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1971-07-22 - Orange Coast Pilot
7 • • . x es in urmo1 DAILY PILOT ll.S. Says llpper Bay * * * 10( * * * THUllSDA Y AFTERNOOl'I, JUL"Y 21, 197 f Saiwtuary "'Pre-.nature ~ VOL. U. Ne. 114 I t•CtlOMI. •·f'A••• • • • • •• • • • • • • • Newport Cop Shooter a Free Man Loyal Army 'Coup Coup' BEIRUT (UPI) -Forces loyal to ousted Sudanese President Maj . Gen. Jaafar Numeiry occllpied Omdurman Radio Station toda y in an apparent couhter<oup against the pra.communist group who deposed him on Monday. The Egyptian Middle East News Agen- t.y in Cairo quoted the radio station which ls the Sude.,, nationa l radio. as sayi ng Nu mei ry "is well and will still lead the nation." The radio announcement came a few hours 11fter neighboring Libva forcerl down a British airliner in Bengh;izi and kidnaped the pre sident of Lhe new Sudanese revo!utionar.v council and e.'1o!h('r council member v.·ho v.•ere 11board 11 Sudanesr tronps ('.:irlirr v.·ere rl:'ported tn ha ve ~urroundrd the Lib~ an, ~~gyplian and S\'rian embassies in the Sudanese capi!ai of Khartoum in retal1:itfnn Then the Jl.1iddle East r\rw~ A.gene~ reported the broadcast from the radio station in Omdurm;.n, the \\.\•in city of Khartoum. as ~ying . "Sudanese forces led by Lt Moham · med Ali Krbasi have occupied the radio 11talion. "Jl.laj . Gen. Numeiry will broadcast to the nation soon." The :igency quote d 1 1pokesman Identified as Col. Salah Abdel Aal 11 r;ayi ng on the radio: ;,The cs.lastrophe through v.•hich tha nation has passed in the last few days i! now over.'' Qualified British source! said in Lon- don that fresh fighting had broken out in Kl'iartou m. beginning at about 4 p.m. local lime. The London sources &aid tank! had sur- roundl!!d the presidential palace and that shooting v.·M reported around Army headquarters. The sources said the liglitlfli appeared to be the beginning of an attempt by Numeiry or hi! supporters to regain the control UH!y lost on Monday. Numeiry wall toppled by 1 group of (Ste SUDAN, Page II La Habra Wife Shot; Mate Held A 1.8 Habr1 m111i ha! bffn charged with aSMult with inlent lo commit murder after his ·wife was ahot ln the fl(e with a small caliber revolver. Polite said Mrs. LucH!fi! Van Orden. 80, ef 2S50 Greenbrier Lane, was &wa.kened at 2:4:i 111.m. Wednesday when llhe felt her huJbe nd'1 hand on her face. The nut thing she recall:ii 11 • loud erploskln. of· flcers said. She ned to a neighbor '• boust and potirt wer~ called. ~frs. Van Orden la reported in good crnditlon at Kai ser HOi!pital ln Bellflower µ·1Ui numerous farlat wnunds. "1J -·--.t.-.. 1 ~- Apartments Ont Valley Bans Any More Development By JOANNE llEYNOLllS OI 1M flelly •1i.t $1•11 FoWltain Valley -the little town that grew -has had it with apartm6lt building'-It isn't going to allow developers to bu.ild any more. City councilmen said Tuesday they are calling a halt to the construction or apartments or roodom inium:ii becausl!! the y want ID decrease the density Md ullimate population of Lheir city. Areas that were master planned for apartments or condominiums have been changC(! to other usell at the recom· mendation of the planning comm ission and plannin ng staff. Councilmen mad!!! exceptiClll.!! in the cases of the New Republic development near \\1arner Avenur and San f.1ateo Street and 1 townhouse project on Edinger Avenue near Euclid Strl!!rl. Planning director Cl\nton Sherrod sa id both projecL~ were in the proces.o1 of development 11nd so were not included 1n the change. These are the only tv.·I') prnjects lrrt 1n a mul !iple -un1t zone iR·4l. At that, !he ci· l\' counril C'arl\er this ve11r changed the d.ensily pattern for the ·R-4 tone from 32 un 1!s per acre lO 20 un1ll5 per acre. The nel effect ol all these changes will reduce lhe ultimate population IJ.8 per- cent from around 71.786 l.o 6.1.ffll. SherrOO explainned in a memo to the CQunciL When F'ount.ain Valley became 1 city in 1957, it was a <tpy farmillg rommunity of t ,000 with a sin.Ile. two-room schoolbouu. ln the spring of 1964, the population was still only about 7.000. ln December of 1965, however, it w11s clear the population boom that engulfed CTIQSl of Orange County in the 1950!! finaHy had l5pilled over into I"oWllain Valley . _Sµddenly, the population ~'"! almost 17,000. Two years later, it w83 up lo 23,189. The city 's current population is listed at 39,600. With property that had been master planned a~ multiple units now changed to sillgle famil y, commercial or industrial use. the ratio of multiple unil3 to Lota! li~·ing unil1 in the city will dro p from an ultimate 29.08 percent to 25. IJ percent. According to a plann1n~ department report, the tot,111 nr apartments expected in the city will be 4,300 under the new master plan. The previous expectation was 5,759. . During the public hearing held duru1g lht. Tuesd ay council meeti ng nne re:si· '1t:nl, Da \'id Buffinglon spoke in fa vor nf the proposal , saying il i.'I a "desirable concepl" in relation In !ht size of the r;chools. T"''n attorneys representing land owners Donald Harpt:r ;ind John ;ind Jack Saltio ka asked the counci l to de!etl!! their client.!' holdings becau~ the change iSee APARTMENTS. Page?) Bay Refuge 'Preroaiure' U.S. Official Reveals By L PETER KRIEG CH n.. !Nlly ,I..., lt•ft The U.S. (}ep.!.rlment of lntertor in- tends to designate Upper Newport Bay 1 natlonal landmark but any talk of ac· quiring pert of h. for 1 wildlife refuge is premature, federal officials 1s id this morning. Designation of the landmark llt.a.tus, .~i pected in the near future from Interior Sfcretary Rogers Morton. "does fiol con· .rtitate a cloud over the title -thei:e i5 DO acquisition of land Involved." Willlam Monroe , regional coordi1lator of the department, said toda y. He said Fiflb Dialtkt Supervilor ROflald E. Casper•. who Tuesday u id lhe desigtialion of a !!anct.uary 1talll! was due In lw than two weekl. ".-ppartnlly rnblnterpretl'd'' something we 'M!re talk· in' about. - Munroe Nid naUM1l landmart 1tatus ''gives an area 1 partlcul&r de1lpation indicating it bas a special quality and that' area ls entitled to special di~ aider•Uon. Monroe said ht recommended the deSiJnatlon to Morton , 111 did an 11dv\sory panc!!I, .1nd u.Jd the secretary could act 1t any lime. On the oth!r ll11nd. action on J rtquesl by the OrAnae County Soard nf Supervisors to establish 1 wild life rtfuge in IM bay is much further off, ,.ionroe said. "We have been working with Cupe!:rs' office in exa.minin1 tilt Upper Bay to dt· tennine if there i1 any besis to make it 1 special preserve coosistent with the board ·11 resolution ," Monroe confirmed. "Secretary Morton new over the arl!!I and asked me to 11tudy the possibility." ,.,ontOf 1ald he wou ldn 't guess how long it wiU take him to file a report. but he did point out that designation or an 1re1 11 1 nationa:I wildlife refuge takes an aet of Congres11. "Our study ill purely in the format ive -1tages." Monroe said, "we have bttn meeting with the county counsel and the staff. "We are concerned about the area," be uid. ~ Monroe tfould not guess how big an arta ht mlaht recommend for 11 national 1anct.uary. "There are minimum 1tand1rds," be tald, "but I am not ramll iar enoogh with them tn comment at thi~ time." He 1ald If "decia\on la m11de to acquire ~me of the )>ay for a sanctuary, It w()uid be purchased. pou1b/y with funds J1va ilabl' through the Duck Stamp Act or th! Migratory Bird Act. , Mesa Party Triggers 19 Arrests By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of "'' °'4111~ ~11•1 llt lt ·A ~tiy·wnith ·dreV.i·np !<t lOO ~rsol1s lo Coat.a Mesa's quiet Callt!!gt. Park district ended in chao.s late Thursday as police tactical squad teams cleared thti streets under 1 barrage of projectiles . The incident came after the party wa s declared to be an unlawful assembly and scores of partlcipanL~ fa iled to disperse as ordered. By th!!! time J1 wall over, 19 person!! were jailed. at least one was ho~pilaliud and many morl!! including police officers suffered minor cuts end bruises. Arrestees ranged in 11ge fr om \3 to 2fi, roming from a.s far away as Pnmona. and charges included m~tly fa ilure to disperse or being drunk in public. Thret men were bookf'd on suspicinn nf assaul t nn a police offic er. one of them , a Colorado tra nsient whn allegedly swung at Patrolman Dean Howard a t 12:20 a..m. today in the ~latlon. Carl Carlson, 26, was arrested follO\lo'ing a scuffle in which he sulfered a lracturrd jaw and was transferred to the j2.il ward of Orange County Medical c.enter. Circuinst.ances involving a l6-year-0ld youth from Orange wtro wa.~ arrested and lat.er suffered some type of seizure were also being probed today. Poliq Capt._.1 Roberl . Moody, com- mander of the palro) ~ divisio n. said widespreui c<implaints about a live rock band and crowd In the 2.300 and 2400 blocks of College Drive were received . A conUngen~ of 10 patrolmen and two sergeants was dispatched al 9:45 p.m., afttr dispatchers had logged a dozen irate calb and finally quit counting. One man had threatened to tUe his own gun into the street if police didn't in· tervene. according to the call log. The squad or uniformed officers - without riot control equipment -took charge and ordered the crowd to dispers!. using the rock band 's ampllflca- tion iysttm. Capt. Moody said. He said they withdrew when a barrage of rock!. bottles, oranges and other Items was hurled by 5-0me members of the crowd 1urging in the street. The morning watch was due on within moments -many member& df the so- ca\led Tse Squad Included -at which time the crowd control unit was ordered into the field . Newport Beach poll~ were also placed on 1tendby alert. De11ptte the earlier dlsperaal order, Capt. Moody said a second wu given by Sgt. Robert Goode, 1t which time more. nbject.IJ were thrown &nd the rtre.et sweep Degan. "Most of the cro~·d dispersed as ordered." he s11ld , explaining the rowdy. defiant eleme.nt caused trouble for many who weren't resisting. Officer P11t Rodgers 1111ld he W<lS jumped by nnf: YoUlh while trylng to ar· (Set RlOT, P11e !I -.. , ·r· -- -. DYLAN ON THE. PORCH An Unearthly Qui•t Dtme1nor Silent Spectator Watches World Walk' by Porch His lonjit hair flowing . he keeps constant vigil on lhe porch at 2818 Newport Blvd., Dashing a peace sign and st.a.ring out of still, blue eyes at passersby. Those !lopping lo talk find him , well, unreal. Main ly because. he is. Known as ''Dylan" to owner Harvey Farrell and friends, he is wire frame, painted paper , a brown wig and some old clothes. "Some guys were out on lhe porch one day watching the girls go by as usual, so I put him out with them," 111ld Jeri Brandl. Since that time about a year ago , Dylan ha1 moved inside onl y once and then "the neighbors came ove r 11nd asked 'Where 's your ma'n?' " laughed Jeri who ch.111ges Dyl.an'• position once in 1 1'hl/c. But most of the time he jw;l sits there, day and night, 1tartlin1 people wilh bis une1rthly quiet demeanor. Fullerton Police Net 19 for Drugs • Ninetttn persons werj!: arrested In a narcotla raid by P'uUerton police u r\y today. OfJicer1 sa.Jd •II suspects we rt r~ullerton resldents ind are beln R held on char&es r.1 n11ng from PoSSe111ion of marl· Juana tor sale to heroin. No Drinking Vow Wins Probation A man who wounded tw(» Newport Beach pollc-emen in a shootout on the Pacific Coast Highway wu placed on three years probation today in Or.a.ngt County Supt!flor Court. J udge Byron K. P.fcMilla.n 11U5pended what could have been 1 lengthy it.ate prison ·lenn for Arthur Lambert, 61, and ordered the retired engineer to slay away from aJtohol and firearms during hls pro. bation period. Lambert, smartly dressed in a rra1 sui t and silver tie, 1tood up in the prisoner's box and promised Judge McMillan in his clipped Britir;h accent: "I ·ve stopped drinking your honor, I won't drink again." It was stated in his defense that he wu in a drunken stupor last Nov. 14 when he shot Newport officers James Gardner and John Ellingham in 11 fracas sparked when he was halted on Pacific Coast Highway and booked on charge1 of drunken driving. Lambert shot Ellingham in the leg ind Gardner in the stomach before he wu disarmed and booked on charges that In· c!uded attempted murder. Both officera have since recovered from their wounds. A $6 million lawsuit filed by both of. ficers against Lambert i1 awaiting trial in superior Court. Corn Blight Spreads WASHINGTON IUPJ ) -Arkansas and Oklahoma. have been added t.o the. list of states -now numbering 31 -where com blight infestations have been uncovered. Orange Weather The suo will peek through the haze today and Friday, follow- ing early morning low ' ctoud1 and fo1 . Temperaturea will range from 70 along the best hes to 84 inland. Lows around 66. INSIDE TODAY A PoliJh. Jew. now an 1.srnell citizen, has revta.ltd that whil« in a prison co.mp, ht Uarncd the Ru1aian.s, -not th.t No.di, TMtsccrro 12,000 Polish of~ cers during the war. Stor11 Page '· .... ..... MIJtMI , ....... "•llWl8'1 ,._. 0""'9' C""'Y ,, .. ,, ,...... ::::·..,,.,.. 1'tlt•hlltll ,~ ..... " • .. t!lt. "-'•N ... ... • • " • I •• .,, .. lt·M • 1).H I I I l I I • ' 1 I " DAll. Y PILOT s fhundar, July 22, 1971 WBAD 06 Air Last Yaclit Unlawful Station Made Bad Waves Over Line • 'JS'fAllllll, La.. !AP) -No _,, JbUa1c or weather from WOAD today. ~ent agents swept in and Jocked • 1tudio door of the homemade rad.kl .ption run by "''°'l'rlllng youths. '~'I can see why the P'llderal O:>m- lllank:aUons Commia:1ton closed us down, t can't argue with their rusoning," be- reoaned Nathan Gifford, the JS-year-0ld station manager. "But I think we wei:-e more. of a public service than a public nuisance." 'two FCC officials ordered WBAD off of ttl transmittin( AM frequency at 27.IM MegaHertz Wednesday. 1bt: station was broadcasting for abnoll four months with a modified -Md • 111).foot dl-1 antenna before the FCC found out about Fro•n Page J SUDAN •.. army officers -aeveral of whom hid helped him 1ain power In a coup a year qo. Their leader, U . Col. Babakr El Nur Olmaa, Aid in Lohdon Wedneaday he hoped to lteer Sudan on "the palh to 6cientWc socialism." He was one of the two members of the new revolutionary council aboard the British plane forced down today in Libya. Libyan jets bw.zed the plane to force it to l~. Libya'• 1overnment supported Nwneiry'1 anti-communist pollcles. The Mkl.dle Eut News A1ency quoted another announcem~t over Omdurman radio bJ Maj. Abou Khassem Mohammed Ibrahim 11 declaring a staU of emergen- cy tbroqhout the Sudan with 1 curfew startinC It! p.m. (11 a.m. EDT) Ibrahim ns 1 member ol the Rtvolu· Uonuy Command Council loyal to Numeiry which the pro-communiit group replaced. The radio station asked its employes to report immediately for duty. "Yur revolution is steadfast and the armed forces will continue the march at your wish," Ibrahim was quoted . as saying, and he ended by quoting Numelry. lJbyui jet fighters for~ a British overseas A1rway1 vc10 with lo 7 passengers aboard to land at the Libyan city or Benghazi at dawn today and disembark Lt. Col. Babakr Al Nour Osman, the prC>-COmmunist president of the Sudan's ntw revoluUonary command council. and another council member. 'I11e second council member was ten· talively identified as Maj . Farouk Hamadallah. The airliner, en route to Kha.rtown, turned around and returned to London. Nour 37 had been en route to ~ ~ assume power as president of the new Revolutionary Command Council. Both he and Hamadallah were in military nglme was overthrown Monday ln the fourth coup in 15 years. Tile: previous regime had been negotiating for membership in a new federation of Arab states with Egypt, Libya and Syria . The new government ls hosWe to the federation project. In Baghdad, Iraq . the official Iraqi news q:ency said that a special Iraqi 1lrcraft carrying high.ranking lraql of. flclal! to Khartoum cruhed in the Saudi Araiblan desert today, killing three high· ranking Iraqi officials wbo were en route to the Sudan to confer with leaders of the now ousted military government there. The Iraqi 31ency gave no cause for ~e crash. Egypt's Voice of the Arabi Radio nid the plane exploded in the air. Freeway App1·aisal Set for TV Friday Bamford Frankland, assi!tant 1ttJ.e public works director. will discuss Governor Reagan·s r~11.ppraig\ () f California's freeway system and lt..s direct effect on the coastal cities of· Orange County Friday at I :30 p.m. on KHJ·TV, Channel 9. OUN•I COAIT DAILY PILOT ... ,.,. .. 11 · " ................ ..................... ,....., c.... .... S.Ct1• re a.AHN' COAJT P'UllllHltrtO COM"-'"Y ··••rt N. w ••• '"'-*'" .111111 ""'°'..,.. J1clc R. Curley Viee ,.,..,.,. ..-All YwM•I Mt,..W Th-1.....ic1e•U !:ti .... lh•11111 A. M1r,hi11t ~ ..... lldl ..... C'ierlM H. l••• Rlt.h•" P'. Ne ll .....,._, M8Ml"'91 .141...-. tel ;f I I (fl4f MJ"""41J1 Q'*""'41 U-tWst Ml·llfl ._ a ...... Al •••=• •• "' ,, • 4fl~Jt < It. ,,,. ll&tllllltnlt llpaJ ---two--nfth of a watt -could be pkked up two blocks from Nathan's bedroom, the station's studio. WEAD was on a frequency U was not assigned to, the power exceeded \lf'bat an unregulated station may h a v e , transmissions were potenUally dangerous and the antenna was too long, said Art }fallam, an FCC engineer. "The potential danger was to aircraft navigation," Hallam warned, esptclally lf its broadcuUng hid int.erfered with airport·to-alrcraft conversations. What became a threat to aviation started out as a joke, said Nathan, who uses the broadcast name of Stranie Brother Nathan. "Three weeks' afUr we first sig~ on, we deeided lo become a good un· derground radio station," he explained. The boys. including his 13--yea r-o\d brother, Skinny Russell, and The Real Joey Backes. also 13, played records, rewrote headlines and broke In with the latest weather reports monitored on VHF. They fashioned a store·bought walkie- talkie to meet tbelr needs. To hook up the transmitter, they con· nected it to a wire on a fishlnc pole strung out from a bedroom window, down to the trunk of an oak tre't, up through power Jines to the exhaust stack on the next door home of The Real Joey. then over to a willow tree. Ul'I Ttlw>Ml9 Packing llp j· · Vi .Tr""8pac r. ' .. ~ .. ·-ULU'(lll'I) -Tiie ·1171 blem\W ~lo. Y~·. tJldod aar!;t '!."t:fi.. ~ . ~""lei,~i;': Bon ........... ,-·Ill• --a. ;,·~l!o\fa.ru1." · 'n. 'ftoweDt:.1.a -0us B VHMI with Dolltld Daltlel af'lh helm. utled past lhe DiamCIDd He.ad finish line at 12:30 a.m. ~ to become the last of 61 vessel• to make the 2,2Z-mile voyage lrcm San Pedro, Calli., which be&an July <I. She Cinished far down in the standin1s as a strategy of tak.ing a northerly course In hopes of catching high winds backfired. The rest ol the fie.et. sailing ln a toutberly direction, found 1troa11 w:lndt stirred up by tropical storm Deni.5e lut week and finished ahead of her. The Wl.Ddward Passage, a 73-foot ketch from the Lahalna Yacht Club, beeamt the first vessel in the history of the rac. to capturt: Ui.ree fint placts, cleaniweep- ing the first to finllh, Clau A and flrtt overall in handicap. Other unofficial winners were Encore, a 43-foot sloop from Balboa Yacht Club, in Class B; Argonaut, a 40-foot sloop from the Santa Barbara Yacht Club in: Along the way, the wire was soldered to a turpentine can with a ground wlrt attached. "That took aome doing. We we.re work· lng on Joey's hot roof yelling for towell to stand on," Nathan recalled. Mrs. Mary Irwin, wile of Apollo 15 lunar module pilot Jim Irwin. and two of their five children pack suitcase in preparation for trip to Cape Kennedy. There they will watch dad begin an even longer trip. The moon shot is set for Monday. Tte dau&b· ters are Jan, 6i and Jil, 10. Class C. and Dakar. a 41-foot doop from the Del Rey Yacht Club, in Claaa D. Awards were presented at tbe victory banquet Wednesday nl&hl "The station got to be quite a thing in the neighborhood," noted Na l ha n ' 1 father, A1ex Glfford. news director of WVlJE.. TV In New Orleans. "Kids would ride around on their bikes with radios against their ears." On1y complaints. it seems, came from father Gifford, 11'bo bit his tongue 'tlach lime he lost sleep or privacy. Nut he added : "I've never heard so many Neil Diamond reeords in my ~ife. That's what woke me up every morning. It drove me cuckoo. During the day they had a request line for songs and our phone kept on ringing:• Hallam informed the boys of the penalty -$10 000 fine and/or-two years in pri so n -and' made Gifford sign a stale-- ment to insure that WBAD would not return to the airwaves. From P"lfll 1 RIOT ... reat a companion who he alleaed lhouttd obsceniUe1 at a woman who came outaide to complain her children were tryln& to sleep. The prospedlve arreatee, Robert S. Tripp, 19,· of 388 Marnolla Ave., waa eventually booked on susplcl-0n of disturb- ing lht peace and resisUng arrest. Police charged Patrolman Rodgers' alleged attacker, Gerald D. Smith. 19, of 4.70 Le.nwood Circle, with 1uaplcion of asaault on a polict -Officer. Frank M. Sorlch, 18, of SlS Clbrlllo SL, wu 11ublequently booked on ldtnt.lcal chatiU. Involving Oflicu Chuck Hamilton. During the melee, Tac Squid Officer Jim Blaylock wa! struck ln the front of his riot helmet by a thrown bottle which broke the visor and dropped him to hil knees momentarily. Investigators &aid they also arrelled Coast Guardsman Duane R. L-OtU1. 20. o! the USCG 1tati011 1t 1911 Bay1lde Drive. Newport Beach. on suspicion of resisting arrest. Police said the party was staged by Kevin Morrow. 17. of 2414 College Drive, who Capt. Moody s1ld had tried to obt.iin city permission lO block off Nassau Drive to stage the party. City Manager Fred Sorsabal turned down his request received on Tuesday. reportedly because Nassau Drive i.s a through 1treet and this would be un-- feaslble. Morrow told a photoiirapher tod.ay it was too late to call off the party whan notified his request had been turned down. Captain Moody s&ld today that many residents had compllmtnted the Tactlc11I Squad's handling of the situation, while others disa~. "The kJds wert no problem . They were doing just great." said Mrs. Robert Young, of 2410 College Drive . ''ll Ju.st wasn't fair," she add6d. Captain Moody a110 said neighborhood youngsters as well a~ 90mt visitors did • pretty iiood job of cleanup •fter the party ended cllmaetJcally. "You couldn't believe It when wt got there.'' he said. "There were ~ Cllll and broken 1lass everywhere." Marines to Give Duke the 'Mike' SAN ANTONIO. Tex. <UPll -The Marine Corps J..elaue baa named JMn Wayne the next recipient of the 11tron Mike·• award -given annually to the man "who btsl es:empllfles the word ·American.' " Firm Recalling Tainted Salami After Illnesses WASH1NGTON (UPI) -Armour & Co. is cooperating in a nationwide recall of its "Genoa Salami" a1 a precauUon because nine cases of Illness have been traced to tainted batches, lbe Agricu!· ture Department report_ed today. The Department's Consumer .and Mar· keting Service (CMS) said some of the salami was infected with a "sta"ph" toxin that produces nausea, vomilini and -Other digestive upeeta. Officials said three separate illnesses, Involving nine person!, were re.ported be· tween M1y 10 aftd late June in Ke.nlliba, Wis., Denwr, Colo., and Bellingham, Wash. All of them have fdUy recovered, offi· cials .said, and it was not until late last week that 9pe.rt.s were able to traet ttie sicknes!I to Genoa Salami. Although the department statement noted tht only "some'' o{ Ult!! salami wa 5 found t.alnted with a toxin produced by staphylococcus bacteria, officiala said all Cenot S.Jaml from the St. Paul, Minn. plant where It Is made, was being recalled from retail stores as a pre-- cauUonary measure. Dr. Abby Lo(l, a CMS officlal, aaid he hid no utimate of how much salami was involved. He said Armour, which distributes the product nationally. was cooperating fully in the voluntary recall. In normal processing of Geno1 Salami, officials 11ald, "favorable bacteria ke-ep the staph from re.a ching harmful levels:" In this case. they said, the usual Jn· teraction did not t.ake place. Lofie said the Genoa Salami Is 'nor- mally sold in rl!lail stores and dtllca- le.!!scns in five pound stlcks and In sliced form. J oaq ui11 Board A wards Contract For Toro School A contract for a new lnte.rmedlate school in El Toro bas been awarded by the Trustees of the San Joaquin Elemen- tary School Dbtrlct. The low bid of Sl,$44,000 was subrntUed by W. E. Lyons Construction Co. of Lynwood. Construction Is erpected to belln In two or three weeks. Routine st.ate appro'lal of the contr1ct must be granted llrsl. The scllool is located on a 20-acre silt on Mulrlands Boulevard where Alicia Parkway will intersect. "When Alicia Is constructed the county wlll probably purchase two or three acres of the site for tht street," !&Id Rex Ner1~n. Assistant Superintendtllt for Administrative Services. 't'he &Choo! ts deslcned for !50 studthta ind Is exactly the same as the in. l.crmtdlate school now under construction in University Park. The baalc pl•n for both tchoob was adopted from La Paz Intermediate in Miss.Ion ·viejo. NtriSon said the 1chool I.a expected to be completed and occupied ln 8eptembet ol 117L Fre• r..., 1 APARTl\fENTS • Ttie award, named after l nine-foot would create a hardship in deve.lopini the statue of a nghtlng martne. on Parrt& property. liland, s.c .. will be presented Aue. 13. Counctlm.an John Harper (no rolaUon Wayne was chosen ''•lnct in his SCf'ffn to lhe h1ndowntr) moved to dtlet1 the portrayals and in his everyday lift hf: haa Sokloka property from tha chtl'lfe, bu\ playtd thost traits of ccharact~r that the proposal died ror Jack ol a .econd, and make him an outslAndlna American," lht c::ouneilrncn approved lhe changes without league i>•id Wedrlt5dAy. comment. · Harriman Attacks Nixon Cl1ina Motives in Address By TOM BARLEY 01 ,,_ O.llt ,l .. f Sllll Rovln& amb8ssador Averell Harriman eceu.sed. President Nixon Wednelday night of being less than honest with the American people about the motJves behind hill proposed visit to Red China. Harriman told the World Affairs Coun· cil of Orange County in Santa Ana that the "American pablic was entitled to know the true purpose."' of Nlx.on's mission to the F.ar Ea.st "and should not be kept waiting for some di1Closure on tbe tinet of the Penta&Oll Papers leak. "In any event," the veteran diplomat added, "the President's visit ihould not be allowed to dlvtrt public aUentloo from the Hnselw tragedy ol the Vietnam war and our troop& m111t be out ol I.here lofli before he i<>eS to Pelting." Harriman. a former U.S. ambassador to Soviet Russia, said complete honesty by the President before he journeys to O\ina would prevent misunderstanding of his motivea by the Russiaru. "Il would be a tragic blunder to play one against the other." he said. "We: have come a long way toward the present understanding with Ru.ssla and It is much more vital that we preaerve that re\a. tionship lhan that we should eultivat.a China to the detriment of our Russian un. der1t.anding." Harriman, an adviser on foreign affairs to six presidents. lashed the South Viet- n11m conflict and this nation's In· volvement in the wu with North Vietnam throughout a hard hitting talk. "We have no right to be there." he said. "It is our duty to get out and get oul now and we mOl!!lt cetrainly should be long gone front South Vietnam before the nut g'oeral election ... That elect.ion, Harriman said, should be fought on the nation's domestic iMUU and "Lhla nation's energiea under whoever wins the election ahould be con- centrated on the solution of probltDV that plague w right here at home." He held up the example of the post World War II Manhall Plan as "the only sensible way " lo aid any naUon determined to fight communism. Harriman, who played a major role in the concepUon of the giant aid package to war torn European nation!, told his au· dience that "we ahould only help those who are willing to help themselves. Planes, Cutters Search for Pair Missing in Boat LONG BEACH (AP) -Coast Guard cutters and Air Force plMes wer1 ordered to resume a search tod21y for I 4(1.foot fishing boat. reported disabled and drifting somewhere off Polnt Conception with two brothers aboard . The search lor the Atka continued lnltt !he night. hampered by heavy coastal fog, s Coast Guard spokesman in Long Beach said late Wednesday. Aboard "·ere Phil Ha skin. skipper. and his brother. Ralph, both of Watsonville. A distress signal was picked up at mid· morning the Coasl Guard said. Civil Defense 1unit& were aiding the se11rch with mobile units 11long the coast about l~ miles north or here. trying to pinpoint the exact location of the craft. Work Stacking Up SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Since a gravediggers' strike began in June, more than 800 bodies have stacked up at mortuaries in San Francisro and neighbortiing San Mateo County. Authorltie.s said Wednesday the bodies have been embalmed Bnd stored In cof· fins so there is no health problem . Soma San Fre.ncilCO mortuaries have had to rent atoragt space in olher funeral homes . luxurious spring down sofas Thia handsome Sof• was de•igrted to give you th• ultimet• In aaating comfort with c:ltcron and clown back pillows, dftp apring down s1at c:u1h Iona enveloped in down •nd feathers In two foam· fill.ct •rm pillows. Choote from a wide selection of fiM fa bric•. 8' length, reg. $500. NOW 3 99. 1 BTH SEMI ANNUAL SALE IN PROGRESS SAVE 20% ON ALL HERITAGE AND DREXEL Ul'HOLSTiRED CHAIRS AND SOFAS • ALSO -SEY!RAL HERITAGE AND DREXEll BEDROOM, DINING ROOM AND OCCASIONAL COWCTIONS ON SAL!. Yow /®'lritt. iftkrior dttigur will bt Mppv to csariit vo• , • , H.J.GARRETT fURNrfURE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS o,... Moo .• Thn. & Jlrl. lva1. -TRY OU~ HYOLYIN• CHARGE - 2215 HARBOR IL VD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646.0275 646-027! --· .. ck<•-""· -~ ··"" ·-..-.-•·""------.--..... --·I :tr_'·~ ''"jJ~· ~ -:' /~. lliJl!'-~tCjW)>~ 1 .\\.(W.,'<\fi~". ,.-• ..._..._ ~..;-~'f'il<o .. •--n.~·1 ·~~·-t ~·,..-~.....e. " '''Di;. --~·-j / ...,.,., . -1......---· 1 I • I I I 7 7 I I I 7 7 Huntington Bea~h Fountain Valley ....... • ·---, Today's Final N.Y. Stoe& VOL 64, NO. 174, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 22, 197 1" TEN CENTS Valley Calls Halt to Apartment Construction By jQAr--'f<rri'E REY]';OLDS 01 !flt Oelly ,.1191 $t•lf Fountain Valley -the lilt!' I.own tha t grew -has had it with apartment buildings. II isn't going to allow developers to build any more. , City councilmen said Tuesday they are ca lling a halt lo the construction of apartment& or condominiums because they wanl lo decrease the density and ultimate population of their city. Areas that were m11ster planned for apartmenl.J or condominiums ha\'e been changed to ether uses at the recom· n1endation of the planning commission and planninng staff. Councilmen made exceptions in the cases of the New Republic development near Warner Avenue and San ~1ateo Street and a townhouse project on Edinger A venue near Euclid Street . Planning director Clinton Sherrod said both pro}ecl.s v.•ere in the process or development and so were not included in the chaoge. These att the only two pro1ecls left in a mullirile-unH zone f R--4 ) At that. the ci- ty council earlier this year changed the density pattern for the R-4 zone from 32 units per acre to 20 units per acre. The net effect of all these changes will reduce the ultimate population 13.8 per· cent from around 71.786 to 63JJ71, Sherrod explainned in a memo to the council . When Fountain Valley became a city tn 1957. ii was a sleepy farming community of .C ,000 with a single, twt>-room schoolhouse. In the. spring of 1964. the population w&."I still only about 7 .000. 1n Oecembrr of 1965, however , it was clear the populatio n boom that engulfed most of Orange County in the 1950s finally had spiU'd over into Fountain Valley. Suddenl y. the population was almost 17,000. Two years later , it was up t{l 2.tl89. The city's rurrenl population is listed at 39.600. \'.'ill\ property that had been master planned as n1ultiple units now changed to single family, commercial or !ndwtrial use. the ratio of multiple units to k>tal living units in the city will drop from an ultima te 29Jl8 percent to 25.13 percent. According to a planniog department report . the total or apartmenl."I expected in the ci ty will be 4,300 under Che new master plan. The previous expectation Y.'1.5 5,759. During the public hearing held during the Tuesday council meeting one resi- dent. Dav'id Buffington. spoke in favor of the proposal, gaying it is a "desirable concept" In relation to the aiu of the schools. Tv.·o atklrneys representlne land owners Donald Harpe.r and John and Jack Saldoka asked the council to delete the ir chents' h<lldings because the cha.nae would create a hardship in developing the property. Councilman John Harper (no relatJa11 to the landowner) moved to delete the Sokioka property from the cbanie, but the proposal died for lack of a second. and councilmen approved the changes without comment. ' --Bared Weapons Beach Seeks Freeway Showdown OAILT f'ILOT llfH ""'"° Tar on ·the Beacli 1-'i}J. ""' •• ,.~ Sal Buzett;i., 18, Stanton (left) and Kirk Salaya. 11, Huntington Beach, com pare crude balls of tar Lhe y rolled up from beach near city pier Wednesd!y af. ternoon . Tar came from minor oil slick which ap- peared offshore about 1 p.m. betv•een 12th and 23rd Street.s. City officiaJs said beach was clean today. They declined to 1peculate on origins of oil. Transpac Y acltt Race Fiiially Comes to End HOr\OLU LU IU Pl l -The 1971 bieMial Transpacific yacht r11ce enrled ,ar]y ""edresd11v "'hen Rnwena. 11 49·fool cut- ter from the St. Francis Yacht Cluh in San Fr11ncL'f'fJ. won Lhe dubious distinc- tion nf .. Tail End Charli,. ·· The Rn"ena, a Cl11ss B vc ssrl w!lh Do nald Dal1.iel at the he lm. sa tlffl past th' Di11mond Head fint~h lint Al 12":30 am H.ST In IM'C1'1me lhe 111~! of M vessels to m11ke the 2.225-mile voy11_1!e from San Pl.'drn . Calif .. \lhirh ~gan .July 4. She finisl°H'd far down ln 1he 11tard ings as a str11tegy of tak ing " nnr1hrrly course In hopes of c<Hching high wind .'! backfired. The rest nr the fleet. sailing In a wutherly directi on. found strong winds stirred up by tr<lpical stocm· Denise last wt>ek and fin ished ahead of her. The \llindward Passage. a 7l-foot ketch from the Lahalna Yacht Club, becarfle the firsl ve~el in the history i)f the race to capture three fint plact.S. cleanswttp- ing tlW! first to finish, Clw A and first overall in handlc.ap. Orange Coan Locl\:heed Wi11s Victories In Bid for Federal Loan \\'ASH1 NGTO!'i (UPl ) -\\'ith its ct--airman keeping Utbs from a ca pital h1dea11.ay. Lockheed A1rcr<1 (t Corp. has "on Jmpressl\·e House and Senate ''ic- tories in its bid fnr lhe govcrnment- guaranteed $2.)(l mi llio n loan 1t nee<ls to forestall bank ruptcy. But Sen. \Y illiam Proxmire II).\\'1' ). Lockheed's forem051 foe tn Congress. threatened today to m;istermind 11 filibuster aimed at preventing a fin al Sen<ite vote before Congres~ qui'~ Au,1: 8 for a month·s vacation Pro)(mire v.•as whipped by a 5&36 vote Wednesday in hill move to send ba ck for new hearings a bill giving the gov ern- ment authority kl guarantee replaymen t of up to S2 billion worth of loans lo ailing corporatkiru; such as Lockheed, the na· lion's 33rd la rgest firm. Lockheed would probably gel the firi;t loa.1 if the bill passes bu t it says ii must have the money in the next week 01' Ml lo avert bankruptcy. A second crucial victory for the aerospace giant came in the Hou:se Bank- ifli Committee. wllich outvoted lt.f chairman. and approved 1 bill identical to the Senate mea."lure. The House was expected to act on the measure ht.fore the congres."lional ~ess. Lockeed Board Chajrman Daniel J, Haughton, a plainspoken eng ineer fr<lm Alabama. wa tched devPlopments from the etremon1al office assigned to \lice Presidenr Spiro T. Agne". The office is JUSI off the Senate fl oor. "In !he 14 years J'Ve been in the Srn ate , I've never been subjected to this kinr1 of pressure:' Proxmire said. com· plaining aboul lobbying by the Wh ile }louse 11nd by Lockheed. Sen ,J William F'ulbrighl j!).Ark.l, agreed. ··1 expect Lockheed has as many lobbyists 1n \l/ashingtnn as there are Sen111ors:· he grumbled . Pr<lx mire said he recP1vl:'d twn threats (lfl his own life -one by teltphone and one tn a letter postmarked Long Island Cify. N )'. Another lettl.'r v.·a rned of a plan lo poison his food. Proxmire told the Senate. that Henry r.t. l)urham of Marietta, Ga ., a former Lockheed employe wbo had written him a letter about Lockhee~fs "mismanage- ment,'' had received "very !i«!rious phone calls" threatening \ioleoce . As a result, Proxmire said. federal marshals have been assigned t.o guard Durham under a law making it illegal to threaten congressional "i lnesses. Prox- mire has invited Durham t.o testify be.fore the Joint Economic Committee about his allegations aga inst Lockheed. By ALAN DIRKIN OI lfll 0.llJ ,Uot SllH Court act.ion or legislation were threatened Wednesday afternoo11 M weapons Huntington Beach might fire kl wive the city's freeway shortage. These hints were dropped in a showdown bet ween city officials and Bamford Frankland. the as."lislant state director of public works . Out of the confrontation came an Sudan Torn By Violent Pg~t;t ~Gr~§_ , BEIRtrr (UPI l -Forcu loyal to ou.sted Sudant~ President M•J, Gen. Ja.ifar Nwneiry occupied Omdurman Radlo Station today in an appatent counter-000p againllt the pro-communi!t group who deposed him on Monday. The E1ypti11.n Middle East News Agen- cy in Cairo quoted the radio station which is I.ht Sudan national rad io. as saying Numei ry "ls well and "'ill still lead I.he nation.·· The radio announcement came 1 few hours after neighboring Libya forced down a British airliner in BengM1i and kidn1ped the president of the new Sudane&e revol utionary council and &!lot.her council member wh,o we.re aboard it. Sudanese troops earlier wer' reported lo have surrounded the Libyan. Egypt ian and Syrian embassies in the Sudanese capita l of Khartoum in retalia tion. Then the Middle East News Agency reported the broadcast from the radio station in Omdurm2.11, the twin city of Khartoum . as saying· "Sudanese forces led by Lt. Moham· med Ali Krbasi have occupied the radio station. "Maj Gen . Numeiry v.•111 broadc11st to the na tion soon .. , 1be agency quot.ed a spokesman Identified as CAii. Sa.lah Abdel Aa! as saying on the radio : "The c&astrophe through which the nation has passed in the la~t few days is now river ." Qua lified British snurces said in Lon- don tha! fresh fighting had broken out in Khartoum. beginning at about 4 p.m. loca l time. The London source.'! aaid tank.! had sur- rounded the presid~lial palace and that ahooting WM reported around Army he1dquarters. The 10Urces said the fighting appeared to be I.he beginning of an attempt by Numelry or his supporters to regain the control they lost on Monday. Numeiry was toppled by 11 group of fSee SUDAN, Pare t) 1\'eather The sun will peek through the haze today and Friday, follow· ing early morning low clouds and fog. Temperatu.re1 will range from 70 along the beaches to 84 inland. Lows 1round 66. Added Sewer Study Sought INSWE TODAY A PoliJh Jt.w, notn an l."lrot.li ci!iif!n; hns re~alf!d that while 1n o prison camp. ht learned th f.' Rus.uanJ. ·not th,. Nazi$. massacred 12.000 Polish of/1· Cf!r.~ rlurinu 1he. Wl'lr. · St orv Pagt 4. 1111111 ,, M•tti.t It.ff '•llt<ln1+• .t Clll'<lil~' Utt 1 Cl~nlllM ,.. ... co ... ln • c.-.u...... ,. f~lle•!tl ~... I f~l...,t!•-, •. ,. ,,ft~~·· " lolWllHI ,....... N 1'1-''-'' """' I Of•lltt '-'' 11 lyr.11 hl'ltt H s,..m 11·U Slldl "''111"' ti-II Ttlottllllll It ,_ .. ~ 1'-tf llt .. Kt,.. H Ano L•""tn U .......... 4 Wt-'f N .... 1 .. 11 Mtrrlttt LI<-• 11 Chamber Asks Denial of Permit on Brookhurst Job The Huntfniton Beach Cbamber ol Commerce directors are callinf for 1 greater 1iudy cf tbt. effecta of the prt>- J>(l5ed BrookbUnt Strfff. aewer line i nd altematt. ioute1. 'Mley passed a resolution al their monthly meeting Wednesday urg ing the tjty council t.o deny the Orange County Sanitation District an uc1v111inn permit for the pT'tlject until 1 ~tudy ii m11de of liH' total C011b of the job. Proposing the resolullon. William Foster, gener11I n1anager of the Hun· tington Beach Comp1ny, •aid that the district bad coruiidered only the c:on- &t.ruction co.th In plckJ ng the Brookhur."ll Street a!Jiflment but that ll ..study 1hould W ....... _ -,-..r ....,, - be made of the COAts including Ult. effect on buslnus, traffic flows and Jou of sales .... The study woold include the alternate routes that have been rejected as "in- feasible" by the sanitation district. such as the Santa Ana riverbed. Bu5hard Street or tht Talbert dra inage channel. A "No'' vote to the chamber resolution was cast by real estate broker Roger Slater; who said I.hat the city stflff had lmpo~td tough restric!tons on the project. expecled kl take 22 month.,. SU.Its tloubted lh.at an y merchant would be put nut of business by lhe work. The project lnvoles linking tre11tment plants five miles apart in Hunll.qakln Beach aod Fountain Valley with a·M-inch line. Tbt aanitaUon district •la.ff WI week made 1 presentaUon lo the icty C(lllJ'ICil asking for the excevaUon permit. argWng tlTal 1 tlO million teder1J ind ltate grant would be je.Opard.i~ ii the job were del1yed. The district suggesttd chanees in t:be construction restrictions. which, it claim- ed. woold eul the projtcl by eight months. The council delayed • decision on I.ht permit request until Aug. 2 1.(1 allow ob- jecting homeowners and rnerch1nl.3 time lo 1tudy the change•. which basic1lly in· volve 1llcrwing two COMtruction pointl 11nd ea:ttndin& the work day, rr ~-.... --.... -· _,.,. --# 1~ --·"' ~,,. ~~,. ---\ - a.MuraJa from FrMkland that the st.ale would cooperate in giving. I.op pr-iority to coMtruct.ion of the Huntington Buch Freeway (Route 39) lf that was what the city wished in view of the uncertainty over u.e Paciflc Coast Freeway. He went along with a plea from Mayor George McC racken for Route 39 to hfi continu'-CI down to Pacific Co as t Highway , instead of termino>.'.lng al Adams Avenue, "dth the provLso that '. ' ' ... ' ' . ' ' .l '. ' . -· .... • NOT FORGOTTEN Miss in9 Pilot P•tterson Chctrnber Pushes Letter Campaign For Red Victi rn "J im Pattersoo Day" may be declared in Huntingkln Beach to generate a letter "Tiling campaign Jn behal f of US. servicemen missing in action i n Indochina . Directors of the chamber of commerce agrttd Wednesday afternoon to endorse such 1 campaign and asked that it be adopted by the city council. The idea was suggested by G. M. Pat- tt.rson of Laguna Be1ch, whose brother U . James K. Patterson. 1 Navy pilot, wa.."I shot down over North Vietnam ln 1967. Lt. Patterson's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Patterson. live ln Huntington Beach at 16078 Mariner Drive . The pilot's brother said in a letter to thl'! chamber lhat M11yor G e or g e f..kCracken had pledged his support kl a letter campaign in behalf of the POWs and MlA.! II local groups would sponsor it. Chamber Manager Ralph Kiser ex· plained that the purpose of the campaign will be to gene.rate letters to con- gressmen .ln Waahlnatoo on the plJ&ht of thoee rrduing In action and letters to Ha hot. ' The clamber would provide suggested JeUer forms. but d.tlzens would provide the pootage. . . Althou&h 10me chamber directors qut• liontd whether the campaign mlRht offer "false boP._e.1• to 'the family the dlrectora agreed uninlmously to endorwe the dr1 0e. War Study Ordered WASHINGTON !UPI ) -The S<nalo Forelgn Rel1llona Committee haa betn glvM Sl00,000 to cooduct lb own in--. veeUgltion of the ·or11lns ol the Vietn•m W1r. some way ol disbursiJl& the tr&fflc at tm temtinus must be found. McCracken also urged the state build the Coast FTeeway up to the HuIJtlngton Beach Freeway so the east-west ·traffic coo!d loop down to the coast and baclr.. The major said that this would place a heavy burden on the AdaITl!I and Atlanta Avenue arterials. but seemed the most workable solution for Huntington Beach. "It's a very reasonable solution that we 'll consider,'' Frankland srjd. ''What would stop you from doing that~" McCracken asked , explaining tba.t it was imperative Huntington Bea.ch receive "some IOrt of c:ommitment'' from the state. ··Prohlems in Seal Beach with the na va.1 weapons people ,'' Frankland ad· milted. The 8ession in cily hall betwee11 Frank\ard, McCracken. City Admlnlstra· tQr" Doyle Miller and Public Work& Oirec-- tor Jim Wheeler turned into 1 &rll1iiti of the stale officiaJ by the mayor. McCracken berated the atate on It.a policy of not building a freev.·ay through a c.ommunity lhal does nol want It and eall· ed !hill position ''wishy washy." He pointed out that lhi"ough this policy Newport Beach is blocking ~ Pacific Coast Freeway and Fountain Valley could block the Huntington Beach Freeway. "W.e are not trying to dictate .te Nev.wrt Beach on the exact alignment,'' McCracken said, "but in the meeting.t we'll ha ve in I.he next few days wlt.b other coastal communities we'll have to decid·e whether t.o align ourselves. even if it is legislation. We 112.ve a tremendous in· vestment in plaMing in th.is city ba."led on reliance on the state." Frankland denied that the state wa! reneging on any agreements. but uid that since Newport Beach residents had sa.XI the y do not v.·ant the prest.11t freeway route "we must see if there ta another solution. or if we can come up with a consensus on .fOJJle alternative." Re(errlng to opposition in Newport Beach, Miller observed. "I think it need! to be brought home they are damaging other communities and this may have to come about in the courts." "I said a solution musl come 1bout." Frankland said. "The communities rnust get together." McCracken liken~ the state policy of not building a. freeway without a freeway agreement from a city lo a person buying a piece of land without title policy. "A rank amateur wouldn 't do that." he ssld, referring to the right-of.way purchases. "I thought the state was the fi.na1 authority.·• the mayor continued, pointinC out that Huntington Beach accepted the adopted routes for both freeway• ll1though It preferred alternatives. "You are playing favoritt.s to one city." "I'm 1ure if the 1tale wanted to come through Huntington Be1ch It wou1d come through.'' he added. ltiiller observed that he w1s en· couraged kl hear that Route 39 could be built to Pacific Coast H.ighway and 1ald that he "honestly believed " that location problems could be worked out with Youn· tain Valley. McCracken was not l50 confident. "I've got a huoch thlg Is not going to·be easily solved either," referrinf to tht talks with Fountain Valley on Route 3g. The mayo r said t.bat the state'• po1ltio0 wa5 based on blind faith that all cttlea would cooperate. "You have to be an eternal optimi1t." Frankland respondtd ruefully. ';About ti percent of the problems with freewa.11 IS.. PllEEWAY, P1p IJ Freeway Appraisal Set for TV Friday B&mford Frankland, uslstant at.ate public works director, wlll dllcuas Governor Reagan's re;.appr1i&1.I of California's freeway system and it1 direct effect on the COf.stll cities cl Orange County Friday 1t 1:30 p.m. oa KHJ·TV. Channel 9. .;~. :~::::_==::::....:.· -::. .•. • . 1~1·,_.. . ,,. ....,. . lf"·t----)_:t,'.1 .. ·-,. ,_,.JI.I;; ,r_. ........ -..... .;....!' ........ ------~-\ ,. Harriman F-lays :~ ' I ~tr :.. • Nixon~s 1'...0tJves . ·-~ ' . .;-•·, • . • .J .: By TOM BARLEY DI rM 0.111 '"II" ittH Rovinc ambassador Averell Harriman accused President Nixon \\'ed nesday ntght"Of belng--less than hones! with . the American people aboul the 1not1vcs behind his proposed visit to Red China. Harriman lold the World Affairs Coun'· cil or Orange County in Santa ~na that the "American public Vias entitled ~o know the true purpose" of Nixon s mission to the Far £2.st "and should not be kept waiting for some disc!osure on the lines of the Pent.agon Papers leak. "In any event ;' the veteran diplomat added, "'the President's. visit s~u\d not be allowed to divert public attention from the senseles!'I tragedy ol the Vietnam war and our troops must be out of there long before he goes to Peking.'' Harriman, a former U.S. ambassador to Soviet Russia, said complete hooesty by the President ~fore ht journe.ys to China would prevent misundl!rstand1ng of his motives by the Russians. "It would be a tragic blunder to play one against lhe other,'' he said. "We have come a long way toward t.h~ .present understMding with Russia and 1t 1s much more vital that we preserve that rela- tionship than that we should c~ltivate China to the detriment of our Russian un- derstanding." . _ Harriman, an adviser on foreign aff~irs to six presidents. lashed thc ~ut~ Vi~t nam conflict and this nation. s in- volvement in the W?r with Norlh Vietnam throughout a hard hiu.ing talk. "We have no right to be there." he said. "It is our duty to get out and get out now and we most cetrainly should be long gone from South Vletnam before the next general election.'' . Thal election, Harriman said, ~d be fought on the nation's domestic issues and "this nation's energies under whoever wins the election should be con- centrated on the 11olution of problems that plague us right here at home." Two Huntington Cyclists Remain In Hospital Two Huntington Beach youths. injur~d lo separate bicycle accidents remain hospitalized today. Richa.rd Keith Myers, IS. of 21551 Brookhtirst St. was injured a week 11.ga when he rel! off his bicycle in the path of an onc.oming car. A spokesman for l{untington_ ln_tercom- munity Hospital said Myers 1~ 1n good cooditkln and has been taken out or the intensive care unit. Seven-year-old David Lee t1c~ulla~, 17611 Still Harbor Lane, remains 1n guarded condition at the same_ ~ospital. He was injured Tuesday while riding dou- ble an 1 bicycle that was struck by a car. Police said the boys on the bike were crossing Springdale Street against .a r~ light. The <Jther cyclist, Alex Ker tis, received minor injuries. Tumbling Signnp Closing Friday Registralion for the second session of tumbling offered by the ~~ountain v_alley Recreation Department will close Friday. Clasm will be held Manday and Wed· nesday through Aug. 16. A begin_ners' section will be offered at 6 p.m., int.er· medtete.s will meet at 7 pm aPld ad- vanced students will have classes Bl 8 pm. Classes are conducted In the wrestl ing room at Fountain Valley High School. The fee is $5. I OUN•I COAIT DAILY PILOT O•ANOE COASr PU•ltsMIMG COMJPANY ll•b•d N. W••' JPruolt<>r •N l'\lell- J.c~ II. Cu1I • ., Vk e f'ruidf"I •'Ill G-•I M-...- 11111,.,•J JC •• ~;1 Efl!Ot 'Tl.o"'•• A. Mw1.1oi;.,, Ml"ll .... Ed• ..... "''•• o;.~; .. w .. t Or....., C.-!V [ti• Alb.rt W . t 111, Al-Ill• Ea• .... M .... .,,_ .._., Offke I 111l l11cll loul1,.1,4 Jril1 ill11t "'''••u' P.O. lor 7,0, '26•1 °""' Offlc .. "-1.-dl: m ~~'"' "'-c..i. M911: JJO Wf\; B11 ~!fM'I ~ • ..., .. , »lJ "''""'"' '""'~·~ .. ~ (:~II; JI$ ~ [I C."'""' 11. .. I He bo14 up 'Ill< ewnple of Ill< pool Worlti War JI MarthaU Plan u ''the only sensible way" lo aid any natioo determined to fight comrnunisni. Harrin1an. who played a ma1or role in lhe conception of the giant aid package to war torn European nations, toltl his au- dience that '"we should only help those '>''ho are willing to help themselves. ··Stopping communism with American boys 1s a theory that won't hold water," he said. "There are those among us today v.•ha would send troops· to Chlle simply be<-ause we see a threat in tht com- munist regime in that nation. "We stopped Stalin by using !ht ~farshall Plan and we can do the samt 1h1ng in Southeast Asia." Harriman said. ''We have no right to interfere in South Vietnam and withdrawal from that nation should take precedence over t h e President's Peking visit." Harriman agreed Iha! if President Nix- on's visit to Chou En-lai results in !ht admission of fled China lo the United Na - tions then Taiwan should also be allowed to retain her seat in the world organiza- tion. But he made it clear under questioning that the nation of Taiwan and not the regime of Chiang Kai -s hek would br the one to be acknowledged BS a member of the United Nations. Buckley Says Vietnan1 War Story a Hoax NEW YORK (UPll-Will iam F. Buck- ley Jr. said \Vednesday documents on the Viet.nam War in the National Review were a hoax printed to show the pubhe would accept a s classified infarmatian anything that seemed reasonable. Buckle}', editor of the w e e k I y magazine. s2~d the articles v.·ere written last week in the National Review offices 11nd were. composed ''ell'. nihilo" -out of nothing. The articles were published in lhe magazine's current edition. · The New York Times, which first published the Penlagon papers, said in today's edition that the Natianal Review articles were not tot.ally composed out of nothing. The Times said there were quottd phrases and puaJihrases of the Pentagon report .scattered through the National Jleview articles and two of the memoran- da in the magazine were excerpted from the report. Buckley, meeting with newsmen on his return from Seattle, Wash .. said the articles were printed in the National Review lo prove "that forged documents wauld be widely acceptcd as genuine pro- vided their content was inherently p!UJsl· hie.'' He said although the documenls were fake their nature was such they could easily have been written from 1962 lo 1967 and most likely similar documents were written by government officials at !hat time, He said the hoax also was meant to show that "the Pentagon and !he CIA tCcntral Inrelhgence Agency) Are not composed of incomf)E'lcnts " Thi.~ 1n- compete11ry \1·as "1l1e un111frranted con- clusion !o 11 h1th man.1· Americans and non-Americans 1\'ere led by the fragmen- !ary revelations of lhe Nf'w Vork Times and thr \Vash1ngtu11 Post " The N11!i<Jnal Review art1l'!CS prcsentrd a gener?J pictur-t> of a US government lry1n2 not to get 10\'o:vro 1n a l\fng-tcrm war in Vietnam The Pentagon papers showed a deeper and d~per involvement ul the Uni ted States in lndoch1n11 Ol'er three decades. Buckley said it look lhc news media 48 hours to seriously question the authen- ticit y of the rnagazine's docu1ncnts anrf th is "contributes a general 11ndcr~tanding of the limited refl exes or !he press. "Indeed. it is possible that there will be those wOO believe lh2.1 this statement IS a hoax.." The National Review articles .,..·ere reported by twa television networks. news services and a number of newspapers across the rountry. but not to the extent the Pentagon papers wrre reported. One o( the 13 fake documents cited by the National Re\'iew was a 1965 coded obscure military message which !he magazine said "iodicate5 that the pra- posa\ to make one or another use of nuclear weap(>M remained alive v.•1thin I he military as well as Bl least one sec- tion of the intelligence communities." Buckley was asked Jt the possJble ust or nuclear weapons lit the basis of the hoax that sueh ider.1 were probably being discussed in lhe mid-1960!. "II s.ttms very clear since we have nuclear arms Lhat they W<JUld be used un· cler certain circumstanctl," he said, but declined c<>mmenl on whether he bad any evidence the governrr1tnt cOnsldered nuclear warfare. Front Page J FREEWAY ... arc C\'enlually workr'd OU! " Tht discussion ended with P.ltCracQn uri::1nfi[ F'rank.\ttnd to give 11n early sniwer un !he question of building !hr. Colt.rt F'retwt1y ta Route 39 and extending Route 39 t(I Pac1flr C.011st 111ghway, ''It may make t difference In our 1e- \lon with ltgislation." the mRyor con-- eluded Taxpayer Now An 'Ex-Irate' "-~ hot ... .., • -lo ' lho~VelleY City O>uqcll -I md by Ma10< £d I J II 'fll lfQl1 .....U -· Ibo~' ...-. !be council'• declliGa lo erpond Ill< dty's alter school rtereatlon program to all school playgrounds lhis fall. "Because of your deci3ion, I am an interested and coacemed tu. payer instead of an irate t.upay· er." the letter read. It was sigxied "An EJ:-lrate Ta:i- peyer." Police Raiders Hit Island Home In Drug Roundup A Balboa Isla nd home under surveil· lance as a possible drua distibution &pol was raided by Newport Beach police who arrested ttne suspects and :seized 1,500 alleged drug pills Wednesday night. Huntington Beach police operating in conjunction picked up a fourth sus~t at a residence in that city. Booked <JO suspicion of possession of dangerous drugs for ule were Gregory E. LePort, 18, of 24531 Overlake Drive, El Toro, Mike Minchti011, 22, of S!SI Caliente Drive, Huntington Beach and Stephen G. Roberts, 18. of 301 Avocado St.. Costa Mesa. Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel and Delee· live Mike Hietala said in addition ta tht 1.500 suspected barbiturate pjlls, a quan- tity of marijuena was found at 322 1h Marina Ave., on the island, Huntington Beach police also arr'*<! Jl!rair H Bakshoian, of the Calltntt Drive address, but did not reveal whelt.- er any contraband was seized there. From Page 1 SUDAN ... army officers -several of whom had helped him gain power in a coup a )'ear ago. Their leader, Lt. Col. Babair El Nur OsmM. said in Landon Wednesday hi! California 'Fair Game' To ·Dieease SACRAMENTO (AP) -State bealth and agriculture officials warned today that the 5leeplng sickness which bu kill· ed thousands of horse& in Mexico and Tt:1as can't be ktpt out or California because evtn humans can cany the virus. Dr. William W. Worceater, chief of the Slate Agriculture D e p 1 r t m t n l ' 1 \'eterinary services ieClion, uid the pn> blem Is mounting bl!caU.5e "we just can't quarantine peoplt." Cattle and dogs also carry the disease, Wor«ster sakl, but quarantining all cat· tlt shipments into the state would be almost 1s drastic as limiting the move- ment of peoplt. Worcester said officials of several agencies were meeting ag1in today to dlSCUM possible w1yw to combat tbe dise15e. At a meeting Wednesday. Dr. George Humphrey or Berkeley, head af the Public Health Department's animal health section, said that there is no way ta keep the disease from spreading throughout the United States. The diseast, known clinically as Venezuelan equine encephalomytlltis, is caused by a virus which is carried by mo...cquito.s. It has moved northward from Central America. and hM caused quar· a.ntines on shipments Of hors~ in .several statts. Tht meetings in Sacramento drew of- flcials from the state agriculturt and public htalth departments, the University of CaUfomia, local mosquito abatement di~tricts and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Dr. P.obert. Schroeder, Los Angeles County's chief veterinarian, has told state agrlcu\turl! officlals that he doesn't want any horses shipped into Los Angeles County at all, widening the current ban on horses from Tt11s and surrounding slates. Ellis Road Work Financing Told DYLAN ON THE PORCH An Uneerthly Quiet Dem11nor Silent Spectator Watches World Walk by Porch I His long hair flowing, ht keeps constant vigil on the porch at 2818 Ntwpori Blvd., flashlng a peace sign and staring out of 3till, blue eyes at passersby. Those :stopping to talk find him, well, unreal. Mainly because he iii. Known as "Dylan" to owner Harvey Farrell and friends, he is wire frame, painted paper, a brown wig and some old dot hes. "Some guys.were out on the porch one day watching the gi rls go by as u.sual, so I put him out with them," said Jeri Brandt. Since that time about a year ago, Dylan has moved inside only onct and then ''the neighbors came over and asked 'Where's your man?' " laughed Jeri who changes Dylan's position once in a while. CottncilOKs lnHustrial " Drain Wtirk Work on a drainage system which will allow for ~~lopment of the second phase of the Fountain Vallty industrial area has been approved by the city roun- ciL The project, which will provide a storm drain in I.he area bounded by Slater Avenue, Newhope Street. Warner Avenue and Euclid Street, will cosl an t stimated $241,IMXI. Wayne Osborne. city Public Works Director, said t.ht storm drain "will ovtrcome the maj<Jr obstaclt to develop- ment of the area." Osborne recommended that the council authorize the staff to deslgn what will be. known u the Ea.rt Valley Channel storm drain and adopt a policy for the industrial area whereby the city will supply sewer line. water lines, and paving upon de- mand of developers. "Once the developers are aware that the city will reimburse these capit.al im· provements upon demand, Lhe lack of sewer and water fB cililits and adequate street access will not be a detriment to tht development of the industrial area," he concluded. Osborne estimated the total COSL5 of the sewer. water and street projects fO'I" tht entire 1l.fea would be $lll,81P. During their discussion of tht industria 1 area ·s devekipment. council member1 brought up the positioo or an industrial coordinator. The position has been budgeted for this year at $24,000, but in prior discus_sions, councilmen declined to seek applicants because of the prablems encountered in developing the area. C.Ouncilman John Harper suggested the rouneil consider the position again. With Ule drainage problems being solved. he said it would be worthwhile to promote the area. The industrial coordinator will be discussed as an agenda item at tht Aug. 3 council meeting. hoped lo steer Sudan on "t.he path to The ltngthening Of Ellis Ave11.ut cross- .scientific socialism." Ing Of the Talbert Fl~ ~trol ChaMtl But most of the time he just sits there. day and night, startling people with his unearthly quil!t demeanor • YMCA Offering Swim Lessons He was one of tht twa mtmbers of the in Fountain Valley will be fm~ by a new revolutionary council aboard th!! cooperative agreement between the cit)' British plane forced down today in Lib°y1. and the county. Plwnhers Now Outdo Swimming lessons and 11limnast.ics Libyan jet! buzzed the plane to forot it to • The Oranat Coulity Board of Super· classes will be offered by the Hunting· land. Libya's goYemment supported visors Tuesday approved the pact fort.ht T ea ch e rs in Salary ton Beach .YMCA this month. Numeiry's anti-communist policies. $240,IMXI prajtcl to which the city ~·iii The slimnastics courst is designed for Tht Middle East News Agency quoted contribute $25,000. LOS ANGELES (U Pll -Plumbers women who want la loose weight and im· another announcement over OmdurmBn now can make more than top instructors prove their fitness level. Classes are ral:lio by Maj, A,bou ~ssem Moh •IWfled under new ~·age scales Mopted by the held from 7 p.m. to 7:45 p.m. Tutsdays Ibrahim as lleClarin'g a state of enietfen-Work Stacking Up Los Angeles Comn1uni1 y College District. and Thursdays. cy throughout the Sudan with • curftw Tht board has approved raises ranging Swimming lessons for pre-school and starting at 6 p.m. (11 a.m. EDT) \. SAN t"RANCISCO (UPI) _ Since a from 4 percent an hour for painters to 18 grade school children will be offe~cd-at Ibrahim was a member of the Revolu-k b · J ~ccent hourly for electricians. th' Mar,·na Hig h School pool beg1nn1ng gravediggers' stri e egan 1n une, more i-~ tionary Command Council loyal lo than 800 bodies have stacked up at Under the "prevailing cominunity July 25. Classes will n1ecl on succeed- Numeiry \\'hich the pro-communist group mcrtuaries in San Francisco and rates" for the district's 95 employes. ing Sundays from 10:30 a.m. to 12 :30 replaced. neighboring SBn Matto County. . tradesmen Bre guaranteed 12 months a.m. The radio station <'tsked its employes I.a Autharities said Wednesday lhe boches ·work annual!y al salaries up to $21 ,484. Further information about lhest and report immed iately for duty. have been embalmed and slored in col· The top teaching wage. spread over the other Y!l1JCA programs is available by "Yur rtvolution Is steadfast and the fins 50 there is no health problem. IO.month school year is $17,22t1. calling 847-YMCA . armed forces will continut the march al J~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ your wish." Ibrahim was quote.d as saying, and he ~ncled by quoting Numeiry. L1byafl jet fighters forced a British Overseas Airways VCJO with I 0 7 passengers abaard to land al the Libyan city or Benghazi at dawn today and di~emba rk Lt. Col. Babakr Al Nour Osman . the pro-communist president of the Sudan's new revolutionary command council. and another council member. The serond council member was ten· t;i!ivelv identified as MaJ. Farouk 11amadallah. The airliner, en route to l\h.'irtou1n. turned around and returned lo London. Nour . ~i. had bftn en route lo Khertou m to a~sume power as presidenl nf 1ht! ntw Hcvolutionary Command Counci l Both he and Hamadallah wert in military regime was overthrown Manday in the fourth roup in 15 years The previous regime hed been rieji\otiating for membership in a new federation of Arab states with Egypt, Libya and Syria. The new govemmtnt is hnsli!e to the federation project. Jn Baghdad. Iraq, the official Iraqi news agtncy said that a special Iraqi aircraft carrying high-ranking Iraqi of. ficia ls ta Khartoum crashed In the Saudi Arabian destrt today, ki\Ung three high· ranking Iraqi offieiBls who we.rt en route to the Sudan ta confer with ltadtrs of I.ht now ousted military 1overnment thert. The Iraqi Bgtncy gave no cause for tht crash. Egypt's Voice of tilt Arabs Radio said the plane ex.ploded in the air. Licensing Fees On Bikes Ended In a n effort to licenst mort bicycles In their ci!y. Fountain Valley councilmen removed Lht $2 ftt for bike registration. Mayor Ed Just said he favoM:l the movt becBU3e of the largt number <lf bk'yeles that ar't stolen in Foontain Val- ley. A bkycle tNt has bttn lictnHd Is ea&ler to Identify, 8ut Councilman George SeoU noted that the dlange would NYe resident. 20 minutes on each rq:i!lratioo. "and In my CllJJe, f'U be saving too minutes." be quipped. Corn Blight Spreads WASHING TON (UPTl -Arkans11 and Oklahotnl M.ve been •dded to the llst' of 11lates -now numbering 31 -where COl'fl • bllght lnftstatk>ns have be«l dro~ered. luxurious spring down sofas This hand1om• Sofa was d•sign.d to g iv• you tl'I • u1t imal• In seating comfort with decron end down back pillow$, cHl•p spring down ••at cusk Ions •nvelop•d in down and featl'l•rs in two foam - fill•d erm pillows. Choos• from • wld• 1•ltction of fin• febrics. 0 8' length, reg, $500, NOW 399. 18TH SEMI ANNUAL SALE IN PROGRESS SAVE 20% ON ALL HERITACiE AND DREXEL UPHOLSTiRED CHAIRS AND SOFAS • ALSO -SEVERAL HERITAGE AND DREXEll BEDROOM, DININCi ROOM AND OCCASIONAL COLLECTIONS ON SALE. Your faoorit« inurior drsiQntr will be 11.appy to auist you ••. H.J.GAI\R.E1T fURNITLJRE • PROFESSIONAL ~NT!RIOR DESIGNERS Ope1 M .... , TI11n. I Fri. lyn. -TlY oua llYOLVING CHAa•r - 221 S HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 6<6-0275 ••6-0176 ---.. .. -: .. _.... - -----"":"" ' :?":. "i ...... ----= -"'-~ -• ,,. ---_ .... • ~, 7 7 Packing Vp ti.lrs. ~la.ry lr\vin. \Vife of Apollo 15 lunar module. pilot Jim Ir,,·i n. and t\VO of their five children park sui tcase in preparation for trip to Cape Kennedy. There they \Viii ,,·atch dad begin an even longer trip. The moon shot is set for Monday. The daugh- ters are Jan, 6; and J1J, 10. Aug 3. Voting On High Rise To Proceed By BARBARA KREIBICH 01 lftt Ol l!J 1'1191 S!tll The La guna Bearh Aug . 3 high n st election is on again. City attorney Tully Seymour advised <"ity councilmen \\'ednesdey nighl that in his opinion an appeal filed by attorney \l,'illiam Wilcoxen stays Superior Court Judge J. E. T. Huller's order to cancel the election proceedings. Earlier in the day, Judge Rutter grBnted a writ to halt the election sup· porting the view that a building height limitation ordinance is a zoning matter and not suitable for the initiative process. Wilcoxen. representing the Village Laguna proponents of the initiative, prcunptly filed an appeal and , to back up the action, asked !he Fourth District Court of Appeals in San Bernardino for a "'rit of mandatf' ordering city clerk Dor - Clthy f\.1usfelt to proceed \vilh el~ion preparations pending a decision on the appeal . The appellate court was scheduled to set a hearing on this request this morn- ing. J\1ean\.l'h.ile eleC"t1on activity rolled 11 long. with most of the ballot! 11lrtady mailed ou t and some 80 cf 100 absentee ballots returned from such far-sway places as Norw;iy. Grttce. England, Italy and ~1exico. v.-here Lagunans are vaca- l1onini :0.1rs f\.lu~relt. "''ho had not been ~rved \1·1 1h 1ht' court order !o hall the election bv the tunf' th<' appeal 11·as filed. said she hegan mail1nR the ballots J\1 onday. as re- 11utred by la". and had the !lacks con- taining the balance taken to !he Post Of- fice for 11 l'lghinf! Tuesda~·. paying a bu lk 1na1l1ng po~t;1ge bill of S.322 i9 l'nder the r lect1nn rodr. n1;Hling n( the ba!ln1~ had to hf' rnn1pletf'd this "''erk. Elf'C'tion PXJ>rnses lo date, she said, aninunlrd In JllSI O\'Pr $j,()OO and in· ··luded chet'kin~ of petition sign:.!urrs, f'lection supplies. county services and postage. An additional $800 would bt needed for polling places and election of- ficials. she estimated. City attorney Seymour noted this e.1· pense in his reixirt to the counci l, poin· ting out that if the election v.·ere called off no'tl'. and la!tr ordered held by Ille e.p.- pellate court. the m~y v.·ould ha ve to be ,spent all O\•er again. At the request or sttorney Ralph Benson. one of the five Village Laguna respondents in the action brouaht by Laguna realtor Vern Taschner. Mayor Richard Goldberg agr~ to cancel a. pro- posed executive session end dbcuss the Jitlgation in public in the council chamber. Expulslo11 Questioned Court Order Puts Halt To LAFC Appointment Los Alamitos Councilman Joe Hyde's election to the Local Agency Formation Commission 'tl'as stopped -temporarily at least ~ by a court order. Superior Court Judge J E 'f Rutter \\lednesday ordered county 1nayors and the LAFC to either reinstate Louis "Red" Reinhardt to the con1mlssion or show cause why not. Rutter set Aug . 12 for the Superior Court hearing on the shO\\' c·ause order. Fullerton CCluncilman Re inhardt named the mayor of every Orange County city, !ht: LAFC jtseJf, and t he County's City Selection Committee in a court action that demands the expulsion of Hyde antl his own reinslalt'ment. Reinhardt 11·as ousted from the chairmanship or the LA fC in a League of Cities vote last July 8. but clain1s in a wr it of mandate that his term or office actually extends to Decrrnber. Ht challeng!'s LAFC executive officer Richard Turners ruling that stale codes call for the terms of LAF'C members 1o end on the first 1'.tonday in May. Reinh11rdt also ar£ues th at the meetina 4-l l'ote at \1·h1ch Hyde "'as elected to replace him \\'as invalid -that is was not properly called by the agency's chairman or at the request of the ci!y selection committee, and that votes 1•oere cast by proxy on behalf of rnayors 'tl'ho "'ere not present at !ht• meeting. lt)de took over as chairman Julv 14 rletnhardt "'arns in his romplaint thiit al l actions of th!' LAFC fron1 !hat date are subject to l'hallenge, espec-ially 11 Hyde voles on any issue. Reinhardt asks Judge Ruller lo ex· pJnge Hy~'s name from the comm1~ion and restore him lo wha! lhe Fullerton 1·nunciln1::in clain1s is hi~ rightful place at lhc he<1d of !he agent•y. Ser\'1ng tr.•1th Hyde on !he current Lm:a l Agrncy Forn1alion Commission are Coun· 1.1 Surervisors noberl Ballin and Ron Caspe rs. l'!Juncilrncn Stanley Northrup of S<1n Clemente. and Charles Pearson of Anahei1n . Alternates are Supervi sor Ralph Clark. Tusl1n tlfa,\'or Tony Coco, and William D J\·lartin of Laguna Beach. All are named as resp&ndents in Reinhardt's action . Sui)ervisors Approve Sign Re stricti11 g Dist1·ict Law Tht contro\ers1al ord1n:1r1('e ( 0 establish :"1gn restricling districts ;ilong 185 miles of county freeways and h1gh\l'<;l)'S And designate thPtn as ;:ct'r11r ('Orridors 'tl'as approved 4· 1 by th(' Orange County Board of Superv1wrs W('dnesda1 . Sul they follo\l'ed immediately with 3n order to the county Planning Comm1ss11J11 !o study the new la\\' v.·ith respect 1n possible changes in y,•Jdth of the ~cen11' corridors. possible exclusion of industrial and commercial areas, and an abatement period for large business building s1Rns as is provided for billboards. The la'v as passt'd calls for a reslrirlrd scenic corridor area one mile on either side of the freeways or h1ghwa\·s. Supervisor Ralph Clark who pushed through the study 1notion. favors one·half mile on each side. Only areas e1cluded on the approved law are plllMed community zones where sign laws 11re already in far ct. like El ·roro and ~11s~1nn V1ejr1 Supcrvi.~nr Ronald Caspers. in ..., hose d1stric1 mo.~\ of the restricted area 111 l(1c<1 1cd. en!husJasl!ci:tlly supporled the rneasurc sho'tl•ing th e board a movie film hr. took il!ustratin,i:: sign blight 1n South La~una. on the San Diegn Free111ay from Santa Ana !n El Toro and in the Dana Pflint arra . Supporting Ilic ne1v !;11\' \1!'rr the l'Hp1strann Bay chambers of commerce-, thr Orange County U-agur of \Vomen \'ntcrs <ind the Orangf' Coast Assorialion. Rrpresentarives of billboard and eJrc- !rtcal sign companies vigorously opposed the change . asking ror a lnnger study and unprovcment. nol a total ban. i'l:ine scenic corridors are designated including lhe unincorporated portions of the Pacific Coast Hlghws y, San Diego Freeway, Riverside Freeway, El Toro Road. Santiago C11nyon Road , Ortega Highway, Lagufla Freeway and Newport Freeway. Dana Harbor Busy Place Landscaping of Facility Next Project on Agenda By JOHN VA.LTERZA Of tM Df!IY ,Jiff Sti tt Miles of concrete walkway, and metal handrails continued to grow aroond the w11terw11ys of Dina Harbor this week as c:.oostruction at the facility continues al full tilt. Be11ide11 the major C'Oncrete work, t'arpenters are busy with rough frt1ming and other work on tht motel and restaurant portions or 1ne harbor. Cbunty Direct or or Harbors. Beache.'I 11 nd Parks Kenneth Samp.!On st1id that 11~ won 1.~ the concrete work i.'I finil'lhed, contract5 wilt be le1 for the major Ja ndsc11ping throughout the d~vtlOptd port.Ions of the m11ritime comple11:. Compltlion of tht m11jor motel and Ports O' Call re~tauranl i.'I {Xf>eCted in the f3JI, he .'la id. ··ey Christo1as, no one \lo'lU recogni ze the plaee," he predicted. Sampson Mid that dramatic additions to the 11ndM:11ping will be tilt: large, sea- carvtd boulders which recenUy were removed from 11ome channels in the harbor. The bouldtrt -mostly ma r in I' nndstone etched by wa\'e acllon. measure up to 15 feet across and will be placed in planttd areas throughout lhc harbor. Construction 1~ t'ont1nu1n2 1n thr h11rbor·~ ta.c;I basin "'here hundred.c; rnorr. boat slip.c; "''ill be completed by th1 .c; f;il) The number of \'es!!els ron!1nue.c; to grow, district officials !!aid. \Vith onlv 11 ftw months' 'tl'aJt required for iit1• yachl!l'men . Elsewhere 1n lhr harbor. f1 n1sh1ni;: touches are going in at lhe dry·boal storage area where dozens of ves11t ls a!rtsdy are park~. New dock.1 also have been buill at the launching ram p, and a sailboat rental concession is in operation nearby. Sampson said his office is still aw11 iling ~·ord on another colorful proposal for the rnultlmllllon·doll ar maritime fae1lil)'- ntw.c; on lhe reasibilily of anchoring 11 large. historic tradin2 schooner as a lourl.~! at1rart1on '\Ve h11\'rn ·l heard anything ntw nn ii \rt. · hr ~;urt · 1 he prnposal. rnadl' to r o u n 1 y ~uptrv1sor~ sevf'ra1 wet>ks ago by 11 fiarden Grove man. call for refurbishing 1hf' fl\O masted Baltic trading vei;sel and f'nnvrrling it into 8 floating tavern and m11r1t1me attraction. • Thi.Ind.,, JulJ 22, l q11 H DAILY Plltlr 3 Fiery Dream A Niglitmare Public B each Bill State Unit Backs BIRMINGHAM, ED&land (UPI) -John Ruddy, 33, dreamed his house was on fire and acted pn:mpt- Jy, climbi•& out a window and on to the roqf. Coast Access Bid But he acted so fast he forgot to put any clothes on and got a rude aw akening when he found himself naked on the roof and unable to iet dO\.\'n. A neighbor. heard hinl <-rash.Jog through the bedroom window and called police. The y arrived and gave Ruddy 11 pair of lrousel's, ~·hich he slipped on backwards. Then firemen came and lowered the confused sleepwalker to tbe ground in a safety harness. "It was all a nightmare." Ruddy said. "It et:rtainly was a vivid dream." Marines to Give Duke the 'M ike' SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A $7~.000 bill to finance a proposed commission's effort lo acquire ocean bt'ache~ for the public has been endorsed by the Assembly 'Vays and J\1earfs Committee over Reagan ad- ministration objections. The ml'asure by Assembly Speaker Bob Morelli i 0-Van Nuys), wa.s approved Yi'ednesday. The bill originally ~ propriated $5 million for the commission acquisition but MoretU quieUy cut the sum to S?SU,000 with amendment.s without explanation. The funds would be turned over to the six-member "coastal conservtllon com- mission."' which would determine how and v.·here to spend them. The commission, appointed jointly by the governor and legislature, v.·ou\d be established by a .separ11te bill by Assemblyman Alan Sleroty ( D ·Los SAN ANTONIO, Tex . (UPI} -The Angele s). J\farine Corps League has named John Roy Bell, assislwl director of the stale Wayne the next recipient of the ''Iron finance department, and an official ad- M\ke" award -given annually to lhe ministration spokesman, protested the man "who best exemplifies the word bill v'ould give the comm!S!ion "carte 'A:nerican.'" blanche'' authority to spend without pro- The award. named after a nine-foot posed acquisitions first being screened statue of a fighting marine on Parris by the legislature and administration. Island, S.C .. 1-vill be presented Aug. 13. "They should be given review in the \Vayne \.\'SS chosen "since in his screen ordinary budget process," he said. "It is portrayals and in his everyday life he l'las rathtr unusual th e.I. you give a sum or played those traits of ccharacter that mohey to some outside. outilt to spend in make him an outstanding American,'' the any v.·ay they want." le.sguc said Wednesday. The purchase of beach l11nd v.·ould be financed by reducing the 27~ pucent depletion allowance oil companies now receive on their gross ineome to their ac· tua[ cost of drilling a \lo·e!J , Separate tu bills to accomplish this allo are pending. Planes, Cutters Search for Pair Missing in Boat LONG BEACH (AP) -Coast Guard cutters and Air Force planes were ordered to resume a search today ror a 4().foot fishing boat. reported disabled and drifting some'tl·herc off Point Conception with two brothers aboard. The search for the Atka eontinued into the night, hampered by heavy coastal fog, a Coast Guard spokesman in Long Beach said late Wednesday. Aboard were Phil Haskin, skipper. and his brother, Ralph, both of Watsonville. A distress signal was picked up at mid- morning, the Coast Guard said. Civil Defense units were aiding the search with mobile units along the coast about 150 miles north of here. trying t.o pinpoint the exact location of the cralt. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Hodson WPORl BOULEVARD• COSTA MESA• ,;,o NE 548.9341 WITHIT! LIGHTING BY l.IC;l·ITC>l.11~11 a. 1'Wet" look il'l cquer fin ish spices b. c. d. •• room with rnid·a ir color for bright· hearted livin g. Available in Snow W hi te, Oronge Oronge, Curious Yellow. 12 ' widl h, $25.95 Simpy scinti<.'lt1ng. Generous g;ft of ligh t plu!. pierced COl'le to cre<.'lie llghtploy. For the young. fun ond buciqet mind ed . Avoil able 1n Sno1'1 W h.te. Oronge Orange Cur 1 ou~ Yellow 14" width. $19.95 Industrial re flector reborn for th e 'now ' crowd in sa s5y, hoppy colors. 'Snow White. Oronge O r<.'lnge. Curious Yellow. Plush Pink. Gross Green . I Sl/2" width . $15.95 A colorful translucent dome crowns t1 cl<.'lssic opl'll g1<.'lss globe. $16.95 Real cane tiffo!l ny 's for the height of elegance and style in decorating. $2 1.95 " ., 1 · d. I f D .. LV PILOT \ \ •• I ~ps Court Ruling s Boggle Mind s By THOMAS MURPHlNE Of fflf 0.ll'J ~llot St•tf OOURTifOUSE BEAT : Tho~ of us wbo...att jtl!l ordinary folb rertalnly ell/\ get confused from time to time by decis1ons ha nded down in lhe courts of our land. Sometimes lhe confusion !earl.~ 1o fru.Strations and the frustrations bring on &nger. j 1 We've had a couple of rourl decision.~ ) fairJy recen tly right here alo ng lhe ,1 OrJinie Coast that have left many of ~he ~ mint run of ·citizens violently shaking ~their head! in an effort ~to dispel the l cobwebs. ~ THE FIRST ruling, for exa mple. wa."i in .: ~· Jate, great Newport Beach anti- : freeway election. In this one, a group nr "'. cftb:ens known as the Freewa.y F'ighters •• launched a petition campaign lo place the question of future freewa ys through the ,· city before the Newport voters. Most peo- ;. pie had a pretty good notion of how that •, \11ould turn out in NNport if it ever got on the ballot. l Aa tlection·time neared. another group of Newport folkll. beaded by former via mayor Han.. J . Lorent. went into superior Court lllld asked that the elec· tioo be ruled ille11aJ. Their argument wM that lbe signing o! freeway contracts and frffway negotia· lions was properly a function betwffn t.he ,t elected City Council and the state 11overn· ment. It shouldn 't, they argued , be decid· ed by voles of the people. IN THE ENO. lhe judge said in effect. "Well, the questions before !he .voters may or may not be legal but the tim e to decide that is after the election. The peo· pie should have the right tn vote on it " * ,. Now it's a few months latrr an 10 Laguna Beach and a group Known as Village Lagu.na .\tarted C"irculating peti· , tions aimed at calling an election lo put a ~ ceiling on th e height or buildings in the Art Colony. Du l.v. more than enough 1ignatures 1~1ere gathered and the election 'Was called. NEX T, LAG UNA real est.atem::in Vrrn Taschner filed an ec!ion in Superior C.ourt aim!d 11 blocking the fllection . He argued that CQnlrol or height of bull~iOl!.S is properly a function of the ele-ct~ City Council and the state ,1tovernmen ~ :, through building 11nd roni ng code.o;. This ghouldn't, he argued, be decided by vo!e.!i ; _, of the people. Ah. you .o;ay. the 11.rgumenl .!iOUnds ~ familiar, just like the effort lo block that _: Newport frteway election. "I KNOW HOW thL~ one's going lo (".()me out," you tell yourMil smugly. :· But lo, this time the judge ta different ' fellow than in the Newport ca:se) steps • out of his chambers Md rules that the -: Laguna election is illegal. Somehov.', )'OU set. as on, of the • Thlirsd•Y. July Z21 1~71 Pari.s Reds S·nub Nixon China Trip PARIS (U P!\ -The Vietnamese Com· mu.nists publicly ignored Pres ident Nix· on 's plan~ to visit Pe king at today·,, session of the Paris peace talk! and privately indicated the visit~ \t'ould not soften their conditions for peace in Viet· nam. They again demanded an unconditional U S. mili tary withdrawal from Vietnam. Jn privatt'. diplomat! of both North Viet· n::im and the South Vietnamese Nationa l Liberation Front (the political arm ol the Viel Cong ) asserted they havt Pek:ing'1 full backing for their conditions. They lndicated there will be no con· cession on their part to smooth N1xon·s path to Peking . They reiterated their two b::isic demands: tolal U.S. m1l11.1ry v.·ithdraw;:il from Vietn;im and the removal of South Vietnamese Prrsident Nguyen Vrin Thieu from off1cr. Both Hanoi's minister of slrite. Xua n Thuy . who appeared to be in a more jovial mood than in recent week!, and the Viet Cong's foreign minister. Madame Ngu yen Thi Binh , brushed aRide wi~ool mention a renewed ple.e by American chief neg otiator Davi d K. E. Bruce and Saigon's Pham Dang La m to discuss im· mediately a cea.o;e-fire in Vietnam. Laos and Ca mbodia . "It is clear that if thP: America11: governm ent continues its policy of Vie!· nafnization of the war it v.·ill merely sink into an even de eper impasse," Madame Binh said. In her five-page stalemenl, Madame Binh, carefully refrained from namin~ anyone else in the South Vietna me:se cabinet as undesirable and challen~ed the American negotiator again and again tn atate whether Washington will make Thieu's presence at the head of the Saigon adinini!tration 11 major issue. Bruce last week warned the Com- munists they would be harboring "illusions" if they thought Washington would drop Thieu. Bruce told Madame Nguyen Thi Binh , the Viet Cong foreign minister and nominal author of th e latest Communist peace plan. "the proposals you made so far do nof envis::ige rin e::irly end lo all thP. fighting. On the contrary. they indicate that you apparenlly intend to continue the wrir until you achieve t1.ll your political objectives.·• Bruce also reiter.:ited Iha! the seven· point Virt Cong plan, placed befort the Vietnam peact coofertna July I, made no mention of any etase·fire in Laoii ll.nd Cambod ia. Ht urged Madame Binh and North \lietnam·s minister or slate, Xua n Thuy, tn "trike a fresh look at the advantages of an early and comple1r r: ea se· fire demande<I by !he alli eR . "ll would put an tnd to the killing in all the areas wherr the conflict now rages, 11nd I believe. it could not fail to affect favorabl;V our deliberations here '' Hanoi·s Xuan Thuy i;aid 1he Viel· namese conflicl ...,,i ll be i;eltled pe11cefully onlv if Presiden t Nixnn stl~ a deadline for' a complelr U.S. milit::iry wit hdrriw al :ind stops supporHn~ Snuth Vietnam'JJ President Nguyen Van Thieu. Wicks Australia Beauty Miss Australia, Toni Suzanne Ray\vard, displays l"'O handsome outfiL~ she made herself during the pre· Umi naries of the Mis,c; Universe pageant in Miami Beach. She makes almost all of her O\Vn clo thes. The new f\11ss Universe \\ill be crO\\'ned Saturday. Jew Relates War Horror Says Russ , Not Naz is, Sle1,v 12,000 Pole Office rs TEL AVIV (UPI! -An Israeli citizen says It was the Russian& and not the Nazis -as the. Russian& claim -who ma ssacred IZ.000 Polish army officers during World War II in the Kalyn Foresl near the Soviet city of Smolensk. German soldiers un covered a ma.~s grave in 1943 cootalning the bodies and saicl Soviet troops kill ed the Poles hy shooting each one In the back: of the head The Ru,c;~ians accused the Nazis of another war C"rime. The U.S. Congress inveslig::ited !ht in· cident an d in 1952 issued a report whiC"h said Russian troops had killed the of· ficerl!', probably A!I part f>f a move to eliminate leaders of a potential anti<Qm· munist !eadet-ship in poetwar Poland. \Vednesday, Israeli citizen Avraham Wydra, 64, said the Russians wrre re.sponsible for the ma ssacre. A P olish .IPW by birth. he said he spent several years in Soviet labor camps during the ...,•ar. \Vydra tnld the Tsrtieli newi;.rel'fr '-1a 'ariv th.at three Soviet Jewish officer!! v.•ho either pa rticipated in or witnes~ed lhr killinjis told him or t.h!' massacre. Hr said he w11,c; sworn tn .o;ecrecy ::it the lime but wanted lo tell the story now before he died. Wydra 1::1id at the start of the war he Italian Train Crashes • Alps Ill v.·as in terned in the S\arnbyelskv Labor Camp near where the killiiigs Occurred and was told of the incident by a f\1aj or Sorokin who saw the Poles slain. \Vydra said. "the m:ijnr gnt rne alQne and roured out his heart. He ~aid 'lhP world \"ill ne\'er helievp 11•ht1L mv eves beheld. The Poles have a!I bern shiiL· ~. "It seen1ed ;:is if he wa$ going through ::i fit nr ('nnvul s ion~ as hr talkrd." \Vsdra saici . "He coulcl not ret;.iin his words" At a srrond l::ibor ramp two years latrr tw11 n!her officer!' said they had lakrn part in thP k11!1ng~. \V)dra said Hr said they confid('d in him bec.:iuse he wa s a Jf'W . He ,c;;.iid the officers were sent to the ramp because 1he authorilies said they 111•ere mad but "it turned out the tv.•o suf· fered from frayed nerves. One used to cry a lo!." \Vyrlr::i said He said one or the officers identified ;is 1st LL Alrxander Suslov told hin1 . "I ll'arit to lrll you the story of n1y life . Tichnnol' l!he second orfiter1 .<ind I are thr two n1osl unfortunate peopl r in the wholr v.orld . 1 killed the ·r olarks' 111·1th m~' 0111·0 hands. I shot thf'm ''Therr were ,c;nme Russi;in soldiers 11hn couldn 't stand it -!hPy thrrv1 themsel1·es into the pit and committed suicide." Apollonauts Brush Up On Critical Activities fAl~r: l\ENN!-:nv ilJ Pl l -\\'ith launch ill!'! four days awa.v. the Apolln 15 as!rnn;i ut~ wtnrl up n1orf' than 1wn yrars of grueling trti ining toda): by bru~h i11g up nn prncrriurrs fnr walking on thr moon ::ind walking in !'pare 48.000 miles above it. Thr 1hrcf' ~urface ex<'ursinns by D;.i vid n Srot! and Jame,c; B. lr11·in ;ind the unul'ua! wnrkin,1t spac~111·a!k by Alfrrd M. Wordrn 11re exJ)('c\ed In tell m;.in 11s much ::ibour the moon .:i.~ the first three Apollo landing!' put to~elhrr. nrxt !hrre da.vs i~ !heir own. ScoH and Irw in are scheduled In de:r;· r('nd nvf'r the 12.000 tn 1.'i,11(10 fon1 t;:1 1l Apennine !\fountains anrl ];.incl e half mile Wf'st nf si derp canyon .July .1fl. 111·l11le \Vorden remain~ in lunar orbit in the command ship End('a\•nur. The iwn surfa ce explorers pl<1n In ~pend a tnta! of 20 hours invrsltl!:alin~ 22 miles of intngu1ng lunar terrain. They drvoted mu ch of today 's tr::11n ing to a te\'iew nf the i;teps they will take In preparing for th e excu rsions and !hr wnrk they w1ll do when they return ln the Lunar module Falcon. 21 S. Viet Troops ,Die Ori Copter SAI GON (AP) -a 10,00<>-man South Viet namese force searching for North Vletnarnese base camps in eastern C11m• bodia made it.s first significt1.nt cont.act wit h the enemy today. f.feanwhile, the U.S. Commt1.nd •n· nounced U S. helicopter pi cked with South Vietnamese rangers developed mechanical failure and crashed in fl1me1 Wednesday 100 yards from !tJ destinit- tion. Fire Brise Mary Ann , a former U.S. base SO miles southwest of Da Nang. The command sald 21 South Viel· namese troops were killed and J I were injured in the crash, the worst since last November. The five America n crewmen also were injured. Field reports said 37 North Vietname9e troops were killed ln the fighti ng In eastern Cambodia, 30 by U.S. air and South Vietnamese artillery strike!'i . Nine Sooth Vi etnamese soldiers were reported wounded, The righting broke out about nine mile!'i northeast or the Cambodian town or Krek, north of Highway 7. This wou ld put it ::ibout IS miles from South Vietnamese force from the 7th Division, trig gering I 211·hnur battle. lllev called in U.S. rock:. et·firing helicopters ·and artillery. Field reports said the South Vi1>l- namese troops also ca ptured a quantity of munitions. U.S. 852 bombers backed the Saigon troops with raids against enemy supply lines and storage depots to the rear. The operation 111·as lriunched Wednesday by Lt. Gen. Nguyen Vrin Minh. He 1aid the operational area covers l70 square miles of eastern Cambodia tG the north and west of Highway 7 between the border villages of Krek and Mimot. Minh, commanding the drive, said ma· jor objectives are to s1em North Viet· name,c;e infi ltration. provide security for lhr .~nu1hcrn part of South Vietnam and r,re \'e nt the enemy from disrupting the forthcoming National Asscmhly elec!ion Aug 29 and the presidential election Oct. 3. The l'_S_ Con1m;.ind reported that 11 Arnericans were killed 1n action la~t "·eek, !he lowest one-week 1ola1 in :oii;( ~ears. The toll reflected the lull Jn the 11•ar a'i \veil as !he withdrawal ef U.S. forces fro1n combat. V!e1namese casualties all'rt wtre redur- ed, 111·ith 202 government troops and 117~ ot lhe enemy reported killed . The week be,. fore the report was 238 and 1,1 45. Fa tal Gern1an Crash Ca u,.e il h~, Speeding? \1! 'l~LLllEl~l Germany t UPI ) -A r:i1iwa~~ spokr~n1an ~aid today excessive :;peed lln ;:i t"Urvp n1;:1y have caused the rlerallmt•nt rrar t h P Swiss·Germ11n border Wrdnc ~d;i\' of a lranscontint.nt.11! Pxprrs~ tra in crammed with vacll!ioner~. Official c1eterm1nation nf the cause of the crash was pending an investigation. P0l1ce said at lras! 2~ persons were killed and 122 were in jured when the Trans ~urope f.xpress 1TEE1 tra in link· ing Ba~e!, Switzflrlanrl 111 11 h Copenhagert p lun~Pd down a 15·fnot emb;:inkmenl i.n!t tr;:ick.~1de housP~ nrar rhP \·ill age 111 Rhein"·r1ler abnu1 IS miles north of the S-.o·iss border, la\·men in the ~rret'1 . the legalis!Jc clif· fei-ences between the Ne\..·port 11nd Lagu.na caSt's are !l>ubllt nuance!! tha~ have escaped your ordinary mine!. Either thal. nr 1here are subtle d1f· ferenc~ in JUdges. BRIG, S111•1tzerland IU PJ) -A train earrying Halian worker~ In thr1r Job.~ in Swillerland Oerailed inside lhp S1m plnn Tunnel under the Alps early loday. cau.~ ing dea ths .:111d in1urie.~ and blocking the tunnel. ra ilway oflici::i ls :r;;i1d t:arly rcoprls .~11ld five per~nns were killed. and four person.o; 111·11h ,.:;er1ous 1n· Jllnes and 20 111·ith minor in)unrs were rescued The spacemen are scheduled ln set \'IUt nn rhr1r rernrd hrr;iking 12-da\ m1.~s1on ;:it 9 34 ;i m. 1-:oT J\1 nnrla\' thr 1·ountdo111·n 1~ prn('l"t'dinli! 1011 ard th::it 1.:iunrh anf)01ntrnen! 11•i1hnu! a hitch_ Sf'nt1 \\'nrdrn and lr11·1n passrd 1hP1r l;:ist ma in r ph\'<:.1c1al ex a tn 1 n a r 1 n n s \\rdnr<:.rl:iv ;incl lhrn ~P!llrnrd 11' ;i ro1n· n1and ~hip tra1nrr for a f1n:il rrhearstil of 1hc1r 12-minu te (:lunh into sp;.irP Thev a l~n reviewed crnrrgcnry steps tn be !akrn 1n rasr some thing goes v.·rnng VA CJ1i ef Mi11i111izes D1·ug ANYWAY. J\"EW legal papers are flu\· ~ tering into I.he <"ourt.~ in the Laguna Crise .., and at thi.~ v.Titin~ it 111·ould appear tht1.t -the Art Colony's h!gh ri~e rin m11y come off after all . Lawyers, it must be ronct'ded. try hard ? not t.o let these thing~ OOgi.:lr their minds. Frustrated al one level. thf'y 111.~t plod on ~ up "1.i th more paf)Cr~ Ill a high court Looking for 11 iudi;:e who understands :· their subtle differences. ' . "L~'T 1'1 \ 'Top auto executives predict 10 million cars will be sold in 19 71 .. .' The cau~fl nf !he de rallmf'nl 111·as nnl known , lhry said, but !he tr<11n left the lr;icki; as 1t passed the control station 1n· side the !llnne!, the nfficiall! st11d. R.:iil traffic nn the Simplon tlnt v.•11• /it flpped. ' The Simploo Tunnel run.~ 12 milei; undrr the Alps ' frnm Brig ln Varzo. a tin.v lt11li an mnun t.:t in village north o f Dnmodosoll11. See-saw Weather Prevails • . • • ; l • • • • • • • j I i j 3 , . ~ ~· --l. • Weather Conrlitions Ut California "' I 'l WllTM(I rOTOtllT<Ji ·-I --- U.S. Showing Wide Range co .. t.i "•W' *""· l~ _..... ....... ltltfll .... '""'"lfit "'8url ~ _,..,.,., ... 11 Ir-.... ,..,_, ~y l l'HI , ...... "11911 '""'" 11 .. 15 Cettllol ...,_,.M n ,,_ fl'-M ._ IS llO!ollll 1-lllrM ni"'" ,,_ 4ol .. u. w .... ..,.,.."", "" Sien, Me&n. TMIJllDl,Y le<-~,,h , •~am io;:-"""' .. J.O•m .. " r1,.1 ~I"'. 11 10 1 1'!1. 4 1 "'"' 1,,. J·m • m. -4 1 ~~-M9'1 10 H ~ m. '' • ....,...le"' 411•"'· 4,1 SIJ~ IUW.f l '1 1 m l•tfl.l!•m. MOii~ 11:•-l :Cll • '" ''" t l't t .m T~mJteratures r,...,.,.....,,.,., ... orttl•l+.t\co> ·~ !!'It ,.....,.,,, -lttcl tndlflt I t /. • m Hlf'll L..., ''''· .\lbuftU ... <l!i• .. " ""''"' .. " Bobo •• " flou..., " " l)r(IWnJvll!t .. " e.u11110 " • Cf!or11ut " " C~ICl ll' " " Cltvtl•'ld • •• ()oil•• • " °""'''" .. • r:..,.Mo•r>ff " • O.•roll .. " , "'""""'' .. .. l"<lllNCtOl lO • • Jv.,..u .. " 11t1 .. -ciw " " L"V-1 ... " L""llYll,. " • ·-N " ·-• ~ ·-" M .. _,, ~ .. _ .. _ " ~ • N-Y..t " .. OllM ...... Cltv .. " ""'•'" ~ " l 111t1W .... 1 '" M ~,!Mlel.,,11 .. ., -· '" .. ............. • • •• ,1~ (ll"Y " ,. It·-· .. " •1·~~ .. ,"\ • • . .. , ....... ... • J1"l••rr11v H ., S.n oi,,,. " .. \1n '••"(I-" " '•••ti• .. " lMI<·~· •• .. Vtn("!.Ov.,. " " Wa1fll1't'Oft .. ., Th~ thrf'P pilots h;.ive been traintn.'!. lnJ<ether longer fnr :i flight 11' the moon than ;in\' other crrw. But tndav·s wo rk ends th8t schedule and their tirrie for the Prois pccts Din1 In Htu1l for Boy Lost in Hills NE\YCO~IB. NY. fUPl l -Prospects nf finding 8-yrt'lr..()ld Douglas Legg. lost for 13 days in the Ad irond11cks. diminish· ed Wednesdav when searcher:r; found only 1 large rock 3t the )(l("ation indicated by a "hnt spot" on in fr11red piclu re:r;. The picturrli "'ere laken b;v an Air Fnrce pl;ine prrssed into service 10 thr hunl for thP bn y who disappeared nn a h1kt' 111•hich ~t.:irtrd fron1 fl rel11tivr..'s 13.000-::icre estate in the densely wooded n1nuntaln~. Rescuers hn1wd tn l(l(.·11tr lc11d.c; to !he hny bv me;ins nf "hot spots" ()0 lhe hea l sensitive appar11tu.~ . Onf' such spot was pinpointed in the Beaver Flow 11 rr11 . 8-10 miles northe.asl from where !he bo}' ...,.,.s last seen July 10. When searchers arrived at the site, they found only 11 111ri.:f' rock. Authorities theon1.ed lhe sun shining on I.he rock: .c;howed a degre.e of heat approximating that of 11 human being. The 400 ~earchrr,c;, inc\udm!!.: a rescu@ team from California . wrre lll'Orking "shoulder to shoulder," re check in lit W"nunrl prrviously <"O\ ered, Sheriff Ken· nf'!h <:oodsreed sa id. Thi' rrrhl'f'k. Tl"W in it ·.c1· 1•! ,:-11, he:J!A!l In 1111 arr1 I I '• r ·1 lhll . ;i hnut /1 \'e mtlf's east nf the lodge 11hf>re Oo11,1tl~ .11nd his parPnts. ~1 r. and Mrs. \Vilham N. LrJ!g.tilsildwtn~ville. NY , "'Cre vis111ng 1vhen~e boy dis· .11 ppt11rcd ' Adcli ct Rate A1no11 g Vets \\'ASHlNl.TON (AP 1 -Thr rh if'f nf the Vrteran~ Arlmin istralinn \Vprlne~day minimized lhP Vietnam (; I heroin pm· hlrm. saying 99 out rif evrry 100 Vietnam vrterans 11re nnl addlfl~ Donald E .. Johni;on , admini:c:!r;itnr of thf' aji!rnl'y v.•hi<"h h;i~ ;i m a j o r rr sponsibilit~· for addict treatment and l1ndinR ve teran5 jobs. said rit a nr...,·5 con· ferenC'P: "Even if the estimated ~0.000 Vietnam ,·eteran addict!'> in this country should prove to be anywhere near true. the f11ct !'>till remains tha t this is les~ thrin one perrent of the more than rive minion \rietnam era veterans now back in ch·ilian Jiff'. "Stated another w11.v. for every Viet· nam era veteran·.11ddict there might be, there are more than 911 such veteran!! who ;irp not 11ddict.s," .Johnson sald. .Johnson said !hi ~ nef'dcd to be rx· plainrd becau se of reports from somr velerans thsit "e1nplnyprs have rear! ;ind hrard so much 11bnut vrteran drug ad · rlirtinn, that 1h('y figure all Vietnam vrteran5 are addict.~." Johnson s11id ht personally found en· minisLralion's drug abuse expert, Dr. eouraginjt thf' report of the ad· .Jerome Jaffee th11t military testing liO far has turned up a rate of 4.5 percent of heroin users. Rep. Robert H. Steele. R· Con n . estimated the rate at 10 and 15 percent 11fler a Vietnam trip several months a1110. Johnson !'.aid he still regards .Ja ffee 's findings as "being In the ball p::irk " ''\\1r \'I' Ji!Cll to clist'lf'I thr lnt.1l ily co n• l'eo: nf thr drui;:: addiction picture. i! t::~ ,Jrih~ ]"l'r Vl'.'lrrtins an ::lf'Cn<'v pro1;1·a·n 1' In hi' :i~ surrr.s~fol as it 111usl l'l(' l)nn 'I mi~undrr~t::inrl Tl1i~ i~n ·t In ~11-·· 11~,1t t hen~ i~ 11 1ninlmal rl ruji! ad:l1rt11n prn• hl,.m rnr nur V1ctns1rn \ rtrran,c;," John~on ~aid ~ IJP1Tt~19 MINIMIZES DRUG WOES VA Chief Johnson The jobs program progrei;s has been gratilying so f11r, JobMon Sllid lo June there ...,,ere 309.000 unemplnyf'cl Vietnam veterans. down from 372.000 In four months. The figures 11re stasonally ad- justed, he /iald. On nther !ltlbjctL"' .. JnhnS<1n ~a1rl th. :';if '1~ 1r.r1s of vrtrr11n.~ m1"rl1 ral and 11(\chiat ric insl1tulinn~ will .~Mn hr \Pry 1•lo~r nr meet 1he st.1ndarr1< ~rt b-r l;oneress. l1nderm~nn1nfi! ;ind ~ r 11 r't ncj?ler t of ~nme p91ien1~ h1t\!t l>ticn lt<"- c us;i!inn~ (If snm r VA <"rltirs • I I • ... 7 7 I l • Newport Bea~h EDITION VOL. b4, l~O. 174, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • . ' THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1971 . • Today'• Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS 12 Newport Officials Earn More Than $20,000 An t'ren doz.en Ne"•port Stach city of· !icials are nov• eam1ng more than 120.000 1 year. a DAILY PILOT sur11ey disclosed today. or thr 12. only eight had been over t~ s20.ooo mark last year Four other top offlcials are making JJS,900 or more. Top! on the !isl will be new City t.ianager Robert L. Wynn , who wiU be earning $28.000, the same amount as the ~ ~ "' , ' '!l. •, <' •' man he succeedtd, Harvey L. Hurlburt. There is . no city attorney at lht mo- ment. Former legal department head Tully Seymour was making $25.000 last year. His successor has not been nAmed. Public Works Director Joseph Devlin and Police Chief B. James Glavas tach will be making $Zli.040 this year Devlin 's '70-71 salary was $24,084 . while G!avas ' was $23,520, giving him a raise of ,, I ,, , . ., \. I I ® I / ®• ' \ CROUL \HIRTH •, ; \ I ,., • , . ~ © '· , I~ "' B ·~ I ---...... ,' '~/ I ~ I I $2.520. lhe seC<lnd highest raise of all department heads. Receivtng the highest raise over!!.U - $2,544 -is Personnel Off icer Darlene Raat. whose salary JUmped from $15,468 to $18.012. At $22.404 . Finance Oireelor George Pappas' presenl salary is a $1 ,152 jump over last fiscal year's $21.252. Acting City Manager Philip F. Bel- tencourt Is al so salarled .11l $22.404. but u.c.1. ' ' • \~ I I '0 • 11,t ,, I •o I ' PARSONS I • ..... __ ''• I MAP OUTLINES CURRENT BOUNDARIES OF NEWPORT BEACH'S COUNC ILMANIC DISTR ICTS Council Commltt .. Att1ck1 Line Bandin1 Problt m of Upd1tln9 Arr1n9em1nt Adopted In M1y 1969 Newport Police Nab 3 in Race Betting Case Ne1,llnrt Bc;ich police -involved Jn It probe nver several months ~·1th nther agencies -\.\'rdnesda~· night r.rrested th ree suspec1ll allegedly !Inked Ill a lucrative horse racr bellin,e: opr ration. De!ec!1vr ,John Simon sairi today that in addition to I.host> ch;i rged w11h conspiracy to commit bonkmaking . ('Ifie mnr e suspect Is sought and even more arresl.'5 may be made. Oimph11n ts 11·f'rt' be1ni:; ~ught tod ;iy eg2.i ns1 "·;illon D. Martin . 26. a barte nder , Sha ron ~1. f,ugholli. 24. a 14ilitress. both of 7 1~ f'ernlcar Ave. Coronfl. rlel i\.f;i r. ;:i.nd Harvey D. Kagasoff , 33. of 2.114 Trask 1\ve , V.'eslmin.ster. Martin. Ger man-born and 11.lso known as Dieger A Ro~enstein. wa.~ arrested ~·ith i\.1iss Gugtiolli at the Corona. del Mar address. Kag!l.'IOff, an apartment h o u s e manager, wa.s arrested in the Santa Ana area, where police raided an unoccupied warehou.W: building with 1 search war· rant hunting bookmak.ing equipment. Detective Simon sa.ld the joint in- vesligatJon includes Santa Ana police and the Orange County District Attorney's of. fire. Council Unit w Study Districts' Variation Wit h the Supreme Court's ''Onf' man, ont vote .. edict firmly ent renched as a fund amental rul e. a city rou nc1l com- mittee is about tn start bending 50me counctlmanic district lines in l'\rwport Beach. Bending may not be. enough. F'1gurrs r(')eased tnrlay hy Arting Ci!y ~1an11ger Ph ilip f . Bellencour t shnw a va riatio n of di~t.rirt population by mor e than 50 percent in one 1ns!ance. The cily has seven councilm11nic distr icts. Whilt> there are 9,7118 person~ in !hf' District. 5, repre!'entt>d by Maynr Ed Hirth, there are only 5,685 peoplt> living in District 4. the .seat held by Coun cilman Milan Dost.al. On the average, district population, s~~uld be 7,777, according to city of· f1c1als. Thesr figures put Hlrth 's district more than 25 percent above the mean and Dost!!.l'1 nearly 27 percent below it. Following ia a brt>akdown of the pres· ent cooncilmanic districts: -District I (Balboa P e n In 1uI11 reprtSenltd by Vice Mayor Howard Rogers) 6,n8, 12.85 percent below the mean. -District 1 (\\'est Newport, Coun· cilman Donald ~lrlnnis) 7.505, 3 5 percent be!o1~1 I.he mean. -District 3 I Nel'-·pnrt HPight s. Lido lslr . Co uncilman Carl Kymlal 9.057. 16 46 pl'!rcent above the mean -District ~ !Wei;t. l'pper Bay. Oiun- ci!man Dost al) 5.68.'i. 21\ !t percent bC'l<Jw lhe mean. -Dts1nct :'! !The Bluff~. 1r\'1ne Ter· r::ice, Balboa l~lanrl. Mayor H1rth l !l.7!lll, 25.86 J)('rcen1 above the n1ea n -Di stric t f) 1Eas!bluff a'1rl mr>st nf Coron;i del l\il;:i.r Cnunr 1lma n Richard Croul J 11.086. :J.97 perct'nt abnve 1he mean -District 7 tHarbor V1rw linn1e~. Harbor View Hills, Shore Cliffs. Camro Shores. Councihnan Lind~ley Parsons ' 7.539. 3.06 percent above !he mean . Councilmen Kymla and Parsons . !hi! members of the redistricting panel. h:ive reserved comment pending a m~tin11 wil.h the staff in I.he next f~·o weeks to re\'iew the figures . While Croul's district is only lhlrd highest in population. it outranks bolh Hirth 's and Kymla':s districts in the num~r of people registered to v('l!t'. :i fact tha t may be attributed to a heavy (See REDISTRICT. Page!) only tmtil Aug . 2 v.·hen Y.'ynn begins his dutirs. Bettencourt was given a 17i..i per- renl bonu:s for assuming extra duties , which boosted hi! 197(}..71 salary from $17 ,052 to $20.244 and this year's from $18,910 lo $22.404. ln th e same bonus situation is Assistant I Acting ~ City Attorney Dennis O' Netl, who remains at $23,076 until a new ci!. .11ltronye is appointed, at which t.Jme hls pay will revert to $19 ,36B. ONeil 's base and bonus sa.Jar1es for 1970-71 were $17,484 and $20.724 . respecti1•ely. Remaining city officials n014' earnlng mor!': than $2Q.OOO: Assistant Pohce Chief Harry Ne lson, fro m S20.244 to $21.348 ; Fire Chie r R. J. Briscoe and General Service Director J acob r.t yndersr. bot h fron1 $19,740 to $21,348, and Assistant Public Works Oirector Ben Nolan, from $18,80( to $20.328. Another vacant post, the community development director , a combination of the former pla nning and building director positions will have a aalary range cl $2 L348 to $26.040. Both Larry Wilson, planning director, and dliver Grant, former building direc- tor, earned $18,804 in 1970-71. Assistant Community Development Director James Hewicker \15 nearing the $2Q,OOO mark v.·ith $19,368. He was given a $1 ,464 raise. Shooter Freed Police Assailant Put on Probation A man who wounded two Newport Beach policemen in a shootout on I.he Pacific Coasl Highway v.•as placed on three years probation loday in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Byron K. McMillan suspended what could ha ve been a lengl.hy state prison term for Arthur Lambert, 6l. and orderl!!d the retired engineer to stay away from alcohol and firearms during his prcr bation period . Upper Bay's Refuge Status 'Pren1ature' B~ l.. PETER KRIEG Of'tfi.t 'Dll,, 'llet SMtf The U.S. Department of Interior in· ~nds to de signate Upper Newport Bay a national landmark but any talk of ac:. quiring part of 1t for a wildlife refuge it premature. federal ()fficials said thia morning. Designation of !he landmark status. ex- pected in !.he near future from Interior Secretary Rogers Morton, "does not con- stitu te A cloud over the title -there i'i no acquisition of land Involved," \:\tiJliam r.1onroe, regional coordinator of lhe department, said today. He said f ifth District Supervisor Rona ld E. Caspers. who Tuesda y said the designation or a sanctuary sta!us was due in le•s than !wo 14•eeks. "apparently misinterpreted"' something v.·e ~·ere talk- ing ;iboul. ,'Yf unroe sai d na!ionaJ landmark sta tus "g111ts an are a a particular designat ion indicating il has a speci al qua lity and that <1rca 1~ f'n litled tn specia l con· 11drra t1on. Mflnroe sa1rl he recnmmendPd I.he rif's1gnallon tn Mrirlon. a ~ did an ad visnry panel, and sald lhe s!':cret.ary could act at any tin1e. On !he othr r hand. actJnn on a requ e~l hy 1he Ora nge Cou nt y Bo;:i.rd of Su perviso rs to estabil~h a w1ldl1le refuge 1n the ba y is mu ch fur ther off. Monroe sa id "Wt> have been wnrk in.e: 14•1th Caspers' office in examinin,1t the Upper Bay fo de· rermine 11 !here is an y b:isis to make it a special preserve consistent wilh the board 's resol ut ion," Monroe confirmed. "Secretary Morton flew O\'er the area and asked me to study the possibility." Monroe !aid he wouldn't guess how long lt will take him to file a report, but he did point out that. designation of an area as a national wildlife refuge takes an !!.Cl of Congrcs!. "Our study is purely in the formative stages." ~tonroe said. "we have been (See BACK BAY, Page%) Lambert, smartly dressed ln a gray suit and silver tie, stood up In the prisoner's box and promised Judge r-.icl\ihllan in his clipped British accent : "I've slopped drinking your honor, l won't drink again·· It was stated in his defense lhal he was in a drunken stupor last r\ov. 14 ~·hen he sho t N!':wport offi cers James Gardner and John Ellingham In a fracas sparked o.i.11. Y l"ILOl Sti ll '"-" DYLAN ON THE PORCH An Un earthly Quiet Deme1nor Silent Spectator Watches W oriel Walk by Porch His long halr fl owing , he keeps constant vigil on the porch at 2818 Newport Blvd., flash ing a peace sign and staring out of still, blue eyes at passersby. Those stopping to talk find him, well, unreal. ~tainly because he is. Known 11s "Dylan" to owner Harvey Farrell and friend~. he Is wire frame, painted paper. a brov.·n v.·ig 11nd some old clothes. when he was halted on Pacifie Cout Highway and booked on charges of drunken driving. Lambert shot Ellingham in I.he leg and Gardner in the stomach before he was disanned and booked on charges that in· eluded attempted murder. Both officers ha ve since recovered from their wounds. A $6 million lawsuit filed by both of- ficer~ against Lambert is awaiting lrial in Su perior CourL Last Yacht In Transpac Crosses Line HONOLULU (UPI ) -The 1971 bieMlal Tr1nspacific yacht race ended early Wednesday when Rowena . a 4~foot OJf... ter from the St. Francis Yacht Club in San Francisco. won the dubious disti~ lion of '"Tail End Charlie." The Rowena, a Class B vessel with Donald Dalziel at the hrlm, sailed past the Diamond Head finish line at 12:30 a.m. HST to become the last of 68 vessel! to make I.he 2,225-mile voyage from San Pedro, Calif., which began July 4. She· finished far down in the standing! as a strategy of taking: a northerly course in hopes of catching high winds backfired . The rest of the fleel. sailing in a southerly direction, found .strong winds stirred up by tropica l storm Denise last week and finished ahead of her. The \Vindward Passage. a 73-foot ketch from the Lahaina Yacht Club, became the first vessel in the history of the race lo capture three first place.s. cleAnsweep- ing the first tn finish, Class A and first overall in handicap. Other unofficial win ners w~rr Encore, A 43-foot sloop from Balboa Yacht Club, in Clas~ B; Argonaut. " 4().foot sloop rrom the Santa Barbara Y::ichl Club In Clas! C. and Dakar. a 41.root sloop from lht': Del Rey Y::icht Club. in Clasll 0 . A.,.,·ards were presenterl at lhl!! victory ban quet Wednesday night. Freeway Appraisal Set for TV Friday Bamford Frankland. assistant state public works director , will discuss Governor Reagan's re-appraisal of California's freeway system and Its direct effect on the coastal cities of Orange County Friday at I :30 p.m. on KHJ·TV. Channel 9. Orange Coaat He said investigators believe the opera- tion involves area bars or nightclubs &nd is of a fairly large acale. Yes, She Has Fire Hydrants Balboa High Rise Given Up "Some guys ~'ere out on the porch one day watching the girls gn by as usual. so I put him out with them." said Jrri Brandt. Since that t.lme about a year ago. Dylan hall moved bl!Jde .only once and then "lhe neighbors came over and asked 'Where's your man?' " laughed Jeri who changes Dylan's position once In a while. Weather The sun will peek through the haze today and Friday, follow- ing early morning low clouda and fog. Temperatures will range from 70 along the beache1 to 84 inland. Lows ar.ound 66. A Newport Beach hou.sewife called aulhorities Wednesday to notify them of the whereabouts of $9 misalng fire hy- dran~ heads. They were &:tac ked in the driveway of 1.-1rs. Shirlry Niel.sen, 1112 Sandcastle Dr il'e. firemen . rt>lievl!'d to get. them back, lugged I.he devicl!'S awa y for replacement 1t ll'lCaUons throughout the city_ War Study Ordered \\IASHING1'0N (UPI) -The Senate t nrl!'IKfl Rel11tlon1 Committee bu btfin given 1100.000 l-0 tonduct t~ nwn In· ,-esltgatlon or the orlglnll of the Vietnam \Var. Rendezvous Ballroom Site May Be Condominiu1ns O'tA'Tim of tht s.ltt of the former Ren· deivous Ballroom in Balboa have given tip nope: for I high riae apartment there and are now plannh1:g to ae.H the 1ite for a four.glory condominium. Architect Ro!ly Pulaski s11 id this morn· l~g he intend! to approach the city coun· c1l Monday asking for official thinking oo U\f' plan which he 111y1 would confonn to e:iiS'ling R·4 zoning regulation! but woo)d not mel!!t standard.s proposed in the lower Newport &y civic dlslr/c:t ordi-nance. Pulaski u..id I.ht l!I00,000 project would be half the !iU of the orlgin11! high ri11e propo111. There would be 24 unll.3 In · lf.ead t1f « with four lrlorles lnste11d nl ~ight, he said. Tbe bottom floor would bt an enclosed parkiJ!g garage and would be parlla!ly undergroulld, Pulaski said. ~ the buil d· ing could gfay \\'ithin the 35-foot height restriction. Ther!': Is a moratorium on construction higher than 3S feet along the lower ba y .and ocean front, alld it i1 because or de- l11y11 brought on by the temporary ban Lhat Lhe owners ha vt 111tered develop. ment plans , Pulaski said. He e:iplained that, while the proptrty belween Pa lm and Washington Stretll sooth of Balboa Roulevard is in a com· mt>rciAt 1.one, t.he condominium will meet al[ R-4 (multi·fami!y) requiremen ts. He sAld the owners. Mr. and Mrs. Er· M!'St Neufeld will !ieek a use pe rmll. . " ralher than a zone change from the plan- Rlng comm.Jssion to clear the path for construction of the project. Pulasld sald I.he Neu!elds iotend to sell the property to an unnamed de.vetop.. er. He cl;iimed they had to reduce I.he price significantly because of the hl.gh rise moratorium. Pulaski said the building would be cnnt.emporary In design and would in- clude park ing for 441 automobile3. He said the project would loc.Jude two and three bedroom unit& that would sell between l.10.noo anrl $65,000, He said all unils would h11ve An tlef'An view whlle some would also have a view of Newport Bay . ' ' But most of the lime he just sits there, day and night. startling people with his unearthly quil!!t demeanor. Swim Units Offered By Newport Beach Newport Beach Park.! and Rtcreation Department iJ offering two rema ining two-week !'esslons of l"'lm classes, begin- nlng July U and Aug. 9. Regislration for the dally se.ssion11 cot:- Ung $4.50 ls at tht Island llouse, Fashion Island, Monday through Friday S:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m ClaSSC!S raniJng from pre- beglnner to advanced are offered. INSIDE TODAY A Polish Je w, now an Isra eli citizen, has reveoted that white in a. priion camp, he l~arned the R11s.,ians. ·not the Na.ii!, massacred 12,000 Polish offi.. cer1 during the war. Stor11 Page 4. l lrl"' 11 C~llloml• I Cllecktrl• U• I (l•ull~ tt·H torn!u • , .. ,~-.... 11 lllll•rltt '''' 4 l 11tltrtllftll'!"'' , .. " F1n•1te• 11 Ht,.Klfltl 1' .lo1111 L•""•., U Mtrrl•t• Ll(trUM 11 ' "'"'Ill 1•,.. Mlll11tl l 11F11h N Nt!IHtl Ntwo J 0••11941 c-•1 11 S7tw11 '••tfr H ''°"'' U-U Sl9t~ Mt rtlth H•17 Ttlt•lt1t11 lt T .... lt~• 1t-7t Wttllltr ' Wt"""'' Ntwt 1).lt ~-OAll Y PllOT N Th11rMSay, Jul) 22, lq7l Sudan Turm()j: ~r~pt s::~ • ... Coun te r-coup Ousts Rebel Rid Off~rs -, . ~ ' . . lilllil" l)Jj'll -ll'llr~ 1'>1*' "' oo'i!Bf' ~ Prtsldent Ma) ~ Juf1r Numelry occupied Omdurm11n Radio StaUon today in an apparent cqunter~p a1ainst the prC><Gmmu1JJst 1roup who deposed him on Monday. The Egyptian Middle East News Agen- cy in Cairo quoted the radio station which b the Suden national radio, as saying Numelry "is wtll and will still lead the n1tlon." 'n>e radio announcement came a few hours after neighborlll& Libya for ced down a British airliner in Benghazi and kidnaped the president of the new Sudaneae revolutionary councLI and another council member who ""ere aboard it. Sudanese troops earlier were reported to have surrounded the Libyan, Egyptian and Syrian embassies ln the Sudanese capjt1l GtlDlartouln In re~llo!l1 • • " =:: prflldtllllal ~ ud -,1 'r1>ell tlJj, Mkld!a ll:al! lflWI ,....., · · wu 11porled ......r f.rmY ,..pol'led lbt bi*cut r,_ ljlo .,,;tJo "· . ilaUoa ln Omdu~ I.bl twlD cft1 of The .!Ources .said th~ tighUng 1ppeartd Khartoum , a.a: saying : . . ··Sudanese forces led by LL Moham-lo be the beglllnmg of an altem~t by med All Krbasi have occupied the radio Numelry or his ~upporters to regtun tht station . ' control they lost on Monday. "Maj. Gen . Numelry will broadcut to Numeiry was toppled by a group of the nation soon ." army officers -several of whom had The agency quoted a spokesman helped him galn power in a coup a year Identified as Col S1lah Abdel Aal as ago. Thelr leader, Lt. CoL Bab11kr El Nur 5aying <in the radio: OsmM , said in Loodon Wednesday he "The catastrophe through which the hoped lo steer Sudan on "lhe path to nation has passed in lhe last rew da ys ls scientific socialis m " now ove r." He was one o! the two member5 of the Qualified British sources :i;ald in Lon-new revolutionary council abo11rd the c!on thal fresh fighting' had broken out in Brlli.sh plane forced cl<lwn today in Libya. Khartoum, beginning al about 4 p.m. Libyan jets buzzed lhe plane to for1..-e it to local time. land. Llbya 's government supported The London sources said tanks had sur-Numeiry'1 anti-communist policies. Horse Sickn ess Can Swee p Citizen s Can Li1nit Heights, Says Attorn ey State, Health Aide s War n SACRAMENTO {AP) -State health and agriculture officlals warned today that the sleeping sickness which has kill· eel thousands of horses in Mexico and Texas can't be kept out of California because even hwnans can carry the virus. l>r. William W. Worcester, chief of the Stlte Agriculture D e p a r t m e n t ' s veterinary aervices 5e<:tion. 'aid the pro- blem is mounting because "we just can't quarantine people." cattle and dog• al.50 carry the disease, Police Raiders Hit I sland Home In Drug Roundup A BaU:>0a !3land home und er surveil· Janee as a possible druR distibution spot was raided by Newport Beach police who arrested three suspects and seized 1,500 1lleged drug pills Wednesday night. Huntington Beach polir.e operatin1 in conjunction picked up a fourth suspect 1t a reaidence in that city . Boolr:ed on suspicion of possession of dangerous drugs for sa!e were Gregory E. UPore, 18, of 24531 Overlake Drive, El Toro., Mike Minchtion. 21, of 525% Caliente Drive, Huntington Beach and Stephen G. Roberts, 18. of 3()1 Avocado St .. Costa Me5a. Oettctlve Sgt. Leo Konkel and Deltc· tlve Mike Hietala said in addition to the 1,500 suspected barbiturate pill.!, a quan- tity of marijuana was found al 3221A Marina Ave., on the island. Huntington Beach police also arre8ted Jerair H Bakshoian of the Caliente Drive actci~si , but did not reveal wheth· er any contraband was se ized there. Frona Page l REDISTRICT • • • Worcester said. but quarantinin& all cal· lie shipments into the state would be almost as drastic as limiting the move- ment of people. Worcester said officials of several agencies were meeting again today lo di&cuss pos11ible ways to combat the disease. Al a meeting Wednesday, Dr. George Humphrey of Berkeley, head of the Public Health Department's animal health section, &aid that there is no way to keep the di sease from 5preadlna: throughout the United States. The disease. known clinically 11 Venezuelan equine encepllalomyelltis, is caused by a virus which ls carriert by mosquitos. It has moved northward from Central America, and has caused qu&r· antines on shipments of horses in several states. The meetings in Sacramento drew of- ficials from the state agriculture and public health dep1rtment1, the University of California, local mosquito aba~rnent districts and the U.S. Department of Agriculture . Dr. Robert Schroeder. Los Anjele1 County'! chief veterinarian, has told state agricuHure officials that he doesn 't want any horses shipped into Los Angeles County at all, widening the current ban on horses from Texas and surrounding states, Free Cho w Set For Viet Vets Vietnam war veteran• of the Harbor Area are invited to free chow Sunday, when the Veterans or Foreign w I r I holds a benefit apaghetli dinner at Costa Mesa Park. Coastline Post 353~ Commander Joe Casillas says food will be served from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. with non-Vietnam veterans paying for their meals. Proceeds of the spaghetti dinner will go into the organization '1 buildin1 fund. As long a1 Newport Beach resident! continue ttltempts at limiting high rise "through the zoning laws, there will be no problems," former city attorney Tully Seymour, city attorney for Laguna Beacb, said this morning. An Orange County Supeiior Co urt Wednesday ruled illegal an initiative al· tempt at impoiing a ceiling of 36 fett on all new buildings in Laguna Beach. The decision is on appeal in the fourth District Court of Appeals. but, "If it stands up it prelty well eliminates enac- ting height Umitation.s through initiative procedurea," Seymour said. "But this 11 nol lo say pe<>ple can 't go to the planning c<>m.mjssions and city council and express their view1 there in public hearings," he added, describing the method that Newport Beach has followed. A citizen's advisory council to the 1..-0wer Newport Bay Civic District Com- mittee meel.! again tonight at 7:30 o'clock in city council chambers, continuing it! study of a high rise ordinance devised by the committee. The group is scheduled to discuse; gee. lions covering view corridors, walkways and public access provisions. Its recommendations on the ordinance are tn be reported to the planning com- mission by mid-August. F r o m Pagel BACK BAY. • • meeUn1 with the county counsel and the 'taff. "We are concerned about the area," he said. Monroe would not guess how big an area he might recommend for a national sanctuary. ''There are minimum standards," he said, "but I am not familiar enough with them lo comment at this time ... He said if a decision is made lo acquire some of the bay for a sanctuary, it would be purchased, possibly with funds available through the Duck Stamp Act or the Mirratory Bird Act. ;~:.~;~o~"ec1~~" In lh• cecenl •peci al Purported Manson Book Of a total of 24,395 registered voters in Newport Beech. lhere are 2,682 in District 1: 2,!29 in District 2: 4.002 Jn A d b T District 3; 3.~ in District 4. 3,936 in p p rove y rustees Distrkl 5; <,207 in Disldct 6. and 3.175 in District 7. OIAN61 COASf DAILY PILOT Ol!ANGE (Oi&.5T "'UILlll41HG COM,AN'I' •••••• N. Wetf l'r .. ·.,..,; 1/ld ,.,..n,11tr J ee~ It Curley \tlcc l'•••'d.,., •NI G--•I Man•,.r l )l•,.,11 IC1tvil Edl1w Tl.o,.,tt A. M1H,~i11t ....._,..g."'IJ Editor L ''''' 1::.;,, N-t a .. ch (otr EtUO< N .. i-t ....... OM&. l Jll N•w,.orl l•wl1ver~ Mt ll:119 Atld r•u : ,,0 , 1111 1175, 9266) Othf OHie" Celli llWI•: Ult Weu l•Y '"'"' ~.,... 1 .. <ll: n: F.,. .. 1 ""'""" ...... llflllO.~ IMtll: 1111; IMC .. hvlr.r1rd ...., c-•" JDS Nt>rlll t:! Cunir.. 11111 T 1r,•1rr 17141 '4t-4JJ:1 Cla lf'IN Mw•st•h 1 '4l-167e '"""""/· non , Or~ c...11 ""' .. ,, ... ,.. ~Jfly, P+e -I !Mr-l+lul.trtt ... 1, ........ 1 --,..,. """"'-"h .....-.i11 _, • ~-"""-' "*i.r -· IRINIM el~;.-, .... do! .. ...., ... "Ill ti N ...... f I.XII .... ClfM ,..., Ct!I~. ~ ..... ,, w~u..-...:r1 ~-·n. _..,. ......,.. .... """""' lf.JJ _,,.,.,. --• A book said to be r.har!es J\.fanson's ''guidehook through life " was recom· mended i:imnng m11ter i11ls for a propo!ed ~cicnce fiction course adopted Tuesday night by the Newport-Mesa Uoified School Dil'ltrict Board of Education Mrs. Pat Walke r. 2383 College Drive. C.Osla Mesa . told the board that "Stranger in a Strange Land" "won't help any 3tudent acquire a JOb.'' Mrs. Walker urged lhe board to delay ection on the proposed court~ guideline• which included the science fiction course . until parents had a better opportunUy to know what v.•as being planned for adop- tion. Board President Rod MacMillian noted the large numbers of courr.e offeringii in the district made it dilficult for the mass media to communicate all the proposed courses. He said copies of the m1terial1 to be used in new cou rses were available to parents for review. MacMillian noted lhe course ortcringl'l had been brought up at a previous meeting and tabled for l1ttr con· siderall<ln by the boerd. Mrs. Walker'• charae about "Str1n1er In a Strange Land.. drew no reaponae from trustees. Another parent. Mri. E. W. Sumrall of 1766 Bahama Place, ~ta Mesa, crilicii:· ed another course offertni 11 half semester or "quartt.·" course In ''The Occult in Literature." Mrs. Sumrall 11id two of lhf' books In- cluded in that course were not available for her review. She aaid ba.ted on the materials sht> had reviewed it apphred the OlW'Se made "no elfort lo rtl1t.e Devil worship to modern life " nolini most of the material on devil worahlp wa~ centered in the 17th century. She asked how the course would fit into a 1Ludant '• Enali&h rtqulremenll. Dr. Norman l..oalS, actln( 1uperht· tenclent In the abst:nct or Dr John Nicoll , exp lained that the quarter course concep!. .ir.llow1 a student to take OJI! 5ubstitut1. unlll'l of Engli!!h that otherwise would ht found in s general lllerature course:. Selim S. "Bud " f'ranklin, board member from Costa Mesa. asked how the: requiremenli for study in English or other areas were communicated tn parents in light of the changes In of· rerlngs. Dr. Loats 1aid he would see to It lh1t parents were told in the student handbook how the quarter cour1e concept could bt employed to mett tht thret ye.ars of English requirements. Basically the district requires a year eaoh of grammar. composition and literature. Lo1t1 ,;aid. That requirement continues. However. students may arrange their schedule~ to brecrk up Lhe concentration.!! of study by interspersing quarter& of study of courses dr1wn from the three 11reas. The board did not approve 11 new C<'lurse labe led "The Altemative School " since It appeared to duplicate effort s heing made in the work study and Regional Occupation Program 1reas. Mrs. Beverly Langston noted thr district could benefit by the experience of tht Berkeley tchool di1trk:t which has already launched auch an "altemative1' hlgh !lchool. Lo.all explained that the plan would have used community facilities aftd rtSOtlrcti for training students. The courst was developed prier to the b<>1rd'1 approval of a vocatlonal tr1lnlng ptOJr&m in conjunction with the Hun- tln1ton Beach and Tustin Onion ltlgh School Dlstrlcll, Loll! said. The plan rte0gniied the fact that the di.strict can't 1iford to duplicate lhe ex- pen11ive equipment of the bu1lnes1 world In attemptlnc to provide current voca· Uonsl tralnlnj: eiperiences to m~ netd1 of 1111 students In the district ky S111111Q.er Huntington ~:~~n. ~i:, Weathers Earthq uake . Pi·@paring "Q\>Pe ~-~ 11 cm .. ShucJ. d,r. II "'111'"' !' .. . R F" h l1~~1 '! ~-..= " oute ig t ~ JmPortJnt t'(pl~ but with liUle dlNCt 1dintrfcanc. to m o s t Newport Beach resident! who mi~ht hive read Lhe reports with detachment. But delachment was not the state of Mr. and Mrs. Ro~rt W. Krone, 22.37 Donn ie Road, Newport Beach . Their IS. year-old daughter. Kerl. is spending the summer In Santiago, Chtle, as an ea· ch ange student. "Of cm.ir!H! we were very worried ," says f\irs. Krone. an assistant manager at Pacific Telephone's Costa Mesa of· !ice. The Krones were CQnlacted almost im· medialely by representatives of the ex· chanse program, Youth for Uundersta.nd. ing. lnc.. reassuring them of l he i r daughter's safety. But soon they received an even more imi>ortant message -a letter from lheir daughter. Keri wrote that when everything "be- gan to tremble . , . being from Cali- fornia and quite used ta earthquakes ..• 1 knew immediately what was gG- ing an ." After describing her Chilean family "huddling together" she wrote. "the papers said it lasted only 1 l,J minutes. but to me ... it seemed like an etern· ity ." The quake, which registered 10 on the Mercalli scale of 12. was so strong, SHAKEN IV EARTHQUAKE Exchan11 Student Krone said Keri, that "I could feel the wooden floor beneath my bare feel rolling as the waves roll on the .!lea~ .. Afterwards ..• my whole body shook with uncontrollable (ear," she said. 'rhe house where Keri wa~ 1taying suffered little damage, although much destruction was reported elsewhere. Keri will return to Newport Beach Sept. I and attend Corona de! Mar High School as a senior. Harrimru1 Attacks Nixo11 China Moti,1es in Address By TOf.1 BARLEY 01 lht 01U1 Pllol Slt!I Roving ambassador Averell HarrimM accused President Nixon Wednesday night or being Jess than honest \\lllh the American people about the motives behind his proposed visit to Red China. Harriman told the World Affairs Coun- cil of Orange County 1n Santa Ana th;it the "American public was entll!ed to know lhe true purpose" or Nixon's mission to the Far Ee.st ''and should not be kept waiting for some disclosure on the lines of the Pentagon Papers leak. "In any event ," the veteran diplomat added, "the President's visi t should not be allowed to divert public attention from the senseless tragedy of the Vietnam war and our troops mus~ be out of there long before he goes lo Peking ." Harriman. a fonner U.S. ambassacklr lo Soviet Russia, said complete honesty by the President berore he journeys to China would prevent misunder~tanding o( his moti ves by the Russians. "ll ~·ould be a tragic blunder lo play on e agaln!t the other." he said. "We have come a long way toward the present underslMdlng with Russia and il is much more vita l that we preserve Uiat rela· tin nship 1han lhal we should cultivate China to the detriment. of our Russian un- derstanding ." Harriman, an adviser on foreign aff airs to six presidents, lashed the South Viet- nam conflict and this nation's in· volvemenl in the "'2.r with North Vietnam throughout a hard hitting talk. "We have no right to be tbcrc," he said. "It is our duty to get out and gel out n0\'1 and wc most cctrairJy should be long gone from South Vietnam before tbe next general cleclion ." Thal e!ecHon, 1-larrimasi said , should be fought on th e nation's domestic issues and "this; nation's energies under whoever "'ins the election should be con- centrated on the solution or problems that plague us right here at home:' He held up the example of the post Wnrld War II Marshall Plan as ''the only sensible way" to aid any nation deter.mined to fight communism. Ha rriman, who played a major role in the conception of the giant aid package to \Vilr lorn Europcet n na tions, told his au· dicnce that •·we shou ld only help those who are willing to help themselves. "Stopping communism with American boy1 is a theory that won 't hold water." he sa id. "There are 1hose an1ong us today "'ho would send lroops lo Chile s1n1pl y because we see a !hreat in the com· munisl regime 1n 1hat nal ion By ALAN OIJ\KJN 01 TM OtUt "'ll•T Still Court action or legislation were thre11lenf!d WMne!day afternoon M weapons HuntingLon Beach might fire to solve the city's freeway shortage. The~ hints were dropped ln 1 showdown betw~en city officl1ls and Bamford Frankland, the as3i3t1nt state director of public work!. Out of the confrontation came an assurance from Frankland that the state would cooperate in giving top priority to construction of the Huntington Beach Freeway (Route 39) it that was what the city wished in view of the uncertainty over the Pacific Coast f-'reeway. He went along with a plea from Mayor George McCracken for Route. J9 lo bt continued down to Pacific Co ast Highway. instead of le:rminating at Adams Avenue. with the proviso that some way of disburiing the traffic at the terminus must be found . McCracken also urged the stale buHd lhe Coast freeway up to the HunUngton Beach Freeway so the east-we.st traffic could loop down lo the coast and back. The major said that this ~·ould place a heavy burden on the Adams and Atlanta Avenue arterials, but seemed the most workable solution for Huntington Beach. "It's a very reasonable solution that we'll consider." Frankland s&id. "\Vhat would stop you from doing that ?" McCracken asked, explaining that it was imperative Huntington Beach receive "some sort of commitm~t'' from the state. "Problems in Seal Beach v.·ith the naval weapons people," Frankland ad· mitled. The .Se\5ion in city hall between Frankland, McCracken, City Administra- tor Doyle Miller and Public Work.!I Dire<:- tor Jim Whee.ler turned into a grilline of lhe state official by the mayor. McCracken berated the state on lL'I policy of not building a freeway through a community that does not want it and call· ed this position "wishy washy.'' He pointed out that through this policy Newport Beach is blocking the Pacific Coast Freeway and Fountain Valley could block Lhe Huntington Beach 1'~recway. -. .. We are not trying to dictat• to Newport Beach on the exact alignment ," McCracken said, ''but in the meetings \ve 'll have in the next few days with other coastal communities \ve'll ha11e to decide v.•helher lo ailgn ourselvc11. even if it Is Jegi.!llation. We h2ove a tremend ous in· vestment in plann ing in this city based on reliance on the stiite." Frankland denied that the stale wa.!I reneging on any agreements, but sa id that since Newport Beach residents had said they do not want the present freeway route "we ml.L'it see if there ii another .solution. or if we can come up with a consensus on some alternative.'' Referring lo opposition in NewJX>rt Beach, Miller observed. "I think it needs to be brought home they are damaging other con1rnunities and this may have t.o come about in the courts." lux uri ou s spring do wn sofas This handsome Sofa was designed to give you tli1 ultimate In seat ing comfort witli dacron and down back plllow1, dHp spring down 1eat cusM ions enveloped in down •nd feathers In two fNm· fill1d arm pillows. Ct-loose from a wicl1 selection of fine fabrics. 0 8' length, reg. $500. NOW 399. 18TH SEMI ANNUAL SALE IN PROGRESS SAVE 20% ON ALL HERITAGE AND DREXEL UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS AND SOfAS • ALSO -SEVERAL HERITAGE AND DRIXEL BEDROOM, DINING ROOM AND OCCASIONAL COLLECTIONS ON SALE. PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Your fovarite interior desiuner wiU be Mppu to a&sUI uo11 ••• Ope11 Mot1., Tliun.. & Fr i, lwa. -TRY OUR RI VOLVING CHAR•I - I , 2215 H;.R I OR ILVD. COSTA "4ESA, CALIF. 646-0275 446-027, 7 ' ·I ' . ), 'I 7 I --·T""--.. l;osia Mesa EDITION VOL. 64, NO . 174, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Police End Me lee 500 R eve lers Get Rough in Mesa By ARTHUR R. VINSEL A party which drew up lo 500 persons to Costa Mesa 's quiet College Park di strict ended in chaos la\e Thursday a.!'I policr taclical squad teams clea red the streets under a barrage of projectiles. The incident came after the parly ""'as declared to be an unlawfuJ assembly and St1dan~orn By Viole11t Power Grabs liCOreS or partlClpants failed to disperse as order~ By lhe time it wa~ over. 19 persons were jailed. at least one was ho.o;pita!ized ;ind m11ny more inelLJding police officer~ .o;uffered minor cLJts and bruises. Arrestees r;inged in 11ge from 1J to 2111, coming from as far away as Pomona. and charges included mo.o;tly failure t.o ( • • .. disperse or being drunk In public. Tlu'ee men were booked on suspicion ot assault on a police officer. one of them. a Colorado transient who allegedly s ..... ·ung at Patrolman Dean Howard at 12:20 e..m. today in the station. ·Carl Carlson. 26. was arrested following a scuffle in which he suffered a fractured jav.· and was transferred to the ja.i! ward of Orange County Medical Center. Circumstances involving a l6-year--0!d youth from Orange who "'-'IS arrested and lti!er su ffered some type of seizure were also being probed today. Police Capt. Robert Moody, rom· m<indcr or the parrol n1visiOn. s11id widespre?.1 comp!ain!s about a live rock bMd and crowd in the 2300 and 2400 blocks nf College Drive were received . A con!ingenl or 10 patrolmen and two sergeants "'as dispatched at 9: 45 p.m., after dispatchers had logged a dozen irate calls ;ind fin a \ly quit counting. ii • " Today's Final N.Y.· Stoek8 TEN CENTS CIAJLY FILCIT Si.ff I!' .... BEIRUT !UPll -Forces loyal to (lusted Sudanese President Ma j. Gen. Jaafar Numeiry occupied Omdurman Radio Station today in Rn apparent counter-coup against the pro-com munist group \\'ho deposeri him on Monday. One man had threatened to lake hi3 own gun into the street if police didn 't in· lcrvene, according lo the call log. KEVIN MORROW PONDERS TRASH COLLECTED AT SCENE OF COSTA MESA DISTURBANCE In College P1 rk, a Front Yard Party Got Loud and Things Got Ro ugh The E~yptian Midd le Eilst News Agcn· cy 1n Cairo quoted the radio star1on "'hich ts thr Sudf'.'1 n<1t1onal radio. as saying Nt•n1riry "is \\'ell and 11 ill s!ill lead lhe n2 n." 1 ., radio announcement came a few h"•· :; arter neighDoring Libya forced d..,. 11 a Britis h airliner in Benghazi and ki('11aped the prcsidenl or the new Sud,nc.~e revolutionary cnuncll and &110,hcr council member "'ho were sboard 1t. Sudanese troop!'i earlier were reported to ha ve surrounded the Libyan, Egyptian and Svrian emba.~sies in the Sudanese cap11ai of Kh artoum in retaliation. Tl1en the Middle East News Agency rrr ,rted the broadcast fr om .the _radio station in Omdurmm, the twin city of Kh?rtnum, as saying: ''.~udanese forces led by Lt. Moham· n· Ali Krbasi ha ve occupied the radio " 0. .11 {;en. N11meiry \\'ill brnadca5t to th~ ... .it1on snnn." 't flt agency quoted A !!ipokesman identified a~ Col, Salah Abdel Aal as 1;aying on the radio : "The ca.taslrnphe through v.'hich the nat ion has passed in the last few days is now over Qualified Bri!ish sources said in Lon· d0n tha! fre.~h fii;,:hllng had broken out in Khartoum. beginning at about '4 p.m. local time. 'The Lnodon source,<; said 1anks harl FUr· roLJnded 1he presidcn1i<1! palilre and tha!. shoo ting "';:.s reported around Ar my bcarlfjLJarlcr,<; T11e sourrf''I s.1ir.! lht' ri,ehtin~ appeared 1See SUDAN. Page!) Officials Warn Horse Sickness Can Hit Stale S·\CRA:\IE/\TO IAP 1 -S!atE" heal1h anrl tl J:rlC'Ul!ure 0H1rial!'i "';irned today that fhP sleeptnJ;!. !'iirkness whirh has kill · f'd lhousanfls nf horses In Mexico ::ind Texas can'l be kepi. oul of California bf.cause e\en humans can carry the \•iru s Dr. \\'i!ham \Y, Worcester. chief of the St at& Agriculture: Depart men l ' 5 veterinary services section. said the pl'l'l- blem is mounting because: "we just can't quarantine people.'" Cattle and dngs also carry the: disease, \Vorcester said. but quarantining all cat- tle shipments into the slate wnuld be a!most a!' drastic as limiting the move- ment of penp!r \\"('r('eslcr said official!! of several 111•cn1·ies \\·ere mreting again today tq dt:i;c11ss possible wa ys lo comba! the disrase. At ;:i mcrting \\'cdnesrlay. Dr. Grorge: Humphrey of Berke!e~'. hC'ad or the Puhl1c Hralth Of'partme:nrs animal health Sf"Cfion, s11id that there is M way to keCp the di!'irase from spreading throughout the United St;ite~._ . Tht disease. known rlln1cally as Vene1.uelan eqLJine encephalomye:Utis , ls caused by 1 vlr11s which i5 carried by mosQLJitos. II ha.o; moved northward from Central America, 11nd bas caused quar- .an!ines on shipments of horses In several 11tate.s. Thr meetinJ!S in Sacramento drew of- fici als from the 11tate agriculture and puh!ir health drpartmenl!i. the: University or C111ifnmia. locsil mosqultn abatement dislrlc1s ;ind thr us. l)i(_o,partment or ,\gricul lure Or Rohert Schroeder. Ul!! Angele~ Cnuntv'li <'hiel V('!crinarien. hll! !old Jittll4! A;:ric-~lrurt. offiri1115 that he: doe~n't w1nl. •nv horS('S Jhlpped into Uis Angeles coUntv at 1111. widening thr current b~n nn hn'rses from Te:ia! and 1urrounding ~tale:~. OFFICER FOR MONTH CMPO'a Holbrook Ex-boxer Named Officer of July For Costa Mesa CQsta Mesa's Police Officer for the Month spent much of his college: cilreer !!ludying pre-medicine: and producing first ald p2Jients as a boxer. Patrolman Tim Holbrook ll'lday is wre stling with the problems raced by snphislicatcd law enforcement programs and systems for the lu!ure. The Costa Mes<1 Crime Preventio n Con1mittPe·s ,J uly honoree i~ ;issigned to the department's Planning and Rf'~earc h division, which engagC's in computer-bas· ed programs and rrla!ed wnrk A \'.'hil!ier n?.tivr, Officer Holbrook enrol!rd ar "'hal wa~ !hen Chiro Slate lnllrge w11h a medical car~r in mind. Jnin1ng Tau Ka ppa Epsilon fra tern ity s nrl t.he boxin,ll ilrtd ~nrcer teams. He later switched lo Cal S!;i[e: Ltin g 8"arh. ar h1eving a b;ichelor's rle~rt'e 1rt criminology He joined the local depart· ment in !%11 after graduation, He 1s a member of the Ca!iforn1a Association of Police Plannutg and Resrarrh Officers, the: Orange County Peace Officers' Association and CMPD tactic;i] squad. Studying !av.· at Western S I a t e University in addition t.o departmental duties leaves little spare lime, but Officer Holbrook makes lhe most of it when its available. He and hi.s wife Rozanne: ertjoy ocean yaclJUng. motorcycle riding in the desert, plus water-skiing and fishing at their Lake Tahoe cabin. Yes, She Hns Fire Hydrants A Newport Beach housewUt callf!d authori!les Wednesda y to notify them of the whereabouts or $9 missing fire hy· drant heArls. They were .o;t.ackl"d in the driveway of Mrs. Shirley Niel.o;en, 1112 Sandcastlt: Dnve. Firemen, relieved to get them back, lugged the devices 11way for replacement at locatlons throughout the city. Freeway Apprai sal Se t for TV Friday Bamford Frankland, assistant 'tale public works director. wlll di~u.~s r.ovrmnr Reagan '1 re-appraisal of California'• fruway system ind its dirttt effect on the coastal eille~ or Or1nge County P'rldt1y .. t 1:30 pm. on KHJ-TV, Channel ~- The squad of uniformed officers - V.'i!hout riot control equipment -tonk ch;irge and ordered !he crowd to disperse. using the rock band's amplifica- tion system. Capt. r...1oocly said. He said Lhry v.·1thdrew \\'hen a barrage or rocks. bottles, oranges and other items was hurled by some members or the cro11·d surging in the street. The morning v.·atch was due on within moments -many members d1 the so- c<1lled Tac Squad included -at which time the crowd control unit was ordered into the field. Newport Beach police were al~ placed ()0 standby alert. Despite I.he e<1rlier dispersal order, Capt. r.1oody said a second was given by Sgt. Robert Goode, at which time more objects y,·ere thrown Md I.he .o;tree:t l\lt'ttp began. . "Most or Lhe c1B'Wd di spersed as ordered," he aaid. eiplaining the rowdy, defiint element caused trouble for many y,•ho weren't resisting. Officer P11t Rodgers ,;aid he V.'.<l l! jumped by one youth while trying ln ar- rest a companion wbn he alleged shouted obscenities ,11t a "'om11n who came outside to complain her cliildrert were !ryi ng to ,Jeep. The prnspecLive arrestee. Robert S Tripp, 19. of :\113 Magnolia Ave .. was evenl.ually booked ort suspicion of disturb- ing the peace and resisting arrest Police charged Patrolmart Rodgers' ~lleged attacker. Gerald D. Smith, 19, of ~70 Lenwood Circle. with suspicion of assault on a police off icrr. Frank T\1. Sorlch, 18. of 313 Gabrilln SL. was subsequently booked on idt>n!ica1 charges. involving o rricer ch u c k Hamilton. DurinJ: lh~ melee. T;ic Squad Of!tl·er ,hm Blaylock waos ~truck tn !he front or hi~ riot helmet by a thrown bottle which broke lhe vi.c;or ""nd dr opped him to his k.nPes momentarily Investigators !>aid th('y alsn arr('!o\ed Cnas! r.uard~man Ouilnf' R 1Atr1g. 20. nf lhP USCG ~tal ion at l!ll\ BaysidP Drivf', Ne11•prir! Beach, on suspicion of re.~is !ing a r:"est. Police s;i1rl 1ht p;ir\v w;is stagrri hy Krv1n Ylnrrnw . 17. of 2414 CC1lleg' Drivp, \\'ho Capt. Moody s.<11rl h;id trird to 1Jbla1n 1Stt RIOT, Page!) 1 PERSON DIES I N MESA CRAS /1 One person wa~ killed shortly before: l p.m. today when a car collided with a pole al 17th Street and Orang~ Avenue, Costa Mesa police said. Detail5 of the accident were. not im· mediately available And lhe identity of the victim "'AS beirtg withheld pending not ification of next of kin. Solons Baek Measure 2 Impressive Victories Shore Lockheed Morale WASHINGTON \UPI ) -With 1t11 chairman keeping tabs from .11 capitsl hideaway. Lockheed Aircraft Corp. ha s wqn impressive House and Senate vie- ~-it.w1ta-'-1d for thll\• ~huntnt.. gVaranteed $250 million loan lt needs to fore stall bankruptcy. But Sen. William Proxmire 10..Wis.J, Lockheed 's toremost foe in Congre~s. threatened today to mastermind a filibu ster aimed at preventing a final Senate vote before Congress QLJits Aug. 8 for a month's vacation. Proxmire \\'As whipped by ii 56--36 vote Wednesday in his move to send back for new hearings a bill giving the goverrt· ment au thority t.o guarantee replaymenl of up to $2 billion worth of loan.> to ailing corporations such al! Lockheed. the. na · lion 's 33rd largest firm . Lockheed woLJ!d probably get the firsl loa.1 if the bill passes but it says it mLJst have lhe money in the: next ;1·eek or so to avert bankruptcy A ,,econd cruc1;il victory for the aerospace gian1 came irt the House Bank- ing Commi!tee, whtch oulvoted it~ chairman, ;ind approved a bi!! iden!ica l In the Sen;ite measure The House wa~ expected to 11ct on the measure before thr cnngress1onal reres.~. Locke:e.d Board Chairman Daniel J, Haughlon. a pl11in~poken engineer from Alribama. w;i1rhr.d rleve\opments from the C'ere mon1""J off1cr assigned lo Vire President Spiro T. Agney,· The office is Just off the Senate floor "In the 14 year~ rvro been Ill lhe: Senate . l'v1; never been subjected to this !-:inrl of pressure,'' Proxmire. said , com. plaining abou! tnbhying by the '\lhite House and by Lock~ed . Sen_ J. W1ll ia1n fulbrighl (()..Ark .), .11greed. "I expect Lockheed has as many lobbyist!! in Wa.shington as there are Senators." he grumbled. Proxmire !iaid he received two threat s (IO his own life. -orte hy !elephone and one in a letter postmarked Long l11!11nd City. N.Y. Anolher letter warned of a pl<1n to poison hi!! food . Proxmire told I.he. Senate: that Henry M. Durham or Marietta. Ga ., a fonne.r Lockhe:ed e:mploye who had written him a !el!er about Lockheed's "mismanage-- men!,'' had received "very serious phonl!: calls" threatening violence:. As a result, Proxmire said. federal mar-1>al• ht'tt betn 11&iptd to~ JUard Durham under a law making It Illegal to threaten congressionsl wllneS!e1. ?rox- mire hlJ~ invi ted Durham to testify before the Joi nt Economic Committee about his allegations against Lockheed. Jn the House. Rep. Wright Patman ( [).. Tell:.), chairman of the Banking Com- mittee, said his committe~'s "ill-con- ceived decision" to approve the Senate bill could lead to defeat of the measure on the House floor. He. called it "poorl y perfected legislation which ha!! every earmark of a general slush fund for big bu.o;iness." Banclit Wearing 'Zhivngo Cap' Robs Mesa Shop A b.:i.nd1t in 11 Or. Zhivago-type. Ru$Sian fe lt cap robbed a Costa Mesa liq uor store !ate '"ednesday, momenl.."i after t\\'O other SLJ5piciou.o; characters apparently cased ii Tl1e robber, who took $13~. was Cauce.s1an. while his apparent advancr· men were black . one wearing an identical cap <1nd the other decked out in a straw creation like a Chinese coolie wears , Clerk John L. Beck said he. was alone at the E·Z Inn, 1888 Placenti a Ave., about ll p.m when lhe first two sauntered in and looked around. keeping heads averted and buying nothing. Moment., later, he said, the lone bandit came in to make a purchase then simulaled a gl.IJl in his pocket and deman· ded money while S«k was making change. Valley Bans Apartments Booniing Litt/,e T ouJn to Deny More Developments By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of lht Deity ... 119! l !rtf Fowitain Valley -the llttle town that grew -has had it with apartment buildings. It i~n·t going to allow developers lo build any more. City councilmen sl\id Tuesday they are calling a hall to lht con!!lructlon of aparlments or condominiums Mcaus. I.hey want lo decrea.!ie lhe den11tt Md ultimate population or their city. Areas that were master planned for aparlmenl.!I or condominiums have been changed t.o other uStl! "l Uie•, retjltn- mendation of !he: p!;innina C6mmis~ 11nd p\anninng staff. , U>U11Cilmen made l'J:~tiom ln ttie c-11se:s of the. New Rtpublic deve:lopme:nl near Warner Avenue and San Mateo Street and • townhouse project on Edinger Avenue near Euclid Street. Plilnning dire:c.tor Clinton Shl!:rrod said both projects were: in the process or rle:ve:\opment and so were not Included in the change. T~t. are the only two prn)ectg left ln a mulliple-unll 1.one (R -4J. At lhllt. the ci- ty· council earlltr this year changed the. densi ty patlem for the: R-4 zone from 32 wilts per acre to 20 unit.I per acre. The. net effect or all the1e ch•nges will rtduct the ultlmat.e population 13.8 per· cent from around 71,786 to 63.IY'lt. Sherrod expll inned in 11. memo to the. council. When Fountain Valley became a cily In Hl~7. it was a 1lee.py farming cnmmunity ()f '4,000 with 1 1ingle. twcrroorn schoolboust . ln tht gpril\g of 1964, Ult population was &till only about 7,000. In December of I~. however. it was clear lhe populalirin boom that enplfed most of Orange County in the 19505 fiPaJly had spilled ()ver !nto Fountain Valley. Suddenly. lhe. population wa11 t1lmost 17,000. TW(J yea rs later. It was up to 2.1,189. Tht. city's current population ls listed at 39,fiOO. With property that had been master planned as multiple unil3 now changed to "ingle family. commercial or lnduatrlal U!!e , the ralio or multlp!e uni"' to total llvlng units In the city will drop from an Llltimite 29.08 pcroent to ll.ll percent. Strategy Mapped In Huntington Freeway Battle By ALAN DIRKIN DI lhl D•ll~ 1'111>! llltf Court action or legislation were threatened Wednesday afternoon aa v.·eapons Huntington Beach might fire to solve lhe city's freeway shortage. These hints \\'ere dropped ln I. showdo.,.,·n between city officials and Bamford Frartkland, the 11sistant 1tate director or public works . Out of the: confrontation came an 41.o;urance from Fra.nkland that lhe sla\e would cooperate in giving lop priority to construction of the Huntington Be:acb Freeway (Route 39 ) !t that Wa!I what the city wi5hed in view of the: uncertainty over the Pacific Coast Freeway. He. went along wilh 1 plea from Mayor George McCracken for Route 39 to he continLJed down to Pacific Co a st Highv,.ay, instead of terminating at Adams Avenue , with the proviso th1t some v.·ay of disbursing I.he traffic at the terminus must be found . r.1cCracken also urged the stale build the Coast Freeway Lip to I.he Huntington Beach Free-.1·ay so the east-west traffic could loop down to the coast and back. The ma1or said that this y,·ould plaee a heavy burden on the Ariams and Atlanta Avenue arterials. but seemed the moat workable solution for Huntington Beach. "It's .a very reasonable solution that ""'e'I! consider,'' Frankland said. "What v.·ould stop you from doinl that'?" 1\.fcCrarkert asked, explaining that ii "'as impe rative Huntingt.on Beach receive ··~ome sort of commitment" from lhe slate. "Problems in Seal Beach with the: naval weapon.o; people,'' Frankland ad- mitted. The session 1n city hall between Frankland. l\1cCracken. City Administra- tor Doyle l\1iller and Public Work.s Direc· ll)f Jim Y..'heeler turned Into a grilling of th~ stRte official by the mayor. McCracken bera!~d !he state on Its policy of not building a freeway through a community that does not want it and call· ed this position "wl.o;hy wal!hy ." He pointed out lhat through this policy Newpor!. Beach i!I blocking the Pacific Coast Free.,.,·ay and 'fountain Valley !Su FREEWAY, Page !) Cout Weather The sun will peek through the haze tod1y and Friday, follow. ing early morning low cloud1 and fog. Temptratures will range from 70 along the beachl!:s to 84 Inland. Lows around 66. INSIDE TODAY A Pahsh Jew, nnw nn Israeli cilize:n, has rl!t.ttaltd that tohJle in a prison camp, ht learned the Ri1.o;sians, ·not the Nazi!!, mas.tocred 12,000 Palish offir cers rluring the. war. Sl(ITJI Page 4 11'11" Jl "'""I" , •. ,. C.1!; .. mlt I M11lwll '"""" M Ch"•"'' u, I HtlloMI H..n I C~111lltllll ,,. .. (O""lc' U c .. u_,. u t:~!l~tlal 1"11t 4 Or.111t1 c-i, 11 l1•~1t ,_,!Ir M s,,.... u.u Stl(.k Mt'1ltU H.11 l"t1rt•l11..,....1 lt-11 TtltWhltll If ,!lltl!Ct ,. Thtaltl,.. ,,_,. "'•"'~-,. w .. tlltf t AftR Lu••ttl U Wt"""''' N-IJ.M loltrr1 .. 1 Lit..,_ 11 I ------·-__ ... -·-' ,( --7,...,.,... .... " , ' ' • f OA!l V, ~ILOT t 'No Jtfore Beer' Thursd1y, Jul1 22, 1971 • • . r Police Shootin~ Figure Set Free A man v.1ho wounded two Nl'wport Beach policemen in a iihootout on the Pacific Coast Highway was placed on three yean probaliOll today in Orange County Supericr Court. Judge Byron K. McMillan suspended what could hive been a lengthy 1tale priJon U.nn for Arthur Lambert, 61. and ordered the retired enginetr to stay away from alcohol and firearms during hu; pr1>- bation period. Lambert, smartly dressed 1n a gray sult and silver lie. stood up in the prisoner's box and promised Judge McMillan in his clipped British accent: ''l'V!: stopped drinking your honor, I won't drink again." 11 wu stated in his defense that he was In a drunken stupor last Nov. 14 when he shot Newport officers J ames Gardner and John Ellingham in a fracas sparked when he was halted on Pacific Coast Highway and booked on charges of drunken driving. From Page 1 FREEWAY ... could block the Huntington Beach FI'ffWay. "We a.re not trying to dictate to Newport Beach on the exact alignment." McCracken said, "but in the meeting!! we'JI have in the oea:t few days with other coutaJ communities we 'II !lave to decide whether to align ourselves, even if it is Jegislation. We have a tremendous in- vestment in pl&Ming in this city b~ on reliance on the state." Frankland denied that the .state v.·as rene.ging on any agreements, but said that since Newport Beach residents had said they do not want the present freeway route "we must see if there is another solution, or if we can come up with a consensus on so~ alternative.'' Referring to opposition in Newport Beach, Miller observed, "I think it needs to be brout:ht home they are darnaging other communities and this may have to come about in the courts.'' "I said a solution must come about." Frankland said. "Tht commwiities must get together." McCracken Jiktned the state policy of not bulldlnc a frttway without a freeway agreeip.ent from a city to a person buying a piece of land without title policy. "A rank amateur wouldn't do that." he said, referrina: to the right-of-way purchases. "I tbeqht the stale was the final autharit.y," the mayor continued, pointing <¥ that Huntington Beach accepted the aclopted routes for both freeways although ii preferred alternative~. "You are playing favorites le one city ." ';I'm 1ure if the stale wanted to come through Huntington Beach it would come through," he added. Miller observed that he was en· counged to hear !hat Route 39 could be built to Pacific Coast Highway and said thal ht "honestly believed" that location problem1 could be worked out with Foun- tain Valley. McCrackePI was not so confident. "'I've gol a hunch this is not going to he easily .solved either.'' referring to lhe talks with Fountain Valley on Route 39. The mayor s11id that the sl-llte's position was based on blind faith that all cities would cooperate. Lambert shot Ellingham In the leg and Gardner in the stomach before he w11s dtS<lrmed and booked on charges lhat tn- cluded attempted murder. Bolh offlcef"1 ha\le since reco\lered from their wounds. A $6 million lawsuit filed by both of. ficers against Lambert is awailing trial in Superior Court Transpac Yacht Race Finally Cornes to End HONOLULU (UPI ) -The 1971 biennial Transpacific yacht race ended earty '\'ednesday when Rowena, a 4!l-foot cut· !er lrom the St. t-"'rancis Yacht Club in San Francisco, won lhe dubious distinc- tion of "Tail End Charlie." The Rowena, a Clas.s B vessel with Donald Dalziel at the helm, sailed past the Diamond Head finish line at JZ:JO a.m. HST to become the last of 68 vessels lo make the 2,225-mile voyage from San Pedro, Calif,, which began July 4. She finished far down in the standings as a strategy of taking a northerly course in hopes of catching high winds backfired. The rest of the Oeel. sailing in a southerly direction, found strong winds stirred up by tropical storm Denise last week and finished ahead of her. The Windward Passage, a 73-fool ketch from the Lahaina Yacht Club, became lhe first vessel in the history of the race to capture three first places. cleansweep· ing the first lo fini sh, Class A and first overall in handicap. Other unofficial winners \vere EnCflrt, a 4J-foot sloop from Balboa Yacht Club, in Class B: Argonaut, a 4C-foot sloop from rhe Santa Barbara Yachl Club in Class C. and Dakar. a 41-foot sloop frorn the Del Rey Yachl Club. Jn Class D. A'.'.·ards were presented at the victory banquet Wednesday night. From Poge J RIOT ... city permission le block off Nassau Drive to stage the party. City Manager F'red Sorsabal turned dov.-n his request received on Tuesday. reportedly because Nassau Dri\le is a through street and this would be un· feasible. Morrow told a photographer toda.v It was loo late to cal! off the party when notified his request had been !urned down , Captai.Q.. ~loody said today that many residents had complimented the Tactical Squad's handling of the situation, whilt. other! disagreed. "The kids were no problem. They were doing just great," said Mrs. Robert Young, of 2410 Coll ege Drive. "It just wasn't fair." she 11tlded. Cap!ain Moody also said neighborhood youngsters as v.·e.11 as 'some \•is1tor~ did a pretty good job of cleanup after !he parly ended climacticall\'. "Yo u couldn't bClieve ii ""'hen we got there ."' he said. "There \\ert beer cans and broken glas.~ e\ rryv.•here." .. WO MEN P DAILY PILOT tllrl ,,_ RK ATTEM T. TO RESTORE OROER FOLL OWING CAVE·IN ALONG SUNFLOWER AVENUE Gas Line Endangered During Inc Id ent, But Utility Crisis Averted Harriman Attacl{s Nixon Cl1ii1a Motives i11 Address By TOfl-1 BARLEY 01 lt'I• D.1111 '"" 11111 Roving ambassador Averell Harriman accused President Nixon 'Vednesday night -0f being less than honest with the American people about the motives behind his proposed visit t-0 Red China. Harriman told the 'Vorld Affairs Coun· cil of Orangt County in Santa Ana that the ··American public was cntilled to know the true purpose." of Nixon 's mission to the Far Eut "and should not be kepl waiting for some disclosure on the lines of the Pentagon Papers leak. "In any e\lcnt," the veteran diplomat added, "the. President's visit should n<lt be allowed lo divert public atlention frotn the sense.less tragedy of l/le Vic1narn war and our troops mu!it be out of there loni:: before he goes lo Peking." Harriman. a former U.S. ambassador to Soviet Russia. said complete honesty by the President before he journeys to Fron• Page 1 SUDAN ... lo be the beginning of an alttmpt by Numeiry or his supporters lo regain the control they loat on Monday. Numeiry was toppled by A group of army officers -several of whom h11d helped him gain power in a coup a year ago. Their leader, Lt. Col. Babakr El Nur OsmM, said in London Wednesday he hoped lo steer Sudan on "lht path to scientific socialism.'' Quna v.·ould prevent misunderstanding of his motivts by the Russians. '"It v.•ould be a tragic blunder to play one against the other." he said. "'Ve have come a long way toward the present underst<Vlding with Russia and it is much more vital that we preser\le that rela· tionship than that we should cultivate China to the detriment of our RLl.'isian un. derstanding " Harriman. an adviser on foreign affairs to six presidents. lashed the South Viet- nam conflict and this nation 's in· \lolvcment in the war with North Vietnam throughout a hatd hitting talk. '"We ha\le no right to be lhere," he 5a1d . "ll is our duly to get out and get out now and we most cctrainly should he long gone fr om Sou th Vietnam before the next general election." That eleciion, Harriman said, should be fought on the nation's domestic issues and "this nation's energies under \\"hoever wins the eleclion should be con· cenlra1ed on the solution of problems that plague us right here at home." Ht: held up the example of the post World War JI ~1arshall Plaa <'IS "the only sensible \.1-'ay'" lo aid any nation determined to fight communism. Harriman. who played i maJor role in the concepuon of the giant aid package to v.ar torn European nations, told his au - dience that "we should only help those v.·ho are wil!ing to help themselves. "'Stopping communism v.·ith American boys is a theory that won 't hold water," he said. "There are those among us today who would send troops to Chile simply becau5e we see a threat in the com· munist regime in !hat nation. Utilities Okay After Cave-in Posed Threat A temporary crisis which threatened to shut down all utilities in the area oc- curred this morning along Sunnowt.r Avenue on tht: Costa Mesa·Santa Ana city limit. Shifting sand caved in on a metal shield-plate being pulled through a ditch lo c!ean an~ s!11ooth it, causing it to lodge against a su:-mch gas main. All work was stepped until the gas line could be shut off. reducing the risk in straightening the instrument, according to a Southern California Gas C:Ompany spokesman. He said an alternate trench was dug adjacent to it with a backhoe and the pr~ blem was resolved shortly before: 11 a. n1. allowing work le continue. Officials of the Los Angeles 1'imes plant at 1375 Sunflower A\le ., had been warned all utilities might be shut off, preventing newspaper printing there until the danger passed. Plun1bers Now Outdo T eache rs in Sala1·y LOS ANGELES IUPIJ -Plumbers now can make more than top instructors under new wage scales adopted by lhe Los Angeles Community College District. The board has approved raises ranging fron1 4 percent an hour for painters lo 18 percent hourly for electricians. l'nder the '"prevailing community rates" for the district's 95 employes, tradesmen art guaranteed ll months work annually al salaries up to $21,484. The top tc?Ching wage, spread over the JO-month school year is $17,220. Upper Bay Preserve 'Premature' By L PETER lcR lEG Of lllf D.lllY ,.11•1 11111 The U.S. Department of Interior In· tends to designatt Upper Newport Bay a national landmark but any talk of ac- quiring part of it for a wildlife refuge is premaiure, federal offlciala said this morning, Designation of the landmark status. ex- pected in the ne ar future from Interior Secretary Rogers Morton, "does not con· slitutt 1 cloud over the title -thtre is n() acquisition of land involved," Wilham ~1onroe, regional coordinator of the department, said today. He said Fifth District SuperviS-O r Ronald E. Caspers, who Tuesday s11id the designation of a sanctuary status was due in less lhan two weeks. "appartntly misinterpreted" something we. were Lalk· ing about. Munroe: said national iandmark sl!tus ''gives an area a particular designation indicating it has a special quality and that area is entitled to special con· sider a lion. Monroe said he recommended the designation to Morton , as did an advisory panel. and said the secre!ary could act at any time. On the other hand. ;iction on a request by the Orange County Board of Supervisors to establish a wildlife ttfuge Jn the bay is much further ort, Monroe said. "We have been working with Ca.sper~· office in examinin~ the: Upper Bay to dt· termine if there is any basis lo make It a special preserve corrsi~tent with the board's resolution," Monroe confirmed. "Secretary Morton flew o\ler the area and asked me to study the possibility." Monroe said he wouldn't guess how Jong it will take him to file a report. but he did point out that designation of an area as a nationa l wildlife refuge takes an act of Congress. "Our study is purely in the formative stages." Monroe said, "we have bttn meeting with the county counsel and the staff. "We are concerned about the area," he 1aid. Monroe \.1-'0uld not guess how big 8n a rea he might recommend for a nationaJ sanctuary. ''There are minimum Rlandards," he said, ''but 1 am not familiar enough v.·ith them lo comment al thi.!1 time." He said if a decision is made to acquirt some of the bay for a sanctuary, it would be purchased, possibly with fund.s available through the Duck Stamp Act er the Migratory Bird Act. Corn Blight Spreads 'VASHINGTON <UPI) -Arkansas and Oklahoma have been added lo the list or states -now numbering 31 -where corn blight infestations have been uncovered. He was one of the two members of the new revolutionary council aboard the Britillh plant forced down today in Libya. Libyan jets buzzed the plane to force it to land. Libya ·~ government supported Numeiry's anti-communist policies. The Middle East New~ Agency quoted another announcement over Omdunnan radio by Ma j. Abou Khassem ~1ohammed Ibrahim as declaring a state of emergen- cy throughout the Sudan wilh a curfew starting at 6 p.m. lll a.m. EDT l luxurious spring clown sofas Thi s handsome Sofa was designed to give you the ultimate in 1•11ting comfort with dacran end down back pillows, deep spring down seat cuJh ionJ enveloped in down and featliers in two foam· filltd arm pillows. Choose from a wid• selection of fin• fabrics, "You have to be an eternal optimist.'' Frankland responded ruefully. "About 98 percent of the problems with freeways are e\•entually worked out." The discussion ended with ri.lcCracken urging Frankland lo give an early answer on the question or building the Coast Freeway to Rout.e: J9 and extending Route 39 to Pac ific Coast. Highv.·ay. Purported Manson Book 8, length, $500 NOW 399. "It may make 11 difference in our ac- tion with legislation." the mayor con· eluded. • ., DAILY PILOl OIANGE COAST PVl l..llHIHG COMl>AH'I' •0D1•f N. w •• 4 ..... : • ..,, ..... ,.vtltl,_ J •clt k. Cw1l •v Vice ,.rnld.nf tNI ~el MIMl1tf' n.111111 K11•il f:dll!W" lJ..oM•' A . .Mwrp~i111 /IA• .... l"lll fd·- Ch•tl11 ~. l101 ._ich 1rtl P. N11f Mtl1••"' M•1'•1"'V fo!lllW"I Celttl M"e Offk• JlO W11t l•v S•••t+ 14,;i;,., A4111 rtu; P.O.••• ts •o. •2•26. Otlt.r Offk~ Tet.,•1e1 17141 64J-4JJI .. ClwdAM A'"'* ... Ml·ll71 (..,ytillll, ml, Of"-(itHI ""'"' .... ~"' """""' ... -· ·-· 11""'1, ........ . .. 1,... .... -·-tr , ... If'!. __ .. Mrtll\ ~ ._, ,_....., Wllll0¥1 1,.c .. I ,.... """"""' ~· -· ...... dftl ,.. ...... ,..w 1! N,..,...., lttdl .... a.,. ,.,..... (1/.......... ~:.ii.. ..,. ot""' ... _.,.,1 .,, .,..n a ,u ......,.,, t1>ill""' lf"llM!lw.t. .... U ..-1111'1' Approved by Trustees A book said lo be Charif'~ M anson·~ ''guidebook through life" wets rtcom- mendtd 11mong n1ater1al s for :t proposed science fiction course adopted Tuesday night by the Newport-Mesa Unified School Distric! Board or Education. J\.frs. Pat \Valker . 238.1 College Drive. Costa Mesa . told the board that "Stranger in a Strange Land" ·•won't help any student acquire 11 job." J\.1rs. \Valker urged the board to delay artion on the proposed course guidelines which included tht: science fiction course. until parents had a better opportunity to know what was being planned for ado~ Uon. Board President Rod J\.1acri.1i1lian noted the large numbers or course offerings 1n the district made il dlHtcull for the mas!> media to rommunicate all the proposed courses. He said copies of the materials to be used in new courses were 8\lailab!e to parents for re\licw MacMillian noted the course offerini:t!I had been brought up al a previous meeting and tabled for later con- sidtration by the board. Mrs. Walker 's charge about 1'Stranger In a Strange Land" drew no re1pollll9 lrOm trwtee.s. Another parent. Mrs. E .W. Sumrall of 1766 Bahama Place, Costa ~1esa , crlliciz· ed another course offering a half semt:Sttr or •·quarte." course In '"The Occull in Literature."' Mr!, Sumrall said two of lhe bookl 1~ eluded in that course were not •v1i!Abltr for her review. She said ba11ed on the mattrials she had reviewed it appeared tht course made '"no eHor! to relate Devil worship to modern life" noting most o( the material on devll worship was cenl.ered in \he 17th ctntury. She as ked how tht course would flt into a student'ii En11Jsh requirrments. Dr. Norman LoalJL, 11ctin~ 1uperln- tendent in the ab&ence o( or. John Nloo\I, Pxplaincd that the quarter course concept allows a student to ta~p OR substitut e uni!~ nf English that otherwise would be found in a general literature course. Selim S. "Bud" Franklin, board member from CClsta ri.1rsa. asked how th~ requirements ror study in English or other areas were communicated to parents in light of the changes in of- ferings . ~ Dr. Loats said he would see to It that parents we.rt told in the student handbook how the quarter course concept could be emp~yed to meet tht three years of Engllsh requirements . Basically the district require.s a year each of grammar. composition Rnd li tera!ure. Loats said. That requirement continues However. students )nay arran,1:c their schedules to break up the concentrations n( ~tudv by interspcrsini;i qu<1rlers of study of courses drawn from the three areas. The board did nol approve: 11 new courst labeled "The Altemalive School" since it appeared to duplicate efforts being made in the work study and Regional Occupation Program areas. J\.lrs. Beverly Langston noted the di!lrict could benefit by the ta:perJence -0f the Berktley school district which h•S already launched fiuth an ·'alternative" hl~h school. Loats explained that the pl11n woukl have used community facilities ind resources for training student1. The course was developed prior to the board's approval of a vocaUonal tr1lning program in conjunction with the Hun· Ungton Beach and Tustin Onion Hlsh School Districts. L<>ats sakl. The plan recognized the fact that the district can't ;ifford· to duplicate: the e1- pens\ve equipment of I.he business world In attemp1 Ing to provide current voe a· tiontl tr11ining experiences le meet needs of sll students in the distMct. -= reg . . 18TH SEMI ANNUAL SALE IN PROGRESS SAVE 20% ON ALL HERITAGE AND DREXEL UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS AND SOFAS • ALSO -SEVERAL HERITAGE AND DREXEL BEDROOM, DINING ROOM AND OCCASIONAL COLLECTIONS ON SALE. Yo ur favorite inttrior dtsigner will bt happ11 to assbt Vo"' •.. H.J.GARRE1T fURNl1lJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Of>" Mon., Thun. & Frt. lw ... TRT OUR RIVOLVING CHARGI - ' .. • l2 1 S HARBOR I LVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF . Mb.0275 Mb·027b 7 7 " • • -_., i;-:_ ........ Saddlehaek EDITION Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks VOL. b4 , NO. 174, l SECTIONS, o40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1971 TEN CENTS 3-road Plan Ends Golf Course Access Battle San Clemente's bitter access con- troversy over a proposed major golf course development appeared ended !Ar day after city councilmen \Vednesda ;• night settled on a three-road plan. Admilting they "'ere bound by a deed tiled in 1929 and 11. city action ove r ease- menls in 1963, councilmen chose an ex- tension of Avenida Magdalena, Vista Bahia and Avenid3 San Pablo as the three route.~ to serve initial unit.! of a development proposed by the Douglass- Paeific Corporation. But the BCCf;SS roule would remain only until 100 homes are built and occupied. Any addition of .:iwellings to that sum would require a newer accesa route to the acreage nkow as the Rasmussen-Ayer properties inland of the city-<1wned links. \Vedhesday's hours-long discussion on the months-old issue hed a far differen t lone than previous meetings where marathon appearances by opponents lG access suggestions dominated. Councilmen and developer J oh n Douglass Jr. hammered QUt point after point in a list of about. tw~oien develop- ment conditions originally imposed by planning commissioners. Oae key to the future .acces.9 into that segment of lite back COWllry remairu the roadwr.y skirting the city Um.it1 on Camp Pendleton property. Tiit thoroughfare might evt.11tually become a publlc one if Presidcnl Nixon's intended gin of San Mate<> Ca nyon and six mile3 of Camp Pendlelon shoreline indeed goes to the public. Jn " development condition, ~iayor Waller Evans J r. pressed for in· corporation of links to the .Pendleton road within the proposed condominium and estate-lot development tentatively named "Presidential Heights.'' Becaust a t least 18 months would elapse before the 100 Wlils C<Juld be built, councilmen agreed the interim period would help cltar problems which have heset the proposal for months. · Jn tough , but businesslike discu.ssions , Dc"•slass steadfastly held onto his right to use the acce.s.!I easements across the municipaJ gol! course granted l.n 1929 and 196.l. It was those easements which drew in- timations that the ci ty faced a suit on a previous approval which would ha ve r:estr:icted uae of a roadway across the link! lo golf carts only. Ci~y Attorn~y F. MacKem.ie Brown told councilmen that th~ action would leave the city open to legal action. But councilmen about four week.s ago rescinded that solution, then sent a new one back lo planning cummissioners. Wednesda y's decision appears to have won little favor among lhe residents of the area and city golfers who have bit- terly fought the use of er.isling streets for months . The use of San Pablo, they said, would cause traffic snarls and dangers because of short driveways 1n the Patrician ViUa tract, w~.re lhe entries are so short that cars can not fit without jutting Into the roadway. Golfers complained that Magdalen'a's extension across the tink.5 would poe.e a hazard and destroy the quality Of the cour:se. Councilmen agreed that for the most part Magdalena and Bahia would take on a country-lane design with a 24-foot width in many sections , thus, parking would not be allowed. The vote by the obv iously weary eoun-- ci! was unanimous in favor of the plan first detailed by Councilman Cliff Myers. Litt\e reaction was evident in the au· dience -weary as well. The only comment heard alter the vote. came from Mayor Evans. "Done," he said. ew on ection Mid11i9ht Appeal Fireworks Ban: A Fast Fizzle A fi reworks ban proposed earlier this year and· supported by the San Clemente city staff went up in smoke Wednesday. A midnight appe al by representalives of the city's two veteran's groups and a 11pokesman for Junior All-American Foot- ball succeeded in winning a vote by the council continuing the present permission for tht Sllle of safe-Ind-sane fireworks. ln another motion councilmen reset the freeze on the number of organizations allowed to sell the pyrotechnics each year. The veterans groups and organiiation are the only the foot.ban three "'itb Joaquin Board Awards Contract For Toro School A contracl for 11 new 1ntcrmcd iate school in El TQro has bten awarded by the Trustees of the San Joaq uin Elemen· ta rv School District. The low bid flf $1.544.flOO "'a~ subini!ted by \\'. E. Lyon~ Constru ction Cn. of L}'TI\\'ood. Cnns1rur t1on is ex peeled to begtn 1n l""n or three weeks. Routine st.alt approt·al or th' contract mu st be granted first The school is located on a 20-acre sit e on Mu irlands Boulevard "'here Alicia Parkwa y will intersect. •·when Ahcia is constructed the ct1unty \\'ill probably purcha.5e two or thre' 11cres of the site for the street," said Rex Nerison. Assist.ant Superintendent for Adm inistrative Services. The school is designed for 850 students 11 11d is exactly the same as the in- termediate school now under construction in University Park. The basic plan for both schoo~ was adopted from La Pai Intermediate in Mission Viejo. Neri.kin sald the school Is e~led lo be completed and eccupled In September of 1972. Oruge Coa•t Weather The 1un will peek through the haze today and Friday, folJow- lng early morning low clouds and fog. Temperatures will range from 70 along the beacl"lea to 84-inland. U:iws around 66 . INSIDE TODAY A Poli3h Jtw. not11 (Jn Israeli cititen. ha.$ re vtaltd that whi~ in a pri!Ott camp, ht ltnrned t.h.e Rll&.tian.~. ·11nt tht Nazif. mc.!.!acred 12.000 Poli.~h offl- ctr1 d4ir111g tht war. Storv PGQe 4. ""~ Mwlu•I fl•"41• N1llt•,.I N._.. Ort .... C-'V ,.,,.,11 ,.,.,., '""' 119<• M1'11t'11 Ttll¥111tf> TllM!•N w •• ,.... • .,,..,., N.-. ... • • " .. "" .... " lf·H • ,,.,. permission to sell the merchandise In the city. Veterans. cnuncilmen co nceded , have taken precedence because profits from the .sale help 9ffset, large deficits each year in presenting the· -major fireworks display from tt\e city pier. The football organization. v.1 h i ch operates under a tight financial burden each fall , raises funds through lhe sales to make up £or a conference ruling which forbids sponsorship or teams b y businesses ;:ind service groups. Councilmen stressed to spokesmen for the groups that problems do exis t in sales tn very young children. who carelessly use firewo rks and cause blaus in grassy areas. Veterans Fireworks Commi ttee Chairman Wall Llebig stressed that all the sales groups have tri~ to "pliiy it by eiir" at the sale~ booths when very young patrons appear to make purch ases. "We often ask them lo go home and get a note from their parents. Somelimes thev ha\'e five and te n-doll ar bills and we \\"oi-ry that maybe they have laken lhf! money wi thou! parents' permission," he e.xplained. In squashing the proposed ban coun- ci\n1en pointed to large enforcement pro-- blrm.c; in othl'r coastal citil'.c; "·here fire1vorks are forb idden, yet are set nff none theless. "Un\c.c;s the ~t;ite ban.c; the U!>e of rirc"·orks all over C:ihfornia . or the coun- \y does something like it. ""e really citn"t he too effective here," ~aid Mayor Waller Evans. $3,000 Approved For Additional Capo Promotion An 11:ddition1d $3.000 hall been budgeted by the San Juan Capistrano City Council for community promolion. Mike Darnold, president of t h t Chamber of Commerce, said his group i1 plaMing to bring detailed projects to the City Council i.o the hope they will bt ap- proved for funding. "We will work closely with the Council in the selection of worthy community promotion projects," said Darnold who seemed pleased at the council's une.1- pected acUon. The city fathers had ori ginally budgeted 13.000 for community promo- tion . Two thirds of this was to p1y for a ci vic brochure printed by the Chamber as one of last yenr·a projects. The b;alance was to be used for Uus yeR r's Cham)>er projects; with 1100 earmarked for the Fiesta A1soclation. • group that annually organlz.es a parade lo celebrate the rttum of the 1w1\IO'wl to the old Mi111kin. The Chamber had requested 19.000 dur- ing budget study sesstoris last month, but WllS turned down, One of the projects outlined to the City Council by Director .Richard Dickey was A walking tour guide, maps showini historical 1ite11 in the city which could be reRched ori root. Damold was re luctanL to $•Y which prnject11 wlll be 11uggest~ for funding. He i;itid the Board of Olrt:elors of lht Ch;imber o! Commerce wtII bt holding • gerles of meetlng• to make tht:&e decisions. Down the Mission Trail School Ecology Push Continues MISSJON VIEJO -Linda Viii.a !::leme'ntary Sch«>M ~~ssfu'J' eccil6gY drive is continuing through the summer. Newspa pers. aluminum cans, and bot- tles miy be left in the sthool parkin1 lot July 31 between 8 a.m. and noon. The drive i!ii sponsored by the Parent- Teacher Organization and is being coo rd inated by Jim Dowd. For in- formation cart Dick Niffierhauser, 837- 471 5. • Le•1on1 Planned LAKE FOREST -New sessions of tt:n- nis, swim and guitar le1sons will begin next week at the Lake Forest Beach and Tenni!li Club. All Lake Forest residents are eligible. Swim lessons "·iU be Monday through Friday, from July 26 through Aug . 13. TenniS instruction "'ill be nn Mondays Rnd \Yednesday~ from July 26 through Aug . 2.'i. Both sports will have classes fur adults and children at various times depending on ability . Guilar will be: taught from .July 28 throui::h Aug. 18. Time and da y will bear- ranged by class enrollmenl. For information call the cluh. 837-6100. • B ayrlde Ro/11 MISSION VIEJO -A hayridt for rifth s nd !liiX graders who live in l\Ussion \'iejo will be held on Sunday. Registration for the party is being take.n at the Montaooso Recreation Center where the activity will begin at 7:30 p.m. The cost for the ride and refreshmenls will be $1.50 payable al the time of registration. For more information caU the ctnter, &37-4084. • Luau Srheduled MlSSlON VIEJO -A polynesian luau is scheduled Saturday at 7:30 1.m. •t the Montanoso Recreation Center. Spon.sort!d by the Nadadores Booster Club. the luau will offer food. and en- tertainment for $15 per ct1uple. Reservation!li can be made by calling the center, 837-4084 . Nadadoree Booster& support the Mission Viejo Recreation Center '• swim team. San Juan Picks Names to _Go With .2 Parks -. -' . Two morti of San Yilan Clpilt.ram'a undeveloped park tile!I have names this week. ·~· ' The five-acre park in tM: Westport development wiU be called Junipero Ser· r• Park. and the. one-acre 1Ue In the Troy Homes development wiU be called Boni to P11rk. The n.AJnes were ad-cltr Council Monday at the '-= t! the Parks and Recreation flft_' Alternate suggestions ror !ht five-&cre park were Se.rr1 , &Int.a Ros1li1 and El Aldea . Other 11ames for the one acre park Clubhouse Vote Joins April Ballot By JOHN VAL TERZA 01 1111 0 1111 P'Uot 11111 San Clemente's voters will receive a new million-dollar parks and recreation bond pa ckage in the same ballot as that listing candidates for two city council poaitioa~ ner.t April, councilmen _agreed WtdJ\etc11y. ' . ' :· . A1lhoug'1 formalitles are .not complete, eouncilmen 11:greed with City Manager Keri C.rr's recommendations that April 11, 1972, would bf: the lnOlt timely and economical date for the omnibus issue similar in substance to one which failed lasl April. The recreation vote seekin g fund!! for a new community cl ubhouse and three other major improvements ls ci!rt11in to become a ce.mpaign issue. The po.9ta: filled by Ma yor Walter Evans Jr. and Councilman Stan Nnr1 hrup will be filled in the vote, which ls ex- pected to bring out a large amount of c1ndidates and voters as well. Councilmen set aside their first mceling in November to 111unch the iormalities in the e!eclion which would involve one vote for all four projecl:s. Last April's failure 11t the polls. coun- cil men theorized. was due lo the separa- lior. of vole~ on each project. Thus a single vote cast next April tvould affecl th~ clubhouse construction, the proposed youth recreation center, beach and pler improvements and development cif neighborhood parKs. During ;:i council recess \\'ednesday clarification came 1n nne matter related to the election. Mayor Walter Evans .Jr. stressed !ha! 11 10-cent tax rate increase already ap- proved by councilmen to help finance the clubhouse would be rescindeil if I.ht bond Issue were to pass. The rate, however, would be tech nically replaced by another lax increase "'hich Yr"OU!d yield funds lo pay back the bonds. The crux, Evans s11id, is th11t if !he bond issue were lo fail. the initial IO-cent hike woo!d pay back to co.st for t.he clubhouse over a flve-year period. The rate then would remain, with income us- ~ on other capital improvements; pro- Jero. "I think some people have gotten the impression th11t the tax increa..5e would be used for the clubhouse. then 1crapped, leaving other project.! unfunded," he •aid. "But the intent of the motion (approved late last June) is lo use that SS0,000 a year for other projects after the clubhouse.." he added. The current clubhouse financlng plar:1 entails 1 "loan" of aorl!J from the city general fund , wl\i ch would be r~ald ovt'r •bout fJve y!ar1 by Insurance 1ettlement money from the clubbome flre damage, plus lhe 1nntl1l take from the t(k:ent hlk•. ~ inereaM: In I.he parks and recrea- tion rale has )',et to be 15et by councilmt.n, however. By custom. ihi.9 fiscal year·, rate I! of. fkially c~rlifitd at 1 meeUn1 In Au1ust. Freeway Appraisal Set for TV Friday BamlprQ f"'r~kland, 1nl11.Mt 1ta.te pub Uc works ctitector, will' dlactt!s l".ovfmor Reagan's re-appraisa l o r Callfomla 'a freeway sy11t.tm and \\11 direct tffect on !ht coastal cities of Orange County Friday al 1:30 p.m. on KIJJ·TV, Ch!Mel I. were Del Rey and Tjna. -. - .l'!:::_-. -F ~e:t.'---• ..,.. -• .a..r-., -==.:..::----..... •' .,.~ ·- -~ . ·~ .. ·"~ ,. 1 ., '..,. ~ ' Best Dressed Bet!y Thoma.9, 9, and her dog Rip too k first place in the best cos· tume for A dog category \Vednesday at the pet show put on by the Lake Forest Beach & Tenni~ Club. You can see why. They came t.o the .1ftair dressed as Los Angeles Dodgers. Arrested in Min11tes Pendleton Ma1·ines Held In Laguna Beach Holdup Laguna Beach police Wednesday night arryted three Canip Pendleton t.1arines as suspects; In an armed robbery V.:ilhin moments alter the crime occurred. The vidim. Dr. Robert Quass, of 559 Cf.p~esa Drive,, told cfficers he. l\lld been robbed. at gunpoint" ln the re~r of his holi11eoby a pair of men when he rtlumed home et 11 :30 p. m. "Dr. Quass reported be gave the roen all the money he had with hlm -two dne.doll1r bills -and the pair e.9CJped on foot. A" Witness saw the n')tn • short tlmP. l•ltr w.lklng a!ohg C:O.•t Hl&hw•y al 'F'orle:st AVenue tnd 'Informed police. Ar- riving officers cou!d only locate nne nr the suspect5. Robert Paul Sobb, 20. and took him lnlO custody. Sobb was taken back to the scene of the crime and Iden· tJf ied by Dr. Quasi 1s the man who !Jfld the g\Jn. police claim. '~--' -••• Investigators reported the gun was nol (ound. but claim Sobb had two $1 bills ln his pocke1. Two men Sobb had been aeen witlil by police 1bortly btfare the robbery were also arrested on suspicion of the crime. They were kienl.ified' ~ Brute Allen ~hiery, 21. and Jack Ray Childree, 19. The case Is sUU under tnvestlcallol\ police said. War Study Ordered WASHINGTON (UPI) -The S<n1t1 Foreign Rel8tlon11 Committee bas bel!!t given $100,000 to conduct IU own to. vtstlaatJon of the origins of the Vletnan War. ----'""'--- ' • ~ DAil V PILOT SC Tllund.t1 •. JuJ122,1971 Sudan TurmOil Efupts f ' Counter-coup -Ousts Reb~.l ~ed. f!!fl~!' BEIRtn' (UPI) -Forces loyal to ousted Sudanese President t.taj. Gen, Jufar Numeiry occupied Otndurman Rad.lo SLallon today in an apparent counter«1up against the pro-communist group who deposed him on r-.tonday. The Egyptian Middl e Eas~ News Agen. cy in Cairo quoted the radio_ station wh~ch is the SudM national radio. as saying Nwneiry "ia well and wl!l .still lead the nation." Tiie radio announcement came a fev• hours after nelghOOring Libya forced down 1 BrllWI llrllnor In Be111hld ud kidnaped. tbt pre.aident of tbe new Sudat'lfse revolutionary council and another council member who were itboard It. Sudanese troops earlier were reported to have surrounded the Libyan, Egyptian and Syrian e1nba.ssies in the Sudanese capiLal of Khartoum in retaliation. Then the Middle East News Agency reported the bra.idcast from the . radio stalion in Omdurm&n, the twin city of Khartoum, as saying : "Sudanese forces led by Lt. Moham- Expulsion Questioned Court Order Puts Halt To LAFC Appointment Los Alamitos Councilman J oe Hyde's election to the Local Agency Formation Commission was stopped -tempora rily at le ast -by a court order. Superior Coor! Judge J. E. T. Rutter Wedneday ordered ct1unty mayors and the LAFC to either re.instate Louis "Red·• Reinhardt to the commission or show caue why not. Rutter set Aug. 12 for the Superlor Court hearing on the show cause order. Fullerton Councilman Reinhardt named the mayor of every Orange County city. the LAFC itself. and the County's City Selection Committee in a court action that demands the expulsion of Hyde and bia own re.Instatement. Relnbudt was ousted from the chairmanship of the LAFC in a League of Cities vote lasl July 8, but claims in a writ of mandate that his term of office actually ei:tends to December. He cballengea LAFC execulive officer RJchard Turner's ruling that state codt.s call for the terms (If LAFC membeni to Laguna Mailmen Support Ouster Of Postmaster Members of Branch 3616 of the califomia AssociaUon of I.he National Assoc:iaUon of Letter Carriers -which tncludea; postal employees in Laguna Beach, South Laguna , Laguna Hills and Laguna Nlguel -have gone on record supporting the ouster of Postmaster General Winton M. Blount. Representatives of the loca l joined with officials or other brandies from throughout California In a Uls Angeles rneeUng this past weekend in sLanding opposed to Blount. Chris Has.sler. secretary of the local said that Blount "has refused to en- courage good fallh bargaining" and has tried to "circumvent the intent of the new Postal Service .'' Letter carTler! unanimously approved a motion to have national president of the NALC, James Rademacher, seek an appointment with President Nixon to "de· mand tbt immediate removaJ of Blount." Work Stacking Up SAN FRANCISCO <UP I) -Since a cr•vedi~rs· strike began in June, more than 800 bodies have stacked up at mcrtuaries in San Francisco and neighboring San Mateo Coonly. Authorities said Wednesday the bodies have been emb4lmed and stored in cof- fina so there L!L no health problem. OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT 01tANG~ COAST PUllUHINC. (0Ml'ANY l:•\t•rl 1'1. w •• d "''"·°'""' • ..,,. lll'vl:ll•,.,..r J•c~ R. Cutl•v VlcAI ~ra..,tnt •>Id c.,..,.r Mt,..ttl' n. • .,,., IC1 t wil EOll<H" Tho,.•t A. Murp~•11• Mtnegl,.. Ecl!1'0r Ch1rln H. loo, Ric~•rd '· N1tl Ai.1lr.I~ Ml...,11'19 Eol:ora .._ ..... Offko 222 F.11.+ Aw•11u• M1Tli119 •4dr•u: ,.0 . l o• 666. 91651 s-c.._.,. Office JOl Nerlh t;I c.,,,1~0 R •• 1, •1~72 °""' °""" C.19 M9M• DI W111 It? Sir"' fll!':m... '-"' »» N-por• ku.l'V•r111 '"'""''V a...:11: 11111 8••~ •~ult•lf• end on the lirst Monday in May. Reinhardt also argues lhat the meeting at which Hyde was elected to replace him was jnvalid -that is was not properly called by the agency's cha irman or iii the request of the city selection commitlee, and that votes were cast by proxy on behalf of mayors .,.,.ho were not present at the meeting. Hyde took over as chai rman July 14. Reinhardt warns in his compla int thal all actions of the LAF'C from that dale are subjecl to challenge, especially if Hyde votes on any issue. Re inhardt asks Judge Rutter to ex- punge Hyde's name from the com mission and restore him to what the Fullerton councilman claims is his rightful place at the head of the agency. Serving with Hyde on the current Local Agency Formation C<Jmmission are Coun- ty Supervisors Robert Battin and Ron Caspers, Councilmen Stanley Northrup of San Clemente, and Charles Pearson of Anaheim, Al~emates are Supervisor Ralph Qark, Tustin Mayor Tony Coco, and William D. Martin of Laguna Beach. All are named as respondents ln R'einhardt's acUon. L.W. Stevenson Services Held Private services Wl!re hl!ld WednHday for Lester Warren Stevenson 498 Cliff Drivl!, Laguna Beach, who di~ Monday at the age of 78. Services were conducted by Pacific View Mortuary. lnurnment followed. Mrs. Stevenson is survived by his widow, Helen , of the family home and a son, Lester. Jr., of Minneapolis, Mln· nesota. A native of Chlcago, Mr. Stevenson had lived in Orange County for the past 20 years. Rites Conducted For Elva Smith Services were held .11t 2 p.m. today al ri.tcCormick Laguna Beach Chapel for Elva H. Smith, 30802 S. C.oast Highway, South Laguna. She died Monday at the age 0( 71. Mrs. Smith is survived by two son!i, George S. Burdick of China Lake and James Burdick of Glendora ; a daughter, f..1rs. Carrol E. Shutt of Arlington, Virginia, and seven grandchildren. A native of California, Mrs. Smith had resided in Soul.ti L.lguna for the past 10 years. Lagu11a Moulton Playhouse Loses $600 to Thieves Laguna Beach delecll11es are invesh· gating a bu rglary at the Laguna i\1 oul ton Playhouse i.11 wh1c.h tools belonging to the ci ty apparently were used lo break Gpen a safe from which $600 was taken. Det. Robert BriscClf' said a city main- ltnance man. reporting tG work at !he Playhouse this morning. found the lool chest he kept at the rear or the theater had been broken open and the tools re· moved. J1e promptly reported the loss to city police, who, on checJdnll further. discov- ered tht loOls had been used IG break open the i;afe in the theater office. Briseoe. ~aid there •re no 1uspecls 11 t this time and the in vntigat.ion will eon· llnue. bAll.V P ll.Ot. wrtt. .... dO 11 ~ "'- "'-~-~ i. ,.,.n....,. '"''' ,.,,,, ,_ •• , 111 ...,.,. .......... a.-... ,... Pl h N 0 td • ..,.., ,._, ''"' ..... ·~• .. •M um crs ow u o a.di, 11'..ittlio V1IW,. S.11 C.._"1 =:.--~.'=:.~· ... ·~ ·,::.:1: Teachers in Salary tt UI ... ...,. 11,...1, C.t• Mcu. LOS ANGELES (U PI ) -Plumbua T1'1pt111 11t4J Ml.,.111 now an make more than top lnatructora a.-,, ,,., •. , .. i.,. '41·••n s. c...._. AJll Dlfl 1 ,., under new wage scales adopted by the t1hp•••• 4tl-44H Lo,, Angeles Community College Olstrlct. 1. a..w--.._. Al hpatrntt: 1'ht bolrd has approved ral.!N 1anglng ., ....... 4H-t4U from 4 pttcent an hour for P1lnter1 to JI ·~· ''''· °""...., CM" "'*'""1"' percent hourly for electricians. ~. ,.. ""' '""'"· m111tr111oo11. L'nder the "prev1 llln1 community .....,... fM'IMI' .,, ..... ,.._.. ""'"' _, "' """"""• ,..,,_, .,.w.1 ,_. ralts" for UM! district'A 95 empk>yes, ,...,. "' ......,, ·-· tradesmen are guaranteed 12 month.~ '-""' rt. ,...... •Id .., Jill._. h.ocfl work annually at aalarle.1 up to ... l.134. ... c.4' ,....., c.1..,.111. ,lllMQ...... ~ "" "'""' v.n _,..,,; _, ~" ''·" The. lop teH:hing wage, sprt1d ovtr the ""'""'ly/ l!lflll•,., "'''"'' ...... 11,J:f -!Illy. h """ ;fS~ij;;;:::;ji;;~-:::~~~ lO·mont sc . .,_! year Is Sl7,221). !' J. ; J. j ' )!i I 1 ~=•~J111:'"·-;:;::~--:-~. ~' ~~.-~ mtd "AU ~ blvt ~ 1111 rldlt ••M~ " -· ' "Maj. Gen. Numeity will broadcbt lo the nation soon." The agency quoted a 1poknman identified as Col. Salah Abdel AaJ as saying on the radio: "The catastrophe through which the nation baa pa.ued Jn the Jut few daya Is now over." Qualified Brltiah sources aaid in Uln· don that fresh fighting had broken out in Khartoom , beginning at about 4 p.m. local lime. Thi! London !OUtces o ld la.nks h•d 1ur· rounded the pre.:lidl!iltial palilce and th•t .shooting wM reported around Army headquarters. The sources said the fighting appe•red to be the beginning of an attempt by Numeiry or his supporters to regain the control they lost on Monday. Num elry was toppled by a aroup of army officers -several of whom had helped him gain power in a coup a year ago. Their leader, Lt. Col. Babakr El Nur OsmBll, said in Lobdon Wednesday he hoped to steer Sudan on "the path to 1cientific S-Ocia\ism.'' He was one of the two members of the new revolutionary council aboard the British plane forced down today in Libya. Libyan jets buzzed the plane to force it to land. Libya's government supported Numeiry's anti-communi!rt policies. The Middle East News Af:ency quoted another announcement over Omdurman radio by Maj . Abou Khassem Mohamml!d Ibrahim as declaring a state of emergen- cy throughout the Sudan with e curfew starting at 6 p.m. (ll a.m. EDT ) Ibrahim was a member of the Revolu· tionary Command Council loyal lo Numeiry which the pro-communist group replaced . The radio station asked its employes to report immediately for duty. ..Yur revoluUon is steadfast and the armed forcea will continue the march at your wish," Ibrahim wu quoted as saying, and he ended by quoting Numelry. Libyan · jet lighters forced a BriUsh Overseas Airways VCJO with 107 passengers 1board lo land at the Libyan city or Benghaii al dawn today and disembark Lt. Cot. Babakr Al Nour Osman. the pro-communist president of thl! Sudan's new revolutionary ct1mmand council. and another council member. The second Muncil member was ten· tatively identified as Maj. Farouk Hamadallah. The airliner, en route to Khartoum, turned around and returned lo London . Nour, 37. bad been en r()Utt to Khartoum to assume. power I S president of the new Revolutionary Command Council. Both he 1nd H1madall1h wen in military regtrnt was overthrown Moiiday in the fourth coup in IS years. The previous regime had b e e. n negotiating for membership in a new federation of Arab states with Egypt, Libya and Syria. The new government is hosWe to the federation project. In Baghdad. Iraq, the official Iraqi news agency said that a special Iraqi aircraft carrying high-ranking Iraqi of· ficials to Khartoum crashed in the Saudi Arabian desert today, killing three higb- ranking Iraqi officials who were en rout• to the Sudan to confer with \eadera o! the now ousted military government there. The lraqi agency gave no cause for the crash. Egypt's Voice or the Arabs Rad.lo said lhe plane exploded in the air. Draft Evasion Prompts Arrest Of Laguna Man Thi! Federal Bureau of Investigation Wednr:sday arrested a Laguna Beach man on charges of evad ing the drafl by claiming to be undergoing orthoclonUc treatment. Agent., took James Lee Harde1ty. 22, Into custody at his home at 291 Grandvir:w St. and booked ttim on the charges in Lo,, Angeles. Harde.sty was amona: ten young adults arrested Wednesday on the chara:e11 following a federal grand jury indictment which charged the men "knowingly and willfully'" evaded service in t~ Armed t~orces by fal.~ly claiming they were "undergoing active, continuing orthodon- Uc treatment." The indictment culminated • ltngthy grand jury probe of possible draft evasion through fraudulent use of medical and dental services. The grand jury t~·ict subpoened Dr. Bernard Bf!nder. a LM Anaelea dentist, who !ailed to appear and wbo aubar:- quently was ht.Id ln Cubt when hl5 yacht ran aground lhtrt. A t1aremonl College chaplain. the Rtv. Gordon VerPlank. wu alao que1Uoned by I.be putel about bis ck'aft counselin1 ac- tlvihes. Sleepy Resident Crows Over Cock A lllleepy voi~ resident called Lasu111 Beach polke early lh1l morning to report that both he and his ire h•d been IWlk· cned by a nel1hbor 's pct rooster causing a auarise disturbance. A police officer wu dispatched to the Mynle Street addrtss and round \he crowing culprit behind a locktd fence. However, the offlcu's knocb on the door or lhe rt5idence aot no rapo111e, so A noll! wa.~ left on the dOor advlaln& the bird o .... •ner of the prob~m. c...,ep JIWnterprt;ted Bay~:.Refuge 'Premature' u~ .. Qfficil\tfte"Veafe. I < I I t . . 1:, ... . , '' · ,,, ,, L fitlil(l KJ\IEG Of ... O.ilY , .. ,,., The U.S. Department of lnttrlor in- tend• to de.algnaW; Upper Newport Bay a national landmark but any talk of aC· quiring part ol it for a wikilih a:fuge js premature, federal officials said this morning. Detlgnalion ol the landmark status, a:· peded In the near future from Ioterior Secretary Rogera Morton. "does not COi). stltule a cloud ovtr the title -there i,, no 1cqui5ition ol land Involved.'' William Monroe, regional coord.l•ator ol the department, Aid today. He nld Filth District Supervi90r Ronald E. Caspers, who Tuesday sa~·d th dl!slgnalion of a sanctuary status was d in lw than two weeb, "apparen mi.!interpreted" something we were · ing .;iboot. • Munroe .!llllid national landmad statua "gives an area a particular designaUon indlcatina it has a special quality and that are11 ls entitled to special con- sideration. Monroe said he r~ornmended the designation to Morton, as did an advisory panel, and aald the secretary could act at any time. On the olher hand , aclion on a requr:st by the Orange County Board of Superviaora to utabbth a wildlife rdu&C! ln tht bay is much further oU, Monroe uid. "We haw: been "WorklnJ with Cupers• otflce in examinlnJ!! the Upper Bay IG de-. ttnhlnt ii ttiere is any buia to milt it a special pceserve COIUL!tent wllb the boant's reaolutlon,'' Monroe confirmed. "Secretary Morton Oew over the are.a and asked me to .tudy the pcmfbility.'' Monr0e said he wouldn't 1uess how long it will take h.im lo me a report. but he did point aut that de.ignation or an area as a nation1J wildlife refuge t.;ikcs an act of Congress. ''Our study .Ls purely in the formalive sLages," M~ said, "we have bun meetina with thr: county counstl and the staff. "We are concerned about the area," he said. Monroe would not guess how big an are.a ~ might recommend for a n11tional sanctuary. "There are minimum stBtldards,'' he said, "but I am not famil iar enO\lgh with them W comment 1t this time." He said if a decision ls made to acquire .!!Orne of the bay for a sanctuary, lt would be purchased. possibly with funds available through the Duck Stamp Act or the Mirratory Bird Act. Cafeterias Turn a Profit The cafeteria system of the Laguna Beach Schools -which has betn a money loser for years -came out in the. black for the period Sept. 1970 through June 1971. A total profit of $4~.79 Wal shown on a balance meet given to member11 of the board of education al a meeting Tuesday night. For the same perie>d a year ago. the cafeteria system loet a whopping $6,000, aaid Dr. Charles Hess, district business manager. Hess aUribut•.d the change from operating "in the hole" kl making a pro. flt to a new walk·ln freezer which a\low3 Marines to Give Duke the 'Mike' SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) -The M1rine C.orps League has named J ohn Wayne the next recipient of the "Iron Mike" award -given annually to the man "who beat uemplifiea the word 'American.' " The award. named after a nine-foot statur of a fighting marine on Parris Island, S.C., will be presented Aug. 13. Wayne was chosen '•1ince in his screen portrayals and in his everyday life he has played those trait..s of ccharacter that make him 3n outstanding American,'' the le1gue said Wednesday. fGr quantity buying and a new food preparation system used at the elemen· tary schools, which cut labor cosls. Under the system, all foods are pre- partd al the central kitchen at Thur!iton Intermediate &hool and distribtued to the l.tlree elementary schools -Aliso, El Morro and Top of the World. "Kids like the new food much better than the. old and our part.icipation in the cafeteria has improved," Hess said. "Actualty, our go.al ln the cafeteria system is not lo make money and not to lose money. We 'd ju11l like tG break even," Hes~ ssid. He Added that cafet.eris CO!lts may be slightly higher next year -as the direc. tor of the cafeteria operations will work on a half lime basis. Trustees Handed Salary Requests Formal requests for salary Jncrea~ and other benefits were made to Trustees of the San Je1quln Elementary School District Wednesday. No action was taken on the proposals which can be kept secret, according to provisions of the Willton Act, until • de- cision is reached. Rex Nerlson, Assistant Superintendent (or Administrative Services, said the board and the employe groups have reached accord on almost r:very proposal, but a few minor points muat still be worked oot. Dress Code . Surfaces The drw code iasue •t Laguna Buch High School -which has been dormant foc nearly a year and a half -wltl surface at a study sesaion of the new school board Monday night. ''There's a popibllity thal we may change the dreu cc:.de," commented WillJam 'Ibomu Tuesday night. "Then again there's a possibility we may not." Tbe high school has ope rated without a dress code since late in the 1970 school yur, when ttuatees dropped all regula· tions regardIDg hair length and types ol clothing that could be worn to school. The only rule in efftoet is a 1tate law which. stipulates that studl!nts wear 1hoes to school. BW Fish, president of the high school student bory, is expected to be at the study session to answer question1 thtt board may have. Thom&' comment was the only thing said by new trusleea aboul the dress coda matter •t this week 's meeting. Board members also agreed to take a look at the high school course ol study, which lists au the clas.ses offered at the high school. Thomas. in previous meetings, has said he has "some questions '' about the hii;ll school course offerings. The Monday night study session will be held 1t the Education Center, !SO BJu. monl Drive, at 7:30 p.m. CdM .Cyclist Breaks Leg In Collision A Corona de! 1'-far motorcycl.i!t sufftted a broken leg Wednesday evenina after. being hurled 40 feet when his cycle atruck a parked car on El Paseo in Laguna Beach. • A spokesman for South Coast Com· munity Hospital said today David Alun Yarnell, 18, of 610 Lark.!Lpur Ave., was in satisfactory condition . Po!ice said the. acciden t occurred at about 7 p.m. when Ygnell, southbound on C.oast Highway, twr'\ed onto Et Paseo and struck lhe auto. Officers said Yarnell a~ parently misjudged his speed and could not avoid hitting the parked car. A passenger on the cycle. Steven Rutherford, 16, was not injured in the mishap, police noted . Nixon Voted 'Great' MlAMI BEACH. FIA. (AP) -Presi- dent Nixon was voted the "world'• greatest man" by contestants of ttle Mlsa Universe pageant. Nixon received six vo\e5 wh ilr: Pope Paul VT and U.N. Secretary-GeneraJ U Thant got four each. The other con- testants polled voted for their fathers . "I'd vote for President Nixon in an election , but daddy's No. I at home:' said Michele McDonald of Butler. Pa .. luxurious spring down sofas This ho1nds~• Sofa wes cJ.sl_vned to giva you tt-l e ultimo1te In seating comfort with cf1cron end down bo1ck pillows, dMp 1pr1ng down seat cu1tt ion1 env•loped in down and f•ath•rs in two foam· fllled •rm pillews. Choo1• from • wld• selection of fine fabrics. 8' length, reg. $500. NOW 399. 18TH SEMI ANNUAL SALE IN PROGRESS SAVE 20% ON ALL HERITAG! AND DREXEL UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS AND SOFAS • ALSO -S!YERAL HERITAGE AND DREXEL IEDROOM, DINING ROOM AND OCCASIONAL COLLECTIONS ON SALE. H.J.GAl\l\ETf fURNf[URE PROFESSIONAL INTIRIOI DESIGNERS OplO M ... , Tti.n. I l'lf, '- -TIY OUI llVOLVIN6 CHAllH 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. t.'4&.0275 6"46-0 27t. 7 • ~~~· ,_.,.._r .-··· -.s T • fl.,. -' ...... •• • Laguna Beae_. EDITI ON VOL. 64, NO . 174, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE CClUNTY, CAllFOR NtA THUR SDAY, JULY 2%. '19)1 • 1se ote n * * * * * * Higl1 Rise Talk Citizens React to Court Ruling High rise was the wpic of the day among Laguna Beach shoppers and businessmen f o l to w i n g Wednesday 's Superior Court decision on the issue. Some comments : "The public's \•iew of the ocean should be the issue most strongly considered:' said Phil Teal, 31494 Flying Cloud Drive, Laguna Niguel. who used to spend his \\'inters in the Art C0!ony, "I arn against high rise of any kind." His v.·1fe. Edna Teal voiced the same opinion . "They have just ruined La Jolla with tall buildings," she noted. Sheila Hclfman, 261 La Brea St .. said she. too. \vas against high ri se and thought it "'as •·very sad" that the judge had ruled againsl holding the election . 1'he opixisite view was expressed by N. E. West, 397 Aster St., Laguna pioneer who helped incorporate the town in 1927 and served as a County Supervisor. "The only way to justify building5 under six to eight stories is to cut the value or the waler front property in half," \\'est said. "I think the people are uninformed.'' West thought the city coun- cil should deride the building height , not the voters. A petite, grey-haired woman watering her garden at her downtown-area home stmply ~aid , "I don't want high rise ." She would ool give her name, however. ··rm a motel owner. Sure rm for high rise," commented James M. McAlee , 1575 N. Coast Highway. He is owner of the Laguna Mot.or Inn . ··People who have property along the oceanfront are ent!Ued lo develop it." said Mrs. William ~1ann, 1405 Emerald Ba)'. "They have to pay su ch high ta1es, you know." One gentleman , who only said he wat from Illinois, asked, "Whal'!. high rise~" Despite Court Ruling Villa ge Speakers Urge Hig h Rise Limit Laws Hope that Lhe City Council and P~an· ning CommiMion will develop 1 height limitation ordinan~ more in keeping with the wishes of th e community, even if the courts overturn the initiative election. wa& voiced by Village Laguna spokesmen Wednesda y night. ~l11vor Richard Goldberg. commenting on' the court df'cision. ag reed this could happen. "As A councilman l want to d<t \\'hat the people want." said Go!dber~, "but J have 111~·ays QUestioned the legah- ty of this initiative. as the courts are now doing . "This is not to say that lhe City Council and Planning Com mission cann~t. enact zoning in accordance with the "'1shes of the people and hopefully they will do so " Goldberg referrt'd to state la w setting up procedures under which zoning legislation is in\liated by the local !egis\a!ive bodies and gOf's. thrnug? a pre.scrihed srnr< nf public eanngs beforr becoming law ln later disrussion "''11h hnv;('\·er Goldberg said pPrsonally could no\ suppo 6ett1ng a cityw 1df" 36-foo! ·'I riel1nitrly do nnt want to see h11::h rise build ings in Laguna ." he said. "rm \n business here and I knn1.,. that what bnn.11s people to Laguna 1s the ~ort nf nnstalg1r atmnsphrr~ lhat would~ com- plrtrly deslrnyed by r-.1 i a m I · t Y P e buildings. "l~o\1'ever. I Feel the J6...foo1 \im1! Is too reslr1ct1ve anri coul d result eve ntu all y. in 11 seedy. rundown look for the town because \t simply \sn'l economically fraii;ible f('Jr owners lo improve their pro- perties under such restrictions.'' . Goldberp; said he would gn along with a r.Q-foot maximum. bu t "only in specific small area!> and probably fewer of them than we now have," with 30-foot or less maximums retained in other ~rcas. He ci!ed locations against the hills and the Hotel L.aguna block of C.oast Highway Cout Weather The sun will peek through the haze today and Friday. follow· ing early morning low cloud1 and Cng. Temperature& will range fr om 70 along the beache& to 84 Inland. Li>ws around 66. INSWE TODAY A Pnlish JP.w, now cut f.trot"Ji citizen, lr.ru rrvtal.ed tliot while in n pri$Ott camp. he l1arned thf' R1111ianii. not the Nill~. mas sacred 12,ono Poltsh off1· cers rluring th~ 1oar. Story Page 4 •lttll• 11 (lllf•...,11 • c11 .. k1"' u, ' Clootlll.. " ... (.t..,IU M (,,_HWIN 2' 141fl'•IU f>ott f 1111.,,t111..,..,t U If "ft•Mt II \olt,..•tlM 1' Iii~" Lt ft4H't II ,,. ... , ••• ~1c ...... 11 :.i" '-Ill. M ... ~ It.It M ..... t ~ .... , H ,.,,...,_, "'*'' • Ota"'I CtYftly 11 lfl•I• f't•I•• H S•rt• 11·U SllCk M•"'th 1'-1' l•tt•ll.... " TllMton lt·l'f ........... ' Wtlll .... I N,,... If.II as places he felt weuld be. suitable ft'.lr ~ foot structures. Civic League f)reii;!dent Jon Brand presented the council with the rHulb of 1n informal poll on the initiative pro- position , conducted by &O precinct workers . Out of 1,5'42 voters contacted, Brand said, 1.~3. or 87 percent. said they favortd tht ordin11nce limiting building height lo thrte stories: 117 s;iid they \\'Ould vote against ii and 82 had no opi· nirin . V1!111ge Laguna spokesmen were plf'ds- e<l to hear !ht city attorney advis e the council that election pre parations should continue , confident t.hal 11n overY•helming vote in favor of a height. limit would in- fluence fu ture city actions, even if the elt>Clion itself should be inva lidated by the courui. Firni Recalling Tainted Saui.nii After Illnesses WASHINGTON (UPI) -Armour & Co is COOpt>r<1ting 1n 1 nationwide recall ol i1s "G<?noa Salami'' as ~ precaution because nine cases of illness ha ve been traced to laiitted b;i tch es, the Agrlcul· ture Department reported lod1y. The Department's Consumer and Mar- keting Service (CMS) said some of th• salami was infected with a "staph'' tO'lin that produc<?s nausea , vomiting and other digestive upsets. Offici1ls said three separate illne.s&e.s, Involving nine person9, were reported De- tween May 10 and late June in Kenosha W!s., Denver, Colo., ind Bellingh11m: Wash. . All of them have fully ~overed, offi- c1aJ1 said, and It w1s not. until late last Wttk that experts were able to trice the 1ick.ness to Genoa Salami . Although the department statement nottd I.ht. only "aome'' of the salami was found tainted with 1 tos:in produced by staphylococcus bacteria, offici1ls .said all. Genoa Salami from the St. Paul, Minn. plant where it is made, was being reca _lled rrom retail 1toreii a~ 1 pre- caullonary measure, Dr. Abby Logi, a CMS offici al. 1aid he had no estimate of how much salami was invol ved. He &aid Armoor, which distributes the product nationally, was cOQl)eratlng fully in the voluntary recall. ln'liormiil processing of Genoa Salami olfici1l.1 said, "favorable bacteria keeP the ¥.aph from reaching harmful levels." In mis Calle, they ••Id. the usual in· ttraet.lon did oot Like pl1et. Freeway Appraisal Set for TV Friday B~mford f"rankl1nd , assistant atilt public work& direetor, wlll disctW f,.ovemor Reagan't re-appralS.111 o I Califomi11'1 frttwRy 1y1tem ind its direct effect on the CMst1J cities o( Orange Counly Friday at 1:30 p.m. on KHJ·TV, Charine.l I. ..... ~ ... .· ---\..· --. • I ... r r I t I t I ~ • .. ' ;' '~·· ... · .. , . . ... . " ':I -J,' • I . .... . . .. . ,. " PAIL Y ~!LOT S!lll Pi>thl ARC HITECTURAL RENDERING SHOWS NORTHERL Y VllW Of PROPOSED MAIN 8~ACH PAR!< , p,_m:tt. o.ck ;«~ ll!i~W-llif"'•· 111e.~!"9 ·a.i."""""~ s..~.,,. '., •' S. Laguna Nurse Fined in Death A South Laguna our5e accused on ~r rtsl of hit and run following the. traffic riealh of A young Dana Poinl man was fined Sl.000 and placed on three )'ears probat.ion today in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Byron K. Mcfl.fillan suspended ror three years what could have been • county jail term for Mrs. Regina Walters Smeck. SO. of 32221 Vista de Catalln1, on reduced charges of m i s d e m e 1 n n r reckle!! driving. Mrs. Smeck pleaded guil!y on the charg~ following the death last March 2.f &f Glen M. Mccutcheon, 20, of 34111 Pacific Coast Highwa y. She was ordered In sta y 1w11y from alcohol for the full pro bation term. It was al1egef1 in earlier court hearings I.hat Mrs. Smeck was the driver of 11 car that struck and killed Mccutcheon A! he \\'alked along Pacific Coast Highway near Cro\lo'fl Vall ey Parkway. ll wa~ 1lso &lated Lhat sbe had b!>en drink ing and that she drove from the aceni 1l high •peed. Five Laguna Architects . ' Reveal Main Beach Plan By FREDERICK SCHOEMEBL 01 flHI O.lly ,llM St.If Tree:-1tudded walkwaya. 1r111Y l!.l'- pan.se.1, te1tllt'ed walkway& and a curved boln:lwalk Ire 1 f1w al the ft.lturea that will mark the Main Beach P•rk, as desi(!'.ned by five lmiding La(Un1 Beach 1rchitec~. Rendering~ of the park. prepared by Carlos Diniz Associates or Los Angeles. !how the park area some 40 fttt to 100 feet wide.. between P11cific Co 1 't H\Rhway i nd beach sands. At the north end o( the beach. 1n elevated promenade. deck Is proposed. wh ich would look down on an "activity 1rra" at th1t end of tht beach . The acUvity area would includf volleyball courtii on the 5and and 1 cbildren'1 pl1ygr0Ulld. Traveling to the 11outl'I along teilured concrete walkways or the new boardwalk -viaitora would pua undet la.tgt euc1lfPlU11, W and 11ndalwood tree:$: Graasy 1lretche1 will be. lncluded among t.he waJkway1 in the park as pie· nic areas. Bencms will be provtde:d for those who wish only to sit. The renderings show 1 new Ufeguard tower -almost 11t the exact location of the one that now 5lands 1t the end of the Oce&n Avenue breezeway. The new tower will become headqtJarlers for the force, At the 5ou th end of the park. the architect& ha ve incorpor.!ited 1 large restaurant complex -including facil ities fr>t elegant dining and 5hort-order items. E! Pasto and Laguna Avenue would be.come malls under the. plan. with tW>O of the old buildings 1t the locaUon upgraded and retained as information centers. Attack on Water Board The five architects who offered t.o prepare the plan ire Richard Bigler, Alberto Trevino, Fred Briggs, Fred Lang and Kenneth Wcod. Traced to Recall Gr oup Condemnation of the South Colgt Coun· ty Water Diatrict by I.ht Orange Q:iunty Grind Jury in 1 recent message to the Board of Supervisor• apparently w&s bis· eel on material supplied to the jury by backers of an unsucceMful move to recall (our members of the SCCWD board. Recall leader Angus Smith said Wednesda y that his f1'0l.IP, following refusal of the board to let a recall ele.<:· I.ion because of alleged deficienci es in petitions , h•d put together 1 ''complete p.ack.Rge" of information on the rec•tl at- tempt 1nd tent It to the Grind Jury ch11 r11iri'g vlol1tlon of the election code. Smi\h 1ald the only direct retponse they received from I.he jury wu 1 copy nf 1 lttter sent to Geor1e f!.osan, attorney lor the water diatrict .. •et;k.ini clatilicl· lion nf biJ opinion that.the peUtJonsiwere deficient. , , • ' "We dedded 1lle 11\lna probably woo dead and we'd jutt bave.to wait Ull the Novembtr election to get some changes on the board," n\d Smith , "so we: we:~ both turprited and plea11!d lo learn thll. 111pparenUy on the basis o! tht IJl· form1Uon we had aupplltld , the Gr•nd Jury hid singled out the w11ler distrtet in Its critlcltm of 1pecial dil1trict5 and thelr 1ctlvllle1." The jury'1 letter to the suptrviso111 referred to tht coonly'1 ISi ~pt<:lal tutnr districts as "a 1eriou1 dettrTent lo 10W1d a:overnment,'' eltln& I.he SOCWD'1 60 per· J ....... -. .. ,. ' -. '' cent water rate hike and Ole .subsequent recall attempt•• 1n ei:1mple. SCCWD director Robert B. Malone, one of tht targets of the ree1ll move, 11.id he w11 aware that the· reciU prop&nents hid gQrte to the Grind Jury, but that body'• only communl~alion with the board had bttn • letter 1:sklng why Logan hid not pr,ovided les1l advice . tor the recall group, to which Logan replied he had not betn i sled for 1tlvlce. M11lone 1aid he did not know whit ttw; re~a\I group had told the jury, but in a.ny case: the board hid not been asked tq rive its version of the case . The w11.ter dlttrlcl of(iclal 1dd~ ttl4l ht regarded attempts to "centrallu every_thlni" •• pot.nUally danguoua, espec\ally to the South· Ciounly 1re1. "Some people favor c,enlr1I control.'' he 11ld, "bot ln Or1n1e County it wollld only mun 1that Garden Grove. Fullerton and AlMhelm .Ooutd run llll~s. They eould care le11 whit we 1e! and ~ ~ pl• would l)lv~ pi 1h·1t1 t~ \aMI'." · Th< GrlDd Jury Jll"'ff' 11.I!> 1tnalod out the Ne'!']lOrt Dr•""8• Dll\l'lct and the lplooqulto Aba\emtnl Dl1\rlct a.a ez. 1mples o! suptrnuous UiklJ entJtle1. While 1pplaudln1 the Grind Jury'1 comment•, recall leader Smith o ld he doe• not 1nticlpaUJ any.furtber action un- til November when hil lf'OUP' •ill oppose re~lec:Uon of lncumbent directors and attk reduction of tht water ratet. ---, .... ~ ;rJ1t11---c-J ' ' Wood , in explainin& the renderings, taid tbe designers "~:ent for the linear approach, with the park area we1vicg in 111d Out of the beach l.hrouih the use of the curved boardwalk." Construction of the park will be done in two ph.ueii, the arcllitect 1aid. Phue ftDe -1t 1 eo1t of SlB0,000 -would Include nearly all of the development of the park and bl!!1ch activity aru at the north eDd of the beach. Phase two, .Wood said, would include construetK)n of the rutaurants and mall areas at !he south end. "A m.ajor .part of the enUre. plan." Wo® added, '"Is to inc~rporate t.he higfiWR)'. Into tile p1rk ." To do lhia 11rchltect! agr,eed to raze 111 buildings bet\'etfl the higbw1y and the bc·ach and brine .the park right ur to the edge of the l:wll.llev11'rd. nees wil bf pt&nted &long the tide of the hiRbway and archlttcta later enviA:Jon cobbleJtone -or some other ·tutured surf1ce -for the in· tciriectlona at Broadway, Oct an Avtnue, P'oreR Aven~ and Llg'\tn• Avenue. The rendertn&1 of the park hivt not yet beten '&hewn to memt.riia of Ule Main' Bt1cH Conimttleie who recommended eltl!er (his year that \he Main Be•ch become 1 park, ., !>ppCl8ed to other com· merdat·use.. ' The city 1taff. however, h111 1lready pre!lertted lht 11te plan to nfficlals In Sacramen~ with the Sl•tt Dep11rtme~t nf Parks 1nd Recreation, which J5 rev iewing the city 111pplk:1Uon for 1 $250.000 gr•nt of matchtn1 fu.ndt foe development of the Maio Bt1cb Park. -· -_.,/16'& .:II '-. • ,__._ -------·--, - T oday's F ina) N.V. Stocks TEN CENTS Legal Mo ve Ma y Ass ure Balloting By BARBAJ\A KJ\EllllCB OI lh• ti.Illy '11•1 l ttff ' , The Laguna Beach Aug. S b.iih rise election is nn again. City attorney Tully Seymour advised city councilmen Wednesday·night tha.t ·ln. his opinion an appeal filed by attorney Will iam Wilcoxen stays Superior Court JUdge J. E. T. Rutter's order 'to canceJ tbe eleclJon proceedings, Earlier fn the day, Judge Rutter gr.anted a writ to ftalt the el~tiC'ln sup.. porting the view th.at a building beiatit limitation ordinance. i.s 11 zoning matter and not suitable (or the initiative proceM. Wilcoxen, repre!.tnting the Village Laguna proponent.ii of the lniUative, promptly filed an appeal and, to back up the action , asked the Fourtb Distrid Court of Appeals in San Bemardino for a wril of mandaJ.e ordering city clerk Dor· olhy ~1u~felt to proceed with eled.i~ preparations pending a decision on the appeal. The appella~ court was scheduled to set a hearing on thi!. request till!. morn • Ing. Meanwhile election activity rolled along. with mo1t of the ballob already ma~ed out ·~ IOmt: IO Cl{ I00 "1bteptee WI.lot! returned from 1uCh · f1r--aw1y places as Norway: Gr~. E,natatut: It.lily 111d Mex ico, where Llgunana lft 1v1ca· tionina. Mra. Musfelt, who·ha:d not bret-n se"ed w.ith th~ court or~r to halt the ele<:tiop by the time the appeal was filed . aald sht be~an maUJ.ng the ballots Monday, u re- quired by l aw. and had the sacks con· t~ining the bal11nce. taken to the Pos't Qt.. flee for weighing Tuesday, paying 1 bulk mailing postage bill of $322.79. Under the e/~tion code, mailing of the ba]otJ 'had to be completed this week. Election expenses to da~. she said. a.mounted to just over $3,000 .and ii· cl~ cbtcki~g or petition 1ign8.t~ electioo auppl!es, coonty .services aiJd posta5e. An addition al $800 would be n_e~ded for polling place1 and electlon of. f1c1als, she tslimated. City attorney Seymour noted thi.s e.r- ~n.se ln h!.s report to the council. poin· ting out that if the election were eaUl!!d oFf oow, and later ordered held by the a;p. pel!ate court, the money would have to be spent all over again. At the request of altornty Ralph Ben.son, one o( tile five. Village LaiUJll respondents in the action brlought by t..:iguna re.altor Vern Taschner, ~1ayor Richard Goldberg agreed to cancel a pro.- posed executive se1sion and discusa Che litigation in public ln the council chamber. Benson said he realiz.ed the council wu entiUed, under the Brown Act to dl&cuu litigation behind clased doors'. but said. "We'd llke to hear your discussion." "We have. nothing to hide," said Councilman Roy Holm. and fellow councilmen agreed. _Be.a.son invited the city to join the V1Uage Laguna respondenU in 1ppealillg J Lldge Rutter·s decision, since the council earlier had supported the tiolding at an e~tion on IBe oontrover&ial 3'-foot h<lghl limiL Seymour. represenUng Mrs. Musfelt in the case, 11aid he h:ad not planned to in· elude: her .1n the ·appeal since' her role w11 that of "a technician" In proces&in& the election papers. The Village Laguna reapoodentl would be arguing , the merits of the lnitl.attve ordinance, Seymour said. •nd the council concerned ooly with Lhe boldlni of an elect.ion . Holm aald he felt the city 1hould joln the appeal "in view ol our stUtudt that an election be held ind the will of Uw: ' people determined." His motion to join was defeated In 1 2.2 vote: with councilmtn:Charlton Boyd ~p. porting Holm. Mayor Goldb'1'1.Md coun-. cilman Edward torr opposing tM tnl)tsOn ind cooncllman Peter Ostrndw ·ab- 1talnin1 from 1 v~ "tn upheld my previously voiced po8ltion ol•neutr11Jty." Fullerton Police Net 19 fo r Drugi Nineteen ptrsona were mea\ed 1n a narcotla raid by Fullerton police early toda y. Officer1 said ill su1pect.1 were Fullerton re.slde.nts ind are belni held oa. ch1rge1 r1.nglng from posawlon of marl· ju1n1 for N1e to btroln . --• '· \ • I I I DAIL y PILOT SC ' Sudan Turmc>il Erupts· . ounter-coup 0.¥Sts _Rebel Red Off~r_s· • · -. ~ ~, " I 1 I " , B&IRl1T (UPll -Fore<s loyal to down l(Brillah a!rllotrilc ...,.,,.zl •od med_ AU K/but have ~ lht rd oosl~ Sudanese President f..1aj . Gen. kidnaped the prtaldeot of • &ht new ltl&fGn. , . Sudanese revofutionary Mincll and "Maj. Gen. Numeiry wiU bl"Oadcast to Jaatar Numelry occupied Omdurman ..,nether council member who were I.he nation soon." Radlo St.Ilion today in an appar~nt aboard it. . The agency quoted a apokesma.n eouhter-c::oup againsl the; pro-comnlun1sl Sudanese troops earlier were reporled identified a.'l Col. Salah Abdel Aal u group who deposed him on Monda~. to have ~urrou11ded ~he ~ibyan , Egyptian saying on the radio: Tbe Egyptian Middle E~sl News Ag;n· ~nd Syrian embassi~s in, l~e. Sudanese "The ca.laslrophe through which the cy In Cairo quoted the radio. station wh.ich (a pita I of Khartoum in retaliation . nation has p•.!.'!ed in the Jast few days it is the Sudan national radio, as say1n& Then the Middle East News Agen~y now over." Numeiry "i! well and v.·ill atill lead the re~rled_ the broadcast from .the radio Qualified British sources said ln Lon· nation." station in Omdur~<'.JJ. the twin clty or don that fresh fighting had broken out in 1lie radio announctment came a few Khartoum. as saying Khartoum beginning at about 4 p.m. bours after neighboring Libya forced "Sudanese forces led by U. ldoham· local time'. Expulsion questioned Court Order Puts Halt To LAFC Appointment Los Alamltoe: C:OUncilman Jot Hyde'• election to tht Local Agency Formation Commission was stopped -ten1porarily a t least -by a courl order. Superior Court Ju~e J. E. T. Rutter Wedne$day ordered county mayors and the I.AFC to either reinstate Louis "Red" Reinhardt to the commlssion or show cause why not. Rutter set Aug. 12 for the Superior Court hearing on the show cause order. Fullerl.cln Councilman Reinhardt named the mayor of eliery Orange County city. the LAFC itself, and the County's City Selection Committee in a court action that demands the apulsloo of Hyde and his own reirult.atemeril. Reinhardt was ousted from llie chairmanship of the LAFC in a League of Cities vote last July 8, but claims in a Wfil of mandate that his term of office actually extends lo December. He challenges LAFC executive officer Richard Turner's ruling that state codu call for the terms or LAFC members to Laguna Mailmen Support Ouster Of Postmaster Members of Branch 3616 of the Calif<rni1 As.!ocialion of the National Aasociatioa ol Lett~r Ca rriers --..w.b.j~b includes J)O&lal employees in CJl!!ha Beach, S0u:Ui Laguna. Laguna \{ills and Laguna N"ia:uel -have gone on record supporting the ouster of Poslmuter General Winton M. Blount. Representatives of the local joined with officials or other branches from throughout Callfornia in a Los Angeles meetlng this pasl weekend in standing opposed lo Blount. Chri..11 Hassler, secretary of lhe local said that Blount "has refused lo en- courage good faith bargaining" and has tried to "circumvent lhe intent of the new Post.al Service." Letter carriers unanimously appro\•ed a motion to have national president of the NALC. James Rademacher, seek an appointment v.·ith President Nixon lo "de- mand the immediate removal of Blount." Work Stacking Up SAN FRANCISCO IUPI) -Since a gravediggers' strike began in June. more than 800 bodies have stacked up at mortuaries 1n San Francisco and neighboring San Mateo County. Authorities said \Vednesday lhe bodies have been embalmed and stored in cof· fin11 !O there is no health problem. DAILY PILOT ORANG!! COA5T PUil ISHING COMl'ANY lt•b•rt N. W1•d P'•• d*il! •"" PUllllWI' Jet.Ir ll. C11rl1y \/kl ,.,.icr ... 1 1n<r ~~••l M•l'llO•r lh•""•• K.,.a IEfllDr l!.ot11•1 A. oM11tph: ... M• ... Olf>t IEd•!Of' C~•rlH H. Looi llich1td r. Ni ll "'°'~"nl ,,....,..w., IEdl!~ U,11H S-111 Offke 11? F.ro•I A~•1111• M1ili119 14.tr•u; ,,0 . lo••••. 'l•ll S..C ....... Offke JOI Herth El c ,,,,;~, ltotl, tl•72 Ott-OHk" ~ti M .. 1• lXI Wal l •'f Sit"' H..,..1 -..Ch; WJ "'•poro IOll '"'rd HVftt,....... a-.h1 111111 •••UI •iw1ov1"' DAl\.V l"l\.OT, '°"" Wl'Cll 11 '°""'°""" IM "'-"'""'· "' ~~ .. u, ··~ttl $.-''" Ill ~--tdttllMI ..., utwo• a.tell. 111...,..1 ~. C.l.11 MeN. flll"i~ ~ ~•tJll v11..-,, 1411 ,.,._,,,, c.-ilo'tM '"' sn11111011uc*" ,..,. ,.. .. -, ........ adl!Wi. Prlftci..I 1r1i11ti.,. ""'°'' lo 11 :Ill Waf If)' St,...!, C.I• """6. laldpl 1 I 17141 '4Jo4JJ1 CtaaalAM MM1«al11 64,_..n s.. c ....... All ••• , .. -.: Toi: pl•• 4tl-44H ........................ : , ... , ....... .... ·C..,.,rlf'll, Ull, Cit ..... C-.1 Pwllllltfllnt c..r..11r. "'' ,.,,.... '"'""· n1uttt••~· 11111,.,i.r "''""' .. ,,...,.11_1'1 ,,...."' .... , -•""911\IC.lf wl!Mlll .,_191 ,.,,... "''",_ If cwrr'-'t _,_ ...... """' "'""' ....... "'..,,..... ,...,. ...r C..11 M"•• Cll""""lt-luMerfrt"" _.., C1rfltor ''·" """"'"' •r 1!'111' U JI 11W11h!~1 mm11•~ 4-llMti.., a.• """""""' --"'--. -·--~·~ end on the fir!t Monday in May. Reinhardt also argues thal the meeting at which Hyde was elected to replace him was invalid -that is was not properly called hy the agency's chairman or at the request of the city se.ledion committee, and that votes wen! cast by proxy on behalf of mayors who were not present at lhe meeting. Hyde took over as chairman July 14. Reinhardt warns in his complaint that all actions of the LAFC from that date are subject to challenge, especially if Hyde votes on any issue. Reinhardt asks Judge Ruller to eI- punge Hyde's name from the commiuion and restore him to what the Fullerton councilman claims is his rightful plaet; at the head of the agency. Serving with Hyde on the current Local Agency Formation Commission are Coun- ty Supervisors Robert Battin and Ron Caspers, Council~n Stanley Northrup of San Clemente, and Charles Pearson of Anaheim. Alternates are Supervisor Ra lph Clark Tustin Afayor Tony Coco, and William D'. l\1artin of Laguna Beach. All are named as respondents in Reinhardt'! action. L.W. Stevenson Services H eld Privale ser\lices were held WedneSday for. Lester Warren S~venson. 496 CliH Drive, Laguna Beach, who died Monday at the age of 76. Services were conducted by Pacific View Mortuary, Tnumnient followed. _Mrs. Stevenson is survived by his widow, lfelen, of the family home arid a son, Lester, Jr., or Minneapolis, Min· nesota_ A native of Chicago. Mr. Stevenson had hved in Orange County for lhe pa!t 20 year!. Rites Co11ducted For Elva Smith Services were held at 2 p.m. tod ay at f.fcCormick Laguna Beach Chapel for Elva 11. Smith, 30802 S. Coast Highway, South Laguna. She died f.fonday at lhe age of 71. Mrs. Smith is survived by lwn 50ns. George S. Burdick of Chint Lake and James Burdick of Glendora; 11 daughter, ,..lrs. Carrol E. Shutt or Arlington. Virginia. and Sf'Ven grandchildren. A natlve of California. Mrs. Smith had resided in South Laguna for the past JO years. Laguna Moulton Play house Loses $600 to Thieves Laguna Beach detectives are investi- gating a burglary at the Laguna Moulton Playhou~ in which tools belonging to the city apparently were used lo break open a safe from which $600 was taken. Del. Robert Briseot: said a city main- tenance man. reporting 10 work at the Playhouse thi5 morning, foond the 1001 chest he kept at the rear o! the theater had been broken open and the tooh1 re- moved. lie promplly reported the loss to clly police. whQ, on checking further, discov- ered the tools had bee11 used lo break open lhe ,;afe in the lhealer office. Briscoe said there are no 1uspecls al th.is time and the inveslig1tion wlll con- tinue. Plwnbers No w Outdo Tea chers in Sa lary LOS ANGELES (UPI) -f'lum~s now can make more than top instructors under new wage scales adopted by the l.os Angeles Community Cellege Distrk!I. The board Ms approved Taise.s r11n&ill{I: from 4 percent an hour for ptiinters to 111 percent hourly for electricians. t ·nder the "prev1illng community rates" for the district'• 95 empklye!, tradesmen are guaranlecd 12 months work ;om ually at Aal1riu up lo $21.434. The tnp tenhing wage, spread over the IQ-month school year Is $17.22\1. ·- • The London sources said lank:s had sur- rounded th~ presidential palace and that ~hooting wa.s reported around Army headquarters. The sources said the fighting appeared to be the beginning of an attempt by Numeiry or his supporters lo regain the control they lost on Monday. Numeiry was toppled by .11 group of army officers -sevtral of whom had helped him gain power in a coup a year ago. Their leader, Lt. Col. Babakr El Nur Osman, said in Lohdon Wednesday he hoped to steer Sudan on "the path to scientific .!Ocialism." He was one of the two member• of the new revolutionary council aboard the British plane forced down today in Libya. Libyan jets buued the plane to force It lo land. Libya's government supported Numelry's anti-communist policies. The Middle East News Agency quoted another announcement over Omdurman radio by Maj. A.bou Khas5em Mohammed Ibrahim as declaring a state of emergen- cy throughout the Sudan with a curfew &tarting at 6 p.m. (11 a.m. EDT) Ibrahim was a member of the ReYolu- tionary Command Council loyal to Numelry which the pro-communist group repla~. The radio station asked ill employta to report immediately for duty. "Yur revolution is steadfast and the armed forces will continue the march at your wish." Ibrahim was quoted as 5aying. and he ended by quoting Numeiry. Libyan jet fighters forced a British Overseas Alrway5 VCJO wi th I O 7 passengers aboard to land at the Li byan city or Benghazi at dawn today and disembark Lt. Col. Babakr Al Nour Osman, the pro-communist president of the Sudan·s new revolution.11ry command council, and another council member. The second council member was ten· t.al\vely identified as Maj. Farouk Hamadallah. The airliner, en rou te lo Khartoum, turned around and returned to U>ndon. Noor. 37, had been en roott to Khartoum !G assume power as pre5ident of the new Revolutionary Command Council. Both he and Hamadallah ~ in military regtmt was overthrown MOiday 1n the fourth coup in 1~ years. The previous regime had b e e. n negotiating for membership in a new federation of Arab states with Egypt, Libya and Syria. The new government ia hostile to the federation project. In Baghdad, Iraq, !he official Iraqi news agency said that. a special Iraqi aircraft carrying high-ranking Iraqi of- ficials to Khartoum crashed in the Saudi Arabian desert today, killing three high· ranking lraqi officials who were en route to the Sudan to confer with leaders of the now ousted military government then!. The Iraqi agency gavf! no cause for the crash. Egypt'.s Voite or the Arabs Radio said the plane exploded in thl' air. Draft Eva sion P rompts Arrest Of Lag un a Man The 'Federal Bureau o( Investigation Wednesd11y ;:irrested a Laguna Beach 111M on charges of evading thl' draft by claiming to be undergoing orthodontic treatment. Agents took James Lee Hardesty, 22, Into custody at his home at 291 Grandview St. and booked him on the charges in Los An~lcs. Hardesty v.·a5 among ten young adults arrested Wednesday on the charges following a federal grand jury indictment 1vhlch charged the men "knowingly and willfully" evaded service in the Armed f'orces by falsely ch•im.ing they were "undergoing active, continuini orthodon· tic treatment." The indictment culminated a lengthy grand jury probe of JX)SSible draft evasion through fraudulenl use of medical and th?ntal 5ervice5. The grand jury twice subpoened Dr. Bern11rd Bender, a Los Angeles dentist, who failed to appear and wM 1ub* quently w11s held in CUba wtlen his yfleht ran aground there. A Claremon( Co llege eh&plain. the Rev. (;ordon VerPlank . wa! also questioned by the panel about his drall coun5tllng ac- tlviUes. Sleepy Resi.dent Crows Over Cock A .sleepy voiced reskfent called 1..lguna Beach police early ttUJ morning to report that both he and his ire hid been ank- ~ned by 1 ntighbor'1 pet rtJC:mer causing· A !Unrlse disturbance. A pGIJC'e ofnctr WIS di9patcbed to tht l\lyrtle Strf!et addrw: and found the crowing culprit behind a locked Jenee . However, the olficer's knocks on the rloor of the residf!nce RM no mponae, 10 11 note was ltfM n tht door tdvisin1 the hird owner of lhe problem. __ ,--=--- ., C~et;• Misinterpreted Bay Refuge 'Prem~ture' U.S· L(}ffielal_~-,~ - 11J L P~fllll KRIEG Of ltM Delfr ".., SfMf 'The U.S. Department of Interior ln- 1.e.oda lo deaignate Upper Newport Bay a national landmark but any talk of ae- qulring part of it for a wildlife refuge is premature, federal officials said this morning. Deslanation of the landmark status, et· pected in the near future from Interior Secretary Rogera Morton , "does not con- stitute 1 cloud over the title -there is no acquisition of land involved," William lifonroe, regional coordi11ator of the department, said today. He said Fifth Di;;trict Supervisor Ron1ld E. Casper1, who Tuesday said the designation of a sancluary status was due in less than two weeks, "apparently mi.sinterprtted" something we were t1lk- ing about. Munroe said national landmark status ''gives an area a particular designation indicating ii has a speeial quality and that area ia entitled to spetial con- sideration. Monroe said he recommended the designation to Morton, as did an advisory panel, and said the secretary could 1ct at any time. On the other hand, action on a request by the Oranae County Board of . . Supervisors to eslabllllh a wlldlife refu1e in the bay is much further oil, Monroe 31id. ''-We have been working with C~rs' o!rice in examinin.it the lJpper Bay to de- termine if there is any ba&ia to make it 1 special pruerve eouial.ent with the bo1rd'5 resolution," Monroe confirmed. "Secretary Morton flew over tile area and asi:ed me to study the pt'.ll'ls.ibility." Monroe uid he wou.ldn't gue5s how long it will take him to !Ile a report, but he did point out that designation ef an area as a national wildlife refuge takes an act of Congres.s. ''Our sludy i5 purely in the formative stage!," Monroe said, "we have been meeting with the county counsel and the staff. "We are concerned about the area," he said. Monroe would not guess how big an area ht rnighl recommend for a nstiona l sanctuary. "There are minimum .standards," he said, "but I am net familiar enough with them to comment at this time." He said if a decision la made to acquire ~me of the bay ror a sanctuary. it would be purcllaaed, possibly with fund! available through the Duck Stamp Act or I.he Migratory Bird Act. Cafeterias Turn a Profit 'The cafeteria system of the Laguna Beach Schools -which haa been a money loser for years -came out in the black for the period Sept. 1970 through June 1971. A totaJ profil of $4!15,7D WU shown on a ba1ance !heet given to members of the board of education at a meeting Tuesday night For the same period a year ago, the cafeteria system lo.st a whopping $6,000, said Dr. Charle5 Hess, district business manager. Hess attribu~d the change from operating "in the hole" to making a pr~ fit to a new walk-in freeier which allow! Marines to Give Duke the 'Mike' SAN ANTONIO, Ttx. !UPI) -The Marine Corps League hss named John Wayne the next recipient of the "Iron Mike" 1ward -giYen annually lo the man ''who best e1ernpWits the word · Amerlc.11n.' " The award. named after a nine·foot statue of a fighting marine on Parris Island. S.C .. will be presented Aug. 13. Wayne was chosen "since in his screen portrayals and in his everyday life he has played those traits of ccharacler that make him an outstanding American," the league !iaid Wednesday. ror quantity buying and a new food preparation syst.tm used at the elemen- !My schools, which cut labor costs. Under the system, all foam are pre-- pared at the central kitchen at Thurston Intermediate School and distriblued lo the three elementary schools -AliBO, El Morr() and Top of the World. "Kids like the new food much better than the old and our participation in the cafeteria has improved," Hess said. "Actually, our goal in the cafeteria system Is not lo make money and not to lose money, We'd just like to break even.'' Hess ~aid. He added that cafeteria costs may be slightly higher next year -as the direc- tor of lhe cafeteria operations will work on a half time basis. Trustees Handed Salary Requests Formal requests for salary incre11ses and other benefits were madt to Tru!tees of the San Joaquin Elementary School Distnct Wednesday. No action wa! taken on the proposals \Vhich can be kept secret, according to provision! of the WiJllon Act, until a de- cision is reached. Rex Nerison, Assistanl Superintendent for Administrative Services, said the board aod the employe groups have reached accord on almost every propo6al, but a few minor poin!.3 must .slill be worked out. D1·ess Code - Surfaces ··-i.:-..:c-t"·--ui · aguna " ' The dreq code la.sue al Laguna Beach !ligh School -which h.., 1-n dormant for nearly a year and ·a half -will surface at a study session of the new school board Monday night. "There's a possiblUty that we may change the dress ec.de," commented William Thomas Tuesday night. "Then again there's a possibility we may not." The high school. has oper1ted without a dress aide since lale in the lflO tcbool y_ear. when trus tees dropped all regula- tions regarding hair length and types of clothing that could be worn to school. The only rule in effect i5 .11 state Jaw which stipulates that students wear shoes to schoot Bill Fish, president of the high school student bory. is expected to be at the study session to answer questions the board may have. Thomas' comment was the only thing said by new trusteea about the dress code matter at lhis week's meeting. Board members also agreed to lake a look at the high school coursf! of 5tudy, which lists all the classes offertd at the high school. Thomas, in preYiOtnt'meeting!, has said he has "some questions" .11bout the higll school course offerings. The Monday night study session will be held at the Education Center, 550 Blu- mont Drive, at 7:30 p.m . CdM ,Cyclist Breaks Leg In Collision A Corona de! Mar motorcycli!t 1uffered a broken leg Wednesday evening after: being hurled 4fl feet when his cycle !lruck a parked car on El Paseo in Laguna Beach. 1 A spokesman for Soutb Coast Com- munity Hospllal said today David Alun Yarnell. 13, of 610 Larkspur Ave., was in satisfactory condition. Police said lhe accident occurred al about 7 p.m. when Y~nell , southbound on Coast Highway, tw:r'ied onto El Paseo and struck the auto. Officer5 5aid Yarnell ap- parenUy misjudged hi5 speed and could not avoid hitting the parked car. A passenger on the cycle. Steven Rutherford, 16, was nol injured in lhe mishap, police noted . Nixon Vo ted 'G reat' MTAf.,I BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Pre!I· den~ Nixon was voted the ''world'• greatest man" by contestants of the Mi~ Universe pageant. Nixon received six vote~ while Pope Paul Vl and U.N. Secretary-General U 'T'hant got four each. The other con- testants polled voted for their father.~. "I'd vote for President Nixon in an election, but daddy's No. I at home," &aid Michele Mc.Donald o! Butler. Pa .• lu xuriou s spring down sofas Tki1 k•nds°"!• Sof• was designed to give you th e \Jlti m ate In seating comfort with d•cron •nd d.own back p1llow1, d .. p s pring d own ••at cus'1 ions •nvelo~ in down and feathers in two foam· filltd •rm p illows. Choose fr om a wide •election of fine f•brlcs. 8' length, reg. $500. NOW 399 . 1 BTH SEMI ANNUAL SALE IN PROGRESS SAVE 20% ON ALL HERITAGE AND DREXEL UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS AND SOFAS • ALSO -SEVERAL HERITAGE AND DREXEL BEDROOM, DINING ROOM AND OCCASIONAL COLLECTIONS ON SALE. PROFESSIONA L INTERIOR DESIGNERS Yo1'r favorite interior derigmr toili be Mppv to CJ.$Si.tt vou ••• Open MOii., Th"'1-& Frf. lyn. TRY OUR RIVOLVINtl CHAROI - 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646.0275 646 -0276 .....-,~-./ /1";!-. - I I ' ' I I I I ' I I I ! I I ( I I I I . . ' . . ' ' • • .. . - . ~· ' •· ... ~·-·-"' Today's Fln•I San Clemente Capistrano EDITl·ON N.Y. Stocks VOL. 64, NO. 114, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, G.ALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 22, 197 1 TEN CENTS 3 ·road Plan Ends Golf Course Access Battle San Clemenle'1 bit~r acceu con· troversy over a propo11ed major golf course development appeared ended to- day after city councilmen Wednesday night settled on a three-road plan. Admilting they were bound by a deed fi!ed in 1929 and a city action over ease· ments in !96.1, councilmen chose an e>:· tension of Avenlda Magdalena, Vista Bahia and Avenida. San Pablo as the three route.'J to 1erve initial uniL.~ of a development proposed by the Douglass- Pacific Corporation. ' But the access route would remain only until HIO homes are bullt and occupied. Any addition of dwellings lo th11t sum would r~uire 1 newer access route to the gcreage nkow as the Rasmussen-Ayer properti~ inland of lhe rily-0wned Jinks. \Vednesday 's how·s-long discussion on the months-0ld isiiue h&I a far different tone than previous meetings where marathon appea rances by opponents to access suggestions dominated. Councilmen and <levPloper J oh n Douglass Jr. hammered out point After point in a Ii.st of about two-cklzen devP:lop- ment conditions orig.inally imposed by planning commissioners. OcP: key to the future access into that segment of the back country remain!' the roadw2'y skirting the: city limits on Ca mp Pendleton property. The: thoroughfare might eventually become a public one if President Nixon 's intended gift of San Mateo Canyon and sis: miles of Cam p Pendleton shoreline indeed goes to the public. In a development condition, Ma yor Walter Evans Jr. pressed for in· corporation (lf link.!! to the Pendleton road within the proposed ctindominium and estate-lot development tentatively named ''Presidential Heights .'' Because at ll~ast \8 months would elapse before the 100 units could be built, council~n agreed the Interim period would help clear problems which have bf.set the proposal for months. In tough. but busir.esslike discu.ssions. Douglass steadfastly held onto his righL Lo use the a~ tasem.ent.s across the municipal golf course granted in 1929 and 196.1. It was those casemenls wbich drew in- timatioll.! that the city faced a suil on a previou~ approval which would have restricted use of a roadway across the links to golf carts only . City A Horney F. MacKenzie Brown told councilmen that the action would leave the city open to ltgaJ action. But councilmen about four wee~ ago rescinded that solution. then sent a new one back to planning commissioners. Wednesday's decision appears to ha ve '>''On Little favor among the resldents of lhe an;a and city g<>\lers who have bit- terly fought the use of existing streets for months. The use of San Pablo. they said. would cau.iie traffic snarls and dangers because of short driveways in the Patrician Villa tract, where the entries are so short that cars can not fit without jutting into the roadway. Golfers complained Ulat Magdalena's utension across the llnk5 v.-ould pose a hazard and destroy the quaJity of the course. Councilmen agreed that for the mol!t part t.1agdalena and Bahia would takl': on a counlry-lane deaign with a 24-foot width in many 5ections, thus, parking would not be allowed. The vote by the obviously weary m.lll· cil was unanimous in favor or the plan first detailed by Councilman Cllff Myers. Little reaction was evident in the au- dience -weary as well. The only comment heard after the vote came from Mayor Evans. "Done ," he said. ew on ection a e Midtaight Appeal Fireworks Ban: A Fast Fizzle A fireworks ban proposed earlier this year and supported by the San Clemente City staf( went up in smoke WednP:sday. A midnig ht appeal by representatives of the city's two veteran's groups and a i;pokesman for Junior All-American Foot· ball succeeded in winning a vole ~y the council continuing the present permission for thP: sale of safe-and-sane firewor.ks. In another motion councilmen reset the freeze on the numbrr of orgAniU1tlons a!lov:ed to sell the pyrotechnics each vear. • The veterans groups and the football organization are the only three "'"itll Joaquin Board A 'vards Contract For Toro School A contracl for a new 1n1ermed1ale r;C'h<.i('ll 1n El Toro ht1s been av•ardr:d by the Trustees of the Sen Joaquin Elemen· tarv Schoo! Dis!ricl. The !ow bid of $1.!>44.000 ~as submitted by \Ii. E. L}·ons Con~truC'!ion Co. of Lynwood . . . C-Onstrurt1on is expec!e-0 Ln begin 1n two 4'>r three weeks. Routine st.ate approval of th e con1rac! n1ust bf? granted first The school i., located on a 20-acre s1tf nn r.1u1rlands Boulevard '>''tiere Alicia Parkway '>''ill lnlersecl. "\I/hen Alicia is cons tructed the county t\•i\I probably purchase lwn or three acres of thl': site for the ~trttt." said Rex Nerison, Al!sistant Superintendent for Administrative Services. The school is designed for 850 s1udent.A and is ex11ct!y the same as the in- ttrmediate school now under construction In University Park. The basic plan for both schools WAS •dopted from La P11z Intermediate In t.lission Viejo. Nerison ~a id the school Is expected to be_ completed and occupied in September of 1972. Orange Coan Weather The sun will peek through thl! ha ze today and Friday. follow· Ing early morning low clouds and rog. TemperatureR will ra nge from 70 along the beacheR to 84 inland. Lows around 66. INSIDE TODAY A Polish. Jtw. now an lsrntli c,tiztn, 11.tlJ revealed that white in n pri.ton camp, ht I.earned the R.usJians, ''10t Ott Naz.is, m.a..~sacrtd 12,000 Poliih o/fi· ttr.t during tht war. Stor11 PDgt i. 11r11t1 II C1 IM""'ll I CM<•I~· U• 1 crauMIM H•., [ll!llU 111 c .. u.e'11 • ldllerUI ~.,. I a.,1.,i11f\-· 1'·11 r 1.,tnct M Ho .. HI,_ 1• • .,., l•"'•" lf M••'lllt lk ... MI II Mt•• lf·Jt MllfNI ,..... M H•"*"•I Hw1 I Ort1>11 [Ml!lty II 1¥...... l'lmlr N ,~,... , .. Zf .s-Ml"'lltl ff.tr ,. ..... itltfl 1• T,.._Nn lt·H W .. lltw I w ........ , ....... 1).11 pennission to 5ell thr: merchandise in the city. Veterans. councilmen conceded, ha\'e taken prec~ because profjts fr otn the sale ~1-p .'ofltet: lUgt: deflcitJ each year in presenting the major firew orks display from the city pier. The football organ.iiation. w h l c h operates under I tight financial burden each (all, raisea funds through the sales to make up for• conference ruling which forbid s sponsorship of te11ms b y businesses and service i;iroups. Councilmen stressed to spokesmen for the grou ps that problems do exist in sRles to ve ry young children, who carelessly use fireworks and cause blazes in grassy areas. Veterans Fireworks Comm it t t • Chairman Walt Liebig stressed that all the sales groups have tried to "play it by ear'' at the sales booth!! when very young patrons appear to make purchases. "\Ve often ask them to go home Md get a note from their parents. Sometimes thev have rive &nd ten-dollar bills and we wof.r)' that maybe they h1111e lakr:n the money without parents' permission," he explained. Jn squash.ing the proposed ban coun· cilrnen pointed to large enforcement pro- blems in other coastal cities where fireworks are rorbidden, yet are 5et off nonetheless. "Unlrss the slate ban~ I.ht Use of fireworks. all over California. or the coun- ty does somr:thing like it. we really can 't be too effecllv~ here," 1aid Mayor Walter Evans. $3,000 Approved For Additional Capo Promotion An additional $3.000 h11 been budgeted by the San Juan Ca pistrano City Council ror community prornoUon. . Mike Darnold, president of the Chamber of Commerct. said hi1 group i1 planning to bring detailed projP:Cts to the City Council in the hope they will be a~ proved for funding. "We will work closely with tht Council in the selection of worthy community promotion projects;• said Darnold who sttmed pleased at the council's une1:· pect.d action. The city fathtrs had or I g In 111 y budgeted U,000 for ce>mmunity prom~ lion. TWo thirds of this was to pe y for 1 civic brochure printed by the Chamber as one of la5l year's project.s. The. balance was to be used ror thi5 year'!! . Chamber projecta with $100 earmarked for lbt Fiest.a Association, 1 group th11t Mnu11ly organ b.es a par'lde to celP:brate tb( return of the swallow• to thl': old Mission. The Qwnbti' had requested *8,000 dur· tng budget study 1es1k>ns last month , but WAS turned down. One of thl': projects outlined In the Clty Council by Dlredor Richard Dickey was 1 walking tour culdt:. maps ahowlng historical sites in tht: city which could be reached on foot. Darnold was reluct1nl to aay which projtcta will be 1ugge1ted for funding. He satd the Boa.rd (If Directors nf th• Chambv of Commerce will be holding 1 11erie1 of mee Un11 lo m11ke theslfl declliens. -,.... ..-_ ll~\: ,~ Down the Mission Trail School Ecology Push Continues . 11.ls.'j!ON VIE.JQ,",... Lin~~ Vim Elementary School's 1~egsful ecolOiY driye is continuil'lg throu&b the sum.mer. Newapape.rs, aluminum cans, and bot· tles m1y be left in the school parking lot July 31 between 8 a.m. and noon. The drlve is sponsored by thr: P1trenl.- Te11,cher Organization and is being coordinatl':d by Jim Dowd. For in· formation call Dick Niederhauser, 837- 4715. • Le•sons Planned LAKE FOREST -New segsions of ten- nis, swim and guitar lessons will begin next week at the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Clu b. All Lake Forest residents are eligible. Swim le:ssons v.·ill be Monday throu~h Friday, from July 26 through Aug. 13. Tennis instruction "'ill be on t.tondays and Wednesdays from July 2& through Aug 25. Botb !iports will havt classes for adults and children al various times depending on ability. Guitar will be taught from .July 28 through Au1;. 18. Time and day will be ar- ranged by c!;iss enrollment. r or informalion cal! the club. 837·6100. • lla11rlde Rolll MISSION VJEJO -A hayride for fift h And siI grade.rs who Uve in Mission Viejo will be held on Sunday. Rr:gilltration for the party is bt!ing taken al tht Montanoso Recreation Center where the activity will begin at 7:30 p.m. The: co.st for the ride and refreshments wUl be $1.SO payable at the time of registration. For more information call the center. 137-4084. • Luau Scheduled MTSSION V1EJO -A polynesian luau Is scheduled Saturday at 7:30 a.m. 1t the Montanoso Recreation Center. Sponsortd by the Nadadorell Booster Club. the luau will offer food and en· tertainment for $15 per couple. Reservations can be made by calling the center 837-4084. Nadadores Booster• i;upport the Mission Viejo Recreation Center'1 swim team. San Juan Picks Names to Go With 2 Parks Two more of San JulJ\ Capiqtano'1 unckvtloped park IHet have n1mu this week. The tiv~acre park ln the We1tport development will be called Junipero Str· r1 Perk, ind lhe one-acre site. In the Troy H,omet dP:velopment will be c1Ded Bonito Park. The name:s were adopted by the city Council Monday 1t the suggel!l.ion ol the Parks 100 Recreation Commi11ion . Alternate suggestions f<U' the five-acre park were Suri, Santa ROA1ll1 and El Aide•. Other '1amea for the one. acre park Oubhouse Vote Joins April Ballot By JOHN V 4.L TERZA 01 1111 ~Hy 'ltet S!•lt San Clemenle 's voters will receive a new millio.n-dollar parks and recreation bond package in the same ballot as that listing candidates for two city council -•HMJ ooxl ,;!.•ril, cou~ilmon .~ 7.~day. · ·' .,,. · · .. - Althol.lgh formalities are not complete, councilmen agreed with City Manager Ken Carr's ree<1mmendations that April II. 1972, would be the moat timely and economical date for the omnibus issue similar in substance to ont which failed l11st Apr il, 'T'he recreation vole seeking funds for a new comm unity clubhouse and three other major improvemenls Is certain to become 11 campaign issue. The post.!1 filled by Mayor Waller Evan,o; Jr. and CO!.l ncilman Stan Northrup will bt. filled in the vote, wbich is ex· pected to bring out a large amount ol candidates and voters as WP:ll. (;ouncilmen 8el asidr: their first meeting in November to launch thP: formalities In the election which would involve one vote for all four projtcts. Last April's failure at the polls. coun- c1tmen theorized. w11.s due to lhe separa· tion of votes on each project. Thus a ~ingle volt casl next April would affect the clubhouse construction. !he proposed youth recreation center. beach and pier improvements and development nf oeighborhood park~ During a council recess Wednesday clarification came in one matter related to the election. Mayor Walter Evans Jr. stressed that 11 10-cent lax rate increase already af>' provtd ty councilmen to help finance the clubhoost ""ould be re.sclndtd if the bond issue '>''ere to pas~. The rate, i1owever, would be technically replaced by another tax increase which would yield funds to pay back the bonds. The crux. Evans said. is that if the bond issue were to fail, the inilial lt>-cenl bike would pay back to cmt for the clubhouse over 1 flv~year period. Tbe rate then would remain, with income US· ed oo other capital improvements pro-Ject.s. "I think some people havP: gotten the impre.o;slon that the tax increase wouJd be used for the clubhouse, thea scrapped. le~ving other project.s: unfunded ," he aaid. "But the Intent of the motion (approved late last June) Is to use that $50,000 a year for other proje,cll after the clubhouse," he &<Idec!. The current clubhouse financing plan entails • "loan" of sorts fro m tbe city ceneral fund, which woul~ be repaid over abput five years by insurance settlement MOM)! from tbP: clubhowe fire damage, plus the annual take from the 10-cent hike. The Increase in the parks Md recrea- Uon rate has yel to be set by councll~en. however. By custom. this racal year's rate la of. ficially crrtilit4 at 1 meeUng in ,AuSUJt. · Freeway Appraisal Set for TV Friday Bamford Frankland. wisla.nt state public works director, will discuss Governor Reaga.11'1 re-appraisal o f C.Ufomi11'1 fretw11y system and Its dirflct effKl on the coastal cities &f. Orange County Friday at 1:30 p.m. on DAii. Y '11.oT 11.tt ,1111 .. Best Dressed Betsy Tho1nas. 9, and her dog Rip took fir st place in the best C05- tume for ~ dog category \Vednesday at the pet show put on by th9 Lake Forest Beach & Tennis Club. You can see why. They came to the affair dressed as Los Angeles Dodgers. Arrested in Minutes Pendleton Marines Held In Laguna Beach Holdup Laguna Beach Police Wednesday night arr&Sted thrtt camp Pendleton Marines as susp«:ls In 1n 1rmed robbery within moments after the crime occurred. The vicLim. Dr. Robert Quass. of s.S9 Cypress Drive. toltl oUlcers he had been robb:ed ~t gunpoln~ ln the rear of hb. house by a petr of men when he returned 00~ a,t ll:SO.p.m. Dr. ~BIS reported hf: pve, tM m~ a\1 the money he !lad with him -two one-dollar billl -and the pair escaped on foot. A witness uw the men • short time later walking along Coa5t Higbw1y al Forf'1l Avenue and informed police. Ar· riving officers could only locate· one 0( the suspects. Robert Paul Sobb, 20, and tnok hlm lnlO custody. Sohh wRs tAken hack to the 1cene of the r.rlme And Iden· tilled by Dr. Quasa aa the man who held the gun. pollCt claim .. lnvestig.ators l'eported the gun waa not found . but c\Rlm Sobb had two $1 bills tn his pocket Two men SObb had been seen wtui by police ihortly before the robbery were also arrested on suspicion of the crime. 'll\ey were ldenUfied as Bruce AIM!:n Shiery. ll. and Jack Ray Oilldr ... 11. The case i5 sUll under lnYMt!i1Uon. police $lid. War Study Ordered WASHlNGTON CUP!) -The Sena!< Foreign Rela~ions Co1nmitttie hu betn given $\00,000 to t!hnduct ftl own tn- vesUa:a tlon of the origins of the Vietnam War. were Del Rey and Tin.1. --~---~!:Y!lf'f.~ ,..., ___ __ KHJ· TV, Chaon•l 9. r,~~ --·.:::-.. ----~,..,,.::. --... ,,. -... -·~·---·i ll ,~· .--.. __,.. ... ~, 1,.,.,""; .... ,(.' , . ' -' .j ' I _z Dlll V PllOT SC Sudan Turmo'l Erupts eted Dress Code Baf · , efuge 'Premature' S-.. J . ;, · · U:J-1.aces Cou nter-coup-O usts R ebel R~d .Q~1_ U.S..Offieiah · -~--1-~---lil~htgon· .· -. .•• l ·~ .• _::~a BEJRU1' (U PI ) -f"orces loyal to ousted SudanNe Prtsidenl ~iaJ. Gen. Jaalar Numeiry occupied On1durman Radio sta'uon today-in an apparent coumer-coup against the prO<Qmmuni.st eroup who deposed him on Monday The ~ian Middle Easl Newj Agen· cy in Cairo quo~ the radio 1tation which ii tbe Sudan naUonal radio, u sa)'tng Numelry "iJ well and will .1tiU lead the nation." The radio armounttme.nt came a few hours after neighboring Libya forced do .. a British alrllnlr In etn,llUI AM ld<lnloped the pruldenl of the oiw Sudanese revolutionary councl1 and another eoun cil member who Wtrt aboard it. Sudanf..Se lroop5 earlier were reported to have surrounded the Libyan, Egypti•n and Syrian embassies m the Sudanese capita) of Khartoum in retaliation. Then the Middle Eaal News Agency reported the broadcast from the radio slat.ion in Omdurmaa, I.ht lwin city of Khartoum, as saying · "Sudane.sc forces led by LL l\otoham- Exp u l s ion Questioned Cou rt Order Puts Halt To LAFC Appointment Los Alamitos Councilma n Joe Hyde's election to the Local Agency Formation Commission was stopped -temporarily al leas t -by a court order. Superior Court Judge J. E. T. Ruiter Wednesday ordered county m1yors and the LAFC to either reinstate Louis "Red'" Reinhardt to the oonunl.ssion or show ca111t why not Rutter set Aug. 12 for the Superior Court hearing on the abow caose order. Fullerton Councilman Reinhardt named the mayor or every Orange County city, the LAFC itself, and the County's City Selection Commillee In a court action that demands the expulsion of Hyde and his own reinstatement. Reinhardt was ousted ftom the chairmanship ot the LAFC in a Ltague of Cities vote l11t July 8. but claims in a writ of mandate that his term of office actually extends to December. He challenges LAFC execuli ve officer Richard TUrner's ruling that atate codes call for the terms <lf LAFC members to Laguna Mailmen Support Ouster Of P ostmaster Memben <lf Branch 3616 of the Calif«ni1 Association of the National Aa9ociatlon of Letter Carrim -wbkb lncludts po&lal employ• in Laiuna Beach, S<lulh Laguna. Laguna Hill1 and Laguna Niguel -have gone on record supporting lhe ouster of Poetmaster General Winton M. Blount. Repreaenlatives of the local joined with officials of other branches from throughout California ln a Loi Anteles tneflting this past wetkend in standing opposed to Blount. Chria Ha!.!ler, secretary of the local said that Blount "has refused to en- courage good faith bargaining" and has tried to "circumvent the Intent of the new Poatal Service." Letter carriers unanimously approved a motion to have naUonal pre!ldent of the NALC, J'1nes Rademacher, seek an appointment with President Nixon to "de.. mand the immediate removal of Blount." Work Stacking Up SAN FRANCISCO fU PI ) -Since 1 gr1vedlggers' strike began in June, more than 800 bodies have .stacked up al mcrluari@s in San Francisco and neiibh<lflng San Mateo County. Authorities nid Wednesday the bodies have been embalmed and stored in cof· fins 10 there is no health problem OIAN•I COAST DAllY Pll01 OlANGi! COAST PUBLISHING <OMl'AM'( lt1ltert N. W11d f'•11: .... 1 ftld l"uDll>hff J1c~ It. c.,1.y ~ ,.,,__....,, •r.d G•ne••I Ml ntVtr n-·· 1e,,.;1 IEdllvr lhoM•I A. Murph'"' loll"fflr>g l!tllOr Ch•rl11 H, l101 ltith1r4 ,, Nill AJolsltnl Ml ntgl"ll Edr.or1 ....... a..a Offk.e JJJ F•r11t A .1.,111 M1rli119 1d~r1H1 ,,0 , l1x 666, t 1•l! S.. CW-M Office JOI N .. th El C1..,ifto R.11!, 92671 _---...~, ..... I I • end on lhe first Monday in May. Reinhardt also argues that the meeting al which Hyde was elected lo replace him was invalid -that is was nol properly called by the agency's chairman or at the request of the city selection committee, and that votes were cast by proxy on behalf o! mayors who were not pre.sent al the meeting. Hyde took over as chairman July 14. Reinhardt warns in his complaint that all actions of the LAFC from that date are subject to challenge, especially if Hyde votes on any issue. Reinhardt asks Judge Rutter 10 ex· punge Hyde's name from the commiuion and rtltore him lG what the Fullerton councilman clailTIJl is his righllul place 1t the head of the agency. • Serving with Hyde on the current Local Agency FormaUon Commission are Coun· ty Supervisor11 Robert Battin and Ron Caspers, Councilmen Stanley Northrup of San Clemente, •nd Charles Peenon ot Anaheim. Alternates-are Supervisor Ralph Oark, Tustin MaYor Tony Coco, and Wiiiiam D. Martin of Laguna Beach. All are n1med as respondents Jn Relnhardt'a acUon. L. W. Stevenson Services Held Private aervic!S were held Wedn81d1y for. ~st.er Warren Stevenaon, 4QI Cli ff Dnve, Laguna Beach, who died Mond1y at the age of 78. Services were conducted by Pacific View Mortuary. Inurnment fGIJGwed. .Mrs. Stevenson ls survived by hi1 widow, Helen, of the family home and a son, Lester, J r., of Minneapolis1 Min· ne-Aota. A native of Chicago, Mr. Stevenson had lived in Orange County (Gr the ptlt 20 years. Rites Conducted For Elva Smith Services were held at 2 p.m, today at McConnick Laguna Beach Chapel for Elva H. Smith, 30802 S. Coast Highway, South Laguna. She died Monday at the age ol 11. Mr1. Smith Is survived by two ton1, George S. BurdiclJ: of China Lake and JarneJ Burdick of Glendora: a daughter, Mr11. Carrol E. Shutt of Arlington, Virg inia . and seven grandchildren. A native of California, Mrs. Smith had resided in South Laguna for t.he past 10 year a. Laguna Moulton Playhouse Loses $600 to Thieves Laguna Bea('h detectives are invelll· gating a burglary at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse in which tools bek>ngtna to the city apparenUy were used to break open a safe from which $600 was taken_ nei. Robert Brist'Ot' said a city main· lenance man, reporting to work 11 the Playhouse this morning. found the tool chest he. kept at the rear of the theater h11d been broken open and the toob re-- moved . He promptly reported the loss 10 city police, who, on checking furlhe:r, dlacov· ered the tools had bee" u~d to break open the safe in the theater office. Bril!C<le said there are no auspec:=lJ •t lhi11 tlmt and lhe lnvealigaUOn wU! con. linue. Phunbers Now Outdo Teachers in Salary LOS ANGELES !UPI)·-Plumbtr1 now can make more thin top Instructors Ul'ldfr new wage aca.lea adopted b)' the Lo.'! Angeles Community Coflege District. The board has •PPf'OVed raltt! ranglllg from 4 percent an hour for P1inter1 to 11 ptr('tnl hourly for electrlcl1n1. l'nder tbe ··P"evallin& communlly rat.es" for the dl,trict'• 95 empklyea. tradesmen ere gu•r•nteed 12 month11 work 11nnually at 1al1rle1 up «> f21 .4M. Tht top te11ehJng wagt, sprtad over the ID·month ~.::hool year ta '17,22U. .... All llr!l.ll lil.t lie-lid ..... ltadon. ..._ t ·- "Maj. Gen. NOmetry Wiii broll!ellt to the nation soon." 1lie agency quoted a spokesman ldentlrled as Col. salab Abdel Aal as saying on the radio: "The catastrophe through which the natioll hu paued ln \bl 11.!t few days is now over." Qualilied Brllisb sources said in Lon· don that fresh fighting had broken out in Khartoum , beginning at about 4 p.m. local time. The l.ondoo IOUrces said t&riks b.cl aur· rCIUnded the presldeitial pai1ee and that shooting wa.s reported around Army headqcarters. The 10Urtt1 said the fiJhting appeared !G be lhe beginning ol an attempt by Numeiry or his aupporiera &o re1tin the control they lost on Monday, Numeiry Wll toppled by a il'OUP of army officua -sever1l of whom had helptd him gain power in a coup a ye.ar 3go. Their leader, U , Col , B•b•kr El Nur OsmM, said in Lobdon Wednesday he hoped to 1leer Sudan on "the patb to acientirlc socialism.'' lfe was one of the two member1 of the new revolutionary council aboard the British plane forced down today in Libya, Libyan jell buu.ed the plane to Iorct it to land. Libya's ·government supported Numeiry's anti -communist policie.!. The: Middle F.ast Newa Aaency qooted another announcement over Omdurman radio by Maj. Abou Khassem Mohammed Ibrahim 11 declaring a state of emerg~n. cy throughout the Sudan with a curfew starting at 6 p.m. (11 a.m. EOT) Ibrahim was a member of tbe Revolu· tionary Command Council loyal to Numeiry which the pro-<:ommunist croup replaced. The radiG station asked Its emp\oyes to report immediately for duty. "Yur revolutio n is steadfast and the armed forces will continue the march at your wish," Ibrahim w11 quoted 1s saying, and he ended by quoting Numeiry. Libyan jet fighters forced a British Overseas Airways VCIO witb IO 7 passenger• aboard to land at the Libyan city of Benghazi at dawn today and disembark Lt. Col. Babakr Al Nour Osman. the pro-communist president of the Sudan's new revolutlonary command council, and another council member. The second council member was ten- tatively kientilied as Maj. Farouk Hamadallah. The airliner, en route to ' -..... . .r, Ir L )if id IUtlEG Sup«visora to ea:~ a wildlHe refuge 1 • .... ._,., ... 1t11H in the bJy 11 much fUrther off, Monroe The U.S. ~ of nrtaior in-aaid. tends to deslinate Upper Newport B•y a "Wt; have betn workin& with Cepers' n•tional landmark bot any ta1k of ac. oMce In e:lamlnlnt the Upper 8ay tG de- quiring Plrt of it for a wildlife refuge is termlne if there i1 IDY be.sis to make it a premature, federal effici1h: said th.ii s~Lal ·presei:ve eo11sU!tent ~'? 1¥ mornlna-board 'a-.uolut100," Monro. c_,1tmed. Ddlan•Uon fll &..a. land.mart alltus. a· "Sec:ntary Morton new over*rta pecttd ill' the near future from lnteriOI' &rd asked me to •t'U!l.Y the poai · . •• Secretary Rogeft Morton, "dots not con-Monroe said he wouldn't g s w slitute • cloud over the title -then i3 no long it will take him to file a report, but acquisition of land. involved," William he did point out that dealgnation of an Monrot, re1ionat ~tor al the atta as a nal.ional wildllf6 rel\Jfe takes dei-rtment, ta.kl today. an let of Conirt&:s. Ht 1alcl Fifth .Dlatrid Supeni)or "Our 1tudy is purtly In I.he form1U ve Ronald E. caspera. 'Who 1\lelday u..id,. the sta1ea," Monroe said, "we have been de1Jgnatlt'lft of a sanctuary 1tatua wu due meetln1 with the county counsel and the in lesa than two weeks, "apparently staff. miainterprded" somethlna we wen talk· "We 1tt concerned 1bout the area," be ing abclut. said. Munroe aid national iaadmark ttatus Monroe would not iuw how big an "gives an aru a particular designation area he miibt recommend for a naUooal indtcaUn1 It has a apecial quality and sanctuary. th1L area iJ entitled to special con-"'lbere are minimum 1tandlrd1,'' be slder1tion. said, "but I 1m not famil iar eMUgb with r..tonroe said he recommended lhe them to comment 1t thl1 time." de11ignation to Morton, a1 did an advis<lry He .!aid if a dtcislon 11 made to 1cquire panel, •nd Wd the JtCretary could act 1t some of lhe bay for a sanctuary, it would any time. be purchased, possibly with funds On the other hand , action on a request available through the Duck Stamp Act or by the Oranae County Board ot the Migratory Bird Act. Cafeterias Turn a Profit The cafeteria system of lhe Laguna Beach Schools -which has be.en a money loser for yur1 -came out in the black fer the period Sept. 1'70 through June 1971. A total profi t of $455.79 was shown on a balance lheet given to members of the board ol education at a meeting Tuesday night. for tbe same period 1 year a,o, the cafet.eria sy1tem lost a whoppinC se.ooo. aaid Dr. Charles Hess, diltrtct bulines~ manager. Hess aUribut.ed the change from operating "in tht hole" to mating a prc>- flt to a new walk·in freezer whi ch allows Marines to Give Duke the "Mike' for quantity buying and a new food preparation sytlem wed at the eltmen· tary schools, which cut labor cmls. Undu the system, an foods are pre· pared at the central kitchen at Thurston Intermediate School and distribtued to Lhe three elementary schools -Aliso. El Morro and Top of the World. "Kid.I like the new food much better than the old and GUr participation in lhe cafeteria'hi11 lmprn•ed," Hess .!aid. .;Aclu1lly, our 1ot1 in the cafeteria system i5 not to ma\:e money and not tn Jo,se money. Wt 'd just like to break even." Hess said. He added that cafeteria costs may bt slightly higher next year -a~ the direc. I.or of the cafeteria operations wl.11 work on 1 half time basis. The cha code t.we at Lagwia Beach tr,,ii Scllool -whlcil 11>1 been dormant far nearly a year and • half -will surface at a study session of the new schQol board Monday night. "There's a possibility that we rn•v change the dr• cc.de,11 commented William 'lbomiS, T._i.y rughl. "Thon ag1in there's a pbsalbility we may not." The high school has operated without a dress code since late in the 1970 school year, when trustees dropped all re&ula· t!Gn.'! regarding hair length and types ol clothing I.hat could be worn to school. The only rule in effect is a atate t.w which stipulates lhat students wear .shoes t. .school. Bill Fi.sh, pttsident of the blah achoo! student bory, is eipected to be •t the study session to answer questions the board may have. 'Ibomas' comment was ttie only lhlllf said by new trustee~ •bout the dttss code matter at this week 's meeting. Board members alsa •ireed to take a look at the high school course of 1tudy, which lists all the cl11ses offered at th~ high school. Thoma!, in previous meetings, has said he has "some questions'' about the high school course offerings. The Monday night study seuion wltl be held at the Educ3tion Center, S50 Blu· mont Drive , at 7;30 p.m. CdM .Cyclist Breaks Leg In Collision A Corona de! Mar motorcyclist suff~ed a broken leg Wednesda y evt.ftinC alter being hurled 40 feet when his cycle 1truci a parked car tln El Pasco in Laguna Beach. A spokesman for South Coast Com· munity Hospital said l.oday Davld Alun Yarnell, 18, of 610 Larkspur Ave., was in satisfactory condition. Police said the accidenl occurred at about 7 p.m. when Yarnell . soulhbound on Coast Highway, turned onto Et Pasco and struck the auto. Officers said Yarnell ap- parently misjudged his speed and could not avoid hitting the parked car. Khartoum, turned around and returned to SAN ANTONIO. Te.t . (UPI) -The ~:!:': !1. 'bad bttn en route~ to Marine Corp• Le11ue has named J ohn Trustees Handed Salary R equests A passenger on the cycle , St.even Rutherlord, 16, w1s not injured in lhe mishap, police noted. Khartoum to assume power as pre1iden t W1yne the next recipient of the "Iron of the new Re voluf.iooary Command Mike" award -crtven annually to the P'ormal reqnesta fot salary increa8t3 Nixon Voted 'Great' e and other benefits wtte made to Truattts Cowlt:ll . ~tll ht and H1madallah ~in m•n •'who bcit ezemp!Hle1 lhe word ol lhe S•n J0:aqWn Ele11'1entary School military rtgime was overthrown Mmday 'American.'.. District Wednesday. MIAr..fI BEACH, F!a. (AP) -Pres!· in the. fourth coup in 15 year1. N · .. , .. _ 1 dent Nixon was voled the "world'• ~-pre,lous regi·me hid be, n The al4'ard , named after 1 nine-foot o act.Jon w11 taaen on .. ~ proposa s 11tt: which can be kept ___, accord· ,,, greatest man" by contest ants of the Miss "'gotiatlng for mem~rship in a new statue or • figh ting m1rine on Parris -R.-... • ..,,, mg .., provisions of the Wiaton Act, until 1 de--Universe pageant. federation of Arab states with Egypt, Island, S.C., will be presented Auf. 13. cision is reached. Nixon received six votes while Pope Libya and Syria. The new government 11 Wayne w11 chosen "since in his screen Rex Nerison, AB!istant Su perintendent Paul Vl and U.N. Secret&ry·C'.eneral U hostile to the federatioo project. I d 1 h' d l'f heh fGr Administrative Services, said the Thant got four each. Thr. other con-In Baghdad. Iraq, the official Iraqi portraya s an n •1 every ay i e as ho lr 'l f h t th t board .and the employe groups have testants polled voled for their fathers. news agency sa.id that a special Iraqi played t st 111 s 0 cc arac er a reached accord on almost every prOJ>l'.)6al, "I'd vote for Presidenl Nixon ln an ;ilrcraft c1rrylng high-ranking Iraqi of· make him an outstandln& American," the but 1 few minor points must still be election, but daddy'• No. I •l home,'' 11ld flciala to Khartoum crashed In the Saudi league said Wednesday. worked out. Michele McDonald of Buller, Pa .. Arabian de11ert tclday, killing thr~ high-Ir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ranking Iraqi official.! wtio were en rout• to the Sudan to confer with le1der1 of the now ousted military government there. The Iraqi agency gave no cauae for the cr•sh. Egypt'g Voice of the Arabi Radio said the plane uploded ln the air. Draft Evasion Prompts Arrest Of Laguna Man The Feder.11 Bureau ol lnve&tiptlon Wedneaday 11Tuted a Lagun• BelCh mM on charges ol evading the drift by claiming to be undergoing orthodontic trtatment. Agents took James Lee Hardmty, %2, Into custody at his home at 291 Gr1ndview St. and booked him on the charges in lA>I Angeles. Hardeaty was among ten young 1dults arrested Wednesd1y on the char1es following a federal grand jury Indictment which charged the men "knowinllJ and wllltuU y" evatkd 1ervict in the Amled FOTt'es by fal.!ely claiming they wert "undergoing active, continuing orthodon· Uc treatment." Tbe indictment culminated a ten(thy grand j ury probe of po11ible dr1n evasion through fraudulent u.st of mtdkal and dental tervi<:es. The grand jury twice IUbpoened Or. Bernard Bender, a t.oa An1e le.!l denUst, who failed to appttr and who IUb• quenUy waa held in CUbt wben hi• yacht rill aground U!ere. A Cl1remont Collefe eh1pl1in, the Rtv. Gordon Ver Plank. w11 al!O questioned by tht pantl 1bou{ bl1 $-alt C<lUJ\le\if1C AC· UvlUu. Slee py Resident Crows Over Coc k A 1leew·vo1co<1 l'fticltnt called 1.a.,_ Beach po1ic1 e1rly thia morning to report that ~ ht Ind his tre ba4 bten awall:· ened by • neighbor's pet l'OOlter c1usln1 a tunrlse disturbance. A pollc:o olflc<r Wtl dlspol<hod lo Ill< Myrtle Strett lddrt!I 1nd round the crowing culprit behind a kN:ked fencr,. However, tht olflc:et"1 lnocb on tht door of the rukttnee IOl no NpGast, ao • nott wu left on the dOor advlllna: the bird owner of ~ problem. luxuri ous spring down sofas Thl1 ho1nd1em• Sofe we t cletlgl'Md to give you the ultimate In 1eeting comf1'-rt with dacron and O.wn INck pllhrw1, 0..p 1pring down aeat c.uth ion1 envelop.ct in down and fe1ther1 In two fwm· flllM arm ,11tew1. CheoM from a wide Ml9Ction of fi,,. febrlc1, 8' length, reg. $500. NOW 3 99. 18TH SEMI ANNUAL SALE IN PROGRESS SAVE 20% ON ALL HlllTAGE AND DREXEL UPHOLSTERED CH.AIU AND SOFAS • ALSO -SEVEllAL HERITAGE AND DREXEL IEDROOM, DINING ROOM AND OCCASIONAL COWCTIONS ON SALE. YOUf foocritt tntcrlor dcrigncr toiU bt ~ t.o o:ubt ro• ••• H.J.GAI\I\ETf fURNllURE ~ROFESSIONAL INTUIO~ DESIGNERS -- o,_ M• .. n""" & l&rl. h-. -'IT OUI l lYOLVING CHAIGI - 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 6'6-0271 6<6-0276 I I 11 to th a th " to an in lo in •h af bo s h c bl h I bi lo ar 3~ • be an r th .. ' fo :;i in Its is. ei b v pa '" le d" l IV WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? Sy JU.f NIEMI.EC ... -Albacore L'Ontinue t.o produce plenty or acUon for anglers fr~m Oxnard to San Diego. The longfins have moved in c!O!er Lo ~hore as water conQitions improved during the week. Good bill's were reported from inside the 43 faUiom spot to lh~ 371 spot for party and t•harter boat.! fishing out of harbor ar~a marinas and !anding. Down San Diego way the I.lite is v.·ide open everywhere, wilh the. main concentration of boats heading on a 180 degree course from Point Lonu1 at a disl11nee of only 30 miles. Fishing aboard the sportlisher "little Richard·' this past week. this writer can report tha t it's a bonanza ytar. Ski pper Doug Hannan ran tJ1e 42 root charter boat from Newport Harbor to JUSl shorl of the 43 fathom spot. After a few short jig stops and a short run to the 371 spot, the bite was full on. The albacore charged the boat on almo:1t t very stop. not stay- ing around Jong, but loog enough for four anglers to sack up 4S Jongfins in only a few hou rs fishing. Fishermen aboard boats out of Davey·s Locker. Art's Land- ing and Dana \Vharf are averaging about two fish per rod on the :;hort runs out to the fishing grounds. Lots of fish are being Jost after they are hooked. in fa ct, Spike Taft. owner/skip pe r of the boat "Patrician" runnu1g out of Dana Wharf, said that in one stop his passengers were only able to land one fish out of 20 hrokups. Longfins are still 3veraging ltss than 15 pounds, but oc- casional lunkers to ;15 pounds are being caught. The: fish are biting heavy tine and anglers equipped wiUi the right tackle are hiwing no trouble in landing the longfins. Alhn<'ore l'ro•pecll IJp Jerr~ Thompson of Corona de! fl.1tir ha s bttn fishin g lhe arta JOO to 150 miles sout h of the i\1exican border and a call from him in dicated that we can tipect ever better fishing. ·, Tbompson hes bis sportfisber "Pacifi<' Clipper" outfitted for long stays at sea and says that catches of 300 to SOO fisb per boat are <'ommon in the waters off Colonett Point. The fis b are only :so· miles off the beach and thick. • These fish will be moving DP to Joln tbe 1cboollng flsb off odr <'oastllne soon, and "'hen that happens Wday'1 CODDts wW bt only drops in a big bucket. · Water south of the border is a,·eraglng about 12 -64 degree1, and from tbrse reports there is still a good chance of that inslda rll'n of albJes this season. ,~furli11 S igl1ted .JI n11ght seem a bit early, but already boats are reporting the "tell ·ta!e .. sign of marlin in the v.•aters off the coast. The spikebills have been spotted on the 43 fathom spot and the 295 a:pot. No hookups have been reported as the water is still a bit co ld fol".' tJ1e marlin to go on any sort of feeding spree. These early sightings of billflsh \Vill send some eager harbor area boats out ---' .. ' ... -~ . ' . ' in search of the ex.citing game fish. -----------------------------------. The 1~ater is dirty inside the 209 spot, but when it clear&, Its 70 degree \\'ater ternperature will be a good place to be if one is.looking for the first marlin of Uie season. Lnke Sce11e Good Fishing at all the Southland lakes has been highly productive c:lespile hot "'eather. Both bass and cat!ish bave taken over the duties of pro1·iding plenty of action a! the more pop~lar lakes. Va il Lake has been one of Uie hotspots for catJish tb nine pounds v"hile Lake \Vohlford. a short drive from Vail, has been giving up nice catches of tunker bass. . Vail Lake catfish are active in shallo"' water on cut bait and night cra .... ·ler~ \1•ilh Lhe fi.~h averaging betv.·een thrl'e .and five pounds. Bass are active on surface plugs and v;orms in shady pOrtions of the Jake, 11·hile bluegil and <'rappie are most every- where. \Vohlford's bass population is being th illed, a.:1 six bass over ei.ght pounds were caught this past week . The be~t enticer i~ a brt11vn worm fished along the south .shore. Ed Steiner of Spring Valley bagged a 12 pound, 2 oz. bronzeback to lead the fishing parade. Lake Henshaw i~ ronsislent for small bass and bullhead cat- fish. v.·hile the San l)iego Lakes remain rairly quiet with only a few good catches being reported. Alamitos LOI ALAMllOS 1.NTJllll.' ,.., Tiwr..io,. J11ly u . ,.,,_.,h 01v C!M r I 1'11!. 1'1,.1 l'°'I 1 4' "M St N!•hllv O.U~le "' h i A 1"' Jt1c11, SJ •••• , ......... "" .... " l'llllT l.4CI. -350 ~11d1 3 Vt or 0100 I uo. C!olmlno. l'u•Wo 1100G, Clolml(IG l>l'ICI l \llOO Wi lch Curl Go (LID"l ml Frl•~Y Kip (Vt ui0"' N;c~I Del Mtr ( •oo••I !idln ,111>0 (Wordl M,. Lo°'r (W•lc1'1 Gorn,. Jonn (Aliloon\ P1/let1 lhc Tim• !Sm rt.I C1plt1ll•I (l'i'llt Vl Mn!tr Coovct t IK1nl1! MDftf.V Mii! (l1n~1) AIM fll•l~ll Coun<"' w .. C1'1c I Smll• I p.,, O.c•. ILiD"•ml Chu C~u l ob lC••do"l Ti111>lno 1 ... 1P11nt •I ... "' /" " '" "' "' "' "' "' '" "' "' '" !l!COND llAC.I -tcO "''d•. J v11r Oldo "' uo . Cl11mlno. F'urH 11•00. Clolmlr.; orfc1 UXHl. S~ldo P1>ht (W1l1or1! E111 lndion (Or.-,1•> M•u De Sottd 1.llll'°"l ~<Oii M1cL11n (POO') 511•~1 G;,.,,md l(ordoo••! De Judo• (l1nk1I Entries Cl1lmlno Dt!Ce ilSOO l <ny H°" 4LlDhlml !II Colllornll SIT>O<I Um•lhl Ill Too Todd !Woh"") 111 R<>CllV llPl<:n Hortll, (l'oc:i•I 11• Geronimo M•~I>' 11•ern1r) 111 (horlworl l(lr<lo>I ! IU Sl <nr o Bonio !Adolr) 111 Lii 81bv 4Wll>Otl l 11' °""nlno Gun lHorll 111· '" "' "' :1!1 " '" "' '" "' "' "' '" "' Vikings Win LBCC Loop Hoop Title LON(~ BEACH -Marina High captured the Long Beach City College prl.'J' summer basketball league Wednesday night, ta.king the r1nale over i\l illik11n . 50-47. The win gives coach Jim Stephens' crew an unbt'aten record and puts the Vikes inlo the first round or the loop tourney against Long Beach Jordan Friday evening 18J. \Veo;lmins!er finishe<l second in the league after bt<ating --. . . ... • Off the Greens ICCC Players Nail Four Aces Re c ently-comp\eted CUil· &trucllon at Irvine Coesl County Club is seemingly already rl.'paying golfers In fa t dh'idends. Since tonstruction has been concluded on three front nine holes. a quartl't of aces have been rt>corded, two or. Uie new No. ~ hole . H oles·1n-0ne a1:compl1shed last "eek on the 144-yard fo urth 1o1·ere chalked up by Joe Ordv.·ay, \1·ith an 8·iron. ;ind Bill Black. v.•ho used a 7·irnn Two aces "'ere also shot on the 17th hole, meanv.·hile Bill Rewitzer u~cd a 2-irnn lo traverse the 195-yRrd hole from the back tee while r.1rs. Roy Hallberg sockrd in her ace from the 150 -y ard v.·omen's tee . Jtflle Sq11nrr The meinber·guest tourna- ment is slated for a :16·h(l[e run Saturday and Sl1ndriy. /lfendo1rln1·k A partners· best ball tourna- ment was held by the men's club last v.·eekend w i t h separate "'inners Saturday and Sunday. Saturday's victor y,·as the Les Harris·Hidge Bemis ron1- tm at 55 with J ohn St:1nko-Don Niehols trailing at 56. Dick Allen and ~-r a n k Becker !earned for 8 57 ;ind Sunda~•s half or !hr triu1nph ll'ith runncrsup C'huck .!oincr- Dana Wade shootin,ll 58. The 11·umen~ Cll1b he ld 11 mutt and jeff (only par live and par three holes played) tourney last 1veek with com- petition separated io1n three fl iRhts. Belly Briley t•aplured A fl ight "'ith a 351? while Jean Hight was (JS) taking B fli ,c:ht honors and Pa! Hr1nphill 1351 was winni ng C flight. 1'Jissiot1 l 'it•jo Hov.·ard Shelton shot a 153 01·er J6 holes to 11·1n the 10111 ,llross a"•ard, edgin~ (;rraltl Bork 11601 and Garvin Kelley {170) in that category. Low net honors "'rnt to Lar- ry Smith at 131 v.·h1le Leroy fie1hnan al 139 and Hon Jones al 148 follo.,.,·ed in order. The club's amateur cham- pionship is .:1cheduled .J uly 31 - Aug. I Big Ctlll!JBll Head professionRI D n n Mollica set a course record for pros when he shot a 67 last Y,'l"ek. J-/is reat which Wl.!I fired last month by assistant pro Gabe Loya. S ca11t11 A11u Thursday and Friday's at· tivily will tenter around the President's !·'light. 8 f1ve- through·eight handicap quali· fying !oomey for Saturday's Southern Ca!lfom1a C o I f Association t a rn a t e u r ) tourney in Long Beach Ru11 t'ho .~011 Junq11irt In a beat·the·pro tour11a- 1nent last week. head pro Bob Bailey ran into son1e rocky going as the 78 he shot V.'3S bf'ltered by seven distarr golfers. Con1pris ing !he gro11p 1vere Pnt L<1ckner at 73. Jean Cot- tnin at 74, Florence \\'illets at 75. F'ern Sproul and Pat Talnuige at 76 and Millle ~!evl'ns and ~lary Kay Llo~·d v.•ilh 77s. Vi rginia \\lright's 3ll'·1 1vas i;:ood enough to capture the A flight in last "'eek's .,,..omen's club mutt and jeff meet v.1ith Helen Hodges !37 1:1. r-.1arjorie '!'hatcher (34 l and Ka y Lcuihviler t39) laking top plaudits in B. C and D fhghls . Continuation of the ~econd hHlf of the two-n1an best ball touniey is slatrd Saturday, f ,fffJlfllR fle t11.•f1 (;r:it:ia Johnson (/\ f11gl1 ! 11t linl, ~1rs. Sam f\1ark s (B rtight at 62\ and Mrs. T kc \\'f'stm orelanrl (C flight tit 59J v.·rre winners in last week's IO\V net v.•omen's club tourney. El Niguel f\1r and Mrs. Laszlo Rakoczi captured the nHxed partners' best btill tournament lasl week. An ace 1o1·as rt'l'orded last w1·t·k by Mrs Eln11 Kober. 11·ho used :1 3·11·ood In lral'erse the 140-ya rd 17th hole. 1•les11 Ve1·de Ltist 11·t•ck. 1hc 11·on1en's <'lub held a nine bhnd holes· n1eet vdlh 1~inners crnerging in thref separa te <'lassifications. Mi·~. Holf Miller won class A. ~1rs. Kenneth Leasure took Class B nnd cl:iss C was cop- red b.v Mrs. Robert E"·ing. GOLFERS I Wllh L1w-H1nllk1p1, I 11r1c!i(O Al T~• I NEWPORTER INN I PAR 3 GOLF COURSE $1.00 With thll ad WHk dayl OAIL Y PILOT !$ Reds Whip Vikes, 4:1 In Baseball LONG BEACH -Kaufman and Broad Mnr1na 11bsorbed a 4-1 Police League be5eball &r l· back 'Vedne~day 01ght at the h;:inds of the Heds at Veteran3 Park. 1he Vikings or Marina were able tu ,1Jet in the ~coring column only Jn the sixth inning v.·hen Jack Dillon ~ingled home Steve Miller lo avert • :;hulout. 'r11·0 t.lanna playtrs hit safely tw1ee Y.'llh Tony Cresci. playing catcher. and Rod Brown holdin,I! the hot bats. ('resci. 1n addition 10 a pair of singles. tossed our a pair or runners frorn his backup post l!r norn1nlly operates at third b:ise ancl the pi!cher's mound. Br<lY.'n s safe ties were also singles. The loss dropped Kaufman and Broad's mark to 5-8 in lea,l!ue pla~·. 1<1u!m•n 11111 l rOld M1rln1 !1 1 De\\'•ld, rl 8'0"""· lb c~mP1>~11, 11> ''"~"' c M'11et, u S•·~. l~ O<llN1, II 8"cdetr~, r! £11•""'· p l0!1I~ .. ' ' . • • • ' • • ' . ' . " lftnl"'' ~ ·~· • • , . ' . , . ' . . ' ' ' • • • • ' ' . " . 0000010-111 )lQ)(Xli-410 CdM Star Replaced There seems little doubt (·oaeh Phil Brown or the ltcbcl<; has solved one problem prrtaining to the 12th annual North-So uth Orange County All·slar football garne Aug. ll at Orange Coast College. lle 'll not be .short on quarterbacks. Hi.s latest ad· dition to his South squad is Saddleback lrigh's Br I an ~1y racle, the seven!h gridder 1.1·ith quarterback experience. f\lyracle replaces Corona dr:I !ll;ir end Karl Killefer . \\'ho has decided to turn down the oHer to play in the showcase: g:11ne_ SUMMER FESTIVAL OF CADILLACS PLl:ASlf C41.L 14f.flM Trout fishing at most southland lov.·.Jand lakes is yery slow due to warm waler. Big Bear Lake is the only exception to the trout fishing, where anglers are posling nice catches of the bo.,.,'S 1veraging about a pound each. Tl\e C~url (Adl lrl l <>tl'• l or Er.cl CHtrt1 l•v Wor C"lc fllPht ml "' "' "' "' "' "' "' '" "' on Long Beach Poly, 54·50. andljiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiii~ \\•lll meet Long Beach \Vilson in a 7 o'clock game Fr iday. Alan1itos Results LOS r.L.l.M ITOS lllESUlTS Wt dt1t•01 ', July }I. 1'11 Cit I t I. '111 ,lllST ll•CIE -7 "''' olo ..,, "'"' Ctt lmlno Pu"• 11000 Poi~ o .... ~ 1•n1" l en"""' •I 11,..111ua1l /,\I•> 1!11 9,, oV•u•""' T 1.,,0 11 4 I '"'° II•" _ sa•on G••« PDP'I lrou bl• Ot•", C11'v °""· ><v Pftdnor. "''Ck OV 1(1!1• NO Jt'll<"•• Deep Sea Fish Report Pec1 n It• !C1r«1l•I •Ml T "T" -JI J/\0 .. ,"°Ill" -~IT<I lo c;.,, Go Ii,,.., ..... ~""ltt(I Bull, ll.~11 J•h,.,, PHorlm """ No 1<r1 •c1>t1 ,l,TH ll "Cll -•Oil Y&rO• i •10-ol<!I "'llowooc•• Put,. lilOO. r ... Ml-• r,.•;r:;, 110<;-01 (Adolf) 100 !.40 7.16 WI•<" Cte<!ll. cn1t IMtOon11a1• IO l JO K•no'1 R11!U• lAlll•e>n) •.to ~::•11~,,-~s1t:~ •.. 11i,on. V1> C1>1ro1. Tnil• Trl!llc, C1l11111, 0101 Srno<:rtlli<I. No 1cr11cnu. SIVl.NTH llACI! 11tJ V•td1. ~ VH • etci. I. u1>. Cl1lml"9. l'u"o 1)100, TIMI l!Kkm•n ln1lrumPn!1. Vo Qlor1> I rornor) ~ e l 60 1.IO t~d•I Roe.I"" ICt rdo11l 7.00 ~.20 ll\ll!ll:lo Sll(d.v lll)V \llln~I) I.* limo -·'' J/1 0. Aho Ron -Ml-•v 1....,, ""' Ouortr Hiii. 1'1N...,t lltv, (~Ill lor. Mon&'I I'" J•?irolcl'lo<I -TOii ll"•ol,, I.to llun, Mt A<ffauoro. l.IOHTH ll •CI -...,., Vi nti. ' yw r old• a. uo. Al-1.-C:H. """' P300 Nof Ann ILlpl>om 11.• 1 6C •.Cl l(lpl'l't M-(l"tr.,.rl J.IO S . .O IO:owt"" ((ordc1ol •.00 limo -:lG J/I~ ..,1.., Ron -C•P!•v•lcr. T1,1 •u•, II.,. (h•<1<1•• llor. Oou&l1 "''"'"'· No Hr f!Ch!'!I LEASE A 1971 CADILLAC "SUMMER SPECIALS" Coc:~v Kid 'Pt rnorl TNlllD llACI: -150 v .. 1:11. ! -1~n::l~1~11 ~~\l1~1~ lint Ftvot \C•rdo••I Sooct Nolt ,..,.,..,) TDP!'J (DOY \Adolf) LloM..,l"<I w nd fl•~~" OUCl#.'I Ool~t ! IO:onitf lt'I A MlflClt !WI'\"") ~~";·s~~~ 1~~.~~ml counl or H°'T1.!cl'rr,&1,], 1!1"' Tht I ll> lLlo~l"1) YnlOf'I _.Nolr f81n~1I T•ul• Jt! ((r.,.DVI Chico Oo Morgon litr1,..,J •• "' '" '" "' "' '" "' '" '" '" '" '" '" HEMPHILL'S SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE ••• Dean Bogdan ll'd ~1 2.rina v.1lh 19 <'ounters .,.,, h i le \\'~stm1nster's l\'.o. 1 scorer v.as Cr<:lrdon Blakl.'ley f 17 /. W11tmlnllor /~) ,, " ' . ' "'''''"hf"'I''' L1n11•f " ' ' • ' • " " " MEN'S SHOES 300 PAIR-SIZES TO 13 e Dltc•11tl•ll9ll lfy1-e ,,.. .. s1M. • •• FLORSHEIM VALUIS TO $Jt.'5 ~6.90 WINTHROP VALUES TO $22.00 $12.90 5<I FASHION ISLAND Newport C111t• ,., 644-4121 Opposlt1 lroodwey TREMENDOUS TIRE VALUE! 30,000 MILE GUARANTEE! 4 For " '"' .... ~ ....... .,. ,,,. ... .,,. ""' -'"'" .... _, "'" ,,.., .......... ~ w••t ....... ,, ............... •·"""' ............ ., .... ~ ........... ~···· Nu I•• " 10 "' <• .. ;d,. ... to• "''" ..,, ... VU-00 1•" ~ .. ~"'' """ 7,,,' •''"'~.,.,col''"""" ,,,., ... , ............ ~ ..... ,_,._.' •"'' ,, ....... '•' --'· ......... "'" ..-......... . •FREE •FREE >NY Sil( IN STOCK MOUNTING FRONT END ALIGNMENT ------· s159s; l -------Sln9lt Tire 9UAUTY TIRES 4 ~ '32°0 RETREAD R 8.88 2860 HARBOR BLVD.-COSTA MESA n Mon.-Sat, M e Sun. 9-5 .. ' > > ' ' • ' ' > ' ' ' .. ' ' • ' .. ' " 28 OAIL't PILOT SC Your Money OVER THE COUNTER Post-Korean Vet .......... ,.... ....... .., _.. ............... .., ' A.Jill. .._ .... .. ,.,__. ... -....... ,_.. .. _,....... -.. -- Has GI Benefits N!W '1'011111" {A~l A~UOI !" -Thit tou-1.,. !11l~NCll"" ii • Ml«lod By SYL''lA PORTER Ar-e )Oll the post Korean ll'lr \eieran awart> that under a new Jaw vou ma\ br t>llg1ble for fUIJ GI blll bencflu Pl LS a full i;a!arv Jf )OU g(l into tra.m1ng under a fl'der allv subs1d1"zed tr1un1n~ program nf the Manpolol'er Oevelopmrnt and Training Act~ Are \OU the rter 1n 11ho has been 1nehg1hle fnr lrn portant edut:a!lonal lx>nef1ts because 'ou h.:n e ser1 ed lrss than 11.10 }ear! of actl\e dut~ 8'A are \hat vo 1 n av now quahrv for substan!l al benefit~ tf vou 1.1ere on more than HID da}s of continuous ac!11e duty after Jan 3! 19~~ Are \OU thr \\ 1e!l and children of tntallv disabled war 1rtcra11s a\\are that vnu also qual ify for a full educa lion tra1n1ng al1ov..<1f1Cf' -lf \ ou tak e an appro1 t'!l ap pren t1cesh1p or on the-Joh train ng program" 1>11 -o<>0I S..:~ 11-1 ti ""'°' •1t "°"'11t l•n~ tl<W!G Offle•o A•V> ov .. ~•- of educauonal bentf1ts for :;~~ ·.~~. • .,..,,,. ··~ ~ \ t>lerttlS !S the IIlSll\U!JonaJ h~1;!"'~"° s"i:~•: ... z=.-S• b f I l h l fH S• JI~., A•CC. l ol cne it -permit Lng \OU O 11 E""' ~ 10 . 1•\oAr G•• ll at!rnd not onlv college but ~·d 1 8~, !!,. !:~&(~ .~ h""w Ii:>< ~ 4 S1 l•lto At at:>o an1 app ro\ t-d lugh school u v1 •k• n , u ,.,, P"'C \f)(<1l1onal school cor "•'",~:! .. ~ "·,:::~"';, rr~pondenls rourse bu siness F 1 ui;~1,1~~ is• ::~;-r ~ sihunl etc etc Jf \ou want to..., .. 1 Cp ,,. •1•••~m•l! \r!1'fans 1s the 1nst1tut1onal !it':..-' 11 1: 1:::i1~ M; T O"CE '" I ... TS • c ... ••II•. "'•I 11pph A " at u•e neares .t.VM co 10 1>o. ••, L•D \A Offce ,,,,. ntl i, I 1'~ M .t.cu•nn 1 1H B uos W ~ Tlll::RE ARE r.1ANY on !~;':" w l-. ~ : ~,n~ t!f' Jfh tn11ntng prograll)S 1n !~,~JI~~ ;...; : •l::,: .... HE11• ft<'lds rang1n~ from health to• • ..., 11. 1 a .... , •H \.l.:llt'r po!lut1on <'on Ir n 1 !:~"i-., l~,; .~ •1::ndk•,n Pprr ld and eniplo\t'rs n1ust: ~~.:'<Lb .! .r~):r~',..''! p i1 1ra1nees <it least half the : d,";;' LE~ i1 " J" ~~~~b B~ !;tl:JT) thev tire expec!cd lo • r~<ll 1 1 .. ]11uc•••• I ,o, t II•• t o ~·• llunntln l'arn on coinp et ng traming -• d EQvt •'• t 1•v" s"' PLL S j our GI benef11s :,~" c8~ 11': ·~'4 ~: .. "'i.'",. -A l ~"iO COVE RED bv the ! :~'-(;00 ~ ' ~~ ~!~:'...:', ( I b 1 I l correspoodence :E1 1t'';: 1~ ~ '!.~ ~:~··~1.~ cnurscs on thl' 1ob fa r rn •m E~" 1 1 1 e , c.o iw•( .t.m "" ,. .. JO~ .ooln A r Cf'l()J)f'rat11e programs a nd l .o.r;~ LS 1•"' io, .oo Toe A Am run• t>o .0 0 (1> fligh t tra11 1ng ppren\ltes ..,,,, i:; ..... u ~· ~ • s • 11 1 l h se r 1 1 ~ r-connecled NASO listings for Thurtday, July 29, 1971 F'ev.rr than one 1n lour \elerans is now takHlf,; ad \ antage of his \ a!uable edutl'l hon training benef11 s under the GI bill l'.h1ch wrnt into ef feet last Chri stmas e\e - even though the nlher side of lhe coin is that by the end of next year 1t s hkcly !hal 1 800 000 will be receJ\ 1ng benefits :ire ('\1g1hle for the same 1!mM-t~';~ ~' ~ C!.~ ~G' bC'ncf11s as !11 the ]Ob trainees 1!~.dw;11 1 . • C•~noh c Vo(' a t 1 o 11 a 1 rr! ab1htat on 1 .. """'' ' 1i"" 5i ,1§:"~"( PS tr11n1ng be! rfl!s for ve t!'rans <J 1~ab ht1es star1 al $135 a Mesa Fi· rm month 1f vou have nn Sad as 1h1s is 1t '~ f'ven more appalhng 1n the face or the fact lhat hundreds or thousands or r e t u r n 1 n g velerans ci:in l find Johs The f0Uow1nl{ points are vi tal -VOU CAN GO into these programs parl time as \\ell as full lime can co1nb1ne work wllh study may be able to gel extra stipends 1{ you ha \!e dependents may attend an ever e11:pand1ng variety of schools training 1nstruc1tons and training p ro g r a m s Moreover \our ba~1c l'duca l1onal benl'f1!~ have been up- ped 35 percent lol'J\h1n this past )ear -THE BEST KNOWN I\ pe PLEASE HEED THIS IMPORTANT NEW CAUTION by TERRY GRANT R Ph )num;q nrlH f'll n<'11 !a brl tha! is n;i11 11 ppt'i1rln >: on i; 1m<' 11f )O r prPSc1111t 1nn~ !1 i;!;il('S CAt fJ(1N f <'d<'r al !111.1 proh1b11s the !rans fl'r nf !hl~ d nJ~ 1n any p<>r 1'0M ntht'r than the patH•nt for v. horn it 11as prl'scnbed Thf'rP 1~ a .':Ood fl'i'ISon f(lr thJS caution T tda~ s tnt'd~ dependents in add1t1on to regular dtsah1l1ty com pensation and costs of ltl1llon books etc -ON TOP OF TIDS are ne1.1 progra1ns ranging from preparatory training prior 10 ser1 ce discharge to special t 1lorial assistance benefi ts to spec1:il co tJ n s e 1 I n g and remt>chal <:Prv1rrs for thf' low sk1lh•d disabled or disad \ antaged \ etcran ABOUT &O MEDICAL school s hospitals universities and other 1nsll tut1ons are of fer1ng specia l training to 1 eterans with previous ex perience 1n some health held for penods from 14 weeks to f1\ e years fhe US Office of F.ducat1on has launched in ad d1t1on a wor k study program fnr 1eterans fron1 low ncome fiim1l1es wl n v.;i nt tr<11n1ng for teachi ng 1obs 1n lov. income .;;chonls This tr 11n1ng pavs a 1.1 cPk ly stipend of S90 aloni.: v.1lh GI ('dutat1anal benefrls based QJl the number of hours of {fllll'ge v.ork !ht student s carr} ng 'fhe hst goes on and on but :\Ure!y niy p<nnt h;:is been made You must not ignort. or down i;:rade the full rangt. or benefits ;:ivailahll' Make sure vou have ex plored all the poss1b1!1t1r <t Check 1rnmed1ale!y al your nc:irest one stop ' Veter11n~ Assistance Center -of which there are now 71 located across the nat ion If yo1 .,.. 1110• vsl•9 A11lW•rl119 s.nlc• Yo11 ara 1ot tattlllt cdl of yo11r ••II• Tlll!l'HONI ANSWEllNG IUllUU 835-7777 c1nf'~ rar bf> 1rry SllC' fie for Jl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I a µa rt1rnlar 1l ln,.s~ 11 id rould PVPn hf h;;irmh I 1f rt\f'J' 1.1<'re 111);,.n Jor ~(rn1 lh1ne <'l~r Sam<' <) !11! !nm'< rin n I orr r1;~11r II m<';in !hi' ~an<' 111 nrcc llnh 11 I f.1 <i ar c:in d<'lrr n1n<' I t1<' • au~e <if fin 11111<><..• ;i lll 1 till R !"'re n ~ll il<J !/\kl' f r 11 '-:I' <'T rn rlArH.:• r 1 ! I'll !h nr !hilt f n1hrrs by A1.1arr•ni< mcd1 <>+nrs ~ nt nr. '01 n f>()('Tf'IR CA'\ Pl!O:'\f US \ h,.n 1nu fl Pl'tj A dl'h\PI') \\p l.\J[l dP 1 \rr 11romp1ly \lllh<'lllt "" !11t rhar>:P A ~1e:it rn1111 f't'nr\e rrll on l s fnr their hPalth """ds \\p ...,,.Jron1r rr111.1e~f!<. for l'lrl 1f'rV service and chetgP eccolJnl s PARK LIDO l'HA•MACY 151 Ho1ph 11I Ro11d Newport l•11ch •42 1510 'r•• Dallvary $15,000 INVESTMENT COMMERCIAL PROPERTY -LEASE 80°/o WRITE OFF-1971 Ad ::171 / \. ' "·~k·~· llHf • 11"111•1 f•1~ e~ ,1•~" ~•,.port c t~ttr --. BACK ' Uses New Computer Penney Sets Stock > Complete-New York Stock List -,, ' • ~ . . . ·~ ... ~ .. •• : L ~ ~-• • -" Thursday Jul7 27 1971 SC OA.il 'V PILOf ··-•• Thursday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List N•b 'to ? 10 ~•co Ch a& oco ic Ill' 01~u.Co .. NatA <1 10.. N l'.v a 1 J.1<1 N~ Ctn '" N Can ~I SO Nt Ct•~l 1 N4t C!'lem 'J.O N•CfVl 9~ f.lo 011 ro N 01I DI 4 !5 N• Fue 1 ~ Na Gan 70 ~= GJ'g,,.,! QS NI h>du• lalndc60 Nat!nd p l ~ NP t• l Jr... Nal'Svc!n ~~ ' .. s.t1nd 15 f.I• sf..,.-.:~ " Na Ste..i 2 50 Nol Te• ro Nt!UnE! 11d N• OMI & 2~ NN>lvn1 «'I N""'Pow 11-l N..wbe rV 1 ~~"'\fr 1 it Nov.no J:l Ntwrnnl I 0' NYHonR (Id NYSEG 10S ~YSE c&IO Na<J MP 0 N &Mc1' 4 0 N tMor J~O N 1 Mpf J 40 N I MP l "1 N aoSn ! 00<1 NL n<I 1 Norto!W \fl j l'lorl <\CD ~ No r111><11 NA Coo M NoA M .J•<1 Ne '-m P!'I I oAmR~ 70 NoAll:~ P •IS NoAR~cll; N~•• U! t• No Ct ..C• 60 ••or (•l'I Rv No GI$ l II No G•Dttl No ~PS l1 figNGa• 7 OIO "lo NG ~I d No NGol60 Nos aPw I~ N&Pw <>160 No110 • $1!• No ti QP No mp pf •l N ... IS N~81 cl <O '"""' nd N "' d wt NW nd p ... I NwnaPC5 Nwl In g!• JO NW II/\~ L! Nw!5 W??Q Ncr oo 1 SO Nof S "'on "lo 1 3 " 60 Nv r co ••• t ~'It ! "" ,, ) ~ .U l Ho ' . " . IS J' D " . " 1• W" • • ·~ • "' ' " " '" ' .. ,,. " " " ~ " • "0 " ,. " " '" • ~-• • r ~. • " ' ~ "' " " '" " " . ~- " • '" ' . I or<, 11 1"4 . "' 1>' ~l"< -S-• '" " ' • • ' " ' • ., " " ' • ' ' •• ' . '" 2l•• ' •• » ' ". " ' w " ' " ... '" . " " . " ,. " . ' " " . " . " JD }!)'• ' ' . . "" . ' . 0 •P• ~ SJ'lli "' • ' .. " " I • " " " '" ~ .. "' • "' ' ' '"' ~. • • , " ' . " ' ' " ' " .. "' " • " ~ "' • " •• • • " '" ' ~ 1 ' ~t. .~ " • ... " " " " "' " " .. ,,. " ~ •1h " '" !)\• " ,,, ,., " ' Jl • "'' ... ~. r.: lll\ " ~•Ht , ... " l\1.Y. Win11ers and Losers N!'N 'l'OllW.: IA'l -"111• Inflow "" la•C"-"1• ,,_. dieu O! YO ~'"' H11 •N Pfft t nl•_. c~-s .. 1a. 11ld tod.lr • ,,.., ,..1c.. ... ,, . . ' »' •• 1?'0-, " . " ' '"' ". ~ '"' • " ", l l .. + 10'> -.. -'" " . '"' + ' Show Decline NE\V 'I ORK fU PI) -A stock market de<'il ne accelerated in the last hou1 or tradin g Thu1 sday The Adnun1strat1on has said the eco11'J1ny 1s 011 an upward curve and that everylhmg is proceed 1ng on schedule but there is not suff1c1ent evidence or this to con vince t.D vestors said Robt. t B John son a general partner 01 Pai ne \Vebber Jackson & Curtis After being do1vn 2 62 at 2 p m lbc D0\\ Jones 1ndustr1al average \Vas off more than 5 points at 885 81 minutes before the final gong 'ZU'~· " .. + \'olt• p!\IO l hlOl<()I fO Thom8el I O<I Thom l >tl ...oo -... ThomJW 750 Th ft (K fl) f CO P I XI Tdtwi!M loO r m,1nc 1t0 TmeoMr loO Tmk•~ l lO T •h~ IY '9ll> 1Tood$h l:ICI 11lo R oE llO , Too R•ih '9 Toot Ro lOb 1oT•ne(o ll:I + T an•U!XI 1 -•1 T 1n•W JI, ~>\lnWl'.r •I -"Ir nwF n •11 + T &n&C1 Inv -o T&ve Jl\l ' " .. " '" .. " " " , " " ' ' ' ... ' » ~ " l•vt•P~ 1 I LO<I lll T iCon I »II T !COii ~!1 }() T an11 11<1 to T Cjl oan1 TRW lne • TRW $1 •'>Cl TRW p l <O T~<•nGf I Twtn Ct n r~, c~~ 0 • ' -UV-,.. " ' • • " • "" ' " • • ' » • ' " 61 H t 19 "'' $9 2 • 6 lt • . " ·~ ~. 0 .. :0 tjl-! 109 S'I• 5 10. ' ~. TO> ?] o JO HJ'! ' ... I l~o OJ }\o .. ' " ' .. 19 :!(} .. " . ' . ,. " n 19 , • • ", • n .. » • '" ... • " • " ~ '" " '" .. • 10 >Y o 1 'l'Uo 111'1 + ¥o ... " 101 01 -l JI ~ ,.,,, " " l • !l .. .. •• • .. •• • " . .. • ~· .. ....... 11111 CIMh) tlltll uw Ck1• '"' W•~n Go• '•WotnVn l w •• ~ "'"' W•llhl"fld ,. ..... .... •• IU,11 ln CltM (~ ' ' '•"''',',' O&-~\. •. t•·-: I t I ~ 'I • • Ila I 1 I 06 0 .lS o -t \o ' . ' . t7 ~ lt> it>:o -\olo o•t0 Jt 126 0 16 1, .... ~ t O .Ol't 'C, '°"'+-I II 10 • to :i. 1s .. '' l• _, •SJ.O"-"J~l•i l s 1, ' '° 11 • ll 1' J t~o •S 1 1S In •14 fl) 'IO o rloO M '>I '>I nn .n'1 ) 291 1'l< 1'1' + tSO '>J SO ~!. 'f!J o l?o ll1o -t l.o n f'o IS~ !Po '4!0 l ~ 10 SO];\ rJloO O t •l 61 u • ,,, ol 11 16 1 ?I l • 'J') • lt .._ JI JI JI~ 1' :u .. ll ., .. ,.~,. . 1111•.n n-,-\ I' 0 Oi -• I 1J o oj tl 1 9 , ~, P'o SO 19 ') )9 JO ll 0 • • •l M H"• l t ~ ?'h 1 JI J7 • l l , ....... .. 11 S?l7Slt 61? 'l • 7?1o 71 • 17}() 109 109 Oii ~ • 6 16\li ~ 0 11•. 71 ,,,, 30 9 • 9 \ • ' -I l :!O 10 ?O • s • • • Ul•l~O .. l 6' M ollV. - • ' •l o o-o o ~-·• 1•1 lM~ 1'4 l ' 1' • ltl!.o lll'i ~. 71 71;., 7llii l~ ~. l <o 6 I M lo 111 ., ~. ;i,,-1 Jl i l 11 ••• " Jl•o 3t. '7 ll O ' :Ill • Jll 3' • I. • lU "" <6 , '7•• .1 JI 1l 1,.,,, 71'1• -' T~ ""cc • ed P e>I t Complete Closing Prices -An1erican Stock Exchange List Thur!Sdly 1 <am1> ete JI l(tl -AB- ' 10 'lo 10 'o . .. . ll ~ ? 11 ~. ' 14 J • l • > 1 ~ • ? J • ] O l o 1J~o ' 19 I U I o o . . ' 0 ~1· ~ J u ' :IC! • ,~. J 10 o;,v ? ~ I ) n .,. 1 ... I , I > 2• • 2#0 . " 55 51 26 16 1 j I 0 O !• ~ I J 5 \. S'-' ~ 2i~: ~. It i~. 1h. . ' ' j 1J lJ~ l• .... ~ ... 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" lhe stock ma rket But the C'Gn1pany w 11. r n s add111ona ! bouts may come when a lot of bargains purchase<! 1n late 1970 fd~e above lhe month~ holding period become long term fGr ta x purposes ' + S ymbols St H r1t u f-t •rt ur>Offi(ll ! "' and Unl•u o!NI t1l•1 no td rt1~ "' cl • dt ndt In l'rlt f~I,,. t1bt1 i re """""' .... .... -1'.ho •"'1 • or extr•1 b--.llftv•I r1!• Ptv1 •lock div dtnd. c-L'-1d•t .,. 1 rv1o 11"'4 o-O«C• ed or •• d In 1'71 111,. tta<k • v "'""--P•la Loot ""' f-t '•le 111 •fock 11vrlnt 1911 tf!lrn1tto utto "' v• 011 ea"'(llvloelld t r -.i..tl•l• Dull•" d•l1. t-D« 1rt<1 or 111a .., f1 tl'llo Ytl• 1'1-Dt( I td Or I f 0 •IN'< ·~· "d v ttflCI or•• I u• t-Ot<-t...cl or"" t ! _ It !fl • Yt•r t n 1tcumv 1tlvt 1'1V4' w!ll! ) _ \' d vlftflcl• In '"""'" n N"" stuo -1. ) -\o '•Id lfllt "''' <lhildlnll Ol'l'llttH II,,. ,, -t t ltr HI Ill' l\O l(!l(lfl Ilk"' II 111 dlY~ 1,' -; .. mHll1111 r-0•1•~ or 0111 " 1''10 l'lv• :io _ V. 1lock Olv!cltM!. 1-ft•IO 111 •loct dutln1 110 + \o U10 .. u,,,.1~ e.011 "' v. on •x-dlvkl~ ~;''' = .,: OI' P>CI "r!llo,lliofl delt 11 f-St ltt In ,,, \~~~ (!-Ci t HI •-Ex di¥ d•llCI r-1:• ... , 11 -• <ltnd 11\11 u t" In lull tx'<llt-1!• ti 11r1o 10 --~ Dul 011. a r-'!l 1111" •w-Wllhoul _,. ~~1, = 1, r111t1 ww-WI!!• w1 r•n!t. ...,,_;ot....., di> °" t t\ Ir hultd "'1-Wl>I<\ 1....,.0.. 11(1.-N•iit .. '' \ M!lvtr)' ~ ~l : ~I-In DenkruotC"!' 9• t'ICI Vt r'lfli. • l'o ti<! n1 oo •1n ltd ul>dtr ,.,. l •l\ll.rv11lt 'I' l ~ l'.tl or JitCur •• ""'"''" by "'di ~ \lo H~ .-. 1!-fa lnh t i! t l-Cerllll(•l<tt.. 11-sr ... .,om l.-1>P11t " tt•I •-Mthi •ti borl•ll ~•""1 a~ Uy lmfll rll!(I Ill' "'t lUfllY • f'je~t ~141 Jltlb:-n'.,.~h ... ,,_. .. ~.,._,~1'i"''"' .... , ftllOtl ,.. - II DA.ll V PILOT TUMBLEWEEDS Tlnir~1. July 22 1971 "MILLIONS cr-TONS OF RQCK,OllEF. RECOVERING BOOIES IMPOS5tBLE.'• SEMO A. CREW TO BARRIODE" "NE AR~A -V'Ert'I OA.NCiEA.OUS . ly Chester Gould By Tom K. Ryan APIOS, 17B'U1Y! 1M Sfl.lfnN' i\llS UR~AN SCENE! I GO FORTH 10 DRINK DEEPO'TH~ HEAC'Y VRALJG\(f OF ll~B\IY PJ( SOlllUPE! TVE\OOR GRfAI GtJlf'S O'RARIFIEP OlOOE!ID FEAST 1 MY~ UPON 111E PRISTINE VISTAS rJ NAME. WHER!'~ THE WEW HEAPED FOR? IF ANYONE ASKS, TELL 'EM rvE GONE 10 SHAN6ftl·LA ! SOME' CHINESE REST'RANT .. . . . . .. • .. . . • • . ' . ' ' ' I/ FIGMENTS 80r'.._i00~ SONIAAN IS iuAUY 60'INA PEEL ms TIME. ! PLAIN JANE MUTTS BEEN PRACTICING ALLWE~K WITH HlS lWOTtN PLATES EEEARGHHJ ' . .i;._· oA-,L-v ~cR,,--:-os=s......,wo=R...-D .-.• -.• , .-.• ,-POW...,,. I ; ; ACROSS 48 lnj llfy Yesterdays Puzzle Solved. ·f 500cta 11 w~\e1 s o . fl --!le ~01~ba! tOI Oi'~d by · , ~ Lla11•~>' plant-l!ke : ildtH\d\ A11 rJ.11'!-. !lO M111e1al \'/l!'I 2 WO/()$ : : <1 $O(t ~= Ev15ttr.1(r~ ; ~oapy l!~l u1 r S4 E•po>es \o • [14 lr1d,9o so1iott n101sli1r r ·?'.ilenoroi '5 M oi e no11o~rlul ~ ~oiva 110 5'J Ari ofltr.al ';l~ Co11s 1st111~ n1r~$W •"g : cl :;peet11 ~J 11111r e•1i'·'"t r : 17 R~lll"I \O • h~~lth : 1 q Pan1'1rr ' : 20 Q111ver inn r,iOYt mtni _; 21 Ga lla11i malt : • : 2 words : 23 Promote ; 2~ 602 : Romin ~ numera ls ~ 26 Otllc~te ~JO ls!arid o! , Grttct ; 34 Swa p . : 3~ C1ow li kt bird : 37 Roof td9e ·: 38 Trot19h ft:t carrYl l'll • brit k~ '. ! 39 C.ity o( ~; Gtr ~any : ~ 42 Mrtal ; 43 A.1 ... 1ys ~ 4S Not J\tW : ; 46 lmprovt ),j-.,-..-..-1 1 2 l 4 ji 1-,-+-1-+- 17 " .. • b4 V~111y1t ~ ii& P~11 67 A11(11 or [ 1esl T110P1rsori 6S Ho11q -·--·· b'1 01~ssrd 70 Golf111g hat3rds 71 C1 ~1tcd· tit• oo :.t1 I I.lair dtN 2 E~traord 1r1arv p~rson: Sl a11o;i ) Staplr 1ood ~ f'."fll in a 11,ap S Rrh,c1~nl ~ NtQa1i~r con ~l~\1yr 7 Graduatrd disk g 0111,.,.~,d il.•1at r; Krnd ol cook1' ' • 1 " 19 . ' " ' ' "" " 7 22,71 10 Por1 100 ol 41 f(cl1a119t A «lllO 9oss1p 11 lo~IHIS Of 44 Corrccttd ril an'.s 4 7 [rror 12 Monk of l1lJt l ~9 Away hon1 11 Grol'll o( 1115idt lo<n lllt s 51 Devils 18 '~ade a li~11ld SJ Pl1t flow ~SlllHler i2 C,111\CSt )) (,1 MW !Jy1\i1Sly rtflist 24 Rabh it~· 5t. Ob1ect or rt!J\IVt~ wcrsli11) 2b M1~s l'i~!t1 S 57 R1vtf of 17 Tr e J~11rt ···-A.i1 zon~ 2t Ht ll ~s Pio··-··· 29 Fa1 hir t t.0 "11 we1~l1s 31 AJ)pra1srd .... ·-··'": Jl Dts 19nal in~ 2 ... 01ds sllteP bl f ello"': 3) O ispatch~s 111rormdl 3b More Pt<:ullar h2 Adva11ta9~ 40 Most stunttd b5 G111~er iJl 9row\h ~le, c.9. I • 12 \) " " ,,,.. JO J1 l1 ll )6 JI ' •I " " 60 61 61 .. " By Dale Hale By Frank Baginski 7-;:z. ( GoLF WIDOW!) PEANUTS !. ' ' '' r l(OU SHOULD~lT CRITICI ZE 11-IE WSATHER, SIR .,,IT'5 ALL PART l)f THE WORLD WE Lll'E IN .• JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH r:'::::::f-'j;'.;5KINNY LESTER .JUST BOUGl-<T A NEW PAIR OF DUNGAREES! : PERKINS • -., A•E TI-IEY EIELL- ~TTOVIS, LESTER? J ll'L AIN9 !iALL Y BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS ..,._ ~ ~ i~-=- '--~--=··.:··-:...· ---1 ... :I THINK 50 ... By Charles M. Schulz By Harold le Doux I 'M T-'IONG VOii !A(.I( TO VOUR MOTEL~ -'ND PON'r LE.II.VE VOllR RCXli\A UNTIL '!'OU HE.A.R F~OM ME 1M NE MOIZMIN6! By MeU MUST Be. W~N '!OU HAVli' Si<INNY ANKLES, EVlill:YTMfolGIS !IELL-&OTT~ED. ly John Miies By Al Capp SO, NA.TCHEA.L'Y, rrt.L PGl'-ITTO HUMDf"M HIGHW~- ly Charles 11C1rsotti By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson I p--j l WISH l I 1..---J COULC> SP.Y 1 , IH E: SP,M E ~ [;;/ A80UT ~·~ NICKELS'· /~~ ~=;;;~ 1i. 1-L.-,__.- ---~[foe·-, ·] ---c:--"'= -,/ ' -' "' By Roger BoUen I 111WK rrts SO l'lrEClOllS 1l-le w~u ~ SAU BO&, Bll?D Ai$:> A.cWER • "' • ---- By Phil lnt,erlandi "They're beginning to make sense wilb street names, I see." DENNIS THE MENACE '~Es A Pll£11Y &XJO<JX)I(, Wf SlES -.GOl-11/S~CNlllOIS.'- • OAIL Y f'ILOT ltaff f'M .. PORTS 0' CALL RESTAURANT, OTHER PROJECTS TAKE SHAPE AT DANA HARBOR Cement Finishers Work on Miles of Si d•walka TPt1t Wiii Surround Boat Baain Dana Harbor Busy Place Landscaping of Facility Next Project on Agenda By JOHN \'ALTERZA or •~• a1111 f'll•I s1111 r..1iles of concrete walkways and metal handrails continued to grow around the waterways of Dana Harbor this week as construction al the facility continues at full tilt. Besides the major concrete v.·ork, carpenters are busy with rough framing and other work on the mot.el and restaurant portions of the harbor. 4-1 \lote County Director of Harbors. Beaches and Parks Kenneth Sampson said that as soon as the concrete work is finished, contracts v.·ill be let for the major landscaping throughout the developed portions of the maritime complex. Completion of the major motel and Ports O' Call restaurant is e:t~ted 111 the fall. he said. ··By Chrisunas, oo one "'tU recogniz.e Supervisors Approve Sign Restricting District Law The controversial ordinance t o establish sign re!ltricting districts along 185 miles of coun ty freeways and higti"·ays and designate them as scenic corridors was approved 4-1 by the Orange County Board of Supervisors Wednesday. But thty followed immediately wilh an order to the c.wnly Planning Commission to illudy the ne\v law \\'i!h respect to possible changes in width or the scenic corridors, possible exclusioa of industrial and commerci al areas, 11nd an 11balemefll period for large business building signs as is provided for billboards. The Jaw as passed cel!s for a restricted Acenic corridor area one mile on either side of the freeways or highways. Supervisor Ralph Cl ark \\'ho pushed through the study motion. favors one-half mi le on each side. Including the unincorporated portions of the Pacific Coast Highway, San Diego F'ree"·a~·. Riverside Fretv.·ay. El Toro Road . Santiago Canyon Road . Ortega llighway, Laguna Fr~v.·ay and Ne.,..'J>Orl Freeway. Supervisor David Baker opposed lbe ordinance. "Not because I em againsl the principle but because jl unnece"5arily restricts industrial and i.:ommcrcia l areas.·· Caspers countered that industrial areas "can be beautiful like the Irvine Industrial Complex along the San Diego Freeway.'' Under the la.,..•'s provisions billbouds in restricted areas are to be phased out over a three-year period and all new business buildinl! siitns are restricted In size. the place," he predicted. Sampson said that dramatic addilions to the landscaping will be the large, sea.- carved boulde.r1 which recently were removed from some channeh1 in the harbor. The boulders -mC>Stly m a r i n e sandstone etched by v.•avt action, n1easure up lo 15 fttt across and v.·ill bt placed in planted areas throughout lht harbor. Construction is continuing in t.M harbor's east basin where: hundrtds mort boat slips will be completed by this fall. The number of vessels continues to grow, district officials said, with only 11 few months' wait required for new yachtsmen. Elsev.·here in the harbor. finishing touches are going in at the dry-boat storage area where dozens of vessels already are parked. New docks also have bet.n built at the launching ramp, and a sailboat rental concession is in ope.ration nearby. Samp50n sa id his office is still awaiting ,~·ord on another colorful proposal for the multimillion-dollar maritime facility- nev.·s on the fe asibility of anchoring • large. historic l.radi"8 schooner a~ a tourist allcact.ion. "We haven't heard anything new on it yet.'' he said. Tht proposal. made to ~ o u n l y i;u pervi!io" sever1J week1 a go by a Garden Grove min, call for refurbishing the t.,..·o masted Baltic trading vessel and converting it into a flo ating tavern and maritime attraction. The boat rema.ins in DtMlark where the refurbishing would take place. After the work, the sehooner wouJd be sailed across the AUantic and eventually to Dana Point. Only areas excluded on the appro\'ed Jaw are planned community zones \\'here sign la\\'S are already in force. like El Toro and f\.i ission Viejo. Supervisor Ronald <..:aspers. in \\'hoSf' districl mosl of the restricted area is located, enthusiastically supported the measure showing the board a movie film he took iJlustrating sign blight in South Laguna. on lhr San 01rJ:n F'rre~·ay frnm S;inta An;i to El Toro and in the Dana Pninl area. Laguna's Lady Bartender Takes Over Male Tasks Supporting the nev• law v.·rre the r apistrano Bay chambers of commerce, the Orange County Lt'aguc of \\'omen \'o!ers an1I !hr Orani;:r ('n:i~t Association. ftepresenliltl\f'S of billboard and eltc- trieal sign companrcs \'1gnrnusl~' opposed the change. a~kin,g for a longer study and Improvement. oot a total han. l\ine scenic corrirtors are designaWd I . Bv PATRICK BOYLE -01 1~1 DlllY ,.!191 U•U The pretty bninette behind the bar 1nay not heav e 100 n1any inebriated p.i· t rnn.~ through !he swinging front door, but Laguna Beach's flrst !ady bartender thinks ~he can match her male cou11ter- parts at any other task. OAILY f'l~OT Sl•ll f'~tlt LAGUNA'S FIRST LADY BARTENDER POURS ONE Sus•n Klum •f Wor'k flt Orplianage Rrstaurant "I can do that." Susan K!um !l('O]ded a male employe Wedntsday at the Or- phanage Restaurant wtien the young man attempled lo pour a tub of ict into the freezer _ "lloorav for our side." shouted a coc k- tail waitie5.~ standing near by 1~ th!! petite bartender hei'ted !ht large tub and poured 1he ice over the beer bottle!!'. The 26-ytar-0ld woma111 worked her first shlfl Wedn"°ay making drink11 and i;queeiing Jemom: -barroom tasks tra- ditionally re!lerved for men . .. So far it has been a lot of fun ." Susan ~aid. "lt is better than cocktailing, be - cause there is not as much walking." Susan ha!f had prior experie.nce and training tending bar v.•hen she v.·orked 111 a hotel In Hawaii. However. she. is among the first women to enter the profession in California. Unt il a recent state Su- preme Coo rt decision. wome11 could not hold po!!.itions ai; bartenders. The court ruled rarly this year th at such a law was unconstitutional as it was di scrimin11tory against members of the fairer sex . Jn addition to tending bar. Susan has held a va riety of other job&. The former frarden Gro\•e resident has been 1 sec- retary, a clf!rk, a model. worked in a lumber yard and dealt blackjack in a Nevada casino. "My parenl<111 weren't very impressert when r told them about my new job." she notrd ai: she twisted a lemon into a drink. "Of eourse. they ~·t im- pressed when l went to work ln the lum- ber yard M the ca:Qno, eltht"." She uid in her former jobs bartend- Ing, she has had i:come comola!~ from men not wantin& !heir drinks mi1ed by a Y.1'man "f ju!Jt smile at them and P"' 111'-m what thev want." iht noted. "If thtv persist. I tell them they can go drink !OTTltPlace else." OrphanaRe trtmtT' &ill Von Sultzer says he iJ oot necewrilv tryinq to strike 1 blow for women's-li~ation by hiring Su•lll"I to .,.,.ork the bar. "We are lust 1111•in11I rll~imiriaflon fw reason<111 of sex:· Von Sultur nplai"!J The cocktail w:aitres•~ wnrldnp at !hr Orphan;i!!t are pleast-i with !ht ide1 nr lun•inr Susan bth!nd the bar instead of 11 m:in "Thf.y ..-ould probably likt to do It too," S11s.11n not~ "J can't think of any. nnfl "''ho "·ouldn't" .. , .. • -'' .... ~-.~;-.,,.,,;--::::=.___..,.' rfl ', )''l'll"°- _.. __ .. --------- s 2 New Park Public Beach Bill ~equests Get SCAG Okay State Unit Backs Two requests ror federa1 fundin& (or parks in Southern Oranie County have cleared the Southern Ca 11 f o r n i a As1ociatlon of Governments. They are the Laguna "tiguel Re1ional Park and El Toro Community Park. Coast Access Bid SCAG , wtVch acts as a first-stage clear- inghouse !nr federal assistance. •!> pllcatlons, has given its blessing to a ..,25,000 request from Orange County to the Department of Interior for the Laguna Niguel facility. It la located betwttn La Paz Road and Alicia Parkway. south of Allso Creek Road. Tenlltive development plans include con1trucllon of parking areas, roadways and traU1, lighting and rtslroom. Total expenditure is estimated at $650,000. SCAG also endcrsed an $86 ,250 request from I.ht county for development of the El Toro facillty. The park would be located north of lhe San Dief1o Freeway east of El Toro Road. It will mvolvt grading and drainage of about 1~ acres, provision of water, lightlni and con1tructlon of a restroom. There is also to be a tol lot with a shade structure. picnic areas. playflelds. a baseball diamond and an observation point. It will emphasi~ preservation of the natural area along Aliso Creek. including existing sycamore lrtts and creek bed , with foot trails and walkways throughout, according to K e n n e t h Sampi;on. c<iunty directors of harbors, beaches and park5. SACRAMEN'l'Q (UPI) -A 1750.000 bill to finance a proposed cornmiulon'a effort to acquire ocean beaches for the public has been endoned by lhe AMtmbly Ways Fiery Dream A Nightmare BIRr-.fTNGHAr-.1. England CUP!) -John Ruddy, 33. dreamed his house was on fire and acted prompt- ly, climbh1g out a window and on to the roof. But he acted so fast he forgot to put any clothes on and 1ot a rude awakening when he found himself naked on the roof and unable to get dov.·n. A neighbor, heard him crashing through the bedroom wtndow and called poll~. They arrived and gave Ruddy 11 pair of trousers, which he !!lipped on backwardA. Then firemen came and lowered the con fused sleepv.·alker to the ground in a 1afety harness. "It was all a nightmare." Ruddy said. "It certainly was a vivid dream." and Means ComnUUee over Reqc ad- ministration objeeUons. The measure by Asumbly Speaker 8ob r-.1oretU ( D-Van Nuys), v.·as approved 'Vednesday. The blll originally a.po propriated $5 milllon for the commiu!on acqui.5ltion but ~foretti quietly cut the sum to 17511,000 with amendmenls without explanation, The funds \lo'ould be turned O"Ytr to the six-member "coastal conaervat.ion oom· mission," whieh would determine. how &J1d v.tiue to spend them. The commiASion. appointed jointly by the governor and legi.slature, would bli established by a separate bUI by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty ( D. Lo a Angeles). Roy Bell , assistant dlre<:tor of the state finance department, and an offieial ad· ministration spokesman. protested t.n. bill would give the commWion "carla blanche" authority to rpend without pro- posed acquisitions fir1t being screened by the. legislature and administraUon. "They should be given review in dl8 ordinary budget proc~s," he sald. "It ii rather unusual th& you give a sum of money to some out.side out/It to spend in any way they want." The purchase ol beach land would be financtd by reducing the 27~ "percel\t depletion allow111ce oil companies now: receive on their gross lncome to their ac-. tual COit of drllllng a well. Sflparat. tu bills to accompli!h this allo art pe.ndlnf. Hodson pORl BOULEVARD• COSTA MESA • -\r,\0 NE.W 548.9311 •• b. c. d. •• WITHIT! LIGHTING BY l.l(;l·ITC>l.11~11 ''W•t'',look loc~uer finish spices room with mid-o ir color fo r bright- hearted living. Avoiloble in Snow White, Orange Orange, Cu rious Yellow. 12" w;dth. $25.95 Sim py scintieting. Generous q ift of light plus pierced c.one to creo te lightploy. For the young, fun ond budget minded. Avoiloble in Snow Wh:te, Orange Orang e, Curious Yellow. 14'' width. $19.95 Industrial rs fl ector reborn -for the 'now' crowd in sos!y, heppy colors. 'Snow Wh ite. Orang e Orange, Cur ious Yellow. Plush Pink, Grass Green. I Slfi" w;dth. $15.95 A c.olorfu l translucent dome crowns o clessic opal gloss globe. $16.95 Reel cone tiffany's for th e heiqh t of elegence ond style in decorating. $21.95 b. -- . .. ~. -----:.•r'., "'.tr.-• •t ... ~ • -' • l • • ' : • • . I ---· \ \ t>AI LV PILOT •• I ~ps Court Rulings Boggle Minds By TH0~1AS ,_1 URPHrNE: COU RTIIOUSE BEAT : ThosP of u!I who are just ordinary folks certainly can get confused from lime to time by decisions handed down in the courts of our land. Sometimes the confusion leads to frustrations and lhi!! frustralfons bring on z..iger. We've had a couple of court decisions fairly recently right here along the Orange Coast thal have left many of the mine run of citizens violently shaking their heads in an effort to di spel the cobwebs. THE FIRST ruling. for example, was in ~ late, great Newport Beach anti- freeway election. In this one, a group of citizens known as the F'reew..,y Fighters launched a petition campaign to p!acl!! the question or future fr eeways through the city before the Ni!!wporl voters. Most peo· pie had a pretty good notion of how that v.·ould tum out in Ne":port if it ever got on the. ba!lol. As election-lime neared, another group of Ne wport folb. headed by former vice mayor Haru J. Lorenz. went into Superior Court and asked that the el~· tioo be ruled illegal. · Their argument v.•e.s that the signing of freeway contracts and freeway negotia· tions was properly a function between the elected City Council and thi!! state govern- ment. It shouldn 't, they argued, be decid· ed by votes of the people. IN THE END, the judge said in effect, ''\VeU, lh l!! questions before the voters ma.v or may not be legal but the time to decide that is after the i!!lection. The peo- ple .~hould have the right to vote on it * . Now ifs a few inonths latrr and 1n Laguna Beach and a group kno"'Jl a_s Village Lagu na .<;tarted circulating pell· lions aimed at calling an election lo put a ceiling on the heigh! of buildings in the Art Colony. Dul.v, more than eno~gh i;ignatures "'ere galhered and the election .. ·as calli!!d. NEX T, LAG Ul\;A real estateman Vern Taschner filed an action in Superior Court aimed at blocking the election. He argued th at cnntrn! of height of buildin_gs is properly a function of the elected C1t.v Council and the ~t<ile government through building and zoninR code~. This 5houldn't. he Argued, be decided by voles of the peo ple. Ah. you say. !he argument ~ound.~ familiar, just like the effort to block that Newport freeway election "I KNOW HO,\' this onr's ~oing lo t'ome out." you tell yourself sn1ugly But lo. this time the judge I a different fellow than in the Ne"-port case I steps out of his chambers ;>.rid rules that the Laguna election 1s illegal. Somehow. \OU see. as nne nf 1he la\men in thC street. the legalistic rl1f· fei-en ces bet"·een thr :'\r"·port ;incl Laguna cases ;irr suhl lf' nuancr.5 that havp escaped ~our ordinary mind Either that. or !here arr subtle d1f· lerences in Judges A'.\"Y"'A\'. f'f-~\\" \r~;il paper~ ue llut- 1cring 10\0 the rour!.~ in thr Laguna r~.~r and al this 11r111ng it 11·ould appear that the Art Cnlony ·s hi.c;h r1sr l}O n111y comi;> off after all. La1~·yers , it 11111.~1 i)t ro11C"l'd<·d . lr.v h:-ird not to let thesr things OOg~le lhe1r minds Frustrated al Pnr level, !hr~· iust pllld on up with more papers tn a high cow·t Looking for A jurlge "'ho understands their subtle differences Paris Reds Snub Nixon China Trip PARIS !U PI ) -The Vietnamese Com· munists publicly Ignored President Nix· 01J"s plans to .,.isit PPking at today's session of the Pari~ peace talks and prl ... atelv indicated the v1s1t would not soften their conditions for pe.ac~ in \'iet· nam. They again demanded an Unl·ond1tional U.S. military v.·ithdrawal frorn Vietnam. Jn private. diplomats 11f both No rth Viet· nam and the South Vietnamese National Liberation front (the polillcal arm of the Viet Cong) asserted they ha.,.e Peking "s full backing for their Cflndit1ons. They indirated there will be nn con- cession on their part to sn)()(llh Nixon's path to Peking. They reiterated !heir 1wo basic demands· tolal US. military "'ithdrawal frnm Vietnam anrl lhr removal of South Vietnan1ese President Nguyen Van Thieu from office. Both Hanoi·s ministrr or stale, Xuan Thu.v, "'ho appeared to be in a more jovial mood tha n in recent weeks, and the Viel Cong "s foreign 1ninister, Madame Ngu_ven Thi Binh, bru;;hed aside without mention a renewed pie.a by American chief negotiator David K. E. Bruce and Saigon·!'! Pham Dang Lam to discuss im· mediately a cease-fire in Vietnam. Laos and Cambodia. '·Jt is clear that H the America" government continues its policy of Viet- namization or lhe war iL will merely sink int.p an even deeper impasse," Madame Binh said. In her five-page statement. P.iadamf! Binh. carefully refrained from naming anyone else in thi!! South Vietnamese cabinet as undesirable and challenged the American negotiator again and again to slate v.'hether Wa shington will makl!! Thieu 's presence al the head of the Saigon administration a major issue. Bruce last week warned the Com· munisls lhey would be harboring "illusions" if they thought Washington wo1,1ld drop Thieu. Bruce told Mad ame Nguyen 111i Binh, the Viet Cong foreign minis ter and nominal author of the latest Communist peace plan . '"the proposals ~·ou 1nade so far do not envisage an ea rly end lo all the fighting. On the contrar.v. they indict1te that you apparently 111Lend !n continue the \rar until you ach1el'e al! your political objectives.'' Bruce also reiterated that the seven· point Viet Cong plan. placed before 1he Vietnam peace conferenC1" July l. made no mention of a.ny cease.fire in Laos and Cambodia. He urged Ma.dame Rinh and l'\c1rlh \'ielnam ·~ minisler of st;:itr. Xuan Thu.v . lo "take a fresh look a~ the ad.,.antage!'i of an ea rly and complete c e a s e-f 1 r" demanded by Lhe a1!1e~. '"lt would put an end to the killing in all the areas where the conflict now rages, and 1 believe. il could not fail lo affect fa vorably our deliberations here " Hanoi·S Xuan Thuv said the V1Pt· nan1esc conflict will bf settled peacefully only 1f President r-.·ixon ~ets a deadline for a cnmple!r U.S mil11arv w\thdra"•al and slops suppnr11ng South Vielnam·!'l President N~u~•en Van Thieu Wicks /. / 'Top auto execu tives predict 10 million cars will be sold in 1971 .. .' l --- Australia Beatity ~f iss Australia. Toni Suzanne Ray\\'ard, d isplays tv.'o handsome outfits she made herself during the pre- liminaries of the Miss Universe pageant in Miami Beach . She makes almost all of her own clothes. The new Miss Universe will be crov.·ned Saturday. Jew Relates War Horror Says Russ, Not Nazis, Sleiv 12,000 Pole Officers TEL AVI V IUPIJ -An Israeli citizen savs it was the Russians and nol the N3zis -as the Russians claim -1vho massacred 12.000 Polish army officers during World War II In the Kalyn Forest near the Soviet city of Smolensk. German so ldiers uncovered a mass grave in 1943 containing the bodies and said Soviet troops kllled the Poles hy shooting each one in the back of the head The Russians accused the Nazis of an11ther "·ar erim{'. The U.S. Congress inl"esligated the in· cident and in !952 issurd a rrpnrt wh1c·h :-aid Russi an troops had killed the of· firers, probably .as part nf ;i move to eliminate leaders of a potential anti-com· munist leadef"ship in postwar Poland. Wednesday, Israeli citizen Avraham Wydra. 64, -said the Russians were responsible for the massacre. A Polish Jew by birth, he said he spent several years in Soviet labor camps during the war. \Vydra told the lsrarli newspaper r.fa"ariv that Lhree Soviet Jewish office.rs v.•ho either participated in or witnessed lhr killings told him of !hr massacre. He ~aicl he "'a~ s"•nro to secrer~· 111 the lime but wanted to tell the story now before he dierl . \\'ydra saicl at the start nf the war he Italian Train Crashes • ,i\.lps 111 was interned in the Starnhyelsky Labor Camp near where !hf' killin,c;s occurred and v.·as told of the incident by a Maior Sorokin who saw the Poles slain. Wvdrll sairl. '"the m:iJnr got mr a\nne a.nd -poured ou1 his heart. He said 'the world v.·il l never belle1•r "'hat my eyes beheld The Poles have al! been sho!.'" '"It seerned as if he was going through ii rit of enn vul sions as he 1:ilkcd ... \Vydra said . ··J!e could nnt rel:iin his v.·ords ." 1\t a second l::ihor camp t""'fl years l.<itcr two n1her nffircrs Sll!rt they harl l<1krn parl in thr killings. Wydra said. HP sai<I t he~· confided in him bccau5e he was a Jev.• He s;11d the officers were sent lo the eamp because the authorities said thry were nlad but "it turned ou t the two suf- rcred from fra yed ne rves. One t1sed lo 1:ry a lot ." Wydr;i said. He said one of !.he officers identified as !st Lt. Alexander Sus lov told him. "l wan t to tell you the story of my life. T1chnnov (the second officer! <ind I are the 1wo most unfortunale people in !he "'hole world. I killed 1he 'Pnlacks' with rnv own hand.• I shot lhrm. '"There were some Russian s11ld1crs who <'ouldn"t stand il -they thrP\\' themselves into the pit and comn1ittt"d suicide."' Apollonauts Brush Up On Critical Activities CArE KENNl::DY I UPI 1 \V i!h 1<-iunrh Just four clays a"·a.v , the Apollo 1:'.>' as tron;iuls wind up nlore !han two SPars of grueling tra1n1ng !Oday by brushing up nn proccdurrs fnr 11·alki11g {ll1 the n1onn ;ind "'alking in space 48.000 miles abllve it The three surfate ex(·ur!'ions bv D11vtd R Scoll and Jan1es 8. !flvin B.nd the unusual working space'>l·alk by Alfred 1\1. \\"orden arc expected to tell man as much about the rnoon as the first three Apollo landinJ.l"S put together. nrxt thrce days is their ll"'n. Srott and lrv.•in ilre scheduled In d('~· f'rnrl Ol'er 1hr 12.()(10 tn 1.1.()()0 fonL tall Apennine i\1ounta1n~ and land a h<1lf mlle wcst Qf a drcp c;i.n_vnn .Jul .I' '.lfl, \l'hile \Vnrd('n ren1ains 1n lunar orb1l 1n the enmn1and shi p 1-;ndral'nur The two surfat"e exp\nrer.~ pl;in to Spt>nd ;i Lo1al 11f 20 hours 1n1·estigat1nc: 22 niiles of intriguing lun<ir terrain They rlrvotrd much of tnda.\'s traininJ? to a re\ iew of the steps !hey will take 1n prep;:iring for the excursions and lhf' work they will dn when they return to the Lunar module falcon 21 S. Viet Troops ,Die On Copter SAIGON /AP ) -a 10,000.man South Vier.namese for ce searching for North Vietnamese base ca mp11 in ea'l!ltern Cam· bodia made it.s first significant cont.ac t with the enemy today. Meanwhile. the .U.S. Command an- nounced U.S. helicopter packed with South Vietnamese rangers developed meehanical failurl!! and crashed in rla meJ Wednesday 100 yards from its desllna· lion, Fire Base ~1ary Ann, a former U.S. base SO miles south"·esl of Da Nang. The command said 21 South Viel- namese troops were killed and 31 wl!!re injured in the crash, the "'orst since last November. The five Ameri can ('rewmen also were injured . f"ield rrports said 37 North Vietnamese troops v.·ere killed it1 !he fighting in eastern Cambodia, 30 by U.S. air and South Vietnamese artillery strikes. Nine South Vietnamese soldiers were repor1ed \\'rJunded The f1gh1ing broke ou1 ;ibout nine miles northl'asl of the Cambodian town or Krek, nor!h of High\\'ay 7. This would pul ii about 15 n1iles frnrn South Vietnamese force fro1n the 7th Division, triggering a 2' ,.hour biltlle . They ct1lled in 1'.S. rock· et·f1r1ng helicopters and artillery. Field reports sai d the South Viet. namese troop.<; also captured a quantity of munitions. l! S. 852 bombers backed the Sa igon troops v.·1th raids aga1nsl enemy supply lines and storage depots to the rear. The operation \\"f!S l;i unched Wednesday by LL Gen. Xgu)"en Van J\'11nh. He said !hr operational arl'a cnvrrs 370 square m1lrs or easlern Cambodia to the north ;incl 1\es1 of llighv.·ay 7 bct11•een I.he border v1ll;iges or Krek and M1mot. Minh. commanding lhe drive, said ma- jor objectives nre to st t'm North Viet· narnese inf1ltrat1on. provide security for the snu thrrn pa rt of Soulh Vietnam and i;.re1·ent the enPmy frorn disrtlpl!ng the fnrthcom1ng Nattnnar Assembly election Aug. 29 and the presidential election Oct. 3. The l" S. Cnmm;ind reported that 11 Ameri<'flns 11ere killcrl 10 ar!1on last 11el'k, !he lo11es! nnr·week total tn si.ii: years. The toll rrflecterl the hill in the war as 1vell as the withdra"·al ol U.S. fortes from combat. V1etnan1ese casu;ilt1e~ al.~" v.·ere reduc- ed . 11·irh 202 gn\·ernmenl lroops and 975 &! the enemy reported killed. The "·eek I>& lorl!! the report '>l'as 238 and J, 145, Fatal Gcrn1an Cras Ca used hy Speeding? :0-!l 'J·:LLHF:l~I. Gennany 1t.;Pll -A ra1!w;:iys _.;pokesn1;in setid loday exress11•e'. speed on H curve nlay have cau~ed the der11iln1l'nl n<';•r r he Swiss-Germa~ border \V edr.csd;i.v (If a transcontinental rxpress !rain rn1111n1ed w11h vac;i.t1nner~. Official rletcrmin<it1on of thf' cause of th t cr;ish w;is pending an 1nvrst1g<1!1on. Police ~;11d al l"a~1 2!"1 p('rsnns were k1llrd ilnd 122 11·ere inJurrd \\'hen the Trans Europe Express 1Tl·:E1 train link ing R;:isel. S"·itierlllnrl "1lh C"l'lpenhagi? plunlled down a 15·foor emhankmPnt int l!I !rackside housPs ne ar ihr \"llla~e of Rheinweiler abou1 15 miles north of the s"'iss border BRIG, S1v11zcr!and !L"Pll -A train carrying Italian workers tn their jobs 1n S111t2erlanrl derailed inside the S1mplnn Tunnel under thr Alp~ earh 1oday. caU~· 10,11: death• ;inrl 1nJune' aorl blocking the tunn('I. r;:i ll"a.1· off1r1a!s ~aid E;irl~-rrnnr1s ~aid h\"e prr•nns \1"f'r1t hilled. a.nd four prr~nn• 11 1lh ~rnou~ 10 - Jur1es ;:ind 20 \.\llh n11nnr tnJUries wel"e 1"r ~r11f'rl The sp;icemen are schedulrd to sel nut nn !hr1r rf'l'Prrl hrr;iking 12-day miss1nn nt !l .l4 a m EDT :'\londa ~· The (·nun1rlo"'" is rrncred1ng 1n11•ard that launrh arpn1ntment without a hitch S•·oll. \\"nrdl'n and Irwin passed thr1r la.<;! majnr ph1"s1r1al ex 11 m 1 nations \\'rrlnr~rlav ;ind !h1•n rrlurnrrl tn a rnm- n1:i11d .;hip !r:-i1nrr for a final rehearsal 11r their 12·rn1nutP rti1nb into ·'Pfl''f'. Thr.v ;il sr• rr1"1rwrrJ c1nrrJ;cncy steps lo he. t:iken 1n rri.;r s0n1e!h1ng goes 11·rnng VA Cl1ief Mi11i111ize s D1~ug rhr (t!U'I' ,,f Thi' d<'f<l ilt11rnl "".1 ... 11'•! ~nn11n. tlu·~ ''"Id h111 thr 1r111n lrf1 thr 1r:i1'k ~ :"l.' 11 p•i~~rd lhr 1·no1rnl .•1at1on 1n- ~1dr thr tuonrl. \ht> nff1r1al.~ 'aid R,:iil lr~lfu.: nn !he ~1mpl0n J,1ne 11a~ s1npf"i4'rl The S1111p\nn Tunnr\ runs 12 1n1\es unrlrr lhl.' Alps !rnm Brig tn \'arzo. a t1n\I Italian nYlUnta1n l"lil<l.l!P north () r Domodosolla. ·rt1r !hre<' pllols h;il"e bern t ra1n1n~ lngelher longPr for a flight tn the monn th:ln any ()\her crcv.·. Rut. loday·s wor k ends 1hat ~rhedule and !heir lime for the Aclclict Rate A111011g Vets \l'A.Sll!r-.·r;TON <AP1 -1·hr rh1 rr of !he Veteran!!: Administration Wednesday minimized lhe Vietnam G.l. heroin pro- hlem. saying 99 out of every 100 Vietnam ve!erans are not addicts. See-saw Weather Prevails Prospects Dim In Hunt for Bov Lost in Hills Donald E:. Johnson, administrator or lhe agency wh ich has a major responsibility for addict treatment and finding \'elerans jobs. said at 11 ne.,.·s C'Qn· ference : W eat11.er Conditions Cnllrornln 1,,. I.Of ,1,-1~1 ··~· ~·~ ~., .. •vn•hl'141 with nigh! ond "'o•nln9 10 .. ~~~·,..J~~··~;:~,,;;,''~1 .. ~~1en~:~ t.lah ,,.., a.. to'T1fl••l"d with w.,i. h~••'• n. tho low 1onloht will ti. M • lit U.S . Slioiving Wide Ran ge Cnnslal """ IM11". l""'' v1rl1ll"' wl'llll 11lttit .... ..,."1... "°"'" --·"• ... ,., •• "' .... u -.. 1., t llff-1 '9dtly 11111 l'•IM1" >lit~ "'Oil• 7J to &j. , ... 1.1 ,_, .. ,,, •• , ..... ,,,, ...... tw 11. lnl1<'d "-•!U•U '""'" frOtTI ... 19 ... Wttw t...--r1f\lt• f', S11M, lf18&11. Tides "THU llOAY Terr1perat11re• ,.,.,.,,. •• ,Y,e< •">ti n•tt•1>llo•ie~ •,,; t~e '''"""' "'"!NI •f>dl•t 11 , •.,., 8--"'"'"" Bufl~lo C~~rl<'!•r• cn1c•0<> ''"•••&~<1 0Allo• O•• lv'o•"•• °"""" F•110.0~•• l"<\•1.,,...,111 Ju~·•~ """'"' (l'Y Li t VM~I lOlli••!lls M~ll "'""' Mllw1ui< .. Mln""''l'1H1 w-0.1 .. ~1 N-VCll1t: l)lol•,_,,• t ll'I °"''~" ""'"' s ... 1,.., "~1...,.1""!• """"'"!• ~i!t~...,. """'" C"v ~--· Nltll Lew l'fU. .. ., .. . ~ " 11 ~\ ., ?\ ·1· '" " "' • • .. " .. ~ • " tt ... " ~ u ~ • " u .. ~ .. ... " .. .. .. " .. " M " " ,. " " "' ,. ., " •• .. • .. .. ., .. " .. " .. " •• ~~<""d ll1tll ., I I•" - 5Klll'll IO* J On"' t• .,,, ,.~ 1) .... , .... ~·· " .. '" .. .. ,,,.,, ...... , .... ff!'# $...:1>'\d ...... l ..:Ofl4 low ,llDAY IV" 11.l"'ll ST I "' """"'" •11" ··~· ... I! WI 1 "' ,,) 11111 "·"'· .ti I 1~ I• • "'' ' 0 ; ,, . ... '' l ttt I 01 t ,,,., 11'11 !'1~ ... Son 1 .. ~, C.•'Y 5•" 01100 5•" l'•o"(l1t11 )fot!+t S•""' VI~!"""., W91~'"l'll"' " " .. .. ,. •. , .. .. " " " " ., NE\VCOl\18. NY. fUPI 1 -Prospects nf finding B·year.(lld Douglas U:gp:, lost for 1'.l rl<1vs in lhf' Adirondacks. dimin1sh- rd \\lrdnf.sd;iv when sc;irchrrs ff\und nnly a large rnck ;1\ the location indicated by a '"hot spot"' nn infrared pirturrs. The pictures "·ere taken hy nn Air Force plane prrsscd into servicr 1n the hunt for !he bn~' 11•hn disappeared nn 11 hikr whirh stn rtcd from a relative·s \.l.OOO·acre estate in the den sely wooded mn11n1ains . Rescuer~ hnpt>d to !O('nle leads to the hny h.v 1nrans of '"hot spo ts" on the heat sensit1\·e 11pparntus. On" surh ~pnt 1vas pin pointed in th~ Rra.\'er F'lo\v are11 . R·IO miles northeast lrnm \1•hrrr 1hr hoy v.·;ts last seen July 10. \\'hen se;irchers arrived at the site, thry found only ii lar2e r(l('k Authorities theor11.e1I the sun shining on the rock shn"·rd 11 degrrr l}f heat appr(lximating that of a human being. The 400 .~eal"t'hrr~. 1ncludin,1t t1 rescue team frnrn Califnmi;i, were 1vorking "shoulder lo shoulder." rec her k in g ~rouncl prev1nu~ly co\·ercd, Sherif! Ken· nrth (;roodspecd said. The rer hcck. n'lw in i1 ~ •.et .. ·l1 it.i', hri::.1n In ;in nrril ~ 'l fl' f r' I \111). siboul five miles el'lst nf the lodge 11hrrr Oo11g\.:1.~ And hi~ part'nts. ~·Ir. arid l\lrs . IV1l11an1 N Lrgg. 6aldw1nsville, N ~ , "'rre \·1s111ng ~n the boy rl 1s· Jlnf"lf'<lT~rl ' •• -,.. ·-Jt/' ' :.. ' _.,..,._ "F:l'rn If the estimated 50.00D Vietnam ve.teran addicts in this country should prove t.n be anywhere near true. the fact still remains that th.is is less than one percent of lhe more than five millio n Vietnam er;i veterans now back in civilian life. "Stated another way , for evrry Viel· nam era veteran·addicl there might ht, there are more than 99 .~uch veterans who are not addicts," Johnson said. J ohnson said this needed to be ex· plained because or reporls from some veterans that "emplnyer11 have read and heArd so much about veteran drug ad· dictlnn. th11t they figure 1!111 Vietnam veterans are add ict!." Johnson i;ald he personally found en· ministration's drug Abuse expert, Dr. couraginit the report of the ad· .Jerome Jaffee that military testing Ml far ha~ turned up a rete or 4.5 percent of heroin users. Rep. Robe rt H. Steele. R· Conn ., estimated thr: rate al JO and 15 pe.rcent after a Vietnam trip s1vera) mont.hs a.11:0. Johnson s11 id h! sUU regard1 Jalfee's findings as "being In the ball park." "\Ve've gol to· dispel lht totality con• cent of thf' druJ! addiction picture, H the Johs For Veterans an A~ency program 1!1 to bf' AS sucressful 11s I! must he. Don't ml~undcrstand. Tht~ i~n·t t'l s•1 ··, · tt·,; t there Is 11 mtn lmal <lrui;i t1t!-l1~·!l'l;1 rrn· hlr m for f\Ur Virtnam vr!('rRn~." Johnsnn ~nid _.,. . ,,_ , .. ~·· MINIMIZES DRUG WOES VA Chief John50n The jobs program pro11:ress hrts gralitying so far, Johnson said In June there were 309.()():) unen1ployed Vietnam veLerans, down from 372.000 in four months. The figures are seasonally ad- justed. he said. On ol.her subjecl.;. Johnson ~aid th• ~'.lf 11': i .. :,·~1~ of velcrrtns medic~] and 11sych1:i1nr in~litu!if)ris will soon bt> vrry rln!!' • r IT'CCI !hf ~·.iridard~ ~rt h• \.'nqnrr<:~ l 111l rrm:tnn+llil i111r! ~ 1 11 f·, ne-:lcrt Pf ~"rTl" pRI 1r.nts h11vr t)('en RC· r11~n!i...,ns rif S"f""r"'<' \'A rrt11•« . ' 81ST BIRTHDAY Roie Kennedy Kennedy Matriarch , .. Logs No. 81 H\'A!\'NJS POR1» !\!a 5 s. IUPIJ -!\1rs. Rose Kennedy celebrated her 81st birthday today F"riends said the molher of A President and rwo Stn<it~rs pl2~'1ned tn spend it quietly \l'J!h :-1rs El he! Kenned.v. '-''lfe of the late Sen Robert F. Ken- nedy I D--~Y /, and her daughter, ~1rs. Sa r gent Shriver. She 1s the daughter of Jnhn F' ' Honey Fitz·· Fitzgerald, a powerful Bo~tnn nu1 ynr and Olngressman . anr! married Joseph P Kenned1·, an Irish immigran!'s son >A'ho became a multirnillionaire and foWlded a politjcf!I dynasty. !\1r s. Kennedy 1.5 \ er.1 ?.'.:Uve a l 81 She ;irtends 111ass evPry tnnrning and e\'ery chance she gets, she swims in !he lam1l.v pool or pla~·s golf. She scores in thr RO~. She s11ll i;upervi~es n1uch of the famil y affairs. prrsonallv signin.1: paychecks for employes at r-.1erchandise ~1art 1n Chicagn. a building O\l,'Jled by the family. Only one of her sons 1s sliH alive -Sen Ed.,,,•ard ~1. Ken· ne<ly ( D-~1ass J. Steel Finns Close Do,vt1 PITTSB URGH IUP!l Anticip11ting a steel strike Aug, 1. 1l1r \Vhl'el ing· Ptt!shurgh Sier\ Corp beJiins the grarlual proces~ of closing do1\n its nprra1ion~ Sunday. Thi> f irm ·~ cnki> producin.': plants in :'l'\onessen . PA ;inrl Steubcnvillr. Ohin. 1,1·i1! IX' the first to clo~e because the cnm- p;;n~· has not been able In al!'rPe nn a rnntr;ict rxtensinn \\:ith !hf' r n11erl Steel \\'nrkers t;n1rn a spoke~n1an sairl \\'ed- nesda\', Ill' "-a 1rl \\hr r l1n r - P1tt'hur ch. 11 \'11'h hr g an barE:a1n1n2 1nd£'penrlrn r I\· 11·11 h the l'S\\1 last frbruar~· has of- f Pr~ rn ahirtr hv 01nv ccnn- !rarts thf' 1 "~\\" rr ~rhrs 1,1 1!h the "h1g n1nr'' s1 rel prntl urer o;- !r thf' lJ nlnn il ~ff'<'S not tn strike .. ~ . 1 1'1u·~ay. Ju\J 22. l'J71 D.a.!l 't' PILOT .~ U.S. Actlnl( Solid Barrier Sought Massive Seizure Fatal Horse Epidemic Toll Spi1~als Of Food Warned AUSTIN, Tex. (UPll - Health officials say they are try ing to bluld a solid barrier of vaccinated horses to enclose and !Jr(ll riff a 11rrr;id1ng steering sickness ki!lln; horses by the hundreds in south Tex11s. NEW YORK IUP!) -A federal heelth official said Wednesday if Bon Vlvant . In c., does not spud the recall of more Ulan one m!lllon cans of food pro<lucl.5 , ii \\'iii race an "imminent'' nation1,1•ide seizure of them . V.'eems L. Clevenger. head of the FDA regional office here. said Bon \li\•ant had not fulfilled a vo\untar~· pledge to name a central location for the recall of all its products. a telephone Interview, hair bten "ln almost daily contacl" wilh the Bon Vivanl atlOrney and told hlm "ln no uncertain terms lhat we want action." Food Stamp Revisio11 Set By U.S. Agency But so far nothing h11s slow- ed t h e . mosquito-carried d1sPasP, anri Ag r i cu I lure Department of l ! c 1 a 1 s 1n Houston rPport a spiraling death toll. VS. 0 e p ;i r I men l of Agr iculture off1<'tiils said Wed- nesday I ,!Jli horses In Texas ha 1·p been killed by t.hr out. brrak nt VPnP1t1elan Equine ed rrgu!auons annowiced lasl £nccphalomyC"l1tis (VEE l April were ton restnct1vl" and with an other l,469 horses sick that some lo '.1.'·i ncome familiPc:: \1'ith it v.·ould v.·ind up pa~ ing more In add1t1on, iii ht1mans h11ve reach a turning pomt tn the battle against the disease. Along the coasts of Texas and Lou1s1ana. Air Force and private aircraf! sprayed heavy doses of malathnin, trying to saturate S 6 million acres wi!h I.he mo.~quito-k1J\ing chemical Spraying operations w 111 have to start over after six da}'5. since lhe in'.';ecl1cide is only t!fl'C\11-e for that long. ~1ost of the cases "'tre In far south Tl"xa~. but un- conhrmtrl rt ports of VEE In horses came from Oklahoma. Louisiana and lhe Texas Afncan ho& fever in Cuba Or Fred Maurer ol the Texas A&~f College of Veter ina ry !\1ed1c1ne describPd 1t as lhf' ml'Jsl dPvastat tng a n J ma I diseasl" in the world . HONGKONG CUSTOM TAllOIS" SHllTMAICUll ,IRMANINT IN •ANTA ANA °""' 10 000 $ci!i1ll0d ("""'""" -100% G••'"'"•Od !,.,,.,,.,.,_ 2 SUITS s135 l)O.IJfll 11111 •lll-Clt,.!o'" Ma4o 5~11'i S~ltlil rtl(I Ao~ MOW °"'••'•«•II ..... StJ S69 1 11."•"•''·····•S !I S•o•u•;• ...•••• AJ 12 c..~,. .......... tJ Jt S•ll w .. 1 ••••• , 11 tt s.1 .............. 10 t _i"' d••r I ''"'''' "•ul holllo (•Ill l•tllt~lo f 1 ..... II t 1.M. SAVE UP TO 50°/o 1• 11o•d IGI a<oG ("""'" ""'°' '""'· ,...,,.,..,,,_ s ....... ''""· l ,000 f1N!SI ll•l •S~ l~ll<C$ •WI •IT ANT l lZI • 4 WlllC DIUVllT ••Ill ALTll.ATtONI • IAIT ,ATMlNTI panhandlt>. , .. 1,,..1~1 ... .., 'h••• t.17-lnl m 1101 W. Muirlhi• l l•t , Ila Ji! _, Ranchers <inxious about the 1a.1, '"' i.••"""""' ,, ,,,,. •. _' \'EE ep1df'mic had anothtr 0 "" ""'" No-th 01 ~"'" c-.. P•o.i•l 1,1·orry today -an outb~ak orl '---------....;;;. ______ .:..;....;;:;.;:;.;_-1 Clevenger said the seizure, '.1.'hich may come v.·ithin a 11•eek, would be one of the larges in history and there v.·as a chance all the con- fisca.led cans woul d be destroyed. \\'ASHINGTON !APl -The Agr iculture Department plan4 ned to announre today revised proposals for putting more food stamps into the hands of the poorest families and shut- ting out hippies and job-shy adults. for food stamps. Pren stricken by syn1ptoms of ----------------------------------- Bon Vivant made the pro- mise after the FDA determin- rrl a can of Bon Vivanl Vichvssoise contaminated with dead.ly botulin toxin killed a /\"e'.I.' York hanker and paralyz- ed his wife. '"lf they rBon Vivant \ don't start moving pretty rapidly \1·e're gnlng to start making se izures." Clevenger said. The FDA, Cle,·enger said 1n Th e revised plan is the Nix· on administration's ans1.1•er to Capitol Hill critics 1,1·ho charg- Boy's Hope Comes True After Deatl1 food stamp~. go1 Prnment· thr disease, and health of- backed rnupons sold ! o f1cialc; sairl 17 of !hem "''ere quahflrd lo1r-income IX'Or!e, l;ihnratory-conf1nned rasl!!I of are chief \Yeapon~ in the VF.E . It is seldorn fatal to gol'cn11nenl 's pledge to "''lrf" nian, but kills 80 percenl of in- out hunger in the lJnited fected horses. Slates Health auU1oritics f rom Ahout l I n1\1!1on persons get various ngl!ncies met \Ved- slamps. double the nuinber a nesday 1n Austin to map out a ye::ir ;i~o. The coupon~ are new stratf'gV in an pfforl to ~nlrl a1 ra1P~ baser! nn ------- h..,u~ehnlrl monthlv income anrl bonuses ~i1·en to.boost family 1 buying po\\•er at grocery stnres. I l'nder ne.,,,• u n 1 r or m 1 ~chedules proposed in April. for example, a family Qf four jewe ls by joseph searches for jewels C•"Yrrt U•w•••td low1!ry le lm..,fllt• 11• •••h br 111<1 to I 1,.m wllou -•owl1d11. ••P1rt1u. •~d lftl .. •lty 1uur• you corlful •~•lutrl<I~ 11 I~ dlVI m•rkll v•IUI. i'\E\\' ARK. N.J (UPI l -\l'ith an income nf $50 lo $60 a W1 ~n ~. p11111d 1t 1Y1mlft1 your ''oung Rona ld Silpe. \ O, rnonth 1,1·ould spenrl .$10 nn :::~.•no! ••v1•• '9'11.,.1"' th•I• •11• Dain T/ire<ll 1\·anted to be a rloctor. but he stamps 11·nrth s1 na at died last "''eek of a brain hem-surt>rn1arkct~. morhage . \ongrPss. tn a new "2-b1lllnn. EctsillP Off On \\"ednesdav, d n ct nr s :'1·\'e'lr fnod-s!amp \a11• p;i~~rrl " transplanted nne of Rnnalrl s la!P in l!lil'\. l1hrral1zed !hP1 kidneys to Carl Salamensky, prngram grncral!y bul. al~n II, Kentucky \1·ho \1•as sulferin~ from a sl;ipped ne11· rPstnctions on " p11inful kidney diseasP . some users. Ah I e -b o rl i rd ~alamfn.~ky, 38 , of \~';iynP, adults. for example, \vo uld bP 1 :'110REHEAD , Ky . (UP!l -I\' .J. a placement direrlor fnr rrqu1red tn register for anrl C1ll "'', JOM!pil tr Mr. FOUi 11 ~ ·~- ~fi} ~:11 1cwels by 1osr.ph South CQ11! Pl111 s,,,+col ot tht Stn Oio90 F ... y. Co•ta M~·~ !.40-'IObb The threat of a spillol'er fr0m \Vi lliam Pa t ler.~nn st a 1 e accept a1·ailab1e 1obs as p;irl 1 , a Lcmporary earthen dam eas-College in \\'aynP, h;irl ad4 nf the food stamp qualifica- ed today, but the Arm y Corp~ vertised in a new spaper that 1 ~t~'°~'~·---------~~~~~~~~~~~;;JI of Engineers asked residents he nPerled a 11e111thy kidnev 9{ tobacco farming com-\\'ith the same biological pro- muni!ies below !he dam not lO perties as his ov.·n . rel urn to their homes yet. ~orbert S1lpe. a s s 1 s la n I \\la!ers from the rain 4 direc1or of business ser,·ices s"'·ollen Licking Rive r level ed al the college. knew nf off about a foot from the npv.•, Salamensky's nee rl. He makeshift lnp nf the dam late remembered his i:.on Rnnalrfs Wednesday nigh!. dream and offered the kidney ******************* MERCURY SAVINGS and loan association NOW OPEN EVERY SATURDAY .. :: .. 10 A. M.-4 P. M. 11~, \\'orkmen. using bulldozers for a transplant. andpilingsandbags.bad rais-After tests show @-d ed the level of the temporary Salamensky's bodv ..,,,·ould ac- dam seven feet by Wednesday cept Rona!d"s kidney. !he night. indicating just how transplant operatioo w a s Open Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Fri. 9 a.m.·6 p.m. 111111 '1N:a11uu. serious the origtnal threat of a performed \\'ednesday at Beth ~ spillover had bl"en. Israel Hospital. BUENA PARK MercurySa~ingsBldg.,Val!eyViewatlincoln five consecu rivP davs of Sa!amensky was reported in HUNTINGTON BEACH Merc ury Savings Bldg., Edinger at Beach rain had caused the Lirking satisfactory condi!ion al the River to rise to an unusually hospi!al today, his new kidney TUST IN MercurySavingsBldg.,lrvineBlvd.a!NewportAve. on One Touch Sewing! Newest Touch & Sew" sewing machine with handy carrying case, Reg. $349.95 Nows2749s 7581576 Th• Singer 1to3&•credlt Pia" SINGER ForaddrK:So11MSinoet~r,.., helpt you have th11e values Cen1erneares1vou seeWh1111Page!. now .. wlthln your budget. un0e.rs1NGERCDMPANY. '"' 1-.. ti Tiil lllt4Q toMN.1rt COSTA MISA-lrbtol & S1111tlow1r, l outh Coo1t '1<:1111, 540·26ll COSTA MISA-2300 Herl!>or llvd., H111rbor C111tor, Kl 9·11 95 HUNTINGTON llACH-ldlnt• or Inch, Hu11th1tton l•ot h C•"ter, 8'7·1041 OllANl>l-21 Sh111111011 lat, "TIM City" Center, 54Z ·l4t5 CJAllD!N GllOVl-ttJT Cho,1111111, Orallto Co1i1nty P'lo10, 510-4010 high level and filled the 15 working perfectly . * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * mile long reservoir behinrl the 1jiiiiioiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,;ii;;i.;;i,,i;oi.ji;;i.;;i,,i;.ii;ii;,i;;;;i;,,;i;;iiji;,i.ii,;iiiiiiiJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii dam almost 10 overflowing. II Thousands of acres nf !Obilc- co f11rmlend at the foot of the A!lcghen\' J\-1 nu n t. ;i i n s in northe;is1ern l\cn!urky "'ere 1.hrcatened Abnut 1. 7 00 rc~ident~ \1•err el'aC'uAlerl J\-100- dav anrl a~a1n (In TuP~da \" Officials said \Vednesdav 911 f>('tcent nf the per~ons \1·hn li\"- erl in the \"alle y left their homes Tht> earthPn dam 1,1·as huilt In hnlrl hark the ..,,·;i 1rr "·hill' !he perm;i nent Ca1·e Run D;im .,,,.a.~ unrter rnn~truct ion. The ~'ork 11·a~ scheduled to bt completed in 19i3 Son1P nf !he rrsirlen!~ nr the lnu l;inrls hrh1nr1 thr dam 11 Pre ~kepr 1c;il 0f !he danger but <iec1ded tn leal'e . I HERE IS A LISTING OF ONLY A FEW OF OUR OUTSTANDING BUYS. YOU'LL FIND HUNDREDS MORE, EQUALLY WELL PRICED •.• COMPLETE LIVING ROOM GROUP !00" Custom Quiltl!d Sofa !Velvet\ 60" Custom Quilt ed love Seel lVel. vet I Clu b C~e 1r, Coff•-'I Tabl.,, Corn11Jr Te. ble, Table l•mp i choice of F11bric.1) A"'l, Price $965,00 !Savo S110,00I ANNIVERSA Y SALE PRICE , , , , , . , , LIVING ROOM 102" Roye! Coach Sof11 -Crescent Sh1pt1 -Full Cu1+0,,., Oui!t -Gold Ve lvet. Rt9. $675.00. Ann iv1r1a ry Sale Pr ice ··-.......... SSZS .00 9' Tu1111do Sof• -Velvtt -Very Speciel •.... . ....... $125.00 Me tc.hin9 love Se11t ··--·····-.................... ... .......... ... .. . .... $249.00 I 00" loo1e Pillow Back Sofa , Reg . SJ 19.00 ·-········-·· . Sale Prlc.e $.245 .00 60" loo1e Pilow Ba ck love Seat , Reg. 5239.50 SGie Prlct $169.50 I Your Choice of H«irculon Fabric1) 96 " Royal Coach Sofa -Cu1fDm Quilted !Choic 11 of Febrit.1 a nd Color1 l I 00 i'. Nylon. Reg. $490.00 .............. Annlv1r1e1ry Salt Specl•I $429.50 ROCKERS ancl RECLINERS Meplt Swivtl Rocker .. . ..... Special $59.95 or 2 for $110.00 Ptir Green Club Chairt. Reg . $219.50 ... Clot• Out r-ao. $129.50 O nt Only.,. Blu«i Club Chair. Req. $169.50 ..... C lott Out $40.00 Reg ister for FREE GIFT NO PURCHASE: Nl!C!55ARY •FREE Cullt.t S.Oly "''",.... "' Bor s,rhtt• •FREE ~ .. ,,,, llM!itrt •FREE P'olr of lo'""' P'lllo.-B, ITC. ITC. SOFA SLH~!R SPECIAL •u111111 -LlllH l'I~ lew l t•i• Ci.fi\r1 ftf Me••~lll" ''~rl<'.1, <u,. lem •~l!IM l1mllM ouf•!l!y. D•ly JlU.H ONLY $245 00 SLEEP SHOP SPECIALS Ortho Comfort . Ortho Comfort . Ortho Comfort . Ortho Comfort Sealy Quil t Supreme 3 l , Se.,ly Quilt Suprem• 4 b Ss•ly Qui lt Supreml!I Que111., Sst S•<'lly Qu ill Supr4me Ki1H} Set S immon~ GoldOJn V.,lu OJ Quilt -Full or Twin Sr1e Ou1111 n Sit11 S•t • Kin g Si111J Sst Twin Set $59,95 Full Size Set $49.95 Queen Si1e Set $99.50 Kini] Sl1e Set $149.SO Eoch Plec.e S49.95 Eoc.h Piece $49.95 -·· $119.50 , Sl79,SO Eoc.h Piec.e $49.95 . $149,SO Sl 19,5 0 Simmon1 I 0 I Anniv•r1ary Supreme-Full or Twin Site (very firm) ---·-··-···-·---··- Queen Sitfl Set . (very firm l. King Sit!!! Set J very firm I Beaulyrs1I end Post ur epsd ic.s et F41 1r Trade Pric.e1 Sofe Sleeper1 end Corn•r Un it1 et Sig Saving\ DINING ROOM eoc.h piece $59.95 $I 69,50 ' $249,50 6 Piec& Meditsrrane en Pee.en, Oc.tegonal Ta ble, 4 Cheir1 •nd Chind Reg. $695.00 ·-Close Out $475.00 7 Piece Med iterr .. nean S.,t, Tre1tle T .. ble, 4 Gene Bdc.~ Cha ir~. 2 Arm Cha ir1. Reg. $450.00 . . Annlv•rlOf'J Sale Priced $195.00 8 Piec11 lt<'l li e n Prov inci al Ch1rry, Ovel T "ble, 4 Side Cha irs, 2 Arm Ch.,ir,, end Ch in e. Reg. $589.50 ...... ·-• .... Sale Prlc.e $519.50 Good Selection Cal. Shop1 Ee rly America n -Also Thome1vill e et tremen4 dou1 Sevingsf!Jl S Piece Mediterranean Oek. 38i:60" Oval Eidension Table, 4 Ch airs. Re9. Pric., $1 99.SO . . Anniversary Sale Prlc.e $169.50 Oc:lc:I HutcheJ and Ch11 ir1 at C!o 11 Out Pr ices BEDROOM SET Complet11 Bedroom GrDup i"g. lnc.lude1: MfFld it erranean Tripple Dre11er, Mirror, l(i"g Headboerd, 2 St11nd1, l(in9 Site Mattre51 Set fSe alyl, Kin9 Sizt Fra me, 2 Le mp,. 2 King Size Pillow1, Bed 4 ding Kit includi"9 Sheet1,Blt nkets, etc., etc.. Re9 . $897.20 ............. Stve $202.20 .. -··· . Sale PTlce $695.00 b Piece Med it erra"etn Set. Dr e11er, Pr. Mirrors, King Heedbo•rd, 2 Stends. Reg. $529.SO .. Anniversary Sale Priced $475.00 Chflrry Italian Provinciel 5 Piflct King Site Set. Reg . $539.00 . . . . Close Out MS0.00 Severel Correlated Groups for Girl1 end Boys at Ferit•1lic S11 vin91. Ma ny Oth1r Thom a1 vUl 1, Broyhill C11 I. Shops at Huge Disc.ount1, DIAL DIRECJ TOLL FREE FOR HOTEL e ESERVATIONS lazy Boy .t nd 81'lrkline Recl iners ~ mu1t lower inventory l SlS.00 to $75.00 Off R99ular Prlc.e Hurry for S1lec.tlo" Regi1ter For Frll'Je Giff , No P'urcha1a N11c111•ary HURRY FOR BEST llUYS SOM~ ITIMS LIMITED • Al.SO ..• \•Ol.VING CHAROI 800-648-6901 1865 HAR80R BLV@ .' • DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA "':=-z:::;----:----~~~:f~;.:;-~-~·~•WR;-~ ,-. ·,•;:i•-'" '' :~:=-:--lilt-~--e--~ 11 _ti!' . waeuaaa o•s ¥ dtffl ., • _.CJ] 4 I s • PHONE ;;,ft • w . 548-5131 • OVER 17 YEARS SERVICE r r \~lii:.'~'ZJA'.illtlll:l!!:llll!ll:: ...... .,'91!!!1!!!11!'!!1!!1!1!1!1 .... 1111!!~ ,_. • l I ' • ' • • • • DARY PROT EDITORIAL PA.GE Road to You hear talk on all si des. particul arl y ln govern- mental Circles, about belt tightening, holding t.he line on expenses and exerting pressure to hold the line on laxes. AJI this is understandable. But how many v.'orking people In the field. private or governmental , do you knov.1 v.iho have gone t\VO years without a raise of any kind-not lil salary, not in bene· fits'.' That's the plight of the faculty n1embers on the campuses of the Un iversity of Callfornia. I.ast year. the Legislature. upset by campus unrest, refused th e1n a five percent salary increase although other stale non- teaching employes routin ely gol a raise . This year, the Legislature approved a len percent increase for UC and slate college professors (to make up for the omission la ~t year), bu t the entire amount \\'as chopped by Go\.'ernor Reagan. Sensing the dire thre<it to \\'hat once was considered one of the "·orld's greatest educational institutions, the UC Board of Regents last ~'riday asked the Legislature to override the Governor's veto. The depth of the Regents' concern is indicated by the fact they took this uncommon action with lhe governor h11nself present and arguing strongly against it. \\:e think 'that rccon1n1enda- tion is in order if UC is to survive as anything n1ore than a mertiocre university systen1 _ Mediocrity had wanted money or prestige V.'e would have turned else\1.'here for our Ji ving.·• \Ve think this attitude reflects the £eelings of most n1en1 Jx>rs of the slL!l ·slrong, but dc rnoralized members of the UC faculty. Certainly there are refortns that could be n1ade V.'llhin the UC systen1 and rnany are being made. But ihe system itself can never rise above a level of mediot· rity v.1ithout enough incn and \\'On1cn of quality lo lead and to teach. Yet. it is not really their ca<>e ,.,,e plead - 11 is the case for thousands upon thousands of California s tudents who will have onl y a lo1N·level university syste1n ahead-and those \~ho \v1ll be turned av.·ay-if the cut· no·rnaller·"·hat attitude prevails .. The governor's veto should be \11thdra\l.'n, or it should be over-ridden. Still Ali ve, Indeed Yes Despite falling far short of a hoped-for 200.000 visitors ~v.'ith only 105.000) the 197 1 Orange County Fair ll:,:, Expos ition ending last Sunday \\•as still an at· tendance record-setter. By ernphasiJ.ing fan1 ily fun even more lhan in past years, the fair offered a \vide variety of entertainn1e11t and ranks al the top of the list for overall success. Cleanliness of grounds and attractive exhibit~ and d isplays \Vere especially noteworthy, v.·hde police assign· ed to supervise the cro1-vd \Ve re 1n1prcssed \vith a lack CJf incidents. LC faculty members used to be in the top ten when their salaries were compai'ed \Vith teachers in like instit utions. Last year they \Vere 43rd. This year they are 63rd. lf the governor's veto stands. they ""ill drop f ar below that figu re -to a point where, obviously, UC simply cannot attract nor hold enough faculty mem· hers of high Cjlliber and capabilities. So1ne would say the old-fashioned county fair days are over, but in Orange County the 32nd District Agri· cultural Associatio n doesn't believe it a bit. The Fair Board has pledged to keep its annual show lively and Jn pace with changing, 1nore sophist icated Limes. ·~·-"ll ~•l •lf. Jl\1 "'" 'Le t me put it this l vay. I can tell you ~vho I 'm not going to vo le for!'; As a UCI faculty member told us last week, ''I have no desire for riches through teaching. and I find great satisfaction in my job. But the demoralizing words and actions of the governor have sorely affected my attitudes about serving my com munity. state and country .. , We teach for the reasons \ve \Vent into teaching: if ''-'€ If anything, the fair is more alive than ever here, but still retains a nostalgic flavor of a more sirnple past Why Dog Days Are Nation Finds P edal P 01,ver Way to Go Called Dog Days Lelle.rs from the dog-lovers keep drib- bling in, asking why I don 'l V.'fite more on their fa vorite subject. In rcspons-e. or tet..a.lialion, here is a quiz. more or less "A living dog is lion."? literally. all abou l dogs and canine ex· press tons. You ntusl get l'alf the ques- tions right to be- con1e a Certified Dog-Lover, I. \\'hat is "'a dog in a doub!el'"'' 2. \\1here is the ex· pression lo be found better than a dead 3. Identify the lines -"I am his Highness' dog at Kew: pray, tell me. sir, whose dog are you "'..' '-WHO WAS Aubry's dog" 5. What dog do the Moslems adm it to heaven'..' 6. Give the names of the famous dogs "Who belonged to {a) Lord Byron. lb) Ulysses, (c) Prince Ruper!, \dl Isaac Newton, ( e) Punch. 7 What philosopher surnamed himself "the dog "? 8. \\1hy are days of intense heat called "dog-<lays"? 9. \l;llal do the Bnlish mean by a 0'dogsbody'"'..' JO. \\lhy are the evening v.atches a board ship called "dog-watchrs"7 l l. What do the Canary Islands ha l'e 10 do wi th dogs~ 12. Why is the rommon \vild rose ;ils(I called "dog·ro51!"~ ANSWERS: 1. A bold and sturdy felll"l\I ; the str ::ing dogs employed in hunting 1hc wi ld boar were dressed in a kind of doublet but- r· ~---, Sydn'ey J. Harris j toned tl"I their bodies 2 In the Bible EC'clessiastes IX. 4. J Alexander Pope presented a dog lo Frederick Prince of \Va les l\"lth these hnes inscribe<! on his collar, as a Jibe at fawni ng courtiers t Dragon. the dog (If Aubry or 1\lnntdid icr. \1·h0 v.'<'ls murdered In \he forest. Attacked R1ch<'lrd of M a c a i r c whenet•er he appeared: condemned 10 JUdi ri al c0111bat w11h lhe do.i:. R1ch:ird confessed lhe murder with his dying ga.~µ. 5. Katmir, the Dog of l11e Seve n Sl-;cpcrs, v.·ho re1naincd walled up with his seven noble masters for 309 years. ac- cording to fllohammedan lrad1tion. Ii. ~I\ "BOATSWAI N." (bl "Argos ,'' (C) "Boy,'' (d) ··oiamnnd." (e) "Toby" 7. Diogenes. \\'hn repl1erl lo Alcxandcr "s greeting, "I am Alexander. surnamed the (lreat.'' with '"l am Diogenes, surnam~d the Dog.'' R The Romans called 1he hones! v.·etiks of summer eanieulares dirs. because the dng·sltir, Sirius lhen ros~ 11·1th the sun. adding he111. ~ An all-round tnrnial 11 nrl.rr "ho de.rs MO Job~ Ill. II 1<; a "flrrur1u1n <1! ''rl!N\,i:;r-wal· c-hc•." ha1·1n~ norh1ni! to r!11 11 11h t1oi;:c:. 11 ~amrrl f•)t n1any l a r~e do'1c: fou11il lllE'H" in rarh Homan cl;l1 <: 1he La1111 n<in1e for a <Ing i~ ran is. !2 . The anr1e11t Creeks c:uppo:-.cd thi s f!nv.er to be <i hl~ In ru re lhe b1t r of n1ad dogs, A conspicuous cornmuter in :..'lanha!tan Is Dr. Reynauld Chase. 63. \\'ho calmly pedals a btt•ycle through the conges ted lraFf1c. ~nt only does Dr. Chase report fecl 1ng bcl!rr sin ce hf' ga1'c up his l'ar, '·he has cut his average tra\·eJing time on house c·<ills from 25 to eight n1inutes." So Editorial R esearch reporl s an ;irticle in the Arncrit an !'1-lediral Assoeiation's niagaz.ine Todlly'5 ll ralth.* Ecccnlnc~ Not any niore . \\'h1le A1neric;i 's farned Jove affair with lhe automobllr. seems to be turning sour. a new mystique of the bike is growing. The Bi rycle l nsli!ule of Amf'rica told Edito rial nesearch Repor1 s th;it nearly 7 million new bikes \\'ere bought last year. And !he National Athletic lnslitu!e describes cyc ling as !he foren1ost outdoor part1 c1pallon sport. Thcre arP now <in t st1maled i~ m t 11 t 11 n prdal -r ush1n!' 1\n1rr1"ans nn 1he n;111nn s road>Aays. Del ro1 t. 1n Fai.:I. !-hould lor.i:et aUoul 1·nn1p<'IU 1on From fnrC'1~n r ;;rs and start 11r.rr.\1ng abou t !h(' hlC\'t•lr Heh .. rrn ~.0011 a1u! fi Ill.Ml \·11n1n1ulrrs 111 \\ a'ih1ng!on, Jl «. arr lca\'1111.: their r<1r~ al hnme <1 nd pt•rli1!1 ng 1n 111•tk •\nrl h1ki'r' ,1rr h1•rnn1 I ll ~ <I \'fl!'<ll pr'''S\Jf'f' j:if\ot!p f!C'll1allrl\11~ rqu;il right <; 11 ith (:Jr•. srw·11;il · n11<•ar'' [J11t•s and <le1'i1).:11 ated ;iark111g a~c;1 s_ Tiii-_; l::A llLll·:ST TRACE 0r 11hal tta· Two Wives Per Husband Enr·yrlop<1ed1a llrit:-1nna'a calls 1he "rul! 11f self-propul s10n" L" th1· (]('ptCt1011 of a 11i1h century rJl;ln s1ll1ni:: 1111 a v.·he cl(•d dr\'1ce and pushin.t: himself alnnp; \1'1th his frel. The firs! bicyclf' v.1th ped;i!s "'as in · Everyone yearns for 11 perfect world, but this is 01 hopeless hope. There is no perfeet world this side of the pearly gates, and there never y,·11! be. Then how about a betti'r \.\'Or]d~ Ah, there is an ;.ch1ev. able dre(lm. There are nulhons of y,·ays the y,·orld can be made better. and each man ha<> his own fomtula For it. '; Here are a few suggested steps that might help the human race and the planet earth lo hum in harmony instead of screech ln long discord; Each husband could have tw o wives if Dear Gloomy Gus Oar dtfmst poit.ure without the development ol the S-1 Bomt>tr frtplaoernent for the. 20--year-<lld 8-5%) ii Ukt playing foo tball vdth- out lhe !Grwllld pass. -Diogenes ·71 ,,.. ....... """"" -"' .......... ..., _.,.,. --ef .... ---· s .... """' -.....,. W • ......, ., .. 0.tlt' l'INt. 1·pnted by a St'O\sn1a11, l\1rkpa!nck J\1a1:l\11llan I! mu<;\ have gone at a pre11y r i Hal Boyle \ good clip bl'ca usr histor.v rc('ord s Iha! he v•:i s arrested h~' t.he constabulary for "furiou.~ drivrng.'' ' .....,, he v.11led il--f"ll'<' to art a ~ housekeeper anrl scconrl mother . other to act as his girl fnend , his th• EACH 'VIFF. c<1uld have h\'fl husha nd~ if she v.·i!led 1t--0ne lo pay her bills, lhe other to g11·e her thrills All leen·a~ers v.·ou\rl br taken front parents at 13. kept and educated in vast ~overnment pens, and returned horne at 2! \1•ith a college diplon1a anrl a job. Cocktail parties would bf' bannerl ('J.- cept between the hours of ~ and 7:30 p.n1. on Saturday night.~. An~' 1nembcr of a government body which imposed a nel'.' lax on lhe people would have lo pay ft ve limes th at amount himself. No l<:x y,·nuld he imposed 1vhirh rr- quired paymenl 1n J)<'nn1cs. and lhe penny itself. now JI nuisance coin , would be abolished. Every busincss office would have enough couches for any employe to tak~ an hour's nap after lunch If he chose lo No one would be allowed tn givr free ad \·1ce. If advice isn't worth charging for, it isn't worth i!:h•ing. Catsup Ytould come only in blue boUle:s. t\ex t C'an1e a !'eries or "bone shal.C'rs" 1\·1th ht•avy 11·oodf'11 whcel s These 111achincs became popular in the J860's f'\'Cll !hough they vibrated dangerouslv l'!n rouizh ro:ids Ry the 1870's. peoplf' all ovrr the .... or!rl "ere riding "'l<ill nrd in::iriC'S ' 1-1·1th huge front wheels 11nd l!nv r!'ar one!' The first bikes \Vt1.h a "haln drive tn th!? r!'ar v.'h<'el y,•ere c<illcd •·safeties'" hccausf' thr rider y,·as close:r to th e ground and didn 't ha\'e so Far to fall. Today, the humble hicy!'lr has hcc-ome R thing of prel"ision \l.'ilh serrated "rat- trap'" pedals. toe clips. gears and hand· hr<'lkes A sedate bicycle with three forw;ird speeds can hr obtained almost anyv•he re for bcfl'o'(t'!n $50 and $70 An cx- (]Uisitrly-tuned, t"Ustom·n1ade ra cing nr tourinJ.1 machine y,·ilh up lo 14 forward gears can be bOught for up to $500. T R A NS PORTt\TlON ~ECR tlAR V John \'olpe 1s a bike booster. His assis- lant to Environment and Urban Syste1ns, Herbert F. Oe Simone, announced recently that he wanted \\l ashington tn bPco1ne "ll model c1ly ror bicycles ·• Furthermore. Oe Simone i:; writing the hellds of all state t:.ighway de:partments urging !hem In 1>romole: cycllng For r('('reation and c'Qfr'lmuting. New York City rope!"' off son\r strl'f'I~ for cycling. In (,111(,'.'tgo, a Jlilrk1ng lot for fl;O ~10Rt.: AH TIO..ES madr of p1asti" h1cyrles hA~ r.pcncd near the slyli~h would be allowe<l to come on the market North ~lirh1gan A\'rnut business d'1~tricl exrrpt after a full government hearing. 1/!'>lmstead , Fla . has had a "b!kew::iy '' The giving of platinur11 lOOthplcks I S eKclu11il11elv for b1('yclc~ ~1nce: 1962 And Ke1a11,edys Drfltv C1·iticis1n Is the Clan Tight-Fisted? There is grumbling in high Dcn1ocrat1c councils that the Kennedy clan has been unv.•illing to contribute big mnney tn 1 h<' party Irani !heir n1ulli-million dollar prrsonal fortunes. J\'lembcrs of the family angrily drny I! And their part isans ch a r g e the back- roon1 n1u!lenngs 11rc by anti -Kennedy Democrats y,•ho "·ant lo destroy Sen . Ted Kennedy 's prestige with party rank and fi Ir. (;ov. \Varrrn llearnes. outspok('n ~ll\'en1or of 1\.-lis~uri and chairman or th(• Nation;il Governors' Conference. rai sed the question with Df'mncra!1c Nation;il Commi !tee Trea surer Hobert Strauss. ll EAHNES IS A F i\l\10US CHOPPER· J)(),\'N of pre sidenliiil limhcr. Jn 1966. he sharply ren1;1rked of President Johnson that !he par!y "n1ight be better off with son1ehody else"' unless LBJ shaped up his dnmestic policies and his liaison with OC'mocratic governors. LBJ quickly com- plied. 1"his lime Hea rnes told Strauss at a re- rcnt govemors conference that there was nn reason for the Democratic National Committee lo have picked up the cam· paign bill s of Sen . ll oberl f". Kennedy, Jack Anderson ID-.\1 \'I . .'.lfl<'r h.i·nlll'li\' ll <JS :-hot. 'f1lf' Kf'1Ul<'dy s hntl pl1·1111· of 1no11ey of thei r .i11n. I !l'ii rnes ~a 11I In' <1lll 1,ctl S!r<111s~. I lc;irncc: al'o told hun lhC' part~ ·s fN1l 1t~· c:hould br t<1 a\"oi tl p:1.v111i.: any (·an- d1datc's precon \'f'ntuin tlcllts.. Hearnes, hov.·evf'r , denied tu us !h;it he exp ltc1Uy compl;1 1ned to Str<tu.~s that the Kenned ys had n'lt been pulling their "'eight on con- tributions since 1%2. llE,\H.\'ES'S \\'tJllUS \\'F:l!E STILL fresh 11·hen Strauss also gn t son1r unhap- P.v n1uUrr1n gs fron1 1nrrnbrrs 1il the i11- ner sanct11111 oF Ocn1(wratir n1nrH'.1' 111Pn, lhl' DenlO(T<J!l l' Fi llfl lll'i' COUJl('il. Afl1·r :t b1g recent l)C'moer<1 lir [und-r111 ~l'r 111 \\"a~hinghin . s1•\rr:1I (If 1h(·1n t"h<itti·<I 1111h h1n1 1nf(1nn:1 li"y about h<iw 10 tap lhc krn· ner!y fOrlunf·~- St rau~s. as part it'ipanl c: 1'f'1·:ill 11, 1r1l d !hem 1t wa~ lruf' th" l\t'nn"d ~s "cr"n l too J.!C'!lt.'rous 11•11h !heir n1lltil'V 111 nor1- Krnnedv f'lN·t1on.;. Thf' f)f'tno<·r.i t1 c ('on1- m1!\eC',0he s;iid. hac: "gon r 10 thl' 11ell sn n1a ny times" v.•ith St('1'1• Snu1h, husb.in<l of Jran Kennrd,v and Lhc h11n1h 's rol1t1c;i! a,nd f1nanc1al ;1d1·1:.flr !ti;lt 1he IX>n101.r<1!~ don t e1C'n h-·lht·r to put 11n the hcA! an.vn1ore. SJrau.,-: urge<I 111., quc.•1torirr<> ln r<'nl!'!flbrr th al Terl KC'1111rd.11 hall bncn \1 11i1ng to h·nd his i::l ntn11r tn llrn10( r:it<; in li~hl CIL'rl 1un spnl~ lhrnughnut lhc. <'!1Urllr1 f!1 r .1f•;11·:.. The J\1·nnt•d\ !'l;1n h.1d surnf' 1 1·h~·1n('11t rr<>ponsi'S 10 th!• 1-h·1rrr ' ~1nith lt1l<l 11~ !hr l\cr1111•1ll " h;11t put Ufl "IPn~ i·r lht111~n11U.~ of dull,ir~ f11r 111111· Kenned\' r·:1nd1dalrs :i nrl 1·un11n1 ller:.. "I h<11 c cofltnQulld (u th~' !)1·1uv1Ta111· ("n1n- 1ni1tcc.'· he sn1d, "hut nnl cll'ry lun e they ha\'c <i::.kl'rl of 1·nul"M' · S/\l tTll SAln STll,\l"SS 111 \ISF:LF h:1d nrve.r C\'C!l ~"krrl h1n1 for rn.,11f·1 Sal'grn1 Shn1·rr h1isha1 u! ,,r Eun1l'e K,..nnetl\' tnld us th:11 h,.. r;1n ,1 l'r)111111 1t!re clunnr: ·thr lns1 1•lr\ l1nn for pr111111~1ng \'OU11g 1)('1ll{H'1';1!u· c:111d1d;1 [ro.; 11 1111·11 r:11~:. ;.rl $~(1 01~) In t:et t·1•lphnl 1v~ fr 11· l1111d· r;iisi:rs :ind s:iuo.0011 fnr !hf' f':1nd1d.1t{>~· t·;;mp<ug11'. Il l· 1t1·l1r11 olf $1:: .111:1 1li;it hr> ;.ind l':t11111·i· and thr 1ll '-l'ilT:-. rlr•na!t:d In cand1da1 r:-<ind !'Ornl\11l\1•es. o\ spoke~r11;111 f•1r Ti'd l\\•r111r,rh· rrn11111!- cd us th;i1 ll'lth Ted ;ind HPhrrt l\1•nn1·dv had t:in1 pa1i:n 1'd ;ill :u'f"o:-.-.; 1\rnr ru .1 fnr i·nndtdnl t's Th<' :-.pol..-·•tnan dpcl n•f'd 10 r:-t1n1a!{· \"il 'h ron l nhu1il'n~ 'J ,•d ]1,1<; J:1\'f'l1 n1unt'1 nut uf h1~ 11•.111 fN'lrk1•1 jf) cand1dalC!(, hr s.11d "Hui 11.11 1111 11· Tc-1! spent 11n lhl' (-h1r k,·11 r1t('u1t 11.1' 11111• h 111c.il' \,,111,,t,lr 1" l111n tlo,111 .111~ 111v11,._1.' It's No Happiness Factory ·n1r t;id y 1~ ot On~ntal <lescC'nt She h~1~ long bern 111rll and happily n1ar ried 1n 11hat we c;ill a Cauc~s1an, or 1ncn1ber of the "white" race . She wa s t11lking the oLher day about some attitudes to1vard 1narriage \\'h1ch :;he iohcri terl from her culture: and her fam- ily , And whi ch ket'p her stearifa st Ltl her present relationship. '"Even when I was ;i f'hild," she y,·a~ ~y1ng , "and long hcfore I ~·as able In lhink of marria~e. I :i lwa y.s cons1derC'd 1hal lo\'e was an f':O.:- lreme form of like I had 1-ery littlr patience y,·ilh thal stuff oo the radio soap ~--By Ge or·ge --~ ~ar Gl?Qrgr I would like to becon1e a prll- fl'ssiona l cartoonist. rm told you know everything. What's the first step I should lilkc to become a car- toonist'..' HOPEFUi. ~ar Hopeful · !)raw a picture The second step is to lrave n1e alone -I had a \•ery bad night. Df>ar C:corgr Am I correct in assuming thal you do no\ get all broken up and tearful over scme nr the: questioos you get .. Or do you really act so nip to cover a broken heart ' CURIOUS Dcrir Curious: Yeah. yeah, yeah. Broken heart. (I do v.·i~ people would quit askini;: me dopey question!!; snmclime!'I I thin k rm in the wrong t>u~incssJ. 1 Since r.eorge First or1grnate1l S1<1eway~ Thinkinj.!. A great many advanc"'CS ha v& ~n n o 1 e d . Anyhow). operas -T-fo\·r-h11n-h1il ·l-hiltt·-l11111 '"lf )OU clo l1kr pcnpl<'. yo1 1 pul up \\'tth U1c1r physical and rncnl :il pC'culiarities, no" Yflll <lo nro! irl'-;1,1 th:1t fr 1rnd s lxib lhe1r noses or lose 50 poundl'i 1n reta in your fr iend!lhip Bui 111·optl' rnake suC'h r1d1c11lous dC'n1 and.11 111 flli!rri;1ge. or peo- ple tJiey supposedly lol't' ·• The lhrn1r 1h111 ran through hrr hfe . 11'ht>n she seriously began to think of m11rr1ai::c. 1,1·as· '"I ll"lll lnvc lhe 1nan I n1arr~•-" .'Jo!: "I v.•111 marry the 111an I Jove " THAT OLD-FASHIONED statemen! set off resonances inside me. I began 10 rc<1l12e how mu ch I was a creature of my age. even though I h<1ve resisted many of its. "urrents. Espcci;:ill~·-h<111• my irleR of "hat a n1arriagc should be has changed fro m the time: of my you1h. Arnong the Irish 11111n1grants lo New ''or k, with whorn I ~rC\\I up . thi<> idea of. "I will love the man I n1arry,"' was lxlth comn1onplare ;:ind ('Orrrrr f\·larriage wa s a AAcran1enl. v.·h1 th rne11n! it v.•as a s.1cred pron1isc 11 1\•as a co1nrnitmcnt. You clo nil{ break 11 prnn11s<'. nr A con1- mitn1ent, because thr de<1l didn't turn out as rosi ly RS cxpcCl('d. Sor11et1me when I l'..1~ grov.·ing up. there can1e In be a l!:re11t preoccupation ._...,th the matter or "happiness" in mar- riage. A marriage was supposed to be a hap-- pines.~ factl'!ry. If lhe Factory dldn"t pro- dure its expcclcrl quota. and that quota was ~!ways un('Ommonl y hig h. then the an.~y,er was In close the factory doy,·n. and look around lor another si te. ,Cl"'llC'r<ilh hr lr.1 11,l;iT1·d ;1·. 1·:111•1 g 1·n1ir (•\111 \1;11 -lll!itl'lllC. 11<"•0 ,t11d 11:~~[ - nnd l 1Pi1 1~ ,-1pp1 •1\1'il J.i.· 11 Tl1 1~ Hli·:i nl 11u11111111111•111. 1•.1111 11 I 11 1d ~cr n ~o Slt•iltlrl1 ('fndt• hrf .. rr 1111 111, :1q 1 1:rew up. 1s hi'i nr. !'l'11\'rr! 111 rn ,11v young pcnple I knn11 \'o\\nd.1\S 111u dntl l nerd sr x to holrl a 111;i11 , nr 1nnn1·1 11"11111111 a \\'Oman In r;ir·I. 1111"' \!'f\' 11 nr1J ··11n!d " is sort of had-tasl ~ ''nti )11~l pler1gr and, if you 1lft' nf lh<!l fX'TSU;1s1n11 fllt'dge and pray. I LIKE THESC: l'ra11 11cdd1ng~ \IHI :.re :intong the kids. r<·r{'t ll'"ln1£'.<: 11! to111· rnilmPnf. \\'1!hn11 t pr1rc:t c: 11r fVlf hrr. 11nrl "'llh 11·1ld roc·k mu~1r 11nri m.1~ hf' a ('nuplf' of vrrses fr<1n1 Christina no~f'l!i, or .sorncthing. If !her(' is :in1t h111~ \l('llrr lh;in 11. s;icrtd prorn 1 ~r. 1t i ~ n srr1p11c: pror111~r. entered into frerl ~·-;ind 1111h1111t 1hr ~uri-· port of .Jov ian sl'rnpalh1,..s ! 1!' srr11 some of these prrsona l 1n11i,l!l 1ng, 11·orl< out qu11e V.'C'll I "ondrr 1f 111 thf' 11;1rk nf nighl there are grrat ~lnomy 111u~111 gs ;i bout whether l'a ch p;1rl1· 1~ "'rrall v hRp· py·· -:tnrl , 1f no1 , how lo rcn"!'.!C' on thrir promise ln ellch othrr. ·rhursday, J uly 22. 1971 The r<litnr1nl pnac of l/1r nnil11 Pilo t seeks to 111/orm 011d slll"n - tilntc rradrrs by prr.sent11r(I rins 11c1r$paflcr"s opi nions nurt r 111n· tnf'11 tnr11 on f11p1rs of 1•1/r rr~t anti s1g111 f1rn11r r, hy prllr1r/1 •1g a for11111 fnr tl1r 1·rprr$~l•H1 nf 1111r rC'nrlr r:;' nr11nor .. ~. 11111f h:1 p 1 r.~r n /111y 1l1r rln·rr. r 1·1(>11•- pni n t~ of i11f11rmrd o flsr n r1.~ nnd sp()/..-r3rnrn 011 tnp1r$ o/ tl 1? dnµ. Ttobert N. \\'ecd, P11bli:;hcr Christmas present11 would be widely I.he Un11·Crs11y of 1 11ino1~ ha~ set n~cdc di,sp>ur1!££<1. ........ •~ !IOJ)}e rn:id l01r1rs for bik<'s. ~-=-:;<~:;::;~~'::::;"~:'..'::JJ'.~ --~ --J~--1 J;~-=-.. ';91 .... --.. -...:::~· '.L,J ~ •• NOT ~1 E:ll f.LY ~1A llHIAC:E, hul ahnnc:1 any 1r1sti111t1on 111 l'.h1rh a prrs<1n foun<I hi111se!f "unhappy ... 1r<is !o br iih- Jllrtrl. The nr>!1<1n of t on111111n1ent in per~on<il relation~ b<oj::an In d111so)\r before the: netd to bj' hAppy, which muld i==---' '--~,,..,-------" ... .., • ., . ._ " I --)-.....____ ..... -· ~ J>--.... .,,... ' .1~11111· •••• ~ .... '· -I , ' ii " . Westcliff Plaza BEEF STICE· lfft-•ftf tVllllfl IAlltA&F SOLD AT LEA DING SHOWS & FAIRS COAST· TO -COAST S~I 20¢ OFF REG. JJ.69 LB. '" LI. ''CHEESE Of THE WEEK" e,,.11., K•e•• . . • 1pt ci1I, ,,..,;.,oft ch•••• woth • mellow OLD WORLD fl t vo•. Fo• t 1on9 t imt ii wt• t bti.ic ptrt of !ht l•opittl northt•n Eu•opttn mttl. Todtv , , it'1 t popultr •11- ,.,.,.,.nd chte•t vou'll find .!eli- ciou1 for 1 ntc~1 ind lint coc~ in9. Fond it now t i Hic~oty 1, Farm• of Ohio , , , whtrt you ctn "'"'Pit btfort you buy. Town & Country 777 S. Moln Sr. . -. CHECKING •UP• Bacl1elor s: Tl1ey Ar e Bo ys Fore.Yer By L. ~I . BO\'[) lr'oi"QUI RES a then!: '"Who said. ·A man never knows how to say goodb/e; a woman never knows \vhen to say il"?'' That was Helen Kowland. She also said: I. "A husband i'i what is left or the lover after the nerve has been exlr<>cted." 2 "'Love, the quest , 1narriagt>, the conquest. divorce the tn· quest." 3. "A bachelor never quite gets over the idea lh<1i hf' is a thing of beauty and a boy forever .. , llE \\/AS a traveling man. television in Saudi Arabia·~·· A Telev1s1on, yes. f..io v1es. no .•. Q. '·You n11ghl point out lht> brighter .side, too, buddy. 1'hese econorn1c rece~ions, for instance. bnng peop le clo.~er lo the church.·· A. True enough . So do funerals. Slit-~ CAN'T CALL herselr II professional St'Cretary until she's bt'itn on the iob five years. Such is lhc cla irn of an employment expert. Career of the a,vcragc scrrelary lasts three years. Besl or the1n are 2.bout 50 years old. Usually, they worked about lwo years 1•rt•111t•te d l ,e\\'is Barlo\1·, 29 , La- guna Beach. patrolman \\'Ith the Fountain Val- ley Police Depart1nent for the past l\1•0 years, has been prornotcd to sergeant. Ile takes over as \\'ateh co1n n1andcr in the dcpartn1cnt's pa- trol division. Thutid~y. July 22. )q71 DAILY Pi l af 7 Drug Problems In Nav y Climb !;AN DIEGO (UPll -1'ht>rl' Is no Navy ship afloat or naval :s!alion w1!ho11t a d r u ii: probleu1, 11ecording to a c·opyrighled .11rll<:le 1r1 thi• San J)iC'go Union N e w s pap c r \Vednesd:1y. •·i-:vt·ry ship, every s1alion and evrry conunand in the- Paci f1c has a drug problern - 111any or thcrn are ma1or problerns." H.ear A d 111 • Ch<irles Rauch. speaking for /\"avy Secretary John Chaffee, IS f]UOLed as sayi:ig. Similar state1nents applyi n~ 1o both the Atlanlic and P:11·1fic carne fro1n officials or the Pa«ifit· fleet 111 Honolulu. fron1 Yokosu ka. Jap;in : ;11111 fron1 Lt. George Wie("kart. l1f'l'ld of intelligence for the ('rui.~er·Ocstroycr f of c e , P11i-1lit: Fleet. "l!"s a 1nu11ster bl'Cf!11se ii lhreatcns thr s<1fe1y oE our ships and 1.:011!d hurl our n11ssion."' Wieckart sa1d. •·11 is a tragedy !hill cou!rl tear the guts out or morale on our destroyers and crui!:icrs." Vice. Ad111. JJav ld rt1cht1rdso11, de p u t y com- rnander ar the Pacific rlect, eslin1atl·d about 20 percent uf tl1r 1ncn eHhPr u~e drugs or have l1sed then1 once or twice :.ind then stopped. T h f! President 's task force on drugs 111 tl1e N;:ivq has estimat- ed :i(l pert·ent. Sf'veral things are heing done . A drug rchabll1tation 1..·en!er r e l" e n t l y was c<;!ablished 111 MJramar Na1•al Air Station here: another i~ pt.1nned at Pe<irl llarbor. <ind the formation of II five·point progran1 of drug education <111d control is to be announced in \Vashinglon, !JC. later th is \l"CCk. !n1•rs!igators ~,1id in 1nany c<1st>s Na1)·men arr profiteer· ing in dru,E:s. anrl rt!te111pts ar11 underway to wipe 011l the "belo'.'.·-drck" p rob ) e m . 11th & lrvint NEWPORT BEACH 7 14-642-0972 OR.lNGE 71"·5~3-801 6 JNl8/fJ'I JIJl/111 IJ'llll lfl811 Out of St. Paul. And alrnost every ti1ne he went into a restaurant, he looked with loathing al the poorly w~5hed cups and glasses. Germs. It got to be a regular obsession with the old boy. His name was David r. Martin. He in· vented paper cups, therefore, and made a fortune . before marriage, r al s e dir---------------------------------.;...;; • ~Su mmer Clearance Reductions Summer Clearance Reductions~ .!! 3 ~ 3 ~ 1o \.et SUMMER s I ~ : i o"' ~t\0~ CLEARANCE a e ~ u r: 0 •• H " u .. " 0 ~ u " ,, .. a: " u " a ~ • Infants Summer Sun Wear • Girls Dresses Toddler•; 4·6x; 7·14 • Girls Pant Suits & Maxies • Girls Sportswear & Dresses (Many Items Below Cost up to 80°/o Off) • Boys-Perm Press Knit T Shirts Toddler, 4-1 4 • Boys Dacron Cotton Sh irts 6-14 • Gi rls Swim Suits 4-14 .:amous Maker • Boys Playshorts & Jams 4-12 SHOP 0 ..!! CHILDREN'S Ci " n .. " .. ... c n .. c;· " .. n r ~ Q " n .. THAT COLLEGE GIRL who inevitably gets the most mar· riage proposals, it's known, is the Chinese-American cred. Nolhtng con1phcated ?.'>oui whv . Her ilk is greatly out· nu1;,bcred on can1pus hy Chinese-An1erican tnen. So those lads of oriental ancestry compete mightily. How is noteworthy. The boyi; organize cooking parties lo which 1hr.y invite eligible young ladies. Thereat, a meat-dumplings artist mav battle il out wilh, say, a s.lewed-shri1np Specialist for feminine favor. CUST0~1 ER SERVICE: Q. •·How little is <.n alligat or at i1s littlest?" A. About nine in- ches long. \\!hen it's hatched •••• Q. ··0on·1 they have ])ean's Roll Tabs Walke r youngsters for 15 years, and returned to the office in the ir late 30s . To qualify a1nong the best. they must never en- terlai n any romanlic 1nteres1 in the boss. I WHAT BURNS UP this gentleman subscriber are the j car-wreck statistics that in- dicate \\'omen are belter1 dri\'CTS th?Jl <ire rncn. "The girls,'' he contrnd'l, .. drive short haul" 1nostly. Al low speeds. They bend fenders, scrape 1toors. baller bun1pers, 1 but don't report 1hcse at> cidcnts. So the sta tistics are wrong." Something to th;:i\,I 1naybe. He insists the best drivers arc m id d le -a g e d salesn1en. If' ''OU OON"r want the i.;reasc lo spatter. o u r l Household H i n ts specialist suggests you loss a little salt I into the frying pan. young lady .... DON'T HELIE\'E I .vet 1ncntioncd that 1own 1 n J\1issour1 c?J\ed Hul\a v.as nan1ed afl c.r that town in North Carolina called Raleigh by an illlll'rille wilh a Southern dr<1>A I. • • Yo ur questions and com· 1nr11ts are 1uelcornert and uii/t be used in Cl~ECK· J,VG IJP 1ohercver possible. Hunting1on Beach resident, Please addres.~ your let- Larry A. \\lalker, son of ,\1r. lers to I~. /If, Boyd .• P. 0 . and f..1rs. Ca rl A. Walker. Bo.r: 1875, Newport Beach Serving A!I D1'trn9e Counl!f "'A1ner1ca ·1 Largest'' DRAPERY CLEANERS 1702 NEWPORT BLVD. ot 17th COSTA MESA Ton 540-1366 IT .. 642-0270 NEW FROM COIT..-.,... Custom made drapes o top design qualiry. Complete selection of fabrics to please th6 EXCLUSfYE corr GUARANTEE Drapery Cl•onin9, Perfect re9ardl"1 of the 09e of your drapery, or 100°,', repkJcement If cleanab~. • WATf.Jt STA.IN ll EMOVAl • flAME PROOFING e DRAPEll lES REMADE AlTERED Ol aEPAllEO e NO SH RINKAGE e NO FASlllC DETERIORATION • NO WllTED HEADS • SEAUTIFUL DECORATOR l'lEATS • DRAPERY HAIOWAlf INSTAllED AND REPAlllfO • RfSIDENTIAL AND COMMEIClAL FOii CASH & CAllllY ~ •l 1058 l~i;:po::::c~~ff Plaza i 17342 Canna Circle. has been 92660. [~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~;~~ ~~1r;~,~~si:~ •. the Dean's Honor 1 -,..._-LEON'S-I ----- walker ·ea rned pla.een1f'n1 on ~ ~ the. l1sl by ;:ich1cv111g better ~ OPEN MONOAY·THURSDAY EVENING 'TIL 9 ~. J;: Summer Clearonce Reductions Summer Clearance Reductions a ~~',;,: ,~,.~~:r,:i;:~;;:;,'~~ SUMMER EARN 253 ro 503 MORE the Sha...,·nee, Okl<ihoma can1· P'" SALE! SHOP EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION! ---~r, I' DAILY PILOT CARRIERS HONOR ROLL Tl r 0 .\11.Y PILo·r 1.'l pro:1rl of its cnrps nf you ng so/esrnl''I 1n}lo dr/n·cr t11e newspaper to your door. These !/'ltn1n 111r11 01(' tlie creoni of tl1e co1n11111n1ty. Each 1non rh, the brst (If r!1e1n will be selected for listing on lh~ //ri•1nr Uurl. Enrh carrirr !isrcrl. here hos obtained at lenst four 11c10 c11.~ton11'rs during the past rnonth, had 110 ,, r11 r r/1011 one c11.stor11r r con1rla1n t for the month and must hnve paid hfs bill fo r the nctvspopers he bouglit "1r/1(!/r~nle" 011 tnnc, f\'11meral in front of star(•) preceding /!is 11o rne indicates ·n.un1ber of consecutive months 1ilnt carrier has bPcn on rite HoTior Roll. l<•'I W;l1on Rvon R•110• M1rk Poli en Gordon Wyn 1 Mil• H,,,'.,,,,, M111. o·s .. ~n Jot QI;.,, C1do• Orti1 M·•• H,,1 Frid S1nthe1 A ~!honv S1ncht1 John B ~t'. Dt•id Sht•chuk R•vmond G•l•t'I Eddit Ftrlan 1;11 !>chum •l'I Robt rl 8a;l1y llroo ~• Brinn R;c~~·d ~•ul•c" i.: •• ;,, w ;1,0,, t<erbv !>mill! Stoll E.•t'IQn G11q Hid Bill Mttk Non" N1l1on D••• Sc~lup llulch M •u~ll:n Mtrk F-,llmtn 1' F-r•n~ She•q 2• Ow;qht Ah~itdt 2' Cr••q Hue'. 1' Dw 1vnt Htrlt 2. Jim v~lde• 2' Greq ltw11 2' Bob Sl •lt••v 2' D1•t Jon ~1 ] • Johnnv Cloplo11 1• Mikt O;ro11 J• Bob w :i .o,, •• 'lr•c•v o.v~1111 <4' lcf!I Holl1nc:I <4' S!1v1 D•L;, •5 Grt9 01ymo~ RAYMOND CALVAN, COSTA MESA Carrier of the Month R.tymond G ,lv •n, ion of Mr. a nd Mr,, Ramon Galv•n of 8~8 C,pi· tol in Cost• M•111, 1njoy1 r••din9 •nd visits th1 library often. He pul1 h11 DAILY PILOT 1arnin9s to 9ood use by buyin g c.loth111, "6 8ri111 H1;11 'lo 011• Sh1cht• • T M1 rk Mo o•• "1 Scot w;11;1 ,,11 • 7 Ron Ruuo • T l 111y C1mpb1ll •7 J1fl Rundell 'I M1rco 81 lit u •1 D1nnt1 Stol•11 •a 01vid F-l1+,h1r •9 John Mol.1 • 11 Mile• P1d<i90 '21 ltob1rl Holl1nd 1 2) 01vid Collini lb--_---- -~-. --,. \ ··1~1 ~ -• > f I LOOtC F-Oll TH E TELLO W TA.GS A.II Wool l SUITS 11 '" SALE 564 50 I ":~· SALE 16888 SI00.00 • t; sPoRl-coA1's ...... I •·•· SALE 12988 11',"~00 SALE 57450 , 1 1' ::~: SALE 13388 ,:,".:; SALE 13788 •·•· SALE 14588 S•s.oo II ,.";;; SALE 14888 11 - h SLACKS ii ~ •·•· SALE 11295 Sii &-SI' .:~; SALE 116'5 " .lll Wash '• Weo• i I "••· I S!l.110 IVY LEAGUE PANTS SALE 1499 SALE 1649 SALE 1699 SALE 1799 ~ ,,•;:; •••• SI 1.00 •••• SI 2.00 SINCial Selitetle11 •f 9 Sl"OllT SHlllTS 8 9C NIT SHlllTS e SWEATlllS e l l!llMUDAS 25°/o OFF! "WA.ll·STll!nlll" SHOES 30"/o off! LEON'S MEN'S SHOP 227 I. 17th St., Ce1ta Mtt• IN Ml5A ClNTlll-l l l·ll•l l1tWM11 Tllrlfty.l S•f•w•y ALL 1ALI' ,,l"l,l.L -JLIOHT" AlllllATION CH,1,llQI '-.. ~. Many ba nks pay a reduced •avin gs passbook ra te of a low 4 %. At Pacific you still e a rn the same high rates a s before. ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS ------- 6.18% 6.00°~ 5,000 !!.Q TWO ----------5. 92 % 5.75~o 1.000 !!.Q ONE -c-,----------- 5.39% 5.25°~ 500!!.Q Yi th 5.13°/o 5.00°/o 5!!.Q ONE DAY Interest compounded daily and pai d fr om date of deposi t to date of withdrawal even if it's just one day Ask how you can obtain all these benef its service charge FREE PREPARATION OF PERSONAL STATE and FEDERAL INCOME TAX RETURNS FREE TRAVELER'S CHECKS COLLECTION OF NOTES SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES MANY OTHERS OPEN NIGHTand DAY Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. SOUTH COAST PLAZA aJ,J' l llUSTOL ITllE!""T • COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA • PHONE S40·•0lt I ··. ~· S:-. 't• . ,. ,. . • <. --.. f ~All Y l"ILOT T~ur~.11. July 22. 1971 Reagan Welfare Bill Dead; Senate Spares Substitute SACRAMENTO iUPJ) - The St11te Senate has killed Gov. Ronald Reagan's welfare rtform program and barely kept alive a Democrati c 1ubgtilute the G o v e r o or ahhor."l. Jn the year·s first ~·elfp,re ehowdown for either hoose , Senate Democrats bf'al baek Republican .attempl.."l to amend Reagan'.o; previously-rejected bills into a reform measure sponsored by Sen . Anthony C. &:ilen50n !D·Bevl'rly Hills.) Beilenson termed it "a bit of an insult to the Legislature"' that Regan would even try 10 revive his program after it had bfoen rejected by two Seni\.te. C<}mmitlees. Th en Repubhc::ins \Ved· nesday night blocked passage of Reilenson"s bill, which re· quired a tv.·o-th1rds vot e. To Sil!VaJ(e the rncas11rc, OernocraLs an1cndcd out key features that necessitated the two-thirds \'Ole. Now, the btll can be passrd Lo the Assembly with a .'iimple m11jorit.v votr. lt wa s e1q>ected to be late tod11y. "This will get us nff dead center," SP.id Senate Prc~ident Pro Tern James Mills (0·San Diego. I The floor showdown climax- ed months of Sena!e jockeying and a full day of strategy sessions. Reagan had met wllh ' Senate Republicans and urged them lo support his amendments and reject Bellenson"s bill. The Hepub!ican Governor Jct it be known he intended to vt>to Beilenson's bill if it evt>r reached his desk , contending il did not represent ' ' l r u c welfare reform " '!Jir Senate generally voted rJong pHrty lines. Democrats control the house. 20-l9. The Sennte rejected ~i x RI· tempt.~ by Sen. Cl11ir \\'. Burgenrr 1 R-Sa11 Diego), 10 <imend Reagan's program intn Beilen~on 's bill. Most of the Bmendmcnts \\'ere dec ided on a strilight 19-19 part}'line vote. AM l!:RICA'S LA~Gl!:ST" FAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN '. 100% POLYESTER DOUBLEKNIT DRESSES AU are th'is season's fashio ns you've seen selling for 14.99 88 JUNIOltS' AND MISSES' SIZES IN GROUP TlW" fabric th11t 's going plnrt11r- l OO')le terturl'd pnl)·~ . .oer double- knit, in 1 \\•id,. M-\e('t)on of 5t\'le1 that promist ta~r-111 -ci:rre wa.sh· ahrlity anrl \\'ri nk ],..proof \"trsatilit~ ! You"ll fi11d mini nbs, 01tl)m1111 r1h,, ~r11lpt11rtd trtatm('nt•, plr11 1ed ~kirts anrl more ... 111 ~ lt>e,·rll'$~ and shnrt sleeve fashions that stl""s~ f'rpMtJii;r rll'lnilrnJZ.' A l1 in p;i )tcl shad!':$. JfurrtJ 1n , 8'll.lf'! COSTA MESA, 1601 NEWPORT BLVD. Solons Vote To Double State Term SAGRAMl':NTO 1UPl) Californie Assemblymen have voted tn doublr their terms to Four years ;1nd extend the terms of Statf> Senators from four to six years. If the: Senate agrees. lhe final decision would be up to the voters next ye11r. Simil ar legislation ha:oi filed al pa5t st's~lons. Currently, Cong ress- men are elected fo r two years and U.S. Senators for six. The Assembly with virtually no debate Wedne5day ap. prnved 54-17 a proposed con· stitutional amendment b y Assemblyman Ha rvey Johnson ID-E l Monte), to stretch the terms of office for state leglslatnrs. Jn presenting the proposal, Johnson told the Assembly, '"I'm not going into the details. l'.:veryone knows the pros and cons of this. We could do 11 far belier job or laking care of our people 1vith Jongt>r ltrms. ·• Assemblyman 1.1ike Cullen ID·l..-0ng Beach ), the only lawmaker to argue against it. said he didn'l ''believt I.hat the people 1 represent "'nuld want to be deprived of going to the polls t>Very !.wn yet1rs to ex- press their sentiment ." Evangelist S pecuw.tes OAKI.AN D !AP) -1 Evani;:e\ist Billy Graham says he thinki; the Vietnam war will I be over before President. Nix· nn, a close personal friend. I. vi.~it.~ Red China . Nixon h::is ;innnunced he w111 1 vi~it Chin;i before next May . Assembly Pushing Medi-Cal SACRAMEN1'0 (UPI) - Assembly leaders are pushing fnr qui ck passage of a com· promise version of G o v . Ronald Reagan's Medi-Cal reform bill even tl)(lugh the countie."l are complaining the: measure will cost th em n1oney. The \Yays and Means Com· mitlee scheduled a hearing to- day on the bill by Ass em b 1 y m 11 n William Campbell ( R · H a c i end a Heights). The measure cleared the health Cflmmittee, ('hatred by Campbell. on a unanimous voice vote Wed· nesda y and leaders hoped for final Assembly action late to- day. tr passed by the Assembly, tht> measure :;till must clear the Senate. I The pl11n provides set fees ! for doctor visi1."l. requires pa-1 tients to p;iy a "token" part of ! their medical bills and i3 : designed to encourage, development of prepaid health I insurance programs f o r' welfare recipients . It also requires the counties i to pay a maximum nf $24~, million for support nf the Medi-Cal program. The state would pick' up remaining costs al an estimated $600 million and the federal government would pay about $800 million. The bill \vai; opposed in the health committee: by the Coun·1 tv Supervisor~ Associt1tion of l California ! CS AC ) , the C;ilifnrnia r-.tedical Associa· lion. 1he Welfarf> R i ghts Organization and the '. California Council for Health Alternatives. Y1hich representg l the Afl.,.C!O. Teamster~ and automobile workers unions. I "It constilutes il substantial sh Ht to the counties." con- tended Ralph Long, represcn· tative of Santa Clara County. Jerry Crump, Deputy C.nun· tv Counsel for Los Angeles Coun!y, estimated the measure ~·ould cost the county S7 million. THINK SALE 'I' think it will ftll be over ,( l he/ore he goes to Chin;i . ·· said I V t-;rah<im in an int erview Wednesday. I ··--.. ON ~ate 7die4. PAINT GALLON TO BRING YOU MORI VALUE WITH TRUE TEST PAINT, WE ARE CLOSING OUT OUR EN· TIRE LINE OF TREASURE TONE PAINT. SALE PRICE SUPER POLYESTER. Reg . $9.00 NOW $2.99 INTIJI IOR·IXTERIOR WOOD STAIN. R•t · $6.20 ... NOW $2.99 Plu1 many, many, many more. Everythinq 11 $2.99 a qal. 4 qt1. •qua I 1 9al. 8 pt1. equal 1 9al. 16 ane·half Pt1. ALL 9-qUal 1 qol. • REPUBLIC ••GEMINI" Water Heaters 20 Gal. JO Gal. 40 Gal. SO Gal. $47 .99 $49.99 $59.99 $74 .99 T~., auolity Ql.l!•On•e«I gl•" 11~..i w~t"' h~''"' '' eau1npe'! "'''" •1f11v '""'P . •• '•nu"•<I ~v low W• ~•v• •Amo d•• '"•'•'IM1nn ~Vft"•OI•, II vno w''" "'" no•m•I ln•IAll•iinn P•'" •n~lodtl'!. C•I• by n""n -jn>llll 1n•1 d•V. ,.II work done by m••ler p•uml>!,.. INSTALLATION AVAILABLE IN-SINK-ERA TOR THE NO. 1 DISPOSER ;;;:_ -. Whv dn women buv mo•e ln.S•i• E '"'"·" 1~"" any eit.., dl•?O•or• 8~•u• 'ul <0""''""·P"'"' •••,nl~I' ,1.,r E•,lo· ,1,. .. l•~e I"• ··w••"'"'"'" '"" '"' vno rt£'' 1.,,,, 011l1v "'"~ "'"'" No wand"' '"' wc""•"ol 'll"o" I/ ~~' 1 i"• ''"'" '"""'!~n w•.,•n•v h•d • I"""' P''11 w'""nty, IOC. T~e au•llty 1"•' m•d• ln.s•n~·E ••'"' •lie numn., One ~i1P<>••• bflon~s I~ yl)U• k ol(lltn HOURS : Monday· Friday 91.m. · 9 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m .. 6 p.m. Sunday 10 a.m.-4 p.m. About the trip he s::iirl. "T jc n al'\ I\... L II 11,..th_;,_k_,wmem•m;mllmsmce_,lh;eo.;.m•o•'1•p•r•~•I;;;. \.AJl'f l~~~~~r\JC~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ found change in our foreign ! W policy since World W.iir 11." •1tcliff P1eia Only ------------------------ WE MUST MOVE OUR 1971 ZENITH PRODUCTS TO. MAKE ROOM FOR 1972 MODELS ARRIVING DAILY CHECK THESE CLEARANCE PRICES C-7"• •uno'"'"'' COn!lmllO'l 'Y 51ylod Wth•"1 C•ll1n11t 1972 SOLID STATE ZENITHS 11 StKk & '"'" ,. s.n SAVE SAVE SAVE ON BLACK & WHITE RADIO STEREO Con''"'"'''"' Slylf<I CoooOtt FREE 1 YEAR FARTS & SERVICE l•tl ... ·-l'lf!lllfllt<! FREE COLOR ANTENNA-IF YOU BUY .. ,.ii. .. ar ,, u~ ""' .. ,,. THURS •• fRl.·SA T., JULY 22,d. ll•d . .,d 24th Ne ~!~Intl Ch•••• If Paid 111 90 Dn1·1 ABC COLOR TV • SALES • SERVICE 9<l21 ATLANTA AT MAGNOLIA (IN THE LUC KY DISCOUNT CtNTEP.) HUNTINGTON BEACH PH. 968.Jll9' S CRVt:--'G !lRA~GL CC\t;:\ n· rrir: 20 yr:::. Nn Cew11, l ' Mn~th\ Te ,ey IF YOU WANT TO SEE A ZENITH AS IT LOOK S ON DISPLAY AND NOT OUT OF A CA TALC''7 SEE US -WE HAVE Tl~EM ALL. O~ANGI COUNTY'S u~a1sr ZENITH D!AllR ' ' .. ,/' ...... ~ -. Th11rsd1y, J1Jly 22. 1~71 DAIL V •llot 9 Display of Prize Scheduled ANIMAlogic Lad y Driver Taking Cla ss Garbenstangelers Aiming for; Trophy ·- A woman bus driver from the Ocean View S c h o o I DUtrict iJ getting some expert training n her profession from Highway Pat r olmen in Sacramento. Garbenslangelers throughout the Oranae Coast today are tuning up for the world's first Build a Better Garbenstangel Contest and lnternaLional Rallye which get.s under way Monday al South Coast Plaza. Secret practice se s s i o n s reportedly were being held at both Orange Coast College and Golden West College campuses as teams from t.he two schools get ready for the Collegiate Division co1npetilion . Me! and Evie Noack of the Noack Trophy Co., Costa Mesa, are putting fin a I touches on the f>erpetua l trophy which goes to the team which builds the b e st garbenstangel in I he in· lercol legiate competition . GARBENSTANGELER ADMIRES COLLEGE TROPHY Mel Noack Explains Masterpiec e for Winning Team The master piece in trophy de:Sign features a genuine alumlnum-paint plated loving • IS WORT • • NO MINIMUM bAlANCE REOUiREd Yes, that's right! Free checking - no minimum balance requ ired. Anything that's free is worth checking, and now is the right lime to check.into Anaheim Savings new free services. We've joined w ith a major national bank offering you complete Savings and l oan plus banking seN1ces. Only at Anahe im Savings can you deposit $1000 and eam the highest interest in lhe nation on insure1 savings and receive the benefits of •. , Free checking, Pre- ferred Customer rates on auto and boat loans, and Prelerred Customer rates on persoMl loans. Learn about these at our Huntington Beach office. FREE SAFE dEposiT boxEs Fre • with ecc:ount ba lance of $t ,000 or mor•1 6% Two to five year term certllicats accounts with $5,000 minimum balance. 50 YEARS OF SECURITY Accounts are Insured to $20,000 and protected by Anaheim Sa'Yi ngs' 100o/. record of safety. ANAHEIM SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION MAIN OFFICE; 187W L\ricolri Avt, Anaheim. Ca1iforno11 PA2·iS32. • t 1 Main SlrMt Huriting!on Bt•ch, C1hlorn11 LEH591 • - cup guaranteed lo be at least 40 years o!d supported by the two gilded muskateers (no one seems to know what happened to the third musketeer). It's topped by a winged victory statuette standing in what Noack describes l'l.S "fluted scallops that look like the Reuben E. Lee smokestack."' The trophy will go on displa y next week at South Coast Plaza and goes to the school v.·hose team wins in the Collegiate Division of lhe con· test. BUY NO" &SAVE Once in a lifetime opporlunitT to buy beautiful, quality Gentry Ltd. of South Coast Plaza will outfil Lhe entire winnina tt~am in Hang Te.n shirts and hot pants or cord flares (winner's choice). Teams today selected their competition dates and an - nounced their • • s t a r t i n· g lineup5." Orange Coast College will field tw o teams next Tuer.da y. The one coached b v Techriology Division lnst.rurtn"r Rill Abernathy includes Dan Swofford, Steve Lilly, Glenn Truitt, David Perry and Brad ~1orwer. Dick Hernandez, dlre.ctor of speci al programs al OCC, will coadt a teant composed of Rosie Esquivel , Yolanda Diaz, Jo Ann Kawamura , Nancy Padilla and Veronica Sar· miento. Darrell Ebert, fine arts in· structor, is p!a:v ing coach of the Golden West team wh ich will build its garbenstangel at South Coast Plaza n e x t Wednesday, Team members are Don Mclnney, Raymond Hay and Donald Gradowski. Mrs. Jan Wright was invited l-0 take an intensive 12G-hour course in classroom teaching techniques and behind·the· wheel instruction which wil l eertify her as an instructor ill school bus driver training. The course, offered by the CaHfornla Highway P at r o I Academy, is designed to reduce the number of school bus accidents in the state. mattresses, convertible sofas and corner groups at tremendous s avings! Sale priced to move out fast! Hol'f)' to your nearest Ortho store, today,.:a nd save! King Size ... Save $50 < ( I. ' --..... /•''·, ~ •<..,~ ., .,,, ,_.'V-\., ~ King Size Set -$14995 SAVE $50 Ref.$199.95 QOEIN Sill SIT *12995 llllttnu l 2 101 s,*'l.r Speetlcut:tr Ref. $179.!JS ~alue! R>~ll Ouined !(lag with fiber foe~ SAY£ $M --, -· -. ~·sal insula1or :tnd CftJWn Fie( Ce"1er Sufll"Jrl for ~dded comlort. l•tl1l1s TWIN OR '11U S£T$8985 Or\llt-~' n11lllt kn9:1.! Reg. S7S.~ SAVI$11 ......,._.._ ' ( < < • . '•< ·~ /f:;':'•A /' .'..·'~ ,·'\ '' ·"~ ·~: .,,. .....,, . King Size -SAVE $70 "''· $291.15 $22995 11.ll:EN SIZE sn Reg. S249.95 $.IY( $50 '199811 M1\llt1s ' 2 ltt Spri11p .....,.. • .._,_ P11110!ir yourself with l1!fill1t ' t,...,,!ort •rod tonghle dur•b1li1J 1'11'111' Oii FULL S£T with tempul!d Slttl i11ner• Re1. $1Z9.95 SAvt $30 ~D!tnJ! 1111·t •1111 Cr'JW" Fin: •99 5 C~!tr Sup(l(lrt ... 111 yours at • I u l-. Dtires' l"Dl~~u Ortllt-bt I flttlllt IDDtS! --- The Corner Group Be vun!i!t. ln biedroom or dt11 ••th lh•I 9 ei•ece 1et. lncliodes 2 hrm OrthQ m1tlresses, 2 fin• 1pnn1s. 2 bob!tr,, 2 QV•l!td 'owerlels tnd 5'!1a!'I COflltf UQle, •II J! this low pric'! $15995 < ( < • • The Ortho·Pak • rieldcrest no-ir011 !(in& or Ooeen sitt lnp s~eet • Firldcre~I no iron ~•ng Gr 011een s11e fitted Oo1lom si1~et • 2 Kini( t<r Ouem S•I .. bols!er p•llnws • 2 pillow ca~es • l(ong or t!\Jeen s+1e mat!1ess 1>ad • ~"'i {)( Oueen ~1ie metal Ir-on easy·roihn' tasters The Double Bonus 1(1n1 • G 1M1 1~: t.e~dl,,.,a1d plus quilled btdsp1e~d • lwi~ tr full, he1dbo1<d and m•l•I lr11me Ofl ~a~y.1oll1nt ~!ers .. Cen~er11blr So!1: ~enmne Shepllerd cast· "''' ~nd ltl\ed arm cMls • llt111"d I••, 11~1 fashior.e<;I top sheet • f1tltd l>ot· tom !hte!. \/·~ '¥(~/"\/.~-:- ' ' / Convertible Sofa TWlll OR ruu SIT Jl tg. ~!~9 9) SA'A: $30 s129a5 ........ _ ... ,, the f'UU. SIZE ''""""· """" """' ""'"'"'' Sol• •17895 ••I~ deh11• fliklrinf 1nd cl)Mltu:llOll is • tomptett wit!l li•m Ortllo mtltres1. AV11iabl1 hi tit sins. IM19111n llltlllll lom11! You can only buy Ortho mattresses at Ortho stores The Nation's La111est Chain of Mattress Specialists FREE DELIVERY LAKEWOOD tl433 C1ndl1wood Avenue Candlewood Shops SANTA ANA and FOUNTAIN VALLEY ANAHEIM 1811 West llncoln Avenue (across from Ll!lktwooo Cen tar) Phone: 634·~ t3• 16131 Harbor Blvd. (corne r ol Edi nger) Next t o Zo dy'a Phone: ~39 ·4570 Between Euclid and Brookhurst A11anues Jusl East ol Fed Marl , Phone~ 776-2590 N DAILY 10 9 •SAT 10 G •SUN 12 6 • IMMEOIA ll DELIVERY· CREDIT HRMS AVAILABlf • BANKAMERICARO •MASUR CHARGE :· .r:r::r"L ~;~ ... ·---=-,,, ' .t...Jl.K.. -· ,.,. .. ... 1 'fmrt. --· "\" ~--~~· ' .. -· -;...,......1 .... ... ,., ' , ~ J.rl...~' ·-· . ~--· ,, • • ' ~l~O!,_D=•='L=Y~Pl=LO=T~~~~~~~~T~h"~""'""'~·J="~'·~'~'·~'~')~l I Witness Swears\\He Successfully Bribed NY Judge Ai11erican Chinese Air Views SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - How do Chinese Americans feel about President Nlxon"s proposed trip to Peking? The answer depends on l\otlich Chinese Americans are talking-if they talk about it. Indiffe rence appears widespread, but that can be misleading~ The I a r g e s t Chinese community outside Asia is made up ol im· migr~nts or their descendants who came originally from the Canton area, far from Pek.lng, where a different dialect prevails. Oldsters here generally have said nothing publicly about the Nixon vi.sit. A relative exception is K. F. Chan, 65, editor of the Chinese Times which supports the Chiang Kai·shek Nationalists of Taiwan. "We don't like it," he says of the Nixon visit. "This is very bad for Na· tionalist China. It has the im· pression that the U.S. i.s sell· ing out. .. playing a balancing game between Red China and Russia. "Communism is a thing we regard as a degenerated system. The visit will help recognition of Red China.'' Some younger Chinese 2.lso ·profess indifference. but mote are willing to speak out. "I'm not really interested.'' said an 18.year-old girl in a pant suit. •·1r 1 were in a government class. maybe. But I'm tak.lng history." One frankly radical young woman who declined to give her name emphasized that the visit means no change in Pek· lng's policy &S far as opposing imperialism and he Ip Ing revolutionary struggles 1s con· cerned. "But there's nothing to lose by talking. and this might pre· vent a third world war," she said. ··1 think it's gre.al."' said \Vang Ling-chi, until recently director of the Chinatown Youth Center. "Any time the U.S. Im· proves her rl'l at1onship v.·ith China. the Chinese {'01nn1unity here v.·il\ be beltl'r 1111 ·• Wang belongs lo the Chinese American Dem0t'rattc Club , chartered by the Democratic State C e n t r a I Committee. which is.sued .._ ~tatrment the day after the Nixon visit was announced. lt called upon lhe President to recogni1.e Pelting and treat the questio'n of TaiwRn as Rn internal Chinese question. Club president Gimmy Park Li said the statement ·was believed to be the first of ils k1nd ever to b(' issued by any established organization in the Chinese (.-On1n11lllity here. It called for ~mission of Peking to tlle United Nat.ions and withdrawal of American military forces from Taiwan. The club , \~·hich wa s chartered in 19~. appe;irs to have taken on new iifc recently and has 11 board of directors that includes hot on- ly Chinese Americans but some c<>.uca~ians, Filipinos and second · JlCneration Japanese. Not connected wilh the c.lub ls a new newspaper, the Chinl!!e Voic~. which wme consider pro-Peking but ·which Lau said "Is just pro-China."' WASHINGTON (AP) -A confessed Wall Strttt stock manipulator and dealer in iitoleo S«Uritieg told unators under oath Wednesday he suc- cessfully bribed New York l rial Judge Mitchell SchYl'eitz.er to give him a light jail sentence. The witness. who appeared under an assumed nan1e because he said he fears rnoO reprisal. narned 62 underworld leaders and others he said are relive in the disposal of stolen jecunties in ltl1 international underworld conspiracy Using the name ··George \\'hile." the witness, a portly man with long, lhick sidet.urns and dark horn -rimmed glasses, said a llghter pe-n<y cosl h.im more tlian $100,ooo\in In his appearance: before the Jnvestlgations subrommitltt. the mystery v.·ilness, who said he has for years been a •·fix" money , $10.000 or whio.11 government informrr, said he said was paid to Nathan J-' .• McConnack 's off l c e at Voloshen. Voloshen's request once Vol06hen received 8\ mtervened fe>t him with the suspended one.year sentence \ last November following con· attorney general of vlction of fraudulently using Massachusetts. the prestige of the office of the He said Vo!oshen was unable Speaker of the llouse lo help w obtain a court pootpone· his clients_ n-.ent and, at the request of an He was described as an old friend of former Speaker John in~uential untler~·orld figu rr . W. McCormack, who insisted re1'.lmed the $10,000 he had he knew nothing of VolO!he11'1 beeo paid. questionable activities. In\A long and complex story of life on the shady side cl. penses'' of his pending court to the hotel and that while ht Wall Strttl, the witness said he was indicted for grand larceny in 19~ as a result o4' complaint.'! filed by his two partners in the manipulation of stock of the Shawno Development Co. It was al this tiine, he .siid, Lhat he met a man named Stanley Polly who he said v•as ··v.·ell-connected with organiz· el crime ." He said he used $225.000 in proceeds fron1 the manipula- tion of stock of the then Franklin Oil and Gas Co. to pay le.1:al fees and "other ex- case. ··The 'other es:penses' were chiefly a bribe to Judge Schweilll!r for leniency in my case," the wltnen 11aid. The witness said Polly had "rnormous connectioos" in New York City's polllical, police and judicial circles. I-le met Polly in a restaurant the night before he was to be sentenced. the witness said, and Polly called Jud g e Schweitzer's home but W(IS told the judge was at the Grand Concoorse Hotel in the Bronx . The witness said they drove stayed in the cat Polly met the judge in the lobby. "He met Schweitzer in the lobby in my plain view," the witness aa.id. "He came back lo the car and told me there would be no problem with the judge. There was no problem." The next day, he said, in· stead of a sentence, he got a 90-day postponment. He was sentenced three years later and said he was "eminently satisfied" to get an eight· month tenn-of which he ac· tually served only half. ''Gdd Jobs'' SALE! Mediterranean-Designed Exterior Light Fixtures • 6 d•c.or•tiv• 1tyl•s e Acc•nts of w•ether resi1fe nt m•t•I e 51/l " deep, 5" wide, 8" t1U Your Choice 32-GALLON PLASTIC TRASH CAN • Unbre1lt1b1 • • 1 .Ye1r Gu1•1nle• • Stiv·on lid , ••••·lilt 1ide hond\,, 3.99 Lon9 Or Short Sprinkler Key e Tu,n1 on 1y1t1m e11ily a E•1v-q•~I' handle e Choic• of 1 1hjl11 Jumbo Unclerbed Stora9e Chests a 12-1/•"•l b-l l"•b-'/"" e R1inforc1d ~onll•uct:on e l ·tolor flo••I print 99' 30-50 GAL ON TRASH CAN LINERS e K11p h •1h nttl, 1tnil1ry • w •• 1h1rproof bt91 e For indoor or outdoor ~It PLASTIC, BLACK ELECTRICAL TAPE • >.:," >1 bb' roll a ln1ul•t"" 1plic11 w:,,, e R1p•1f< 9ord•n !0011, 11<~, 22'roll CASTING RESIN FOR CRAFTS e ldt•I lor ~obbv:1t1 e C11! vour ow" pl11li< ftuih lri v•h, t ic, e Fun fo• tl! 2.99 Got CASTING RESIN 'ANTI-SIPHON CHECK VALVE WITH UNION e Combin.tion conlrol-vo!v•, ••CUUm br••ker e Pr1•1nh b•ck• !low e Conlrol1 w1t1r 1y1t1m1 4.88 QUIET TOGGLE SWITCH • Sin9l1 Po l• • Conv•rh c !Oc~ 1wilcha1 '" lil•fll 61'1f l • In i•ory 35' Top Gracie Kerosene • For hurric •n• l1mp1 • A mu•I lor 1KEROSVtE c•mp;n9 • M•nv oth•r ... ~ Ulfl . -~ GALIA~ ·• ! ' 99' G•I. YOUR· CHOICE OF TRU-TEST OIL BASE OR VINYL LATEX EXTERIOR HOUSE PAINT OIL IASI PAINT e for 111 ••l1rior wood Ju•f,,,, e 60•1 on tmooihl.,. '"'ilh bru1h or rollt r LATEX PAINT • E<pe r :,ll v le•mul~l•d lor 1t~cte e C~oo•• f,o.,. 20() b11uliful dtcor•lor ,olo" PA.ICE EFFECTIVE THRU WED., JULY 21th YOUR 3 88 CHOICE o g1I. Adjustable Brass Sprinkler Heads e Flow control ad jullm•nl • s,1/.deonin<j body c•vity e Su•• •••I w•1h•t l'op·Up 89' Duplex Grounded Receptacle e Fo' 11f.,1y, '""'""'' e Hi9h11t qutlity e In i•o•v e Ou•!;tv n~lon b61tl•1 e ]" ,nd -4" •i1e1 e Fool~~r•d 1nd1 for 1mo•+h1r 1lrok11 59'ea. Its editor. John Ong. v.·as cautiously optimistic about the Nixon visit. If the President goes lo i'<'k· l•ll!'"'!" In& with a one-Chlna p(IHcy, !laid On(I. '"then the trip ~·ill be a peaceable joumcy." But if Nixon goes to Peking detennined to "continue sup- port of the Oilang Kal-shek clique, I'm sure he'll be disap- pointed, .. aald Ong. Whatever, Ong went on , Nixon will bt able to see how China has changed In 20 yt:ari;. "'f'be U.S. wank<I to murder tbil baby," be said. '"Bulin 21 yur1, Oiln1 htt become :. 2666 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA PHONE 546-7080 •= WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 9 to 6 Itron man" ~--.1'.'!:f_ .'.. --~.--.---·~--. -- 1 1. GOODWILL Industries GOOD Wlll y sez, Th• kids ar• out of school •g•in for summer v•cation and, as usu•I, they'r• w•aring out their cloth•s f•st•r than you can buy th•m. Why not try shopping 1t a Good- will Retail Store for their sUmmer clothes -and yours! 590 W. 19th St. Costa Mesa Of)'n Mon. thru Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9 till 5:30-646.2479 Your Dollar Buys More At The GOODWILL STORE BOX SPRINGS & MATTRESS $3790 Reconditiontd f(')AM & FEATHER PILLOWS 2 , .. $349 WOMEN'S CA PRIS 33' :~· WOMEN'S DRESSES 79'u, BABY MATTRESS $995 MEN'S PANTS 59'-79' ANO UP MEN'S SHOES $1.55 UP MATTRESSES $1995 BOX SPRINGS s179s Please Use These Booths In Your Neighborhood M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M ' • ' ' " l • w • p l " ' w ' " ' '" For the Record Births J•"' '· 1m Mr. 1nd M<I. Wllll•m )(. Hl ll«I "' 1HJ Ort "fl. Cwt1 MtM, boy M•. 11>(1 Mrt. Wllllem Dwlt hl Atlltoocl. -...... Moftt.,.... "''· •. ..." C1tin.nt1. girl. Mr. 1!111 Mr1. R.aQ ... Ht raid Mott , H" f. ,.,...,,1, 51n Cl1m1nl1, 1lrl. Mr. Uld Mr1. Ht nry Jiit. U l ,.,.,,.,., Slftt l, "~I (, Co111 MtH, boy M• 11\d Mn. Lb D<ovm1, 27111 """ttll W1y, Apr. no. Co1t1 """'· w M• tnd M" ltogtr MtM11!er1, 77C1 Elfl> 51rel!. Hun11n;1on lle•<ll, be• /.•• 1no M!I "II ltrtlneqar, 711•1 V1<1•11m ltno, Hunhng!on IUICll, ... Mr end """· l!cntl<I Cnry1llr. ltlll llv>bV l l nr , Hunhngtooi •~11. 1!rl M• 1n<1 Mrl Lynn Wtlldn•. ~I Lf~eren1, 01n1 Pooni, ghl M• t nd Mtt. A.pollnt rlo Nt•l<lld, 1.r!I Souln•nor• Dd\11, 1-\Unll"OIOl'I llttt~. .. , Mr ft rtd M1t li1orUn11 $1\1rr1r. lHi 8N tn, Tu\lln, boY Mr ~na M••-lDCld (11rn..,er, 2\11 Mop!• Sheet, Ca•I• Me,1. bO• M• on~ MrJ 1!1v<n<lnd Campo,, l/j) toug1onvlllo Pla<t. ~nt1 .o.na, DC• Jui. 1. on Ml IN~ Mr•. (n1rlol Myer1, J:/fl! un .. or.itv. cosi. MtH, t lrl Mr ond Mn Win•IOn W, Wtl~ff. 1'1 80\•ilng Grttn Ori,,.,, Collt ... H H, 00, Mr on<l Mf> Rof>lrl .t. Oobbl, 1"1 CM!an<ler Orive, Co111 M•••· 1\r! Mr one M" Poler P_ Ef>lf, 3rot !>ta•1>or1 Drlvl, 1'41,,.,parl !hoot-, qir! Mr and Mrt. L•trf .I., L1nvulll1, 1111 E1•U>Orl Otlv1, H1>nlon9h>n l ood• OO> Mr af>d M•I. Wlllltm H, l t1'11'11n;!an, llUl Tuolln Ettl OrlYt , .I.ti JI, l uurn. bOY July t, 1'11 Mr. t nd Mrt. ICtrl H1w1ey, :Id Wt1! W!l\on • .l.O!. F, tosll M111. alrl M• ~"" Mro. Timothy lllldwln. !U E111 13rd Slrffl, Ca1t1 Mut . girl Mr t nd Mrt. Mlch1tl A•nold, Jill C.anntl Qf!vt . to111 M•••• git! Mr t r>d Mr~. J 1mn CO<'r•lt,1 lOOfl Moontldt Clr~lt, HUMlng!On lttth, '" Mr and Mn. Jetl'l"oy Lltlena.ut11. UJ Pork 0.-vle, (oltt Mt>I, 9lrl Mr, one! Mn. Lwl1 S. l'rl!i!t1, lOl• W•rren L1n1. Colli Mt». boy Mr. tnd Mfl. Mlc!'l)el J . Hollom1n, n• sn111m1r, Apt.'· cmro M•••· boll Mr •nd Mrt. lltlcn1r4 M. G•rtv. 1110l Elm SlrMI, F0<.m!tln V•lloy, girl JMly 10, lf1! Mr. ,ond Mro. Wlllllm JtmH. 701• l'orl llrh rol Clrclt. NtwpCr! !hie,,, gltl Mt Ind M•i. Ow1yn1 Mcllrldt . 1'01 Wu• Y11mo Clrcl1, 51nt1 Ant . gfrl Mr on<I Mrl. Atl>erl PMlllp!, U9 WtJt P1lt1•<l•. S•n Clemntle, bov Mr &nd M". Scotttt N;iQI Vf&, 1•1'"'-' O•tnq• .l.vt nvt, Cot11 Mt11, ~"' M• 1n<1 Mn Jonn OOC!l,v. 1ll02 Se,o•pri!1 Clrclt. Hun!l"910n l •t cl'I, t otl Marriage Lice1ises L., V~GA.S, Nev. -M1rrl•o1 Ii<~••• •llVtd l'lort ;nc1ua1. HIJFF·6ElVIN -Junt 11, W1lltct .l.r!nur, •l. of Fnunlaln v~11,,, •nd Ron Mutt. ~. ol C.•rdtn Gtovl. l~lAU·CIJNN !NC.HAM -JuM U, Woll•ct Getir<lt . .i&. """ M1ro1r1t E. •!. boll'I 01 Co•I• Mei•. OOWLINQ·91.15HEIC -Junt Ii, OJC1• W•tlon. 51), al Gar atn G•cvt, t nd Ellttn C , "·or Wts!m1n111r. CROWNOWER-HJ<WLEY -J~n• H, Jot O_ II. 11. al Ed<I., S1>rlno1, Mo .. t nd Carol S .• 11, ot Wt1!mln•!tr EC tLES-TUl'Y -Junt U, 0..ltlerl Grtnl, )II, 1n11 Rulh, ~3. ~lh of 6 11-. t!UMPHRIES-l'ELKEY -Ju"" 1" illlv S., ,,, 1nd Gier.• Janell, II, ball\ ol Hwnl\n11on llnd1. l ECHUGA·THORI' -Junt lJ, Cht rltl ~l.t~in•'~-Lutl M,, S , botll oC ll:EfVf!.-L.t.YTON -Jun• 16. Wll\11111 Lit, JJ, OI lu"ln, t no Ritt lltt. 11. of L"""h' 101Ln. WHITEO-STIFT -J une 16. Cllllon J , JO, ol 01b0rn, /NJ., t nd Roni,., ~. cl Hun1 lno1on 6 ttc/\. 1~:n)(~~n111, "21w~:1f1n~ J~:~ .~~ 1'n,"Olneu1.IJL0/ 1-1un!lno!on ll11tn. Plil !J~A-THW Ir~ -Juno 11, J1m11 G11111m, Jl, of AYon l o~t. ~lo. •nd P11r1cl1 Ann, 11. O! Hun .. ng,on Ll'A1~~~E•·G.t.RONE R -Junt II, ttooerl w 1 .. 1n. "· ot ll11111r CllY, \.t .. Ind l olly 0,. ff. or w11tm1n1t!•. lHW•11~-MC NAUGHTON -Jwnt II, J0<1 Henrv1 :11, t nd Mt rllyn E1\1obt l!" u. 1>e111 C11 1111n11no1on ltt th. H INO~·GlllSOl"t -J1>nt It, M•r!ln .t.lt n, 1s. of South P111dtn1 tnd Chtrvl ll u,hbll' 01 Foun111n Vtfl•~ N.1.NNl!-JOll AN -Junt U, 0Wt1' Lt wrt ntt . ~. Ol Gtrelt" Grove, t ncl ""!· ll, or F~ttln v1111v. WATl -M.t.Y6E Y -Junt II. John tC. ,,, ol Lat 1'Qoie1 t nd P1trltl1 1'!\ntllt n. of Hununoion l tttll. ltPTON·~J<RROLL -Jun• !I, O<ontld A. L .. 11, OI Hemtt tnd Chtrltnt. JO, •11-1untlnQJon 8 otch. JM TH·GOOOE -Junt II. entries EOwln, "' ct Coren• di\ Mir. t!'CI Ell11 Vt nac11, 11., of Ltount l11ch. v1 10.-.110.~MlLLlr. -Junt I'' Ll"'rtnct •·a •5, t nd .t.ndret. u . bolh w'6t~l'Zf:l:~1 .!":~~HEZ -,wn• 1•. HtMY J. 51, ol (O•lt Mflt . Ind C.u11111uo• GQdJnt. JI, or 111u1n1, wZ·~~~~lll-NEWM.l.N June II, Jim~'· l!'uaene. loll. nr Wntm•n•1tr, •rod N~l'Y'f J1•n <O, of Sl nlt J<r.t . Death Notices CllMlNG [tcil Dtml~o. \Ill'• Pl1c1n1i1. Co1l1 l.'•Y . Oot• of e111tn, Julv 70. Jiii Se<v· "" 1110 lnltrm~n! ... 111 fl.I n11e1 ~11urd1v. July 1•. In 5plrll Lt k1. Iowa. w1a1c1Uf c.noHI Mortua,., ~..i·-'IH. P'orwt rdln• MILLl:ltotG S1tpn1n J. Mtllrlnt. 4601 Rn1~1MY Crovf, t-luntln~tM\ B •lt~-0 111 ot dttt~. JulY 70. 1011 ~u•vlv.cl bv wl!I. 01~111; '""' Sce1•1 11~ufM1rt, 5Tto!>l~lf, Suu nn1 1nd Oat• 01~1; otrtntt .. Mt. t nG Mfl. Oon Mtll· "n" e~,...1• J•t~ 1nO Oon M•l"ln•I 1,,,0,, Oorolnv H1rf1•. Ro~arv, l'rldoV, 1 JO '·"'·• !I. Bon•vfn!ur1 C1tholl~ cnun:n 11:...,ultm M111. 51!u•d•V• 1G • m .. $1. l onavt ntu•• (111\0ll< CrNrcn. P....to; P'11T>llY CO!Olllt l P'untrtl Home. 0 1rK1tr1, ARBUCKLE ~ SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 4!'? E. 171h St., Costa Me11 -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del l\o1•r . . . 81S.t•50 Cotta Me11 . . . . . . 5'1-t4t4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY lit Broldway, Co1Ur Me11 u I-US! • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1715 Lapna Canyon Rd. 4M-t411 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary O apel 1500 Paclftc View Drh•e Newport Beacb. Callfomll ....., .. • P!l'!lt PAMJLY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME 1111 Bol11 A~c. weatmh1tta m-ssts • S~tlTH'S MORTUARY t!7 Main St. "'""" ··~- 'Long Overdue' Board Lawyers Support SANTA ANA -The Orana:e County Board of Sllpervlsors epllt 3-2 Wednesd1y Jn support or Govern« Ronald Reagan's )Velfare reform program. SA Federal Court By TOM BARLEY Of "" 0.111 ,.rltl ti.ti' SANTA ANA -Freeway. weary lawyers and Utigants in federal court actions have long protested the time-consuming jowney from Orange County to Los Angeles. Those com· plaints have moonled since lhe revealing of plal1.!I for con- struction of a federal building in Santa Ana . They have argued fo r years that an Orange County federal court was long overdue in terms of population and filing statistics atone. Added to that, they say, is !he difficulty pos- ed by free\\'BY travel at hours when attorneys, litigants and jurors can bank on peak traf- fic conditions between Orange County and Los Angeles. A bill introductd by Rep . Q\arles E. Wiggins (R-EI Monte) five months ago calls for the creation of a federal court in Santa A n a . Congressman Wiggins now has the support of the Orange County Bar Association. I n a statistic-packed presentation, the county bar argues that the central dislricl ranks 22nd Jn geographical size among the existing 93 United States district courts and is the only one in the first 77 to have a single courtroom location (Los Angeles ). The Central District of California comprises Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino Counties and the Long Beach area and is in terms of popula- tion alone the largest single jurisdiction within the dislrict court system. U:ts Angeles' fed e r a I building is the only place \\'here the legal issues created by the lives of n1ore lhan 10 million persons and activities of thousands of private Rnd municipal corporations can be resolved. The county bar points out in its support of WiggJns' bill that you hflve lo look lo sutb jurisdictions as the Virgin ls!ands , G u a m , Delaware, Rhode Island and the District of Columbia to find other situations in y,•hich just one federal court building i s available for an en t 1 re jurisdiction. "The Central District cf California stands out as an ex · traordinary anomaly," bar president C. Arthur Nissan says. "Its area is great. its population and rate of growth astonishing, its p u h 1 i c transportation is mlnimal and traffic in and around its single courthouse, buill in 1939, is congested beyond all reason or remedy." Orange County, he says. would be ideal for Riverside and San Bernardino people with federal court business and this coun!y"s tren1endous edge on those two jurisdictions in terms of population and 111- ings should en5ure San\a Ana gelting the nod for any ex tra courtrooms that may he provided. No provision \\'AS made ff1r feder al courts in the Sant;i Ana Federal Buitdin11: that v•ill soon be erected in the counly !eat's civic center. but th~ architecl foresees no problem in that , county lawyers say. Nlsson says the architect has told him that the addition Mom Names Valley Man In Lawsuit SANTA ANA -A Fountain Valley man blamed by police for a traffic t.ecidcnt that led to the dea th of a Eeven-month· old baby has been sued fnr 1775,000 in an Orange County Sup erior Court action filed by lbe m!iher of the child . Mrs. Linda Lucille Smart of Santa An• blames DQnovan Aron Van Over, JS. of 10474 Egret St., for the death on Ju - ly 13. 1970, of her Infant son, Thomas Smart. Vr.i Over was booked on manslaughter charges after his car collided with Mrs. Smarl"s auto al Newllope Street and McFad- den Avenue. of Ule required floors to tht planoed structure will ac tually make the building even more architecturally attratlive. Jt -==========-=~ will ht part of a complex: com-r- prlsing !he recently built Orange County Courthouse. I.he almost con\p!ctcd county law library. a stale office building and a new Santa Ana Who Cares? No other neW'Spaper In the \~·or\ci 1·1:1.fes abo\ll y()ur ~·<1111- Jnunity J1ke your cornrnu n1ty dl\ily llf'\\'SJMlS't'r docs. It's lhe nA!LY i'ILOT. city hall. *BRAKE* RELINE s 159s ~~sue~~! llCIPIDISt VW'S $22.95 *DOMESTIC -~ *FAT* AX RADIAL UNIROYAL FASTRAK '{:? DOUBLE f? Glass Belted Ii Polyester fQUIP "Tl SlRllS" * ~~1~,~ti~HS Of ~l~~t:1ss11R * Gl.&.SS lllTBED 88 SJ ~11 1 11 Blickwa\1 " ... $1495 . ··~:"J ••••• $1 6" C18/13 ·"''~'.'!" · · · 95 ClB /14 .'':'.''.'~ · • · · $16 95 ElB/14 .":'.'·.'~'. · • • :19 95 flB /14-flB /1 5 · · · · $~!" GlB/14-GlB/15 · · · · $ 95 ttlB/14-ttlB/\5 · • · · 39 $44'5 l 18/15 ••.• ,: ... ·.~,;~,;· .. ~: ........... . h" • *FINEST* SHOCKS SUPIR VALUIS U.S. CAllS, TllUt'.KS, cind (AMP[RS Supervbors William Phillip! of Fullerton, Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach and David Baker of Garden Grove voted to back the Goverhor's pro- gram. They were opposed by Supervisors Ralph Clt.rk or Anahelm and Robert Batt in of Santa Ana . Tuesday. Hcagan's top welfare n1an. Robert Carlson . state director o{ soc i a I •~Ct! ll~IMU ll ll&Ufl tll 4 W!tlUi • tOl'llf llllSlflC!lioOU I U"f tlllll • lllUl\t Ill Wl(fl Ullll'1 U! • 1'111 IUIJl:'!ICI ll\ • 11111'11 • Jl~IU 110"1 Wt!!H 11•11•1 S • IUU&H ll~!l.UO fllll !~'Oil • llt Ul~I "UL hlll • IWl'ICI UllU llil! • fl !l lfJUl!llllllTJ '"lll!lf 11111..C ••f.l,D IUlltltllln ......... ;.,,.. .. ,,, ....... " s,,; ... ,, s .. 11. ~.uor c,1_ 1tt1t1, Wlti.11 a •• ,;~, •• 1.i,.t ••' ;1 ••t<h4 'l'hursd.ty July 22 1971 DAil V PILOT J Splits "'elfare, explained the ad- vantages of the governor'! progrun to supervisors. But his. arguments didn't blunt the opposition o t Democrats Clark ahd Battln who argued lt would oosl the. county mooey. Carl.son denied this and county Welfare Direc- tor Granville Peoples said he estimated "conservatively" that the Reagan program would save the county $600,000 during the current flsca! year. None of Lhe.se ?•gu1ncnls s11·ayed Clark or Ballin. Peoples siud hl• could to on Welfare estimalt! the dollar effect of a bill sponsored by the County Supervisors A.ssocit1llon of CalUornia {CSAC) whu .. 1\ Clark though!. the board should sup-- ix>rt. Peoples said he didn't think the county would be penalized if lhe state ran out of money late next spring. But he reminded the board that they had '"1opted a resolution stating that If state money ~·as cut off the county would slop the welfare proi,:rain , not penalize the Joc 11.I taxpayers. Supervisor David B a k e r I repeated. that he was 1pinst the governor's program at one time, but Nter careful atud)' concluded U1at it was the best offered. Battin finatly said, wilh a big smile on his face, "We sho uld nol vote on a partlun basis." Supervisor Ronald Casper.f <·ountered : "I didn't drop m.Y Republican beliefs when l came on this board. I think the RepubHeans should be ruMln1 <1ll govcrnn1 cnts. '' Battin hit hack with, "Yeah, social "'elf are for the rich." lm!!!al!!!lll!!!'l li!!!l!.!~1 -~~9.!lim BRAND N£VI fUll 4pLY 7,7Sx15 (17~!.~~1. .. .. ' ..... "" ""~~:: ou.o•• • J0,000 Mil• Olf•r. lrelr• lllec•••• r11tlSll£~,, . USC/Ji II ''. flCl'l flSC 40,0t'>O Mll• Gu er. lr1•t lllecJr•J• f Ul1 SU[ U.1. CAIS . OC('l ... * * •MARK C. llOOME IRA~l GUARANTEE ,,,,.,,1., .... ,,1"'" """' • ,, ,...,.,lotlor•-oi-t••H"" '"' -· <°"II '""'"° ....... I , ...... """ :"'.: ~::::i; .~ ... ~~:.:i~:·~-~- Van Over pleaded guilty last Jan. 15 to reduced charges of unlawful drlv blJ and served 9U days In Orange County Ja.11. He was warned by Judge Byron K. McMlllRn to steer clear of alcohol and premi ~es where al<'QhoJJc beverages are $15 95 .....• ..00111 •. r:-.: , • 3005 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA CORNER of BAKER and HARBOR -PHONE 557-8000 served. The Sm.rt b11h y , a pa.ssengf'r in hls mottitr·s car , dled in i:t loc11l l::lospltAI ,. frw hours 11f~er ~~~.1.lsi!!_1 ~ b<!!W'l>ll\ " 'lf"'..,_I". . ) l L ' Servlnq Cn•la -'lean-:\'e..,gort llearh A ren GARDEN GROVE I ANAHEIM-BUENA PAR K I FULLERTON 14040 Brookku"t-530-3200 6962 Lincoln Blvd.-826-5550 1321 Euclid-8711-0\00 • I ~ I " • ii • • r • • • • • ,, • •n " ~ ~ .~ ~ I ~ OAJLY PILOT ltiur...Wt J~lr 2l, 197! Sale Priceo Effective !l'bru Jolyrl ' • .,,,..._~~ \ ,.., "' •, I ' .. , ~,.~...ii;,'• ...... ,~ ' .l · ' ' r I ~ •·. ' ' . , t ' r • ''El Toro Bravo'' Bedroom ... Spanish-inspired bedroom furniture in a. warm , dark oak finish ••. construcced for long service. Carved-effecc detailing. Textured plastic t ops. Brass-finish chain-link style hardware. Dovetailed drawers. fully dust-proofed. Ide.ii for boys' rooms . ' .. ., • "Bonnette" White French Provincial Bedroom YOUR CHOICE $79.95 Canopy Be d $ $79.95 Single Dresser Base $79.95 Four-Drawer Chest S79.95 Studenl Desk 1 S79.95 Poudre Table $79.95 Lingerie Chest Graceful l~rench Provincial bedroom furniture wirh a silky smooth antique v. hire finisl1 and gold-color accents. D eli cate curves, deco- rative m c<l a!li uns an<l cabriole legs add to t he elegance of Scars ••Bonner cc". And •.• jt's tOJJpcd \Vith l1igh pressure plastic to pro- tect it fr om p racti cal I)· eve rything ... scratches, mars and spills. MATCHING PIECES Framed Mi rror 3995 Bachelor Ches 64" $99.95 Double Dre5ser Base •34 Stack Uni 4995 'Triple Dresser Has 119.s Corner Des 39•5 Triple Dresser Mirro 49•5 Chai .2995 Panel Be 5995 Night Stan 3995 Standing M irror 7995 $79.95 Single Dre••er Base $79.95 Chairhaek Headboard $79.95 Four-Drawer Chest $79.95 StudentDe•k $69.95 Three-DrawerChe•t S 99. 90 Pair of Night Stands MATCHING PIECES Framed fl.1irror 2995 Cornoc 4995 Tahle $99.95 Double s79 Stack Dresser Base L" nit !119.% ·Runk Br.d '99 Chair 3995 2995 SHOP SUNDAYS 12 Noon to 5 P.M .... MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M .... SATlJRDA YS 9:30 to 6 P.M. FREE PARKING! ..,.... , ... I( •2•-4400, .. ,, ... ,)Ci CANOGA, ...... ....... , '°""°" ~·,,~.,., _, .... -) I COVINA '"'·0611 n MOHll 44J·391 I GltHDAll 241·1004, 244·4611 HOllTWOOD 469-S941 IN GllWOOD 671-2 J2J lONO lrA(H 435-0111 .. . OlTM,IC & SOTO ISeai:sl ,,1.s111 OllAHGI 637-2100 ,ASAOIHA. '611 ·3lll,3.S1·421 1 ~LU.51 ltOEM/CEAI"(D CO. -------·--·----··~ l'OMOHA SANTA MOMCA TOUANct Satisfaction 629-S161 J944711 J41·1S11 '1CO IOUTH COASI' •LAZA VAUIY Guaranteed '73 ..... 261 J40-333~ 763-&461. 914·2);'"" Or Your Money 5.IHTol n: SHJHCS THOUSAND OA.Jt'I VOl:MONT BC!lk 944·1011 497 ... , .... J12·1131 7J9·1911 --·-., , n·.....-,. >h-~ .... ~--.. ' • ~·,. ·~· ~"' ,_ci)-• ·3:J~ ~c~ <4:''f Melon melting in their mouths , the girls furiously fin ish another piece. Among the more thon SO girls competing are I left to right) Robin Atwood, 9, Terry Schossow, 8, a nd o young guest. Girls Scale Melon Mountain By JACKIE COMBS 01 ·~• O•llr Piiot s11t1 Spitting seeds and \\'J!d!y \\ ip1ng fat£~. the girls devour· ed 15 v.•atermelons in less th;in 10 m1nl1ic!'. Juice dripped dO\\'ll over their tannerl hnrlies. Seeds and rinds littered the yard of the Harbor Arca Girls Club as the group staged its annual \Valermelon-cating contest for girls, 6·1 2. BEA ANDE RSON, Editor Running S\\'iftly. smiling \\'Ith rlc1crn11nat 1on. they lunged at the great tubs of red melons. The lusc ious fruit seemed to evaporate in to the 'Na rm summer air. Thwrll11y, Jwlr ll, 1'11 P111 U They squealed as only llt!le girls can ctn 11 hile counting the pile of rinds before thein. "I've eaten eight already,'' she said. runn ing back for another. Ttve!~e pieces of \\•ate rmelon \l'Crc eaten by ;i dyn amic: duo, Leslie \Vatson, IO. and Johanna f,spinoza. 11 Besides probable stomach aches. the.v received activity cards good for craft and skill lesson s at the clu bhouse. A thorough hosin g do,vn fol!O\l'e d. Girls jun1ped. Girl!! ran as water came from all directions. Summer-tanned bodies took many shapes as th ey filled out the bikinis. Pudgy wilh haby fat. li the and angular and ~imply straight -they li ned up fo r a bikini fashion shov,1 Arms and legs fly. You ng faces set in determination, they aim for great pols of rich , red fru it I right ). All sm iles , th ey dig in to win !left ). Da ily Pilot Photos by Greg Schneider 'Ugly Duckling' Fairytale Still Has a DEA.R A/\"N LANl>EHS. I sa1v mysclr in your ro!un1n the olhrr day -the homely child \.\•hose mother wao; SG a.shamed she co\·rred th~ titllt> girl's face with a heal"y \"C1l1ng \\·hen she look her out in I.he. baby carriage. J hopr ~·our me!:agc ~n\ th rough lo thal mother because nohr>dy ,.-:nt through lo n11nc. I grev.· up hcheving I \\"ac; the ,1j1,!ic.11l person in !he world . 1 didn·l make fnenrls beca use I fell I "'<IS too hnmel~· ln hf' .~P t n with r.ty pos!ure wa.c: h~d b«'nuse I kepi n1 y shnuldcr~ hu nrhrd "° no one would h11ve lo look al m~· f;icc One day fl k\nd tcflchrr a~kt>r! n1c to t;\t1y Aftrr school. I .~wrar I thnu~ht :;he was going 10 tell n1e I WR~ ton u~ly lo he Jn hr r cl11s11. and I wos hr in~ t.r11n:;frrrrd. Instead !:he told me I h11rl .,,rry pretly h11ir :lr (] nice ,., f'~ and 1 ~h.,lllrln 1 1111r ;·1• a)v11 il . . ~ "i'li' . friendship -50melhing I could n't do before. Today I am happily married and we have two beautiful ,children. Please prinl this letter for other l,;gly Ducklings and lhel r mothers. I might help someone -10omewhere. -MADE IT AN YWA Y \\·en-dressed bum. He has been out or 'vl'Ork for twn year s and is not looking very hard . He l ive~ wi!h r.i om who has bought hiin a car, pays fnr his in~urance, gives him SJX'nd1n~ mone y. iron~ his i;hlrts ( 1he laundne~ aren ·1 careful enou gh) ;:ind cracks hi~ soft-boiled eggs in lhe morning nr she gets a few shells in lhcm he yells et her.) Lasl week he marncd a 1g..year-0\d gi rl. She has no job either. l\tom owns lhi11 building and he w;:ints one of her choice apartments -"on credit." 'Ve fPcl hP has taken advantage of Mom to '"1nlrrr~t1ng" DEAR M. I.: Here's yo ur letter -11nd lhe poin! that it i!I sickeni ng . How can we Th<1! "'nnrlerf\11 !rRcher rhRn_R:r.d niy e blit bouqutl o( orchids In lhat y,·ontler· get her to see the light? -FED FED my nose 11nd chin -!hat my ra ce would deve\Qp nicely in Lhem and I might e\·en be consi.dered e beauty. She ghowed me m.:igatine pirtures of models \\'ho hed 1rf'ak chin.~ and pron11ncnt noses and ex· pla1nrd Iha! irregular fe;:itures could be hfr AFlcr nur v1s1t I s!ood ·a UUle lul ~ocher. I hope Jbe 1ee1 It. Ff;:n ,o;traighter Rnd Ala rlrrl to btlieve t.hat one l>EAR TRIPLE FED; Your mother (lRy I n11gbt he cnn~i rieretl 11tlr:\ctlve l DEAR ANN LANDE RS: Our hrothrr IS dl'lf'1n'1 WANT in 11ee the light. She tnjoyl h"':~n \n Off'n up to Pth"r,<, 11nd 11rrrpt 25 ~·par.~ or age, bona f1fiP loa fpr Rnd a hr ln)t A pat~y for ynur brother. ID fact, ~-·-·--.... -.~-~-·.,;. ,.··~·':..c;., -------.............. -. uu ----·--·--·;.~ ... -- prior to the conle.!.L Kathy Kesel, 7, \\'asn't lo be outd one. Having no bikini, she coaxed mom into fashioning a delightful creation. Cotton print diapers clasped with great safety pins and a halt er top secured wi th a length of rope. Voila! The annual contest is jusl one of the many activitiell staged for l-tar1l9r Are·a Girls at the clubhouse. Besides the cl asses ranging from ceramics. cooking and copper enamel to mobil es. machine sewing and mosaics, th e girls can learn ball et. po ttery and French. Second session begins Aug. 2. Speci al events take place each Wednesday throughout. the summer. Coming up for the younger girls are_ice skat· ing. lour of the fire department, train trip to San Diego Zoo and body painting and hose day. Also on the agenda are play day at the park with relays, contest and prizes, visit to a tortilla factory and the sun1mer carnival which climaxes the season, Sept. l . Located across from Cos ta Mesa Park, the fa cility is ope n to Ha·rbor Area girls age six through high school. Age groups include Polywogs. age 6 through 3rd grade: Mermaids 4-6th grade. and Teens, 7·12th grade. Happy Ending 1be ba!I ut bersell up for It. Tbe 11d lhlnl 11 that her Indu lgence has made btm what be 11 today -· a.nd be wW 'pay the price. · lnqui1ltive. ll IP. natural for tbP.m lo U:• p\ore. Tbl1 doesn't mean they art disturbed -or bed. DEAR ANN LANDERS : OUr ~year-0\d so n and his &-year-old cous in play nicely together. La!it Sunday I wenl to the bedroom to call them fur 1nspper and I found them half un dreued, ''playing doc- tor." J. we!I so upset l nea rly fainted. Our MJn has always been 8 good child and J had no idc11 he was interested in &el. l don't know how far they went but I am worried. fi.ty husband and t are res!>ecLable people and we doo l know where the boy got off the track. I!! this child disturbed? Should we seek help for him? -LOUISV\Ll,E l>EAR LOUIE : All normal children are _:..._._ .lllur.--":--. ··.:t~·; Youngsters 1 b o u Id not be lift unsupervised for long periods (If llll!e under any elrct1m ~t1nee1. Moreover tbe c.bildre11: 5bould be taught that tbtlr bodies are "private" and clothes m11" b4I kept on. If the clothes oome ,41 oc- C.lil!llionally. l\1nm 5bould not become unglued snd make them feel lbey\·e done a ttrrlbl1 tblng. What awails you on the other !.ide o! the nlarriage veil? How can ynu be sure ynur m11rrial!e \\'Ill wnrk? Read Ann Landers' booklPt, ··~1 .. rnage. -What lo Expect·• Send your request to Ann Lander! in care of the DAI LY PILO't enclosing 50 cenLo; in coin and a long, stamped, scl(-addrcs~ed envrlope. \~ ~ . ....;;-;r.:r.~ • :~ ..a I l J 4 DAILY PILOT Film Star M ate ~Drops • By ERMA DOMB ECK :-i: For the JJ!e of me I could never figure out what Paul Newman sees In J o an n e what"s-her·name. Oh sure, she's an intelligent, well read, beautiful, blond mother of six, an award·win- nlng actress and a devoted wife walking around in the body of a model. But thaL , could get pretty boring after : awhile. i:P.:~~ According to the current g~·..article in Good Housekeeping . .:~:they are opposites. She is a ~--vintage wine; he is six percent , ·beer. She's a concerto; he is Mo._,_.·~ poker on Friday night. She's Y, .an oMginal lahel : he is faded .. ,. ' j .:..-: , eans. !;: , _· I guess what really bothers ~ ~ me is that J don't like the idea !~. of a sex symbol being ha ppily .~ married. The other night I had t a dream in which I was squeezing melons at the pro- duce counter .and a h a n d : i touched mine. It \\'BS Paul Newman. I looked around_ :'-""· aghast "'Paul. we 've got to • ~ stop meeting like this." ~ '"I know,'' he said his blue ' >==. : eyes shimmering. "I had to ~: get out of the house. All those , . • classy books, high-brow music ;--:_ ... : and what's-her-name f!oa tl ng ..;_ ~ • around looking s e x y . She -~ doesn't understand people like !: :"'> ._...,., you and I . " ~ "Me." I cor rected, then ad· : .. ~ ded. "Some people don 't ap- : -"';: preciate coarse people like us ·~~ who like to watc:h_rol~ ~ 4 t ~-.. -. . -. . "" .-. -. ~: :~ . -. " . _ _, •,.. ...(. ~ .... ~ oy to the World • IS I SWIM WEAR I HOT PANTS Jaw lo II>• W•r"' l'll~lon• 3551 I . COAST HWY. COll:ONA DfL MA it P'trkln1 In l:e•r Rating AT WIT'S EN D derbys and sl'oot pool with Wisconsin Fats." "That's Minnesota Fats," he corrected. "Minnesota Fats Virginia Slims ... what does it matter the aiu or a cigaret- te. The point is we have so much in common. Take our Jove of politics. I voted for Charlie McCarthy twice." "l didn't campaign for CHARLIE McCarthy," he said, "It was SENATOR McCarthy." "No mattei," I said, "I do fetl wicked for meeting in public like this. Maybe the next time we should meet at the library." His brow furrowed, "You know how I hate to read ." "Oh, c'mon, Paul," I said, "You can't go through life playing handba!I and tuning up engi nes. I mean It wouldn't kill you to read a book once In awhile." "I think people who write books are so busy writing them they don't have ti me to live. lhem . ··Thal ·s a pretty rotten thing to SH}'." I said slamming the 1ne!on dc11vn on his hand. "Considering th e fact th.<11 T am at work v.Titing my third book now." "That. lady. is your pro-· blem," he said stomping out. I awoke v.·ith a start. ''Wha~a matter?" a~kcd my husband, "Bad dre;im ~" ' "Not really." I !'.aid _ "'! \\/::IS 1, dreaming about .! o an n e 'Vootlward and Paul \~·hat"s. his-name." "Newman?"' "That's the bum.'' TAKE THE NEWS QU IZ We Da re You ... Eve ry Saturdoy HEMPHILL'E SEMI· ANNUAL I I Swirls for Fall From his f'all·\vinter Collection '71, Castillo offe rs ··serthilde," a naked back dress for evening. It's pleated frorn \vaist to knee over pleated trousers. '!'he oulfit is execu ted in buttercup yellow vernon Next Step: A Cultural Center '!'be~ of U.. Newport Beach City Arts Comm!tite can belt be meaeured in t.ernu of a lot of l i ttle ac- compllahmenll, acoordlng to Mrs. Edward Whltehouae, one of three i'eUrinJ members. Mra. WhJt.ehouse hu finish- ed her four-year term and Is retlrln& with Mrs. William Stabler and Mrs. Harold J. Phllllps. Founded in 1960 at lht rur- gestlon of Jay "Stoddard, then mayor of Newport Beach, the comm.Jttee lint arranged art exhibits for the city hall to decorate the larae. unadorned walls. The .first members of this committee were the mayor's wife and Rex and Joan Brandt. Soon, more membtrs were appointed; !lOme of these going on to found the Newport Harbor Art Muieum. The committee's servietl! to the community ha.s broadened an d recently included an ex- tensive survey of the status of the arts in cities of com- parable stze and stature. A compilation of tbe cultural accompllshment.!I and plans of these other communities wu Betrothal Reveal eel Dr. and Mrs. Robert C. \Voodruff of Newport Beach have announced the engage- ment of lhcir daughter. Janet Woodruff to Donald G. Smith . llloorporai.d !Jlto U.. Newport Tomorrow report. Bl\OADENING SCOPE C:Oocerned ma inly with the vltual art.a in the past, the committee Is broadening its scope to include areas such as music, Ute theater, art ac- qui.liUon.s and the des igns of city signs and buildings. The commlttee lpQIUIOrS the annual Spring Arla Festival and organizes exhlblt.s ol art and hlstorial material for tbe city libraries. The three new members of I.ht committee, who will act as spokesmen In the fields of mwic, theater and urban plann.!ng, also will help the committ.ce work toward Jts goal of encouraging arts within the city. Joining the committee are Ge rhar d Felgemaker, en· vlronmental de&lgner and artist: Don1ld Fergu,on, first vice preiiident of the Orange C<lunty Philharmonic Society, and Ladis1aw Re day, pas t chairman of the advisory Area Is the next 1tep fo• the board of Sooth C o a &: t.. ....ol.ty, accordh\g to M r s • Repertory Theater. Whitehouse. but the initiation Feli emake.r earned degref!l of this project !s doubtful in from the University of Illinois the near future because ot and the UnJverslty 0 f the lack of financial backing. Pennaylvania and is a "'All the arts are suffering member of the American from the lack of a facility," Society of L a nds ca p e Mrs. Whitehouse said. Artists, the American Society Continuing.committee mem- o! Planning Officials. Laguna btrs are Ronald Yeo and the Beach Art Associ ation end Mmes. Herbert B rowne I I, Newport Harbor Chamber of Robert Malinoff and Francis Commerce. He has won L. Smith Jr. awards for hJs painting andJp; _________ _, photography. NAVAL RESERVE Ferguson. a graduate of the University or Sout hern California, holds a captain"s rank in the Naval Reserve and ii; a member of the American Society of Chartered Life Underwriters . Reday. a graduate of MIT and Fi.!iher Art School in Detroit, was a member of the Kobe Intemational Players while residing in the Orient and appeared in s e v e r a I movies at RKO. He also has appeared with the LI do Players. The estab lishment of a cultural center in the Harbor THINK SALE W••tc:llff Plaza Onl y DTERY Don't Miss Our Sale! Quality Foot\vear Je rsey. ,,. ·~ ...... --~~~-::i~1 Miss Woodruff is a graduate For \Vome11 and Children 225 E. 17th STREET COSTA MESA 548-2778 Crusade Director Headlines Agenda Cliff Barro\1':;, inu sic dlreclor for the Billy Graham crusades and program director of the flour of Decision radio program, will be the guest :;peaker for the Newport Beach Christian \V omen's Club Thursday, Aug. 5. The noon luncheon meeting will take place in the Airporler Inn, Newport Beach, and v.·ill include a fashion show of dresses designed for gi rl s of all ages. Al so featured \\'ill be Y..1iss Oarrellyn l\1e!illi, lyric coloratura recording artist and frequent soloist at UCJ under lhe direction of Drs. ?vlauri cc Allard, Colin Slim and Peter Odegard. Reservations Carl Armando. may be made v.11th Y..1rs. j of Newport Harbor High ~-School and attended San Diego I Slale College. _ _.:'J'.'.'.A'.'.:N'.-"E'..'.T_'.'W'._'.:O'._'.:O~O'..'R'._'.U'._'F:_-:F~~=================~ fl er fianc-e, son of Mr. and 1- Mrs. Willa rd Smith of Na- tional City, ls a graduate of } Sweetwater lfigh School. He f al!io attended t.fonterey City i College •n:;:;S I Sydney Omarr Is one or -the \1·orld's grl!!at astrolo-ger1. Hi~ column Jg one of I the DAILY PILOT'S rreat 1==''"'==.:""'-~:==1 I W11111111 .A.p,.rol b'( • Norman Wiatt e Bltylt Al•o Coll w •• , 271 1 Iott Coat Hwy. Corona d1l Mw 671-4740 ~~--™" -r:s:ea••== =*'"'es•"' IC¥VWl1U<S:•"-" -.. " _.-:;.. ~ ·.:, ... . •' .· ::~ --' ---' . .. ~~ -r.~"'""" ~t~1 ~- JOHANSEN • _Enna Jettick® *RISQUE *HILL ,and DALE VALUES TO $30. 1/2 PRICE e DISCONTINUEO STYLES e B~OKEN SIZES e ALL SALES FINAL 54 Fa1hion ltland Newport Center UN 'l'•11r lkll~kA-rlco,d M•ller Cft•rto e H...,phllJ..Cllo''' No. 48 Fashion l•land: in th11 North Mall, Newport Cuit&r {71 .4) 644-4737 • Vi sit the beauti ful world of Arkraft at No. 48 Fashion Island Fine, imp orted furniture and unique acce13orie1 ii our husincs!. You'll find a wide selection of solid tea.k and rosewood hand-carved fu tniture, magnificent Coromandel and soapstone inlaid screens, porcelain l&mps, cus tom upholstery, beautiful area rugs, and Jolid bronze flatware from Thailand. Complimcntuy decorating service. Muter Charae, :BankAmerica.rd and CIUr own reYOlvi.ng plan. And now we're opening ;;i new showroom in the Long Beach area at Re dondo and Hill.just north of the P~cific Cout Hiahway. FINli FURNITURB ' - ; ' ' ' ' • l hur~-0' July 22 } 1)71 DAIL V PILOT J 5 Vacation Time Put to Good Use by Active Coastal Groups Evr.ryth1ng frnm food to fu hton will be leatured ne1t w~k along th• Orange Coast. Dem ocratic Clu b Plans for paruc1patio11 in the first annual Orange Coun- ty Dem&erat1c 8 a r be cue Saturday. Aug. 7, al O"Nei ll Ranch will be discussed when n1embl>rs of the Huntington A e ach -F o u n1ain Vallf'y l)emocrlltic Club g a t he r \Vednesdll y, .July 28 Mr . 11nd l\1rs. H. c.;, Sullivan will hMt 1he II pm. meeting 1n their Hunllngton Beach home. Ju nior C lubs lde11~ will be exchanged by club officer~ during a Think-ln Tuesdav. Julv 27 . in the Anahe1in F.bell CI u b house sponSOrPd by Area 0 of the California Federation ti f Women's Club. Junior membership. Special guf'!i1s at the 9 .10 11 m e11ent v.•ill include 1he l\1rne.~ Rudolph Hollis .. ~tale presi dent. Richard Jaeka. first \PICe presidenl. 11ncl Michael Rile.v. con1roller-auditor. Amon~ learlf'r~ nf a huz1. session nn n1embersh1p will be l\1rs. Ronald Stcnge of lhE" C05ta t.1esa Junior Women·.~ Club. SA Co uncil l\1 iss D<lttie Ahern, speaker 11 nd counselor. will he the special guest of the Christian THE N-E-W LQQK ni,the ~ for HAIRSTYLING 9 Ma le & Fem a:e HAIRSTYLISTS To SerYe Your EYery Need! 1--Vl-VIANI WOODARD COSMITICS ---' matA"~ WIG & BEAUTY SALON S48-3446 250-D lo1t 1 ?tll Str"I HILLGRfN SQU ARE COSTA MISA :;I Busine~ a nd Profu..'\1onal Coonctl al Santa Ana Tuesda~, July %7, in Friedemann Ban- quet Hall, Orange. Also 0t1 the program for the 6:30 dinner meeting will be Of· firer John Reed of the Santa Ana Police Department and the. Revelations, a professional all-woman singing group. FY Associati on New officers w1!1 be In- stalled during the annual d1n- nE"r mttting flf thf' Fount:11n Valley Arts Assoc1at1on Sallu- day. July 24 . 1n Franrni~ rrstaur11nl. llllntingtnn Hr;ieh . SeatesJ will bP Bnti Krrrnrr. president. along "1th Lnu1s Kreuger and the MnH·~ t<.l;ir- jorie Kremer. t.11ll1e Rlan~e11 , Sharon Griffin and Joyce Anderson. W omen's ORT Efforts Pooled \Vith approxi mately S"'imming pool.<i fnr every sqllare mile in F nu n l a i n \'alle.v. the need for a pool safely program was nl)\"inus In rnembers of the Sou1h Coast Junior \\lornf'n"s Cluh. v.·hn have initiated such a pro~r;im. Under the direction n r Mr5 , Robert Marten, safely chairman, 11 course of in- struction by Fire Depar1ment Engineer Dave HeHnf'r has been arran~ed for various pools throughout the city. ln1.:luded are a F1ln1 . '"The Breath of Life,"' dcn1onslra- tions of va rious techniques or rescuing. including some for nonswim mers, and mouth·!().. mouth resuscitation practice on a lire-size dumm y. Hosting a course at 3 p.m. on Saturday. July 31, will be Mrs . Jane Pull, 11nd offering futurt' dates are Mrs. J11meS We.!it and Mrs. Bud Mohr. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SA TU RDA YS IN THE DAILY PILOT HEMPHILL'S SEMI ANNUAL SHOE SALE! ['J; 11 ! •] ,; 3: ~$1jt•l41 250 PAIR TRIDERITE SHOE THE SHOE TllAT \lNOERSTA.NDS CHllORE" .LirZY ... BDRES ALL SALES FINAL !Ill I>' ••• --1 ~ ... -..... J.t.. $600 TO $300 BROKEN SIZES DISCONTINUED STYLES VALUES TO $17.00 14 r: .. 111 •• '"•"' N-rert CHt..- 01'1'· .,... ... ~, ..... 22J a 7 30 din ner meeting ·Wednf'~ da~. Jul\ 2JI. in Vittorio! tf>~tau1·ant. ilunt1ngton Beach. fnendsh1p Ira on Aug. 23 will Ne 1o1•port Harbor'11 American depart from the Boat Canyon ·-------------------- Assurn111g responsibilities ~1 11 bP th"' Mnw-~ (rf'ne R f:nn·!ey, Joe Gonzales, ~land Jeffers. Doris Woodall , Veln1a Bohn and Calvin Olccitt La Lec he Lea gue l!unt1ngton B e a ch '.s La LechP League "'ill p1·esent a d1.~cuss1on of the bir1h nf the bJby and farnil y adjustn1enl Rt II p m \.\'ednesda y. July 28 , 1n thf' home of Mrs A. Lynn .\1{'~ l'f. I be discussed. Legion Post 29 1 has scheduled Incoming officers are the JU annual luau dinner dance ~tmes \\'1lham C. 1 es ch en, for 7.30 p.m. Sa!urday, .July pre'.'liden! Edward St11!"1:;e, 24 . nance n1usic and a floor Robert HeaHon and Milton show are being plannl'd and \\'oodford, ~ice pre~ident s; reservations are required. Paul C'r;irnt·r. l.\'tllia111 Sargent Club Tr ip and Howard Moffitt, vice A lnur of the Q•.J('C'n l\1nrv. president1<1I ;1~s1st<1nts . sponsored by the !~7 ClulJ. will Safeway store at 7 a.m. Satur day, July 31. Participants will be bu5ed tn Long Beach and r"run1 by Z p m for thE" $'1 ch<irl(e. Rrsf'r\at1ons should hr rnadr \Ylth MN. Arthur .l S!e;id of Laguna Bf'ar.h A nf\. ho~t luncheon wllJ be served on hoard . OthC'r are the Mrnes. Fred i --- New <1nd expectant n1others art' 1nv11ed 10 the meeting, the third in a series of four. Anderson ;ind Norman A!rx· -- ander, seC"ret11nes. E.A R Torsch, assistant ; Rub)' Binklt>y. treasurer. and Helen Perkins. Hanck·lasp editor. Ame rica n Legion FREE -, ----- ~-- ORGAN CLASSES EACH THURSDAY THIS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY JULY 22 FREESTONE PEACHES SAVE 2Dc LB, c LARGE FRESH SIMI lb PLUS 10°/o NO LIMIT TH IS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY MONDAY, JULY 26. 1971 Mr, BIG OR BIG·D SAVE 1 Sc LOAF BREAD c LARGE 11/2 LB. LOAF W H ITE OR WHEAT lb PLUS 10°/e IN RECLOS EABLE BAG NO LIMIT r O~EN SUNDAYS -11 to ~ BAAAOWS THIS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY JULY 23 HILL'S BROS. COFFEE c ADULTS ONLY LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON LIMIT 1 COUPON CLOSED ON SUNDAYS AND PLUS 10 °/o WEDNESDAYS OPEN 10 A,M, TO 7 P.M, THE OTHER FIVE DAYS ' SWIVEL BAR STOOL THIS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY SATURDAY, JULY 24, 1971 SPRINGFIELD SUGAR S-LB, BAG c PLUS 10°/o THIS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY JULY 27 ROUND STEAK SAVI 1 Sc LB, IONE IN FVLL CUT c PLUS 10°/o \ NO LIMIT I ,......._ __ .,.,,/ WAREHOUSE PRICES Plus 10% SHOP IN A WAREHOUSE OF FINE QUALITY FOODS IN COSTA MESA AT 19th AND HARBOR BOULEVARD IT DOESN 'T TAKE A LOT OF NERVE TO BE THE ONLY STORE IN TOWN THAT DISCOUNTS THE DISCOUNTERS WHAT IT TAKES IS THOUSANDS OF LOWER PRICES How We Sell FOR LESS & SAVE You Up To 20°/o NO GAMES NO STAMPS NO GIMMICKS LOW RENT LOW OPERATING COST CLOS ED -S UNDA YS AND WEDNE SDA YS WE ARE IN THE GROCER Y BUSINESS NOT GAMES Everything is Marked WAREHOUSE PRICES Then The Ch eck er Adds Just I 0°/0 To Arrive At Whot You Pay, So If You Wound Up With $I 0,00 Wort h, You'd Simp ly Pay That, Plus I 0°/0 Or $I I ,00 THIS GOES FOR EVERYTHING EXCEPT THE FEW ITEMS LEGALLY CONTROL LEO LIKE M ILK AND LIQUOR WHICH IS MORE IMPORTANT TO YOU? BEST SERVICE-OR-LOWEST PRICES NO MARKET CAN GIVE YOU BOTH-WE GIVE PRICE THE "FIRST" COST PLUS SUPERMARKET IN CALIFORNIA we welcome .FOOD UIUV STAMP SHOPPERS WE RESERVE THE RICHT TO CHANG~ !'RICES ,t.S WHOLESALE 'PRICES CHANGE ' ' ' •. ___ •. _. ,_ .. _ .. _.~_._ •. _ ... _ .• _._._ .. _ .• _,_ .. _ ... _._,_-_ .. _ ... _ .. _"_'·_ ... ,l7l I •l ~«·Ill a Ii:! I 1] ~«·Ill: ii~ jJill' I •l E«•lll: i Ii: 11 •l ER•Iil a i ~ :tlj'J I •l ~1(11111iIU!I1JEU•lll: ii~ itl'l'l I •lE1<•111 ' . .,,. •' ))' ........ ' . --• 1-- I ' IC DJ,ILV PllOl Tllur~ay, Ju!y 22. 1q11 ~our Horoscope • tancer: Travel Coast Clubs Recruiting to Bolster Rosters Success dep e nds on regent, led the slate of officers bll1'.lled at a buffet dinner and dance by the Cosla Mesa Women of the Moose t.1Japter dil.ughters and sisters o f veterans "'ho are ellglb!e for membership in the vrw Posl but wh o need not be a membtor. Mt'eting~ art' held on the first and third Fridays in the JOOF Hall . president : John PI per , His first order of business lltark Fierro, Rose Luna ind secretary, and Edward D. wlll be to present RrYice Rudy Garcia will be lnlltalled Machado, treasurer. d 1z· u ~ \'ict president, secretary . ' Funds Coming participation and 0 ran g e Coast clubs nre lining up new ofrlctrs and membtrs. 11$3. Laguna AAUW Also assuming new duUes The Laguna Beach branch of were the Mmes. Walter Buck, On Saturday, July 2 4 • awar s recogn 1ng 1e com- profes!l1onal chapter members munity leadership of Mrs. and lrearurer durlng the v.·ill be the guesta at an an... Maria Ruvalcava, r.Irs. Carl ceremoni es to be atlended by t' Lara, Mills Aurelia Luna, Mrs. preclaUon party ho!lted by David Solon.ano and Manuel Fountain Valley government FRIDAY, JULY 23 By S'l DNE\' 0.'i1Allll American A.s!oclallon or junior graduate: Doug Winder, proirrt <!e!'.cr\es your <Lt-University Women Invites junior regent; Michael Ryan, tcn11nn c;he it prospective members to an ln-treasurer; Dee Robertson, Interio r Design lhcir student chapter a t Sianez. and school persoMel. C'allfornia Slate College at -=====================:; LI/II !,\ (Sc·pt 23-C)r\. 22) A fornial coffee al 10 a.m. Tues-recorder ; Darcy Tryo n . dC'bl is rl'1i.:ud. Fr1c11d who had day, July 'l7, in the Robert J . cha plain; Stuart Book, Argus; :ippt>:irt·d 1ndtfft·rt:'nt now Brotherton home. Harvey Reynold!!. sentlnt'I; (11,pl:.iy.., rcl1:ib11ity l.eo 111-Richard Reese, guide, and d1 v1clual 11gurcs prorn111enlh'. f\lcmbcrship in AAU\Y is Tom Stailey, assistant guide. Srynii· hlJp!'S. ,1 ishes arc fulfill-0011-invilational and open lo nll 1•d Spark of crPall\'lty is fan · c1ualJficd women college VFW Auxi liary graduates who want to con- ned, ,\<iu hrn~'flt. tinue their in!e\Jectual growth, f\1rs . Helen Crawford con- Ms. Sue Hecve became president of the Orange Coun- ly Chapter of the American Institute of Interior Designers during an installation-awards banquet a1 The ·r o we r s restaurant, Laguna Beach. Other officers 'A'!ll b e Stephen J. Titus, v Ice Fullerton. .r Colonia J ua rez Barney Osuna wl\I beC()me president of Colonia Juarez Community Center at a recep- tion from 2 to 4 pm. Sunday, Ju!y 25, In the Fountain Valley neighborhood. SCOll l'IO !Oct. 23-Nov. 21 I. further the advancement of ducted the first bwiiness J{emem1>1:r recent diet resolu-women and conlribute lo meeting of her term a!I presi- uons. You may make special. society. The Laguna Beach dent of the Ladies Auxiliary to G~ "THE STORE WITH public appearance. Prestige is branch includes Laguna beach. Huntington Beach VPW Post ' LABE~ OF DISTINCTION" on upswing; Aquarius in-communities and Saddleback 7368 in the TOOF' Ilall. An e:ii:cellent selection < d1 v1dua! "'111 play key rolr. Valley. Those eligible for mem-of Gown1 •nd Form•ls. F.:l•·111en1 flf liming favors your < ('ffort.~. Move now. Women o f Mo o se her.ship in lhe Veterans or f 2515 E.COAST HWY.,CQRONA DEL MAR /eaturirtg ~TRmE~ ------ toll Adom1 !,,itagnoll• I. Ad1m1! Huntlnt lMI •••<II. c1. ~ 961.l lt? Leo is loy:il 11nd exhlhits startling ability to ~raph ically 1Uuslrale n1ean1ngs. f\1 n n v aubjeclS, u1clud1n~ ecolog~. cou ld benefit frorn ahown1anship 'A'hich ~ce n1s almost paLently a trait of this 7.0dia.ctl sign Leo is fiery <ind romanlic; nau,·cs of this sign seldom do things hrt!f...,·ay These are the magicians or our lime -those "'ho l1llht up theaters and accen1 u;11e d:-ama. If you love ;a Leo. there may be tears but there also will be an abundance of lau ghter. Some fa m o u s persons bom under l h i !I zodiacal ~ign include George Shearing. Anjanette Comer and Rudi Gernrek·h. S''GITTARI US (N.0,. 22 . Foreigh Wars Auxiliary are ._, h .our c •rg• eccount welcome 673 2990 . _ _::.M~'~'c..''~''~'~ol~d~G~l~••~s~,_se~n~io~'~~m~o~lh~e~cs~,c..'w~i~''='~·~w~i~d~o~w~·s~,_::~::=::,::::o:::::::o::::o:'O:::'.:::=:=:,o;;;,;::::::;;:,,:::::=~-::O,==O:::,~f1=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~o=J r>ec 21 ): Area previously 1_ obscu red rect'ivc11 benefit of ARJES (March 21-April l!ll : One v.•ho appeared to have absconded \1·1th v a I u a bl es makes Puick rctum. Avoid hasty judgments. Be lenient with those who lack ex- perience, including children. Base. conclusions on facts. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): SpeciaJ contract. agreement makes you hapoier about home co nditions. Ex p res s needs. desires Key persons will respond fa vorably. Open lines of commun1ca!ion Fami- ly member needs <1llf'n!1on . GEMrNI !May 21 -J1111e 20): Conditions affectinc v.• or k , relatives and neighbors shov.' sharp impro\·ement. Entertain 11t home. ~fake amends for re- cent display of temper. Study Aries message. Gather vi tal information. CANCER (.June 21 -.hdy 22): Money is forthcnming for travel-vacation plans. Know th.b: and refuse to be discour:u.!ed. Accenl is on nay· men!. colleclion of debts . Your techniques improve : mean· ingful complirnent is received. LEO ~July 23-Aug. 221· Roadblock to efforts is remov- ed. Relations wih members of oppo!!ile sex are more grati- fying. Where there was lack of communica lion, 1here now is display of affeclion, respect. Make first move. greater information, kno\l'll'dge. You are able lo present findings in more 111r<1nin;::ful v.·ays \V r i I e , publish and advertise. Be fle:i:- ible. CAPR ICOll N !Dec. 22-Jan . 19): A friend may confide special need. l111·olves money : be generous '>'"ithout being foolish_ Remember fa ni i l y commitment. Ro m a n c e . fulfillment can be found in out- of-wav place . Ch~k detai ls. AQUA RI US (Jan 20-Feb . 18!· friend can hl'lo locate kl'y person in legal dilemma. Throw aside f;ilse pride. Ask questions; ohtain ans"'ers. Refuse to be satisfied with superficial inforinalion. Get to hertr! nf matter. PISCES (F'eh. 19-:0.larch 20): Lo\l'·key approach b<>st serves purpose; don'! force issues. Improve rela!inns wi!h co- workers. Make intelligent con- cession. Diplomacy wins fami- lv member to you r side. Proper packin~ a necessity. IF TODAY IS YOUR HJRTJJOAY by September you should be in your element. There will be social activity . special laurels to be \\'On and recognition from peers. Ynu arf' a dynamic indi,,idua!, possessing lna ds of personal maRnetism. You attract mcm- hers of opMs.itc sex. at tin11•s n1ore so than for your 0.,,,11 j.!ond You are creative and :r.houlrl ,give serious con· s1derillion In writing, other forms of ~elf-expression, in- cludi ng drama. VIRGO ( • ZJ Se I 22\ lo find ovt more Aboul v'"'"~ll l~d l\U~. . p ' : l ;!•OIO\IY. O•d•r Sv~n•1 o ........ "° You are aided by neighbors. peg• Ooo1<1e1. ,,., T•ui" •bo.J1 relatives: some reslrictions ~·1d'~'i:'r ~::i.~'.''~ .. ~··~:.~dv 1i,t•;;~ are removed. Change routine. ~~~--ll~o:,. G1•0~~~ c.~,,~1 s1.110~ . .-... Dine out; attend 1hrnter with li-----------•I congeoi•I I"'"'"·'· Ch.ciloble THINK SALE Division Continues lf there. are any arguments1 at your house about the division of chores. hear lhis· I A NetA' \'ork survey shows th.at ""ives continue In d11 mn~1 of the in-the home work dnd that husbands continue to do yard ...,·ork . home main- tenance, car care. help .... ·1th the markeling, rerord k1~cp1ng and soc1ahz1ng typt" of ac tivities with !he children Westcliff Plaza Only Planning a \V'cdding' Don't Miss FERNDALE FASHIO NS FINAL WEEK ANNUAL CLE ARAN·CE LARGE SELECTION OF • BRIDAL GOWNS a_,. St.95 lo 160.00 ., BRIDESMAIDS' GOWNS R .... lf.95 to 49.95 • MOTHER 'S DRESSES lteg. l 5.SO lo •9.SO • FORMALS Fe rndal e ' loc•t•d et F•rnd•I• Weddin9 Chepel 17fti St. Ju1t E•1f of H•rbor '.:J 1404 W. W"'"'lttttff Av e. Soltta Ana Phone Sll-1871 HOU.Ir MON. fttru 'Ill. t -f IATU•DAY f-J1JO The Are Coming! South ('oast ?Im JULY 26 Through 31 For Details Read The DAILY PILOT --~---- Refugee Fears India, Palcistru1 Clasl1 TI11~eate11s AGAJ<TALA, India (AP) - ln~an relief officials t.:aring for n1iltions or Eust Pakistanis streaming acrOl:is the border e.tpress fears !hat strife may erupt tn Ind ia unless the refugees leave. '!'heir ft'<rrs co1ni.:1dr-with 1n- c-reasingly bellicose statcn1ents fronl govcrn1ncnl leaders o[ both P;ikistan and ll1d1a , f u r I he r troubling re lations alre<idy strained by l he secess ionist movcn1cnt in J::ast l'alustan. Indian Foreign fool 1 n i s I er S"·aran Singh has told Parlia- ment that lnd1;>. stood rcadv to defend 1\srlf if Pakis!an Ust.>d the seizure of so1ne f::asl Pakistani areas fro1n govcrn- n1ent control as ··a pretei<t to attack India " The Pakis tani governrncnt repeatedly has charged that India is offering <'.id to the Bengali rebels because of ethnic links bclwctn Indian Bengalis and the SL'cessionists trying to break away fron1 union v.·iU1 \\lest Pi.1kist,1n. ln- <lian-Pak<'lstano border clashes have been reported. The conlinuing civi l strife within Easl Pakistan now has pushed an estimated seven million persons across the border into India. Officials say most are members o f Pakistan's minority ii ind u Claremont Names Si~ For Honors Six Orange Coast students have been named to the spring semester Dean's List at Clure· mont Men's College for ex· cellenl academ ic pcrforn1ance. group bul more th.an a m1thon are reported to be Moslems. Even as the refugees con- tinue to pour into border areas, Indian government of· ficials say Uiey huve made phu1s to care for them only until the end of Septe mber. It is hoped there will be o solu. lion in East Pakistan by then that will enable the refugees lo return ho111e. ""They must go back,'' said rellef c ordtnator P. N. Luthra. "'Otherv.1se. it 1vill be bad for the Indian economy and bad for lhe y,•orld and human civilization. How could 11·e sti ll talk about freedom in our e1vihzation if Uiese seven · million people can't be gu2.ranteed their rights and tlieir freedom?" Local officials say militant r-.tarxist Communist already have tried to recruit followers arnong the refugees. At one point, the officials say, the J\tarxists urged refugees to organize den1onslrations to de· rnand more food and better living conditions fron1 the hard·pre ss ed Indian aulhorities. "If lhese refugees stay here for a few months more, there will be serious Jaw and order trouble," said H. Ji. Dasgupta, an administrative officer in Assam·s Cachar district. The government, banning processions by the refugees. has so far avoided trouble. But officials <'Xpress 1rorry about how long they can keep peace ·1n camns ""·here tens of thous2J1ds of persons remain idle after lheir fli ght from East Pakistan. Despite the govern1nenf s in- sistence that they must even- tually return hon1e. th e refugees sho1v few signs they are prep<'.red to cross back over the border They are· from Corona del /\l:ir _,p;;.. __ ..;;.. _____ .. I Thomas Pa Hen, a junior, son of Mr. and fo.irs. Malcolrn C. Patten, 4521 Orrington lload; and David Riley. also a junior. son of 1'.tr. and r-..1rs. Herbert E. ll.iley. 117 Bayside Place. F'rom Laguna Beach -John Chamberlin & sophomore, son of r-.lrs. Virginia B. Cham- berlin, 521 Center St.: \\lilliam llitchcock, a junior, son of Mr. .John H. Hitchcock, 1 I I 5 Emerald Bay: a nd Robert Kawaratani. a junior, son of r.1r. nnd Mrs. Taka s hi Kawaratan i, 557 ~1 o u n ta i n1 Ro2ll. Fron1 Huntington Beach - Charles Lomas, a junior, son of l\o1r. end t-.1rs. 1'.1ilton A. Lomas. 7062 Sw-dight Circle. THINK SALE Westcliff Plaza Only GRANT'S SPECIALS RIGHT GUARD SPRA l DEODORANT Sale66~ ... • l'lrasant s<:rnl ~.-· ····"\\ •Full protection ,.,... .. ~.., \.. ,..,,,~,) l1MIT: :l <Or>i p•r cuitomt r i..:.::.-·_.. Miss Clairol® Creme Formula Sale66c limit: 1 Per Customer Johnson & Johnson laby Oir Sale66c 10 Ot Lanolin Enriched; Gentle limit: 2 Per Customer DAILY PILOT 17 t TOUGH SMOG BILL HYEIJ Eleme11tary School Goes Year-round 1:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;'· ' LET'S BE FRIENDLY \1/ASlllNGTON 1 UPI ) Rep. Victor V. Veyst•y \H- Calif ), !>O'.lys he .,,, ill introduce i egislation this \\Cek to let Cal1forn1a enforce stricter Hl!" pollution c o 11 I r o I s on auton1obile ernissions, despite I.he federal sti.lndards. ··California has ptuncercd this n a t i on 's ant1 ·po!lullon progranis,' Veysl'Y Si.lid i11 a staltrneut. "Mud1 uf tile Jegl~la\1011 and rnu:.t uf thr. programs in cffc("l today ;;it the federal level can1c dirt'('tly rrom efforts and research which or ig i nat ed in California "· .lilORAt.LA, Orr. (UPI) -As of 7 JO ~londay n1orn1ng, June 28, ~lolalla"s Elcmenlar)' School District converted its system fron1 the norn1a\ nine- 1nonlh acaden1ic year to a uni- que year·around plan. \\'hat nlakes the event uni- que is that it is the fi rst elen1entary school in the state to 1nakc the change, although rxpectations a re it won't be the last. Rising costs of eduea- l1un and taxpayers' reluctance 10 foot higher taxes. coupled \1'1th 1ncreas1 ng numbers of students and overcrowd ing are l'<lusing more schools to look into the feasibility of year- around education. 1'he innovator or lhe systen\, f\1olalla Elementary School did 1l v.•ilh apparent support and enthusiasm oot only from the teachers, and. parents, but, in- credibly enough. from lhe youngsters! Nv sad faces stood out a1nong the 500 students V.'ho showed up for classes f\1onda y, as they seemed just as en· thusiastlc as earlier genera- tions Wt •.. y,•hen sutnrncr vacation rolled around . One third grader was even heard to say, ··Get', school's really great " Sain \\lilson. Superintendent of the schoo! district and ar- dent supporter of the plan, BOY'S & GIRL'S BIKES Reg. Similar To Illustration $4499 I SAVE $15.99 I Boy's Green Draggin -Girl's Molly Lou WOVEN BEDSPREAD SALE$ 77 Twin 4.96 Full S.96 no 10 Pc. Deluxe 10-Gallon AQUARIUM STARTER SET SALE 88 Reg. s1394 I n cludes: large 1tainle11 tank, re flec t or, dip tube, plastic tubing, gla11 wool, heater, breeding trap, filter, therm ometer, p~mp, anti· chlorine, charcoal and com- plete instructions. .said lhe show cf <..'OOfidence put 750 students in cla!!lrooms from the parents in the and 250 pupils on vacation dur- district was overwhelming. 1ng each of the four periods. "Even kids whose parents Jn addition to reg u I ft r saJd they wouldn't send thern holidays during each term. to the summer term showed faculty and students will up," be said. rt..·1:cive one week oi vac;ition Jr )1iu hB\l· nrw 11rl1,:hMNll' or know of Rn)one rll•lVh•e· IQ our ar('it, 1.irase lrll u." so that \IC! n1uy ••.•lend a fril'ndly \•rl1.:ome and hf•ltt , th~n1 tot br••omc ucquttin ted ~ in t h"I(' nP"• ... 'UITOUrld1ng1.. One enthusiastic parent call-at the end of each term. ed up after the first day's r-.1any of the teacher s , classes and said, "r..1y k.Jds can Wilson said, will find a closer hardly v.·ail to go back to relalionshlp between teacher· school tomorrow." and student because of the So. Coast Visitor 494-0579 494-9361 Harbor Visitor Wilson is happy about the i~~r class-load. success. "We gol off lo a good l start," he said. •·we didn't 2 HOUSES encounter any problems we TO BE MOVED (I Ye•" Oki) didn't e.l(peCt." 646-0174 Sally Ban anas Reolly Is .•. Bananas, That Is 16573-4 Via Collforldci In brief, the ne\V system Coph1Ta110 lkoch operates on a schedule of four 714-539-6860 continuous quarters which will STURDY BROOMS Polyester .~KURL KNIT FABRICS SALE $ 64 Reg . I" " ' SALE Reg. 109 &MOPS SALE ea. Reg.$1" • Rayon mitt-type dust mop • Plastic broom • Squee:z:e sponge mop •Wire-bound corn broom QUALITY KNITIING WORSTED Color Kraft c 4 Ot Skein • Easy To Use Pull-Skein s • Fashionqble Colors Women's & Girl's SNEAKERS SALE c Reg. $147 Exclusive! Leb-tc!tcd for durability and abra- sion! Co[ton d uck or denim uppers, shock re· sistant insole. sure.footed rubber !Oles; 51hto 10. ·-·. . . \' We l•nrv• Th1 Rl1ht To Limit Quantititl. None Sold To Dealers -.. HUNTINGTON BEACH, GRANT PLAZA BROOKHURST & ADAMS 962-3387 Hours: Daily 9:30 to 9, Sunday 10 to 6 ·-----· ' .. •• -' I ' j OAllY PILOT Thursday, J111J 22, 1971 AMILi' CIRCUS lty Bil Kea11e ' ·!> ' I I I ''Mommy, wi ll you tell Jeffy to stap it? He 's singing at t he wrong speed ." Thieu Vs. K y Differe11ces Crop Up 111 S. Viet Election SAIGON {UPI) -It hasn't taken Jong in the South Viet- namese presidebtia.1 election campaign to bring to the surface tile Jong-simmering perscnal differences belv:een P resident Nguyen Van Thieu ."Ind his vice president, Nguyen Cao Ky. Ky, \\'ho reportedly has en· countered difficulty obtaining enough of the support required under a new law lo qualify for the Ckt. 3 election openly broke '1'ith Thieu this p2.sl wee k v.'hen he sent him a let· ter which said "my cooscience demahds that I put an end to this association which only ex· ists in name, and that I no longer blindly follow•you on the path of errors .,.,·hich have placed our fatherland i n peril." The letter co11tinued for four pages citing Thieu 's pJJeged shortcomings as seen through the eyes of his vice president. 1be president was silent for 24 hours. then issued a stale· ment \\'hi ch said: "The. president observes !hat, in the past as ·well as in recent months. even though vice presiden t Nguyen Cao Ky often criticized him publicly and made slanderous remarks against him, he has kept silent because. in his opin ion, vice president Nguyen Cao Ky has adopted such t.ltitudes only as part of the vice presiden\"s e!ectori<1I campaign." II would be improper, Thieu added, for him to indulge in disputes 1<vhich "not only are futile. but also will benefit the C.Ommunisl enemy," Thf' exchange between the l l't'O leader6 of this warn-torn C'ount ry was just another rou lld in a long i eries of disagreements between them. ln fact. it cou.ld be argued that Ky's bluntness and facility \\"it h. the quic k report v.•as the best hope for livening up 8 campaign whcrr Thieu is favored 10 \\·1n. Gen. Duong Van t Bii;l 11-11nh. the other l ikely contender, is a more bland , dit:nificd pLiblic figure in the manner of Thieu. Ou a personal basis, Thieu and Ky arc opposites. Thieu is ?. Southern Catholic hardwork· ing. intelligent and serious. Ky is from the north, a nominal Buddhist who is \'ariousl y described -as fle.rn· Jy silent. He contented himself with ceremohial fWlctions; kept his hand in with the air force where as a flying ace he commands respect; and perfonned numerous chores Thieu asked him to do. He said repeatedly th.at he v:an ted unity among the na. lion's leaders to help the government obtain stability. He spoke out frequen tly on the war, but .he v.·as rarely directly critical of Thieu. In his letter to Thieu, Ky said "four years ago, I ac· cepte<I to atand together with you ill the elections because I wished that the people and the army would be inspired by this expression of unity at the leadership level. "I had then no other ~ than to see you achieve the national objectives ;vhich you had def ined yoU Ts elf . However, hone of those ob- jectives has betn attained today." In 1967, Ky, v.'ho wa s premier in the m i l i tar y government which had ruled South Vietnam. bowed out as a presidential candidate and 1 took the No. 2 position on Thieu's slate . 1hieu, a lieutenant general, hut served as chief of state. Other leading generals encouraged t his political marriage in C1rder to prevent gro;•;ing r i v a I r y bet,,.,·een Thieu and Ky from splitling the armed forces lo the detriment of the war ef- forL I The two men rarely appear in public togetlier. althClugh they shared the dais at the l Natiohal Armed Forces Day 1 parade in June. Palace staff report that Thieu and Ky hold forth at oppos ite ends Clf the palace with bodyguards and messengers barred from mov- ing between lhe. two of!ice ""'ings vdlhout o f f I c i a I pennission, If Ky and t-.1inh can·t defeat Thieu separately, they may join forces. A·nything cou"td 1 happen •within the next three l months. _ ___ I KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN Saturdays in The DAILY PILOT boyant and bright. Ky likes to,1l_r_~~~~~~~~;:; play tennis. Thieu likes lo hunt II and fish Thieu has has been ma rrir-d once and has two childr en_ Ky has been married f\\·ice and ha.c. five children. Both men are in their 40s. 'Jbe president observed once that no modem-day vice presi-•.n.·1 i.rw .. 1 r1n11Y1!Wlll dent has exercised t he L.c:•I ~~;n H•..U freedom lo speak out against ol"•N MONOAY NIT•S -the nrPSident to the degree CLOl•O SAT, t'' ~ ''WI Try llerd to mtr" that Ky has done. yo11r t"Oftfkl....:I" . ' Ar1ny Offi~er Forn1s End-war ltlovement FORT 0111> (l/Pl) -A 2'1· y e a r-old Harvard-educated Finl Lieulenanl oald Wed· nesday the Army baa rduKd to let him restgn ahd has given him so little to do tbat he bas had Umt to open a brokera1e buslnesa In San Francbco. orpniling lbt Fort 0 r d cbap4<r ol the Cooc:erned Of-. fieen Movement, a group or military mm working to get the United State> out ol Viel· nam. tried lo resign, they tJave me fewer and fewer duUes. "It b.u plcled up some since I .vrt a letter about my problem to Uie surgeon Genul!J, but they aUll a:1 ve you ooly about a qu.arter d the work you'd do as a civilian." hospjt.al. He aaya he does whatever ii asaigned him but U)t duties of all three officers probably could be done by one . now been promoted to First l..ieulenant, although he said the promotion was held up for several weeks because of his Huller's commanding Clf· ti cer. C.ol. Edward J • O'Shaughoes.sy . ....ould no t dLSruS!'I Butler's case except to say hi.s resignation did not conform to regulations. activities. Lt. Steve Butltt sai.d be •lao has time to coot1nue b1' work "Right now, they are paying me to develop a concerned of- ficen movement," Butler said ill an Interview with the San Fnncixo Ezamlner. "After I Butler and two other of- fictt1 CWTently art supervis- ing moving facilltie.s to a new ''My attuation is tYPical of what a lot of Secon d Lleutene.nts art doing these d~s." he said.. "Basically nothing.'' But Butler has not remained a Second Lleutenant. He has Butler did two y e a rs graduate work at l he University or California at Berkeley and got into the Army when he joined ROTC al Berkeley "to avoid the draft." Two other senior officers :it Fort Ord , neither or whom wanted to be quoted by name, had differing views of Butlt'r and his activities. OPEN FRIDAY NITE 'TILL 9 P.M. 0 DICOIATIYE PETUNIAS 39c po11y pac .... 79j BARK .·:~~ S139 ... . I GREEN HAY~N~ srca. fO\ 6ARDEH6!<0Vt,..,...,_.~ ~ JS Q.CC61Nf1UP0?.>TA ME~'> DJ2JVE:WAY----- Box Specimens -marked down up to 50% OFF Come in •nd 1lgn up for dr•wlng on a frH •....••. assorted Electric Lawn Mower $26.95 Ortho Lawn Spreader 1 Gal. Plants .... 69« assorted 5 Gal. Plants DN:w'-t wlR .. lrtehl S1111d91, Jwly 25th --••surilll ... GERMAI~' ROSE&FLOWER SPRAY Rose &Flower Spray ~.:: 16oz. Reg:$J.79 • [nf·lO·U~ '""" lfl9liutor •Kills 1phid3, mitnand controls mildtw, tMiclapot t nll ., ........ on roses. Happiness tor Rosa is GrRMAri'(.S' ROSE GUARD" PWIT FOOO sP,~L $\.00 • fetds Roses with ba!intcd frrtililtr •I< ins Aflh14t and other suckin& instcts • Control1 more than 24 dillerent fl'"IUU•nd weeds. Sib.size $2 49 Rec.$3A9 , . ' 5 Gil. . . Stepping Stones 20% OFf Assorted Pottery 1/2 PRICE ••• $398 Klli. ""'' v99ef•tl9" on conl•d Ill 1n1Y t M J <f•~•. ~••I •cling· .,... l'ffkl ... t •iltw1 r.plan11ng in '""' •. ,. $1 49 K.,. $1.91 pl. • 1.,. Sl.50 qi. $2.89 r;:-------------~ I ~========~ !I I ~614EEN H-\VEN ~ : I FREE QT. i : MARIGOLDS : f with Coupon f { Expires August 1st. / I I I J'CD.JPO~ ~ I I ====== I ~--------I ---------- AlTlflCIAL FLOWERS TERR·O-VITE MIXICAN POTTERY llAUTIPUL CELOSIA 10'... LAWN RAKE .~·~ 5198 9r. 2CJ' ROSES GU.SS SEED 91:EG. $4.fl 1 GAL. 5 GA L. $2.98 $3.98 TREES reg. $39. 95 now 6ERMAl1'(_5" PENTREX" Gallon size, Reg. $4.98 ea. Now2 for$4.98 Accent your patio with ... REDWOOD HANGING BASKETS ~AVE 50'/~ •Ideal for plantin2 fe rns, ~goni1s. fusthi~~ and othtr hanging pl~nl~ •Wire han&ers 1m:tuded. 10" size g 9 ~ Reg. $1.98 Each New, Improved GERMAI~· KOLORCOAT ' DICHONDRA SEED SA~E 50% Actual ly, unt il r t c en l sme °"""" '"'"" ••· l_, v-1 monthl,Kyhasbec'."'~"~la~t:;'~~~ .... ~~~·~"""'..,.~'~-..,.·.,...,.•~n~·..,.~11 SHADE .. . AZALEAS Fertilizer Sprayer 99' sNAiot"c .~'.~ 89' .BEGONIAS 9uun 39' Kolorcoat" Dichondra Seed CUICK GlRMINAT l~G •Coale d seed promotes ••~1er 1rowth and preyer1h fun~us d1se~st • tas1er lo sow th~n re gular D•chondr• seed INSTALLED CHAIN -LIN K FENCING • • • FREE ~ buy one ... 1 . Ph. 646-3925 ,,......_ ,_ I l 1.-..(\f. .. -- c~·meuias:::= FREE I & I DICHONDRA FLAT 95c CITRUS 91:1G. S7.f5 , •• c- Camellias $298 DAISY PIN WHEEL,:','''.': I lb. size Reg. $2.00 NOW s1~ .. "'"'* ri4 Y••r l•w11 •11d t•nl•~ ., ,.,ir..n .... .... ,.m. 2123 NEWPORT BLVD. -1 '1-' ·-- $149 COSTA MESA -----· ' . . . . ' . r ,--. ·-I I Fresh .t'ormat Planned Brinkley Set to Drop Anchor Role FOR ADVERTISING IN OUT 'N' ABOUT PHONE NORM ST AN LEY • 642-4321 By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The Huntley-Brinkley era ended one year ago, In the mldsum- mer of · 19'10, when the distinguished Cbet Huntley decided to call it a day as anchorman of NBC·TV's nightly report. Since that time. those In the television industry with book- keeper minds have pondered portentiously over the monun1entally trivial question of how the ratings have been affected -as though serious newsmen shouJd be compared numerically like a couple of situation comedies. Much more important, by all odds, has been the question of how best to exploit, in soloist form again, the rare and brilliant gifts of David TV DAILY LOG Thursday Evening JULY 22 l:GO 1J Iii "911'1 JtfrJ Dunphy, (])ABC Nm Reasoner/Smith. 0 KNBC NIWS lorn S11yde1. D Vlr1l11l1 'r11lu11 Show 0 Sh O'Clodi Movie: (C) (10) ''tJIKJ" Part I (musicll) '63 - 1'11lllit Wood, Ro:ulind Rullfll. II.Ir! M1ldtn, Paul W1l!1ct, Bttty Bruet, Parley 81 tr. e1,ed on th1 memoirs ~r Gypsy Rose Ltt. Q t Spy m T)e flinhtOllt'I Cl)Sbr Tr1k SI Art Studio, T" Ill) Notldtn1 l4 m Dttlh Vt111J DIJS a> Ktws Jim H1w1hornt. l :lO (l'J Ntwt Biii Huddy, @ Truth or CollSequtntu @ CBS NIWI Wtlhr Cron ki1t. Q9) NBC Nl'ln David Brinkley. ID The FIJ!ng Nun ED Hodppoda• lodge m Tiit Dt~rt Report fl:) U Ador1blt Pral. ~h!10 (EABC Ntws 7:00 I) CIS Nft1 Walter Cronk11t . 0 a;, NBC ftttrs D1vid Brink!ty. 0 WiiS. Sattm Thetbt: {90) "In· visible MtA Ret11rns" (mysttf)') '-'O -Vi11ttnt Pria!, Sir Cedric Htrd· wide. @To Ttll lht Trvth 0 What's MJ Unt? @I Dick Y111 o,lt m I l0¥1 LllC'f Q) (I) Dr11111! fl\)Thl Cou11t •f Our Timu "Tl Weimer R~~blic." (Rl el An1tlito1 Nt1tN ffi Mowit C1m1 7:lO IJCIJ F111ilr Af11ir {R) Buffy ~ids 1 fond llrewtll to h1r doll, Mrs Beasley, 1rt1r beinr told sh1'1 too old !or such thin1s. Cl ®J a;, N8C Action fll)'houu (II) ''A Timt lo low." M••imilian II) Giy11pic. lolifll: Sho11un Alb1- r1do vs. Buddy Boos In IO·round •elttl'Wtillhl tontut. FD Nn "'1houM "Th• Queen t nd lh1 W1l&hm1n." 15th C.ritury B1il· 1in is !ht :111tt!n1 Jn which Ctltltrine (Dorothy Tlltin), widow of HlllfJ Y, iin1ff~l1 !IOWS the seeds ror the Wtr of the Roses. Derek Cod1rey Ptrtr•rs Sir Owtn, Nicholas Selby ls !ht Duk1 ol CloueestH. t nd Gof. dOft Whilin1 portrays John, Duke of Bufford . CB l'ltt.u1 ter Liri11 ':00 ID {I) CIS Thllr$d11 Mtwit: (2hf) "Soni 111d Ltverin (R) (drama) '60 -Dean Stockwell, Tr1YOr Howard. WendJ Hiller, Mary Ure, Heather Stirs,. Willitm lu~s. Con11d Phil· lips, Donald Ptusence. The :ltof'J nf • YtKmg man and the atleclion· ate dom in,alion nertised CHtr him by his puenls. o rn CIJ m 111... ._ for Cr.llddtddy (R) "Ka1111 llate." lltthy t1ket k1r1l e leSSlns i nd learns how 1o lhrow her ... ei1ht around. !:30 0 [Ql e!) Adam·lZ (R) "Saft Job." A Yfec11cker 11els into build· ings •~hout evidcnet of lorciblt entry. 0 (])Ci) m thin A111111d (R) •·Bullet for 1 H!fO." A Santi luist •If hwo is fwnd dttd minults bt· tin ht n1 to 1ppe1r 11 1 tell/· ITIOfti1I banquet 111 his hon/)(. o lat• wan N.n !E Lt Cna: ff Mlrisa C1»U1 IO:OllOIJlmDll• Ml~ (it) Surn· mrr host Vic Demoftt welcomt1 Don Chtrry 1nd Donn• Jpn Younr. Cuol L1wrtne1 111d' Gill lthrtin art lt1\ured. e ..... J:ttin Stlldtrl. 0 Motla: (9Q ''Slllriodi Holl11• in W1dil11(ltll" (mysl:tlJ) '43 - 81sil R1thbont, Ni11I Brutt . m Nin Putn1m/fi&hm1n. EID $9fculatitn "A ConvMulio" Wi1h Godfrey Clmblidp.'" al) Bu "'"llle111I Schell, Chirt Bloom, Nln1 Foch ind 10:30 rl) Drl11'1tl R1lph e.i11my 1u1st in lhis con· O MO'l'lt: (21w 451J1) "Tile StNJ tempor1ry dr1m1 ol romtnoe, money ot Dr. Wnllll .. (dr1m1) '44-Giry arid rnotivts. Cooper, l 111in1 Day. D Cil@ r:Dll,ICIAI Tbis h (l)CMcbrwdflal lO!ll »n• ... In Ceo! .eo~~IJ 0 CI) r:D i IHC!Ai I ln111en: lit Tom .lol'l6 welcomas lo h1s 11tlh T'Mir Own U"'-'-" l iau speci1! ~ !ht season Ch1rfi1 P1ide, Tht first of 1 •r!a of lhltt IPIC· J•l!'mY Tubuc~ i nd N1n1 1 i.ils lot11sin1 on m1T111rity' 1raups In 0 Million S Mll'lit : (Zhr) "Tht Amer>es. This .i.e1ment WIS filmed In Wron1 Mtn" (d1 1m1) '57 -Htn')I Ntw Vor~ Ci1y 1nd locu.i.es on the ~(l;ld1. V1r1 "41let.. Two oeoplt bt . 111>Wll1ul 1ens1 of the communlt1 rome caucht 1n t web of m1$11~tn tYidenttd by this tth~1c 1roup, rden11!1es. @News Bitl Johns. m Truth or ConStqutnets m D Ditrio dt unt S.non\1 ~ Ql It T1-u a Thiel I ctnlt ED Fl•htrtJ & film (RJ LGurs•ana Story ·· 111:00 8 (() l!l Hft'l i?J Prtmitrr MMiu 0 @l ei;, NtwS ( i) Duth V1llty Dl)'I 1:00 £) ({) Lar!Cu (R) W1ll ;,.m Wtndom O (=:J al Mtwl 11utsts as 1 1hm·t11m arti.t 'fll'hO •~ s1ved by .'>!'Pit !ram , ttr·tnd· m Movit: .. htliJfd"' (mnttry) '41 le1therin1. only !o 10 to tile ltni:.r -Brian Don!f'IY. (Ill ll1ineL 1111th durrn1 Sron's 1buritt ind Q) But th1 Clod s!1rt a phony land boom !rom Vlhich ED WaJhinfltn W1tk In ltl'it• ~e hopes to prob! m To Tell the Trut~ m W1thinsttn W1H in tt:)Nino Jltvltw 1:30 B ~ m lrM&iM {R) "Love Petet, Brolllerllood ind Mu1de1." An 1v1nt·111de the1!re 1roup's new production is stalled wllen • c111 m11mb1r rt mu111tred. I) The Stwe An111 Sflow Guests ll:lO O [jJ M..-w Gliffi11 o ~m)lllnny c.rs.o. o rn@ m !tit' c...tt D Mlirll: "stnin111t ill II• C~ (drama) '62 -Robert Gll'rtllt, Ca· milo D1lrulo. Q) Mtrit: "To• ''' Ttw Mt!M(' (n1)'11ery) '57-Hu(ll Mc.Dermott, J1111 Hylton. ilitlude Soupy Silts. Y•nc1nl Price 12:30 m All·Nl1lrlt Slltw: -JN l lll'fllr: u!d Df. Joyce Brtilht rL "WtlYtl tf tflt O..p" 1nd "Kllld Q DJ (t) aJ llll'ltdt..S{R) "Mu'/ tn All)' Door," lht Good f1!ry." Mi ry lht Good! r1hy imbibes'° much br.ndy 11 l:ODOMftit: "l•uP.llM" (adV'tlt- ttit St1ph111~s !ht! Slmtntht haJ ture) '49 -Robert Ster1in1. John to 11k1 ovtr ~er chores. lmo1entl l191t nd, Glori• Gr1h11111, M1rth1 Coca runts. Hyer. m Dav~ Frost SlllW Guests are (}) 0 fJ ([J l1j N ... 1o!t ch1mploo J1t k Nicklaus 111d a1111!n1 rrouP Th• B)'fd1. 1:15 0 Dt '''*' Friday DAYTIME MOVIES 1:00 m cc1 """ ~ 1.m111 • o.. "'lippi111t~ (~111ur-) '50 - Tam £Wiii, Mlcttelh1t h111t. t:lO U "111e HthW' fdratMJ '4t - 0!1¥11 dt Htvill1nd, MonffQl'MrJ' Ctilt. O "Jullwt Cleur" Co!Klllllon j19tCl1cul1r) 'SJ -Mar!Oft Brancto, James "4t90ll. lohn GltllUd. Qr "'fttnl Mtn WIU1 t Htnt" (mualtal) '50-l(lrt Ooull•s, l•u11n B.lc•ll. ------- 10:00 (]) ''Cnt ti Oirtl1W1" (•W.nt) 'SZ-Mltdtwltkl C.1ey. Altlis Smllk. l:flO m (C) "'CHrlt TlwM 1H ~ (dr1m1) '55 -\'111 Htfli11, JGt1111111 Woodw1rd. 2:00 O (t) "JIM J1.r' ( .. stn) '39 :-TJ"Wll PoMr, HMrJ FOl!dl. S:OO (f) "Ttmr If ti. T1111" (horror) '61-Gtotlif)' TOOlll. 4:JO II m .,., ... .t Tlilfr lid" (•esl11n) ·~ -R!Cl'ltrd E1t11, An111 Dltkln'°"· Clmwoa Mitchell, Oolot~J Milone. IJ) S.M n 10 AM liitilla- Brinkley as a writer and com· municator, now that the famous teaming i11 jwt .a memory. The Hunt 1 e Y· Brinkley pairlng was a sheer, happ y accident. Any attempt to duplicate it was as doomed to failure as a scientist trying 'Couple' All-male At First to formulate the chemislry or Journal'' -named after his Jove al first sight. memorable series of prime Now comes word th a t lime program., :!Klme years Brlnkley is aliO going to call it back. Thoae programs were a day as anchorman ol NBC-lengthy film fe1tures, ranging TV's nightly news report, and from drollery to hard news- that John Chancellor, with whatever Brinkley's discern. whom he had been sharing ing eye C8Uiht and got in· this chore for some lime wi!l terested in. But NBC ne\1·s handle the job alone starting chief Reuven 1'~rank figures most oI Brink.Jey'a "Journ1:1I " Aug. 16 or thereabouts. On the one hand, it is a bit sad to see pieces on the n I g h t I Y l·g as •d•n•·ced , , newscasts will be analyses. a1ure" s Brinkley unhitch him:relf front Frank estimates that \hr a familiar post. On the other, analyses v.·ill make up perhaps ii NBC-TV's plans for the four out of five weekly pieces. 9Uperb nev.•sman are fully sue· v.·ith a fifth segment possibl~' cessful. vie"-·ers will have the being done in the field - pleasure of sa1npling his again, anyUting 1hal catches delightful. incisive talent in a Brinkley's eye. The nev.·s chier freshly focused form. says that what he wants to When Neil Simon was mak-The network says Brinkley take advantage of most of all ing the first draft of his com· is tired of his anchorman is the sublime skill of Brinkley edy, "The Odd Couple" which duties. He has, after all, been as a writer -In, say a two-or subseque'ltly became one of at it a long lime. He teamed three • minute segment of the great sLage comedy hils of "'it h Huntley in 1956. And, commentary. But, says Frank, ••e 1-•·s. ,., was an all -ale h · ·11 it would riot be the kind of "'' _, .... though a veteran, e 1s st1 a show. But that wasn 't right, pretty young men. No one comnlentary that is Ji1nited to and he knew it. really ever knoo·s what is in merely discussing past events. He wu telling the story of the back of anyone else's mind Again, he says, Brinkley v.·ould l\vo men in a pa in r u I _ but, considering b o l h have almost limitless cope. predicament, but he wanted to Brinkley's and NBC-TV's posi· "He might even lead off the empha~ize the humour, not the lions at face value, it seems news," says F'rank. pain. One of the men , a born \~ise for them, lD alter the And then, of course, there sloppy.Joe, is a. gruU, cigar· long·running format of the are the inevitable wags who che w i n g news pap e r nightly news so that each can suggest -perhaps -0nly half s]Xlrt.swriter whose disorderly bring new vigor to their roles kiddingly -that NBC·TV habits have driven his wife lo in ii. might score ql?ile a coup Dext abandon hi1n in a big apart-The plans, says a network year by teaming up two ment where he rattles around s)Xlkesman, are for the nightly gentlemen named Chet in a loneliness allevia ted only nev.•scasts to start including, Huntley and David Brinkley to with regular Friday night five times a week, a segment cover the nation&! political poker games with 1 om e called "David Brink I e y ' s convention. equally untidy friends. \----------------------! The other man, a member of the poker crowd, by con· trast has a compulsion for tidiness and epicurean cook- ing. /·laving just been rendered deso late by his wife·s having bounced him for being a nit- picking fuss-budget, he is glad to accept tbe sporlswriter's in· vitation to move in and help fill the big, empty apartment. The glorious incompatibility of this pair in their domestic life gives the comedy it! hilarity, but Simon finally hit upon !he idea of having the \\'ives in evidence only through phone calls. while introducing a pair of chattering, feather- brained neighbors. The production a\ t h e Laguna Moulton Playhouse continues on Wedne s day through Saturday until August 21. Playing the odd coople are Alan Hart and Paul Tt3Chke. Seen as the poker-playing chums are \Valter Dudek, Allan Jones, David McAdam and John Briggs, the }Jelene Briggs and Judy Hirsch ap. pearing as the zany Pigeon sisters. Curtain ill at 8:40. Call 494--0743 for rese rvations in the a i r -conditioned Laguna Playhouse. MilftNidllls,Jalil\ldd!oo, fallliltllaJl!DMDrabirl. ~and.Mcsftilltr. f.arml Knollfcdgc. EX'111$M ORANGE COUNTY INDO-Ot! !NGAGIMENT Levine presents a Mike Nichols Film starring Jack Nicholson A nn-llar~rrl I .Jack Nichol son ~ 1' ' > ~ ~ a. EaHice Rerg" 9 Arlhur G1rtunkel j ~ CARNAL KNOWLEDGE'' 1 ii': (THE A.B.C.'s of SEX ) ~ Ja::>npoJd ar.qnJax3 .1a11!a.:1 sa1nr Aq ualJ!JM · l1aq1As p1e4 0!Cf iaub!saa Plus • IOXOffKI IMl 7111 P "'BLUE WATER. WHITE DEATH; ~ INCLUDES SOME OF THE MOST f ,.:, ~ .. -;."" :~::rH:.r~::E~~1~1~EDI ( '· ;,:,-_~:: •) "ABSOLUTELY BREATH· TAKING, GASP-PRODUCING! .. ~J ~Cli!M ,,,,r, N8C TOCllY Stlo• "BLUE WATER, WHITE DEATH" n.. hunt for tho Groat Whllo Shark .. ~ contlil ~ llllQ(W1mOll .._,...,J"n!R ... ·DwodM .,Pl'tflll ...n __ JMIUU'9COlo9 ll~,.MQMlOOQM.~,..,..,.. a • ... ..,. ....... ,..,, .... ... Offkt0,...17115 •·•· s•ow l .. "'' ., D1ut ·P-• OfttiM011 Showiat Dlily •ow•""• ~ "' -COit• ""'""--J•• 1•01 .. --·-----...... - -------~ "'·r,1• ... --- c.':::"':c"::'':::'.:_· .:J':c"c.:c"::.· _.:l _.:'7_.:1 ________ DAILY P\L OT I fJ "'BLUE W R, WHITE DEATH; INCLUDES SOME OF THE MOST SMASHING MAN-AGAINST-BEAST FOOTAGE EVER FILMED BY ANYONE ANYWHERE AT ANY TIME! The film Is superbly realized!" -Vincent C3nby, New York T•mes "CAPTIVATING!" ,.. r,! 1ft\ilj'I; _,,. .. ~rRui:v"'"'"" I'll rl), ',~ ,. .. q1111; REMARKABLE " II.I s ",i,:. ''. ~,, ... -V•nc~nt C1ntry, New Yo•~ '•"lt l • "SPECTACULAR! FASCINATING!" -5tu8rl Klt1n, M~l!OITl~d,,1 "EXCITING! TERRIFYING!" -Bob S•lm•g.go, Gt0\06 w Ne~wor• PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT EDWARDS DAILY l :00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00 P.M. EXTRA SHOW FRI. & SAT.11 P. Thil II Ille !1!11 movie ,... should not 111 alOlle. ~-""~\\1llARO-BRllCE DA\JSON · SOfil!f\\ LOCI<!· El.SA IANC!f£SITR 2ND OUT ST ANDING ATTRACTION ...i ERNEST BQRGNINE,. Martin C,Wi(-s'IOfl ~ ... '=:; .::.."':';'.QION CiMU'lPlllrr 'WHEN EIGHT BELLS TOLL" (GPl __ .. ,... "'""''g,__.,., ___ """"-·"'"'"" --- PREMIERE •Orange County 'ENGAGEMENT In everyo11c "!.life tl1t•rc \a SUMMER OF '42 A Robert M1,lhgan/R" 1,~10 A R, 1•1 P•Odlld•OU JENNIFER O'NEILL· GARY GRIMES JERRY HOUSER• OLIVER CONAN{ ........ ··-···· HERM.1'N llAUCHEll RICti•RD •. ROIH ,,., ...... , "'•~<•• P:Ol!ERT MULLIGAN t,llCHll L( CllANO ~-"'-"''" ~~l-.$9'. 4TH AND LAST WEEKS· NOW AT All 3 THEATRES 2ND AT LOGE Joh" Mill•-+ Hol*v Mill• ''THEFAMILYW '' NOW AT BOTH THEATRES OPENS AT 7:00 P.M. SHOW STARTS AT DUSK • ROB[RJ WIS[ rnoo <r110N HILD OV[l· 6TH WiEI! "' "•lllOft ~"Cl"'1~ tt ~!ill .. _ ... _,_ .... MICKAfl CftlCHTOtl EDWARDS HARBOR c:..i·:.1 "'''°" r.•rl Of Wll.ION 1r CQU• •110 IOI M il ~NDROt.EDA STRAIN " ....... 0 W'I A UN!VLRS/tl P1CTLJRE •T EC:H:llCOLOR. PANAVISION. ~ ~ 2ND EXCLUSIVE HIT · Pe1ec O'Joole ;n "MURPHY'S WAR" (GP) EGG1travaganza ! we11 .. 11.-rc1 """GOl.Df'<WHI .. I ... , a.-... c;~•OfN G•avr ' ~~" V>l<lOIWY\ 2ND TOP WALT DISNEY HIT Kurt Ru~1eU ·Joe Flynn "THE BAREFOOT EXECUTIY(" ll!l "$1 ,000.000DUCl"AbtAI TECHNIOOLOR" ~ .. •• ,., ""M• ''•I• iiiiin JON es· sanl\\f ouNCAN .Xl\l FlVNN 10f1lf ROBERJS Jtimes GRE Mhiit• Ylijt, Qfti.iMKlllS ~.1,-:.;-:-·~ i.r.i li:'llfltlON l1Ncf;rll!OOlV TECHNICOLOR" 13 .... . • • ... _.,.,..,.,,.,,, .... _ .. .._ .,., .... •·' nP .. r.c;,rp ,..]\_ -· ---·-- RATIO I~ ' ... ~. ' . ·- ff DAJLV PILOI T!l~rW.iy, J11!y 2:Z 11l71 Sketches Set at GWC 2~845 Performances A series of satirical s:kclches ,.. jabbing al cootemporary mttn· ners, mores, and nlusic will be ;1 . hour-Jong show will bf: presented July 31. Aug. 6-7. at 8 p.m. in the Actor's PlaybOx. Admission is free. and the 111.1 · dience will be seated C1n a first come basis. 'MENCKEN' SCHEDULED SAN J<'RANCJSCO (UPI ) - "An unpleasant evening with ll. L. Mencken," a 011e-nu1n show v.•ith Jaso n Robards, \Vill have 11.s world premiere Aug . 9 al the Marlnt:s Alemor1C1l 1'healer. 'Fiddler on Roof' Breaks Broadway Record -.. • •. staged the end or July by a ,,., IJ'OUP of Golden West COiiege .~ m.unmer players who have dubbed themselves ' 'Th e Devil's Advoca1es Directed by Stewart Rogers. Golden West instructor, the THE BEST !leadership p o 11 ~ prul'r "Peanuts.. is on<' nr 111 .. \lo'Orld's most popular C'OITHr s1ripg. Read it daily 1t1 the DAILY PILOT. "There 1s little wt· dun·1 touch upon.·· said Hogers. ··we really are trying to hit everyone and not be exclusive. Fads. !asles in music. ex- tremism of all kinds -that's our subject matter." The sketches. of which there are more than IS, v.cre written by Rogers and the students. NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES the webfoot wonder with Paul Shyrc, ·who has ;idopted similar plays fron1 the writings or \\'alt \Vhiln1an and Will H.ogers. v.·rote the play and will direct the pr°" duction sponsored locaHy by the Ainerican Conservatory ·rhcalrl'. f\1entken was 11il' !l!OSI vitriolic American s()('1al critic of the l1rst !hird of th<' 20th Century. famous tor his a1 · tacks on the h y po e r i 5 y . stupidity dnd bigotry 1i r Ainer\can !Hf!, \-'US!oms and NEW YORK I AP ) -A cheenng audience g a v e "Fiddler on the Hoof'' a fiv+'· minute standing ovation as the l'asl comp!et.ed the 2,845lb performance, mak.ing it the longest·running musical 111 Broadway history. Out side two huge spothghts pl ayed on the Broad;vay '!'healer Inside, b a 11 u on s floate d down from the ceiling as t-.1ayor John V. Lindsay. the 1Teators of the musical and the first star of the show \Vent on st<1ge \Yednesday night for <i postperformance celebralion with tile present cast. "It's a wonderful lhing ahout Sholom Aleichem." Zero show, :said of the man whn wrote the stories that inspired .. Fiddler" "He's become more al'- ceptable than Shakespeare. lfe runs longer," l\1os tel said, "Sholom Aleiche1n mean s 'peac:e be with you,' and that's v.·hat it's all about today .'' The musical tale of Tevye , a Yiddish dairy1na11 111 Russi<i <1t !he turn of the century, broke the 2.844--performance mark .Sl't when "Hello, Dolly!" clos- ed last Dec. 27 ... Fiddler" i..; stil l going strong-mail ord€rs are being accepted through next Jan, 2. the 2.f Kerar layaway plan! ______ -====----~·~1~,,~-1~el'-,~th~e~o~r~;g~;~no~l~'~'~"~o~f~t"."he ______ _ behavior. A total of 147 inv1•.stors spent $37S.(XKl to bring the show to Broadway on Se pt. 22. 1964. .• ... -------·-·--- ALSO SEE EVEL KNIEVEL'S MOTORCYCLE DISPLAYED AT PLAZA II THEATRE ONLY. THE LAST OF THE AREDEVILS! t' _,,.,c.,-.,,..., ;GEORGE ·HAMILTON oOO SUE LYON • WALT DISNEY P«•duotlon•' ll!liroc:dll'I rtrn-,_,icri "D Ol<l.W~Jl THI' fOOAl!(CfH!PORATl(l(ll Also Richard Crenno "THE DESERTER" (GP ) 1~ow Ti•u w-..io1• 2ND ACTION HIT "EVEL KNIEVEL" '"" "! .. 1"1 110:l4 "Do.u<1or'' 1:41 1ot. S ho. "!"I" l1l1. 7:00 • lO:H "o., ..... ,.. 1:41.1:1,.1,41 "HELL'S ANGELS '69" Opens 7:15 Starts at Dusk GEORGE HAMILTON a. SUE LYON Al•o JOHN HUSTON -RICHARD CRENNA "THE DESERTER" '"" Play The Advertising Game to Win With This Rule: Don't Wlieel W1ien You Deal PAY YOUR M_ONeV ANDTAKeYouRe~ANCES That's pretty mu ch th e way ii is wilh some advertising media- not even the proprieto(really knows for sure what he is sell Ing . Most times unknown, unmeasured, unaudited, and unnamed circulation audiences are wisely unwanted -the odds jus t don't favor the advertiser's doltar. We believe you should have !he facts before you buy. That's why we have the Audit Bureau of Ci rculations verify our circu~ lation regularly-fin d and report the actual figures accord in g to their standards and based upon their auditors' insp ections. Above board circulation-be ABC-s u re with DAILY PILOT Ttie Audit Bureau of C lrcula11011s Ii a Sl!ll-iegu!11101v ,111ssocte t1on of over 4,000 advertisers, &d'#'11IJ$ll\Q •oe1lCl&1, end publishers, and 11 recognited as• bu111au ot staridarda lor tl'le print medi1 Industry. ___ , .... -·--''1 '1 l lllt·· .. .•. - 1r,;;=~1 (!Jdo NIW,O•T •l"CI' ·••I .... •~"• •• 1.i.~1••• L''• I.lo .• ot. ~UO HELD OVER IK:JBERT MTCH.M TRE\QR HOMRD and SAAAli MlfS "~tis Daughter" IGP1...,...-.0~ Sun. thru Thwr1. I P'. M. Fri. and Sat.-8:30 Mcrtlnee Wed., 2 P.M. Sot~rday-1 :JO ond 5:00 Sunday-I p.m. a11d '4:30 BALBO~ 673-4048 °""' 6:45 ME.a.JIM.. .. lllM h"irmd• THE NUMB[~ ONE NO¥£l Of_])![ ~EAR ... llOW A MOTIOlt PICfl/IH ! £., .~!)!;'HU~!E R-u,,.., I ' AIRPORT ' BURT DEAN WCAillR·MARTIM JUNSEBERG JACOUEUNE BISSET • UIWl\'i~W PtCIUll[ ALSO 'IOW! UNCUT! POPULAR PRICES ! Jul,ieAnd.rsws :i~luc 1)6!! IU'<TEffS ... ,,,~ .. ·-•• Pr•ml~r• En9a91r. ... 1 Under 17 Mu11 b• wllh pci•ent 1111 ... """"' """· the youno; helren .. , the ltid"opplno; t~al becomes o love 1tory. "THE GRISSO M G•NG .. I(<.., D1tby-Stolf Wil,ci~ Co~ni• S ft ••no-l•~n • D1ily -•LSO PLAYING-- Alllltoir Moclea11'1 "WHEN fl.HT IELLS TOLL" Rob't M or!1y-Anthony Hcpkin1 Where your nlthtmares end ... VliLLAll begins. .. l\!fl N 0 W I tllttlO ___ ,.,_,_ FOUNTAIN VALi.SY OlltlYf·llt routfl'NN 't"'u.tT-.. t-t .. 1 (0 . ..,, "HOllSf TllAI -Cl -.;OOO"/Gt'! .... ,IWt~-.-.. .... 11111•-.. , ___ ...,.,10,IS•M 111 Mrlli:''Wiii"'iilJ-111.ilW..._. c ................ """ .. tt.•.......,. ----lflW.utO'I -- HUNTINGTON CINlllA llUNT!HOIOO.. NAUI IUOl-- 141.- (00.11""°"1 O.O•t• -.O• '00 '" Pf{1•t ..._,...OW OM fli a ~<I AdUlll Jl.7S; Jrs, 11.lS; Chlklrt~ 1k c1~;,t Bloom "11£D SICY AT MOllNIN(jl" ~I~• "l MU\-ES FOil SISTER SARA" wit~ (linT Eostw-' Sp•<lll KICIS M•li"H $11. 1:H •·"'· PACIFIC WALK-INS authors, producers and direc- tors of all shows now running Lo Lhe of 1,900 Tevyt." Jn addition to .itJ Broadway conquest. "fiddkr'' has been per f o r-.D'l<d throughout the United ~~ and in 31 countries 'in . 11 languages. ··~·-· Unlike "Dolly.'' whi"·::})a,d "Fiddler" looking o~;·it:s shoulder v.•hen it surpas~ the 2.717-performance mark of .. ,\\y Fair Lady.'' the tale of Tevye does not have a major challenger close to its re~rd. The all-tinle Br o ad \Ii q Y chainpion is "Life with Father." a nonmusical. whicll ran a lotal of 3 ,%24' pe rformances. •• TWIN ROCK SHOW (GP) "Mad Dogs And Englishmen" ••• llOLLIN• STONES "Gimme Shelter" Cont. Daily From 2 r,:=====::::::;~ I ... II (OIO• F~m,ly En\t"Ainrnon! ! All Sl~r (a'1 "LAWRENCE OF ARA&!A" (G) 0 THE JllllSIC ff JILL g l~~~ plu• • S~ond ft.0!u•• "MAROONED" !GI -"'7'!11"'9'i ---,_~)'5 T~t Enllr• C1r10H AClmi"ICI For Prl<• ol Ont Ad~!I Admiulon 1 15! !Alt Color Fdmlly EnTtrt&inmPnl J&m~ G~rner "SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL GIJNFIGHTEll" !G! "SUPPOR T YOUR LOCAl SHERIFF" (GI """~-.. ~--, ....... --• u1-1m or1ng1 County Pr•ml•r• Eng•;m•nll SI••• McQue•n """ Ill "LE MANS" IGI plu• • Ou•tln Hottm~n "LITl\-E BIQ M•N" CGP1 ~-"'"' ....... ... ~ '-'• All Color F nmily EM•rTnlnm•nl W~l1 01'nt~'s ''MILLION DOLLAR OU CIC" (G( Plu' Joe Flynn "IAllEFOOT EXECUTl.,.E" CG> 11jilfi"ii!!I Lot.'_.,. ...... "''" o! ~-I •n·•O~ ,A.II (olO< Pr.ml••• Engdg•m•nT "&LUE WAlEll: WI-UTE DEATH" plu• e Chn•l.,on li~>10n "lHE HAWAIIANS" 4GI") ............. .. ............ ,.._, .. , 1'U All Color Pr.ml••• E:n~.,gemen1 ErnO>• eorg~•n~ "WlLLAllO" (GP! 11. !\ & 11:\KI I'M ) plu•. "HOUSE lliAT OlllPPEO Bl000" iGP ) All Color Promi<rr EngoQemtnt' G~rgt H~rnd1.,., "EVEL ICNIEVE\-" !GI"! oru, • J•'"'""Y 51~•~ "HELL'S At.tGElS '0" (GP1 ............ •'G"-"'""' ...... , ~l• !il lJ Colo< S~ow Under 11 Mu$1 Bf WI•~ P1r."t "SUMMER OF '41" PIU$ """"'~~ H~Cburn "WAIT UNTIL DARK'' l •"<00• I" w .. •o••oott ~1'·1>13 VlntMI Pfirr "OR. l'HllES" ~G"I Jiu• • "llOOO .I. \-ACI" (GP) Jlul • "HORROR HOUSE" (GP) TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ We Dare You ... Every Saturday THE MUSIC HALL AND COLUMBIA RECORDS PRESENTS ••• .. -. r • i .- : ' f,, ·, • .. ..;,l 1.1, " ' \. , \· > ..... -- 1' 1, ' .. \! ! .. • ;\I • \I, \I\ ' BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS, ''4'' REGULAR $5 .98 NOW $3.49 ALL COLUMBIA R EC 0 R D S DIS- COUNT PRICED AT THE MUSIC HALL ••• ALSO, AT DISCOUNT PRICES THE COMPLETE LINE OF , •. "COLUMBIA CLASSICS" THE MUSIC HALL Sl"ICIAlS AT ALL TNREI: lOCATIONl : NEWPORT "ASNION ISlANO SHOP'Jt!N• (IMTI!• : HliXT TD •usso·s l"IT SliDI'. SUNSET STRIP "'' '""" ""·· : OPJ>OUTE THE WM ISICf't CENTURY CITY : Olf THI. WEST Mill AT Tiii CO•NEll o• (INtu•v (111' LUGG AGE. c F G ~JI PE SI SC 50 CH 0 VE A 0 0 G .. RIB ROAST STANDING l A<G llND lUc'*'t'lCP QUAUT'f BONDED BEEF 88~. CROSS RIB ROAST FULLY COOKED HAM () • •··l:Lr Bat!--...... PAPER TOWELS CHIFFO N ASSORTED l '.ilO-COUHT ROLL 29c FROZEN FOODS • PIZZA ROLLS !1:f.·!·"~v~•~'..'~~~--····65' ~ MANICOTTI ~~·1;~~! PK~ ........... 70 t PEPPER STEAKS ~~~~ •!1.'~~.~'.: ........ 73~ SIRLOIN TIPS :~1,0 ;~1~ ................ 45 c 'CALLOPS uen1u1" ~ 140l .rKG .. .......... .'"167 SOLE FILLETS (UllfRU"C.OIOIN 76 ' I lllD, 1Q 01 9K~ ••.•••• ,. •• CHICKEN PIE ;;.;~~":::·1 ............. 43 < ()• ... ~Bat!·--...... REFRIED BEANS ROSARITA 29.0UNCE CA N 29c ONIONS ~;~;0:~;0r'10 ............. 24 c VEGET ABLES ~:~11"~;~"' 33 c "'""U to•" .. 11ut11• SAUCI Ml\! 'I (U ~" 111lt (OP~. "'10111111 •!•\ ..-/I UTl!I l•UU Mll•(O•~,. eutl!I IAll(l GARLIC BREAD ~~i0.'Kr. ... 36 c WAFFLES :~i~~:~.1~•.•u~t.•.~M11~ .......... 46L FRENCH TOAST ~~.~~~·~~·~~ ........... 45 c FRUITS :~•g:_~1K1~~~.1.c~.'.".~~-.. , ........ 47c •1u111111u l!IC ID ,l.(Wll, (l!lll lU , 01 M•llO Ill/If AP PLE PIE ;!ri~11i11 ... .. ............ 35c ORANGE JUICE i~~;~'.': .............. 55 ' ORANGE PLUS :·;~\/.'~ ............ 57' GREEN BEANS :~!:r,";•"c~~~~· r•f. ..... 22 c NOIZEMA MAKE-UP POWDER, LIQUID & TUBE No<mo's "Covtr Girl.. 139 molqp thot leo•tS o ••• AND f~ OF GREATER SAVINGS MRS. BRADY OF ONTARIO SAVED '8.67 TRUTH IN MEAT LABELING • SINGLE ITEM PRICING Our meat labeling is clear, simple an honest! You know euclly what you're buying. Mrs. Albert Brady was in the check-out line at one of the LUCKY DISCOUNT SU PER MARKETS in Montclai r when we asked her if she wou ld buy the exact same items or comparable brands at any oth er market of her own choosing Know instantly how much each item costs. No contusing multiple pricing. KEY Buys .. Key ~uys'' are extra savings made possible by manufacturer's temporary e promotional allowances. SHE SHOPPED & COMPARED HER • OPEN CODE DATING Yrur f.tJ~ranl"C! Cl! frr~hnn~s on all Lady Lee Dairy and • lfa1vest D.:iy 8Jk"ri produc.t!:. • FINEST QUALITY AVAILABLE ~~~~~··1 brands you know and OWN SHOPPING LIST AT ANOTHER MARKET OF HER OWN CHOOSING ,f ·. She spent $51.56 at LUCKY ... The ·Jr GUARANTEED VALUE PER MEASURE ~,~:::;:~.'.' ~~;~6~;;_at the ot her market cost NO CHARGE FOR CASHING CUSTOMER CHE::=CK===S~~-=~'.~g:":'~~~d::L~c~=~· c-=onvi~nced::of:':':'t h_. -:""' ROUND STEAK CE NTER CUT I EAN. FlAVOl!f \l l LU(l(y TOP QUALITY BON DED Bl Ef 88~. ()• •· kLr RECIPE DOG FOOD J VARIETIES 1411.0UNCE CA N 25c '1.:.1• CANNED' iFOODS CHUCK ROAST BLADE CUT 48 SfRVf W/Vl CfT ABL£5 c lUCKY TOP QU AU TY BONDfO B£lF LB. FRESH FRYERS USDA GRADE A F•fSH WH OLE BODY CNIC tUNS 21;..3 lBS. AVC. WT. 31~. ~u~i~:U~Y~--~-~.~~R~·-···············ll. J6c $148 YOUNG TOM TURKEYS ~ICllllM I .....•... , ...................... ,ll. 39c CANNED FOODS · · PACKAGED GOODS ()ur LOW Everyday P rice~ CAKE MIXES 29c lAOY ll( 19 OUNCE BOX ' HOUSEHOLD ITEMS PAPER PLATES ::~~~Z~1."""1·.'.''.. 57' t1""' ROYALE TOWELS ~1;~~ •0t1 .30c MODESS ~!~1.'.~~,l~A~KI~~ .............. 83< 45c YOUNG HEN TURKEYS 1\01 il&lll I, 11 l! lU II' ... u HOUSEHOLD ITEMS · BRIQUETS ~:~:\~~~ ................... 79' r GLAD BAGS ~~~~A~!, .. , ........... 61 < "0" DHll GIMI WHITE KING t•oi 1101 ................ 58' o-: GLAD BAGS :!~:i:~~':~~,~~:1 :•0 56~ WHITE KING !~~~~~;.~'· ............... 71 < Tlssu E I OIAll ASSO ll 10 TOllll 2S< Q"'"' l1JIS(I IOftl ............... . WHITE KING ~1·s1.11·01J0'.'.1".1~ .............. '1°1 ~OVEN SPRAY ~~i~~:~'.~ ....... 69' JOY ~~oi~o:r','.'.•r.•"' ....................... 82• SAL VO ~~;~,~~~1/•ei111 ................... '21' COMET ~~?~u:i"~!~'~-~~'.~ .................... 27< ZEST ~~~1~'.~~~~................. 22" BEVERAGES ·• SPIRITS SHASTA ;:~·,~~~~,~~~'.:.~;~ ............... 23( SCHLITZ BEER ~~x;,~~~"···· ............. ' l 69 LUCKY VODKA ~~ ::~~otnr ........... 1711 4AVAtLllLI ., ou• STO•U WITN I IOUOI n l'T I w~Van de Karnp'sw AN OUTSTANDING VARIETY OF FRESH BAKERY GOODS U.S.D.1.FOODITlMP • COUPONS Gladly Accepted ... !ht It• 1tem1 listed cR !Ills P '~~ con>ll !ule ju11' 1mall 1Jm~11~1 cf lhe 1~ou11nd1 of low, diicount prices SLICED BACON p,;'"' "'" D"'""""d f.<opt °" /01r ·l1nd<'d o nd Governmerit LIAN ••• SMOKED FlAVDR, LADY Lii, 1-POUND PACKAGE 53c PORTERHOUSE STEAK Jill Cf ; 1( 4! I\ ~I "!Oil U !O•~I C ~!!I .. $153 . ..... ll. JIMMY DEAN SAUSAGE Plll ,Ct~ ll,UI U QI ~1.1 l~ IQ!\ 75c • ()• ... kh18.t!·-~ GREEN BEANS DIAMOND A CUT 16 OUN(( CA.N 20c PET · FOODS , ..• , • 1. CAT FOOD :~1/~::11 0 '..~~.~ .............. 16• CAT LITTER ~~~:.";A•~AI .................... ~ 111 () ..... l:Lr&t !·---. COOKI NG OIL LADY LEE GAllON PlASTIC BOTTlE $209 : DAIRY PRODUCTS : . MARGARINE ::00Y1l~r~G ................... 2Jc JUICE !:~~+<:,:~."~~'.'.'.~.~'.'. .................. 99 ' SHERBET ~?:~7°<$''" ...................... 6Sc BUTTERMILK ~:~'/~~N . 42' LADY LEE BUTTER :;·0~1u~1r'~' ........ 81' Conlrolled lrem1. ~o.,, p,,,., P•o'"' hon Pol•<Y 11"'"""'"~' rh.,., Pl :,.,, le b~ .. 11.,, ... p loom WPd•••Hioy, July 11 1h1ougt, l "P>doy, )uly 27, 191l 1•9•"<ll•" of co•!'""""'"'·" t t.1' 1 r1c.~t•J 1'11 ""lUt~Y "01!!, IN~ -•It 1•9~'1 ....... . Our I.OW [vcrytl.iy Price~ LADY LEE FRANKS /\llMEA T sac l l 8. PKG. (1 2 OZ. PKG .... 4Sc) ~lslil~I~.~. M A!~.R ~.~~~~-~~-110/.Pa 7 5c ~~~1~R ~AYER W·l·~-~~~-~ ... 111.P•~ 79c ~~~eR .MAYER -~-~~~~-~~-iiti '" 79' 1~~,:~2! SALAM£ ............... 1101 n' $) 49 ~(~a~~~1~1~[£F BRISKE~ .. J'• LI UM$ J 98 !~o~u~~"~Jl~~~M~•~~!c~u~.~-~~~~DI r•c 69( Our LOW Evcr)<lay Price! HARVEST DAY BUNS HOT DOG OJI' HAMB URGER 8 COU NT PKG. 29c ... .Guaranteer/ TO BE THE FIN~ST QUALITY AVAILABLE and at Low, low Everyday Discount Prices! . . AVOCAD OS 24~. HASS VARIETY , LA RGE SIZE, RICH BUTTERY FLAVOR _.DIXIE CUPS 'OI COlCICUPI, 'Q". llSOlllD, lOCI •lG, i" 11ort !Dr yo~ 11 l.Jic ky. ~-..... -9'f!!I".,. NOR GOLD POTATOES MUG TREE SET WITH 4 MUGS 199 Alt 111 lo bli9hfen up their <DfMr and ''''le you Mndsomtly al <off11~r1ak lime. fo111 de1111rali'le .e1ami< mu51s; metal "tree." SPICE RACK These Items Are Aral/able Only at Those LUCKY DISCOUNT CENTERS LISTED BELOW •.. BLEACHED MUSLIN SHEETS dean, ncilurol look. la. ~el al 12 9lo\s opotht<o1y bo1tl11 to hol d you• spict totltdio n; tw1-ti11td d~,e11ywood rotk, ser ol sluk-on lobtb. 266 by c1n1111n RI G. 147 ~ING 117 TWIN 217 THERMAL BLANKET CAii CASE SllHI 37 lithtw1lght, w11hoi.lt DOUIL[ 1)97 OUEEN 311 KING 511 3 y1or-rouiv:lhkr11k11; SHtll S,,. 5HlfT 5HllT FASHION ICED TEA TUMBLER •• 21 i , . AI SORHD CERAMIC ~ COOKIE JARS ~J ( 1,,toling onl· .~. 97 Matlitlllttl• hoW • 11111111111 1wofll• el 1Mliil11 . .t.11orttd ct>ltf\. IWEDll H TANNING SECRET 114 The 5tcr1 t al a b,aul1· lul ilttp ton, qu1(l ly. 4 Ot. LOTION 01 Oil TANYA TANNING BUTTER 67( lvtt1111p flf • l.11- 111 , deeper, 'lmtolhtr 1011 in leis ti111c. 1 OZ . JAR ICE Q1, ~~~~~;,~~~<~ comes in goy kitthen 10101\. lADIE I' STRAP SANDALS 9 9 ( For sh111 .10111f0t"t, !ht • cloitll lh111g fO WCllf• 1"9 ,.. sioesl ColorL SOFT HAIR MEN'S HAIRSPRAY 114 Htlils ho ir nictly in pl1c1 wllltovt Mkint II 1liff " sli,•y. 7 oz . osso1ttd 10101 1,, // .... ·' Snow,.white b!f'Od!fd mu1lin heddinq i~ e•hll POL tESTER PILLOWS &-, . ... '"'b'•·i''"'''''"'""'"'""'b"'· HM..ii,,, • .;" -197 287 361 . \.'.· ·· . / "·:· ""1 '"'''" "" ""'"'' •• ,i... MATTRESS :::=;-;ib~1',;~"''· ,.,,. , .. ,. ,.,,; .....-/"'VINYL MATTR~S COVERS PADS MEN'S NO -IRON DRESS SHIRTS & TIES Pt1rmincnl Prtss polytsler COiion 1hi1!1 with sho1t slc11•tl, long point tolla r; 1ofid c1l- Of\ ond stripes, si1t'i 14 1/2 It 17. Also 100~, ,olyt•t•r 111il hi1•1i11y.tl1M tits in this 1111•11 strlpt1 tnil cofer1., A 1rn 1 0uyl TIES 136 IRCM IUNK, TWIN, DBI . 97 ' OU EIN ]97 ~ ~~l "REG. Pl llOW 110 ~]_,/, J97 497 097 KING 14, KING 1 , ~ 1w1N fUll 1e1Nc o PILLOW BIO /.iO Sturdy rnotlle~s pods of quill ed Pfolt!ll fOUI 1ostlf moth•sst s and bid i ollon, lirrn ly sewn lo lost lo~. pillo ws lrom soil, sloi11, pt1sp11olion, t ll. . ' GERBER BABY SUPPLIES · _··~ ~~ PUll-ON 39( TRAINING PANTS 69( ~-'~r:r BABY PANTS or BABY BIB ~ \_ _ _;J Stly-soft wottrpt11f pull -on pant s, 1uptr-obso1btnl cot1011li11h1r1lri-/ ~!;, ~ J ' ittg JHlllfS tmf 1111trt1H-Jilt H .. y ~ib. All 01c mo1hin1-woshoblt . ' ... ~ T_~?!e Are Many Other Lucky Discount Supermarkets To Serve You In Los Angeles, Orange & San Bernardino Counties. We Discou nt Everything Except Quality, Courte'Y And Service -----. ,1;. • " ... " ... " " " '· ;11 ,_ ' ' ·-. . .. ' .,. •• .. "· ... '· " ... " •• •• .. .. .. "· ,, • •• ... •• '· " ... '• " .. " . .. : . • ... ' : ,. ' ••• . ; . • • • . " : " ' '''· ;n .. ' ' .~ • ' .. • . . ~ . . ~ . : . ' ' " ' " : " • ' .. •n ' ' •• ' . :~ ' ' . ·~ ' : . ' ' ' " . " : " • . .. . " • • • • . -' ' ' ' •• • '• ' : .. ' ' '" • " •• • •• " • • a . '. ' : . ' .. ' I ' ~ • '· , •• •• ,,. ,, . ... ·~· /\- l•~ nel'lo .. 1 "'" .... ~ sun.,. dutl•: ne, ... t Gol~·: -----... :• ... ''i H·- "Pe V.Uf' - ~tri DAl .. C" '· .. . · ... .• ' ,. .. '. -· '' . , .. .. •· '. ., . .... •. .. " ... " ' ... ... ·'' .. .. .. """ .~ .. ., .. ... •' • ., ,. -- , DAI LY PILOT . , • ENTERPRISING YOUNG MEN CREATIO OWN KAYAK BUILDING COMPANY H•rry Wallace (left) and Earl Beadle Demon$frate Their Wares, Youthful Business11ien Embark on Enter1Jrise Leakproof Capsule l\f esa Teacher Apollo 15 Hatch 'S afe' At Institute Charles Funnel, a scienc~ teacher at Costa Mtsa High School, is participating In a summer institute sf)Ohsored by the t-:a!ional Scienct Foun- dation al Syracuse University, CAPE Kr-:NNr:OY, F J a . 1'wo n1inutes later, the re- l A Pi -A111t:ricnn sµacecJ'afL er1t!'y n1odule separatf'S fron1 c1perts believe safeguards the orbital module. This is budt into the Apollo eomn1and done by firing ex p I o s 1 v e 1nodu!e v.·ill prevent in U.S. charges arid safe distance is 1nanned flights the sort of achieved When the a i r disaster that killed three pressure h1side the orbit<1l SO\'Jt't cosrnonauts a board rnodu!e -wh ich no lnnger has Soyuz 11 . a hatch -pushes it away , 'r!u.' flfri('inl so\' i e t ex-1nueh like an innated balloon p!analiun fur what \\Tilt wrung ·dµs away v.·hen the nozzle is un Soyuz ! I 11·;~s that a rclc<iSl'd. prt'Ssure h::.ik de\'l'loped 111 !lit.' !1 was ;H !his separatlnn sµatt·ship abu!1\ :w tninutes point tt1at the Soviets an- hefun· rl•-('ntry 111111the1•arth's nounrcd thry had recei\'ed no alrnospht'rt• .Ju11e 30. The at•-funlif•r 1,ord frorn the 1hr!'e counl ruled ou t slruelu1·aJ cosniunrtu!~. 'rhey .~aid there d:1111agt• !u thr era fl, 1111pl~1ng was a l>l'al failure. 11·hich could a l1un1a11 t·ri·ur. orily be in !he hatch. 'l'he Anit•rit·:tn rxpt·rL~ s3y "Thrv h;uJ a pressure leak 1ht'Y d(•ri't b1·lil'l'e a sirntlar 111 !ht' ·hatch a11d they had nn tlcprcssuriY.:1ti0n ac cident v.·ay or knowing iL'' one CllulJ happl·n to the fTr\\' nr authurily s;ud. Apollo 15. 11l1ich blasts u!f for \\'hv didu·t they knov.' it? tl1c 1110t111 .Jl1lr 26 Bol.h m n d u 1 es v.·ere Apollo t1.'ls a do11hle h<1t1 ·h, a pressurized to 14 7 pounds per hl'ller l11ti.:h1ng systeni. a !c<1k squart ineh -psi-v.·ith ;ibout de1eetiun procedure and a 80 perccnl llltrogf'n ;tnd 20 1~r s:1ft•r prl's;;uriL:ition :-.ystrn1, t'Cn! oxygen R<1s-sirnuh1ting thev sav. E\'cn if the ~ta ]I've! condiiions on earth. sp<{eecrafl lost prl·ssure, the Wilh the pressure 1he samf' on aslrorn.1u1s 1vould h:1l'e t1111e to bolh sides of the co1nn1on don protective spacesuits. hatch. and 111;1int;iined by :i The cosmonauts don't f'\'Cn prf'ssure equalization va!l·r in carry prl's!'ure suits. Their the h;·ilch, there v.·as no V.':JY to pressu re s\·s tem i.~ such th:it 1f dettct leak. a puncturt' occur~. de.1th is "That same systern had altnosl inslantanf'nus v.·il h no opera1ed successfully on 10 ch:1nce lo don suits. earlier Snyuz nights,"' the U.S. Here's how U.S. engineers authori1y said. "So the logical farniliar v.·ilh the Soyuz design conclusion is that it was not c..:a\culale 11·ht1t happened: tile design by itst>l f that was at So.1•uz consists of thret· parts faul1. that it 11«1s prubablv -the orbital n1odule where hu111an error. M:1ybt berausf. the cosn1011<1 uts sp1·nd most of 11[ lhrir long exposure lo sp:1ce their tirne. the re -en tr v tl11·v were not :1ble to fu r1c11on module. \1·hich they enter jus°t pr01Jerlv :ind they eilhl'r didn't hl•Fo1·e rrturnin~ to earth. and ];itch the J1:itr:h corrrctlv nr !hf' ser\ i!'(' n1odult\ which eon-!llt•y forgot tu elo~e the \·ah·e t;iins baltt'ries, n x y gen. befure separation ,. ni!rogcn ;1nd other IHe supp<irt How does the Apollo ship f'Q111p n1ent. diflt'r'' To rc-rnter from orbiL ;in B(•fore rr-rntering lhf' at- encirH' ;1hu<1rd the service rnnsphcn!. Apollo eonsis1s of rnnd11le fires fqr fi ve 111i11ulr.~ twn scclions. the eomrnand In slo1\' ttie speed. Thr service 1nodule <ind the s e r v i c e rnodul e separates :ind s1n<11! 1norl11lr. The scr1•ice n1odule is safel y away by s ma l l thrusters. \\'iUloul an orbl\al module, the astronauts have no concern about an un- detectable leak between two sei.:llons. 'J11e Apollo co 111 1n a n d n1odule has two hatches - a n1ain one for entering and 1ca1·ing the;, spacecraft and a tunnel hatch for trans[rr into the lunar 1nodule, wh1eh is Jel- lisontd 111 111uon orh1l. F.vt·n lhe slightest leak 11·ould be detectab!e by th~ astronauts ur sl:'nsors, a luxury U1e Soyui. does not have because or its pressurt· Pqualiz;,ition systcn1. The n1a1n AJ}l)l\o hatt:h is securt>rl by !5 latches a nd Lhe tunnrl hatc..:h by six, ro1n pared 11·ith ,,111y one for the Soyuz hill ch. I Bul n1osl i1nport;1n!, Apollo l is prt>ssu rized to only 5 psi rn1xture like th e Sovuz has, if1 vou have n1ore than" 3 psi. thad i-i1trogcn is going to boil in the 1 blond 1f you lose pressurr.''I 11·ith pure oxygen . "\\11th a nitrogen-oxygen ] the autl1ority s<11d. "\\/hen you drop frorn 1·1.7 psi to zero in a hurrv. the blood is boiling. Death is almost instant. "\\'ith oxygl'n at 5 psi, the depressur1 1.ation is not asl r<ipid. The astronauts can take depressurization better. 'rhrre is 1in1e lo gr<1b oxygen rnasks,·· he said. ''In addition. Apollo llfl.~ a surg(' tank systern that v.•ill 111a1nlain cabin pressure for 10 to 15 minutes f'\'en if 11·e sud- dt·nly ch.>1 t"loped a hole onr· ha'f <in inch in diameter a111·1vhl're in lhe sp;u;ecnlft," he .<:1ddcd. "That·s enough ti me for lhe ert'w lo put on their l prOll't'l1ve pressure suit s. A ygen at a high-flnw ra!e to maintain cabin pressure. Whal safeguards are then~ 11·hen the Apollo command ship is linked lO the lunar rnodule? Funnel i! one of 42 teacher• v.·ho, until Aug. 6, ·will study the content, objeellves, and classroom approach of tht seventh and eighth grade materials developed by the ln terme<liate Sci e n c e Cu r· ri culum Stud)'. which Je;itures self-paced laboratory etudent work. There is a tunnel cnnnccting the two craft and f'ath end has a hatch. In normal flight w!lh all three ;istronauts in lhe cumn1and ship, there Is no pressure in the tunnel and a leak \1·oul d be dl'lectable bv :~:,:~:·,°':;·;::.:.~:""~'i'--w--A-·N-·T-~E--D--! .... ~'m1Mili'Ait11 1 SUNDAY AT 1:45 r'.M. JOE COCKER WITH Leon Ruslell "Mad Dogs & Englishmen" COLOlt-RATEO GI" Ope11 Nightly 6:4S ,.M. Sw11cioy at 1:45 f'.M. OESI ARNAZ , JR. CATHERINE BURNS RICHARO CRENNA CLAIRE BLOOM I ONE SMILE·A·WHILE DAY CAMPER FOR HAVING' TOO MUCH FUN Whtr•: 1'45 ~2 B••<h Boui••1rd W~v: 5..,.;m Sc~ool e $porh • Cr.lh • Coc~ouh Tr ip• e O•er11«1hh Wh o: Boyt & G;rl, <1 -1 ~ Rt · 9•rdle u of tchool pl •ctm111! Whe~: Your dioice: Bv Oty, w ~~~. Mc~lh or Whol1 Summ er. .. n1clL·or1tc puncture -a ''Red Sky rP!lH>tt' ch:ince -probably wouldn't punth th(ll big (I Special Eciwcatl;,. tiolP." At Morn"1ng'' Chllcire11 w.1, .... Tlic su rge tanks hn]ds :l 7 For R•war• cuicf 1111~~;;;,0,. pnunds or o~·xgen for usr ;;,.., FREDERICK SCH OE/\1EHL 01 111e Cll!IY" ,.not 5!•11 price is $4fi. For an add1ti11n<1\ $4.1. a builder c;in get a kit or 1nahngany tn1n 111all'f1!1ls. C<invas l'Ovcring for thc <'r;ift is 11111 included :ir1d 1s usu:1ll~ pu1Tha'54..·d tllruugil i\1111;1 Alh·u ~ail Loft In Costa .\h:S[1. rnglnts push i1 a .~are distance jrr t i.~nned before the craft hit.<; 1\lnre recently. the yo1ith~ :iw;iy. the al1nospherf' and Is taken pl;iecd nne of their pr11101ypes ------------- during rr-entr.1·. Jn ;in COLOR-ltATEO Gr' 530-JJJJ..-Call~K-~13 en1ergL'llcy i_r _can_:_u"p~p~IY'_'"~'~-[!,,===========df~=======~2!~=~ A lfl..year old South Laguna boy. along 11·ith l\1'0 enn1- p<1nions from i'iewport Braeh. h;i~ embarked (>n a business \'enture making kayaks. The three -ll arry Wa llace, 35 S. Enrino, South Liiguna , E;irl Beadle. 213 Via Nic:c, Newpflrl Be;:ich and Philip Ashev, J~Ofi ~1ariners })rive, Newi)ort Beach ~ have for111- •<l the Sea Sovereign Bual Comp;iny. Already lhey have set up a busines~ style bank account. have an ind ustrial account ~1\lh the La guna B e a c h Lun1brr Company, and are !OOn to go on whnles~le stnlus v.·ith a Los Angeles alun1inurn 1upply firm. Cu1nplrlcd nHxh·ls ;ire a hit n1orf' 1·xpi·11~1Vl'. 'l'hl' 11n1~h1·il Cors:11r :-.t·lls t<or· !>11;2 ~U ll'h·l1· the H:1r.gcr is slig!itly highl'r at $! 7:i. Each of the three l<ids <:hip- ped in $40 lo get 1he <·un1pa11y rolling. They l'<ith dr:11' S~ :111 hour for !hl'ir L11Jur. \'ul- lec\;.1blc altl·1· a craft 1s .~olcl. Un a craft, lh~·.v \1ill :11en1ge about 20 perte111 prul1l. C.:1ins1ructit111 of the kay:1k~. IH1111·1·cr·. h;1s g11't'll 11:1y lo lhl' n1111r irn111t·d1,I[(· t'(Hlt't·rn nl g1:tli11g tht: na111e of Sea Sovert•1gr1 ~1u! to \ill' puiil1r. l•:;ir\. JlarTy <ind l1h1l1 p ultl·n k;1_vak around .\1·11p1'i't tl :i~. 10 lhr lobby of the \'rv. port H«;irh YJ\lC1\. llar-ry, Earl :incl l'hil ip h.'.1\'l' hL•t:n :1..,..,i-,tt•d hy thi.:1r fathtrs "' lilt• 111"g:11111.:11 1011 d11nt•. 'l'i1e 1hn·1· f:1lht•1·s nuw ser1·e :is 1·1-.or . ..," to thr c111np:1ny. "\\'e are trying to gt·t boy~ :ind their f<ilher~ tu ·\1·11rk \11g1·\ht·r ;ind ·"\ll'ild \1n1e 111lh r:11'1l u\h;·1·,'' c· o 111 Ill t' !I l t' d \V:1)1·s \V:illat't'. H:l!1'.I ·s d:td •·\\',.hope lht· 1d11:i 111111 spre:1d 11iruugtiou1 tile ;1rC':.i :ind lli:it pt•1•pl1· will buy <1 k1l fr'•)lll 11s 1111d .~t;1rt lht-1r nll'n co1npany ;11ul "0 011 d0\1'11 llit· l11w ' "\\'e ;1rr 1r1·111~'. tu ktl'P :111:.+y frnrn P~t:ilil1 ~lu·il ~'\)11lh 1>rg:ini1.<1!1on<:. \Yi• w;1nt !hi.~ tn ht• spun!:1tlCOU~." \\' n ! l <1 t (' .•.aid . The youthful rlrn1 offers 1wo line~ of kay11ks -the 11 Fnot "Cnr~air .'' and the !3 fnnt ''R11n,o:er''. \1·h1rh lll<tY be p u r c h R .s e d e fl n1 plctely as~rmbled or in kit f(1rn1. 11•ll1 ng ollll'I~ ;1hnt1t th••1 r.------------·• pr·nUut·I Tlit·v h.11·1· p1 Pp:11 t·d ;1 L1('t .'hC'et on the J.,11" :ind r11111 pltlt•d t·rafls v.h1th 11tt'} cin·ul;ilr lrt·t'I)'. "\l.'e're tryin,t!; to eneourage pl'<Jple 10 buy tile kits." l!11rry said. "\\'1> want lo see kids :ind their dads v.·orking together." Thus far. Sra Siivcreign has ~ol d one kit to a boy ;ind his f;ither in Nrv.·port Beach. whn. Ha rry reported '';ire having a ball bu ildinp: !he era fl." The basic kit include.~ the ne ress;iry m.ilrri11!~ In lra111r A k;iy;::ik . For !he Corsair. k1I i\'i :1 pnnno11011 f1•1 lh~· (11111 ~l'i'I ~n1·rre1~11 t'Oll'l"'d ~! t'l':'l ll in the Balboa R;1~· Club kay;1~ r:iet' 01·t·r 1t1t' .Jilly 4111 11rekrnrl. Their K;i_l'ak ra1111• in third. 1!;11T1 said lhc t·11111p,n\\' \I iii prob:iblv rnlrr lhr !,;1hn1: ll:i\ ('11n1pe1 1t1nn ;it 1!1r rlt1h ;i \ll'il. ''Artistry i11 ~ioving" '.A~ .. ~'.ffliR, >. - TRANSMISSIONS Wor1a·, 1,,,.,.., Tr .. ~\m••"on So"''"''"t. lotrtl Oeolcr Wil H~w~!t ,OPEN MONDllV ..i1TtS ~ <lOStO \Ar ' -{,o I•, "·r~ • ' \OW '"'""'"' • for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: 494-1025 Eltabllshed T 926 580 Broadway FURNITURE Makings for the Mediterranean mood: deep wood tone , glass carvings1 and iron details. Th r bJr. a biq elegant :'4 x 66 .. ""'1lh carved tronl panels. iron rail. The barst'lol. wrought iron base rind vcJ vct or vinyl cushions . The chow, carved wood lopped with glass, ;;:o· square. The cocktail t;ible to rnalch fha cho w, handso1ne long 34-_x 60-. The Game-Dining Set, 40 " square glass topped table, carved pedes1al base. conquis- tador chairs '/v1tl1 rich vinyl cush- ions and slraps. 5 pieces complete, '~5. LOS AN GELE S-61?1 Wilsh11e Blvd. Miracle Mile: 110,:0 W. f1lo Blvd.; R31.0 S Western Ave, ANAHEIM: lfi72 W. l1ncol11 BAl'iERSHELO: 3010 Ming Ave. CHUL A VIST A: ~76 Broadway CLAREMONT/PO MONA: 23? L roo!111ll COVINA: 9~5 N. A1usa DOWNEY; 94JS L f1restone GLENDALE : 333 J( Central Av!, GRANAD A HILLS: 10100 Balboa Blvd . HUNTI NGTON BEACH · l'J.1 11 RPach P.l·irl. LA HABR A· 117fl W Wh1t!1"r LONG BEACH: 2189 t~kPNMrl Rivn.._ MONTEREY PARK: 415 S. Atlantic Blvd, PASADfNA: BS S. Rosemead R!Vt RSIDE: 10000 M~)!noli~ SANTA ANA/TUSTIN: 1703 f 17!h St. SAN BERNARDINO: 999 S. "['' Sl SOUTH BA Y: 15533 S. Crenshaw Blvd, THOUSAND OAKS: 244 Thousand Oaks Blvd. VENTU R.l 3409 Telcgr~i;h Rd. WOODLAND HILLS: 22223 Ventura Blvd. SHOP7 DAYS A W[r l( • W£[KOAYS 11UNTIL 9 • SATUROAY 10 UNTIL 6 ·SUNDAY l lJNTIL 6 • fR££ PARKI NG· fR lE DECORATOR Sl'll'VIC£ · rR££ OlllVEflY • CONV£Nl[NT BANK T£Jttf$ stereol03FM the sounds of the harbor ~d~~7 youve never heard it so good • -------I ,J'>-• ... , . LEGAL NOTICE .. NEWPORT Vll.L,t., .... Mll•rl1 Wty, N~"'-' 6•ft1'1, C1llJerM1 "'60. !<EALTHCAll:I COIPOll:ATIOH, "· Q, ao-'""· 0•1 n11. Ct ll'Ot11l1, TMt bv1lntu It !Mint c$11f....:1N ll'y I u•·-•!Ton lr•M MtrUn'°" '"" 11••-nt lilt<! "'1111 ~· (tl/llfy Clrrk Df Oltfltl (O\lll!V Oii Jv111 JI, 1t71 llV, •t1w J, l1111tt11 09,_,ty """ty Cll r\. ;. P~0-1111'1.., ()t1nv1 Cotl! Otl!v 1'1101. JUIV '· •• 11, It. 10 1 1n1-n LEGAL NOTICE l'·lUU Pl(TITIOUI IUUNlll NAMI ITATIMINT TM lollewlnt P1rtor1 11 dOlnt l1>llln11.1 .. ·.::'bl!:T ... L ART STUDIO, Sl\ldlo ~ - --VOT,01 Wttt, m t.1tun1 Ctnv~n 11:010, l..11~111 a.1c~. C1!ll, t'MJI C~•tl•I E' Oooom111, lf04 Mw1111111 vi ... 0,1,,,, l.•1!1111 811<.11, c1111. tu.n . ' "Q\11 b111l11n1 II Nl~t co11d11c·rff1 bY 111 l1M1f~111I, · C. E Goo1m111 Til/1 11tt1m1111 Ill"' wltll 11'11 Ci.rt 01 Or11111 CouM'I' f>I''. Jul'I' llV 8tvtr1Y J. M1ddc~. Dtw!y C ler~. Pl!lt'lhhed Or111v. Coell OlllV PUQI, .~u~'I'· IS, 21, 7' 111d Autv1! J, 1911 llS0.11 LEGAL NOTICE -' .... . -' .......... .;\ ' ... :·\ . I "'·',: ·.> ••• o.4' I So, yoa're '··~4 not ... ,.. of '\...., whot you heord '\· · on radio or -,, tflink ~u sow on TV7 :I':; With today'& tte'W1poper • ot hand you can reod obotrttt~ or lottf"-4r ,..d It ov•r 11941ln to N doubly ,.,. flf wllotao4...._ ....... EIUOYTHE CONYEllEIKE· ABIUTY ONLY llEWSPAPERS CAM GM YOU Enloy The DAILY PILOT • LEGAL NOTlCE LEGAL NOTlCE LEGAL NO'l1CE IYllOPl11 OP THI lllNUAL ITATIMll'l'f ~ ~ MIRITPL..AN llllUIAWC• CCMPANY tl ,1 di llltw,.rt C•"' Orlvt. N_,.,., tMll'I. Ctllf9!'Tl!t YMr llMIM 0...,....., )1, Int TOlll MmtnW tilffft !lltfl 2, LIM JI) 11,nt.IW.,. Ttltt t11blllm. IPtoe' >, Lint t)I 11.n,IOi.tt l pttltl l'Jt lll'°' lvrod:I CPI .. J, LIM 14) U11ltt! IMI~·~ or tlfMOI"\' d .... 11 {P .. 1 J, LIM UA) .... • 1.000.000.• ' l"" Pl(TITIOl.I IUllNlll NAMI ITATIMINT ffl-1111 l'trM11 la M IO'ltl ikillMu LEGAL NOTICE , 1t1N PICT1TIOlll lllflN•ll llAMI ITATIMINf i.!ltwlf\9 "'tOll 11 dtlnf b\11111111 • I ~ ll:DAJLV PILOT THUR$DAY; FRIDAY, SATURDAY 3 :DAY SPECIAL I While Qu.01.1tit Lasts ' UP TO 5 FT. TALL DECORATIVE TREES 44/46" PRINT COTION TERRY CLOTH FABRIC Discor.rnt Price! 3 Days Only! 7!! Sew and Sa ve 3 Da ys Only! 97r~ Ntmnl looking 5.f1. polye1hylene tree~ l.a1·c "''uhable lea.ell. Brtnchcs Un be lhapcJ :u Jc~lri:-J. l.IH>O~e l..t~rher Fein, Dr:u-en-. Cord)•lfne. /\tea Palm. Pl.'acoc~ l'e1n, Na.<l111.A Bamboo, fo,iil f ern. U~ your K-niart Credit (:uJ.. '\'our fattorite Clltoal fabric ror f'hf·!ime fa~hions j~ :ule f!tked. Cb<lo&e from & lat~ 1e/e<.11on of 41/<16 .. C<>Uon ~rry prinU l'!pe<"ialJy grctt loc beac.h wau., robel, tDp$1 s.borts a.nd decorative 1)..18 :rd. JX"S. --- PAMPER'S"' DAYTIME 30's Limit 4 12s Box of 30 dayrime diapers. So sofc. absorbent and "''aterpronf, babies love tht'm. Stock up, save! UNFINISHED BOSTON ROCKER 3 Days Onlyl 1297 Early American Boston rocket adds a dccorar i\•e accent to any style room. Unfinished. Ready to be painted, stained ur varnished, as you wish! •• , .. . , ' . . .. ... . ' -• REG. or LEMON SPRAY PLEDGE 3 Days OnTyl ·Gives fu rniture ~·axed beauty instantly, as you dust. 14-ounce size. .... ~""' ... .-· 5-GALLON AQUARIUM KIT 3 Da ys Only! Discounf Price! 7s7 A ~·,l!.ollon ,1!1~!~ D('lf~ fi1h aq•1~rium •·irh Merl frame~ plus t kit that conf3i11s 1 bottom filter 111d ..-1braior air rump. :SOFT SIDED FLORAL LUGGAGE 777 roJ337 DOUBLE PAK Q-TIPS 12x12 OZITE EXCELLO TILES DOUBLE KNIT POLYESTER SOLIDS • PRINTS 3 44Yrl. Charge itl 'R"' a 62"' •·ide double knit polye!M hbri(~ for iiew spring and rum- mer G;:hio11s. Buy j-icquard., (rtpes, twiUs aDd m in~lle weaves. All ' m«hioe-wubable. 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"o;,;,;" •' '·'· •··~•• c •. .,...1111 11,.,, ;,. ,11, U19 it14 S!tllJ, (1111 ~ •• f'111rt1 • ic 1 . •u1tr1 l+I BELLFLOWER 11411 ••wt•lll t tl !h H~ f tH•lf HUNTINGTON BEACH 11!11 lilllOlhl 1! 'lfhtll ORANGE II ltl!•I II hi\ l UI • lt11i1 --· BUENA PARK L1t1 1l1 11 fllltt ,,,. )Ill l1M1I• kt INDUSTRY •t1•flfl 11 hill! IHlfllll lll I lllllftll 11 .. OXNARD 1111•11 uf (UHtl hbM 1111 t•1111! titu4 BUENA PARK IUI~ II .. I! ll •1nh II .. , Jll l ltHI llof LANCASTER ,. !I .... ,., J l l ltU! ( ti k !lltttl ''.Y RIALTO COSTA MESA •11k r l•11n1r• .c •~ 1111 llFffr .... _ MONROVIA 11> Ut 1111 h11,..111 If"" 1111 ....... c.111 RIVERSIDE fttll+ll 1111 .. 111 I! ,l,,.C -! lt•I S"HI IM I IH1'Ht lltC It tlt+U S1t1t1 -., \~ -.. 11»='-4 - • • ' • , -: . ·""' ,., " •. "'' ·~\d,<· l ~·,,.~t,· . ... ,..,.... . ' ~··"· . '.,· '11J;\:., ! .' . ·" . ' ' .;>·, . ·~ • < 40-GALLON WATER HEATER 3 Days Only! Discount Price! 4888 Don't be C3UBht withoot hot w:i.1er when important chores have tlO be completed. Call tQday and be sure with • new 'l•>ater heater. For all yo~ ho~ ~mpro..-ement need! be sure and ~hop K rmn, ·..-,,hnc your 1at1sfa.ction is guann~ed • 3 Days Only! 3ss Rubber-tip T-legs. ATo· ado. While Qurt.ntitia !.Ast! 16" STACK TABLE 3 Days Onlyl 244 \\.alnut finish. Rubber cippea legs. 16" ista.ck table. Stack for comfon storage. Enameled hardboard top. • 0 ...... ,, . TDILnTANK REPAIR KIT . ' ,, ' TOILET TANK REPAIR KIT 3 Days Onlyl Discount Price! .397 End cosrly water •:aste,,, Complc1c kit for repa iring a_ll items in the toilet tank. Fasy ro fnllow in~rructions. At this ptice rou can fi x · h rest rooms cheaply! -----··~-' . ' Thund.tf, July 21. 1~71 DAILY PILOT J :J Prothro Regime Differs Vitally From Allen's . { ' Early return.5 are In and the roolue coach, Tommy Prothro, says he is im- ptts~ with hl!'i Los Angeles Rams. His veteran star quarterback gives him pass- ing marks. too. "! knew they were fantastic athlel.es." Prothro sa.vs . "but I've been an1azed at how much better they ant than anything I've ever seen before A few have been dl."iappointini;r. But not many " Prothrn. who left UCLA tn succeed George Allen, now with Washington, has pleased quarlerbaC'k Roman Gabriel 1o111th his relaxed approach. The players weren't A \VOL "'°'hen they left camp last Saturday night and return- ed late Sunday morning. They h.cid been given time <Jff, somethlng unheard <Jf dur- ing the Allen years. "In 1967, we went 21 days without get- ting a nigbt off." Gabriel said. "Then George called off the evcnlng meeting. This means '>''e '>''e re free from ~:30 p.m. until 10 :45 p.m. -curfew time. This was Allen"s idea of an evening off. No meeting." Prothro has no curlew. Gabriel said he wasn 't knocking Allen, Want No Part Of Gambling HAR RISON. N.Y. (APl -If \Y illiam F. Talber! has his wa y, there could be a Las Vegas-style odds Hne on tennis ma1 ches al Forest Hills in lhe next few years, hut I.he idea of legalized betting ln golf brought C'Old reactions today from the game's leading personalities al the $250,000 Westchester Classic. "l want no part of it." insisted Joseph C. Dey Jr., commissioner of the PGA Toomamenl Ph1ye rs Division. "Of alt sports, golf is least vulnerable to chicanery. But I cringe at the thought of open betting on golf tournaments. We are unalterably opposed to 11. We have strict rules in our 11greements with both players and sponso rs." ''It doesn't shake n1e up because I lhin k it's virtually impossible to fix a golf tournament." added Arnold Palmer. "My concern would be that it would change the character of the Spllrt. The fans are too close -thev can walk down the fairi,•:ays '>''ith the goifers," said Freri Corcoran, tou rnament director of the Westchester 11nd also of the Intemational Golf Association. "Thi5 woul d give rise ln suspicion v.·hen no reason for ii might exist. Every miss- ed lhree·fool putt would be co me suspect." s.3.id nan Sikes. the golfing lawyer from Jacksonville, Fla. "Fred is right. The fans are loo close. \Vha l abou1 a sneeze or a cough JUSt when a guv is beginning hi.~ backs'>''ing ?'' Ta lbe rt, former n a\'IS Cu p captain ~·hn Is direclor of the U.S. Open tbis year al. Forest Hills, stunned the staid old tennis establishment earlier this week when he said he s111v no harm in off-court betting. He said he planned to make a formal recommendation to the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association. "\Vhen Howard Samuels presidenl of New York's Off-Track Belting Corp. ap· proached me on the subject," Talbert said, "I said. 'Why not?' '"Tennis booming. There is a prece- dent al \Vimbledon . where betting is legal. There never has been an incidenl there. It might help the sport." Samuels has proposed off-track betting on all sports -in addition to horst rac- ing -con1.end1n~ such a move \l+'nuld help stamp out illegal gambling while fat- tening the public trea~uries. Commissioners of pro football . baseball and basketball have voiced strong ob- jection. claiming such a move \l+'OU!d !cad to lemptations and create questions of in- tegrity in sport~. Golf is siding wit h the big spectator games. "Golf is a game founded on individual honest and integrity," said Dey. "To in- terject gambling '>''ould pose a threat to Its structu:-e." Former r.1aslers champion Bob Goa!by said in order to fix a tournamC"nt it would be necessary tn get to every man in 1he field. "How ca n anyo ne do that?'' he ask· ed . Palmer said a fix is possible only '>''hen l'>''O n1en pla y. "\Vith purses what they are 1$50.000 firsl prize here !. who could afford it'?'' he added. JOHN BENCH ELU OES TAG OF LA 'S OU KE SIMS IN SCORING A RUN, Dodge1·s T1·y to Salvage Serie s Fi11ale With Red s ClNCINNATl (AP \ -There's nothing wrong with the Los Angt'les Dodce rs' batters thar gelling l'l few hi!s in a row wouldn 't cure Thars "'hat noo~e~ manager Walter Als ton hnfM'S his team can do tonight Jv!v 1.1 Jul~ ll Jvl• 1• Dodge r Slate .. II Oll!ltJ.., 11111 !6'10) DodG•ro 1• (o~tl.,.._11 Dl'lO<ltrl VI Btl v•• Doclo"• v• Br•~•• 5 p .... ,.J5 p ... I 5S a ..... when Los Angeles tries to salvage the fi nale of the three·g11me ~ries with the Reds and get out of a ta ilspin that has the club losing SUI' of its last eight. The Red s bunC'hed their hit, Wed- nesdav night for a 6-2 triumph. Cincy right-hander Gary Nolan scattered ~even Dodger hits. "I really felt we hl1 !hf' ball as wrll a:oi they did overall," said Alston. "They just hit !heirs in one innin.1t." All nine Red hit11 ~ame in the flr.,t three Inning!. Nolan evened his llfelime record llJ!al n~t the Dodgers to -4_., 8nd he drove In two ol his teHm ·~ run~. • ''I got ~'orr!ed ln I.he ftftli Inning whe n I ~itw 50me of !ht-.l{Uys wJJ1rming up In the bull pen ," Nolan recH11C'd, "I knew then t ··- ' had to kick myself 1n the. rear and I made some good pitche~ " "Gary didn '! have much on lhe ball around I.he fi fth inning," said catcher Johnny B<"nch . ·'Then ii long about the scvenlh hi.~ fast ball ('ame back for him and it "-'RS rnov- ing real good ." The left-hander. now R-10, retired the last 12 of 13 hitters fa cing him despite long drives to Richie Allen and Willie Cra'>''ford in lhe eighth The .~hot~ l'>'ere piC'ked off the wall by Bernie Carbo and George f''oster. LOS •HGILl!S C!HCI NH.t.f1 ... ,,"" WIM, '' 0 1 0 ·~~ ~ fl "'-'M ', rl 0 1 I (l•l)O, If w.~vl" cl I I I L M1 v, !I> II ... lltn 311 0 l a T Potrt!. JI! (••""'O•!I. ,, II II • e ... ol'I, c w p.,~..,. 111 o a r ~0011•. cl '""" c o a a CC>o>c"Pl'IW' llV>••!! lb I! D 0 W-w1rd, 111~1""~'. II 0 l 0 HPl•n, 11 ........ p 1 ' 0 G••ll'""'"'I!/."" • ~ O a M·-••I•....,, I! I! 0 0 0 11 r !'I rl l I 1 2 0 ' ' . ' .. . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . . • • ~ ' U 0 I 0 . ' ' lOt•I• I• ' ' ' Tot1I• n • ' ' 1.<l" lno•IK lltlO 110 D00 -) (on<ln.,•t! 105 000 Olh I E -II I ll..,, Wl'lt'O'lwO•d 01> -(ll'("'°nlll I LO& -Lo<. •"11•1~• •· Clf>tlnno!I ' 21 -II; 1,11..,, $~ _ f Pwn. " ' • .. .. •• ""l•••nc! ... IL.l·JI ')IJ ' • ' ' ·~· J.1 IJ • • • ' • M l~ ....... ' • • • • ' Nnlon IW,110\ • ' ' ' ' ' 11 ... , -,. ,.,,_,,,(. -··~ - -l f 1,,..... who ''w11l always be successful,"' but he kept the Ra.ms busy lhinking football 24 hours a day. "George had meetings just to have meeting s." Prothro holds meetings for speci fit· purposes, said Gabriel, a 11}-year veteran who has played under four Ram coaches. "Prothro expresses his idefls and what hP expects at practice and at rneclings. Whal you do after that is up to you. "I know r m going to h;n·e more fun under this set up although I wouldn"t say A rea Gll ls Hit It Big KAIL UA KO NA, Ha'>'·aii ! UPI ) - T\l·o of the three niarlln boated \\'ednesrlay in the Hawa11an !n· t.erna11onat b l I I f i !'. h tournan1enl v.•ere landed by a pair of Cornna dl'I r.1ar women whose catche.~ put lhe California Yacht Clu b team Jn a se· cond place !ie. Sally Rock lin fought hl'r 2112 pound martin I hour and 7 ni inu tC's while Carol Duckworth, fishing from the same boat. brought her 211-pounder to gaff in 49 minutC"s. \Vith the bonus points the Cal ifornia Yacht Club team tied Pajaro Valley Game Fish Club wilh 74! points. The husbands of the two women caught noth ing. The Saratog;i S port s m e n s Association still holds the lead thank5 to Hayward electrician Jim Pa stor'!'. big marl in ~1onday which netted his team 8112 point~. Three marlin and nine ytllowla 1I luna were caught \\'ednesday, bringin,ll the three-day total lo 38 yellowta1I tuna and 18 marl in. Cla y Calling Elli s Fight A Spri11gboard HOUSTON !AP\ -!\1uharn1n;id Ali s:iy~ he's not taking Jimmy f.llis lighllv. but thoughts of Joe Frazier are oe\•er far away, ''I'll have an advantagr the next time I right Frazier," Ali said Wednesda y ::tf!er training fnr his !\1onday fight in \ht> Astrodome against Ellis. "I know how he hits nnw. I know how he gets tired." Ali figures he"ll use I.his miitrh iiJ:ain,<;l Elli,<; as a springboard lo another shot al Friizier',<; title F:llfs thinks he c;;in mnve up the same way. And !he more Ali talk.~. the more he beC'omes convinced he \l+'asn·l lhe rral loser in the Frazier fight. "\Vhen a man losts a fight tn th,. public, thev don "I tum our !n see him I rain like th is." said Ali. rcferrin ,I! ((I lhe overflow crowds that have watched him train daily. "I don't knn~· 11•hy they even quesl1nn ynu Hbout Joe Frazier." said Rund ini BroYt•n. one of Ali 's handler.c; "\'ihy he I Ali\ olayed with him for thrC't' roUnds . Everybody knows that. "The mouse iust gnl aYta~'." Bund1ni .~aid "He JUSt J!O! away. th;if'~ ;;II You thin k I'm jiving? For!!l.'1 abl'lut 1he prr:c:~ Forget about the referees and !he iudgr~ ~go ::is k !hf' ])('Opie Th<"y'll trll ~nu 11h11 the C'hamp 1s " Drsp1lf' his talk 11hnut h:t\'1n,i: !ro11hlr i:::e\11 n£: 1n cnndllion. Ah 1s rxpccted tn b1' rr;1d1 lnr F.llis. \l'ho ;i lread y is in lop sh;;ipe. Ali weighC'd 224 \V('rinr,o;d111· \l+'hf·n !hr twU fighters undr~·rnl ph ystcal rx;i rn~ for their 12-rou nd bal!Je. Ellis scaled 192. Ali said he realized tht prissth1!1rv w<is !here th11! he might get tagged. hut he fe ll experience '>''ou!d carry him through. "When you ,eet tagge<l , you .~hnuld dance away," A!J s;iid. "Tie. him up. play the rope~. give yourself a chance to rorne out nf 11 It 'takes 20 second.~ ··vou not 1cP Ellis 111•hen he fouf,!ht F'razi'!rl got hit, and he got up and goe!. riglil back in the hitting rangr Rub Foster fi?ll, and he got up and "'ent back in the hilling range. Thi.'y go righl back when they're still numb. "Frazier had me out in thr l!th. Rut he couldn't follDw up. I'm too expcnencf'd " Ell is sparred lw o rnunds Wf'dnrsday and continued ln taper off. "Fridiiy, that's what I'm wa ifing for,'' Ellis said. "I think I'll be the aggressor. J'd rather be the m11n moving in ," Ali said he planned to fight B~Hin sevt•n weeks after meetina Ellls •·1 need the work.," Ali ~;iid . "I gnl to get rt-ady for Joe Frazifr.'' J didn't have (µn under ~lltn. I can"t tell you whr! is best. but 1 llke the way things ari. now better." The practices are more interesting unfl,.~ 1~rothro. "Allen had us going two hours ln lhe rnorning and anywhere lron1lwo1" three hour! in the after-noon." Gahrfe' said "t-_;\'Cll if we gol ti.red. George felt we got something out of it. He only i:topped the practice when he wanted ll stopped . "That' ... not tbe way it is now. One day v.•e might start out with a pas11ing. drill 11nd I~ ntl't day It might be &Omtttrlng else. "But you 're alway! doing something in Prothro's workouts. You "re always going somewht-re to gel so1nething done. The whole le.am is involved." Training under the previous coaches a.lso differed. Gabriel note,<; Bob \\'aterfield 's practices were shorter and Harland Svare concentrated on hitting and running. "Allen stressed conditioning while Prothro pays more attention lo lndlvidual fundamental."i ," he said, .. tr ~ou're not doinJ:! something right. he 'll !et you know about it regardle."is ol who you are," Gabriel said of Prothro. "He'll let you know right now, Allen \l+'BS more inclined to pull you 11slde later," Prothro, who may be found discussing the upcomin..: exhibition games 11.~ well as a chess match or a bridge gaml!', com· ments on hls quarterback situation : "It looks like Gabriel will be one of them." Seven Hours of Baseball For Angels to Get a Split BALL HIT BY MIC KE Y STANLEY IS DROPPED BY TONY GONZAL EZ. P1·0 Cage Merger Nears; Ex-OCC Golfer Fires 64 :i.1r:~1r111 s. Tt>nn ~ A bill to permit the merger of !he nat1on'.s t\l'O profes- ... 1oniil ha~kctball IP;igur~ "'di be intr!\- duC'C'd 1!1 Cnn,:?ress, a J\lemph1s nr"spaper rf'pr1rterl 1oda,\ Thf' <:omn11-rc·1:il 1\ppra! sa id Srn. llnll';i!'rl H:ikrr .Ir •R -Tenn ), h;irl an- ""~in<·f'1t pl;in .; '" $pon ... nr lrf,!isl;iti•IO in !h<' .'i•'n;11r ll'h1ch 1111uh1 wii11·p iinr1trus~ 1:11.1 ~ :inrl rrrin11 thr 1nrrJ.!er 111• .;;1id tho• l••J.!1 ... l;;t1nn would bf• tn· ln•d11rr rl in hn1h hou"•'S nt•xl wPek . back· rrl hi• ;1 llllllllll'r of C()·Sf>Oll<;Or~. e l l 1•v 1,1 ... i::l t•s r-:x-1un1nr rn!lf'~f' ~ta!r rh11m pion Mike ll''f'h l frorn Or.111~,. C'fl::t"! fnll!'l!:e will at- t.rn1r1 !o ~!;iv hot l&!11v in the fir$l round nf lhe South"rrn C;ili fOroia Golf As!'ocia- l!on I Am;it.Pur I tournamenl at El Ni,Euel Country C!ub. r.urrCnth· a Cal State 1 l.<1nii!: Hcarh 1 s1u1!1•nt, llcf'hl fired ::i srnrchinl!: &1 io a pra!'ticl! round \\'rdnesday at Santa Ana Countrv Cl uh. If n"cchl makrs ii Jla"t tht cham- pion!'hip flight today and Fnday at El Niguel, he'll qual ify for further action S:iturday and Sunday at Long Beach'."i Virl(inia Country Club. e (#nrre tt itt Catttp nunnlna backs Dick Post and Mike (::l rrell . bolh considered holdout~ by the Sl'ln Die~o Chargrrs, rernrted to C'amp at UC Irvi ne Wednesday itnd look part in an fl.ftC"rnoon worknut. the Ch11rgers said. e "''''''''·· IJ111p Dies SIOUX FALLS. S.l). -A woman \vho once wai:; thou,11ht to be the" only paid female basrball umpirP in the United States died Tuesrlay in Sioux Falls. Am::tndii ClemPnt. 83, alsn had bef'n knn\l+'n for throwinJ! 11 ba~ball 275 fef't 1n 1912. The thrnw w::ts belirved on t-nf !he longC'Sl by A \Ot'On'li'ln Rorn Hudson, Jn ~hat lh<'n was Dakot::t Territory, Mrs. Clrnu•n\1> bC'p:An hPr brif'f earrer ;i ~ <in umpirr 1n 1903, whrn shf' 111'1~ 1.i Shr h:id pl;i veri hi:i.;;rbiill wi!h her brnlh1'r~ fnr A nun1ber of ~·r;1rs when a S<'1nl-pr-o tr<lnl t·;i me to town ~o one r ls{' 11;i~ avail::tblr to umpire the ~:imc. so .\11~s llud.~011 w11s a~ke<I. • '""'' ,.,,,, .. rr INC:LE\VOOD -A rleiid heat between HcRal Guard and Snappy Jo'1n in the first race and a 92-1 shot triumph by Like fl J-lot in the second produced d::iily double paynffs nf S7!:i1 11nd $1 ,:179.fitl Wrdne~day al Hollvwood Park. l.ikr 'tt Hol. ridden hy Rudy Ramirez. scored hy half ii length over Camp Ja.v And paid $18S to win, $.'i8 60 to plare and $17 ~O lo show. The t•ombinat100 nf Like It Hol and Regal Guard vaid Si.'i t and Sn iippy John, an 18-1 bet. joined wi!h the second race victor for the big payofr. e /!lore "" Ton11 C LOS ANGELES -Outfielder Tony Cr>nigli11ro sa ys he ha sn"L decided whPlher to return lo baseball but "if I wanted to, I think I could make a come- back.'' Conigll::tro. Vi. quit lhe Cali fornia Angels on .July JO and said vision in his left eve had deteriorated. The eyl!' was in· jure<:I when he was hlt by A l'ltrhrd ball in 1967. Sacrifice F ly In Nig htcap Sinks Detroit Fittingly. it wa/i Playboy Bunny night at Anahein1 Stadium Wednesday -and early Thursday as well -as the Californ ia Angels and Detroit Tigers bat· tied to a hair-raising finish in a lwl-night doubleheader. "That's a long way to go just to get 1 split." mused the Angels Ken Berry, moments after his line-dri ve sacrifice ny tn rightrield got Syd O'Brien home with the winning run in the bottom of the nint h inning of !he second game. That '>''as the run which ga ve the JUIV ti J"<v ?J JUI\/ l• Julv ?~ A ngel Slate I.II O•me1 .., kMl'C f1lt l 01,.n D••• Ang•ll 11 8•1!•"'0ro Ang•I• •' 81ltlmort Anv•lo oP 811tomore ' }J "m, • 1j 11.m. !:H "·"'· Angels a 7-6 decision after t.he Tigers had scored three rul)s in the llth inning t<J vdn the opener, 6-J_ O'Brif'n , running l\ke a rabbit, just beat Al Katine's thruw from right, sliding under Hill Freehan's tag . The Tigers 1·ehemently prolesterl pla1e umpirP Reif Ftatirrty·s rulini;. It wa s t11 no avail \\'ednC'sday"s marathon event consumed almost seven hours and ended at 12:51 lh1s rnorning . A crowd or 30,054 watchC"d the twin bill . "\\1e're liab!e lo all get nailed for 8 curfew violation,'' deadpanned Eddie Fisher. who pitched lwo scoreless innings lo garner the \l+'in in the nightca p. Trailing 6-S after a five-run Tiger e1- plosion in lhe sixth inning of the second game. !hr Angels drew even in lhe sevf'nth \l+'hrn pinch-bitter Billy Cawan dnublf'd home !he lying run. In the ninth, O'Brien, another pinch-hi!· lf'r. sin,l!lerl to right, wen t 1n !hird on r o"·an '.o: sin,1?lr anrf, alter 11 walk to Sandy A1on1ar, .~cored on Rerry's timely sacrifice fl v. "I th ought 1 wa~ tm rler the tag ," O'Brien :said, "but H was too close for comfort." Fisher collected his eighth win while re liever Fred Scher man, who saved th e opener for JO( Coleman, 10-6. was the losrr. dropping his record to 6-5. Ruilding a 2--0 fi rst inning lead, the An,1.'els coulrl not hold the Tigers in the f1rsl game. Detroit went 0111 in front 3-2 in 1he fifth when /\'orm Ca."h ripped hi" 22nd hon1e run , givi ng hirn !he American LPiigue lead tn that departmen!. .Jim Srwnccr's 11th tied 1\ for I.he Angels in 1hC' sixlh and it ·"tayerl that wav 11ntlt llrtroit cam ~ up with their thrre ifi thf' rlr1<'n!h to hand Angel starter Clyrle \V rii;!ht hi.~ ninth loss againiit the same nun1her of wins. Tony TaylQr 's leadoff si nglr, 1 !'..<1cr1f1cC', an in!('nfional walk to Willie l!nrton anrl Bill Freehan 's nin-scoring single got tht learl run acro.~s. F:drfie Brinkman .~ent two morP runs hon1e with a bad-bounce single ove r the head of Angel shortstop B r u c e Christensen. California gnt off lo a quick start In tbe sr<'onrl game, loo . scoring lhree times to rout Tiger star!er Df'an Chance in lhe firsl Freehan knockerf hi!' 13th homer in the fourth for 11elroit but the Angels car· r1cd a S-1 lead into the sixth when t.he Tigers blit1.ed Tom Murphy. Three successive !'lingles and 1 walk produced a run and Murphy left in favor of Lloyd Allen . The Angel reliever then r.ommitterl 11 two-base throwing error on J\!ickey Stanley's romebacker a n d Brinkman with a two.run single to send the Tigers into the le11d . S!:COND OAMI D!fllOlf .. ' OJ""'*°' II I 0 l(•l•~f. " 0 0 A llod'IDufl· )~ j 0 NO•lll•uO. •! I I C•oh, 1 ~ I F,.·ltlltn, I l McA~llU•, 7h I ~ r" I G Alam6•. 1l! 0 0 ll!vo••· tf 0 0 I! Fi.h.,, O I 0 !1•,,V. pl> 1 0 c;.,,,,.lt l, !! tt r ~ rll I I 1 0 ) I 1 0 • 0 0 • e o o ' ' • ! 0 J 1 I 1 J 1 1 1 Rodriguez Death Theory M StAnif'~, cf I l!ldn-..,1n, u O Ch•~ce. o o o G""'"'~. a • O 11111< ... ~v. o o o r 1 ... m .. mon I) t 0 Scht •rn1n, D 1 O J 7 511""~'""· C O O McMullt", lD 0 1 5_.,,,, 11 I 1 """''· 11 ~ 0 f lltVr>OIG'I, r! • 0 0 Cll•l•!lon..,.., •l ; o o O"llrlen, t>11 ! o o T Mv•pf\v, p 1 I O L All..,,p 0 Cow•"· II 7 . ' ' ••• . ' ' ' ' . ' ' . • • • ••• . ' ' 1 I.I 6 LONOON IAP l -BRM ra c1n,11 learn chief Louis Stanley criticized Wednesday the organizers or the German rare in which Mf'xico"s Pedro Rodriguez Yt'llS kill- ~ for 2llowillg inexperienced drivers to cnmpete out or the ir c111s.'I. He ~!)(Ike ()Ill afttr seeinfi{ r1!n1 M''- qu ence!'I of event.11 immediattly preC'ed1n1it the Mex1r.an"i; fatal crash At 1he Nuernberg lrack. Rodriguez, No. 1 BRM Gr11nrl l'ri:< driver. w11.s competing In .11 Ferrari • I )~ spnrlscar at the time or his dea1h July 11. '"It 1/i qui te clear In me that whal hap- penrd wa<; th.:;: Rodriguez was forced on to !hr .iiras." by An inP:<perienced rlrlver in ::t sfQ\IPr car '>''ho did not look in hill mfr. rnri;,'' liAirl StRnll'.v . "Pctlro ,;pun and swer.,.ed 11cro~s the !rack. hiH1nti: the w<ill on !he opposile i;1rle I! 1.~ anoll 1er example of how wrong ti iii In allnw slriw car~ and .~low drivers lo ron1pcle among e:ii perL~ ·• Slanlcy !'.Aid he h11d been .shown f1ln1 ,, t>y the Por~chc team chief flieo ~-. • '.1J6-r Ste1nemann .11nd' h110 hc11rd numerou!l ac- counts nf what had happened before reaching hiii opinion "It is M wrona tn hav~ •hig h class driver~ In high powered cars mixed '>''llh 11IO'l'o·er cars and driver~ In the same race," he added. Stanley added that h111 criticism applleld not only lo organi1.ers of thr frerm3n race. "1!'11 ha1>pcning all loo often tod11y," he Aa1d. Tc••.. J• l I J Toith .ll Two ""' _.,, ... 1n~1,.. run ocorfd ()elfOit (1111.,...,, • ' -' A+!en •• - 000 I~ 000 -' XII 100 101 -1 O.t<11l1 '· C:olho•~I• '· , .. -°''"'" •• C1llfomlt " " •11:1 ....... cow•n •• -.. _ I U l, ' -lllvt r1 ,, -ll••rv " ' • .. .. .. C•unct "' ' ' ' ' • Glltlr"""' ,..,,, • ' ' ' ' l(l"ffl"V l I/) ' ' ' ' • t ........ ,""'" ' ' • • • ' ~·~·'"'"" It,, J1 ' ' ' • 1 M<Jrl'l'y ' ' ' ' ' ' • ~ •11~ • 1-71) ' " • ' ! ~1111" (W.1-•l ' • • ' • w• -' Mur,,..v, ICll-•·•mv ' ""'' ,.,, •"•IWl<I~<• -JQ.Oj• -.,,,. ·---· .. ;e,f DAI\. Y •ILDT Slab Game Too Much For Eagles Thrtt Corona dtl Mar lfigb pitchers combined to one-hit Est1ncl1's Eagles lo highlight C.Osla Mtsl·Hunlington Beach Recre1Uon •~r baseball league ac- tion \.\"tdnesd.ay evening at Cost.a Meu Park . Bob Pal mer, Mark Grigsby and Craig "!>!allory combined to lihut out I.he Eagle1, ,.., In another evening tussle it was Foun- tain Valley Kiwanis dominating Edison to lhe tune ol 11).l behind the batting and pitching of Roger 5.a.ilor. In the nightcap at Cost.a ~lesa Park it was Huntington Reach on top of Costa J\l csa. 11·3. Sailor worked four innings. allo wed no hits. no run s. 1truck out four and walked none_ And he ad<ltd lo his cau se with I pair of hits as did mate Don Jones. Bob Carroll had a pa ir of sing les and 1 dou ble to fu rther frustrate Edison. Steve Matt and Brad Baker each drove In a pair of runs in CdJ\1"s fi\•e-ru n second inning outburlil. l'V W.lwlftit Of! ldl-(I) ~ ' .... 111 r .... (1tr11ll. ~ ' ' ' ' LO(lf!. ~ ' • • • z,,.,,,..,, l~ . ' ' • ' w .. 1n~rg1r, Jl:I ' • • • E(kl .. , .. ' ' ' ' Hiii, .. ' • • • e1"""-at0. ( ' • • • HI""· " ' • • • S..l\Of. •" ' ' ' ' Z!•O.I, ,, ' • • • H1600W, ... ' • • • T 01d!il 1d. " ' • • • Fin-IM, " ' ' • • C11u111. ' • • • • l-<11oltr, Cl ' ' ' • w ..... " ' • • • MaTn~. • ' • ' • T/'clml)IOo, c \D ' • • • LM•nlMl(lo., rf ' ' • • C.Oldllrl<I, • ' • • • J<>oi ... 11 ; ' ' N•th1n. • ' ' • • TO!&ll " I~ I~ 1 ... 111 " ' ' • Sc1ro ly l""lflt"• • • • ,., ........... ~ m ; -" " ' EO••t>n ~ ~' ·-• ' ' (lrt"o -el Mor IS! •ot11w:il lO) .. • . ~' .. . ~ ... .. ~..-, " ' "'"'''· " • P•lmt•. p-J~ • Erlcl:1on, ' ' • John-.. " ' • Jol~•llM, U ' • AndrtWI, JD ' ' ~ ...... " • • S~•r1, " ' • ll~lgf, ,, ' • Molt, " ' ' OoMillt, .. • • Cl•nl!f, .. ' • G'IO•DI'. • ' • Mol!Or,o, p • • Tot~~ " ' Coron• 011 Mt• Eo•1nc il ' ' I • ' • ' • ' • ' • • • • • ~u.,llnf,.., H•rMou• fill ' • ' • • • • • • • ' • • • • ; S<l'>Ulll, " • • Gr1n1, " ' • ll0<o9fl, .. ' • Po.tel. "·• ' • JOl'ln•O", ' ' • B~••e!!, ,, ' • Ronq11lllo, " ' • P"'"tll, JO ' • Urm.o.,, • • • Vlllt•e, • ' • loTtll " • • • • 050 00lla -s • l • • ' • • • • • • • ' Ol'lllOOll0 -0 I • Ctlll M11t (l) • • • • • • • • • • • I t r h ~ •t '~ .. , V1n,.m1r11or1, Cl1••, • ' ' ' ' " ' ' , ' Go ldtn. )II ' ' • • 11: ... ~..,,, '" ' ' • • C1'1rl1tm1n, " ' • ' • ("""°"· " ' • • • Scl'lrupp, d ·ll ' • • • O....!tf . ' ' • • ' C11C1well, 11 ' • • • AIM~•d, " • ' ' l1u,.,.,, ' ' • • • Sl1g11, rl ' ' , Pt!tnen, " ' • • • ltor11M11>9l'I, r1 • • • Z•l>nltck1" .. ' ' • • ''"""'· 11>-I! • • • Fregoo l, ' ' • • • Hornv1lo., 11.111 ' ' ' ' Tro••I, 31) ' ' ' • ltr110, " • • • • M~ll . • ' ' ' • Tot•11 .a: I! u ' Toi.11 " ' ' I l(tfl lly htRl~tl ' • • l<unll.,O!ort "' "' e -11 " ' ~ .. ·~ '" ,. ·-' ' ' TENNIS TOURNEY AWARDED TO NBTC t\ewpori Beach Tenni! Club will play hotil to the 1enior division of tht PacHic Southwest Tenni1 Champion!h ips 5'pt. Jl-1 9. Fnnner net great Jack Kramer 1_, thfo tourney director end he indicat es thal the meel will incl udt 22 11eparate d1vi~10n'\ r11nging from rnen'111 end women 's !1ngles In the 35-and-0lder clas.~ all the. v.·ay up to " 70.and-older c:itegor~, The rvent (~ sanctioned by th" United ~!ate~ La"·n Tennis Associ etion 'USLTA f ""'1th Aug. 27 looming a! the deadline fQr entries. Tars Nip Foothill, 63-61 ·. ' l , . ' Awaiting Shrine Kickoff Orange Coast area representatives on the South squad for the July 30 Shrine football classic at the LA Coliseum huddle around Rebel co- coach Lou Birnbaum of Hollywood. Standing Oeft) are Huntington Beach's Garth Wise, Newport Harbor's Grant Gelker and Craig Mor- tensen of Edison. Hot Rod Set Faked Out By Rear-engine Cars Has the rear-engine fuel dragster faked Many of the sport's hardest ch arger!, out the hot rod 1et? lncludini; Don Prudhomme of Granada Two lop drag racers. Don Moody and Hills, favorite to win the PDA title, have Rick Ramsey, thin k so, and they will built new rear-engine cars this year . v.·heel conventional front-e ngine cars in Mood y believes the Prudhomme car the fi fth annual U.S. Pro Dragster Assn. won'l he.ve any advantage . Chan1pionship dr ag races at Ore.i ge ''He's got a body design that creates Newport K.-lllgh"s Bill McKlnQey sank bl.I 31th paint cl the eveolng with less thin 1 minute to go from the free throw line lo ...... Newport out ol a 61..U tie and I.be Tan went oa kt nudae boct Foothlll, 63-fil In other Foothill League rummer baJketball play Costa Meaa turned San- tiago away, 71-73, and TuJUn grabbed an urly lead and held on for a IJ..U win over UDJverslty. McKinney, a 6-3 forward with muscle, had things going his way from hla forward spot all night and he constanU)' So. Plastics ··Easy Winner In Open Play Southern Plastics eased to 1n 18-58 rout ot Woody's In the C.Osta Mesa Open ba1ketball league Wednesday night at Southern C..lifomia College. In the companion feature It was Long Beach ekeing out a 61-57 decision over .La Fonda's. Southern Plastics had five players in double figures and four of them (Gall 'Evans, Dave Murray, Glen Nygard and Joe Day) had 14 apiece. Woody's countered with Greg Kind (22) and Bill Inloes (15) but lt wasn't enough to offset the balanced attack of Southern Plastics, which assumed a 40-18 balttimt lead. La Fonda's chewed into an eight-point halftime lead, but couldn't overcome Long Beach with Bill Connelly (21) leading the way. F'ormer Maler Dei star Ralph Chando1 led La Fonda's with 13 points on sil field goals and a gratis shot while Tom Long had 11 for the only other double figure mark . L• 1"-1·1 U1) LtHtt ... <II Ull " • • .. " " ... C~lri<l<>l ' ' • " .1.11 .. ' , ' ll&dtn ' , ' • ·~ft ' • , '~' ' , , , M<Cl1Jrt ' ' ' l!IN!on ' • ' , Con.,tly • ' ' "'" ' ' ' " Jolliff • ' J1<~•on ' ' , • Novotney • ' Btrn~I ' • ' J O.l"ra1t1 • • Hom..-' • • • TO!•l1 " • " v Totalt " • • H1lf!lrnt; Long ltt<~ ll, le Fond•'• t,, WOO!ty 't (st) lfwlh1rR l"l1tU( CM! " " " .. " • ,,_ ' • ' " On•!n ' ' Grant ' ' • • f:v10• • ' "~ " ' ' n C,M ' • Hul<l'l@n1 ' • • ' Mutt I V ' • N~llltt ' • ' • Nyo•rd • ' Sc1'111cl'I ' • ' • ~, ' • CMcll•v • ' Gr1r-' • Curt11 ' • T11i.ls " , • • Tolflt " , 1-<11n!m•: ~lhttn "11111< ...,, ~'f'• 11, Rustlers Nip Rival, 92-85 • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • • • , " " • " , " " ' " ' " " " " , ' M County International Raceway Friday too much down force on lhe rear wheels Id . . h Go en West College eastd to it s s1xt and Saturday. to be good for his engine," Moody sa id. win in seven tries in the Rio Hondo aum· f.-1oody. 29, or Westchester. winner of RamS<"y, another hot rodder who has mer basketball league Wednesday night !he 4th of .Ju ly Drag Festival at Irwindale carefully followed the rear-cnglne trend with a 92-8) decision over tht Roadrun- Race\\'ay. and Ra mse.v, '!1, Ontario Mol.or ners, Rio Hondo's No. 2 entry. Spced w•."'s 1970 NHRA Super:nationals in recent months but ha sn't !Witched. is ' In Santa Ana summer league fare alternated with cutaide 1bota: and drtvlnl 1nllde altnpla lo llotp lhe l"oo4hlll ~ .ti balance. Cotta Meta '1 trfumph ftl 1par1led by lhe lialanced pcrom of 8ooU Ei14aley, Ttd Neville, Jell lloNt and Jack An:htt. EndJley led lhe parade wttlt 21 polnls on nine fteld ,00• and 1llr!Je ll"'ll> '11o1.t whilt MevDJe WU I couple nokbel blck at 19. Hont bid 14 and Archer added 1 dot.en. Leading Ulllverslty'a taUy sheet was Tom Mulllnll with 21 poinla . lie &ot 11 of them via the frtt throw line. Whips Trltons ,...1111• Ull " ...... , ~rt. (Q} -..M1111 'f ~ ~ 'I Jollro"" t I 1 It ~. • 1 a.-J I t . II~ I I I ,.,,,....., I I I ... urti. 0 I t I T....il Jl 16 ......, t JJ f "'""'"" ... t l•tf M(KlioMy 1• I l Jill • ...._ I I I 4 L1""1 I I I J 5!91'ft S I 1 11 Htl\lle • I I t ll_,,.,.t I 1 • J 'T...,b. f1 1 IJ 41 'toi,i. C•llM M-. (NI fttf!lf !p ' t I 11 M..,Ule ,,,,,,...,i..,. • t I 11 llo!0911 I' I t t Ttlflt Vlll~CUI """" J II I n LJerWllt 1 J 1 1' Sc:on J11 1 1iy.n Ttu4 t7 t 11 1U .. " "'"' ' ' , lt ' I t !I I t I 1 as • • 11 ... ti ,, ti> t • t • t ) l I e I 1 I u ~ .... Mission Viejo Bags Laguna Summer Loop Mission Viejo Higti'a sharp !!hooting Diablos captured the Laguna Beach sum· mer league basketball championlhip in convincing style Wednesday night with an ~ rout of San Clemente at Laguna Beach. The victory gave the Diablo1 a two- game bulge over runnerup Laguna Beach in the final standings. Next on tap for the champions ls the in- itial round of the lea,ut toum8mtnt MoOOay with a 1:4$ teat wltb wlnless Unlvtr1lty. Laguna Bea.ch a11ured Itself the run-La-Beoch Sam-Lea(lll (P'blal) w Mission Viejo 9 Laguna Beach 7 San Clemente • Estancia 5 FounWn Valley 3 University 0 Tournament Mooday L I 3 4 5 7 10 Mission Viejo vs University 5:45 Laguna Beach vs Fountain Valley 7:45 San Clemente vs Eltancia I p.m . nerup position with 1 'lG--51 verdkt over Fountain Valley . University forfeited its game with Estancia becauae o( achedullng problem8 . Mi1sion Viejo upped lt.s mar-in to 23 points after three quarters before relen· ting. Tilt ot.ablo1 bad five players in double figure•. with Craig Citro leading tht way with 20 on seven field goals and a half do1..en free throws. Pat Wilkenson scored 15 and came in for 1pecial praiat from coach Pat Roberts for hil rebounding 'and buatle . Others in double figure• included Mike Bowen (11), Rob Ferguaon (11) and Steve Blacker (10). Ferguson's pa1ain1 wa1 another factor ln the Dlablos' easy win. San Cemente's doUble thrtat of Mike Dowling and Rick Bautr combined for 4.t points but it wasn't enough to offset lht balance of Mission Viejo. Dowling had 22 for the night whll1 Bauer added 21. Dowllng, a 6-2 jumper from tht comer, got his 22 counters on an assortment of drive• with mid-air htaltatk>n. Bauer, tht Trlttins' all-purpo&e Junior guard, Jed San Clemente's fut break at- tack. The Mis1kln Viejo win avenged 111 earlier 1ou to San Clemente, the onJy set- back ol the campatin for the champions. Vinet Mc:C&lla, Vince Whilnah and Nonn Bedell cashed in with doubh figures for Lquna Beach as the Arfuts handled the Fountain Valley quintet. McCalla had 16 for the night whilt Whitnalt (12) and B«!ell (11) followed. Bedell (a 6-5 junior in the fall) led a balanced reboundlng corps for Lagun!. Coach Jerry Fair of Laguna Beach called his team'1 l!\owing good, but wun't happy with tht shooting percen· lai"· 1be team's rebounding and bustling turned it around, however, providing Ult Artists with tht second place fini1h . Chri1 and Tlm Adams combined for 2S of the Fountain Valley total with 15 and 14 apiece while m1te Tony Sepulveda ad· ded 13. L•l'M ltt(ll f'tl 1'-1! .. !R Vllln' CJ21 " • • " " " . .. ki111t!&t,1'1 • ' ' ' l_ ... ,,.i,, ' • ' , c...-.....;,. • • ' • '"""!vtelt • ' • " McCI!!• • • ' " WIOclft ' ' • ' Whll~tl'I , • ' " c..-.tlfs ' ' ' ' Ntllllln , • • • T.Alltmo ' • ' ,. OH~ ' ' ' " (.Ad1m1 ' ' ' ,. ... ' • • , Flt-.i11 • , • ' ,...,..,.,. • ' • ' -' • ' , ,~. " " • • Tat•b " • • • lc•r. .,,. av1rt..-1 l•0""' &""' 1' 11 " II -JG' Foun1tln Vtllty ·~Norm11\0 .. ·-llluCU•wlt "~ Wltklft'llllllll" I I-ck..- , " " 17 -51 ..... , .. _.. '"' """'" JO I 2 fl , ' ' I ' > I I I 2 I I l t f I 6 /, JI 1 e I I ' t 2 I 2' II II M 2t lJ -12 It 23-ff Rustlers Shell Wards champ. are among the favorites in the lee ry of the ne wtype of car for safely Maler Oei dropped a 49-48 decision to El $40,000 meel, whicli has at lracted more reasons. t.todena at Santa Ana College. Greg The Senik RU!tJen continued on their Jt:rs wu Mart Roft:N and Bud Bullinf. than 15CI entries capable or betlering :.!00 "The r£"ar-cn"ine car has only one :ed· Green was hi"h for the Monarchs with 20 ............. ..1 ..... _.... o .... m '"•d a double and two 1tngl., h . h ·1 Ra li " "' W\Mlnr WIYI W~-.iay ,..., .. wnu I ~wa ua m.p .. 1n l e qu arter-mi e. msey vea " R 'd "'"·U t r while Rick Kniffin chipped in 15. while Bullin• added a double i.nd ....... ,, in Manhatt.an Beach . vantage. p.mscy s111 , ""' er rac ion 5--0 Metro Lta1Ue conqutat cf Ward's e _.., Rear-engine advocate& "don'l really because the engine i!: farther back. Till!: h lcl"' wm Cf'tl Piratea at La Palma Park, p-oviM..... 1'! the ntcht. r . . h d f ft ,, ... " 1• f1 " ,, .... ::.... IMlk ....,...,, •• , w ...... l"lt•t .. Ill unde.rstand why they f'.{e switching" to driver is rea!lv not sa e sitting a ea o 1111 i c 1 • 11. c111r l ' 1 1• the w!Mera with a 114 1ame .. -•• n •• , 11 ,.. 116 , 11 rM the relatively ""P'•""· radical detlg"· Ille engine . If· he hits anything, like tht ~':,'~..-: ~ 01 ",0 ~~ ••• -~ ~ ~ ! over thelr neareet rival. Dedof. " 1 • • ' W•flfll'I, u 1 • o '""' -· C\ll'rl~, ff t f I f On.lr,11111, l't J t O according tn t.1ood)'. The type of dragster guard rail. he's out there by himself , and cr..om ! 1 1 ' ••own ' D ' 11 Bob Selvidgt-and Mark Barr combined_, Ctld.,., 111 1 1 e t Kir11ttk1, , , 0 , he . . h' b k II th Of!<~•' ' J o l) To!•I• J; )• IJ '1 I lh Ill ,._ Plr ( fl ht'• a11111no. c ) 1 1 • S1mPtOfl, lb 1 o 1 -popular in early day5 of lhe sport -he gels t t!ng1ne 1n 1s ac . e car H1 1n1....,., Go1e1.,, w .. 1 .1e. it_,,.,,,,,,.... ~, o ro e "l't' a ea on ve ... 11r · 11 1 1 0 0 l"•i,.,..., d 2 0 0 that ha~ the engine silting behind !ht fli ps. all he ha s for protection is a roll M•lf• 011 1q 1 ~ Jtusttera picked up a pair of mark-,"' in, 11 1 t • • F111<11r, 11 J o 1 · .__ ----• fr and "'-d ..__ tm"-fll"ltr, •-· r1 1 e 1 driver was po pul arized early this year by bar." '' 11 flf '' •• " ., '' ers in uie K\.VIK.I am• a"""'l: .. ,u lll • e 1 MeK1<1...,., 111 1 e 0 Mood d R b I. th I lh ""11"" 5 5 s 15 J Poetrgf" 0 0 1 0 more in ''"-seventh for lnJur•·-'·"nd 1to0 ..... d' • 1 ' '°'ttr, J11 ' e e Don Garlits. y an rmsey e reve a ey """'l J 1 l 1 Cycvr1( o o ? o uie ...... " 11e1u Er"Nlr•1. 11 1 1 e ,ull'l•m, 0 , 0 0 ·He probably voon'l adn1it lt," Moody have equalized the rear-engine dragster'1 ~':!';ttv•" ~ ~ : 1~ "'1f~i.,, 1; ,; 1~ .; & nine.hit attack. hlv1f111,' ~ : ; ; ,..._, ~ 1 o 1 i;;o,;d. "but the 1na in reason Garlits weight distribution advantage by lhe Hoin1mo: !.1 MOd•"• 21, M •t1r Oti l•. Leading the batUni COrpt for tht RU8l· 81f:t,: ,., s • , Tott l• ,, e 1 switched. in my opinion. v.·a~ Lo created Jilmple ex pedient of movin g their engines 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;.;;;;;;;;;;;i.i;;;;;;;;;iiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;o;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;iiiii;;;i;i;;i;iiiii;;;i;;;iiiiii;ii;;;;;i~i.;;;;iio;ii;;i;;; snme inte rest in the class. Top fuel farther forward on their ca rs -the 1 dragster ra ci ng needed s o m e re· Moody-Cerny AA lueler and th e juvenation. and lhat's:._:•=h:•l:.::il~g~o=t.-·'---~C~aliOiliOoiirn;,i•'•C•h•'.;';ge•'··----------,1 i • Ba.seball Standings !T!O!YIQ!T!AI American League Ea1t Dlyldon ""oo !Ml J\o:ll!imore " " Boston " 33 Detroit 50 ., New York .. 51 Wash ington " " Cleve lalld 40 " Weit l>IYl1loa Oakland 6-0 .. Kansa! City 49 43 Angels " 13 Minnesota 4.1 51 Chicago 41 ~3 Mil"·aukee 39 5.1 W-Ml•r • It-Ill Ml""'"''" !. No"" Yor-I IOt!<>n •· (l'llc•to 1 W•1~l"'fl0fl f , Mllw•""tt 1 k1n•11 CllY I, l 1IU"'Or1 2 0•-11"" •. ci. ... 11.,. J, 11 1n"1""'1 Pc:t. .617 .591 .SU ,474 .419 ,417 .639 .53.1 .f7t .-4:\7 ,436 .,. 0.,rtll M. ~"'"' ).I, ht t•"'• H !11"1 .... t T .. t~'I cttfMo GB 2'1 ,.,, 13'1,, l!Y, II 10 IO 17 " 20 C!llct!IO /W!IOO t.11 ol Botton Iler. ...... 041 Mln,,..>oll 1Corbl11 1-ll 11 lllt"" Yf)I~ l ~ll••111n .l•I er ICllllcll •·•l Ml!wl"""te {LO(J(wtod j.I) •I Wtl/'llntlOll !S ... 11•,._ .. ,~ J-1), ""'"' &tlllmtrt !Jl<kton l-J o• l.onl'1,1ir-I.OJ ti Kt"' .. , Cllv 1H...tl,,.,,, •. ,!, "ll M ()lol'f '""" Klledul ... Pittaburgh Chicago SL Louis New YOl'"k Philadelphia Montrea l NatioDal League Ea~I Division Won Lott 63 3.'I 52 43 50 .. .. ., 42 !JS 39 57 Weal Dlvlsk>11 Sa n Francisco 59 39 Dodger1 51 47 Atlanta 50 51 Houston 47 48 Cincinnati 48 53 San Diego 34 14 Wllll11tM•v'1 1tnwlh Clll(ttO 11, ,., .. Vt'1< I Cl"<.lftnlll '· 00d1tf1 J Mtw1ti',t1 !. Hwlffttl S Sin Fr11'CIKI •· ~ln11>urth I At1•111f .. I, h" 01 .. e l•f II LOV•• 6, Plllltdflpl\I~ 1 lo•lllV'f OtmH Pct. GB .1156 .547 IOI\ .521 13 .518 131,i, .43.'I 21 ~~ .40f 21 ."'2 .~tfl I .19> 101,, .495 10\'1 .4115 13 ~ .3'7 25 N"W 'l'or'i< !Sftvf r 10 6) 11 CMClltO (Jtllllt' 16-ll Son '••nc l•co (Ctro!tllfrJ 1-11 II P+t11bur1ll (E!Ut li·Jl Son Oltto (Pl'lttbl.r• 1-11 ti ~ll1,,t1 (Ktlln '-JI, .. 1.111 Oodol•'• coewnlftt 11·•1 ti Cll'ICllWllll IM(G1t11111n , ... 1. """' MDFt,,~tl lM tAn•Jlv 1·11 11 Ho11•~ !Ol1r\tr lJ·I Of 11!.0n .. II, nltl>I Pll!!t•"l""ll IFryn\ln •II 11 It, l ""l1 101D4er'I ,1.-t ), .. 1,111 15TH ANNIVERSARY SALE!) BIGGEST & BEST YETI D EA N LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA Mocfern Ir Compl•t• S•rvie• & P•rl1 Dept. Modern Body Shop for All C1r1 646-9303 540-9468 Oraai• County'• Largest and ri.fost Modern 1'oyota and Volvo Dealer OftlllAJ DILJYlltY l'fCIALISn .. •t.a>•~ l/1A«tr,. Lr'Jil,_1.,_---·• ,..._ ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS '71 COROLLA IPICIAL $1777 DEMO.• 6991 ~ Sii THI ALL NIW TOYOTA CELICA sn. Crl. IMMIDIATI DILIVllY' ~ VOLVO 1971 DEMOn $4098 16-C SEDAN Aule1111li~. ll.1die. Ht1t1, •JJft USID CAI Sl'ICIAL $995 1961 TOTOTA COIONA H.T. lttfi., llff!t•, t I"""', (VT " 011~ .. Tennis Rackets 4.95 to 50.00 Paddle ean Paddles Racket Ball Rackets Paddle Tennis Paddles Table Tennis Paddles Squash Rackets Badminton Rackets Tennis Dresses 12.95 up ladies Tennis Shoes 7.95 & 14.95 Ladies Tennis Hats & Sa1 Mens Tennis Shirts 4.95 ta 8.00 Mens Tennis Shorts 5.95 to 12.95 MensTennis Shoes 8.50.to 14.95 Mens Tennis Soi 1.25 to 2.25 OPEN 9 to 6 ·CLOSED SUNDAY I Masks -Fins -Snorkles Duck Feet Fins -8.95 Cressi Fins -Close-out -5.88 Sleepiflr Bats -14.95 ta 100.00 Back Paeks & Bass ~Foad .. Basketbalb FootbaUs Volleyballs Telhm:baRs Basebals Softballs Soccer Balls Tennis Bans Ping Pong Bans 538 Cl!NTEll COSTA MESA 646·1919 ' .--~,) .l. WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? By JIM NIEMIEC . Albacore continue to product plent,y of actlon for. UJlen from Oxnard to Sa.n Diego. The Jongflm have moved ID ex.er to shore as water conditiona Jmproved during the week. Good bites were reported from inside the 43 lathOrn apot lo the 371 spot for party and charter boatl!: fishing out o( harbor area marinas and landing. . Down San Diego way the bile i$ wide open everywhere, with the main concentration of boats headlng on a 180 degree course from Point Loma al a distance of only 30 miles. Fishing aboard the sporUlsher ··Little Richard" this .past \\"eek , lhis y,•riter can report that it'1 a bonaru.a year. Skipper Doug Harman ran the 42 foot charter boat from Newport Harbor to JUSt short of the 43 fathom spot. After a few short iii stop' and a short run lo the 371 spot, lhe bile w11.s full on. The aJbaCQre charged-the boat on almost every at.op . not stay. ing around long. but long enough for four anglers to sack up 4S \ongf!ns in only a few hours fishing . Fishermen aboard boats out of Davey's Locker, Art's Land- ing and Dana \Vharf are averaging about two fish ~r rod on the short runs oul lo the fishing grounds. Loi..! of fish are bt.ing lost after they are hooked, in facl, Spike Taft , o"',,erlskip?f'r of the boa1 "Patrician" running out of Dana \\1harf. sai~ that in one stop his passengers were only able to land one fish out of ZG hookups. Longfins are slill averaging Jess than 1$ pounds, but oc- C'asional Junkers to 35 pounds are being caught. The fish ar• biting heavy lint and ang lers equipped wlth the right Llcile are having no trou ble in landin g lhe longflns. Albacore Pro•p ecls (Jp Jerry Thompson of Coron• del ~lar ba1 betn f11hing the area lOO to 150 miles south of tbe Mexican border and a call from bim indicated that we can e.tp«l ever better f11hh1g. Thompson ha s his spor1flsbtr ''PacUlc Clipper" outfitted for long stays at sea and 1ay1 that catches of 300 lo 500 fl•h per boat ar.e common in the waters o(f ColoneU Point. Tbe ft~b are only 30 miles off the beach and thick. These fish wW be moving up U. join the tchoolln& U1h off our coastlltle soon , and whtn tbat happtDI t.oday'1 cout1 will be only drops in a big hucktl. Watrr south of the border ii avera1lnt about 12 -If dtlfttl, and from these reports lbtrt Is 1tlll 1 1ood chance of that ln1ld• run of a lbles thl5 season. ~larlirr Slghred It might seem a bit early. but. already boat! are reporung the "tell -tale" sign of marlin in the \\'aters off the coast. The t;plkebills havl': been spotted on the 43 fathom !pol and the 295 5pol. No hookups have been reported as the wate:r i! still a. bit cold ftir the marlin lO go on any sort of feeding spree.. These early sightings of billfish will send r.ome eager harbor area boat.s out in search of the t'tciting game li!h. --------------------------------------The water is dirty in!lde the 209 spot, but when it clear1 , its 70 degree waler ~mperature v.·ill be a good place to be it one is looking for the first marlin of the season. l,ake See11e Good Fishing at all the Southland lakes has been highly productiv• despite hot \Veat.her . Both bass and caU'ish have Laken over the duties of providing plenty of aclion at the more popular lakes. Vail Lake ha:i; been one of the hotspots for catli!h tO nine pounds 11hilt Lake Wohlford. a short driv r from Vail, has bttn giving up nice catches of lunker bass. . Va il Lake catfish are active in shallow water Oil cut bait ind nig ht crawlers with the fish averaging between three and fi ve pounds. Bass are active on surface plugs and v.·orms in lhady portions or the la ke , v•hile bluegil and crappie are mo.st every· where. Wohlford's bass population is bt'ing thlned, 11s six bass over t:ight pounds were caught this past week. The bt~t enticer i~ a brown v.·orm fished along the south shore. Ed Steiner of Sprmg Valley bagged a 12 pound, 2 oz. broni:eback to lead the fishing parade. Lake Henshaw is consistent for small bass and bullhead cat- fish. while the Sa n Diego Lakes remain fairly quiet with only • lew good catches being reported. . Trout fishing at most southland \ow-Land Jakes 11 very slow due to v.·ann water. Big Bear Lake is the only exception to the trout fishing, "'here anglers are posting nice catches of the bows averaging about a pound each. Alamitos Results LOS A LAMITO~ llflUlfl w..i""'ti!!', ~11110 ,;i. "" "lll ST ••Cf -1 v••r old mold•M C1ol"'l"O l'vrst 119')) P• .. OK~ f'"<loh I 110 1 >(I ' 10 1 '° l "° '" c.,.""'' "'' IMO l>u<lo) f,\,., 601 fl" "'•<'Qll~I r 1 .... -11 ··1 >.100 ll:•n -~llin Glore, Poi>'o lrou- bl• Oronl (o!IV 0..1• ~. Por~nr,, i..11c••• .:•11>. NO KtOlt~> Deep Sea Fish Report • ••• PitUn lor ((or<IO:ol ,,_ -,, )/\0 ...,1.., ll1n -~l•o! To ~o. ~o ~-"''• .,,0tt..i l!lull, llovol .Joi11t•. Pl lorlm ..... No o<'oitllr• •ll'Tll ll"'Cf -u O Yl 'O' 1 Vf0' oldl. '°''°""""'"' """" 17.JOC. T,,. Ml<o t':~f:.'.:, ""d·•' 1 .0.0011 > i oo 1.t0 1 -.o w1n11 Cro" ChLc (lltDl><l•ld •to l 10 """Cl'• l!uh" l"'l•l1on1 • •o Tlm t -l'OS10 lol•o l!o• Ne'1"'1•n~ U• C~••oo. T•vlv Trltt.r. Cola••• Olot Sl'llCIO•ll•t . No l<t&ICl\00 \a 'laHTll .... Cl . 111) ~••d•. J y .. , 010. • uo. Ctolmll'tf. ~ ... S2J'eCI, TIMo ~:<~rr.~: \r;;~;~nt•. '·• >..o '·g '"'""'101 •oc~.i (C•rdo11l 1_00 •· ltudd• 5CIOOI<" l!lo·, (Ion~•) l. l im o -•• !118. "''•• ~ ... -M lowt • r,,..,, ""'· Qu1m Holl, P••tonl l]IV, cn111 •••• MO!'ll 'I .... Jtlcro?tn .. -fO<I f,tel•• Id• ltu,,, Mr .-.otqu••t LEASE A._ 1971 CADILLI "SUMMER SPECIALS" Alamitos LOS ... l.t.MtTO~ KNTllllS ,., ffturM••· July 11, lfl'l-1"1~ DI V CIHr • 11'111. l'lrJI ,...,, l:U ,.,M '' Olltllll• 0.U~lt ... ht • , ......... . LI ••1U1 t~ .. ~ ' ""' llt<ll '" "' "' "' '" '" "' ' " "' "' "' "' " ' '" E11tries Ci1lm1f\O orl(• 11~. l ln• HOD 1Lillnt m 1 Ill Ct lllotnl• Smoo (5mlih\ 111 r.,.., TOC<I (W1ttO"l 111 ~o<~V ll N cn Htn~ !P•D~) 11• G ............. M•vor (l't"IU I 1'1 (/\1rowor! 1Coroo11) 11\ 5olnt'• Bonlo (Adolr l !)I Lit lll!:>Y IWll1onl 11 0 0-lf'OI Gun I H1r!) ! lS llllTH •ACI -JSQ VO<GJ. 1 \'Oar 610.. (l•im\l\O. Puru St\00 (l1!mi11<1 ""t• 1)300, I'm O.llollto<I l"•rn•rl Truly \Jo l lgM tM111n Countrv C•rou••I (W1,d) Mt. Co• 61r \C"do irl Short Cuh (A. lloon) Voll~ HO.I 1Llll/llm) llO"nl"'• LODI (Cro.bv) 111-v lllob !Wt hon) Collf'O<! Grod (l•-lt r!) ~'"'""'' Tilth (Wli-l •IM> llltlbll llot>ll Turn {l lDh t "'I Jtr•c.o csm;lf>) Sht lb't 5~•• !CordlJ.I ) 0 '01•1 {llllevl ' " '" " ' ~ '" "' '" ' " ", "' '" "' Vikings Win LBCC Loop Hoop 1'itle LONG BEACH -t.larina High captured the Long Beach Clty College prep summer baskeiball league Wednesday night. laking the finale over Millikan . W-47 . The win gi ves coach J im Stephens· crew <1n unbeaten rea:ird and puts the Vikc.'l into Uie first round of U1e loop tourney against Long Reach Jordan F'nday evening !B), \\.'estminst er finished second in the leaguc arter beating Long Beach Poly. 5~-50. and .... ·ill meet Long Bea<'h Wilson in a 7 o'clock game F'rirlay. Dean Bogdan led M?.rina with 19 CQUnters w h i l e Westminster'~ No. I scorer v.·as (~nion Blekt>ley 117•. Wlllm!nJtt r ($4) .. .. Wo"" ~ Q "'"'""ti...,,, l 1 L•~"" JnhM~n 811• • •I Tot•I• • ' • 1• 14 S«rt "1 Ou••i•f\ Wt•'"""''0' ·~ IJ O Lo~9!e1c~"O• 1; 11 I! M oroni !~I i, I! -..... ~ \ ..,..11., 0 •I "I ' , ' . . " ' " . " ' " . . .. I " . l'I IP ' " ' . ' . HEMPHILL 'S SEMI -ANNUAL SHOE ••• MEN'S SHOES 300 PAIR-SIZES TO 13 e Oltc••t4""4 Sty!.t . . ,.. ... , .... • •• FLORSHEIM VALUES TO $39.'5 $16.90 WINTHROP YALUIS TO $21.00 $12.90 Off the Greens ICCC Players Nail Four Aces R t' c enUy-eon1pleted con: slniction at \rvl11e Coast County Club ls !t'em1ngly already repaying golfers in fat di1•idends. S1nC<' c.-onstr·uc11Qn has bee11 i'Qnclulled on three !ront nine holes. <1 quartet of aces havr bee:n rccorded, I wo on lhe new No. 4 hOit'. II oles-Jn-Ont' acco mplished last week oo the 144-yard fourt h were chalked up by JOf! Ordway, 11'ilh an 8-iron. and Bill Black. who used a 7-iron . Two ac-es were also ishot on \hp 17th hole. 1ncan11h!le. Bill n~wltzer uscd a 2-iron In travt>rse the 195-yard l1ole fron1 the back tee while r.1r!;. Hoy Hallberg socked in her ace froo1 the 1$0-ya rd 11·omen"s tee. iUlle Sq11are The mernber-guesf tourna- ment is slatrd for a 36·holc run Saturday and Sunday. i'lec1d•>1vfor k A partners ' bcsl ball tourna- TI\f'r.t was held by the n1en ·s club last weekend 1v i I h scp11 rate 1,1•inners Saturday and SW1day, Saturday's victor 1~as the Les Marris-Rirlge Bcmis co1n- bo 31 55 with .John Stanko-Don Nichols trailing at 56. Dick Allen and F r a 11 k BC<"ker l<'an1ed ror a 57 anll Sunday's hall of the lnu111ph 11•ith r111111ers111J !'buck Joiner Dan;i \.'lade ~hootinR 58 . The 1,1•ome11s club hl'l (I 11 mutt end jefF (only par Iii r and par ihree holes played) lourney last 11•eck with ron1- pe!ltinn separated into three Oighls. Betty Brile.v captured /I fltght with a 35 1'% while .lean 1-tii::ht 11•11s (38\ taking B fl igh1 hnnors and Pa! llcm phill 135\ \\'as "'inning (' Oighl 1llis~iu11 \1iejo llowartl Shclto11 shol a !~1~ over 36 holes lo wu1 lhr low Rross ci11'ard. edging C.rrald Bnrk 1160) and c:arvtn Ke lley t17fll in lhat catcgory I.ow net honors went to Lar- ry Smith at 131 v.·hilc Leroy ltcitman at 139 Rnd Ron Jonc'l at 148 followed Jn order. Thr club's 1H11atr.ur rha111- pionship is sc heduled July 31- Aug . /. Big C""!I"" Head profes.~iona1 f) on ~lollica set a cou rse re cord for prQo<; when )1e shot a 67 last Wel'k. His feat obliterated the 70 ·which was fir~d last month by assistanl pro Gabe Loya. Sn1atn A11u 111ursday and FruJay's at·· \ivily wi ll tenter E1rou11d the Prt.-sidenl's Flight , a fl1" tJ-irouish·c~ght h;.nd1c<iµ trual1- fy1ng loumey for S-:lturday 's Southern California C o l f Association t a m ate u r ) tourflf'y in Long Beach. Ra11eho Sot& Jou•1••i11 In a bea t·Lhe-pro tourn<i- tnf'nt last v.·cck. head pro flub Bailey ran into sosnr ruck Y going as the 78 he shot w<1s bettered by seven di!;tnf( gol fe rs. Comprising the group were Pat Lackner at 73. Jr11n Col· tam at 74, F'lorenre \Villets al 75. Fcrn ~prnul and Pat Ta lmage al 76 :ind r-.1ilhr Stc1'l'n.~ and ~la ry Kay Lloyd 1,1·i!h 77s Virginia \Vriglil's 38' ~ was good enough to capture the A flighl in l3!l wel'k's women's club n1u!t and jerr mC"el w11h Helen Hodg es 1371.:d. i'l1arjoric Th alcher 1341 ;ind Ka y l.euil\\•\ll'r \39) taking lop plaudits in B. C and D flights f'onlin\Hlli6n of the scroncl ll :l\f of the \\\'O•tll:ltl bes! ba\l IUUrll<'Y ts sl<lted S3\urd11y. 1~«1~11••••1 Be•c,.11 <.:r:1cia .1111\nsun <A lhsht ;it 601, Mrs. San1 r.'l <irk~ !B fll~hl ,11 62 1 ;inti i'llrs. I k r \\'estrnorf'\and 1C flight at 591 "'ete 11'1nners in lasl week's low nel wornen's club tourney. El l\'lg11el r.1r and Mr.~. Laszln R:ikoci.i cop1urt>d Ilic rni:1rd p<1rtn('rl>' hesl ball tournament las! week. An ace 11·ns rl'cortled l;)st 11('11k bv ~Ir~ Elna Kob('r, 11·!10 11s1•d ~t 3·11·ood tu Jravf'rse 1\1r 14!)-yard 171h holr itlesa \1ertl«" l.ll ~L week, lilt· v.01ne11 's cluh hrld a nine blind ho\es' 111ee\ with 1vinners enierglng in lhret> separate classifications. ~l rs. Jlnl f r.1i llcr won class A, r.1rs. Kennelh l.!'asure took Class IJ anrl ('lass C was cop- pcd by tl1rs. 1lobcrl Ell'in~. GOLFERS With LOW·HlndlCIPI, Pr•tlltt "'' Ttll NEWPORTER INN PAR 3 GOLF COURSE $1 .00 with thl1 ad w"k d•Y• OAlLV >!LOT 2 5 Red s Whip Vikes, 4-1 In Baseball LON(; BEACH -Kau rn1a11 and Broad !\1arina absorbed a 4-1 Police League bastbalt set· ba ck Wedn esday nigh~ at the hands or the Reds at Veterans P11 rk ThP Viking.~ of Marin<1 were able to ).(et ,n the st'Ol"ing ('f!1umn on\y In the s1Yth in ning when Jark Dillon singled hon1c Stevc f\llller 10 avt'rt a. :;:hu\ou1~ Two 1'.larin11 players hit sn fely twice with Tony Cresci , µlaying c;1tchrr, and Rod Brown h-Olding the hot b11ls. C:reS(.·i, in .1ddition to a pa ir of singles. tossed out a pa ir of runners fron1 his backup post J Ir nornu~lly o~rates at third ht1st and the pitrher's moun d Rro"·n's safelies \\'err al!)o singles Tht> los!I dropped Kaufman ~nd Brond 's mark lo >8 1n lra,i;rue plA\' ICt~!mtft I MI l fOl<I M1ront 11 \ .. 0..WOl<I. d • 8">Wft. 11> C•m~c•ll, )b ( rt1c" r Mlllt r " SOI~. IO D•n...,," 8 u•doH•. t1 E!l .. on. o Toto!> ?• , .. ,.. ~' l"nlnt• • • • • • • • ' ' '" • • ' . • ' . • • • ' ' • • • • , ' . " ' OOl)CI010 -11t tf0 '103 A-4 1 ll CdM Star Replaced . •r1tere .~r.e1ns little doubt l'O!\th Phil Brown of the llchcls has ~lved one problrm pertaining to the 12th annual North-South Orange County All-star foo1ball ga~ Aug , 12 at Orange Coast College. He'll not be short on quarterbacks. His latest ad- dition to his South squad Ls Saddleback lligh 's Bria n !\fyracle, the seventh gr idder with quarterback experienct. Myracle replaces Corona def ~tar end K:irt K1lle fcr. who ha" dec1clC>d lo !urn down the 11H1•r lo play in lhe -,,howcase gan1e. SUMMER FESTIVAL OF CADILLACS ,.LIASI CALL UO>tlM TREMENDOUS TIRE V ALUEl 30,000 MILE GUARANTEE I " ............................ ...... -·~·· ,, .................. ~ ...• ""' ,..,, ... ,, .~ ....... '"• "'" ....... . ""°" ..... "'" ""~ """" '"·~·"" "'o '"' " "' '" '"""'"""I ,,,. """ . ..... ,.,,, ........... ~ ........ ·--~ f ill" •• ·~· .......... ""~ ........ . ... .. ... .. _, . .,. ................... ~. •n•• " '"' '"' ""''"'" ~· '"" • .,.. ,_.... ....... . 4 For •FREE •FREE .. , SIZI IN STOCI MOUNTING FRONT END ALIGNMENT ------· s159s; I -----·- • • :· • . , • • • • • • ) j I • • [' ' -' 26 DAil V Pit OT s • Your Money OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List Post-l(orean Vet ............ ,..., ........... .., -1•1 ..... •I .,.,,.. .... ....,. ' AM ...... 11.U .. l'rii<M ,,. ---..... II _, ........... ----., _'"...-_ = :. A.Ml IM tt :::nc.,.111.,, NASO Listlnt• for Thurld•y, July 29, 1971 Has GI Benefits l: ...................................... ~ .................................................... 1 ...... ,..,. 71• _,,_ A••11I•• I~ 1.IE\11 YOltk (AP 11\tft I~ Tl>t !allow nt fl•!1• Ull'd ,:6 Q~el kc..:...~i.. .0.fd M•V ... r ...... , l.MI 1'11. 111'i ... C• 11"' lr4 ,.~ ... Sii Tai. 11\.'t ll H!i:. ~ J~ ,l,m&IV "'" , ~ • ,..nc. " ,, • X* OU Co Jt>;. " "'"'In 1.. ~ ~ lil11 .. l'\lo ., .... ...,....t., '·'° By SYLVIA PORTER Are -you I.he post KorPan liar ' tteran aware lhal oridt>r a new la~ you ma y be elr.r,1ble for full GI btll benefns I I t ~ a full salarv 1f you go 11tt1 training under a fcdcr 11J 1ubs1d1zed tra1n1ng prograrn l)f th0 Manpol'.er Oe1 e!npn1cn1 and Tra1n1ng Act ~ Are 1 ()lJ the ~cter an y;hn has been 1nellg1ble for un portanl educat1ooal benefit ~ because )OU have served lt"s than twQ years or active du v ll~are that )OU may no" qualify for substantial bcnef1lfl 1f you were on mnre than 180 days or continuous ac\i1e duty afler Jan 31 1955" Are you rh1ld ren of !he "11 cs and l.olallv d1sabll'!d war \ e1erans aware that v J also qu11l1fy for 11 full edUlil t1on train ng allo" a nee -1f vou lake an appro\ erl <ifl prent1ce:.h1p or on the J h lraintng progra1n" Fewer than nor ir1 fn1 r \elerans ls now l<1k1ng ad \lantage Of hlS \il]UabJe eduta tion tra1n1ng heneflts under the GI b11! whi ch went into ef feet last Christmas e1 e - even though the nlher side or the coin is Lhai bv 1he enrl nf next year 1t s likely !hat 1 800 000 will be recei\ ing bt>nef1ts Sad as th1~ 1.s II is e1 rn more appalltn~ 1n the face of the fat! that hundred ~ of thnu~ands of r eturn n g 'et er ans can 1 find ioh~ Tl e £0Jlow 1ng po1n1~ ;irr vital -YOU C,4.N GO into thc~P programs part time as 11 rll ~s full trme can comhtne 11nrk w1lh studv ma) be able l0 get extra stipends tr vnu ha e dependenl~ n1ay attend an ever expanding 1 ar etv of schools tra1n1ng 1nstruet1ons and lra1 n1ng pro~ ram s Moreover your basic educn tional benefits ha1e been up- ped 35 percenl within this past ~ear -THE REST KNOU'rl; 11 pc PLEASE HEED THIS IMPORT ANT NEW CAUTION by TERRY GRANT R Ph O•~I• , """ 11v., ...,rkMol' !ht ("'1n o 8•"~ AtWW V '' ' ... ~!'.:' , o,•, 1-... , "'' "'' '"' 11.1i E(on u~ >111o 1n.. "' t1>11 1 n '' "'"' .. .JC1 ·• ,,,.. .. Jtl,l, JJ,,, "'' F~ ,,,.. I EIWCI S• ~ )'ltN,'-<:ll*" t t..,.t..n.(Go'ldl I 11 .. II"° ~••• M l'tl l">C•I CO'fl ..._ I o EIP•I f l lS ... II_,. N t U-'4 l\'o "'lldl t;K~ 1 11~, 11~. ~w u I 11 all.I •O ..... ;.h Elbfo Syrl ' A ..... suw · s ~ AMOt• .... 0 of educat1onal benefits for 10•,11 •,"~ ... &. 1""u• !''!:: .:; 1 elertJ ~ Is the 1ns111ut1onal .,r·~~""!"" ; ... u•., !,;:.o .. • ~· benefit ~ perm1tt1ng you to :!;£~" s~ ~!i.. ;'!, !~~~. 11~\ attend Ml only e-0!1ege but ::;.~~: 6~~ !!"' !!t1:~~ t;~ I "h I h I sn.w 6<>• s .si llt ld "t a SD ;lO\ ripprl'lveu IS l SC 00 u v1 Bk• l7 , Jl e.1r Pn c 1nr3t1nn I r.chnol (or "•N 1~~~ •• ~i. n :::~H11•, r !lpondr I~ course bu~1 ness F •Un L 1• .. " !e, ~• 11 J • li,. cnl 8 IOt I 1)"111,\l'J D•'ll• M HllO n E!d• •• 1-i ... H El'HIGE 11 " 11\lo ... ~ (l•y I 20 ,, JO I\ 1Gn 01<> 1\ o ... (p '" Sllo Elt<: Nu;;I lfllo 11'-HJ Nii!,G 1Mt »"' ~llllC.I> .ll I~ 12'4 l\t •~• 111 lJt O•t• Don NO J • E1e<;lt"' !i\o\ J'lo N\Cfll1" f' 2' -""""'° I Jt1 l o 4 • " 1S .. fS ltO 0.11 G•n ""°' "°"' E\K Moel J\(i ,.;, "I •lln A ~' l>v. AHC:o Cl> i.. .i.:. .. I " M • nv. \~ D•t• Pk• ti.lo '"' E M;!r Cl\ i\llo l"" Ni9i•fl ! ....... Iii Pt. C4r• n IS'o t nU1 A :ti'> 2' Del•!" P !Vi 14 f~l 011 l• l~ No<'..., ' l1'1o 14 "'Pl. pl ('1 611 , .... ""C 1 nUI Ill )IV• i•l<o Oev o "d I """E,,.r1v C 11 ll ~ E11r 01! J..,_ 1'4 APL et I J4 ·~ ' • k Ml 71'" 13 oO•V'" n 9_, 10\4Enf rt • JI I'll, : W Note 11\'i 11,. Apr>ll,.i M•I 1.,, ""' C •u•n1 ""' 6~1 O•Lu• c: ,, Cl"' Enlw 111 )'9 •Vo NW PuS~ 11 n ~ "'""' ._c ~ o <Ao cir,." o 1 l , l IDKc 1.. , 11 e 1.c1 M ,,,,., •lit "'""IOI Co ",... ~ ~ A•ce•e 01! II" ,_, low C:e 11 ... l?i.o 0.11. o Ag SI ~~ Eq11ty Ot lllt. I !Ii S.,u<~ II.~ lJ\t J.3!\o .Vcl\ 01n }I 16>.fl (<>tO• l• lt Ot nl 0 10~> 111'\l E !. l 'c. •" •'"4 OMo Art ~ 10-., A, 11 l'iv 1 OI I~ 1 .Co4nFd ll•H•lnC•f s~•floFll,li (p l llo•Ao ...... .,. 11;,1t A,rl•n•OStr ""lltl t I 6•"tl F scl1)0! etc l't c lfi}OU \\!Int to""' co ••• ,,,.1 1 6&u" 1 11 l1 r 11" 1s the 1nst1tut1onal :•t t,,_s 11 ~ : :::1 .M~ <ippl) Ar ON CE at tl1e nearest :vr; ~~c ,g '" :~ :: ' ;::0 \A nff l e ,.,. I><! ,, 161\1 Ml ''," ,', 'I',•,: C:,, ll U'ilo 0. n II 1J 'lJ '> Fii Ct<:o '°" 1 011 5f>•I• s s 4 Ar1011 lllltvOv "' ~ JI 9 jD•w• E l >""F•br Cir JI ll '0..1 S<:en nl' 11'4 A me•$ I 1 1• 1~ •Com G•• ll • 0 em Ct~ 10 '°"" F•b TH; ) > 1,. Oat!( TK H• J<). Alme /If ) 1e Q • O>olC""'"' P• }.111 )6 "10 11•1 .0.t ).. ) I> F<110:l•f> E I 1 O<•o M I l • l\li """' 1111 11 .I) H Com ,,. II... I 0 • ,,.~.. • 4 Siio FllWll •• , ... l l'o O•mont 10,. I~ Allflc,l c~ ttt Sl'> ll 'i(mpl (m '1 IU 0 •• In(_ l "' 1""° Fin• Or1 l o ~Otto Tl' l .. n\lo Ar"' t u 1 IO I 8 1 C:mp In• ~<. S 0 ~ C u 191'.1 10 F n1rM lj\'o l•I• (hr ... ~.0. S,,_ W, A•• (OtP 90 At11~hnt l l I B u~• W !Jt• l\to(mp TK '"'"°"'""I , .. ''"'' ""'' ""t.1\11 0>,v c. 16•<.IJ -4""'" ltldl '' )l (em M ?Yo l~o Oon•I t.J 11,. n~ Fol Genii! I,; /!,;, P1!»! 11 •l 1 U A•hld OH I l'O J\!i l C:O<I P•<> "lo 10 Dow Jail• .. ,,, d F• P Mo 111• 1• P•< G At :!li t> 1' A .. d II -J• • )) Con A«k JI 1' OoY • 011 71 lSVi FtPM! "" )0,, l P•~<O l • • ...... $4 0(0 1 )0 -rll t:RE ARI M-"N' on :~;:" w 1;" ,; ,: "ch.son 1111 )Ob 1ra1n1ng progrem~ 1n "~" 11~. '"" ' le <~,.. 1, llo 0 (011 en l~o ?I Ounlrn D i<ol.UOF!PM WT ,, .l'loPen.to! I~ l .11,l.sd Tr1n>p 1••U Co once ,..~~Dl;•l•P ~ '•"•IWnl' 1 . n.P•nol (I l"o •to AJh'OtW 1°" •• 1 Coos 1 ~ JV.0111,~n 11 .. 11 Flci.ner 11,.19 Pt ~ 0 •l •llV.AllC•E• 11' I A• S • ~1 t oAo.t~• E I 1 d~ 1 angm~ fron Iiealth to A '"" J'I. 1 aero AH 11 <1 trr polluuon con I r o 1 ! :',,Ha 1~.,: 1 ~:: ·::, Pp101 rd and employers mu sl ;~~ .. ~'1.1> .: ... A;~:.!•119sc.:r p") tralnees at least half the A 0•11 e 1 1""' .~ II• A cc Lnd 11• \I 8u{~~ M OI. 6oll co • .., 'l'tl ''"' 10'9 ez Po n1 I .. 1"4 Fl• T.t u . ~ p.,,, H i •'Ill ... H ll kl\llcl 1 2 1 '"' Fie W• IJ J'ili • P~ni.v C.t 11 ll'lli I. t en pfJ JJ I ., """"' Ftl> l lo. I I', P1tkw H ll~ llV. .. 111cn 1>!l ' "''•:l•m••..,•• .... ••••"'"'"'"'"°'•11 o ,JI<.,. .. P•1 F••" '• 9'41 .o.1llch pl180 J.'.1' 6i ~trn t 1 ,.,, ,,. ~:~ie,,', P 51• J"' A It> (Mm 1 scil11rv !hey are expected to A 1 Toch ~ 1 , 11v ~··• I A 0 6~• '"" •·•18Uhnttn lllo Foll G nf ll ,. )I~ P t vl. nw lMlo l6~k A!lt1 Corp I Fotom.r J k JI> Poe Mf l•V. lll'I ATO !r.c Olt earn r n tomp e!1ng training -,. d Euut ~\, ., eu ~"' ll•• l < • MUTUAL F nMI C• l>• I ii• P"rl•• T H'6 1J4 AuTom o~ • 11 • 11 ~ F nl n El I 0 t 4 Ptnn Pt c 1~'141 l i A,u omln nd PLUS 1our (,!benefits :1;." CB~ 11~ 1i,.,~::0sv., -Al so COVERED by the :1~rn~e<1 i ~ r..·~:~:'.o~~ CJ h 1 JI corrPspondence :E. iri:: 1; ~ 1 1~.1~!~",:!,t,~ courses on theJflb {arm.,..., E•~ 11 1v,ceo s .. ,1 •mF11I 19 .... lO.,,CoPnA~ i 1)operal1ve prograrns and A" 111 LS '"' • .c.~ lt<: fl1glll rra1n1ng Apprent1trs !~ ~u.; 6; .:"l! 1. c:. are rl1g1ble for !he same :mM;~~~ ~r· l~,.~!-c 'f.i/l benef !s a~ on he JOb trainees .o.m w• d 1 • •" C•vnt h c J•o • • f ... E 1 ,., ) Pa G&W 2.51'> ,11• AVC'O Co p " 101 F "" •ct l(I 10>;, Pepi 6w I J. IV. l.vco CP wt 'II 11)(1 GllE 1 ll 11"' I .. Pel pll1 Avco pll 10 " • FUNDS Gii (mo 1~, Jlo p,1 bOf> •i,,. 11 A""Y Pd XI ,, o H '• Gob Mte ,,,,, 21 Pl\ I $u~ ~ ~v; AvMI In Ole /\<,I G••nk J •n Ph 0 L 17'4!1 Avon Pd )) l' ' Gt• G bn 5 J;, PP\o!on '"" '"' .0.<l~cOll l JOI' 7 ,3 , G~A lc iP~m,lii ,JV. 1"' •, Gtn lll!Eo 9 P flt\• n 7tn JI~ ll•t>ckW so ~ Th• IOl o nt 1uo l•~l~ P0<'1 HIC 1' lJ 8a t GE I U ,;: i -; an• ou::'o"" bv lnvtt llOI n II ll JOG"'o•n W 11'.I; n Poul1 M ~" 10\'I 6•n•or Pvn1 '"',,',~~NEW VOlll( ( ... Pl Inv Gud 15' t.\l!Gc".'",", I s Pl• I~ ll!1<U>..5•k Oll 10 JJV. 11 •th~ N•! On• ,1,.,oc l11v11!ort Group Gold C•cJ ll U P OC P l:i.. 9 • ltnDP pt l 11 17••. "" ol S«Ut !IH IOS ndl s ~ ! IS ~ooe1w,•, I .. ] ... p 0 Go I ~ ... •, ............. ,",',, 0•••• I<>< •• Mu t~oso•11uOV II l l 11111o P~M n' ~ ...... th• <>rlct• • "'" ch p " , ~ • 96 Gould lJ I~ Ro Pub NM ,1 : J'~ •,,•~ flf N,',,' V 0 ca t 1 o n a 1 rehab11itallon :~~~u: 11 ,:1<. j~" ~~,;~ Ps tr 11n1ng be11ef1ts for \eleran~ 1.< 1 l h se r \/ 1 c e-<:onnettrd di~ahihtics ~tart at $135 :i month if }e>U ha1e no dcpendt::f\lS -10 arid11Jon tn regular d J s ab 1 I 1 t y con1 pensat1nn and costs of tu1t1on bor.i'ks etc -ON TOP OF' THIS are nl w programs ranging from p epar:nory training prior to ser. te d1schargr In special lutonal assislance benefits to spet1al co u n s e I 1 n g anri 1Pned1al scr\1ces. fur thl' low skilled disabled or d1sad 1 .1nl11J!ed 1 P!era i \ROUT 60 MEDICAL St'hno!~ ho~p1tals un1\ers1 !lcs ar d r !hrr 1ns1 tul ons are of fenng spcc1ii! training l.o 'eterans wuh previous e.x per ence in some health field for periods from 14 weeks to [IV(' yf'<lr5 The u s Office or Educat on has launl:hcd in ad d111on a 11ork st 1d1 progrilrn for ~etcrans frnni low ncome fam1l 1rs who \1aut 1ra1n1ng fnr tt<Jl h ng Jribs 1n low 1ntome ::;chool s 1 his Lra n1ng pays 11 \\ltkh st1r;cnd ff t:OO allng \11th { ! tdU(<l!lon<!I benf'f11 s b 15ed ( n the 1 urnbcr of h(>Urs of rollrge 11ork the student is t~rr\1 g The J1sl i:oe ~ nn and on but :o.urcly mv p( ! t has been 1nade \ ou 111 1st not Ignor e or d011ngr::ide U e full range of bcnrfil~ a\allablr ~f;i ke sure )OU hair ex pl rerl Rll It r pos~1b1l1t1es Cht:ck immed ;>tr.Iv at )nur nrarrsl one stop \ cteran~ A~s1s1ancr Cen!er or wh1 th thr rr> «re nn" 71 lncated •Hross lhe n::i llon iwu ,..,11 11., soc~ l'••l ~-'""" ,_n 1 1i,Pub S NC .• .,.r, cou d l>ov• oetn S•llCI t 2(t 9 19 G Ph Sci ?l JI>~ Pub~~ •<• •"1 81rbt 0 I It •od tl d 0 bau;hl Ve Pv I ll I Sie;,.. M • l • llloO Puro~• lJ ... 11 I• d f A ?5• (ot~t<H Weonsd• ll v llell1 !» S tc; t en Ml n: l~ ~u~a9C':~ J!~ JS\~ :::1~ p~J4IO Sllil Alk l•ltl M )l lJ 01 g ~~. 1.:v lloO ~ Qutl C:M UV. ll"' Ila!•• M ; .O.GE Fnd j)) ,11 lvv ... l .. r. I lV. 711 llT Sv1! S\O s>;, llaletMI PI Abe dn , )I l 0 J Henck I" I" v Cid "1' • Pio A<1Q1n Pr 1'14> •'1i l•lhlnd 10 """'lrel!y Fundl Jo1>n1I" l• 10 l• lf H: Pt n 111 11 1 i i<1.1o A•h•fl C la IO:V. IS•u•c~Lb 10 Gtw I\ 7 11 1 96 Kt•>lo,... Fu"llJ Hea !l>I ;.\'o ~ "•n•t>t II! ?! 2~ 8•~1 L•b I l<><om •4l•H Aoolo 1106 1211 filed !" n )9'4 R1v,1>Co U 1>"11 ll1yk (150 l111u 10 41 11 -. Cu• 6 i U6' t 53 Htrlt Jon u ' UVi .Ii~!'_!"",, IJ 1Jlilo llt1FG• I U """'' SSt61 Cu•lllU 41 '1 )4H•ll C• ~ 14~uv.fNIFdl PI• Ae nt F 10 • 1131 Cuo 114 14T t1'Ht•A l"lo l'lli Rc«t 2Alol0'4 11tF of'l lO A!lta<! I ll l t J Cu• IC I 711 1'1Mdoc (,. 1" S ille!.O Env Mio .s¥ofecck1n9n ll.I "'"tu • F 1 O' !1 OS c,v• K2 S 11 6 21 Hal-m ~ j!Jo R ddr Pu :Mt'o l.5 ~t<:I 0 c-» ~l.O.m Fd I• '7 V• Sl 20 1J 21 10 H-';',, I, ... ll "°"" E~ ~ Sl ffCl\A lr 60 .... >I• o 11 Sl J 1' l"' il 10 91 )l 01 H;lf Ah ~!~ 5!~ ==:i.. M I~ \:~ ::~~·~ t(JSOfj AIPh• ll O<I •15 Cu~ t6G 9 •2 H-d GI 01111 ll<>u•• Jl\IO j l'\!o lleklntH 60b Amcao ISl 111 p~.,s' ~}f l !f Howmd ?93,i;ff~ llowin In '"' 1 1>~:11 ~\"'i.Gn•o r.-1 i:i)Or Dala Corporation of !~ ~":,, 1~ ~ 11 ~ 1<n c•t> r n : u ~~~~ ~!: J • '"' ""' !. ov Jt • .O\'o 6em , co oe Co.i:ta Mesa ha~ introduced a !~e e"J':" ,1,:1 5 '11t:~~.,i.~ ,':,; ,' :, ~~ ~~.'l ~" :~~ ~~ ~:~ eno~1 1!~ !: I,:~~ •• ~-~1'°,',, Ceo l 'IO t Jl ...,1o4 Hyatlnt l\oll,,.Stl'lotn l •l~•n~P new and versalrle computer ncmo 9 :u. o 1i11..~ 11,., 11 ot11 11 mao• sv 1 1 s • c1>1 ,,... 1~, ==~~t s~:·1~ tn~t'1 1 15 917 l b l~ Fd 6 11 llJ 1,,,..~ Co 1 • 1n Sc PO• 11 ?1 !5 8 t"lluot readnutde\!C. SP"' tll l l•S1• ~U •tolndNuc• l Jl y,S 00 J'•, B~•••~no s <>c:~ t I O Cl? L I• Inv I :l4 t 1 lnfo n< l ~. ll Sel f<l Pa JS 1!>,j, 8el~ St ! Xl Jt IS used to visually display"'"' c." •" 111 Lnc Nu l 11 11.st into o a '"" ' Soe e o 1•,...1•, B•c•D•<• 1 Am nv sn snLnt !OJ nl • nd l J St• Com '"' 1 6 d g tal COd S gna]S from a Am Mu! 9 lS 10 11 Lac n ' S•v •• In m>. In l .. J Seneco F ... 1 ' B a,. Jt,,~, 4 I I e I a.mN Gtn l• J9S C•n•d lll Jl 'I Int mt G 11 11"1 s...,1 rn 1"> 1._. 9 oc0 HR 1' l 1"11cno GouP C:•o 11 11 l71 1nll•W•I\ '~I Svc Go 6 '1 •fl llluelle 1 19 compu e r or manua cao i 116 ,60 Mut 1•11 u 11 "lf • co u i. ,,s.ven u ""''9"'8obb• I H<• d I (,wn ll llllt•Lod A.DI 18S9 lntMul f 111>16 Shooll:•e 111111 lloelnt1Co 40 ke yboar After rive \ears 0 lncm• 1 21 tOOLulh II o i1n ll1 Int Svs "' Siii> S?'J> Sm9u> n l'lt. 01,/, 80 1(1• lib "" nv tJ110)1Ma1n•ln l lt t 1 nrtwav l l/;ll...,S...eol• U 1t1>Bot1dln<I development and tesllng the voni ,. 1J olA t1 Menhln ! 11 s '° lori (I nc 12"~ IJ , s C:•I W•t H to !~ 8 or<1•n JO A1on •llSllM~tGtf! 6•••o •S<11UI ,. ... Xt~!>cNE Tol JJ l lli llorvW• lll Patented device 1s now in A•• 11ou1h on M•n •chuHi <:o J•<ob FL ,n, ', ,• ~ ~w. •,•, .';_o 11 " it"' Bot•'"" 100 Fnd A 59l 6"3 F -IU 9lj J•Oun ( l > >• 11 111'> 601E:G, l.M Pr-""uction occording to Ma Fnd 11 1 fl 1 11 °d•<> '1• 1 so J •m wu l 1t '"' Sov n C:1> 1J<,. l 'l'I 6('4 Ed n11 it uu S!ock 6 Of 6 6lo ~.. 11 l9 n •• J1msb• 1>;, l '>i !.oaco Y Pc. ).,.. S""tn• Inc D C St •n •U !JIM••>Flnt <>Cf JtlY"d• l 1 l 1 S •nclv" lS'h:!O.!o llr1n lA w JOr ata orporalion V1~6•b•on ,,9 '" M!T •111s 65 Jo;f,,. M 1• 201.Std .1111<1• 1e.,,111 111vs11 10 11 ~ Fd I JO tS1 M G !l 1J t111 KMS Ind 10 ... !I SI•" !"Pd » lJ ~I! !I MV 110 president H H Sark1ss1a n 11!~ w c; s 12 6 :u. MJO IJ 11 u .st K,"•s ,s 1 11 • H>.fl sio a s 1..,, 1• 1 11 ,,...,~ n! l ll•a<n HI \0 tl 10 ll Me.. '11 • )I •• I '" """ 1 Ii St I Wb Cl •SV. 46 6r !Pe XIG Named the Majo r64 lheBe•cn,, u"u";-;.•dh•• •O••o•~:~!n.o. 1~""1~~~~~~1 l~~ 1J •1 ~,,:a~1 ~".,~ II~ 0 Kf l\ 1QnlnnM!F AM lll llO I<•• G . l, • SvD• El lll'-' 11\lt llctw•H• oil new product ha~ a wide vane 8• k Gn •Ja 691MuU$F'l,., ,',", 9 s. l<••••m 1~• l• nME oc 11 n Brkw.G• ID r I I Bona !k 6"' 1111 p ll tc•• T I • 1 T•ml>ol• )II 'IH1t llklYriUG I ll ly iJ app1l'ations rom11o•ri~1~ 1 109sMi;oa• nos1io1 .: •• ,..c0 0 10,,1,.,., 10 ,11 "ewris'1~ 10 I I I d I llo• Fan l ll 1 «• 'UV• l<•f ), 7,T•vor I 1 > J 0 8wnS~" I ~ cac1ingn1ac11nesan ~a l'S50, Fno l ll9051Moodv• l16•1i•K•<><1o A ~· l av w 7, 76 llun•wk 1 d1 spla1s lo soph1st1cated com :.,w;;_.F1 •.. ·~1 •19 ~'~,;.a ~!! :;: ~! ;dsvc :=, ~~ 1"~~,,,"".," .i •,.! g~z ~~ 1 )I) PUlf'r peripheral devrces Bu•<~ 1 » 11 ,.il~u 0~'11 1,•, "•"• >1 tcou Eu , , Toi.com ~ s"' lluad co o I (•an t/lll • iOGKove Fp l•-TVCom 1,.~\lludoFoJ•O ,. 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Fund 107• oo -•17 5 •Jl<n•o Vac H l><J l ien c;~ Y'•, llul ndl .cl lo p1rtures and {o r e 1 g nlc1o~m 1 0, 1 1, !? v a • u • n L•n<• 1n •"-JO~ Tot e L• l"' • Bur No l l)!<;i I bol ( 11 C•P Gh l~ ll~ "wh 9 lllO OI Lone! lie• .ll, J o T •<o ( J .. 1•' 6u Nor p/JJ anguage syrn s or v1r ua y c • .,11 s~ ,,1 7,6 P s ~ 1Xt '" t.•nt wd , , ., r <><Q G 11 1' :~n:~. 7o anything lhal can b e f~:~: .. ~~ r1~n'J, llAl ~~:"' : 'i : ~ t" ... ~ c~ 1j,0 i:'1 i •..::,: i ~'h ':"' llu•n un ., Phnlr.n1 aph('d Jn both black 8• "" I 19 17" N•I Gr!~ 9 .. 10 ID L1h (o.ol '"" ! • f lco Pd }ii,,. 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Coldwll-10f lrirom n 11 l• 11 T1mo GI un•v• 1 AIP!lt P c..... I 1$" • ... + Vo Cole<o n l)lb thl!i price dehen1u re holders Dvn• • •S • n l ow Coe 11c ':it AICoe 1 '° l6 ~' .!6Y> llVi -Vt c .. i. "• 1 •O k Gtwth I 1510 II T n• C•P 7 tl I "1 Amt1$.ut 1 Mt I 11 ~ l'"° ll Cll! ~'"'"' JI convet11ng 1nlo cnm mnn sloe F"" •G 10 11 i 1 t t T••• fo l~ 11 11 11 A.Ma.o.c so 11 u 1"" 13.. c..111n, 111.., Id I F4n-l\GO\lfl Tl,lll H9"1Jl1 u"Am11!a 1 )G lll ~i1 ?l '4 (olonSl4Clt wou ret'('1ve~ecu r 1 1es DNTC 1 1J •.llTwnCG1 io1 1 :ioAmliu • 1u 0:~~1~ i':"t\!!<:01atnt11 i '° '-?-IUedatSl330 foreachSI OOO G 1wth 6 60 1 lllTwnC •n< tOf •.c!I A.meH l>ll ,, 11 , ''' ,,,. ,-, co 1 1n11 1 Ut • 611 ~I USA" Gt 10 1'101'AAlt ~ tr to 6;6 21,,, 111, ,,:;_ ... (all lnl>l'IJJ principal amount o f deben •co"' 1 1 1llunn Mllf 110112 01 !"',,:,,11•1,,• 1 ... "• 11 ., 11 , _" co11 1n ~1 10 US Gov 10lll :n1un 1u...o lO N l!U "' ""C l!S 1-lures Fd~ o .... 10 llO 0 IO U• on SV< GtD A 8 tn•h 1 XI Ill u" fJ>I> ~ + ~ Fund n< C. p I! otd 1•90U 1l "DildUI !:10 XO <U-1> ti ;, •116 + \'o Clll II The C<lmp11ny h11~ ente:red Comm •11 cu Not in .. 131 t u ~mc.C..·~,\~ 's, ~f~~ ~;::_ ~-! t ~ ~!\~r9:; ~· d th l11u•C ll •11 UCAO 1'll1H Am (•lh• .ll 1. ,, 'ti.,_.,co1so0n 110 1n1o a ~tan hy agreement wl nc1 ' d ll IJ u lJ Whloh i o u ._A c~tln {"60 1 ''"' '"" , .... + .,, CMbEn '° I l lb k Plot Ill 1nun 1..i "unll• Al:~•" 1,.1 u l6• 31 , ls o -0 com1So• IO <I itrr.up o 1nves men ilfl ers F"" •m 1 •1 t '' .o.ccm 1 ~1 a 11 A.m 0 .,11 1 , 11• 11 1 _ v. com•Sot ~·"' headed by lhe First B-08lon cc;•tw• t11 011 Con Gr lJ to 1,n1.oo T• JOe I.I ,9,, ,.~. ·•~ .,.11 (Olt'lwE 1.!1:11! •~ ?•C 1 U 9 I< CM lfW: I SI !l lol Am OuolVc•I 1 1 , llo I, COfl'lw(d w Corp under "h1ch agreement g" •1 1 .1 'n '"<°"' u lll 1 u .1.oua111 ".-i "" 1 •· 11 COME ~ u o~~ St! 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Cori• ~ltl'l , rOOett1ptJOOdate11\1'J>f\ct of "nH'I t lllttll•ll(l'f~ llJl 1t A ~pl 1 '1 1"6111 l U'\61-.,,t-Mtl)\t Ciw•ll 1 tl •l'OV•<>M 411 ,ll ,.m MOt• )t IOI~ ll""' )S,.,-'rlo C-•t "° 104 394 pcreent .and e<>0vert all M• "°' 1.n • n V•M• TH 10 H 11 u "m "v" 2s. $ 14~ 11,,, ;,,,. con Edl1 1 Ml Hl,C: 'd 11 46 J .. 11•• "P I f< J1'AM.-(!ie;t l) 1.Sl),) l JV) lt" CO!Ofdlt.i l d~nture.li so purchased Into H&.t L•• 10 •• io tt "'"! '11 'u A M11c1. 1 * Ht ""' l1"" n + 1o c"" •11~. o1 s l k Hfd!O (;.(> In •u1w11 I G ••• •11 Am M~or· ~ ,, •h ii:"'-' (no'l l"dl '-70 (.'()n1mon ~oc Hrc!t• l l ft llll W••h M l)t)1t 1J ... N1 G•• ))0 II ~ .... =· ..... COl'l'd -1•14 l:lr~--====---===="'o,):1-l' 11•• 1 t1 'l1wt11,,.1n G•l>U!> A. ""0• ,,, '' ~'"" ~ _, COfl '"'"~' 1 Ho M t ll 16t•l1U E•ot JllO!l •'A"' ito 11 )06\ '!<*-~ ~ Lto1l"t CM~ln t OS IU Iv•> t•Utl llAmihl•llOb )tll ,1''0 1' +1,C.,,N•!G I H Who Cares ? r-;,.. othrr fl" '~flllprr 111 111.,. 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" ' • " •• " ' " • " }IJlo , . • • • • + • • • ' • • ' ' " " " "' ~· " " ' • " •• ' ' " • 1 o+J.. I " ' ,, ' ·~ • 'I ' " ~ " '" , " • ' • " ' "' " ~i\ ' •• • l " '" " . ~1\lo -.. ' -. }Jlio -.,, 10 ~ • '. t ... " '• ' ' • " Finance Briefs 1l I~ rea dily appa.renl from techn1ce1 l e\ 1dence thal th@ market most ltliely 1s 1n th• area of a pe11k accord ng tfl Jlarris Upham & Co Howeve r lhe company said the severity of a c!e<:hne depends on th!! broadnes~ ol the top and 1t ''"' no 11vhcaUon11 o t severe dlstnbution Thu&: at this stage a pullback or only minor proportions 1s looked for the firm .llSYI • l • ' ... ................................. ,,_ . TUMBLEWEEDS "'MlLLtON~ OF IONS OF ROCk'.,CMIEF. REC.OVERING BOOIES IM POS51 BLE,'• . ··----·· ·~·- $ENO A C.Rerl TO &AMICAOE TM! AREA -VErl'/ OANC..EROUS . By Chester Gould IT APPEMS S COQH MADE MIS OWN TOM85TON! OUT 01=" TWO M IL.LION TOt.15 OF ROCK, By Tom K. Ryan 9 AVIOS, 111'PUT'I ! 1),1 SP!.llTIN' fHIS Ul\~AN SCENE! I GO FORTH 10 DRINK DE<PD'lllE HE ADY VRAUG!il OF l.l~ERlY Ml 50L111JDE!T'VEVOIJR uRf'AT GULPS O'RAR IFIED OZONE! 10 FEASI MY OR~S UPON lllE PRl511NE VISTAS O' NAUE! WHERE~ -rnf WIOW HEADIOD FOR? IF ANVONEASKS, !ELL 'EM f\IEGOOElO SHAN6fil·LA ! SOMIO CHINESE REST'RANT FIGMENTS '· ,; )1 ~~ PLAIN JANE MUTTS BEEN PR.ACTIC ING ALL WEEK WITH H15 \WOi'IN PLATES f: ,, ~r oA-IL..,..,.v-=cR==os=s=wo=R .. D .-.. -b, ,-. A. -, 0 w' .. I ACROSS •B Injur y Ves\rrday's Pu;tle Solved· 1 --dt-c041,ba\ 5 Ll 11m~~· hati11~1 10 M o:1cr~l .1 \'1 11 so!t SO Ocran w,1tt1s { :ilOlfd by ri1a11t·l1:.c i ¥t O:ll~ SZ Evisct ralts so~py 1e,ln•r ~~ [~po>r~ La 14 Indigo source 11101~t11rr 15 Te110-o• ~1 ""o'" po"'''' .I ;. SO[ll,1'11'1 ;io Co11s•>t•~Q : ol ~IM'tC • ;l 7 R~lm11 \o • hral!11 ,1q P3n\li~· ,20 Qu1vcn11~ • move"1pnl :21 Gallant malr: ' 2 WOl'dS '.73 Promote ; 25 h02: Roma 1 ;; m.1mrral~ ·.2ii Oe11catr ;JO Island of ~ Greet e ;34 Swap • '.15 Crow like bir d ; '.17 Roof ,.dge ; ;38 Trough few .. • , cJr1y 1ng ~ btlck s ; '39 City of , Cie•min:J : : A2 Me!JI ; A) Alwa ys : ; 45 Not new • •Ab lmpr ovt ' '1 A•1 oil 11 111rasrn '' 11 t.)M101P.e .1r.1 r ~l VJ~l~l<~:I bl /lu!lior 1·_ 1r l T ho"'IJ~Oll (,8 !10119 --·· bq Orrs~cd 70 Gol fing hazolrd> 71 Crallrd H~, OQ.YN ) t,1,11• dPrr 2 EAt1acrd1na1y person: Sla!lQ } Staple food • f ,ll 1n ~ ht;\p ~ Rrluclaot ii Negative corr,.\a11v e 7 Gradualtd d 15~ B 011\w;\id : Ari.1! '1 Kind cl tookie • •• ;:, • 7 ' I ~ ' ' . ' ' • I • " I .. ~ '" I ' -~ f".-l " " " (• 21 " " .. ~ " ,. w " .. " " ' .. • .. "' ~~ " "" " ,. • .. -"'' " 1"'1'" . .1)/•t· ~ .,. ' - •P £ll ~~c~ 1:1 ror11cn oi ~.Slit~ l! G~r111~ of plants l? Mon~ of l1brl 1> G1011p o1 IJ1~il1rs lS Madt a l1q11,d flow ~1 Chmrs• dynast)' 2 ~ Rabbits' 2h IHss \"!a1e1s 21 Treas111r -·-- 28 Hrll 2q r ol1h11e ·q A~pr~•S"d 32 Drslri11at1• ~ ~http 13 D1sp;1:tl1,~ Jb More pt~ulr3r ~O Mos\ stun!ed 111 9rowt11 I ' . " " " " " ' JO " .;;: l1 7 22 11 41 [,Chol11gr (ll~~·fl ,1,\ C.on-clP•! ~I [n ot 49 Aw~y from il!s1dt ~1 Devils 53 P11t r ~r11~, ~ 0(}1rrl rif ~ ... ,. .11111 57 R,ver cl A•1Z011~ 5B Pro---·· bO ''It 11.rr19h\ , .. , -.-----. 7 wor(I \ bl Ffllo,.· l11I01mal f.2 A~vJTll~qe b~ G1r1grr i\I~, e.g. " " ll ·' ' ! • , " " " ., l•'m ,, ';;. .. " " .. '• ~ " "' 61 62 .. ~ " .. ' " ' Jl ~llif:· -··• By Al Smith By Dale Hale !. •' 1- i PEANUTS l(OIJ 5HOOLON'r CRITICIZE THE WEA1HER, 51R .. ,IT'5 ALL PART Of 1HE ~ORLD WE LIVE IN .• JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH KAMP KE"LL Y ~ANTEtN PERKINS SKINNY LESTER JUST BOUG~T A NEW PAIR OF DUNGA~EE S! ,.~· r';.~:. ~;-::;,:: • I f"l (U .,_ .t L ARE -rHEY BELL- BOTTOMS, LESTER? Ll'L ABNER !iALL Y BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS ,.._ .... '---:c=::--...a :r THINK so ... By Charles M. Schulz l°VE NMli? ,;ID! A FARMER 6010 5UMMERCAMP. HAVE~51R? By Harold Le Doux I 'M TA.KING 'VOU !.ACK TO VOUR MOTEL~ ~ND POW'T LEAVE YOU£ lrOOM UNTIL VOU HEA.R ~~OM ME IN THE MOllNl NG! By Mell MUST 13£. WHEN '>OU HAVE SKINNY ANKLES, EVEltYTMING IS BELL-EWTT"OOED. By John Mllet • c 1'71 w.n.. -.,.... FftOwtRl \ QUEENIE By Al Capp SO, NATt:.HE.RL'Y, rn...L POINT TO HUMDfllUM HIGHWM- By Charles Barsotti By Gus Arriola 111!! WOOD~ A~~ '5flol<T cv-rs 'lll!WOGH TH~ W""°' / OH!' By Ferd Johnson By Roger Bollen :t 1HlijK rr's so f'l!eCIOUS "THE , llJNi :t SAV BOG-, Bll1D Mi> RO.llER. • By Phil lnt.erlandi "They're beginning to make sense with street names, I see." DENNIS THE MENACE L ; I I ~ '7-zz. '-'-· 'SllE S A PflfT1Y G.l)D <IXlK , 6UT S/jf 5 GOT~~_r.)lt!UT ~:__-, -I ' -_,,, . ~ . . . '. . . . . . . . . . ' ' .. • AMONG THE GREAT ONES Here, among some of the great newspapers of the world , is an old friend. The DAILY PILOT looks as much at home on this international newspaper rack as it does at the front door of thousands of 0 range Coast area homes where it is dropped daily. That should tell you something. It should tell you that a "home- town newspaper" can be sophisticated and still not lose touch wi!h what's hap- pening at city hall. Whether it's news from around the worid or down the block, the DAILY Pl LOT packages it best for you. And the simple fact is that, because the DAILY PILOT emphasizes local coverage, you 'll find a lot of stories in it you can't find in any other newspaper in the world. On th:s international news rack, it's among the great ones of the world. But at home, it's the great- est one in the world (for local news). DAILY PILOT I . l ' s .1 " i • I ·~ _,-="'_""':::· ----~---:--~-----.,..,,·i;w----==""'' ----------·' ~ • . .. . . ;; • . • .. '• • . ' • " . . . . I I • ,' I I I I r I ' I I . /' f ; I 1 1 I• I , r ,. ~· ,' ! f r , t t t • ISO DAil v ~ILOT ._Thatsday, July 22. 1 ';171 Was Soper Trip Kept Fro111 Agnew? By HELEN THOMAS WASFUNGTON 1ur11 Back.stalr1 at the W h I t e. HCRlSe: Is Vice President Spiro T. Agnew -the nation's No. 2 e.Jected official -el)Litled to know the tlilion'1 lop secrets'? ApparenUy not. The White House won't say for lh,e record whether Agnew was 3"'°!1g the handful or officit;-:_.w_~o ~·ere privy to the historic clandestine journey Henry A. Kissinger made to Peking_ Agnew found oul either just before or about the time lhat President Nixon unvefled the super secret lo the entire world This raises s peculation on how many other • classified policy dtcisk>n! Agnew Is pqmitted to be in on the ~U as well u .lbe ·1anding. He doe_, attend Nalional Security CounciJ m c. e ! in gs w~re major options art thre.shed out on sticky foreign policy matters . .But one rarely hears of Nixon summoning his No. 2 mlltl to' the White House when a deci sion Js impending or about to be announced. A1:new 's Hrst reaction to the start of ping pong diplomacy was to ex()l'"ess critical com· ments.' which did not endear him to the White House . But the problem of · his right to ktlow stale secrel.5 ·is more Three Cheers deep .s eal e d : with~.a pre.'ddents: it .apparenUy was ever thus. Wt-a\ Harry S Tr~an, Oleo vice president, received a 'elephone call on lhe after.noon of April 12, 1945, informing him that f'rank.liD D. Roosevelt was dead , he did oot know there existed an atomic bomb project. He also had been left out of a number of olhet super secrets crucial lo decision-making during World War II. He had to leam fasl and when the enormity of what I.here wa.s to learn came home to him, tie said he felt that lhe "stars and the. moon" had L-Ockheed Aircraft Corp. \Vor}cefs in Sunyvale toast congressional vote that dealt a setback to their foremost foe , Sen. William Proxmire, in the corpora· I.ion's bid for a governmenl·guaranteed $250 million loan. Proxmire, however, threalens a filibuster to prevent a firtal Senate vote. Plan to Dump Chemicals In Atlantic Stirs Storm DUBLIN. Ireland (AP ) -A Dutch coastal tR.riker steamed northward today to dump 600 tons of wasle chemicals ihto the Atlantic off the coast' of Ireland despite prote~t~ from Brllain. Ireland and TCl!!lahd . The Jeeling ran l!IQ..high In 1reland that a 24--hour police guard was mounted a~ the . Can Harmful Pollution Always Be Measured? BERKELEY IU Pl l -J1"s rliffi r:ull to have clean and safe air v.•hcn scientists aren't sure ·wh;i! rl<'an air really is. a ~pokesn1an for the FC'dC'ral c: n vi ronn1f'nlal l'rotecllon AJ:cnry 'i<l1d \\'cdnrsday. nr \\"dl1<1n1 l ' Nelson, a b1nsL<1list1r1;111 f11r 11w agency, said nu1oy har1nful f10lhJt:in15 in lhf' ear1h 's aln1osphcre can't. be measured with in- struments currcn1ly available ''There nl<IV be a 101 or olher things in thC ;iir we aren't measuring that arc even tnnre harmful than the. ones we are measuring." he told the sixth Berkeley Sy mposium on Mathem11tical Sta tistics and Probabiti!y. He said an rxamplt: of ~ harmful and unmeasurable ~ubstance 1:-peroxy11cety1 n1tratt 1 PAN \. whlch is dangerous lo living organisms, especially plants Nelson said PAN has been responsible for kilhng pon· dcrosa pines and has been harmful to trurk farnl crops in lhe Los Angeles area. "\\'r 1neasurc s ma 11 e r amounts of pollution toda y." he said . ''Y..'e used lo put out buckets and get big chunks Now we use ftllt·rs \Ve arc in· tcrestt-d 1n sm~l! rhunk.~ that penp1e brralhe " The p r i m a r y sub.~l<ln<"c.~ measured arc nitro~C'n d1ox· irlc, carbon n1onoxide and sulvcr dioxide. Another S!)('<1ker, Frrdcn('k S l;nulding of the Unlvcrs11y nf Ca lifornia l, a w r c n (' e Rcrkelcy Laboratory. dcsrrih- rd a \'ersatile measuriniz rlc\' ice designed al lhe !ab as "one of the most v;iluable potential developments in rn· vironmental research in the past 10 years." Palmdale Airport La11d Buy Stopped LOS ANGELES (AP ~ - FurtheT \an<l purchasu for 11 proposed in ternational nirPQrl in Palmd11le have bf' en 1uspendtd until a suit aga inst tne federal go\•ernmenl is resolved. 1lie conserva\ion1SI Sierra Club filed t.l'e suit Ills! Yebn111ry contending I he Dtpt1..rtmenl of 1'r1nsportallon and f"oderll Av l1tlon Admin lstt.alfon did not ad~ q~te:ly .stud)' I b t t:n- vironmentaJ lm1>3ct ot: tht huge alrJIOrl. The !.Clo Ani!eler Alrl><>rt CommiJ.1iOft suspended hind llCCJUblltia.. W<dnelday. Oii- ton Moore, Loi .Ans e l et Jnternallontl Afrport man:tgtr , said the 11"tion •ould allow more lime to aludy lht Palm~le project .-iU1out crfppflng •Ir traffic in Sputhern c.111 .... 11. J! l • .,._ ~ illldlala 11ol<<Lthal air traffic has been ~lining in the last tv.•o years, giving Los A n g e I e s International authorities some breathiniz rnom in their den1and for ad· di1ional runway space in tht Brea Last week the covtrnmrnt ordert:d a frcr.ze on funds ror !hi' Palmdale a 1 r p {I r I ' s development while a new f'n· vlroomental s1udy Is made Federal authorities h av e denied tht Sierra Club's con· lention that a previous study w11s infldcquate . 'The Sierra Club said In il5 suit the FA/t did not glvt cnn- !'iide_ra lion to wning 11 n d develO'pTntnl . air pnllution. noise oollution 3nd impsirt nn wildlife. About 4 100 11rrrs havl!' hf'~n purcha~td north nf. I. n ~ Angeles for lhe Pnlmd11le 11lrport which i.~ planned on 13.000 lier~ to strve 100 !n 1SO mllllon-pas.sengtn"· r -3'ear. Dutch Embassy In Dublin. The coz.stal tanker the Stella Maris. was steaming to Stornoway in the Scottish 1-lebrides off nor l her n Scotland's wei;t coast to take on fuel after demonstrators stopped her [rom refueling in the Danish Faeroe Jsland5 Wednesday night. Officials in Stornoway in· d1rated lhe Stella ~1aris would be refue led. Said Mayo r Sandy ?-.12Jheson: "Stornoway offers bunkering I 11 c 1 I i t i es to whatever \'CSsets re q u i r e 1hem " \\'1 U1out !hr 11ddil1onal luel , 111(' Stella Maris would have to rrturn lo lhe Nelherl and!'i \V1\hout d u m p i n R the <·hfl1Tiil'11l~. I he Norwegian radio rf'portcd. 'rhP. orii.;1nal plan was 1n cn1ply the wastes into 1he Nort h Sea but lhc plan v.·as ('hanged alter protei;!s from Norwa:v Md Denmark. The Stc11a ~taris, owned by th~ 011tch Azko Zout Chemie Cn.. intends lo dump the cht-mirals Into the Atlantic 600 miles oH the Irish and lcelan· di(' shores. Fi!iihermen fear the t•hernicals will damagt.'·fishing Rrounm dt:spite a report by the. Irish gove rnment that the material is only mildly toxic. An Azko spokesman said the wast!' could be harmful only if dropped in great quantitie! in enclosed V.'<'./.ers . Nevertheless, Ireland Joined Britain in ordering ils am· bassador in tht: Netherlands to make urgent contacts with the Dutch government. T h e flr il\sh government said it deplored the dumpi11,1t on ' 'gt n e. r a I env iron mental !!rounds ... lee land asked lh 3t the dumping be canceled. A1 Thorshavn, in th e F11rr()f":i1. the Ste lla ~,aris ,...·a:ii met r.fter 11nchoring by 31)().400 1nhab1tanls at U1e dock led by Kjartan Mohr, 1nayor, parlia· ment member and direetor of the shipyard. Mohr .!>houLed: ''Oul of tht harbor at once:.'" Many demonslr111ors i n molor boat~ circle<! 3round the ~11 p and when f rogmtn Jumped intn the: tt3 and btw gan 'wimming Inward ht.r, tht Strll;i Mllrl!I upptd anchor 1nd i;a1l1•d, l.1~r lht Irish and !ht rt!{tdent!'i ')f lceh1nd, the f'a · cro lsl11nder$ ~e the dumping nl 1hr <'ht'mltAll! A.~ .11 thrc11t to lh<~ rl•Mng 1MOJll'y. fallen on ttlm. He a.aid "pray for ID(." Nixon, as vice president, said he felt ht wa1 "one hurt bea I" away from the White House when President Eisenhower suffered a heart attack in 1955. Nor did Nixon know some of the cloak and dagger opera· lions being conducted by the Central Intelligence Agency at a later point in his tenure. Nixon was on his way lo Constitution Hall to make a speech in 1960 wh~ ht got a hurried call from Eisenhower's pres.s secretary, James C. Hagerty, telling him the CIA pilot Francis Power1 had bttn downed by lhe Russians on their own I.er· rilory while fl ying a U·2 spy plane. "You 'll be asked aboul It," Hagerty informed Ni Jon . "Don't say anything." It wall quick thinking on Hagerty'a part, know\ng'Nil.on would bt quizud by newsmen. Hagerty was already t.ana:led in a web or phony rover slori~- T'ht expose of U.S. recon- n11issance over the Soviet UniOn eventually led Premier Nik.ii.a S. Khtu~v to cancel Ebel)hower'1 lilvitation t o Russia, a b 1 t t e r disap- pointtntnt .to the ··Prutde.nt. 'White Courts' A1igela Claims 'Railroading' SAN RAFAEL (UPl) -guilty even when they are In· Angela Davis c I a i me d Wednesday b I a c k s are: railroaded to jail by white judges, white juries and white court-a~lnted attorneys. The black mi I i ta l1 t asked, therefore, that she be allowed lo act as her own lawyer. Miss Davis, '1:1 , talked for more than an hour on her mo- tion lo act as co-<ounsel dur- ing her murder, kidna ping and conspiracy trail. Judge Richard E. Arna~n took the motion under ad· visement a'nd a che.du led argumenl.5 today on defense moLions on pretrial publicity and for dismissal of charges on grounds no crime hM been committ.ed even if all ac· cusations against Miss Davis are lrue. ~iiss Davis ' performance as an advocate wo·n praise fro m prosecutor Albert \Y. Harris, v.·ho described her as ''lawyer· like, impressive and crderly. She didn't call me a mad dog. she didn't call me a racisl." However, Harri5, an assi5· tant slate attornf!y general, said that she could not act as a co-counsel because it would blur the line between lawyer and defendant lo the. point it would be difficult to cro.55-f.I· a.rni·ne. Speaking in 11 low voict which sometimes wai1 nearly inaudible, Miss Davis cited three ·black convicl.5 15 ex· amplt:s of her contention that blacks are railroaded by the judicial sy5tem. They were Ruchell Magee , her rormer co-defendant in the 1970 Marin County Courthouse shootout: Jamei; McClain. one of four persons killed in Lbe gun battle, and G e o r g e Jackson. whose freedom the state says \Vas one of the goa~ in the courthouse kidnap plot. "I v.·ould like to draw for the court a picturt of what a black defendant find s in a n American courtroom," she told the judge. "lie flnds a white judge. a v.·h1t.e prosecutor, an n\•erwhelmingly while jury, and often is urged to plead ~uilty by a white. public defender or a while court-ap. pointed altomey. "It's my belief that 85 per· cent of black defendants plt:ad nocenl." Miss Davis argued lhilt the 6th amendment to the con· stitution guaranteed the. right to counsel, but "it did not vitiate the right to self. representation.'' She said Magee, a San Quen· tin prisoner at the time of the shootout, was sentenced to life in I~ for "" $10 robbery and kidnaping in Los Angele' for which a middle.class v.·hite youth would have probably received probation or a s uspended se'ntence. Magee·s trial wa! severed from Miss Davis' case this week. Jackson , one or the three "Soledad Brothers" accused of killing a prison guard, was originally sent to prison for lire on a $70 robbery con· viction after pleading guilty on the advice of a white attorney, Mis! Davi! said. McClain was first arrested I• 1960 for felonious as.u.ult, zhe said. and HrVed longer th11n 1 white man would have. Policeman Tells Blow By .Newto11 OAKLAND (UPI ) A Berkeley police s e r g e a n t testified Wednesday that black panther cofounder H u e y Newton in 1966 slugged him in the face and tried to wreac.h his service revolver from its hol ster. Deputy district a t t o r n t y Donald Whyte said he called Sgt. l'~ugeoe F. Sabatini as 1 witness lo show that Newton had a record of past violence toward police. Derense attorney Charles Garry objected to Sabalini's testimony on grounds it wa~ irrelevant to Newton 's currt-.nl trial on manslaughter charges in the 1967 slaying of an Oakland policeman. Alameda Cnunly Superior ('oort .Judge llarold B. Hove ove rruled Garry's objt:ction. Sabatini said Newton struck him fn the face ~'hile he wa11 arresting panther leader Bob- by Seale for di sturbing tbt peace on March 3, 1966. Stans Asks to End Coast Dock Strike SAN FRANCISCO (U PI) - The FederRl Secretary of Commerce has stepped Into the troubled West Coast labor si tuation with 11 plea for the end of one strike. Maurie• H. Stans. th t. st:cretary, telegraphed both IAbor and m a n a g e men l leaders Wednesday asking set· llement or a dock strike "for lhe sake nf the country." Hi.• telegram arrived as Another major walkou! ap- pe11rcd to be ending . whlle. still another was threatened. Many lelephont employes returned tn their jobs while the Uni ted T r a n s po r t a l i c n Union thn~atened to lilrike t he Southern Pacific Co.'s railroad system. Stans sent his plea to Harry Bridges. lnttrnal lona l Lo n Rs h o re m en ' s and Wsirehousemen's llnlon Prei1i· dent, and Edmund J . F'lynn , Pacific Maritime Associ11tlon Pri-s1denL "The prolonRed ~hutdown or l'!ur Wf'~1 Ca<J<:I ports, now izoinit Into lhe fourth wetk. Is beginning to h11ve .w:rious con- '-C.Qutnres for r.veryone "'"° ctrnl.d; .. ~l\i aalif. "F"tt"6'ttfl sake of our counlry, il should be brought lo 11n end." "It ls beginn ing to hurt our exports when expanding ex· J>Qrt!I are critically important to the economic health of the counlr)'. "A continued shutdown will aoon have severe .ind adverse consequences on the people 11nd the P.conomies of Alask11 and Hawii. "Already the :iitrike Is hav· Ing a damaging effect on those whose livelihoods depend on the Pacific Coast miritime in- dustry " There was no lmm<:diate re11pon$t as Longshoremen sooghl a new eootr1ct with greater job security and better pensions. The Ca\iforni111nd Hawaiian Co. said It W1>Uld have to close down its plant al Crockett Aug. 2 and release l, 100 employes unles.11 augar now 11board ~hips clln reach San fr11nci•co B.11y from HawRIL Pac;Hic Telephone & Tclt.1r.11ph Co. ~11id thal 3.'1 per· cent of its in s I 1 11 ers, repalrme.n and linemen 11s well AS 13 percent or \U nper1tors rtturncd te t job< Wedntrllly llL"Gfil6: : WANT TO CLEAN UP ON YOUR CLEAN OUT? FOR FAST! FAST! ACTION! CALL DAILY PILOT CLASS· IFIEO DEPT. D I A L D I R E c T -- 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFJ·ED . . General $21 ,600 3 Bdrm + Den "Movt in" condition, prime location, entry haU, spec· ious rooms thruou t, r in e quality built-in range + ov· en + di1hwasher ovenited kitch~n. park like 'yard, brk., open ti! 9 p.m. 540-1720 TARBELL 2955 Harbor '.EASTSIDE General BAY FRONT REDUCED! &>aut1ful BayshOres baylront w/6 bdf"IT\I., lam. rm. &: drn. 63' Terrace cve.rlooking !he boating lun. Will con. sider yrly, lease. Owners have purchased ranch '° will sacrit\Ce. $159,.;.CXJ. --Coldwell.Banker ~ener•I BAY VIEW Sptttacular front row view home i11 rxrlusive Dover Sl\orl'1 '4 &<!rooms, Jl,-i b.th1 Incl. huge master 1uU• wilh-aolarlum Formal view dinin1t rm. pooJsk1e kitchen will\ adjoininr bnak.last nn. r ven a billiard room! $148,500 Assumable 51-''ID Loan . Sparkling clean 3 Br Honie. l Bath!I, dining area~ !er· rific kitchl'n . Poot sized yard with nice lsndB<:11plng .• I ~~~~~~~~~~~ I $17.900 -cau 546-1313, j ~ 83:M>700 REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 IO THE REAL \"-ESTATERS ' "' . . . * Block TO Ocean * 2 Bdrm. en R-2iot $32.000 -You own the land Builders Attention R·'l N_,port Bea.ch corner tct, 1 Blk. to ocean. Good rental area. $28,000. Cat!: 613-3663 548·5942 Eves associated BROKERS-REALTORS lOZS W Balboa 673·l66J LOVE IS - Grern rolling l11wns, bike trails. tennis courts, a rom· munity pool, and, no yard \I orl<: Couplrd with thi~ beautiflll, immacul11te 3 BO home in the Blutts and ooly $43,rm 673-8560. IO 'THEREAL \'."'\., ESTATERS ' "'" ,], '"' $24,950 EASTSIDE RUSTIC Quality h u i It H£CKORY I ••E•X•E•C-U-T-IV_E_H_O_M_E_ HOME, must be sold in\· med1a1ely, ().,.,'ner anxious. Now vacanl. lleavy shakl.' roof, I a r g e bedrooms. 1cret"ned la.nai. Room to build additional rental unit. Walk to.shopping. Supt"r val- ue at $24,;;(l()_ Submit ail terms. Call 540-1151 Open eves. 120' ON THE WATER $99,SOO In secluded Balboa. Cove~. Pier &. dock, room for 60' boat. -4 Bedrooms. 3 bath.s. Lovely South pa tio. Oversize ~atage, Lois of parking. f'ee land. Owner aruriou~. .....-Coldwell.Banker ~ In Newport Be;.ich on }'ran- cisco Dr. A must 10 1et! Custom single story home that i11 tnily exceptional Maslt"I' bdrm ill huge with a great dressing area .I: pvf. bath. Formal Din rm. a: a a living rm. This horn• shows pride er O\li'nership. Owner n-tiring & nady M sell. $:15,000 call Mr. Harri• at South Coalil Real Estate 545-8424. Mesa del Mar 4 Bedroom. l hilth, wifti huge pie shaped lot, Sha.rp a.nd clean, a.net owner ready tit move into new hOme. Name )'Ollr termg. $33,500 Newport •t Fairview 6'46-1111 (anytime) 5 Bdrms 833-0700 644-2430 De n+ Family Room l .'.:~~~~~~~~~1 ":::::::: Prime location. Huge tam1ly SUMMER 10-/. DOWN rm, built.in range + even, PAYMENT forced a ir hl'aling unit, na-IS HERE!! Award winning "Univenity'• tural wood cabiMts, tire-A~ )'OU11 enjoy it more 1n model, in a prtstigicur am piace, brl:., open tit 9 pm. 1his 4 bedroom home with a of University Pk. l BR .• 540-1720 big family room .r. separate FAM, rm., 1ep, din. rm. TARBELL 2955 Harbor dining room. Ttwn's 1. pa-Gl'l'at brick patio; love.it. JUST IMAGINE ho and nicely Jaodscaped greenbell locatmn. $47,500. S31 ,950 - 3 BR, l~ BA, lge yan1 for O\lldoor enlertain- back.Y11rd, troit tl"N'!! Ian. ing _ f'or clad, a garage with 1astic 6X 11s!lumahl~ V /\, lots ct extra lrtorage ca b-- You won't bf-lievp t'ht ta~r11. !nets. S33,1""JO. Ca!! 646-71TI. --Coldwell.Banker *Patti Walker, Rlty.* 1617 CcnUncla, L.A . (713) 776-3010 17171 Besch Blvd .. lf'B. (714~ -S.12-1411! * • • .. .. • ELEGANT • C Bedroom 811ycN!!lt home "'il'h rorn111l dining rn1. A lovtly family rm. 11·i rh v.·el bar. A drlight 10 shov.•! Arnold & Freud JM E. 17tti, C.r.1. 646·77:"J.i VIEW LOT WESTSIDE BLUFFS (Oce.n & Mounta1nli) Quiel rul-de-~c ltt'tt'I. Si6,5()0. 1>.·/lerms. Roy McCardle Re.l'll!or 1810 Nev.l)Or1 Blvd., C.M. S48-7729 1 ACRE VACANT Try 1 yr . pl't'pa.id inh~re!<t + 5 yr~ inll'~ ('ln)y, 11 sking $4~,000. 7.one R2. PERRON REA LTY Co. 642-lnl ANYTIMF: DOVER SHORES- Vitw homf. 1148 Sllnti11go Dr. Best buy. sp11c. 5 BR. -4 ba. Al ap tAblr ftoor plan for C')Uplf'cr lgt'. litmily. Newly df'rnnit,.d , By app'!, S91.000 Biii Grundy, R1aUor 341 Baysidr, N6 675·6161 REPOSSESSIONS SparkiinJ: c1'1sn homes, 30mr newly pa inted & carpeted.~ J, 4 &. S bdrm~. Some \\1\h por'lis. FHA-VA conv. terms, from S20,000 to $40,000. COLLINS .L WATTS INC. ~ Adami Avti. 962-5523 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD -~-Freeway Special 3 hetiroom plus Bonus room I ha:: f'nour;.:h for a pool tatilr) is sll ling pn>lly righ1 nn your way down 11\e San D1rgn r!'l'ev.·ay. t-:xce11ent assumable :i-'. •;. f1nancinJ<: eva1lablr, 101111 paymrnl in· ~ 83:1-0700 '44-24li l ON A LOT $23,1'.m • Owne.r wiU help fl· • ArlOthl'r .sha rp ~ bffiroom v.'i1h huge family room on Eastside Cost A f\trsA. All Walker & Lee eluding 1a.11.r~ ancl 1nsura&e :rl1.1 \\"rstcllff Dr1vr !('!IS than rrnt al S'20li.OO prr 1'46-771 1 OPP'fl 'Iii 9 P.\11 nmnth. All rich1 bargain 1---------- huntl'r -ru11 µfi rt s'Z!l.:JOO. Meredith Gardens • COLES'WORTliY&CQ . Lllrge bedn:iom and bath 011 REALTORS r1r~1 noor. Thrr' hedn:ioin• _, IUIJl """' "'·1111 ~nd 2 hath~ oo v cond floor. VETS No Down to You Bli:: .i hrdroon1 ranch style rharmer. Family room, ~hake roof. trrmE"ndous lo· ration. Hurry, bargain pric· f'rl Ill $21.500. C11.l1 540-1151 (open rvest [ y :~~1 TURTLE ROCK Brnarlmoor beauly. ~ bt'd· room5, 2 balh!I. Bl't!er than ne1v k only $42.500! CORBIN- MARTIN REALTORS SANDPDINTE Ort1m11hc 4-bedroom. 2,,, bath tv.•o 11ory stucro home in Orani;i:e Counly'• TMSt con. venient localic-.n, Only one yellr' old but fu lly .11nd f'nl)('\lt'\'l lam1ly room , fnrn1i<1 l dining room, :H:11 r ~flflll:;t! and A rorner IQt. 0WTlC'r 1r0nslerrtd to ill4 mirl-\\lrsl. Priced 11! sot:i,50). CsJJ 646-7171. \O 'THE REAL \"-ESTATERS -. . WOW! J Big bedroom~ and den, $!l00 total down lo \'f'la mOvt'~ you In. Llll"ft'e patult Collrg., P11.rk ri1.nch st)'1l'. A rral v.·1nner al Sl!l.500. V.'11.lk to rv,.rythina-. Owne.r C~H 540-1151 loprn •vet). Iv ~~~~1 3 Bdrm. Home l\oi BAth, covered patio, n r· pet5, dta!}f'5, quiet alreet. S2'.1.500, Trrm~. Roy Mccardle R•1ltor 1810 Ne"·port B!vd._ C.M. S4B-7n9 bf'autifully l11ndacapcrl, nr•r I ~~~~~~~~~~ achool~. PA rks &: p I A J ~ a:rou nd11, 3 mi11111r~ to .l frtt-BAYFRONT APTS. V.'l'Y~. Scuth Coam PlAZll. Vista Ori LiOo. 1~ier I Slip Shag c11rpeting, fireplace, Avail. rrom $31.~. Sell or ltil!le. S.l;,900. 0'A'Tltr ~Hi ne: prin· c1pa.ls only. 5.f/.3111, George Wnllamson 67).4350 645'-15'4 evff REAL CHARM DUPLEX! Realtor NOW"S THE """ 642·~~-.;.?f,._.-.-== .. " . . ..... lhundq, Jul1 22. 1971 DAILY l'ILllf SJ " -. Everyone Has Something Thet Som•!'nt Else Wenh 'DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ·The Biggest M'rk~tplace on .the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results You Can Soll It, • Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad I~ I --.. I~ Huntington Lach WOODSY PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES CHARMINGLY DEDICATED IN BLUES + GREENS And uptradtd carp t 11 n I . Plu1 a iOTlltoul kllt'~n. 2 tlory 3 bedroom horn!! on • bonus siu cul--Oe--Mc near the ocean. R.l.~ed loun- datlon. VAlnlA terms or 11.•umr a VA loe.n $31 .800 Bkr. &U-l535. Cozy , bdrm. cott.ql', nf!llllA- ed a.monpt the tr'H'9 in Bl~ CaJiyon on ~r 101. ~. .-tone COrt'll!I' fireplace, Patio. Ck()' S28,9JO. 92 Linde Isle Drive Reaul. 5 BR .• 4 ba. home w/fonnal din. rm. & family rm. 3 Frplcs. Outside stairway. Built-in gun cabinet & bookshelves. $145,000. .AO/an, REAL ESTATI! For Complete Information J 190 Glenneyre St. -494·9413 54~' FAMILY POOL HOME 4 Spacious bclnna. 21.1i bath&. tv. 1lvinr. tami:t'y 4r dlnill:f dms.; c:heery kitcti. w~ of cabinet':l!r. Comp. l.rdKpd., w/li:-t. trtt'I!: l!'nd. yard wlth 15 x 30 Hid. & tilt. ptd. Nicf' deck & pat:i!t IU'f'&J. Good neighborhood, dOH to achooJs, $49,'500 On All Homes &. lots, Please C•ll : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR NEW LOCATION •.a THE REAL \'"'-ESTATERS 'O THEREAL 1~ l:STATERS 341 Beyside Dr., Suite I, N.B. 67S..6161 General General ' ' '. ' . ' 1917 TERESITA LN. Out,tanding Location * * * * * * OPEN SAT. 1-S ii""-"' 4 br, 2 ba, lit lritchen/din'1 area, frp1c, brick patlo, 1ree1, corner house w/1idl' yard for bo&I or trJiler. 2 minutes lo major 1nop"i center. 1ttew11.y1, scbool11, 50 1c1~ p a r k , .$31,!IOD. '46-J(Ql, FANTASTIC POOL 1.nd ~ 1q. ft . Rtcreation Rtn'llPll' Room with hugf' bu\11 .in wet bar and pool ta- ble, make thi11 a home fol' rtal lam\ly enjoymttit. Add 4 bedfooma. 2 bll.ths, brand new ""llhaa"' W IW carpeting and txisting GI Loan any- one c:an assume subject to ni'i'o annual percenta.ae rt.II'. Better tte this ooe today. Min. ot S:KJOO dO'Wll ...,,,-. TAYLOR CO. Harbor Higblands-eloee m Mariners park & ¥Chool. MUST BE SOLD. Owrtel"'ll of this charming horne have added a den and completely .,re-bit tbe kitchen with all ST/steel elec fixtures incl diShwashe.r & even a BBQ. Wt believe this to be the brst value in Newport Beach. Call Mr. llarri~ 10 set riow or come on over Sal. Price redui:eri $3.1.~. Makt your offrr! ~th Coast Real Estate 5'1,5--8424. LET'S I N LOVE YOU WILL, with this extra sharp, almost new split level 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, huge game room , family room, 3 car garage, J.ton refrigeration, ankle _deep shag U)ruout. cus· tom draperies, fabulous drop lights. Profes4 sional landscaping & sprinklers. Assume 7% E~nings Cali 548-3~ LARGE FAMILY TRY THIS! General $1500 DOWN 1'0 ALL Corner lot location wirh AC· ceS!! for boat or trailer. Ci054I' ro M:hool!'., park, and recreation ce11ter in North Co.sta Mesa. You'll Jove the cemfortable fttling of thi8 3 bedroom and dining roon1 nom•. AS!iume ~f'l\e.r's 1oan. 1'~uH. price $26.500. • COATS WAtLACE REALTORS 541>-4141- (0pen E venin91 ) BEAT THIS ONE 4 UNITS -$17 ,500 No jokt> -ll's tnlr II tllf"y are not shacks. Good in- come. Ulw m11.int. Owner will help tina.nce. No va- canci~ heft. What el~ can I Sll.y -jui;t hurry, C11ll (TI4J 002-5585. I ORISI E Ill.SO\ " PEAlfQNS 19111 Brookhum Ave, Huntington Beach A PRIVATE KI NGDOM Only S.30,000_ Lrx 3 B<'lnn. 2 Bil , boautifl/I CO\'tf'f!d patm w lf1r'E"pil' l.nt!; of CUP· boards in g-ar11§:\' So m"ny extras you MUST SEE!! Call 545-8424 lopen rvt!fi) Macnab-Irvine Realty Compi1.ny A HOME WI TH "ZING !" Soaring ceilings in a * BR I: rlen home w/• !'r\endl.y t"R. Truly unique cu!Jlom In a highly flesirable localion on 'l'tt land. S!ll,'500. Macnab-Irvine 647-a23S 675-3710 STEPS TO BEACH 2 Sty. A-frame. lmmac. rond. Acce~s to pools, lt'n- nis. l BR. 2 b.rh.~. SJJ,900 CAYWOOD REAL TY 6306 W. CM.!! Hwy., N.B. 548-1790 A cood want ad W a aood lnveatment Instant Cash Instant Sale MO LON6 ISCIOW J,hiH ;~ ,.,..,,~11 OIC. w, 1'•¥ •II t.01h. J..,.t y•1o1• f•fr ''*wity 1- '''~ -J4 1111. ean B47.S5D7 lfor111 1.ly l •••h••r R•tl+.,l Gen1r11I ONCE IN A LIFETIME INSTANT HOME You find arr.al fixer-upper, 2 IN MESA VERDE block< trom •he "'"" ood VA loan. Owner anxious! .......... $42,650. * EUREI(A!!! WE POUND IT, a 11h block from-the-beach "'fRIPLEX", has a 3 bedroom, 2 bedroom, 1 bedroom unit. Lots of shag carpeting, new buiJtins and in top shape. TERMS!! Get on the band wagon for .............•. , . $76,950. * DON'T BUY!!! * MESA VERDE * (1) Hu~ Rpiil'&te family 4 br, 2 bi., on corner lot w/ room matuni trtts It. 1hrubl, (21 Choice Mesa Verde Nev.iy c:rptd & painted. cornt'r O~r a~1. Will uc ba- i3j 4 bedrooms; 2 UP-Jow FHA appraisal. Terms 7 rtown &v&il. $30.000. Call 54S-5!M6 1.f1 7300 feel o-f romfortattt or Sf5...49-j7, living l;P~A~N°'0°RAM;;-:;;;-;fC~'~OCEA="°N"°'V~rEW= !jl 2 full bath:ii -011t' with 11.f't'."Cs.<i lo yard 161 Formal dining mom j7! C\OSf! to IC'hools It. at.op.. pin~ i81 $42,9;,Q Call 546-23ll 3 br, den, 2 ba, patio, cabMa. Privacy, Ii~ yard. Ideal lar children & pell. $28,500. 7141756--923.1. l!M.9 whittier A~e. 2. Br. 111.tge i&r, fenud yd, clOlt' to tel'lools & atnpping . $16.000. 272 CostA Meaa St. 646-9136. Walker & Lee 2T90 Harbor Blvd. at Adama ~ <>JM-n 'ti.I 9 PM OWN YOUR OWN 4-P\e)(, Don'! alt on 1 big equtty, ret your lazy money working:. Call for detaih about our unit!! Real Estate by McVAY UNIQUE CONTEMPORA?tY 4 BR.. ii: den or 6 BR. Beam m... .,.. trpl., kitch. w/bltns Ir tam. nn. Painted munl& by fa.moos Lquna artist. $36.950 -Of- fer down. MISSION REALTY 64--0'Tn Ocean View Home For u1e or l&e option.. 3 BR, 2 bll. tireptace. patio, tana.i, 2-car ru. GilBERT CO. priced to !ef1. You do lhC' This houM"; is a home! All of painting &.. cleaning and the feal'l..lres and comfort save thol.l!iands, Large 3 n1091 people desire are in bedroom 2 ba~ w/huiltins, thl11 beautiful, Rep u b Ii c dble i;i:ar, tirep1acf' &: low liplJt-level home in Mesa ni11.intenance landscaping. Verrle. ft has 4 bedrooms, 3 Choice-Nr'.1-'J)OM: location balhs, formal dining room, with complete privacy. Prk· large faml!y room with ed only • Until you've checked out this darling splft level 2 bedroom, 11h bath home with w/w carpeting & built-ins. CLUBHOUSE. POOL with its '"NO CARE" privilege:s. A good buy al • .. .. .. . . .. . .. .. .. ...... $23,800. 1-0· THE REAL \' ESTATERS ' ''I r. "'•I I I . 21:2 Broadway -19f-!Sln OWNER Iller. OCl'aft vu o/y/o apt, 2 BR. pool, rec • CUTE 3 br, 2 ba, 1>11.tio, 893 =~~ 54;,.{)458 I -• s ... _ ~ rm. Lo dn, EZ tnna. WANT ACTION??? ge yaru. m uuwn or 499-2901. WE'RE SOLD OUT, BUSI-assume $189/mn pymn1s, SOL VISTA WOODS Cove. Modl':rn 2 Bl\. brick !!replace and wet bar. $26,500 Lovrly deCQrator w a 11 Ca1'. S46-S880. Open e~ . NESS HAS BEEN SOTER-S24·000· By owntr 646-8l39• HOME New. Walk to beach. OwN!r RTF'IC MOST 01'~ OUR I BY Owner -MESA DEL l Bedroom 2 bath plut t U $32 950 49S--5~7 paper. shutters, shelving. bookca~ and other extras ·~· I !hroui;i:houl , To appreciate .~ _ ~!!.e! you must see lhis home. l ~==""""'====~·j * I NVEST, DON'T LISTINGS ARE NO\V JN MAR. Bir 4 BR. 1''/R, 2 Ba. 1 llll"(e !am~y room. 11 Fire-:~: :wicnds.' • ESCROW. 0\VNER -IN-nu ~hag. Very a h 1 r P? pl•~. On tree lined cul-d~ I c---=-~---·I VESTOR.S ARE MOVING $32,150. 545--5270. sac street in choice •rea, Laguna Nlgual BEJ-'ORE I NT ERE s T 4 BR, 2 ba, crpls, dr-pR. frplc:, $30.000. Ail tenns. SPEND Price .$46, 950 POOne :i46-2313. Get two for the price or one, in this newly decorated CdM DUPLEX. Separate units, 2 oversized garages. c lose to shopping, South of the highway. Hurry, they don't last at $51 ,750. RATESC'.0 UP~ CALL FOR lg!' lam rm. S 21 ,!19 h. COLLINS 1: WATI'S TNC. HIGH ON A HILL SPANISH A F REE APPRAISAL -NO ~&-2843. i51 Olympic. 962·5.'i23 l::V't'S, 642·0427 -0 THE REAL ''.'.. ESTATERS SINGLE STORY OBLIGATIONS. ff YOU E t Bl If FANTASTIC WANT A f'ASf SALE LE1'1--•-• __ u _____ _ Xlnt 4 Bdtm. 2 ba. tx>mt witti ali bltns • .$39.950 . " -You'll lov, this "Small randi- f'm. A1most J/3 8('1'(' lol with 8 fruit fr'e1?1!, largt' pa·ho area. lots o1 play 1patf' for children. 4 bf'drooms, 2 baths, newly painted in Ir out. atrium entranc,_ Im- maculate & V11cam. Bener hurry on !'hi~ one! $42, 750. PROf"ESSIONAl..S~ JN A • EXCLUSIVE.AGENTS . TRI-LEVEL LONG TIME ESTABLISH-SALES. LEASES Lagun• Nl9U1I lll.a11lty 130-SOSO 496-5791 Lido 1111 COLLEGE PARK BEAUTY with 1epara!e mother-in-law quarters in the rear. 3 huge bedrooms up front where ii counts, with separate family room. 2 g-real fireplaces for tho~• c:hilly eves, Space-saver kitchen with all the trlmmingB. Huge garagt: rO«..JJed 'With lots of utn ~pa~. One bedroom unit in rear ha.I its own FA heal and wattr healer. Whal a sel-upt CALL Walker & Lee 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams ;,.i;,..()465 Open 'ti.! 9 PM •)n,sil\ 'irb,:Jl,atir 546·5990 $150 TOT AL DOWN Spanish 3 bedroom town· t'louM. Oioi~ 1''oun!a1n Va11ty location. $23,900. Brokf'!" S42-%>35 * SAC RIFI CE It you want to buy but feel you don't have enough cash -opportunity is knocking. lfere's a real family sized ho1ne (3300 sq. fl.) 2 story, 5 super bedrooms. 2112 baths. family room, formal dining room, 2 fireplaces. VACANT and ready for in1mediate occupancy. Lease/ option -low, low down ............... $43,950. 80 OF'F'ICE, REPRESENT YOU. A CALI.. JS ALL YOU NEE.'D TO 00. U !<l Vi1ta Dt'I Oro Newpon Beach 644-lll.1 646-0555 s BR, J b11, 3--c11.r 1ar1g:t, EverungB Caff 548-326!'1 outlltanding I n d 1 c p n &: • $75,000. Owner. 64~. -" r ,,, UNBELIEVABLE El To'° ~ft4tUl-W>~ l 8'rlroom. 2 both, 2 '"""· , No1v V11cant. X!nt °'51A 3 BR, Lske Forti!, 4 m""I Mc~11. location. Builtins and nt.w. Ctps. drp1, ele~ a p- J .&Ml •1-1.1.m .. 11 extras. Fun pri~ sn.950. pha~s. beamed 1:4!illnc~. Hurry 011 this ooe Cal! front yd !n, bf'ach club 540-1151 !Open ..... ,.~.1 HERI-mbnhp. Sl5.~. 83()-9:U2 Meredith Gardens I General $40,500 p:;;;;;====-.1 Ava1l,.hle for immP<liate O('- C'\lpB.ncy. f'lP.gAnt 1wo-slory horn .. ,,.:ith .t bffiroom~. 2•,.. bRth~. lormRI rl in1ng room. l'Mrm1ng walnu1 _ panelal family room with u!Oed: brick fireplare. ExlTcmely sharp, i n.~t(!f' A-nu!. Prrst>nt lol!ln i~ ~~umnhlf' 11! 5~'"~ \nterf'!lt or mayb,. ~1rcha11NI wlM1 nrw 90"~ !')fin and 10% rlown. Home hr vacan!, ownel'!I anxk>tl~. Pho n r. REALTORS 0 TAC"tV. R .. 11.r E,;t::i1,., Fountain Valley 644• 7270 • Ba Ibo• Pen;n•ule RED TILE ROOF 546-2313. BALBOA PENINSULA Balronied 'Bt'l'lluty, with Cali- fornia f'lair, Roomy 5 bed· room t.ome l}ufu on two k:Jlg, bulltJn kilt'hen with toads ol cuunteni And cupbouds, family room with we1 bar 11.nd pool ttib!e. 4 bl.'th!!, lar~ w11.lk-in ckli&ets, JotJ; of •IOl"ftge -mucti, much (l11lre. SU5.00'.l. PETE BARRETI REALTY 647-5700 Macnab-Irvine Rtaltf Company N•tur11I Baam C1lllng1 Cllffh11v1n A ...... rm f"llltic four bedroom ho~, lOb; d natural ..uxi • brick. Pod -'-)'H'd. Prictd brlow rnA appnJ. uJ. CuR now to -.r.. Macnab-lrvme 675-3710 l'ORfSI [ OL\O\ " R£/fl ropJ I 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. 4 BR. dtn. J ba. Nr. Racquel Club & boar n1mp. S5!!,:-io:J. Very, \'f"TY Span1~h l bffi. J\1ar5h11JI Re11lty fi75-4600 room rownllou.'IC'I_ chO'lrf' f'ountaln Vallf'y location Ill\ Coll991 Park 22 v 1 t II~~!"!"!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!'!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ [;;:J~~>;;;:r;;;;;-;;;::-;-for S ,500. 11carr., JI, ug OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK * * 3 Br. 2 ha, ram rm, dbl tt". Brokf'T Ml-2535 l ACRE RANCH General G1n1r1I frp!c, 24' or &!1rling 11'.lass WHERE C•n you find * * * ----------1 door:'I, crpti; !'. drp11, new 5 BR, 3 BA, bt.m rm w/ COLONIAL Arthur EASTSIDE C.M. p11in1 . $29,500. Owntr over 2JOO 3q It. f()r only 4 + DEN + 4 BA Thomp•on 2 HOMtS ON LOT "'"-'1°'· u;.ro0 .• .,,m. ~ fHA "HORSES'' 67 Balboa Co ve• i\ l hu loan_ Recen1ty ~duced 110 re11 Y w:.o wanbi flriflrd Corona det Mar l!tll. Cl!lll now -US Attil!ated N1wport B1ach. i ncom~ -live 1r1 one and lei WALK TO LAKE BACK BAY AREA You a"" , .... V>'inne• •t ,._ t'-...... k h E h , 0 • Rlly (l'ormrrly Bra11hcar ''" "" • " "" 0 ner ""'P ml\ "1 ,. pay-nc antinn GSIS TU'ty.l Ph: 847·8507. ~ tickl'tll to tht' mtn111. Spo!lf'.'t!I 3 ht-dmom, "21 . Southland lh h.>1th tJomp + 2 bertrrnm, Dreams are made of th111 -Califomia IJvinCJ Hom1 & Garden 1 beth.~ !Ire c1e11.J~~tta your own hidt-a-way in the •-,.,dy to _ .. , '"· A hf>11rl ol our ('ity. &au!ituJ l bedroom, 1 ~ ba1ti tco'Nn· Unbellevabl~! Quiet tree Show '"' ..... ~ .. i~· 1 11 ,_ ..... house. Bu~·· choice of lined SL to thi11 gorge-At tht' good lnvt'""1ii·nt. P.S./room UIJRg@', a u..-!"'A, )'OU ., .. n ous "old world charm, aJmoat hear a waTl!rfaJL rolor ce.rpeu. Under $23,000. er." 4 m11s11ive bedrooms ANAHEIM ror garden. Only $35,000, 0oo·1 !ail lo -this moel Good Fountain Valley loct:· + huge paneled f11m)ly CONVENTION un~ duplex _ l BD + tion. Broker 1M2-253S room! 25 picture wtn· CENTER ~I p11111 a t BD unit Jor Huntlnnton ... ch Lachenmyer dow in living room with Jilly »-Aua-. g $84,SOO 673-&550. ··• unique fireph11ce. l.Arge Please call 642-5678, ext. !14 Re.il101 250 sq. ft. dream kllch. rn. Wall of g:lass opens betwttn 9 •nit l pm lo 1.j) elevAted patio with claim your ticttt11. (North t1peclacular view. Zoned County toll-fret: number 11 for hont's. Truly• 11how-540-1220) place. Gre11.t area for * *" * children. Mwitat>ll Quick. l l·---------- 0 IAL 645-0303 "SPANISH" Reduced to Sell QUICK JN FOru:cLQSURE I l VACANT!! Batik w11nt11 a faat sell. 3 bllf ~· rooms. Extra lar1• f111n- ily room. Sh&rp 11.nd clean 3 )l!:llr old homt. C&rpt''-3 11,nd drapeii ln- THE P 0 I N T I -0 THE REAL \' ESTATERS . ·. ' FIXER UPPER -4 BR + 2 Bath Areas Mos! f11bU'louw JRO• \'il'W, Lrg BROADMOOR Hsrbor View 4 bdrm 2 ba, furmlll dining, /,, oc. vu from Dllf111. PL to $23,750 - lam &res off kitcben. Com-Pt. fl"rmin, • Br, fam. 2!h Twin 1lzed bl'fnn1, whtte pletely re-<:arpeted, jU!l"l ba. Wu model. 2815 brick lirep!, FORMAL DIN· p::ilnlt'f!. Largeirt WI Jn Bluewalf'r Dr. 6 4 2-5 3 8 0 · ING area. NEW paint OU!· EAS1'BLUTF'! $49,500 w/ Owner, Prln, only. aide, B-8--Q In b1ck yard. oPtion to buy l11nd , HURRY 2 mt, 1 BA + 1 BR a-pt on covertd pa.lio! Needs your -IMMEDIATE POSES· 45· lot. So. of Hwy. $47.000 lender loving can. Ideal SJON, Cd! !'>4!>-1424 (open llrm. Princtpai. onb. Rt:t· buy for 2210-l bl.l)'ers - ew~1 lin.r,:, !16f-665J. low, low down pa.yment! CORONA DEL MAR Fllll pric. $23,750. CaU -o~t h ("cast HOME lo APT. Ml-Lm 3 to-<'hoosl': rrom. Lrg 4 BR SEYMOUR REALTY tri·level tJome + 1 BR apt. 17141 BeaC'h Blvd., Htirn Sch Open 'til 9 PM 'tlude-d. Completely land-Owner Transfel'Nd 1eape-d. Hun • hua:e 111/ 101711 dn. S63.500. PERRON REALTY CO. 642-lnl SELLING ftnced Jn yard.. Exiatlng Vacant 6"% lOAn can bl! as-Coste Mese YOUR HOME? aumed with low dnwn. -$2BOO ~ -1'ttt a.ppnllaJ • We buy AJs.o -excellent rtri· •nd ltM\lfn!! • VA '°'9.n on a ASS\l?'tfE my 6% Gl lo&n. equiUn. PttlOl\ll attenHon. nianclnr •va!lable. Don"t ll '~~B;IG'="c~b:;:R;OO:NC.:A""= 3 bedroom 2 btth home In TotA.l pymnt inc.I taxes" In. 2.l yn, f'.xperie111;•. Delay North 'a:.st. Ml!tll . Hom" l\lr St&I. S6CXX1 cuh req'd. COLLINS & WATTS N~. n1Cf91. warm Ir apac-J 15 a~ DIAL '4.S-Ol03 love l BR k ftun. rm, • w;Hr.fbe ..,.~nt ~ . ~'j Take 11m 2nd , S43-4006. 96~23 Eve.. "2·M2'7 C'kl5e tO tM W&1er in "Olrl tt 1 lPn. rk't ,l()O. No Oown.E•tt Side BY owner, 3 BR Hunt1niton 6P5J 1 DAYS fuf( Corona rlf'l M1tt." R~uced S46-2lll By ownt'r. 3 hr, 2 b. Can Conllntnlial ool'N'.kl w/1lnk l!WI Ne .... -por1 Btvd .. C.M. tn S79,500, ~ IOl.d w/nolhlng rlnWn to c-enttr. $1800 dwn, T.O.P. IOHl\l L 111\0\ 646-.19211 Ev~. 646--5649 Hom1 Show R1altor1 GI. Pymnta Sl79/mo. 1906 96&-!!Mt. Thi futesl draw In the Wtst "Annehtllr Hou,ii~unllnir" 01'nge Ave, 642-~7 1 'Tho~~,~ .. ~,-.. ~l-d~,.-w-l-,~,.,~W~•""•< •• a Daily Pilot C1auiftfd 2299 "-"bor, Catta M'ftill l.'i."r> E, OJ.a•t Hwy •• CdM l-------~~•1HOUSE Hu.ntl111! W11tch the .• a Dally Pilot ClualtHKI Ad . MJ..-:SlifS ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ........ .!II '7.S.7125 Tor be1t J'ffUltar 642-Sli?I OPEN HOUSE column. Ad . 64)...6678 ,;> , -" • • < ~' I ~me plu1 thr~ c:ar garagf' for rent. Only J377 per month Call 842-2535. \0 THERI:AL "'-ESTATERS ' ... ' "·' ·.· ONLY $74,500 Extrll nice l ~room home on big lo!. Veta &Cl in klr $400. do1vn. PAy~nts lesti than rent. Hutl')'·'fn - Rea,I Estate by McVAY 4 BR. 3 Ba, fi0x90 •••• $n ,soo 3 BR., family rm., Ji,i. bath& 45x88 Lot ............ $94,500 4 BR .• 3 bath!i. ?Ox80 EX'ln lge, lot w/poot ••.• siz.ooo LIDO REALTY INC. 33n Via Lido li73·7300 Me•• Verd• BY OWNER: 3br-2 ba, tam rm, 2 frplc, bJtne, new cpt/dp1, fncd yrd. Assumable 514"-Loan. S29.900. 673--~. 5.f5-().lj3 393-8533 1-'--'---------1 ::.::..:..::::_===-,_::::::.c::::.;. I J\1ESA Ven:le 4 br, ne-w!y VETS!! dK"Orated lna!d t • oul $1~ total cash moveA you in-Atrium. Quiet st. LlWI to 1h11 Jovt\y rv.·o 11tory pro-ln&Jcpgn. 535.500. Owntt feBsioMlly l8nd&eaped in-~0169. eluding • m i 11 i 11 I u r t Newport Be11ch orchll.rd. Only .$32,000. '4 BDRM. '-0 THI:: REAL '"'-. ESTATERS ·. . VACANTI S BDRMI BUILDER'S REPOI RepBJnted! Cui:ieled! Fenc- ed! Good 1erm~! HAFF DAL REAL TY 8-12-440:) Eve : 541-24·16 • VACANT • $'11,:xl(), 3 Bedrooms, elec.· tTiC' bul!tin RIO, rdrig, !or- mal living mom with tirt· pla~. carpet8, dra(lt'8, pa- t.io, F'A ht, large doseu. low down payment, exi11t· Ing 6'M FHA toan. ., 111Jge Real bt.1te '62..+171 I :;: I MM18J S39,900 BayCT't'St area, 4 BR, fun· ily rm. dinina: nn, l be.'lhll. tile entry. 2 ~Cl, cpta/ drps. ~r dbl. r&r. Wide 80' lot. CALL 0 6.f6 -J414 Aw'4., 7:'tALTY Near Ncwpart Pait Otrlra SAPIDITY! A c:ustom home wilh I bl1 bedioo1111, Iara:e ram 11 y room , 2 tireplace1, rww iihag earpetine, and custom drape&. Minimum c: a r- yard. Vace.ot I ready for you to move 1n. $53,900. Call 646-nn. O THC RI~AL ' I:ST!1TI :11 <; $50.00 tol•I down paymt. In-* THE BLUFPSI * cludfng clo1ing cost ON THE GREEN'B'ELT to •ny qualified v•t. OPEN SAT/SUN. l·S Stp&r11tion lurcf:I tale of 3 * 403 FELIZ * BJt. 2 &. home. Ide&l loc., Franeac..n model. 1ptlt CT'Ptll. drps, bh:ins. Hurry! tttd; r!decor. 3 l,e, BR., Month1y pytn!a abt. $2S6 per 21,1 ba'1., ctl n. rm. Immed. mo. inel. 1AXet1. ~-· WID tr1de. I•/ • S47-8531 • • op1ion or 1ow down P1Ymt. TlfE Real Esl'Att MART owner/e,ient Irvin• TI•: m-22.11 4!19--3-t0.1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 BAYCREST, 1111 week on LOTS O~ ROOM market. Imma~ 4 BR 11 BR a studio) 2~ bl. Fam nn. 2-Sty. 4 BR .. 3 be.'•. L«e. Din rm. aep btld11 rm, !Iv lami!y rm., 3 car Pl'. Walk· rm w/hl-btam c e 111 n s , tn dowtl. A belut. Turtle decontor drpl, •lab tor Rock home Wiland, priced 00.t, Jovtly ya.rd. Windward rl&:ht at $45.950. Ln, 51,ii"lit aasum.. k>ul. ired hill REALTY Univ. Partc Cflnter, lrvlne Cllll AnytltT'le 133.onl rlJRTLE ROCK 4 br. 3 bl, fam rm, c:u1tom drpt, crpl1. Nr..xt 10 park. View. rm.med po11111. Owner. $46,5 0 0 . 133-!m. $.5Cl,500. 6f6.,J)27. BEAUTIFUL Newport Beach home, 3 br, 2 M. tam nn, util rm, bltn.t, 2 frplc.. cov 'd patio, ~ plum- bln11. undef'll'otlnd utU. Nr 1hop'f, 1K"hl1. pe.rk, library " tennl• «>urta. Aaklnc . 146,0JIJJ, .,,__ The futut draw ln tha W•t ••• Dally PUot Cl••Wtd Ad. MJ-.n . --·-·--· ~· -----------~ __ .. _ ---------,,.. --·-,-------1liJll~·-""'f ,. -... , I ~~~ ...... ~ .. ' . ''' .... . . ' ' ' ' .. . . .. ' IU!l.Y Pll.111' -·Jo~ 22, 1•11 el ~~~. ~~ .. ~,~~;! ~~~.;; ....... ;;1 ~;~I m~.~~· \:.~'1" ~~~l ~I ~~~l~~l ~I ~-~ ... =-~~l~I iiii -~ .. -~_1~~1·:1iiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiii"'-~l~;11 ~!~ .... ~--"'-~l ftl i [ ~·--··M j[ij 150 LE 10 AC. ra.ndl lite, NO E GANT DOW,_ R ...... wnlly ,,..I MiDmERANEAN ,,... .,.,r 125 "r mo. .... --"""" .-. ,,•:;."""""~~-~-'-' --= fttTtW &nina: t'(IOl'l'l., ~ l&r1e BEAtrr 21A AO'! mobile ~ and 11.m.tly room bOme !.iti!-1. Tree• ~ vlew. m J5&.yc:rett $78.000. CaJ1 S!«JO. Terms. Call owner at ....,,,n . ru1614-19J3. • 'O T l 11; Rl:AL '"" I :: ;Ti\Tl:RS '" * VACANT LOT * Here'a • aood dMl! A ~ x 109 R-2 lot, )'(Kl own the UM, on ~ carnrr of OOth • RJver. Good term. 4' only $2.5.000. MORGAN· REAL TY 67l-664l 67>64S9 ON BEAUTIFUL BAY Busln•s• Property 154 *KEY COMM'L LOT* c.2. oe•rfttr O:ma M"1a. 50x 168 aa.ndwichrd bietwn 2 new bu~u'leSie:B. Buaine&& .t. !iv· ini quarten. $59,6CX1 caa.h or T.O.P. (nttd more room ). Appt only, 646.-2!i86. By owner, Mrs. Hill, lll14 Nf!'W- pon Blvd, C.M. C•met•rv Lots/Crypts 156 Cbannln.r immobile ?Mbtle 2 Ctmiett.ry ltm ln Pacitlc home 2 BR. 2 BA. den, fire. View r.temtJrlal Park. Ex· pl. J&rden nn, Pvt bch, m.ip eeilent value. &f6....t579. avail. $27,500. K, Anchorage. lou Way. N.B. Owner 615.1748 4 Adjninln&: , Harbor Jt.Kt or 642-1329. Memorlal Park, C.M. In prob&te. Discount. 542-0632. e NEWPORT BEACH 3 BEDRM, 2 &th tam.Uy Commercial home in pidurHqUe lotttina· Property """1' patio .,, eni.rt&Jn. I --,-N-V_ES ___ T_M_E_N_TS- ina: or Just relaxinc. S:W.950. Call ro lll!'t!. Exduilve Wint '"MAJOR." AGENT 646-32SS. . TENANTS-1.EASE!ACXS 151 OITJCE BAYSIDE vw-.. l Br .l COMMERCIAL den, 2 ba. Ntwly decorated. Ii: APT BLD'GS BN.ut View o1 Sick Ba.y, Pvt beach. Pool.I 4r. Jacunt. W. R. DUBOIS, INC. &al slip avail. No dl.ildttn fR.E. 8roken) 8J3..94e or pets. l mmed OC"CUpancy. Condominium• Ovt of Stat• Prop. 111 1 .;:B.:;••:.:l.:;"":.:'.:;'_W.::..,•.:;•l:.:ad.::..,,.,,,2,...10 HouMt Unfurn. 305 Houlh dnfurn. §OJ Housta Unfurn. 305 Apts. Fur n. 360 1 Apt. Unfurn. 365 $495 FULL PR.ICE 9/ANTED to buy e1t1bU1Md General Coata M•sa Newport 8e•ch Costa Mes• ) (~·,-.-n-a -d"e"'l'"'.MC:-1-r--- PiM ~ ~ ('abll! aite a:arde:ninl J'O\lte: Newport 1ii~iiiiilii l MESA VERDE WESTCLI'F'F-! er, :t Ba.B __ U_S_IN_E_SS--,,,-,-.-,-,-,-,-,-,-, I iiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 9'\lthern Oreaon. LeYel, wli,:5'M=.::'.:.44:.·,....~---,=I RENTAL FINDERS 4 br. 2 bl.. S27'5. r.tnWeg on· Tl"9e •unwnded yard. ll75 everyone. Lo '' $36 "'k, L"J&ininc n.adonaJ forts!. Be1.ch, Cosl.a Meu. ~I.. • l br, 2 ha, $365. Re<: room, priv1.te POOL. I wkly rares nt1w oUe~d 10 ~- road. Short walk M 2 trnul Money to Loan 4,, w. lM.. con.1. Mu.A ly. No ~II . 546-5.'Wi. mo incldi ia~r &: pool I 5e&l1.rlr Mo!el, 2301 Npt b.kea. Owner M+7'U ;;.;;:;.;;:.:......;,_;;....;.,:.---Hou•••* Aptt. 3 8R, + Fam rm. Fn<'d yd. man. Adult• prel'd. £\•ts Bli·d 646-744·' Real E•t•t• 1st TD Loan * 645-0 111 * CrptJi/drp!. $215. Av 1 i 1 MS-4307 nr 64>1s20. 011.y1. I-1JA.N, 1 er s1c11. u nturn 1 oN TEN Ames Eichenge 112 ~-~"':'".'.:~'... now. nol federal. M5-!M5l. 5'40-5&20. BR $135 utU pd. Adlu. no 11 ll 2 BR. f urn. ' linturn. ' ""-...,......,..,..,..,..,. free ,,, IA.rwlJorda 11 ,. .woi~• **3 br & M, fo~d yard. BEAUT mM. io··-•··· ... 3 pets. 820 Center St. Ca Fireplaces / 11r1v, paU01, YOU1t e!fU\fy ea.n do more TD l "" "'"~ Wt you tl\r6ulh a well 2nd oan $1l5-0LDER 2 BR bo\ae, M.9 Go\•emor Sf, CM. $100. Br. 21l ~11 . trp!c, pi1t1n. 642-5848. Pools Tennb Contnt'l Bldst. dei~ exchante. No 1.tt.. fenced ynt fnr Jridl & peta. ~-5358 pool. 2 c.u JU, all bhru . ./ AVL now -t & 2 BR turn.1900 Sea Lana, CdM fM.26ll llmltlllnn. By appl, Mr. Term• hued on equity. M:>OllL 4 Br, 2 811., cpl!, drps. ,1alk rrpts, dnt.pes. IA11e S29.'i PO')I, rte rm, gd loea11nn. (MacArthur nr Coast Hv.)') Stttle, ~. 642-2171 545-0611 schls & shop 'J. Pel ck. $250. f J 1 523-4110 or 84f>..~991 eve5 :\n rh1klr~n ()r pr Is . ..:::.:..::~.:.;c.:...:c._. ___ ~I SeMnc Harbor are• 21 ~. Sl4~SINGLES tine. 2 BR, 3023 Garlitld. 5t5-62!M. be1wn 8-10 nr 111knr1s. t "46-jl\21. I PARK your car & >111lk; nr OESEA.T prop xlnt potenrtal J•• 2 5 acre• Victorville. Mutt S•ttler Mort9•9• Co. w/11.r, stove, prdene.r pd. 3 BR, 2 BA, d1n il encl patio. BEACH SHARP 2 BR-$160 oct!ln. nr shnp'E 1\1"'1 ap! trade/.eU equity medical 116 E. 17th Street MS-0111. crp., drp1, bltinA, dbl aar TOWNHOUSE V FURN Hid POOi . Adl tl/no Br, 2 Ba. br&m C'til. Many b·"· ·•t 3 673-'""~. ......,, A I ~1151 ONLY S27S YR.LY Uit: 1 Pels • 2272 Maple S:. nr ~Ira.~, :!31}-f\ _~l!lrKUl"rlle. ~ --c h F I ~10.SP ·c-·s . s· , BA ~ I . . . I 61J.-Hll] or ~it-1()~ Rut E1tat. W•ntetf 114 ast .. "' JUU "'• ' 3 BR, 2 BA. bla encl~ ~.i.li everythln~ ~ wan -"'="~"~'°:.::..· -------! .7=--~cc---...,-;;I as • d't4 11.r, Wn!y welceme. ya.rd, crptJ, dfJll, and ready tncl wood bum1n1 !Jreplare~ I Br. Duplr x Eltc bltn~. FOR lease-Deluxe new a.U l 1t & 2nd Trust Deeds 645-mll. to move-in coM. $225/Mo. ~-&lJJ. , cl06oed garag,, Sl.30 1(1 eJec 2 Bil, 1 BA · * CASH BUYER * Don"t llat yo1.1r home, J&ll 1t to ua. Save time, 1.1.ve money. ltruned. tirm otfe.r. Brokt:r e LEADERSHIP INVESTMENTS e 842-4466 " 5'0-5338 WANTED: Vt!rJ txclustve baytrbnt home w/1lip l pler In Newport Beach. Phone eollect Sara Carey, Realtor, LaVtt'l\e. ca. (714\ .... 1.10J5. PVT. party will leue mod. 4 SR home w/pool tor •P- prox. $300. mo. C.M., r .v., N.S. or H.B. 839-5746 all 5 pm. \bl d I N Unobstructed view o! bay & rnE!: APPRAISALJ; ""''"0-ER'S ~"~''· I Br. Ed Riddle Rltr 646-AU. UNIQUE 2 Br, 2 &, pool. 1 re1pons ! a u t. o pets. _..... Lrr ...,..,,... O('ean. Adlts only 673.Ji932. Cott• Mete Investment w/pool , Cpl,. drpe, bttrui. MESA VERDE 3 Br. neat & beach, trplc. t\o. 14 4 Rtfs 646-4224 . 548-nl 1 •nytlm• M>Olll. shady. S250/mo + deposit. &y11de V!lla.gf Adult.5: Tl(> 1 BR. Crp!!, drp~. bltns. l I 2 BA . cpts/drps. 549-4225. ptl1. Yrly only. S260 t2131 adlt. 5132/mo yrly . Ga.r&g~ LOANS! LOANS! LOANS! $251>INCLDS Gudener.J Br. _ 7S.lt-1161 or lliet mfr. 11\;i.LI Open House. 336 E. \I/fl &ive th! most. Private, ti., &, Npt Hrrz area. 5 BR, 3 B~,' ~29.'.l/mo. Cpts, Newport Shores 20th St &12-852<1 2 BR . bltns, ~frig, u1tht 1es included, ne\\'ly p11n!ed sz:io mo. 673-44j2 afr 6 p.m. Costa Mese d'.t"'liod . Boy, tradt, 1eU. ,.,...,d P't o" . .,•M•J, drpa,, dsh hr. nr ~t'hb &1;.;.;.;_.:;.._....;..;....;.;. __ _ '"' ... uu " """'u ho A II A 1 I BR, Adults . Pool. Ideal !or XE Away from downtown area. ' I P II· va UK · FOR lease--4 Br. 2 sty. 21 ~ OELU 54~294 bachelor1. Spaeious. EN 2.us Newport Blvd. BEACON * 64.5-0111 · &. Tennis court. pool. w11!k Sl30-$!3\ 1993 ch 11 t ch. APARTM TS C.out P1.v.·nbroker 642-M02 3 BR. + ram rm , cpt!, clps & io brh. 3()() Lu Ion I a. . ~S-~J~ 1\0\V AVAILABLE e fAMJLY Wanted! :I BR, 11t1vt, $190 mil. !'lt:'''J>Or1 Shor,i;. ' ' ' Air Corid. Frplc's -3 Swim· Mon•Y WantM 150 arttt loc&tion. EDct aar, 968-&ISS U , 1 p rlc LRG 1 Br. >1•a!k 1n closet~. I ming Pools • Health Spa _ WANT $50000 all nr art in lodl ok. $1.10. , n1ver1 ty • \Vt w. trplc, drps, 1 adu11. I Tennls Crts. G<tme & Bil- 2nd mor~r .. e mo!y a! ALA R1ntal1 e 645·3900 f OR lt:ase-Mt:sa del r.lar 4 LEASE or sale 4 BR. 21.1 BA S\:18/mri yrly. Garage avai!. I liard Roc>m. br, 2 ba, crpts, drpl, Aug h U . 1 p ,_ 1;.1? 1r2n 10% OV!l" 10 yn.. No pis. e HEAR THIS~ :I Br. cptJ, l.At. S300 mo. 5"45-~2. ome, ruvers ty ~ Ar_", ... J 1 & 2 B!!:DROO~f Supub collaltra.I, 968-7510. rirf>S stove fn('d yrd encl Irvin~. Xlnt cond. ~l-37.)4.1 VF.RY ;'\11:"e 1 Br dplx Quiet. F'ROi\l $141) (n 3l EX~. rar. ,Child .i.. pet. s1sd. ~S~/bl~~~~ r:o. 1~ r& Hous•t Furn. or ~P by gara~es Ad ults over MEDITERRANEAN Mortgeg•t, ALA Rentals• 645-3900 Wl mo. advance. 545-2786. Unfurn. 310 30· nope~. 5'18-l021 VILLAGE T t Deed 2601 FURN. 2 Br. apt. Utilitie!. $l3,950. 675-<i99'5, MS-2886. for ul1 160 HAVE buyer for Meu. Verdt T 0 W NH 0 U S E in Hti home to approx $30,000. Harbour -3 br + &ep din Prlnc1pall nn.l,y. Bkr. Ew•. nn or d~n. 21Ai ha. S43.ooo.1 ..:838-6ll.:.:..=.c1::.·_~~-~ Sbown by appt on I y. PVT. Pty. 5-1 hr. houH, 848-$526 pool, hllfe yard, qultt at 3 BR, family rm, 2% BA, Lo 'Ibe Blutts. View, con- woient to park, •hop-pin.a .t. loehooU. By owner. ~ aJ1'r ~ lhort drive ID bch. (21J) 691-4313 rul 1 1 • ThfMACULATE! 1 Br. 2 BR, $165 mn, 1 <:hild OK. Cprona 4•1 M•r j l'>aid. $160 per mo. 1271-B t-'EED CASH Crpts. drpa, ltv/refria:. Kkls 642.-9!64· Alai) alttplnf room 2 BDRM 14 ha duplex. r.faplt St. 548-5913. $1000 OR. MORE I< pt-t&. $140. !or 51n&le per&en. . ·· ., SeeA Thrit t RttJ ALARental1e645·l900 . Re.trig .t. roove, new SPACJOUS :I br, furn . voo 1 or • 2 BR, clea.n. pvt yud, !f\llet carpets. drape1. $250 per I Garage. Quie-l couple p~t El'tate lean. Upon 1.pproval •SINGLES OK. :I Br. Stove, street . Av11.tl now. St~ mo. mo. yearly, 67Hl45 or $140. j.48-892;;. ll&e the mnney bowever you fn('(i • ....:i encl "'·d 548--7916. 646-2290. I likt . Alao a.sk about our _ 1 '"" ra.r. n.1 s. BAOiELOR SU5. Pool , laun- rtd naJ 1o1.ru Sl-!J. East Bluff dry rm. :Jj TH••~ ~~:~~~~:·~jf :~ '~!tf ~:;f: ~~~~ ~:~:!:';l•m• 320 I ~~~;i~:~:~;;~·:~i~'. 2400 Harbor Blvd ., C.~r. (714) 557·8020 RENTAL OFFICE OPEN 10 A,\1 TO 6 P:\! FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. * EASTBLUfF' 5 BR * CBy ()'l>IMrl Luxurioul exec home form..1 Otnina rm, 3 ba. Y'rplc W~. U!IM firm. 644-053{] NWPf HGTS-2 Jae br. 1 ba. Ire ldt & ~rv porch. din rm, dbl g11r. Xln t loc. $29.500. Owner 54&-4321.. lncoma Pr05Mrty 166 PVT. Pty, S-8 Br. houu, pool, huzt yd, quiet at. •hOrt t!rlw to bch. 12131 691-4.313. g2(! N~rt C.n!er Drive bedt'O!"lml IJ\d den. Sunny I F"flR \~&r.e University Park 8J3.3MO !ivina room with fireplace, 2 Fount•ln V•ll•v Tov.•nhse. 3 BR. 2 BA. Like LRG 1 Br. Nr occ. $l30 fin1ncl1l ~~~~~~~~~~I bathg. Yard fenctd. Doub!~ . ne\\', 833-1611. ex 21n d11.ys, G11ragr. Lndry f11c1L No li-1. : garage. In Mts& del ~lllf I-OR l~ase w/opbon ~ Spl11 S33--02l5 eve& Boh fl"'I! 546-9787 or 546-85M . 2 & l BR's ?rivate patio. pool • lndiY. 1aundry fa c. N!'ar OrAni:e Co. Airport & UCL Adul!s only. 20122 Santa Ana Ave. ~frr. Mr1, Jnachin1, Apt J.A 541).fj2)5 . ' . Newport H•ighta e COST A MES.A Satnboo ViJlaifl 12-2 BR Garden Houses all 9''/&tt. garares &: pa.tib~-On valuable 172x204. l blk Bank of Amtf'ica. 2 mi. ocean. Income $1,940/mo. Good terms. Gall Page owner. 545 &:rnard st, C.!-f. 64&-4430. (3) 2 BR/1 BA HOMES ~ I I[~ l area. nf C.O.ta M ! 11 . level. 5 br, 3 ba. Children & ' · I , _____ '_" ____ _, Available lmmedi11.teJy. No pt! welcom,. SJ7:'i, 1st & Townhouse Unfurn. 335 1 Huntington Beech .. . last + dep. 842-1003. C M -~t• p1eue. s~ ptr month. ost• ••• wea ....... ""U ZJ · .. :. Bu•ln•u 300 c.u ,. .. ,.,, Huntington iluch la Qu'inta Hermosa .....,,,, OIAR.MING cu&!Om 3 Br. 2 &a . Shade tref:1. lovely c:oupeti.ar D'Yt'r hudwnod. Lr. brick tirepl. Bea.med Uvingnn. \\'onny che1tnu1 panel&:. Dellghlful terru:e in easy upkeep r a.rden/ '-' acre Jot. 64&-1391 Santa An• BY OWNER -2 br houU: hrd'wd tloonr. Ire I o I . $16.000. 540-5166 COMPLETELY REDONE New crpts, new drps, new tile, ntw floor, new pain•. Huae lot. 2336 Eldf!n Ave-, 01. $60,000. Owner. E\'e1 646-5302 *NEW-UNDER CONSTRUCTION - 10 UNIT APTS. JO Delux 2 BR/2 BA. 2332 E:dtn Ave, C.~I. Mun see to appreciate: $175,000. Owner. Eves 646-5302 CA SIT AS CAPI5TR.ANO 2 BR 11!4! on lot to bw.ld. Little in nune onl)'! TheR j $iiOOO cu.h & tAk:e over equl-to'NT\ho~ have all the ln-I ty SWJ:I. Pymnt& SS9 mo: Opportunity 200 Hou ... Furnished LOVELY :i 1ty Townhoust, 4 _.;:.:;::;:;~;c;c_;_____ ..... Belbo• p..,fn1ul• 2 BR House. Vacant. Large BR, 2 BA, in Monticello. I * "* + Gener•I yard. 11.raie .. Quiet. 2 kids s .... ·im'g pool & clubhouse Spanish Counil)' E1late Liv· Clark * * + ?>!OST de•lrable area on the ok . $170/MO. U29 Delaware privil. S250/mn. cal ! inr & Spaciou~ Arla, Ter- Sommera Emll point. 521, Fr. nn !he hay S!.. H.8 833-2299. raced pool; 1t.1n.i:en ~1..5 BBQ 306 Marine Av•. •,1:/p1tr & flnat tor 11e. boa!. BEAUT 3 br nr bch-2 011. Unbelievable Living • Only New Beautilul Garden Apa.rl· ments. Pri\'ate Pa!iO!!, Pool, Spa. Garage. Luxurious !.uid!.cap1ng. Adlllts, no pets. rurnlshed, Unlurnished. 2 BR -SJ 7j. 3 BR. $2!.5 B•lboa Island Foust Spi c. ur.ed brick terr I bttns. crpts, drp&, patio l Br unf $ISO.furn $175 You are the winner of ~~wNpo. ~•:por~ pla.nted w/l1owtr1 & trte1 I $245 962-5U1. 962-219-1 . I ~•rtmtnb forltant ](9 ] 2 Br unf $175 furn $210 t:it F.'. 21 :;:1. c ~\. 646-!!666 2 ti('k!fa to th! You ue the "'~~ o1 3 BR, dt:n: exte.mively ! 2 Story-5 BR. 21~ Ba, din -. ALL VTIL JNCLUDED THF: BEST COSTS LESS Southland remod. & decor., "''/mnd 1 2· ~I N "--I Special 3onus; a. silver· H • G d 2 ti('kett tD the lnl _, d • rm , up C! .. r I Cnuu !. j I~ dl " j ome • •t en ., quiu. carp., rapel . Lr11.se $375/mo 968-7298_ pa"" ca.n e anuuer 1 Show Southland 1hutters_ Summ!rhou1e 1n Apts. Furn. 360 yolll'1 lt you brina this ad &I the ANAHl!IM CONVENTION CENTER Jilly 30-Aua. g Home & Garden patio could be nfc .• hobhy • 3 BR. 1~ Ba Tnhse. Pool when you visit our models. Show rm. or 4th BR . Stginnini ,., rN". BrookhllJ"\IJt k Adams. Gen•r•I 4 blks S. ot San Diean Frwy at the' Aug. 2nd, Sl.000 pe_r mo. $190 mo. 645-056.'i. R!nt Beautiful Fitrnitllr• on Beach, 1 blk \\'.on Holt ANAHE IM yrly. l!lf!., Incl gardener & MEREDITH Ga.rdens, heaut. tor 45 little 115 to 16ZU Park!.Jde Lane. CONVENTION "''Iller. 0>1•ner 714: 838-0350. 4 Br. 2~ na . Lease ONE MONTH tn4) 817·54-41 CENTER 2 BR .. l BA .. crpta thru-nut. Ab~y Realty '642-JA:.O July 30-Aug. 8 11U app!ill/l~I. Nr bay. ,·r-EXEC :I story, ,f; BR. Lrg BACHELOR apt, furn. Util Imagine: 11·rt bar. fireplac!, he11m cc-llings, rough-hewn paneling. big pr11·1te patio, 2BR-2 BATH. de l ux e ('!UbhouSI". ponl, V-ball, &. it"s unrll'r Sn'! Ill 387 \V. ~a.11 s1 01h,r 2 BR's !rom Jl6.5. Alt Ri1U!ti;, nn pels. BAY MEAL>O\VS APTS. * Call 64fi.-007.l • P1taae C4ll 642-5678. ext. n~ bfltween 9 and I pm to claim your 11cket1, CN()fl:h County ro.ll·tre. number is Pleue call 642·5678, ex"t. 314 ly. LellM! $300 mo. 67l-!12.V! complete with paid. /vijnln~ Vl"ty n1<"e •-9 family rm, t·ormal din'g 1oo•1 homl" 1n !I. hetter trart. .,.,tv,IHn I.lid 1 pm ft'l rm . S350, Gardnf'r. 9&7-3441 your '0 EL CORDOVA Jttdlenm o! modmi Uvl.ng. t'l!n!A fnr $145 mo. 50-5766 ~Iodiem kitchens with bill-in 1---------- Jt/O diahwashflr1 ,& liJhted BY nwner, 2 hou1es, eom!r ce~1. 2, 3 &; 4 ~mi, ](Ii, Downtown H.B. $1500 2 &: 2'1) beth!. :i ear down. S300 income or live * * • 1uqM. &autitully kept rent tree. 536-0438 eve.. ---'------- 54()..12201 claim your ticketi;. (North College P•rk Purch••• Option Gn.r11g'", Pvt p~!l1\ :-.'"''1 • Nr l Cnunfy toll-tree numbrr is Irvine Ind. Hem st:lectlnn. bPach "1 F:rli~n High, HB . AptS. M0-1220) 3 Br, den k pool. New cpt h 24 Hour Cely. ft'I"!' Iii Aui:: J,t;1, $140 mo. * * + drfn. NO PETS. 4 4 7 3 BR. 2 Ba. atrium •... S32S CUSTOM 968-6!12.~ ;..•~\V l h 2 BR Luxury Apt.I. P · I -5 < 6 5 2 • o Dshwhr~. :ictra closrts & C\JP-FREE 11 rinceon •J i . -"' J BR. 213 ba. lam rm·· S.125 Furniture Rental hoards, •uxury shag crpt'a , L•ndlord1-0wn1rs wkdays or 646-6835 nnts or i J BR, 21i'J ba. f11m rm .. $.l''ill 517 W. 19th C.M ~3-3481 Lido l1le be1u1 . rec lac1J & POOL. grounds. &: pools. New 77 AdU'lt Apt ~STICS FROM Sl6.:l«I S422,090 * Menufacturlng * Call 493-lll4, Realtor \\!ebb Brokflr 164~) EXpandin1 manutactur\nt t'O, requ1r!s m11..n tD oper1Te W! will reler tenants to yiou wknds. :i BR. 2 b.I. bonus rm •. S.150 Anaheim ' . 774.280(') l BR. furnisht'd . Uhl pairi. Adult.-.: • No pets. Industrial Property 161 am. plant. ProduC'tl ~pre· fREE or cha.rte .•. Many Corona del Mar 3 BR. 2 baths, bonus mori1 LAHabr" G,()4.3708 Garagr. 1 B11rhelor. no pe t!. 10T7 Charie St. 642-147!'1 llOld. Must be ·~ tt> 8U~· $375 furn .. , .$425 Un1urn. ~. ....i ti· 3 o 8 31 ,.,..,..1"'11"".""!':~~~~~I 2 AI>JOJNING delux tt1plex-fOR LEASE 4800 sq ft viw--'uction, -•rcha,si""'" desirabll! tenMta on our 4 BR 2,, •-1 1~~' Balboa P•nlnsula Sl&.Jlmo . .Y")'. 1 • p [ Llk S d' San Clement• es. all bltn•, mci intercom, Carpeted ofc!, llll' cond, nle I'"'" ,...... ... "'airing li!t. 2 ~R., be11m ceir1. pa do. I · 71 ""· am rm '· '"'1 ''''"~ I ar .. -• urroun 1ng alarm, vac systemi, pvt tloor!. fluorescent IJ{es, kit 2 shipping' ,retttvini . SU,~ ALA R.entels e '4!-3900 Gara~e. New carp: r11.niie 3 BR. Dtn. lY. bl!· famil.~ 2 BR. Ytllr ly. rnmplr1ely QUIET~ !JELUXE .. Uo6. elec rate•. -le, M"ts nf bath!;, Beaut. hldi illveit. l"tQ d. S300 pe r 1''H • &-rrlrig. S22.i ?o.fnnth ! rm. · · f"rom S.\36 :n S.,65 rurn. !'\n f'l!'f~. nn rhilclr,n, N•wport B••ch ;.2 k 3 BR APTS .. I' lor hte mra . 15.\'l Placenl.La In start + protit.'ll "'"hlch ~NICEL'l:_ fur~. Baehe!Of', Un1v,r11ty Ri"alty 67~'>10 4 BR. 2 ha .• lam, rm. in S22:1 n10. 1·111 p11u1. 1401 \\I -----1 Ptv p!ltlos * Htrl Ponl• 11.r. door optN!fl, Cbe to 11'1oltld toarn pa_r-jy tielttled l<f'oVt. refrig. Utll pd. Tot Turri, R!X'k ........ $3~(1 Ral ho;1 Hh·rl !'\ B • \\'E: HAVE RENTALS: e J\r ihop'g i1r /\dulls nnly bch &. shpc. J7400 dwn per l cA~'7'-N~·~.B7•7M>-<117'~~'-'~~~ S51J.OOO per yev. Your mM'I pe! nk. • 1 BR. 1 Ba, lrp\c. bf"1m~. 1 ,-,1,.. ' · 0· · \\·inirr 11 nrl Yea riv unit 6-42-3.490 l\f-1 ZONED <Htg Bch1 Of· rigid 1nV'l!'ltiraoon tnvtt!"li. BEACON* '45-0111 bia: woorl,d yrd. fl.'o gar ........ ~1 ARREY REALTY 642-"'.~'.il Martinique Apts. 1----------·I heel, 1tnra1e yard. Idul Ref'a ~xchanred. for pr:r-:.02'1 Ja~mlnl". S\95 Yl!'11rly, e U'> \\'K & UP .. On O~an , P.ONT :l RR li77 Santa Ana Ave . C'.\-f Univ•r<y P•rk 1 11 .. • 'GUN A B"A~. 2 Br f urn. t\\'A!I ~i1-Wl<l Lovely 81r.helors l BR l(lCF.ANf' ' UPf!('r · ' 'I A 113 «<.5"2 or rnntr&ctor or"' Inrome st1nal 1nten1!w, phonf! ....,..u.. u '-'"' Maid ~en•lcf' P()f'll Uni pr[, 2 RA nr N<"\l.•pl p1rr !oi1nc\<"~ _· ~'~'·'=r~l~~=~7•~N7~-I 4 Br 1D>11lhou1ot. 21, h.11. 2 $6600 yr. ~2.:llO f .P. \.\'ill :7:1::'::"::'~::"'::':':'::"'::H:.:::::: Con1.ge. Ftplc, fnC"d yrd. 2 Br ~tnVl!/ref. Adulm. No , e C1'1lt 67~it7411 • o~ S4(V) mn/yrly l•r Birr. LARGE 2 BR. 2 BA. trples. ?>fndel born ... na11y c<Jnaider exchana, Io r smw. f'l!"I~. gar 5Pfl~. Yard. 514 &12-4~16 j' APT. t.;PSTA!R.<:; extras. Xlnt lo ca t 1 on . larrl!r industrial or apt. TO BUY OR BEACON * 645-0111 On:harrl Av~. CdM' "'SINCE 1946'" F.XCLU~TVE B,.11.ron Ba.v CHILDREN \\'ELCOMl!: $..'\6,500 l01T~ dn. 13102 =-~"'~'~"-"-2--174~3'~--~~ I SELL A BUSINESS • BELTEVE! Cozy Mme. 2 BR, t"rplc, Crpts, Drp1, 16t Wl'!ltrn B11nk Bldg. h11.rhr!or 11.p!, )'tArly. C11 ll Newporf H•lghtt 1 All eleetnc Gold l\leda.Uion Leatherwood. Call ~JJll o __ u_t_o_f_S_t•_••_P_r_o~p_._1_11 HOLLAND BUS. SALES tncd yrd, cptg_ df"P!. child ArUl!!. no rio!•. Un1vtrs1ty ParK AflPr i; rm. F>i3-477I I k1tch klr appt. 8r P"I nk, Uni pd. s.g5, • * 644-861'19 • + O•v• 833-0101 Night1 Beck Bay CLEAN 1 or 2 BR_ A~tilts~ no '1466 Sant• Ana Av•. SALMON ''The Broker with Empathy" ALA R 1 I e "l ltOO ptl~ Li kit. Sil~J.'ll ~421 j Af tnli Ora.n1e Ave ., C.M. en a 1 '". **'* 4 BR. 2 BA , BLK TO Xl..NT IO<"Rt1nn. 1 f'R, hPat....-1 , E. lfi!h S!, NB. f;46·Jit(\L 642-llll ternoor\ I~ f1SH£RMAN1 5 64.5-4170: 540.~ anytime e BUDGET BOOSTER·! Br BEACH! S300/mo. 673---0~. I • UNIVERSITY PARK • pool, Arlull<, No ~t~. S135. DELIGHT! \\'e nHid Wei people I l\'r he11.ch. Kids k (lf'ts nk . .l Bl't 2 ba. rownh~ .... $.12':1 ~8-1S4~. Santa Ane *· * * Choice Jot In Kit.math R.!ve:r I Sl?.>. Cost• Mes• 3 BR. 2•,, b.ol. townl\~1' .. S.100 Coron• d•I Mar Royal Suites Motil LI KE LIVING IN AFFILIATE. Get in on the ALA Rentals e 6-45-3900 DESIRABLE J BR. 2 Moch~ ..•. s.lr,,.s.1~;. I YOUR OWN HOME country e!tat~s. A plann@d lucr111 ive end nf m•chine -3 BR 2~ balh! ........ S.150 LRG Ba('h@lor, 2 blks lrrim Sl; PER \\'K UF' • • • 20~~RJ~:!~~~·'r:~: ~v£~~~~':;:~~J~;~ ;:i:~·e;:. ~a. Active Prld~O!f ~~~~~1h lp 2H~d _1 tl~~~ .. 11~~= I {id d h•11 ~;!r~~~rrin:~.a~l~lfl/1~ A ~-~1r: c~'~.!~~~k:l~n~nln!~~~ 2i~s~J~~~~~~u~:~:rs, AcrHge for 1ale lSO on Van Blll'f!n &-Otvtland. DEVELOPM ENTS OWN VENDING Route, tood loca· Family wi~0':1;nagers ok. rarb-dllp, J&rllgt, \\'Alff ·-,.' re I &12-lt)~. lf!fV :r0010 ,,, l BR. I Apt• Good 1ite Jor trailf!r park er properly shoreline. Streri. tion. Near new machines. 4 Bf!dmom 2 bath, bUllt lnl, turn. I · · 2 BR . frpl, b11lrony, yrl,v on· \It milH ,,., Npr Bch. 5 milH Ph. f.\2.fJ;ll 111\ l pm. wb-dlvt1Lonf, .on ma !~~~way ln and mafnlllinecl by coon-Sacri!ie1!. Owner. SlS-7499 ~ng, drape.'!, lt•U Sl8.'i ADULTS ONLY NO PETS , REALTY 11y 1. ls1 & 111," 11122•9 1J122 10 Dll'r.t yland \ 1 to Much 1eld. Pn<--..u •I try. Zo~d for tr•ile r or EiOO CAf'E, e!fUIP'Pf'd . Ideal tor per mo. Phollt Lone Stach RATE REASONABLE 1 t..:n1\', Park ~ter. Irvin• lr 10trnpt. v11 · · • 5.)\.39.\0 , NEWLY $11,000 per ac. Wr ite gq. fr. hou!.t. Ottered for oraaruc loods or catenna:. 213 • 4:zs.955t. AC!'Om trom Country Oub CR.JI Anyttme 833-0821'1 67~364;.. ! ~1 Sil. HarOOr. S.A. DECORATED Oarlea ~fartin, ~70 No. sa1e due to illness of owner. t lc. Reu. 64'~1149. 275 Mea. Dr. Ph 548·6706 Coit• Me&• U f 3,5 0111rn1Lnc: I Rr r1u[l!ex. ~ew M~; .. St, Rlver.1d,, 92501 •-~ --~ !----------Lido Isle < BR 2" ba on pvt ........ , Apt. n urn. 'Ii' d & , Lo -• _.. ,_...., ~. "'WEED It It reap"' .. Clean APPLE pie lnttrlor w11h MW · ~ ..-crpt1, rps pain . VciY i:SEA~c~.~cloe~~lp~a~t~$3~,05'1~~F~/~P1J~~lil~l~lll~""~'~°"~~..,~u~""'~~·~tr~u~h~-WATERFRONT 4 Bt. 224 urpetJ, new floor tile, 1.nd v.·/pool '-tennis privileaes. CASA de ORO I General park Hk'" "urroundlnp, w/tuml . Hand)' to Mw 6000 illf;!J•lfi~~\11 turn into ca1h thru a DUiy VI• Udo Nord . Call (213) new lixture1 ln b11.throom,11 SJ7a. 8JJ-J895· CASUAL Calif. L1vir<&: In a Qui,t. m111 ure !dults only. ac muld Lala! re c r c · 11 i!iMIJ"l\11 Pli(lt O aultied ad. f4W£78 93c..cmD or (21.'ll 2'7()-45(7. and kHche:ru:. 3 btrlrooms L•gun• Be•ch W!lrm Med iterranf!11n a tmOB· VENDO•~E SJ:ill :l-18·6!lXI. preaerve. Bia. 644-4670. Wt"U help you aeU! 64.l-5678 N•wport &.•ch and d~n: 2 bathrooms. Sun phue SPAcloua i:olor co-m -RENT &R E-LAX ny \IVlfli room w I! h J>;E\V 3 RR, 2 BA, ('p!J, orrlin~t~ apll. de11gned & IM~fACUt.ATE: .A.PTS! in 1h1"' hf-11ur xrn lrg 2 BR, The Punfe with 1he Bui/f./11 ChucUe AINRAF I I I I I 11 I 1-rp ..:U,..;R,:..;:.E ..:.T,..-,1 1). f, I I ' I I . • ,,INT NUM!ftfO tfTTfltS IN I' THf5f SOU.I.If$ . I' I' I' I' r I e w.sc:~~~i\ """' '0 I I E~ I I I I -. -K~M-Ul5c-~ERS._-tN-.C: LAS$1i;&c:J.llON I' • B .. . I .. I 'I bl!-in~. Vlf'W, Arch Bl"llCh r. 4 , pool. bt1.u1 vu, tirep •~ ... ,e111 di' '" 11r. rurn1i.htd :nr atyle l.. rom· ADULT 11nd 1'1 BA . Comp! Rrcl!'e. &. in upper bll.y. $250 v.·k tor 1um· A v a 11 a hie lrnme-di1tely. Heigh ts. sno. <194-8457. lort • H~11~ed pool • Kir ch· FA~1 1LY St-r11nn .c;p11r•k!1nJ.: NJnfl . Nt111 plush !Mr thru S e pt 11. S265. per momth . Cllll 2 BR, den, vitw, nr Pll"t, e.1 y,•/ Indirect liQ:httn.g • Clou to &hopping, P1rk ! M'f'll~. 1o\·r1,Y !n('i1 r..· lno1~p'd. 11 41633-9393 ext 1 g A: :',4.;..94~1 I atnres. $260 mo. or le!l&re. De.luxe R/O. AduJI.\, No pe!A. ., s~clou~ ~ aR·s. 2 h11 .1'l'ri. Sl fll/m(l. 1004 El ea. 714 1&46-J103nrn3/Gl 7·1'l62. MIR+ den. 2 ba.. Bltnran(f Hart Rtall)' 4~. J BR.-S175 f'urn. * S>1•1m POOi, pul1 gM"~n m100, ~l6-~·j04. 2 BR, rompletely f\lm , nr • oven + brff,\cfa11 ba.r, M•t• del M•r UTILITIES INCLUDED * frpi, Indiv Lndry 1:1 1''\s ~la.ney'1. YHr round ttn-Frplc, bltn detlk, hure book· 36~ \V. Wll!on 642-.\971 1845 An1h•im AYI. * Spanish Elegance tal. Uri! pd. $225/mri. 1hl'lf, hUgf' M.ck .vd . Oose to * * 4 Br. tam rm. l'!i Bil, *$35 WEEK & UP* COSTA MESA 64'2-21124 gn..2792 all ach(lols, shpg: <"tr .6 COi· blt:n!, dshwhr, cpU/dn;a. Stuclio & I BR. •Pt•. Quiet Advlt Living S•n Clement• lei". UM. S5?-8UJ. ~~;;.II~· sm mo. Rt:J a. SUNNY ACRES SEU..-Tttnt·1""Alt. Nt v.• 2 ShA,C cpt • cl rp1 • bltn1 MESA Verde, 3 BR, tam rm. MOTEL Br. 1 &. Apple Vallty. Btauutul Pm! • AH UtiJ Pd ~ BDR."d Summer R.ental dln rm, ltt.te·ltue option or T))VELY 3 BR. 2 &. Mmr. !\hlli crpt!, lilV'ri dra.prries. I 2 Bn . SliO SAN CU:~fENTE ta.If. S77~ Mo / yrly Iv. AU applia.nets. S275. Ov.·nl"r 1 b\k iouth of F'•1rrroundt b~akfaAt bu. dil'l"'hr. 1rarb Artul11; onlv-no P"I! • 492-3802 e sir,.~ !)l~!h, snumable (714t 993-U73. 2376 Newport Blvd. dl5pt r•.nR!, TV ('lllhl,.., Z41 Av!X'arln si, ~6-0'.119 HouMs Unfurn. ·305 loan. Vacant Ownr I Bkr Me•• V•rde 548.97.'16 pa ' lo· w• 1 h room"· I !!~~'.'!!!!""'~""'"'""""" 546-7""1 ca.rpnrt&. Adult..~. "" per.. DUPLEX-1 Br. Ir p I c Gener1I · S250-3 Bl", l~ ba. 0-'o GXROEN DVTNG Sl7.!i/mo. ITI41 2424.W1. hf-•m!, cpr~. p1111o, t iirtl t. ~..:.;;_.;.;... ______ iVERY a.EAN 4 bedronm JC~. Fncd. Qult:t It, Pet. Quiet, aftrac. pleU1nl. Ulll B•lbol P•nlniule 1138/mn )Tl)' G!\r 111 vaiL rRE!: ftflnl&l Semee. 3 It 4 home ln r.ten dtl Mar tor oil. Avsn Sfpt. i...t • 11' tut. P'•·d. H••I·.• pool. I .,., Opi!'n HOU!I", 336 E. 2llth. bedroom home•. children A leue. FamUle• fl n Y · Atl 6 J'l.m. ~ 1 BR ~ S145/Mo. Ol.X. duplu J B.R 2 BA. yrly pe:11 OK, SW.:. and up. Po&H~•lon Aua. 1. Srn/MtJ. Newport a..ch .I.DUL 'ts 1811!. Ntw paint, dflls. erptJ. _ .. _,.._•~;.20~~~-----1 Brnker. 7682 Edinrtr, Hun. Call llJenl. ~141. 7¥1 W \Slh Sr., C.r.f. All 1ppl'1. S:,,._. _ _c9'_9 ___ • 3 BR, 2 BA. nr" drp1, tin.aton Stach, 3 BR • Oen. 2 &. dbl 1•r. J SR. 2 bA hou•e on ~•ch Corona del M•r c r r T ~. B t ! n s P ~ r ! n. GOV 'T RJ:POSSESSION'. 11lw lncrl. di!J)')f.lll, f'le(' door \'4t&r a.round 1t1rtlni; Aua: * RE'OEC. Lrz l BR. Cf'n-J lt;.'i/mn f; 4 ~ -4kJT or dn. A}luml! k>"' inf ll'Mln. oj')l"ntr 2.t'M Collrte Or 1.11. "'•-8hl'r II d r .)'e r · tr11.l 1(')(';, Jl')'!IL carport. 3 AR. 3 011. hlhns. 3 yr nld. 5J,&..-0.~24 E111y qualify!rt1. Bk r . S2M mo. I.M. 833-l6U a.ft 6 ~S..-7!>84. •dlts/no pet.I. S~/mt'l. WI 1100 I! ]()\\'t r doplit-l unJt. 2 Br, P t Ba ~1ud10 Encl 642-4245 •nytiml'!. pm. BLUFrs -Bayv1ew {Br. 21, \V. H~rnilton. e 46 -'16 0 ' \V11!k !n bf'11 rh. &Mpp in.c. I pllll m Enl'l or r11l..t11'-\8( 2 Br. t"Omple!e\y tum, nr &AST •Ide CM·2 br, l~ ba Ba. t11.m are11, cu~tom 1,c"~""='7"'~--~~~~ achnn1 G1J. "''llltr. 111n1~n. l:l!I CAl'lril1<'1 li42-~13.i DtllN'y·1 Year19P\lfld ren· horn• 'J/llfl ya.rd . Crpt1. "ff!1t\U'f'•. Prlvacy PMI. Nr1HOUS!: Hunl1na:? Watch the 1n1 Cpl8/i11'(1$ mcJ Yr The l11N1;;r-tiraw in tht-w"Mt t.al Util pd, $22Z1 mo. drpl. bltn1. Children ok, l'IO lcltl. SJ9b, L.16-5297 orj Strv\~ OIN't:tory. Chf-rk It Le1u '300/mo 50!! Acacia. 1 Dally Plln! Cl11sslf1M ~"7~""1-.-.. --. .... "-Vl!'g,., .i. ~e~. ~~·= --· 1.~·~w~. '"'"""-· ~'T'~:l~~!"'!"~~"!'~ .. ~-c:-:... '--'':.:'"°":.' .;•=L-=•:::•::"'::~~~""·""'-=-"' •.Ad.:..~~a-.,,,.... ""'[ ·-· , , ; )k. , ' / DAii. Y I'll.OT 3.J [·--........ i ~ ! .... ----1~ ~ ! -·'·-1~ ! -Pl!' -I~!" ,... , llj] I ....... _ f!SJ ==: .. ·-~~ ,________ M ~· Afite., l•R-------1 ~----,;;;,;; .. 11 ~P;.;_;;_;~--;:;~ ... ~1 ....... 11_ .. , ... ;;;;;., ... Apt. Unfurn, 3'S Apt. Unfurn, --Purn. or Unfurns 370 ooms ...... _ ltonto -·--~ -lnltructtono m Costa Me1a ~-\---rt-:-:Bo:-o-eh:---·i ,,!:!;:~~;!!!~:_:~/i115i5P'PERER";,..;t;;:,.~,.,,.;;;i,;'.'.il30ii Sl'OJ\E...l.rx41'.+1 loc, 11'13JAXON' lbe ~ • Mi ~Whl\lt German ---=."'-='••c=n-:-:• .. "a=---1 Costa Mesa --------·I Huntington Be.tch WHlt up. apta. MOTEL * Barber, atr-e. tm. Mon. hour~ mq1e t:ir c:b.lldftnl Sbephml. MS.2i87. ~ ~ * 2 BR. "-· bltno, cyta, e NOW OPEN e ~:::~:::::::::f'l_"8~·"l6~=· -=~==:_-: IM. Qulnt...i tGaL • -~ -1'0UNl>""'" ltr eat Jn !LB. Bqlnn1nr and ·-· 2 v. ORLEANS APTS. ~~v~:-J:i.mo. 568 »m Santa Ana A\'e. Spao-.QN BEACH'. l BR full 1>a ~ clolet pvt wt SHOWROOM: mf.a. a ottict ~&. ~ ~.G~~ ADULTS ONLY 3Br,2 B1 $1 65 ~!!~:~:~: Nl:WAPI'S ~l~~:l:lD~ bay ;;,~i:_i:r:.,1oc·1 L.Ollt ... ,.... 1rm "'L-..,".7"-------w= :.~. ~ OI 2 &. 3 BR. Avail. Pri\'ate pa-1028 v..iencia. 646-2547 J.ltd poot <Acrou trom S.A. II F $227 . .L:i.J D~ rict o f ...::.:....,=-"=.,.,,=="""-'' tlo, pool-lndtv. laundry tac. 1----------COUntry Cub), Jlro. :ieil-OZU 1 P. ' rom ROOM ln ex~ 1ar )'ard P&Warlno 6 Babb St c.J4. PIANO LESSONS (Ni OrangeCo.Airport;Tus-1 BR. w/w, patio, pr at-lBR From S242 work.NearO.C.C. 1 I~ 1 feoWt yellow' l a 'b Bet1nnen learn ba•lctl tin at 17th St; nr. Wtalcli!I ). tachrd, 1 adH. l smI child SEACUFF Manor Apb. 1 3 BR From $375 549-lMS lt.talrt ~ Found (f,.. HJ) 550 tttnwer name "'Sllcred" 1 theory, 11,lht-raidJns, etc. ok. $132/nio yrly, &1~:11. BR. & Bachelor a.pt. Crl>t1, Furniture Available MEN _M,., 2 alee ,_ , . _1_ • ' Cd llnlct ~11 aftll' t drp1, bltnl, 1:arb d.llpolal, Carptota-dn.pea-dlshwa.sbu ........,., p..,. nn.t. SMALL lf't'1 JJ;OOdlt, nd cm. .. _ 1*dt: lab tetriewr, 1741 T\lrtin, Collta MtM ~fgr. Mn. 11'1omp110n 642-46'1 NEWLY dtt. 3 Bt lndscp'd, 1% Ba.. Pvt patio. 1525 heated poci-aunu-tennis $60. mo. Be~h. .. , ldL IM).. ler at w.trnlmter aod nun. •'Prof!t.M ... Both pup. Jp~.m,~~~~~~~~~ fncd yard. drps, patio. $200 Placentia Ave. A!k about rec room-<>Cfflt view,. 548-6986 aft... lnchntrlal Rental CSO Broad St Newport HstL ,._ unckr t mo'•. Ple&M ; 675-1827, 673-6267. our disl-ount. 5'1.g...,2632, patx.-ample pa.rkin& Summer R i5n t •I• 420 * COSTA MESA* 5"U171from1~:30 PM. call ~...icsa. Rtwatd. r I HARBOR GREENS LARGE ipacioua 2 BR. Near "N"'PT=-"i."1_..w=1r"'rm=1-c,c;,/p=ier Stturlty gUU'd.1. $95. & $167 per month. BL.ACX L&b mh. i:mle, M REWARD b return ol l'.h'Y ~;-;;;;;;_.;;_;;;;:;;~I alL Ctpts, Drps, Stove .I: fioat. J BR/2 Ba, trpl, HUNTINGTON LA GUNA Beach tor rent Indumtal. units, fftdy tor moc1., 4ta oollt.r, vtc. Pu-. Motorola2-wayndio,otlato GARDEN • STUDIO APJ'S refrig. Sl35 mo. 673-8l45. sundeck. $375 yrly lie. PACIFIC Aug. ?.1agnilicenlly turn. lie occup&ncy. Uf>.220 Power Point. 3380) Coppd' IA& rt mtua or wbtn.bouta. Bach. l, 2• l BR'i. from $110. $16:)...ADULTS only, quiet 2 67~7672. t-.lediterranean styl• villa * C. NA1TRESS RLTR * ta'n, DP. Lott abt l/lOm, vk Udo Auto Wax ing ~eterson \Vay, C.M. Br, J ~ Ba. GE kit, 2 car ="=,E=sr=cu==F=F~,-=BR".-cAc;dccul;;-1':1 711 OCEAN AVE .. Jl.B. w/lush garden on ocean-230 E. 17th, C.M. ' FOUND 718, Jp male Naclr: ShJpyard. Contact, Dt.vid Sk W sh NW gar. 240 E. 16th Pl. 54s..&432. only, no pets. $l80/mo. 1728 CTI4) 536-1487 front. Superb c:outal vleWI 6f2..1485 I.: brown SMpbttd/C.ol.Ue O'oeby t:/'O Alan D Croll "t9rt • ax * NICE * Bclford Ln. s.is-m.t Ofc open 10 am-6 pm Daily w ~ balconles overlooldna: M-l UM sq, fl new bldg dog. Will Ow away Uno( 213 m..1oco. NO ·Qm:s'. Compactm fl.ZS Standatdl z Br. crpU, drps, balcony, Dana Point ""=~~~~--o=· I WllLIAM WALTERS CO. pnvate beach & oettntront w/otllce 1_ rt'l.t door 1787 cialmed. ~xn. TIONS ASKED! $9.25 Quid&: Snv, Campeirt; locked gar_ Nr bus & thr-· ---------3 BR/2 BA, bltns, aundeck, I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! salt \\'B.ler pool. Sleeps 8 to ' ,..., • • Mobile .erv. &\Id. Your atre. AdJls, no pet.s. Avatl UNJo1JRN 2 Br, 2 Ba apt. steps to beach or bay. $2S5 P~klike Be&eh Livin&; lO. ~lodetn kitchen I: a~ Whlttier St. CM. Abo 1240 LABRADOR retrliew:r dog, LOSr: Bklrld .\1.sh&n, black home or pk.Jr up. ~ now. Sl4.5/mQ. 645.JSlS l..i:l~ly view. Near Da.ne. mo. yearly. Rers. 66-1878. for Adull!'l plitncea. For the b'\111 Lotan St. CM, 1500 aq. ft rem, abt t yrs. W: Lacuna mult, I mo'a. Vie: Ankbtlm C1an-up A res. matnt, BEAUTIFUL z Br, IY.a Ba !:'...~19. f\farina. $190/mo. BAYFRONT APTS. 2-3 hr. Casa Del Sol aesthete. $2100. 4M-3.U'.l. !:.'r;~~ 646-5033. ~:1' Lquna. B ch. ~~KEN o ~ 1..c°""""':..=.==-------I Studio, ne1v crpts & paint.I----------crpls. drape!: & ref. $290. & l & 2 BR-fum/unl. Pvt pa· OCEANFRONT, luxuriowly M-l ZONED .(Htg Bcb) Of-• . JtETURN. 1 ·8·5613, B•bytlttlnt1 Drp!:". hltns, c arp or t . E•st Bluff up, agt. 646--0732· tio tri>lc in 2 BR, elevators, tum. 3 BR home -'Nllter on rice torqe tncd. yard FND: Vic: Adam.1 A -.'1290. _...;._.,.,;:;... __ * ___ I SlG0/1110, No petA-1 child ---------dshwshrs, crpts, drpa. Pel! 31id~! AvallablenowthrU Ide~ :or c~ntractor . Magnoli&,Gtrm.Shep..pup. * * ok. 998 El Camino, ~1. S•n Cl•m•nt• accepted. From $145. Aug., week or month. 14fr2l69 Ql' &C-l4l5. • Pl.I e&ll • ktenttt,y 536-tTIO. GREY P.ralan, neut~ kit· JGMph e QUIET!! e NEWPORT BEACH 2 BR. Avenida Rosa 21661 Brookhunt St, HB. 494--1989 or ne 499-3736. RENT M 1 1125 f 35 f'OUND-f1utr:y sreY lrltten ~·.~:;::;t~a~o!:~ 724~en It 2 Br, drps. new crpt'~. Baker Villa Granade Apts. Sar aemente 492-5413 * {TI41 962-6653 * * BALBOA I S LAND A · U A ~ t, ~ at Buttder'• Emporium. ~· R d umm &. !{arbor sllop'g. Locked ~~ura~~1;!~c!:1C: =:...::===---::C...'--l-N----9-_-h ___ J.IOTEL. kApts-Rooms. Byh ~/In va No UJ' 7 · Cfl.I 17thst,C.M.tf5..2933. 673--QIS2.• pet. •wa r ' y~~":.~et gar. Adults, no pets. $145/ "" -Santa Ana ewport ut1ac Day/\Vee or Mont • G75-5tls · ' · · GREY A whiflt tipr klttim mo. 615-3515 or 644·0753. llvine & quiet alUTOltndiJli 675-3613. · '-5 REWARD-I yr old male 2 licnu to tb9 1~-~=~=~~~1 for tamily with izblldrrn. RESORT LIVING *$65 WEE!<&. UP. STEPS 2880 SQ. ft. commen:lal bldg fi~· 'ric: 27111 s t. N.B. dark ttrlped cat w/wht H Soutt.IG•~,-- • REGENCY • N""' O>r<ma dd Mar High CAN'T BE BEAT '°' ''""'· C.M. M-t ''"""· . pow A <heol. No rollar. omo & .,_ NMAC, 2 BR, 1 Ba. Shag School. Flttplace, wet bar a: LulCW')' apt living w/ $1 mil· TO BEAOI. t t C-2 543-556:9 Young bllc A wht cM named :1 H>-9928. Show crpt'g, sell clean. ga.s oven, built.in kitchen appliances. SINGLE STORY lion recreation .•. sMmming. 645-4£3 nex 0 ' · J05h Lquna Nlzitd. Mlatnc wkl. at the dshwhr, encl pr patio. 377 83.5 AMlGOS WAY 644-2991 South Sea Atmolphue tennis, billiards, sand vol· NEWPORT on the beach. Ju. Rent•l1 W•nted 460 ~. LOST: Rlttenha.t11en fl ute, ANAHEIM W. Wilson. Coldwell, Banker Ir Co. 2 BR. _ 2 BATII lcvball, health clubs, saunM, ly 31·Aug. 14; Sept. 4-11. BUS Exec w/wife & 3 SMAU. Mrlte cat w/plnk I: ~ J::·u. ~ ~ CONVENTION Call 548-3605 Manazinz Agent SU-5221 Carpeta & dJpl clubholUe, party room, res· l...ge. Attr. 646-4833. chldrn, need 3-4 br hse or whl.tto !let. collar, 16-llOT, re~-Dennil 2U/379--l061. CENTER 3 BR, 2 Ba. deluxe, Bltns. Huntington Beach Air Conditioned ide tennis pro~ pro shop BY BAY, 2 br, furn cottage. condo. in Cdi.\t or Bluffs, Newport Bea.ch. '~=~~~-~~~-Jld.y 30-AU&-I Shl\g w/w cpl. drps, trplc, Private Patios ~ B~c~=~~~eit;nt~ $75 wk. ll2 \Y. Pacific Coast 9/1171, SJOO.S400 (w/siip il FOUND-Halt Jdtten, LOsr SUnda.y, lftYiih bll' P1eue call, 60-!1871. at Dt patio, gar. Like new. *KIDS WELCOME HEATED POOL 1 SlJ5 N I rt· llwy, D8, N.B. 642-7658 po$S!bl'l "°Un. yr Ile . lftY w/bl6dc ';' Rrlpn haired tom m.t, Paularlno betwttn t am t pm to 962--4180. ?i10VE IN TODAY. Aftrac. Plenty of lawn .::~. M~><ie1~ ~u~aily 2 Bdrm near Balboa, OCl!&n 644-5215 l-whit.ffff. S41-9731. School a.rtt. N. C.M . da1m )'O'Jr ttdDrta. (Ntwih * $1 70 * 'l:ive 2 BR APT. $159. ALL Carport ll Storage lO to 8_ & bay. A·;3\J by \\'k or STEADY employed female FOUND H T9ddy Bear ~. OJunf:3' tcn~tne munber ii J Br, lV.. Ba, patio bltn11, EXTRAS. POOL. Pets ok, HIDDEN VILLAGE month. 6'1S-5810. needs 1 BR house or apt, ... St In~ dol M ' WHITE~ pop, 4 rno'l 540-lZJO). I d A k bo, 1-A K~.0 .. • -<>4"-= 2500 South Salta S H BAY CLUB c M 0• Na ·-• w kl . ""'--. v . old, p4.nk ccUar. Di1ea.se in * * * crp s, rps, 1 a ~ our '"" .. -= " ... ,, ~ <."n-ta •-· • 546-1525 OUT 2 BR cottage, S70/wk, \Vest " · • · ..... ' ou m-n88 h -~ ~~nt. discount plan, 880 Center or ~7510 ~· ....,,... (just for tingle people) c.~1. No peta, Deposit req. like small )09.rd or patio.I"'=;;-:·==:--::-:.,-,,.-~(. •i=u" .. ~....... COSTA MESA St .• C~l. 642-8340 _K_m_s-.-.,-,ro-m-,-.. -A-rt_ra_o_2_B_'· ~'""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""I Nelvport Beach 54.5-4:i36 r.ta.x. S90 mo. Good rt't'11 GIRLS pmda.nt watdt. Vk: PRE·SCHOOL avail. Please call 540-8308 Beach Blvd in H .B. , ,.._. A'~-•-I• -•-·~ 2 BR, cpts, drps, bltns, encl $159. Pool. All extras. 17362-3 Heated pools Irvine & 16th. 645--0550 2 Br nr Bay &. Clubhouse. .....,..,.: u-...:, m..,,.., ,.... ~ &umner Pncrta gar. Sl4:J. Adults, no pets. A Kce\son Ln. 84U235, Large Clubhouse etc. BBQ Lido Isle, $l SOt wk. COUPLE w/ 3 chldrn desirel.,,, .... =1621""'·--,.--,~--,-It ~*~ * * 18lt •Monrovia.~ dey + Avail Bil. 2916 Peppertree _968-'='--"~'~'·----~-,I Child Care Center OAKWOOD GARDEN $48S/mo. Call fi73-7l85. to manag~ apt units. 2 yn F'OUND a b:>)'ll bike in I ~=,,,.-,-...,--,,....,.-,-, tuJ1 day~ P1anmd Ln Apt D, or call aft 6 pm. I.GE 2 br, 2 ha studio apt Great new 1, 2 & 3 Bdrms APARTMENTS 1-'==.:...cc....-----1 exp. Ref'L Call anyti.me, Newport Beat:b call to kfen-LOSl'-&n female Sel.lpoint pI'Op'aM. bot lunchea.. .A,. & \\·eekends. 557-7407, w/patJo & yard all bltns, SOUTH COAST (resort living for adults) Rentals to Sher•. 430 64Z.7958. tlly Ml-6091. ~~Balboa Blvd .I: U , bn: fi :30 AM • 8 PM. "GABLES" &: "SEVELLE" lndry !acil. Vic' Warner & VILLAS ~ Newport Beach 3 BR, on or nea.r beach. CdM FND: Rabbit. Vic: Jaarntt., AV'OOldo. 8'15-2«i9. $18 wlc.COMPAR!:I ~ 2 BR, l~~ BA w/gar, Adults. Beach Blvd, $150. 842-4549 UOl MacArthur Blvd. 16th & Irvine 6tl-8170 io San Clemente area. CdM. 1n& 6n-GM. LIBERAL reward fiot' Jae VACATION MOTHER Crtps, rlrpi;, bit-In~. fenced BEACHBLUFF APTS. l---~546-c._88_23___ e NICE e RENTAL TO SHARE? Year'a leue. A dult1 . HOUSE Hunttrwf Watch tbs Nack male cat bit vie. So. Will take care ot )'OUr yd w/paUo. 636-4120. 2 & 3 BR, 2 BA, pool, patio, The morl beautilul view or NE E~a Rao~~~~? 836-4323. OPEN HOUSE eolamn. Bay Club, N.11. 543-9138. childftn in )'Olli' home wbDe 2437 Drane I"o. C SlS5 dw. Nr ihopping. &47·3957. Ap:~;n. or Unfur n. 370 the bay & ocean In the W h 1 YOU GARAGE wanted by private )'Oii vaca t io n . Own ~19 Santa Ana Ave No. I $155 Habor area. 2 BR. 2 BA BE'A""'CoN' P* '45-0, tool !!I pa.rty tor &lor&gl! N.B., C.M. * ,I * * * * * car re 11 a b t .. ft1¥rentA1. 2 BR., nr. shop'g. Garage. .,.c """14 EAST Side 2 BR, retri ... , G-e•al apt•, 1or lease. 642-2202 or Cdt-.1. 644--6692 1 .,,~.,.,,="·==_,.-..,..,-I " Newly decor. $135/alo. ""' stove, crpt!i, drp1, garage, Realonom!cs Bkr. fiT.>-6700 BABYSITTING my home, fenced yd. Mature adults. PALM MESA APTS I~ \VAiVfED-wor lting girl to 1~ anytim•. many yr1 axper. $14j. 642-5.531 Xlnt loc. 2 Br. Duplex. Near beach. • Rent111 ,. share apt ,.,./same in H.B. ~-·------··-....,. Trader's Parad"1se· Lovtna: can. Fncd yd, toys, 1--S~H~A~R=P~l~B~R~-$~1=3=5-I Crpt.s, drpi;, stove. No pets. [:miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii . Heated pool, aauna. rec rm, -. •• lunch. Rieu. Vict oria Bltru;, hid pool. Adlts. no SI4s. 536-3507. Bachelor unfurn ••· ... $135. elc. S9l mo, lncl utill~ ••••••••••II Harbclt area, C.M. MS-1413. 2 BR, 2 ba studio. Newly Bachelor turn ........ $16, Rooms 400 846--7930 or 636-1681. l"1nes DOOY-'G ., ~--pets. 149 E. Bay. &12-9520 · si•" a-nounc•m•nh 500 DnD .,. •••. ., • Y IIUIU9. dee, retrig, bit tn&, pvt pa· 1-BR unfurn •••••••••• ...,, RESPECTABLE working .~---------11 alildml under 4, Mea 1 BR, crpbl. stove, rttrlg. 110, nr bch. 847-8511. J-BR furn ... ••••• trom flS5-* * * \\'Oman wisheti to share * * * Vetde Le !enced • dshwshr. Adultll, no pets. I ~,c:::,B=R::...,:·1"'':::._"c;rn_o.;.. "'~=--.--.,.to 2-BR unfurn ••••••.•.• $160. Stev• J ennifer 't"1 mes ~, .... ~ 1 . 717 James. ,_ <llJ_ ~ ...., ~ fro si~ W lovely home w/Mme. All c~~~-iii;i;':-::::-==-;-=I <.c::...:==c.:~:.::..::::::... __ 1 ~ h N 1-BR turn ••• ..... m '"' •sserman .vil & . J • i-* *EXTRA lge 2 br, 2 ha, uocac. o pets. •POOL 16611 Nalu C ir. pn conven1enc a 1. ••sup BABYSIT my home, M .. crpt.<i & drps. t l55 mo. Sl76 * 53&-9942 * e SAUNA Huntington Beach 5301·9MS. ~~~:~:m.::~h dollars ddXln':Wpl•:, ::"dlle, ;,.. -... -~· ?lfl..sslon or 646-8139. 2 BR. $140. 842·8365 • JACUZZI You are the winner ot H NEST, emplyd man lfll' ... ~ ......,_ ---------·I 1561 Meo Dr. Santa Ana 2 tickets to the lux 11.B. apl w I•• m • You are the winner ol Cerl teacher, reb. Mt-mJll. 2 BR, Crpts, completely Lanuna S.ach Southland (30-60) 10 min bcb. Ph. 2 tk:keta to the BABY.,...,....."'G 24 .. _ all draped, bltns, dhihwasher, • Balbo• s.0 Club Southland "" ••• '"" Ho m. & G.'d.n Johnnie 962-4477 dys. ..,, Blr " •--~ •0 -• xlnt location, 646-5291 BAYFR NT H & G d ... ......~ --.;,. NEAR BEAOl·New l .I: 2 Show SH.ARE-CDt-.f home w/work· om• •r en * * 20 Unit ~onal Have 39 units near Dimey. yard &U.156'J. LRG 1 &. 2 BR. apts. Lndry BR., l \!i ba, pool. Adults, No TERRACE APART. at tht< ing ,11mrwi. Reuo~hle, Show Bldg. wU1 accept Ttuat land. 6 X Grou. $6.5. mo. or $18. wk. Baby or rm & POOL. Clos' to 1tores pel s. l.se. 2175 s, coar.Hwy. l BR unfurn or turn. f~ly ANAHEIM owner ha.I her RP. room. at the Dttda or rr to M'llt' Jo.n. ~ ~ child can. 1..ovtly Ia. dun & OCC. From $135 to $155. 4!M-448t or 528.-6743. equlp. Sub-ilcaae Sept. 15 CONVENTION 675-0621. ANAHEIM Broker. ora .._ .......... ,.,.,. ...,...,. Ask about d iscount. 1846 Period flexible can Mr,. 1---------CONVENTION &16-2460 Rea.Iton 815-3800 ,...,.,,..., -.-. ~·-I Lido Isle , -ml CENTER BEACH front, far out 2 GOOD ..,. Ba'--'tter _., P acentia, r-..tgr. Ap t. H., Halmos ot Mn1 ...... em e Jul ,. A g CENTER \Vill tn,-1-"'?,000 .. in la• 4 OR 8 Uolta. Xlnl income. • «"..., .,,.. ' •-v C'L "' ow "" ~1 1 m Y ...,.. ug. bdrm., 2 ba., turn. home, Jul "" -.-h<>tne or ......... a.ft or ...._ !---~---·-----I SPACIOU S, lovely 2nd floor lllt ......,.._, ·eave essa.ge, Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 pvt. room and ba. C>w?wr Y ...,-Au11. I new hame on (Olf cour1e Trade equil;y fol' 2 BR. 2 BA can Mo .,..._~IL SPAC. 2 Br a pts. $140, Jltd apt 3 br, 2 ba, bltns, Costa Mes• betwf!('n 51 and 1 pm to travels, John 536-7757. PleMe e&ll M2-5678, t?X"_ 314 In Granada HW. tor C.M. mobile home, ot 3 BR rpn, Pool. Play yd. Cpts, drps. dshv,.shr & retrig. Crpld, claim )'Ollr tickets. <N"".h SINGLE girl \l,'i.Jl(ed to lhatt betWHn 51 and 1 pm to borne or J'ffltal prop. Lany home. WW take 2nd TD to BABYSITTING my bamit, Bl!ns, patio. Kids ok. drpd. 2-car garage. $.t75 on AMAZING Adult LI vi n g County foll.free number is apt w/wne. Ctll art 5, claim your ticltril, (North Kttlln 54&-M.'D. adj eqty. !16l-4219. lrg !ncd yd, hot maJa. c1Q< ,!??8 Maple No. 1 548-7660 lse. SlJo11,'Jl by a Pp t. Beaut. J .Ir: 2 BR furn or unf MQ..1220) ·~-,_.,.,.,o ~~~,toll-free number ti '68 Ford HO\lle'CE', aeU<:0~ WORTH $17,9!50. • mutt A nlte. 60-5299 • .,.,4 Coll N 6 646-Xl87 Apts. SeU <'lean. oven•, .J.:J ~ ,,_..._,, I S. I ''<WCm;;'"';',...',-·o;;o-::::;;-l-'"''.:4-::.'.:204'.:5'.:. ______ .I D/W ('• 2 B•) d~t,, 51.nn * * * •=~"-'------* * * tamed. dual wheell, radio, ocean view lot· for trust Busneu rYC9 "I~· u• • ·~.-·-. . . SHARE my \\'alertronl home ,;f~lACULATE l BR. cpts, Mesa Verde cpts, drps, jacuzzi .fl aauna ROO:'I[ in .pnvatc hon1e \\'J!h \\'/dock. l'tfan, 30-.fiQ yeara. TV, •tereo. valu. $«ll0. deed1, auto or what e•er'• TYPING my home Hda drps, b!lnB. Quiet 4-plex. Nr baths. Huge pool. house pnv!leges near OCC. $l50/mo. 675-;l3l. Swap for belt saJ.lboat offer falr. 1167 Aviemore Terr. Belch '&reL ra~ com- fryws. No pels. 1.1gr, 2S6S DL'\: 2 & 3 BR, 2 Ba, encl Mar r lmac Woods $15 \\'k. Female only. eau r..:c==-'-c...:=:____ II') or??? 8J3.2£1)3, Quint.a.rd Realty, 642·:1992. m~nsurate w/job 968-4755. LaSalle, Apt J, C l't1 . gl\r, $150 & up. R'ntal Ole: 42j ~lerrimac Way, C.~f. eve.11. ~7285 NEAT, clean roommate to Ptnontla . TRADE EXTRA nke tam-Oceanfront • W. of Pier in ;)49-3524. 3093 !I.lace Ave. 546-1034. For best results! fi.42.M78 Call 642-5678 No\\·! :~281~ Beach hBe-tly home, professionally Ind-N.B. ok -Home pride of C•rpet Servic• 2 Bedroon1, 2 bath, acros~ the llCPd, be1ut shade tr'ffs in ownenhlp &Jilli with deluxe JOHN'S carper .1: U~tilr7 street from park, garage. Newport B•ach Apts., Aph.. ,70 Garages for Rent 43.5 Auto t r•nsportatlon 525 c.~f. FOR 11ma11 t.ou. 1n owtWr unit. Owe $44 G. CluDen. Extra Dr1 • Furn. o r Unf urn. 370 Furn. or U nfum. • Built ins, SIS5 per mo. * Steps to Beach * ---------...,.,---::-.-:----1sroRAGE gafage downto1vn CAR Pool · Nl\'Pl~ntwn LA, N.B, :li7-8J3l. Ches. Quintard &42-29'92. St.ampoo frN Sootchiuml i'i7-lm4 Mr. De flTar. 2 BR. 2 ba., bltm. Ocean Newport Beach Newport Beach Costa Men, $20. per mo. oJf!ee hrs, 1ummer, 7 2 Aa"ff, Bet Afr ott Mui· Mqnitlcent ocean ~ lot {So 11 1t et a rd an t I )· * 2 BR, l BA. GARDJ:.~ \'lrw. AduJt11 only. t'o pets. 642-4228. a m-4:30; WJnt,r, 7 am -fj OOlland Dr. VaJue $30,0CO; nr. ?11arlne\and, PalOl D'!greuen 6 e.11 coJor- Unlfs. Shag crplg, drps, Yrly S27:i. Avail. 0011'! ••" pm any or all d•v.e:. eq. clear. Want Newport q1r Verdes. Want houw, du~,•x hrlrhtenen • 10 minute Office R ental ...., ~ "" 1 b hJ dwhr, patio, beam ceilings, * + + .. * TA 11'1:' rrOFF! 646-8280. Laguna. N'pt. to Sa.n Clemente Rieb beac for w te carpetl. frplc, gar. 2650 Elden.:\ BR. 2 ba .. bltns. Childn-n I~ . • 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM Personal• SlO Apnt 213: 'ftS.99S8 Irwln IUtr675-6060. Save)'OW'moneyby •vin1 537-3125. $163/r>IO. \\~lcome. $JOO Yearly. Avail· OFF }'rom 300 sq/rt. 35c IQ. fl. l'hi acre Spngue River, Or· Belut. rust blt Buccol.a hm, me extn trips. Will d e.ui SHADY GARDENS-POOL able now~ TAKE IT.Al I ! 67~2464 nr 541-5032 ECONOMY IN EN· tfOt\ kJt. Beaut entry-side. 4 BR. l\.ii yr old, prop. d r. llvifV rm clinlng rm A hall l & 2 BR .. furn. & unfu1·11, Call: 673-3663 642·2253 Ews. e Xi.NT OFFICE SPACE TE RT A IN MEN T??? ~ arnog I: few people. $1500 LoQi at xtras . for com'l lnc, $1S, Any rm $7.SO,. coucll Fn'.ln1 $130. NASSAU now avaU. Lido Bldg, 3355 FREE THRIU.S, CHILLS, eq 1or jewelry car boat, b:. or Palm Sprlnp Rltr $10, Cl.it $S. 15 1fL exp. la: PAL:\fS. 2 children ok. /ia Lido, N.B. G73-450l. FRIDAY NIGHT AT 8 PM., antiques or aub:nlt! ~ MII-0588 anytime 673-6534. what count1, not metbod. l 177 E. 22nd St. 642-Jfi.43 ALONG WITH FREE PRO-do work myM!l. C..ood n1 DESK space available S50 GRAMS AND FREE Want 14 to 24 unlta • Have Aet'l!an HUh home, 3 br, 2 531--0101. DELUXE 2 Br/11) Ba. cpts, mo. Will provide furniture p ARKING AT TifE P!.000. eq. in 2 hodfel, r .v. be., 1am nn, fenced cor. lot. '-=-,.,...,""""',......,...,o= .. ..,..,.,,lttr-1 drp11, llove, d~hwhr, gar. at SS mo. Amwerlng •rvlce ORANGE co UN Ty .Ir: 1\ll't1n, mall proe:pectus l ,600 9q" ft. $10,000 equity. Avg size room $8 Sm! chnd ok. Av'l 8/1. Sl55. PARK NEWPORT available. 222 Forest Ave, SPEEDWAY MC7I'ORCY· to Owin: Quintard, 18Tl Tr.b'houRLquna.CdM, Repairlnc I: INtUl.ttlom 64Z.7958 APARTMENTS Laguna Beach. 494-9466 CLE RACES JN COSTA Harbor 81., C.M. lrvir». Nwp•t areJ, ~ Free Elt. "5-lllT l BR, 2~1: ba 1tud io, C'prg, Bachelor, 1 or 2 Bedrooms, LUXURY OFFICE SUITE 1tfESA. P S: THERE IS BEAtrl'IFUL lot free A Have lot $3500. Trade tor Ca......,ter dri>i, bJtru. $190/mo, No Md Townhou~. Spa, pool!, Finest view o1 harbor .l SLIGHT OIARGE OF $2.SO deer. Blc U.ar-Whiwp•rlrc hol,., to approx $30,000. _:.::::.::...-------1 pets. 998 E. C am i no · tennis. From $175. Acrou QCellJ'i in Newport. Vr:ry at-PER ADULT TO GAIN EN· Forest, All utjli'!es tn W.Gm '11'9 Doyle CA9tPINTRY 546-0451. Jrom Fuhlon Island a t Jam. tractive rental on iub-leue. TRANCE TO srADfUM. value for mbln cnmrr, eom119ny MINOR REPAIRS. No Job REDECORATED, lrg 2 br. bort'e .l San Joaquin Hill1 We're stuck! 67>7'40 SIGNED: HARRY OXLEY. TD'a or 1'1' ~. Eves: 838-6341 Tao Small. Cdb»t .ta _.. rl('\v cpts, dps, bltns, child .:::Ro::'=':...· .:.<11::<,::l,.:644-""1~000,:,::.·==-DESK space available $50 •FULLY LICENSED* HAVE '31,000 2nd TnJllt HAVE IUX>. equity in Jot qes 6 other calltMta,. OK, SlSO. 7616 Shal imar MARINER SQUARE mo. Will provide furniture Remwned Hindu Spiritualist Deed mi Sari Oemmt.e lft6 1n OllU. Qty. 1"rlde f'6 56-1175 tt no &nlWW ..... MZ.illi APARTMENTS •t SS mo. An!werin& ~ Advice on all matters. come-WANT blqr, duJlln. M1t trdtr, truck, car, tra.. iD11o at l6a72. B. 0. * BEAUTJF1JL l h 2 BR. 2 & J BR Unlhol now available availabl@.17815 Beach Blvd. Lov,, Marrlap, Blaine• trlpZex in Ceron& M Mu. 'f'll trtr or r Mcwlna! °"Atldenon.="'""'~-=-~_,,-_,,1 Contemporary Garden Apt11, for adults de11irlng to Uve Hunttnrton Beach. 642.-4321 Readtna:1 elven T days a MATCHAM JU.TY M-4131 -.m. ANY,., )lb. Jtetld., Onm.1, Patios. fr p I cs , pool. 8drnid.11I beauty by the .ea PROE"ESSIONAL Bldg. t5c week, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Have 3 d~ (4 llR • NB vacant 2 sty 3 BR ~ Indus., Aptl. All type. $150-$165. Call ~5163. in the prestiglous Westdltt sq ft. Air-<'Ond, crpts, drpl, ll2 N. El Camlno Rea.I. 1 BR) Corona del Md, BA, bttnl, new erpt,. Eq wc:n. Rea, 1'rff fft. NICE unturn 2 Br. apt. area. gd parking. Xlnt loc 350 E. San Oemente $40,000 e q u It y, .,..,_ SlJ,tlXI. tor TD'1, lot, amt ~00. POOL.008eto•hop'11.Sl .. 5. FROM $230 17th St. C.M. PETE BAR-492-9136, 492.-0070 $190.000. We t 30 to ..0 hOlne C.M. Lachenrnye:rl A,;Tr='.:.,..:=,.-:,,.=mes"n"°"'•"H;::ome:::I 313 E. 17th PL No. B. Mr. Buckley. Manager REIT RLTY 642-435.1 EXPERIENCED unttJ:. Pm-on R!tJ tu-tm. JUtr Ml-Jl:Zl/Eve QT.'FS75. ownm. eu,.try, pain- "'" ""· 124-1 Irvine Ave, N.B. DESK a-ce available '""' House-.ltters avan '"-... A By .. -~ .,.,,,........,,... .... .-. wn1 -.. ·-~ ~~ WW ~ __ ... TD'• ...... ~ ... ... ,,... Call 645.0252 mo, Will provide f\lrnlture Protect YoUI' home .I: prop. ..... uv•ni• ~ -~ ~ LRG. quiet. 2 Br, 2 Bl. Pool. 1 -~P~A~R~K~N=E"W"P"O"'R"'T;;-Compl«efy outfitted pm• BUll1rds room • Large adlvi-at SS mo. Anrwsrtna IG'Vice Curftnt local ref'• Olurrtr>' aub aolf mem~ at mafttt vatu. with re-I .;'"""";;:;;;;::T·,.-,,,--,..,-=,,...I $145, il'lclds utlt Also 1 Br, tin room for Olndng, Card Pllylng. P1rtiet •Olympic available. 305 NQ. r: 1 (for tx..rd onl.y), llhlp IOI" late modd •Uon ooun. .. dmrn Clt'I prime THINGS b)' Jiloolt.. Lt. f'lect., Sl 10. Adult.s over 3 5. APARTMENTS air• pool • One and rwo bedroom apartm•nll, with Cam 1n0 R • • 1, 5 an 545-3315 "'a.gOl'I, sports car, Roll• antt. nr F'crum tn. lnale--plumb. t.nce • tile • Imttna. , .:.""'::...:"°c;::':..· ~=~~-_,.1 s.chelor, 1 or 2 Bedrooms. rtftlJl!ll lor1 bullt·ln r~nge, OYen, end dishwas her • Clemente m-.4CZ ~ 646-se'/O. MICd. C.Q, 6'2-199'l. CarpeM17 _ p&lnt lltC. •· and TownhOU8e1. Spa, pools. 'rMlte-view patlot •nd b1lconles adjoin e1ch •1Mttmenr · S IN G LE S . Don't bt · 5C5-0GO. ** STUNNING Garden •r>t, n75 A • C.rports next to eYt!t'f .iip1r1men1.• f rom $155 * NEWP.ORT BEACH * lonely-dance leNOnl, no Corner oce:an vlf'W Im. Van. J mt. C2 aw. Mq *"·•I ,::F.:,;;;:i;;;;:;-';::-;::::;-::::;-1 t Br, PQO~recrn.Uon room. tcnni!i. From · cross l/lda c\el u---A --.~-a.-A--from 0Ylc Center. _.,._._ "'"4 ...... , ... 6 ·-Co, l ~-., t....o. Trade Nv, nr """-Mall , SZl.SOO. CARPENTJ\Y by local man. Sl"' from Fashion lsland at Jam. ..l"MIBG ftR1·1fUIUI'"° .... ~ ..,..., ....... .,.,.....-..,.,. ..... ,..... ..,... .... ~.. .,_ -11 Sl<t>. Gl5-'"10 Fttm, · "°'" • s.n JooqWn Iii!~ r~ Ai..-Opt'r-P<k'r . »> to pm. on """""' l*Oj)ttt; -in· dr, ti< tto. or ""1>kX "' ell ldlltle, ,_ ••I., - 2 BR. bltl"ll!, S~. mo. RMd~. ITI4\ &t:4-l900. fOJl IEAUTlfUL PfOPU 1000 aq. fl 35c. PREGNANT? A doption ftT Ballxta It. du;pkc. etc. '80.0JO. mut attt. awrr/ 1 tw S:ao p.m., 5J&.l641. Carport. tmmfd occupancy.1..:.:="'-.:C.:.='=~-~"1 •=::::: DeeDH ..t; 67J..5882 ·,o...""'::""':....:..,.::..:295L='-----qt. 291.S La Ventana, s.c. EXPER. remod el ln1 • .. .., .,.,,.. BRF.AnITAKING V 1 E W abortion v aaectomy1• 981 Valtnci:I . .,......,...,,.. ST'ORE or offitt. Newport I: DDW1Hilit, • lnlorm&Uoa. .. * • * * • * HI.Te "SS MGB. cornpl ftt>lt, cabl:aittl. ftPl.)rl, ln&lnL No $115 rll.W 2 BR API'. sxro. Jt~ 2 BR apt. High on B&y Cult.er. W NtwpOl't MJ..443£. CHEVY Otprtoa CV, 2 dr, new tcp I: ~ roll bar. Job too maD. R•I•, '151 E. 2ltt St. Back &.Y Blutls w/2 pvt Blvd, CM. S2$' Utll pd. PHOTOGRAPH a bt&atffUl lolided, VfrY IOOd CCN.Udon 'J'rldl for ponr bolt. ~""!!'!::""'~:.,,,,,,__,,,,, __ , • ~ • bAICOnlH, frplc, he a tt.d ~=B~: M6-US2. model. Bonk'• Studio 1725 to trflde on heme • Sib. llllfl'OX 1r. Ceft'Mnt, c.ncre~• ./ 2 BR, 2 BA sruoro ~ pool, h..a or dolle!!. 745 ~ m 4> J.45-4MS Business R.ntal '4J w. o.pman, Oranat. ]...1 6C4lllO 6tl-9'rJ8 or ....,.. RESID. Coacnte Spedalim. ~· !:~ POOL.. l ~~i::· (C.D.l'tl.ll.S.) I Atk for Mr. and Ml'1. ATTRAC • •tore ' omc. pm. S'Jl-l le&. ~~~ ~:n. eo:; Tftde iecJUlb' kl C.1 ptopetb' !'1.thrr • lcn T e. m. Wllllim Nayes, Mal'\igcl'1 spaces $50 It up. Dwntwn 1.LCOHOLICS Anonymous, lG units or mon. Equtty "()rMp 1or late model E1 ~ ~· 2 BR w/carport, crpt..s, drps. * BRAND NEW * Menased by Sgn Juan Caplstn.no, nr Phone 50-1217 or wrltl $40,00) ~ ati:J. .t>r:ndla or Uncoln Coat'l. pvt pe.tio. No pet&. SJ40. f l:.S. 1 BR. f~c, Indoor/out Smi1hem Countin mlae:IQn, 49J.ll53. P.O. Bmc 1223 CMla Me1&. · ~T ~«0 IT'S Beaeti ._ tinM. Bi. 963-3-t6.i. kilchen, het!f.d ponl . (ACl"O&!I M1n1sement Company COSTA MESA, 991W19th st. MASSAGE • nlulq: ex-' lftt lltltc6on ncrt Set tht 2614 Santa. A~ Av~I hr, from S.A. Counll)' Oubl. l2?x90 C"Orner w/900 aq ft perlenctt 16#5 o Bola * * 1( * * * DAIL'! PU.O'I' 01•ie.d IAl'llft' .. Ref re<(d . Over 3l. Sc-e flf 20432 Santa Ana Ave. bldg. 6-t.Z.l400. l jCh~loa!_!M~~· .!:"!:!·B~._!~~!!!!!:_Jii!!!l!•iiiiil•••••lliill••lil•••!lli "~==.;-;;;,;;•;,, _____ . ft'lQuire l33:1 l!'Jd~l1. or call 5.i7-02ll. '· u:i::;::e -:r ---·-'~~, ... ----· I~ i»r ' ... . . ~ ': 34 DAILY PILOT ,. '" ;...: I . ' i '• .I SEE-~T FREE Everything for Your Home Only lflajor Flotver Sliow in Southern California This Year: Cement, Concrete General Services P1\TIO Specialists. Add I ·H_•_•_l_in_g;.... _____ _ distincticn to your ~me YARD. garagP, rlcanups. \\'Hh ll custon1 pal10 dcsig:l-Renio\le 1rct'5 dirt, J\'Y, ed especially for your home. ski p 1 0 ad e / b11ekll0l'. Qual ity. EX per i enc e. &fi-2666. ' Satisfaction, F.awn & Sons --,~~~--~- Consu·uclion. 5-ls--0769. I TRASH & Garage clf'an-up, l~C-,=~-~~.c.~~. cc-;; 7 days. SIO a load. Free cst. p,\TIOS. \\'alks. nr11·e, in,;tall Anytime. 548-5031. new la11•ns, sa\V, break, ~==,~---~--~ I'l,'!nni·e. 548-8668 for est. i\1.0VJNG, garage clean-up & llle hauling. Rt'ason.1ble CI::r.1~:NT \\'ORK, no JOI> too Free ('Stimates. 64:.--1602. ~inal!, 1<'risonablc. ~-re e Est1m. I!. Stuf.!1ck. 5•1S-861J. .-. -CONCR!!:TE. Floors. CLEANUP. garage & )ard, Lit<! hauling & gardening. * * Call 543.-9735 * * patbJS. clrivr~. !idew11lks. ---~-~----- Lic'd. Rr<is. Dor. &12-8;iJ4. Housecleaning QUALITY Cen1cnt \\'ork. Le t George do 1!. L i c 'd. bonderl. 645-l69l. Jiousec!eanlng By Day. Own Tran.~porlauon Ca11 836.rei!S Job Wanted, Male * * J, A. Sowell • 9844 Mariposa Fountain Valley You are the 1vu1ner of 2 t1rkt'tS to the Southland Home & G arden Show at lh•"? ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER JtJ!y 30-Aug. ! 700 Pl£>11~e call &12-:i578, ext. 31 4 bel\1'E'cn 9 and l pn1 to cJa.un your t1cket5. (Norlh County 1oll·irce number is 5-J(l.12'ltl) * * * CONCRETE \\'OR!.; No job too s1nalt 6·12--0178 J-~ree Est. i\!esa Cleaning Service Carpets, \Vlndows, Flcor etc. I 72cv0o=UN=•c~m-,-,-.-,c,-&~211-w-,u Resid. & Commc'l, 5-18-4111 do odd jobs. La\\·n \\.'Ork. Contractor Bay & Beach Janiltirial painting. etc. Reliable & ex· Crpts. \\·indows, noor:s etc. pcricnced. &12-0022, ask for ADDITIONS to ' Com ' I , I o-"-"'~· _&_Co_m_m_'I_. _ .... __ 140_!._I oB;;oo,;c~=o"'~Go'~'o'c· ~-=--,.~~I Con1plcte Service, plans, Ironing PROFESSIONAL Ba r!l'n<IC'r estimates. Joe Rowe. Gen. -----------available for home parties, C.Ontr. &t2-5!!1J7/646-9203. IRONil'\G done in my home 673-3657. $1.25 an hr I "J-bc-oW~-~-=--~=I r.1y \\'ay. quali!y home o anted, Female 702 * * 645--0826 * * repair. \Valls, ceiling, floors Io----------I----------- etc. No job loo small. Masonry OB-GYN s«y·rC'Ct'pL Bi· 5'17-00.'\6, 24 hT ans. sen•. •8-R-IC•K·.·, ~B·LO-CK-·&-S-T•O•N•E-lingual rSpanl Exp'd front & Additions * Rcmodehng HOUP.LY _ 642_19.t8. back offlet'. '1!)!}...'.l!K}I. ~· ~ 7 ~U~CONVENTION n ,-...; C"tmCENTER DOORS OPEN Weekends .. 12 Noon Weekdays .. 5 p.m . 800 West Katella, Anaheim, California Employ~ l[I!]! ![I!] Help Wanted, M & F 710 He lp Wanted, M & F 710Help Wanted, M & F 710 • typist & girl friday apply at Don the Beachcomber 3901 coast hi9hway 9 a.m.-5 p.m., daily Mr. Hurst Gcn1·ick & Son, Lie. ll_O_U_S-E\\'0RK·.----I 673-6041 * 5'1!t-217C M_•v_i_n~g-------$2.00 hQur J.,,..,,....,. ... ..,,,_,..,..,....,.,.. .. ,..,.....,,..,..,....,...,..,,.. ... ...,,....,,.. ... ,..,.. I Electrical ~iOVING _For your local or *** •l<i-1-9755 * ** Help Want~d-:-M-& F 710 I HelPWante-d-:M&f::710 He lJ)Wanted, M & F 710 LIC'D Electrician. ma1nt. scrv. Also, resid. industJ"ial. &12-4·1l 1. ==~~~~-~ EL E CTRICrAN, licensed. bonded. Small Jobs, m11int. & repairs. 5-IS-:i:Z03. Jong distance moving. call ;AJIDD>iF.'i.s:f<to~c~CCornoO,,~,"l'~';o,;,~,"~''· 1-----------UESK t·lrrk, n1al<'. Llj~una OK V & S EXl~ERIF:NCl--:!J Casual11y an , toragc, Y')ur 1 o 1 ldC"rly care or family ca1-e. BEELTNF. Fash11 ,11, oflrrs Bt>ad1 r<'~rorl hol1~I . :l day InsurilncC" Girl. local allied agenL P nUe!ized on1emakers, 547--668_1_. __ f'very woman 1111 1111" n.tv, .~11111, 2 rve.~. Sonic typ111i:. 610rage also avail. &314100. ~iiijjj!i."iiiijjj!iiil ,. I s · 1 --' Call 8·12-441!1. /or pl/tlni~ 11r:irk. SJ()-$Sil ~1111r e OlCClJ: .• ('llll J'{• U'l'u _ ~ __ '---1 P & [I!] I I f\100 l S<ilary. l'"/C BOOJ.;:KEEPF:R: !'; ainting I • • 6~6.0:\!2 5J!l.Jl3~. pie rn·cr · cs • uper Paperhanging E,.toyment I• ----Ph. '1'.Jl-11%. .Joh~ Frout ore. appear. IJl'iTJ{ll3UTOH. I 11 LlJ !11 t• DISHWASHER Find Your Name If your nam• 11 list.d in a special ad -it could appear under any classification, so look at them all -phone 642-567!, Extension 314, between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. to make arrangements to pick up your tickets at any convenient DAILY PILOT office. Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT fn1>!oyment .____'""1'_,-·_,l [I!]I .___-___.![I!] tielp Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wa nted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Good SMILE Like to Meet People Money-Exciting & Fun Work Part or Full time iobs as Hosts No expe rience necessary; we hava 4 training program. Hours and days to fit your schedule. Don The B~chcomber Restaurant Sa1dd Ladie s 3901 Coast Hwy. Applications from 8 A.M. to 5 P.M . Mr. Hurst FUN WITH FOOD Applications Accepted At Beachcomber For Full Or Part-Time • Broiler Cooks ... Daytime Preparation • • • • • H a ve Fun Schedule To Fit Yours Unusua l Benefits Good Money Great Training Program APPLY' DON THE BEACHCOMBER 3901 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar ... Gardening ~;;;;;;;;;;;~:;:;T~IBJ.,ro:i.1~: an •' .\1 II' A Y ---13,.,1u !1lu l nC"111 bid~. in p I ca s an 1 surrounding-~. PROF. painting. E " t P. r . x!nt a[lcr tr:..1n1n"' <""nl, :\lu,;i hr rlroiln & nPilT, ovrr · l !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!~!!!!"!!!!!!!~'!!"!'l!l!."'l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I HI W ted M&F710 " Dynanuc growing firm . l-slory, low as $22:1 \l'/gd. e P an ' plctPrl. Un in 11 t <' h ('(l "ll-21. Appl\ in J)f'r."'1n, Suri & $600 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Helj)Wanted-;-M-&F-710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 paint. Avg. rn1. $18. Airless A & H & OL MEN pol'tun1ty. Pho111' ;11.)-'\(~1.~. Sirloin, ;,'.130 IV. Coast !!Ivy. AL'S GAH.DF.NING spraying accous. ceilin~s. 2 BOAT CARPENTERS NB. lor garden~ng & s mall Ai't" you titt<I of your pres, ---------1.'Qats $1.). Ro;.·. 847-l:l;}R 1 1 lll'iTf{]~l'TUllS \l:llllP•[, ~ell lanciscaping 1ervices, call 1 ----,,.-=~----en1 ll'ad prugran1. l'\u c-;111-\\'lih l':l.J)C'J', )U1ld111g ar;:;r 5-10--5198. ~rving Newpon. :>~o \\'a!<t1ng ,a~s1ng or it0l1c1Hng. C.1JI. cus:on1 .\·111·h1s_ \\'ill.1rrl P.o;it R;i~1c JI !'rolcin Ccl\f, Ols1a r.tesa, Dover *WALLPAPER* u1i;: on cstab. <H't'Ouni-.. \\'orks. 1.:00Lo.:::.ioA1 •'.c:i.1. \luan11n 1ol!i-1."i21 Shores, \Vestcliff. \Vhen you call "i\tac" E11r111ngs con1m1•nr1· 11n1nPrL I Professional Gardener 548-144.J 616-tnl Should be in exec;;.~ uf ~l~lll FC Bookkeeper $650 OMV GIRL D1s1tibu1c9 Tree ~·ork, pruning , sprinkler,;, clean up jobs, landscaping, George 646-5893. PROf. painting ext/int, neat per ~·k &>rond yf'ar J~', Xln'1 P''Ml1on fur f!"•nl ulo·, 1 FLIGHT SEC'Y -''"\ .t t1~rd dr-.k \lust Br ("(jUIJlnH'nl, AllS1~1~ In la)OUI \\'Ork. Acrous ce1l \11,gs, nC'111al!I 2j'(i, ln1n1C'o!. nd· 1_,p.•. l)l'l'lf't'('tl!l."ll'lh't11J11or · \\nrh. ,1/nif•'1." & '''"'"'' I r '1 ',,,,, c,,, ,,, .,,.,..... ,, ~" " .. ,•. di:'Sl"n o! IHI{ 10 ~yi.lcm ... I R f 1·ancemrnrs. Cal l '"'' ;111"!. "l'\'lulc,·tural hJckg1\_rnnd. ·' ,.., .. 1' · ·' ' ··-"· .~ "' l'llr e~s i;pray1ng. e s. ,. .. . t J I:. u11·ncr~ in An e!<c1tin~ a1••a· :o;u!J'('! vises oi1t:i·a11on & 8-17-1 ~58. 9 an1-3 pm \\'kd,v.~. 1'iJ.,.t;71. NEWPORT L 0 n r 11 r l'l'ry . !'llHJ llun C". Tl•• sk)' '' 11 .. 1 li'" ---~---p I A hl•i.-:J:a1:\. ,_, • " •" n1111n1enanc(" of rqu1µ111f'nl; INSTALLMENT LOAN CLERK --United -- California Bank 3141 E. Coitst Jl"·y. Co1'0n11 dPI ~Iar 673-9240 J::qt1a1 Opper, En1ployrr EXP. Japanese Gardc~r. INT & Exler. Pa intin~. ACCOUNTS rrcr11·ublr l'll'rk ersonne gency D L • lmpts 1111111 011 Tl1is Joh. Hrport flS!>ISls 1nsu·ui.:1ors 111 u~r. Kno111 l1ow, up-kerp, plant Lic'd, in!';. Free est. 30 yrs ex(>Cr. 111 n1ttnual posl1n~. 10 833 Dover Dr., N.B. ean eWIS • l\• tor "'<<'C;llthes. Slarr SIOO. nia1nta1ns 1nvrntory; suprr· rrr -s<. trln1nung, clean-up. CX""r. Chuck, J""n' ref''· key ;idding machinr, S:Ll;1ry 642-3870 (osl1t ~Jrsa, Calif. Call Jr;i11 l3rown, 5-10-60;)5 "I•. I" l~I"'''''''· J ABSCO PP..ODUCTS .. ~ ,.... """' • • ,, _, ,.. "" has in1n1cd. of)E'nings for Lhe 968-::-ISti. &1~809. C'0111n1rnsura11' 11·1!h ab1l i!y, * DRIVERS* C'OA.'iTAL AGI::;>;CY folloiiini: positions: AL'S Lanrl~capiru::. Tree re-VIN YL p;i p erh1Lns;1n~ r.1rs. c;ucrrrr(I, Co~1 s 1 BOYS 10..14 1i!~fl~_:.:?rB1_'.'"~~da~~-AUDIO VISUAL /\ssen1hlC'r Ca1;i11111ra11. San Ju a 11 111 dr1i1·cr P·•flCJ's in thr ~an No Experience 1·1,11 OR •• movaL Yarll rrn1odclini;:. ~recia1ist, \\'Ork gu11.ranll'l'd, . ' yuur nc1v job see A-1 OPE RAT tlla1cr1al ha11tllcr & truck D C11p1~1r11no. ,,~:\-l."1Sli. Cll·n1en1c. San JL!.1n C.11!1'-N I ,, 1 A 800 .. f" I I Trash h.aulin,c:, lot cleanup. frre est. an Sch1l'anz _ __ etessary • r•rsnnnc grnC'y, S. ·,, Sri up, OJX'l'&le5, 111on1 01'~, drivr1·. X 11'1 l"!Cncfits & P.r pciir sprinklr i-.;. 673-1166. !>47-5846 or 846-2182. AC11ve Proplc lr!'.llio and Capislrano Bel!Ch ,\Jiist hilV!! clean Calil. driv. C ft rn 1 no n ca I, San adJusl vanrly ol a11cl10-v1~. \l 1Jl'k111;: cont!1lio11s. JAPANESE i:a r d-cning PAINTJNG/papenni::. J~ MINI MONEY ;irc.1DAILY PILOT Jn\'.: record Nr1t under 25.. Cll'111rn1r. 11~! f'1Ju1pmr11t, IC. uv•'r-Equal c1ppor. ,,n1plo)t'r service. fl·lon1hly r a I c. Yrs. 111 Harbor Area . Lie &· H you'r!' ('arn1ng nt I n I 1~12. n211 YELLOW CAB CO. GE NE RAL OFFICE jw :1d prnjr{'loi-s. rt'conl J Is:> JJ;ile \\'ay. Cos tu ?Ill's& General clc<1n-up. Re I. bonded. Ref's furn. &l.2-23;)fi, n1on1·y, lr1 us heir you ~up, ":U."llO,. 186 J.-:. 16th gl.. C.i\I. Vanrd <lul1{'<;, ahtl1ty fn pln~l'I'«, rrcoult'rs, sl11!1· or 1 -----~.-.i''.ir .. 1-._8',;''•'----- ,\Janagement $15,000 A YEAR MEN EARN $50,000 + .\IE:N l\llLITAR¥ \\'0:0.1EN IF YOU HAVE TI-IE DE- SIRI-.: TO l:'llPROVE YOUR CAREER, ALONG \VJTH !:'\'CREASING YOUR f'J. N,\i\'CJAL POSITION, OUR (;0.\IPANY NEF;DS YOU TO FILL SALES & r.tAN- AGE.\IE:-.IT POSITIONS 1M .\1l::DIA1'ELY. Rcason11.h!r. 642-Zl39. plC'llll'nt \'Ollr inronll' $~. ro ... ,, 11ork 11·/n11n ~Ufl•'l'ViSIOn & f1ln1 f)J'()jl'('10l'S. OJX'l'illl'S, P,\JNTING, lic'd ins. Fl'I'(' ! I I C II '1 1· 1 I' I C 11 1· h Cl I ,. ------·--~--. f)('r It • ..c .. r • .1,1 1>1', ,;1.11a nnn 11.111 <i r· T •11 ELEC~ONIC a~sun11, J'{'~flOn"ihilit\,'. T)•p-1no1111tJl"!I & 11dJus1s c~uip-JACI\ ~Son l awn c~titn.Qualitym<'IT'l.dt>pen, ""~ 1<018 "D f ' ·'I I -• ;;,,,~.11 11 K• .il,l~l•of' r, omna .,r ECHNICIANS in!! & nlfi{'<' ('\p dPStl'f'd n1<'nl for J'l'ill' ~l'l'('Cn pn>- ,_ J , W. ROBINSON'S e NL\\'POl~T BE,\Cll e t\O EXPhl{JENCE NEC· J;:SSABY rr· YOU \VAl\'T TO BE(.;IN A PllOt'ESSJON· :\L C,\REER JN 'rHE Dl'- v~:STi\lE::--1· FIELD. )'OUR EARNJNCS ?.IAY BF~ S~ll.000 + YOU!{ 1'-IRST YF:,\R 1:-: CO:'ll'.\1JSSIONS & SERVICE: FEES. ' I • ·-T ' . ' ,. ' ' ! r. ' ' ,., • srr\'irf'-.\1011·i ng. e cl gin g, clablr. 24 hrs. 8-17--412$. ,\J.i.r JlTTfPr :-nn11' 1'\f't.'t', ap-T 1 ) on i·loq•cJ ,·1rr111! vacuuming .!· c Ir an -u II . PllOFESSION1\L Pain ling -AfPP~ y KO\VI !~r par! kt1~1: pl\' :i:30 pin \\'rd·Suu. ~!llllr ln1l'~hl1~1eal anll!udr ·:~~ •. ~i~\on lfim1;1 & s1•l•'l·t-free t'~l. '.16.\-!Y..'1:'9 1 k (!(IC ""r. irr 1r r nn 11 ·w' _.__ ·-V\puw.J,ro" n11~1""'' nf tf\in· 1'~11-c<. Pl' Y a l Rohr•rt· . ~!-:\\. lawns & planltng int<'r ('\'.{Pr. lonPst 11·or·. C:1ll ~·:~-1\0l;il! I rni. CASHIER-RE C EPT I ;ll•T11.1l ~'l1·1·ln1nn~ (0 at :-ha1v Cnn1ro1~ (',1 Jfj()j2 0-nl<Ull' :;,l1<ir ptt!Jt'llOr ... ; Lir i.· i~i<. ~13-~i:i~. sr ... :;.;~:i(l E;o.,p1•r. Tl.111 1 "r l11l.i1h'r "" !r1 inr 11·q1111T~ 2 ;1rld1t1<>11:il (;r,1h:1rd. 11 I.l. Eq11;il Opprir. fX'l'!onn.~ ruu1Hlf' ma1n1rn· ~0r.·~~· 1~11:~a\~.n<iRs;;::.;1~~: p A J 1\ TI :"l G · Hon f' "1 , ,\rea P.l\kpr Con11 !!11~p ~~111[ in 1\n~k 1n 1hrir1 of,· h1!'. rd I '''~I lt"rhni1·ian~ !u 11,,11111r En1plu_1."r anrr crf ('(Jllll•n1ru!. •" i:;ua ranteccl work. L1r'd. f."<P•'31',·~~ 1•)$il1fl lri \l11rld /1dql1'S u{ '''''" ~h·~''· p·p,11r ,t· 1•,1l1lir.11r 1.:;!Rl.f'r1fl<1 y-pa)r<:t]l~ SLAB i:is:: 711.)..Z\.l'.I. /\ny i<izc job. Call 675-57,10 In~ Sf>,..·.I' "'-,:1·,I Fin;111<"1.d S1·1\1rt'<. :\ln't ,,.,1·.p1i·, (tii.;ll.d .t iln.l lOb ITi'/puy, l·nusu"l <•pp<)r!.1GRAPHlC Jl,.~ u11nll«l1.llc O/X'n 111g rur BETTER SPORTSWEAR SALESWOM EN !'l'F.:>.Cl:.lt :i l.1H111 Serl' ire 1 Plaiter, Patch, Re,ait i''"I P.kl, 1 !'r I•• ~II' ~ d.ir~ \11t1y ,-" hrn•'I ''· 1.,1 nul~. I f,,r ;inihibou.~ i::11 1. 6!:1-~li':I T ECHN IC \AN F'rt><' est. l..;n1n carP, · {r.,·rr .. 1rr ~JI 1o1~!.il \pp'I' n• 1"'1 '""• \11•• N!·! u11<·r.11ls sl11Jr tl'[l\'Ol!lir rlr<1m 1ps. J{rasl)nillill'. i~l;it T,>p1•1 s1.·,,_ T!111f1 (i!.1 i\•·111 •ort li•ult•r ,.,1,,,1 ... ",O 11on l.°•111a·r:i: h11 11dt1•s 8 k. V11!] .. rp lnllP."'P''I !'fC'· l'ATCIJ PL'STcnl'G 1:rri1111 r11,, II'~ " , GAL FRIDAY :.1~ ~l21l * '" ~-·· · t.:C"nl'J'..t l 1•11" r S!IJG Iii ,'i1111•· 1111. ;-. 1: __ 1 1 1 111111111 ~111! r:i1)l•'r.1. piu-/<'rr\'d, ,111·1 1>0 li<-n<'f11~. -----All,,.,.,,,~ "'rro "1i~,~t"~ _ 11111tw o! 1•d ··~r I• 1'•·1 ",., .. :"o sho1·111.1nrl. Bkkpg, & 1,.1,. 1 1 f. 1 r I '" ' '''"' NEWPO RT (\IH'r~ n11t'IT.t lt'H'; c:<ir10011:-, .).prr. · flp ;inc''' ""n rr1<·r (';i1\ ;,uJ-f,.~2~ CASHIER-Car W ash 11',)111~ i. l ;,1 101 It·~·• 'l"'r, 111 · 111111,Jlp oiffio·<· Con1pl1>tl! ~d SP r\I<'"· j\r:1t Personnel Agen<y 1 k ! 11!l1<;1ra1t~s :11111 lrll•·r,,. prr-.\pp!_1' 111 P"l~o11 1()..:1 pn1. Plumb'.ng ,_·1111 ~,rP!li llH' _r.11 .11·.o , ''!' .'<'f"J'\.I\'(' },j,·•.'l••llH( Ill C.1JIL•1t'a1n(',\\,''!('llfr tt ·l~· I 1! i\R .t· Hr\111 Fro•r P~1 612~~Sq 833 Dover Dr., N.B. -,. "' l'-•11 1· ~"''Ill'"~ i.· f'\!Jf'I', 1•, JS(ltHll'I A!"!!\'•" p,1rrs tr<lll'-fll!l<'IH'lf'.\, Oil• " .os11on " .• ' . -642.J8lO Cl\.\IJ·:Jt1\ ~11'1u1•·r111, Fri ,I,. ~ '" c!ud1n~ 11st'.' 11f l'l.t!o r: nvC'r· ~:q11n! 11ppo1·1111111y rn1p!oyr r Con111lrlr G.1rd(·n1n' 11r \ \ •l"~l'\'r 111 1•11·1 lr1\111r. 201:! \\'.:,!rliff fJ1·, N,' B. I S:i! nilt'.<; fnr Slli,11111'1' ('all I ~('I'S n1"0r111•'110ll ol <Ill grap l· Srl'\·u·t: TAf{AS t,, :-;011s Plun1h111g I Plli:!l fk'1'1111 • f;\-ZT/fl ,. · · 1 'd "-d _, B,\Jt\ltdDS-r,p ,1. ,1,1,1,; 1 .. 1\lr~. U1r1. !2131 ~:'1-l~I)() ;1f1 "' ___ ·1• 1 i(·~ n1fl tl"1"1als rcl:ilt'd 10 in· Free r-:~t1111a1~·s f,i:l-llfi!i "'. """ ""· repipr ,, " -~KITCHEN HELP lit•rs n n l!(lin 1-2 I''"· .. _i:1_•n1 f11r,1ppl ---· __ (;IRL Frnl11y. i\l;il11rr :;Jrucllnn. £XPI::HII::NCE0Japanc~e ~::~1~~~:;:~~~1v consL t"rer '.\!un-Vr1 nl thr Gr(•rn c·,\~!l\EH. lil"n'l off1rr, DANA i\lo•fltc!ll f'XPtT. helpful GJrd1•nl'r. '.\l 'l'"h'11an•·r i.· _ ---Lfln lC'rn, Jg?;(l PIArenlul, !lf'l'ICJI. f in<• l;idif'srln!hlrl~ T!'h'phnnt• p<'r'-Onalit1 . \\'111 OFFSET _<_lc_:n _"_P· ~137-.~S';'I. PL~;1~:;~:¥1 ~1~~{(1R c .:o.r ~1\,tT l':-.11 11 nir. prrin. ~n 1rn1n. Gll-()0[,j al! 4:::0. PRESS OPERATOR EXPETl. 111111·ai1an Garrlr"nrr • G-l'Z·:l12S • BAP..\lAID 11 11111cd :u 11,.,. phour r:dl~ g..,.. 111 v. r. laboratories 110:"111~.\1A1<r:1l1nr vi~ lhlli·r1n1c pos111on f;1,·111g Cl}mrlr1c Gartlcnini: ~rr· -~~-=~ J.oius Roon\ fii!l 11111r and Bnrk!'lr1'<'t, Ao. 2J r.1~hton 11.11111>. \l nn1nn rupnhll' of i;hift. 4p111 lo ftpni, i\lont!,1y \'i('(', Karnalani 6"'4~(6 COLE P L UMBING n:ii·t. l.i"JO holo ',,ILO'<l.[_1 ~11', l\'.B c.in11~ for 2 childrrn + thruThuM>day,OpcraCt'Sfllf----2·1 hr, sCl'\'icc. &15-JJ61 ,. " ' .----"" 2~1)1 CA'.\1PUS !)fl., I \1 h -11 ll cl . sci and dirt•ct in1pN'ss\on rrriencrd. malH{e cleanini::-~~l~e~·~::~: la"n & gardC'n·1 -Se_w_i_n_g_/_A_l_te~,-.-,-,-.-n-,--~7-'r.1T:i c;.rF.1.I F orl'~k. part ''.~12'0' I RVl~~:. ('Al.IF. r.7i:~·clri~: 7 ~·~~1"1-rk:tr11:;;: oh11>tic;i!lng r.quipn1cnt: pre· '1~a,,','m",m,1., . .,1or 11,'','1 1"a'm,. ~~d. -... fi,\Ri\l,\ID -~1n11.1•'. a1 1ract. ',1' ar .rs aurant. 4 1 Equal opporll1n11y C'n1ploycr I " .. ""' J 1n1 ~s-n.io;; t 1 L "'nfl B I 51.1>-::1~,1 or 518-154·1. p.::ll'('S :ieg11UVC's and P 111"'s; j'jr...,·port area. Part time, All.•ation• _ 642-5845 No· rostnml'. Thr F'1 -1•rr1tlr ~"'~'l'.:'1_._::'lc 1___ · d ki ~=~ 11 II ' * * * * * * * op.1qu1ng ;in mas ng; ''' c.., '.~22 LA\\';.;' ~1n1nl. au ng, new ?\car, accurate, 20 yPan;;. <'Xp, J{oom, 1664 Nc1rport Bh'cl. Cl\TL .I',, Fri \Va11rr~~r~. nrw F rf nutinl<1 lns inventory: oJl('r-1 .:.cc'c'c·c~ccc~:::c· ~~--- la11'Jls. clean.up. pnining, TI C.1\1. 0111 !Is. Yni:: .r,, a.Hr. •'PP· j ,\f)C'TICll('f'S liOUSF:l\:r:EPF:rt, undrr 3:,, atp<; nhotocomer. bindin11:. LATHE WORK c ' C•ll "-'" ~~,, ; • I"' T ,,. d ' n I TELLER hP!l\ll l(Ul ha.v/ronl li<in1r. ,. ,.. • , .. 'fil 9 '" 1~',~~c','~·~.:.-"'':'''_· ·--BEELINF. ~·a~h1nns n1•cd ,,_,, lll'S, C' r.; iurs. eollafln11:. jogging, cu!ting 5IS".~ .-..1 · : ..... pnl. DICK'S GARDENING CERA;\llC file n<'11· ,•., help. ll1gh profit 1\n r-nll. .. r ~N1'11 rior! Bl~·rl. ~ If JUU'rp hnght, likp talkinh pn\·ate quarirrs. s::oo. ino. ;ind paper drilling equip-"'"""""""""""""""'"""" Re,1dl'nlial-Comml'rf'1al rrmndl'l. Ftt'<' ('SL Small drly. :-.:o in,. rs I nl c n t . COOK-EXP ER, to IJPilplr. ha1•r a glXld Ii;.:· *6;;:.!lj(j.* * * nil'nl. MANAGEMENT • (· Clean-Uflf:. Ph. &12-0473 JOb.~ 11·rlco111". ;}3&-2 126_ jfG.i;lil. ~11;1.Q.l:ij :'llu~t be 01·rr 2!, 1\pply tn u11• a111JlUdl', a pl<'.1~a111 prr· -----* * ;:.,._.;:;o-=~ • .:::::::..::;:;:;;;::;:;::;:;:.::;:==;;;:=;;;:==;;;:==:'..:=:::;;;;=:::;;;;:;:;:;;;:==cl P"r~nn, ~11r1 & S1rlo1n, :-i!'llO :o;nn<illly ·"" hllSllH'SS l',,rt'r. llOUS~:J\E EPl'.:R nrrclPd. 10 Srnct j{('SUnl!" Cf;is~ified Ad x,~flLITARY OFFICERS BET\l'EEN AGES 2~30. I~' YOU HAVE RECENT- LY RE.TURNED F R0~1 vrEl.'l/\~t \\'E HAVE A JOB THAT YOUR LEAD- ERSl-IJ P QUALITY \VILL F"IT RIGHT INTO. YOU \VILL ACT AS A RECRUIT· F.R FOR A LARGE L'\ND JNV1':Sl!\IENT CO. INTER- VJL\V PEOPLE \\'110 RE- SPO~D TO OUR ADS. CAN'T BE /\F'RAID TO i\ll::ET OBJECTIONS. - \V Coa~i l!liy. NR. ir1r1•f\•r.1bly fl~ a hank 1rll-c:ircfor2boys agrs.'.land2. #\~)!, DAiiy Pi\n!, P.O. Box 2 f'rl ~ou ,~111ld rru.ihfy for L1vf'-1n. or. out., Rl'tcfl'nccs l''". Costa Mrs.1, Calif, CllILD ('fl!'<°, ll C'l'k1luy.~. t I 546-638(1 f '""' srhool ~irli< jn Turtll' Ho<'k onl' of our blink lcllrr open· es~t'n 111 . , or up-92628. \''"' l;/;~~"~"~"~"~'~"'~·;;;;;;;;;-c:::;:;:-<,:~1::::::::====== hon1" 833-!H l!'l. ""' • /ISKPRS E1n plyr pays fee. Apply George Allt>n Byland A~en· C!lAIRSIDE -Busy 01f1cC', BANK OF f',V JIXi-B E. J6th. S.A. ·'°me Sa1urd11y's. }'nngc AMERICA 5-17--039~. DENTAL ASSISTANT h"nPfi1~. l!unt. Ill'h, ttrc<i. 1016 Irvine Avenue 1-11-0-u-5-c-·1·,-E-E_P_E_l_l ____ _ Ph· ,1;1.1r~1'Ho s 111TI.fi pni . Newpo•t Bea<h 11'·" in, 1\ 1fe r!('('ca~cd, 2 children, IJl:.:--TAL. 8F~l•lf11Jl-J\r111Y1r\ F:t1unl Oppor. 1•:11111!oycr :JC<' !'l _ \'1 , 616-3fl;i6 or . I nr thodontlr "Il le r . :,:;;..f,167 ('\'l'~f'.lriikl'nd~. l"h:1·1<ir!•' 1\ppl'<I'( 4 -1::\PE!llE':"i'CEIJ-• I <1.11 ~/11h Trip (>A,1 . l.1h1·rnl NUR SES AIDES llOUSEKt:F.:Pl'.:n~Cido-r;ir. fR\/lNE PERSONNEL I I I I A ~30 a rla)~. 11·.Jn)(' ni1 r~. Local n-1 11i.:r "'I'll .r-.. ·~e • .,.. . .\II i;hifl'\. Full Tln1r. SE°'l/J(ES"'AGENCY W Salary + ounus Plan F:\11 r<'q'•t r.12,x,20. 1 Huntington Beach rrf'i<. $tlO \\·r1>k. 673-9189· " • Plush OHicc~ UJ:;-. r.\I~ a~.or. Fr"O!ll dr~;; Convalescent Hosp. HOUSEKEE PER-,-t'ref' I: F'M' Po!ilt10n' • F'r uige Bencl11s "'11· Sh.1rp, fr rn1lly i.-:lr\ 18811 Florida Ave. EXPER. Sec'y Legal $550 + •Start Immed1a1rly 11/nr.1! n11fW'ir.inr(" wh<' H .B. 847-3515 .-.ig...1001 Prefer Culit. e:i1pcr, Dicta-I l 1kP~ flf'Oph• fil'Z-!1'.H2. l lORSF:\\O~IAN, 18 o< O\'f"r. phoot", htr Sii. _ l·.:\P U ("('Wlk lor parl-t1n1,.. d to $600 tlf"..\1'AI, ;\~S ISTA'\T 1•f•r'k prrrnr~i.: ,t, ~ervin~ c.;pt>r., lo \\Ork on rent Girl Fri ay -f':,p'•I. 1'·1111 thnf'. P.r1·r~ I l>n1in l unc-!'H•nn~ or ilintl<'M; I i;!nn,c RM1voorl S1ahlrs. IlriRhl Cllf'llbl~ S:1rl lor busy 1 f·f11•!-\,~1'!nnL o, .. r :i.1. hlll'r II \\1-.Pk In p\l hon11' 202"6 J ... 1i:-unn Cyn. Lfli? Sch ('\"I. pf'{'!;ldl'lll. CALL NOW Mr. 547-6771 Ask for Kent Ada ms C.11! G-i6· ·: ,~:, Cd\l Iii:• 0.~!6 ' 1 KITC1 tf':N-&(·o0n1~ hrlf'<'rl Exec, Sec'y . S600+ 0 ENT AL REC E PT:-LX I '!<H I t.Nl'~ n ,. 0 r k t 11 i t for l!11l 1a n tlf'11. 1'\f)('t. L~Jl·l 1 Ton !\kills lor rlynanuc e:ii:ci:u- . 1·1 ·I "I · I 11 n ll\'r. M H I ll•·~k 01111. r1rn1111 '''per "~11 11>s~. At11·n1·t1vl' 21 .10 • rn1 1 ,.. '< · A T • 1 $400 a ture os esses , · --cctng ra1nee o ,,....., 1,, Tf'R"ll·'.\V 111•(·•·~~ Sc>tnr s ... 1.~. H:il'-11 :.rr Churk Y•·111:t'r, \\'h11r INSOMNIACS {'i Typing. 1o kry a.d<lcr. !It• '" , v 01.i·n. !nng••. 1~'!1f'hl~. 11;1~. I ll•Jrsr .Inn, 329j :'\'1•11·por! fr1r J'f'~•·nrrh prn,if'<'I oh s!C"rp ii-ork c:xper. Nl·,\V ltf:SIDl-.:NTS l\r<'_:.~.2: xl:l.tl(I ~A~I·~ ~ -~!~. l\Jl. i hnl111~. Pi1rllci pnnt11 ari> 188 E. J7th lttl ftvU"lt"l C.M. ~~~rt. Tim~ &:11-iho old aLuil Iht..v..~· 11 ''~.J~n\)j 110..,.~ aid. Q~~~!'fjicaJ I _ '42-J•lQ jCAH,'..· r\l.t.i\T!.!Tl ,RNEC. 11"'1.V ~1(1rr-• ' · s4ii'1"n1111 _-, -'""'"":--..... Rk. 11"'· • ~ ...... -~;r =-... -fj"'tfl~,,_,,._. ·------------------------~ ~--------q • S1art lm1nrd1a1cly e Plu~h Offices e lln11·a11an Vac11!1on (for 2l AS A..'l ASSOCIATE OJ-" DAV~: WOKJNCa .• A.'\D, Fr. r-.· \:>:CIAL l:"VEST~IENT A~>,LYST, R. r: BROKER, \\' F •• Lt. 11\1:\IEDIATELY (;!\.E YOU TllE CllANCE TO DH!VE !..· '11\'N I\ NE\\I Jill\ CAOIJ.l.1\C & V.'E 'U.. p,\ y FOR rr! CALL NOW 547-6771 Ask for Mr. Edwin Youn,i;. aggressive company Call ,\[rs. Schmidt ll'CS'll1lff Person~t A2cllC'y 20..Jl \\'e'S'lclirt Dr., N.B. (Hj.2710 :\IATURE \1uman \\'anted to cal"f' for Ont' child & r\o light housekerp1ns;:. P r 1. roon1 & boo.NI + •alary . ~l..lS-0331 <111 4 J\.1A TUR E Salt'~ 'I '•~d-y ,-.,.-,-,-.I pC'r nett.~.~. l11Tfrv11•!J only ll::JG--J Pi\1. Sl\Vw-Orr, 7.! }~flsh1on Island, N.B. --~~~1 flfAI D, livP-fn. for family of 5. N.B. arron. Refs. req'd. 6'15-0758; 534-222 1 MEDICAL SALES X -RAY-NUCLEAR Ou,s111nd1ng oppor. tor ~Tcchcal Sale' cal'C<'r w/1 leader 1n the lnrl111try. Pick- rr ,\lt'tlu·aJ Producta Oi\•1- 111on, P>ekf'r Corp, K1X111Jrdcr ol n1t'd1caJ ~ nay 01' 1\uclear rquip. '·' req 'd -': 11 ti.1ckground in :walrs IS prrfC'rablr. \ornpf'Mn!ion mmn1rnaur. •It> 11·/f'XT>l'r. Ell'tf'n111·, ro. benrlit5. \\'rite fully your qual1f'I. C'a!lnn~. r>;prr. ,t. rt"IJ1111~ mrn1~. r . n. Bo:-: 1>286, Sunk1~! ,c;:1at1un. Anahf'in1, C11l1f. 92SOO. Bus1Lsr -ro --,c,.-,c,.-1-,-.,.,--"'-I fl'\\'n, The DAI L\ Prr.m Clll!~!fled M!Ctlon. S a v, money. tlm• • f'flnrt by -..r.-•lt_. -.. -· J ' .. ' " l lill ~I _·--·-~![)]]!...._ _ ..... .,,_ ..... _..J [Il] I I~! l~I .... ,. I~ I I~ I ....... _ llB r -'-tr'-· iltf Help Wanted, M & F 710Help W•nted, M & F 710 H1lp Wint.cl, M & F 710 AppllMce1 I02 Ml1utlenMUt lllMl~ll.MeU1 Ill TV, Redlo, HIFI, Oogt 154 Boats, Power liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii e;iMAMA~Y~T~A~G;;;,.;,.;.;~~m;;;,n;;;;w:lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij.~S~ho~roo~-----~lli~ Al<C Rccisterf!d Collie Pup. HAVE FUN w"'""'°'"'°"·"""w/llO ** AUCTION ** DUAL tuml•blo No. 1115. pl" lo.-"''· Trl-«>I,,.., d11y'iuar. SSO. '31-8637 Harman & Kardon -n«l X Pritt ~.00-1100.00. Have WASHER, F'MPtiutt, dfiuxl!' 1trW1 amp. Ft.f multiplex ha.d aU 1hot11. 962--4873 . ,et action, 7 yrs old. excel FRIDAY 7 P .M., JULY llrd out put 1, Sound.cra!1~man POODLES _ AKC, mtni, 7 Lik e to Meet People Good Money-Exciting & Fun Work Part or Full time jobs as Waitresses No experience necessary; we have a troinin9 program. Hou rs 11nd days to fit your schedule. Don The Beachcomber Restaurant 3901 Coast Hwy. cr>nd. $56. or oftrr, 5J6..7426. Old musk.et & bayonet. Chil4'• Bentwood trlangle ~aker, Koss mo. choc brn. Show qua!. Furniture 110 rocker. Old hand churn. Coffee mill. Swivel hM.dpb:>M, $32!1. 8'17-9533 ~tud M!rv, all ~ 0 Io r 1 ol:eauing :Jlze Sn1og Pll'11!1e buy my houeluJ t'lf turniturt . 5'>JJ1ng a.JI. Makf' oiler. ~8-5934 alt 6. 213/424-8904 piano 11tool with glass baU &: claw. Grand-===-===~-1 father clock with Westminster chimes & 1971 ZENITH " Admiral MIDWAY KENNELS - h F h be h N dJ · l cioM!-Ollt aale, t~o w e s t Germllil Shepherds. Pet k moon c anges. renc n<: • ee e-poin prlC«, l yr picture tube. I 1how stock. Board a I I top. 2 CarvP.d frame French chairs. 2 antique yr parts & seivicf'. Ant~nna breeds, 893-5549. grand pianos. Dinnerware & stem glasses. inataJIN'.I ""'/all ronMJJes. Secretary desk, Late model Wurlitzer organs, ABC rolor TV. 9021 Atlanta, Stereos, Color TV's. Bdrm sets. Dinettes, H.B. 968-1'12!1. Chests, Dressers. Bunk beds, Divans, Mat· tress, Vacuums. ANO MUCH MORE i GERtllAN ShephPrrls. alt wh11e. AKC. 6 Wks old &, beautiful. &N>-4710. RCA Victor 21 " rolor TV. GERMAN Shorthinr, 16 mos, WINbY'S AUCTION lntc1!1gl!'nt, ~entlt, obedient. s,.i:i. 540-3769 28' LUfrRS 1poru &hu. fully eqwpped, re c • n t 1 y hauled out, new tarps. bl.it IAnk , swim 1>tep, trim table. +much~.~by Parkins lfio dine!, Job transler torce1 aale, Mu1t see to apprec:l11.tf'. Rl'ady tor al bacore! 835-11J24 or aJt I 494---0618 or 494-7249. Dive or f'l&h 141,) 0/8, %! HP OMC ent. big v.•hl trfr. Good oaa.n hoat. $,4~. 49-1-8393. 20' GLASSPAR cabin crulaer \V/IJ'!r, &lps 2, head, C.8 . radio. (win l5 Johl\50I\ f'lf':C, .11l1p av.ii ll. Priced 11th!. ~9~. Appl ications from 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. Mr. H ur~t Color clear lr chslincl In ~au11lu! \v3lnul cah1nt t. Sacrlllcf', truly a i::em, S-350. &-17-953,1 alt 6. ~fUST 5ell our near new Spanish-Merht furn : 9. golr! COME BROWSE AROUN D 21 .. COLOR TV _ Mu~t OLD Er16:1iSh .shN<pcfog. l yr 32' TOLLY old male, Tlf'dlgnoe, t11t1ke : BY Ov•n~r. 1966 T.S., P'.B .. oHrr. 4!W-7776. I extras. lmmac. Bf'st oUer POODLES AKC. Teacup -over SIJ.000 543-5098 I Toy&. Pups/Adulls, All col-17. 1969 CHRYSL.ER t» Hp or'.\. Stur! '.\erv. 893-9719· 110, marine r11dro, full AFGHAN. young female, cover. Xlnl rond. $.2895.1 ready lo hretd !or ~ale or 673-2319. ~'~-"~·~"~'-~"-"--'-"-""~""-· ~~1, 010=· 's"K"l~P-..,.JA7C~K"'-. -x71,~,-"'-""_,.·1 GREAT Dane: pupF; beautiful l..Qaded. Call Ted Rosen, GoldPn favon , al:;n Vf'lvel. 673-.1252. Help W•nted, M & F 710Help Wo1nted, M & F 710Help Want•d, M & F 710 WAITRESSES SMILE A LOT-PERSONABLE LIKE TO MEET PEOPLE GREAT TRAINING PROGRAM jno experience necessary) FULL OR PART TIME Apply for our Waitress Training Program Applications given out 9.5 pm dai ly, except Sunday. APPL Yo 3901 DON THE BEACHCOMBER E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar velve! lultf'd 60fa If '2075'/:z Newport Blvd. ~crifiC"!', $%: 19'' portable lovP~at, King-sz mattTPSS Behind Tony'• Bldg. Mater ials .,,1/bltn radio S35: 21" B&:W !..· box .spr in,iis. Game 11el. Costa Mtsa * 64~1686 111blt n1odtl $20. 642-562l. Ill-back velvet d~rator PACKAR0-~11 25" oolor cha1r11, 5' cocktail tablf' OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 TV w/phonogr11.ph &. >A'/ rn a. lch1ng oommode.s.1 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I AM/FM radio. 5't9-4168 Pictures. Lamp~. Eic. AlJ I! l<'ss than 3 mo's old. Pvt Garagt Sal• · 812 Misceilaneour. 118 AKAi 1800SD Tape rerorck-r. pty, please call &92-1073. Rf' co rds & pl 11. Y g . "°,.-,.,-,~-~-~~~l2 Family garage salt Thut'11 l BRAND nl!'w white window Reel.s/carl. Sti5. 6'1&--0366. BAR:.· {Sl011.n's1 of{ whr. thru Sii.i. Hou11 eholrl dra.pe~. gra~~ material 2.~·. . han1boo; lable 4' l"ircular, lurnishin5:S h furn 11ur" R', 11' + m11ny whil e n11r. STEREO CQmponf'nl~~ng \\ht wrought U'On, glass-lop ~alore. 11032 El P11r11.1M1 rnwer rurtains. Make offtr. pr oi•tr $1400, llf'll for $,800 \\/4 ch11.i~ yf'llow cushion~. Cour1, F,V.. corner o! 675-7111.'l. or hes1 ofr. ~75-5117!!. BALBOA B11y Cluh Mem-mis!". furn., sm. \\'hi. rel. Euclid & St11tf'r 11 1 ParadisP 673-0.'JGS. M11.nor. hf!Nh1p Al 111.rgf' di~ooun1. I I!' MUST Sf'll IJ\'ing tm k. den GARAGE-: Sll.1t -two 8~ x 20 Wrilf' ClaMilit-d Ad No. 172, fre• to Yo11 furn, ind \'eJvet sol11 & ITI.Jck tlrts, tow bar, wa!('r Daily Pilot, p O Box 1J60,I'~~--~~-~· tovesea1, Ibis, l a mps , &0ftt.nrr, misc cll'&n-u p C.M. lLines,:tTim•s,$2.00 Hf'rtulo11 sf't, Game tb!. salt.. Dh'!'l I-chll1r, 85.ll l'iiA:v"E-;;;;.;;J0 <i;:--o;;l1•••••••••• 11 E H.veral sets o f • • Hope • Vacuum cleaflf'r, f'1c. Xln! Arnett, H.B. (nr cor111"r or hardY.'OOd unfinished kitchen corn:!. 645--0036. Nr wland & .Arnell! 842-2242. & bB.thrm ce.bi~ls. Will &eU ~!UST MOVE! Sa.critice near MUSICAL instrument!l, port. &t lge discount. 64.>-1212. new matching 10la & typf'WTJter, ·64 T-Binl, WATOI Rep&U' Summer loveseat, kingsize bed, «11-la11.'ruJlower1, misc. !um . Special! $4:.50 Clta.n, adjust, l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!![!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!~!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!ll!!ll!!"!'!l!!!'!!!'J!'!ll!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!"!'!l!!!'!!!!!I lee & encl tables. CdM uea. Cothe.s, It. much more. 11.:U pollah, ata.ndard movements Help Wa nted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 1 Pri pty. 675--8083. Corona Ln, C.M. Fri & Sat only. Coast Pawn & I 1 NE\V 14 ''xl4" p il lows , 10ril5. Jewelry, 24.26 N ew po r t, S•g• 2072 N1wport Costa M•s• You are the winner ot 2 nckets 10 rhe Southland Home & G1rden Show ~IAID, part 1lm«. fnr nPw Saleslady-Cashier f \\'ANTED-Ac In r i; l.t ai:sor!ed colOT"l!, J for s2.9:l_loLct"oo°'"cJc,71,-,-oShoco--ck-.,-c00-c, -,7 642-ll40l, \\'esl Nine Villa,. 111 l.:ti::una 11·11111l'd hy relaTi1·cly ~mall I Artrr~sr11. Co. prO<!uc111i:: V.'aloul end &,. roffte l.iiblti; <ioll.v w/2 hp , n R 111 ,, I ,,=~----~---I N1g11rl. 196-0.767 nr -1~1011. fMd ~torr -ML a su per. f'(!ucatton111 pmgranis oPed~ S·1 t>a . Headboard~ for full Clothing & m1!C. Sat le Sun. WILL move Anything you N--n1arkct. ;-:0 Sa1 ni.rs or ! n1cn k \\·nn1rn. 1111 ai::Ps F.t ,;i~r bf-d $,l f'a . Uff', 11185 l!l Via Lido l'\orrt, NB huy In this column and MARRIED ME Sunday ""rk. :0.1erlic11J & typri: 10 apl)l'ar 1n ftln1s N1:1 H1lrhor Blvd, CM. S48-~:.7. 67:\-4237. ~o .. "16.48C.&11 After 3:30 p.m. Nn age l1mil, lo sr rvicf' our ho~pl!al hrnrhti;, L!ndornt 11C"t1nr: rxp nrt·rs~11r;.. P11y I=~~--~~-=~~ ~ II! thr ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER equ1pmf'nl & !e11rn o!hf'r lui·nishrd. $2.2.) hr. Apply Cln <iaily hasi~ Opf'n in-DECORATOR movln.o::: hag lo BIG Gar&ge Salr 2302 So l·5c0cR=FcBcOcAcRcD-~Tu~•i"o-l-in-,-.. -,t "·ork. Could mran dnubl1ni:: Linrf!X'r_:! Nurn!inn, tn rear lrn'lf'l\S 11 1 Concrpt MPrfia, ~rll furo . Gold velvf't &0fa, Rl!'ne Dr S.A. lnMr Warner 1;ale. 5. 11 .. Oluck Dent . July ~Au.1:. S previous inmme. Ec1.rn1or: 1 of the Toy \\'orlr! ~rorf' on Suil r 310, 1500 Ad!ltYIS 11 1 gref'o ancl white. living roon1 k Br'i!tto)) July 24th many Good conrt. S50. &14_1682_ Please call 642-5678, exl. 314 opportunity $110 "'k, CHI lowrr lei•rl, Sn, Cna~I Plaza Harbor in c.~1. CnntRrl t·hairs, Danish buffet and guodieg Haw11.1l bouM '-l -;--;:"7.cc,--oo--.,.-~-1 bet\\'f:'en 9 t1nd t pm ro ·for pcrsc•nal 1o tervlf'll'. Br-Shopping centrr, C.'.'11. G('{l. Lymburn. rri. Ju! 2.~. table a S pi~e gu·!s must Jet thin.Q's~ but fut. Hf'alth Spa Membership, claim your ticke.!s. !North tween II & 10 AM . ·l!lfi..231!3, -_ . 1-~ pm ancl Sat. ~l pm, OOr:!_mom sP.t·hP-adboan::ls, NEIGHBORHOODCt1rai;r:ti 6 yrs. SJOO Cou.nty toll-!rtt number is Division of Consol1r!atrd i SALf,S ~rl for boutique shop Please dn nnt r.al! office. c-ha1rs and •.•sort: d Sale. F ri/Sal., 10 AM , 5.l7-j96,111.lter 7 PM 540-1120) Food :>:. B. area. Perm. pos11:Jon. war{'ho_use bargains 5't6-2517 Eve~<K.in ... 1n 5 Port Sher-e BEDS, Table&. Ola.in, * '* * Black Gi11n1 rPru; 5.i7-74~. TINY !oy whl chihuahua $,1). Tioy Joy wht poodle puppy , 6 wk~. 642-4818, 534-3885. WEtMARANER p u II pie 5 AKC reg, fi rno olrl. $,100. 644-7433 \N ESTIE Tc1Ti<'r~. champ '1ttd, n1ale Shot~. 644-4721. AKC, & fe m. AKC German Shepherd pup- pies J lemales. 10 wk& old, 2 .11hots. &37-1:140 POODLE, AKC, f" male, \\"hite 1oy. Sell or lease., 7 wks. ~5-178 ADORABLE lllonde male L11J-"a poodlt, 5 "ks o!d, $5(). 4~2128. GER:'vlAN shorthair pointers, 2 ramale,;, AKC. * * 893-9443 ..... !RISH Setters, AI..:C , Ch~p line, Lovely little lad1e&, 18' LYMAN 120 Mercntiaf'r 110 \\'/tr!r & full covers. $19!l:'i. 673-654~ or 642-1641, e lS' HUD SO N BAY P r\CKET1'-Scaloa.m tref'n. Call 67.'>-0430. ~1UST sPll, 25' Owen. Ex.- prf:'ss Cruiser, good cond . Offer. Eve. 642-8062. BAY BOAT -17', 4 cyl. Nf'w fittings & just relinisllf:d. Trlr. OUer. 675--0376 eves. Boats, R•nt/Chart'r 90I -Cal 25 + Catlin• 27 Guarantee the Jowe.st rates Jn So. Calil, "Catlin& cruig. ing club". Location Ne.wpor1 Harbor. TI4/968·.t840 for inlo. 36' fLYBRIDGE Cruiser, S!ps 6. Fully eqpd Inc .11klp S1 35/d11y, $700 /w k . 64~9000. Boats, Sail 909 born May 24. 830--16:.0 . HOLI DAY 2-1' Y8.\\'l. 3 Sailg, t-.1Al.E lri!h Seller, 10 \\'ks, inboard eng., sips. 4. all .11ho!s, Al{C, champ line. Surveyed. Mint con d , SlOO. 673-4923 I'°''"-~· --===~-,~~-I SAtl10YED males, puppy l'. AJ:e 21-30. r-.1us1 hf' \\'ILL babysit my homt-, VIC. 5'}6.-36!); .,, .... ... $35 . $175 PER DAY thomll.c,hly e>;per Send Beaeh anr! Slnler, Hunt. ~. t1elrt, Harbor View Homes, Hldl':-a-bf'rt &. f''rigidaire J'M a pure wh1tf'! kil!tn & my 1hots, AKC. B h "'l 1,70 CASH buys it right. Ex-N.B. washpr. 642-5611 · brother's 11. 11ger \l.'e nf'ed 8.'k'\-2761 rf'.~umr, Cl11~s1flf'rl ad No. c ., .,., -" · I I c=~==~----- 12" SNOWBIRD, f b c If>, PERFECT CONDITION! $~. Call 968-3037 l\tC"n. \1omcn ,t· t'h1!1'1rf'n lnr extra & bl! pan for nno union !,. rommf'rc1alg, (21$1 461·'1:051. J!=I:\, Da ily Pilo1 , P. 0 . Brix iiiiiiiiiiiiiii RI mplP; g· blk naug • ..1sofs'1J'-MOVING to Aus tr11Ji11 MUST PAYMASTER check 11.•riter, borne~ badly 6 4 2-4 g l 8 SCHNAUZER pup~. groom- 1000 c , 'l C•li'f =~ o.vese111 , never u5,,.., ·'"· SE" ,11 "--... •hold ll•m•., .-rfect condition. :.14-3885. · 1 d 1 , 927~. 0~ a "esa, " . I Merch1ndi1• J ~ Elegant Sparn~h king-t.:r. nn ';';aS(lnll~~:~lltr rtfu~. ,,. 67:...4596 '•fcRcE=Ect-o-,-d~ho-m-,.-,-,-t-,-m-,ct-, ing, 5 u* ;~';9 ~ms. 1~· SCORPION 1968 $295. f'asl & trim. Pvr Ply mov· ini:: 6.\~3441 111t i p.m. fi.\j..5084 • MLE.S\\'OMAN • . . ~~m:~~~~.lrf'~:11::·~~ 11119 B·Amf'ncan Pt, Costs 2 USE D 5 ,1:allon propanP mixed Sdlnau:r.rr /.,?pup. Hors•s ' A UR'" p ,. r.1rAA 642-JOll! 111.nks. S7 each . .Eves 6 lo 9, H.~ebrkn. 646-3851 tvf'.~. 856 ~10RNINGS only, lrnn1 Aue .•1 T i:.. art ime hir!e-a-hprl /.: more, Must1 ~=·=·~~·--·-~~-- 2, AUJ: 20. I) Pf' $..· an~ YOllog ~111.tt-mity Shops Antiques 800 SC"il immrd. 714/M8·4918, L.ARGf: G11r11i;:,. Sal '! a p-64&-Jl660. GOOD malt dog !or chi!clN'n, tf'l{'phont>, or OrangP Coun1y ~1 t'n;il<t Pla£11, P~l's only ---.--·.---.---HIGH .__ k bl k . 1 pll11ncf'" lot-' ol misc. Fri. CARPETING, good rond, J l Yl!'!U's olrl. I .,..c. ac ,viny f'llSY Sa.I and Sun 17~1 011.k ~! beflrms k hall. 82 1q )'ds. h1~ Airpnr!. C'11ll Fri on~.l SHARP GALS Gail "hairs, $.t'llra. Nl'w ll'WlV('I F V M Do ti s"--! •~ <"' m·, bcfv.·rrn 8 30 11m-12:JO. 711\ Lnnk1n' fora permanf"nt fl()-Hougthton bu kt h s 2~ .. Of'ar c WI' Cnuu ........ ,,.......,,,.,., f''EMALE beaglP. 2 yT! fllrl . c f' C' 11.Jrs, . "I f' II , 1147-9719 540-247h. s111on, houtiriue :«a.I~ .. \lust 2893 El R io Berlroom lamps 111 J:ood ron-l"==o.-----.,.---WESTERN ~qu1tation 1uil k Likes ch1ldrrn, other <logs. NURSES ncec!M for pv! du-h;• exprr. lull & pt/time po-Costa Mesa rlit100, $2/ea. UF'F', JAA5 J\10VfNG -t: our h, 11 p-equitation ha1, f'xcelknt Need~ fncd yd. 494--04;,7, t)'. All !)'J){'S-al! shifts -Silton.~ i:iva1I. Call for appt. You are !he winnPr of H11.rbor Blvd, CM. 54!1-9457. pl ia~1. QuPrn 11i1.r hl'rl, condition $20. 548-9590. DEATH 1n fam ily, nd honif"5 Rel. ncr L c ~ i:-o u I \ r Thf' Look M4.f>500_ 2 r1cke1~ to the BEAUTIFUL 2 5wivel "wet" carpet &: misc. 165.12 Los I R°'"'A"tLRco~OcAD~c,-,,-,-. •xclcc71_ro_l>d~.1 /or 2 BalirW"se c1tt11 &; 2 .\ml NurSf'i; R e>: J ~ ! t v • ~51 SALESGIRL Southland hlack chain, lOll' \l.'hite VPtdrl! Ln. H.R. 346-5062· 6"x6"x5', Sl.50 ta. doi~· Martincrest, 546-0989. Hoi;p1111.J Rrl. N.8 . Call ful\tJme~itinnlQrlgeapl Home & Gard•n couchbma1chinglov!"~eat. PATIO gale-Rl!'trig, lilovr, *• RJJ.-1956 ** TWO txoaut1lul kitties to 6-12-!=1!15:. any hour. lntcrv lc11i;ing nff1re. \Veekf'nrl Show \Vhire lea1her, ch r om ~. washPr, rl r Yer. misc -7o'c6c"~S"u-,'l~bo-a-rcd~$4=5--I qu11.H!i{'rl owner. 54g...{).1!13 or hr~ f)a-:'ip , ;.1 -r \\'nrk rrq'rJ. Good s11l11r.v + al !he glaAA & pla~tic table & furnitur,.. :\07 Dit1mond A\'f', CONTACT 6'12-3'12:1 R."«>--449.1. !lORSF.S Boantf'd $40 per SAILBOAT-Seagull, 1 4 ~', mf'. feed includ,..d. Large fibe.rgl.a&s, 2 sails. Fast, xlnl 111'f'nA, trails. We~tern sad· rond. C.ilr topable. $425/of- dle, Sac $,.'iO. 5.17--0625. [er. 494-8393. * Sale or trade. Islander 24' 8 YR. old Morgan &. Arabian sailboal, inl:loard motor, mare w11h ha.reback part good shape. &12.-.'llOfi. and bridl~ $.l;Al, 637-684J. 1 '1co;=9~1clc, -,~N°'T0EcRN=A~T=!~O~N~A~L 1 * 4a:J. Xlnt cond. 11.1tll spin. PALOMINO m11re, 7 ,years. naker. S850. S.16-JGQ.L Well mannered. Gentle but I L~!D"O~c1c.1-. -,-ood~-,-0-,dcic.,-.,-.' 11.piriled. $400. 5.17~4!11 S,700. 5-11-2288 day5; 968--0624 I cnmm1.~~1on tor rci;pon~1 hl~ ANAHEIM rlir€'CtOl'll ch11.ini. 6x9 & 9xl2 Ba.Ibo& Island. ~-;:....~----'---"'-=11"°==°"'"-cc--ccc-oc---I F'OR rl"nt -Corral for horse NO EXP ER. NECESS r.r1·s0n. C11lJ aftrrnoons for CONVENT/ON gorgeou~ hlk, & while area GARAGE Sale, G11~ s!ovt, Mutlc•l lnslrum•nfs 822 PUPPTES to $:ood homr. er pony, $30 mo. * F'LIPPf~R ~5 * NO VF.E' CE TER 675-4.9' Mother vpry i;:enrlc. Mrd ~-548-5636 f'Vf'S. "~ app!, N rugs. j, ' Dl!'~k. Dr~~sf'rs, f'tc. 806 SHOWMAN Guitar 11.lllp, Hul'ry. 21J/j,'lS-3107 aft 5. [~~~~~~~~~~~ C..oorl cond. $250/be~t of.fl!r. Si>rk1ng' c11 r<'"r 1nsload C>f a (71 4) 557-4800 July 30-Au,. ' CRUSHED I f T CM •••• ,_,,,, S.'-. '1 I ti 57· 0~2 I ve vel llO a I, owne. . . u ,,... ,.,..., r.. Sf MESE k' 6 k "11s 11<' · .l-'"'" · ioh? \Vant n fulurr w pres-PJPase call &;2-;,67R, ex!. ,114 17~-~----.,.-,cc-,-~"' ""~~ ..... A. 1t1eo~, w -~ l°'==""'"'°-_,.---,,--=I tiif' !..· mnory~ Join !he !>f::C'RY.:T,\P.Y for airport cha ir r;er~. xlnt <:on d, 4-F'amily garagf" u.lt, 9 to 5, • * ............. .,,-.., • * old box tr11i nf'1'L I Bolt• •nd 1( .. .>f? J CHR'i'SLER Loan Star 16' ('>;('lflfl' 1~rlrl of prr~nnr!. 11rf'~ CPA. BookkePping PXP bf'lwf'f'n 9 ~"'1 1 pm 10 S69/.se1 . .rull ~n.e mal!N'S~ Sat 7/'J4 only; 1376 Shannon LUDWIG sn11.rr: r!nim .11nrJ &16~3 Marln•EquipmMlt 111'.. for sale or rrarle for '70-'71 '• ·ft .. ft~ a r\ull innrnrnl'. In-rrq 'rl. Salary open. Call chtim ynur t1ckel!. (North & box sprln£" $,.10. 7' t',Ofa11 k Ln CosTA Mesa. 11tand. Chrome . $40 ;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;:.; VW bus. 549--0j.41. .. .,., R\3-2292 for app1. County roll .free numb{'r is ~fat, ch1tir sers, $25. Sl.1,I~~·~.----..,.~~-· Kfl1'EN, most charming lit· l =~~~~-o=-c~--·I rrrvlf'"·ini::. phnnr, fll'l">Plr ~----1 5'-IO·l.220l $45 $;:,."i, Uf'F, lRllS Harbor BIG, big gar~ 1all', Thur~1 ~5'6-05=~'-'~·~-=-=--I tie bny, uflf'xcepted by our CAL 20 No. ~-Many #X· 1nvolvcmrnt' Sah?11 pl"rwn· SECRETARY * .. • Bl~d Chf 5.JR-9-!57. lhnJ wknd , .154n Hamver Offic • Furnitur•/ cal. 008-9571. G1n•ral 900 tras. Very clean. iJOOO. Pvt .;ilit'I a plu~. Also ff'e 1ob~. Excr!lcni .skill~. Local · · ' Ln H.B. 1193-3237. E I 124 1-c===~-c=----ply. 714/846--9450. Call i.11,. \\-~!-'>Oil. ~33-2700. Call l.11raine NE\\' ~hipmrnt of l1nP roun-1 iio;jAJ'NiitSSHHc--;;m;;on;;i;,:;:.,;.-o.,;;i:i.;:-j•ol,';"o· ~~~'.::':'.'.:...-~= qu P· ADORABLE kittens, fTPy, * * * Dennis .~. OC'nnis \\'f'Stcliff trv furniturr, 1111 !)f:'rsonatly chair .se1i;, $25/&f'I. l pr. Mi1c•lf•nffUS 111 fl.UOR.F...scF..NT , fixturP.s, black k whi!t. 14' ALPEX-Aluma. Cr&.ft. I 1 t-" 1 A h t 64fr.')56!) Mrs. S. H. 1\-lual sell now ! Sl.'ill. rc~nnrl Agf'nt·~ Pf'r!'l1nnrl A i::cnc~' • f'f' ec ~,,, a ut rn lqUf's, fj11'l('flt' :;;er$., gorid concl. off~ quality. twin 40-A· Wolf• :?Ol\2 )lu·hrlS'Cln Dr. 21').1J \\'r•lrhfr Dr, :-; B. 21~ :\tv.·port Bh·d, C :'YI $12/set !i pc .-!1nefle set urut1, ,.;laH dilfu~n !'In top 6 ~lo's old puppy par1 1738 E. Oc•an Blvd . 642-4&13 t1ft tr 11 pm Irvine, Calif. o.1:i-277fl Tu-Sat lAAl !!arbor BJ~·d, O.l. e AUCTION e ~-bo11om.s. S7 · f'11.ch . AJ115k l11n lluFky, NeM1 gr\ Balboa l\!ETCALF lJ ft.: 2 sets ot I• ________ .., __ =s.=.=c=Hcf·=:r=,,=·r.y, ;-.=n~-,-,-,-,.~., 'v"1°c-r=o"n"t"A7,~m-,·,hclcr-,-.cffcr-o I _"_"-_94c.;_;_. ________ 1 Nf'l.Vpflrt Har hor Ari h(lmt. ~.1701. You Are the winner of E.a 1ls. Just p.l lnled. Come 0 R :0.: \ ;.r E ;-.: TA L rn.n;.. h'1trl ·,111~1 !1;11 r l'.'Y'lti ~kill~ !~hlr. -17"'<~2 ,1··. S !l;.: EARL\" Amtr1ran furn. L1kP HOUSE Mu ~eum 1211 W. Ba.Jhna J ~lo. olrt male a.II "'hlle 2 t1ckc1.~ 111 the M'('~ $2::.0. Call 673-30(() __ . __ t \\'0P..l-\ER "'prrirnfrrl Ah ol lly 10 n1rr1 r1...,p!r k hr Cu~101n 12"\J~" hra1r!r<i nr11. K11111:-~1. Oerlrm M'!. Blvd, NB. 6 75-3866. ,,hort ha \r ki11rn, Genllt>, Southland LIDO 14 No. 413. :-0.1nt cond. •• • .i~l-fi.~jl\ * • • rlrt1111 nr1rn1,,rt. Gnorl ruJ?. hl'1'1\1n rnnrs, nf'", pa \d ."inla f:.· lnv rSPal, Rnrk1n11: Atll"lioos P.vtry f"ri. 7 pm \\!"t kr!P1yl! !1-.l. hag gho!s. 642-11981 . Hom• & Garden Trailer. shng, hoa.t cover. OPF.P,,\TllRS Fin"i:l,.-nl'rril" ~1.11·1 1 nc: ~ .. 1~1'. PhnnP 11 f.,(I, srll 5llll h44-IXl.10 I ('hair. Cnffrf' ~-Pnrl tah!P~. }'urn. Appli. Annques -~~;•~n~o~•~/~O~rg~•;n~,~~~8~2~6 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~ Show $800. Call; 54&-1.73:1. ,,.pl'r. l;nnd r>.~, ~1 r~d.1 h11 -17f10 r \t :,~,.1 J,ll;th CE~'fUrtY df'~k. Ftt!IP, !11mp~. f'1('. V"ry lo pncl'fl ~,,,. w W S • h LIDO 11 • '"Ir No 2111 "'' ·1 • arntr, · ·"'· SU MMER CL F. AR AN CE I J[B a t 1 c "" "' ' ' ·' 11rorK. p~irl '' 11 c A I i nn · ~J·.r\\1!'T!~l-.SS 1,;inirrl~I p1nl' h11 Trh cah1nf'I, rlt)' i;111k, 714/.'>.111-491~. !follow ae11rch \1R"ht1 SALE Pets and $upplltl 'LI ANAHEIM V{'1y gonrl concl. :1-lovin&. !i4 2-~1i2 NB ~"11· ~11.,·r11ft ro1rro;, r.\p. <'rrwrl brrlspr'f'arls, Ann NE\V SOFA-LOVE SEAT, ~9-22Al • ~7-773.1 I I T"t CON" ENT ION mu~I sell. S\000. :i48-6!J92. ---KAw11 i. Steinway, Bad\vn,;•:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~ • -PRIVATE Pl LOT p;i rt t1 111r f":tll ?.l:•~-'l~'.1 ltrarl<: Aniiritif's, 1'12·1 \V . sold 124;,, 111.k~ Sl42 cash. SALE: PleaM> read caretully. Wurll!Zl'r, Kimball. Lowrey. II CENTER FLIPPER • $265 f<>r thP ~al "'h'l 11k~ fl.v1ni:: Chll PITI;in, Or;ini::r . fiJ.:i-Q.16Z. Nrvrr used. 639-6022 or Antiqu'" turn. I. gl11ss Ind. Conn. A1Jf'<> .. Etc. S295 &. up. P•ts, Gen•ral, 850 July 30-Aua. 8 il' dinghy. 9611-7667 1,. 11'an1i: ~n 101rrr<:1 1ng 1nh SERVICE CENTER ~OFF \VITI! THtsAD 9().11-:.l\06 P11.ul. cranber.:y, prt'WM"d & milk RENTALS. PLAYERS.I----------Pif'a~ <'ail &12-;iii!l:, t xt . 314 SABOT-$175 r11~pRtrh1ng Atrcrafl. S1ar1 AGENCY Jlarl1rld Anl1f']urs, RI~ E. CUSTOM drC"Orator furnihfre gluli. paper wtight~. cupli & Frit>ndJy telephon.o infor, TALKING Mynah Bird v.·ith bf'twern 9 and 1 pm to Sell or trarle. &\4.2874 .S2. * Sec'y M in, $450 Ralhn11. Rlv<l. B 11 l ho a, -1 lr 8' sofa.~. matching OI· MUCf'ts, hu1ct1, Ztnith TV, FIELD'S PIANO CO. cagt, $125, "!aim your nckt>ts. (Nortfl c.a11 ,Jc11.n Rm\\'n, ~)IO fll:t'l B1ZZf'r fun jcih, \\'rr!-S!ll, 12-.11 pm Inman. 4-)X" 5tclional. gjrl'i; blk &: wht, Pohm:ud c11mers 18.13 Newport Blvd. '* 645-2927 * Cnunty tol!-tr~ number is Boats, Slips/Docks 910 r01\STA!. AGf.;'-:f'Y * PBX Min. $400 OLD c11nP Win< k11f'k chair. hdrm set, mort. 646-5154. No. 100. Mlle. colleclor Cost/I. Meu. 714/645-3250 C•t• 852 540·1220) d WANTED -privatr: or com- 27!'1() 1-1-'lr\'or Bl 11 1 " am.~ \\'1!1 train rcliable gai I P..rl1n1shrrf" ""\\'cane Ex. CHAISE loun.i:e s,100. Hide-a-11f!m1J. 'I'hurl., July 22, Fn 1 --'w"'o"u"L'D'°Y'"O"u"--I~~-------...::.:.;: • * * meri:ial &lip for 30· catch, p~::~;~o~:~; Po~n~.o ~~ tf'~e~~:~~1~~ms:i~ :;~~:~:~~~1q2 802 1 ~~2.;';'~:-:~:..~·="~:~';,,='·=·~;:=,_.~'Y=•~58=bo~y,lo~~u~;-;;~~1~_,·,:~·P:;7:"'_1..a~'~;c~:::::;~=m~ .. -;:;:1'1~ FREE ~~~!;~~NS S~~~~~~ kittens, 4 males. SCRAM-LETS ~7~~-ana Ml 2-5695 or Ml C1rmenle, Cap1s!rano arca. J * Bkkpr/F/C Min S6QO RABY cn·b.· b,--• -w u·--' SEAR."i Bellf 11" color oon-·~--*-*_,... __ 1._J.J_7_• __ *~= ==-cc--~~~~~ hn "'"' ..... =<> 1..11 lonr as you like! No nc-i~ ANSWERS BOAT slip avail .. Jul y 1.111, tor \\."Qrk In y<lur ""'" me. Sn1all orc/Oppor. position 3 mo·.~+ l 1htf'!-" ol bumper 1!0le 1V, '69 Walm11. H11.rdly lmAtion. No obliE&tion. Jut Dogs 854 60'-70'. \Viele d ip. Be~t dr11I in 11re11. Phone * G irl F ri. M in. S4SO Kinmore Gas Stov• pad. $,27. 5J6..-38R2. u~. &a.1'1 prnfP.C.,ionRI C.011W'. hfoncl&yi 7:.1() pm 1-----------673-6606 J13:l-1%r-. bP.1ween 9.00 ll.m. I ~n. r rrrl1t or !1n11nct f'~P CLEARA1\'CE, \\'hlff' &. vacuum cleaner. like oew, COAST MUSIC Summ•r Rat•• on Farina. -Erupt -F'1lmy -• 8' OLI VE le 2old eon-SLIP SPACE AVAIL 1100 noon . *Jr. Secy Min, 5500 ('Olors S1n2'1, & double 1 C.ood od Bffl offtr. ~ or S4l-28Sl GROOMING Nlice -ON tht CUff'. Personn1I Director Pre~rise Co/care('r oppor. 0\'('"9 Reduction up 10 trmporary IO•· eo · li44-7019 ar llM' to ap-Tnu l · ru ""' ~ The qu1cke~ Wiiy IO lose 25'-30' SAILBOATS On ly $,12.5. 540-4298. t ·-p ....L. HAMMOND, St a in" a y, VJ m n.111 rer .,">.. * 673-6606 • ~--rr. ,J )'.• "P· Xlnt 1'0m-Sl:il Pr" t II f e . u su 11i1-.. s II t ~ ~ your 111hir1 19 tu .... + too much ._., .... , , . . Pill hil k Yunah11.. New k uH'd ma m1n1a ur-cs ""'·'"' .-~• pany. c11 u i\1r~ Schn11c!L :i60 Nr"'J)O rt Cl'n1<-r Dr., NB K•nmor1 Dishwasher Tart Sofa -ow c Ntwport, Ap1 217 piaflOI! of most makf's. BHt OS~~!~ $4 ... ~ & s;, ... ~1'1._,, ON the CUf·~-. Boats, Speed & Ski 911 \\'~t<'h lf I Suite 53~ I fi4·1-491ill CLEARANCE of Hl70 Good condition S:.ll WAilRBEDS u ... r .....,11., ·~r 1o ·:.u STEVE Wi110n Shore-Goer, rr-. nor! A"eni•y Jl.1"'ll'l> fott !ll7."' por'ta-• !)46...(1573 e buy1 in So. C&llf. a l Schmidt Th' 'nd d "8 th ,,:: 1 CLASSJC !'wiahogany 16' 1"1f'T'C .. -. .. "' .. An . Sl,95 Pad!' Mu ic Co 1907 N Mii.in is I u eli a 'U>;O• 6' &ailing dinghy, oars. "e inboard. '&I Chry 1 le r 2(1..1J WC""IC'l1!1 Dr., NB. 1 Sf:RVICE Station Salrsm~n klrs prirrd 11s 1o a~ s,.itil. KINCSIZE bed, Royal Res!, •l.U'fl ~· · art Sansta An~' ' ' Deaing & nails. boa.rd, rudder. mast & new M.ilri"ne 6. Sel!' 10 •Pprf'<:ialf'. 645-1770 F111J ttn1r , graveyard Ex· Sears, Roebuck & Co, 2 mos old. 20 yr. gu11r. $175. Mal, paddf'd na.uphytfe · ill Broodway, C.t\-f. i;ai!, S,115. 543-2708. "'-•t off•r -·•r ll 000 p L A~ TT CS t ti c 1 0 r y I Pf'!'· nf'at Apply 1n pcr!ion. Adams 111 Ma.1:001 111., H.B. Twin size hed S.3{). 541·3961. fr.ilm,, $49.95. Water cha.in UNfQUE Design D• n l ah 642-4818 '* 534-3885 2 0 , 0 0 U 8 LE • n de r oc .,. ' ' tra1ner-M1ht11ry ohlig1111on 2,100 Ncwpnr1 Rlvd, C.,\.f. Phone962-7781 cWcAcL'N"U"T'°'b<dnn"'""-,."t".cmco"tt'"'~:I $7.50. 838.55117, Te11k Pisno. Orl&h'IAl cond e OLD ENGLISH Sll.EEP w/trailer, 2 eyJ e.ngine,1.,C96H6""='clc.=~-~---t romrleled. 5·10·• or o\•rr. TELEPJ-IONE So!icltQr Ex-f(LECTROLUX with power springs incl. Like new $135. A'NTTQUE BR Hf, vanity -' $900 54'-7877• 6'4-49!'M. DOGS: Male &: fe.m11.le, forw&rd Ir. rtverse, Call CRUJSALONG, ir.bolmi mtr. Jfarrt "''o r k !" r 11 only. rr! pny & ~hort hrs con-nozzlf'. Gut1r lo oulc:le.11..n 11ny !1.U..9301 dN!uer 175. l' "' 5' mil'T'Ol' Sportlnli Goods 130 AKC, 6 wk11 olrl Md flt:n 9SJ-24S8. 224 VIa Lido Nord, Lido $2.45/hr. 5411-512.'i. 1aci1ng bus1~si;C't on 1 Y. vacuum cl,a.ntr. l'' re. f' 1,-,===-,,,-cc,.-,.-o--c-I S25 . .a·• x 40'' mov\~ lic:JT~n I ~'---''--------·I beautiful. $350. Ker m j t I.sle: 213:270--4547/934--0920, RECEPTIONIST \.l/nrk out or nffir..-. Exp demn. Call Luclllt . 1162-6828 LEAVING State! ~t. 1 P . El,c. hrdi:f' clipl>@r $8. SURFBOARD "Elimlnll.tot" Boats, M•lnt./ Cam-rs, S•lt/ Rent 920 prrf n \'r>r 21. :..'l7-1721 ki!ch,.n Ill'!. Tv.o bedmomi. 26' ext. l•dde.r SA. Mitc. 1'KI by th' Grel'k & c•r rack. Riggs. Ph: 546-599() or S•rvlc• 902 ,..- P11rt time. ~·ouofl: 1drl fC>r or :..14-09R'\. Livln2 room S1~. 549--0024 Cabrlllo, CM. fi4G-6AAI 67!'1--4596 54&-2759. 11!'lephonc N t1llrll!' 5 rlity 11 k, 2lf YR. establi,o;hf'd pl.:i~li" GE aut.o wa1<1\Pr $ 3 5 -j ~«I~• ~'".P~Mi;•;•~l~I ~d~•y~S.~'·c...._.ji:QW.mfA'r(iX)i('iVA""' ' . ' AKC r"R'· &moyf'r\ pupplf'R ----,.,-..,-,,.,,-,,,-'."."~I '59 Dodg• 112 Ton PU J.fl pm, Sl.T.1 hr, l'ashiOn 11rthr,o;11·r & mtor cnrp, We1li11imou~ ~lee dryf'r 8 E AU TI f' UL p e c .fl n ~lii~~-,H:IAnlT••• C0001-IKW. n~ DIJV.~RSI-Volt T.t7Jbotank It lor aale . .$100 ea. H1J1 aho!.s F1BERGLASS REPAIR·ALL ~ton. 3111 tt. overhead e&.m~ J!l!•nrl 1nvf's!me11t l!n11ncf? l'lf'rrl~ s11ll'sm~n lo i'llnl1nue Sl!). Bnlh iood cnnd. 2uar., ,,._.L, ~ '" ,.,. P''"'"" " va ve rw.w in x $65. & dewc:\11111s rit.movcd. 8 wkg TYPES. B1g or zmall-inshop-er, sleeps ~ w/ran,e lee llusifle!I~. Pl'rmAnt'nt 1\l)ply rapid 2rnwth builrJ-up 1n & delivered. S46 -867l, cr!df'nza, rv""'iuer, " yrs. nf'Vl'r QJ>f'ned, -old, S.109, Ml-16.16 oirl. C.111154"-7.i95. outshop. 20 yrs "xp· 114 I box, ov,n, wired, etc.,'vei1 2111 fot'('<1! Ave, L.a.itHl~ OE.\f, RF.PS t.. distrihutno;. R47-ltll5. old. S2'l5. PhDne 496-587l. takl' $82.50 caflh. 6.19-6022 « SCUBA divtn want to buy . AT STUD 5JS.fi646. 213/.Cl.,_5419. clean. Call 557-9792. Bch srt .l pm. rar & salary. Xlol op. I ,KcEN=~M"O"RcE~,-.,-.-.-,-,7 ... -,-,7.7~0. Garap S•I• 112 96.\-5806, P•ul. (t&r. N"fld • v' r Y t h l n I ' AKC S.moy"1 Champion Boats/ Marlnt Nltl-fROD '70. Used 1 t1TM . pt:1rtun1\y to if'O"'' &. l'Xpand ----------·I BEST otter t&ke1J! Bunlc bNl1 14~1~"7 ' Equip. 904 •• I •• I · -R 'd t M e •T1gidt1lre auro wa.shl'r '60. "" · iittd 1!hOW do(, $100.00 fee. ~Pl . ~ove, re r11, wt1 • .,.. es1 en a nag r v./Prrmahte. 543-'i.\25. 3 FAMILIES S2S. (;old tf'dlona.I SJ(XI_ Old TV, R•dlo, H IFI, _ -. tank, f'lec wlrl"d. P•ld d 1 .,,===~-~~-~ Borh lace. ~Is, xlnt cood , ,_ _ _._ ""'"'•"•11 k>r new. 17 unit JI uJt apart-WAITRESS !or prtva!f' cluh ituar Ir. delivered. MG--8672, Bunk ,,..,..,., corner beds .I. Fr. Prov, dna:. Mt $D1 Stereo 136'_SH_E_L_TJ_·-·. -AK-C-.-m-.u",..-, .. -'sHP Commtndo, ne.w S95-S200l; t.&ke .SlSOO. d1,y11 ment In Cz::ista MC$11.. ~ply l.agul'l8 N~I Muit tit ex· &17-8llS. tahl1", near new baby bua:Y. Ste.tt0 $125. 4M Lerrwcod """" l2v 08 mtr SJ.1. 40 hp mrr 644-Ull: e.vn 53&-1138 .1ZJft 1tating "xperience. martial prrienccd and ovtr 21. I 'K~E"ON=M~O~RcE~--c.,tt..c-rc&ccd--c,-c,, '' 1~12 dutaner clothes, Cir. CM 5'M777 STERF,Q, 1971 unclaimed males_ ShoU:. ~:!' .. I!.. back6• boat .\ trlr. Make. dtt,r. 327 Walnut, HB. status, income. rrqu1remt'n!s 4~s767 or 49'}-lflll. ~... .., ctil1111. baby f\lm.. couch. SCHWrNN F"air Lad Y lay _ away. G • r r a r d .rmund, Reu • ...,.........," aft w. Wll11t1n, Sp. 39. I F"A7cro="R=Ycd.,.,-1 -,-,-.c1-d~"1....,.,-,I iind backgrotlnd. \V r I ! t-: w Ar TRESS. "xpc>rtPnf'fil. f'Krtl cond, 5 YTII old, S160 or rofltt tbl•.. brand , tl('W StinaTlliY. Good cond. $25; turntablt, AM/f'M •tere<i.1,o'=m~·~~~-~-~--· I ~~~~-'-----=~ I l\l&jorway I: H11.U Pint, froui Cleq1!il!'d 11rl •!Jfi, na1Jy r 1. full l\mf:'. Rrnton'r. Colftt bt~t oller. Tl-4 M~ r "! I JI• f' r J f' -bro 1 le r . G.E. portah1r rttOrd player radln A: tape player. Alr NEW obedience clAM 1t11r11 Bo•tt, Pow•r 906 S79S 869 W 18 h S CM Joi. P.O. Box J:,00, C<l!lll PfltLCO relr~crator. Gl'lOd brlck--.-hrac It rmn,: othl"r SJ S Mg..q.;,12_ 1 p e .1 k f' r 1 w/cros..over Novicf' Obecl . Train1nK .• lu1y · · t t, ' ' ~1~. Calif. ~10:·n t~ hs _.9;~~ Hwy, condit10n. Apt •lzf! l"IO. Ut:m&. SA, Sun IOA.m-3pm.t--·---------1y1l,m. Stlll bnu\d new, 271h 9:30 11m. MarUncrtst 23' Chris Cralt_ OvtT· DODGE '68 pop.top cus1om SALESGIRL, •xp·l'I. fo r 1----"-'--'-·-·--·-·--~!Hi-i4!l. 1~4R f'nr'I _ Kimberly, N.8 . rrs Bea.ch houM time. Bir· IOld !or .$Jl!t w/w1rranty. Ktnnrlt, 5-~. N l t h!f'r . Chry~ eng., camper. fo,!lnt cond, lfi.000 G~rma.n de\\ Af'P\.y 111 f al'I ttsull~ &re ju~! a phone Tridtr'• P11.radlst column IJI !Ha rhor Vipw Homt11.• 1e1t 1e.Jectlon ever! ~ 1he P.11y tin hal11 nC:f' ot .$120 or • • w !11 TE F..LEPHANTS" fiO w rllrl., l)\N'rtion flndtr, oriR ml. .$3200/ofr. 644-MS&. pt'rtlfln, [)l'r R1>chnrr f)f'l1, for You1 5 Linea, 5 D1,y• for HO\i~e J-luntln1t? W.11teh the DAILY Pnm Clau:t.tled ama.11 p11yment1. C r e d It Fut reiull.I At'! just a phone 11t>llrl, Covl'r~. Slp~ 2. Rr .. dy Dally Pilot Want Ada bavt 18582 Beach B!wf. H,B. caJJ away· 6.fZ-5673 .S!i. Cllll !od.11y ... 642-5671. OPEN HOUSE ttilumn. aection MW! d1tpl, ~50l. call awa.y. 60-5671 to go! Sl!f.JS. 673-4496. ba.rr11ln,, 1alon. I ------ I r ff DAILY PILOT I Transport.alion J:yctes, Bikes, Sco.>tffs THNll 'HONDA ... "FRIEDLAHDBr 1-MACllt Oftln'. WI 537-004 • Im-7566 eTHE BIKE SHACKe . NEW BICYCLES PARTS e ACCESSORIES EXPERT REPAIRS ON ALL MAKES Brazing & \\'elding 1093 C BAKER, CM 1':e11r Fa1Mew e 546.4130 * Show Chopper 1969 HARLEY DAVIS0:-.1 74f'Ll-I. Lois o! chrome. ~lust see to appreciate. Call 635-Sl-16 anytime. ? LADIES bikes, prarncally new. only ndden a fe111 Ltmes. S.30. ea 1 boy'! Schwmn bike, 10 spd, $30. 675-1828. HODAKA Ace 100, Brand new engll1t'. J\!any xtras & spares. Everything in perfect cond. Best offer. 644-0145. y A.\tAHA 125 CC, ~1X, 19TI~21" front 1vhN"l, knotr bies. currrutts, perfect con· clition, S5j(). 847-1331. WANTED Honda 250.305 Scrambler. Running or not. \Vill buy part5. 557.9305, FOR salf': Girl'i; Sch1\'inn 3 !!lJlf'ed bike, good condition. ~· 644-2005. ~ * 1370 SL HONDA. Xlnt Oond. tt>O. Call 6i1-3969 CON TEMPO LAGUNA HILLS TfturMjq, July 22, l9r1 Autos tw S.lt 1§1 1 I§] ,__I ·_~"'_""10__,]§] I [ '"'"'"'''' l§J i l,__·_"""_"""~1§1 970 ~A;u;to;s;, ;lm;;po;rt;od;;;;;.:;9;7~0 I iA;;uto;,;;s,;,;;I m;po;,;;r;tod;,;;;,;;97;0; j 1§11 1§11 Motor Hom•• 940 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported. 970 Autos, Jmporfild -------RENTAL, rre..1 yourst"U to a RED CARPET vacation in a -Sports Car Values! JAGUAR 27' ~ondor motor home lulJy I• ,63 Healey 3000 • ,68 'b:I JAGUAR 2~;1· Auto, alr. equip!. dual AIC slee-ps S I •·~A A rl 17,000 mL X.nt con d, . • Spri• o:i ust1n me ca s·-... sin1 1 6 ~~Y to roll, reser.1at1on • '&.J BJ'l.IW 1600 • ,70 Dat· .)1 a t . avail. thru Aug. 8th · sun 20Xl e '68 J'l.1GC GT e '65 JAG 3.8 SEDAN. Au10, 496--24&:1, 4!J6..fil44 . •&J .\JGB GT, air e '10 MBG Orig. Xlnt mech. $1900. 3.)' MACK Bus. Completely GT 1z1 e '64 V'\V BUG e 675-4177. aelf contained. Xlnt running '69 V\V F5that:k. au!o/alr e l----J~E~N=S~E=N~-- cond. See & make offer. ·157 Ghia Cpe e '69 V\\' DLx 54&-0022 anytlml'. Bus e '69 VolYO 1~ Auto ---J~E~N~S~E~N.,---- FOR Ren t Self ronta1ned, e '7! Volvo 14~. A"lnt fine· AU11-IORIZED Travco. SIN"ps 6. A1r/rond. T .. kl' n·1irl1>s. SALES .•. SERVICE \\'kly or monthly. Beginning Jl(JUSI::: or-l~fPORTS July 25th. 836-4323 { 1 ) 523-7250 1 'T"',"."';i".,-,-, T=,-.-v~.1~~94"'5 I BENTLEY MG taro lHINK ii&,,~,, ''FRIEDLANDER" t J150 lll!•CH {HWY. :rtl 893· 1566 • 537.6824 :\!UST sf'll '62 Cl1GA, R&M. vrry good rond. $700 or best o!le1'. 536-5012 PORSCHE TOYOTA ~'7::::--:::::~::::-~·1~~-·~---~-'70 PORSCHE DEAN LEWIS Ov.u~rs P~roonal 91IT now for sale. Immaculate i!reen TOYOTA f1nisb v.·ith black interior • 1'1ag V.'h!'i"ls. radials, radio, !'IC'. For den1onstration, call 8~Z-i.13.'i. Harbour Volksv.·ag. er. • 18711 Beach Blvd. Ask !or used car dePt. Ole. 695· APCI • 1967 PORSCHE 912 Xlnt coOO. 19il Toyota Dton10 #5991 $1777 So Down Payment 1 ~~~=~-~~-~-1 •3e9~ 6·1:>-:,9j1 '68 :\'!GB-GT CHndy apple 1.c' ~·~·=~-~-----! $65.31 mo.* red, n1int cond SI.750 1966 912, :i spd, ex1ras. \'ery 36 mos Drfet•rM paymPnt Ong1nal Q1,nrr. 496-1891 n1<'P, Rerl SZ79."J. t'irm: pr1tP S2.l'i1.1ri or cash prier lJ' SCOTS:'llAN Tr a i I er --------.o •4n ft 11 S18!b.1Ei !nc! Tax,< L<c. APR 1952 BentlE>y. Very good 1959 MGA GD COND ,~~~~~~'-~'~'~"~-~'' Chemical Porta Pot. 12 \'Oh 3100 \V. Coast Hwy. • · l·LJS'(', •on approl'ed credit. NEWPORT , IMPORTS VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN '6.l V\V , Clean appea.'.:.~nce, 1----------I Gvod rn1·<:b cond. Sbr::i or , 66 BL'G, 11@1' clutch & IX'.~t offer. Days s.J:J..1832.1 brilkt>~. good t!rr~. 5jl)(), Eves: ~8-1610. 1 Call atll'r J pn1,__:1!13-l!r.1l, 1966 V\\' CA.\lPE:R I '69 V\V Bui; xlnl co11di11on, new rng111e .SU:\ROOf' s1.12·, Ot'Yl:R .. 492-27<» • • 6-16--0.166 • =-=~-----------() VW '65. New clut('!l, good '69 V\V HUG-Clran. A·I tires. Clean. SG9:-i. Call I mech cond. $149,l • * * 8·1i-f3SI G·l4-128J_ 'G!l Bug F~l/A:'ll raU1v. rop. :\!any X'rras. tr&de. 646-1696. 1 u1yl $1050 ':..ti VIV \'an S200 RU'.\S~ lJfl}'f, :..~$-16J(I, E\e!!: 49-l-40i~. 66 V\~V~,.,-,~lbark. rrbll ~:n~ l n\\'rlf'l'. gd f'Olld , S!ki:I l!-t!--:l~ 'G!I V\I' lr1stb<1ick, Jo.Int ('Ond . A~k1n1; Si'.12J . :,48-7826 or :.-16-1261. and lJO lighls. $650 (}r best i:ond. Runs good $6000 or s~. * '.•10.0090 'j!l POR cpe JfiOO norn1al bPSt o!ler. :i-16-3778 "'knds Newport Beacb ===~~~~·-~-·I !\ew eng, clutch SS50 !inn f' D , '6:l VIV. runs good. h('a,lrrs. oiler .. '>1&-i!995 -or 531-216-1. 1~-~-------· I :'llGB-CT, 'GS, Ovrrdrive, actory 1reL't !'all's, Service flll paint, l'xtra clean S.JCIO. =~~~--1 V\\ S!'.:D,\;<.', 1910. Lt gTt>)'. Slick :;h1!1, fully ~'4u1pped. Ni<'e car. Askwg $liJO. Cal! ·19j...5137 ooly. KARMANN GHIA SJ&-713l '" • pm. VACATION in snug 14' ----iliA\'i/----i:;.::.::::.:=:.:;~,.::.:;::;:: A:'l·l/F~l tape. new rad1a1s.1-----------I & Part!, 1966 }(ar bor Blvd., 548-4001. Crov•n. Full 5ldl' I" n ! BMW 1910 K.4.R;'llANN G H I A . Pi·t ply.' lH2-6721. RENAULT Costa lllesa, 646.9303. ~ ... --V-W-.-,-m-/-F'n-,.-,-.,-,-00-, w/a.Jum poles. AU only I Orang1>_ $1900. Good cond. '&l :'lolcGRBc~•oOnr,1,:1,"··" $~0 '61 RENAULT ,1·/xtra '70 MARK II SPT. CPE. Good '~c~',,","1;1'0-.',so,.. 1--=.n~V\-v-s~,-,,..-,~.~u-,--1 $490. 54.)..n8'1, days. _A_u_t-01_n_o_1;_"_E_x_oo_ll_,-n-ce-·I Cali 846·2'2'19. ' ,-" o-ll<41«11.v L'srd SEARS. Sleeps 4, plus f":..ITa I & ~M""E~R=c=E~D=E=s~e=E~N=zo.1 ---'-'-'"'~'-'·'~"='~'~"-"-'---mo~~.~12~·;~n~·l2-:.;Jti:> .\u· l..~lllil•1lOn. 4 Spi'l''<l-L1ke 1 ,,~,u=sT~~s=E~L'l-. --.67--V-\\' *. IJ.16-S~SJ *. 21p.-0nltent. Jct' che~t Ji • MGB --~====~--1 SQUARF:BACK. S1300. VI\ '6!1 II' E ~Tr H :\LI A ~ 4M-60Z2 PEUGEOT m'11 r:ttJOA!\Si This 1,·cek heater S . -I MB PRESTIGE CARSf l ~,19-3!126 * &1.'.-l·ll~ Can1(.1('1'. Uni; Ol\JH'r. all CA!l1P Trailer. sleeps 2 and 2 ' • --------------------! on~" SIS95 Tum unused items ul!o quick serv rrl·or1b .. PERFECT; $200 '67 :\!GB.GT, lmn1aculate. 1962 PEUGEOT. Excellent ~~~~ .. Good Buy al · ROY CARVER, Inc. e .64 220 s • .6:i ICJO 0 • 11 ,{J()() orig n11. S 2 1 O O. tr.:inspor1ation car. Good MIRACLE MAZDA cash, call M2--567S Pli fii:i-oo.xl. ~·-"'_"_"'_ ... ___,/I") Antiques/Classics 953 Horseless Carriage 1902 OLDS. RECREATION CENTER ROY CARVER, Inc. 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa lviesa 5464444 WE PAY TOP CASH tor usM can: &: 1J'Ucks, ju.!it call us tor free f'Stima!es. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask for Sales f.tanaier lim.l Beach Blvd. Hun~on Beach 970 2925 Harbor Bl vd. .67 250 s, auto. • .67 T;:JJ s. _'16_8-_6_10_1_. ==oo-----('Onditifln. 642-4469. Autos, lmporte~970-Autos, Imported Costa flilesa 546 -4444 stick e 'SS 2:-io s e '69 2~0 OPEL TOYOTA Home ol the Rotary Engine -----! '68 B,\t\V l600, R/H, 50,000 SL e '70 :?50 C Cpe e '10 1----------:?i:-:.0 }/arhol', Co~ta ,\lesa m;·,. moo. 280 SE."' "'· ""Y ""'-'69 RALLYE '7 0 TOYOTA 645-5700 • * 646-7907 * * sic&: s,...,.rts n1odels in :-;tock. -~-~ -~---,_ ~-DR 1970, lo mi 's, 1ape CORTINA '68 CORTINA GT. Blk. lt'ather. upholst. 4 spd, Good ('()nd. $600. 557-5963 aft 7 P~I. DATSUN HOUSE or !:'>!PORTS SPORT COUPE 4 O.R SEDAN rlrck, n1::ig \\l1cels, w1rle ( 1) 523·7250 , !<cod Polygl0> hm. $17'>0 Orange County's La rgest Selection Ne-w & Used Mercede s Benz Jim Slemons Imps. Warner & Main St. E:1:cel!rn1 cond1t1on -auton1a- 11r. trans. >,'Old 1\1th rallye i;tr1~. IZLhi66l, This '\'e!'k Only $1495 MIRACLE MAZDA 6i.>.216j Corona senes -Air Condl· 1~;1 TOYOTA S tation 11011. Extra r~ean and sharp. \\'agon. 1\lrk II. 6 mos old. (666BBS1 Tht~ \i"eek only, LOADED~ Air/cond. Lug. $1 ,95 rack. _\Just sell! 842-1993 MIRACLE MAZDA TRIUMPH . THE TRIUMPH VS STAG NOW ON DISPLAY Large Selection of Fully Reconditioned Used V-W's Porsches-Campers & Vans 100°/o 30 Cay o r 1000 Miles Guarantee Parli & labor e Engin e e T1•n;. e Front & Re,r A•I• A"emblie• e llt•k• Svile m e Elocfr;t•I Sy1ltm '65 GHIA .( 1peed, ted;o. 51646<1 '67 vw <I •P••d, ,.d;o, c~rome ,,m1, W IW tOr~1. VEGS99 '62 vw <I >peed. ••dio, origin.I 1;,,,, 19,000 o,ig;n•I ,,..ile1. LP88SO MUST SEE '65 vw I' •P••d. •odio, t ~r<>m• t•m•. PIX I S<I $795 TWO LOCATIONS '67 DATSUN PICKUP 1 1066 PORSCHE '"· lo °'' '· motors 1"' VIV BUS. Ver} ,,~d fl"d !ilk IMh'r ' $20~1. Alt 7: C'O,nd Camper, S\02:i 01' R-l2-S6:i2. Laguna Beach 1n1rl<' 6i::t-720:iZ. I, Fast resulls aN" JU~t a phone 900 So. Cst. Highway DAILY PILOT fvr action! I NEWPORT IMPORTS • 1970 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 549-3031 673·0900 E. Coast Hwy. . . NEWPORT IMPORTS 3JOO \V. Coast HI\'}', Kewporr Beach FIAT • C.Omplete Stock o! 11Dli1D C'all aw;:iy -612-.'i67~ 494-7503 * 540-3100 Call 642-56;8 & Save! 980 '-Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New FREE 1175.00 VALUE SUNROOF iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii CLOSE-OUT OF ALL REMAINING '71 MERCURYS BRAND NEW 1971 COUGAR AM ·~d·o. 1:~1ed glol\, di .... hi , co•e". !IF91<!SJ7701 ) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Move 10 SIERRA DA\\';\'. Always dry. baJn1y, clea.L No r.mog or fog. Idea] for arthritic or bronchial prob- lems. A1 SIERRA DA\\'N you own .\uur 011'!1 mobilt'· home lo!. Renr11 k('{'p going up. \\'hy pay N'nt~ For !rer brochtlrt'. \ITHe Dept. 3, SIERRA DA\\'N, HemE>t, Ca 92343. 841-6087 KI 9.31.11 lhi~k SH FOR Just $10,500 you C'11.n 0\\11 a 20'x55' rnob1Jt" home ANNIVERSARY •50 PINTO \V/AUTO. Trani. $5 d11.y, 5c mile. THEODORE ROBINS FORD on a golf conN<e at the 2060 HARBOR BLVD. beach. Has large ~rrttned 1 COST/. ~lESA 642-00lO room Ir fl'nred paT!o Park :'--======~=~ hag all facilitie~. 5.i6-4n9. ANNIVERSARY •SO TRAILER mme & rabana ~ady to n1ove in to Loca ted 1n trlr park nr hay on Lido Pen111. il4167Hi77.~ or 2131692-3387. ·59 FLA.\1INGO d *'I u x f' mobile home. ~ ev•\y tumisl'M!d, 11 ir cond, patio oov'd, Xlnt cond, $3000. Call tor appt. 548-5608. AUTOS WANTED Top dollar for clean used c;:irr., ~ Andy Bro\\'n, THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BLVD. COST A :lfESA &12.()(ilO \fE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS l! your car ls extra clean, "FRIEDLANDER" 13750 IE.A.CH ILVD. l Hwr. J91 8:13-7566 • 537.<..tt2-4 'f\4:--iO Spyder. Good cond. B~· Qwll('t SllOO. 4 1 0 Lmrrald Bay, Laguna Bch. 4!\.l-{i02Z. LOTUS LOT~ AUTHORIZED SALE~ & SERV1CE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V. Coast Hwy. Ne .. vport Beach '65 FOR luto Tron\., llCtO~Y Al~ (0Nfllfl0Nlf/G, Po,..., "ff'• ~· PoWt! (d<") br-,,i<t;, IQ. dt0. ""°!" l \U II? $895 6 <11 ...... h""'·'"''°'Y•" to..t•:••"•"'l·••d'" h101or. .... eu>l'MIVljlf(oOI~\\' s995 '10 CHEVY Mll>ll v.t . ..m rrnn•. lotlllrl .~ 1....r''""'""l·-·-""l· Qllly 1 ~.000 .,,1 .. Jl9~1i(l BRAND NEW '71 HORNET $2199 # 153059 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BRAND NEW JQ~ll!Wl~OJt ~It!<'! o.r concj;'""'""I· pow. or ll•tOftlj, ~0"'11 (do>e) brokt" l,,ggo1 t 1o<k. "i'3t95 '69 RAMBLER $1495 '69 BUICK tr'l'ti.1 ·---' ANY BRAND NEW 1971 MERCURY MONTEGO IN STOCK-WE WILL SELL FOR 3% OVER DEALER INVOICE! YA.JdAHA 125-Set up lor d1r1 see us first. JAGUAR '71 AMBASSADOR STATION WAGON f«lar'!' "'' rOfldrtionfll. lult po'""· 1oN1ca1 <001, AM/rM '"''"· 1o11 111•""11 "'~••L \!XY'l~1 $ 795 OUR HAS SELECTION OF 1971 MERCURYS NEVER BEEN BETTER. IT'S TIME FOR YOU TO MAKE OUTSTANDING SAVINGS RIGHT NOW AT ••• Many extns . Strfft gf'ar in BAUER BUICK '69 XKE ROADSTER a box . Also 360 ~1a1c<l.1 23-1 E. l7tb St. STh-4425. CMta i>ll'S& 54S.n65 ft\otor Homes 940 l:'llPORTS \VANTED 12.600 actual milt>~. Br1t1!h Orange Counti~s racing l:'n'f'n. Chrome wires CON DOR TOP$ BUYER IZBC498l 134\li BU.L r.tAXEY TOYOTA A'\l1hori~('(I Jtig, Dealf'r Tho ,..cllt thA!'1 not a boot. 18881 B<ach Blvd. ~ mar•"\'$ BILL CORWlN FORD H. BeACh. Ph. 847-s.m Dl ,.11 Onnre County'• Condor Dia-'&.).'iO MALm~.~EVELLE. m ottfS tributor, 230 S. Main St., air, top t'Olldition. I L B h Qranae. ClC'lR to thf'M ma· f ==~c_<J_l_6'_4-4_1'_;___ aguna eac. 6J9..~•~ Or 900 So. Cat. Highway Jor treeways. UJ.N TI~ED of !hat old turrututt! 494.7503 * 540-3100 Ki. 7-0(44, It 1 really not that hard -__ _ rrs Beacti bou~ time. Bia· psi selection ewr! Ste the DAILY PILOT OUl\tied _,....,.,, to rtpl.1.ct. J ullf w11tch the l!W>R JAGUAR 2 + 2 £..Type. turnlfUN I: mbcellal'Jf'O"J~ I 1111rk, 11 ir, 11rw hr11k~s & columns ln tM OusWed l'lu!t·h. ln1mac. C'flnd. Call Section. 642-IS.'i~ •. , ... '62 RAMBLER WAIOll -.. ,. !tot" tOd•O ~•oto;, ~ <,oot1 Jloll lrofo.,...!OO f,..,/,~IH6 DISCOUNTED $1006 31 '69 DODGE SllPll Ill V B, ...,10. !•o••. POWff l!H<,n;. '*''-lJ,1 "' • THINKING OF A NEW OR USED VW? Let Harbour Volkswa&en Prove To You That We Appreciate Your Business 011111150 NEW• USED VW'S TO CHOOSE JiROM. IMMIDIATI DILIVIRY. BRING YOUR TRADE. OPEN SUNDAY ' 1968 YW CAMPER Home of the Rotary Enrine Zl.50 Harbor. c.o.ta Mesa ~S.5700 '68 YW BUG Au tomatic stick •J1itt mUlt H"ll • nttd the room lXEiV 754!. n 095. $2998 @ 1971 Volvo 144 Sed. Demo • 7360 $3098 Harbour Volkswagen L19un1 8e1ch toO S.. Cot. Hl1hway 494-7503 * 540-3100 1m Volvo 14l Sed Pemo # 3268 Authr.irhted Volkswa&en Deale-r 18711 IBACH BLVD. 142-4431 1970 YW BUG 113 HUNTINGTON lliACH Exctdlent l"Onditlon .0 1peed yellow. black intnlor. f)H. Al.O J, This ~ otlly. $1595 Au..,, lml"rla4 t70Auto1, lmportad t70 MIRACLE MAZDA PILOT CLASSIFllD Autos, New '71 Firebird 980 Autos, New '71 Flreblrd 'vlly !1c••r, MUl&ol'tll• v.1, 1u1~"'11lr lr1n1m11. 1 1 1 n , 1lr d l'ldl!lonl"liJ- 1ln•l'1 ol•H, pew1r 1!••r· 1119 •n<I "°"''' br~k.. rt· 1110 I. n11r1r. !ll3111(1ot. ~" '" -980 ~:;, $3807 ~;. $3643 ~::. $3661 '71 Flreblrd '71 Flreblnl '71 Firebinl \t.1, l~ltl'!'lt!I• tr•n1l'!'ll1o ~/' t1"11111•n1,,.g. llnlld A!• ~oncllt~lflt, V-1, 1ui. r,..,, flt"'' 1!ltrl~o. t nd e IH, 1ule""t!lc tr1n1ml1· rnellc tr1n1ml11Ton, POW. •Ith, 1lr col'ICllllOnln;, 1!11n_, V-&, pawtr tl'l!I! tf' OMrll'll l brlkh, llnt- ttl.,11.lltJlll> a P"ewor i••kfti t• Ill i lttl. (ffll1ll.1onof) a 11.-ttr, ftJ111L18* l f:;, $3643 g:;, $~61 I ~::. 8:1142 ······················: • SliE IT NOW I • ON DISPLAY! • I • • • • THE ELEGANT ALL Nl!W • I • • GRAND PRIX • • ''HURST PONTIAC'' • • • I I • • • z • • • • • • • • • • '89 Flrebird •t~.O. riower t1•~•· !!II . PfWff br&k1u . ~!~y\ r1;1G!, !,.IC1nse (ZXX JJfl $2388 169 Grand Prix 70 Chevy Mt llbu ....... ~Mt· ff,'""'""'" l;~':; Ill ! 11 1 i ~ , t••lilt. II• w 1 r ....... "I' CtMf. ~=l"l)y~ 11¥1 TtP. $2895 '71 Pinto ....... 4,toO MU• 4 tl'll9d tr1ri.mll-110n, rH lo t. ..,..., .,., l l)tt Cllt) Ofily ' $2188 '69'Fonl · CUSTOM • ....,. 1td111, VI. •11!0~ JIOW•• ,1..,. lno. IMl IEL) $1299 '66 Mustang li?~dlo 1. ,,,~11r. "'u!Or•,.llc Tr 1n1-m111il>l'I, "'Ir Condi· uonlno. !~"'V UJI $995 '66 Olds. 98 Tlll1 t dOOr ll1N- IOP 1!11 full pew.,, llt lOrV •Ir condll1""" }'ai r;lt1 .. 1\11191'. .1098 '88 Wiidcat Wll111 twt1 m1tlc lr41\111'1ktlfll. pOwtr l'''''r.•· pe-,..... 1ctory 1lr, •!rolloWI Ind wlfll • vlnyt ClCA '") ontiac C.tllllll. ' °""'" Htrtl!Op, AHio t. HMMf', "'u!-llc Tr1111m!ttlclrl ~ .. Sl-lnQ. ·-,,...... Air corw:u .. llOnlllf. UO l .ICOI $1997 '69 Cougar AllllllMilc ,,...,..,,... •!Ori. _, ...... '"'· 'flnyl roof, ll'C-IOf'Y t lf conclllllllt-ltlll. !JC'fl llt ) Loe.ded, only 4.000 rnila. Corporation prflid•ntl' wUe1' private car. Like new 1n every rt1pect. C&ll Kent Allen 8424435 for dtmon. ltratlon awclntment. '69 CAD c~. De Ville, Full pwr., all dll:. axtru, Xlnt OOftd. Orla:· erwner mutt 1&crltlef t:ir Imm ed 1 a te u.le! f4::IOO. au..m..I7. t ti7 Cpe, De VIiie TACl'OllY AIR CON.OITIONING TULL U:ATHE1' lNTEIUOll 1'uil power, vinyl top, tilt 4 11t1.tte0Mc .tfftlna, AMI FM, many other deluxe u- -!VKP1'0l $2444 NAllllS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd. Colitll MeM 540-9100 ·ii CAD"Sedan De Ville. M power A air. 'IOO over wholeNlt, 100% ttnancm,. Pvt. Party. 815-4830 Uk lflr Dick . CAD 'ii El Dora.do 32,00J mile1. Owner J.ttvtng for Ha'>l•all. Aliklnt f', 0 0 0 _ ,,.,..,.,.. 1963 UbILL..\e" Ldan de Ville. Xlnt (!Bftd. ;500. MB-4-481. Autos, '0194 WAGONS Credit No Problem 2145 H•rber ••"-t; , • .,..,....~ -64W4 t - CAll.Y Pll.llT ':f; SPECIALIZING IN QUALITY JUST 5 REMAINING 1971 DEMONSTRATORS LEFT!! • ALL HAYE REMAINING FACTORY WARRANTIES & FULLY EQUIPPED. • ELECTRA * IUICK IPORT WAGON * RIVllU * LI SAlll * * OPIL. WAGON * 1970 JAGUAR XKE COUPE Yellotw exterior with black l•1th•r interior. Air condition in9, 4 speed, chrome whe•l•, AM-FM r•dio. A low mlle19e 011t1t1ndln9 cu. 115889$4895 1969 OLDS CUTLASS Autom1tic tr1nsmi11lon, radio and h11t1r1 poW•r 1f4erin/il. po<w•r br1k1t. What a -11y on this nice cer. (744APY I 1969 MIRCURY COUGAR VI en9lne1 111tom1tlc tran1ml11l1111 r1dle1 h11ter, power 1tetrin9 ind power .,r1k111 factory t !r con•ltlonln9, yJnyf roof, Ju1t lovoly. (604DFCI $2795 ' 1968 PONTIAC GTO Thl1 ••ry '''"'" 1t1oi1I i• lully •~ul,,..d l"tlw!lllnt Vt, auterft1tl1 , rad io, heatar{ pow. •r tf••rln11 !ftwtr ltrtke1 '"' •lny roof. IW,Slt71 $ 1895 1970 CHIVIOUT MAUIU VI tritlft l , tvtttnetf1 tr1ntml11fen1 rtlil•1 httftr, 111wer ••••tll'lt1 _JOWtr ltt•~··· ,, .. lory •I• 1on41tl;•l•I· Drlvi lhlt ••• 111i you'll ~uy It. Ill AYDI $3195 '1961 llVIEllA ~II l'_tWfr •~ulp1 .. •I ''"' 1,ctory air co .. 41tt1nlnt1 •jftYI reef, cu1t1M btneh 111t arwf mtrt. It WI I \e her.ii te ffnJ on• •• ril11 •• lfili. I IV114fl $1995 BUICK In COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA 548-7765 l •1\ .. ' . •AN EXCEPTIONAL PAINT FOR AN EXCEPTIONAL PRICE • GOtlD HIDING • CL~AN-UP WllH WATER• • 1:f1C)UR D,RV;ING •BRUSH OR ROLL OUR PRICE 199 · GAL. •CAN BE USED INSIDE OR OUTSIDE -JO•• "L•ASANT HILL DOWNIEY • ......... ... •IO!l.r "t::.,..,. ltll fOtilfltA C!)lfA et.YD. Mll I . f"lOlitflCI AYI, .,.~~· ~Nl'1fi-7# •• ~·0011 ' 1 "" -'l ~ C:Ofllt411t &.UtC:~ a 1.IMD•.t.Y a ANT A MONICA l • I .... -.,_ 9f ""''"' ._ 1411 lllfCOLN ILYO, . .. •' " s· AM¥A ANA. , '' ••'"1 •1°""1 ''-'· ' ~ ..... Q ttfl'I, .. ,..,,. TOltRA#ck ~.~~ -l l 1te• t ... 111 ofW1•.,., ll>ltl•t) t11M1t1AWflfQltNI flYO. .......... -,-;,_.,, LA l:fA81rA •t l..,..•h 11•<111. -~ ... ·0 1 ~-NClll WHln111t • •DANO w•sr ,,·• .. , _... ' t i.et• t••• "' &1~11 "" ~·'· t1Alt06NA/HA WTHORN• 11r1 1. lllOtlllllTlO. M. •flf'-P ~"·~ .-_... c61t»llt ~ltlNllUW ILYD I 1)!01 I f 1 ''-''',..,,II of l"lto ' tW'ISTA'•LA ltl•SA ••AN DIEGO• EAST• W•.ST PHOENIX • ' • WE CAIOIY A IAl\PE SE!EeDON·Of·viE.BE11,SH1VA, UOUITEX, KR~IJJN .. STRJ!THM411E w · mooi:rs- Alf 1t'i~OUNr P!IJCES! WATER·COLORS OIL PASTEL SET 25' JZ ggw,ii STANDING EASEL ARTIST .OILS 49 COLORS 20 CC TUBE OUR PRICE 25~. • PRE·MOUNTED ON GAUZE SHEETS •APPROX. 12 X 12 IN. TABLE EASEL PALETTE '12" .. 18" MASONITE 89< MOSAIC TILE PIUS .65 GLAZED & S!Ml·GL~ZED · PATTERNS • STANDARD BRANDS PAINT CO • .Zu!J !Ko .Za•f E"•'Y lt•'"•iln Out StO'll C•fllllltd by ou• Bur•~~ L1borl!O'lf CAN B .USED IN I E ·WH~Rf ·1 EXTREMELY DURABLE PAINt jS DESIRED. • 30 MINUTES TO ORY ,_SCRUBBABl,E •CLEAN:UP WITH WATER •A TOP 'QUALITY, EXTERIOR STUCCO·"IASONRY PAINT LASTS 8 YEARS ·3··ga WHITEST WHITE COMP. RETA IL AND 44 COLORS I .ZS GAL. 3 SPECIAL GLAZED 39c PATTERNS .o,.v~, · ,0~:. 49c 10 21s,.r• IHEET COMll IU!TAIL 900 C0111f'. IETAll 90c 10 3.95 7 INCH JIOLLER & PAN SET At IHOWN . OMP. A!l AIL70C TH":~R .~~:. 2 2 ~' IN YOUR OWN METAL CONTAINER 4 INCll NYLON °"" 19 9 PAINT BRUSH · •••C• u . COMft. lllTAIL a.oo SPRAY UNIT COMPLETE ou• 4550 WITH MOTOR. l'llllca QUA.AT· CUl\I, , lA. ' HOS.E, coM ... lltlT.t.11. 11.00 -B 'BARD·S . PAIRT 1 OPEN 5 NIGHTS MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8 A.M. TO 9 P.M. OPEN SAT. 8:00 TO 6130 OPEN SUN. 9:00 ·ro 5:30 • ~ASAOENA 'OltAllADA HILL.t LONG 86ACH f"Al" .o••• I HOLLY #101tTllltl0GE , .. , LONG tlACN ILYO • I tioc•• w ..... of Coll•... 10111 ••LtOA llYO. • ........ WlllO• BUlfflANK v. t lffa &cH.t11o .i °'""°"'"',. TUC$0N 130 N. VICT~Y It.YO. MONTER~Y ~ARK. POAOWAY AT ,.lllllT AYI \\ 11:1.u lt'Oftll "oM"""n' •tJ1w,111001111 IT. ,.0MONAI ONTA1tl0 VAN N'u.Y5' l\ .... N..iflet Jll1f11t ..... ""'"'.. COJINllll NbLf I MtLU '"' lt:,UL\llOA tLYO HUNTING TON BEA Clf 6L MONT• Cootftl, ••• 1 .. 1 llM.a tOUlfl .. ·v.._ .. ., l'toO WAlllNI!• AYIMUI .. , l'tclr. 1110., l 1111, ...... Y•ll•t ' ' N111 Qoldefl Wl•t .,,.,.,.¥••• lflV•RSIDE WOODLAND HILLS OJCNA'lfO( VENTUlfA COlllNllll •Aa,.ou" a .tUlllUP& 220» YINfUlt• ILYO, . 2211 YIJlj l'AlllO AYI. LO$ ANO•L•S · 1 lloc• Wo1t ef '"" .... Cl"JOfl C..-Of Oo.,..Ylfllp,.rf CO•Nllt 0' l'tCO & tltOAOW&Y NO.• .SO.SAC/fAMEN10 .. 8AKEltS'1ELO • Flf•SNO •$AN 8ElfNAlfOINO _.,_, :.· . .,.. .,._. ---. ..... --. ,., . .l ~---1 -~---- _,. __ -·-I -.. _, . ....