~~els. 1~l1ev~~ r~·n Pa>s~g~ 47 ~m~ll rle•,.oris litlwee11 lal:es 4g D,;rn1~1111s· H11ron il~r! Slan~ S mer ·ri• h1!()'nrn I 15 Fn•T hy "'-~r1n~ ""~Y l~ Colllr 17 l 1\.1'1 ~OffAI 11 Mr W~IJf.; 1!) !1111f'' lot1~\ Zl lfOJ'l('ll r .:c~"lr.> 22 s~11 hit'" ~ hig'1 M" S~ lr1 11'" m~n,,~r (If 2 ""'ri~ Sl "--·· Ki .,,ol" 52 01 ~n .;ra,~'j ll"l<e ~ .5.1 R11~51;i1"1 A~br. bO So n's rtt:"< I l\'JI'\~ f-1 F 1v~ t'r~I ·~ ~2 c~r~·r n, f 23 Place whert !or on' &4 Rrfll"l•\•'111 bb 8Aff li•IQ ~\lrSllll•I r ··~ l : young irt 1 a1s~d 24 Co1111ly nl (,1ea1 811 ta i11 i~ Ert1hlt lltsh 29 Pull along btli.nd Jl Number E11e from 0n\~fl0 )3 Systu1•a t11 plan of itl10·1 )!) Outs1!1e: Prt!1x 38 Cl)l1Stt 11~1 ion 39 Ptrta ini1'>Q lo tht ~~u\I b7 Span 1Sli l1\ r b8 Sri1 1~h 1111r\ o( W''ghl &9 Efrem1n~\t 70 U1111 ~! 1tngh 71 R~n ---- TV T~IZ~~ DOWN l Tte"1bl1!1~ 2 ,4..clor --- Gr tPnt 21 t S6 7 ' " ~. 15 " " Salurd~y·s Puzz lt Solved: ' " ",. '" " '" ' '" ' '°' '" ; " "' G OLCS Y ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ~ K ~ ''" " co ' " O •~S V ll< ji C ~~ Of f "IP tl ~OI U£ l l5 itG • a o R \I S F LlO Ctt ~(I t.[ G • l l ~ ~I ~ 0 0 t [ !l[P R[L[N l{, B l.~U1'!:T 1.PSIS ' " ' l R U II S H ' ; "' ' I ( o_ ' " '"' " ' "'• E n a l ~ " ' ' ' ' "' " ;; " ~ '• [ ' ' " ..... , 4 ., • ' tll '.,,,_ 1N\' '' ~' ~rr~ri1~•! m11r~ I •,t,, 1/j~Hj>, I> Sony'" .lrw· 1~11 l·I Prdl11r t 7VM•lvnr ~lpmmo11~ ~mpl1lbole E Cl1 ~n9r llie t011"•' Qf ~ Over tl•t !till 10 Col1Y : Prel1x 11 Cnnd11'\ "'1e- ~tll bMll~ 12 Euro(ll"~n T11e~1~1 o~ n~ra110~. Abbr, IJ Mon~IM~ •1111\ of CAmhod 11 IB "'~~~ pl11m~ 24 ll~on irH>!er a le9~I oM11 \o: 2 WOfd~ . ' " 19 7 j ~ ·1 2S '-"n1 ;i1• l' ill~'!' 111m1 2' ',r •• I'\ f>,1'·'• ''·/rl .i J [), •o• •' (/"ll'~r -;.~ "'! r '>ti 1"1" !~hf·~ 3~ '1"'1""1fj 15 FPl>r.ily j] Coty on lh~ Oka 40 ll11om f)'eCt.lf~r lo An ArP~ 42 Tnr~<S11 h".ls\tl ~5 At!lrn\ f~tl 43 T 1~11pir1Q !IP~ >C t!. 53 R~p1t;,nta11·,t 55 Jorn toQe\her 5& B~c~lt ss, Mml tss stat 57 y,l!ow1sl1 ttd sg lr1d1~11a tit~ 61 Yoi">a salmon &2 Roman 9o6dr<.s hl l.1~11 ~fl!'C1~I\~ bS CaYo~r sr,, ... ~ 10 II 12 IJ • I "Tl<AN KS, PAl. ... Ml1'HT WORK .• , YOU'l.l. HAFTA AOVANC£ ME' A COUPl..A OOCKS • Bv Al Smith THINK I WANT SOM E CLUMSY OX STE:PPING ON MY SHINE? Hale By Frank Baginski '-"T I • ' Ll'L AINER SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ~· ANIMAL CRACKERS BUT \.4ANDS0t'IE CONDUCTOR,. \oJE'RE PASSING. IHROU6~"'Tl-lE Cl'TYOF6ROWERLY LOVE! JUDGE PARKER _A 5B EY SPENCE!( i;:::E(EtVES ~ LONC. D15TAN(E ?\-<ONE CALL ~l<OM Sl>.M. Dli.'IVEI(' -·'£:,,.... --" MISS PEACH • KA"'P KE:Cl.'i l;'LAR IOtJ PERKINS ..:.rrr..:::.= .. J.~.~ ,.,, -· r. -- .___,__.. ___ ................ , By Charles M. Schulz --...... --~ I a~ss 6C<N6 I [)O,'IT !EE TO CAMP 15 M~516HS~ 5'Jl'P05ED1U Ii A FEW 6l16HTERS 600DFO~'IOll WORKIN6 I~ THE FIEl.05. By Harold Le Doux I~ f"\7 1 NEVEi<'-DID .• ~UT MEl•JJW~l lE , 1'T T'HE S!:-CU ll!'ITV GATE-.•. 1).llWK 'i'OU ) -6.LWAYS 1=8.T I Sf.I OOLD c.AE'ED 1'~N 8E IC'IND TO ,l..NI M•LS, MORE '. (f.llLDE'E'-1 "ND u..iDEE'· 0-PE'IV\LE~ED L,i..W¥ERS'. .. ,.,""' By Men ~· ... By John Mir.s ,, •• --_ ..... , -- By Al Capp By Charles Barsattl By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson . /.LL-"!llS'W WIN '8/>.fj( -ro cu~, CAMI', tll • By Roget' Bollen ... />JY:J IF .I: DQ~tr CHC::()SC 10 Hl>UE'. ((~MOTHER IJl)OOb WrfH l)S?- _l/00 U.IU. M~ f rHis ro1ir.o~oos 5MKE VE1'4 UtJHA?P'.' ! DI ei;.;,11JIJIAJ6 , -ro PICKUP A P,lln"E~ HERE·- 0 . • • ByPhilJ~ "! gu<ss 'boeof filets flambe' """'1't D.tea.nt 1to go••.•." DENNIS THE MENACE . I 'Js [}\D MAO AT YOU , Moi.\? Hr's l\Ol1KlN' IN 11£ ~Mi' HE'S G:Jr IT ~o.'· · TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening JULY 19 l :XI fJ (() Tiie llCJ SllllW (R) Wt'IM Newt°" ,ll)'t I f1nn boy Who w11ble1 only lo barnyud' 1nlmal1 -Lmt1I Lucv d1~trs him. •:OO 8 Iii Nns Jeuy Oui1pt1~ (i)AIC ,..., R11sonu/~m11h. 0 kNIC Mlws Tom Snyde1 . 0 St..... Uta si.... G11ts!S ut ~>ehud 01wJOn. J~mts fr1r.Ci!ieu~. bynt MeMQWt i nd 01vid Btv1ns. q m m • wn • vtfJ '* YN1 lhe ~llf 11927) lindbe"h m1de - ho~tory 1n th e Spir1! ~ St. lo111s •s uprised by Mel Toimt Special ,U&sf R1d11rd Ar!tn talks 1boul the l>15! Ae1demy Awerd·w1~ninR p1r· I !u1e. '"Wmr5."' in wh och he st1ned. m 08'1id frt1I Sllow Guest1 tie I •rtor D1v1d Hemm•nR\, ooer1 ~·02•1 r;!•ce Bumbry, ind him ~ueclor i nd I •ti!hor frtnk C10" 0 Ylrfini1 Gr1h1m SIM'# Go1i151 !or S!llCrll show Oii health tl lt u1 1 Or_ Michi e! De 81ke1. 01. £011,ne Scht1tnl1ld. Or, M1td1t l1 SPl!ll, 01 Wrllo1m lctlterhos. Or Ltsle1 Colt man ind nwodiul 11ud1nl J1U HtH•~ 0 Sil: O'C*.k Mo~ot: (90) Mloun1· j h1'°4 HawktM P11t I {dr1m1) ·~­ James f11nciscus. Sut1n11e Pleshe1!1. GentYlt'll P11e. (fl G1bor. M1iyi 11.llOf. A youn11 writer 11oes lo New Ycirt 'l!htf1 his td1tor l1lls 111 ID<1t1 9:00 0 Mtyterry l .f.O. (R) Ailee seems • w1lh him. ' lo bt trnolion1t\y invol~td with her 0 I Spr hup teeclitr (Leonid 11.•ns~'Y). whl) I •PPtlrs more inlue'!led 1n her m T1w Flinbttn1s Q)SW Trtli: til) Art Sh1d10, 1 .. tD Notic1tre 34 ED Ot1tll Yalllf Dirt Cl) NtWI Jim H1w1horne l :lO (3) ...... 8111 Huddy. 11) Trvtll er C.nM11ut11c11 I]) CIS llt9S W1l1er C1onk1t1. ®I NIC N.-s 01vid Brinkl&Y. ID TIM AJint Nirn m Hod1epod1t lod11 fD Tiit hJtrt l*90fl a:l D l'rtl. S&libr• (D AIC """ 1:00 f) CIS Ntwt W1 llrr Cionk1lt. 0 @D NIC Neon 01v1d BrmkltY. D Wide St.re111 Tlllebt: (90) "Thi Wolf Min" (mystery) '41 -Cl1ude R"ns. lon Ch1nt1. (iJ T1 Tell l~t lrlft- 0 W111rs M1 Lint? ®) Dick YIR 0,kt m I Ll'lt Lucy m rn0n1nt1 fD DEIUT MtQ!t &-tilt INirhflll M1ctiiM1 A phys1t1I lrtn&:i,1' ieUeS of ·~uci~ !or 111 12tS. H°"!e~ IS M11111i1 llttvio. wilt ol MIT. p!O· mOlll'1 1nd cookm11. A [fo) m World ''flllitr• Movie: I tC) (2hr) "£11 of \ht C.t"' !RJ (susgen:ie ) 'JG-Michie! Suruin, Gayle Hunnicutt. [le~or P11ke1. A youn2 min Wlh In 1hied lee1 t1I r1ts b!ttlmes 1he mnoi:ent 11o·he· !w,en 1n 1 di1bohcal plot lo usurp 1n •cctn1oc lll'Om1n'1 lorlune 0 (3J @ Cl) AIJC Mon d1J Movit: (C) (2111) "W11o'1 MindinE the Mint!'' (comedy) '67-tim Hutton. Oorolhy Pf(w1nr. Miltoo 6!r1,. Joey Bishnp. Bob Oen"t'llr. Walter Brennan. A !flOofltY chtcker 11 1~ mini 11:ci· dtntally de:1tro)'S i50.000. (I) At lu.ir ID Ftlt1ny Sqnd m 11 .. lilin '"Sm1i: T~e Mounhin I of God '" H1'!lory of the le1end1ry ! mountain's relizioo1 si1nil1t11Kt l throu1h the 111e.1-m Sonrilu a;i llos.as p1111 Ytronic1 t :30 i)(j)hri1 n.., (R) Do1i1 hies! to s.vt Iler old C&l'r·country lnend (l1m15 Hampton ) from h"itleflnll 1wa1 h11 rodeo Pl•Zt mone1 0 l1rter W1td News (D Quat !Of Adventutt €IJ L1 Crin d1 M111n Cru«'I le~ Dr. jMome Lettv1n. 10:1111 0 (IJ CBS Ntwt4lrltr1 O~vf Gi l· fII Anrthtot Ntlr111 roway 11 ho:11. Gue~! newcom!i " «:) lllltutlito '4ilcln Show ~'1 Bruce. d°'play1n1 h~r 1crobil1c aJ Mn~ Ci1111t 7:30 IJ (i) Gunsmok1 (R) '"Uncl t fm·I ney." Two ~.tlb•llV brothers turn 1n\ !lle11 103·Ye•r·flld untie 101 1 $50 bounty on 1n cld chuae. then ust 1111 money on 1 scheme to rob l~t t1e11:hl 0111ct sloill i nd 1~1hly D New. Kevin $1nderi. O Mnil: (l~r 40!n ) "Ttlt rNrl• fdr1ml) '48--Pedrfl Armendlrll. M1ri1 M1rq:.ies. W News Putn1m/F1shm~n @ M1nlttp Pit M c:Corm1c~ 1uest~ fD Current lvtnls "Common C:1u~!" 0 lfQl m fro111 I l ord'1 [Jt V1twl T~Pt of June J( spetch by Jormfl • Sic11i1n A!f11r ·· M1ci:•t ind M11ht1 HEW SetrdllY Jolin G11dn•r. (P1!1t: f•nley i nd M1lhttnt M1rt1nl W a l11n1111 btt0mt 1nvol'led 1n 1 S1t1h1n t1m1ly! teud when lhey h~p • IJ1end te /11t H):JO O M11¥ie: (21/1hr) "'f'tor1hwtst p10116!1J 11f1H1. I Mounltd 'olia" j1dv1nlu1t ) ·•0- (tJ MllVil: (90} Hfh• t ntndu Hi111 G11Y Coop!<". M1dele1n1 Curoll, MobM (i;omedy) '52-Altc Guo nn'lJ Paulette Goddard, P1e3lon fostu. St1nl•y HollowiJ. I (D ""-1 6111 .klllni. 0 m rn ltt's M••• • Ot•I I m £1 Oilri• ~. uni S.ntril• De- tt nt1 O M~1io" S Mo,il: (2ht) "f ortt 9' Ar,,u" (dram1) "51 -W11h~m111 :00 0 (I/ il:) Ntw1 Holdtn, Nancy Oil.On, lr1nk love·j 0 ;igi @n Ntwl )OY. (tJ Ott!~ Va llty DfJI fil Ttllth 11 C11nWqut ntt1 0 (})ti) Ntws m tt 11kti 1 Th11f ID Movi1: "Earth ¥1. Fl,•n1 Slucer1" (:ic1il•) '56 -tiush "4a1. lowe. JOln Taylor ii) Do-Rt-Ml li) l eat tltt t lotll 1:00 0 @n Nit tofiltdy Tlltt\11 'RI "ln ll ffi Citp1tchtrs (I!) Arrt L1n1u11e." A fprmer rnusk:1I _ eomtdy i11r ttitt lo rekindlt lier 11 :30 0 (LI Mn 'nll1n urrer 1nd ·~ old rom1nu wh olel1 0 J21 m J""~' C.rsan .Jllrllnf in In 1tal11n •rt mo~1t 0 (]) 00 m Oitk C•~fl1 ~1ntttt f1br11. ~1t11do Monl1lbJn @ Jlolkir £11111 and John lorsyllie '111 0 (3) CD Tiit NnlJWfd £11111 tlO n T1kr1 • Th11I m T1 T.n lht l11t~ fI) World ,fin ([) T111n1t CID N1111 1:00 f) MD¥io: ''1'•uni Mr. '•tt" (d11· ma) 'A2-Robtrt Oon11. Phttl•s C1I· ~ert. Robert MDfltY • .JollB Molls.. fl) ID 0 CiJ ®J "'"l D Thi Cil!lffJ Joh"ny Gnnt ind r.onn1t K•n1 OD hc'1 ID t iKO 11 1~ O "l M D.I." !dr•m1) ·~l-l•tk Tuesday Webb, (k,n Dubbin~. ID:OO (3) "Pic\~p on SGllth Strtet'" !mys· DAYTIME MOV1ES tery) ·~J-R·~hird 1'11dm•1k, laln re1~rl. t :OO m "si.ft Sllip" {ldftn1ure) 'J7-l 1:00 m (CJ "hi•~ ,IO!TI CGcodyM !dr•· W1rnt r 81x1e1 , Mockey Rooney, Wil· mil '65-!ein M•r•ii. Llselot1e lt ct BHry. Pulvtr Philippt C!~y. t :lO O Mltomrirt• (wesltfn) '•!1-Jamts 2.00 r.r. .. ~·tte k" id ) "5& ~ I k Millican, Mary Beth Hu1~es. "Out j · -t 11m1 IC hw fltf'(' (westm) '50-Jimmy P1l1nc.e, Eddie Albert, lH M1r-i1n. l"l h!oOfl Ruuell t11yden. 3:00 fJl "Tllt S.Crtt Stvtn" (mystery) fJ tti 1 .. WMl• Wilh llfl"i '40-Brllte Btnnett, flortntl Rice. (m~sicll) ·50-J•n~ Powell. Debb" •:JO O (C) "Oi1Nnsit11 5•• hdvell1 ure) R1yl!Olds. Ricardo Mont1lb1n. lou1s1 '66-Jeffrty Hunt!!. f11nct Jrtuyen. C:1lhtr11,, Ann H1rd1111. Ph,lh1 ll11k. Cl} 5-10 AN lidin1. Actress Discovers TV Life Feast or Fa1ni11e HOl.LY\\'00f) (AP) -The life or a television performrr ce.n sometimes be a c:i:~e of fcH sl. or famine. a.~ aclres.~ Path~ Finley "'Ill testify. \\lhen you"rc a rc~ular in a 1cries. th e money rolls 111. And v.lten you're cance led lhc c.·hccks stop arriving. In Hl69 P11t1e made "From a Rird·s-Eye View.·· wh ich is now being shown nn ro-'BC. ""1 "'·as Mrs. C.otrock!i that year all over Europe:· she said. In 1970 shr made exactly $1 ,7511 and her only JOb w11s a guest shot oo "The M11ry Tyler ~ioort' Show."" She said , ''Peoplr ask me how I lived. Che:iply. l'\o. off my savings. IL was nol !he be$t of yea rs. I got al l my U.S. rcdera1 income tax back. ~ly 11ccoun1ant, >A'ho ch:irj?ed me $250 \hr year heFnrP. oHerrd to do it frtt." PNte -pronounced Pal - --- i~ r1uw taping NBC.:'-' "The Funny Side," \\•hich "'111 la kr a) hun1orot1~ look at t hf American way of life. "Ir I hadn 't got 'Thr Funny Side' I think I v>'ould have jusl given up."' she said. But even at the beginning o! this year things began to look up. Shr gilt another guest shot on thr f\loorc show and did <;evera1 commercials as ' ' yo u r average f.1rs. 11ousewife." She i~ N.so cast as a hou<;ewife 1n "'!lie Funny Side." ln fact , as the Middle Amer;ca wife of a bluP collar "·orker. EveryoTIC in the cast will represent a 3lereotype . ..\Ve 'rp trying to show the Fun· ny side of what's happening 1n Ameri1?a today,'' she $aid. "Bttause if thert i!<n'I ,. funn y side, we're in a lot more l(OUb!f:." Monday, July l't, 1~1 'Don't Drink the Water' - •UNNIUT P'ICTUAI YIT W~.~,!~~ Amuses Them in Clemente ~ (OlllOH.\ oaL Nl.\111 woodfaU.n "bananas· f.?I COJI ti, Olluie" ........ , By PA~I lJALLAN /\ very funny play, worth eve ry cent of your ticket, is currently on stage al the Cabrillo Playhouse 1n San Clemente. ~:'::'.~~~ ... ~~1__2:Tlhc offering is "Don't Drink ~do S11&dqy tl1111 Thu1tdoy 1:00 '•"'• Fri day ' Selwrdey •• l :lO '·"'· Motl.,.. Wt:d .• , , .•• J:OO '·"'· Sor. Merlnt:• ••• , l :lCt &-5:00 SwR, MellR• .•• , I :C.O lo 4;l 0 M~I lll(W -ti ~ '"'"'->• •••..!••• 11~. 1,1 •.. or '11•0 EXCLUSIVE THEATRE RUN A story of bve. .. set against the vdeoce ci rebclOOn NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES \ L;.Ap ..A:A.JV '-~~ ileiiii JONES sanDY DUNCAN TECHNICOUJ!r "" FLYNN 1llOY ROBERTS :ia'ines GRf GORV CD f!ij ... , ___ .,,, __ ., ... ·~ .. ---- ALSO WALT DISNEY 1uoduc1;.o~,· THrBAREFOOI' EXECUTIVE ; .......... ~. [DI ,~ ..... ~., •• -,i, .• " ,,,,,.,Q..,""'-· - EXCLUS IVE \ ENGAGEMENT .... , "" ~" • ··~ ., I GEORGE HAMILTON · SUE LYON EVEL I KNIEVEi: I L\ :~~~,::\~-ir1~~ 1\1nd H1! John Hu~ron ll:1chord (rr nno "THE DESERTER" !GP) WllDAYS: "(Y(l •• ," 1:00 & ll:lO "OfSf•Tll" t :AS SAT.' SUN. "IVll •.• " l:J0.7:0CI & lG•lO "D(SllTll" 1:4S·S:10 ' 1:45 FREE PARKING t~ Water" by Woody Allen, the story of a well meaning bungler >A'ho kee~ a n American Embassy in a Com· mw1ist coo.nlry 111 continual hot wa!l'r. Jim Speirs gives a fine performance as Axel Magee, a nail bitting. excitable junior d1plon1at who can "l d o anything right. Outstanding perforn1ances are put 111 by George and Dor- ris Donka \1•ith highl y stylized characterizations as Mr and t-.1rs. \\'ater ll o I I a n d er , "typical" tourists. A re al scene str.a ler was Paul Gersowitz as ihe chef He also plays the tole of lhe Sultan. The other members of the cast, all doing Justice to very funny ro les. include Ed Tierney as ~~ather Drobney. a priest with a pcnchanl for magic: H1chard (;annon as Kilroy, thr smug assistant; S.1. & S1111. Sc.hed11le "lO'f'E'0 l :00-5;5G-•:45 "lfAf·• 4:G5·7:5S TH~ GIANT OF ALL ROCK FESTIVALS "Woodstock" JIAT£0 R Al~('I THE BEATLES "Let It Be" Continuou' Daily From 2 P .M. Adult1 and J r1 . 1.SO until 4 p.m. • BALIGA 673-4048 OPEN 4:45 7" r . ,,,.._ leli... '•itlnn•I• a~ Susan }tollander, I he tourists ' sofl·spoken . lc vel- 11eaded dc.ughter. and Ted Burgard as Kroiack, the Com. mun1st police deteelive. Also are. Hal Walker a.! Ambassador Magei!. Charles Moffat as the guard, l\.1ary t-.1odiano as Mis..~ Burns, t.1ary Ramsey as th!'! sullan·s wife. San1 Besse a~ Ka~nar arid Anne Tierni'y as countess Bordoni. The performante is bright, fast mo\'ing, and very funny. Al1hough some or the younger members of the cast aren't as polished as the veterans, the performances are v er y1 believable and tntcnaining. t-.luch credit n1usl go to Richard Andersen. the riirec· tor. who did an cxc:ellrnt job of casting. Everyont' srcml'd ("Omfortahll' in and sui ted to - his role . The play is cont1nuu1g Qn Thursday, ~,ri d a y s an(l Saturdays through Aug. 7 Curtain time 1~ 8:30 p.nl. and reservations can be obtained by calling 492·0465. , ' . -ALSO PLAYING THE 11<0 ONE :a .J '• 011 Aprll 21, 1911 they met In tfie skies of Nonce for "L) ="'-on • 0 llichthofeil and Brown' ~!lea ID.Ill~-· -- Nearly Everyone Liste11s to Landers PREMIERE Orange County ENGAGEMENT In C\.'C'l)"Ol\C·s lilC there:\ a SUMMER OF '42 A Fl<.ll)('tl M .11,ga•1/Roc!1111'1 A Roi~ Proa ... IOQ0 1 JENNIFER 0 NEILL • CARY GRIM(S J£RRV HOUSER· OLIV£RCON.\NT "'·~·-·· ........ ... HfR¥.lf'< 11.lUC~lfR R1CH.t.llD .l AO H! o., .. , ... , ... ~ .. '• .L -1 '' · ~ IRl··~"o~-1 ........ ,. · --····-,!•· ·- 3rd GREAT WEEK -NOW AT All 3 THEATRES f •Ull IOl/1M IW &M DllCll ,..,.. 2NO AT BOTH HI-WAY Jt & HARBOR 2 Alon Arki" Aud rey Hepburn "WAIT UNTIL DARK" 2ND OUTSTANDING HIT a ter Motl au Elaine May "AftewLeaf " ~,ti, Co:ar Oy MOV~ J 1,t; NOW EXCLUSIVELY ~ ......... 1 ........ ( • .,, .. EDWA .. 08 2ND BIG THRILLER "THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS " Storrin'll Geo•t• C. Scoll, Joo""' Woodworll • Now 2 BIG FIR ST RUNS TOGETHER 5th GREAT WEEK ·c EDWARDS 0 «:t·t;!" TH•AT"a -M"'°'"'""'' ... "''"0-j\0 • ..,.. \"")l!lf ~-.................................. . 1""1 t:xc ·1.trs \'I·:"' :1-: .. TH• Wl:l"TWllNSTW:JI C•NTSJI SIEVE McOUEEN at 200 MPH ' 2ND AT LOGE 'BUENA SE RA, MRS. CAMPBELL" A L ' • NOW EXCLUSIVELY! I· RATED G BUT MAT 8[ TOO INTENSE FOR YOUNGER CHILDREN. STH GREAT WEEK ,RDBfR)~.-..• ~NDROM:DA STRAIN !GJ .... I -.. .. ., . ,, j~~t\ i "A GUNFIGHT" 1· JAMES TAYLOR WARREN OATES · LAURIE BIRO · OENNISWllSON [!t] -=-~.,ii,.;-..,-~ I> UN•VESI SAl..P IC:TUR[ • TfC..,l'o1C:OLOR• @-> 2ND TOP' ATTRACTION GEORGE PEPPARD & DIANA MULDAUR IN "ONE MORE TRAIN TO ROB" (GP) HELD OYER POSITIVElY End1 Tues. 7/20 .,. • • Oe.\C .. -~YD. AT Ol.l.ta O o .. • 811loi• Uw ..... 1 f'll• 2nd GREAT FEA. TURE ROCK HUDSON ANGIE DICKINSON ~Pretty Maids all in a row # ..-r. c: ..... -........... ,.._., r.:;;;t.... ,.._ IM7·H08 .... u .. ruo•TOOI ••AC" ~TflCXXl.OO ·PANAIJISO( M(.Uv STARTS WED. JULY21 ""' !1111 movil ,.. abould not ... 1lone. 0 0 0 " Willftll" WEDNESDAY ii;OOJONES -DUNCAN nc.•oco.oor ""FLYNN 10rNROOEllTS Ja'iiies GRfOORI' e>l!ll -., '~ . .__ -.----A>·- l.. 34 DAILY PILDT LEGAi.. NC11'1C£ U.:GAL NOTICE LEGAL NO'l1CE t.EGAL NOTICE ---1------NOTl(f or 'rllUlf••'I tAl.I lolOTICI TO (tlDl"IOll t.t.I W t LlllAL fLiOTIC I 1 t '"" lff.I I Vli>lllllOll (OUal 0, TMI "a. A4MM lfl""l'()•1•MIJA UH,,110 "" ,t.ow>I l, lt l\ •I .. 00 AM ,,... ,, ... ,, or (,\lll'OIHIA l'Oll N•flCI Of )ALI ., llAL '111 0 I CMOOL OlllltC• inow Co•Po,tU...,, • (e l•fOf"•• -lHI (OUOllll' 01' o.IANGI. !Otllf'I' AT "'lllVATI lALI r..o11<t t"v•llflt &lol• •o.ollO" •• <111i. •<>...,11'!.ct Ttllt too """' lfa. A•ltl<lf lfl "'-!oVHrl6r (e.,ort Ill •no \t1lo •' NOTICE IS HEREBY OtuEN tn11 In• 0.~tornl,I, In """ ,., tht (1HJn1Y OI ~""'" of E<IL.o.otl"" el +n• N•w1><>" M.,1 O!'ont1 un111..., )Qo(>Oi ()"'"t! or 0 <1 nQ1 ClloJnf'I '"" puc'"""' lo 0.hl ol Tu1>I d•f"' l l!t tt of M11lo """' ...... ,,..,., lkl Julv It, l•t1 •O.:I.,.,.., Aug.i•t I, ittl Mt "I N l 0<1m•"· ·~• •mv Morl1 u I"" ;•o lo• 11> t>oc~ l lll l>O H 11) Aft9•1icl NO•• k r1m11', O.Ct11tO In tho M•I••• <ti 1,.. f"o!I o! l~ENll V {&lilornll , wlll tot<'V• ,.oOO(I bldl uo t& W\NTHllOP VALE NTIN(, t i .. •!l<lwn 01 II 00 AM en In• lrd "'' "' Au11u•I 1'11 HfNlllY W V"lE NTINE, 1two '""""" 00 11 '"• 0111•• o• .. 1n Stno<>1 O"t''"· HEN•Y VAlENllNE. Cle<:•••O<I l'"""I'"" •• 1117 r ••tt n•I• ••• .,~ •• (oil• ~flC E •!> .. Ellftv G•VfN ..... "'" ....... (•lllo•"" •• wn•<" llm• ••Id ro•O• .,.,..,tit""' wOI vii •I prl~••• "'" to Wlli f>o wrol1<1v ooon•O •M <O~Q '"' .... 111-11 l f>(l i)f•t llldd•" lUbloc• •o '"" TI L€ ~LOOR ~f.J>LA{(MENT . c.,.l!r..,t n.., or tr.o •bOvt '"!>llt<I All bl1>1 "'" •o bt In •((Ot61nc• W<ll1 Su.,.dor (C>Urt "" or '"" •n• ?l•d do~ '"""'t'"'"· l"•"v<''""" ond ~~•c1t''"""n' 01 JulY ltll 1t 1e oo """ •! lh• oltlt• of w"''" oro "ow "" "I• I" t"• oUI<• or th• :!ot<urll~ Poclll( No+lon•I II•"~· S5e "'v•tn.,int ""'"' ot ••Id )<k(>OI D"Hltl f<l•WDD" C•nt•• Orlvf, ,,.,,.....,,1 11 •• ,n !1)1 <>11'""''' Avonvt , Co••• Mou {oll~rnlo Cov•ll• o• O••flQt S!•to ol C•"•o•nl• ol Ollltlol lloe<it~• '" lko olfo~ <>I 1n1 NOTl(f 11 t!ElllEllY OiVEI'! 10 !Hf Cou1>tf Ileen•!!~< or O••n1>t t.w•1h \1111 CllE01TOll \ 0~ TH~ •l>O~• ~•mW •oc1 61 C111101nl• Wlt.l SEl.-l -'l f"Ulll( <l~nt '"'' oil """""' kovl"• tlol"'' •UC:TION 10 HIC.HEST 181001!11 ~011 •••In>!"'' H id <11<..01flt .,. r••ulrffl ,, CASH !1>•••1>•1 •! llm• o• .... In l•••u• ••It '"*"'' •Ith lh• ne<t n ••• •O<I(;~"' In mono• ct •no I.In"~" S!t•~•I JI •~• ''""' 11-.. ••II~• 01 lho cloro ol 1no •It<>•• on on!ra~co or ~'•"Sho w (1U .. <o!l1>n, l•OO 1LllM (Ot,orl o• lo p101en! tn•m. with "" E•>l M••'•" ••• O•orlt<, l.oll!(Unlt oll ooC•"*'' voo.:h•••, +o lho vJ>C\f'lltnN O! t>t M, r.ne or>a IMo<OU conv•••<I ,. •r>O •no ot!l<o or nor ollotno• Eliot•, •• ::'1n~•1:,::e::. u~:'01:~161n~d•tc!.:~~ ~·,7:::• ~JI~~· ~11~"'11~·.,..',!}, w~~~i~' (olltornlo •li•l , whit>• h lho ~loco ot onO ~'''° 0•1<rlb0d •I l>IJ•(n•u '" rno """'"''"'d In tll ''"''"'" Co!llornlo, oll '"' •!tM. 1111•, 1,,,.,1., ond Ea<k bldlll( mvl! •ubmll t b!d d<..,.)I 01101• ol '''~ ~eteO•nl 11 !ho t•m• ot in "" •o""' ol • t onl!lfd "' '"'"I"• ll•O<" •"II 1!• '"' r>"11 1111• 1,,0 '"'"'''' en<(~"'• bid t>e<f\d oov•I 19 '"' l><>t <r n1 lko! ,.,~ '""• ho• •~QY""' O• OPtlOllon I)" t o+ lno omouM o• tk• ~'" "'""' .. r iow, "' ,,,., .. , .. 1,., 011 .. , inon "' '" "" 1>•••b'• •o '"' o•lle• o• '"" "'''""°'' "'''" dl!icn •o !f\ol cf u 1c dt<O<l•nt of In• limo Unl!lt O Schoo• 0"1'"' • 0"''~'"'""~' el O•O!~ '" of\d 10 •II !h•t (t<'loln "•I Bor><I ''"' bo roavlroll •' th• Ill•(•"'"" ol 1>•01>1rtv •Hu•1• 1" th• coon•v 01 O•on•• '"" 0""''' IM '"' •v•nt ol ••llu« 10 ~Ill I) 610t~ J, SKllon l 6olbo;NI 1>t<loln•no IO l!\o t>l&to o1 o•ltl .,.._-.,,,.+ i>l•r><I, In tno Cit• of Now<>61'1 ''"""'• •• w"~ln twr ml>f\lhi olltr "'' 11,,r o~bll••· "'own on o Moo rt<Otdt ll In llO<l~ • 11,,,. 01 lhlo noHtt :tb,}~.:· c~;:.~~·£:~~.:;::P• r.coro. Oo!td Ju•Y I IHI T"• "'"I oll~'"' ,...., olhor <on1m<>n nu•Q".oloOn, ,r on•. ot "'" rool P•Oo>t•IY d"''lt-l .. l><IVf " 1>utPOrl•d lo bf l!I A1>olo"1 l!•lb.,. h>~na Coll!o'"'~ Ann I l"l••n•y, E •Kuln• 1f In• .. 111 et Int Ab<lv• nom•O Oo<:t••nl Eliot•• l1ron1or, Mvt" 1 1"'1111 1Ml Wo11<ltlt Ot1•1 Slit• cf {olll"'"'"· .,,., "'"'e ~1<!l<u•••I• '"'"' Int" •u<~ COfllr1<1. !no ~•(l(t•<H of lh• """'"IQnOd """"' O••t +1rm1 onv dt •Ctlbt<I II 10110..,, tl\wl! All mol '"' IM• <:hf'Ck wo+ bo lo<t•llO<I lo U LC $<"°"' l1101>1tv lor •nv 1'1tO"..:i.-.11"' mo "'"I •••" ltnct iltui •td In •~• S+••• cl O«l!I<! o• O••"•• C"""" •d"'"" •"d om" com•"o" <l•olvno!lo" I• }t,!llt 111 '0 lo• !HI '""•>rnlo. Coirnov ot O•onv• Cl l• el "'o blll<IO' m o• wl•nor•w nl• b d tot • ""'· ,no .. n ho•fln Nt "'l>O" lllfa(h dn ctllltd •I tol,..., P•"lt>d of lorlY 11•• 00 ) d•V• 1t11r '"' }~1<1 u lo '"'" bo m10o, b<1! "'l!l>lllJI NowHr1 ••••h. C1Ui.ttnl1 t JU l l•I (11 0 10 IJ)t ""'<fl IA all• "' •o• '"' """"•nQ '"""of t O••"""' o< """''"'· "'"'"" or !"'"""" "''"""" llr l ••<~lrh P~bllol\od O••nff Coa!I Dolt" ~Ill\! Loi 11 ln llll<><k 1S of'"" f O\I S•d• lt•~ ~OMO of Edut~tlO" o• !ht Nowoo•• toQMd•nv 1ot11, 1><a\<ul.,,., o• '" "dlll!lon 10 '"' !l•+l>oo l••<• °' ,..,0,.n Mr•• U"l'"d So;h~I 0 1,111<1 ,.,,,.., tn• eu-nb••"'"• 10 O•Y '"' r•m•ln1no """ 0~ 1 "'"" , ... 0,0,,, Jn fl(>O~ , 1>•1>• 10 <>I roQM M role<! ~n• Of oil b·~' •n<I "01 cl1>•I •~"' or "'' nnl• >t{"'"" bv >•id Ml><••l•n•""' "'""' •«o<d• 01 Or on~t ""'""111, oc <•pt tn• I•"'''' ~1<1 •nn +o Ooe<l ol ''"'' •~w.i t).1 9~611, w<ln '" JUh 1/, lt, 1' 1(1(1 .. ,,.011 l 11)1 ltll>ll C(>lm!v, (o!llot"'" w•I•• "" onfo.,n olltY 01 '""""'"'''• I" +orul m•'"""· •• <><O••dtd >n ••l<I "0" P•«•! lll •n• ~'d r•c.,v..i od•"'"" I! •nv, vnner "" l«m1 "' u ld Tnot r>0r!I"" 01 La• to In B•oc• ll 01 """GE •Alf\ o .. '11 "' lrv<t, '"'" <~•·••• 1nd ''"""'"' "'• £o., Sldt Adlllt on 10 "" B•ll><l• Pv.,vonl 10 lne Lobot C°"• a! 1h• Sto!o ol ino 1f!J11e• ""' ol lk• ltvlh <rooted T'""· 11 •kown nn • M11> 1tco1d•d '" al (oll•<>rnl•. S<outn~rn (otlfornl~ 6 ul!Olnt bv '''" Orod lll Tm\! e oo• '· o•ll• xi or Ml1<;olll,,.oo• Mil>• •n<I Can•l<u<Tll>n Tri o., C • u n ~ 11 • fnp bone11c1.,, und.r ••Id D••d of "'Cord1 of Orono• {oontv (•llto<n••• lholldlng onct (on.,•u<tion Tt•d"' (<>u<'l(ll l•u•I ~.r•lotoro •••Cu lOll ond ll•livot•~ lvlnt Mtwe"" •n• "'o•lht•"orlv pro o• Orono• Cnvnlv lh• '"'d !lo~•d "' lo 111o und•"•onod o w•ll!er1 00<l•ro!IO<l lnnt •!lon n! '"" f.lnt!hw•>!•"' ~nd lru""" fl•• •"•rl11n..., •~• oon0f1I 01 00!1011 and °""'"Old tor ~•I• ond o ~ ... lhoaottrl• line~ ar Lo! ll '"Ill<><• II ~"""'I"'" '"'' or Ot< ~'""' w•Q" onr wd!lon "'"ll(t <01 D•h111I ond EltCl!O~ te <>I "''" E•H S<dt A<1<1lllan to !ho aaltl<I• ••th cran or hP• QI wo•~,.,..., ""'"""d •o ~•II In• u"d•.,1on•~ t •u•t<I ••'n NoTrt• Tr•(I •••<u!• tk• <on1ro(h wn1<n wit! b• 0r 0 •1•Lfl! ond f lo<llon •o S••I 10 b• "•'<•I 1C ow••O•<I In• '"<~•"t11I b•Od•tt 1nd tt•••• 1"<0<drd ,0 1ko own!y who« mo f'•I lh•t no•tln" ot Ge~•rnmonl 1 ~• !, P•••••IJno '""' "'" 1'1"'"1"•M "' ••k• PrOP"1Y " l1><•l•d Fra<l•on•1 5.,11on lS, Tawnoh>P I S...,m •P•<1<>(tl,On• •dOP'"<I b, 1'1• f!Q11d, """ Otl• Jul•'· 1111 R•nO• 10 We.I Se II .1. M d•><tl!>f<l oro ''I"'"" bolnw Ston~kOW (.o•O<l•l l<on e• !ollo,., A•» <••Ulf•<••lo"' nOI anhc•n•!•<l ond 1 Callln•nla coooor11le" fl~olnn•n• ol • P<J•nt 111 me ~.onw l"!td •h•ll ~· P••<I •I '"" ""'""' A• ul<I l•u•!O• Nof!n, •• 1 .. 1..-H>10 o• IO! ,. In Ill<><~ a woo• ,,1. 111• '"" •PPh<•bl• ... ,,. M•d M•U'""" Sn•w of tne (o•I S•<I• Alldlloon lo lho llo<l>oo r l•,.llt<•l•O" In ""'" w•!n •on'1c•hl• Autkot11td !o1r,.turf lr•Ct, 11 •ho,.n on• Map roCo•<I"" In ''"du (ounc1h If •n• '"" 11.ie<I f>Olow \~t 27'n l'ubl•""d "'•woorl Horbot N•w• <'ro>! tomb'""d wit~ lht O•!lv P11~•. Nowpo•I ll••rn. (olllorot0 . Julv !1, Jt , 7', lt)l lino< i. P•t• lO or Ml><••l•"•ou• M•P> aro no1 '""'"' or •'• ''"'"'d ~Y l•l>o• ••cor<11 ol Oro n•• Coun!v (olllornla 01>rttmonl1 tlu•ln, l no bldOlng '"''' "' "'d POl"I beln~ the IM•'>O<llon or tn• ten1lfLJ<loo" lom• •u(h f'"'""'" .,,.,. I>• Norrhea.,ertv prolon•oloan or rn o '""'l"<"d o P~rt el tho l>tlow lh lotl Nor•nwe11tfl• lin• 01 lot 11 In aiocw lS '°''' Anv h~•!•n wol!•ro vocotlon. ---------- "' u l<I !•f t! with ,.,., Normoo"•"• oromotlon or olhot bono!!h 1hotl bO '" 1 ll 1·11 ''"" of lol U +h1n<e eon1:nu•nQ •d~ll 1on •o !k• ll•IOW 111!.., w••• ><•••• Nnrthe••!••IV t lont sold prc1on•e<1 APPlllEHT1Ci' .. Otthwo•terlv H,,. to II• lnl,.«rllon Atl•nl<on 11 di••ct•ll to Th• nrov•\<On• ol wlln tho lino or ordlnlr¥ noon 110• ol !kt L•l>O< (Ode W-ellon 1717 J ron<•'"'"' ::!~;1~11,_,,~:·.~. ~ ... ,~:w0r;o~~e :~;.,1:: "~i10:;.·~7:,~r •:::,:~~I~",', of •ub to<'l (nu•t o! O•&n•o (ovn•v. d•!Od l••tlo" •rr>olovlnO +r•d•>m•n on .onv •P .. ovembfor, S, l'11 o '''''"'"" tOOY o! P••nll(oblo o<;cuoollon to 1ooly 10 tk• OD wnlcn w•! tft(OtdO<! No"""'""' 9 19)1 on PllC•l>IO 1oln! oppron+lt••hlo •omm"'"' B...,., ?ll """' 100 or Ollt(lll R•(O'"" '"' • corilHcoto a! •P1>•nvo l ond ltJ<!ng th• tnon<• Sou•ht•"trlv •lono •aid nooh ••t•o ol ooorontlcu ro Jou•r>ovmen u'"o l•~e lln• le 1!1 lnto"..c!lon wllh mo on tn• cor••••<' folor!~e&o1orlv ornlOr>V•llcn or '"' Con"ottor mov bl-rooulrod le ma~• Snu1hooot•rly llnt ot oo ld Loi II In can!rl!WUan> to •pofent!<e•hlP P•<>llt l m\ !l•ox~ II ol '"'" ''"'' 1n.n1e Conlr~clQr ond •ub .. ontr•<'•" •h•ll ~"U!kW•ll•rlv •IOf\I> s••d o•olOnQMI ""o rcmply w•tn So<:Jonn 1171 0 In !ht Sou'"•••ttri¥ tin• to '" ln,.ne(llon •mploym•nl o! """''""'"' '"''" ino Noctno•>IO•IV !In• ol ~of I• '" Fo• lnlo•m•1lon rol•!i•• lo •• l!Jox• I~ ol ••id lr•CI, tnonte pron!lte1nlp ll•n<IMd• <O"T•c+ 01,•<lor "'nrlhw••1•fl• •Ion• "'d "'"""'•"•'IV Ol lndu•1•1•1 lhl•locn" Son F••n<l1<0 H"• or lol 1• IO tho P<l<"I of b•O•nnln• Colltmnlo or Ol••••on of Aooron! <U MP """"I ?A Sl•nd•rdl ll••ntn O!!icu C~A~lt,1(.1.llO .. • R••ll•n1 Fl""' I ••or HOUll.~Y •ATE "" l'tn>lon LEGAL NOTICE MU"!CIP .. l COUil 0, CALll'OlllO.t. COUNTY O' OIAr..GE UI WHI lit• SlrHI, Cot!• Mu•, Colllornlo OIAt.IGE COUNTY MAlll&Ollt JUOtCl .. l DllTlltlCT CAii NUM&lllt !Olli llJMMON$ PIOlnllff l HOMAS W, HENOElllSON, !r "' D•ltndonl ~AUL SllVA ,1,e ~nown t\ PAUL C.ll !IERl SILVA, To th• D•t•nd•nl PAUL SILVA o~b PAUL C.lll5€RT SILVA A «•II t""'Pl&,nl hn b••n tllod bV mo oloH\!l!I ootln•t '"" I! vov wllh 10 d• tor><! !htO 10 .. •uil ~ou muot !Ill In th<> CQUrl ... r111on Ol18dlno In •••POf\U lo Th• comol•lnl !or 1 wrl!,.n or o•ol oloodl"o, 11 1 Ju•!I<• c .... rn within J6 "'"' onor LEGAL NOTICE t< !!Mt ,ICTlllOUS •U"Nlll ......... STATE,,.,l!Nl Tno !o.,ow<nt '" bu•ln•U u , ~oil\I EL GUSANO COOJ>ERAllVf;. N•,.Ol'I •••<h S10vo L im1tn, ROJO oll 11S1 IOS 'hi ~l o t •, Co"dlo K Srnl!h, "" llov<O. frv1~• lhJ\ b~11no" " bolnt condv<ttd ev p'""'""'P S"•• L Sm•lh lh•• '"""'"'' hi•~ "'"" '"' CovM• (l<t~ ~! O'"'O• Coun!Y en Jul• l~. lt71 ev ll•vulv J Moano .. D1ourv Coon+v Ci"'' P~blhhtt:I Ot .. nl!O C""'' O•llV <'H<>_<. JUIY lt. U •ncl Au'"'' '· t. lt11 ltt(l.1! 1.EGAL NCYI'ICE , \UO ,ICTlllOU'l IUS!"l\I NAME 11.t.l•MINl Tho +e.llowl~• ""'"'"' "' bu>ln"J '" KIM!lf:IL¥ New,o•I .ovt Co"• M.,• .... rv L ,.,""'' llfOl lllO !••'"" Corflnf A !101nu llfO) C.illm•n IP •111f Ina bu11nt11 I• bo<nf condu(!Od bY •n \ndlvlOv•I (O" "' a !l•rne• T~lt tlll•m•Ot hl•d w•tn •nt (ounlv (ltr~ "' O•onte Cnun!v en JulV 11. 1911 6v •~vfflY J Moa<1c~. O••uh Coun•v C•••~ Pnbli•~"" 01•no• Co•tl Da\lv P ilot J<i" It, 10 '"" ,t.u1u.i l, f, ltll 1111·1! LEGAL NOTICE Lo! 10 In Black lj 01 tn• 1':1,1 S•<I~ .. ~ddlOn 10 In• llAll>O• Troc1. •• •hown "n • Moo •1ro•d<ofl In Boal< " ••Q• lO "' """'"!""'""' Mooo. "'"'"' or Or1n90 Cnun!v C•••!o•n,1 H•o lln & W•lfart, Voto!1~n. ond Aoort nli<• Tr •lnlnQ , .. th11 •ctmmon• _. H tvod an vou O!~frWl1• your ~•Toull will b• '""'f'd Q" •PO!lc .. tlon &v !ht olol,.1111 '"" t~f "''"' moY •nl1-r • lu6•m•n1 •G•!ntt """ lor •~•1-------- tnon•• o• oinor r1111r rMuutfd In tho I' !tNJ P•<e•I )15· T!'t N&rt"w•S!or•v Xt l••t o! L<>I 1' •n llh><O' IS or !ht Eo" .Soco AOdlloon TO th• l!~lll<lt T rool •• 01>0,.n on • Mao tl'<Otl!Pd In l\ocoi( '· PIOO 10 of M l1<elto"""u' Mao1, •«c•~• of O•ono• i:O<Jni., Cal!lornll !ht :!o<>tJtl>••"•rlv bo11..0or~ II"• of ino ,..,..11..., of ••ld Lot l • bolf'I> • t.1ortheo•lotl• ~rolonootlon ol fhe Sootnon•orlv l>ov""•'• lln• of Lor 10 on lllOC-II o! '"<I Eoll S•O• A<l<llloon fo Tho !ltll>O& Troe! 17 !I en• n.01t Holldl Y• <ompl•ln! ,tCTITIOU'l &USll'llll 11 VOii wl•h 11 totO !h1 M•i<o ti•• •I NAMli Jf,i.flMl. .. T O•O'hm< 11 bmo ond •r~ <loubl• 11m• OVlfli:llM1£ •A•li torno• In !hi• m•ltoJ, YI U •h<>tJ!-fe •• T~t touow•no p1rtcn1 •" ~olnt ov.,!lm• '""' b• ""'~ tor wot ~ oerrormod In t><OU of II\• tfllctl•r dov'• wor~ •nd •I t~o t a!• tor ovH t.m• ol th• """ Involved or-o..,0+1> " '"" ~our •ltoOl"'I• II ••v, buoln011 •• m o• bf hit~ •n llmt TOii CONSTRUCTION l"'C1 !91 ( O•rt<> Julv ), 1~11 8uov SI. Ca••• M .. t , Co ll! 1'.1111 M H•mlrn (lorO To' Con•rru<llon !nc. 191 € llluo• i t• ttol•d••• •• "'"'"'n '"'"'"'"" 1e '""" bo ~ofmtd to l>t "''"' YoM t O&Y, M•morlol O•Y. lnoe.,..M•n<• a.... l •l>Or Do" Voler on 1 Da•, ln•n~1giv,np D•v ond Cn,,1tm•• " •n• o• m• Al>Ov• holld••• tall on Sur>O~• tno Mon<toy !oll•wlna sn•ll tor (on>ld~t•d • '"••I nol•d•• llY Jo•n (l<m•• O•ov!Y Co1'• Mtu, (oll!or"lo tUll 11-<0M•t w HENOllllOH, JI Tnl• llualnuo (, l>flnt t oMuctH b• • '" ,,..,,1, ,.,•••• (OtPOrt!lon llt l.011 11"' It . Suitt Ill M•rlorlo Ru" Poree! '' cool~ Mou, C1 rlOtl Iott Cll•l '4t.J1)4, l~lo >111•m•n1 lli•d ,..nn •~• Coontv T~o! perllon of Goven>menl Lot I, r.,.c!lonol St <llo" ll lown•hlo • $.ou!n """0" 10 We>t SB~ ~ M, <1nu•b*<I •• •otlow• """'"'" lot l'la lntHI (ltrk ol Or•ntt Counlv on J uly L 10'1 . Pub"•h"" 0 '1"00 (Co" P~11v r 11n1 8• fl••!flY J M•~dl(, O•outv Coun!¥ Jvtv It 16 on<! ~u~u•I ), f lfll '"~II cr.,o It •11011 I>• m onaotorv VP"" fh< Con• 11~;,nnlno ol !h~ Noflho•" cornor ot l "' I• In Blad 11 el lht €01t Sldo A~· "'''"" to Tne l!sll>oo l••(I •• ,,,...,,. on • M•• t l'<nr<11'<1 on too~ •, oOQ• 1'0 n! N •<r•llon•ou1 MIP• fo<n•<t• ol Or•n110 C.ounlv (A lo!ornl • !h o "<~ "'~•!hw•"•''" olono !ko Nortn••"fflV hn• o• •eltl Loi H To '"' mo•• NoHn.rl• cnrn•r "' 1•id Loi I< lhtnro "'O"h••"t•lv olnha t~• Nor?n•••torl~ Ol•Olont•tlon ol !h• Nonnw••l«I• lino 01 \•ld Loi I~ 10 I" ln!ft•O<llon wllh m• 11n• of o•dlnorv noon tid• of 1n1 Pot•Uc; O<t•n In No••'l>or1 fl•• '' 6o•c•lb•d 1n aocrt• of tn• 5,,.,.,,1.., (ootl ol Orono• Couni. lle!e<I Novembtr ~. \'I'll, • <;Ofli11 Pd <OPV n! whi(h .... fl-CO•d•O "'O~Omt>or 9 1911 Jn 600~ 11S, ~•Uf 160 ef Otllcl1I IH<••~• !n r n' • 5!111•n••''"'I' 01ona lh• •••d 1•d• l•nt 10 It• lntoro«!lon wot" tno Nor•n••'1orly 1>•<1len110toon .,, +no ~ourn•••'•'" ""• or ••'d ll>I I•, tn•n(t Sou+nw••lfflV olono o •tr•loM Un• 10 tho •Olnt OI botinnlno •~c•oiln• 1n,...e1rom lhe ~oo!l>•••''"'I~ •o •••I !hereol 1ne :!oou1n•e•ll'i• boun "'"'" lin• at 11 1<1 porllon !h•rtol l>•lno • N~•tne~""''' n<olonsetlon o! 11•• 5auth••••••I• 1>o11r1do'v lint o! l o+ 10 In lllk>o' ll or ••ill E••t SI~· Adlll11on TO 1no !l&ltlot Tra[I H•<"" fo ... norn • ro,,hor t " •w••6•d ond voon •« '"t>ton•ro<lo" und'' hltn It> O•Y nM , ... '""" •••O "'"""l Pr •v•lll<>O r•ll• o! ~"' ll••m "'"""' lo •II woikmon •rr>olovon '" 111• •••<utlon o• In• <O~"ltl J>vbll •hOO O<anoo (0011 OOllY Pll"' .JU• \v I 1f 19 16 "11 l!ff 11 1'€Wl>OllT MES• UNIF lfO SCHOOL DISTlll(l ot Orono• (eun1y, (olllofn<b LE(_iAL NOTICE NOTICI TO Clll'OITOll' ... A IUll l U,ElllO• COUil o, l"'I Jl .. TI. G' C.t.lll'Oll"IA ,0 11 lHI COUNTV 0' OllANOI LEGAL NOTICE , !NU ,l(TITIOl.ll aU\l"fl l NJ.Mt I TATIMI Nl Tn1 !otlowlna P•"~"• •" <I" n• Dorothv Horv•• f,.nrr l'urch11lf't "''"' ••l 1100 Eital• or JOHN llERNA•O C."!lllllEL •l•o •nown ••· JOliN a C.A!lll l ~l D<eoa"d bu''"'" ••' K & M El E(l llO/oll( \Ulll'LUS. 11~• lo~•" ~•< <.. (o<t• M•u TE GM~ OF ~ .. lE (e•k '" lowf~I "'"""' of lhe Unl!td St•1•• ct Arnerltf on ~onlormollan cl Ult ol PO•t <••h Ind bslanco ovldencpO bv ""'" or no1ei •t<U•ed b• morlQ&O• o• T•u•t °""'° "" tn• "'"""'"" ,0 •oln ?t n ""' (•nt or omo~nl o• bl<! lo or(.,....,oonv bid "II b•n• 01 o!lor• "'~" M •n w•l11<>Q 1n<1 W<ll f)t ,.,.,_..,, •' '"' •loromont1,.n0<1 ol '''" or loll w<lh 1no Cn·E>•<t•'O" 0.,,on•ll• o• m•v M Ille<! wlln me Cl••~ flf '"' •l>C•• •ntnl•d (ovrt •I •n• '""' '"'' '"' ""1 ""b•lcoHon ol 1"" noi,ct on~ ll•!oro m•kl"t •••II ••I• •~• Co E••fu!n" n01•bv '""V°' < fl\I I" '"'°'f onv 0' all 11111' i;:tote<I .J"1" ~ 1t11 V,r;lnlO P V•ltnt.n• ~otur ll• Pod tl< Nollo~•• llor.~ Co.(v!'<O'"'' o! •~· Wtll nt t~o •t>O•f ~·n10d do,t ll •"' """'ntv• '"' llOBilllSON, 1-<0W~ER 1nd G•llANO •l'O c~m•<1• nr1v• Nowoor! eoa<n, Calllor"•• D~l•d .Jul• 16, 1•11 l>u~ll1hed O•anto Cootl Ootly J'J!Q!, JUI• 1•, ,. 1911 l"'l 11 LEGAL NOT1CE NOT IC1£ O' TlllUSTll'S S•LI No l ·llt o~ "vQu<I lnd 101 11 10 0'<1t1<~ A 1,<. ., "'"'""°'I !lt•cn City H~ll. JJOll "''"'a"'' eoul,.vard Cltv ol NowPOfl 8••<~, Colllo•nla Ponmoc Co. • Collfornl• CoroorAlogn •• •ub•lllvlO~ lru<l•• und., lh• dtt<I or "u" ·n•d• by (VNTHI~ s TllA(Y. • "'"'''"d womoo "'"' '""'""" Jvn• <. 19)0 In 8(>0~ tlll~. P•O• I!, of 01 !otlol P"'o'~' of 0••"9• (ounh Coll!orn••· vlv•n IC •«uro "" "' ~•lll•O"t" !n !o••• a! (•~c•P< (d•I'"' "'•lion•1 lllb nk. o N•llOn"' b•nl<ino A"<><•~llon now own•d i nd h•ln bv W"'"' 11. r.,.,..,,. •nd "'o•m• " p,11 .. an, nv• b•nd ond w•h b• «t •on &1 "'" b1"•<h ol c•"•ln obJ•o•tlo•• '"""" '""•b•. "o!i<t el '"hlr~ W•• fO<O<d•d April ), lt/I, on !loo~ •l•l. Pot• Ill, nt .. Id Dlf•f111 R><O•ll1 ll•ll T<u•lo• will \•II ol ~U~''I •u~11,,,, tn '"" h\on•tt blcdor to• '''" o•••t>" '" l~whd '""""'' o• '"' u ... ,.1 S••ln •I !~• """ ot "''· ..,,,,,~.,, -...- ••ntV •• to ""' ""''"'""" or • 1 ru• ... t>••n<t< lh• , .. , .. ~,I <•"••••O '0 •<>d now h•IO t>v '"'" l«•ll"' ""~" •••<I O••O t>• '""' '" ono In "" follow no d'"''n•d ~'000<" !n Wll Noll<• I• h•,.b• olvon lo «""H"" ol tk• ol>tl><• nom•d 11.coaonl '"" oll ""'on• h•Yln• (l•lm1 •Q•'"" '"* '"" nH •~•nt ,,, '"""..t to Ill• 1nom. whn "" "''"""'" •Ou<nor" In 1no orlL<• o• "'° Cl.,~ of "'" •l>o•• tn!l!ltd <our!, or 10 "'""nl •n•m wltn 1110 """""" """'""" 10 tn• undo,,fgnHI •I tno ollic• ot Sornvtl II Piton• ''S' WI"""" lllvd Svho .-io, ~•vorlv Hll!t. c111to•"I• f'01\J whLtn I• tno .,, .. ,. el bu1<no" cf mo und•"1onoll In o\I "'•tt1" ... rto1nln• lo th• .,,.,. or '"d <l•<•lltnt, wl!hln !nu• "'•"t"• •lltr ......... 1 PVbllt ol1M ol Th•• natl<• o ... a Juno ]Cl \t/1 So•• F Gobt1•I Admlnl•l•Ol•I> 01 !h• E•l~lt of oa<d d•c•ll~nr so,.,u•1 • r 100tt1 •o• wuo~lr• t l•t .. 1w111 •oe &•vori. Hill•. Ca111..-nl• 1'0111 A11o•n•• !Ir A'mlo\lltolrl• ,,,,.oc p,,~111n.~ Ot1"Q• Co••! Cl•"V ,.110! Jv•• I IJ It 10 n il 1111 11 LF.C.AI. NflTIC t~ n .. ••. "" wlllo~m l , l(loln jr, ll l L+.-oqton lon• (0111 M•'O Jo .. ol\ M McG<lllcvd~v, Ofl\ S•9• (" San+• AM• Tn" bu•lneu I• b•"'" rondo"•<! "' • Portn.,,nlo ln" •l•••m•"' t11•<1 w•!n '"* C"""'" (lork of Or•no• (01JnlV on J"<V I It)>, ~• l">•vfrlV J , Modd~• O••u•v (&univ Cl•d Pu~"'""" o'·"~ '""01 Oo•I• P ··~· . _JulV !, ll !I, JI, It/) 115' )I LEGAL NOTICE l'IU.l l'ICTH10US t u11r..1ss NAME t•ATl,,.,ENT Thi !ol!owlno •tl\on1 oro noint DU""~" ... l AC.UNA CAii WASH, HO l (0111 Hl•~w••· L•tvn1 ll•och. (ollf !leoco• II•• Eoltto•!•"· I"<. • <•" ooro1!on {•lllornlo, !Ill "'"W""'' (ontor Orlvt, N1wpert lll••<h {•Ill In •• •u•lnou 1, bolng <•nGo<lod ft• •<> !n~lV•<lu•I Tnh ''""ment !\IHI wLI~ !ho (oun1V """ of Oront• CounlV on J~I• 1, ]Oii flv !lo•orlv J M•d..,., OollU•• (Qun!Y '"'~ Pul ll &h•d Or•"'" Co•" 0•11, """' Jut¥ j, 11. It, l•. "11 11\J..JI T" (IU) 100 l•OI 1no1 norllon af l\IOt< '0 er f~'on• 11•1 M•• '" tnt "'' of N•woo•I tl••tn, <oun•• n• p ,.090. '"" o• (•lo<~""" •• po< '""o '""'"11~6 I" 8POk l P•o"' •> •"~ •I of Mll<~ll•<>tO\O• Map; m !hf~! '"' nf •no Coon,. R0<ord" o• ,~,u (OLJ""• IVU>O "'"'h«lv ol •• ~ ""'"'""' '" 11••• '"'Mn rnv"" """" •• ~ ., rob ••I "' , D••~ '"'"'"•d "''' ) 1•10 '" llnn• l!l Po9• Ill 01 0 •0<1• •t•! "'"'" <>••Ii•,,.,,. 11 .. u•h•rl o• '""Ct°"' "011Lf IS l<EllfllY G>\IE "' 11••1 I • l100 r ... ~ W•IU, •II t , \/I~ )I , Co"• Me••· Color Pub1 i•h•rt N•wo~•t "•' n•• "'"' r""• ,,...,,.h n•d ""'" O•"' "''"' "''"'""" 11.oocn, (•lllntO • liJ I> IJ ll, a 1011 ll'0)/1 LEGAL l\'HTICE F.1no• ,ICTITIOl.IS !U~lt.IEIS NAMt STATEMft.11 T~• tollcwlno o.,.•""' oro •oo~uchn• h•JO•ftl <I uo<ttt •~• f•t+l!•O<J\ n•mo of ()ran•f!n<t••~ K••fflOf lnv,.,monl (om D•nv "' olO Swtn Eur•l<1 A~truo ~vii• N" \,CU• 01 An•""'"'• Count. ol O"•not, Sl olo ot (al!fornio HOWMll T Lt n•, Gt t10'•I P•''""'' 111f l!onllO ,,,,.. P•IM SO'"'"' (OllfOtnll •Ji.I ""'"'"" '"'""""'"' L ",,..,, """""' l "'' llv•I"'" h cOntlvc••~ ~· 1 11ml1t d •~"~•roh!1> nATEO Jun• ?t 1011 How8fd l L•n•. c;.,. ... 1 P••I~·· !J"•menl ui.d wd" •h• ("'•nl• C IOr~ &' fl••"'" c .... nh Sl•t• 01 C•ll!crnl•. en Ju jy '· 1171 00NALO llfLV1!AL Allernoy ol L•I"' t it l""th Eutlld ••o ""•~•!..,, C•!Ho•111• P"~li•"*" ()'-40,.. Co~•I O•liY J"'' +: "' '6 •"" Au••JOf ' 1111 ----1 1.EGAL NOTICE I' IOI/I ,l(Tlll()UI llUllNlll N.t.MI I T.t.l•MINl t"• 1n11c .. ••• Q*''""' .,. <111ln• Ji. ....... ., Mfll!!l61"' SAll (01,<PAN Y, )Ill ltovno•(I• Avo S•"I• Ano M<l(,•l>flln Soll• 1"<11•~~·•+•<! !C•llt!l•nlo fOf"'l"Honl, 1111 ••Y<ll)ld\ Av• Soni• Ano Ce~•t <•••rr>aron Co,oor •••o" l(•'""'"I• (o• .... ••"an), J;l(tl l (•II' Pe•lerto, ~"" J<I'<" C•n••lf•nC TM• bit""'" It bo'l"9 ton<lurt•<I b• • ""''"""n10 Thi• 1111""'""' tl!Ml wl•h I~• {1><J11!v {itrto ol Orof'Of (O<J""' <'In Julv 1 lt ll •v ll•vt •!¥ J M""""'" DOou•• (('univ c1..-• r 11bll •""" 0,.11.,. <o•" 0 .. 1. "''"' Julv J, '1 II 1•. 1'11 ll+o II LEGAL NOTICE , lOliJ l'ICflllOVl •uUNltl MAME llATI Ml"T ~•o'""'"" ., " oo "' al In'"''"" "" M t• • •Ou<nOfl• I.no of '"'d l nunh l>o•<t lnO,. ll•v"O• 0< "' •"O tno .,.,1.,rv I"" 01 •ca<•• ~vtnu• "' ,.,d <-01000 001 M•" ""'<!"t•d '"""'°'I' lo fn•I ,.,11,..,-!mnJ l~•n{• '""'" >10"" lho >Ou•kW'>!l"V 1"" nl .. <d fl••"ri• !>r.v• 1•11n• •••I '" I~• lru• oo,nl ~· b•g,n "'""• "'d POI"! b"f\0 !"• rrlO\I •• lnl• cnrnrr o• tho 13n~ <or>v•••d to Ed''"" w~o•"""'"' Ot>tl "'''' t>V d••d r-rord•~ Soo!•rnbtf \I IY .. rn II<><>' !1Jl f'•vt 119 1>1 0!"""' ll r<o•~" th•~~· •<>o•t~orlv "~"Y !he ~outh""'""" I>"• or 1•ln B••>1dt OrLvo, SJ ~I t••I '"•nt• •nu•nw•"ffPV &IOno +!>I "011k -•!•rlY I'"' Of l~A! it•l•lrr <~ tN)\ 0A1.,nt"I con•~••ll to It'< <•tt ol N•wp~" !!•~'" o <tl'I""'' ot JSJ II '"' lo • POI"' '" !~• l1no "' n1••" nlt h lid• ol lh1 P•<•li( Oc••n •n Nfwuorl II••· •• ~"""'l•~•d '" ivPt"M ("''" ol •h• "•I• ol C.•••I«""•• "' ••"! H>O In• ,o""'' o< Orono• c_,,. "'o ?l•U • ronv nt '"'d d•(<OO brlno <1-t nr<tod In !loo' 111 r .0,. i;t of ofr1,101 11 .co•a• "f ••·~ (,,.,n1v , '"'"'' no•1hw•<i"I• ol11no , .. 111 ••Qt l•no 11on, • <v•v• <On<••• to "'" w••! ~''"'o • ••div• o! 1,000 •••t. • d<\!""'" or 7f '1 l••I lo 11>• •no'1 •oul!lO<IY <Otnfl •• •••d P~rttl ~· , • ..., <nn•••"" +o fo,.lo W•Otnn•l•t1 •"d wltt, lh•nc • ror1h••""I¥ l<t • n1r-cl 1ln1 01on9 •n• 1ou+n•••l•t I• ''"* of '"'" l•nd con••v•d lo Ed'"'" W•Q"'"'""" •nll ,.. . ., to 1no lru• oo,nl ¢1 ~Lnn•no · "''" '"own "' ll7l fl•t•I<!• O•lvo Ce•ono dtl MAt, c.~"!o•"" !~r .... OL!fl•O•• o! P•Y•"O "4>1 ••ll~n' 1•(Y"d bv U ld D•O<I !mlud•nq ''" , nMo•• •nd ••o•n••• o• !h• 1,.,., ... •n """'"' It an• un~or tno I""" or '"'" [)ood, lnlfr•ll tno11on •rl(I \11,llt I! In vn1>alC &•lm•o•I cl tno not• "'"'"' b> '"'~ Oo•6, wit" •n101••' •n .. •on ''"'" "''' 71, 19/C "' 11 • •• , ., In H •C nclt ••a b• IOw ~rov•U•d O•!HI Jvly ~ IOI\ f'ENM.0.C {0 . 1 r~•to1 l!v 1..., 0. Penn }', """dtnl tUtl r uroll•h"" N•woM• Hori><>' N•w• "'"' com~ln.,. wnn !ht D•ll• Plfft! N~"'""'' t•KI'· (•lltornl• J~•• J), If, I• lt!I IU l 11 l.EGAL NOTICE 011\/ILLf r, Elro1 I II••'''"" h"'"". pftl!•On for PfOQ•I• o• "o•o•••Ohlc Wiii ""~ '"' """"'' r.t I"''"" 7•"•rn•n>"• '" ~••d lnnor, '"'"'"''to "'"I"""''"• •o• ''"Iii" ••'lt<ul•" ·~~ '""' "" • "'" ot•O '""'' o4 """"' I"• '""'' no\ ""' \ ,., lo• 1,.1, 1', It/I, " t Ill • '" ln In• (01Jrhoo1t1 M ll•P•""''"' "'" ) o• ••l<I , .,.,1 .1 100 c.,.,, c•"'"' n ... , w"'· '" '"• '-''' nl IAnh An• Col1lor"1' OOl•d l~!'r !7 It /I W E SI JO><N, <.ouM• (••" llOll!GlSON HOWitll & G••L .. NO (e• MICHAEL G£1tTNl•I •IOI Comou• D"v• t.lowport •••<~. (oh!&'"" llHl l11: "II S•oe lllorntv• I•• ~O!+t>on•• Puh•••no~ O'"""' Cc"'' o.,1v '"" 19 1~ l•. 1011 r •l1'1 no 11 1.E:GAL NOTICE NOT !CE To c 11tf DIT011ts t!JP(lllO~ COURT Of TMI STATI o• (All,OllNIA ,n. f Hf COONlY 01' OllA"~li ,.0, A Ott~ E"•'" ot L"""' J1n1 ~Ofb D..:• .. 0<1 NOl l(f IS H[llEBV GIVEN 1~ th• n•~""" of '"' •l>O•• n•m'"" dt ctd•n+ •h•I •" ""''""' ~•-lno <l•lmo •t•tn" tno ••'~ dt <f<lool O<t t0<ml10~ to !Ito lhtm wllh th• n•<•'"" vov(hor•. In lhf oU•<• ol !llf cl••O. o• I"• ollov• •"tttl•~ '""" Of t" pr.,•nl 1h"n .. un ,,,. ""'"'"' •ou<hor• '" H•o un~t,.lo""' •' II>• ol!lt• o• hr• ol!o•~•• Rov ft WOOi"'· 11!7 W"'<lllf Dttv• }ul!• Jn> N•Wl><t" '""'" C~ll!or~oo fJMO Wh•<" <i lho oli Ct ef )) "In•" 01 1no und•"ID"•d 1,.._.11 m•TtO'< nor t••nl"I lo lhl ""'' M "'" <t•c•Ofnl w ""~ lour m"n'f" •"t' Int !!•" ~v~I•<• hQ~ 0( l~IO """'° O•l•d )UM JO 1971 Tn""'"' 11 •• .,, •• r,.,..,, E ••tu•or o• Oho Wol! M '"' •~o•• nom...i <l•t •~•" ..... 6 WMIU l 1111 W11l<lllf ttrlvo 1~1" '" Now1111 too,~. Colllornl• ""' Tot u u 1 111t·•NJ AUIU~•• 100' l•o<~lor Publl•n*" °""~" Ce••' 0•"• 011111 J~(v \) It, l • •O(\ ~lltU" 1, 1'11 lfjl '1 LEGAL NOTICE ,,l lMO f ICllTIOUI &1Jflli l 11 NA""I ITAl lMINl • lHOI '!CTlllOU' 61JtlNl't l ".l.""I Jf.l.TE""lNl '"' !nlltlwlnt ..... n •••• ""'"" 1)~11 ...... ,.,. lc!\o"''"' M'•Ofl• "'" 11•""0 """n"" ., ltlfo IOll .. 1"1 """"' ••• !lll•ne •• Sl f•G~ ("rt WA \H 111., N, l v•!l11 ........... -'""" .... .. (WPOlllT CE .. T!• (All W,t.)11, llO ,,.,,.,.,,., C•n1"' Dtlv•. "''"'"'!<11 !olth Colll 11tvt1110.-1 •• "'O"TN Sl,I. MA•tNf, 1111 l uM tol>I', No.......,1 •••'-" •11lne N-1•"" l•lt Y. •1• Ot lo (I• Cll, (ttlt Mttl Motrl ... ""!Ill Motlfy, l?• Ot lO (or{IO, C..11 MH.1, 't~ll l!Utlneu lo l>tl~• C-"'-f•<l ~· •• .......... Tlllt ''•"-"'"' •'"' 1no covn•• (.lt<'I f!1' Or•-{-IV e<' J~I• I. 10 1 ,. .. .. t<,,, J . ~ °"'"'' (&uO>" '~ P\IM!tll«I l)o-1 C.01111 ()11lv "''!~! Ju ,.. S.. tL ••• W. "" 1/\0.11 II••!"" llov fn•or•"'" Int •t or M••tlftn ((t"'"'"'" \SO N•w-• (•"'" ()rl~• Now'"''' l\•Of~ (,•I•' T•" llu•l••H It t>olnt (~"""''"d e v o ~...,.,.., •• I() .. F••' f"" •~n"'•• Vit o '"''"'"' l~TO •!OtON>O"' HI°" W'"' Pt" (N•"!v (If•~ •r 0••"'" C-"""1• nn 11"• I 1'/I 9• 11••••1• ; ,.. • .,~.,, n•n•"Y ("""'" , .. ,~ f> ~·ion•~ l'!<•n•• {"'" Jvl~ J 11 1• i• 1•1• lll•a<on II•>' Ef\f•rr•l\01 in< • C"'• (i:•Tl~r~I•! )j(I Now"'"'' Loft!or Orlvt Nl-wOOfl lloot• {_olll 1hl\ buOLn°'' II l> .. nt COf\11\tt!LOtl bY I <n• """I"" F., 1 T•~m•• \l•fo l""l!d•n! T"1' 11 •1•m •n• Ill"" ''"'" ·~· ('"r' "' Oron•• '"""'' II" Ju•~ ~" ••v•<I• .I M•~~"' C•1111•v (1 ... , (!'!!"'• I lt)I (1)11"" ""~11,h"4'f Or on"'° (not! Oo•lv r 11.,f 1 .. 1y J I) j f I~ 1011 llll )I 11.••ton Ill•• En'"""'" '"' • <et· o"'•llon. 11(1 No .. ..,rt Con•" 0 "v• No .. oort !lo.,n, C•ll' I 7~1• bu•ln•" I• b•l~t C0"••1(tt<I bv ' (o•oOrollon Eo•I ( UL{t Pro\IOOM ln" "•••mt~t lll•d ... m, tho C•untv (or< Of 011nto C<'110I< on J>JIY 1 !911 , !Iv lll•••rl• J M1dd8• O••ut• '"""'' t•or~ 'ubll•h"" or.no• Co••l ()l'lv Pllnl J • ly ,\ ll I' 11. "II llJl 11 LEGAL NOTICE 1'·11111 ''(llll()IJI t Ull .. ltt NAMf $TAlliMIHl ?ho loOew•nt "" '""' oro ~nln' l uoln•" "" SPEE DWAY MllAL f l .. IS><1 .. G. !tll Chorl• s'''" Co•+• M.-1 Oon•ld Jolt~ M•llov, lllN in l -•11 SI"'-An•. 0 1nl1I w11t:1rn lt••o. tal No 0 1 •• I I, S.on .. "11a, Tni• bv•'"'" lo 11 .. n• e1ndu(!o~ b• • ~••lntronlo Dcn•ld J M•llOY T~I• ll•t•m•nl tll..a "'''" 1n1 Coon!y (lot-<>I O••noo (Oun•v on JL>IY I 10\ I • et~t•IV j Mtlld"" Dtou!• ("""'" (lor~ J>u~lloh•d OronfO (0011 Do•l1 r 110)1 Ju •• j , n u. 1• ion 1 ••11 .. LEGAi. NOTICE I' 11171 ••CtlTIOUI llUl!Nf•I "AMI STOllMI .. , I~• tctoowl"c P<'ln" " ""'"' b'"'""" L W.6.LTElllS ~NO A S~OCl •H!\, I/Ill Ool I r•• L•n• l•vlnt, Colol Lii• won.,, Vu•••· 11111 0 1• ,,., Liiio. Ir.In•. (•Ill '"" ~u,lnou I• "°'"' ~on(lu(ltcl b• •n IMl~lduol l!!• W•ll•r< Y~fOo Thi' tt•!•Mt M 111-<I will< lht '''" "' O""'" (w/l!y "" J11lv e. IU¥frlY J Modto• Oo""'' (l•t> '·"''"" \, ltll {"""'" l'~bl.,~-d Ot•n•o Coool Ooll• Pl!n•, J u Iv I 11. "· Jo "" 1'i• II I.EC.AL NOTICE , ""' •1CT1l!OIJI &U)l1<111 "AMI tl.t.Tt""I"' l "t l"ll~wlnt """~" I• <1olnf bualn•\\ .. NfW~Ol>T llEA(lt (,YMNA~fl(~, ~)'1 (•m•v• O•l•t Nowt>nrt &11t11 r 1ttic10 Anno Mort, l'.lt1 '"'''~• W•• l otuno !l•oth 1M• bu1lno" It btln1 condvfl•~ llY on 1ndtYIOut l ........ 1 •• """ l "" tl•!O<M•M fllo<t WIT" tho (~nn!V (!tr~ "' (>1ont o (•uni• "" J.,1. 1,1 ltt! &y ll•VOfFY ; Molll'IO>, l:<o~u+. (.,univ Clo•• l'u~lh••d "'""•' Cf'.\O" n ol!v ~Ill'• h••v '" 1• ·~ •v•u•• !, •. l"t 1•1J 11 WANT TO CLEAN UP ON YOUR CLEAN OUT? FOR FAST! FAST! ACTION! CALL DAILY PILOT CLASS· IFIED DEPT. D I A L D I R ; . ' . .. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED The Biggest Slngu Jllarketplcue on The Orange Coast. Phan'-642-5678 _ .... * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. POOL-PALMS-PRIVACY 4 Bdrm 01{, huge Jot. incl room (or boal & !railer Cenlrally JocetPd fnr schools, shop· ping, playground Pool area truly tropical. Auto. sprinklers. $57,500 "Our 26th Ye•r" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 S•n Jo•quin Hill1 Ro•d NEWPORT CENTER ~910 G•neral "FAMOUS REPUBLIC" MESA VERDE Cho1t'e lnc11t1nn Co1 nrr lot on " f]Ulf'1 st!'l'C1 Luxu1 IOU~ j bedfOQm, :l halh, lam1ly room, :;rparalP dunng are-a, And 11 l{OUrn1el kuchen l.nl ha~ room lor your hna1 anfl tra1lf'r and po<ll rantasttc land~apPrl grounds II you h11ve a lari;e IRn11 ly 1h1~ home is grf'a1 lnr !hr kid~ Only $42,500. Call ~6-231:1 \O 'THEREAL ~f:STATERS I Genera l HEARST CASTLE A la CO~TA ~F.'iA .. f'nsh Hi x ~2 1>111mm1ni.:; pool s111 I rnurv!N\ hy AurJf'gillf' A11rl Jwav.v ('enH'l11 re.1111. ('h<lrm. 1ng 18 x '.!'O ra•"Pd floor CA · bana, Co mp!P1e v.11h wrt har, r,.ftig{'ralor an(f hath that douhlr'!l a" a i;:ursl room J11s1de your homP you'll hf. del1j!'hlr1l Wllh a ~tunn1ni;: rosewOO<l entry, rlr lux earpruni;:, drapl'S and .. xtr11 k1trhPn cabinets q u1r<I· e<l hy rork cr1l1ng d111u1g room Many Pxtra~: Al! rW"W p!unil:>ing. ceramic a nrl lf'nl prrf'd safety glass enclns urr. tl1ree ch11rm1ne; hf-<1- • • • R. S. DORRIS 2140 Cr•nada Balboa rou Al P 1hP \\ trinPr n! 2 t1 t·kr1" 1\'l 1hc Southland Homa & G•rden Show 11 1 111c ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER .Jaly :l(l..A11)':, ~ Plt>iiSP call &1'.!-.lb7~. f'X I .. 111 I hf'l\\t>f'll 9 Arid 1 pn1 fO 1·la1n1 ~'!'lu r nckf'!!I;, l'Jn1111 Coun1v 1011./rt>e n11n1hr r 1 ~ ;,.10-12201 • • • BAY FRONT II I~ Gen1ral LIVE ON A HILL (,01 .:M1J~ Ji\O r\f';:rre \'\l'V. -..:l'\\ \l'lf'pf'1!11l<! lh!'IJOlll ) .... 1..:r ~I 1~rd II• 1':Hs1hhl l( All !IJt<, 111111 1 l~r~r hrrt. 1.,."lrn~ ~nd fnrmRI d 1n1ng $111 .·fl('l, Call ~5-!112·1 \Op!"n LOVE IS - (,,~ (•11 1 .. 111111: l1111r1s, hikr 11;11!•, l+'rHn~ 1n11rt~ 11 com· n111nll\ pun! anrl, nn yiirrl \loll, • ('r>llplrft II 11 h 1hl~ h,•:111l•llJl, 111111mrul11lr 3 Bf1 h .. n1r 111 thr Bluffs and oril)' $I :. 1'lfl 1, 7': .~· •. ~11 REDUCED I Rf'll!lllrul Haysl\(UPS ba1 lr0111 11/i; h<'!rn1~, fan1 . rtn & I drn ii:;· Trna•f' ovr!l(l(}l;lng th" boallni;: ru n \VIII 1·nn· 1 ___ $24,950 s1drr y1 ly lf'a~f' Ownr1 ~ ha1'e purcha~"d n1.11('h ~11 \\'Ill AAc11f1<'e l lj!J,500 I ......-- Coldwell, Banker ~ 833-0700 644-2430 5 Bdrms Den + F•mily Room f'r 1111 .. !fli'Aliun HugP famJIV 1111, l111dl-1n r~n::e + ovt>:n, fnnl'rl ii.It hl:'a!I~ unll, Oil.· 1un1l '100<! r;ihlnr-1~. hre· p111rr. bd , oprn 11] 9 pm. ;,.10. 10".10 TARBELL 2955 Harbor ' ,.., f, pPjf II < !''~ COLLEGE PAR K BEAUTY rooms, 2!.l h11ths C:olDrr<l I :-;::~~·-~-J:=~-~~~~~~~~~1::- l'On1 rele drive lf'ads to •\1odrl Car'))f'nff'f!'I· J;:llfllJ<::P \\'Ql kshop. OUR BEST VALUE AT $311.!M. Owne1 Wiil hf'] fl Jl!Hl!H f' ----NEWPORT Evrn1ngs Call fi.l•1·7~n wolh sPpara!r mo1hrr-1n-law I 11uar!rrs 1n rhr rrar .. l hugr hed 1 oon1~ 11p !1'()111 11h••rr 11 J pn11nts. with srparatr ffln11 h ronm 2 grr111 f1rrplacr~ !nr I lho~,. rh l ll y r\t':~ • ..::••········~ ~parr-~A\'f'r k11rilrn \\1th Rll 1hP 111mn11ncs. Jh1i;c 1:a1·acr lnr D;irl With lnl ~ ul f'~tra I ~p111* OT1r hed1Tll\111 111111 111 i't'ar ha~ 11~ ow11 fA hral and \\•alrr hf'<tli>r. \\hal R "'I 11pt ('ALL Walker & Lee 2700 Harhor Rlv<i Al Arl11m~ ->4:H'l46.i Opf'n 'Ill 'I PM -NEWLYWEDS-- DREAM nrilv 1'.!1 f'(M1, no •n••rnnl nr m l•t11kr Clo~r 111 lho tJPa• 11 ;ind OT1l y $6fot'l lntal rln\\·n, 1n~PS' 1n your lamll~ 's fu- llll'e NO\~. Walker & Lee Rrt1krr ~\l ~4.'t> t1r :.,.1fi.'il•10 -TURTUROCK Rrn11dn1Mr hrautv :1 hrrl rnnni~. :.I t-alh<. Rf'tlf'f lhit.ll npw k onl y S4l ;.no• CORBIN- MARTIN REAL TORS "4•·7662 ·----- General BAY VIEW SJ)P<'111~ 11l11r lr'1n1 r ow Vlf'\I ho!llf' 111 r \1•lus11 P fl111rr !'hnr·r~ 4 Brrli r.-.m~ l l i h,11h~ Jori hLll!<' mas!Pr ~111lr- "1lh s(ll<tl'IUm t'r>nnal 11f'11 1li111ng rn1, rnc•ls1rlf' k1t1/1('n ... 11h ad1ril111ng hrrHldas1 rrn. e1'<'n a hill1a1 rt roo111' $148.'100 rt~:AT '!'ORI\ !'INf ~: 1()4·1 673-4400 I DANCE UNDER THE STARS nn thr rtrr•k nr lh1~ rr vsl;il pool and II as Ari<! nn fl"n. 111ndf'rn lnlrnrn, f\1·,.plarr, rt1~h1\a~h :::01 'I !nan nr 11~P vn1or V I\ r•r r'llA 11chls S.27,:-1"1(1 1111 .. 1 EASTSIDE RUSTIC SHORES Quali1y ll0~1E: h \I i ! t rriu~1 1-!!Ch:OHY 4 b<>riJ"'On1 . 1 h111h-hr~I nnnr hi' ~nlrl 1111· n1rr\1a tPI)-, "'1nrr 11r1x1011< !\ow var ;1rH fl ea\'v sh,1kr l'f~\!, l111·i::r hrrhoon1~. ~<'rrrnPrl lilflill. Rn•11n 111 I huilrl add1 t1 nnJ1I rrrHal 1u11r. \\'alk tQ shnflr111g S11rr1 ldl !II' a l S24.:J()(I SuhnHt 1111 I 1•·1n1:-;. Call 5-l-0·1151 Op•'n f'lf'~ r1~11 on ~hn1~~. f.xtr11 lllTI!f' living rMn1 lnr rntrrra 1nln~. C'nm1nun111• pool & t!'nn1 ~ rn11r1~ 6Hi-717l S ~9 .:iflo, Call ~·i'~P~-~HllERITTllAcAGi[]E j 3 Bdrm. Home V IL\l lllAlt 1 1'~ Ba1h, 1.,.1vererl patio. rAr· :~::i~~~iiiii:::~ pr1s, dra l'Jf'~. q111e-L srree1. ------S2~ :"111 T<>rn1~ Macnab-Irvine Rr:o!rv Cnn1p;in1 A HOME WITH "Z1NG!" Soa 11r1g r·r1l111g~ in a * RR!., df'll hO!llf' \\/fl fJ IPJlfliy rn 'J'ru!y unique f'\1~tnn1 1n 11 highly fiN;1rablP ]O('altQn 011 frp land $.12,)()0. Macnab-Irvine 642-8235 675-3210 Roy McCardle R1alto r l810 Ne\\prnJ Blvrt., C.:\1. 548-7729 BAYFRONT APTS. V 1~111, J1rl Lirln J•1r r I Slip ;i10,11i froni $11,;iO(), !iel! or lra~r George Williamson 673-4350 645-1564 eve~ Realtor 1 ~--~~~1 iurn 11r111r.;ed 1trn1~ into qu1clr ca~h. c~ll 6~2-:.678 1 ACRE w1TH 1 x~:::::~~gJ NDEX 2 BEDROOM :=.===;;::::::'.\ HOUSE I Hou5e5lorS•I• II It!) 1\11 th1~ lnr S~J ()()() ('111r 2 '---~-----' C!<"J ssific:<"Jtion 100-149 h+'rlr()On1 hnusr nn ftnnl 1nr 11f'!' 1111rl rnnn1 for 10 t<'°'I (lf RI rt', [( S b11.1-' Call 646-i\il. 111111" on ' Roral Estator, Genorral ~ IJ ,_c_1._,_:_::_:_:_:._:·_1'_"_1_,sli ;) Cl<"J ssif1c <'ll io n 200.260 ~I IORl\l [ Ol.~O~ '" N£A L r o~s OPEN 7 DAYS A \VEE!\ 1 ACRE RANCH COLONIAL Walk ~,~,,~ Lee --.....C.....:..:-,ei---=-, ' I Huuse5 !or Rent I I ~] --"-' 1.'..::'...'''..::'"''1 \0 I BA YSHORES '-----...J * * * * • , ('h<11·n1111>: largr 2 h"r!Jn.,111 Cl11\~1f1c<"Jt1on 300-355 I 1,,,,1r'h , •did~<' or"n 1 .. 11111 1r 1 l ln 1.:• ~~•!\ 1".;111 YOUR CHOICE Thr"' ()Ul~ll\nfl111~ R.i1t l •'t 1111111<>< rach "llh f,1111 111 (nrniA! rt1 n1ni.: 1rn ~ 4 t•,.flti.-.m~. h1J1 1'!1111111• 11·1~ (1,rrrt'f'r11 1r1 flMr 11li1n< ;i nd T -- 5 6 7 8 4 i· DEN 1 4 BA "HORSES " WALK TO LAKE BACK BAY AREA l Tnhrlirvable' Qu1e-t trre linrd 51 tn 1t11s i;;nri:"· nu~ "rdrl '1 nrld r h11rtn- f'f." 4 n1fl~~11·c hf'droorns -h1u:;r ranrlrrl fan11ly roo111' :!·,• p1r1ur" 11111. d<~"' 111 livin' rrmni \11lh llnlf]lll" f11Pplll ('f' J~1n.:c ~.i0 ~fl [\. dll'RITI 1i1l•'ll. l'n \VAii "' glRs~ DP"ll~ 1..iJ {']PVll!rrl !1111f0 l\llh ~J)t"r t11rul11r v1f'vo. Zonrrl fnr hn1 sr~. 'fruly 11. sho1v· plRcP. (;rral ;11rfl fnr childre-n Mu~t ~f'll quick. DI AL 645-0303 BArlK SAYS ~ELL Redi· :J Thou1and1 SPANISH $29 ,300 IN FORF'..CLOSURF.'' VA CANT:: Bnnk \\•11nt ~ 11 f1131t ~pll, 3 h1jt i)(orj. r()(lm~. F:xtrll. l11rgP f11n1· llv rl'!"ln1. Sh11rp 11nd '!P11 n :l Y""r l'llrl ho111r ('111prttt 11nrl rltllflf'~ in· .;.h1d"d ('nmp!rtrly hind. ~c11prli. llugr • ln1i::r All fr11r f'd 1n )11rrl t:.'ll~tln11; f>'l!i "~ ln11n 1.lln hi' 11•· ~11n1rd \\•flh ln1'' tlo\\ n A!~o -rx('rflrnt rrfl· n1111rln1<:: 11v~ll11hlr 1)Qn't D<'lll)' DIAL 645-0303 f OKl\T [ Ol.,O\ "' #I ~L 'OR\ <'!1)1"1'lll"lllll('-Pl! In Sf'f' l11c fll1111• ""lll"' I<\ •'I+ .. n 1 hi!" 1· \I II / 11 11 IH f' ""'~"' $'1 11()111 h111 rr ~,.,.. 1• INl.11 . • COLE$WORTHV & co I REALTORS _, K.ILCI ,... .. 11. 1111 Arnold & Freud _ , .~R F 171h. C:.'>1 fit~ 77.~> /I. "BACK BAY" hn+11r SANDPOINTE ll111mat1c 1.brfJrnn1n, 20.., ha1h l\\fl ~!of) ~111rro hnn•P In Ori:ince l ol1111y s mf'l:t 1~•!!· \1Pn1rn1 lflt•1111nn, Onl~ onr ;.rar nlol hul f11 ll,1 i:i nrl hPa1111f11lly lanrl~raprfl nf'!lr :tf'honl~. pA1kJ< & p l 11y grnund~. ~ 1111111111'• In J rrrr- \\ll~'ll, So'Jlllh \011~1 P\11Zll Shag t A•J>"'h111<. lllPflla•r, $1",!IOO 0\1'n"r ~rll1n~ pr111. 1•1p11IJ< nnh ~·17-:',Jll l111 Hl1•tl 1n hr,11111(•11 l•Pf'I'+ P.a nk R.11 ('11l-<1<'~~a1 ~11•11 I I lo~r 111 'I \!(',I\. Rn\• ('!111> t h1k1n::: 11,1>111, 4 hnrh r~1111c, '."• 1•01.tli• l01.rc1> la111 1I> rnn111 2~x411 Anthn11~ pnn! "11h .l;ir11i·11 pon! ~'l'l'l'f! J\'1.1111. in~nv nJt1rr ~P"• •RI fra!urr~ !'lra<r call [or 111 sprrtlllll sn 2:.0 :111>-2 :1~ -• Bedroom -$25,950. I FISHING \1 11 11 2'1 h3th~ y r l' ('ov1•1rr! f'ndo~rrl pAt\n makr~ r~rnl -· · ],n! p!11y l'Ylfl1 NrAI 1111rl I !ha I I Al'ail (' .. an, 01\'nrt• fl!l)(\1111!1;. <'HI • I I< flnr RI 1.akr \lr11fl, l'" 11;itrrlrnn1 !1nn1r I< (h1nrt' 1111~ houcht Al \ni;: arr ~. ("~ll """' In ~Pr 1!1" h1 kP & nlf~t • a rn~I ~ 1500 Ad&ms A1•t., (' \\ Rf( fnr $jj,;,oo l n' REPOSSESSfONS l\p11rk llllJ: <'h!•n hcnnr,, IVl!llf' nl""d)I p~lntrrl & f'~rpf'ff'rl , 2 .t 4 t. ~ hrlrm~ SOmr w 1lh IJ<"fll~. f'HA ·VA mn\' t('rffij, frnm $10,llOO In $40 000, h101lrnnl ,.,.,, p11!1n. p1·11 ~hp fnr 1~ ti hnal I.. II tnnrl S\\1rnn11n.: hra<h 675-3000 Call ~-()r l.1vln.i;" 'vl11.11:a1.u1r 1 N8t1onally D1s1r1bu!r11) BAY• BEACJ.I REALTY 1" 2299 Harbor , CmtA Mn11 COLLIN.-: I.. WA1TS tNr '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~l !8< __ 1_A_;_,_m_,_A_v_•--"-'-'-'-"-----....::========= O 'THEREAL ~ESTATERS ' lfN J',•r1 I"~ ~-''"_"l•~I ~ Cl <"Js\d+c<"J lion 400 -465 ~-'"_"'_""_"~_""~II ~1 Cl11s1 if1 c11hon 500·5 IO L"""''' I ~ Cla ~~1fic11tion 525-535 ~-'-"_' _'"_'_'"""' _ _Jll q] Cl<"J \i if1c11t Pon 5~0 -555 I lnttr11cl•tln I[ J•] [ c1.,,;1;""'" s15.sso l~-c--'""1''-"""'~l[II] c1"1,l ific.11 t1on 700-7 l 0 I"""-·~""_ .... _ .. _I[§] f CJ 111 \1fic ation 800-836 ~I "_""_t""_"'"~· llB Cl111\ific .11t ion 850-858 I~ '-;c~1~.-.,~, .. 1;-,-,,~,-,-,~9~s~o .9qo .-~ -=--'-= ---. -, -. .~~~--"'=-/ \~ -------' s I.a Yo \I' II bUt <eh Re Tln BR ,., lhr Pro VA l~ik PL of sha He the ers fir IO pro Ge de °" lh ~' If en a ' 5. din f o, In' 01 '11 pl s "n b ev ~en p Th• r ""' m' ~no '"" "~ •11rl '"' 01 " '" • • Mood.ty, J11ly 19, 1971 DAJl v PILOT 35 Everyon e H., Something That Someo ne Else Wa nts DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Ca n Self ft , Find ft, Trade It With a Went Ad The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results I~ I -·«•• 1~1 1 -...«... I~ I -·«.. l~ General G e ner.ti I _D-co-:v::er-:-:oS"'.h:o·::":::'-=-==-,-I Huntington &.ach ";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= I * 8 u I L DE RS ow N * " 315 HELIOTROPE Costa Mesa G.I . REPO. \ Look No Further I u,"h',"~mf' Cf'a!lJi?lh5 & old worhld11 Superb 2 & df'n; 2 baths. Blt· This IS II • fnr !ha1 sharp, ' 111 IS C'USt. COSTA MESA Cindtti'llA -4 hE'droom 111 I /\HO\\/ HOZ..tE v.·h1ch could ir oven & range. Ma.v;1w PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 3 Bedrooni home on hug(' nnl.Y Slf:.JOO. .1ou\•f ·bt-rn ml h.-i·rplacf'd fur $180.000, rnck fJ·plc. Secluded patio. Joi 11·1th fruu 1~. patio lookin,i;: lor. On cul-r!t-Sllr. Cninpl pnvacy w/ v.·attr All this plus bldg, plans lor Shown By Appo:ntme nt anrl 11 sl)("('1al work ~hop rlo«r In stoM's. 51._,.0 assuin· I Vlt'I" froin alnloSI every rental unlt on this ruct R-2 ilnd slora,i;:~ roon1 f{lr Dad, ahle lri.an ~ morivatf'd sl'lJ· rooni. ~ frrr\c.~. ~11 Ba, 4 l:ar 101, :\o. of Hv.y ., just i;tf'ps Boal J lrai.ltr Access 1t1 ,, 10 !he btach. \Ve'U be i'\ad ,· rr. tl)ltl,t; 10 l't'!ll\' 111 Cata-i::ar. Spacious w/ hlgh ceu• 1·ear yard Also. Sl88/:0.lo I lina• fOuflh bedrorint <'Oil· iot;!. Ownrr ~g.7249 In show you this, hy App't. pa)s all w11h l lllOO rio11n ----· MORGAN REAL TV 12 Linda Isle Drive UNl lJUI'. tilJMl'.5 Elegant nc\\.· 5 BR. 417 ba, home •.r1formal rlin. rn1 , fam rm. \1·ct bar. Impressive en· try court v. 16 ft. 1nahog. doors. $179.500 Plus S:i2:> f"losing cost. Don·i veruble In d10111g or family E ast Bluff 1 0 673-6642 675-6459 MOm, l)kfs1 area, VA no fl••' E.1101•, e1~ v.au or hf'~llBII". d bl -.-E-,,-"-LU-.,-,-V-E_A_G_E-.,-.. T-s_e_ • MOVE UP • $22.150 "'" ""'*" '· ' " ,. SALlS . LEASES coo1. root MR. JORDAN'S ,lnrrt:u1., t~ 11 QU<1l1t1 RENTALS Newport SHARP ~ BR. 2 SA, ;\t \\'· . h\ quality. spac!llu~ livin_: For Complete Informatio n A ll Homes & Lots, Please Call : On Large hP.ated pool for tons of sum1ner fun. \'ou'U li ke this 3 hedroon1. family room home \1'l1h all rts carpeting. draperies, electric hullt-in kitc:hen. 2 baths and il's close to i;chool and shoppin~. Has existing \'/\ loan. Reduced to se!J now, <'It $33,950. \lr. hnmf' 111 ;in f's!Rhl1shf'ri M"I· Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR ;· tf.c... a .. d prttUif' Joe. <I l..ef' BR, &.st .. ~·}· JIJ 'i!lf' I ~ai: rl:is;;;. ~~~-/b~j rl<'n1111! air11. wirh ihr tiomf' NEW LOCATION ynu i:rt .1nnr ni~·n kr~ '" 111" At the entrance to L inda Isle llrl\ill" (·.:in1rn ::hnrr~ •t l"'lrt Shorr~. 2 short bl....,..k~ 10 nc't'IH1 Yr·round S2'.l,i. fURJ\:ISHF:O 2 BR. 112 BA. F1irvi1w ! 1>46-1811 I . . I " ~l IJ tf'rms. ' '-'.. ' t .... r,vh. y n11 :il~'l hf>t 1 h1ri:?r 1 ~~3~4~1 ~B~•~Y~•~;d~•-D~'~·~· ~S~u~it~e.-1,_N~·~B~. ---6~7~5~·6~1~6~1 .. kf.drr"1n1~1 a J;in11ly roorn, 1:-~ (•nytlme) j Hun 11 n;; Inn Cont1~n· 1 ;' rea lly 893-&.i:l.1 ~5-0458 1;1.J t~11nhn~""· S!SO. Call..· I "'-··· "' m;is~11,,. fir·,.piA<'". 11 General \ Ge-neral ~~~Jl\80. !JOO Adanis Avt .. 1 2-ll~ Vista Del Ora by MeV•y C.: L I Xtwport Be11ch 644·1111 Real Estate * Ha ted This extra sharp. allnnst 11e'v split level 4 [jA, 3 B.<\, huge garne rtn, fan1ily rm. 3 car g:ar. :J-ton refrigeration. ankle deep shag thruout, custom drps, fahulous drop li_ghts. fJrofess. l<lscpg: & sprinklers. 1\ssume 7'711 \IA loan. Ov,incr anxious~ 542.650. li!fCP .vard And j()IS of PRIME LOCATION ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; good1r~ Q11;d11.Y rt.'ST<1\l 1hrrl' hdrn1.1 HUSBAND'S ""· Y SVL"'1 two hrttl1 hnn1r 11•1lh n1n rm I .~· :.::1"1' i;.11·1111: 1.:u1·11('n HIDEAWAY UNllJUI'. ti()Ml'.5 DOVER SHORES Vif'w hon1e. 11·18 Saiitiago Dr. B~st btl)'. spr1c. S BR. 4 h11. At'11p1 ablf' noo r plan for l 'tr H~ITAGE I 1 ~ngton BHch --;;F;;cA""N"'T""A=sy::1"'c,-- -~ """"". CHARMINGLY ====== TRI-LEVEL HALECREST -DEDICATED IN 11011 £1111•, 1175-IOOQ '"l f , (,.,, J..l\lry, Coro111 Otl M.u, CaJ!L --·--SALE-LEASE /It~ 1·rry n11•n OF:~ nr rlupleo1· !.1:P. f11m1ly . Nev.•ly srt·oy 1111 hcautilully pan-I drcorall"d. By aprr't. S!ll,000 "llrr1, 11°1rn a sky\1i;:h1 <'1·tn: I Bill Grundy, Realtor .\rlrl 10 1h1~ a 2-1· ;o.: .10· ~"P· ?.-II Ba~~ldP. NB f;'Tj.6161 aralf' ~-;\.\Ill'{ R00~1 • 1 Balbo-;-Peninsula NORTH COSTA MESA BLUES + A ~·rry /1nr neighborhood Jn livf' 10. Al~ includrs C'luh GREENS homt plus three nr ranat: for rent. Only $371 per month Call 842-25J5. 1-0 THE REA!, \"'\.. ESTATP.RS ' ,,,,._ . * Best T hi ugs Co ni c in :rs or LEASE-OPTION l.::i.r::r rr;ir !.1 nn \\' rq)J<· ll,\RPll'Otln r1 .00RS l.· 111 1·p1•1~ 1hru·ou1. l'ltll (;;ir .. I Ir:: 1r.i1· v;irrl \\ FnnT 1rrr~ I Ar~! E11;1 ~ldf lfl('81l(ln. rul· 1 r1r-~;u· ~1.. f\\'itr n11><lrn1 \\'F,ST(l.JFf" SllOPPl:-."f. CE:"\l.EH. 1\ mu~t ~c ;it S\li.:ioJ 1• 1th 10',. !Jn. 1:,\.\1F: ROO:'l-1 v.•ilh l\'.('101 for I a t'flupl" or pnol iabl<'S. ihl'n _* __ O_N_T_H_E_P_O._l_N_T_*_ add .\ tK-r1roon1.~ llnri SC'p;IT· CHARM!;\;~ . 2 bdr 111,.. rlin rnn rw1 • ' • 1mmac. m. hou;;e a'ld sw1mmin.1: pool And upa;rAded c arpe t in 1 . in the area. 1,'h1s hon1e has Plus a ;o~s k itchen. 2 4 spaciou~ bedroonts k>calrd s!ory J bedroom horn' on 11. ;it rear or lht. ll(lust. Huge honus size cul-de-sac neAr I •-iiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij Llke !his 11h: block frorn-lhe-beach ''TRI· PLEX", has a :1 Aft 2 BR. I BR unit. Lots of shag carpeting. nev• bu tltins and in top shape. TERMS'' (;el on !he band \1'a gon fnr $76,95-0. * (;olf A n y onc~ Here's a Triplex • j u.c:;t a "9·i rnn" shot from lhe Costa Mesa Golf Course. Live in the ov.·n· ers plush unit \\'ilh its 3 bcdroon1s. 2 baths, fireplace. buil l-in kitchen . heavy shake shag in all three units, wh ile !he other tv.•o units produce good income. /\. \vinner at $55.500. * 88~ Stre tc he r Bl'aUt1ful !r1-ll'Vf'! f'\;f'l"Uli\'l' I ~l!l!lll!lll!l!ll!l!ll!lllll!l!'.., h'lm" • nnly !I month~ olr1 . 'r IT Sf>Ar.t-\LES• :.!11 Ba1h~. 1 ~~"" -I t-'<1ronn1~ ( \l;i;.rrr 1111:1 ~1·11ne f<)nlll'. fan11 l.1 mom, hl'"::P rno'l0!'"'1, fl'or·rr1 r>ar)(- likp .\arrl . <)11nf'r rr;i11~frn"1220 E 17th 646·0555 rtl. Qu H·k pnssrss1on poss1-. • _ n11. sr!.9::.0. c1111 ::..1.l-i:121 -~"~~11 11 4'.1-1.,00:: ing "1 " ~·ou holllP. Bnrk frpl. heavy hal't' 1111 1mprMslVf' 2-100 sq I h k 1 " I · 11'u1 1 sarmo:uelgn pa10. fr h'lrnl' in f1n,. upgrar1r.r1 \ Only Sl7,700. ronrlJJ1on. If you nr!'d 4 3 RDR\I. .\ ba. homl' T,.r. hl"rlroon1s. JllSI rnn1rr1 lhr rirn' Ii~ our hl"~I filr lhP mon~~, Rt s:l6.~Jl'Jl'l. JClt,,,. CO: TS nr1r pa:to. 1, Blk. !o harhoor "111r11n1'f' '.\lus1 ~I'" in ap- flr<'c ./u~1 rrrlUf'f'd In S.iO,!t;it'l. ./O;o."ES flEALTY tii.l-6210 2fp01 \\I, B11lhn.<\, ;<.;.B. ~WALLACE 1 , RR. rlrn. ~ h.<t. Nr. Rll.rriuf't MESA VERDE · R.EALTORS C'h1h .~· hnal r;in1p. S.'i!LlOO. $26,950 -546-4141- 1 t-.~r~hall Rrally 6i:H600 ra .in1l"n1~ 1r~s 111;111 rrni ;:ir (Optn Evenings) , College Perk S2\.1 a ,\lnnth, /lll.1-.: eVPt)'· .. ~-...... .-... ,...-.... I_ 1)111a::. 11 11h ;is.~un1;ih\e h1:.;h NEAR BEACH ;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 100;., DOWN hala11.·,. i:111·rr111nrn1 )0.:1.n. ASSUME 6"'o Ah~,111111'11' hl'llU!Jflll in,\rjt-I• PAYMENT .<1rirl ,,,11 , Tirrc, fi<h Mnd. VA LOAN hornl'. d1n1ni;: roon1. 2n x :\11ard 1tl11rnnl.'. "l 'o 11·rr~11\" Z'J' !lll11Plrd ram1l) roo111, ('TIVPrrd p;ol1°1 n1rr<11rri car n1nr\PI, in 11 prr~t11::1n11~ 11rra ~p;io·1nu~ 2-<ll"'lry hnmr tn I ""'1 ""t.~ nain! rhruoul. 11cr, d1nir1c n-.nn1. k1rrhrn •· ,,. ,. hv1ng room v.•uh picture 1hc ocean. JU11sed foun- 111nrlow. Counlry slyle kl!C'h-di111on \'A/rHA terms or rn 1vJ1h rloorv.•ay ro &:rr111 11~sumr 11 VA loan $31.SOO pat1n v.•hich 1~ surrounded Bkr. 8~2-~. \-0' THE REAL ~ESTATERS \.. 01'1'• ur,•11 • ,.,, hy trop1c;i,I California lanrl- scaping. G!'s no monry on !his one. Also ~'HA TPnns. 11! hr! \\'!' can t l"I srllrr I to p;;y y o u r cosrs Also. CAl.L. FANTASTIC POOL Walker & Lee 2190 Harbor Blvd, 11[ Ad11ms :"l-+5-CH&l Open 'n! 9 PM Outstandin g Location anr1 500 1q. It. Rf'<.:rea t:ion 11L1n1rus Room with hlli:C hul!\.111 wet bar 11.nd pool ta· blr. n1akr thi5 a borne 101· rc~l Jam1ly enjoyment. Arirl 4 bc-drooin._~. 2 baths, brand oc:w "shai;" W/\V carpeting and r.xis\\n;; GI Loan any· one can a55ume subject to 71~,..,, 11nn11al pcrc:en\ai;t r~tr Bcttrr ~l"r this onr tr.day .. \11n. of s :lflOO down 3245 IDAHO LANE :O.fu1t bt sold • CRV, onlY $30,500. Submit on conven- llo11al 1ina11C1ng. 3 Bed· room~. family • d 1 n i n I room, 2 fireplacoes, 2 batb1, quick pos..-;ess1on. Call Mr. Harri!': • South Coast Rf'a.J. tors. ~:>-~24 (Open eves.) VETS!! $1j() lotal cash moves you tn. to this lovtly tvoo story p~ ff'S&\onally land.scAptd in- cluding !l m i n iatu re orchard. Only $32.500. \-O' THE REA!, \°'-ESTATERS '-'I I'' I'. I , ; Get !1\'0 for the prt(·e of one. in this nrv.·lv rle roratcd Cd!I\ DLIPLf:X. Separate units, 2 oversized J::aragrc;. <'lose lo shopping. So. nf the highv.·ay. J·lurry. they don't last at $51,750. nl \in11rr<1l~ rk. ~KC, t:rPat lnr11linn Rflri ('ustomrirpo. ~~!],IO. l"l'lllt1J:. ;orl'a. 1 Hf'drntinl 2 '" FJ\.\1, 101, ~rr rlin rn1. l!<'1t:hhl'lrhN>rl Vr11111rr~ 1 1 ;,\ Fil.\ \Nt.n 5,~·l.!l~. r.1 r:1t hn1k p11nn l'11rlr 1'''1h 1"'""~: 11"11 " in \IPq hr•lr"'•n1~. 1'~ t11111i~. l11rt>P ;)1'l·D:i27.2:i1.1And'l\'rrrl. I br. 2 ba, lgt ki!chen/r1111'g area. ll'plc. brick patio. trees. corner hOUS(' 111/ti1!lt yard tor boa1 or trailrr. ~ nilnll!rs l{l n1a)Or shop'~ rl"llh"r !rt'l'll a vs ~rhonl~. !i!1 ~~rl! par.k'. $31..iOO. ;,.u;.~o.~. re<]Ul!T'rl. -'=:::=:;:::;~;:::;""~""=I Walker & Lee T• '"~~~~..!.R!! .... Cash a * Proble 111 ·~ If vou v.·ant to buv but feel you don't have enOugh ca.~h . oppOrtunity is k·nocking. l·lere's a real fRm1ly si7.cd home 13300 Sf!. ft.) 2 story, 5 super bedrms. 21h ba, family rm, formal dini ng rm. 2 fireplaces. \'A('1\N'f and rearly for immediate occupancy Lea~e /opt!nn · low, ]O\V do111n. $43,950. lachenmyer Realtor ! S -·ro \rrrir ll!lll'\, pi-I h·lrd. 111111111' rnnrn 1'11h t>rl"k i::rrrnhr I lllf":it"1n. ~ •.. • Call ;:,10.11.·,1 l ••Jl"ll r1r,1, l·rrn\111i Sp11rkl1n;.: •'lra!l I 0jlf'n Hnu~f' -5.at S: gun T MESA VERDE * " \\'r lnvp This llomf'! ! •1 br. 2 ha, on corn('r 1<"1! w/ ~~ Harbor Blvd. at Adams I .~. ~ITIGl l anri <,h11 rp !ht'flughu11I, rf'11r1y n1aturr trrrs & r;hrt1h1;. ~a.Oi&i ()peon 't1l 9 P~t ... -... ~ In illl\\ r \fl 11nrl f'n){l~', ._.. rn•n NP.\\'ly rrpld /I.· painrcd. iiiiiiiiiiiiiii.,.iiiiiiii--iiii ColdweD,Banker j .~;;;;;;;:';;::;;;;:;;;:;;;::;;;;;;;:, r111 111•r.~ l'rry 11n~1"11"' '" s:rll \Corona del Mar 011nrr a runous. \\'1!l s~c br-1 FIXER UPPER 11 nrl must )i;11·r ~ -hrdr<1C1n1 11 -~'"' --2 ON A low rHA 11ppra15a!. Terms LOT h"n\r ;i~ snnn 11~ pn~'lhlr ' I 4 BR + HONEYMOON 11va1l. $30.000. Call 5-1.)...59'16 $'!1,000 . (lwnrr \1·1ll hr!p Ji. !-'1111 flrll'P $~6.7j(I Phonr nr ~;1...4!l;i7. 933.0100 644-2430 nan1.,. ~1i;....231s ror in10. COnAGE ===-:=-.e-e.-o:::::-2 Bath Are as I ASSU:'llE my £''-GI Jo11n. I $23 750 N --j B-h /.. SOUTH .. Qf .. THE· Tolal pymnt incl ta xes t.· In· 1 ewpor eac 1\nn1hrr ,11111p ~ l)f'd 1'N•n1 snr Sl&l. S6000 cii sh rt<fri. Twin srzrr1 hrlrn1~. 11·h1tr Owner's loss i111h ho1i:r f:i1111!v l"'lm n11 HIGHWAY T11kr .~n\ 2nrl. 54R-IO:l6. bnck hr1!pl. FORillAL DIN· l' >1~1~1rl" (·n,111 \]r~11 All Hn"' ~0riu1 !his in \nrnn~ rl~t S. AVE SSS hcforr 1~ji5i'C(1.""2 Ji\'G arcii . NEW paint ou!· l.1111· doi,ii. lnii ninnt!ih p;i\ Trrn1~ 111·11il11lilr• \.1ar'.' /\ ~l111rn 2 O..rlroom 2 .. BB n b k " I I "I 120 ' ON THE " h• i<•oo•.• o • I•• I" I, Sl,.t', · ·...-Ill lC yai·u. 111r111~. nPar ·,...;1r1, 1.1<«t1• · w lk & L lk ' ",.,.. "" ' " i'lo•:1n. :i flR. ?·~ 8 1\, 2 ~Inly a er ee WATER hall\ hon\P only II short v.'a. £asrs1de, S2I.OOJ. 2~01 Norse l'lYCrtd patio! Needs YoUI' 199 500 10 1hc bl'11 ch. A s•1rrr1s1ni: Avr. 5'18-41S78. trixlf'r loving Cftff'. ld!'al llf•l'O•'· lmmrdi11ll' f'1~~"~· ' 11dur 11! only $•1:1,500 For i:tn buy for 221D·2 buyers -~inn. r-:,.1,. ~ha,... r;ir""rs 1hn1 ~'lll'l \l'r~t('l1 lf nrivr ln sl"rl11rl"rl Bri!l-.oa Co1•r • 11 MR E XECUTIVE .. ,.. 11ppr,,n1n1cn1 10 scr ra • Jow, low down p11.y1nen1~ ... 1. c·, .. ,.,.1-i· 1.,,1.. fill}.TI11 ()p('n '11[ !I P\f P1rr k rlr.("k, T'Nlm for 60' h h f "U " ' ' ' ' 673·8.i50 tod11y. \\'f' ha1·r I e Olnf> or you. Full prict' S2J,7j(J. Call *Tw o TRI PLEX E S* hn111 ·l Rrrlrooni~. :> hll!h.'. Big 11.nd hr11utltul ~ hedroon1 R-17-1221 I .nvrlv .'O•i!h ri11110. 01•rr.<11.r 'l• $75,000 E ach hom" with luxurious • ~ SEYMOUR REALTY S:::l!'/ICP Ln!~ n! ri11rk1ni;:. ._,11 I frr l11n.i (h1 nrr anx1nu.' REALTORS 644-7270 2 Apt• h111r 'l hrirn1< :! ha1h~. fll;H'r modt rn "'" !· 1 171·11 Be11.rh Blvd .. lllgn Sch h ... 1h~· l 1\pt )l:.~ I l>-11 m 111 kitrhrn \1ith \01" of PX· Optn 'UJ 9 p;..1 8 r11!l li !li·~2.!t':.;STOl.R"Y"' ri;1.T.1i .·1 1 h.tTli • "'";i ~rrrpinc rt11 .__.._ HY OV.'NER. S-16.!l.'ill tr~" rtu.< 11 hlll:" tt<k!-('Jn ~ ___ -~ __ ~ _ " Mth '\r" (,1rri ll'ornl· ........--~ 427 IRIS, O PEN l~S 1;11mr room ;inrl s111nd up h 1Nll't'11r :'!rp< 1n bf',1, h 111 Coldvvell,Banlc;er 12 .sPp /urn hr>mr~ nn lot. ""t h;ir inrludrd. v.·1th lnts I $18,500 STEAL ·.,...,...rn,., ......... I PnrnP 1()1·. ~o ol hwy. f.:. nf rl.11~1111: Mo1tn .• ';1'!11'1' l Bedrooms, 2 haths. 60 ' x t".:int;i.:tir h;ir~.ull ;;• nnil l'•ll 0'07.1....,,., '"•, ,,.,.,.,,'" ]'<" ... ~~·Jo~ ,.,,, ••d "'""I I I '"'"" -·•·''-• • ,s rrn!al 11rra. :>;11<1n v.·alk "' ''""s ''"' • " · \(JI)' fenced 'll t f'C'tric S..'11 .. •'lll "h11h 1n,ludr~ II h.•h ~ shp,.. ;'>lust ~er 111; Subm11 \Ollr r101111 p11y-1 biultio RIO, t 'A hi. C'ar· (Forme rly DtLAncy R.eal Estate) 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWA Y CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. hui::r hl'rlrnrirn'. 1·, ' :i1l ,.. ] I I d "-I 83'-0700 644-24 30 fiTJ.1 :"10 or 675-4:J61 alt 5 mrn! or E' ~ ra t ,..,uses. pr!s, rlrapri. 1nttrrorn rani.1.v rn(lcn . fn1111.ll 1!1n1ni: ~ I c LI or l•k-nd~ A • .<VS!rm, ptl\'111" hath ort r•••n 2 h;i1!1<, •11rrrrl• "'I w lk & L rlr;,p•• ri.n~·"' ,,11 .. "\r t' Try to Se~t This ! -CORO°NA DEL MAR-a er ee ~~~tcr ,:r~1~oon;;;11~h ::1~~ l•ll!l•ll!l!!!!!!!!•lll•••llll•l!ll!!!!!!!l!!!llll!!!!!l!l!!l 1 ~f)jl ~·i 11 '\o '111 1'!'' rii nr --SP R --llrrr' '"'" 1n fl:.; lip . '-;rrrl<" HOME & APT. ·.·-,-. 11 ,·o•'-1· RI<·<] •I '-'·••<<<. hoo_1l11n B-.B·Q. Sl8~ rlov.·n, -----G ----rn,-t;,k' T1·plr .1 .. ,.1· A KLING I p11n1 ·"lfl •llm" r;;rpr1 1r~ ' I ! L. 4 RR "' ''"' n "" General •neral & L 1~" 11 • 1 ·1nn~r r'lni i's'n •Pl. _'·'''·"'''·_·,~---'.'__•I,"'·'_ I ~117 1'.\10 1nrl !axe~. 11iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii]W I k e c LEAN I 1"J' : -' .!•~I 11ndrr •l1r 111'\j II l·if'\l'l l~ll\lt' + .,.. ,,,,." I ~ a er e , ' _ 1.,,.,._. rir·1,.rrl ~ HH ~ 1'11 ~ ·• JI\' IJl\'"' .. ll' h I h l' BAYCREST ( h 1 h I ., hi rl11 ~u ... :~in • . M.' .,, r. · ~.1 <i!r II~ B llC ''' r•"1111, • lv•o•,r 110 \r11 pnrl Sl1orr~. • CO Ri·nkrr h oh I I I PERRON H.~;,\LT\ . lh:-.~2 ponl. 3.')1 ~(] 11 fllhana 1 S4 11iagc Real £state ' ~ inn•~. ni;1:ro '1" ~ \l]<,o l " ]••·" ... ~oo< •I o•I<• ''2••7J(•"J 6110J J:l'.'.\!l.\ '11' :}11'~·.•1 1 qUl1"1 ~r1'1'1"1 , h11I r.~~.I 11(.'('f'(~ I · n " "'~·· " ''" f.,12-Ji<I 11/wrl har. r"ln,i;: f, 1, ha,, ~ 1•0L • 1718 Morfin Woy (off Shi pwo y) Open Sunday I to 5 ~~. ffl "11h flr•\ihlr 1"rn1• -----~hag rrp1s. cus1orn drps. --* FHA/G .I. * 1'l !-iantii An~ 1,.. \r11 f'll'1'1 (~;ill :-.1r;.:,f\.~ll. 1:..m .\darn~ I Castles In The Air l b t. Q · k p ' APLE ~ 1·1·r11.i1 • ~ .. n1.1 A11;1 :vl· nrw i·opprr P um ing · u1c ossess1on 1945M h , itrr•<,. Tii~iin S.li'l •i l \i·•,C\1 AJ"f'l'\h1•ay~hu1ltb.v~omconf' man.Y n1f)rr ru~rnm l Outstanding 3 bedroom. :l balh. separate ffl r· mal dining roo1n . F'a1n1ly room \''ilh fire· pl are. Room (or ponl S62.500. ll'\•rlv ~ h,f!·ni. l'\ has , !)1•11·11! As~unir \'·\ J1111n -llJJTAGE .__ 1. • f'n~t~ \lr~;i A llt"t:ain I •!j-l' 1<jlh ~ rifl"11rn. l..t!I your fPaTure~. S:t8 .. 'i00 5'16-1740_._ L«rgt J BR honlf' 1v/df'L "'ar "'•'· ·r.,1al r•.itnl"nl 'lf 51 r.1; .... _.,. 1lrr11n1 '"'con1r A rl"a 1ty No Down-East Side on l'Ofn"r lot. fam rm, fpl, rlw k11 • h C.11•11. J.· i\1i1Jlf''· IUl sun h ·1" " I 31 ~ prr rnnni!I, SIO'\fll'lfl h11lanor • -L wt1rn you Ulu uUf'll'X nr Bv o"orr. J br. 2 h11 Can I lleau1ldscpa;,1oploc.$ ·""" F'.;ilnil! 11""·1 111 kll••h. '111 anrl •iffrrl'd ;it 111q $2.•.:.00. Jourplexc!I on 1hC5(' lot. OnJy !~ i;tilrl w/no!hing down io I your terms. bc!l'r hurl')'! 1iond .. :.ti1nr1~. Alln. r·h11111 * 39 UNITS * Sfi.1.500. 673-8500 rln<.r! Rraul ,.01 rl patin C;;!I tod;i,v l'il6.71i1. ' G 1 BR ' r;i. Pymnls S17;1/mn, 1)16 J.jJ.Qol::.8 DOVER SHORES VIEW 1906 Santiago Dr . Open Set . & Sun. I to 5 Sparinus 2 stnry enlry set.c; the tonP (or ttiat "open feel ing:" ('veryhody \1;ants. ~ustom 4 hdrm . 3 bath, lrg. family rm . V1e\v from every room. . . $85 .000. ROY J . WARD CO .; Realtors 1649 W•stc:liff Or., Newport Be1c:h 646-0228 01'rirrl Rt ~1( \ <Hlfll''tl~AI pn•·P nr S.'fi:'10. ~la~ v.r ~hr,.,,· .vnu th1~' MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 675-6459 • BAYCREST • ( .1 1<r orw 1 hrrlroom~ 11nrl family room, ronl • hl"111rr1 1>nr1 hllrrM. lovf'lv pah'l 11nr1 i:prinklrfl"rl CRn1t ns frnf"l'fl sirlr vRrrl r"r h'IRI nr campt'r Sfi'.l,!ISn fnr rlf'Tall~ I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l/'l~!IJll~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!! I . 612A1:):1 .. _._"_._,._1 _____ \G enerel PETE BARRETT PRIVACY FOR --$-2-16-0-0--REALTY EVERYONE 1 ' POOL & BEACHES Th,. "hiklrrn havr rhr1r hfor1· 1 l Bdrm + Den $43,500 rl'lm'n~ 11 nd r11mily l'f'l'lm on .. 1 'mf' 2 RR , 2 hi! . 11· 'pnv flOl'll nnfl lf'Vf'I Mnn1 11ncl [)11d'~ "Mnvf' Jn rnndi ion, pn y11rrl ~· rov. 1110:01 X!nl Cilr· rna~ll'r hrrlrflllm ~1111,. nn lric11non. r hllj' h1111• JJ)llC'· nna rlrl ;\f11r l<JC1111r.n an~lhf'r. Thrrr 11r" drrk~ lnu~ r(ll'I~; .1hrut'IUI, ~I:' Home Show R ealtors anrl tPJTllCl'!< to f'nhanCf' In I 'll1Al~ty1 b"h1 t.inhl"ll.n~t,-,,-~ "Armrh11lr llouM-bunlln;:" I'll ~ ( 1~ V.'A~ r r n\' '"" •·n • .. Crl\l rinnr-ou!~onr rntrr1111n1n2 . k Ilk ' ti brk :ti,'t1 F .. COii~! llv.·y., arvt b<'sr .,, 1111 for D11.d · h1~ kitch~n.l ~8r ~;11;72o ·· 67S-7115 l'l\tl1 nffif't' ANO II \'f'f,'< Ofl!'R" s"E lt·'29Ss Harbor -INCOME------] ~f"'r1•I rori<t1111 lfl!1n2r. IJ'I" TA____ ----PROPERTY ,..,, hl'>Uu· ror Wi.000 r~11 STEPS TO BEACH I S.".00. mnv"~ ,\'QU 111 nn1v fnr 11n 11ppo1n1rnrn! to : S1y. A·fni ml'. mmar l Jn ri11lllil1rrl huvrr Y.r. 67:1-Ktl!. rond. Ar(.t!I~ 10 JlO"'~ .• trn-SHERWOOD REALTY ~~~;:k~ M~~~Att·~ CALL 540:_8555 {O ' THF. RF.AT, \""'\. ESTATERS . '., '. '" fi306 W. Cn1111 ll-.1y., ~.B. DOVER SHOR.ES 548-1290 VIEW -,.-,-_,-_-,-.. II>' ""' ~18 !~~'·""" R\ '"'o'"r ~.!~-07Z7 rnr nrs ,, ...... "'',...•"' '""' An111Jr1m fi · !'O'<~ • ~ Ora11gt Av~. 642·26.li s~;: .. om -r;;i~\ TrrmFo • CUTE 3 br. 2 h11. patin. Reel E•f.!lte I'~ rRm1d Exchaoo:nr~ I R"illtn" fi7:i.AAm lt:P yard. Sm dci11·n or by MeY.!ly ---1 11ssurne. S18!llrnn pymn1~. I s21.ooo" Ay ov.'llf'r &1&-.'1139. CHOICE ••• two lovely ---------------------i Br. 1;;=-_..c a:ar, Jl"nc:ed yd; pool homes, •xc•llent O Reorro ... ge lett•ts of It.. iovr K/(lf'T>bld WOfdl b .. low lo form lovr s1rr>ole word' I NEET AB l' I I I I r-,..B_E-rT-,..H.,.._A.--11 _ 1 , . I I I' I . r~l0~/~l-T-II_,_El,_,I ! Lot• o f folk• o •t aed1t for ~·::::=·::::=·:::::!·==·=~·-,being clleerful, w he n they'ro I T U l F l E I iusl proud o f their -. J·/., 1--,.--,,.-,.....,-,.--1 O COl'lriloi!e !tie chuckle quot.d I I ' I I I ., ''"'"' ;,, '"' ••D"' .,.,, . . . . . . yov dowelop l1oni .iep No. 3 belew. $ P~ltlr NU.V&f~fD LEITEl!S. IN T+-'E5E .SOUAOES C) UN5(RAMBlE Ae.OYE ll!TEQ5 TO GET ,t.N!.Wfl! ' • ' SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 rlos,. to i chools &. !hoppin:;:. areas. 3 & 4 Bedrooms Sl~,000. 272 Costa r.1,sa SL $32,950, •nd $33,500. &16-91:'.li. Assume lo•n or sub- ./ BY Owner -1-lESA DEL mlt. l\1AR. Bia: 4 BR. F/R, ~Ba, LEADERSHIP R:. E . rt\J shag. Vtry •harp ~ 142·4466 & 968-6800 Sl2.7~ :>-t.".i-5270· "VILLA MONTE-RE-Y" COSTA MESA WEST SIDE STORY LOVELY SPAN IS~l DECOR Every1hiog upgraded! Self- C'lrlln . oven! Cul1orn drps k Priced !O S"'ll •t Sll,950 wilh crps. Lo irrt loan. hif:'h VA Loan with l(ltal pa.y-HAFF DAL REAL TY mf'nls of $16.1 per month. 3 3424405 Evts: 5'11·2446 hllit bedroom1 w!lh luxur· iou5 ba!h. Huge ki!c>M!n wl1 h CUTE ••• newly decor· lnt~ of cupboard 1paCI'. Nf'w ated 3 bedroom. 10°/. carpet1n1 i nd drapes 1hru-down. Vacont. All this nut. Greai fenced yard for fot $19,500. rile k.ida. Submit YoUr down I LEADERSHIP R . E . p1ymtn1 altf'r lnapectlon. 842--4466 & f 962·1420 Walker & Lee -* ev owNER * 1190 HBrhor Blvd. Al M ,11 rna 1400 ,q 11 homr., 3 br. l~ b-3 . M~046l Open 'Ill 9 PM lg,. ~11.m~ LR, al? ilass "\VEED It Ir n!ap" .. clea11 out lhf' treasures • tr11sh - t~rn Into ca1h thru 1 Dally 'I radt r's P&ndlse C(lh1mn 18 fnr yon~ 5 Ltnt1. 5 011.ys: for S5. Ca.!l tod1y •.. 64~78. h.t.ck of h~t. Shov.·lna: Jap. Jnch1("!)n1t. Su ~r cltao nf'l&:b· I borhond, 842-724j "V.'E1'.D T1 Ir resp" .. cleM Olll the trea•llN'! ol trash - rum Into c11.sh thru a DAlly Pilot Cl11s&iflM 11d. 'W2~73 ting, unspi~d by civtliA· t11·111: This spaciou~. ~ry duplex provides your bl\the spirit 11-ith the ria:ht bomE' a s ,1·f'IJ a& 11 permanent ~xtra 1ncon1r. This J + l BD. duplex ror Sil.OOJ 673--S550. e \VJfE: RUNNING AROUr\D 1virh bad GI cl1g1b1hty, looking !or a sharp J btdroom :i bath homr'.' • OR-you can sssun1e lht Joan. only ~'l&,90Cl. Cail 8~7-8j3l THE Real Es!ate ~ART SELLING YOUR HOME? ft"f' appraisal • \Ve buy rqu1tJcs. PtNOnal attention. 2.• ~'rs. experience. COLLINS & WATTS 96'.-5523 Evts. &1.2-0427 BY O\\'NER-3 hr, v.·/fAm rm, v. fw crpts;. drps, trplc, rov 'd p11110. b l tn1. Beaunlully lndscpa. $211,0XI firm. 847-8042. DON'T BE A YARD SLAVE Gn !nll'nhour.e' 4 Af'drooms. 21, ba., family rnom. Lara:e kitchrn & lots or closets. lipgr~de<l c11rpf'ts &. drapes. tl11'\lc·in cle•n. Sl3.X>O. (ired hill Uni1·. Park Center, Iivine C11.ll Anytime &.u.-0820 IMMEDIATE Occupancy - TURTLE ROCK 4 BR. 24: BA. including land $45,500 or make off,r. Owner, ~796. OCEAN VIEW Shingle ,xterior, bea.ml!d ceiHn1:~. ~cious decks. pri· vatc p8tio, v.·tll la.odscAped. i Brlnns .. 11; baths. family room. built-in kltcht:n. $37.950. Call • AG/an REAL ESTATE 1100 Gl!'nneyre St. .C94-M73 ~9.o316 UNIQUE CONTEMPORARY 4 BEL &: den or a BR. ~am l:eUt., iae. !ti>I.. kiteh. v./b\tns & fa m. rm. PAinted murals by !Amous LA1t1na 11r1~t. SJ6.950 -Olftr do'wn. f\I ISSION REAL TY 49+-0731. Laguna Niguel HIGH ON A HILL :-.1nt 4 Bdrm. 2 hr;. home v.·1(h 8.11 httn11. SJ~.~ Laguna N IS1u1I R•alty 831).5050 496-57r. ' 1 .• ft DAILY PILO T Mo_llday, July 19, I'"! I _.,._ ~ .___! _"o:!:_:.:"__,J [iJ .___[ -·~_· .. ··__,J [iJ [ 1 ~,:-[ -;;;;;;;";;;;;;;;;"' ... ;;::l~~fl!,1 '---_ ..... __,,~ [~----... -~~1;;; .... """"';;;;;;;;;""" .. ~ LW. Isle 240 HouMs Unfurn. 305 HouM• Unfurn.. 305 Hau ... Unfurn. 305 Aph. furn. 3'0 Apts. furn. *WATERFRONT5* 20 ACRE "Proctuc:ing orange CASH BUYER 1 t TD L 4 AA. > bo. D<IOI w/pi". I"'"· R,,m;d,, F'rool•J<' * * S oan •l.Jp .t sandy lx-11ch Sl..98.~ on Van Buren &: Cle\'eland. G.neral Costa MeM Laguna B•ach G.neral Huntington Buch t.1ESA V<'rde, 3 BR, tam rm, NE\Y J BR, Z BA, c:'PU!, BF.Aat RATES TOO H.IGll! I --------- din rm, lea&e-leue opt10n or blt-im, view, Arch Jk>aclt Conie »ee us! l8!0 \V. Lin-lRG 2 Br., 2 ba, iN!luded, OFF LIDO Good ille tor trailer park or Doo'1 list your home, 'I ~ TNTEREST C-l-11, V•cant ...•• SJ99.500 Hub<llvL!.LOn, on ma1n hl11•1y &ell It 10 Ull. 2nd TD Loan Kalt. $.Z73 Mo J yrly I~. Heights. S170. 494--3-\jl. coln, Anaheim. 1 8 1w11 Quiet deadend ,t., Ch!ldr~n. RENTAL FINDERS $35.:.00. ~1.1 .,,, a~umabh~ K µet oons1de1~d. SI:,0 un!urn, Cond 2 BR ' b Pool & ,Sa\·e l.hue, &ave money, o · -a, · to f\la.rch t"'ield. Pru-ed ar •I' w. lttt.. conA Miu. Laguna Niguel nott 's Berry ,.-a.·rn I:. 1170 I n11 Ell" N o loan. Vacant. Ownr I Bkr Disneyland ). (l) 774--09j,(), urn. . 11'1 o. , l " r.-.n '""' immed. firm oUar. Bro~r ....... • boiit iiJipava .....•.• ora.JUU Sll.000 ptr ae. Writt' • LEADERSHIP •C'rn1!1 based on fll'Ufty, Hout•• * Apt,. ~,.;i;.10:;1. "°:-::::::---------i.-:o;:"""-'--;-';'-~--C.:.."-blk to ; Pulou .. 84Z-8-t97. LIDO REALTY INC . Charlt>s ~!artin, 870 No. INVESTMENTS e '41-2171 545-0611 3377 V111 Lluo 673-7300 Main St, Rll~rskle, 9Z501 Sen1nr Harbor area 21 yn. * 64>0111 * l lOUSE for rent wllh heatf'<I B•lboa Island Li'do Isle 2 BR, Range, gar, fncd l.;:-:::':'.''.'::-"'°'-,.-::o-----;,...i;..,~ "'""" '" l.r11ult11rd1 backyard. l 150. No ChildrPn, .~~al< :.n.l 3 1 0 ::~ ;,:•,r PREMIUM 2 BR furn. apt, .-W-E __ H_A.;:_V_>:_R_E_N_T_A_LS_,-. * BAYFRONT * .i Ar, chf.apal13;G5o-r1r 8424466 & SW-5J36 S•ttler Morts•te Co. no pl'ts. 6'12...(1.JJO, 2'!39 "8" ._ J I i h $14().F.ASTSIDi'.: 2 BR, honie S lxautilul view, t"Ompletely u Y 11 10 31Ju; $11J \\'k, Wint('r and Yearly l.Arge home on 50 fl ., Lido w/tf'rms. lfaridy lo new 8XlO 11i E. 17th Strttr . tale. modern, dC""!igh!f111. l yr Al~-,wtnter S200 mo. ABBEY R~LTY 642-."JljO Nord. 4;r. din, rm. w/fpL. ac nlUlli lake rtcre'tl [ ji-1 hhn:1ry, .-1udy. ~ BR. plus prf'se1"Ve. skr. 6·14-4670. _ ''"•nciar ~ Cash Fast I. n1a1d'"· Lgr. p1C'r & slip. "10'--A7C"_.--rs-,-,c,--,c,,,-,-cN'°'O ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:.:;;;;1 'w/ &ar & yard. &l::Hlll l f':i\ST sidC' Ci\1-2 bl', l'-. ha leasf'. 714: 49j..57:17. 675-M!L ~-~~,~----1~~-------Newport B••ch $11" ROOMY :i BR \I /n1.rl honie wtlge yard. <..:rpti<, Meia d•I Mar Balboa Peninsul• ---·-------- .:.>-~ • • clrps, bltns. Children ok, no • OCF:ANFRONT UPPl"r .1 SH 2 $200.0fXI 00\\'N, rtC'~pOn Iar1uly ju~! I 1st&. 2nd Trus t Deff1 bowanl) lawson JR. lake over si;, prr 1nu. Bu1ine11 FREE APPRAISALS yrd /or k1ct~ & P"l~. 61..i-Olll J pct.~. $215 nio. 673--1573. CHEERY 3 bedroon1s and • $l5 \VK & UP -On Ocean , BA nr Ne"'PI pier. Slng:!rs Ae.OitOll pyn1nts. 968-00~7 Opportunity 200 Coat• Me1a Investment "· $!9;...2 llr. 1 Ba, l('ncrd yanl, (j('n, 13' hBths. f'~irepl•·-M !Lod vely ~acl\e1,1"1' JUBIR·~, OK $•100 mo/yrly J~ Bkr $77.:".() l lN l:>ELJEVAl:lLI·: I I I llll R J I •1 ,_,_ a .service. 00 . tt l"'· &l?--4SlS HR oou.,... \\'/ c:ar Avail l'f) t cpts, 1 rps, ura 3n1 f'nc osed yan:I, double • Call 675-8740 • __ ._ · _ Cemetery 541-7711 anytime Lots/Crypts 156 BUY 5, GET 5 .1~16 Via L1<lo now. HURRY! t>l::i·Ol 1 l ~~2-1'l'Z2 1 ga~·ugt•. J u a I paperrd, BEACON BAY I br. Yr!y I Mesa V•rde BY O\\INER: ~br-2 ha. larn 4 Adjcun1ng JQ!ll, llarbor Rt'~! ~len1orial Park, C.,\t In p1"Ub.1tl'. D1sco11nt. 3-i2--0632. r·m. 2 lrplc, ht111s, l'p1 /rip~, fnrd AssunV1hlr j\, ~~ nr11· yrrl. Loan. Commercial $29,900. 67::-:;&m. Newport Beach HARBOR HIGHLANDS $36,950 llf'fll"f.io1n 1111h f1rrp!~t .... bud1-1 11s, hard•1ood floor~ and ki1ely pal1u. \\'<1lk to all ~1'11001~. t1brary, park and lrn111s l'OUl'l!i. Call 646-7171. ON BEAUTIFUL BAY Charming 1mmobilr mobile home 2 BR, 2 BA, den, firc- pl. garrkn rm, pvr bt·h. s\1p avail. S27,500. K, Anchorage \\lay, N.E. Owner 67.>17~8 or fi.12-1329. *MUST SELL* BY O\\'NER 8C'au11fut Blulfs 2100 sq /1 Condo, 111rw l)f "ftter ,\- l1i;:h1s, Grf't'n Bel! lor. Fah· 1!1011~ 26>;l!i rtrn. Hcducf'd to $19.:iXl. 6H·l60!i Qr 83.3-0173. ----L p S I [) F: down hou~e 11·111•e11·. 4 nr .i HR~· family + pool. Npt Hts. $6j,!l()(). Rhoc!a 1\lag1JI Rh!', &12-3600, Property 151 INVESTMENTS \\'ITH "7'TAJOR" 'f El\" Ai...,.TS-LEASEBACKS OFFJCE C0'1r>IERCl1\L & APT BLD'GS W. R. OUBOfS, INC. !R,E. B1ukers) 833--9445 Income Property 166 * MOTEL * 13 unit seasidp jewel. gross $48,00J. Spendablt> $14,!lOO. S-10,000 down, can expand to .17 unils. Phonr 5-l&.2316 INVESl'i\1ENT DIVISION \o ·THEREAL '-0-E~'.J'ATE~~ e COSTA !l-fESA Bamboo Village 12-2 BR Ga1'dt'n Houses all \\'/alt. garases & patios. 0 n 11aluabll' 17:b.:20t l blk Bank of America, 2 mi. ocean. Jncomf' $1,940/nio. Good terms. Gail Pagt owner. 54;} Bf'rnanl S1 , C.l\I. 646-4430. (l) 2 BR/1 BA HOMES COMPLETELY REDONE fi.12-4121. Nrw rrpts. new clrps, new --------rite, nrw floor, Jll'W pa int. TO\\'Nl!SE, carcrrrc !1111ni( Pnr~ Lido. No Jcase-hnlrt. 3 Jiuge lot. 2336 FJ!drn Avf'., Cl\l. $60,000. Owll€r, Eves BR, 2 ha. ;; gar11i.:r~. xtras -616 • .)3(12 pMl~. S:; I . .l 0 0. Owr . ..:c:_,=;~=,--===~- 611-22:,0. * NEW ~ UNDER 3 "BR, ,-,,-m-;1-,,-,-,,-.-,-,-,-.-,-_-111 C ONSTRUCTION - ThC' Bluffs. Vir1~. eon· 10 UNIT APTS. \lf'nirn1 rn pai·k, ~hoppinc-&· 110. Drlux 2 BR/2 BA. 2332 ~(·hool•. B}' owner. ~M-j27:1 f •• tlcri Ai'"· C .. \f, l<lusi l!~ 11 urr 6. lo 11.ppr-ee1acr! Sl 7J,OOO. O" ner. f::vps &l6-jJ()2 ~ Bit. 2 BA. fncd yMrd. Lrg patio. t"rplc. 1 '~ Blk beach. 011·ner .. l4S-0336. RY O\\lll'r lhl<; \\ef'krnd 312 Bl.\. :! ba lfl r•n 11a1,.r e.~clu arf'~ 322-S2nd SI. N.B. .. * • Br 01\i'\E'Jl-BLUFFS Cnnd,1n1111H11n 4 BR. .> F:,,Tll. C<1ll 61\-~:1:~~ 4 BDRM. $29,000 i\,.11r l\1•1111011 llt'igli l~ nn '111lf'\ P11ln1rr S1. 4 BP. .. '! ha .. S11rrl1sh ll'J'lr .. f'ntry hnrl::t' ovrr !1~h punrl. cn11- r rcrl pal10. LRr~r R·~ lot 11 allc.1 J BDRM. 129,SOO Lots for Sal• 170 BEELINE Fashions offers P\lf'l'Y ,\·oman flltimf: pay for pt/11mr 11,·ork. S.i0-$80 + \\'k.. rar tlPc, 636--08~2 / ;\\!!-.;.;~·,, GENER.AL OFFICF.: Grtat Co. in heautirul high risr bkJ11:, great hos~ A· co- ll'Orlo;rrs. LlN>stl benefit~ & 1·ap1d adv. Start $·121. Ca!! J l'an B1n11n, .i•IQ-60,'ij COSTAL AGEi'JCY 2100 Harbor Bl a l AcJ<1n1~ REC E PTJON!Sf: Busy rlrlis:h!ful ore. for sttractivc p<'rSOn. Oe-i;u·ablc loc:allon. f::.,cil•n;; ro. Sl5(). Call HrlPll llayrs. ~14()..605.; COASTAL AGF:i\'CY ~790 llarbor Bl at Adan1~ BEA UTJ ruLIO!r;:;;::--&. l'l"llr Big bear.,\·hi~P"r1ni:. Forr~t. All lllll111f's in $6,IXXI '"" 1>•1 I I l"1;:;hts1C"lll r11a• ,.n, 11ra1 Chfl !Ir. l-\1trhrn hHns. 1),ith w 111r n1' 1.1rpr11n;::, 11\V fir" 11'1' It 1ard h1..: f'11nu:.:11ror111ld1t1onaJ 111111 ur \alur lnl' f'ab111 l'nJber, ~"\11m 111111~ llfltil ·ro·, nr ~~ &l-1-l:::J.~ lALI 0 "l~·l ~J 4 It~ Int <'.,!, can boild 40 A • .::OL_._ I un11.-Riil S-ull1van Rf'al13, ~ \1S~l61 ,,, ~ r..~~1t;,~11·~~\1 1111;, r j Out ot-Sf;t;-Prop. 171 GO TO SCHOOLvv SALMON '" mnrl' h11~ l'l'I"' !I<> rn .. 1·r I f SHERMAN 'S 1•h;11lJfr1111i.; 111r \ito1n. Bil~·· 1 to all <;ch1••I~. ~ f'l!t .: lo;1Tli• DELIGHT! + pta11.-~·1rn B•· .• 1 11Jf('1 (b<)l!'r Joi !n fo\111n1alh P.11•rr ll11~·~. r\<l\111::! si::_,il!) ,.,,,_11111-:.· r;.;1a tl'~. A pla11ncrl University Realty rl"vt>lopmt'nt 11·11h ('Ql11PIC'1" >Ol'll t .. (.!'I !I".'· 6'i3·ti.il0 duhhnl•~" facil1t1rs. GREAT Cll 1\R ~llN\. cu~lorn a-P~2 Sfll •. '1U'< ~~ISHING fr'Om r.a. Sharif' lp·r-~. lovi·ly I DEVE1.0P.\1ENTS 0"'N 1•a1"Pf'llllJl 01·,.r h.1ril 11'10(t pn1prrly shoreline. .Strf'Cl~ Le hn1. k t1rrpl. ll"~mrrt in and 111ai11ta1nC'cl by t'()Ull· l11·1n;::nn llnrnl)I t•hr«11n11 rry. 7..onrr! for tra i!C'r nr fiOO pant'lj:. f)f'l•Chl lul lrrr111·r In ~ll-/I h<:rU~f'. Oflrrrd rot "8~)1 upkrf'p :.:ardl'n/ !., 'al<' 1l11e to tllllt'ES ol ownC'r. 11r1·r ln1 &1&-l.':91 lji:;..s:i.lO ~:'600. Santa Ana ROOM TO LIVE I" 1h1E. b11: 4 hl'<Jmom~.; h~th he11ttty -P"111'rt larwbrAfl- lr\i: -12 't :l2 arlflf'd rlll'IOSl'rl lana1-111111u1"~ In Jr,.r11a~~ • 11rxf N>u1h Coas1 Pl111.a -lt'~ hf>l1rr 1han !lf'IY a! $31.:J()O Phollf' 6il-ll.i:iO noll'. 1'° THE REAL I"\, ESTATERS ' '' . •"{ Sa n Juan Capistrano CASITAS CAPISTRANO Little Jn nan1e only' T!\f'\<P townhouM'1" h11vr 1111 111<' in· Jf'edi .. nt~ nf_ morll'rn \1\"1n.1: \o ·THEREAL '-0-E~'.f ~'.fERS 1495 FULL PRICE !'inf' fl'f'r covered Cftb1n i;>1f' 11•l,tn1 r11n~ na!iona! rorMH, l'Qnlhrrn O~n. Level. 11,•/ rt);ul. :;ihor1 "·aH1 lo 2 lrOU1 l11kr~. 011'/lf'!' &14·7912 . ---1 R•nch•s, Farms, Grov•s 110 ~·ALLBROOK 1.1 1\cn·~ w/:190 a\'Ol'ado trf'rs, :-Oo V11.lt'11('\8 nrengf' 11·ef'~. 161i l1m,. h'f'r~. l.!)(Xt 1q 11 hninr 111/~1 br t· 4 ha, Ad· d1tinnRI I hr gue~t hllf'. 7()\:1 10 swimminc::-!\rt'll + ~m stRble I.· f'Orral. Prif"'. $1:.0.oOO. Trrm.• II v I i I. Shf<llrr lflllustrt.,., Inc., Tl~/"'°'~ .... ~20. MORE ON US ••• LOANS! LOANS! LOANS! l\'t> give the most. Private, dignified. Blly, trade. sell. Tnd<1y yuu can Orgin a busi· /\1\'ay from downto1vn area. nPSS of ycur 01\'n willl h a 11 2426 Newport Blvd. rh" 1111 l'!'lmenl nocmally re· Coast PaY.'llbroker 642-8402 11ul1"ed. Our unique TALK-Money Wanted 250 1;-.,:1 ; Vf.l\"UJNCi t.1ACHINJ::, d1spru~1ng •'OOkirs. CL'ackf'r.sJW-AN_T_S50_.-~--aU-----. ncl d bf' h 1.....; """' or parl 1n ii t•an Y, _can I e ""6'~· 2nd mortgage money at nin;: of an 1ndepend£'nl bus1· 10';(, over JO }TI, No pti;:.. nr.~~ th111 ~otl can develop Superb rollateral, !J68-7jl0, into a full ume <:afl't'I'. 12131 EX 9-a59.'i. \ri\h 11 :>O' ;, down payment NEEDED, $4;)()(1 SE"C~red by 011 machinC's, jminimum of 2nd TD Oil sgl family res., 1or1 -t !£4·"-178 101 you can pay Lhe remain· _ •0 in ere5 . J-J , tng bAlan(·e over 24 equ11ll~>l<l--046~~~9~-~~~~~~~ monthly p;J.yments, 1\•ith NOi ; !Nl'J::REST. NO CARRY-[ I[~ l ING CHARGES and NO HoUl•fafRMt ! BR Garage. Crpt Nu f)l'l~ 1 pa1n1ed and OC'~\·ly carpr1<XJ Corona del Mar re•ll;J starting ~pt. J.st . $1·15-LAliUN,\ B[ACH -1 nclrr rl'q 'd Sl:.O nio + !hroughoul. $265.00 per liACHE.LOR. ga r d f'O apt Phone-613-8888 I Bf:. I'./ . ;:or. Sto~·rfrf'h1g I dl.'PoS1t &16-3637. n1onch ... ~1r~a _Del. ~tar SIOO W/uut. bus in es.'! Newport H•ights f'cl ron:s1cle1'f"rl , 61,>.0IJJ l BP. +-1'-ani rm 1-ned }d 1---CUl M..::S.IJ~ __ rnan, So/hwy 11 p 0 t11.' s 5 . _ ~ Crpts/drps. $21.i A\' a 1 I * * 4 ilr, fan1 nn, 1r.~ Ba. Quiet. 67:>--18.)9 -i BR. l BA pool homt-1 $16:)-SPACIOU:-; l BR, 1 Ea. , tl<lll 2103 Ff'deral ;.l.>-Sl5l blln.o;, dsh\\hr, rpls/rlrps S~IALL Ba ht>J h Consider short lcnn 1.s,- bllll!-1, {'l'pts, d1·ps. Kitls ok • 1,"9. 2 B . 1 0~,-:--3 1 chl!Jrn ok. S27j 1110, Refs'. • ~rpl lrtt ~a ;:.._. ";'~105 ag Rel.'!. req'd. S450. 1ncl pool 615--0111 J-r, Dd, C'lltf'u ·1· 73:'19 • u ·J• Pf'f c;;irC', 11ard11t>r. 646-2290. )ard, frplc, rpls, Urps, 2171 .l J-· 1110. A11a1I 813. 67.>-517lJ all -.CC.'-"=~ M V CL~AN l or 2 BR:-J\dult;:-;m Rural Pl., 642-2'122. ___ I esa erde . 4 p.m. . pe1s. Lg kit. $125-$1 50. 24:!] Ba , lrplc, bl1n.,, gar, yrd. $140-2 Br. E-side, gar, fnec1 1$2j0.1 Br 11 J ba Clos,. 10 :l Br, frpl . bal, yrly only. Isl E. JSth :ii, /\'lJ. 6-16-l!!Ol . Chi!dt'f'n & pt>I" ok. ti~:..OJLI .\'tf. :sto11(', drp,;. cpl OI' J sci i~ ,: ·d Q · P & last. .SZ20, '.12'1 Heiloll'Ope. • 1 -· 1K · turi "' rts ~ blk heh 67-364-Santa Ana --I ~·h1Jd. No dog~. &16-:..GQ7. I ok. Avail Sfpl ls! & r ~ Ja~L ·' . .'\--. .l. --.,.-.c:;.;.:c _____ _ BEACON* 64S-Olll **·l br & ba, fPn~dYard. Ali 6 p.rn. :,.10-929;: Co1ta Me1a Royal Suites Mot•I •STEPS co Drach-2 Br. ('f'IS, I !H9 GO\'('rnor S1 CM. $190. N--'8--h S·f<; PE'H \VK. UP dr~. hlt.ns. c:b1lrl ok. $12.J I :1 18.:i:Jj~ ' ew~~ eac CASA de ORO Complet" kilc:hl'n, Jin,-ns, 11h. I ALA Rentals• 645-3900 Fountain Valley BEAUT 11100. lownhou;;e. 3 CASUAL Calif. L1v.;;g in ft .-.crv. htd pool; TV & maid I Br. :!', Ba, frplr. patio, warm Me\literJ·a11ean atn10~--serv opl, e flA NCll ::1i~e }1'd, .:iiovri LEASE rlean 4 BR, 2 BA. I pool, 2 t·11r gar. all bl!ns, phcre. Spacious rolor <.'U· STUDIO 1,_. Rrt. rrfrig, lncd yd. Kleis & pr ts. , I • ! ...,. _.. d d · 16 m·1· 1 " s " · I hltns, drps, 1·pls, cl~hwshr. !TJl :'· 11'11.l}P.• • ..,.·~~ ~""· Olu!l~ale ~pls -esigned & 1 ··:<; o "Pl C11, ,1 ml cs $\30. frpl<:, l:;:e fncd yr!, dbl gar 4 l 1 J23--4 710 or S4~991 eves furnished .or style & (.uni-lo Disneyland 1 A LA Rent•ls • 645-3900 Nr s('IJ!s .t ~hpg. s2_15. _ br"t11n S-!O or 11·knd~. __ Jort • H_ea~ed JX)o~ e .Kitch-I * 531-.';930 + e A RraJ SJeeper-Nirc 2 Br, 968-2&\S BLUF~-."i -Bayvirw 4 Br 21 .. ,.,, iv/ 1nd1recl lightuig • !IOI So. !larbor. S.A, S'lJ0-1.0VELY 3 + FA.\1. 1 Huntington Beach B11, ran1 111·,-a, {'u~tori~ lleluxt> RIO. A~~tlts. No pets. Apt. Unfurn. 365 fC'atures. Pnvflr.y. Pool. Nr l BR.-$11 .1 furn. TUDDEN l"EES. I ;iliiilii;iii;iii;iii;;;;~~ Thl~ ofll'I' doubles youi· in· Housas Furnished 300 ('pts, dr?S, fned yd, "ncl vC'stmenl f}O\l'l'r. You ran sar. kids & pets. $16:i. begin your o111n vending General I ALA Rentals • 645-3900 bus1nrss with f"•ice the);;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;; ! e SPACIOUS J Br. 2 1·ar gar, equip1nent. Thi111 1mro•m• ,"": *LEASE·RfNJALS* stove. C'pls, drps, kid~ & t.wic~ the profits "" pet~. $180. very beginning. ALA Rental• • 645-3900 J BR ? B h :-.chi S39.i. :-i:i&-5297 0 r UTILITIES INCLUDED G __ •_n_._,._1 _____ _ · -a. ouse, l nii. &l.i--027.l. ::Ii 1 \V , \Vil.son EH2-1971 fron1 heach. lmmar. Dra!>f's Ju1t for Single Adults & tat'Pt'g. lhruout, bltn ... , *BLOCK TO BEACH *$35 WEEK & UP* SOUTH BAY CLUB pall('lerl li11, rm., Jrplc. EXECUTIVE 2 + 1''am rm, 2 Studio & l BR apt1. APARTMENTS 1'"rnced yd., <.'Uv'd. patio, ba. frplC', Ille sun deck, pa-SUNNY ACRES I Newport B•ach sprinklers, brick plantt>rs. ·' for <."OmplC'tt' information. CORONA D~L i\IAI'._, So. of 11·ri1r gi111ng ~lrf't'l adch·ess H11•y -Aug l;i-Sept 26 • 2 BR, 11v. crp:s, urp~, refri.i;. MOTEL 880 lrvinr. Allr. GLISfENTl"G 1ntcnor l1kr Li':C. gar 111/storage. l\'atrr l 2W U:>ase. 548-8.i32 . !f1vi11e and l61h1 and pll011t' numhrr !o: l~t. Ba. $l7j l\'k. lilP and r t x 1 u rr s. 3 Glou c t>~tl't. U . S , nr. ,~ 2376 Newpor1 Blvd. --__ _ nPw, _ Neiv t·arprt~. noor rxl. $285 mo. 19171 UNIQUE-2~. l B•. ~I. I bl" soulh of fa1r~TJunds I (714 ) '4.S-OS!O brr!tooms and tfrn. Sunny Bl'OOkhur~t &· Adan1s. CaJJ llC'ach, frplc. r-.·n. l 4 4 .-1~8-9i:U SF.Ll...-f{C'n!-1..cas". Nt'1v 2 Braunlully, 1'0mplP\f'ly r"" li\'!ni! rron1 11 llh llreplacr, 2 ~2&-'.:.167 aft. 6 pm. B<lysitll' Villa;.:!'. Adult~. tlO U b I' b B----.1-Br. 1 Ba. Applr Vall!'y. VrTKla ·Talker. Jnr. ---pets. Yl"ly only, SW! (21.1) n e 1eva le eaut1 ul I "ha .. <"l"P'' 1., ,1 ... . drtorated .l Bf'tlrn1, .1 Bath balh~. Yard frrK·rd. Oo11b!t' :;:PAP.KLI NG, J;unny \\<llk !11 VA! D JSE G .1 . • " • • llf' uiaprrif'~.1 1.)64 Rollin~ Road i\ 7:18-1161 or S"f' m;;r. , ' RE arur~ Apt.~. h1'1';1kfa,•I bar·. dshwhr, "l'lrb Bul'lingamf', CaliL ~llOln -ts1ory.2Cl"xJO'bonus1'001n, ~;;;b"·01 1n ~;1';; c~lf'~l:~ braeh and ;:hopp1n::. 3 San Cl-;mente Adult~_ no pl·~·\ flo1ici·s rli~pl f"&ing,., TV ,.;blt, 41 5-692_4660 ;::<1rdf'nt'J', Vatanl. lmn1ed. 1 hrlrm. blln~. Sf'clurlt'd p1nio, ___ rvf'J'yiihC'rr. ~trl'am & P•" h ,.,.,. S32'00 Avallablr iJT11nrdia!rly. !'\n ,~1 • '''"'"'"'''"~n "•a•y O 11, I II 1.. IR r. fl, was room11, - ----...... ~. ~· · '"" "' """ ..... , " " H USE for Lrasr Ocean 1urr a . •.i PQO rt. ·,111, rarflOl'IQ ., 11 . •• * THE PROOF IS ""Is pleaS<". $26j pt'f rnonth. ~!!''' !2'0 .. ,0 g?o ;9·01 v · s s 1 1 2 Bd ,. I ' .,, " 11 .~. nn pe ... C•·,11 "'.~·. 1.,1 · ·· · -" · '"'""" · · 1ew -lovely ~ 8C'rlroo1n. J · auna, ·Ks • rni, urn-.~!7j/nio 17141 242-'l~!! IN THE PUDDING*.) Be<lrn1, 3 Ba1h -'.!story, 2 1 ___ ,,_,_·'-' ____ iflRi·lou~f'. Va••ant. L.1ra:r anrl A• Blllhs: firf'place; Unfurn. from St13. SEE IT: · '' ' DJSTRIBUTORSM!PS ap-firf'p)aco:-s. Vacant, Jmmcd $11:-rN ICE 1 BR. (iofxJ Jo('. yai·(l, ~ai'agr Qu l{'I. 7 kids rlraf)l's aild <.:llt'pf't. In rs.· ~000 Parson~._6-12_-86_70_ --1 Balboa Peninsula po.i nted by lhe l('a{!C'r, NE\\I· occ. s::9J.OO. y t Ch"l !/ I "" . I PORT INTERNATIONAL, arr. Ir prt w" e. nk. $170/il·!O. 12~" ~1'nr;1rr ".lus11'c n~1gh~rhorld, 421 l RENT & RE LAX DI~'(. duplex :; BR 2 BA, yrly l'fln rxpect lucrative f'fll'n-;: Rcurn1, :! baths, .so. ol Hwy BEACON * 64S-Olll 1 ~1 ··~·R ___ C.fl_llr Abri~.' ·~11 _c1.~1•11'.~11"·1 $1~.l. WiPJ.\I l 13r. Jrg '" lsr. NC'w pa1n1. rlrps, lTJ1!3. ing~ 11hiJ,. 11·orking only 11 Cd.\\. S:!:J0.00. ' . ._ . ,. l-O!l 1'f'/ll 01· /,f' d Br., 2 BA. I _!~.(J/i~Call '2~-6;!,1-.l.iOO. 1a . .;h•fu!/y furn, Enl•l y.t)'d. All appl's. 8::S-4!H!'l. IPw ho ""r k r11· SUMMER RENTALS Sll.J·COZY 1 crt <utt.it: la111 rn1. Cp1~. drp~ ll!ll University Park Lndsc·p'd. Close In OCC. C d -~----1 un; ,.. l\"f'f' rr 1 int: Co11v1. 101•a11on. Trlr~r for (."<1lnf'i•a Ln. S:£~l !i'.17-SCl:o2. __ ........... l['l(tt ~;1 CaJn1110. ~~16·.-,70-t iii0ii'iioniiiiioiiiiii;oi;l;;i;M~•iii;'iiiiiiiiiiiil l AUTO:\IATIC ~IERCMAN-B ·eakcr!<> Dr Sleep.~ 6. $·100. sng-1 won1:in. --LEASE or ~air •I BR. ~·" BA -0 -ED''C L 1 B" --I DlSERS 11·i1h nationally 11crk.SllOO.mo.-Aug:. BEACON* 645-0111 EEAL;T .~hr nr lx:h-2 ha. hoinf', Llui\·rrsuy Park * n L • rg ••. erri- knoll'n ''PUDD I NG & 'l Bf'di·ni. J'~ Bitlh, J::ng!i~h hl111 . .;, 1 ·1·111 ~. 1lq1o,;, palio. 11.~111,. Xlnl cun<I. ~.l::....~7.1~' tr;J loc. pool, •'<ll'fl0r1. ,.- 1-'RU IT CUP" S1111C'k~. and s1ylt>. ~200 11·k. S700, nio-Aug, GOV"T RF.POSSF.SSJON, low s21:i. ~~2-:l!~I. %2-21'l1 I ---_ 11(llts/no pr1~. Sl .';j/1no. ~J60 ~~ i•oll"ctu1g thr n1on•')I bo...:r~. Ba~· Shores • 6 Bedim. Pri-rln. As.~un1r kiw in! lnan .,-. . --?, ---Houses Furn. or \\". Jlanu!ton. 6 •16 -~ I Ii 0 , ....,. H"'t~ \Vhat an ,.asy 1•·ay 10 n1ak,-''ale beach. s2:.oo. mo.-Aug, Easy q11alHy1n1:. R k r . 1 -1.~~'.orr-·;rr~t~'. N; ~,~i~:~ Unfur n . 310 .->1.">---0160. monPy! If you ar" rt•l1ablC', Au1tin-Smith Gorman f.12-424.l any!imp 1~~~~-·----ON TEN AC'RFS I ·-----Lt';1 «r s:;73'fmo. !J61:.i298. * ,, .. LO\ !-~LY '!. Hr apt:-;. JlPalrd havr a good car. and can and A11oci•te Realtors College P•rk RICHARD Ponl. Ch·~,. to ~hops. Fr"<)nt l & 2 BR. f'llrn. &: Unlurn. in1n1rd 1att'ly 1nvcs1 $l!OO.OO 644-7170 ;I;';';;";";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ESSLINGER S.· i-rar ofi-~!r prk g. Adults. f'ircplac:es I priv. patios. lo $2100.00. you may he ~ Br, drn ,t· nnnL t\f'IY f·pl .~-on ""lS. Sl:ill. Pools Tennis Contnt'J Blctst. I d ,,~-5001 Quail Cir, ... 900 o. l>" ec1e lo .10111 your sucC'r~s e OOLLHOUSE . Pl"rf for <irp~. NO PETS. ~ ~ 7 :: BR. 2 Ba. ainum · ·•• s:iZ:1 l'.111 Ponion;. Air. (' \1. ..:n:-a Lane, CdM 644-261J Itani. Dl\Jp u.~ a no!t' show-woman alone. Xlnt Joe. All Pnncr1nn fir -, ~Ii -~12 1 O, .~ Bft 1'1 IJa, lam rm · · ~~2:, Huntington B•ach -------I rt1acArlhur nr Cout Hwy) . ,,·,~.,-, ,,,,,, •• , ] RI' .,, b ' ,~-.,. You ''""l•I' Will!lf''' nr RUSJ:-VESS Dl''nl\ s p ... r ! ~ l I '!f!!!'f!i~ii!!~!i!!!i!i!!!!~ lllg .1nur .,_r .-.,' u11] pd. $\Li. \\kt.lay~ or 646-68:::1 n11r~ ur · ·• -~· a. iHll rm••·"'~' I ·11 ho ou ho11 · · R" 7 1 .. ~~n 2 t1ckr1~ 10 !hr 111ily rarr~ now orrr.rPd tn 1 THI': RE.S"f COST.S LESS ;iiu 11 " ,s 11' ) · ALA Rentals • 645-JfWVI 11·kr14I~. ) J '"· i;i bonus rin •· ,,,,;., II I ,_ I Soulhlond r1•rr.vnne. l,n a,< $ .. 6 11k. ''"''''''· ,,,1 ''' 1.,,.,,1,., ~nd na111r, ar i rr~~. an1 1 l BH 2 h<tlh~ ho11tL' rri..un , phont' nun1brr 10: Nt'11·port e Ji\1~'\ACULflTE·2 Br, fnrd I Corona del Mar I .~;1~; r111.11.".' .. s~2.i t;11furn Home & Garden Sr11lark \1011'1, 2'::01 Npl I bcan1 ceiling~. 1:ough-heiv~ D. ·b · Sh Bh'ci 6~&-74~;,, lnll'rnation11l 1;1r1 u11ng yd, Npl llg1 ~. 1\vaiJ Aug J. LUSK Marhor Virw lldli;, .. 1 HH. '!', h<1. f:in1 nn •. -.:)'.ti , ow --~~-·---r11nrling-, hi;:: pr1v11t~ patio, Co111pany Drrt. No. 2l1A $16j. 1 1 --.1 BB. Orn. :l'~ ba .. fan1d,v I 111 I).,. li~R. frplc, bean1~. p;1!10-.-,l :!BR-2 B1\T!!, d r l u)"r Br. 2 B11, an1 n n, . 4L1/n1n. :\700 Nr\\'porl B I v rl ·: ALA Rentals • 645-3900 Yr;•r l~•'. al'ail flu:: 1.l. n11 ... f1,1r11 i.0 • .lh Tn SJt>:, ANAHEIM i\rlult. U!1l pd. Slj.'i i n10. •·lubhousr. pool, V-blll!, ,.. Nf'11·po1·1 Bea ch:..C~9~, ---LOS AL TOS___ Gai'dPl\t'r incld. frl•\.-2Ss~. 1 BH. t ba. fa111. r11i. in CONVENTION Yrarl~·. Open llou~e. l87 E. 11 ·.~ unt!c'r .i20U al 387 \~'. . p 'd f 0 h ' ---Turtle r{ock ........ s::.JO CENTER 2li;! ..;1_ fi.12-S'.'i20. Bay S1 01hc1· 2 RR 's from Bl:.i"TY CROCKER ri • 0 wners •p Costa M•sa .Joly ~l}.fltii:.. 11 </ AVL nQw _ 1 &-,-,-B-R-,-.,-rn. sir,: •. flll adul1.~. no prt~. NEt:os NOW rr~poni;ible mt'n arid wom{'n lO sP1vic,. au1nmalt1! BETTY CROCKER P U D D l NG rnule:<;. CAn sr1111 pa1·1 or lull t1mr 7'·10 hou1·~ prr 1\·rrk. Cornpany " ~ 1 a h I 1 s II cs bus1nes.~ lv1· d1~tr1butors. Home -,-P-P_L_f.-------1--Pl""~t' L·all 61:./.:,ii7,.:, !''I.I ~11 Pool, rr(' i'm, s:d Jcx:alinn HAY il!l<:ADO\VS APT~. ran11!.v w11 11 1"enagci'l'> ok. ' · p1r llll{'rior 11 1t 1 nP1v II 11 I brl\\l'f"r1 9 1111d l p111 lo Nr. rh1lrlrrn or pP ts .. * Call 6·!&-007~ + 4 Bffiroom 2 bath. built in.~. 1·ar!Jf'!.•, nrw oor 1 r, ani t arlM!ling, <!rapes, least S2S:i nrw f1N!ur,.~ in ba.throoni~ cl;i1n1 .11011r t1c·kf'ts, l:-inr!h fil!i-.l.'<:.11. Costa Mt•• and kllt:hrn~ 1 hrdnJnni"' Countv 1oll-fr1•r 11un1hcr 1~ SHARP 2 BR-$l60 Jlf'r n10. Phone Long Beach 213 _ 429.9::;.:,1. and flrn. 2 brt!hroorn.•. Sun ~llO-l?llt1 f"URN. ~lrrt P<iol. ,\dHsi nn ------ny l11'1ng rnon1 11 i I h "SI:-lCE 19.tii" * • .. flrl'< !27:! ,\!;1p[e SL or FREE 11 f1rrpl:1tr. \1cs.:. t!,.I \Tar 1~1 \\'rstrrn Ba nk Rid~ Condomi'i7iiums tH2-9:-i:.>cJ. Landlords-Own•rs i\ 1 a 1 / ~ h I ,. 1111m,.rt1atrlv. C111\·r r..-11ll Park Unf_u_,_n_. _____ J_2_0 FCRN l Br. C-,,-,,-,-0-co-pc-,,-1 \re \\•ill re!C'r lcnant~ 1n }OU l2fi.·,_ pl'r n1onun, Call Oays 833-0101 Nights 1'-REE o[ charJ;!" .. ,:\lllllY :~i.-1-!lnl 1 =========== Irvin• ,\dull. l!lll p;iifl. Sl41/1no de~irable 1enan1s Oil our ----Yr.1rl.v. Ofl('ri flou.<r , JJ6 ~; ~ RI: & Orn. 1 R.1. 1tl>l ~:ir. • ·rc·RTLE ROCK * 1 Fnl~ lr~~r I n1' f'r~11.v rin·k 201h ='I G-11-X:J20. ORLEANS APTS. .\OULTS ONL r ~ ,t· ~ RR. A1·a1r. Pr1vatf: l'l3- J10, pool. 11Kl111. laundry la1·. I.\'• IJrfln~,. Co. Airpnr1; Tu~. tin a• Ji1h SI, rw, \\"r s1c!1 tr1. 11 aitm1: I 1st, (in r1,.h1n~ nr ~Pf·nd 1no1"t' ALA R•ntals e 645-3900 ftic«I. rh~pn•al. rlc1· 1k1111· ~Br.. 2 P.a .......... $:;.".o 'fn11n11"· ': 111~ 2 r:r\ 1.1kr ! lli . 1111111,., ~J ... ,. h!tn". llmC' l'ilh )r>U1 f;>.1 01"11r hob-·~==== "Jll'""r. 2.~91 ('n!IP::-r !11 t U'. !l'> •. ll.'IT\. P"'f,· • n1"1 .~::~-!fill. I'\ 2111 1la.v.~. 1i11 T11~1111, Cn~1;i l\Tr ..... l\!gr. ,\I!·~ TI1on1p,;on tH2-4f · i 'oc ·" 1··~0,r 1 1 ·' "" '!ri><·il ;::ru .11:" ~1:-.r1 1" o". 11rlfl lrl ll1r m<1rh1nr ;io;:r r~' "r ,-, ' ' IJ\U1'lf'll• .v l'lf1:1 0111 L~• ~;;;;...~!ii~ ilh 6 ~fill '"· ' !'"' ):.",.':-(121:1 r1•·"'· Boh • f '.l BR h ·• . • '"'· l!!l~r ..... _ ·''' <1·<po11~1h[f' ;irlull. J"'n fl"I~ r~111 \l•<I mnney. Cash re· ~ur~~ · 0 1'1"',,-11111",r nn _1'_111 __________ , ; Bl~. ~· · tm !nh~r •.•. S.".110 To···nhouse Unfu,-n, J3-S l~f'f'.~. f1ll>-1'?11 '''''' -d ll,107. .• ~lnl'~! A1·;i fl •e ''''" <ll" - ---' * 2 RI~ {;11r P;111n. C'q11<., ;: An. 2'~ h:i. 1nli~r .... S~J;, n1oolh. 4!ll-lfl1'9 fll' r1,. j C M ;-;-r:. OCC, s p;i,·1nn• HJ: * * * l .l/.111'1':D OPPOP.Tll:'\IT\' , 1 di'J''. •1n1r, 1'rl!1J!, Qn1rl .: llf{. 2 h.t ............ t :l.1 osta esa 1 ~<J,...3 .".G 1 1 • 1 , 1 1 .. ~-1 ------,------1~11 n!liy !i<'•l, garagr. ~!::(/ LIKE LIVING IN t1np11'.~) ~1·111ri:.: "" ;ul11 !.<: • 'FL. >a ..•.•.•.... . ..•. 1 Lido Isle \\'11lt nrr11' ror• 1ll(•1" in-1----------- lormnllull. f 'll(lrhn~ rl1111,1nn l\'ATERFRO?':T 4 fir_ 2~·1 1\1 P.O. Bo;1 :;J?.J, 'l'o1,-;1ritr, V1;., Lido Nord. C;ill !'.!13J Ca . ~i lO. <_;11·t !r lrphonC' 9.~4--0920 or (Zl:;J 210-4.i-17. n111nbrr. Houns Unfurn. JOS ............ !!!!!!'" ......... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!I -Gen•r•1 • • • MRS. RICHARD BERG 320 S,anta Ana Newport B•ach \"oo a1-e the 1.,.inncr of :l Ul'Jl:ct~ 10 the Southland Hom• & Gard•n Show 111 thr ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER July :ID-Aug. ~ Pl"ll~ ralJ 642·Mi18, 4'.X!. 314 tH>1w('('n !I 11/ld t pm to c·la11n your ticket~. !North Count}' 1011-{rre numbrr 1~ ~.,.16-t2'20 I * * * TO BUY OR SELL A BUSINESS HOLLAND BUS. SALES ''1'ht: Broker with Emp111hy'' 1716 Orange Avro., C.i\1. &15-4170: 540·0608 enytlme \Ve nt:cd •al~• peoplt: FREE Rt'nl11t Srrv1rr. ~ l.· 4 t-i.>rlroon1 homr~. ch1ldrf'n I.· pt>1~ OK . $19:1 11nd •lfl, Broker. 7682 Edingl!r, llun- 11ngton Beach. Daily Pilot W&Nt Ads b11.11:a1ns galott. "'lh 1 hi~ tri "''"fl-~. \\f:-O l RH l'J hn ~;::i0 l.OVJ-~LY 2 .,1.1 Tci1111!11,,1.<:r, 4 Ph-~·lf>-!llS7 YOUR OWN HOME .•• ' . I",,.. i) d h I Hf; 2 r,,, Ul 1\lonl lf'rlln. lnR, ;idul!.•-.-f\(1--;::,,::.. 6!l1 :l Br , 1•. [I;. lill(lll'n. c,,_,_ V·, ... '.',·,·,l·l"c·,·.",.:',,',"· ,"·· i-,,,i,.·.,," :.i. -.. -_. re1. I . ;.;1\IH1 ~ P"nl .t· ~'llJt)!111u~r V1r•1,q·1.1, t fl.•\a .\J ~$a rl1 fl<, <"n•:J. p;;r10 p1·11·o1 S:!.~Jlrno. c :i 1 l ;,.\S-{iL~~ WILSON GARDENS h(IJllf' 111 \l,-,:, drl .\la!' 11>1" •n'• .,...,,,, ,,, .. ,.-~~,~·. Vf.'.ll\.-,.-,,., 1-.-,. rlpl,·. Q-,,,,, Aph Ira~,. l··an11l1r~ on I 1 - .. ~-r.r~.\LTY Duplexes Unfurn. JSO Srp !1y s:ara::r". Ar!ult11: O\C'r Ph. 6 12-&ill arr ·1 pm. Po~.<rssain Ant:. 1 ·•-<->/.\lo L111v. Park Ct'111rr. l1•1·•ne Call 11£rnt. ;,~6--41 ·11. ::0. no Jl('I.!' . .'HS-1021 . I . _ _ __ _ _ _ _ C:ill .\n}tnnr s:;:l-(J,'2'1 Costa Me1a -.-•F.:'\lTIA 1--1 h:-1-_-Park-Lil..• Surrounding ;, BR nr 0 C.C. & !-irar«. ·· I!" 1 UJ n. I QUIET lJELUXE :v>n1r h'f'" rrnt fnr rl11111~ Bl \1 'T ·: nr ,, Bl\ 7!11 .JOl\1'.'N ..;1 1 Bil, 1 BA. S1 3:1 n10. 'J88 ,\ll.•.<1011 01• or 1 2 1• B ' I •· I hltn~. ('fp1<, 1l rn~, nn ,nr & 61G-Sl~'l · & ' R APTS pa1ntin1: . yfln wnr,; 1·e11. I '"" nhou~". f'!l grrPllbr ! ,. I' ... rrv pac1os * Hid Pool1 t)il-17.ll l lnr ll1lflllllll111rnl. t.1Plwn :! p.wil.~ Tr1Jn1.<, l;iu111:lrv l"m. Patin. S!iO t'llllN, '} Bl' apt. Ul1l1!1c~ N !)!S-i72!'l r s!iop'g + Adults onJy i-:-A-0 R :O.!--U n f u r ~ school~. S.l7i 1~~1 Sa.ndburg ri:iid :\!60 f>Pr 11111. 2277-B M \\'f_i:-ara~,. l;ood Jnr. \\'at"rl4 BR, 2·~ ba on pvt park NE\\"l,Y 1lrcor. I BR frplc. r.11111Jf' Sr. .)'IS-.1~1 ::. artiniqu~ Apts. I X.· RA•Ylf'nrr furn. $1,10. Rny w/pool &· 1£'nnis privileges, Br11n1 rt'il. ITPI~. bltn~. l J::AST-~idl'-\-br-ganlrn apl 1i17 SantA Ana A11", C~t :'llC'C11l'dlr fu>11ltor. 51S-i720. $3i:i. 83l-~9j. Arlu!t. Patio. S\·14. Yearly. $13:-,, Quit!, m&IUl'f' ilrllllt.•. :!;::~pl 113 fi.16-5.j.!2 • UlkA: sur. u ih OCT.21 ~~ +1.~ ... 7• ¢ ""'' .. ~~Ai t:. 'lOth SL •i42--ll5'2fl. Refs. 54!t-8007. LARGE 2 BR. 2 BA, Newport Beach Huntington Be•ch APT. UJ>STAIH.S -;;;;;;;;;,;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I OllLDREN' IVE:LCO;<.fE t'O R Rcn1, nr1• rluplf'.<t Apt. • , All f'leclnc Golfl 1\Jcdallion nr Rirhanl'.!' rnkt &· brli. La Quinta Hennosa kllt'h. l'rf'frr n111turl' w n r k ing 2466 Santi Ane Av•. 11oman. S11j mo. 673-ID\9 I "2 1131 iili~~~~~~~~~I Spanish Country Es tale Liv--• Afternoon r )/9) ~~.~ ,;,::1'.'~~:,~r;;; ~;'Q :~~,";':~~~'~::"'~,~~;'~ t Apartm.nt1f9rRe111 Unheliev11blE" Living -Onl}' ,\lfi:-i/111n. 64j -41J.17 ni: l ~;;;;;;;;;;;;iliiiii!i.;·~~i!J 1 Br unf $150-furn $175 :118--03:2'1 . 2 Br unf $175 furn $210 l ~cOr.ATED. Irie 2 ;.:- Apt1. Furn. 360 All.. UTIL INCLUDED I new '''' d bl• 1 1 • -----------IS 1 Bo ·· 11~. n' r11<1 fll'C nl nu!, • 81Jver· 01,· I I"" -= C'l 'u G n I · ....,, 1"" • .,,1a 1m11r· -_,_._,_•--------! plal("(\ candle snuffer Is 1 li-12-731.J. yours ll you brini th is itd ---_ R<'nl lkauliful 1''urn1tw't ivhf'n you visit our modt>ls. 2 Brdroom, 2 balh, 11cro~~ lh• Jor ·~ lltrlt as ' blq S, of San Diego f'f'll')' ~tfl'l't rmni flArk. R'ftflil:"' ONE MONTH on Bt>11ch l blk W. on lfoH Ru llt in.~. 11 : • .-, fl"r mo to 16211' Par Kskie Lane. :l.i7-.".0RI 1\lr D<> .\Tar compl•t• with r7I4J 11•7.;,ui SHARP l BR-$1]S- M~rn k1tchrns 11,·11h hi11-1 n RIO, d1Sh\\llShl'rK &-l1ih1rd ttlllnp . 2, 3 &· • N'<hoom~. 2 A 2'Ai bathr;, :Z r.ii.r g11ra~f'I'. Btautitulb' kt'pl fl't!Und11 I poob. ~-~----1 LIGHT R••I E•t•t• Wanted 114 Ac1ive PARTNER t.lANUFACTURJNG \\'It h $9500 C•1h your 1ocr;. Purchas• Option Ind, llem sete<>11Qn. 14 Hour D•ly. -f Bl 1n,, hid j)u(>I. Art1t~ I'll'! FRf';E u11l. rum 1 BR apr Nr I pc1~. 1 ~ E. Ba~· li 12-9.:,20 llf'll.l'h, pool. Slli up. Call -------_ • .,0 ,.77 .,_ ~i .,,!"" 1 LOVtLY 2 hr. 1'3 ~ 1111,110 I FROM S2ti.:-OO Call 41'3---1124, Rraltor "QUICK CASH· THROUGH A WANT AD DAILY 1'1.LOT ----- PVT. Pt) ~ hr hotL~. pml. hui;:r }l'rd. QUlt't ill. ~hnr1 '1r1\e !o bl·h. (213) ~1-4:11 ~. rvr:--r·-•. -"--:",_.--h-.. -""-,,-,,-, J)OOI. hu;,:,. )'Rl'd, fllllPI ,_1 :-.tthN't rtr11't In hrh. (2131 6'.'11-1~1:': • Unu~ual ~971. OJtportun ity * Liquor Lie. Orange On Sale $17,750 (rood .,r l'"C'k111.1hi \\11"5100. C:11llf'I'! 21.lf172·4:M!I Tiff"" un11.~~rf lll'm1 Info quick r11.•h. c1JJ 642--567R • CUSTOM Furniture R•ntal a11 \V. 19th, c.~1. ~1.rt .. 11!l1 Annht'illl ii4·2."«'(I l..11Jl11br• 6!lol·3'10S ~ .. 11 \rllr 1!rrn~ nnw, Cst II 612-Y.i~ No11 • .~-..-. 1 i • _,.,.,..("' ;i....,.. ·""'· ' I I ' I-------·----"! u t~, nn prt.•. P1•t p~1\n. TIME FOR J'""ll. 1:~, \\ IRth ;.;1 . ,ll.;1 QUICK CASH ,.n B.ICHF:l.Olt 11 rrrn;::. i1,-, THROUGH A 111<1 u1H. A1l111t fr!:; \'11Jr1 I DAILY PILOT rt~ nr Baker. ,,f,.ndo1 .. WANT ,. n llOU:-O:E-J.funllni~ \\111tr)\ th" _ !1P~:-.. llOtTSr: ml111nn ·~ ---.. -• •• .. .:; /r> · . • • • r.1Qfldo. Juli 19, 1971 DAILY PILOT [ -"'-l ~ [ Aoo11~ou1w•~1 ll!J [ ---1~ .:;;[ "";m;t-•-•fwR .. ~J ~;m;·,\;;;-1 ;;;-';;"'-,..._..,;;;;1~~1 :1~-~'~;;;;· 1 ...,.,_ l[S]l ---l~ --- Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. S&S A(Jt. Unfurn. 365 Aptt., Ritnt•ls to Sh•re G Aut• tr•napoirtatN!ft l1S found {frH edt) 550 B•byalttlnt G•rdenlng c::ott':"'.':-•-:Mc:-•1-.-----Fur n. or Unfurn. 370 Cott• M.sa Newport h•th ---------1:.lj: yr. old .•trai&ht worklnf CARPool-tiwpt~nLA POUND-A pair of .. . . * LANDSCAPING * New lawns. 1prinkle~ ..,.... bon, paDOI, fenots, watt.. Lic'd contr. ~r o..ti"•· ll Y-n Joe exp. 5a6-172S DELUXE APARTMENTS NOW .AVAILABLl: Air Cond • frp!c'" -l Swim~ ming Pool1 • Health Spa • Tennill Cna • G11.me & Bti· )W'd RDom. l Ar 2 BEDRdoM f'ROM $140 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2·!00 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. (7141 5.l7-8020 R.l::NTAL O~'F/CE OPt:~ 10 A:\-! TO I> P\1 FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. 2 & J BR's Private patio, pool • lndiv. laundry f.ac. Near Orange Co, Airport &: UCL AdulL .. only, 2012'l Santa Ana A1•e. Mgr, liirs. Joachim, Apt l-A a46~21S • PARK your r11r & walk; nr cce•n. nr shop'J!:. Nrw Apls 2 Br, 2 811, hcain 1·r1J. ;\1any x ra.~. 3.)0-A M~rguer11e. 675-187l 01' 548-791\t .SHAD Y GARDENS-.-P-0_0_1. 1 & 2 BR.. furn & 1111/llni. From $130, NA SSAU PAL"1S !77 E. 22nd S!. f\·12-,1&1:, ---$130. COOL up fr1 rf'(!rc 2 13~ w-w new rlrrs. Bl!ns, drsn: gar nr shops & OCC. Prrm arllt5, no pe!s. :'i-18-005~. BEAUTf}'UI. 2 Br 1'-, Ba Studio, new crpls '&. painr. Drps, blrns, c Arport. $180/mo. No pe1 s~I rhild ok. 9'J8 El C11m1no, .'H&-0451. * Spanish Elegance Quiet Adult Living Sha.a: cpr • drps • bltns Beauutw POOl • All UU! Pd 2 BR. $170 Adults only-no pel!'ll 241 Avocarto SL 646--0979 NEWLY DECORATED Cha.rm1ni.:-1 Br duplex. Nf'w Cl'pls, drpg &: pa1n1 . Lovrl)· 1i;,rk !1ke surmund1ng:s, Quir·r. n1ature adults only. Sl30. ~8-69'.!Q, ----- • QUIETI I • 2 Br. rlrps. nrw crpfg. Bakf'r /. l!arbor shop'£, Lockf'tl 11:ar. Ar1ulcs. no pe~. Sl·i5 n10. 61:....351:> or 614-077)3. HARBOR GREENS GARDEN tr; STUDIO AM'S Bilch. 1, 2, 3 BR's. from $110. 2700 Peterson \\-'ay, C.l\f. 5-i&-0370 MARINER SQUARE APARTMENTS 2 & 3 BR Unlis now a'>'&1table for adull.5 dt'lill'ing tu IL~e admidst beaury by U\J' ~('a 1n 1he presua-100~ V.•estcllll lf('8. FROM $230 ~lr Ruckley, M1na,gtr 124~ lrv1~ Av., N.B. Call 64:HJ2i:.l PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS Bachelor, 1 or 2 Bedroom~. <inrt Townhouses. Spa, pools, tennis. }'rom $17j. Across !rom rashion Island 11.1 Jam· horPf' & Slln Jna11u1n lhlls Roans. !TI4 l 644-l!KXI. ~--------~--A New Way To l ive in Newport Beach OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS ' On 16th su·rr1 b11, n lrv1nr and DoYrr Dr, (714) 642-8170 Huntington Beach 1 1rl , &eddn( tN: 1&rM WI ... a.1 ~ hn. • ,7· I th Id ,,_..,... IW'IUllll'r our-mon "'O cats, 11. ~~nt 3 MBt. un~ P~U lf1 am-4.:JO: wfntu, 7 am' -Ii hll1C'k male &. 1. il"I')' Parklike ~~en Llv1na: ~-.. e&a. •1;1 11• pm ,ey or a.I! days. fem&le, in vicinlly of lot Adulu "'"' ~-"' Jas111!ne A~'!'nue rorrh ol Casa Del Sol Office R.,.t•I 440 i1tL drive )'OUr car bai;:k C'rni~• H"'Y-Nf'f'd not proYe l. 2 BR-furn/uni. Pvt pa· 4!&11! ~ July 23r d. po&!e.SSIOll. Phone 644-T.iOI. tio, trp.lc In 2 BR, elevaron., MODERN, OFPICES Preferably to SV&nnah, Ga. S\\-'EET. bJmd grey kitten d&hwshrt. erpts, drps. ~ls * COSTA MESA * or Detroit, Mlcti. MZ-fi774. found vie W1.rntr &: Ralt1. Act'f'Plrd. Fron1 $14[j. 175 & lllO Person.is •30 S.A. v.ill bf' destroyed I! no1 2l&il Brookhurst St, 1-m. · per mo., So. C&lll. • C11.lm...d. 494-9930 cl A y g: * 1714• 962-66;.3 * Firat N&.lionaJ Bank Bid&"., STATES RJGH TS•""" ~:')...M47,.vr.~. CALVIN PRESTON 721 Weit ltth Costa Mt•• \'ou are the winnrr o! 2 tickets to the Southland Home & Garden Show at ·lhe ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER -;:;;:;;:,R,;-;;:;;;---· 1 0230;;:,;;E.:.:3:'.:lt~b~Se;• .. _:C:::.M;·~"'-~.1~'8~5 s p E E D w A v r ,;c· L. t:. I "'-=~---c~---cc-1 Newport Stach ~ ~ • L BLACK ma.le mui. poodlt. ----------·I DESK space 1va.llable S50 RACER SONNY · JllUITER Strawberry hlonrl ni A!'- VISTA DEL MESA mo. WUI provide furnltu~ RIDES FOR THE GR!'jAT Cock·a-Poo. Vir E.~tancia. Hi July 30-Aug. g AL'S GARDENING for nrdenln&; .Ii • m a 11 lan&capill£ MI"VJon. c.a.ll 540--5198. Servin& Newport, CdM, o.ta M..._ DoNr Shores, Westclltt. Profe1sional G&J'dfner Tree \\llrk. pru n Jns , 6Pflnklen, dean up jobs, landscaplnl(. G~ 6-16-5!!9J. at $5 mo. Answering service REAR RACING TE AM i;chool 11.n"ll, "12-9789 alter Plra~ call 642·:-.678, ex1. 314 available. m l'ol'P!'lll Ave, WAS STATED RIGHT BY 5 MR-8344 before s. helWttn 9 •nri 1 pm 10 1°"Ecxc,.c,c.-Jc,-,.-.-,,.-~-~Gc"""'--,-.,..-·I Laguna &11.ch. 494-9466 THE PUBLTC ADDRESS FOUND_ Tiger 5frlpt'rl kit· claim your tickets. 1Nor1ll Compll'te yrl 5erVICe. Neat Apartments 1 Ir1 BH .. rum.·"" {T11f. Di:ili- \\'Allhf'r • S1nvl': 11nd RrfTiJ!: · Shag rrf11'~-Lriz Re~ crnter. flE'.'\T ~tan s s1;,;, Tustin & Mesa Oriv• * 5•5-4855 * e NICE .- The ninst hcauulul vi ew ol the hay k OC('an in lhe llahor 11rea. 2 RR. 2 BA LUXURY OFFICE SUITE ANNOUNCF.R AT THE Coon1y toll lrtt number is &-Rel1,11. t°ref' est. 642-4389 <· n R ... NG" CO U '"rt on Pomona, C, :-.t . "-IO-I~. 1 · rtn('sl Vll'W of harhor ,t· " r. NTY fi·lfi-?l17, ,,. • ..., EXP. Japane!le-American l)('('l'l.n 10 Newport \'try 111. F'AIRGROUNDS LAST * *" * G ~ C I •M••;•• Lo.I SSS aiuef'lC'r. omp. , ............ ,. tracll\'I' rrntal on ~ub-lease. fRIDAY NIGHT JN COSTA -----------·!BABYSIT my hOme. !'lie~ /,_ c-lf'an-up. 893-()150. Wl''l'f' sruck! 67;io74•10 !\ll::SA. SIGNED, HARRY -n l ~1 D"•.K-,-,,., •••il•bl• •= OXLf:\'. PROMOTl::R. Rl::\\'ARD tnr rtturn of ~y e . III", Babies welrome DICK'S GARDENING ~ , ---~ 1 .\tornrola 2-\\ay r1'lrl10 , or 1nfo Xln'r play f1'1Cil, hn! tuncht'~. ft('Slden11at-Commercial mo. Will provide furniture RennwnM Hmd~SpU'HUal1st ff' stAtus or "'herabnul~. Crrt. teacher, refs. 549--0726. Oean-Ups, Ph. 642-0473 at $5 mo. ArtSwering service Advice oo 11ll ulu tlers. J.os1 abt 6/10/il, vie Li<lo BABYSITTING my homf' CUSTOi\-f l lD available. 171175 .Be1.eh Blvrl. LoYe. Marriage, Bu:rtne~ Stupyllrd. Conlar:!, David lrg lncd yd hot meals day. 1 awn se 1 rvice;~ ,.. 0 RPI.~. for IPa.~. &12-2202 Huntington &l'"h. 642-4321 Rearlini.:s given 7 rtay>, C 11 • • yrs ei.:per. Avg a"'" .,,.,...,.,., Croshy. rfro Alan D. rn • « n1le. 641-:-5299. · kl &1'7Zl' 317 =g Santa Ana PROJ•ESSIONAL Bldg. 45c \\'f'f'k, lD a.m. 1(110 p.m. 21~ 213-loo:l NO QUf::S-wee y. <>-.:>, -...,., • * BRANO NEW* HJ I!. A1r-rond, crpts, rlrps, 312 :-< El Cam100 Re11.I , TIONS ASKED,' BABYSITIJNG 24 hrs. all Complete Gardeninj" $1 :~;. 1 BR . F111lc, tnd<l!'lr/nuf VILLA MARSEILLES •<I parkin,. Xlnl Joe ~~ E San Clemcorr --~~----~-~• 81o:f'~. B111: •"-fenced back Service "GABLES" & "SEVELL~_:" "' .,,, GREY I l 4 ' d 642 l'.f.l'' kllt'hcn. hralNl pool. 1 Arm~~ BRAND NEW J7th St. C.l\f. PE:'rt; BAR-4!l2-91."ffi, 492-0070 <'Ola e ""''.· nin s .. var · ~-Frtt Estimates 673-1168 2 BR, 1'~ BA wli.:ar. Arl1.1l 1~. frnm ~A. Cnuniry Cli1h1. SPACIOUS REIT RLTY fi42-435.1 EXPER:JENCF;n Cle11r nf'a ('Ol,1r. Vlf' ! JCFNSED DAY CARE-A Crtr~. i1qis, h11-1n~. fenrrd S.:-e 111 204~~ S<1 rira An~ """· 11 Church SI, Cl\1. 6-1~JZ!M afl J 10·10. ges E XPERTENCF.D Japanea:e )<I 11 /n~rio. ''' '120. & 2 Bdrm. Apts. DESK space av11il11b!e $50 -nu~r-~1 1trrs avail Gardf'ner M11.inteon&nce l:. •·" u.><•__, or rail 557-0211. p :.. 6·16-li1' ' ' · 24.17 Oranf' No. c $1 :i:i l o===~=~=~~~ <Adult Living mo. Will provide furnllun: rorrrl your hon1e t.· prop. rlcan llfl. 537---AA74. :!t>lfl S11n!a Ana Avr Nn. l s1:.:i DEl,.Uxfl: 3 RI n. 2 B'A ~·,;'"' Furn. & Unfurn. at $!"5 "',,o. A.'1~~crinNi: serv1E."1 c, .. ,r1~n~. lo~al r,","5 I~~~l N~1~rtm~~~~~ ;;~: BABYSITTING 24 hr~. LAND s CAPING-Pruning- A fl~. 1rrr. c·rris, .. rri~. Dlshwasher.colorcoordinat • .ava a e . ..,,,,> o, • or nnar,, on,; Your home or rny home Clean-tip. Sp r lnklo!r s NICE * <!ishw<hr. Nr HClai.;. Hosp. C~mlno R 41 aJ , S an ~-.l!!-."161.1 "JR('kie'' Scar on nosf', "-'hi mark on • 646-00jJ * 2 Br, crp1~. drns, OOltony, l 'J"nl,I• •d"li• &I' '3S7 A• ed appliances • plush shag Clemente -49~-4420 PR G s1rle. Reward 67.')..5934. repaired. rree est. 557-0070. * ,. -·"' '" u .,, ,._, '" carpet • choice o! 2 color ' ~ E NANT? Adopt 10 n, 8u11'ne•s Se,v1'co locker! i.:ar. Nr hu.~ & rh<>· 64' 1771 OR Japa~se Glll'derier --· 9Chemes • 2 baths • 5 taJI * NEWP T BEACH * 11.horl.ion. \'as"(' lo my Ex 'd alJ'f', Arllt~. no fll'ls. Ava.ti • OCEANFRONT ~ Dix 2 sho"'·en • mirrored ward-Across from Civic Crnter. , rounsrl1ng & 1n!ormation. I i[J•j TYPESE11"1NG 40c inch Cle~p.'P°f.nar:n:~ -.oo_•_·_. _IRl4E.l~G°'E"·N&Cl.l-y3.iJ;l • Rr. 2 R11, hl1n~. ~unrlr1•k, robe door! • indirect Jlght· A,r-Crpl'g-Prk'g. JOO to 642-4436. . ln1truction I.B.~1 . <"-Omposer. Se t, , P 1 I " b b "" lflOO ·" II '~ ~ijiijiijiijiiiijiiijiiijjj~iii;I p-f•d, ---1·". f'••I, I:XPER. Hawaiian Gardener P!lr ii:ar, on rn1n~u A. og In Aolc en • reiUl..laSI ·'·1• • "'"---· ALCOHOLICS Anonymoo., '""' ""''"·"" ""' 11\LV.AC. 2 AR. l B11. Shag rrf1!'~. sell rlcan. gas ovr11. rlshwhr, encl gar pauo. 377 \\', Wilson. Ca!\ 54!!-~li05 East Bluff I b · D-Dff • 61"-2 accura1e llt'rvi"e. ArlYerti~-Complete Gl!.rdenl"I Ser· S~t>.> 010. yrar }. A\'all no" ar • huge pI"lvaie fenced '"' ,,....,""" Phone 542-7217 or \\Tite ..._ ;,--"·I ~,,_ · S hools & init Ar1111ts. 67l-9181 NB. vice, Kamalani, 6464676 !'.'.:'. .... ~.~.' no Pf'L v•.>-'~:_I patio • plush 111.ndscaping • 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, Ci\1 P.O. Box 1223 Cost& Mf'sa. C LRG. 2 RR, 2 BA. Cpl I. 1 brick Bar-B-Q's. large heat-I J.'rom 300 !Q/fl. l)c ~q. n. JAXON rhe r.ta11:ician _ 11 instructions 575 Carpet Service C0~1PLETE lawn&: iard~- tirps. Bllns. 11 hlk hAy, l ed pools & lanai. 675-2464 or 541-50.1'2 MACRAME ing service. _,1 h 230 ~~21'20 3101 So. Bristol St. ho1tr of mtJ:H: for childrens JOHN'S Carpet k Upholstery J im 548-0105 "' lk <>cf'an. S · . I .... . I'' M1 N f So ~. P '·"I e XLNT OFFICE SPACE plll'Oes $7i. 49+-3669. &~1nrum:-11.nd inter. 2 hr. Cleaners Extra DM LA"' . I 3 BR/' B' hll _ _. 1:-,, 1. • o . \..V<ISI .....-now 11.vail. Lido Rlrti;:. 335.l 1 • • nN" Ma1nt. Hau ing, new , ns, .SU•A•!"<'": Santa Ana l\1ASSAGE II. relaxing ,.x. rlass, Tur.~. ,.vn. small f"f' St>ampoo free Scotchguan:l lawns clean-up pruninf .srPps In hP.ach ~r ha_~· ~u,, PHONE: 557-8200 /1a Lido. N.B. 67l-4501. perienct 16.11i.'i 0 Bolsa Studio in G.G. IH'l'i\. Phonr I Soi I R e t It rd ants). FJ"!'e ~st. call ~6....7379. , 2 BR, Quiel , i.:ara.:.:r, ford NEWPORT BEACH mo. \'f'arlr . R:rf ~. ht,....l!!1R. GROUND llnfir tX<'CUllve ol· Chica Rd, H.B. S.16-~::?72. fnr d"tails • 5.19-8562 or D"greasers & all color . N U . . yard, 11;Hcr /)A id. Jnla1l! Villa Granada Apts. BArr"RO~T-.\rTS-2~.1-br. I --fief' spa.er for J't'n1 -Coast C'OJ\IPETE WITH THE 5.-m-io~7. hnghteners & 10 minute CLEAi P S_pe et a 11 1 t ' OK. v.·11.!k Harbor Sh11i.:: Four bedrooms \\'ilh balcon. rrpl~. rtrapc"s I.· rrf. $2!!0. & H"'}' in N.B. fi.16-!1647. 1 111ASSAG ~: PARLORS. PIANO LESSON S bleach for \\'bile carpets. 1auling. od~s·~;nce Cntr, 3"8 ''B" Avocado SI, ie~ above & !telow, Cr-aciou11 up 111;1. 64f;....()7:\2. Rerili ls Business R•ntal 44l J'LJ. TEACJf YOU 646-00:'il. Bl>ginnrrs lrar11 h 11 ~ i c ~: Save your money by saving ' repair. all. • ~~:-io~. living & quiet 11WT011nding Sa.lCtemente 1 theory. sigh1-rrarl10;:. r1 r. me extra trips. \Vin ..:ledn General Services N!:\VLY DECORATED tot Jamil~, \\•ith t•hildrf'n. ATTRAC ~lore !· 0!11re Call Bt uee ;i.\fH-178 lifter 6 living rn1 dinini;:-rm &. hall 2 BR 11 Ji;:ar. $1.'lO. V.'Ali'r Near Corona del t.1ar Hii;h Rooms JOO .~parr5 S.'iO f.t up. Dwn1wn I laJ p.n1. $15, Any rm $7.SO, oourh TI-llNGSbyMoost-Lt.elttt., pd. 1:167 Or'llngf' Avr !A• Schoo!. F"ireplace, we: bar t ~-nn L!·:A:"E ~ RH APT s11 n . Juan Can1stl'allo, nr Loit and Found Pre-School Swini Lessons SID, chair $5. 15 yrs. exp. ls plumb, fence. tile .... Jru;Uns. Call hlll•n 1 & '"·'· 6:lfi...•ll"' bu1Jt.\n klrctirn appl111ncrs. N".\t in hf'llC"h .• ~l iO mo. "L"AU'l'l''UI 1,,h ... '~hi~·'· 1n1s~1on. 493-11.i:i. '---------' w ! SCA A "'ha! coun!g, not method. T Carpentry paint etc. "' "5 AMIGOS WAY &I' -g1 * 4!12-4'1'2~ * 0 '' r • '~. • ·~ ~ ----2 ks l!"i .. ' -. . d k 11 c~ f ~·· "0"" AVA!L7126:-fllra.~;inr-J\1('~ "" '. -.-~:i t -In Orr;in, s~;, ~\'k & up. z:.iOQ STORE-18'i.:40'-A-I II)!· 1117~ e 4!12-731!7 e 0 \\'Or myse ''""""'re ·1.,'"-'-·~·•cw_. ________ I Verde 2 BR, 2 ha. Cpts. Colo_weU, Banker &r Co. 2 BR, Avenida Rosa 1 :->ravir•i, CD.\1. ! Hai•hor, :'.llr-<.:". Sl~n. · ,..100 . Found (fret ads) SSO 531-0101. Hauling dcp•, Bins, 1"2 c,., .. ,, r-.fanaging Agent 5-ll-S2Z1 Sa1· Clrrnr111 r-4f>2-:'>-1 l.l 11. P''ll-.-.. ---.---1,-0 !sf'. Qu in1~·d 642-29!1 1, PLEAS•· 1 · ,. [5l Diamond Carpet Cleaning ----------·I ~ • • H . B L ----.1 "' 11. \IP "fk11 ,, ~ ,,~ ca1m. ound last I I YARD 1 Dr. unflngton eacn 1 Santa Ana l\C'tk ur. ap1~. :-.lOTEL * 5HO\VROOM mfi.:. & office W«"'k 1n May. Wagetty tail S«vklland~ Avs;: ~ize room $8 R ' i~ge, ceanup!'ll. I 1 Rcpairini & in.staUalJons e~e "'"'e5, dirt. lvy, 3 BR, 2 Ba, cle!tJXf', Bhn~. KIDS ii•rlromr Atfrac 2 Br :.-1,11.97~>.l .<pace. Close To LAguna loc. i;l~k blk !rmalf' rlos;:. \Vht <-------~ Free Est &l:>-1Jt7 .i;ktplo.1.der, backhoe . .Sha~ "''\'' rp1. rlrps. f111lf'. S\~i;, root. All. f'Xtras · 17~62'. CAN'T 8[ BEA J NICF:-~krnini.:-1 m /or 11 $9~ To $3JO Mo. 49~65.1. crn <"hC'~I. Vic Paulanno ~ch./••••••••••• · &-17-2666. patio, gar. Like n r w • f\ Krrlson Ln, !!42-623.l. I Arlult. Pro!. Nr lwach SJl'l Industrial Rental 450 -'~_ll-llli_l_.1. ___ ~-~~-1 Babysitting Carpenter WANTED: Someone to take 962-41M. !lf'li!-7.'1\0 ~l.'\GL!: STORY 1n<1 :1::0-17 12. t"OUND ~mall hlk mall' Dvx· CARPENTRY 1vy from our yard. Call VIE\V'OfRA\':,\11rar 2-hr 2 Rrt. 2 B.\ ~1ucl1n, .'<f'Y•I} !\t.uth ~ra Arn1o~rhr.re RQ()\I .t· pr1~ na . k1tth NEW INDUSTRIAL lf'·Ternf'r~ V1r 811('k RA~' COSTA MESA MTNOR REPAIRS. No Job .'l-1~727~ 10 make your bid. rlufl!r~. Pa11o r!rc•k ·'"· 111 cl 2 RR .• 2 RATII pni il f\lfl fll t7. 1 ;., BLOGS. al'f'11. RPrt flta collar. PRE-SCHOOL Too Small. Cabinet In gar.,~A0171c0,05-0P_·"='·~--~--I h\\V A 1 A 1 $1"" •tr i-ni'r.lr · rr·ln~-bho•. fll'I · ,1. ;,,1 • C"l.l *COSTA MESA* 1>42-1424. ~eial Summf'r Pro11:ra.m 1. · • vai ui;: · ·•• m11, poil1n, 111 t.r ~,·h, 'f••<I< "•••rl.· (';-1••1• ' rl•1•· .<.au1111 ·' .,..~ ·' • •r>eg • other cabin·<• T"'SH • G•••g •1•• ' ,, ,,~ ~--' " ' n ' ,, ,.. ' "'-' ' ------' l~~IO . l:ll6 lt 1740 sq fl Unll~. ·=~~~~~---18,/-A ~\onrovia, 1,, c\;iy + ..... "'-.,_ . ,,., "'-"" e ..._ .,_ n-up, -. -~~--·-·~_i.lJ. !~•'al•.' ~1;-~;,1i. J\lr Cond111on<'l'I S --R t I 420 t"OUND 'i-1.'>-7 1 Bra,-:lr ty[lf' S.15-8175 11 nn 11nswer leave 7 da1·•. 110 a 1--d. F-'''· . ummer en as Pnvare of11ef's, plC"nty of full day ac~s1on~. Plannrrl ""' •..--c t'OR Jra~r-1.1k;-;;wJh~ Lr.t-. : f•I . ~ h;i--;!ndio •ri Pn1;i1,, Pa11..-..:: I k SD}" lrmalr rlni:. Br, whl k hlk. r~·•m, '·t lunche•. Agr~ msg. at 646--2372. H. O. Anyl1me, 5-l3-!J031. ti r 1 H~;,\TEn f'OOL LAL;U'\A Rrarh !or rl'nt l paring.near. reewa.y, V1r RAke r k Harhor .. ,.,, •~· Ad 11 ' rp r. t'rpr.~. drpc;, p111in. " pa1111 .~ 1;irrl ;ilJ htrn~. • t NA1TRl::SS REALTI>R 2-6. hrs 6:3o AM .... 6 PM. n e?'llOn. HAULING, rlean up, odd Qu1c! lr>t· so ol h , $3~ I · · J•1rn1,· nt IA11·0 Aui: . .\'lai:nl fU'f'ntlv furn II:'." · :l.11-$10. NY b '1. · . .,,, 111rlr1• lc,.·il \'I, \\'arrif'r /,, l\ll'<h!rrnirif"an ~;vlr i illa ~.~O;ST.'.;AcM':.'>''.'.·s~A'..,_~6~'2~·_'.14~8'~· /i'cli:JNO::P.;;;;i;;:;;;--,;;-;m, Sl.i:; w·k..COi\-1PARF.! £..12-4050 A t.1 jo. Re51d., Comm'!, jobs. Havf' large van. You mn. A\A1I no1~. 67.H7~,;,, Hr;1;·h Hl 1rt $1-.(!. )l;~~-4:119 l~~:;i~ k\.'~:~:~~"r:: 1111i1sn j!11rrh•n o."n ,w ·»•Hl· :.1-1 1280 ~ll. fl . ritow hkl.1: FOUND-Puf'!'hrerl Siamese BABYSITTING mv home, Indus., Aprs. AU types namf' ii. 4~68. SPA';IOUS 1 BR-rr(iti~ sloiP~ 1 AV ,\l I, \uc 1 -I BR. ga~ k 2;i00 Soulh Sal l/I l1·nn1 ~Ullt'rti t'011~111J \'Ir\\~ 1' fo!flrr, lcr rrar door, 17117 1 0'0'7"c'c"c'-"-"=·~"c· _o_n_-1'_7_7 0· ~ an.v11mr. many y~!I l'Xf!Pr. ;~~k%J Reas. Free est. M_OVL\'G, i.:ar-age clean-up & retrig + n\•ersizcrl i;:ar · 2 1 1,al"I' 1111 Ch1\it !.· pt·I ('If.\ Sanla Ana e 5-l6-J.i2:i "/ 11 nlcnnw' 01rr:r.-.ok1n;.: \\ h1!t1rr SI, r:.1 Ali.o 1210 FOUND -Blond f>UPflY 7111, l.llving <"Rrr. rnrrl yrl. 1oy~. • !. · )111' hauling. ~asonable adh~ .. L.sr, .Sl80 ni 0 ·1 s1 2:, ("1(·11111111: "!' 11r 1 I pr11•a1" hf'Arh & orr:i11fr'Onl Loga n SI , C.\!, Jj()f) sq . t1 . 4700 Nrflluor, N.8. ;,.18-&l62. J11nrh. RPa~. V 1rtnr111. CARPENTR'l by local marl. frre estJmate!I. 6-15-1602. &!6-4119·1· rlrll!l'il 11f>..7~f.rl or .1:12 ... ~:IQL i;all 11alrr pml Slrrp" ~ 10 S19:../mn. l"l11y~. 6-l&-.J03J, F"OUND larc:r !l1rlle Call to llarhl'lr 1'1'f'R, C.l\-1. fi4.i-1~7J. 11.1! k1ncb. free PSf., call CLEANUP, garage & yard FOR lea.se-J)rluxe new al! -BEACHBLUFF APTS~ :; Heal>'f! pnols 10 '\lMrrn k11rhrn f.· a1" f'vr.< &16-0fil!l. !df'n!1fy. !).19-16S\. 1 ii•illbaby!:lifor yo u in-;;y '"'IPr 3:::10 p.m., SJ6-16~8. Lile hauling & gardening. ' "1"C 2 BR. 1 RA .12 Sr. J flR. 2 BA, ponl, p11 lio, LiHJ::P C!11hhnt1~,. ,tr RBQ n1111111·r1;.. fr>r rl1" true RENT ,VJ.\, 112:) Ml ft ,$\~;, Call today_ Sen rontorrow! hoinr. 2 !ilks. rron1 hca<'ll. l::XPE:R. re n1odelin.i;:, **Call ~J.-973.i ** UnobstrurtPd view ~f hay & I <1w. Nr ~!innnrn.:, Sli-~!).17. Child Care Crnrrr I. i1"~n1rtr ~~l~'M-:::::in._ n1n. Ava il 1\11.1; lsl. 1.1;1,; Fast results with 6 Dally f<>nrr-<I YA.rd, mrals. Prefrr ~abincts. rrpRirs, maint. No Houstcltanin ocran. Arllls onl.v. fii.1-6~92. i 2 R;:-Duplf's -Nrar-hrarh-Gro:at nrw 1. 2 & ~ Brl rnt~ I * RALBOA l SL.~ N O l.o~an. No. 7, <..' :'>1. Pilot Chi.ssitled Ad .. Dia.I ·' yr~. !)f yflungrr, a ~k for JOh loo 5mRlL Re as. g l BR, 2 BA, upprr r!upl,,x. Cnii:~. ~h·rs.' ~!ovr. l\n ;rls-: SOUTH COAST llOTEL Ar1~-P.Oll1)1ro;. Ry ll7:i-.'>l lfl. d l~ct 642-5678 _ NOW! nrner, !):16~776S. MG--122-1. Mesa Cleaning Srrv1ce Close 1~ hl'a.ch & ~hpi;:. SJOO $l 1~. !"-i·:r,_~-117 VILLAS Jl>t_r/\\'rrk or JI.Io o th . Rental'-s""W"a_n_tca-d~--4o6~0 ,i;jjji;jji;;;iiii;ii;iiiiiil.;liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil cc~e;,m;;;e~ntt,:Cc:Oo;.n~c;,~.~'.;e---1carpets, Windows, Floor ete. mo 83.r235j day5, 67.>-6832 I --1101 ~·lArArlh11r Rlvrl. 67.",...:161::. * * * * * * R<'s id. & Commc'l. 5-lMll.1 f'Vf'S I:! Br dunlr\ i-rpt/<lrp8, :>16-11112.l c=·"LCECACN~Bc,-,,c.-,-,c,-,-,-,-,c,-,-,,,-i;: LAW .l\TUDENT ""~ 0 l p, RESID. Concrrte SpPClalist.~. Bay &: Beach J11.niltlrial hh1ns, 1<:!1! t1ar:r rl I <, p I , I t b h t * $170 * rn{lo~rrl itllr CA.JI l\~~~ll\. Apls., 1•ms. Step.~ brh. 175/\"k & r ean, ru~ Jc, ar · 1ypc FRther & Son Te am . Crpts, windows, floors ete. J Br, J~, Ba, p,qt1n blfns. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 up. '.i.1.1 E. Balboa 81\'d., brlrrll rrn ;ipr. Rrnt to 11 11 ;i:J~!l-l~ aoytlmr. Re~. & Comm·t. 64&-1401. rrpls, rlrp~ . .Ask .<i bOu· nur 2 ~R . l\o 1·h\ld1rn_ i,r 11:1~ I ~7.'\-99-15. ~lurlrol burl;:P!. Strarl}' h. Trader's Parad1"se •• CONCRETE:. Floors. Thorough \\A1rr pa id S!JCI Cal\ I~=~==~~~==~ \Vil! rlo ~11\r fPd('fll. Yr discoun1 pl11n. 880 Center " · G •S6~1 \~'EF.K l· UP. ST!'.:PS patios. drive!, 111dew'aiks, HOUSECLEANING S20 Si .. CJ\!. c.12.ii,~10 1 9fi2-S3i4. I eneral TO B"'ACH . 1~. Nrwp-Ra!.Cdi\I Rro>R. 1 b ,. "' . nr. hf'arh-hay. C'Ro w1111 lor 5 R s. Rf'as. Dnn 642-&114. M2-J718 645-2513. 2 BR, rfl~S. rlrp~. blrn;;, r ni·l 2 BR. $140. 842-8365 PALM MESA APTS 6-1:,.1.-~"Jl \\ 1ntrr rf'nta.l. Ph. J!!17-7i91 11· nes 11c~c=.,=1E=,NT==w~o=n,=·.-oo~j~ob-too0'Masonry .i:-ar $14 •. /v1ul1s. no Jlf'l~.l l 8 h • oPE:-i"!NG tor l-ood ~erv1'--e allf'r :; /i1nall. reason1tble. free ---"-'------ Avail Fi/1. 2916 rrppt'ri1"f'P a guna eac !\la.naJ:"f'r. Call fur appt, BL'<.; E.xrr 111"'11,. &· :\ Elillm. II. Stu[hrk, 548-8615. BRICK, BLOCK & STON"E Ln Ap l D. or •'All llfl 6 pm. NEAR AEACH-Nf'w l & 2 1 R11rhrlor unrurn · ··· ·• $1.~~. !1-38-.1:19;1. hi I rt l-4 ti h t"1 mes PATIO Speriahsts. Add HOURLY .... 64Z..1948. _&_· _'_1trkrnll_:. :i.i7-i~o7. _ BR .. 1 '~ hA. f/"1!"11. Adult~. l\"o I 8 1 ;{'~")';;1 furn ..... " • ·1111'1~ 2 Bdrn1 nrar BalOOa, nccan ~~~· ;:;r criM n; R~~J/~ d1~t1nc1ron 10 your home Moving DELUXE! llr <111ptr.x-Qu1f't Pf'!~ 1~'1' 217'>"-Coa~·H,,.•v. · "11 urn.......... ''· ~ hr..\ \\/Ill b)' "k or l 9/111, $3m·S~lll} !'NI.slip 1r •1 llh a custom pa1Jo desiJ;"n-l:-:'°"""""'""'c----c--,.-1 rrpon~ 11rtu11~. S1n1r. rrlrii.:. .1111.11~1 "r >:1Lfi711 1 l-RR ftirn ........ lroni ~11.-1· I •h fi~· "'lO. ,...,,, ... ,1,1,, '''·''· ,. 1,,., dOl larS Pr1 r.~""ciallv. '" 3-our home, :<!OVING .... ~-nr your local or I ' -. . · 2-flR urifurn .......... SH;() rn..,n · ',..._,., ,. · ~ • ··-1 rl "P~ 1111 <l"l<I p:Otl" \Arr! '-tlRN ll 1 ,_ h ---------,11 21 . Q"•l•IY. E•p••i•oA • nng t~!ance moving, call ' '' ·· · ~ • 'n1a flA('r,t)r•~·ar . 2-8R lurn .....• ,,from $17j 2EHt r·111Ta2•',S70•1<1,\\.,s1 fl'-,l -~ u """'" ·~ .~140 ~-ll-Hl!<i7 01' ~.1R-f\~I \\'rrk nr n1001h.] nn5~ihle 2 0 ~oi SalJ.~farlinn. t~a~n .t, &ins OK Van &-Stora!!", ~iJr ,.-. r ,, • l \1 No )>"Ii<, fl1•pri~1I fPf1, UN FUR~ "Sia Ir. nr r11n1'h lrx·al a.ll1crl ~"""n1 P•ll•li,,d ~~1 .• \1,,plr. __ , J:r~tl()llSlhlr . 4!'11-1 ~00 0 SAU". A Constn1rtloo. MR-'176:1. "'"'~ · " · ---~ I ~1.r!;i:.lb J::IW~I !1011,,r, Quir t, Orprn-1~==~~~~--~~1 stor1u:c also avail. .\11--0400. LOVELY O•\nrr'' rlrlil\r ;ip1 Mesa-Verde 1 e .IA('CZZI \\AT~;JtfRONT hnrnf'-:-:ln .. l"!;ihle \\lrlnwri• •i l!l y r olrl !Ill' vww 101, BPrmtHIA I!~\'~ l o<"rAnfrnnr rlurlr~-PATIOS, 1\•alks, c!nve, install--.--.--.-------! -2 hr., 11:.i ha , li.:r <lr11 1,,f;J J\\r~11 Dr. Nint11 AnA 9 ~m hoal slip. ll!;I' J1<1f10 , 1y 1 IH'll\'" ~nn. t'ull ,11. D11nc~ CC', Palm Dr.,rr1 f'.~.l\.Anthou~r.rnnrlo,TD'~ new lawn.~. i11w, hrcak,f>atnfing & wllr11l r . ~1111~ c..-p1~. 1'11111· 1 /lLX 2 !.· :l BR, 2 Ha. rnrl sri0 11 k Atii.;. J-Jl. f>7.1-1i'i.l7 pat•ilal rrur in rrrurn for /or 1ownhou~r. Newport or ,\rrnwhrarl 1·:ih1n. removr.. 54S-866R lor e~r. Paperhanging Irr.; I.· lo\if'ly rtrp,. $2f•l. .c:ar. $1."iO ,(. up. Rrnt.:il Ole; I Cost• Mesa - --:<r1·v1rr~. ;,.-1i;..211>0. 8".·ach arr11 nr ., Rich lr'.'."111 Rr«llnr QUAL IT'l Cement \Vork. Let PAINTING .... ·E:xterior &.·_ &1 -l---02.\:I I ."ll!"fl i\l;ir•r i\vr. :W6-J034·. f-----------~1~1nw~;"~!~~ ~~nl~h t1 ~;~; ."iTEADY f'niploytcd~l,-.,,-,c,·,. ( *'7·1•21 2'l_~-..., ~7·'·00fll Gcnr.o:e dn it. Li c' d . Jnlrrior. Paperhanging t· 3 BR, 21'1 ha .s1ur!10, cpl';:, I Newport Beach UICBl:iB.AU ZJ fu!'n, CA.II i><M-20.~!I nrrris \ RR hnu~I:! or AP!. • • 2(1 Un11 Profession;il NR va!'a11! 2 ~!y :l BR 21,2 hoorlPd. &15-169-:'i. Jighl CArprnteriniz. }'rite clrps, !iiln.s. SJ9ll/n1n No ----= c .. \I. or N.B. arr!!, Would Blcli;:. w11l il ("ttpt Tn1sl Ri\. b-ltn~. nrw tTpTs. 1':(! CONCRET". \VORK rst1mate~. Yea.rs exp. C'11 _,,,. ?'.'" f.:. Cain i no.,*Step1t0Beach* ~r.v Brautl fulG;irdrnAri;irl--RentalitoShar• 430 ~ 9000 0 I '' ,.. "" 1 RR 1 P p p 1 111!"" sn111ll yan~ nr p1t!in. Dr"rt~ or 7 · til new IQan, $1 . • for T ·s. 1..,1, :<m No io' h too sm11.H 646-34~!. '· 1' ""I . · ha ., lllro~. Ocran n1rnl5. nv11tf' a11oo;, M, h c \1 1 I .. ~"" I !\la-' 1ro mo. 1_;(\ll(j rrf'x Brokrr. nn1f' .. . ..ar 11•r11n~rr fiil., '"li " E ---~~-------------11r". i\rtulT~ nn lv Nn prls. ~Jlll. l;arai.:P. Luxunnu~ * *" t f;:lfi...2·lr.fl R!tr f;.\6-.lfY.lR/f:vr n7.1.Jj,1~, V"V'I rrr" st, No \Ve.sting D~~l.UXE 2 Bi 11' 1 R~. rpt~. Yri.v $21.l. A\·a11.· ~n": IA n•l~.:'.11plni.;.. /Hlult~. no pr-ts. JUDY Av~il._!2_"11~_·_1·A!I !l'l~3flll Contractor * WALLPAPER 1( rlrps. sto\o>, ri~h11hc, J::";ir • t • * t ~·11 rni.~hrrt, Unlurni~hf'd, EDLAND c OU PL!-; "'' 3 chldrn tlf"ti lff' 111 a.ere Sprague R1..,..,r, Or• 2 n( the r1nrsl co10 launrir11-\Vhcn you call "M11.c" S1nl rhild ok. Avl R/! .$13(!. ~ BR. z ti.:i . t>l!n~. Chilrlrrn 2 BR. SJ7j, l BR . $2.).l 927 Coronado Drive 10 manai.:r apt unll\. 2 .vrs o>l1;no lor. BeAU1. cnrry.s1rlr mitUi, Or11ni.::r-Co • ~ho-...·s ADDITIONS to Com ' I . 548-1#1 646-lill fi42--;~ wf'lrnnir. $31)'} Yrarly, Avail · Costa M•S• "~P. Rrf'.-. Call anyl1mt , No amog &-ff'\\' prople. SJ:,00 ;r.,~~ ttturn.frarte /or ho1.ur, Complete ~rv1ce plans INT k E ,.. BEAllTJFUL I & 2 RR. 11hlr no11 • 1»1 f ; 71 ~t , r \1 f.lf;-Af'~ You aro> !he i\•inncr of F.12-7'bll. rfl for }f'welry, r~r hoar. 1.~nrl nr • Brh 11.rea. 615-712;) f'.~t1mR1f'.~ .• lnr ~"" Gen'. Lic'd ~ns ;~~ t ~831l1nling. -fU' fffl-06.17 f'V1'5. Con1r. 642-5997/646-!)""~ · 5 • Yf'1 Contemporary Gltl'den AP1"· I Call 67:!·3663 642-Zl."\l EvM>, AJ\1AZING Aclulr L ,..,. 1 n i;: 2 1ir.kel5 ,., 1he UNFURN 4 1~ br house in Rnt1qu1"S or 111bm11! 673-{)!1()2 ,U'>;:::c::--::::::o:=c--.,--'-I exper. Chuck, JocaJ ttfs. Patios. Ir PI r ! · pool Beaut. I k 2 BR /urn or unl Southland N\\'pl Bch, wst nr Coast \\111.nt 14 lo 2~ uniri; • llA\'" \\'11.L tr11n,. 16' Cl1rysl,.r l't1Y Way, qua.Illy home 6-1Hl80!}. $lJO....$J6,S. Call !"146-:ill\.1. Apls. Srlr ,•]ran. ovr11.~. Homt & Garden Hwy. Yr lta~. Responsible 126.000. eq. 1n 2 homr-~. f V. Lnan Star' :<ail hnat with repair. Wa~l!I, ceilina:, floorsl'v'-lON"Y'°L--0-,-,-,-,~h-,-0-,c1c,-,·I UNruRN J Br. 111·1/mo ut11 I D/\V r10 2 Rt) 1t 1~pl~. i;hai;: St.ow lam. 1-6.'JS-2367. A-Tu~t1n. mail pm.~pcr111.~ 1r111lrr a~ PArlill.l paymenl etc. No JOb too small. specia.lis!, v.-ork liUB-r&nteed, p<l. Atll1~. nn fl"IS. !<20 rp1~. drps, Jar 1111.1 & sauna al thr 10 Oiarles Quin1arrl, IR7l for 1970-71 V\V bus. ~7-0ro6, 24 hr ftns. aerv. frf'e est, Dan Schwartz Cenl{'t St hi2-:'1!11~. I balh~. H u~e pool ANAHEIM llarbor Bl .• ,C.M. :i.i9.tri1l Adrlilions * Remodrllng 5'17-SM6 or 846-2182. $17;;:-NE\V 2-BR~Ap:r:-PARK NEWPORT-Merrimac Woods CONVENTION AMOUllCllTllfllS J[ *"4) Lag Beh 9 U 011 thl'f'I' Zill'"( H;iv .. liou.sl?, 2"100 SQ fl wl Gtrwick k Son, Lie. INTER & EXTER RESID J:,1 E. 21sl s1 42.'i ~lcrr1ml\r ~·:iy. r :-01. CENTER ~------~ 130' Jotg. Yr gr $14,340 A~· ~1·•, (ii loan on II, \V1ll trd 67J-fr0.!1 * 5'19-7170 C • A t A u' • 1\46-11666 e APARTMENTS Huntington Beach July 3().Aui;:. 8 ~um. 67.i 1111. Tradr-"'l fnr "'1u 1ty ror rll.r. txiiit. rr~vrl El t 1 1 ;mm • .r '·· I.a e<:oua ~ · ---,--B11rllclnr, 1 01· 2 Bedroomll, Plra ..... call 6-l2-:'l67R. ~Xl. JI~ lBI 1'05 nn impr S. Cal lr>1 1lrr nr an}•!h1111i ol tl"{)U'al tc r ca 317 ~'1285 expel'. !'lit service * I B<lrn1, prv p11110 . .an"Tr11,. .... ~,, •• -•• s,,.-1,, , Announc•mtnt1 500 •94 ~.1 1 'l"l18 ~'""'69 LC ~ · ., """ ~-~ ,~.,. hrllVf'f'n . i:tnd I pm Jn P?'OP, ... ....,.., . \"~ 11r . .,. .1·J • ,,.IHJ', . I 'D Elcclrlcian, maint 1~~===~----~1 tropir.tl pool , \.Jj E. !Rlh Trn111s, !'rom Sl7i Ac-.•1 ON BEACH' I k N h Al ·' 'P AINTINGIP'-°'"" l8 """ r 111n1 y(llir 'IC rt:<. 1 nrt * • * Hll\'e :1.9 tlll11! near Disney' serv. so, re~rt. Jndustrla.l. ,....... .... , SI. C~1 6'1'.!.-4bl).~, lrnn1 ~·Astnnn ls!anri al .l11m. 1 <"oun1y 1011 .f~t numOer is WILLIAM llomf' nr rluplf'x . Taki' 2 1 X 6'12-4474. Yrs. in H.a.rbor aree. Lie&; * * l::XTll.A lgr 2 hr, 2 h11. horrf' k San Jo11qu1n Hills I NEW APTS 5'10·12'l!H VAS Blth mobilr hnmr for 1 and\v~n; ~~~~-Deerl~ E LECTRICIAN r sed OOnded. Rel's furn. 64Z..2356. ('rpt.<i g, rl1•ps, s1 :1.l nio. !176 Roat!. (7111 644-1900. I Rr ~~1nn1 $227 • *" • 2301 Clay St. unlt~. Quint11rrl R:call y, 11371 Pyrllmid Exchani:nr~ ~bonded. Small joh5,1~t'. PR0f'ESSION'A£ Painting .... Misi;ion nr frl~IJ!J. 1-e N OW-OPEN-.-'l AR ~·rn1l1 $1·11 N•wport Beach ll11rtior, C.~1 . 6-12-7.1'12. 1tr111tl)rs 67"J-l!SOO & repairs. 54~5203. Jnter/exter. HoneBt work. 2 BR. Crprs-:--cnmplPtrl"V 1 :lt'l-1~2 ~anTA J\011 Avr. Sper· 3 SH J'min SJ7.l RENTAL TO SHARE? Yoo •re thf' wi nlW'r or llAVE $3lt(l 2n<I Ttvtl rk'rd 4 ORR U"ils. Xlnr 1r.tom4!. Girdtnlng Lie."-lt\ll. 5-IS-21"9, 645-S.lSO. rlrapl'ri. hl1ns. dish"·asllrr, 11ou~ 'l BR, 2 RA \\/(rptr, FurollUN' AvRilable w, t11n hf!lri YOU! 2 tickets 1o the nn Silo Clemcn!f' income • Tr11dt": equity for 2 BR. 2 BA PA INT ING : Hone ti , xlnt lnr11.t1nn , 646-~29\ prl pa tin. LnAd~ of r!ir.:rt:<. C.llfJ')f'ts-drapr~-disllwash"r NE ED ROOMMATE? Southland WANT hou.v, rluplPX . tri· mob!I~ nnme, or J .BR JAPANESE It 11 rd e n in r guaranteed work. Lk:'d. )R";:l;,;i'"'rm-:-ki! ,t:--;i1n'i;: !l!d pr.iol . I Across from ~.A. hf'•lt"d pnol-~unA~lrnni& \I.',. e<1n hrlp YOU, 100• Home & Gardan plllX in Coron11 rtrl M11r. hnnit. Will l•kr '1nd TD to M!rvlce. Monthly rate . Any 51.U job. Cail 615-:;740. 11rr~. Sl tn/mn %5-A \\'. Coun!ry Ouhi $1!1(). 557-0111 l'f'<" room-OC'.'f'in virw~ BEACON * "4S-Ol 11 St.0¥1 !\fATCHAM R.l.TY 1>46-48.i7 d 1'162 2:1!1 Gener I cl R I Sf. CLlf'" M p.Alio&-Amplr-pe rklni;: ~ j ~ty . · 4 · · 1 ean-up. f • Pl•ster Patch Re.,alr 17th SI. :Ml!--fi9.'l-t . .A r • 11nor Apl!I. l SN:uriry i;llllrd~. Ill lhf' WiU Ira~ fl2.0CO ,.11 in li;:P c\YcOcRcTH=~,c11c.~,...~.-.~.,~,1~,1 R.ea.sorui.ble. 642-2119. • 1 • 3 BR, J Bf\. $185-. m-n-Al .;n 2 ~R. k b~1'rhrlor llP1· C?'plll, ANAHEIM nPw homP nn t11ll roul'lll' nrr11n virw Inf . k>r tnu•I SPENCER'S !..Awn &rvl«' * PATOt PL.ASTERINC BR hlln~ $1.l.'I. m n · rps, tn5. garb dispn~lll , HUNTINGTON COMM'L ZONE CONVENTION 111 r.r"n11dii Hill~ fnr CM. rlC'"da, 11utn nr whii l eYer'11 Free r1t. l..&wn ea f l', All types. Frtt estimates C•11~rt:< :;.i6-640t IJ.J, RA. Pvt J"tM"I, J.'>l'I PACIFIC CENTER homf'Or"'1'1tlll prop, L,.an-y IRlr. 11*17 Avlf'1Tlor,. Trrr. ~nupe. Re a.1o na hl e.,'=';-.-c.Jl~-5'0-681l--"---I ' P111 rf'nli11 Avr A.o;k •hnut 1 BR Hnuw. .. $t7:i JWy .'IO-Au11:. g K Ji "-•&5.'i.JI Quintard fU>lllry, 6·12-2992. ~5'21.1. 1Plumbln" •• STUNNING G11.nlrn 11pr. 1 ou.r r1""rnunr 54~26$12 711 OCF.A ,'f AVE_, IT.B. 2 BR Hou~ .. S240 ee n ,,...,., . • 114 ·-140'! Plea""" r&.IJ 6-12·5fi~. l'x:. 314 AL'S '-•• · T 1 Rr Jll)l'll-N'<'n!llllOn room. -- -- -f I "''°" '" Xlnt locauon11, l;Mfi pairk!l\I;. '68 Ford lfouuc11r, $Cll-<T>n-lkeanfront • W. of PiPr In •·•Lnu1ca.p1na;. ref' PLUMBING REPAIR f1 40 'Mi-'."J..i30 t'urn, $1131:1. ISPT t~l ll'lrlrnt w fpir r Ofr oprn 10 Am-6 pm 0111ly BEACON * 645-01 11 hl>t"'f!l'n 1 11nrl 1 pm 10 IAined, dual whttl!. r'"11n, N.B. ok • Home rir!dt o! nmov,.1. Yard nmodelin;. No~" too small · -----0Ntt 3 RR/2 Ra 111'1. \\'ILi.JAM WALTERS CO. rls1m ynur ticke!11. !Norlh T\f. llll'l'M, \/Alu,. StoO't. ~nrrship •p1~ wtth rirlux~ Tr1ah h1tdlnf, Jot ~lf!11nup. • ";;2 ,128 • " 2 BR. upl"f'r. hlt11~. epi~. ~unrleck. 1'!75 yrl) \s(' f~.,.,=--...,.-,-~--I Counl}' 101J-r.-number ig ,..., ..... ,,.,.,, Ow• ,,. G. R•P'l"prlnklt'tl. 6•l-llfi6. V'I..., :iAA ;; ' ~ 1'w1 p ror n.-.. 1 "111ilboal olfrr ,,_,..._, .. ..... rlrps, no pct~. $l:t1 mo. I fii~,...i672. • OCr:AN VIE\\'-ftlO~l I SllARF: my "'~tt'rfrnnt hilme !!-I0-12'JJ) ., .. ., 1133-m,1 Chas. Qulnt11rd 642-2992. * LAWN SF;RVTCE • COLE PLUMBING W Wi190n. :;.t5---0760._ '\"E!ITCLIFF 28R~ Adutr~ \ S1.1:i l fir. furn or un!urn wfrlnrk. Man, l)-6) yeus • • • or .. · ' Fmm )'llrd J]CI. Pflt month, 24 hr. s'1'VICO. M:S.1 161 3 Br 'l Ba S165 I on~v. nn pets. SlllO/mo. 1728 1 CASA PLAYA, l~!h II. I SJ~:(}lmo. 675-4l3l. H-.-,,.-.,-ltUnrhii-r-w-,-1,-h-fho-* * * * * * hack yard al~. Wttdin&. D.a.lly Pil(lt Wint Ade b&~ 1111~ v11'1,.nri~ fr.lfi ·Z-l'l'l' 8""rllnrd Ln ~.L7l.l3. v.·111~1~ C:i:tll !l.Y......l::lfi7_ , !'I'll !dlP Items now! OPEN HOU:n: mlumn. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!1J!l!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l' y11.nl elpanup. 962-8617. barplns galo!"f'. .. l • - Sf DAIL V PILOT Nlondl.Y. J11ly 19, 1971 SEE IT FREE Find Your Name Everythl119 For Your Home Only Major Flower Show ita Southern California This Year! If your R411me 11 li1t.d 1n • 1peci11I 11d -it ~Id •PJ)9•r und.r •ny cl1111lflc11tlon, so loolc •t them 1111 -phone "2·5'71, l!xtenalon 114. betw"n t 11.m . 11nd 1 p.m. to m11k11 11rr11n911ment1 to pick up your t icket& .at eny conv•nient DAILY PILOT offlc11. Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT [ ..-... ..-]~ ;;;;;;[ ;;;"'"';;;"""";;;=1 ~~~I Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help W11nted, M & F 710 J[Il]l.___ .......... ___,,[Il] [L___,....,_,,...,,__.. Plumbing TAKAS &. Sons Plwmb1ng Adm. Sale& he'd. bondt-d, rf!plpi! tt~I rotw comt. frtt es!.~ Remodel & Rep•ir WANT A PRESTIGE JOB & A NEW 1971 CADILLAC? H ANDY )I A'."/ ..Carpf'nlry 1 • t"o Degrtts or t.\~r. el~. & plumbL'\i abLIJ~t~ I ~- \\lork guaranteed. 968-il65i. PREsrJGIOUS POSITIO:-i Sewing/Alter•tlon1 NO\~· AVAILABLE DI OUR . EXPA.VDIXG SALES Alterations -642-584S DEPT. TO I.\lPRESS UPOS Neat. accurate, 20 years exp, OL"R CLIE:>.TELE TiiE DI· Tile I AGE & QUALITY OUR CQ,'vfPA.~Y HAS BUJLT CERA.'!lC nlo """' k FOR JTSELF WE1.L GIVE nmodtl. f'rtt e!ol. Small YOU THE CHA."ICE: TO jobs voelcome. 536-2426. DRIVE & ov.·,"I A NE\V 19n Tutoring CADILLAC. DENTAL RECEPT. Desk only. Dental f!X~. n~s. Some Sat1. Salary o~n. !rmge be~llta. ll.B. a.tta. Ph. ~l>W 8A.'1~P:>I ~,.CONV8NTION mC:ENTER DOORS OPEN Weekend• • 12 Noon Weekdays • S p.m . 800 Weit Katella, An•heim , California DE;-.ITAL ass1staJlt, cha.irsidel 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 "-prevenuve control nun:.e. ~~!~tM e;~cl1~.9&2~2~~'.e E•ymerit J[ ii' '~------~I I i + ILi __ •""_10'_-_1_~)[ ii I DE~T AL ASSlST ANT: ~1akel .~;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;,;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~I use o! aU your ta.lentfi, Busy] I attractive otfc w/busy at. Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710Help Wanted, M & F 710 lrartl\ e d0C1ot11. Start $400, Help Want.d, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Career Opening Ltfetune opportunily \vitb (top Rankmg Company) [or Executive Type saJesman. Age 28 or over. 2 -year individually .super· vised Professional Training: Insurance: Na· tional Sales Promotion. Send brief resume to. P .O. BOX 1850 NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. 92663 Equal opportunily Employer -i1 & f' TYPl!>'T-AK.,ct l·!f!rb: l dayll 11k, mWll bf: able to \\Ork ')al & Sun Call .\lrs. fl1}el' .~S--0377 -.. I I~ 100 I Ant iques ·----------• • • VINCENT VEITCH Call .\lary Ltt, 5-1()...6)5.a COAST AL AGENCY 2190 Harbor Bl at Adams. 16626 S illc Tr•• 1':'1"1'~~~~~~~~~~~ .... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'"'...,,.1 Fount•in V •lley Help Wanted, M & F 710 I Help w.nted, M & F 710 I You art the winne1· of DISHWASHER :.rust be clean & neat, over 21. Apply in person, Surf & Sirloih, 5930 W. Coast Hwy, RECEPTIONIST 1 :! t1cke1s 10th• :-.·c11·porl Beach !irni seeks • SECRETARY: front office j Southli1nd SPANISH illi'6'1iiNG0 All ares 673-2380 • Top Compen~a11ons f\.'8. PREP COOKS BROILER COOKS SALAD GIRLS recepllonisc ivi!h nitninnim 11·1w:11 es1abhshed Co, g~ I Home & Garden of 2 yrs rxperience. Pleas-location & m~ny bene(lls. Show an: personali1y & ability 1o l~urry! Start SJOO. -· I at the llIIJ Job Wanted, Male 700 * • * JOHN STOSCHER 2000 Par1on1 Apt. 59 Costa Mesa You are the "'inner of 2 tickets 10 the Southland Hom• & Garden Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER J uly 30-Aug. 8 P1t11.~ call 642-5678, ('X1. 314 betv:een 9 and 1 pn1 to claim your tickets. (North County toll-tree number is ""'12'l0l * * • SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Beaten -Bathe -Deity - ftJtile -TEETH Lots of folks set cmlil for being cheerful, v.·hen they're just proud of their TEETH. Job W•nted, Female 702 PRACTICAL nurse. cook, 1 e amstress. housckeept"r, babysitter. 642--9-W'l AIDES for Convalescent:(", elderly care cir family care. Homemakers, 547-6681. LADY d~ires: drlving/com· panion position 4 clays/\\'k, tying 1( req. 64&-87~7. Help Wanted, M & F 710 ABLE :'>tAN Handyman tyJM! n e e d e d . )lust havt kno11.·ledie of paUJti ng. pl1Jmb1ni. etc. Ap- ply Rtntal Read ier. 569 \\'. 19th s1. C~I Btv.·: t" 3 pm. e Star! lntmediate!y DISTRIBl.Tl'ORS want~. ~IJ • Plush ONi~ Basic H Protein handle hu.~y desk 1vhich in-Call Jean Bro11•n, 541..-6().).) ANAHEIM ).'OU \\.'lLL RECEIVE COMPLETE FREE TRAIN-1 _v_tta~m~in~·= ...... =~;23~=~--1 DIG HEADED B'l DAVE DOCKMASTER eludes use or dlr.'caphone & COASTAL AGENCY . CONVENTION h('avy 1Yping, a necessvy. 2790 Harbor BJ a~ Adan1.!I I CENTER Don the Beachcomber now acce pting application' Xlnt ll"Ork1ng concli!ions & SECURITY guard, San Juan I July »Aur. I LOOKINGLAND, FINANC· NE\VPORT BEACH f d f II d I Co. bE>netits. Call: 641-3258 Capo, over 21. un1 forn1 &., Pleast call 642-5678, e-:-.i. !14 RtB.1 estate manar~ment co. rom men an women, U o r part t ime every a y ex-Btw: 8 an1 & noon. eq1J1p. ftJrn., 493-1192, aft 1 bE>ll1ten 9 .anrl l pm to JAL A:\'ALYST, R. E. BROKER TO START YOU OS 1liE ROAD TO nN. ANCIAL INDEPENDENCE. CALL NOW 547-6771 Aak for Mr. Elkins ASSEMBLERS Assembles e-lectric • mech· anical devices & sub-as.sem- bhes. Jnttrprtts u sembly d r a"' in gs. Spt'Ci flcation prin~. parts list. l Yr pre· v1ous e!e!'tro ml°'C'hanical assembly e.l(per; Solderin& tt'<'hniques. For Appointment Call Industrial Relations (7141 494-9401 TELONIC Industries Inc. Laguna Bei1ch Equal oppor tunity employf'r APPLY NOW for part time lood 6trvicf' help on wknds. Call 838-1103 alt 1 p.m. Banking * TELLER Exp'd. Apply in J)t'f'SOn Newport Nationi1I Bank Superior k Placentia, N.B. BA&\JAlD>Exp'd. Apply ln person btv.'n 1-2 pm, Mon.-Fri a t the Gl"f'l"n Lanttr/l, 1930 Placentia. C.i'lt. BEAUTICIAN' \\'anted. Busy Costa ?oles.a shop. Nev.· graduates \l'elcome. Sunday & evening \\·ork. Call mngr, 548-9919. seel-.."S 1nd1viduiJ ro assist cept Sunday) from 9 A.M .• 6 P.M. RECEPTIONIST-p.m. cla1111 your ncket~. 1!\orth \\'Lth ctJstomer service k SECRETARY SECRETARY for airpot1 Coun1y Wll·free number i$ dock maintenance at major APPLY AT Experienced girl, front oUice arP.a CPA, Bookkttp1ng exp 5-10..12'201 M~·na compl.x. ""'''"" DON THE BEACHCOMBER ''"''"""' & "'"""''"" ~q 'd. "''"" op.o. Call l"iii-· -·-·-ii[ requi~s minimum 2 years I girl c;fflce. Send resume S3l-2292 !or appt. I" e:icptritnce 1n boat or dock 3901 E C H" h C d I M ol' call: J. Fredrick J\lan-ey S ANTIQUES maintenance. Permantnt po-• OGSt 19 way, Orona e Gf & Assoc., Inc. 2172 Dllpont ecretary $550. · · <-d I typiog, SIH. loc"1 yoUng "'· BOB'S AUCTION tiJUon . .-~rn comp e1e N'S-Dr1i'e, Suue l~i. J'\tll'pol'I umt ioclud in~ salary re· Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 [ Help Wanted, M & F 710 Beach. Ca 92664. Ph. 833-2923 ble firm, call Loraine, \';'est· quirtmen1. Wr!!e Ctass1fitdl,,-,.,.-"O'.,-,.----...,,,.,., cliff Personnel Agency, '.»13 arl •49. Daily Pilot, P.O. Fiie Clerk SJ1S ITT JABSCO PRODUCTS I J\IEDICAL RECE'PTIONJST : Resident Manager \Vest elitt Dr. N.B. t.L>-2770· 204 \'/.Chapman Ave. Box 1560, Costa files.a, Calif Exct'llent promotional J>OSI· Ji\IPELLER PROCESSOR This job is a joy! \\'ork for ne\\'. '!7 unit adult apar1· SECRETARY 92626. rion. Lo~Jy ne11• ofcs. Top Some exp. 11•1th hand too ls in 11' Iha n d some Dr's in ment 1n C~!a i\lesa. Reply Orange 'il~/J38.Jl41 1 mile \\'f'Sf. or N11·prt }'\\y, l mile t>as1 or S.A. f'wy, 1 m1le north of Gan:len Gro ... ·p DRAPERY operators -hE>ne1it~. Call J\Iiss Rosf'-11rilJ prrssrs ft'<tt1irerl. Good modl'rn office in n e 11• sta!!ng experien<'f', rnarrie.1 Exp'd Clauic Draperies, annf', !"l.17-6122. Abigail Abbot hE'ncfi1s I.: 11·nrkini; cnn-n1ed1c;U center. To S500. s1arus, incon1e requireinenrs 3853 Birch, N.B. 546-1431. Personnel Ag~nr-y, 2·'\0 \\'. ri1l1{)11s. An t ri u 111 op-Call i\la1·.v Lee, 540-60;,j a nd hackgrouni!. \V r 1 1 f': DREAM JOB \Varner, Suire 211, S.A. portun1ty emnloyPr, l·l8j COASTAL AGENCY Cla.ss1f1ed ad #96. Daily P1. PRESTIGE National firm FOR your new )Ob see A-1 Dale \Vay, Costa l\le.sa. :!i!IO Harbor Bl al Adan1s. lo!, P.O. Box 1560, Costa needs 10 \\-Omen to ltllm & Personnel Artncy. 800 S. El $3 5 PER DAY--7'-lesa. Calif. teach Profe!.!iional m11ff.e.up. Can1 ino Real, San J .C. PENNEY CO. ~ECEPTIONIST Eanuog range $600-S!KIO/mo. ClemC"nte. " I' r·ash1on Island for ve.-u busy 6 line phones. ,ave Opt'nln!,;~; ~fen. \\'Omen l.: children for 'J Extcutive po&\cion also Gal Frid•y Per m. part t ime sales >.i ra & bit parls for docu-Ability to grttt & Talk 10 1n·all. For your per.sonaJ in· SN':ure future 1v1th a Coffee s hop cook menlary. 4Zl.3) 451 _30:il. custon1ers & 'type 5o \\'pm. terv1ew, call Delore& Wilson; co. Lovely ofcs. Top be · Srarl $·12.i ~1835 tits. CaH il·llss Conni E x per. furn salesman MANAGEMENT TRN. RUTH RYAN AGENCY --c-c====s,.._*-,_-1 557-5122. Abigail Abbot P<'r· C'xcel. ll'Orkinr conduion, Y"ung aggrPSSil'e ro. Call Ji9'.> ;.Je11J10rl, c:-.1 &'6·48~ * DRIVER liOnnel A~ney, 230 \V. \\'ar. out5!anding bf'n('fl!S .\!N". ~hmidt , \\'est('llff 17!'f:a Beach. JIB R47·961 7 N E • S ·1 211 s A apply in ~r<>nn Prrsonnf'l Ao:ency. ?OI.: --, , -0 Xpenence ner. lll e ' . · 21 Fa ~h1on I!>land, SB \l'e.<;!chlf Dr ~ B. &i;,..2770 ROBINSO:-J S M.!i oprn1n~ N I GAL.FRIDAY Equ,l op-·1u •11 1 · !01·d1spl,.v man.Ex ..... r xlnt I KeSSGry, . Loi• bookk-pi•g, l>•o"g, ,,.., " y enip O)'er , .• ~~ " ,.. " MT ,1ST (•l benefits. Appl y prrson-lt~ust have clellll Ca.I ii. driv. 111nning gmall aggresst\'e LATHE WORK OPERATOR nrl 1G.-:i ~1on • Fri No. 2 mg record. Not under 25. o!tice !\o Orange Co Call 518-:~1.1;, 'Iii 9:30 pm. ~·a 5hion Jsland N.B. YELLOW CAB CO, I.ora1~. \\imd1H Pe~nnel LOOKli\G fl)r niore 1han JUST Sjl! + 10P benefits. A1 lea~ll---------- 186 E. 16th St., C.M. Agenc-y, 2043 \Vestclitf Dr., a nQThrr Joh? Help olheNi ro 3 yrs re.-;pons1ble general N.B. &15-mo enhanre lheir personal office 11·1)rk. ENGINEERING GENERAL OFFICE hE"aut;v Jn "Be11ut1f1JI Id('as" 1 HUNTINGTON BEACH 1 TECHNICIAN Div. nf Grn·r Foorl.~. :..·o r:..p. UNION HIGH SCHOOL \\'t need a top.flight secre· !ary to \\'Ol'k for our District Sales lllanager, You n1ust havl" a1 least !our to six yrars of exf.l('rience •.. type 60 \1pm .•. !akP shorthand 90-100 "·pm. Business school backgrotJnd or J\lnior col· lege highly desirable, You must bp able 10 1vo1'k \\'ith a minimum of supe1vision. YotJ'll <'n ioy t:\'T't'l!ent salaJ'Y and bmr f11s, and 1·ery plea s- ant 11·odang condioons. GOVERNOR \Vlnthrop an· tique desk $75; antique singl e b('d, w.a lnu l , hand·tlnisherl, S40. 548-5618. Appliance1 102 GE auto 11·asht'r SJS . \\'estinghouse e!tc dryei· S3J. Both good cond, ruar . I.· del i~·ercd. 546-Ji72 , S~i-Sll :i. KEN)JORE auto 11.·11.sher $70, Fn1<1da1r1! atJlo "'ather ~. Both la1P modPls, xlnl cond, guar & dehvered. 546-86i2, To Rrran~e an inter.·1P\\", &47-8115. p\easP call or write to ,\1r. I -=.-.~,!Ae7V~T~A~G~,..-,-,-fr-m_'"_"_" Jack Turner, t;l!ronic $)s· "':asher xlnt colld. delv v.•/90 IPms C01f1., 4.100 Campu.-; day guar. s.;o, 531-86.17 D1·11•r, Suite 1~2. !'\t11·porl ~ ;c:-';""~-"'"o':::..=.:..,-.f n. h Cal ~~" lj CUBJC ft lre('7.er chest, <><·ac . . """""'· Phone !n4J 5-10.31$. Good conrl 1tion, $50. ~>'1;)..4SJ9. Pl'rlorm breadboard1n&' & Speak & unC.erstand Spllntsh, nr(', So r:loor !o <loor. E:..rc. DISTRICT check-out of digital electron-'1'1th an aptitude for figures P')S. a va tl. 842-26&1. F'1lr 11ppllca 11011 hy 4: 30 pm. ULJRONIC ii.. c1rc1J1C1y t-lay be req1J1r-& type 4J \\'pm on the man-• '"'-11 ~"' · ual $3-16 LOO!\J:\'G /or !ir1·rr,t I.'\"· I 1 ~" 1. Call J.."'.9331 f'"'"1 ;!31. P ••t 11·me, on-call puL RE PRO TYPIST Refrigtrator. LgP & Clean. Sell-defrosting S4.J • 64&-7820 • t'<l to provide maintenance · ' -'· • rr 01 tll.'ct.Jonic cu·cwtry & RUTH RYAN AGENCY p('r1enced, n111turc cleaning NE\\'PORTEP. lnn 11P<'d.-; lication typing, Re· SYSTEMS CORP i:s documenlillion. Requires J19.l Nf'wport, CJ\1 646-48;)4 1 rnatron~ for h1g1 demand I n1 a o g a rrl P n (' r f or q u i r e s 60 W.P .M. • GE Delll'\e 11·as~r. J cycll!'.::? at lf'lsl 2 yrs or applicable 17931 Beach. HS 847-9617 1 c:in1n1erc1al bu 11d 1 n g, PC"nnanen l position. !'\o ph. Work from hand writ· spd, 4 "·arer lt vf'ls, Good e:C'ctronic expe1· & 2 yrs of GIRL \1·ho really "ants to Nr,i·po!! area. Part hmC", C'alls plPaSf'. apply Ill ten copy, understand I ''Ond . S.>.;. &Ki--054 2. td1Jcat1on in the !1eld or elec-belong to lrg. busy Jam!ly to I "1'P~ . .>ffi.~:\22· ~;::i"·G~~~n!~~ J\1~i J~I~~ edit marks and line An :~1oy~~i:m;rnty I Fur n ilur• 110 t.Nntcs bt'}-onrl high school. h!.'lp \\'/ hse\\·ork & kids in LV'."I Calif Lll.". FtJll or p/ 00 Rd :'\ 8 justification. Mu 1 t 1 --~s~~=~~~--·--------- exchange for pn rm l: I t.Jrne 7 an1.::: pin. rt'P · ' · · ha ve reproduction typ--HARP GALS I of. A 1 I ~--d I ~ h • H 1· I B h p . Looking for a permanent ,....._ • PP y n person. IJUd.1 • n •""" o m . un 1n9 on eac NOTE TELLER ;ng experience. 011· .--· "'aVtl'fj P 'RIPH~ 'L s u-r"E"·· 96"''·1 I c I 1 H s't1on, bouoqut sale~ . .\ltJ~t C" ... ,-. c.1..,.. ::-i " """ <-V'IJ onv • es cen os p. tion requires 1~20 hrs. EQVTP)IEXT. I:"C, I ·d Experie.icf'd bE' exper. full & p t !inie po-GIRL F' r 1d a y-p ay ro l I. 18811 F or1 a Ave. n~ a week or more •S :Ji rec/pay. Unu~ual "pporL 1 • • • COM MERC IAL needed in peak wor lc . The Look fH.1.G;iOO. BEELl:"E Fashion! need help. High profit. No coU, or 2 "i"ea.n: clencaJ a croWltlnl, rlely. Xo i n 1• es I men I • AI' or Rece1vablt or job 77&-7J7~. 545-0487. rost. Tyrie ;,() 11·.p.m. el~· I --~B~O~Y~S~171).~1~4--­ tnc. to deliver papers 1n the Sa.n ACCOUNTING CLERK Jill! 1\rn1strong (lr.:1nr Jnrlustr1al Complt'Xl San1a i\na, Calli, 92i0j H B 847 3sls , s1t1ons f!l'atl. Call for appt. v, ~ ror ambitious gal. 6-l2·3~i2 7'-IA;o., part 11m ... <"le11.n1no; T ELLER t e 11lOa SHARP GALS d ,'\B. Pl'P5-\\'1lt !rain .. ~;; hour F'lease apply in person S !l.i&-3412 --UNITED --~::.~.~\!arbor Bl1·d. g~f'~~i~~:J~~S~E~SES Tui•n E11~1 on Alton oN Red GIRL Friday :: dys/11 k. H1U 1} bl ks '.\'orth of \lac· 11:30--;i 00 Small ollil'•'. Con· Ar1hur . Rt>d Hill 1nt('rsec-IT. r.ttJSI be sharp. :H~:n54 . I 11on1 turn r1ihl ar Arni· HOTEL-Front or~llt;r s!T'Oni!. rnu~t bC' hnl e! <'\pPr :"CR I MANAGEMENT CA LI F ORNIA BANK Costa )lf'soi ' . 1n1!' • "'·a t!. ,,.kend5. l Lor<iuons I PltaSf' buy my houseful o/ fU ·n flJ St!J ' ' In&: alJ. l\!ak(' "· oUer. 5-18-J!IB~ For Appo1n1me n! Call Industna.l Rtlauons 17141 494-9401 TELONIC lndustrit1 Inc. L.!!guna Beach Equal opportunity employer Acth'f' Pt'Ople MINI MONEY If you 're earn1n2 in i n i money, le! us htlp )llU ~U P· pltment yotJr ir11:ome S2. lo $4. per hr. Call )Ir. Taylor, SJ&.1181 ACCOUNTING To ll'Ol'k in this ~t dl'p1 )'l'lU mtJst h1!.\'f' a good apt11udt for figures. u~ 10 key ,,_ type 4j 11'/lffi. $~2:;. RUTH RYAN AGENCY C!emen!t. San Juan Capis- trano and Capi!otrano Bea.ch area. DAILY PILOT 492-441.0 COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT I ha~ 2 1mn1t'd1aceppen1ngs for 1ntC'rrnediate typist clf'rk .... 2C f'Vt . hrs per "'k. Apply Prrsonnel Office, 1370 Ad· ams Ave., C.t-f. 834-5708 COMPUTER OPERATOR "·/min I )T "XPf'r on IB.\f 360 20 dlM'.. S52tl. f"te l't'- 1mlrursed after J mo. Free pos1Mns too. RUTH RYAN AGENCY 179:; Nf'\\1'Qrt, C)f &16-4854 lifl3t Beach. llB 847-9617 COOK-EXP ER. .\fuse be 01•er 21. Apply l.n person. S1.1rf & Strloin, S9JO \V Coa5t Hwy, NB. 4200. Apply ln pt: r s n n E ST IMATOR \'e1•rnrt ~r 11111, 1101 J ani · Eltctromr-cab1nC't n1!1: C\"J'I OON'" P..rl. N R I r.llL Spec~. prr ct s1on lolel'· HSKPRS F:ni plyr pa~'s [eP a nce~. Gcor~e Alltn Byland Agr11- .1m ne Prro;on nl'l ty t111-B E. 16th, S.A. &r~'l<"l'S k Agf'ncy M7-039i 4S8 E. ]1th lat lrv1ne J C.~l.1 --====-~-- 642·1•li0 HOUSEKEEPER h\'f' in, . _ . 11 irt deC't'asf'd, 2 1•h1ldren, EXPERIEN ~ED R~al Es111.1e a~t> 9 _ 1·1 646-30::.6 or .!ialesman \lante<I. Rare ~p-5.::17""167 ei·es or ,1·kends. portun1ty for right act11e -- pernin. Call for appt. Ellf'n lnaur•nce Service Clerk C. )lahont>y Rtalty. 492-6l~J Tr•ine• $350 E>.."PERIENCED ca5uah!y Xl nt gt'0\1·th posinon. Suh- Jnsur"""" Girl. stanuat inrrrase alter train· Call 842-41~9. inll'.. Top bent-fits. Call --------~=' LatJra, 557-6122. Abigail Ah-r ·c Oookkcepcr Si~ bott Personnel A~ncy. 230 Exe.::: ::-ec ys lo S700 \\'. ,,.a.mer. Suitt 211, S.A. Escrow 0N1ctr $6.:.0 Sec y to PN"5 S<'C·y lnsura.nce Aocount5 payable .Jr &c'y AIR -Jn." TO $6.i() $000 $~,00 s1:i0 $.'/() X-.\nLJTARY OFT!CERS BEl\\'EEN AGES 2:i-3Cl. JJ.-YOL" HAVt~ RECE:-.'T· LY RETUR ~ED F'P.0 )1 VIETXA.\I \\'E J!A Vf:; A ,JO B THAT YOUR L£,\D. E RSJ!IP Qt:ALIT\' \\'ILL }'"IT HJGHT l:"TO. r ou \\"ILL ACT AS A RECnUIT- ER FOR A LARGE LAl'\D I NVESTillENT CO. INTER- VIE\V PEOPLE \\'HO RE· SPOND TO oun ADS. CAN 'T BE AFRA ID TO i'llEET OBJECTlONS. • Sal&.ry + Bonus P lan e Plush Off l<'<'!< • Ji'ririge Benehts • Stan lmmedia tt ly CALL NOW Mc. 547-6771 Ask for Kent Ad•ms ln13 Nt'\\f/OM, C~I 646-4854 17931 Be11rh, HB &17-9617 COOK-housekeepr. 5-d a Y 1~~~-----.--week. for f'lder!y CQUplf', C. lnsuran~ Tra1ne-e '"" S~2j Pa~roll Clerk NEWPORT 'Personnel Agency 833 Dover Or., N.B. 642-3170 Mature Hoste11es TO INTERVi.E\V Nt~\V RESIDEXTS -Pan Tim~ Acc't auperv. $1000 1 1->l. 64&-.9041. Lenal sec'y $600 • SLftll CliSTOD!AN..(j3)'li. a It n ~ Exec. sec'y ovv S.c'y /hoat11s $650 PersoMtl D<'p!, Hoag C\R & TYPE\VR!TF:R NEC. M k • 5575 Hospital. N.B. r tg sec Y D f"rtt & f"tt Posltion~ r.IATURE roupl~ for Apt Call 547.3095 Con1truct. aec $550 ENTAL ASSISTANT F /C BK FrH $750 Secret•ry to $554 I J\lif. !or !12 ol' 26 u : N.R. G.O./ln1. $600 I CllAIRSTOE • Busy 01f1ce, throu&:h TB. Ptrsonable. Sal-Brighi girl qui('k IO ltarn for Arlul!~. Call tTI4l &l:i-1260. S.C'y/G .O. SSOO S(lme 5.l.lurday's, Fnni" ary rev1e1v 111 90 day1 bu~y A<li' & PR De..,. of ~l \\·-- Comnttfor Optr. $550 bl'neti1s. Hunt. B<'h. atta Bt>arh .area, I . I I . r......a c-t.·11··· , en omen •" $500 Ph: 8~Zl408am-6 m. , EXECS Fr $600+ oca orm . """"' -1 s. MANAGEMENT P•yroll Clerk 1----'---''=-1 •cy " Secretary $600 TRAINEES P•rlOnMI cl•rk S416 DE~TAL ass1stant-1".:e"·por1 I Sharp. skillf'd, P~lfy. For Sf"c'y to dynamic Exee. Slmd I $600 Clerk typlat $415 or f hod on T lc o If 1 c e . ~ntroller land dR'",lopmt>n!. 100, 61) type. Ca~r opper. Cha..inide. AP, r 0 , , "" acr1g ntt. us . · per mon!h .. COURTESY tunity. •XECUTIVE P...-1 Aeoncy '10 W. Out H'N)'. NB Snlle H 64!>-ZTtS _, ;"""' days/wk. Top PAY· L1ber11 I F'ERSONNEL Personnel Clerk $416 I :-;il linllal company oprni ni:; frill~ ~nth~. Ase :al-30 1 AGENCY F.O. appr. :;o 1ype. A "Peopl(' nr l\ olfl<.'f' in Laguna Brar h. Exp req d. 642.-26~. I Penon," p,.rmalll"'nt pm;ilion, Pf'rio. Banlt (!f Amer. Tov.·t>r DENTAL 115t. front dl'sk B iiiing Clerk $425 rl1r p;i.y ln('~a!<e4-. :\lus! ht exp. Sharp, fril'odly r 1rl ~i.~~ry~·= f"l"f'1fh l b11Hn!o! f'Xp. typ\~. ~1·a11 immf'd. \\'e \vill train. ,.../~11t aPPl!'arant't: "'ho 1 A / R Cler le to $450 likta people. &IZ.9942 l'\'1)1' ~. 10 kt-v ~dder. PN-- __ c_.:_ _______ ! FE.\IALE. Gt.n'l oUJce '>''Ork . ~us ...,·cri; 0e.>:p. foo-lntrr.·1t1v r&ll 494-71\n i'lon or Tuts, 9 11.rn·l pm, e~k !or ,\Ir ,\rlock, '' \VH I T E ELEPHANTS" I 111~111~ furn. Conlllrt ~1r Rectpllonlat to $450 Fut ~rultJ IU"'I ]USt a phon. Sn11\h, Tr.iine Coast Cot:ry ~ellMnt phonl' ~r&Onal!ty, ra~T te~ll.ilS llT'I!' ju~! a phone call a1P.•ay · &t2~567ll f'lnh. 4'71-!1131 art'ur;i.Tr typ1n i:: <'All a11av -642.;J6jll I •- • .....--;- 201 ,\\'Pn1rtn D~I /.Ja r San Oe11~er11e 492-51 23 ,...-LJRSE Aids -10\p rt. All i;hi!1s. Per!'On11e! DPp t. Jloai; lln.t<j'l1tal. N B. OFFICE ATLANTIC RESEARCH Syst ems D ivis ion ,\ d1v1s1on of th,. ~u.~quehanna Coi·p. !-.qllal oppor1un11y Rou1e orrlrr_!I for dPl1very. SALE.S • ,\1 rn \I 11! cons.icier training Pf'!'· STOP!!! ~on 11/onier p1nct'~~l:11Z or OOKI G & ACT , .... 11o f'd eXp<T. 6p n1-2.30am. l N ;\J1r1 s.·,oo. S.O.les n1l ndf'<l p('rson, M't fnr RUTH RYAN AGENCY your5rlr. a rral carf't'r op- 119.l Xe\\·porr, C)I 6 16-ISJ-1 porn1n1ty. Xln1 future for 01·;11ig,. Co, METRO CAR WAS H Zl-02 So Bristn!. SA SH.·\P.P G1rl \ery good \\1!h 11un1ber~. Apply, lti31 Pla- <'Pntia, C.:'11---Sf:RVICE :-\talion m >" •1anll.'d. r..1rr l\;in w11l "'"P prl'ferrl'd. Apply "' Pf'l'.'<011 "' \l'A.rlt John.son Chev1'0n, :'.!HI\ Bn&tol. Costa illE'SR. SERVICE station. exper. only need a pply. fll ll timC'. 2!l6&~ OrtC'ga H11·y. SJC .. SILK SCREf.:'-i -• I + SETI;P & OPERATE .. I f'recislOn "·k. :)..l~:'W3.i to 9.JO !i!\31 Beach. JIB 8~7-9617 r1~h1 n1an. Ea1111ngs cotn· pm OFFICE :\!AN AGER r o r me nee 1n1med1a tely shotJld l s~t~l~l~E,;-::::::;:-;-;-,,,.--,-.,.-be 1n f'XCftss of SL.JO. P"r 11·k. R 1\·anled 3 days/ll'k. rl1~tnc1 oUice of :ur 1"0111· vour ham• '" o• "" c t\n e11nvf1ssing or !IOl iciling. • ... • ,,,_ar C'n· preSll/Jr & co 11 5 Ir lJ <' 1 1 on 1111erYiei\s by appoinlmenl lury Park, Fountain Valley. r q u1pmen! n111nular turrr. 213/697-1366. ~\ti~! have e.XflC'l'll'ner . Loi· only 9-3 11·rekday~. 83>ml. Fo1Jnta1n Valley. !-'(11-.,ard SALESGIRL TEACHER rr~ume to Classified l\d :-.·o. Fun 11 n1e pos11ion for !gt> !!pl ACCTedited for lnnderg;irren 186. D11ily P1lnt, p n. Box le11s.1 ni;: of/ice. \rrekend in pre-school. to start 9,13. 1."-"60. Costa o\!tsa 926:?6. 1\urk rerfd. C.ood 1'&111.1)' + 3:.r hrs "'k, SJ5Q mo. CaJJ for OPERATORS s ingle nttdlr exper. Good pa,1•, steariy ,,-ork. paid va c ation . &12-34i2 f\.'B. ron1m1ssion !or T""Spons!b!e 11.ppl. 5.116-6-156 all 6 pni. person. Call 111tt>rnoons for TELEPHONE glrl. SQ1nP appl, typing. Call be111ren 9 "-5 (714) 557-4800 :\lon thru Fri. &1j-JS3.1. PROfESSJO;'lo.AI. p h 0 n e SAi.ES fashion opportunity • I. ·1 D p 1 "A" S!;irt a <"IITt't'r l\/Btell11<t so 1c1 or • ana 01n , •""" Cl!'mente, Capistrano area. Fashions. Be )Our 011·n bo5s. \\'ork in your 0,,.,'n horn(', Comm + 11 11. rd r o ht>, B I • 1 l'ho"• 21314:»-39'53 or 7141893-2317. e5 .. ea in l!N'a . " 835-146.l bet\l·etn 9:00 a,m. • ~LES\\IQ)IAN * and noon. )1ATl"RE Part lime PERSONNEL Young ~laternity Shops DIRECTOR :;.,. t'o11•I P\al;!.. Pl\1'1'1' only I Of'~ -~yrs. exp_ -c-all Sl'X:RETARY: Tor a shru·p .\!rs. Schm1(1 1 -\\es1r.hff dynamic lfl'OUP 111ho Tlf'f'dl Pe~nlll"! AgPMC)' -1tl4~ ~ou in ~1,· modern bldg, \\'t'«t<'l1 1t Dr . N.B 6f1·2i'i0 plu~ oll lCP~. Nn fee on th is, nthrr lee job~. s;,o(l. • TELLER • Po5i t1on availsblt rrir per- son.bl~. 11·tJI groomed indi· ,·iduaJ \\'ith pleasitlj' pel'90n- ality and ability lo 11o·ork \\'ell \\'ilh I.he public. TPl!Pr e-xl)l'riellC't' l'tquired. Xlnt 11orking <'ondilions and lringt bentfiti;. Plr:ar;e i.pply in pe~n To Mr~. h~a1P, GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS 2300 HARBOR BLVD. CO~A ~IESA PURCHASING AGENT Call Htlf'n Hayc>&, s.I~ F:qual ririponunity "Olployei· COASTAL AGENCY ',''',1 mf'l~, d::« h1l rd_:art 2790 Harbor Bl ai Adams .., • TOOi. i\11\KER • * 11.C Rl"OU""· .~mt>_ p1,, .. 1Jr· 1 =-===~--c-=· I • or. TOOL k DIE .. 11nn S<'hf'dul 1ng l!'XJl, helpful. Fo .... R.ESUL ~~,1~ canSu 0.. 548-:.4.\J 'tit 9:30 p.m. ll'\ine Personllt'l J)t!nu on, ...,.. uie per- S<'l"\'1('ts & r\i~ncy S a I & 11 ma n .. 011.Uy P\IClt \VARD Stty-rtcpl In nurslnfl I~ E Jith 111 t frvintl C .\! Ch1s1llied &1.2-5678 -place 111·,.a. 'i-.1. :;..11. PP~nntl f.1 2-J tin· 1 ynur .oifl & rhll.f1'1!' II! flrrif, Hnnfl Hn."pl!al. :\'B • ----... ·--~--= \IL"ST .\10 \"E • Sarr1flce near i'lf'\\' fllillCllltlt; ...,,. , Jn1·~-t-~ I. klngflZt' !Mod, CCJf fi'P ~ r nd l a blf ~. Cd.\t area T"n r r:i . tij;-,..808.1: RfDECORA TI,'\G-Ai! l)·p!'• nf rurn1lure I.: 11.ppllanr'"'S l :\ld.kr of!rr. :;904 .\loloha1J Pl . C .\1. :'l.\1-0.'l!Y.l. DINJN r. ~lJi1P . 11•hl te /!ali.an Pnll-. 2 leaf t~blt, I rhatr1", ."lrlrboard. <'h lllit cahine 1. Beaul hft, S·l2:i. 546·7144. CA:\OPY txlt•m ~('!, '""' eonr!. & ma!tr"'~~. xln! \'Ond [/.~!13--084:> 11,ft .) ,, wknds. CHAI SE loung:,. SJOO, Hid,.·a· .. hed 1'01a Si.i, Uoizy boy l'OC'kf'r. naug SJS. 548-668. ~ POSTER dbl bed \1'/8 cfra1,·er drl!'sser I.: milTOr. .$100 67l-77Ji. \\'HITE llr\n I.ltd, drtsur \1'/mirror. b>l'd~pread. All ror Sj(). 968 -2344. 112 RCA Color TV 11·/scr...-1ce po!1r.v s 2 7 ;, : !'p1'1gll 1 BriKs.:s ~)1a11n. SZR.,lil, 22 cu It upriahl rreP7.rr $7.l . bell maJisa&er. s.JO. £46-j'189. l.AGIJ;>;A Btarh. ~!ovlflg .\JiK. 11em1. f 11 r,, 1 , u r r clothine-, f'I C 9;2 L ~ ~1irada. &11 i/17 Ir sun 71111 U-6. PAT I 0 salt-Retris. &Inv~. 11 1~her, <lr }'"'r . miRr flJJ'nllure. S07 Diamond Ave fWboa !~land. ' HTG llarbour-O~n Not ,t sun .. \Ilse. ,.rimt turn. pool rbl, mowrr. 402.l \\'al"llt'r. ~G Mill' -·'l11 n.Yy;a;. cnlll"l."l1nn. e1-t1; th ln.t Koe• Tul's. 312 Qrch1d, ('fl '! HoUlef101d Go:odtl14 rA!\'TA.'1'JC hill J. '4 hl'" A~a nljS. F;~!!I. ~JOI; FW ln\r ~r'~/ f;7 ·,..~1 ' I ---... -~ z •' -· DAILY PJl.OT ( -~----J]~ f'--........ _ _.-..,.Jl~ I '-ta -...... l~ {....___ .... _~_ ... ---II~ l __ T_l'll\aporU-tiOl'l--J)[il ( Autoa tors.le J§l _Autot_rvr_s.____,J§] [....__Auta-• l0t-S.l•_,)§l (.__Auros-for_U• --J}§l ; Mi1ceil•neou1 126 Dov• 909 Trailers, Travel JOHN'S BIKES -NEW- Columbla • Premium Steyr • Roman• 10 apds $84.50-$287.00 5 speeds $6S--SSS 3 spd:i, men & women S.'>3.50-SiO -REPAIRS- we do expert repatr on all makes & models 2340 NEWPORT BLVD, CM NEW HOURS . 2pm to J()pm Mon-Fn Sat-Sun 9-dm to 6pm 645-4720 -Wtll Take Trace-Ins - •AUCTION• HOUSE SUMMER CLE AR A NC£ SA.LE Kawai, S~inway, Baldwin Wurlil.ZA'r, Grand, Conn, Allen, J::tc. ~ & up. fU."N· TAL.5. PLAYERS, Fnendly telephone urlor. FIELD'S PIANO CO. 1833 Newport Blvd. Cost.a Mesa TI4/645-J250 TV, Radio, HiFi, Stereo a36 STEREO, 1971 unclaimed lay -away. G a r r a rd turntable, AM:tFM steno, radio & tape playu . Air s pea k er s w/cross-<>ver system. Still brand new, sold for $319 w/waITanty Pay off balance of $120 or small payments. C r e d I t dept, 893--0501. 21" COLOR TV -Must sacrifice, S95: 19" portable w/bltn radio S.35; 21" B&W table model $20. 642-5621. ~ . Sale Ol' trad,. blander 24' e OLD EN GUSH SHEEP &a.llboal inboard motor 15' SCOTSMAN Tr fl i I ., r DOGS: Male & female, good ~pe. 642-5l.06. ' Chemical Porta Pot. 12 volt AKC, 6 wks old and -~-------.. -and UO Lights. ~ or beiit ~utiful $350 K 'rm I t UDO H, good condition. {lfff'r 54S-8995 -or 531-21~ Riggs. Ph: ~;'i990 oc S?OO. 54l-228S days; 968--0624 15' SCOTSMAN T r a 11 e r 546-2759. eves. ----------_SAJ_LB __ O_A_T--u----a-lll--1-0-, Chemical ~rta Pot. l:l Volt AKC Registered CollJe Pup-"'-' with~~ .. • and llO ligttts. best otter pies tor 58.le. Tri-colored. '' .maran ~ "' &ear. 548-8995 5.11 21&.I Price $50.00-$100.00, Have Only $48. 673--0595 or • · had all shot!>. 962-4873. 14' ALPEX Al "'--f SEARS. Sle~s 4, plus t>Xt:11 -urna "'' .. t. 'ZiJH>n 1ent Ice rhest & AKC Minla~ poodles. 6 Must sell now! ~. heater $580. • 4!W-fi022. mos. Well-trained. 2 tell. 642-4643 after 6 pm -------------------RENT 18' new Nomad, self Seli for i,, price $75. ALCOR'. Sunfish satlbo11t cont Also 18' Fireball. 642-0326. red, !.iberghus, rar root Reas. rates. 646-3071!. POODLES AKC · 2 carrier $325. 557-5389. -' mlJll, ---- mo, choc brn. Show qual. METCALF 13 ft.; 2 .sets~-------. Srud serv. all colors sails. Just pa.111ted. Come ( ](~.J 213/424-8904 see! $250. Call 673-3000. Autos for Sale IRISH SETTERS 8 wks old. Champ blood1i~. AKC reg. Shots. Show & pet. 644-1161 aft 5. SAMOYED males, shots, AKC. 833-2761 puppy SABOT -Like new, raring ---------boom, boat cover, $275. Call General 71'1/537-2767. 950 SABOT SCHOCK-BUILT Sli5 • 673-2559 . '69 Austm America, new May :w. 1970. Ex<·el rond. New tiJ·es. Best oUer. ~">-4677. Aurnons f'\'ery Fti, 7 pm Ful'n. A(lpl1. Antiques 3015 \\'. Warner, S.A. <loll ow search light 1 549-2241 • 547-7733 SONY Stereo Ca s 11 et t e SCHNAUZER pups, groom- Recorder, Model TC-l24CS mg, stud service, terms. $100. 673--0835 alt 6. * 84&--0839 * 8' S~LlNG DINGHY-Comp! Hl66 Ford Bronco, $1,2~ outfitted. Almost new. Best flrm. Extras avail ab I e otter. 548--0720. ~7-UGO. .MOVING Abroad. Must Sell! 1 yr old Deluxe H/G heavy duty 18 lb. washer. excellent <:ondilion $125. 1\vm ai.r· spring b<'d "ith headboard & frame, dean. l yr olrl $•10. 2 custom oak bed tables $20. .Misc. 540-9626. LEAVING town-like new GE dlx washer; patio table w/umbrella, 4 cltrs; 2 Windsor arm chairs; wicker lamp table, w1ckPr stools; wicker cocktail table; "L" shape bookcase & desk unit. 2 area rugs, chandelier. Misc. Ph. 833-1266. ~Free-to You.._..J) [I 3 Lines, lTlmas, $1.00 * * • PAM GALUSHA 219 Marguerite Corona del Mar You are the winner of 2 tickets to the Southland Home & Garden Show JOHN'S BIKES at the N * U d ANAHEIM ew se CONVENTION Repain 2J..IO Newport Blvrl. CENTER Open 6-10 Wkdays July 3(}.Aug. 8 Sat & sun 9-6 Please call 642-j6'18, ext. 314 645-4720 between 9 and 1 pm to -Wm take Trade·1ns-claim your ti ckers. lNorth * AUCTION * ~~~,toll-tree number is F111t.' Furniture * * * & Appliances COLLIE, yr old pup, shots, Auctions f'r1day, 7: 00 p.m. house t:rruned, needs gd Windy's Auction Barn homP & rm to play. 2075~2 Newport, CM 646-8686 =54=--=8--054::::-_7_· ------ Behind Tony's Bldg Mal'I FREE to gd homes; Beaut HAVE several sets 0 t wht kitterus, pt Persian & 2 hardwood unrilllshed kitchen Li g er -g r Y's 642-4818, & hathrm cabinets. Will seU 534-3885. ::::::-==:~-------at lge discount. 645-1212. FREE to good home, part TRUCK I boa t freezer Chihuahua & t e r r i er . portable. freezrs 30 hours, 642-4818, 534-3885. good con d 1 t ion, $50. UNREAL kittens. 6 wks old. 495--046.ll. Orangt' & while, black, WATCH Repair Summer tiger. 548-9697. Special! SUO CIPan, adjust, MAL.I:: dog, pa11 Shepherd polish, standard movements part Golden Jktreiver, ltg. only. Coai;t Pawn & Good w/children. 548-7880. Jewelry, 2426 New P 0 rt• l Male Daisy dog; 2 poodle- 642-R4<12. mix puppies. Desperate! AKC While Toy poodles Champ l1.11e. $50. 1 Yr old male, too. 54;>.-4400. . Horses 856 MUST sell spit1ted 8 yr old gelding. ~. Arabian, 1h <thoroughbred, black. 16 hands. for $150. 548-3197 e CAL CAT Good conrl 1-A--I --/C-I -.--w/tratler, S400. nt ques ass1cs 953 Call 548-8541 eves -..................... aoat1, slips/Docks 910 Horseless Carriage FOR Rent; 3 various s11:e boat slips; $75, $95 & $110 1902 OLDS. mo. Balboa Pen.in. Showpiece. 2 speeds forward E. Michael Rltr. 673-6880 plus reverse. Clinton motor. BOAT slip avail, July 1.st, for Emergency brake. Must be 3112 YR OLD QUARTER-60'-70'. Wide slip. seen. Take S800 horse 111 HORSE FILLY. 673-6606 trade or cash. $250 * 546-3798 SLIP SPACE AVATL. 25'-30' SArLBOATS l Boats and ll • Je ) ---::-:*-:-::6:-73--6_,,.....606 __ *-,----2100 Harbor Blvd. '· _M_1r1ne __ Equip_. _ment_~. 1' SLIP TO 30' Dune Buggies -* * 675-2470 * * 645-0466 956 General 900 Boats, Speed & Ski 911 SAl'1D BUGGY frame, set up for Corv11ir. $2v. or best or- * * * WILLIAM LOWE 17452 Marken Ln. Huntington Beach You are the winner oi 2 tickets to the Southland Home & Garden Show at qhe ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER July 30-Aug. 8 Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 between 9 and 1 pm to claim your tickets. tNorth County toll·free numbe1' is 540-1220) * * * 14' Fiberglau Runabout EXl'eilent condition! Includes 35hp, Mercury 350. Trailer, life cushions, f1te extinguisher, tarp. $700 or Besa offer! 646-8018 B~t offer! 646-8018 CRUISALONG, irboard mtr.1_fe_r._:l5_7-44_8_6 ____ _ 224 Via Lido Nord, Lido Trucks Isle; 213: 270-45471934-0920. 962 • .___Ti_nins __ por_t_at_i°"_-'),,,.] HI. TMIHI Autos W11nt.d 9'I WE PAY TOP CASH fx>r used can I& trucks, Just caU 11$ for f:J'ff eat1matu. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask for Sales Mana1u 182ll Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 847.6087 KI 9-3331 ANNIVERSARY •SO- I fOT·Af.ARI PINTO W/AUTO. Trans. $5 day, 5c mile. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 20ti0 HARBOR BL VD. COSTI MESA 642-0010 Autos, Imported 970 .. ,,._.............. AND MANY MOREl Autos, Imported 970 Autot, Imported 970 Autot, Imported ----FIAT '68--aSO Spyder. Cood cond. By Owner $1100 410 J:..merald Bay, Lai\)11& Bch. 494-6022. LOTUS LOTUS AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS . 3100 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach ---JAGUAR '69 JAGL~AR 2+2. Auto, air. 17.IXXl mi . Xlnt con d. 557-8817 aft 6. MG MG Atn'HORIZEO SALES Ir SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3JOO W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beact. MUST seU '62 MGA. R&H, very good cond. $700 or be-st of!er. 536-5012 '68 MGB-C:r Canrlv apple red, mint con<l. $1.750 Original Owner. 496-1891 1959 MGA GD. COND . $550. * 540--6090 MGB --'65 MGB. compl rebuilt, new '63 JAG 3 S SEDA!\. Auto, top, roll bar, pa.U1t. $l,500, Orig. Xlnt mech. $1900. r· 646-9256 67>-1177. irm. . TOYOTA DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA 191'1 Toyota Demo •5991 $1777 No Down Payment $65.31 mo.• 36 mos Defe'fl"ed payment pnce $2351.16 or cub price $1895.85 Incl Tax & Lie. APR H.55%. •on approved crediL Fac-tory Direct Sal", Service & Par~. 1966 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, 646-9303. '69 TOYOTA SEDAN '6R TR 25() • '66 Tiger • '6~ JENSEN MGC GT e 'fi9 BGT e '7G '69, XLNT cond, Radio, Orig 2 Door, 4 speed, Radio, Heat- paint, $2750. f'r. Dead Sha.rp. (022AGC) 675-5603 * * 673-3000 $1035. BGT • '64 VW e '69 Austin ...,...,,__...J_.E ..... N-S~E-N.......,.._. __ America • '68 Austin Hea-AUTHORIZED !Py ~pllt> e 'fi:I Healey 3000 SALES .'. SERVICE • '67 Toy(lta Mk 11 • '69 Volvo • '71 Volvo • '60 Porsche. HOUSE OF IMPORTS Beach Bl\'d. at the San Diego F1wy. lll 523-7250. BENTLEY PORSCHE . WE BUY USED Porsches DON ~URNS W-f 11•rtati ~tllltm Laguna Be11ch 900 So. Cit. Highw11y 494-7503 * 540-3100 . TRIUMPH XLNT COND. '63 BUG $695. - R/H, good tires, 64.Z-7482. 443 62nd St. NB. 1968 VW Bug Good cond. 1 owner. Must sac: $995. 548-5551 ~ aft 5 673-5000 '66 VW Fastback, new eng, 4-DR, 1970, lo mi's, tape battery, starter, paint Very 1971 240Z, lo miles, fully MGB-GT, '68, Overdrive, deck, mag wheels, wide clean. $975. 833-1258. e'luip. BPSt offer or trade. AM/F'M, fape. new radials. tread Polygla.s tires, $1750. A good want ad la • iood 638-4435 eve~. Pvt pty, 842-6721. 67:>-2765. investment THOUSAKDS of dollars! OI 5.16-8121. e I e c t r o n i r e q p l & L_O_V_AB_LE __ B_R_O_WN--&-· -\-vh-it-e STEVE Wilson Shore-Goer, Med i cal/ De n l a I eqpt. spotted puppy. 1\eeds good 6' sailing d111ghy, oars, lee HONDA '67 Dodge Camper, pop tnp. Many p:-;tras. Wh o 1 e s a I e pric·e. 616-2698, :;57-4~0. SILVER 1970 Datsun conv, Autos, N-.-w-----9-80-1 Autos, New 980 A-u-to_1_ 1 _N_e_w ____ 9_8_0 ~~Mg. ~wwht.w~~lj~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I Xlnt c(\nd . 642-7547 aft 6 PM II Dealers &. w ho I e s a I e rs board, 1-udder, mast & ne\' welcome homf' ~Yl6-2169· sail, $175. 548-2708. 962-9824 all 5 FREE to you-1 male Guinea 17' BOSTON Whaler w/55 p~ H WILL . move anythuig you I Call S36-45SS P 4 cycle Barcat eng, buy in this column and Good cond & fully equip'd, more. Call after 3:30 p.m. FREE to good home, part $3250. 6i5-4562. 536-J64R. boxer & German Shepherd. -------Female. 10 mo. old. 962--7383 Boats, Maint./ BEAUTY shop equipment: Service 902 Everything, complete tor 1 1 DECORATIVE Phoenix man shop. Cost $2500; sac Canary Island datf' palm. $7;,()/besl orr. 557--062~. Remove & take. 642-6!186 FIBERGLASS REPAIR-ALL TYPES. Big or small-inshop- outshop. 20 yrs exp, TI4 / ~. 2131435-5419. Boats, Power 906 ... NAa """'· .., 537-6824 • 8!l3-7566 '69 FORD 12 tnn V8, slirk, Gem top camper. Explorer pkg. $2200. 546-4807. l970 YAMAHA 250, perfect Autos Wanted 968 cond., 3400 mi., $600. or best .ANNIVERSARY #so oUer. 495-S62S, Mike. AUTOS WANTED 1961 -500cc Royal Infield Top dollar 1or clean used D1rt bike, n o t running, cars, Sr(' Andy Brown, needs work S125. 847-6433. THEODORE •MINI BIKE. 5 hp. llperial ROBINS FORD built. Make utter. Call 2060 HARBOR BLVD. _8_3!h_53_9::_· ------COST A MESA 642-0010 PAY:\JASTER check \\Tiler, surfboarrl, 2 lull i;ilf' bt>rls & l misc items. 67:l-2R12.__ h ts and Supplies CABIN FOR RENT )~ 650 BSA A6:1L Lightnm.i: '69. IMPORTS WANTED 1969 Model 38 Ft. Pembroke Lo milf'age. xlnt cond. :\take Orange Counties i;ports sedan. Twin 265 H.P . offer. 673-5905 or 64&-8'.lii. TOP $ RUY ER )'fammoth Lakt>S by Day or WK. Sinps 7. 531 -33i4. Pets, General FWC VS, KohlPr 4KW BUL TACO 250 CC BTLL \lA.XEY TOYOTA 850 ·71 S:'vlf'TH Corona elPc. PARAKEET type\fflter. Like ne 11, $100. 11 ra~t'. SS. 6i3-2 l2~i * Ca 11 ~~~9626 * --------WHEELCltAlR $60: bedr.1rle .SANT A:'>l rhtrkll SI. Geese commortf' S:lO; v.alker $1..'1. Gosling $.~. Ducklings S2. Call 549-0040. 2612 Mf'."ll Dr. 1Upper Bay) generator, ship to shor e, S-l:io. Rebulld. l ~ Be11ch Blvd. fathomPler, ADP oulrlRgf'1'S e 642-0612 e H. Brach. Ph. 84i-8J.'l5 plus more. Askmg $32,500 GmJ;S 26" bike. good con-WE PAY TOP OOLLAR Phone 642--0010. I d\1 1011: hoy's Sltngray, gd FOR TOP lJSF.n Co\R~ 26' LUHRS r I Yb r l () g e ronrl. Sl~ each. :-,..fa-4819. 1t }our rar is extra clran, Sp;>rU1sherman, 2.1S HP V8 1970 HONDA Trail 90-:-1900 see us flr;t FERRARI FERRARI AU'rnORIZED SALES & SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach FIAT • Complete Stock of §BBB Think SH "FRIEDLANDER" 13750 BEACH ILVD. !Hwy. 391 893-7566 • 537~24 Musical Instruments 822 COCKATIEL, young male, $1:>. Greymar1™'. SS radlQ, ne" m iles. $20:i. BAUE R BUICK covers, will swap for * 6-l~i-24~5 * ~?:l-1 E. 17th Si. We'll help you sell! 642-5678 ~ilhoat. 67~7463 evenings. . Costa M('sa 548-i765 Sell the olrt stuff SIGNET SPECIAL CLARINF.T Xlnt rond. i120. :>-l!i-~9i9 art 6 nm * * M8-i011 * * 17' 1969 c WHITE 10-spd hike w/mfant ---,-----HRYSLER 155 Hp se;il. 4 month~ old. 2340 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 ---Office furniture/ F'lr that itern under S50, Lry 1he Penny Pincher I-0 marine radio. Full cover xln't cond. sm;;. Elden. Apt B, CM ___ p;.-m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;--;,;;;-.,;-;;;;;;;;;-;,;;;;;;;;;-;,;;;;;;;;;-;,;;;;.' . 824 c_a_t~s ........................................ ____ 85_2 673-2319. TRIUMPH 1970 Trophy 500, Equip. REGIS. Silver Persian kll- tens; 4 mos.: male $75, pet: female $150, bret'der. Top blood line. 540-6985 10 To 3:30 PM or wkends. 32' TOLLY S825. Yamaha l!l70, 175 By 0 <CTn $450. 962-59.16 OFFICE parlttiom;, :,· higb. Also 10' high, Lge quantity alum. <'ha.nf'I tra<'k w/liber partitions. $50. 675-3866, 10 wner. 1966 T. S., F. B .. extras. Jmmflc. Best oUer over $13.000 548-5098 A:\1 to 3 pm wkdays. ..r.a l o 826 Dogs -.- XI' SKIP JACK. xlnt cond, Loaded. Call Ted Rogers, 673-5252. Pianos rg•n• _.... .......... .._ _ _.... _ _... __ • ~ MIDWAY. KENNELS -:---------- $ 0 S I * 18' LYMAN 120 Mercruiser * uper rgan a e German Shepherds. Pet It I/0 w/trlr & full covers. Trade-ins. most from retire-show stock. Board a 11 $1995. 673-6548 or 641-4641. es, super clt!'Sn, 1 or R kind breeds. 893-5549. in<'. latest models. Jl-lOO's, GERMAN S H ORTHAIR BAY.BOAT -17',4 <'yl.Nt>w E 1°i T 200· C 3 RT 3 A fittings & just retinisheo. • 0 • • s, · • • • • pups. AKC champion sired, lOO'i;, M-3's, C-2. CV. Many Trlr. Offer. 67!>--0376 eve11. w/ Les'11e spkrs. Ali;o Lowry Sfi:i. Ready l'l go. 962-3871. Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 & Conn. Have a day 11t the • Tiny 2 lh Poodle~. Yorkits - beach /.r ~hop w11ti us. Low-or )'faltese et stud. AKC Cal 25 + C11tllna 27 e1-t pr1res. Term~. W i 11 Lt>a~e adults. ~">-2100. Guarantff I.he lowest rates in trade. Open Sun. 12-4 HAM· LABRADOR retriever pups So. Calif "Catlina crul~ MONO ORGAN STUDIOS, (3/4J, 6 weekl'i, $10. After 6 ing club".' Location Newport 2854 E. Coast Hwy, CdM, p.m., RJ().-6829. Harbor. 7141968-4840 for info. 644-8930. .GERMAN ahorthalr pointers, 36' FLYBRIOGE Cruiser, WOULD YOU 2 tamales, AKC. Slps G. Fully eqpd inc ~kip. BELIEVE . ** 893-9445 ** $1 35/da y, S700/wk. FREE ORGAN LESSON'S ST BERNARD Pups, AKC. 646-9000. &$ long as you like! No reg-Xlnt marked, $150 & up. SUn Bo.Its, Sall aeration. No obligation. J ust & Mon only. 962-3728 ------Come. Mondays 7:30 pm 14' LARSON '70 aaJl boat Ii COAST MUSIC ST BERNARD. femalP yd olrl lrailPr. 2 ~t saUs. >.1nt 64Z-2!!Sl "COWJ&C." fl50, or best Of· cond, u5ed twice. $550. RAMMOND Steinway, Y11.ma.ha. 'New (., u~d .ptan011 1>f m~t makt'l!. Be~t buy~ In So. CAllf. at Schmidt Music Co.. 1907 N. Main, SantR An&. FOR Ssle--0l_d_u-pr-ig-ht~ Sl75. Costa Mf'sfl. 6.J&-09~ flirn those White Eleptiants into cuh thru fl Dally Pilot 01m~-line ad! 1 ~,.,' • fer. 67>-7878. 962-7606. BASENJIS-rare A 1r I ca n SCHOCK-built Endeavor 26' breed. AKC p u p a / • I u d . No. 40. Xlnt cond, S4200. Terms. CAii (11 6.38-2236. 642-8584 days; 6 7 3 -~ 3 O 3 GREAT P&n!'s-AKC ttg. Pl't & shOw quality. 6 wk~. Act fast. 7M/:i28-3094 alt 6. MALE lri~h Setter, 10 wkii. all ~hots, AKC, champ Jin,., $100. 673-492.1 eves. SABOT fully equipped, xlnt cond. $175. II' 5.T7-680.'l .. SABOT W/TRAILER sm. • 675-1041 A 11:ood wMt ad ii a Rood Sell !he nld 1M-t lnve~tmt>nt Buy thf' ntw shirt ' .. - -.. n· ... Mobile Homes 935 CONTE MP(). LAGUNA HILLS 2'.1301 RIDGE ROUTE DR. (Corner of Moulton Pkwy) Prestige adult comr iunHy ad· jacent to Leisure World. Beautiful surroundings, &ll luxury appointments, Ther- apeutic pool Saunas, exer- cise gym, 4 billiard tables. much much more! See beaut. furn model~ In park-like attting, CALL 830-39()() or 830-79()() 8x40, MUST sell by Aust. 15, Good desl. Close to hospllAI Ir: shpng center In adult pttrk. 642-5842 all 1 pm or 642-.1637. Motor Homts 940 CONDOR Th" yacht that's not a boat. BILL CORWIN FORD Oranre County•• Condor Dia. tributor, 230 S. Main St .. Orange, Close to three ma-, joi· fi'ffways, 639-185() Or K. 7-0444. Trailers, Travel 945 16' AWOA TRATLF,R new ewnina, Gd oond. ~50. * ~7 '70 15' Tr•vel Trlr ruoo * • • 953.9741 * CAPRI * Immediate Delivery!! NEW 1971 CAPRIS • Tht Su y Europu n IN STOCK lltlltfEDIATE DELIVERY JOHNSON & SON I Miit leutll ef S.• DI .. • frffwey Lincoln Contint nt•I e Muk Ill e Mercu ry e Cou9 tr 2626 HARBOR BL VO., COST A MESA 540-5630 642.()981 -- CLOSE-OUT OF ALL REMAINING '71 MERCURYS BRAND NEW 197.1 COUG'AR Stied thift, "'hlle "lells, po'*'tr 1t .. ri"9· power cfoe lir•~tt, /\M reclio, tintecl 91 • u , cllic. whl, covers. (I F9 I 4SJ 7702 l IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ANY BRAND NEW 1971 MERCURY MONTEGO IN STOCK-WE WILL SELL FOR 3% OVER DEALER INVOICE! OUR SELECTION OF 1971 MERCURYS HAS NEVER BEE.N BETTER. IT'S TIME FOR YOU TO MAKE OUTSTANDING SAVINGS RIGHT NOW AT • • • , I ' I I •' ... , .,. .. --" -··-.... -- ·-:--, l§l 1 ~I ~-~ ... ~ .. ~l[i]~1 :!!I ~-~--~l§l~I ~-~ ....... ~.1~~1 ,,. 1· --' ......... 1§]1' l§J1I._ _-.,-"'-~--'!~ ! .. CALLUSNOWll PHONI 117°9220 INSTANT CREDIT Yff•mA9Dln1 SAYIYff-IY 1.1 you ore nitw in Colifomio 3. If you en ,,_ on your job 2. ti you owe money on your .C. If you how1 littl• or no i:or CNdit &11•m fttAllUll M Cl9fT uaram YOll ... •nu1r011ut on. ..... r-.• .. c.t1,_dllaff 8100 FULLY FACT EQUIPPED $2689 •• OROfl YOURS TODAY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY a~:;o '71 DEMON ~~~~1s SMMIDIATI DIUVllf 1199DOWN ~~ 172 MONTH:.:::.::. ~ $21989.~ fullfoct , r11c1 Equipped S!Wil __ ,,_ ,,, ....... __ ""'fir•. SER ~ _, .. ~,-.,.,-u-J6 .'ff' --"""'"°"11"i od.n.•·' ll2981E1201 75 i.. ..... Anlt.lill Cl•TJ51 U fl 11.7S'JI, . 12 HouR Money Back ;::;~;·:; ru,.tldo '65 DODGE TRUCK ve. r•dio & ~ •• ,.,, .,.;..., tir•l I' b•d S30,71 $49802 .. PtlCI '70 BARRACUDA CONVERTIBLE 0od;o & """"WW ~ ,-s--, ~1398.ti2 V RILl rlKI Ser.' VH27COB1ff609 '6SDODGI PICIUP v.a. •odio. heo1er, -nre•. a· bed 530973 '69DODGI 440 v.s. outo. ''°"'·· focto'Y 0ir u1,.d•t>o,.;n'io rod ... h ... 1. ., . .....i.;,ewan "'•'· y;,.y1 "'°' YPW11J """"' $1288 '66MUITANG A1r10 t1ono,.rod10, heole•, bu<.ket •ecr" 5ROOO& '70PORD l&UXT SOI M.T. Au ta '"'"'N foctory oL• oo,.df11on· "'O• ~ ·-~ bro~ ... POdio. i..ow, ...+iii.won.; .. ._ '6YCHIYY CNIVIWA.uto. """'~...a;.,, h1ate•, whtel cove'• ~~O flngi,..., TWY•11 '68 OPEL KADmE 'lllll' lpt., R .. M, 4 1Pftd, $696 '70 Ply•outlt IOADIUNNll :Ill v s. cruto. 110~• .• lo<!o'Y "" co.,t!. l•O"•~g. l>OWe• '"'.""0• ~·"'VI •o<if. •Rd. buc~~t -· cen!er <""'°'"• lJOAfY '67 PONTIAC 2 DI. M.1. v.a. ou•o. tro"'·• fo<foty 11;• co,.di1ion1ng, 1111w•• ''"ring, •od>0. ~..,,.,., uv~·n• """'" $ 599 '70CHIVT IMPAl& N.T, v.1, e uro. "°"'"' ..-• .-..1 .. 0. re.I; .... h1g11 ., whitewall tirtt,. 7UIM. '6ST·BIRD N.T. Foc:i.v ai-r conditlooll"(I. 1odio, Matt •. full 1>owe r pt.)211 Auto<, Im-970 Aui.t, lmponod 970 Autos,UMCI CADILLAC 9!G Auiao. UeM CADILLAC 9'a AutM, UM '90 JlulW;.\liW '90 ~. U- VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO CONTINENTAL MAVERICK l'll9 DELUXE """ 3'.000 Largoot Selection 1969 Seel. De YIU. '69 CONT'L Muk 111, Tak• 1970 M•v•rlck 2 Dr. miles, .show room cond. ~ THlNI OF LUXURIOUS FACTORY over pymnu. SALE PRICED - Many xtr11i1. 1871 Irvine 'VOLVO' 67l-l'J14 * * ~ 14,000 Ml Avf' N 8 1::.~ ~ .. ,., CADILLACS AIR CONDITIONING ~mut CornfM!Dhon yr-llow ' , . VT.,...,.,...,. • FULL LEATI-IER INTERIOR )970 Continent al Coupe with black stripe. 3 speed 1956 BAJA hug, '66 tra111, y · I -.E.XCEPTIONALLX 11ttft1 legal. un ''FRIEDLANDER" Jn Orange County tnyt toi>. UU powtt, a..EAN tnna, radio, hn.ter, 4 brand 1""" 1963 th 1970' locks, nil&. tele5e0pi<: 1teer-. nrw tires •ttn..crive intf'r-Ave., N.B. MEi-4519. IUM •UCk !HWY... (' ru • U'lg, stereo, etc. IXSR708l Striking Buriundy MiJt tin-)OT ~ ~nd drive a bu-* * '64 VW BUG-X Jn 1 893-1566 • 537~ 990 J ·~BE. RS $4333 ish, ~11~k l_andau with aain. (7/lASW) $l7t5. John. corn:I. S700 or but otter. Call Autos, Used malctuna: interior. Equl~ 110n Ir. Son l626 Harbor 64&-46/JJ. ----·-----NABERS CADILLAC wuh the linM"t. Fuu power Blvd., eociu.' Mesa 540-sgi vw Bug l966-Xlnt ANO MANY MOREi 2600 Harbor Blvd, &. t•ctory air ot coww with · J6 IXXl mi $800 cond. '61' Pontiac Lemans • '68 2600 HARBOR BL., Co61a ~1esa 540-9100 1te~ la.Pf' syst~. N~w MERCURY ' ca:n ~33 Ponti¥ GTO • '66 Ambas-COSI'A MESA I CAMARO tires plus much mor,. St'e 1>11.dol'wagon • '70 ,\.1averick fl.W-9100 Open Sunday I----------Ii drive this bt>autitul car 1971 Mtrcury '62 V\V Bu1, w/'64 nb!t eng. • '67 Olds Culla&!i • '62 Cad • I today. 1601 ABY) $4975. Colony Park Gd. <:Ond. Beil ofter, also CouPf' • '70 Chevy lmpa.la . 'Jl COUP[ 0£ VILLE 1:11,CA:!_~· :L 4 ~~: Joh~n & Son, 2636 Harbor 10 Pau Wagon, Step up to '64 vw Bua:, nttds eng. HOUSE OF IMPORTS Blvd . Costa Meu. 54a..'i630 the tin~t. This at::raclive otherwise, Jtlnt cond. Best Beach Blvd at the s. D1l'go ' Loaded, only 4,cnJ milf'~. $l900 or inake 0 f ! 'r' CORVAIR · light yellow gold exterior-1~o!~f'~':,-';;'~','·f!X>~3~1~. -;--::;::;:; l -~Frn'..:>>~·~·~lt~52~3·~7~250;;,_ ___ 1 Corporation presidenls' 96Z-8967. wirh natural 11&ddle interior IG EN U IN E 1 o"·ner BUICK wiles' private car. Like new CHEVROLET -----.,-_-----1 like new. Equipped wllh WIFE'S ...... rvair !-.toru.a '61 Tea<:her's. '68 VV.'. Only in every respect. Cali Kent 11 all auto trans, Radio, ' ---------· Auto. R/H. Sharp! Real 28,000 local mi. See to ap. 1968 Buick Skylark Allen 842-4435 for demon-1970 EL CAMINO-4:)4 cu in. eeooomica1 $29.1 F i rm Heater, Aum temp •ir Cond, prec1ate. 673-1784. H T strnUon appointment. turbo-hydro. air c 0 n d , 5S?-65lfl. Power Sleering. P·o we r Cust, 4 Dr. · • I Bra.keii, Power Windows, 6 vw Bus '64 Tram, '64 29.000 .\flLES 1966 Cpe. De Vilte 5S3''200'M, ,.",_.13~~ Xln'a.i::i '63 Corvalr v.n \I'll)' Power Seats, Tilt Slieer-Corvair Spyder eng. $SOil. A tt1·a~:1vr Aruc \\'hue l1n'sh ,-'CTORY I · ( """ or ...,...... " k f D •""" ing whee.I and much more 64&-9100 Y•kdays alt 6, Sal. '>''1th nlack landau mo!, AIR CONDITIONii'l/G _'0'a;;;°'A;r'•"'i·;;;-s;;,;;;~i;;j --~•:..,;6'~2--06~1~2='e~--1 Including roof rack. Like before 4· I .. quipped with au10 t!· .. ,1~. F ULL LEATHER INTERIOR '66 Bel Atr 4 dr Sedan also new in every det&JJ. See lllld • VW VAN '59 e radio. heate_r. power i>,'.f'ti'.r-1 Padded top, tul! power incl. '6-1 lmapa SS Coupe ~lh CORYmE ~t drive today. fl71CIE) Camper unit, Nf'w brake ing, etc. t-la1nta1ned in hke till & lelescopic steering w/a1r & x\nl rond. 646-5542. 300 Jolm:!Jon .t Son. ~ Harlx>r gystem, Good trans, Good ne\\" condihon. f\l'LH0~6l stereo A.\l/F'.\l, etc., etc: ·71 Vega Hatchback CJ!". 110 1969 CORVE"TTE Conv, Blvd., Co5ta Mesa. 540-5630 ~ $1' •' J h ' So 2626 • h.p., AM/F'M. radials. cond. $400. 557-""80. '"J. o nson """ n, An exceptional OOy! tSBS-hp $2250 or Best. . lnquire · 96 '6I VW GOOD COND ~~1~r~~O BI Yd .. Costa f\tesa. JS.I! 1593 Redlands Pl. CM. * 6~7524 * I 9 Mercury Monter•y $800. 8~7-1~2i •~ -.~"' $1888 '55 NO MAD, rough. 95r;,, COUGAR v2E~;·c~E~N * '63 VW XI IC d-PVT Pty. '6G Spec Sta \\lag. I NABERS CADILLAC ong. "pholsterv, 283-run.s A d . . M · t 1 • n on , l'.:xcellent cond $8 50 . -~ '69 . war w1nn111a: arqu15 • Y. ~ * * * oo· 1~<-<: · """"H bo Bl d fine 64~ 2-DR hrdtp, priced for '"''· Pop·"a• Bn'"•h g••nnn ...,.,.. ..,.;>-.)0.) I fi!2-7•lli2 62nd St. NB. £"""' ar r v · · · k &a.I & w • u '"'" VOLVO Costa Mf'!'.a 540-9100 CHRYSLER qw_c e, au! maroon metalic !·r.ii!'h with go!tl 111n- CADILLAC ttrush w/matching uphol., dau roof Eq,;p ........ w i 1 h '69 CAD C"". De Ville. Fttll b k t t F . A ~ ,~ uce seal!, ac all' uto 1 tr. o· h 1 NORMA SAYS .• : We Gotta Sen These Cars! W•',.. OverttockM Ancf Prltff H•v• '"" Sla1h-.I To Movo '•m Out I SAVE DEAN LEWIS P~, all dh. extras. Xln1 1968 CHRYSLER trans R/H PIS p/'B A AU o ans .. ra io, ea el", 1967 C D V'IJ · · · : po.,.,·er l"tttring po.,.,·er bri!ij '48 CADILLAC pe. e I e corn!. Orig. owner mus! 300 HT COUPE rral beauty, We pnred · 1 4 Door. VB. automatit:, VOLVO FACTORY sacrifice tor i mm e di ate yf'..,, clean, sham Attec onld $2300 tYCl.539) , • _,, e.'I, atr cond. etc. Sae pr1c· 'J .,. .,.. • ....... ve,...,er ed. CZWt>51) $2245 Johnson radio, healrr, blue with DEMO AIR CONDITJONTNG sale! S.J~. 644-0117. I Mist finish \\"ith black l11n-Fastener Co. 884 W. l8th St, & So 262& H bo Bl d ~·hilt'. tKOC.017J SALE FULL LEATHER INTERIOR 1970 El Dorado 1 dau 1op & interior, equ1ppt'd C?.-1. 646-8886. Costa n.i\1esa. S:::~ v ·· $189 Full powf'r, vinyl top, 1111 & \\'Jth auto trans. radio, heat· ---~D~O=D~G~E~--1.""'"".C:=::...::.::.~::,--11 ---------$2998 l!ln Volvo 144 Seel. Demo # 7360 $3098 1971 Volw 142 Sed Demo • 3268 $4098 1!171 VolVG 164 Sed telescopic i;teer1ng, A.'11 LESS THAN" 14,000 r-.1ILES t er. po.,.,'<'r stttring, poll'ef 1967 Mercury Colony '64 GALAXIE 500 FM. many other deluxe ex-f•AC'TORY brakes landau roof, etc. NOTICE OF INTENTION . Park Wago_n . 2 Door, V8. automatie, tras. (VKPZ.W> Affi CONDITIONING Priced.for quick sale. CZVX-TO SELL ·AT PUBL1C Sa.;.e Pr1~. Attractive> tuhp silver fin i .sh. radio. $2444 FULL LEATHER INTERIOR 201 l $1675. Johnson & Snn. AUCTION ON AUGUST 4. yel~ow w1~ saddle tone i.n· Sharp! IQ 5 z6M 9 3525 ) V111yl 1op. Full power incl. 2626 Harbor Blvd .• C05!a 1971 ,, •·.OO PM. 1964 1er1or, Auto trar13., radio, NABERS CADILLAC tilt & telescopic i;teering, M ...... ~ .. ,....,~,. L. f Bl '"° ....,.,,....v.JV DODG~ 8 SEDAN 522 11.:al~r, aciory Air, power 26()(1 Harbor vd. door locks. most every dbc. steering, power brakes, etc. Costa Mesa 5'10·9100 xtra & "The Master of the COMET (j243161777) Licel'IM! num-(TXT7431 11345. _ Comp"' QE ber OSX270. Atlas Chrysler. Road." 1615B l ·th il! price. Johnson & Son, N b C d'IJa '64 Comet Caliente 4 .spd. v .s. Plymuuth, 2929 }larbor G en G f C: ~1ag v.:heels. Must Stll! Blvd., Costa Ml.'sa 2626 Harbor Blvd., Costa 260o Harbor Blvd. $j5()/best oUtt. 557-2l19. Mesa. 540-5630 Fac1ory Direct Sal~s. Servi~ & Parts, 1946 Harbor Blv~ .• C.M. 646-9303 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT . WANT AD 642-5678 """ ,,.,. >IQ.9100 CONTINENTAL FORD MERC '66, '" ·~. "'" '64 COMET .---------·! 6 ryl. autnmaUc, rAdio, 1970 For d Galaxie power. new !ires, Xlnt cond. heater. ~an finish, 2 '69 CAD. Sed. de Vtl!e: I----------loaded~ 27.000 ~l i. Jmmar_ 1966 LJNCOLN Contint!nlal . Sac .. urgent gale }1,195. RIH. air, full fl(lwer. Rurui 500 962-0950. door. (Q~·IJ\1728J 2 Door l.lUST SELL 1970 Marquis 2 DR HT, $595 We'll help you sell! 642-'£18 98() 67.>-5726 gd. $1000. Pvt pty. 644-64fl. Autos, New 980 Autos, New 9IO '71 Firebird ,.1, coNllllMlnq, 1 u 1 r v fl ~IO•y 8<1V<lllled WI"' •u1t1m1t•C ''""""'"'°"· "°"'"' •IH•l'IQ .I. br•k ... ( 12411L1lllll11) g:;. $3807 '71 Firebird V I. •ulomtTlc "•n1ml•· •~"• l>OWtr >lttr<ng, !Ind 11t10.••· 11r u tt.,,illonir.g Cl13'11L1 lllltl) '71 Firebird Firllv l!l(IO•Y •oull>i>ed. V-1, ""'""'""' l•~noml•· •I II n , •'' (Md•llO<'lnQ •IMIP<l Ql!I,<, 1><1w•• •'••r· lnQ Aft() oow"' br~"'"· r!I· Olo & "'a!•r. !2'3•1111 L1G8· " g::. $3643 '71 Firebird Air <On~l!IOlll"g. !In! 111•11, •ultl"'-11< l••.,tmfs. •km v.1, "°"'" lltt" 3 """"' !!r••n. R•d' & l>t!llOr. (Z1JUIL1090ll)I '71 Firebird (Olli , . l 'llP•t•I L«.,• l"lorlor !!. ,,r.-oor. Aor CONIO!oOl'•oO. V I, •U'"' fY\!lhC "•"tml"'""· ,,,.1. f'C\ ~'~"· '"~'" !!. "••fer. (2'31/ll!O~~~I g::. $3661 '71 Firebir d A" <O.,~lllOn•1>g, Vol. 81rft> m•r.c ''~'"mlulOn. row-•r Jle-tr.r>g & bro•••. l•M· ~ GllH. l12ll11Ll!l'iot! g::. $3643 g::. $3615 g:;. $3542 I • • • • • • • • • • • • • I • • I • I • • I SEE IT NOW • • • • • • • • • I • • • • • • • • • • ON DISPLAY! THE ELEGANT ALL NEW GRAND PRIX ''HURST PONTIAC'' e • 8 •• ea•••. I e e e • • • • • • • • • • • • I • • • • • • • • '69 Firebird 4-•-,., ........ ~,. lnQ, oow•r l>•••..i.. ~""' •oo•, Llc•nlt (lJr;;( ll9) $2388 '69 Grand Prix w.,,. vinyl IOll trod •I• '-""'<lll1e"J"11, pOW t• ot«•l"!I t!'d paw. •r e,8~e1. 110w•• Wln"Ow,. ( YWT 05Jl $2999 '70 Chevy Mellllll l!8dl0, H11I· t r. Au!em•llc. T••,... m l 1•l en, Po"'"" SIH<i"ll, I' e Wt• !Ire~•" .t.1• Condi· tlon1n1, Vl1>YI Top. ~~ ~i<Vl $2895 '71 Pinto l-Tit• 4,000 Mii .. ~ '°""' ,,,,,,,.,, .. ••on. r&dlO &. ~ .. , .. 1r. l l JM C!Hl 0.!l' $2188 '69 Ford CUSTOM i ''"'" 1.0111, Vt, •UIO , 00 ..... r , ... ,. IOV. CHI llf:LI $1299 .• '66 Mustang l!1d !o & ~ •• 1 ... .t.utom1!•< T • 1 ., •· m•nlo<!, ol lr COrod•· lronin~. l~A.Y .15J) $995 '67 Y.W. ~ou••eblc~ 4 511ffd. t10•0. nH'f'• •><I~ 1..,1 buy 11 1~11 lo"' low prke. (TSR 1111 $1097 '68 Wildcat Wit!! 1 ut om1 11c !rt1>>mlulo", l>OWfl' l tt1rl"I• POWI< br•k.,, ltC'OrY l it, llO-• wlndo""' ""' fopped wilt> • vl11yl •ool. (lCA JM\ $1997 '6 ontiac C1t1l1n11. J Ooor H1rdloll. 11.ldlo & 1-111 .. ,. Au10m1t1c l r1n1mls11t1> J'l)Wo. er Slet•lno. Po..,.r ., ...... .I,!• (-~ 1ionln9 114.> !!l(Ol $1997 '69 Cougar Au1ome11(, lr1,.smlto 1k!n. llO ...... , ,, ...... lnfi, vl1>VI •ool. f1c-IO•Y 1lr condillo!l-lnt. (;(Yl tlfl $2598 powdt-r blue, air. full power. Beauuful Light Ivy Gold Fi11-'56 T ·BIRD h h Id . 1 . & d k S3250. Pvt Pl)': fi.6..5016, is WH go in enor ar l-'-_;_;,:c:.c_:..::_;::::._.11 V8. a11rn., \vhite \'in~l brown landau roof. Equip-MUSTANG roof. liRht green body, ped with 11 uto trans. radm, complel<'IY restored. healer, power i;teering, lac-1970 Mustang 2 Door Sharp! I NSU.386) tor) air cond. Thi1 altnH:-Hardtop $1995 tive <:ar reflects exce!lenl SUPER SPORTY care. Ask for demonstration. Bcautilul Royal Blue Meta.Ilic BMW SAND BUGGY 1395AUHJ $3075, Johnll011 &: tir.ish witfl whit• A' LaMau Renault en_gine. !ZKH· ,. 674) Son, 2626 Harbof-Blvd., root. •uto trans radio, t.eat- Costa Mesa. 540-5630 rr. power aieer"ini:. fact Air 1969 Ford LTD cond. &!e and drivP. th;.i n~11I 2 Dr. H .T. bl'.'au1y today. (049 ADG) BEAUTIFUL Sale ?riced $2'n5, JohnSon Bt.rr MUST SELL &. &n. 263i Harbor B.vd., Autumn Rust Finish w I ~ h Costa Meu.. 5'1D-563o. white landau root, &uto $1195 trans, radio, heater, powtt 1967 Mustang Hard!o)J. Jta. stttring, power brakes, tac-dio, Hes.fer, Power Sl'ffr- tory air com!, and more. See ing, Ai .. Cood Mag Wheei.1 and drive today. (KNJ871 1 (UJP445J ' · Sale Priced $2475. Joh11.son & Son, 2626 Harbnr Blvd., C051a !1tesa. 5-ID-5630. '69 FORD Woi;ion ..IleDa LP.U!i.1 W VOlVO Country Squire. 9 Pasa, Fa<:· 1946 Harbor C.M 646-9303 tory Air C.Ondit:ion_ing, V-8. ,67 MUST~G ; + l GT Auto., Power Stttnne:, Pow. Mint cond" . """!! VS, e>r Brake11, Lugpce &ck, 1tion. """ Low h1ilei. CSKG4l2J a utomatic, power steering & S disc brakes, larlory tape. AVE system, low mileage. Candy Harbor American 641>·011>1 1969 HAASOR COSTA "'Est. 1969 FORD COBRA 421 CID apple red. Must stt lo Ap- preciate, Alcer 6 P.,\1. 5'10-4005. "67 Musta.ng 1.89 Silver -Blk vinyl rop. Dlxt int. A~l-FM. Original o.,.,·ner 64&-1806. $750 SA\7E '66 TRIUMPH Mk Il Spitfire Converti- ble. \Vlre \vhef'ls, radio, heater, Sharp: ITFA· 3581 $1295 '67 F-250 >,"< TON 3 speed. overlo11 d sprin~s. lon'1: hrd. li tf'p bumper. t P399 12) $1795 '65 T-BIRD Red finish. Loaded. full poy:er. f0 YL707t t7 T-Birds tn choo~e lroml $802 SAVE High pc:rformancr. 2·1.~ mi .. 611 Convertible _ <I sprl---p;.r Popular Lim: f"'rost finish f!Xtras, new !Jrrs !~ m1 '64 WINDOW VAN \\'11h blac~ 1nter1or. Auto $l200. 644 .. 1848. ' f'nrd. 6 r·yl., .'I 51...,.,.d, trans, radio heater, pov,erl oic';""'"""";:..=~-~11 caq>f'ls. pa11Plini.;:. f\l us t brakt:'S. eic. '1r YoU 11re look-'65 MUSTANG, 289 cu, in ti.. srrn: RraJ Doll! 1ng for speed ehrrk th15 ov. V-l!. xlnt concl, pr1 party. i R:\.B945, Pr. 1ZVZ20J I $14·1.'i. .Johnson 83.H296. $AVE & Son, .1626 Harbor Bl\•d., '6.i MUSTANG 2~9 V-8, Auto Costa f\1~. 540-~. trang, P/S, Ntw tires. $~. '66 MALIBU '71 PINTO-Must !!ell~~ 67.'>-0038. 2 Door. fi cyl . 3 1peed. to mi. mags " ~ year1-~0~L~D=S7M70=B~l7LE~-11 blut'. 1TFV774J l\re~. 4 sp. R/H, rt ip OUI $895 window~. 11ntf'd ~lass. A!! Sacritice "62 Old~. '67 FLEETWOOD extras. $2400. 64.'>-26.13 Art 6. Good rond, 11"' Arou~ham 4 Dr. full 'f,6 F'ord Galaxie 390. All ** 548-5865 ** PowPr, Air, Gold with power. Air conditioning $350 '68 CUTLASS Convl-Xlnt blark vinyl roof. fTVP- Norm &hockley MS-5661 conrl .. Air, Pl•. Plb. m11a:s, J80) di. 5 R&H, lo mL 962-<09l. $2795 VAN '63 ECON~. New V8 -'64 CUTLASS. auto, good l 4-spd hydro, S1JOO or trade lir~. $550., 496-'IS29 Alt 6 N ,, IQ :r~pper or VW. Atl 4. wkriays & all day wlm<is. I»}'~ l!t 11166 ECONOL!NE, x!"t rood. PONTIAC ---- - S750, or bt-gf otter. ,,68,_P_oo_o_,-,-c-,-.,-.-m-. -A-IC-. =~~~"'-'-~3305~~---1 full pwr, VR. l dr. Needs 1964 GAL AX IE 500 V-8, ?Aini. Make offer 494-2334 R&H, PIS, x!nt cond".' $450. 541J..89M. . . * "'"""' * =~==c'-==-... ___ ,.69 GTQ.Like nev,·. Fully ·n FORDS: G •I 1x i e1 , loaded. Make offer. Call af! Muslangs, A: Torinos. Hertx 6pm .,.,.kday1, 548-4275. Corp. (714) 772--0552. .10 •·t 1. . .... a 1na, •uto. pis, vinyl 1964 GAI..AXY !!iOO, V-8. top, 15.000 mlles, air . R&.H, ~.:iO. 84i-4168 alt 6 pm. ~ , * , 1965 GTO, power equipped . Execut1v' • penol"llll car 69 Air, 400 C l -t r 1-power Cortina, 4 fir, wry low W/m•ny xtra.s. 557-3443 . 1Tlile.1g,. Sl.550. 5.'17-1633. '65 Pontiac GTO. full po"'·er . 1960 FORD con v er I l b l e air, Jn mi, S7;,o. or olr, Call e\'erything works $100. After 11.lt !i 968-5860. 'p.m . .......,,. 1 --~T~-=ar=R~D---11 LINCOLN 1956 T BfRD. Nf'w tires. new '68 LINCOLN Cont, 4 !fr, upholstery, ex~llent con. dark grf'e~l11nd11.u fnp. run dillon , $1 400.00. &1l-4469, power+ •ir. S1751l. Prl. par. '61 TllUNDERBIRD c:on''· ty. ~168a; S3J-3176 '"""" ... _ .,..,., or ..... st offrr. '6.1 Conllfll'ntal. Clean, all 54.').4879 pD\l"t'r. &;;;~!~~· l---,V"A7=L'°'IA~N~T~- '6l RIVIERA Loaded. r<'d finish. (J\1{0710) $875 '65 MUSTANGS I> to choose from. Con- verllblr.o;. Hardtop~. 6 cY1.. vs·~. 3 1pds .. 4 ~pd~ • auto, SAVE Marcus Motors 645-0466 21 DO Ha~hor Blvd. The turest ttnw In tht Weit 62 VaJi..nr. Excellent ihae_e. p...,;S!a Mesa . . • Dfllly Pilot Clultried Good 1Wrk car. 5Q-&26,. 1'1 vu. Ad . Ml-5671 \fnntt •· '"· CM !, _____ _ r •--"'-~ --..:. -~~----.. r rt--~. =-::-·,-\'!' :iJJiY (