HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-07-28 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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· :· · Mps. t(le·~ ln'7ading Central Valley;
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··~,i;olln.1y May Es~ape Dangerous Biter8
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WEDNESOAY 'AFTeRNQON, JULY 28, 1971 ' ' " ' VOL. M.1it0. ""' l ;SICTIO•S. 74 PA•ll
P~ti~e .·; Cooler
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PAULA TOOl)IAN WORKS STYLISH LY AT TYPEWRITER
In Jo4 untlngton Beach, Hot Pants Get Cold Should•r
Pants Too Dot?
Police R eceptionis ts Feel Cliill
By RUDI MBDZIELSKI they have skim over them.''
Of ""' DlllfY ,.. s11ttt BUrkenfield believe.a the pant suits are
.. Hot pants m1y be warming tm bottoms "a very functional and comfortable thing fl a few girls a\ Huntington Beach City for the girls to wear. especially when ait-
ij:all, but the lltylt.h appare.l is not ting at the typewriter and stooping over
rt! ......... ,., .. the heartl f th · the file cabinet." ~ Y w ........ ,. · ~ eu-Officer James Walker, Mt of Burken-
f.At \~!t count there ....,.~ thr~ &iris rield 's men:.says lhe attire Ls not distrac-
Searing lhe. new oulfita. Today, there. tilli to IM men. "We're too busy to be
1f;u1y be only two. concerned," he laughed.
~"I wore mine tOday for UM! first·Ume, Another 1lrl brave·eflOUlh to wear hot 'tot J just found out that lhe capt.In pants is Judy Va~erbH:k, tbt girl wbo
~dn't want me to wear them," 53.id Sher-delivers'mail to the various city offices. ~ Lindsey. a receptionist in the Police "l work in Ure mailroom Md ll'1 really
4'partment's delective bureau, who wa1 hot in tbeu. There iJ no circu11ti9n
cli:esaed in shorts~Monday. whatsoever in that room and that11 why I
y Her bou, C4tain Grover L.. -Payrie, wear bat pants/' ahe 1akt.
lave hia reaeon.!! ','I bave no o~lona ."Norody tlas s8.ld &IJ11hing about Jt to to bot pant suit! or hot pants whtcb give me. Mo.st people don'~ ooUce me becauae: the appearance of a dreS!J. But 1 ~ould be ·I'm ju.e;t in and out," s~ added. w;i. the brief type of hot pant4·in the . · ~ as~ed about his opir)ion, City
r Ion areH.' . , i Ve , ·.~trati>t' Dolie2<\iller ••id., ''tl'bi•
', e ti"• all ~~1cfi<J\l'l•1iitg .~ tbilg•~e up •l!oOlt a JlOllr• !I• ill.~ and "'"'• le lftlgh • . ·' m. · ·war.Jhi gb:li.,..rt ,l'i!lrin1 P.n,!'uru .. 1
feMedby the~appura br.bW-. , t1. l'¥~10ft II' loot ID Jt
1•· fol• iude -, ifellls. · lo ...,, '"tin y.oO!f;ti' :"· .l.~ J I d<fi'I IJ:fu• the ill«t-¥,irolo&; !.( Mtllri< ' ' lW oial -~--· e ta;,.ppriate off fee wear... .·l t was. a~ area to JeglllaW:, :·~ pants made their firat awearante . be woWd·"cil~" bit w&rtrW. '
· · w..kl ~In another "°"""A th !-9an11 In the !Wiaw o!l!ce. · . • , depart · nt, Capt. Ml ·ch••l , Are hofpanll ~at·IJi~·~ . ~:.i ~S".'~~:;,,1111; !-'~,'.t"J;. 1>ta<!i."'".i.. rt~ 6ii'1:
. are ~ .peek4•1*i hot ~nll ' ' ,. .''\ • ~~ they i*k out ;Ille !lliddlo <i the 1 · • · • ,
, t 111" ··~ th•m.'' ""' expt•ined. "Fleet of Concordes •·r b1ve more 8el)' onet and shorter ones bu.l U>ea are lhe,mOlt oonservallve." LONDON (UPl )-The BrlPsh Aircraft i .. Capt. Burfenfiel4 and t tAlked about • Corp. (BAC) pttdtcted Tue!lday that
bot· ~nis a Whlle 1gtJ ai'ld he didn't SI)' within eight years al lta1t tsa Concorde
"ye.! or 'ft<l'.JBUl when I came In wblb eupe:rsoak: ~l transport.! (S.STJ wtU be in
them ht 11\d they were oby •• long u service all over the world.
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Qad·ar , ·~ulups Alleged
Panel Probes Taro Jet, Airliner Crash
Sptd&J lo the DAILY Pll.D'T'
PASADENA -Testimony of radar
malfunctions in both planes and visual
flying by Landmarlr:s below one of the
worlds busiest aerial crossroads came
today at hearings into a tragic military-
commercial jet collision.
The June 6 incident that sent a Hughes
Air Weat 1plraJing 15.000 feet down into
the San Gabriel Mountains killed SO
persons, one the F4 Phantom 's pilot,
fmm El Tt>ro Marine Corps Air station.
The victims included a small brother
and si!!ter from San Clemen~ en route:
fnr a swnmer vacati<ln with their father,
plus an easterner headed home from a
\'isit in Costa Mesa.
Sole survivor of t~ accident which ii'I
being probed in three days of National
'TransJ)'.lrtation Safety Board hearings 11t
the Pasadena Hilton hotel was the Marine
jet's radar intercept officer.
During mid·morning testimony, 1.~t LL
Christopher E. Schiess. 24. of El Toro,
r;aid pilot error was probabl.v to bl.'lme.
He did not suggest which pilol. LL
.James R. Phillips. 27, nf El Toro. or the
Hughes Air West DC9 captain.
Initial witnesses said they saw lhe Air
West plane carrying 44 passengers and
crew of five spiral lazily into en almost-
lnaccessible mountain canyon leavihg a
trail of smoke and flame.
Little new was added in the way of eye·
Mosquitoes H it
Central Valley;
Cotintians Sa fe?
By TERRY COVILLE
Of t11e Dliltr l"tlft Stiff A JD011quito plague that hu killed l,:.:xl
boraea in Te1a11 and now thrtaten1 the
San Joaquin VaDey 111 not expected to
reach Orange,County om 1ea&011.
"But," warns Jack H. Kimball . man-
ager of the Qrange County Mosquito
Abatement District , 1·s1eeping sickness
1enceph11JUs) . it alwaya a potential
qan1e.r."
K.lfT\ba11 said. melhod! used Jn Orange Coun~ to retluO. the mosqtlito popub~on
have'. kept the-attuaUon normal. -
In Ten1, moaquHoes have lnlllcted the
horae poplllalioll wi1ll Venaudan Equine
Enoopballlis, • !lead!Y di!eaa whlcb can
.WO tprud to ........
This •eetc dlrecton of the lli!ltl MO&·
qulto' Abatemeilt Dlltrict ""1IClUJIC<d Iha\
pe&µ~ldet are no Ip., ·~flectivo against
mosql!'toea ln the Sao J~uln Valley.
· "We're just 1ittins on a powder keg:•
warned Dr. Don Murray , manarer Of the
J)elta ~rlct in, Visalia. "Moequitou ,are
th'tcker than they 6ave been, in aome
yem.·•
The San Jotquin mosquitoes. however.
!Set MOSQUITO, P ... %)
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witness te11Umony and It will l>e months
before the NTSB panel Issues a finding on
the definlte or probable cau5e of the
crash.
Jeff WiUlngton, 15, of Duarte. testified
he saw the jet fight.er en route from
Nevada to El Toro MCAS ~gage in
acrobalics juat before the crash .
Radarm1n Schiess. who wu able to
psrachute. denied this, uying: hil pilot
made a 36Cklegree roll ror added sir tral·
lie visiblljty several minutea prior to im-
pact.
He said he !!law the jetliner looming out
or the right 1ide of the canopy 1econd1
before impact with the Phant.om, whicb
suffered several mechanical defects.
"Watch it Rich !' he told of shouting to
Lt. Phillipr;. a veteran of about ooe year's
flying experience .
The jetliner then collided with the
IS.. HEARING, Papi)
Apollo Leaves Troub le
Behind, Zips fo r Moo n
SPACE CE NTER . Houston fUPJ ) -
Their trou bles behind. Apollo !5's
astronaul~ closed in calml y and ac-
curately on the moon loday with
everyth ing clear for a F'riday landing at
lhe foot of some of the highest lunar
mountains.
"The moon·,, getting bigger out the
window," reported Alfred M. Worden 111
the !pacecraft was 75,!JOO miles from it.
This was the last easy day for Worden,
David R. Scott and James B. Irwin
before Lhey begln a reeord six days of
moon :;iclivity. Their g.chedult: was light
and ground controllers let them sleep an
extra hour. awakening them at 10:40 a.m.
EDT.
"We certainly did have a good night'•
1leep," W1lrden reported .
A short circuit that qill doubt on
man'• most ambitioua lun~ upedltion
had been overcorm Tuetday and a
prelimlnary check indicated \hat the Ian·
ding shlp Falcon was read;:. 1 The larKll.ng site is at the base of Ult
Apennlne Mount.aJns: ra.niing 10,000 ·fett
And higher, and also near a korae which
dlpa 1,IXXI feet down.
Glynn S. Lunney. night director on the
ground, reported st • mJdmbminC brief-
ing: "The ~talus ar the m~lon Is that
we're on l(:bedule. the tra~ry is.1very
close to r19nnal , the pc;rlomJ•flCl ,(lf, lht'
a)'!l!ms 11 now very close to1nonn1I. '
ScoU and lrwin checked the Fil.con lala"
Tuesday aod plan lo ih!pOci It 1'llll tOnight. . f •
'Ibey will lty to clean up remaining bib
of g:lw from .an lnatnqnen~ oover they
foand thatttted. Looney aaid cootrolltn
wanted tht 1stronauts: to mike certain ho
no1tini glass particles lnlf!,.rferecf wlth
cabin equipment. partieularly hatch
ae1!!l.
"We 're 1olng t<l nm the cabin fan fm-
1bout 15 mlndtfl 11'14 lt)' t.o cat.ch Whal We
can ln 'the finer," Lui\ne; aild.
The $445-ml1U6n ini61i6n' of 1Apo1!o 1$ ls
the most detn1ndtna ever ai1tlsned to 1n
American 1pace crew. Scott and Irwin
•
will spend mo re time on lhe moon, slay
out on the !'IUrface longer, cover more
terrain and bring back more samples
than their predecessor~. Worden will
orbit the moon longer than Anyone and
condu ct lhe first truly w o r k I n g
11pacewalk.
The astronaut! Tuesday ended their se-
cond day in apace as It started -trouble
shooting an electrical problem that trig-
gered an 11larm signal in the command
module cabi n.
They found A circuit breaktt for part of
the ca.bin Ughtlng had opened ~u.se of
an apparent clrcuJt fault, but Flight Di-
rector Milton WJndter reported the trouble
was minor and could be worked around.
"Other than that, 1 guesa. we're ops
(operations ) normal, going to the moon
and planning on going t.o Hadley (the lan-
ding 1111.e)," Windler repm-ted at an early
morning briefing today.
·The three Apollo 15 crewmen retired at
1;33 a.m. ED'l' and alept much of this
momlni.
Apolkl 15 wu aradually 1lowina: under
lhe decreulng Influence of earth'• tua of
gavity.
If1 speed WU d'r:opping from 2,750
~lies per hour at U:$4 .a.m. wben the,
astronauta were 100,IM mllea from the·
moon , to 2.124 mllea per.hour at 7:N p.ni.
wh~ tbey '!'.UI be U.~ mUeJ IWl)I.
Apollo 11 .will slow, to lM'I n>llea per hour,ab/! !hen atart to.1ccoll(ate niur..
day mo!'lllnl under llla !1Pll of Illa moon'•· crml'Y. ' · ,
Ont o~r P<Olllem wu fowx(,~y'
nip! wl>on Scoll 1114 Irwin opened U...
hatth · to the Lunar' M""1/Ja .. and.
dl&COVerod during a t,...hoat liltpectlon
that the f(ll18 cover to an alUmeter
110mehow had shattered 1lnol lluncb
Monday morning from Cape ~.
"We don't hive any tde1 why It broke.''
lrw\n · aa)d. ·II< trtlnlated' 1ie •ahd l!COtt
picked up ·about 'tlO• parcent ol Ille ci-
plm with • ploco ol tape ' """ the
IJ)lc:ecraft vacuum ctea·ner and Wtndler
(See APOLLO, P•1e l)
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Tired Boy
Uninjured'
In Ordeal
CASPER. Wyo. (UPI) -Searcher1 and
tractitlg doga todlY found l-fi!lt-<>ld
Kevin Dye, a mmtallY retarded epileptiG
boy miulng for JI daya on 8,485-fool
Casper Mountain, scratched and dued
but alive and well at the bottom of a
wilderness canyon .
"He ia alive and appears well and
we've 1ent in a stretcher to bring hJm _
out," said Nalrona Cowity Sheriff BW .:
Estes. •
A member of a Colorado Alpine Search
Team spotted K~in three hows after :
dawn in a rugged area of "lots or bruah,,
heavy timber and OCC&!'lk>nal cliffs" near ·
the middle fork of the Elk Horn Creek. ~
Since the boy had been ml.s51ng. he had ;:
been spotted several times but ran away "!
fr.om searchers. apparently from frilbt "'
or becau11e he was playing a boy's game ~
of hidt-and-seek. '
"He probably enjoyed the freedom,"~
llaid Richard McDaugall, m Is a io n :;:
coord!nitor of the search. ~
Kevin was lifted from the CIUl}on in a~
litter pulled by ropea and taken to Wyoba •
Baptist Church camp on the mountain for
treatment. ffis father. Phillp Dye, a
Casper accountant, and his pretty mother
rushed to his side.
When rOund, the lad was· dreased ln the
same blue polo shirt. short arid teMi•
shoet he wore when he wandefed, away
from his parenU: on an outing July 11.
Temperaturea dipped to near freezing 1t
nlghl during the search tM.ll. tt wu about
(Set BOY, Pap I )
We11tlter
Cloudy Ill'" precllct••Mor today
and Tlrunday, clearing In · Iba
afternoons to a wai'm aan. brin&·
ing with il temperaturu ot: arouod
72 at the coast, • inland. Lows ~
nlpL In. the IO'L
· · 'IN81DB. TeltAY · • . '
Sfll'Croilorr llav< mtliolfd'll vrod• ••• ' i>hlc~ could crfdtli
J,llllll "P. Jobt fqt I/If ~· --f ober Ill< "llh('1t mon!M. ll'H' •torr! Po9' I« · · ~ \ . , =:-... ': =,..... ...
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DAILV !t1LOT s Wtdllttd&y, Ju!J' 2&.. 19?1
On Airline
Salt Creek Buy Urged
·1o Continue
Citizens Ask County to Acquire Beacli
' •w ASHJNGTON I UPI) -Tho Senate ~ today to it.op I filibuster delaying .f:uon on a bill to authorize a S150 million
: jvernment-guaranl.ttd loan to Lockheed +Jraalt Corp.
J "Cootinued debate thruterui to prevent
ICtioa on the. bill until after Congress
~"'"" in September from a month-long
s. Lockheed says it f a c e s
. ""''""'ptcy tn abwlct of the federally
~ eked loan by Aug.8.
: ile the move to atop the filibuster
: ,_led for the second lime in three d11.ys, : lfckbeed lhd 'the Ntxon Admirrl!tnti~
: ~ a micl.al vtclOry f;.wo boura earlier ln : •ir effort to keep the firm 90Jvent. The
:. ~te voted 60 to 35 11linlt a propoW : "1cb. . would have. postponed t h e
: ~ loan until fall.
By JOHN VALTERZA
61 th 0.ltY 'fltl li.lf
Tbt Usue ovtr public use o1 Salt Creek
Beach -one which has stirred douM of
angry hearings in recent years -created
a different mood Tuesday.
It. wa.,, friendl y, for a. change.
ln a crowded LAguna Niguel cour!room
more than 100 South Coast res.iden!s urg-
ed Orange Coonty harbor commiSSJoners
to btaWi a plan to purchase p..1blic right.s
to the beach, parking lots .11nd ntber
fac ilities 2.\nng the embatlled st.retch of
shoreline bet"''een ft1onarch Bay 11nd
Dana Point.
CommW!oner!. who called the hear·
lngs to sample public opinion before draf·
ting a flnal recommendation to county
supervisors. first heard from county
department aides:. then Avco spokesmen.
An encroachment on tht dry sand area
of the beach -needed ao that a revet-
ment c.vi be built to stem a major
Iahdslide problem -took up much of the
tistimony.
C.ounty official.! repeated the Iola.I in·
ve.sLment pro1ecUo n for the project -
complete with two large parking lots,
thrff pedestrian trails to the beach and
restroom buildings -at $2.6 millloo.
That sum. said Coun1y Director or
Harbors, Beach~ and Parks Kenneth
Sampson. is the projected cost if Avco
Co.mmwlity Developers handled all im-
provements wd turned over a complete
project lo the county.
The "lurn·kev" approach. Sampson
slreM~. would· be cheaper than if the
counlv obtained the new land and
deve!Oped the same fa rilities IUelf .
Rancor over the Salt Creek issue .,.,·11s
missing among the audienct.
Brennan •·Hevs" ~1cC!elland . o f
Laguna .Beach the spokesman for lhe
S&ve Salt Crttk Committu. rel11ted the
5.000-plus members' position that the
purchase plan should be put to use as
aoon as possible.
Alluding to the distance betweeo park~
• tna lots and the beach 1tsel!, McClelland
pointed out that it follows a coa-
temporary policy of ntw beacl't develop+
ment.
"And, anyway, I l.hink I.he majority of
1h' Pf'Ople would rather walk 1,500 feet
dnwn a trail than lrade for the silu;itlon
of not being allowed to use the bea ch at
all." he said.
He stressed lhat the encroachment on
the i and In the land slide project should
follow promises by Avco that little if any
material in the operation would cover lhe
''11lu;ible dry sand.
Fifth Dh1trirl Supervisor Ron Csspl'rS
also attended lhe meeting as an
onll')()ker. He stressed that the Salt Creek
solution is among his top three priority
projects.
While Caspers did not t'(lmmit himself
on the segments of the feasibility study,
he said he was keenly aware of the need
for good plaMing nf the beach.
If poorly planned and developed, he
aaid, It "it could become 'Caspers'
Folly.'" ~ -~ by the wide mara:i.e e{ the
: elruer vote. Loc~'s supPottars 19 the
: ~ate pressed few the t~thirda major· : It_ nttded to impose cloture-a limit to
:."bate -and force a vote on the bill to
• ~thorize up l-0 $2 billion worth of
From Poglll l Commi ssioners especially M>ught public
comment on one special po int.
JET HEARING.
:. vernment-guaranteed loans to firms Phantom 's rear ta.ii pirtion, he t.estified.
: ose. collapse could hurt the economy. adding he saw it make no evasive
~ t_:But on the cloture roll call, tht vote maneuver.
: 'P5 59 to 30 -seveR:i 1bort of the re-Killed with the other passengers were : rJ!.ired two-tllirda. On Monday, i cloture Michael Potter, 7, and his sister June, 6, ;.@-fell five yotts ah<n1 of a majority. daughter! of Mrs. Sandra Potter, of 709
• ·Gblll's opponent.I bOpe to keep talk· Calle Puente in San Clemente.
::; -and pre~e.nt a ffnll .vot.e on pusage Federal investigators are intrigued
:-unW Au.a. I "''hen 'Q>oires1 1tarta: its with a mystery radar transponder unit
• -, · 1ignal monitored in P a I m d a I e :: ~·'same bi.H cOine1 up in tbe HOU!e slmult.aneously with the jel's colll.!ion.
: fltjd.ay. The Phantom's transponder was out of
: :;in the first vote, an amendment offered order -the lieutenants were rlying at :,bf Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson ffI ([).Ill.), 15,000 feel oo visual ru!es du e to a
~: 'lf!ls d~eat.ed. It would have removed malfunclioning oxygen system -Md lhe
:: fij:>m the bill a provision to exempt jetliner transponder was also inoperative.
:: ~ and Lockheed alone, from the The Jatttr finding was annonuced in a
:: !tss~llll:f of a Conlf'.pllonal veto ell a preliminary NTSB report issued SUnday,
:: IOlln ·guarantee. c just prior to convening the: hearings. :: 2I'he overall bill . would authorize $2 Inv~tigators say the mystery signal
: · ~lion worth of aoyernment-baclted loans lnd.icatina: an in-flight crisis was followed
;: fOir distrea.sed firms whose collapse wou1d for 10 mlautes 10 an area ne:ar Norton
·: tilrt the e<:Momy. AFB, at which time it was discontinued
:: ~·A.a drafted by the Senate Banking Com-and effort& to pin it down have been
·: n\ittM, the bill carried the veto proviJion f\ltlle .
·(or approved a pp I l c at I o n s for Today's testimony Included Capt.
tovernment-backed loans. Robert J. Dougal, El Toro MCAS assis·
However, that provision would not go tant maintenance officer who flew lhe ill·
lnto effect until Oct. l -after Lockheed 's fated Phantom to Mountain Home AFB in
lg)plication had been acted upon by a Idaho.
three-member loan guarantee board He. said lieutenants Phillips and Schiess
created by the lea:lslation. new 1nother plane and stayed behind to
The bilYstates that after Oct. 1. f:ll loan av.·a.Jt radio repairs on the Phantom that
1pplicatl6ns approved by tllt'bo.arl li!bst lat.er crashed, W)iiJe he retumed In the
corne tmder Congressiooal scrutiny. "1'tle one they bad flown.
approved Joe can be made only if within The next day, Lt. Phillips phoned El
,I> days neltber house o! Congress vetoes Toro to report the rad.lo repairs were com-
;fi. . plete. but the rfdar was not worklng and ~TM outcome of the vote _oo the ther~ was an oxya:en !e.ak in the pressure
ll'ev!I· •"'=~~>,\IJt;'.rellil hou, · ''I 1trm ' .. 1 ~ • •' . y ~ ·w~ ~ They w~ ~tlihe.n l'frmlS!iorl. te ~ A~ . 1 '• ""' • • " · • return to b:a1e, 1t11finR below a crlticaJ ~ uys It faces almost certain altitude, due to lack of oxygen.. and flying
bankrUptcy if the. $250 million loan it visually. according to testimony .
setks is not obtained by t:heO: Aug. 1· 1k Radar officer Schiess said they "''ere.
..the date Lockheed's agr~ment with the following landmarks on the ground and
&nkrupt Rolls·Royce of Britain extiirts. changed course at the last mir.ute to
"'.Rolls ls to build the engines for avoid Los Angeles International Airport
1.ockheed's L1011 Tr!Star jetUner. traffic.
:· IJ'he :Br!Ush 1ovemment has said H will
:Bot give Rolla the. aub&idies It needs to
'build the engine iI the U.S. a:overnmerit
,fefU&es· to llJM&Dtee I loan for Lockheed.
:Indians to Perform
At Fashion Island
Members from four Arizona Indian
trtbes will Invade F1.!!hion lsll.Dd in
-Newport Buch Thursday where they will
perform traditional dances for the public-.
Dancers from the Ap.!lche, Navajo.
Papaao and Pim.a nations will ~
dressed 10 full costumt for performances
at aoon . I :30 p.m. and 3 p.m. Cameras
may be U!ied .11t each dance.
DAILY PILOT
" ............. -·-,_Clo s le
ORAMO• COAST Jl>Ul l.ISHINQ COilll"AHY
·~..f N. w.~ ,.,.. .. , .... ,.,,,...._
Jt ck •. e~rli.y vu ,.,.lfwlt ..... ~' Ml,,...,
n."" • .....x ••• a '""" ' 'fh•~•• A. M11•1tlil111
MtMflnt l:llliw
Cllt,lt• H. l .. , l id"'' P. Ni ll
MM.t.111/ MMM\ftt Edi""
Frorn Page l
MOSQUITO. ••
hav e nol yet bttn found !o carry the
Ve:nezuelan En~pha!1tis. They have just
dtveloped 1n immunity to chemic al
k1!Je:rs.
"The d11nger 1s 1n 1nfect1on from Tex·
as,"' Kimball expla.i ned. "The. VPnezuelan
d1seasf' can be transferred from a mos-
quitn to a l"orse .. nd back to annthe:r mo s-
qtHto .,
A c11rrrn1 f'rnh<1rj:11 on ;iny h0rsr
movements 1n Texas or surrounding
states Is expected to hold the encephallt1s
for at least a season. Kimball said
Mean11o'hile:. the: government is pre.panng
a speci al vaccine for use throughout the
1,1.·estern stat.es.
"All nr our horse QIA"ners are l!'>:tre.mely
\l"Orrled," Kimball said. "But 11,·e:'re: So'fer
io Orange Ccunty. We do:-i't use
pe!!ticides ~heavily and MO!lqu itoe:s ht.re
h .. ve not deve.loped an immunity to
chemicals.··
Kimball said lhe Orange County pro-
gram relies hellvily on backyard cleanup
and the. use oi special mosquito fish
which eat the mosquito larvae.
"We planted 200.000 m<>!quito f1.~.h in
waler sources throughout the: county lhis
summer," ht sllid. "Our biggest tar1ets
are fish ponds, 250 miles of flood and
drainage: channels , park pond!!.. and golt
course waler har:ard.~. We plant fish In 1111
of them."
The Orange County dis trict has a list of
fi.000 nrn1menlal ponds where fish fire
pl11nted to keep mosquitoes down . The
mosquit.o fish Is about twn inches long and
mixes we:ll wil.h other fj sh.
"Wt get JOO calls a n1onlh, 90 percent
invnlving backyards. We:'ll give the mo~·
qulto fish free to anyone." Kimbal! said.
"Just call us at 537-58111 ·•
Klmb11ll !1i1ld lhe county is emphaslr:lng
111 progr11m 11t horse ranches now
because: of the curnnt scare. Los
Alamitos R.ace Tr1rk alone hi:§ 1.000
horses. fish are plllnfed tn the horse
troughs. -
"l th ink "'f:'re safe, if we CAn keep the
lnfe<'trd horses from Texaz oul of here,"
Kimhf.ll concluded.
Marries Secretly
LAS VEGAS IUPll ChriJllM
Onassis, lhfl d8ughte of Gree.k biJUon1JrtJ
AristoUtJ Onauis, was ma.rrlftd stcre:Uy
In lhis 1amblin1 resort at a \1wyer's of·
riCI'
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Only a few moments later, the jet col-
lided with the Air West plane wh ich had
taken off at Los Atlleles le!1 than nine
minutes earlier for Salt Lake Clty.
A total of 200 persens sat 1n for today's
hearing befOre the four-member NTSB
panel .
'Vhile no deci sion was reached Tues·
day, commissioners must agree whether
to a~k supervisors to place !he develop-
ment project under control of the Harbor
District which can enter into contra cts to
purchase the beach and pay the $2.6
million back to Avco on a time-payment
prtncipl!!':.
Beca use of a special district status, that
long-term purchase Ls I>O!Sible.
-.tr
Li·ke Vietnam Beaela?
Varied Colo1·f ul Con1me11ts
Enter Salt Cr~elc Debate
Because of the appa ren t widespread
support for the proposed county purchase
of Salt Crttk Be.acb and improvements,
the tenor of public meetings has mellow-
ed recently.
Nonetheless, Tuesday\!! harbor com-
mission hearings on the plan had its
share of brisk commentary.
Here is some of ii :
-A vro E,_vc~tiv/ Y.iet fit~ident
Richard /Weiser, \\'ho bbfiined tnuch of
the offer whiqb his. firm is making to the
county, a\ludeci {e the early days nf hif
firm's ownership nf the embattlttl pro-
perty. "We sal down last !al! and decldertl
we had two options ..... either h;ive thlt'
area iool like Vietnam, or ~ake il
availabli°1to the public. We choli lthe lat-
ler ipprOach."
(The e:xistence of concertina barbed
wire and imJkirled ca"ctw to keep the
public out appartntly,stlrred the Vlttn1m
allusion)
-Reinforr1ng the executive·s com·
Heroin Supply
Ring Broken
In Indochina
BA:\GKOK <AP) -Narcotics age:nts
from Thailand. South V1tlnam and 1.he
l 'niled States 1n thei r firs! combined
<>perat ion have cracked a m11:jnr heroin
ring supply ing American soldiers in Viet-
nam ,
They seized 97 pounds of nurP heroin -
one of the largest hauls ever in Asia -
and 660 pounds nf smoking opium The
rache, which hali a whole~alt. value in
Sai~on of S4 milllion, nriginated in Burma
and Laos l!nd is now ln the hands of the
Saigon police..
Two Sou!h V1et~amese sallOrs were
;:imong I.he 25 persons seized in a round-
the-c.!ock operation th11 1 had 1ge.nt,., paun-
cing in Saigon, in 11 Vietnam~e fishing
\•11lage. and nn an offshore island in the
Gulf of Thail1nd .
The seizure \()fl~ place Sund11y 1tnd
~tonday and was disrlosed in B11ngkok by
Ge.n. Nitya Bhanumas. secrt!Ary·geMr11J
nf the Thai Narcotics Board. He said the
first inform.11tion !bout t.he ring -wh ich
"'as led by a 1A'ea!H1y Chinese merchant
In the Gholon section of Saigon -came
from informants he developed In an in·
ves ligation he directed last month.
The general said none of th.-hProln flr
()plum wa.!I processed in Th.:iiland but It
"'11s hauled through the. country by truck
and loaded nn fishing vessels Along the
Thai coast.
"r-.1y nat ion is a major lran~1t rnute. for
ltllclt drug~." he added .
Nltya said two or three olhtr ring11
seem to have hal~ operations because
of the raids.
The use nf heroin among Americ an
troops In Vif'lna.m i~ .!I miller of m111jor
concern to U.S. officials. The drug Is
frttly avaUable an~'\\'here in Saigon.
Thailand M:nl ,. key crime suppression
o(flcer, Col. Pr11mul'll Vanigbandhu. lo
Saigon last Saturday. He traveled with
U.S. narcotics agent .111ck Greene. wl'lo
ltd the teAm that captured the lea:itr of
Ule clopt ring Tap Vlnh, at hia ~ In
Chol on.
The chief of V1etnam·5 narcoticR
hurt.au . Le Dae Tinh Huong. new wllh
the Thal colonel on the raldlng mission to
the cn1st1I town of Rach Gl• and I.he
Viet.n•mPse Island of Phuoc Quoc The
blocks f)f opium and 127 plastlct b"&• nf
heroin we:rt found In seven different
pl1ee!"
m~nl.s. Vietnam veteran Rustin Ka lish of
Sant.a Ana told commissioners be knows
"J'hal Vietn11m beaches are like . "When t
i;urfed there I had to lake a trusty Viet·
namese to read !he signs fnr me ~o "'e
'tnew where the mine fields were. The on·
lJ difference I perceived at Salt Creek
W•~ that I could read the signs myself."
-Brennan "Hevs"' McClellanct, Jong ;i
colorful and influential figure along the
Sodth Coast, began his commenta ry ~·1 lh
lr&aihonal understAtemE!lt: ''l repreAent
the f,11ve Salt Creek Committee. which
evet-yone knows is a loosely-knit group. 1
dnn l speak ror evt'ryone." he sa.id, "only
about 5.000 or so "
.. At the be&inning of lhe ba!lle.'" he
added , .. it was the fight of !.be Tittle. peo-
ple. Now It's comi l'lg cloef: to victory. But
tr .You lalk tn the young surfers: they
don't "'a n1 11 nren . because they kn ow
hnw In hre.:ik through the barbed wire
ahd gel to the beach. They're afr11id it'll
get trwi crowded.°'
•
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
Most Diamond
Losses Are
Preventable
I'd like to have even half of the
diamonds that are lost from their
srttings ... gone fore,·er: But also
I'd like to see more peopl e take Ule
~imple precautions which can pre-
vent the majority of such losses.
~1ost stones lost from their set-
tings have gi ven months of fair
"·arnlng that they are in such dan·
ger; they have be com e loo se,
u .~11ally due to worn prongs, and
can remain loose in the setting for
many months before the !inal loss
\vhich occurs so often during some
such activity as housework or re-
creation. And it is exacUy under
these circumstances .•. \\'Ork or
play, that a diamond literally goes
down the drain or into the \\•ater
wilh little or no possibility of re-
covery.
About 90% of such losses could be
prevented if the mountings on your
jewelry were checked twice a year.
Sn why not take out the best and
cheaptist insurance avatlable •••
the security of having us check
your mountin gs . It takes only a few
minutes, and I.here Is no charge.
~---------------... I no;.1 I 1 ~· -. ---11..P .,_ ----_. -· ----· --'lo--· ..... ----•) •
F......, ,...,., l
APOLLO ...
said the renu.lrung glass should be no
problem.
The meter normally Is sealed under
pressure In helium With the glass
broken, It ll-"15 e:1poeed to a near vacuum
and then oxygen when lhe cabii. was
pressurized .
~ission C..:ontrol Communicator Karl r..
Heinte told the flslronauls engineers were
run ning tests to see If the change 11\ con·
ditions would affect the meter. ~
"It ~·oulrl be interesting to hl'ar What
they find nut.·• Scott said .
Even if the n1eter fails, Windler said,
the asi.ronauls ca n read thr neces~ary
data off !heir computer and their landing
plans IA'Ould not be changed .
F'ortv-nlne. mlnute11 of lhe lunar mndule
inspccilon 1,1.·a~ televised back lo e11rth.
Bui tile tele<:ast """"s devotrd In the
IA"Ork <1l h11nd and without the hijinks
!Ometimes seen on earlier flights. It was
not carried no nellA'Qrk leleYis1on .
The lun11r mnciule chet k sho1,1.·ed lh;-it all
lts systems were in good shape including
the crillcal blLlerifll, landing engine
system, fuel pressurization system and
the craft's cootrol rocket 1. Com·
munlcation! between Fala>r1 and earth
were exc elle:nt.
f'.rom J>Ufle l
Boy . GARBENS ·f.NG~~ S, . lY
• ·~ • ~, , ~Rotit Esqulwtl, V~i·~rMWn ..
50 degrees and IUMy when Kevin' 1Wa.f .,· ' · 1r• ,'{ ~
discovered. t.. ""'• · -'
..,.his is nol • the most frustra.tin1 Garbe · t ng z search I've been on but it is in the lop' ris a e
five ," said Chuck Demorest, -fie:\d opera·
lion commander of !he Alpine .ur:it. Team at Coast The searchers and their. tcaclina: doil .
had hunted a 31)..square-mile area or the
mountain but today "they just mean·
dered around"' in a 10-square-mile area
lnside the wider circle.
In lhe predAwn flarknes& before the boy
was found, U.S. Army experts used infra·
red scopes as part of a new strategy to
trv lo loca te Kevin.
·The . soldiers searched the mountain
through the night , spurreri nn by new
evidence found Tuesday that the lac; was
still aUve after being on the run like an
animal for II da ys.
Four tracking dogs, their paws bat-
tered and bloody from the rough terrain,
\\'ere t.8ken out of the search by thei r
handlers Tuesday. Fresh tracking dogs
wr.re ordered flown in from F'lnrida, Buf-
falo. N.Y., and Philadelphia tQ replace
them, before the boy was found .
Searchers found leeves stacked in the
~hii.pes of hearts and crescen~. stones
piled in parallel lines and a ping pong
paddle Tue:sday. It was the rescue
squad's "most solid leads yet" in the
hunt.
Free Press Editor
Ordered to Trial
WEST COVINA IUPJ) -Publisher
Arthur Kunkin pleaded innocent Tuesday
to a ch arge of printing an obscene picture
and a jury lrial was set for Sept. 27.
Kunkin, 43, is the editor of the Los
Angeles Free Press, an underground
"'·eekly, but the obscenity charge involved
anol~er publication with which he
allegedly is associated.
Facing 'f enalty'
' A bedraggled O~ge <:Mat Cnlle1•
garbenstangel team. facing a ~rotlable
penalty for '"delaying"lhe game," ruefu11y
admitted this morning that OCC la run·
ning a little late in cqmpleting an enlry
for the Build a Better Garbenstang:el
Contest. ,
For conlest detaiL~·1 see l!pCciaJ •ec·
tion starting on PaQe' 4.9.
• The team coarhed by technolo&Y
division instructor Bill Abernathy spent
"half the night welding ~tuff together" at
the school , he explaine<i today.
But the problem was the garbe.nstan&el
had pups. It is now two garbtnslafliels,
both of wh ich the OCC men's team et·
pe cted to assemble this afternoon at
South Coast Plaza.
Tuesday aflernoon, bo th the me:n's
team Rnd an a JI.girl aggregation enached
by Dick Hernandez. director of special
programs at acc . were to build their
garbenstangels at the shopping center.
The girls showed up and asmnbfed
the\r tum· the· crank· sind -lhe ·whee.ls
-go • around thing. But garbenstan(el
contest ofricials .,.,,ailed in vain for tht
men 's team.
This t'(IU!d be the day of the Grelll Con-
frbn tation. The garben~tange\ tesm from
Golden We st College was due Ul arrive at
the shopping center about J o'clock lhit
afternoon l.n try lo build its bfltter
garbenstangel.
1:-iE~EST UERSllJr.-i lJf
THE flt\ST ~RT~H lJr.-i
THE l':llJ[]f:i
1·~u"e" '-~•• ci.r,,.,eg._r~. "''" .•11 •ll •••t l~to,.,.111
t• ~1u11. ,.,~~ltl '"~ ••te,..1. S•tl"·"' •lJll t lH.
l>'llUll~g b,.Ul1L V.'1!t1_,..ttU"I , •••••••• .$t~j,,
J. C. fiumph~iej Jeweler3
1823 NEWPORT BLVD .. COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT T'll:MS
IANl(AM£RteAll:l)...M.t.STElt CHA~&E
.
J4 YEARS lN SAM 5 LOCATION
'HONl 141·1•01
,,_..""'\~ ..... ;... ----·-·----.• i. .,._ .,,... -----
I I
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Huntington ~ Be~eh
Fo:nntain: Valley
VOL 64, NO. 179, S S6CTIONS, 74 PAGES OUN~ '(:OONtY, cA~IFORNiA
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WEDNE~DAY;· JULY 28, 1971
Today; .. :pt-1
1'.Y. S••-••
TEN CENTS
Huntington Sticks With Portable Classrooms ·
' A Weatmlnlltr ~ r>n~· Tu<!day
to persu,de HuntiQito!t 11!<¢ch Unli>n lliCh -Distrlol ,_ that lhey
need ~ res~n ln' arUbme{it. ~
Robert M. Gordon told 1he board that
he was "dismayed" oYM" its ii:tenUon to
p(lrchase 38 portable classrooms lor
allevµit;on or overcrowding 1 at the
\V~1ter, Marina and Fountain
V!lllley campuses.
He argued that the utra students could
be acrommodaled for nothing.
Gordon's "lesson In elementary
arithmetic from a taxp.ayer's point of
view" Is the following :
Each uf the 21 portable5 woUJd be used
for six hours of daUy instruction fer a
total or 228 classroom hours each day.
The cost for the bUlldlngs will be '"648,000.
But if the school day ~re extend~ for
one hour each day at each of the cam-
puses there would be i '1otal or JOO
·-:.t-~·..,;.· !('!'!' e·i,_ ... ~ ;;: .. ~ ~· v:r,'"' .,. ~,...,,...w,..-•··• ~,....,.~.r>,•• '"'"'1' ···~ . ~
I \ ~. l
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PAULA TOOMAN WORKS STYLISHLY AT TYPEWRITER
In Hunt ington S..ch, Hot P1nt1 Gtt Cold Shoulder
Pap-~ Too H ·otll
Police Receptionist,s Feel Chill
8)' RUDJ NIEDZIEL.SKJ
01 It!• Del&' 1'11.t ltflff
Hot pants may be warming lhe bnltnms
>f a few girls al Hunlinglon Beach City
Hall, -·but the slylish apparel i.11 not
1ecesd?ily warming. the hearts or iheir
Jl)!gd.
At \.1sl count there were three girls
''earing the new o\ttfits. Today there
nay be only two.
"I wore mine today for the first lime.
lUl I just found out that the captain
iidn'l want me to wear them." said Sher·
"'i Lindsey. a receptionist in the police
lepartme,pt's deteclivl bureau, who wa1
lressed in shorts Mon~ay.
lter boss, Captain Grover L. Payne,
1ave his reasons: "I ha.vi! no ob_jections
:o not pant suits or hottpants wllich give
:he appearance of a dress . But J would be
against thl!! brier type ~ hot pants in the
:eception areas. ; .
"We havl!! all t~ or iclientele oomtnl
n here and some peopJe might be of.
:ended by the appear~ ~ our workers.
rrn not a prude -my l'lfe'.·1w hot. pa~ts
Mt.s -but I don't think the 8hori version
6 1ppropri11te office wear."
Hot pant! made thelr f!rsl appearance
1 few weeka ago in 111olher corner of the
dice department.. Cl~t. ~ .1 ~ h a ~ l
aurkenfield's adminiilral1ve d1Vl.!Uon. HIS
iecrl!!tary. Paula Tooman .' wtar1 them.
"These are calltd peek-•-boo hoL pant&
Market Robbery
Suspect Seiz~
Garden Grove police arreMed •·market
r~ry auspect Tut.5day night 1fter a
:JlNe tn which 1n officer fired at the
O\in.
Vktor J . Carevic. 21. or '13141 Barker ~. Westminlter. wu not hit ~Y I.be
MJllets.
He was jaill!!d on char1es involving the
P>O robbery of 11; mar~I!!\ at Bolsa Avenue
end Bugbard Stref.t. Pollet, armed wilh •
te!terlptlon of the getawAy car, pursued
t . When <:arevlc leaped from the vehicle.
M was captured.
Also arrested w11s lhe car drivtr, Lind.a
Pryor, ~ el Garden Grove. ,,
.
becaU&e they peek out the middle of the
skirt that covers them," she explained.
"1 bave mcire sexy ones and shorter ones
but the:;e are the mOit conservative."
"Capt. Burkenfield and I talked about
hot pants a y,•hile ago and he didn't say
'ves' or 'no'. But when I came in y,•hth
them he said they were okay as long as
they have skirts over them."
Burkenfield believes the pant suits a re
•·a ,·ery functional and comfortable 1hing
for the girls to wear, especially when sit·
ting at the typewriler and stooping over
the file cabinet."
Officer James Walker, one of Burken·
field's men, says the attire is not distrac·
Ung to the men. "W@'re too busy to bt:
concerned," he laughed.
Another girl bravl!! enough to wear hot
pants is Judy Vanderbeek, the girl who
delivers mall to·Uw: varioas city office.11.
"I work tn the mall.room and it's really
hot ln there. Therf! is: do· drculaUon
whatsoev!T in thit·room Mcf that'1 why T
wear hot J>®,tll," 1he ·ukf, ·
"Nobody has Qid anytbinc tboul It to
me. Most people don't noUce me because
I'm ju fit in and out,'' she 'added.
When asked about his opinion, City
Admlnlstrat.or Doyle Miller said . "This
same thing came up about a year ago
when the girls werl!! wearing pantsuit.&. I
1aid I had no objection as long as it
waan 't an ungodly outfit."
MUler admitted that personal attire
was 1 'difficult area to legislate, but said
hi! would "digcourage" the·wearlng ol hot
pants in the buslnen office.
Are hot panll appropriate at any work
ataUon?
"At the beach," Miller replied dryly.
·savings, Loan Theft
Suspe~t, Car Seized
Santa Ana police captured 1 man
1uspected of robblni 1 uvinga and loan
office of $2,900 TUJeday and recovered a
Cadillac they daim he had stolen.
Pollet allege the suspect. .June Gentry,
29. A lr11nsient. firgt Stoll! the car from a
salesman during a teg\ ride, and then
held up the Lincoln Savings and Loan.
16..11 N. Bristol St. He WIS captured by
police after he aba.ndoned the car and of·
flcers fired at him.
. -
cla58room hours, too 1t each campus.
The 'cost would ;be zero.
Gprdo~'1 reasonln& prov• d un1c·
ceptable to the trustees w~ rdusM. to
take back their order of the classroo!J\B.
District superintendent Jack S. Roper
said the buildings were being purcha.!il!!d
as a "stopgap" to provide housing ror an-
nual lncreasea of 1,000 to 1,200 students
until y~·around scbOols and staffina: arl!!
gtudied.
He said the acqulsltlon.of the buildings
would not JI.lit provide square footage but
also would provide apace for new pro-
grams, such u a multi-media library an
the Fountain Valley campus.
Fountain Valley Principal Paul Berger
told Gordon that ht had used faulty logic.
"Even lf we were to ex.tend the day,
there would be many periods when al\
4.(100 of our ltudent.s will be on cam~.
We n~ room for them,·• be said.
Trustee John Bentley said he could not
go along ·with Gordon 's arithml!!tic, but
added that he 11;ppreclated his sugge6tion.
Earlier thal night , Gordon also failed to
get thl!! board's endorsement to two other
prooosals.
The trustees said "no'' to his request lo
back legislation calling for the establish·
ment of "alternative schools" which
would seek to find improved methods of
educating children free of strictunt by
the California Education Code.
And the board a1so declined to endorse
a plan whereby community •olunteera
y,·orking in schools would be given iDcoJM
lax credits. That ptan, accordinc to
Gordon, 1' now being pushed by
Congrl!!ssman Richard T. Hanna ( D-
Anahelm) and is under study by the
House Committee on Ways and )rfean.11.
Apollo Right On Course
3. Astronauts Leave 'Bugs' Behind
SPACE CENTER, HoU!lon IUP•l -
Their troubles be.hind, Apollo 15'1
astronauts closed in calmly and ac-
curately on the moon today with
everything clear for a Friday landing at
the foot of some of the highest lunar
mountains.
"Thi! moon's gelling bigger out the
window," reported Alfred M. Word~ as
the spacecraft wa.11 75,500 miles from it.
This was thl!! la.11t l!!asy day for Worden,
David R. Scott and Jame.11 B. Irwin
before they begin a record six day1 oi·
moon activity. Their schedule was llghl
and ground controlll!!r! let thl!!m sleep 1n
extra hour , awakening them at 10:40 a.m.
EDT.
'"WI! cerj.ainly <fid have a a:~ ,nlaht's
slel!!p," Wordl!!n reportt.d.
New 4icport
Board Now
On Way Out?
Orange County's new Airport Lind USI!
Commission, in buslneu for only 1 few
m6nths, may be on its way oul.
Supervisors Tuesday grumbll!!d over a
$62.628 request to staff the group and the
consensus was that the commi.!i.9ion was
unnecessary.
Fifth District Supervisor Ro n a I d
Caspers wondered if It would be illegal
not to Jund the group. c.ounty Counsel
Adrian Kuyper said the state law was
vague only requlrina: that staff auistants
be appointed.
Caspers said the comm i 1 s ion
duplicated the work of the county plan-
ning commission and airport commission.
Supervisor David Baker agreed and
&uggl!!sted that the appropri1Uon be cut to
$5.000 and the county Wru• o! Cltlea be
asked to joi n in a move to 1bollsh the
erganiz11tion.
The commissinn was established la!l
yea.r under an amended stale law which
provided that if either the supervillors or
the ciLies name the membl!!r1 the group
musl be activated.
The amendment was pushed through by
Assemblyman Robert E. Badham IR·
Newport Beach) at the urging of Newport
Bl!!ach city official11 and airport op.
pooents.
The commission ha.11 recently been t.tk·
Jng sleps to plan land u.11e around
airports.
This function wu vigorously 1ttacked
Tul!!sday by Buena Park CQuncilman
Merwin Fr@nch. Hl!l said the commls1lon
bad arbitrarily aet borders In which it
propo1ed to h1w jurt!dk:Uon ne1r the
Fullerton Airport whJch included two
thirds of Buena Park.
SupervifiOr.11 plan to make 1 final
deciskln on the appropriation Friday.
Suspect Held
In Acid Attack
.On Beach Youth
A 16-year~J~ y.'e1t.minater J>o,t wu at·
rested early thia mornlnJ: by Huntington
8e1ch police after 1 \funtington Be1ch
tl!!ellaa:er bad acid" aqlltrted lzito hiJ. face.
Pdiict said the lncktent' oc:curred
ohorUy after midnl&bl In an all•y liehlnd K•......, Lane. · ~· ~, v)cUm wao brln1ina a date hom•
lrom ~ movi.. wben · tl>oy puaed a
group ol teenaa:ers and the 1dd was
squirted tnw tbe: boy'I rite.
Offk!ers 1aid thert have apparently
been IOl'Tlf: problems with jllvenlleli in the
neitt:hborhood and I.hi! lnd'dent may be
, linked to &heae prevtout dlfUcultta.
The Westminster boy was taken Into
tustody and then releaaed Le hlJ parent.a.
A short circuit I.hat cast doubt on
mah'• moil 1mbitlous lunar expedition
had been overcome TUesd1y and a
preliminary check indicated that the lan-
ding ship Falcon wa!I ready .
The landing sit.I! is at the base of the
Apennine Mountains ranging 10,000 feet
and higher, and also near a gorgl!! which
di!"! I.000 feet down.
Glynn S. Lunney, flight director on the
ground, reported at a midmorning brief·
ing : "The status of the mission is that
we're o"n achedull!!, lhe trajectory is very
close to normal, the performance of the
fiystems is now very close to normal."
Scott and Irwin checked the Falcon late
TUe!lday and plan to inspect it again
tonight
They will try to clean up remainlna blta
of glass from an instrument rover they
found 1hatterl!!d. LUMl!!y said controllers
wanted the astronaul.5 to makl!! Cl!!rtain no
floaling glass parlicle3 interfered with
cabin equipment, particularly hatch
seals.
.. We're going to run lhe cabin fan for
about 15 minutes and try to catch what we
can in the filter," Lunney said.
The $445-million mission of Apollo 15 is
the most demanding ever assigned to an
American .11pace crew. Scott and 1rwln
will spend more tlme on the moon, stay
out on the surfacl!! longer, rover more
terrain and bring back more samples
than thl!!ir predecessors. Wordl!!n wlll
orbit thl!! moon longer than anyone •nd
(See APOLL01 P•1• 1)'
'Landlord' to Face Court
In Fraudule11t Rent Case
A Garden Grove nt., who allegedly en-
joyed .a ltudlord'a dream -all profit and
no propertJ tax or .. upi.eep -waa Mt ror _
court . arraiinmenl today. ln a west
Orange COunty rent frau'c.1 case. '
Quentin H. Gardner, 53, of 6342
Anthony Av.e .. wag arreisted by Fountain
Valley pollc~ Monday and booked on
suspicion of grand theft and J>OMl!!ssion or
a false drlver't llcl!!nsl!!.
He has, Detective Sgt. Bill De.Nisi
allege11, bel!!n rentina out property owned
by othl!!r eople.
The inv&tigator 1aid the 1uspect
lllegedly ha.a been doin; bualne!s thls
wa y since the firsl of the yea r, in
Anaheim, Santa Ana. Huntington Beach,
Westminster, Founlain Valley and
Garden Grove.
OeNlal 1ald Gardner Wertedly ob-
lalnM aranl d•«ia to hom<s and
apartments that were In forecle1ure. pro-
ceedings. But the detl!!Ctivt claims the
deeds are not valid bec1usl!! they ware
signed ovar by peof)ll!! who had alre1dy
Jost claims of title to Lhe property.
Advertising in local newspapers, polic.e
allegl!!, Gardner then would rl!!nt thl!! pro-
perty to a family, charging them the first
1nd last month'.11 rent.
Gardner was arre1ted whtn onl!! of his
potential customer.11 · auerted\y 1.1ked
abou t him Jn the sal1!!11 office of the tract
where one of the home.11 wu located.
DeNlsi 11id the tract had been victimizl!!d
previou.11\y and sales personnel alerted
police who arrested Gardner as he wailed
to meet with thl!! woman.
Adult Classes, $6 Fees
'
Okayed by HB Trustees
Preliminary plans for a full-scitle adult
education program in the Huntington
Beach Union High School District wl!!re
approved Tuesday by district trustees.
The program is gcheduled to go lnle
operatioo thi.s September with a
minimum of 10 courses. The offerings are
expected to doubll!! in February.
Robert Martin. the di11tr1ct·11 director of
vocational education, said It would eott
1178,275 te finance adulfeducation in the
first year.
The Income, he 1ay1, will be dl!!rlved
fro m $& pe.r clas1 fees, state ap-
portionment& and about •10&,000 from the
district's 1eneraJ fund.
The plans call for cla1sl!!s from 8 a.m.
to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
The classes will be taught at tbe five
campuses of the Huntington Beach Union
High School District and other public and
privet.I!! facWUes .
A:,;ong the C()Uf'Sl!lS tentatively selected
for lrtt:lu11lon In the curriculum are
1griculturt education, Americanlution,
General.'s Daughter
Fined on Marijuana
LINCOLN, N~b. IAPl ~-P~trida · Jo
Coml . •I~ d>Uihltt ol U.ij. AiJ>For<e Chia(
o Stafr G<n. John D. Ryan, and her bu'a-
band have bttn convicted of poa&e13ton of
martju1n1. ·
Mrs. Cornell and her huaband Carlyle
each were fined S50 Tuesday ln Lancaster
County Court. Thi! marijuana chara:e 11 a
misdemeanor.
8olh 1lao wert bound over to District
Court on felony chara:e1 of posaesaion
"with intent to sell, manuftcture, deliver
or dispense" pbencyclldine. a small·
1nlmal tranqut!JU:_r known 11 "PCP.''
-
business education. c1v1c education,
educational dat.a proces.11ing, English, fine
ar~ and foreign languagl!!.
Also proposed are a forum and Jl!!cture
1erie1. health and physical education,
homemaking, industrial education, math,
parent education, .11cience, 10Ci1J .science
and vocational education.
MarUn sa!d other -course!! will be In·
cludl!!d aft.er the 1taff has Identified the
need.!! of the community.
Boy, 9, Scores
How-in-one
In First Game
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) -Timmy
Cookfalr can be foritven I( he happeM to
think that go1f 11 a very simple game.
Tim la only 9-yean-old aitd what ·doe:a he
know about.the compln probiema of Um-
' ' Ing. awing. lnterlocklnr 111~· 1tralibt
arm, hlpa lnto lht11hot, doled 1t1ne1.
NOi mueh, 10 aJJ he did 'l'Uetdly WQ IO
out to Colonial Acrea. tn neerby Eltmere,
wh<rt he uv ... and after l>loYlnJ elllhl
holta of hia very flnt pt round t•er,
shot • hcile-ln-one on the nlnttl bole.
Tim used 1 thrtt1 wood Oil lhe 1()(}.ylrd,
over-the-'IJ"r shot, which hit th areen.
went pAst ll'le cup and then rolled bac'
Into the ·hol•.
Tim wa.i pl1ytn1 with: his f1tber ,
WHllm, and two brotJ'.en, Jam.et ind
Jolin. ·
Huntington
Car Pileup
Injures Six
. SUI Hnutlngton Bead> and ;,..w.
Valley reaideota -includifta four
childrl!!n -Wl!!re lt1jured Tµtld:ay if·
temocn in I' collision .fn Huntlqta:I
Beach .
Police said the crash occutred at the
intersection of 17th Street and Palm
A vehue. Traffic Investigators reP,Qrted
the car driven by Vir~lnia MiJne, 12, of
17782 AllamJrano Lane collided wlt.JIJ the
southbound car driven, b}r Nihey S.
Hetrick, 24, 17367 Santa Clara Circle.
Mrs. Milne and her lhree-year<ild aon,
AleJ:, were both injured . They were liken
to PecHica Hospital where she .la Jn
satisfactory condllion 'today and he was
treated for cuts and bruJ.9es and released.
In the Hetrick car, P.frs. Hetrk:k, her
seven·yl!!ar-<1!d son. Randy and com-
panioru Mark and Pamela Buddiogh, nine
and seven, of 17331 Santa Clara Circle
were also taken t.o Pacifica.
The lwo Hl!!tricks and Mark Buddln&h
arl!! listed i.n satisfactory condition today
and Paml!!la Buddlngh was lreal.ed and
relea.11ed.
Pool Diver, 35, Dies
SAN BERNARDINO IUPI) -Dwain
Thomal!i, JS, died Tuesday night at the
San Bernardino County Hospital of ln·
jurie11 received whan he dove ft'OO) hia se.
cond noor apartment into tbe apartr:oent-
boose pool.
Thomas and a friend madl!! the dive.
SUCCl!!ssfully the tiri1t uroe "'9Y' tried It.'
On his second attempt, Thomas smashed
inlet the 1ldl!l of the pooJ, 1ald dept1ty cor·
oner Jean Depertuis.
Oruce
We.tiler .
Cloudy 11du prtdlcted f., today
and · ntursday, clearing · in · the
afternoons to a warm sun, bring ..
Ing with trtemperstutes of arwnd
72 at the coast, M inland. Low1 ~
olght 1n the 60'1,
. INSIDE TODA '1
S¥pervi.tors Jiavc inUietedJ 0>
~ogram w1Lich cou;ld cri,ltt,
1,000 111w jobt' for tlte eotint11
ooatrnmeni over th• ·nt:rt JI
months. Sit ato~, Page lo.
...11... •
Clllttnl6t I
CMdl.11'11 U11 1 Cl•ttltfM .,..,
c-1c1 ,.
Dt•lll Nttlfft lt •••tlll ,_ • •11tv1•11>-1 ..,.. , •• !In ti -.. Aflll L........ M
M.,,...._ \luflttl II'
Miii .. ltfYla •
.
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tt Jlll"-··'?... --' -. .... ~
'
I
I
,
•. ..
·-
:
J IWLY "1UlT • H
Radar Foulups
Alleged in . c ,rash
Special lo &be DA.IL Y PILOT Tht. v1chmi!i included a small brother
· • PASAt>!:NA -TeslimOny of radar ar\d 5ister from San Clemente en route
ft\alfimctlons in both planes and visuaJ for a summer \'acalion with their father,
~ by landmarks ~low one of the plus an easterner headed home from a
world• busiest aert.al croasroads c&me visit in Costa Mesa.
-t&d1y at bearings into a tr1gic military-Sole survivor of the accident which is
oortu1"ierdal jet oolliaioc. being probed in lhret days of National
Tiie June 6 incident that sent a Huihes Transportation Safety Board hearings at
~ West tiplrallng JS.000 fttt dO\\'n into the Pas.11dena Hilton hotel wa s the Marine pe San Gabriel lifountains killed SO jet's radar intercept officer.
~a. one the '' Phantom's pilot., During mid-morning testimony, tst LL
.!f>m l:I Toro Marine'Corps Air station. Christopber E. Schiess. 24 . of El Toro,
~~ 6akl pilot error was probably lo blame. =· He did not suggest which pilot . LI.
·.n._ 'i·red Bo· .y Jam•• R. Phillips, 27. of El Toco. or lh• Hughes Air West DC9 captain.
lnitia.l witnesus said they saw the Air
:-0 West plane carrying 44 passen1ers and
;: crew of five spiral lazily into an almost.
:
:IJ: ni·n,·ured lnacet5'ible mouni.;, caoyo" l.avi"g a trlil of smoke and flame.
Little new was added in the way of eye·
:: wi~ness testimony and it will be months
,• 0 d l before the NTSB panel issues a finding on ; n r ea ~~:,:efinite or probable ca use of the
Jeff Willington. 15. of Duarte, te stified !~ he saw the jet fighter en route from :? CASP£R, Wyo. (UPI) -Searchers and Nevada to El Toro ~1CAS engage in
~acking dogs today found !}.year-old acrobatics just ~fore the crash.
'.f:tvin Dye, a mentally retarded epileptic Radarman Schiess. who was able to :..OY missing for 11 d.ays on 8,435-foot parachute. denied th is . saying his pilot ~'""'" Mountain, scratched and dazed made a 360--degree roll for added air traf· .. -,..-fie visibility several minutes prior to im· t t alive and well at the bottom of a pact.
lderness canyon. He sald he saw the jetliner looming out :• "He ls alive and appear! weJJ and d ;! "He i!: alive and appears \WIJ," said of the right side of the canopy secon 11
;)latrona County Sheriff Bill Estei. before impact with the Phantom. which
-! A rntmber of a Colorado Alpine &arch suffered several mechanical defects.
:Team spotted Kevia three hours after "Watch it Rich ~' he told of shouting to
wn in a ruued Atta of "Iota of bru!h U . Phillipt;. a veteran of llbout one year's
vy timber and occasional clUfs" ne.; flying experience.
mjddle fork of the Elk R6rn Creek. The jetHner then collided ~·ith the '.~ince ~boy had been mWtn1, he had Ph.tntom 's rear tail portion, he testified, ; n spotted several times but ran away adding he saw it make no evll,;ive
m searchers. apparently from fright maneuvt.r.
. becauee he waa pl1ylna: a boy's game Killed with I.he other passengers were
hlde--and-stek. Michael Potter, 7, and his sister June. 6,
•
•
Tourist Trap'/ ·"He ·problbly enjoyed the freedom" daughters of Mrs. Sandra Potter, of 70Q ~id Richard McDaugall, m I • s i 0°n Celle Puente in San Clemen te. ~rdJnat.or of tht search. Federal investigators are Intrigued
·-Kevin was Wled from the' canyon in a with a mystery radar transponder unit
Jitter_ Pulled by ropes and taken to Wyoba aignal monitot!.d in pa J m d a 1 e
;,Bapllilt Church camp on the mountain r!fr simultaneously with the jet's coll ision .
treatment. His father. Ph ilip Dye. a The Phantom 's transponder was out of Casper accountant. and his pretty mothl!!r
A nun has been stationed at the door of St. Peter's Basilica by the
Vatican. Her task: Keep out \\'Omen "''hose garb reveals too much
thigh or bosom . It \Vas the first time a \\'Oman had been assigned to
r ule on hemlines and necklines. Vatican officials felt male security
guards were lax in their value judgments. This v.•oman tourist seems
to be find ing fault with the nun's determination.
\.us~ to his side. order -the lieutenants v.·ere flying at , .. 15.000 feet on visual rules due to a I When found. the lad was dres~ ln the If 1. · d th
lame blue polo shirt, short and teMis ma unc ion1na orygen S}'Stl!!tn -an e
shoe& be \Ore WheJ:l he. waftder~ a..,..,. jetliner ftansponder W!.'; also inoperat ive.
from bil We:tits on an oullng Jilly It. The latter find ing was annonuced in a
Te.mperafi:iri9''dfpped to near freerlnr at preliminary NTSB report Issued Sunday,
night durittg the search but it wu about just prior to convening the hearings.
-SO de • lnvMtigatorn, y the mystery signal
dis .indicating an ·O!f&l tri11is 1¥•• followed
\ or 10 mlnut II\' fn 'area ktear Norton
,10 ~ Al'll, at whldi tlini I! was"dlsconllnlltd
. field ' .; ~~ e.ftort.a ti Pin •It dowli have ibee.n
."" ... ''u·1L ··\1r• futile
""" tu A ' "'"' ' Tho ' • :thllr lraekirti ~;
hid hunted'.• :30-'*iliare--mlle are.11 of· the'
'.mount.I.in but today "they just mean-
'dtttd aJ'(lund" in a lQ...!lquare·mile area
·LAside the wider circle.
·In lbe predawn darkn esg before the boy
;'fal found, U,S. Army experts used Wra.
:r,d llCOp@I .. part of I oew 1tr1tety to
:try to locate Kevin.
• Tbfl IOldit.ra te.arthed the mountain . tirouah tbt fli&bt • .spurred on by new el.ride~ fOflDd Tue!Jday that the ltd WU
ma au.. l!tu .,!><Ing on th• run like an
a!tlmal for 11 dayi. · .
, Four tra• clop, theif paWs bat· "™ and bJOodY frocn. tho roogh terrlln. ~e taken oot of the. search by their
hjmdlers Tuesday. FreM track.lng dogs
·~e ordered flown ln from Florida . Bul·
falo, N.Y .. and Phll.adelph.ia to replace
t.hem. before the boy was found .
Searchers found l!!aves 11t.ackl'!d in the
M1pe.s of hear!!'i and crescent,,. ston~
piled in par1llet Unes 11 nd 11 ping pong
p11ddle Tui!!sday ft was th" rescue
squad 's "most solid !tads yet " in lhe
h.lnt.
DAILY PILOT
OllANGIE COAST ~UIHINO <Ololl'AMV
leliert N. WeM ,.,....,...,."" ~ .......
J1t\-a. C11,l1y
Vici ""'-'""' .... ~I M_,..,.
n,,..,, r,.,.;1 ,._
n, ... ,, A. Murp1o.i•1
-......... l!lf"""
Al111 Oi•\-i" .... , Or•• C-ty l!f, ..
Allttrt W. 11+,1 ••11111:l1te llfl""'
Hwtl-.... ..... OMr.e
I 7t71 h1ct. l•ul1v1MI
M1ili111 A44••nr ,.,0, ''" 1tO, f2641
~ .,_ ........
Ll9uril a.a.: m "-• ,,_ CMM Miu: D W•U .. r Strwt ~ ..,.1 JUI "..._.. hllil'¥t1'41' llft Cl9!Nlo .. : »i Htrlll II CtrnlN 11: .. 1
Indians to Perform
At Fashion Island
Mem~rs rrom four Arizona Indi~n
tribes ll.1!1 invade Fashion Island in
Newport Beach Thursday where they \\'ill
perform traditional dances for the public .
Oancers from the Apachl!!, Navajo,
Papago and Pima nations will bft
dt!.S~ in full costume for performan~
at noon , 1 :30 p.m. and J p.m. Cameras
may be used at each dance.
Deputy Waives
Trial; Facing
Theft Sentence
A to rmer Orangt County ~htr iff's dtpu-
ty waived jury trial Tuesday llnd pl!!aded
guilty to lessl!!r charges stemming from
the burglary Sept. 20 of the Mission Vie10
Counlry Club.
Ex-deputy Frederick B. frv ine, 44. of
La H11bra. pleaded guilty to receiving
stolen property and insisted on filing the
plea after Superior Court J udge Byron K.
~fcMillan "'·arned him th11t it would
amost certainly mean state. prison.
Irvine. \\'3& ordered to return to court
Oct. 21 for &l!!ntencing. Related charges of
burglary, a:rand lhelt, auto lheft and con-
gpir3cy wtre dismissed
The burly, f'x-depuly faces a possible
gta!e prison term of up to 10 yl!!ar1 And
Judge r-.1cMillan made If cll!!ar Tuesday
lhat he can almost bank on that sentence.
Irvine v.•as one of (\\'n "moonlighUng''
deputies arre.~ted outside the CQUntry
club shortly afttr the golf pro assertedly
saw the two ntcurtty guards carrying
cases of li(fuor and golfing equipment
from the golf shop to their patrol car.
Deputy Arthur B. Dunc11n, 34, of Hun·
tington Beach. immediately surrendered
to fellow deputle~ but Irvine Hize.d a
patrol car and led tli! former colleagu•
on a wild chast that ended In Rive rside
County after shot! were es:changed by
pursuers and puniued. Irvi~ wrs fin1lly perniaded to sur·
render after be thrutened 11e\•eral times
to shoot himself.
Bolh men were indicted by tht Oranae
County Grand Jury but Duncan w11s
found dtad. hanged from Ike rafters In
the a:arage of his Huntington Beach home
before he could be 1rr1igntd on the
charges
Fril!!nds ,11nd former co!!ellgues sAid
Dunr11.n became dH"ply depre~d arte.r
ch<11rge~ "'f're hli!!d an('J commen!f'd on
man y otrasions that he rould not face
rourt action. He 111)1!'nl much of hlg career
'A·ith th• 1htriff's ('lf11 ce 85 I bAllHf in
sever:.J Suptrior C..ourt loca!ions .
Workers'~ Picket Office
Of :iPacifi¢ Telephone
In a hold qver from 'the telephone strike
or tv.·o weeks ago, me.mbl!!rs of the
lnternational Brotherhood of Eleclrica!
Workers today picketed off ices of Pacific
Telephone in Orange County.
Unio~ spokesman Jackie Goldstein sai d
lhe picket lines. whicb are being honored
by members of the other te lephone
unions, ~·ill only last a da y at a ti me.
"We only have 200 members in !he Los
Angeles chapter, so \\'e picket in one area
at ll lime. 'Yesterday it "·as the Si'iuth
Bay area of Los Angele~. today it's
Orange Count y.'' sh e sa1rJ Sht derl1ned to
name Thursda y's tarJ::et for lhe pickt ts.
~!iss Goldstein ~aid the union is still on
strtke because 1hey have not rea ched a
contract agreement \l·ith Pa c 1 f i c
Telephone.
"\Ve are an aff1l1ate of the AFL-C lO
and .,..,, are gettin g 1re n1endous respon~e
from other aff ilia te un ions. Thev have all
agreed not to cross our pi cke t li ne~." she
s,11id.
Becau$e nf the p1rkets :i t !he dn1en
Pacific TelPphone offices in the rollnl)'.
rondlt1ons have rl!!turned tn ~·h~t they
...,·ere during the height of the stri ke ty,·o
~·eeks a10 .
Information operators and Ion g
distance optrators have not reported for
work and their posL~ are being manned
by a skeleton crew of superviso rs.
The 1 BEW consists or directory person·
nel, Miss Goldstein said. The5e are the
people who set up the phone rl irertories ·
and sell the advertisements for the
yellow pages.
She expla ined that the union _slr(>ngth
v.•as much greater in the San Francisco
Bay area and the IBEW has ht-en Abli!! to
maintain constant pickets or Pacifi c
Telephone offices thtrP.
"The strike i!; sanctionr.d by the AFL-
C10 and we intend to stay out until we
reach a contract agreeml!n1." Miss
Airline Rejects
Safari Flights
Goldstein added.
The offices of General Telephonf! in
Orange County, which have not ~n af-
fected by the strikes. were not pieke!.!d
and are doin,lt normal busines.~ today.
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
Most Diamond
Losses Are
Preventable
I'd like to have e\·en half or the
diamonds that are Jost from their
settings ... gone forever: But also
I'd like to see more people I.Ake the
simple precautions which can pre-
vent the majority of such losses.
lllost stones lost from their set·
llngs have given months of fair
v. i:irning that they are in such dan·
l?l'r : they have beco m e loose,
usuall y due to '"orn prongs, and
can remain loose in the setting for
n1n11.Y months before the final loss
\1·hi ch occurs so often during some
such activity as housework or re--
creation. ,i\nd it is exactly under
these circumstances ••• work or
• play, that a diamond Uterally goes
dov.·o the drain or into the water
"·ith little or no possibility of re-
cov~ry.
About 90cti of 5uch losses could be
prevented if the mountings on your
Je"·elry were checked twice a year.
So v.·hy not take out the best and
cheapest insurance available , ••
the security of haYing us check
your mountings. It takes only a few
minutes. 11nd there is no charge.
,..,, _ --------~---.. --------·----''nll,lf'.,. • --~.·-
--. ,, ....... l. -
APOLLO : .. -
~ condu<t U.. ftnt • tnity ! o r k I n c
apaceWauc. '·
IJ1lt aJtro .. uta Tueiday ...aed U..~ ,..
c>ooq-.i.1 tn spoco u H ~ -llOublo
~ an •Je<tm.I ()tOl>lfm ~t lrlf· aertct tn alarm algn1I in Uie command
modult cabin.
They found a circuJt breaker ror part ot
the cabin li&hting had opened beca.ll&e pf
an apparent circuit CauJt, but Flf&bt DJ.
rl!!Clor Millon Windler ~potted the ,trouble
was minor and could be worked l'll'p~.
"Othu than that, I gue.Sl'I we1rl ops
(operaUona) normal , going to the mOM
and planning on going to Hadley (the lan-
ding site )," Windler reported at an early
morning briering toda y.
The three Apollo 15 crewmen retired at
l ;JJ a.m. EDT and 1lept mueti ot this morning. .
Apollo 15 was 1radually slowin&' under
the decreasing influence of earth'I tug of
gravity .
It's speed wU dropplhg frGnl 2,750
miles per .hour at 12:34 a.m, wben the
astronauts wer• 100,6815 miles from th11
moon, to 2,IU. miles per hour at 7:34 p.m.
when they .will be 5.1,4&4 m.ilee away.
Apollo 15 will slow to 1,N? mileii per
hour and then start to acce.Jerate Thurs-
day morning under the pull ot the moon '!
gt.Yvity.
One other problem was round Tuesday
night when Saltt and Irwin opened the
hatch to the Lunar Module llnd
discovered during a two-hour Inspection
that the gla11:1 cover to an altimeter
somehow had shattered since launch
Monday mornin1 from Cape Kennedy.
"Wt don't have any idea why lt broke.''
Irwin said. He estimated he and Scott
picked up abou~ 60 percent of the glass
piece! with a piece of tape and the
spacecraft vacuum cleaner and \Vindler
.said the tmlaining glaaa 1hould be no
problem.
The met.er normally ill sealed under
pressure in helium. With the glal!.!
broken, it was exposed to a near vacuum
and then oxygen whl!!n the cabin was
pressurized.
Mission Control Communicator Kar! G.
lleinze told the astronauts engineers wtre
running rests to see if the change Jn con.
ditions would 11ffect the meter.
"It would be interesting to hear what
they find out," Scott said.
Even if the meter fails , Windler said,
the astronauts can read the necessary
data off thl!!ir computer and their 1.1.nding
plans would not be changed .
Forty-n ine minutes of the lunar module
Inspection was televised back to earth.
But the telecast was devoted to the
v.·ork at hand and without the hljlnM
sometimes sef!n on earlier flights. 11 was
not carried on network television.
The lunar module check showed that all
Its systems were in good shape Including
tht critical batteries. landlrig eng ine
system. fuel pressurization system and
!he craft's control rocket 11 . Com-
munications betwttn F<1lcon and earth
were excellent.
Marries Secretly
LAS VEGAS (UPI ) Christina
Onassis, the daug'hler of Greek bUUonalre
Aris totle Onassis, was mArried stcrl!!tly
in this gambling resort at a la\\'}'er's of·
rice.
--
GARBENSTANGELERS ENTRY
Ro1i1 E1qulvtl, Veronica S.rmlento
Garbenstangel
Team at Coast
Facing 'Penalty'
A bedragg led Orange Coast Colleie
garbenstangel team, facing a probable
penalty for "dela ying the game," ruefully
admitted this morning that OCC is run-
ning a little late in completing an entry
for the ·Build a Belter Gjtbenstana:el
Contest.
F'or contest details, see special 1ec·
tion stnrting on Page 49.
The team coached by technology
di vision instructor Bill Abernathy spent
"half the night welding stuff together" at
the school , he explained today.
But the problem was the garben1tan1e.I
had pups. It is now tv.·o gllrbenstani:eh!1,
both of wh ich the OCC men's team U •
peeled to assemble this afternoon at
South Coast Plaza.
Tuesday afternoon, bolh the men's
team and aa 111l-ji1trl •ag:reg11Uon coached
by Dick Hernandez, director of special
programs at OCC. were to bui ld their
garbenstangels al the shopping center.
The~ gJrls showed up and auembled
their 'tum·· the. crank -and -the· whethr
• go · around thing. Bllt garbensta'ngi!!l
contest officials waited in vain for the
men's team. ,
This could be the day ·of the Great Con;
rront.a\ion. The garbenstangel team from
Golden West College was due to arrive ai
the shopping center abou t :l o'clock this
afternoon to try to build its betttr
garbenstangel.
r.iEl\JEST UERSJ(]r.i []f
THE fJRST l\lflT~H (]f;i
THE f:l(](]f;i
2-~une•, •·d••I c~rcnc'''~~ ~'""'~ .. , •lle>1td JA'•rv•l• el ~ .... .,,"'""""' t~d ltCO>\~I Stl lftlt ll 11111 t llt, M11e~<'-I llf•r.tlU .. W11tt.,.1!1l.,,I , ,,, ,,.,,.41t5,
J. c. Jeu1efer:1
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENIENl TERMS
l.ANICAMEl lC AlO-MASTEl CMAlGl
24 YlARS IN 5.4.ME LOCAT IO N
PHONE 141·J401
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Filibuster
On Airline ' ' '
To Continue
\VASHINGTON lUPI) -The Senate
refused today to slop a filibuster delaying
action on a bill to aulllorize a $250 million
government-guaranteed loaq to Lockheed
Airtrafl Corp. ,
Continued debate lhrecitens lo p~Jent
act.ion on the bill until after Congres.t
returns in September from a mooUHong
reciess. Lockheed .say! il fa e.e 1
bink.rupt.cy In 11.bsence of the feden.IJ;J
l>Jcked Joan by Aug.&. '
'While Ult mor;e t& atop 'the twtiuiter
failed for the. second time in 'three days,
Lockheed and the Mxon AdminilitraUon
woa a crucial victory two hours earlier in
tbeir e[fort to keep the firm stlvent. Tbe
Senate voted 60 to 35 against a propooal
1.1•hich would have postponed the
l.ockbe1!d loan until fall .
Cheered by the wide margin of the-
earlier vote, Lockheed's supp:>rters in the
Senate pressed far the twe>-thlrds major·
ity needed to impose cloture-a limit to
debate -and force a vote on llhe bill to
authorize up to $2 billion worth of
governmcnt·guarantced Joans to firms
"'hose collapse could hurt the economy.
But on the cloture roll call, the vole
"'as 59 to 39 -seven short of the re-
quired two-thirds. On Monday, a cloture
move felt five votes short of a majority.
The bill's opponents hope to keep talk·
ing -and prevent a final vote on passage
-until Aug. 6 when Congress starts its
recess.
The same bill Cflmes up in the House
Friday.
In the first vole, an amendment offered
by Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson Ill (D-111.),
was defeated. It would have removed
from the bill a provision to exempt
Lockheed, and Lockheed alone, Jrom ttie
possibility of a Congressional veto of a
Joan guarantee.
The overall bill would authorize $2
billion worth of government-backed Joans
for dis tressed firms whose collapse would
hurt the economy.
As drafted by lhe Senate Banking Conl-
mittee, the bill carried the veto provision
for approved a pp l i ca ti ons for
government-backed Joans.
However, that provision wmild not go
Into effect unti l Oct. I -after Lockheed's
application had been acted upon by a
three-member Joan guarantee board
created by the legislation.
The bill states that after Oct. 1, all loan
applications approved by the board must
come under Congressional scrutiny. The
approved loan can be made only if within
~ days neither house of Coogress vetoes
JI .
The outcome of Ult vote on the
Steven.son amendment kept alive the
firm 's hopes of receiving government aid
by Aug. ~
President Ni.~on
Planning Visit
In. Mid-August?
Sources in Washington and in San
Clemente have hinr.cl that Prtsident Nix-
on is planning to retum to Che W~stern
White I-louse in mid-A~t fpr a ~.
y,·eek stay. . , !
While no confirri-ittkm . .f\.u ken rhade
by the Presidential l:taff, trips' west dur-
ing that month are standard for the Chief
Executive.
The August trips generally art the
longest -lhe first in 1969 la sting more
than four weeks.
Sources in Washington told the DAILY
f'ILO'I' that a visit by British Prime
l\iinister Edward Heath might be
forthcoming during the President's next
wor~ing vacation here.
The President and First l.ady spent
lwo "'~ks earlier this month at their
Spa nish estate, leaving for Washington
.July 11 after Mr. Nixon announced he
planned a trip to Peking before campaign
ieason begins next year.
Jtleet Gro1tdmo
\Vould you believe Elizabeth
Taylor is a grandmother? J.ler
daughter-in·la\v, Beth Wilding,
19. gave birlh to a six-pound
girl in London Sunday. l.iz is
only 39, but if you remember
her in "National Velvet," you
are getting old, Charlie.
Heroin Supply
Ring Broken
In Indochina:
BANGKOK (AP) -Narcolics agents
from Thailand, SO\Jth Vietnam and the
United States in I.hei r first combined
operation have cracked a major heroin
ring supplying American soldiers in Viet-
nam.
They seized 97 pounds of pure heroin -
one of the largest hauls ever in Asia -
aQd 660 pounds of smoking opium. The
cache, which had a wholesale value in
Saigon of $4 milllion. originaled in Burma
and Laos and is now in the hands of the
Saigon police.
Two South Vietnamese sailors were
among the 25 persons seized in a round·
the-clock operation thal had agents poun-
cing in Saigon, in a Vietnamese fishing
vii/age and on an offshore island in Lhe
Gulf of Thailand.
The seizure took pl ace Sunday and
Monday and was disclosed in Bangkok by
Gen. Nitya Bhanumas, sec retary-general
of the Thai Narcotics Board. He said the
first information about the ring -which
\Vas led by a wealthy Chinese me rchant
in the Oiolon sec tion of Saigon -came
from informants he developed in an in-
vestigation he directed last month.
The general said none of the heroin or
opium was processed tn Thailand but it
was haulfid. through the country by truck
and loaded on fishing vtssels along the
'l11ai coa.'!t.
"My nation Js a major tran!Jt mule for
illicit drugs," he added .
Nitya said two or three other rings
seem to have halted operations because
of the raids.
The use of heroin among American
troops in Vietnam is a matter of major
concern '-? U.S. officials. The drug is
freely available anywhere in Saigon.
Thailand sent a key crime suppression
officer. Col. Pramual Vanigbandhu, 10
Saigon last Saturday. lle traveled with
U.S. narcoti cs agent Jack Greene, who
led the team that captured the leader of
the dope ring Tap Vlnh, at his house in
Choloo.
Doctor's Cl1arges Delayed
h1 Collllty Abortion Case
By TOM 11ARLEV
0 1 ,... 0.lfr PRtt .....
Abortion charges against Dr. John
Shriver Gwynne or Santa Ana were hdd
over for ten days today to enable both
iides in the Orange Caunty Superior
Court acUon to study the impact of e re-
<'ent State Caurt or Appeal ruling on the
abortion issue.
Judge Byron K. McMillan held the 29-
)-'ear-old ".loclor's arraignment over to
Aug. 6 and aUowed the aCt'USCd physician
to remain free on his promise to appear.
It is expected that the deley will enable
the State Board or Medical Exa miners to
issue Jt.s ruling an Gwynne's statwi
following Its examination cf the multiple
abortion charges Died against the delen·
dant.
Deputy district atlaTM!y Martin J.
Henegban commented today that he did
riOl believe the appellate courl'JJ ruling
find the abortion issue would greatly af-
fect lhe charges riled against Gwynne.
The state court ruled In ttvlewing an
Alameda Caunty t:asc that a woman may
obt11in an 11bortion in any licensed
talifomia ho!piU.I If her doctor decides
that !he operaUon i.~ required lo pret1erve
her physic11I or menlal health.
out in his 17th Street clinic. He haa stated
in frequent a:>urt appearancu that all he
needs to know is that a woman requires
an abortion and that he will then perform
that operation.
While Judge McMillan was granting the
delay two of Gwynne's female assistant!
were being cleared or related abortion
charges in Santa Ana Mu nlclpal Court.
Judge John Flynn granted a pro-
secution motion for di!1missal of charges
filed against Diana Grimitad, Z2. or YJ1
21st St., Costa Mesa, and Barbara
Johnson. 32, of Tustin.
Botb women IA'ere arrested June 22 in a
Santa Ana police raid that allegedly pro-
duced evi1enct from Gwynne's office
files.
Dr. Robert CUmming Robb, the Laguna
Beach pbysk:ia n who faces identical
charges, la due in Superior Court Friday
fer a pretrial bearing similarly deferT't'd
a week ago in tile light of the appellate
court ruling.
Or. Robb, &&, of 34567 Scenic Dr ive.
Dana Point, I~ accused {)f performing
abortion!'i in hi~ Art Colony orfice . lie i!I
J'IOW represen ted in the criminal <acllon by
American Civil Ubc!rlies Union lawyers
A. L. Wlrin Ancl Fred Ok:tand.
All charge!! filed 11g11ln!!t Gwynne The semi-retired physician·• trial dnte
is ~et for St!pt. 29. j, _:·~ f~. aborUons allegedly carried
ri~· .... 1 lftfil ,. ...-.....
-.. \... .;_1_ .... -
Wtdl!Hday, July 28, 19n H DAILY PU.Of :J
Mosquitoes Invade State
By TERRY COVILLE
Of .... 0..., ""' Sffff
A mooqullo pl1gue that baa kDled l,lOO
ho~ In. Texa• and bOW threatens t.bt
San Joaquin Valley la not expected to
reach Orange County lhls llUSOll.
"But," w•ms Jack H. KJmball, man-
ager of the Or•nge County MoaquJto
Aba~l!!lt . pj>lri<\, "1leeping •lclaieu
I eooeJtlUillUS) is always a potential
dange!':'"
Kimball said methods Wied in Orange
County to reduce the mosquito population
have kept the situation nonnal.
In Texas, Dl06QUltoes have inOicted the
horse population with Venezuelan Equhle
Encephalitis, a deadly di.sease which can
also !lpread lo hwnans.
Public Urges
County Buy
Creek Beach
By JOllN VALTERZA
OI 1111 o.111 Pilot lf1ff
The issue over. public use of Sall Creek
Beach -one which has stirred dotel'l.'l of
angry hearings in recent years -created
a different mood Tuesday.
It was friendly, for a. change.
In a crowded Laguna Niguel courtroom
more tJ1an 100 South Coast residents urg-
£d Orange County harbor commis.s:ionerii
lo hasten a plan to purchase pubUc righl1
to the beach, parking lots and ether
facilities 2Jong the embattled st.retch of
shoreline between Monarch Bay and
Dana Point.
Commissioners. who called the hear-
ings to sample public opinion before draf-
ting a final recommendation to county
supervisors, first heard from county
department aides, then Avco spokesmen.
An encroachment on the dry sand area
of the beach -needed so that a revel·
ment can be built to stem a maj('!r
landslide problem -took up much of the
testimony.
County officials repeated the tota l in-
vestment projection for the project -
complete with two large parking lots,
three pedestrian trails to the beach and
restroom buildings -at $2 .6 million.
That sum, said County Director ot
llarbors, Beaches and Parks Kenneth
Sampson. is the projected cost if Avco
Community Developers handled all Im·
provements and turned over a co mplete
project to the county.
The "turn-key" approach. Sampson
stressed, would be cheaper than if th e
county obtained the new land and
developed the same facilities itself.
Rancor ove P the Seit Creek issue was
n1issing among the audience.
Brennan "Hevs" McClelland, of
Laguna Beach the spokesman for the
Save Salt Cre¥ Committee, re.lated the
5,0CJG.plll.'S merftbers' position that the
purchase plan should be put to use u
soon as possible.
Alluding to the distance between park-
ing lots and the beach itself, McClelland
pointed out that it follow"" a con-
l<'mporary policy of new beach develop-
ment.
"And, anyway, J thi nk the majority of
t.he people would rather walk 1.500 feet
down a trail than trade for the situation
of not being allowed to use the beach at
all," he said.
He stressed that the encroachment on
the sand in the landslide project should
follow promises by Avco that little if any
material in the operation would cover the
valuable dry sand.
* ·{:[ *
Colorful Words
S pill Forth
01i Salt Cr ee k
Because of the apparent widespread
support for the proposed county purchase
of Sall Creek Beach and improvement.!,
the tenor cf public meetings has meUow·
ed recently.
Nonetheless, Tuesday's harbor com-
mission hearings on the plan had it.!
share of brisk commentary.
Here is same of it:
-AVCO Executive Vice President
Richard Weiser, who outlined much of
the offer which his firm is making lo the
county, alluded to the early days of his
firm's ownership of the embattled pro·
perty. "We sat down last fall and decided
we had two options .... either have the
area look like Vietnam, or make It
available to the public. We chose the lat-
ter approach."
(The existence of concertina barbed
wire and imported cactus to keC'p the
public out apparently stirred the Vietnam
allusio n)
-Relnrorcing the executive's com·
ment.s, Vietnam veteran Rusti11 Kalish of
Santa Ana told commissioners he knows
what Vietnem beaches are Jike. "When I
surfed there I had to take a tru sty Viet-
namese to read the signs for me so we
knew where the mine field!! were. The an·
ly dlJference J perceived at Salt Creek
was lhat I could read the signs myself."
-Brennan "Hevs" McClelland, long a
colarfUl and influential figure along the
South Coast, began his oommentary with
traditional tmdentatuMnt: "I repreaent
the Save Salt Creek Committee, wbkh
everyone knows is a loosely-knit group. I
don't speak for everyone," he said, "only
about 5,000 or so"
"At the begiMlng or the battle," he
1dded, "It was the fight of the liltle peo-
ple. Now it's coming close to victory. Bul
If you talk to the young surfers, they
don't want it open, bec&usc they know
how lo break through the barbed wire
.ind R"I In lhc Mach. Thcv'rc afraid It'll
get loo cmwrlcd," ·
'Mlis 'fttk dnctan of the Delta Mos-
quJto Abltanent Diatrict announced that
oestlcidts Af't no longer effective again.st
lOOIQUitoes In the San Joaquin Valley.
"We're just aitling on a powder keg,''
warned Dr. Don Murray, manager of the
Delta dlstrlct in VlsaUa. .. Moequilaes are
thicker than they have been in some
years."
The San J oaquin mosquitoes, however,
have not yet been round to ca1Ty the
Venezuela., Encephalitis. They have just
developed an immunity to chemical
killers.
"The danger la 1n lnfectJan from Tex-
as," Kimball uplained "The Veneiuelen
diM!ase can be transferred from a mos-
quita to a harse and back to another mo,s..
quito."
A current embargo on any bone
movementl In Texas or surroundlng
stat.es ls u:pected to ~d Lhe encephalitis
Meanwhile, the government hr pn!paring
for at least a season, KJ.mball said.
a speclal vaccine for UM throughout the
western states.
"All of our horse owners are e1tremely
worried," Kimball said. "But we're aafer
In Orenge County, We don't use
pesticide! so heavily and mosquitoes here
have not devel oped an immunity to
chemicals.''
Kimball :i:aid. the Orange County pro-
gram relies ~avily on backyard cleanup
and the use or special mosquito fish
which eat the mosquitO larvae.
"We planted 200,cm mmquito fish in
water sourcu througl>out tile comity lhls
1UD1mer," be said. "~ blgguU araels
are fish ppnd.s, 250 miles or Dood aod
draln1ge channols, park ponds. ond Bolf
cotlrse water hazard,,. We plant fish in all
of them."
"We get 300 calls a month, SIO percent
involving. tieei.yards. We'll give the mos-
quito fish free to enyone," Kim&au 11ld.
"Just ea11 WI at 537-5891."
Kimball said the county Is emphasizing
Jts program at hocse ranches now
because of the currtnt scare. Lo5
Alamitos Race Track alone hli 1,000
horses. Fish are planted in u,e botW"-
troughs. ·
"I think we're a.are. ir we can keep the
infected horses from Te1as oot of here,"
Kimball concluded.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
43
STORES
TO
SERVE
YOU
SATURDAY, JULY 31
150 TABLES LOADED WITH
1000'5 OF DOLLARS WORTH OF
FANTASTIC VALUES -JUST IN
TIME FOR BACK TO SCHOOL
2300 HARBdR BLVD. KIDS! AT
WILSON
JUST SOUTH OF
COME MEET YOUR FAVORITE
DISNEY CHARACTERS
HERE ALL DAY SATURDAY
SAN DIEGO FREEWAY
IN THE HEART OF COSTA MESA 2300 HARBOR Bl VD., COSTA MESA
GENERAL TIRE
JULY 21st
thru 31st
WIDE Glass-Belted Jumbo 780
Th-. Same Tire That Comes On New 1971 Can!
TWINSTRIPE
~$ • Polyester Cord Body
• Glass-Belted
R
Si1t A78-l l (b.QQ.JJI TYb1J111 Wlii!twtll,
p!Yt $1 .'iO Ftd, ElC. T11 pt1 tir1
C.m.,.r•blt low
prk•• '" '""'-'•
.... " •n4
.1.,11 .. 1111,
CADILLAC OWNERS
WHITEWALL CW 3-JUMBO 780
4 for $15000
'"" h..1f '""· l lC. T•• -!In
Famous O.lco Pleasurizer
SHOCK ABSORBERS
51[1
A7S.13
E7S.14
F7S.14
F7S.IS
G7S.14
G7S.15
H7S.15
FRONT-END
ALIGNMENT
WHITEWALLS '""· IJ. T•• St lt Prit t 4 Tlr• -Tlrt
4 for $80.00 11.tt ...
4 for $95.00 .J.Jl •••
4 for $105.00 It.Joi N .
4 fo r $110.00 12.u ...
4 for $115.00 U.ff-.
4 for $120.00
12.M -·
4 for $135.00 ».ti ...
U.11 ...
w •• ..,.. ................. '""
I• ,r...otrt ,. .,.w c• -· foc.hlr.t"• ....... ~ ....
Mlfety cllMli -4 Mlf•t ynt -... 1' SALE DYNAMIC Hl&H-ll'llD 4
FOR l wy J .t th. ret11lor ....,.day low Mfll119
prk • •.• ,.r rtl• fo11rtfl fM I c.
HIGH VISlllLITT Y!LLOW
TENNIS BALLS
Y9C.1n1111 Poet
., , IHllh
51'8
WHEEL BALANCE
Ovr t,e<ltMt lt Wiii ""'"'k11t1 ••1911<1 Y9lff" wl'l"I' IW.itlltl lnclud .. ),
Cj)uaker Staft _ ....
MOTOR OIL
BRAKE
RELINE
• l"OltOS
• CHIVlllOLCTI
• COfri!,ACTll
~~
•
~195
Charge it a.t General
DON SWEDLUND AVERY
Coast General Tire General Tire Service
'.
till w ... lftlrl. c ...... _
f'tl-540-1711 •r 646·50JJ
16941 S-:lrl ll'fd., Hllltff..,_ .....
... •• 147·1111
~I
•
•· I ~ps ...
Not Politics! .,
Heaven Forbid
~ By TUOMAS J\.IURPHINE
• or ""' 0.1,., l'UN l!tH
~EW TWISTS DEPT. -Reporu have
fStred down to the coa1Uine this week
tlat a new set or charges and counter·
c::farges have been flying in the balls of
"!:ernment up in the County Seat.
r4-s the reports have it, leaders of
Clahge County's Building In du s t r y
~ialion have charged that some peo-Jt in county government have been
efsaged in "'politics."
£:at awesome disclosure must have
y set things a·buu.in' up aroW'ld
c Cenler Drive.
plespite the seriow;ness of the allega-
~n. you can rest assured that the
~irman of the Boa.rd Gt SUpervisors.
~rt Battin of Santa Ana, kept his CQOL
~ IM!t1EDIATELV issued a denial of
" whole thing. ~ow on this one, you certainly have to
g6 along with Board <ll.ainnan Battin.
Jiw in the world could Mybody suggest,
e_!tn in a whisper. that things going on
~ days up in the County Seat could be
, 'tic?
order,jo be polil.ic. my Webster'•
nary suggests that the party must
"Wise, prudent and sagacious ln
d , ising ~ pursuing mea~ ... "
• eavens. That doesn't IOUnd like
Oljange County government we know to-
d~ .. Not the way some of them are
c~mg about up there, engaging in the
bP.,lness of government wilb all the
1~tle nuances of a meata.te.
~NVWA V, WHAT touched off the latest
~nd of charge and CC1untcr~harge v.·as
ati allegation by the builder's group that
c4,inty cmployes v.•ere being affected by
pcillitics and county workers were thus
~ed of making too many movea on
t~ir own.
:Well, with the climate being what it i.S,
y~ might teod to suspect that county
c111ptoyes are a litUe skittery thue days.
What if you were a county tree-trlm--
nYr. You mlght be given to wonder when
lrtmmlng trees might suddenly become
leis t:han routine. What if yoo trimmed t" tree in front of Supervisor . Ron
apers' office window?
R AU.. the Filth District
bor from Newport Beach bills
If . as something of a con-
vationist. Hacking away at his tree
t not be very politic for the county
trbnmer. He might figure it would ht politic to check with Caspers flnl in
ofSer to ire.serve his po&ition of puncbing
a"'COW\ty lime clock. ~ so it JIU&bt go.
~ as for ihe charge that all things to-
day ln county government are politic
within the v.·is,, prudent and sagacious
definition , you might bav' some doubl.'i.
ON THE OTHER HAND, some folks
might wonder lacking politics, if v.·e have
any politicians up at the Cowlty Seal?
Another quick check on Webste r's tells
you that the word politician is "fre·
quently used in a derogatory sense, Y.'llh
implications Gf sCC"king personal or
partisan gain , scheming, opportunism,
1.'lc •• "
Hey, that sounds more familiar. \Ve
may have some of those..
Big Cntcli
Sttufettu Rep!'rt
"~u I W a:t :......,·. · op. _Worry
·of China's Chou v •
HONG KONG (UPI)·-Qm. Com·
' . ~ Prenlir ll>OU ,tn.111 "'' "'8ct<1
U.S. withdrawal from Indocb1na first
among the topJcs to be dlacussed with
Pre1ldent Nlxop durhtg Nlxoo'a visit to
PekbJg, a group of Amtr1can •\udents
reported today qt' their returrf from
China.
The 1":students released an tD>lfic!al
tritiscript of a cenft.raaUon wjtb ~ in
wltlcb he sakl dlscusskm Gt' tMocl>ina
took precedeoce_ over tbe .subject Ot
Taiwan (Fonnoll:a) or the ns>nnallzation
of relations with the United States. He
also made It clear he oPPosed any two-
China po lie)'. '. •
SQTlllf wrong statements in t hi s
rec<iiding."
ChOu's topics ranged from why
studeots wear 'long hair to the key
abstructions in improving Sioo-Amerlean
relaUOns.
"'N'o matter whether ln the U.S. itself
or al;iroad. we believe the greatest cry Is
for the U.S. to withdraw its troops from
Vietnam and the whole of Indochina,"
Chou said. "'And the troops of other coun·
tries: which have fo.llowed lhe United
States into Indochina should also be
withdrawn. I believe that our stand OR
thl5 is also clear. And-we also bdieve
!hat at the president day among the
American people this issue is tile most
out.standing.
Fishermen ca sting from the jetty at the eut end of
the Cape Cod Channel near S;mdwich, Ma.ss., might
hook a big one as the destroyer U.S.S. Harlan R.
Dickson lies hard aground offshore. The craft
grounded Tuesday afternoon when jt suddenly lost
power. Efforts will be made lo refloat the destroyer
at high tide.
Chou also called for U.S. withdrawal
from South Korea and a peace treaty to
end the war to replace the armistice now
in effect. He also Warned against reVived
militarism in Japan with American help.
Poor South Viet
Security Cited
In Red Attacks
Lightning Kills
Cable Conductor
In Alpine Rain
Sudan Convict,s, Hangs
The 15 students talked with Chou and
other top Cbinete leaders on July 19 in
Peking. In releasing the transcript they
said Chou's remarks "are clearly not an
official. form~ statemen~ of the position
of the Chinese government."
In the transcript. Chou also was quoted
thal "maybe 1 will say something wrong
or the interpreter might interpret
wroni." He sald if the material were
publicized it shoold be accompanied by a
statement that "there are bound to be
SAIGON (UPI) -The United Stattt
evacuated dozens of helicopters and other
major support units from two big bases
florth of Saigon and near the Cambodian
border today because of poor South Viet·
namese security around them, field
reports said.
C'!mmunist Party Leader
CHAMONlX, fraJlce (U PI ) -Lightn·
ing sent a cable car smash ing into a
mountainside during an alpine slorm
TuMday night killing ii., conduclor. It left
65 tourists stranded more tha n three
hours in another car swaying 165 feet
above a valley floo r.
The lightly dressed lourists, including a
72-year-old woman were lowered lo the
ground on rope ladders in a nearl y
nightlong operation arid made thcir way
to Chamonix early today.
Those rescued praised !heir cable car
conductor, Philipe Adam. They said he
began making rescue arrangements as
soon as Lheir car stopped after lighting
hit an empty car carrying conductor
Marcel Chamel, who was killed.
Chamal's car broke loose and smashed
into Aiguille Dur..1idi Peak near t-.1ont
Blanc, Europe's hi~t peak •.•
A mountain climber among Adam'!
passengers volunteered to go dGwn a rope
tG keep it st.ead1 for others. Several
passengers already had been lowered tG
~afety through rain, hail and brilliant
~pl.t}"!l of lightning by the lime rnouo.-
tain police and rescue workers arrived by
helicopter.
KHARTOUM (UPI} -The Sudan
hanged Comnumist Party Leader Abdel
KhaJek Mahjoub today after conviction of
masterminding the Jeftwlng coup against
President Jaafar Nurnei.ry, Omdurman
radio said. It brought to 14 the number
exe cuted since the regime was re stored
to power Thursday.
J\.lahjoub, 45, wa:i sentenced to death by
a i;upreme military court Tuesday. The
government-run radio in Khartoum's
i;ister city, Omdurman, had earlier sAid
"President Numeiry approved the
sentence which will be carried out after
midnight."
Joseph Garang, an avowed Communist
and former Minister for Southern Affairs
who was ftred from the cabinet by
Numeiry after loyalist military forces
staged a countercoup Thursday, v.•as
hanged-'fucsday. Sudanese officials said
Garang was seen conferring with rebel
leadus during their three days of power.
nie capital of Khartoum, five mileA
across the confluence of the White Nile
and the Blue Nile from the ancient
capital of Omdurman. remained calm un·
der a dusk to dawn curfaw. Busines ses
were open but acorei; of riflemen patrol\·
Disney Sues
Cartoon Characters 'Lewd'
CJUCAGO (UPI) -Attomeys for Walt Disney Productions Tuesday filed
suil in federal e<>urt. seeking to atop reproductions of famous Disney character~
being portrayed on tee·shil'ts and posters in a "lewd, drug-addictive manner."
Attorneys Edward Alias and Roy E. Olin Wed the court for $50,CXXI in
damages against each of 18 persons allegedly selling the reproductions in
violation of copyrtghl laws.
. "Some or the cartoons portrayed by these people are pornographic," Atla5
~Id. Included with the suit were el'Bmples of posters, showing MiCkey fl.louse.
Donald Duck and Goofy silting arotmd a water pipe (commonly used for smok·
ing marijuana) v.·ith dazed looks on their faces.
Aoother poster showed the seven dwarfs, Dumbo the elephant, Tinker·
belle, Mi ckey 1'1ouse and Donald Duck at aomething akin to a love-in. On one
poster h.11ckey Mouse wAs using a hypodermic needle.
The suit charges that the posters and tee-shirts are "degrading. le~·d. and
drug·addiclive." Jl said Disney Productions worked Jong ;ind hard "to acq uire
the image of innocent delighllulnes.s ..• known and loved by people all over
the world, particularly. but not only, by children."
Named in lhc suit wer' the operators of several 11tores in Chicago·~ Old
Town area, and other businesse.s in the Chicago area. Old Town is sunilar to
New York's Greenwich Village.
Atl as said the only ooL-o!·town business named in the auit was Specially
Products of Memphis, Tenn.
ed the city's streets under a blistering
sun.
Military tribunals have sent 11 army
ofncers to firing squads and three
civilians to the gallows since Numeiry,
who seized power in a coup May 25, 1969,
Jxgan his purge of Communist "traitors"
from the nation of 15 million, Africa's
largest rountry in land area.
The Sudanese Communists opposed
Numeiry's proposal to join Egypt, Libya
and Syria in their projected federation
beginning Sept. I and had been under at·
tack by Numeiry since February.
E1nel'gency Declal'ed
BOIS~:. Idaho (UPI ) -Gov. Cecil
Andrus has declared a state of emergerr
cy in fi ve 1daho countles because of a
grasshopper infestation.
He asked the U.S. Secretary of
Agriculture tG concur and to make his
deparln1enfs resources available to
"a!tevlate this serious problem ."
Laborites Vote
Against Market
LONOON CUPl) -The top leadership
of Britain's opposition labor party and of
the country's trade unions voted by
overwhelming majorities today against
joining the European Common Market.
The party's national el:ccutive com·
mittee, which sets labor party policy,
voted lH against entering the market.
The general council Gf the Trades
Union Congress (TUC), which represents
more than nine million British workers.
voted 15-11 to recommend Britain sta ying
out of the boomlng sil:·natlon community.
The present common market member
countries are France , West Germany,
Italy, Belgium, Netherlands and Lux·
embourg.
The two bodies met and voted
sep.arately.
The reports said lhe evacuations were
ordered by Lt. Gen. J . J. Wagstaff, U.S.
Commander of Military Region lit
around Saigon, in the wake of Communist
commandG attacks on the two base.s that
resulted in six U.S. helicopters blown up
and sil: Americans wounded.
One attack was al Tay Ninh West ~
miles northwesl Gf the city, where 'the
commandos penetrated the wire July 2J
under rover of a mortar barrage. But 11t
Lai Khe, 30 miles norUt of Saigon, the
Cominunists walked unopposed through
the perimeter to inflict heavy damage.
Correspondents at Tay Ninh West said
more than 400 American soldiers worked
through the night Tuesday and early to-
day. hurriedly packing military equip-
ment and their personal gear into ship-
pi ng crates.
The malerial left aboard a convoy of 30
trucks today for Phu Loi, a major U.S.
Airbase 13 miles north of Saigon where
the perimeler is .st.ill guarded by
American lroop5.
Bush mills.
The whiskey that spans
the generations gap.
Rains Dampen Many States
Cool Air Prevails in It-::~west; Some Warming Expected
Callfornla
H ....... Id M •1191!11y _,,_ 911
!ocll>fl'lem C•llftrt10I.
Thi -tMI' burffll fetwo:l•I low
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Moon 11111tl1 J.1 1 m. ltt•l !.~P"'·
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Tempernture•
WEATHl!lll: -lln\Po INI .,.Kil ,
T-1rur1 •PICI "'Kltllt1ll011 ,.,,.
' 1<M'loyr Mrloll •""I"" It I • "' "OT, 11 -MrM bY 1r.. U.S. Wt11~1r
•llrWll II ktl f"fHIC:!IC:D.
Alto.tclu.,..,,.
Anchor•" All1nt1
lek ... 1!1tlll
lll1rn11•1;1C ..... .... ,
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For JOO years, a whiskey (rom Bushmills has been
with us. Chafming us. Begu ilin g us in a smooth,
po1 isl\ed and altogether lighthearied fa shion.
15 generations have refine d it 15 generation~h ave
c;i pped it. Theverdicl : Nea rperf eel ion. Bush mil Is. Full
of ch at.Jeter. But not heavy-handcrl about ii. Fl;ivor·
fu l. Out never over·pov;rnng. Bushrnil!c;. 11 reflecl s
the past \V1th .a lighl and lively fl avo1 1ha1 is all today.
Compare it to your presenl whiskey You needn't
purchJse a bottle. One sip at your fdvo rl tc pub will
tell you why Bushn1ills has intrigued so rnan y 1en·
erations. It is, ~imply. out of sight .
IMPO«TED
BUSH MILLS
FROM THI WORLD~ OLDEST DISTIUfllY.
I Ill MOO! 1ooi 1~1s~ \'l~lh~llS-H rROOI-IOI !llO I~ l«H &NO IHl .10s (.AR~(lU co II! ,y ~Q~,, ~ T •l,lft
• • . . ,,_,, . . I .11r--. ' .. -,, ; '>)t-
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U.S. Trade
Dips T«?lcl .
By Official
WASHINGTON (~I -
Secrelmy ol (! o m "¥ r e e .
Maurice H. stanS says 1'11
may be the first year of tl11I
century the United stat.es baa
been unable to maintain a
surplus tn Its foteign trade.
"Our economic f u t u r e
depends en maintaining our
technology,'' Stans told the
House Sc i e n c e Committee
Tuesday. He said the U.S.
trade suprlus of exporl.!I over
Imports, which has been
declining in recent years, may
hit zero for the fltst time since
QUEENJI By Phll lnterlorull
1~3. l~~~~~~~~~:::::l~~~~~~j The surplus was $2. 7 billion
last year, down from $7.7
billion in 1964, Stans said.
The last offici>J comment on "I thlnk dop llhould be tnlnedto keeDthe!ropin!Q!l!I
lhe balance cf trade was July <)f judge1 to thtimse•vea.')'
8 when the Commerce Depart·-----.:'.:~~~~~~".'.:'.'.".'.._ _____ _
ment forecast a $500,000
surplus for 1971. It predicted
exports would rise 7 to 8 per~
cent, whlle imports Increased
13 to 14 percent.
Stans urged Congress to
c onsi der stJm ulating
techniolgical advancement to
break the cycle.
''It may well be time," he
said. to modify antitrust
regulations so that industries
can pool resources and make
advances he said are needed.
Although the Nixon ad-
ministration hasn't decided
"which way we want to go,"
Stans said, four options exist:
-Direct federal grants and
loan guarantees for
t e chnoiogical development;
and such indirect aid as tax:
break.s, investment credits and
depreciation allowances.
Officers Allegedly
Relieved for Racism
DETROIT (UPI) -F"rnk
W. Render, Deputy Asslslant
Secretary of Defense for
Equal Opporttlllities, 1 a I d
Tuesday at least seven of-
ficers, including one geoeral,
have been relieved or duty for
vlolating armed forces civil
* * * UAW Chief
Seeks More
Public Jobs
rights regulations.
Render made the statement
during 2 news conference
which coincided with the Na-
tional Urban League's 6lst aD--
nual convention. Render, a
black, held hb: conference IQ. a
hotel across the street from
the convenUon site.
"There are people who wore
stars, bars, oak leave" and
birds on t.helr shouJders who
have been relieved of duty,"
he said.
Render Initially said there
were 10 t.o 12 officers who
were relieved of duty but in a
telephone interview later he
said the figure may have been
seven or less. "If I'm asked to
produce seven names I pro-
bably couldn't dolt," he said.
Wrdnndl.J, J11ly 28, 1971
M•t1 Spark Cont rover•y
I
Nixon Eyes Reserve Board Boost
WASHINGTON (U111) -
~ NlDn lo oomktorint
• proposal to:doob!e the ""' of
the Fedmll ~ """"' It ,' ~· lunaed: &Oday~~-... giotloti, II J!Ut b el·o r • ~ eolild toiJdl off a
controversy rivaling President
Franklin D. RooSevelt'• at.-
tempi to "pack" the SUpreme
Compromise
On Draft
Said Near
WASHINGTON (UP!I
'lbere-were reports today·that
a compram..be may be in the
works to revive the draft,
perha~ before Congre1s
begins a month-long recess
next week.
'!be President's power to
draft men into the service ex-
pired June 30 when the House
and Senate could not agree on
legislation to extend the draft
for another two year!'. The
specific point of disagreement
was over a Senate-backed
amendment whicll w o u l d
declare it the national policy
to be out of Indochina nine
montM after the measure
becomes law, provided the
U.S; war prisoners were
released before then.
One member of a House-
Sehate conference committee
which has been trying to solve
the impasse said Tuesday the
negotiators had tentatively
agreed oo a aimpromiJe. It
would involve changing the
out-in-nine-months amendment
to make it a "sense of the
Congress" expression that
President Nixon is h o u I d
negotiate a Vietnam
withdrawal date in exchange
for a ceii.se-fire and release of
the war prisoners •.
OJurt. most trusted economic ad-
Admlnlatratloo olllela!J abo •ber, bu heal crilieal ol ad-
dlleloled that N1llAJn rejec:ted mlnllllratlon policy lor more
•. ,1l1!1114111t,ll'IP!.··-J'. ; tliaa-& )'ti!'. lfe. .... -
Burna -ehOlrman ol the repeatedly for the Pnoldent to
resenie board -for a '20,000 take a tougher stand q&.lnat
a year pay rllle. Bums cur. inflationary'wage and price tn-
rently makes $42,500. crea.su.
Bums, boWever. denied he '"Ille President has received
had "lobbied for an increase several requests from high.
in salary." level economic advisers that
The . developments lert no he ttpand membership of the
doubt that the once warm Federal Reserve Board," as
personal relaUonshfp bet~ administration spobsrnan
Nixon and Burns bas chilled. , aald. '-i'here bas be e n
Bums, at one time Nl%on'1 criticism that Jt ls too much of
a cloled club and that only by
doubling lu 1U. can It really
tuncdon reliably ."
'Ille spokesman • did not
elabofate,
'Die F~al Reserve,
legally independent of lhe 1d-
mlmltra.Uon, sets the nation's
baaic money and credit policy.
Jla m•mberJ are 1ppointed by
the President but t h e I r
OYerlapptng 1._year terms are
designed to imulate them
from day-k>-day politic.a. u Nimn does ask eonarw
... -the """ ol lhl 3 -and autamaUe1lly P.
the authority to name
new memben -ft c<Utd ~
ger a eootroveny not unlltei
the one that lollowed f'mlol
dent Franilln o. -1t·1
effort to lnaeue the 11u cL
t h e S u preme Cou rJt1
Roosevel.1'1 p1a11 WIS rejedtd-
after opponents aCCURd hlra
of trying to "pack the couttJ
to water down lta conaervat!V
majority.
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CAREER NIGHT
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Man Found
Tied Up
lnsUk Tomb
DETROIT (UPI) -United
Auto Workers President
Leonard Woodcock, referring
to unemployment as "the
country's most serious pro-
blem," has called for the crea-
tion of up to 3 million public
service jobs.
Render declined to name the'lr=========iJI officers. "I don 't think it
would serve any u s e f u I
purpose," he said
"
WESJ'\VEGO, La. !UPI) -
Police found David A. Melan-
con, 22, tied and gagged and
stuffed in an above--the-ground
tomb Tuesday in the
Westwego Cemetary. He was
alive, but suffering from
isbock.
"He was as white. as a
ghost," said policeman
Woodrow Chambert.
Chambert said the man was
robbed and then bound and
deposited in the u pp e r
chamber tomb. W o r km e n
suspected something w a s
wrong when they saw plasti c
fl owers covering the opening
of the chamber, which was
supposed to be vacant.
They removed the f\ower:ii:
and found the tomb was not
.sealed with bricks and mortar,
but open, with Melancon in-
1Jde.
Cbambert said Melancon
fainted f!Vfl'J time he at-
tempted to speak to officers.
He was hospitalized. Police
believed he had been in the
tomb since Monday night.
Woodcock, In an address
delivered at the 61St AMual
Convention of the National
Urban League Tuesday, also
recommended tile formation
of a. coalition •·or t h e
economically disadvantaged,"
embracing; all i:aces and col-
ors, to find mote jobs.
Woodcock did not elaborate
on Utis proposal. However, in
remarks t.o new,men following
hls speec.h, he noted. ttiat an
economic coalition already ex-
ists within the Democratic
Party, but said it bu not
given enough consides-aiion t.o
the problems or blue-collar
workers.
Woodcock said during the
past 10 years the Democratic
Party, which the UAW tradi-
tionally supports, bad moved
away Crom the recognition of
basic problems such a s
unemployment.
Render said of tlle ones he
knew of who were disciplined
the lowest ranking officer was
a captain -a military lawyer
-who was discharged in
Okinawa earlier this year for
refusing to shake hands with a
black officer.
Render said the individual
services also could have taken
action without his knowledge.
Mf ~
semi-annual • clearance
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' DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
A Mess on Brookhurst
A great fei.r of the businessman Is that gome un-l
foreseeable circumstance will come along to upset the
delicate profit-and-loss balance on whici1 his livelihood
depends.
So it is little wonder that the merchants and prir
fessional men on Brookhurst Street in Huntington Beach
and Fountain Vallev are worried about a 22-month Proj·
ect to lay a 96-inch Se\ver line under the thoroughfare.
Ever ~ince it became kno"'n in April that the
Orange County Sanitation District was to lay the five-
mile line. linking treatment plants in 1-lu ntington Beach
and Fountain Valley, the rnerchants have urged that an
alternate route be used.
The businessmen claim that the adopted route "'OUld
cause the greatest disruption, "'ith traffic and shopping
patterns being altered to some extent for nearly two
years. The trouble is that the alternate routes have been
rejected as infeasible from engineering or economic
standpo ints.
1\lercbants and homeowners have insisted that the
district's studies were based solely on construction costs
and did not take into account the loss of business and
sales tax revenue.
The Huntington Beach City Council is scheduled to
decide Monday whether to award the district an excava-
tion permit fo r the work. The sanitation district has
warned that $10 million in grants would be jeopardized
if the petmit is delayed.
The district maintains that under the health and
safety code, the city does not have the right to deny the
permit but only to impose reasonable conditions. And
ind.ee~ the city enginee_ring staff has imposed rigid re·
str1 ct1ons -two key intersections must be tunneled
under, work may go on only from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., no
Church Issue Stirs
Another Response
To the Editor :
Written well enollgh to deserve a better
premise, David G. Peary's Jetter
(Mailbox Jllly 21 ) brought up the age-old
cliche that if the taxpayers do not sup-
port the parochial schools the church
might flood the pllblic domain with
Catholic students and close down the
parochial schools.
Rubbish! The Roman Catholic Church
is too smart to do a stupid thing like that.
for it would defeat their purpose of
C.:tholic instruction of their memberll
which was !he goal of the Catholic
Chllrch in the first place.
THE THREAT lo send them all lo
public schools is nolhing Jess than a veil-
ed attempt at extortion, and it is working
in some localities, but there will always
be opposition to a union of church and
1tate. Note what the Russians did with the
church-sponsored Rasputin and t h e
church itselr. Kicked out would be a con-
servative estimate of what happened.
If the Pope would melt down the golden
Images in the cathedrals around the
world at which most of the poverty.
stricken people worship, or sell some of
the vast real estate holdings ~tax-free. of
course) there wou ld be money enough to
1upport the parochial schools forever.
And tha t goe s for the Bllddhist religion
whose; staltJes or Bllddha , which he did
not allthorize, could feed many Asians
who now are dependent on American
wheal.
S G. UNDINE
Seul119 an Example
To the Editor :
'TM following is written as 11: plea and
not as a note of coodemnation to our
police department and our courts. To be
quite specifi c. this plea L'I directed at the
}luntington Reac h Police Department
and lhe Westmlnslel' courts.
Does the end jusllfy the means? For .a
police offiCf!r lo lie under oath In a
courtroom to substantiate his case can
ha\·e very 9tt'ious repercussions.
When the presiding JUdge lllms and
Mailbe>x
L1n1l"ll tr.111 ,...,..,, •rt .,...lc9ft1•, H1r..,1trr
wrn1n 111oukl c1nv1' lllllr "''""''' In )M _.,.,
,, ..... Tiit rlll•I •• co1H11n11 ''"'" " HI WtKI If t llmlHlt 11~., I• .......... d. All 1<it11ra "'~" 1 ...
clucll 1!,n1hir1 1nd "''Ulft• 1lldr1u, ~ul 111m11
"''' IN •ll'll"9kl M fe<llllel! fl 1ulllC1611! r11Mn 11
1-..AM, ""'"' wm 111t i. ,.,111"'*11
talks to others white the defending at-
torney is stating the other side of the
case adds more fuel to the fire which is
already well under way wiUtln the
individuals in a court hearing.
WHY WHEN the defend ants request
that they and the police officer take a lie
detector test is this request ignortd?
When there are direct contradictions by
the police offi~ and the defendants why
does lhe presiding jlldge not try to get at
the truth1
Why is it that a defendant is a liar
when there is a difference in related in·
cldents? Why is the officer the only one
that is considered capable of telling the
truth?
\\'hen a case is won under these con-
ditions it ts a questionable victory. \Vhat
is won in a courtroom under false te sti·
mony can only be lost Ol1 the oulstde 1n
the arena where the real batUe is going
on.
I 00 NOT believe in anarchy and yet if
the above conditions continue to prevail
then there is no doubt lhal anarchv or
some Jess· desirable form will defin°1tely
gain a slronger foothold in our country .
Police must earn the respect and :sup-
port of each citizen. 1be citizens need
good honest police. But yoll ca nnot get
Sllpport and respect fron1 the citizenry
when they become aware of the con·
ditions which prevail in our courtrooms,
Please help the citizens help the police
by setting a good example, tell lhe
absolute trllth or we all will suffer for
these acts of wrong that are being
perpetuated in our courts today.
NAME WITHHELD
400 Pages Long Enough
Jumping to concftJsions:
You'll enjoy yoor life more after 40 if
you malt• It • rule ne\1er to read a book
more than 400 pages long-e:rcept the Bl·
ble. Any author wno can't :say what'' on
his rnlnd in 400 PA&ei is only mllmbling to
himself.
The two most dl.scontented type:s or
people ln America •re Army colonels and
the vice presk:lents
of large corpora-
tions. They are :sym-
bols of top-level fail -
ure. The colonel who
never wins a gen•
eral's ~tar. the vice
president \\'ho never
gets his n11me letter-
ed In gold on ~
Big Door -e.ach
feels in hh: heart like an llao ran, who
almost made It but didn't quite.
This would be a happier world If 11t
ltast once a year everyOhe Jn it wnuld sit
down in the grus with hi• he1rt'g des~
and apeDd an hour totether doing nothln1
a.&ll loot for four ·IN.f clover1.
Acblevernent of some ktnd b pogslble to 1nJ1body, no matter what the handJcap.
That.'1 why so many glrl$ wear long
n111ernalla:. It Ir the only way they can
tbink of to gain attMUon .
WHAT 15 '1IE moll d1'appolntlng food
you've ••r had! Mine wa& porntgr11natr .
ll 10Und1 IO uoUc and romantic, but the
-
lluJ Boxte .'
¥-'>!X<!l.t • •• ~ , ~· ~
first and last time 1 tasted 1
pomegranate. it tllmed out to be a
mouthful of disillusion. ll was not nearly
as e:rciting as a simple &lice of
watermelon.
The thing a w)fc hates most for her
hllsband lo say about her In public Is trnit
she snores in private. She'd 1lmo11t as
soon have him say she u&es: snuff or
chcv.•s tobacco.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
I wonder If Councnman Green w111
aware, when he volunteered both
or Mayor ~fcCracken'! book! as
gins to the new library, IM! one
already h.ad been col11red In?
-D. C. E.
thlt 1111ur1 ,..,_ .. ,..... 'lltw1, ...,
-H.-..l!r l"91t If ,,_. n1ww1,.,. IWHll
-r NI _ ... "' 0"9mr ou .. Dfl1' 1'1i.1,
·-..... ~~,···-' ~
dirt mar be left overnight and al teut one la.ne of tra!·
fie must be kept open in each direction at all time.!!.
T'vo 1nust be cleare<l at peak periods.
The district has indicated that construction time
could be cut by eight months if some of these restrictions
"'efe eased.
That is one choice the city has. But \Vhethcr it be
for a 14-month or 22·month project, it is difficult to see
how the city has an alternative now but to grant the
excavation permit
Meeting the ,Needs
\Vith the population mark near 40,000, the city of
Fountain Valley \\'ill be expanding its civic center lo
meet the growing demands placed on municipal govern·
ment.
1'he project is still in the drawing board stages, but
city officials and architect \Villiam Blurock expect to put
the $670,000 project up for bids in October.
Basically, the project \\'Lil give an additional 6,800
square feet to city hall, including new council chamber!
and offices: 3,325 to the police facility, and 9,600 to the
c:ity corporation yard.
The construction time for the remodeling project is
estimated to be eight months.
City officials say the expansion v.illl be the last one
needed to bring the civic center up to full capacity for
their ultimate population of 63,000. Fountain Valley
has been able to plan expansion in an orderly fashion
with a minimum of inconvenience to residents or city
employes.
.''NCVJ HE'.i2E'.~ MV PL AN ... "
H
Their Tony
On Schedule
Party Tit1ie in Kenya
Witli Didos
You can depend on it. once a year Lord
Snowdon stage.s a cutup which has the old
btJckos in the London clllbs shaking their
heads.
You recall Snowdon , whose name is
Tony Something-or-Other. is the htJsband
of Pri.neess Mar-
garet. and is a pho-
tographer of some
repute. You don't see
many of his pictures.
but if you catch the
London garden
....... ~~' ). parties regularly
' ......_ ._ ' ;, you'll always be ~ \stumbling o v e r
' Tony, and tirobably
the Princess, too. 1liere have been ru-
mors lhey don't get along, bllt it must be
a canard . because they're always at the
same be.shes. 'Ibey were made for ea<'h
other. perhaps ckserve each al.her.
SO IT SEEMS they attended a Mayfair
garden party thrown by a millionaire.
and all the lords and ladie~ and the
mere rich were there, amD11g them the
• Royce , Brier
beallliful Countess Westn1oreland. The
Countess v.·as dancing \vith a gentleman
named Peter Caz.ale!. when Snowdon tap-
ptd him and tried to r.ut in.
"This is not America ," snapped Mr.
Caiale1. referring to Tony·s frequent
visits lo New York. where Uiey do gauche
things. like tapping people at dances.
You may remember that Lady Chai·
terly's Lover was the gamekeeper al the
Chatterly estate. and pretty gauche
himself. But times have changed,
because Mr. Cazalet is a horse trainer for
Quee n Elizabeth, and here he is dancing
\\1ith colln lesSes and the like at the same
party with Tony and the Prin~f\S.
Anyway, Lord Snowdon was in a snit,
so he picked up a ready stass or white
"'·ine and doused Mr. Cazalet. Apparently
the horse trainer didn't even toss a curry·
comb at Lord Snowdon, but he did have
the gall to walk by Snowdon's table • few
mintJtes later. Wherellpon. Lord Snowdon
seized a glass of rl'd lliine and dmiched
Mr. Cazalet. and that's ~lly sticky stuff.
OF COURSE, everybody wu plrllyted
and couldn·t talk aft.er that. Reporten
braced Snowdon, and no dice. Thtn they
asked Buckingham Palace, whlch is
always being asked such questions, and
has never answered yet. Reporters
haven't won one of lhose aince George IV
took Mrs. Fitzherbert to mistress.
But the reporters did sec Mr. Cualef1
son, Victor , and he confirmed the story,
11nd with dignity said he had been told hia
father wa.s "tM perfect gentlanan." This
was heartening, since a:entlemanly horse
traine rs dripping wlLh wine tossed by
spouses or Princesses are comparatively
rare in our day. Be damn sure Ou1.t·
terly's gamekeeper would have clobbered
milord.
THE DENSE AIR OF embarrasament
which suffuses the Buckingham Palace
people every time one of thue con·
tretempe occurs is mysterious, becalllt
the people dote on thtm. They think all
lhe better of the Buckingham fol k for
such hanky-panky, proving royalty ii
still alive ind furt>kiving, like the least of
us.
Think llOw It would have cleared the air
htid some Palace ractotllm told the
reporter!i . ''Right, you chapi; are on.
There w11s a bit of a brawl involving Tony
Watsisnan1e. husband of lhe Prince!!&,
who took f'xception to 80m~ gentleman'&
n1enUon of Amertca, Md let him have a
glass or the bubbly down his shi rtfront. A
jolly mess. wot , blll amusing~'
Diplomat Loses Diplomacy
WASHINGTON -The raucous
behavior or a top American dipl omat dur-
ing Vice President Agnew's recent visit
to Kenya has created a behind-the-s~nes
uproEtr.
The errant diplo.
mat i5 AID admin-
is trator in Kenya,
Bert ~1 . Tollefson.
Jr._ 41, an e:r-com
lobbyist and Reput>-
\ican politico from
South Dakota. His
antics are colorflll-
\y detailed in a ser-
ies of confidential
Stale Department telegrams.
The American Ambassador to Kenya,
Robinson Mcilvaine, was so outraged
that he fired off the blistering ''eyes
only" wires to Tollefson's boss, John A.
Hannah, head of the Agency for lnterna·
Uonal Development. We have obtained
copies of Mcl!vaine·s missives
"I REGRET to inform you," ~1cllva ine
wrote in one cable, "that Bert Tollefson
hlotted his copy book \diplomatic jargon
for 'fouled up') so badly during the Vice
President's visit as to raise serious ques.
tion as to his suitability for service
abroad. Indeed you may be hearing from
the Vice President directly on the matter.
"The problem started with Bert's well-
known pu shiness and general lark of
~ensltivity and culminated in his getting
sloshed at Treetops (a fancy lodge on lhe
edge of the jungle\, making passes at the
Vice President's secretary and trying to
drag her down the steps lo meet an
elephant at grollnd level . _ . "
THE SEQUENCE of events that led up
to this climax, wrote Mcilvaine. began
when Tollefson was officially informed
that "no Americans were Invited to join
the Vice President's group at Treetops.
(Tollefson) came anyhow on his own and
canvassed Kenyans for a bed in one of
their rooms. In the end he talked some-
one ou t of a room lo himself .....
In the course of the evening, Mcllvaine
related, 1'ollef800 ' 'repeated I y in-
terrupted" Kenyan officials who ··were
explainini:?: anima ls" to the Vice Presi·
dent. "The owner of Treetops," the
Ambassador wrote, "al one point asked
mt', 'Who is that jackass?' -pointing to
Bert.
'"The incident with the Vice President's
secretary." continued f..tcllvaine. "took
place in the :small hours of the mornlng.
According to her It took all her strength
lo gel away from him.''
EVEN KENYAN Ambassador to the
U.S. Leonard Kibinge. who wa s there,
commented on Tollefson's "condition,"
Mc1\vaine said.
'"The next morning, Bert slept throu~h
the departtJre of 0900 and when he did
awake took the remaining Secret Service
car to Nyeri leaving them stranded 11nd
fu rious . _ . A car had to be :oient the lOQ
miles up to Nyeri to bring Bert back."
The whole affair, Mcilvaine concluded .
had substantiated his misgivings about
Tollefson's perlonnance during his ttree
months as head of the AID program in
Kenya.
"I can. of course, live with the situation
but will have to spend a lot of time riding
herd and wonder whether all that effort
is warranted in !iUpport of 'Peter's Prin·
ciple.' " (The Peter Principle is a tongue-
in-cheek theory w_hich holds t-h.1 t
everyrin,; eventually r"es to hia own level
of incompetenc~.)
When asked about the incident, AID
Administrator Hannah refused comment
except to call Tollef90n "a very reprec--
table fellow" and to inquire where we ob-
tained the confidential cab)es. They had
come to ti im "highly restricted, hand·car-
ried and sealed." he huffed to my
associate Joseph Spear.
Reached in Nairobi, Tollerson denied
the Ambassador·s charges and said they
v.·ere based on a compJete misun-
derstanding. "I had only two drinks,'' he
said , and took the President·s secr:etary
to meet the elephant "at her request."
He blamed the imbroglio on unnamed
''Democratic holdovers '' in the Foreign
Service.
Lawn Order Wins the War
Once upon a time in the country called
\Vonderfuland. the people worshiped
twin gods. One they called Law. The
o!her they called Order.
As the years pass-
ed the people came
to th.ink of the two
gods as ooe: god ,
whom they referred
to in their dally de-
votions as "Lawn
Order."
It was from this
great god, Lawn Or-
der, they believed.
t.bat all blessings flpwed-bless.ina:s such
as freedom, just.ice. the pursuit of hep..
piness and a soaring gross national pn>
dud.
So the people of Wonderfuland dwelt
happily and pro11perou11ly under the pro-
~--Bu Geor11e --~
Dear GeorKe:
I have beard that SOUthemers
are polite, Irishmen are im·
aglnaUvt, and newspapennen are
very literate. I have just met this
Southerner who Is • newtpapennan
of Irish deM:"ent. Don't you lhink be
lr a Joocl matrimonial risk?
HOPEFUL
Dear Hopeful :
Don't make a move ! The
emergency helicopter is on the
way! (W11er1~ a SL Btm•rd on tbt
last cue Uke this, a.nd the Southern
lritfl ~SJ) lctpt bim ~ a
two-week binge).
Dear George:
If a dog Is a man'a ~ friend,
who is a doe:'s bellt friend?
C. R.
De:tr C. R.:
It's never v.•1sc to dale a married
~·oman. (Yeah, I know, but A (UY
who would write a qu('l(tion llkt:
THAT needs to bf' confused -ii
wlll give him something to think
11bout).
..
Art Hp.pj>e
'
teclion of Lawn Order. But then camt
'fhe Turbulent Tlme1.
THE TURBULENT Times were very
turbulent Those who wert young grew
angry with those who were old, becaust
the old kept sending them off to fight for
camea tbey dldn"t believe in.
TII01e whose skin wa1 black or brown
or yellow or nd a:nw angry at thost
whose skin was whlte, ~ause they
didn't have a1 much freedom. jusllct,
happiness or gross naUonal products.
So there were slt-in1 and Ue-lns and be-
lns. And man:he1 and strikes and
dem on11tration11. And rkrtt and rock
throwing and • _ •
AND THOSE who were older and
whiter and more well.otf grew uneasier
and uneisler. Tbt uneasier they grew,
lhe more devoutly they worahlped Lawn
Order. hoping the 11'•1 god would
preserve their freedom, jU-'ltice, hip.
plne11a end gro1s na\iooal products.
And the more lhef worshiped, the
angrier they grew at those who com·
milted offenses ag1ln1t Lllwn Order -
llll:e the lllack•, thl browns, tht ytllaws,
the n!ds 1ftd the JP.inc. ''Al 111 coils, we
mu1t pr:Merve ~n Order!" thundered
'M\e t:e.adert of Wonderfuland (who were
all older and whiter and more well-off).
So v.·hen the blo.clcs del&yed their trials
by costly leg11l maneuvering• and •P-
peals, The Leaders frowned and said ,·
"Thls destroys respect for Uiwn Ordn."
And the people etrtainly agreed.
And when the young gathered in Ult
country 's capital to protest a war. 1be
Lender s ar~sted evwy YQSmg person in
sigh! -whether they were doing
anythin,I! Illegal or not. "It'! the only way
!fl maintain l.(lwn Order." they Jaid. ~nd
the people certainly agretd •
SO IT WENT. Eventually, of coor~. 21~
the times grew more turbulent, a nc\',.
Leader emerged who was more devolcd
tfl Lawn Order than anybody anywhere.
To restore respect for Lawn Order, he
did away with C<lStly. disorderly trial s. To
maintain Lawn Order. he arn!;sted
everyone with di!orderly hair, disor-
derl y clothes, disorderly ideas or non·
while skin.
To increas~ Worship of Lawn Order. hf'
put everyone in orderly uniforms. hou sed
them In orderly barracks, fllled their
heads with orderly thoughts and required
them to mow the grass tYdCf! 1 week.
Never in hist-Ory had the worship or
Lawn Order flourished so. And yet, oddly
enough, the people of Wonderfuland
didn't Bttm to be enjoying the ble1sing~
of freedom, justice and happiness that
Lawn Order bestowed.
But lhey did have lots or gross national
produda. Not to mention the mo.st order·
ly lawns the: world haa ever seen.
MOl\AL: You can worabip lAw. And
you can worship Order. But sometlme5,
you 'vt got. to choose.
---WWW-• jl'e<ln•sday, July 28. 1971
'I'M et#itotial pgoe of the Daily
Pllot i•tks to in form and 1tin1-
ulatf: 'ttOders by presenting thf.t
ntaospaper'1 opinions and com-
mentmv &n. topfcs of interest
ond li{lnificance, by providing a
forum for the expression of
our readers' opinionJ, and by
prt:stt1tir1g tile divu.st vle10.
poinb of 'inforlntd obaerotr.~
cmd .tp0kts11U• on topics of tht
day. ' .
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
" " .1
I,
'
I
rl ~I
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11
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,....,...~_
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rn1n 1ppll1nct rtptlr
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ME( 600.JR. ALL.GAUGES ................ $39.88
REMINGTON CHILLED SH01 ........•...... $22.00 "" c
SHOTGllN PRIMERS • . . .. . . .. .. .. . • .. .. .. $9 ,00 "" M
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Marnage. --~
Lken•e•
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n..d.,..hlp po II i Orovo
"PeAnut.I" 11 one of the
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LIMITID Sl.ZIS, QUANTITllS AND COLORS
TABLE LAMP CLEARANCE
Modern,
traditiona l
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Orl1. 19.91to49.91
NOW 1588 to 3788
WOMEN'S SWIMWEAR
Orig. 10.00 to 16.00
2 piece styles in misse& & junior alzea
Now499
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Ori1. 3.50 to 4. 91
cotton1, knit1, solidi and prints, sizn S-
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WOMEN'S SLEEPWEAR Ofil.UO teUO
1klrt1, lhifts.. knicbirt
llmited quantity NOW 188
WOMEN'S ROBES Grit. 4.00 to 7.oo·
assorted 1hift1 101id1, s t ripes & Now288
prints
PANTY GIRDLE or1,. 1.00
&pand-o-thigh NOW 5 88
long leg style
•cup
WOMEN'S GIRDLES Orit. Jo..oO to 6.oo·
osaorted styles & sizes
Now.88 lfmfted selection
WOMEN'S HOSE Orft• 1,00
mlni-hi1ch Now.33 replacement hose
WOMEN'S SLIPS Orlf.4.IO
100% nylon half slips NOW 188
arid bikini ponty sets
WOMEN'S HANDBAGS Orl1. 3.00
natural rattan NOW .88 1trow bog1, 1ove
GIRL'S SPORTSWEAR Orl1. 4.00 to 6.00
pant,, tops, dreu
NOW 188 1et1 not all sizes
GIRL'S SPORTSWEAR on,. 4.00 to LOO
porits top• coordinates Now288
not all size•
INFANT'S PLA YWEAR Orl1.1.79to3.00
tops, bottoms, s.et1 Now .88 stock up now
TODDLER'S PLAYWEAR Ort1. U0 I• S.00
tops, bottoms, ffls NOW 188
grea t savings now
CORNER GROUP Orlt. $329
2 Bed1 &.1taroge table Now 5248 for bedroo m or den, 1 only
6 PC. DINING ROOM Orit.$754
Mediterranean styling table " NOW 5544 chairi,. chino cabinet, 1 cnfv
BEAN BAG CHAIRS Or11.1U I
the perfect TV loung• for e ritire
NOW 1488 family. 6 only
GDLFGLOVES Ort1.1.t• t•J.99
leathers, melh tap1 a1aorted 1tyles, " ) BB
7 onhf NOW. to
MAG WHEELS
14" a nd 15" magi dork cente r with
hubs. 20 only
V.W. SEAT COVERS
dla.....dqultdnlg•
duro~• \'1r,,4
Oris. 9.aa
NOW 7aa
Otft.J l .tS
NOW 1911
WOMEN'S DRESS CLEARANCE
Misses and Half Sizes
Group I •.••••• ; ••••••
Group II • • • • • • • • • • • •
Group Ill • • • • • • • • p • •
MEN'S
Orig. 8.00 to 12.00
Orig.10.00 to 16.00
Orig. 16.00 to 22.00
PENNCRAn ®
NOW 288 to 488
NOW 688 to. 888
NOW 1088 to 1288
AM CLOCK
RADIO
SOFAS, FLOOR SAMPlES
90'' Sofa 20,1y or11 .$219 NOW '166
96" Sofa 1 0,1, or11.$269 NOW '219
96" Sofa 1 o,r, Ori1. $.299 NOW '199
.96" Sofa J o"Jy or11,$399 NOW '319
BOY'S SWIMWEAR
Newest &lyles, Orig. 2.91to3,49
b right color& buy
•~ond•ov•NOW e 99 tO 144 PLAID SLACKS
Pinn-Prest® washable;·
n0+iron 50% Polye1ter
50% Cotton.
PAINT
Exterior fl ol latex, white only, l gal.
cons.
AM clock radio, small aize, big tound, !::=================: ''°"''· SPORTSWEAR YARDAGE
Orig. S.98 to 7.91 Ori1. S.99 Orig. 24.95
NOW 288 NOW 166 NOW 1488
FIRST FLOOR
WOMEN'S HANDBAGS Orit. J.00 le 7.00 DRESSES & PANT SETS Orit. t .00 to 20.00
straws, plastics tweeds denlmt &
NOW 188 lightweight fa bric 1, pa,tel •hades · 511 to988 potent bogs b ig sovings. NDW
WOMEN'S WIGS OrJi. %5.00 WOMEN'S SPORT TOPS Orif. S.00 to1.00
1ynthetic & human hair short & long
Now 1888 ossorted fabrics
styles li:nit blouses NOW 3 88
WOMEN'S JEWELRY Orl1. 1.00 to 4.00 WOMEN'S SHOE CLEARANCE Orit.4.ffto l .tt
Earrings, pins,
Now.72 sandals, many 1fyle1
NOW 2 88 broceleta, chains, great buys, save
WOMEN'S JEWELRY Orl1. LOO to 3.00 WOMEN'S HEELS Orl1. 5.99to 12.ff
ring s, pendants
NOW 122 not all &i2e1
NOW 3 88 pins. earrings wonted cOlor1.
WOMEN'S SHORT CUTS Ori1. 4.00 GIRLS TENNIS SHOES Ori1. 2.H
I 00% cottori1, .atin1
NOW .99 1ingle eyelet
NOW 188 drastically reduced not otl sizes
WOMEN'S ANKLE PANTS OrJt. 7.00 .. 9 .00 MEH'S GOLF SHOES Orl1.12.00
polyester & cottons
NOW 3 88 not ell sizes flared or straight leg. fabulous savirigs Now 1088
WOMEN'S SUMMER BLOUSES Orlf. 3.00 lo 6.00 POLAROID ® COLORPAK II CAMERA tonk lops & crop-tops fantastic
NOW 188 includes film flash bulbs case ond J 688 J 988 savings album t<!OW and
''"'•r• 0111• tl:it
SECOND FLOOR
BOY'S SPORT SHIRTS Orff. 1.99 DECORATIVE DRAPE POLES """' '"'""
fini1hed in 01sorted colors also 66 266
brackets and rings NOW• ~O bu"on-dow11 plaids short sleeves,
Now4 f orS00 sizes 6 to 18
BOY'S WALK SHORTS s,.clolly prlct4 DECORATIVE TRAVERSE ROD Orl1. $1 J lo 526
Pennprest!I pla ids, size s 6 to 18,
.77 regular and slim.
BOY'S FASHION VESTS
pre-school arid school a ge sizes,
Now.77 & .99 populor cottori denim
BOY'S KNIT SHIRTS Ori1. 2._99
brorize metal firiish
48"' ro 150" long
PINCH PLEAT CAFES
prints and solidi
rio iroriirig, 2.C" to 5.C"
YARDAGE REMNANTS
NOW 9 88 to 1988
Orlf. 3.49 to S.11
100°/o acrylic, short sleeves colorfvl
NOW 199 stripes and solid s
ideal for skirts, 1horts elc., V2 yd. ta 200/ 600/
2 yd. lerigths /0 to /0 Off
THIRD FLOOR
18" COLOR TELEVISION Orl1. 329.95 8-TRACK TAP ES
toble model, firie turiirig great buy,
NOW$277 for car or home use
NowZ" 3 only special savings
PENNCREST ® DISHWASHERS Orf1. 209.95 LIGHTING FIXTURES Orft. 1191to49.99
convertible or built-in 1tyle1 greotty
NOW 5168 drastically reduced VJ off limited 688 2488
reduced quantity, buy now NOW to
AM/FM CLOCK RADIO Ori1.36.tJ PENNCRAn ® PAINT
a real q uality rad le
NOW 1988 porch and patio enamel
big savings, gre at gift quarts, "5 only
GOLF HEAD COVERS Oris. 1.n 8 n. SWIMMING POOL
leather for 2, "· 5
Now.33
11eel wall, 20" high gre'ot for yord1,
great soving1, 2.C only 7 orily
AUTO CENTER
CAMPER TRAILER
CLEARANCE
big 6'8.,,•19' ""opened up 1l•eps
and 1eats 6 large a nd opt n wirh
6'5" head room kHt ht n ond eatin g
o reo, Save $..00 NOW
$
ORIGINAL
$1645.
Ori1. 1.44
NOW .25
Or'9. 12.11
Now 1018
enRelfl. The values are here every day.
l ' ..._, __ -..... ) ~ .... ,._ --~ --··-~
Orig •• U to 1.09·
Wash 'n wear solids, prints 36" and
"5" width•
NOW .66 ,i
MEN'S TIES Orl1. 1.50 to S.00
silks, polyesters, many
NOW .7 5 to 2 50 patterns to choose from
MEN'S PAJAMAS Orlf.2.H
100% cotton long sleeves ossorted NOW 199 pottems & colors
MEN'S ROBES Orl1.S.tl to TO.ti
terry flannel cottons
Now488 and rayons, 5-M·Xl .
MEN'S SPORT COATS Grit. 32.95
single & double breasted
NOW 1688 summer weight
MEN'S TOWNCRAn® SUITS on .. ~.u t• St.II
single & double breasted all wool
NOW 3488 arid wool blends
MEN'S SHORT CUTS • Ori1. 4.91
100% cottori, wo1hoble
walk shorts, 33 only NOW 2for 5 00
SEWING NOTIONS 0.1,. ,,, ""'
buckles and belts to CO\'er, 1/2" lo 1 sc 2sc
IV2" widths NOW to
PILLOW CASES
100% bleached cotton
36" :ii: 36", big sovings
THROW PILLOWS
Rourid & square
decorator colors,
Orlt. 1.09 pr.
Now .SO ••.
Ori9.3for l.OO ·
NOW 3 for 5°0
DINNERWARE CLEARANCE •"•·"·'"'"·"
sev~rol pouerns !o choose from
14
BB 4988 1erv1ce for .c, 8, 12 NOW to
PRES S & PLA CE FLOOR TILES
sell adhesive it's easy, to it yourself
FATIGUE MATS
Ozite indoor, outdoor
faritostic savings
SHAG UTILITY RUGS
grea t for throw rug1
decorator colors
FOREMOS~ GOLF BALLS
solid cenle r1, won't chip or crock. 3
to a pkg.
MINI FUN BUGGY
with a " horse-power e11g ln • fun
for the entire fa mily
BEHELLI TRAIL BIKE
fi reball motorcycle " apeed trons-
miUion, 50 cc engln•
•
--~
on,.,,,
Now .18
Orif •• "
Now.66
NOW 2for 3 00
Orft .. SI ·
NOW.33
Orit.Mt.9J
NOW 29CJOO
NOW 18600
-
•
• ··~ .. Law's Eagl~ ID the Sky
~ "' r.' • • '· ., y Alll1wJ 1\Jl~OU>S i ~ .' . ~ ' · 0tNM11rlJ!lltts*' r:"..
DEC. lt, 1111 -A tf.ftar-41d m~ -~ armed
with lwo rm~, 'llili!& lil.0 UftiMll li!liiia!cyiid, wounds
two Sanla A/la llili· \llflcth. 'N 11•\•f llluilington.tloach·
pollte beU ,. is ·~lle<1 .i. llA ,_ft. ~ ,pomgbts;\He ·
.._i. ,;lflj li WOwided .itlf cap~, g to e•c•pe
thl! light. DtllJM tlio' >M>tout. a so " uel!d to noUtyr.,ld~ttlO•&acuattui.iM!> · . · t
JULY 2~ tt1tt ~ ~ _26-ft)ah~ 1 aw1UvWs a doM: of
LSD and tHe eo!ta Me5i po1lqt t.WJcoptet, Eagle I; puts dO\\il
in front of the $1:ricken tot'1 lio~ ·picks h.im up and rushe.s
him to Ule boe~tal. ~. '8-Y • infan&·would ha ve d.ied;
had he not received irhinedilt€'inedJCal atteaUon.
JUNE 11, 1»7U -The Coata Mesa police .helicopter tails
._ 5uspected narfOtlC! Stl]Uft:ltr for two bOtJ.111 as ,he attempt"
to elude potenUA.I grOuna pursuit. Convinced he is not belng
foOowed . tbe man stops at .1 house in Laguna Beach and the
helicoptu calls Witts into the scene. Six ~pie art arrested
and 14 pounds of Konian 1n•tijuana plus a quantity of hl!l!h·
iab and LSD aft cooflacaled.
DEC. i.t, lrio-A llttle glrl with blood Type A negative
ia Wldergqing !lurgery at a Torrance hospital. Physician.!!
'
need to give her a tr&lW\lliOD, bttt noae of the Los Angelee Cboib blood bankl havo any or\erif!. ttoag MllnOrial
I ha• the blood and the Beach hellC. tel'
m the parking lot. gets the . and belds. foi ¥or·
r~. Tot.al round trip Ume is rt lll!hillta. 1'1bese are a few wnplll of an ltfiJWtaalve U!t:of incidents
In which police hetleopters have drQ&atlcally ~monatrated
theb:: value along the Ort.nae Collt,. ,
1A· ride in one qulckly gives you I gQOil Idell Why 80 many
law ~orcement agenciee are anliot.i! "to add helicopters to
their ftlrce:t,
The day r ~'ent up, I was ridlnl ln lhe Newport Beach
hettm>pter. piloted by Officer John Heene, All the police hel·
ie-0pters u!led in Oranie County art two-11eattrs that have
the Capacity to carry a Ulird perlOl1 In a litter. They are all
made by H1tghes ·Airer alt Co. at18 i;ill for aboilt f&S,000 .
Like Calta Meu ar\d Huntington Beacli, il!I predecessors
in the skies, the Newport Beach Police Department has tak·
en officers and trained them to be pilots and observeni. "It
takes less Ume and money to lraln an exptflenc'ed police
officer·to be a pilot than it doe! to .train 1rt experienced pilot
to be a police otr~el',0 aCCQrdlng to Newport Police Lt. Rich-
' ard Hamilton.
HIJN1;~TON BEACH ha1 six pilots. Two have in-1truek>t r,a · Costa Mesa and NewpM Beach, each have
· three pUoli, t ot Whom ii an inalruCIOr. lbllnlctOi1 are
tl8«I to b)dit hew Rilota.
Jn, ~r to become _pOol.I, the men undergo a ' 16.week
am that entalls • \Otail of 440 hc!ura on the gMuxl and ~ou bf night time.:~t the completton of Ult coune, they
receive a commerdial riltng.
To gti on to lirl instn1Ctor'1·ratlng. the men receit/e an ad·
dltlonal 80 hours of lralnlng-helt iil ground school and half
in CUghl time.
The observers · recel\le about ten hours ot· ground achoo!
and rtight training. They provide the eye.!i of the helicopters,
funclionln& a!I airborne patrolmen sinee the pilot must con-
ctnlratf! uh nylng.
Crulalng at 600 feet . I beg_in to Sl'!e why Huntington
Beach sit. Ro~rt MorrlBOn eonsklel'I the first three months
of duly on·the--job training for observers.
THE VIEW is apect.acular. I could see ground aqu.irrels
scurrying around a field adjacent to Coast Highway. But
stmple ob9e~aliona, like dete rmining th e make of car. are
almoat impo11Bible without practice or the use of blnocu-
lars.
DAILY l'ILOT l'hoth bJ ll:lnl•rd KH~t1r
SURVEILLANCE IS THE WATCHWORO AS NEWPORT BEACH HELICOPTER SWINGS OVER FASHION ISLAND
It Is Pure Patrol -f•1t, Efficient ind Without Stops for the Paperwork Th1t Can Bog Down E•rthbound Patrolmen
., ... ._
SWIM!>\IR IN TROUILE OFF NEWPORT GETS FLOTATION GEAR
With Lifeguarcl1, Training for the Coming Rlptfd• Seeton
MAN OV!lt CLl.~ir Blt1Ni5 SPE.tl>Y HIL!COPTER RllPONlE
With Fir•'"'"• Copttr Crews Trtht for Alr-G!'Glmd Rttcues
•
IN THIS SIMULATED ARREST, HELICOPTER QUICKLY BACKS'UP LONE PATROUAAN ON THE GROUND
For Su5ptcts With Itchy Feet, tht Knowl1cl91 That They Can't Outrun the Polkt Otp1rtment'• Air Foret
-""""':"-· •I ~.,....-•L.-u 'cs ' -""" ;., ,, . tl"I.--•
PoUor: ground unH1~11e easy to spot. Patrol can hl1•
their llllftlb<n prlntod On tho n>011. At nlJht, bashing rid
ll(hta , ftom a unit mtkmc 1 lllilp can bl aeen tor atveril mllet ~ the air. .. · '
A;IOt of tali: bM -devoted to the_ued fOr havtnc·,•
patrobnan in \b&. liti" And \here Is ilore to lbi.s Ide.a
tllan jllll the ab~tty to liee long dlllaltces. :
Speed and the ability to tee and to go' places whert1 cars
and heavy Pollce motorcyclet can't go are part of the pic-
ture. ·
As w.e new over Lido Wt. Heene gave me bis watth
with a It.op sweep hand. ··Pick a spot In the.elty Md time
us,"' he said.
I NAMED Utt l~lne Coal\ Coun'ry Qlub. It la about two
al'ld a half miles from mid-Lldo to the clubhouse as the cop-
ter nies . By ear, it's about lou r mllee. ·
Heene pushed the helicopter up to 90 knotl (standard
cruising speed is 4-0 to 50 knots ) .and. within 30 &econds, We
were close enough to aee anything coming or ping from the
parking lot. Another 30 stt0nds and we w~re O'lf:r lhe club-
house.
It'!! hard to say how much timt It woold take a patrol
car going code three with lights and siren to make the same
trip. but it would be considerablr longer Uuin llO seconds.
In the three Orange Cnast cities, where there are still
many open fields . miles of beatbes. cllff1 , where there are
sUIJ water ground units must ekirt, the helicopters are
proving their worth.
Illegal cyclists riding on private property · Can be dis-
couraged quickly by .an announcemenl from the helicopter'•
public address system.
MOllISON SAJD, his men were able to locate a lost child
ln Huntington Beach within minutes by usln1 the helico~
ters.
··sh!! had· ·fallen down in 1 sort of crease in an open
field. She rouldn 't possibly have been eeen from the ground
unless you searched. the field by root, yet the helicopter
crew easily aj)Ot\fd her." he said. ,
New'port Beich has IJ)eeial problen'\I with two square
miles of bay and 132 mile11 of bay aboreUM to patrol. Pollc-
lng the harbor Is the duty of the county Harbor Department,
but acUvlty In the bay does concern the. Newport police ..
Hefne told of an Incident one night in which the helicop-
ter crew 11potted an unlighted runabout ln tha bay.
\Vhen we put the lights on him, he tµ.rned right around
and went back the way he'd come, just u fatt 11 he cou1d.
We notified the Harbor Patrol end they really had to chase
him to get him to stop.
"We thought he might be a boat bur1lar or something
like that.
"IT TURNED out he was an undercover U.S. Custom!
agent and he waa trying to follow 10me dope smuggling sus-
pects. I sues.!! we blew his cover."
The time eavlng factor of 1 he.licopter Hai llttped Costa
Mesa. Clpt. Ed Glasgow, commander of the Unllorm Divi-
sion, sald th.at before the helicopter, one "patrol uiµt wae as·
elgned lhe job of aivering all the parks and edlools in the
city.
The patrolman would spend an entire 1hllt 1oing from
park to park and school to school, checking ror vandal!!.
With the u~ of his helicopter. the patrolman previously
ul!led for thi.!'I duty can now be used in regular patrol activi-
Ues.
Coeta Mesa pilot Carl Jacklon 11ald the 1l&ht of the heli-
copter Is usually enough to drive olf potetltial· vandals. "If
they 're up to no good, they'll leave."
POLICE OFFICERS s.ay they ~ Iindlnl!I· the deterrent
factor of a police helicopter even· 1reat.er than anticipated.
Sgt. Pnul White, Huntington Beach helkopter pilot. said it
wa11 the deterrent factor that got him in the program to begin
with . .
~ As a patrolman, ht was called tu a field wflere two .arm·
~ robberf !IUSpects were trapped. "I waa !ltaDdJng at the
edge of the field, above 11 !ltorm drain ,ne two auapect.!'I were
hiding in. They could stt me, but l couldn't 1te them, ..
White explained.
The two su!lpects surrendered, telling offlcer1 they di!·
cus.secl shooting White to escape, but they s1Jd they knew the
helicopter would get them.
"At that point, our helicopters weren't e"tn operation-
al. but v.·ord had gotten out and these guys decided 'they
wouldn't b"e able to e!ICape because of It." White !!lid. "That
made up my mind and I applied for the program."
AT PRESENT no stat111tJcs are avallable lo demon-
onstrate the effect that hellcopter p•trol1 h~ve on the crime
rate.
HunUngton Beach hellcopter11 haVe been· fully opera·
ttonal !Ince January, 1989 and .a ~port on the rise or fa ll
or crime in the city ia bein1 prep1red.
Costa Mesa has been running a full helicopter patrol
since February, 1970. Newport started Feb. l ot this year.
The gut response from the men involved wlQt the pro--
granui Is that crime will be down or th.at itll 1rowth will
be curbed in spite of the lack of !llatistlcs to prove lt out.
There are some problems. The most obvious eome in the
form of citzen complalnlt' about noise and inv1lion of pri·
vacy.
"We know there'll a problem," 1ays Huntington Beach 's
Morrison , the only time citizens notice the nollf is when
the helicopter drops down to JOO or 200 feet and circlea an
1rea because of suspect!!."
COSTA MESA'S Glallgow llB id he feels lhl1 compla int
could be alleviated by educaUng tht comm\ini\y. ·
"If everybod y knew why we were orbltirig, they 'd be
&lad we were doin1 It." he said. "We just can 't take the
time to go door to door and explain we're cha1lng a burg·
lary 1uspect, or Whatever,
Helicopter crews are all very much aware ol the tnva·
!!Ion of privacy problem. The day I w11 up wt didn't sur-
prl1e 1ny nude !1Unbather1, but ti we had, I doubt that we
would have noUced them. Movement, rucb 11 the ground
!U'.lulrrtl1, Is easy to spot. but detl.Ut-tuch al what a per·
.!Ion 11 or Is not we1ring-l1 11mo1t lndilcem1ble .at 600
feet.
Officer 1'1m Grundeman. 1n obttrvtr for Newport
Belch, put It thl1 way : "From where we are, you can't tell
U a peraion lt wearing a bathing gul l of not." ·
The airborne policeman all believe complalnta about
nol!lt and 1nv11ion of privacy will dlmlnlllh u the bene-
fltll of hellcopier-p1trob become obvloua \o rt11dent.s.
Newoort Beach's Hamilton equate• I.ht patrol capability
of oue helicopter to that of 11ix patrolmen. Kt eltimates
that savina• to Newport Beach over a flYl'Jtar period to be
$469,000 and $1.89 million over a 1S.y181"ptrlod.
AS llUNTINGTON BEACH'S Morrllm •-tt, there's niore· to ft "than jUlt the economics "1nfaWed~-~ ·
"The Idea of patrol is that the Ull.irormtd officer on pa·
trot in a marked unit will prevent or raprt11 crime because
he 's con1plCUOU1, yet he tr1vels In all unpridiCtJtite paijem.
"But like a look ~t 1>11trolm1rt wlieb tile~ going on
duty, They're carryln1 briefcases f\IU ol report~. 'lbeir
ear11 are mort travelina ornces th1tt patto1 uluti beda~
they spend the maJority of thf:lt time 10°'8 ·fl'.om ~ll to call,
laking reportt, "1th not much actual ifatiOI thnt Jn between.
"But 1 liollcoptet lln't lnvolvlif ·1n 1lw l'lllO<.t taking '
process. It's pure patrol. For eight., ten bcMlrt 1 dtf, you'vtJ
got someone up there whose only )ob II to keep a lookout
on the city.
The future of helicopters In tbete Uartt tiUN and other
Oranie County c!Uea may depond on thl eoopirlibt between
d1p1rtmanu and municipal 1ovenuntl&I -
TBI EFFJClllNIJY iJI llellcopter p<U.1 11' .,.h that tt
would be poulbl• for clllN that have thoft\ to &nlloct the
service to ollitt, leaa alllu1111 clllta. 11\tnllllglott Beocb ..,..
onUy 11 awd)Joc ouch I Ph>P<>'!illon. '
lnltl"'llenc)' cooperation ln Newport Belch. lot example,.
will mt111 thlt tht machines can be Ultd for blleh !NPft"
vision and llfl!ptlrd deployment durtn1 the M&mmer and
at tlme11 when the riptides are running.
Police dlparlmlnlt In lhl '7111 wtK be rt1yto1 on their
IYtl In Ill• •ill' to b•Hlt dime llld ~I l'lllditilt ... ,,.
ready becoming adjusted to the Idea. •3 noted by a 1tan m
the roof of a. Costa Mesa duplex:
"We appreciate Our Police Department."
j
I.
--...
. -
',Jf DAILY PILOT
I• 'I '
', 'I •j
8.75 01. SUPER SIZE
''Colgate''
DENTAL
CREAM
With MFP
FLUORIDE
•sgc •.
4201. SIZE
''Micrin''
• MOUTHWASH
& GARGLE
For protection
agaiutgerms.
KING SIZE
''Nestle's''
Choice of
Almond,
Milk, Crunch·,
Fruit& NuL
WrdntMfay, July 28, 1971
16 ot. SIZE
Aqua Net
HAIR
SPRAY
Regular,
Super, and
Unscented
•4ac u.
1501.SIZE
a:i?!i''Breck''
'Gold•• Form•la'
SHAMPOO
Ory, Normal and
Oily Formulas
BOTTUOF200
''Squibb''
ASPIRIN
Analgesic
and
Effective.
Touch of Sweden
HAND LOTION
A siecial blend of ~ell emollients, and 1 09 JJl)isturizm that bring soltness to
yourski~ Ref. U91&eL •
16Jc24" OZITE
Floor Mat
2 fl, 01. CllME FORMULA
"Miss Clairol"·
Hair Color ;ii BATH ___ I
In An DJ! Assortment Regular or I Of Colors Unscented
.99c. •ea~
COOL IT THIS SUMMER
•1:1~-111111:;1
"J & B"
SCOTCH
Rar1 Sc1tcll •••
IS pro1f
\>GaL 16 75 ra~;5 •
Old Charter
ICentu,ky Straight
BOURBON
1 ,,. lid.!&'"''
~.~•L11 g5 14.95 •
Bacardi
RUM
• Tanqueray '
GIN
vAGo Sant' Gria
WINE Imported from Spai1
24oL 1.6g
San Miquel
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EDITIO.N
• ' . "
'
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TOday's Fh.t-·
' .... .
N. Y. S'4M!b:
-~ ...
,VOL. M, NO. 179, 5 SbCTIONS, 74 PAGES WEDNESD>:Y, ~ULY 28, 1971 TEf\Cqlm . ' -.
. "
Newport Seelis Traffic Ills, Then Solutions
By L. PET.ER KRIEG
Of Illa O.Hy Plllt Stiff
It will cost Newport Beach · $32,000 to
find out what Its traffic problems are and
another $5l,000 to get solutions to them.
A consultant hired to_perform the city-
wide traffic sf.ll,dy outlined what it catted
"projected" charge.s to the CIUzens
Advisory Committee on Transportation
Tuesday night.
The cornn\jttee voted unanimously to
ask~ the city council to fund the fir11t
phase of the project. labeled "problem
lder¢ification," but said the city shouJd
author:ize. the last two phasea <lnJy when
COMFORTED BY FATHER
Kevin Dye 11 Safe
Enterprise Crew
Set for Reunion
At Newporter
By CANDACE PEARSON
ot I'" ~II~ Pllolt Stall
Stories of !he se.11 and of World War 11
wlll reverberate through the rooms of
the Newporter l.Jln on Jamobree Road
today through Saturday,
For the members of the aircraft car·
rier USS Enterprise, the most decorated
ship in U.S. history, are gathering in
Nfwporl Beach for their national bien-
1\hi.1 reunion .
"\Ve're going to swap old sea stories
and tell about the time we stood of£ the
Japanese," sa:id Captain Elias "Benny"
Mott, now a Costa Mesa realtor who
!erved on the ship from June 1940 to
(ktober 1943 as a gunnery officer.
Motl suggested Newport Beach as 11ite
for the reunion: the first held in Calif·
M'rlia in 12 years, at the 1969 meeti11g
l11 Chicago. "We expect Z50 men at our final ban-
quet." said ~ott. "They're comlni. from
sll over the country-NeW York, Con·
iiecticut. the Midwest." :. Toni~! Moll Is h01ting 1 cOORtail par-
ty for more than 125 of the former pilol'I
Afld crewmen . The Pavilion Queen steamship ha!
been preserved for two Newport Bav
tours Thunday afternoon, which will
be followed by a buffet din~r ht the Tail
Of the Whale rest~urant in th e Balboa
P8 villion.
The main activity schedued ror Friday
Is a W6tern Round-up dinner-dance i•
the Carousel Room of the Newporter Inn.
The spec ial final banquet at 7 p.m.
Saturday will feature Charlie Brown,
Costa Mesa realtor and fonner Enter·
prise crewman. as master of ceremonies.
•'.Rear Admiral Thomas A. Hamilton,
ftn'mer commanding officer of the Enter·
prlse and member of the National Foot-
ball Hall of Fame. will be tbe main ' 1peaker. • All the men al the reunton served on
the Enterprl5e sometime between 1933--
whcn the shfp wa.~ launched and 1947-
~hen it was "mothballed," Mott s;iid .
,,,, Enterpri~e wa1 the first carrier
to rt'Ceive the Prtllidentl1J Unit Citallon.
Jt. was offcially crl'!diled with !ihootinit:
down 911 .Jananese planes, destroying
71 enemy shlpa And dama ging 200 t'lther~.
Aftf!r the war, explalntd Mott, !ht
Ship wa11 1t'Ot tl'J England to brln11 home
S.000 American troopti 11 a tlmt.
the time comes ror them.
Committet members Tuesday also urg-
ed the council to move ahead with work
on updating Newport Beach's master
plan of development.
City Traffic Engineq Robert Jaffee ex-
plained that the traffic study is only one
part of a general plan the projects stould
be performed concurrently.
Jaffe warned of the consequences of
developing a traffic plan based on an out-
dated general plan .
"We don't want the transportation
study committing the city to gener1l plan
conclusions," Jaffe said, pointing out that
development in n1a.ny cities has been bas-
ed on a highway system developed before
the land wa S.
City councilmen have autOOriz.ed only
$50,000 for the entire general plan in the
budget. the same amount they put in for
the traffic study, alone.
The $83,000 the con11ultant, Alan M.
Voo rhees and Associates, wants for the
traffic study, could be totally funded this
year, but since the study will take a full
year, if the remaining two phases are
authorized, the remaining monies could
come from next year·s budget.
Although representatives o{ Voorhees
said there would be some cost-savings if
the entire .study was ordered at this time.
the committtt 5aid because of the
general plan uncertainU.ei and other con-
siderations, it would be wiser to ask for it
piecemeal, thereby allowing the council
to cancel it after any of the stages.
The second phase of the study, which
would develop various alternatives, would
cost $1 7,000 while the final phase, plan
selection and implementaUon, would run
only $13 .000. .
Martin Bouman, representative of the
consulting firm. told the committee there
would be an additional $16,000 charge for
Boy Found Safe
Retarded Youth M issingi for 11 Days
"" CASPER. Wyo. (UP\) -Searchers and
tracking dogs today found 9-year-old
Kevin Dye, a mentally retarded epileptic:
boy missing for 11 days on 8,485-foot
Casper Mountain , scratched and dazed
but alive and well at the bottom of a
wilderness canyon.
"He is alive and appears well." said
Natrona County Sheriff Bill Estes.
A member of a Colorado Alpine Search
Team spotted Kevin th ree hours after
dawn in a rugged area of "lots of brush,
heavy timber and occasional cliffs" near
lhe middle fork of the Elk Horn Creek.
Since the boy had been missing, he had
been spotted several times bu t ran away
from searchers. apparently from fright
or because he was playing a boy's game
of hide-and-seek.
"He probably enjoyed the freedom ."
~aid Richard McDaugall, miss ion
coordinator or the search.
Kevin wa s lifted from the canyon in 11
litter pulled by ropes and taken to Wyoba
Apollo Leaves Trouble
Behind, Zips for Moon
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) -Their trouble!! behind, Apollo 15'1 • ,,.,,. ,....."""!""r~
astronauts closed in calmly and ac-•
curately on the moon today witt\
everything clear for a Friday landing at
the foot of some of the highest lunar
mountains.
"The moon's getting bigger out thft
window," reported Alfred M. Worden as
the spacecrafl was 75,500 miles from it.
This was the last easy day for Worden,
David R, Scott and James 8. Irwin
before they begin a record six days of
moon activity. Their schedule was light
and ground controllers let them sleep an
extra hour. awakening them at 10:40 a.m.
EDT.
"We certainly did have a &ood nighfs
1leep," Worden reported.
A short circuit that cast doubt .. on \
man's most ambitious lunar expedition
had been overcome Tuesday and !'!.
preliminary check indicated thal the lan-
ding ship Falcon was ready.
The. landing ~ile is at the ba sr nl the
Apennine Mountains ranging 10,000 r:-et
and higher, and also near a gorge which
dip~ 1,000 feel down.
Glynn S. Lunney, flight direc!or on the
ground, reported al a midmorning brief-
ing : "The status of the mission is that
we're on schedule. ttie trajectory is vf'ry
close to normal, the performance of the
systems is nov.· very close to nonnal."
Scott and Irwin checked the Falcon late
Tuesday and plan to inspect it again
tonight.
They will lry to clean up remaining bits
of glass from an instrument cover they
found shattered. Lunney said cont rollers
wa nted the astronaut.s to make certain no
floating glass particles Interfered with
cabin equipment, part!cularly hatch
, seali;.
"We're eoing to run the csbin fan for
'-
' I
t
' '
l
about 15 minutes and try to catch what we
can in the filter." Lunney said.
The l445·miilion mission o[ Apollo l~ is
the most demanding ever assigned to 11.n
American 1pace crew. Scott and Irwin
will spend more time on the moon, stay
out on !he surface longer. cover more
terrain and bring back more i:ample:<>
thiin 1hc1r predecessors. Worden v.·il l
orbit the moon longer than anyone and
conduct the first truly w ork i n g
i;paccv•alk .
1'he astronauL-; Tuesday ended their sr·
rnnd day in space as it. i:tarted -trouble
shooting an electrical problem that trig-
gered an alarm signal in the command
module cabin.
They found a circuit breaker for part of
the cabin lighting had opened because of
an apparent circuit faull, but Flight Di-
rector Milton Windle r reported the trouble
was minor and could be worked around.
"Other than that, I guess wf!'re ops
(operations) normal, going to the moon
and planning on going to Hadley (the Ian·
(See APOLLO. Pate ZI
Baptist Church camp on the mountain for
treatment. His father. Philip Dye, a
Casper accountant, and his pretty mother
ru she d to his side.
When found, the lad was dressed in the
same blue polo shirt, short and tennis
shoes he wore when he wandered away
from his parent.!! on an outing July 18.
Temperatures dipped lo near freezing at
night during the search but it was about
50 degrees and sunny when Kevin was
discovered.
Another Lane
For Newport
'Bottleneck'
The ~tate plans to rebuild 1 section or
the Coast Highway through Mariners'
Mile to allow a third 1!1.ne for westbound
traffic from Tustin Avenue to the ArcheJ.
The project wUI not Involve widening of
the roadway, however, Newport Beach
Traffic Engineer Robert Jaffe explained.
Design of the four·tenths of a mile pro-
ject is scheduled to start in the near
future, but actual construction will not
take place for several months, Jafle said.
The project also calls for modilication
or lhe traffic lights at both Tustin and
Rive rside Avenues to allow 1 smoother
flow of traffic, Jaffe said.
He said a master controller will be in-
stalled that will be capable of handling
both intereseC'tinns and p r o vi ding
coordination of the lights .
Jaffe said the addition of the third Jane
will be accomplished by reducing the me-
dian dividers in that stretch. He said lefl-
turn pockets at both intersections will be
retained , however.
Jaffe said the pro.iPct will be paid for
with txith state and city funds .
The state has bud~eted $47,000 fnr the
project while there is $15 .500 in the city
budget for the work.
The city's share of the costs will come
from the Gas Tax Fund, according to
Public Wori{s Director Joseph T. Devlin.
Fleet of Concordes
LONDON IU PJ) -The British Aircraft
Corp. (BAC) predicted Tuesday that
withi n eight' years 11t least 150 Concorde
!!upersonic jet transporu (SSf) will be in
eervice 3ll over the world.
Fiddle Riddle Solved?
Missing Newport 'Stradivarius' Raises Questi.o11.s
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 .... 0.llY P'llll 51111
A mlMln& antique violin alleged to be a
famed Stradivarius has been found rat-
tling t.round in a realty 5aleswoman's
car. leading Newport Beach police lO
close their Intriguing Fiddle Riddle Case.
Despite conclusion of the theft in-
vestigation on 1 hatmooiou11 note, more
questions have been raised th 11: n
answered. I~ It indeed a Stradivarlu!!, originating
up to one and a half centuries ago in the
ltalian violin capital of Cremona~
Banker John Kenner. formerly nf 31 9
D ·' •tood Road, Coron11 del Mar. I.old Of-
fi t:_ Douglaa Dein Mond11y that it i~ a
SlrAdivariu~ indeed. with a $1 ,000 value.
Only there is a difference between a
fitr11divarius and A Stradivari.
Kenner AOld hi~ home recently 11.nd
moved to Santa Monica. Intending to
return fnr the alleged StradivArius. wtiich
I.! properly known 1s a Stradivari if ge-
nuine.
And it's headline news round the globe
when cne cf I.he 540 lovingly built by
Antonio Stradivari, who died in 176.1,
changes h3.ridi with a $00,000 to $250.000
price ljg.
Experts in the UC Irvine music depart-
ment said today all genuine Stradivari in-
strument.a known to be existent are
catalogued by owner, value an<flocalion.
But quality vkllins nearly duplicaUng s
Stradivari tone have been produced down
through the years by distant cou.o;ins, as
well 1s ootrigbt phoniea midi by
unscrupulous artisans.
Music 1uthorities at UC! 11ald Signor
Stradivari also dated his vlollns
precisely by year.
Detective Ch1trle~ Wilkinson Tuesday
Rflernoon set abnut some determined
!<ileuthing bu;td on a tip that some of
Kenner·.~ belongings had been delivered
to former neighbor and c.x<i~ conn-
---,~·--·.:.,
cilman Dee Cook at his liquor store.
Cook -wbose municlpal orchestrations
cc:casionally hit 1 sour note wHh con·
1Hltuenls -kept the itema for Ken11er.
but never saw Int prlndpal ingredient
in the riddle of Ifie riddle.
Sleulhlng around, Detective Wilkinson
contacted the realty salu man, who con·
firmed deUvery of the It.ems to Johnnle'1
Uquor ~Store.
The unk:lehtlfltd woman -she was
aomewhat embarrassed -denltd fiddling
around with the mining a I I ea e d
Stradivarius.
"She said she would a:o check her car
trunk. however, and there It was." uys
Detective Wilkinson .
lnvestig.ator1 said the realty aaJeslady"s
husband is a vlolinlBt and declared-even
In Wday's 11.S. ecooomy-tltal the bank-
tt's $1.000 e11tima.te of lhe value of 11 150-
ye.ar<Olri violin ls too low, whether lt ill
a Stradivari or not.
·-,
"reports and meetings " and $5,000 should
be planned for contingencies.
In it11 recommendation, lhe committee
also asked the council to appropriate an
additional $4,000 for the first phase.
above the $32,000, in case the project was
called off. it it is, the $4.000 would be
&pent for a formal report from the con-
sultant.
In recommending a start of the first
phase, the committee also outlined the
study's basic overaU goals :
-Recommend the best street and
highway system Lo meet the present
..
needs and the future ntt.ds to 1990.
-Eva!ua~ and recommend·tt.,rDt.1to
be played by public transit,
-Recommend a method for. ~
current traffic conge5Uon at l~ic
locations to be determined.· ·
-Recommend individual solutions f9r
specific problem locations at w'lncb-traf·
fie. parking or safety problenu are
prevalent ·
-Present An Improvement program
with projects In a priority order, tn~
eluding cost estimates. project plwing
and potential funding resources.
DAILY PILOT &laff """'
JOAN HOWLIND, 7, BOUNCES, JUMPS AND CATCHES , ,
At College Park School, T11ch•r T•rry (l•ft) Builds Conftd1oce
College Pru·k .Sessions
Put Students 'i11 Shape'
By GEORGE LEIOAL
Of 1~1 O.tlr !'Ii.I 511ll
Summer classu at College Park
Elementary School, at lea st for 5l
youngsters in grades one lo four, means
running, jumping, hula-hooping and boun-
cing balls.
Yet. !he three classes offered mornings
during the five week summer session are
mostly business and not play .
The students, representing nearly a!l of
lhe district's eh?mentary schools, are-tak-
ing the summer class to improve their
physical skil!s as well as their visual
perception, teachers Bob Miller and Tim
Terry contend.
An arrliy of unusual athlelic equipment
daily greets the youngsters who have
been recommended to the program by
Newport Officer
Slugged in Nose
By Bar Patron
·0n,t ·Newport Beach policeman wag
Injured and both he a.nd his partner's
uniforms damaged beyond repair when
drenehed . with blood while subduing an
alleatdly unruly bar paLron late Tue1#
day;
Ronald Newstater, 32, or 2218 W. Ocean
Front, w11 booked on a felony charge
of assualtjng a police officer ah.er the
11 p.m, inciderit at The Beach Bell, near
hJs home.
Office!"!! Lee Roberts and' Michaeli Sul·
livan were dispatched aft.tr a barmakt
asked for aid In removing a curicimer
she satd was shouting ob&cenitita: at oth·
er patrons.
Patrolman Rol)erts sak! he a s kt d
Newstater if he had any weapons, mov-
ing toward hi.m for a patdown search
wl\e:n the ,tJre rhop employe .auddenly
swung his fist,
Hit In the face, by a blow that fra c-
tured hls JtOSe, ltolx-rts was sible to aub-
due the 'arreste. with his partner's aid
before being taken to HOlit: Mtme'ltlal
Hospital, wbere be was treated and re-
leased.
.. -·~--.-.. -..--.-
their regular school year te1:1chers.
The equipment is unU!Ual in tflat·lt·il
specifically geared lo helpil)g the
youngsters improve their balance.~e
coordination and ability to accqmp)iab
movements \vhile looking in a mirror.
Old tires. hula hoops and crepe p8l)e!
streamers merge with more familiar
gym equipment such as tumbling mats.
trampolines and balance walk board!!.
The tire!! offer a cbi!d-size "horse" for
straddle jumping. The. hula hoop when
coupled with an up and down bouncing
motion on a bounce board provides a
total body challenge that outstrips tM old
pat-the-head· and rub-the-tummy routine.
A simple ball suspended from a 1trinl
can challenge a child's visual-muscular
coordination. Terry notes. whtn ht prac-
tices bouncing the ball away from him
(See PHYSICAL, Pa1e I)
Orange
Wel!ther
Cloudy skies predlded for'IDday
and Thursday, clearln1 in the
attemoons to' a wirln !IUD, btiJft•
in11 with It temperatures or around
72 at the coast, 8& inland. Lows to-
night In the &C'.l'a.
INSmE TOD~Y
SuperVisors haoe · initicitfdio-
PTOOrom which could create
1,000 ntw jobs for the coun*1J'
govcnimtnt ov1r the n1rt 1.,8
mo"tM. S«e ato,-71, Paoe 10.· , •• .. ..,.. .•
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c11eut111 U• 1 c~olllM .,,..
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---· ---
' .. DAILY PILOT H
Panel Prebe
Radar Foulups
•
·Alleged
lpec:lal lo Ill• DAIL V PILOT
..,.,A!A?>ENA -Testimony of radu
· lflllfuneUOna tn both planes and visual
_ llytna by landmarks below one of the
"'6rM.a busiest 1eri.al crossroads came
New Airport
~Board Now .
~-on Way Out?
• Ill Crash
toda y at hearinis into a trafic m!l illry-
commerclal jet colhsion .
Tht June. 6 incident that se.nt a Hughes
Air We.st spiraling 1~.000 fe~t down intG
the San Gabriel f\tountalns killed 50
persons . one the F4 Phant.om's pUot,
from El Toro f\tarine Corps Air station.
The victims included a small brother
and sister from San Clemente en rnute
for a summer vacat!cin y,·ith their father,
plus a.n easterner headed home from a
visit in O:lsta '-1esa.
Sole survivor of lhe accident which Is
belnj: probed In lh.rtt days of National
Transportation Safety Board hearings at
the. Pasadena Hilton hotel was the Marine
jet's rAdar intercept officer.
Durlni mJd-moming testimony. Jst LL Ortftle C®cty's ntw Airport Land Use Qi.ristopher E. Schiess. 24. of El Toro,
! Cbmrn.luloa, hi. business for only • ft:w i;aid pilcit error was probably to blame.
:.months, m1y be on Its way out. He did not suggest which pilot, Lt. ~: Supervisors Tuesday grumbled over a James R. Phillips, 27. of El Toro, or the
: $62,'26 request to staff the iroup·and the Hughes Air West DC9 captain.
::consensus wu that the comm.iMion wa.s Initial witnesses 5aid they saw the Alr
• UM&cessary. WKt plane carrying 44 passengers and :1 Fifth District Supervisor Ron a Id cre.w of five. spiral 111.ily into an almost-
·:jC.Upers wondered if it would be illegal inacctssible. mountain canyon leaving a :'!not to fund the ll'OUp. <:ounty Counsel trail of-arnoke and flame. ·~Adril.n Kuyper s1ld the Nte law was Little new was added In the way of eye-::vque enly requ.lrinJ th1t staff IM ista'nu witness testimony and it will be mcinths
: ;be. appointed. before the NTSB panel Issues a finding on
:: Caspers uid the comm i 1 s Io n the. de.finite. or probable. cause of the ~:ctupllcated the work of the county plan-crash.
;;mai com.mlujoa and airport commission. Jeff Wittington, IS, of Duarte. testlfled
:.. Supervisor David Bake.r &l!"ffd and he saw the je.t fighter en route from ;t~ated that the appropriation bt cut to Nevada to El Toro MCAS en1age in
:..$5,t.IOO and tbe county League cf Cities be acrob.alics just before the. crash. ;~ubd to join in a move to abclisb the Radarman Schiess, who was able to
:M 1aniution. parachute, de.ni&d this, saying his pilot
:: The commissimi wu Wbli.!bed last made a 360-de.aree roll for added air lraf· :::Yeu: under an ameDded state law which fie visibility several minutes prior lo im·
:·provided that if either the supe:Msor1 or pact
::..'the eltier name the members the lfOUP He said he saw the Jetliner looming ou t
-:muat be aetfvated.. of the right side. of the canopy seconds
: : The eme.ndment was puthed throulh by before impact with the Phantom. whlcb
::,ANemblyman Robert E. Badbam (R-suffered sever&.! mechanical defects. ~:Newport. Beach) at the urging of Newport "Watch It Rlch !' he told of shouting to
:;Beach dty offldals and airport op-u. Pbilli ..... a veteran of about one year's -:.-uti. r' ,...... flying experience.
:: The commlalon bu recently been ta.k-The je.Ulner then collided with the . :tn.s ateps to pie land use ate1und Phantom's re.ar tail portion, he testHied,
: airparta. ' adding be. saw 1t make no evasive
.: This function wu vi1orously attacked maneuver.
'."rueaday by Bueaa Park Councilman Kill ed with the. other pa.ssenge.rs were
,-Merwin French. He a.Jd the commission Michael Potter, 1, and his sister June., 6,
; bad arbitrarily let ·borders in which it daugbters of Mr!. Sandra Potter, of 709
.t prapoeed to hl\'t jurisdiction ne.ar the Calle. Puente in Sao Clemente.
• P'ulluton Alrpcrt which included two Federal invesU1ators are Intrigued ~ thirda of Bue.na Park. with a mystery radar transponder unit
Supuvlsan plan le make a final 1lgnal monitored in P a I m d a I e
declaloa to tM appropriatiGll Friday. limuHa.ne.ously wltb tbe. jet1s collisioD.
•• , The Phantom's transponder was out of ~' erder -the lieu tenants were. flying at J "I. W s 15.000 fe.et on visual rules due to A Onn a yne tl£S malfunctioning oxy1en syl'lte.m -and the 1 , .-: "'-· jetliDer, tr1.nspondt'r-was ~o inoperative. 1:m:rlif : ~· l""' .'I :.j -,~ ~e littler findlnl,.,as onuced tn a . ~~~· · 1 . prellmlnary NTSB 1'epott I ed Sunday, ,,.11i.. 1 ~ • • !. jwit prlo_r to eonveninc the arlngs. ""(~ ~ . i'!J··· f ' Investi11tor1 say the mystery 1lgn1l
j • !f:J:IJe b1it lndlcllin1 an in.flight crisis was followed
for 10 minutes to an area near Ncirton
AFB, at whicb time it was discontinued
and efforts ta pin It down have been
futile .
i.&· ANGELES (UPI) ·.: ~.hn. :W~
&utd Paramount Pictures Corp. fOf' $1.'7
:rnillioo Tuwlay tn a dlspute over the sale
Gf the Academy Award winning film
:•·rrue Grit" to a television network.
, Wayne aintended Paramouht ahould
;Mt have "ii'eed with Amfrica!i Broed;
~as4ne; Corp. to sell the movie in the fall
~ 19'9 be<:aiw: Wa yne "stood A good
'C.hanct'' ol. winnini the belt actor award
:iattr In the. year, makina: the film more
:.Valuable.
' The suit sald "True Grit" had not com-
;pJet.ed it.II theatrical run 11t the time of the
)agreement,· and · that theater proceM"a
:would have indicalfd the popula.rity of
the film and lncrta11ed it..s "'Orth.
ABC purchased the film as part of a
.$15 million pack11ge of 25 motion pictures.
Wayne, who won an Oscar for best .actor
for his perfonnance in the film. also
named I! defl!Tlda nts Hal B. \\'al11~ and
JOM:ph H1tlen , co-prciducers of the film.
OIAN61 COAST
DAILY PILOT
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--
From Page l
APOLLO ...
dilll site)," Windler reported at an early
mornin1 briefin.a: today.
The three Apollo IS crt-"'men rehred at
1.33 a.m. EDT and slept much of this
morn ing .
Apollo IS was 1radua!ly s!o'>l'tng under
the decreasing influence of earth·s tug of
gravity.
It's &~d ~·as dropping fr cim 2.7SO
mlles ptr hour at 12 .34 a m. "'hPn the
astronauts were. 100.666 miles from the
moon, tn 2.134 miles per hour at 7 3~ p.m.
when they wlll be SJ.464 miles a"'ay.
Apollo 15 will slow· to 1.887 miles pe.r
hour and then start tn acceler.tte. Thurs-
day morning under the pull of the moon '1
gra vity.
One other problem w1s found Tuesday
nifht w11en Scott and lrwin opened the
hatch to the Lun.11r Module and
discovered during a l~·o-hour inspection
that Uie 1laS! cover lo an altimeter
somehow hid shatte.~ since launch
~1onday morning from Cape Kennedy.
""7e dnn't have any ldea y,·hy ii brokt,"
Irwin said. He estimated he a.nd Scott
picked up about 6(1 percent of the gla53
pieces witb a piece of tape and the
spacecraft vacuum cle.ane.r and Windler
said the remaining gla'-!I should be no
problem
The me.ter normally Is sealed unde.r
pressure in he.lium . With the glass
broken, It was eqK>sl'!d to a near vacuum
and then oxygen when the cabin was
pressurized .
Mission O:lnlrol Communicator Karl G.
Heinze told the astronauts engineers were
running test• to aee if the chan1e in con-
ditinns •'Ould affect the me.ter.
"It would be interesting to hear what
they find out," Sc<>lt said.
Indians to Perform
At Fashion Island
Memb@ra from fou,. Ari:ona ln<tian
trtbw v.111 Invade FaMlon Island ln
Ne.wp'.lrt Beach Thursday where they will
perform trAdltlonal dances for the public.
Dancers from the Ap1 chf, Nav11jo,
P1pa10 and Pim11 natll')ns will be
drt!setl in tull ecstume. for ~rform1nces
't noon, I ·30 p.m. 11.nd ~ p.m. cameras
may be. usl'(I Attach dance.
•
Tourist Trap"!
A nun has been stationed al the door of St. Peter's Basilica by the
Vatican. Her task : Keep out women V.'hose garb reveals too much
thigh or bosom. lt v.·as the first lime a woman had been assigned to
rule on hemlines and necklines. Vati can officials felt male security
guards V.'ere lax in their value judgments. This v.·oman tourist seems
lo be finding fault with the nun's determination.
Workers Picket Office
Of Pacifi~ Telephone
In a hold &ve.r from lhe. te.lep~ce strike.
ef two weeks ago, members of the
lllternatiMal Brolherhood of Electrical
Workers tod1y picketed offices of Pacific
Te.lepbone in Orange County.
Uolon spokesman Jackie Gcild:;te!n said
the picket lines. "'hich are. being honored
by members of the other telephone
unions, will only last a day 11t a time . ,
"We only have 200 members in the Los
Angeles chapter, so we picket in one area
at a time. Ye~te.rday it was the South
Bay area of Los Ange.le.s, today it's
Orange C.ounty," she. said. She declined to
name. Thursday's target fcir !he plcke!.'JI,
Miss Goldstein ~aid the un1nn i~ still on
strike. because they have. not reached 11:
contr11cl agreement y,•1th Pac I f I e
Telerhone.
"\Ve are an affiliate of the APt,.rTO
and we are getting tremendnu~ re!'.f"'Jn!'.e
from other aff iliate unicins. 'They have 111!
agreed not to crciss ciur picket lln!"s," she
~a!d_
Because of !he pickets 11t the dozen
Pacific Tele.phone office.i; 1n th~ county,
cnndilions have returned lo Y.·hat !h!"y
"'·ere during the height of the strike t\\'O
House Unit OK's
Funds for Sand
At West Newport
The. House. Appropriations Committee
h.ts approved a SS00.000 gr"1nl to continue
lhe sand replenishment project in West
Ne.,.,-port.
Part of the money \\'ill be used to com-
pltte rehabi li!Alinn of two tesl f{roin:. .at
4oth and 44th Stret"ts. to build another
rock groin al 32nd Street and to put
11)().000 cubic yards of sand around all
three areas.
The appropriation "'ill ali:.o pi:1y fcir
about 20 percent of the fifth stage of th1o.
ongoing project. which is the building nf
groina at 28th, 60th and Cedu Streets and
dumping 750.000 cubic y•rds Qf sand
around those. grciin!.
The work probably wi\1 not be&in until
the next c,11Jendar ye.ar. said Perry Davis,
public affairs officer for the Los Angeles
di.,trlct of the Army Corps ol En1inMrs.
because '"It's normally not until winter
before. public works monies 1 re
1v11:ilab\e. ·•
This is the. only corps of engineers
shore. proJe.ct in this are.a, s1id Davis.
who 1nticlp.tlts "'advertising the work in
December of this ye.ar."
The funds wert 1pproved by the Hou~
C:Ommlllte for th~ beach eros ion ccintrol
AJ"e.a known as Surfside-Sunset-Newporl
Beach.
Davia said Tue1day the Surfsid e-Sunset
project Is done and further shore pro-
tfeliOfl 1ctivilie.s will oecur enly tn West
Newport.
-. )lllr...._,_.._ --.. r
wteks 1ga .
In!cirmatlon operators and Ion g
distance operator! have ocit reported for
work and their post.s are being manned
by a skeleton crew of superviscirs.
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
Most Diamond
Losses Are
Preventable
I'd like to have even half of the
diBmonds that are lost from their
settings .•• gone forever! But e.lso
I'd like to &e.e more people take the
simple precautions "·hich can pre-
vent the majority of such losses.
~1ost stones Jost from their set-
tings have given months of fair
"·arning that they are in !Uch dan·
i;:er ; they have he com e loo!e.,
usual!y due to \•:orn prongs , and
can remRin loose in the setting for
many months before the final Joss
\\'h!ch occurs so often during some
such activity as housework or re-
creation. And It is exacUy under
these circumstances ••• work or
play, that a diamond literally goes
down the drain or into the water
with little or no possibility of re-
cov•ry.
About 90% of such losses could be
prevented U the mountings on your
je1,1-•elry u·ere checked twice a year.
So why not take out the best and
cheapest insurance available •••
the security of having us check
your mountlnJs. It takes only a few
minutes, a.pd there is no cbarfe.
-..
.-
f'roM Pllfl! l
PHYSI(fll ...
wtUI 1 •lick and hlttin& It asoilt ~ott It
hill him.
1'i. crepe atreamers. even t.bougb the.y
weifb less thin an ounce, are. u1ed to
deVi10D la.rs• mu i c J i coord.laaUoll. s~ wave them 1bout in Iar1e
cfrcf&. keeping the rtrtamen: flowing in
lar&t circles or figure.a eight.
Toe-.to-hecl walk.! along either the two-
indi or the four·inch 11ur!a~ of A 11im,ple
two-by-four boaT"d. lmptovee bale~ a.nd
teaches 1tudenl.6 lo UM! their hand5 and
arms to keep from falling .
The mat.s, just as those used in any
gymnasUcs course, keep heads, kne.e1
and bottcmJ from hitting the hardwood
floor.
When the course ends, lhis Friday: all
51 11tudent.s who range in ege from five to
10, will be retested on their physical skill.t
lo determine how the course may havt
helped them.
Whe.n they return le their ttgular
schools next fall , many maytbe expected
to outstrip their clas,,mate5 in 1choolyard
performance dut to summer class
training they've received.
Terry, 27, has been with the Newport-
Me sA district for two years. 'T'be graduate
et Westmont College in Santa Barbara is
the only elementary level physical educa·
lion teacher who teaches full-time at one.
11chool, Cordria del Mar Elementary.
The techDJQue:c; employed In the sum·
mer proe:i-8m are not limited to the
r;pecial program . 1'erry 'i1aid, but he'd like
kl see the workshop remedial physicaJ
education irlea grow. with more students
to be serYed next year.
R.C. Watts. coordinator ef the. district's
summer schl'lCIJ program. nOted this is the
second year of the College Park School
physical education program. "Students
make great progress in five 1,1-·eeks,'1
\\.'alls said.
Terry had little difficulty y,•ith physical
education himself. He majored in it in
college and played basketball fcir West-
mont and footbBll, basketball and track
in high school.
Yet. he enjoys the npporlunity to work
with youngsters Y.'ho mii:ht otherwise be
the gym class dropouts. The rewards. he
say~. aime in seein[I the kids succeed.
"Success in one area of a child 's develnp-
ment. breeds more successes in other
area~ as well.'' Terry believes.
He emphasi1.ei<. teacher assessment or
the childrtn's new found skills rather
lhan elaborate testing. The kids benefit
most by "exposure and by doing" rather
than by taking our tests .
Luxury Car Hits
Mobile Trailer
A Newport Beach woman escaped ID·
jury Tut3day evening •hen her luxury
~~n rammed 11n imroobile mobile
home y,•hich was unoccupied ;it thf! time.
Oam,11ge In neighbor Anthony Andrt-s'
mobile home 111 Uie Lee Ha ven 1'railer
P.rk, 294{1 W. CM!t Highway, was lt!ted
at over $200 by poll~.
The ca r belonging to .Jean Dietrick,
another park resident, was moderate,
police !'laid.
Rammin.R" forward intn the trailer, the
car kT!o<'ked it from it.s concrete aproD .
It came to rest in t.he parking spot, partly
collapsing an adjacent canvas cabana.
GARBENSTANGELERS ENTRY
Rosie E1quiv9', Veronlc1 Sarmiento
Garbenstangel
Team at Coast
Facing 'Penalty'
A bedraggled Orange Coast Colleae
garbenstangel team, facing a probable
penalty for ''delaying the game,'' ruefully
admitted this morning that OCC is run-
ning a little !ate in completing an vitry
for the Build a Better Garbenstange.l
C.ontest.
For contest details, ste special 'ec--
lion starti-11g on Pnge 49.
The team coached by technology
division instructor Bil l Abernathy r;pent
.. half the night welding stuff together " 1t
lbe school, he explained today.
But the problem was lhe garbenstangel
had pups. It is now two garbenstangels.
both nf which the OCC men's team e.~
peeled to assemble this afternoon at
South Coast Plata.
Tuesday afternoon, both lhe me.nl
te<\m and an all-girl aggregation co~che.d
by Dick Hernandez, director of special
programs at OCC. were to build their
garbenstangels at the ~hopping center.
The girls showed up and Assembled
their tur.11-Ule -crMk. -an~· the -wheels
-go • around thing. But 11.11rbens!Ang~
contest officials waited in vain far the
men·~ team .
This could be the rfav of the Great Con-
frontatinn . Thp garberisl.llnJlel team fMm
1;olden West Ctillege was dlle lo arrive It
the shnpping center about J o'clock this
afternoon to try to build it:• be.ttar
j!'.fl:rbenstangel .
•
l.'!El\JEST l.IERSJ(]~ []f
,THE f JRST l\JRTCH [Jr;{ ·JHE r:l[](]f;-1, . .
1·~~. '-41•1 el11enoo'-•~. t.111tu-.. 1!1a.MI 11Tt1r11lt /e• ~&U>t, 1111"'1/llt .~ .. IH•~-J. Sltl~llll l !lfi e.tlt.; .MllC~l~f ~1•c..lel. W~ ,.,,..,, •. I th.
J. C. fi.umphl'ieJ Jewefert.
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONYfNIENT TllMS
IANICAMEllCAlD-MAStfl CMAlCiE
24 YlA .. S IN SAMI LOC.4.TION
,.MONl 141 .J401 '·
.
. ·' .
!,
' ' ' .
t
' .,
' " ' ' l,
-~ ~ ..
U.S. Trade
Dips_1'old l
By Official
WASHING'l'Qji (AP) -
~ ti Comm:erc~
Maurlee H.' Sfans ,.y. lrll
may be tbe. first year of th1I
century the United State! .hat
been unable t., maintain J
surplus in its foreign trade.
"Our eeooomic f u t u r •
depends en maintaining •our
tecbnolO£Y," Stans told the
House Sc i e Ji c e Committee·
Tuesday. He said the U.S.
trade suprlus of exports wer
imports, which bas been
declining in recent years,·may
hit zero for the first time since
ly Phil lnterkiftrll
1893. l~~~~~~~~~::~~~~~~~j The surplus was $Z. 7 billion
last year, down from rr.7
billion in 1964, stans said.
lheTheballaaocsteoffof;ciaJtr. adeoemmwasenJ.fy •1 think dop should be trameclto ~theiropinionl -~~~~-of::_:judg~·~,.:'.'.._'.to:_::th~em~ .. ~lv:e&:::_'~~~~~-8 when the Commerce Depart·
ment forecast a $500,000
•Uf1l!\IS fer tm .. It ~cted ,
exporta wou1d rise 7 to 8 per·
cent, while imports increased
13 to 14 percent.
Stans urged Congress to
considec st i mulating
techninlgica\ advancemtnt to
break the cycle.
"It may well be time," he
said, tn modify antitrust
regulations so that Industries
can pool resources and make
advances he said are needed.
Although the Nixon ad-
ministration hasn't decided
"which way we want to go,"
Stans said, four options exist:
-Dtrect federal grants and
Jo.an guarantees for
t e chnological development:
and ISUCh indirect aid as tax
breaks, investment credits and
depreciation allowances.
Officers A ll.egedly
Relieved for Racism
DETROIT (UPI ) -Frank
W. Render, Deputy Assistant
Secretary of Defense for
Equal Opportunities, s a i d
Tuesday at least seven of-
ficers, including one general,
have been relieved of duty for
violatin1 armed forces civil
* * * UAW Chief
Seeks More
Public Jobs
rights regulations.
Render made tile statement
during a news conference
MU.ch coincided with the Na-
tional Urban League's 61st an-
nual convention. Render. a
black, held his conference in a
hote1 across the street from
the convention site.
''.There are people who wore
stars, bars, oak leaves and
blrtls on their shouJders who
have been reµeved of duty,"
he said.
Render initially said there
were 10 to l2 officers who
were relieved of duty but in a
telephone interview later he
said the figure may have ~n
seven or less. "If I'm asked to
produce seven names 1 pro-
bably couldn't do it," he said.
™-·Ju~ 28, 1911 IWl V l'IUll' 6
ltl•1 s,_.1c Controver•fl
'
Nixon Eyes Reserve Board Boost ·
WASHINGTON (UPI) . ~
Pres!delll NIJoo Is ""1'1d<rlng
1-1 to -t11ullo.Df dlO Federal a_.eJ!Qard, It_
wu lemlod today, The IUI· sest1on. if . put" befo.r•
Congrus, COllld -~ .• controversy rivaling President
Franklin D. Rooaevelt's at~
I.empt to "pack" the Supmne
Compromise
On Draft
Said Near
WASlllNGTON (UPI)
1bere were·Rports .today 'tblt
a com.promise may be In the
works to revive the . dran,
perhaps before Con g: r e s s
begins a 1I101Jth-long recess
next week.
The President's power to
draft men into the service ex-
pired June 30 when the House
and Senate could not agree on
legislation to extend the dralt
for another two years. 'The
specific point of disagreement
was over a Senate-backed
amendment which w o u I d
declare it the national JK!licy
to be out ot Indochina nine
months after the measure
become'! law, provided the
U.S. w.ar prisoners were
released before then.
One member ol a House-
Sehate conference committee
which bas been trying to aolve
the impasse saJd Tuesday the
negoUaton had tentatively
agreed oo. a compromise. It
would involve changing tile
out-in-nine-months amendment
to make it a "aense of the
Congress" expression th at
President Nixon a h o u 1 d
negotiate a Vietnam
withdrawal date in exchange
for a cease-fire and release oI
the l¥'&r prisoners.
Court.
Adinlniatra1lon o11;aa1s ai.o
ttlai!Oied' tlMt 'Nlmn ~jeded
a r.qu¢ i,vm. Arlbqr F.
Burm -chairman cl the
resel'\le board -for a $20,000
a year pay raise. Burns cur--
renUy makes $-U,500.
Bwns, however , denied · be:
had "lobbied for an increase
in salary."
The development.Jl left no
doubt lb.at the once warm
personal relaUonship between
Nixon and Bums has chilled.
Bw'ns, at one time Mxon'1
most trusted economic a~
.u.r, hu -crttlcll cl ""' ~ policy , ... '"""" than a year. Ho bas callod
repeatedly fee-the President to
take a tougher stand against
inflationary waae and price in-
creases.
"The President has received
several requests from high
level economic advWt-1 that
he expand membersblp of the
Federal Reserve Board," a.a
administration spoteanan
said. ''There haa be e n
critid.sm that it is loo much "
• doled club and that oo!y by
-~ ·111 ll!u can tt rully --ly.•
Tho IPObaman did oot
.elllJo\'at.e.
Tbe Federal Reserve,
Jea:all)' lndependent of the ao.
mlnlltrallml, teta the naUon's
basic ~Dey and credit policy.
lb members are appointed by
the President l>!it I he I r
ov,erlapping 1'-year terms are
dealgned to Insulate them
from day-to-day politics.
U Ni.Jon does a!:k Congrus
to doable the ma'<ll the~
-and automatically live ldn\
the authority to DIP" ~
new members -"'M -lrlCj ger a cantmmy not 1lllllk4
the one that !ou.w.d ~
-Franklin o. -·It'• effort io lncrouo the Ille <If
the Sup.rem• Co~r J ·--' ' Rooaevelt's p..u wu re
after opponents accuted him
of trying to ''paek..:..c:a to water down its
majority.
Free Real Estate '
CAREER NIGHT
Hear how F. M. Torbell Co., Inc. sold 1112 biftlon dollars In
properties. Leorn how you can achieve unlimited income. * learn all the facts on how to get your license. * Hear special guest speakers and presentations.
* Video television training demonstration. * Meet our managerial staff and ask questions.
* *
learn how our "fast start" program trains you to success.
Discover the inside story how 219 of the Tarbell sales
people won the coveted "Gold Key1' sales award given for
selling over $100,000 in home sales in the month.
,
I
'
·,
Man Found
Tied Up
lnsiile Tomb
DETROIT (UP!) -United
Auto Workers President
Leonard Woodcock, referring
to unemployment as "the
a:>Untry's IllOE!t serious pro-
blem," has called for the crea~
tion of up to 3 million public
service job!!.
Render declined to name the1;;;;========;
officers. "I don't think it
would serve any use fut
purpose," he said.
'
WrerwEGO, La. (UPI) -
Police found David A. Melan-
con, 22, tied and gagged and
stuffed in an above-the-ground
tomb Tuesday in t h e
Westwego O!metary. He was
alive, but suffering from
l!hock.
"He was as white 111 a
glwit," said policeman
Woodrow Chambert.
Chambert said the man was
robbed and then bound and
deposited in the up p e r
chamber tomb. Workmen
auspected something w a s
wrong when they saw plastic
flowers covering the opening
of the cllamber, whicfl was
supposed to be vacant.
They removed the flowers
and found the tomb was oot
aealed with bricks and mortar.
but open, witb Melancon in-
1Jde. Ota~ said Mela.neon
fainted evtry time he at-
tempted to 1peak to officers.
He was hospitalized. Police
belieVt'd be had been in the
tomb '"'"" Monday oighl
Woodcock, 1n an address
delivered at the &lst Annual
Convention ol. the National
Urban League Tuesday, also
recommended the formation
of a coalition "of t h e
economically disadvantaged,"
embracin~ all races and col·
ors, to find more job!!.
Woodcock did not elaborate
on this proposal However, in
remarks to newsmen following
bis speech, he noted that an
economic coalition already ex-
ists within the Democratic
Party, but aaid It bas hot
given enough consideration to
the problems of blu&<:ollar
workers.
Woodcock said during the
past. 10 years the Democratic
Party,. which the UAW tradi-
tionally support.!:, bad moved
away from the recognition of
basic problems such a s
unemployment.
Render said of the ones be
knew ot who were disciplined
the lowest ranking officer was
a captain -a military lawyer
-who was discharged in
Okinawa earlier this year for
refusing to itlake bands with a
black officer.
Render said the individual
services also could have taken
action without hi!! knowledge.
~iriL ~emons
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Don't Miss This Great Opportunity!
Monday, August 2nd, 8:00 P.M.
Retail Clerk's Union Bldg.
8530 STANTON AVE. (NEAR CRESCENT) BUENA PARK
NEAR KNOTTS BERRY FARM, STANTON & CRESCENT
F. M. TARBELL CO.
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"a network of 39 offices"
'
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But equally Important-cares enough to give you very personal service.
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(
• DAD,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Refuge on
Fl1Lb Di61rict Supervisor Ronald E. Caspers appun
to be on bls way toward getting the federal government
to design1te at least part of Upper Newport Bay as ~
national Wildlife refuge.
Wh.Ue Caspers jumped the gun last week In saying
the Department of Interior was ready to act on the mat·
ter, officials in Washington confirmed they are consider·
ing it .seriously.
Jnteri.or Secretary Rogers Morton also is apparent·
Jy about to declare the bay some tind of national land·
mark. Interior Department spokesmen said this wilt hap-
pen soon, although they were not specific about what
the action means. IL does not involve any land acquisi·
tioc.
\Vhile the department's concern for lhe bay is cer·
ta.inly understandable, its procedures do prompt a num·
ber of queslions.
It seems the secretary is about to act on the land·
mark status without consultation with ei ther Newport
Beach officials or the land owner, the Irvine Company.
Similarly, it is curious that neither the city nor the
Irvine Company has been contacted about the proposed
sanctuary, especially since a controversy on bay develop-
ment exists and the federal government usually doesn't
intrude where local squabbles exist.
Roadblocks Ahead
HopeS for an Irvine incorporation election this year
111re rapidly waning.
Sponsors of the cityhood movement had wished, and
determinedly worked, for an August vote of the people.
The Council of Communities of Irvine had plotted
the incorPQration course, conscientiously studying what
a city government would mean to residents.
Church Issue Stirs
Another Response
To the Edltor :
Written well enough lo de~rve a bette.r
premise, David G. Peary's Jetter
(Mailbox July 21) brought up the age-old
cllche that If the taxpayers do not sup-.
port the parochial schools the church
might flood the public domain with
Catholic students and close down the
parochial schools.
Rubbish! The Roman Catholic Church
is too smart to do a stupid thing like that.
for it would defeat their purpose or
Catholic Instruction of their member.
whJch was the goal of the Catholic
Church in the first place.
THE Tim.EAT to send them all to
public schools is nothing less than a veil·
ed attempt at exlorllon, and it is working
in some localities , but th ere will always
be opposition to a union of church and
fitate. Note v.·hat the Russians did with the
church-sponsored Rasputin and t h e
church itself. Kicked out would be a con-
servative estimate of what happened.
If the Pope would melt down the golden
Images in the cathedrals around the
world at which moat <>f the poverty.
111tricken people worship, or sell some <>r
the vast real estate holdings (tax-free, <>f
course) there would be money enough to
support the parochial schools forever.
And that goes for the Buddhist religion
t;hQse statues of Buddha, which he did
not aulhori1e, could feed many Asians
who now are dependent on American
whe~t.
S. G. UNDINE
No"' They're 'Pigs'
To the Edllor
In the past, I have always referred to
policemen as "cops" or just policemen.
Many people called lhem "pigs." J
always thought that was a bit harsh.
Last week I attended a Costa Mesa
party which was overcrowded. It was
supposed to be a block party when I
heard about it. But everybody had to stay
on the lawn and there just wasn 't enough
room for everybody.
Ma.ii.box
LttMr1 ,,._ rMCltr"i 1r1 ""'k•llW. "9~11JI Wfllert ..... 1111 citn""' tMlr IMl""I llt :Ml _,..
., Ina. Tilol ,...,, 19 _.._ lethn .. flt -
1r •N,,.; .. ,. llkt i. rtMrv9a. AU .. ,,. .. """1 111-
(lllQ lllnenir. •W ,,..tu111 •HrHl. kl! N-•
"''' M wl!lllMN IHI '"Vftl fl wttk!Wll Al-II
•PP-11'11111. l'NI,.,. wlll Ml M l'tlbll"""
study, there &re many who !eel the public
really doesn't know what's good for it.
Getung views from all the various
••publics" would contribule to the people
knowing what is happening in their city
-and then whalever de<:islons are made
will be supported.
JUDY ROSENER
Irvine's Attitude
To the Editor:
As posted. the Irvine Company's
attitude is: "Keep <>ut, No Shooting, No
Hiking, No Hunting, a n d No
Trespassing."
For their zon\ns request al Promontory
Point, our attitude should be : Ket.p Out,
No Fishing, No Trespa.uing, No Fooling, and NO WAY !
RAY A. OGDEN
Where the Lids Went
To !he Editor:
The new rt!gulations by the City of
Newport Beach to require trash cans lo
be covered makes a lot of sense. Covered
cans will keep papers from blowing all
over. I am sure lhe •;ast majority of
householders will agree with the concept
but unfortunately many or us do not have
lids because they V.'ere Jost by the tr.ash
collection people! Jr this is to work
properly, the lids: must be put back on
the container after pickup. Otherwise this
will prove another exercise in futility .
RUSSEL BRIGHT
My chick and 1 were standing on the Moorlnfl• Needed grass drinking !:leer. Suddenly we st.arted
getting pushed down the street very To the Edilor:
rapidly. When I saw through the crowd. As a Newport Beach resident. mooring
the Costa Mesa Riot Squad, without as owner and taxpayer, J feel that I must
much aa a warning, had their clubs vigorously protest any effort b y
drawn and were "dispersing"' the crowd. Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers to
When I saw this, I split because I didn 't eliminate off-shore moorings or private
want my girl's head or mine split open. docks from Newport Harbor.
My parents saw what happened after I This is one or Utt finest yacht harbors
left. They told me how they (the pigs) In the United Slates, and the residents of
marched ~wn the street with clubs the Harbor Area and Orange County
drawn, berd1:"& the c~wd down the street deri\'e great recreational pleasure and
-not to the ir cars, Just down the street, ec,nomic benefits from the large number
and they beat the hell out of some kid -or pleasure boats docked and moored aero~ the 1treet for no apparent reason. here. It would be a considerable dlsset"-
No 1 mwt refer to them •s pigs. vice tG county rtsidents to drive these
BRAD BOURGEOIS boats from the harbor.
High Rbe Study
To the Editor:
In reference to your editorial on the
Lowu BQ Civic District study 1essions,
J would lite to make a few comments.
There has been a sreat deal IC·
complished at the sludy sessions in that
question& have been r"ised lhat obviously
had never been coruildered by the city
councU committee. Unforttulately, com.
mittee members Mr. Parons and Mr.
Glass have attended only a very few
aession.,. Councilman Kymla has been the
only membe.r of the diltrict committee
that hu attended regul1rl}' to aa to listen to the public's wishes.
In thii light, the OAJt.Y PILOT could
perfonn a rtal service by dolni a series
of article.I on the pros and conll of high
r lse development around lhe bay.
There are clear differenct~ o r
phllolopby about the economic and 90Clal
•alue o( blydde hJgh rile and even
lhoUfh the people's voice against high
rise w11 heard in lhe Newport Tomorrow ' •.-
Mooring ownen pay Uleir fair share of
harbor use fees and taxes. Moored boats
occupy about 4 percent of the harbor
surface are.a. Such irrespon1ibl•
stalements as thGse: recenUy made by
Ca.sper3 about moorlng1 in Newport
Harbor should cause county voters to
wonder if they elected a supervisor who
is really C'oncerned about the needs of
COWlly residents.
t
JOHN R. ZWEERS
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Jiow very plr-aSJ1nt to bt able l.o
Visit the beach without having to
contend with obnox i<>us pets.
-D. T. H.
.,,... f.Mlllf-9 ~ ...... , ......... ...,
-•1 .. •llr 111N9 •I 1"-"'""'"'.,· IWMI Hur "' _ ... I• Glw"'' Gv" DI UJ il'l .. I,
•
Upper Bay
They, had some definite bigh·powered help from
the planDlng department of the Irvine Cornpao y; 10 addi·
tion, teams of citizens scrutinized virtually every facet of
the change from countr: to city control.
A subsequent petition drive found a vast majority
of residents favoring cityhood and willing to call on the
Board ot Supervisors to schedule an incorporation elec-
tion.
Those petitions were filed more than two months
ago. Santa Ana demanded the future ('ity give up 938
acres of prime industrial land, but a judge just thre\v
out a court suit on tbe issue. Santa Ana has vowed an
appeal and this will cost at least two or three more
weeks.
\Vhen the litigation is resolved, there are indications
the issue may be stalled by some members of the Orange
County Board of Supervisors or by the Local Agency
Formation Commission.
While there has been some confusion over their
role from UW point on, it does appear some supervisors
will at least try to reduce the boundaries of the city as a
means of getting the issue back to the LAFC.
\Vilh a new makeup now on that agency, anything
could happen to the fate of the city then.
Some interpretations of state law say that the board
can do nothing more than formalJy schedule an election,
but Supervisor Ronald E. Caspers of the Fifth Distrlct
has, in the past, said he thin ks it has more authority
than that.
There is no just cause for further delay. Cityhood
supporters have met their legal obligations, and residents
are literally beggilig for self-government.
Much more delay would force cityhood backers to
ask the vote be put off until late next summer; the cost
savings to be realized by starting the city in the early
months of a fiscal year are too great to ignore, since the
county would provide most services at no extra charge
through the following June 30.
'
·"NOIJJ HE:.Q{S MV ?LAN ... ''•
N
Their Tony
On Schedule
With Didos
Party Time in Kenya
You can depend on lt, once a year Lord
Snowdon stages .a cutup which has the old
buckos in the London club.s shaking their
heads.
You recall Snowdon, whose nan1e is
Tony Something-or-Other. is the husband
of Princess J\1ar·
garet. and is a pho-
tographer of some
rtpute. You don't see
many of his pictures,
but if you catch the
London garden
ft parties regularly ' v you·u always be
.,\stumbling over
Tony, and probably
I.he Princess. too. There have bun ru·
mors they don't get along, but it must be
a eanard, because they're always at the
same bashes. 'Iliey were made for each
<>ther, perhaps deserve each other.
SO IT SEEMS they altended a Mayfair
garden party thrown by a millionaire,
and all the lords and 1adies and lhe
mere rich were there, amoog them the
' ~. t' ... ,. lftoyce Brier
. , \
" !
beautHul Countess Westmoreland. The
Countess was dancing with a gentleman
named Peter Caza.let, when Snowdon tap-
ped him and tried to cut in.
"This is not America ," snapped ~Ir.
Cazalet, referring lo Tony's frequent
\'isits to New York. where lhey do gauche
things, like lapping people at dances.
You may remember that Lady Chat·
terly's Lover was the gamekeeper at the
Chatlerly estate, and prelly gauche
himself. But times have ehanged,
because Mr. Cazalet is a horse trainer for
Queen Elizabeth, and here he is dancing
with countesses and the like at the same
party with Tony and the Princess.
Anyway, Lord Snowdon was in a snit,
10 he picked up a ready glass of white
wine and doused Mr. Cazalet. Apparently
the horse trainer didn't even loss a curry·
comb at Lord Snowdon, but he did have
the gall to walk by Snowdon's: table a few
minutes later. Whereupon, Lord Snowdon
seized a glass of red wine and drenched
Mr. Cua.let, and that's really sticky stuff.
OF COURSE, everybody WU paralyud
and couldn't talk after tha t. Reporters
braced Snowdon, and no dice. Then they
asked Buckingham Palace, which is
always being asked such questions, 11nd
has never answered yet. Reporters
haven't won one of those since George IV
took Mrs. Fitzherbert to mistreas.
But the reporters did see Mr. Caz.a lers son, Victor, and he confirmed the slory,
and with dignity said he had been told his
father was .. the perfect gentleman." Thi!'!
wu heartening, since gentlemanly horse
trainers dri pping with wine l<Jssed by
spouses of Princesses are comparatively
ran in our day. Be damn sure Chat.-
terty's gameket.per would have clobbertd
milord.
TifE DENSE AIR or embarrassment
wbfch iuf!U5el tHe Buckingham Palace
people every time one <>f these con·
tietemps occurs b nzyateriou,, becaust;
the people dote on thtm. They think all
the better or the Buckingham folk for
!iuch hanky-panky, proving royally is
still alive and fun-loving, like the least <>f
"'· Think how It would have cleared the air
had some Pa.lace factolwn told the
rtporters:: .. RISflt, you chaps are on.
There was a bit of a brawl involving Tony
Watsisname, husband of the Princess,
who took exception to some gentleman's
mention of AmeriCa. ind let him have a
glRM of the bubbly down his !hirtfront. A
jolly mesti. wot, but Amu.,lng."
Diplomat Loses Diplomacy
WASHINGTON -The r aucous
behavior of a top American diplomat dur·
ing Vice President Agnew's recent visit
to Kenya has created a behind·the-scenes
uproar.
The errant diplo.
mat is AID admin·
istrator in Kenya,
Bert M. T<>llefson,
Jr., 41, an ex-com
lobbyist and Repub-
lican politico from
South Dakota. Hi5
antics are colorful-
ly detailed in a ser·
ies of confidential
State Department te.Jegrams.
The American Ambassador to Kenya,
Robinson 1fcllvaine. wa s so outraged
that ,hf: rlred off lhe blistering "eyes
only" wires to Tollefson's boss, John A.
Hannah. head of the Agency for Interna-
tional Development. We have obtained
· copies of Mcllvainc's missives.
HI REGRET lo inform you," McTlvaine
wrote in one cable, "that Bert Tollefson
blotted his copy book (diplomatic jargon
for 'fouled up') so badly during the Vice
President's visit as to raise serious ques·
lion as to his suitability for i;ervice
abroad. Indeed you may be hearing from
the Vlce Prtsident directly on the matter.
"The problem started with Bert's well·
known pushiness and general lack of
sensitivity and culminated in his getting
sloshed at Treetops (a fancy lodge on the
,, Mcilvaine said.
• ' r· . , .
edge of the jungle I. making passes at the
Vice President's secretary and trying to
drag her d o w n the steps to meet an
elephant at ground level , , . "
THE SEQUENCE of events that led up
to this climax, wrote Mellvaine. began
when Tollefson was officially in formed
that "no Americans were invited lo join
lhe Vice President's group at Treetops.
(Tollefson) came anyhow on hi5 own and
canvassed Kenyans for a bed in one of
their rooms. In the end he talked some-
one out of a room to himself ... ''
In the course of the evening, McUvaiIJe
related, Tollefson ''re peatedl y bi-
lerrupted'' Kenyan officials who "were
explaining animals" to the Vice Presi-
dent. "The owner of Treetops," the
Ambassador wrote, "at one point asked
me, 'Who is that jackass?' -pointing to
Bert.
"The incident with the Vice Presidenrs
secrttary:' continued Mcllvaine, "look
pla~ in the small hours of the morning.
According lo her it took all her strength
to get away from him. ·r
EVEN KENYAN Ambassador to the
U.S. Leonard Kibinge, who w~ there,
commented on 'rollefson's "condition,"
"The next morning, Bert slept through
the departure of 0900 and when he did
awake took the remaining Secret Service
car to Nyeri leaving thern stranded and
furious .• , A car had lo be sent the 100
miles · up to Nyeri lo bring Bert back ...
The V.'hole affair, Mcltvaine coilcluded.
had substan tiated his misgivings · about
Tollefson's performance during his thret.
months as head of the AID program in
Kenya.
''I can, of course. live with lhe situation
buL w1ll have to spend a lot of time ridlng
herd and wonder whether all that effort
is warranted in support or ·Peter's Prin·
ciple.'" (The Peter Principle is a tongue-
in-cheek U>etr;Y wpich hokl,o t ~a t
everyone eventually rises to hii'own level
of incompetence. l
When asked about the incident, AID
Administrator Hannah refused comment
except to call Tollefson "a very reprec-
lable fellow '' and to inquire where we ob-
tained the confidentiaJ cables. They had
come lo him "highly restricted. hand-car-
ried and sealed," he huffed to my
associate Joseph Spear.
Reached in Nairobi, Tollerson denied
the Ambassador's charges and said they
were based on a complete misun.
derstanding. "I had only two drinks," ht
said, and took the President's secretary
to meet the elephant "at her request,"
He blamed the imbroglio on unnamed
"Democratic holdovers" in the Foreign
Service:.
Lawn Order Wins the War
Once upon a lime in the country called
Wonderluland. t.he people worshiped
twin gods. One they called Law. Tht
other they called Order.
As the years pass·
ed lhe people came
lo think of the two
gods as one god,
whom they referred
lo in their daily de-
votions as "Lawn
Order."
ll was from this
great god , Lawn Or·
der, they believed ,
that aJJ blessings flowed-blessings 1Uch
as freedom, justice, the pursuit of hap.
pine!.! and a soaring gross national pro-
duct.
So the people or Wonderfuland dwelt
happily and prospE-rou:i;ly under the pro-
.-----B11 Geerge --~
Dear George :
I have beard that Southemen
are polite, TriMen are im·
aglna tive, and ne'W!pllpennen are
very literate. I have just met this
Southerner who is a newapaperman
of Jrish descent. Don't you think be
~ a sood matrimonial risk?
HOPEFUL
Dear Hopeful :
Don't makt a move~ The
~mergency heliC{lpler is on the
way! (We sent a SL Bem~rd on the
la.st cue like this:, and the Southern
Irish new~rman kept him oa a
two-wtek blnseJ .
Dear Gf'orgr :
If a dog is a mRn's best fr1tnd ,
who is a dog's best friend!
C.R.
Dear C. R.:
It'~ never v.·1se to date a marritd
~1lTTUln, ~Yeah. I know, but a guy
• .v.•ho would write a question like
TllAT needs to be C1:1nfused -it
wll l Rive h.i1n something 10 think
al>ou!J.
I I
tection of Lawn Order. But then came
The Turbulent Times.
THE TURBULENT Times were very
turbulent Tboae who were yoWtg: irew
angry with those who wen old, because
the old kept sending them off to fisht for
causes the).• didn't believe In.
Those whose skin wu black or brown
or yeJlow or reel grew angry at those
whose 1kin was white, because they
didn 't have as moch fl'f!tdom. justice,
happiness or gross naUonal products.
So there were sit-ins and lie-ins and ))e..
lns. And marches and strikes and
demonstrations. And riots and rock
throwing and •••
A.ND THOSE who were older and
whiter and more well-off grew uneasier
and uneasier. The uneasier they grew,
the more devoutly they worshiped Lawn
Order, hoping the great god would
preserve their freedom, jualic.e, hfp-
piness and gross national products.
And the more they worshiped, the
angrier they grew at those who c:om·
milted oUenses against Lawn Order -
like the blacks, the browns. the yeUows,
the reds Ind the young. "At all costs, wt
most PTft,Serft Lawn Order !" thundered
The Leaders of Wonderfuland (who were
1111 older and whiter and more well-off).
So when the blacks delayed their Uials:
by cosily leg.al maneuverlngs and ap-
peals, The Leaders frowned and 11ald.
"This destroys respect for Ulwn Order."
And the people certainly 11gree<1.
And when the Young g11thered in lhe
country's capital to protest 1 war, The
Lesiders arrested every young person in
sight -whether they were doing
anything Illegal or not. "It's the on ly way
to maintain Lawn Order," lhey said. And
the pooplc CerUl inly agreer!.
SO IT WENT. Eventually, of course, as
the times grew more turbulent, a new
Leader emerged who was more devoted
to Lawn Order than anybody 11nywhe1t.
To restore respect for Lawn Order, ht
did away with costly, disorderly trials. To
maintain Lawn Order. he arrested
everyone with disorderly hair, disor·
derly clothes, disorder!.y ideas or non·
wh ite skin.
To increase Worship of Lawn Order. he
put everyone in orderly unifonns, housed
them in orderly barracks, filled their
heads with orderly thoughts and required
them to mow the grass twice a week.
Never in history bad the worship or
Lawn Order flourished so. And yet, oddly
enough, the people of Wondel'fuland
didn·t seem to be enjoying the blessing~
of frffdom, jui;tice and happiness Lhat
Lawn Order bestowed.
But they did have lots of gross national
products. Not to mention the mosl order-
ly lawns the world has ever seen.
MORAL: You can worship Law. And
you can worship Order. BuL sometimes,
you 've got to choose.
----Wednesday, July 28. 1971
TM t ditorial page of tfll!! Dailt1
Pilot seek.t to inform and .stim-
ulate readers by prestnt,ng this
mw1paper'.s ophdoru and com.
mcnt.arf' O'n topics of interest
Cittd 110111/ieanct, by providi no a
forum for Ute t:iprtssion of
our readers' opinions, and bt1
presenting the" divern vi~
polnu <>j informtd obstrvers
and tp0kt~n on topk.s of the .iav.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
. . • .. 1'11r----
Uosta Mesa
EDITION
* . VOL M, NO. 179, 5 SECTIONS, 74 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,' CA!'./FoRl'lfA.
•
I
N.T. Stoel@,;.
TEN 'OENfS ... . . .
"
Radar Malfunction Charged Ill Air Collision·
.S,..lal to !be DAJL Y' PILOT
PASADENA -Tu.timony of radar
m:alfunclions in ~ planec and vWial
flying by landmarks below one of the
1vorlds busiest a~rial crossroads came
loi:lay at.hear• into a trqic miJitary-
commerclaJ jet p:jWsion.
The June I inddent that sent a Hughes
Air We st apir11J~·1s.noo feet do1tn into
!he Sap Gabriel Mountains killed 50
penonsi o0ne the F4 Phantom.'• pilot,
from El Toro MarJne Corps Air station.
·t
COMFORTED BY F/.TH.R
K•vln Dye It Afe
Violence Report
In Costa Mesa
Hits All Bases
Repori., el llrSOn, auault, domestic
disp ute and finally 8 suicide allempt gent
Costa Mesa police to the same Shalimar
Drive addre.s! in a 24-hour period ending
Tuesday.
' A 2:2-year-old ute shop employ• w;i.s
relieved of 111 bu tcher knife ~ held
against his sltl ma ch. after :!lashing . his
left wrist. "'hen police arrived the final
Orn e.
They said force was required to enter
the bathroom where he w;i.~ barricaded,
after returning bome to find his girlfriend
bad left him.
He had just been released from jail on
bail. charged with as.~ault and battery
against 111 17-year-old molhe.r, who co"!'·
plained of being beaten late Monday 1n
lhf' same bathroom.
~le was re-arrested as a danger tn
himself And booked into Orange County
:Pt1edical Center for 72 hours' psychiatric
observation.
InvestigalOrt ~ere unt'trlain if the
111uspect's g\Jllfriflnd au!fered more than
bruists after thd alle11ed beatina, due le
problems in obtalning medlc&J lreaUnent.
She could not be examined at a :U.hour
medical clinic without having X-rays first
under its policy and was turned down at
Coslll Mesa Memorial Hoepltal, IC•
confing to po\i(:e.
: They said since she is a minor -she
~will be 18 Sunday -IU'kt l!'t also a weUare
~ recipient the l\Dspilal deCHoect te provide
emergency tr4atment,
The keep-lHe·peace call came when
Patrolman derry Kochendorfer waa
dh1p11tched lo !tale her beck to rebiev•
her baby at lPe apartment following the
&Jleged aa11eult.
She hid at first claimed ahe was at·
ta.eked by a irould·be rapist :while walk·
ln1 her dog. according to ln•°estig1ton.
but later chan1ed the story, t1amJng her
boyfriend. 1'le anon cue wp unrelated, involving
a I-year.old boy wbo 1lle1edly started a
srau fire with Hreworkl.
Fleet of Co ncordes
LONDON 1UPI) -The British Aircraft
C<><J>. (BACJ pr<dlct.d ru..day lh•l
within eiAht years 11 le1u1l 150 Concorde
supe.nonic jet tran8 pnrh fmJ wlll be In
1e:rvlce 11J over the: world.
ntt vicli.ms included a smaU brother
.11.nd alst.er from San Clemente en route
for a summer vacation with their father,
plus an easterner M.aded hon1e from a
\'isit in Costa Mesa.
Sole survivor of the accident which il'i
being probed in three days of National
Transportation Safety Board hearings at
the Pasadena Hilton hole\ was the Marine
jet's radar intercept officer.
During mid·moming testimooy. Isl LL
Christopher E. Schiess, 24, of El Toro,
said pUol error wu: probably to blame.
He did not suggest wh.ich pilot, Lt .
.James R. Phllllps, 21, of El Toro, or the
Hughes Air West DC9 captain.
Initial witnesses said they saw the Air
West plane carrying 44 passengers and
crew of five spiral lazily into an almost·
Inaccessible mountain can}'.Pn leaving a
trail 'of smoke and flame.
Little new was added in the way of ey~
witness testimony and it will be months
before the NTSB panel issues a finding on
lhe definite or probable cause of the
crash.
Jeff Wiltington, 15. of Duarte, ltatified
he r;aw the jet fighter en route from
Nevada to F.I Toro MCAS engage in
acrobatics just before the crash.
Rad1rman Schiess. who was able to
parachute. denied this. saying hiJ pilot
made 1 JOO.degree roll for addrd air traf·
fie visibility several minutes prior to Im·
pact.
He said he saw the jetliner looming out
Boy Found Safe
Retarded Youth Missing; for 11 Days
...
CASPER. Wyo. (U PI l -Searchers and
tracking dogs today found S.year-old
Kevin Dye, a mentally retarded epileptic
boy missing for 11 days on 8.485-foot
Casper Mountain. scratched and dii1.cd
but alive and well at the bottom of a
wi\dernes.i; canyon.
"He is alive and appears well." said
Natrona County Sheriff Bill Esle!.
A member of a Colorado Alpine Search
Team spotted Kevin three hours after
dawn in a rugged area of "\ols of brush,
hE'avy timber and occasionaJ cliffs" near
the middle fork ot the Elk Horn Creek.
Since the boy had been missing, he had
been spotted several times but ran away
from searchers. apparently from fright
or because he was playing a boy's game
of hide-and·seek.
··He probably enjoyed the freedom ,"
said Richard McDaugall, m i s s i o n
coordinator of the search.
Kevin was lifled from the canyon in a
tiller pulled by ropes and taken to Wyoba
Baptist Church camp on the mountain fo r
treatment. Hi! father. Philip Dyt1 , a
Casper accountant, and bi! pretty mother
rushed to his side.
When found, the lad was dressed in the
same blue polo shlrt, short and tennis
shnes he wore when he wandered away
from his parents on an outing July 18.
1·emperatures dipped to near freezing at
night during the search but it was about
(See BOY, Page z ~
Apollo Leaves Trouble . Republicans
Label Trip
'A Betrayal' Behind, Zips for Moon
SPACE CENTt.'"R. Houston (t.;Pl l -
Their troublei; behind, Apollo 15·s
.estronlluts closed in calmly and ac-
curately on the moon toda y with
everything clear for a f'riday landing at
the foot of i;ome of the highest tuna..r
mountains.
"The moon's gelling bigger out the
window," reported Alfred M. Worden a1
the spacecraft was 75,SOO milell from il.
This was the last easy dl!y for Worden,
David R. Scott .and J11mes B. Irwin
before they begin A record 11ix day~ nf
moon activity. Their &chedule \\'as light
and ground controllers let them sleep an
extra hour, awakening them at J0 ·40 .-i.m.
EDT.
"We certainly did have a good night'!
1leep," Worden reported.
A short circuit that cast doubt nn
man·11 most ambitious lunar expedition
had been overcome Tuesday and a
preliminary chC<'k indicated that the lan-
ding !thip Falcoo was ready.
The landing &ite is al the ba.<1E' of the
Apenn ine Mountfl.ins ranging 10.000 feet
and higher, and al110 near a gorge which
dips I.000 fl'et down .
Glynn S. Lunney, fiight directnr nn the
ground. reported al a midmorning brief-
ing : "The statu.~ of the mission i~ that
we're on schedule. the trajectory is very
close to normal, the performance nf the
gystems is now very close to normal "
Scolt and Irwin checked the Falcon latP
Tuesday and plan to inspect it again
tonight.
They will try to clean up remaining bit11
()f glass from an instrument cover !hey
found shattered. LuMey said r:ontro\lerll
wanted the astronaut.8 to make certain nG
floating glau particle.II interfered wif.h
cabin equipment, particuJar\y hatch
seal!.
"We're 1oinJ to nm the cabin fan for
I
i
l
J l
about 15 minute5 and try to catch what we
can in the filter ," LuMey said.
The S44S..million mission of Apollo 15 is
the most demanding ever assigned to an
American space crew, Scott and lr"•1n
will .!lpend more time on the moon, 1tay
out on the surface longer, cover morf'!
terrain and brini;: back more sample~
th:in their predE'Ce.~sorl'I . Worden will
CJrbit the moon longer than anyone and
tnnduct the first truly w or k 1 n g
spare"·alk.
Thi' astronauts Tuesday ended their Sf'·
cond day 1n space a!i ii :5'larled -trouble
shnotinp; an electric:il prnb!em that I.ti~·
J!:Crcd an alarm signal in the command
module cabin.
They found a ci rcuit breakE:r ror part nr
the cabin lighting had opened because nr
an 11pparent circuit fault, bul Flight Di·
rector Milton Windler reported the trouble
was minor and could be wor~ed around.
"Other than that, I guess we 're o~
(llperations) normal, going to the moon
and plAnning on goir1g to Hadley (the lan-
(See APOU.O, P11e ZJ
Nixon'.!\ proposed China trip ha5 been
lerrned a "betr1yal " by Orange County
Republicans who say they worked to get
him elected in 1988 but will "rethink"
their support of the Oran1e County native
ln 11172.
The board or the fiOO-rnember Orange
County Chapter of tbe Ca Ii r or n I a
Republican Assembly, by an 11--3 vote,
Monday 11dopted a resolution censuring
Nixnn 's decision to go tc Communist
China.
The CRA is made up of precinct
workers who took credit for the 132,39~
vole plurality Nixon received in the eoun·
ty in the 19611 Presidential election.
The criticism by conserv a tiv e
Republicans to Nixon's diplomatic moves
h:is not been echoed by official party
leadership in the county, according to
Tom Roger11 or Newport Beach, chairman
of the county GOP centra.l commllttt.
Ro~ers 5aid, "My own per!'nnal opininn
rcnects lhal of C.overnor Reagan and
Senator Barrv C.oldwater in supporting
thP President."
The CRA resolution charges that Nixo n
hi1s betrayed the trust or those who work·
t!d for him because of hil'I "reputation ..ill
an un~ailing anti-communist and anti·
MC"ialL~t."
The resolution said, ''President Nixon
degraded and defiled the reputation and
pnwer of the U.S. and it11 Constitution by
hi:i; announced trip t.o visit the atheistic,
communist dictatorship of Mao Tse-tung
who has murdered tens of millions or
Chinese and supplied anns and troops to
kill Americans in both Korea and Viel·
nam.
"Republican precinct volunteers and
donors have become appalled and
disgusted at lhe manner In which Nixon
has betrayed his 1968 campaign pledges
and platlorm, not only in foreign policy ...
but also involving his promised rejection
/See BE:l'RAYAL, P•re I)
Fiddle Riddle Solved?
Missing Newport 'S tradivarius' Raises Questions
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of -DellY ..... t lt•ll
A nils.sing snlique violin alleged to be a
famed StradivArha ha& been found rat·
tllng ll'OOnd in a realty saleswGman 's
ca r, Jeadlng Newport Beach police tc
ck>se their Intriguing Fiddle Riddle Case.
Despite conclu!lion of the theft In·
vestipUon on a harmonious note, more
questions have bee:n raised than
answered .
111-it indeed a Stradivarius, originating
up to onf! and a half centurit'8 ago ln the
ltalian violin capital of Cremona~
Ban11:er .Tohn Kenner. formerly of 3111
Driftwood Road. Corona del Mar. told Qf.
ficer Dougl11 Oein Mond11y thl'lt it i! 1
Stradivarius Indeed, with 11 $1 .000 value
Only there is a difference Mtwetn a
Stradivariu11 and 11 StradlvM'i.
Kenner sold hls home recently 11nlf
moved to S11n!.a Montca. lnlPnding tn
relurn for lhe alleged Stradivarlua. which
~-----
Is properly known as a Stradivari If ge.
nulne.
And it's headline new1 round the globe
wheo one of the MO lo'i.in,ly built by
Antonio Stradivari , wtl{ld1ed· In 1783.
chahgc11 hands . wltb • $50,000 to $250,000
pritt tag.
ExpertJ in the UC Irvine muik: depart·
ment said today all genuine Slradivari in·
itroments lmGwn to ht ulstent are
c11talogued by owner, value and location.
But quality violins nearly duplicating a
Stradivari tone he.ve been prod\lotd down
through the years by dbLAnt cousins:, u
well as outright phonies made by
unscrupulous arti.!ans.
Music authorities 1t UCI sakl Sli;::oor
Stradivar.i also dated hts vlolin1
'pl'eCise\y by year.
Detective Charle5 Wilkinson Tueyh1y
altemoon sel about AOme determined
11leuthing based on 1 tlp I.hit 10me ol
Kenner'! b<'longlng.~ had been dellvf!red
to former neighbor and ex-city coun·
cllman Dee: Cook at his llquor store.
Cool -who8e municipal orchestrations
occasionally bJt a sour note with con·
stltuenll -kept the lterM for KenAer,
but never 111w the principal inaredient
Jn the riddle of the flddle.
Sleuthine around, DetecUve Wilkinson
contacted the realty aa1t1man, who con·
finned delivery of the items to Johnnie'•
Uquor ·Store.
The unidentified woman -aht w1i1
.somewhat embarrassed -denied fiddling
IVOUJ1d with the mlnlnj a I I e g e d
Stradlvarlus.
''She 1aJd she would ao check her car
trunk. however, and there it was," 111ys
De:teellve Wilkinson.
Investigators 1ald the realty u.leslady'1
husband is a viollni~t and declared-even
Jn today's U.S. economy-dial the bank·
tr'1 •1.000 estimate or the value ol a 150·
)'ear~ld violin it too low, whether It ii
a Stradivari or n()t.
I ·--·. >: ~-·~.:....:
of the ri&ht side of the canopy seconds
be.lore impact with I.he Phantom, whlcb
suffered several m~banlcal defeda.
"Watch it Rich!' be told of shouting tc
Lt. Phillips, a veteran CJf about one year 's
fl ying experience.
'Mle jeUiner lhen collided with the
Phantom's rear tail portion, he teitified.
adding he saw it make no evasive
mRneuver.
Killed wllh the olher passengers were
J.~icbael Potter, 7, and his sister JW!e, I,
' daµghters of Mrs. Sandra Potter,,tf''118
Calle Puente ln San Clemente.
YtderaJ investigators ·an intrf,(md
with 11 mystery radar transponder .witt
signaJ monitored in P a l m d a.1 ~
simultaneously with the jet's cqllislon.:
the Phantom·s tran11ponder was Out ol
tirder -the lieutenanUI were flyiDr ~ •l
IS,000 !eel on visual rule& dUe to , -a
maUunclioning Q.l'.ygen system-l!IMi ~
jetliner tr~sponder was &]30 inlperati~
',.,;,
DAILY '°ILOT''ltd:,i..
JOAN HOWLIND, 7, BOUNCES, JUMPS AND CATCH!$
At College Park School, Tucher T•rry (left) Builds Confidence
College Pru·k Sessions
Put Stude1~ts 'it1 Shape'
By GEORGE LEIDAL
OI ll't<I DeN1 ... lltl 1l1ff
Summer clar;su 1t Collegt Park
Elementary School, at least fGr 51
you ngsters In grades one to four. me.ans
running. jumping, hula-hooping and boun·
ctng balls.
Yet.' the three ch1sses offered mornings
during the five week sum mer session are
mostly business and not pla y.
The student.s, representing nearly al! of
the district's elementary schools, are tak-
ing the summer claBs to improve their
physical &kills a11 well as their visual
San Clementean
Joins Fray In
Freeway Fuss
A San Clemente 111\y has been found for
Co.ta ·Mesa Councilman Alvin Pinkley'•
8ttack on the Newport Beach freeway
stand.
Last week Pinkley charged that
Newport Beach's word was "worthless,
even won:e than a wooden nickle." dur-
ing a long diatribe on that city's o~
position to the PAcific Coast Freeway.
Thl1 week he received the following let-
ter frnm ..Nelson W. Barcus, 210 Monterey
Arve., San Clemente: ,
''.Dear Sir: YQu a.rt ~ rtabt abou't
Ne\Vpoll Beich .. Are you wlllil!k to •ll.I·
1~t ti apedal license pJate for Newport
Beach?' Something like No No Niwport.
C~a wl.th lhts.ll~nse would m>t be alloW·
td on any fretw1y."
·Mesa Antique Dealer
Loses Oaken Tables
A Coeta Meo antique dealer returned
from Yuma. Ariz.. Mondiiy ttl learn
lhlevea h11d stclen two old oaken ' llbleii
worth '240 from hl1 ouldoor dlAplay area.
Jack R.. Chrlltensen, owner of
Olrl1tensen EnterpriMM, 2272 Newport
Blvd , said an employe told of .eelng two
111usplcious charact•a browsing lhotfly
·before the :tabtl!1 -varu..hed.
..
perception, teacherit Bob Miller and ·Trm
Terry contend .
An array of unusual athletic equipment
daily greets the young11t.er1 who have
been recommended to the pro&ram by
their regular school year teacherJ.
The equipment is unus.ual 'in ',that it' is
spec:ifical!y geared to he.lpin&: the
youngsters improve their balince, mutcle.
coordination and ability to accOmpll!h
movements while looking in a mirror.
Old tires, hula hoops and crepe pa£'.
streamers merge with more famt r
gym equipment such as tumbling nia ,
trampolines and balance walk boardi!.
The tires offer a child-size "horse" fot
straddle jumping. The hula hoop when
coupled wllh an up and down t!ounclng
mo~ion on a bounce board provides a
tol.3'1 body Challenge thet·outltrtpa Ute old
pat·the-bead and r.ulrt!Je.tummy routine.
A simple· ball suspended from a strina:
can challenge a child's yjaual·mU!ICUlat
coordination. ·Terry pct~, when he praeo
ticcs bouncing the ball away from 1Wn
(Su PHYSICAL, Pq:e ll
0l'ange
Weadler
Cloudy sides predicted for today
and Thursdai. clearlna In a..
afternoon& , to a w~ IUD, ·brn.c·
Ing wllh it temperatures ol arOund
72 at the coast, 86 inland. Lon ti>
night in the ll0'1.
INSmE TODAY
' Su.pervisOr1 hao1 ffiitia.tta «
• pr'ogrom wh,ch. could. erutc
1.000 nt&o jobs for the eounit1
ooucrnme.nt ot111 th.I ne:n JI
month&. See atorJI, Pao• 10.
'"''"' 21 c • ....,,... •
CMdlhlt Ull ' Cl..inM ., .... ~le:• " DM!fl ,..tic•• n
l.itMl•I l'IM • l•lrlll_...t .. ,,
l'lll•OW.• IT "-•-" Jo•" L•lllNn .)t Mel',.. \.JftllMt I I
"""' .. fltrvM •
.... ,
-····~
'
c
; I o a Ok UC
E•~~~~:
~·Striking Railway
.~
Unions Nix Talks
. WASlllNGTON (UPIJ -Th• Uruted ~uea Un.iGti, declarin& "the ~15 ·an down and tht: bet& are made." ~ rtieeted 1 1ovemment request for tilDdint · arbitraUOn tJf a dispute tl!.1t hu ~ui-down 20 percent of the nation's
~~ •YllA>l!l.
·And the liTU. whose members ha ve
•truck four major carriers. went ahead
with Jllam to v:tend the strike to si:r Jitote. railroads P'riday and five others ""'· •. • • ~ ,.jection of the arbitraUoo offer Labor Secrttary JJ.Iftts O. Hodgaon
ay treatly lnertased tbt: likelihoOd
Nixon Administration \Jt'Ould ~ ccn-
aP"eS•kln&.I action kl ef\d the walkout,
:ihase ect!onomk: aide tffects were mouo--Aac. Ne1otiatioiu between the tmJ i:nd ;laiir&ad. mat1qement collapsed Monday
j6: bargainers failed to resolve a Jq.
~ dispute over work rules.
·: UTU President Charles Luna. ln rt-
~tinc the arbitration offt:r, accused the
~i:ron admin.i11traUon of btinJ: "a slave of ~anq:ement." :t. "It ls very distrtssin& to find lite 4ficrttuy of ,labor comin& alone at this
l!Dlnt with the mana,-1ment line and tell-
~ JU Uwt strikes hurt," Luna said. ''We ~ bow that strikes hurt. They hurt us ..
•
:Vohn Wayne Sues . .
l>ver TV Sak -. •
Df 'True Grit' .• • : LOS ANGl':LES (UPI) -John Wayne
f.!ed :ParllJltJunt Pictures Corp. for SL 7
tnfilJoo Tuesday in a dl1p1.1te over the We r. the AcadMty Award winnln1 film
.. True Grit'' to a televi!ion network.
worst of all.
"gut collective bar&.tinlna can never
wl)rk as loog as govemmt:nt rtmains a
slave of management and interferes
v.·hen oolleclive bargalnina Is beginning to
succeed."
Becaust: the ftdt:ral courts had ap--
proved selective strikes in tht: railroad
industry, Luna said , "the chips are down
and the bets are made ."' lit: \\'amed col-
lective bargaining in the lnduslry could
not survive ~Con s keeps interfering
in rail labor es.
Congressional egi! lion already has
been used twice during the past year to
halt rail walkouts .
The.re was · no imm~iate re!iponse to
Hodgson 's proposal from management.
Hodgson u.id in telegrams to Lun11 and
Chairman John P. Hiltz of the National
Rail..,,.ay Labor Conference, th e
baraaining agency for the c11irr1t:rs. that
it was "imperative th.1t extraordinary
steps be taken to resolve the dispute th11t
ha!i caused thest: severe dislocations ."
The Labor Secretary said the ad-
ministration supports free C(l[]ect.Jve
bargainine and the right or unions to
strike but added the administration was
ooncemed that the "rights be exercised
wtth due regard for the public Interest.''
Carl E. Bape, president of the Na·
tional Coal Assocl11tion. told President
Nixon in a Jetter Tuesday there should be
"immediate government act.ion" to halt
the strike "lo protect the n11tional health
and welfare."
Ford Motor Co. said today It would be
forced to shut down several plants and
lay off thousands of workers if the
railroad strike does not end r.oon.
Accident Victim
Holly W. Boots
Senices Slated
.. Wayne contended Paramount should liot have a.geed with American Bl"t)lld·
ft.tin< Ccrp. to aell the movie Jn the fall
&f 11169 because Wayne "stood a Jood
thence" of wiMln1 the best actor award liter ln the year, maklnt the film more A Costa Mesa man killed utan autll ae-
p'a.Juable. cident Monday In Torrance will be buried
'The suit 11id "True Gril" had not com-Thursday at Fort Rostcrans Memorial
j,Ieted lta theatric&! run at the time of the Park. Pt. Loma. ~nt, and. that theater proceedl Funeral service! for Holly W. "Bill" ~d have indicated lhe popularity of Boots. 53. of 1692 Madaga,,,car St .. will be
~e film and Increased its worth. held at 11 a.m., Thursday in Pacific View
l ABC purchased the fUm as part of a Cha~!, Corona del Mar. Burial wiU
•1~ million packaae of 25 motion picture!. follow.
:Wayne, wM won an O&car for best acU!r Mr. Boots was killed in a four -car chain
1or hil ~ante In the filrii al!t. collision on Crewhaw Boulevard. Officers :rwnil" as defend&nti Hal B. W~ and' from the Ca!ilomla Highway Patrol said
:Joupb Hadh, C6-predUcers of tbt Nm. Boot.!!' car WaJ headed southbound on
: .t , ·.~-pl Cren.sha" Bouleve.rd when it was . . ~tn~J· '-'i-' · f~,\.i: broa~ by,a~o~ car whlch ran a :E ~.., · 1R: l~'' 1 ·_r~ li&hton Compt't~oule~rd.
I , '. ', , ~ ew Both cars ric~ !ntCI-othtt Clr11
, t 1 • r.~ · · 1 but no one else w1.1J serinusly in}ured. :s l { ·R • · • · ' Mr. Boota was a zone manager for : e , Of euruon Volkawag<n Pocil;, Di•tributoro in Los
' • Angeles. He had lived in Orange County
A N for 20 years. He is survived by his wife, t ewporter Clara Md a si!ter. Mrs. Sally Turnt:r of
· Framingham, Mass.
Stories of the sea a11d of World War Il
"will reverberate throoFI the rooms of
the N~ Inn on Jamboree Road
·today throo'&h Saturday.
For the membtrs of the aircraJt car-
rier USS E.nWprile, the most dtCorated
ehip ln U.S. hiskry. are 1athering in
Newport $each for threlt nation al bieD-
ni.al ~llllion.
1 ''We're J"inl to swap old sea stories
Ind tell about the lime: we stood eff the
JapanKe," s1id Clptiln Elias "Benny''
Mott. nMV a Coat.ii Mesi re11ltor who
1erved on tht: ship from .June 1940 lo
October 1943 All a gunnery officer.
Mott suggested Newport ~ .. ch as site
for the reunion. lhe fir st held in Calif-
ornia in 12 yelr!, 11 th e 1969 met>t1ng
in Chicago
-~·
ouN•• co.1.n
DAILY PILOT
OllAHGI COAST .. Ull..lSHll<IG COM ... >l'f
l•~•rt N. w •• J
...... ~ .......... ~W'«
J1ek-l. c ... r.,, Vit& .. __ , ..W ~•1 M-er
n. ..... 1 IC"ee•il
1.itet
TJ.o,,.•1 A. M11r,tlrti ~e M111•el"11 fd•IW
c ... M ... Offk•
JlO W•1t lty Street
M1ili11' Aclclrt11: P.O. I•• IS•O. '2•1•
OtMr Offk"
From Page J
BOY ...
SO dtgrees and sunny v.·hen Kevin was
discovt:red.
.. This is not the most fruslratina:
search l"\•t been on but it is in the top
five," said Chuck Otmorest, held oper.1-
tion commander of the Alpine unit.
The searchers anrl their tracking dogs
had hunted a 30.square-mi!e area of the
mounta in but tod11y "thev just mean-
dered around" in a 10-iquare-mlle area
inside the 11,•ider circle.
In the preda"·n darkness he.fore the boy
v.·as found. li S Army expe.rts used infr11-
red scopes as p11rt of a new slralt:RY to
try tn locate Kevin.
The soldiers search(.>d lhe mountain
through the night . ,o:;purred nn by ne1v
ev1dl"nce foUJld 'ruesda~· that the lad "'as
st.ill al ivP after be ing On the run hke 11n
animal for 11 days.
Four tracking dngs . !hr.tr pav.·s b11t-
tere.d and bloody frnm the rnugh terrain,
were taken out of the search by their
handlers Tuesd1y. Fresh trackina: dogs
~'t:re ordered flov.TI in from Florida. 8uf-
f11lo, N.Y .. and Philadelph ia lo replact
them. before the boy was found
Searcilers found leaves stacked in the
shapes of hearts aod crescents. slones
piled in parallel lines and a ping pong
paddle Tuesday. tt was !he rescue
squid's "m06l solid leads yet" in the
hunt.
From Pn.ge J
BETRAYAL. • •
of guaranteed annu11! incnme, 1>.'hich ht
proposes now under hi s F 3 m i 1 y
Assistance Plan. and his ~upport nf trade
with countries which a:ld and abet I.he
enemy·s war effort& in North V!etn11m. ··
The ''trbiage was simil ar W a
harangue against Nixnn he.Ard recentl y at
the close of 11 meeting or lhe C"ount y
Republican Central C nm m it tee .
Millionaire Newport Beach d!'veloper
George Bmkate. whn Sllid he was the
county 's largt:st individual mn l/ibutor to
Niton'a 1963 c11mapip:n. dlsrarrlf'd a thank
you plaque Imm Nlxon. He s11d hf' v.•as
"ashamed'' of h~v1ng ~upported Nixon
Rep .. John G. Schmilz . !R·Nev.·port
Beach 1 has similarly crltlc1z.ed the Presi-
dent for hi~ proposal lo visi! "'Ith RM
Chinese leaders.
The CRA rl'snlut\r.n co m m ~ n d t rl
Schmitz for his ~klnct on I.ht Nixon trip
And fnr "hi.\ uncom prnmi.\lng loyalty tn
frPrdnrn ·
!, ".,, ·:~·]~""'
"' ..
--· . , : .. r• .. · ., ·t~" ..... ~,,11: .~ . ~ ;:";,>l~'": ;fl"'i;t
•aA• ,..,....,~ • .,...,_. .• -~.-...:....,_'°"_""'
Totirist Trap?
'A nun has been stationed at the door of SL Peter's Basilica by the
Vatican. Her task: Keep out v.•omPn "'hose ga.rb reveals too much
thigh or bosom. It was the first time a v.•oman had been assigned to
rule on hemlines and necklines. Vatican officials felt malt: security
guards "'ere la..x in their value judgments. This "'oman tourist seems
to be finding fau lt v.·ith the nun's determination.
Workers ·Picket Office
Of Pacifi~ Telephone
ln a hold over from the lelepho11e strike.
of two wee.ks ago. members of the
International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workt:r~ today picketed offices of Pacific
Telephone in Or11nge County.
Union spnkesman Jackie (,nlds1 e1n said
the picket line!, which are heing honored
by members of the other telephone
Telephone offi ces there .
"The s!riJce is sanctioned by the AFL-
CTO and we intend to stay out until we
reach 1!11 contract agreement," Miss
Goldstein Added.
un ions. will only last a day at a time. 11~
"\\'e only have 200 members in the Los 'J
Angelts chapter, so ""e pic ke t in one arta t
at a time. Yesterday it was the South ·
Bay area of Los Ange les. today it's ~
Orange County." llhe said. She declined to ;1
name Thursday's target for the pickets. i
GEM TALK
l\fiss Goldstein said the union is still on
strike because they have not reached a
contract agreement v.·1\h Pac i f i c
Telephon e.
"\\'e are an affilia1~ of the AFL.-CIO
and 11.·e are getting lrtmendous response
fro m other affiliate unions. They have all
agr~ not to cross our pJcket lines," i:.he
&aid .
Berau.~e nf the r1ckl"ts ;it !hf' dnzen
Pacific Tt lephone offices 1n the rnunt~",
conditions have returned 10 what they
v.·ere during the height of the strike two
v.·eeks ago.
Informat ion Op!'ralor~ and I o n g
dis t;ince oper<itors have not reported fllr
work and the ir post.! are being manned
by R llkeleton crew of supervisors.
Tht IBEW consi~ts of dirtctory person-
nel. Miss Goldstein said. These. are the
people "'ho set up the phone d irectori~
.11.nd sell the advertisfments for the
yellow pages.
She eirplained that tht: union strength
was much greater in the San Franci.sco
B;iy 11rta and !ht: JBEW h.ts been able to
m1tintain constant pickets of P.1cific
From Page 1
PHYSICAL ...
v.·1th a stick and hilling it agll in bt"fore it
hits him.
The crt:pe streamers. even I.hough they
"·eigh Jess than an ounce, are used 10
develop large mus c le coord\n11 lion.
Students wa ve them 11bout in large
circles. keeping the lit.reamers flowing in
large circles or figures eight.
Toe--ln--heel walks along either the tY:n--
inch or the four-inch surface of a simple
two-by-four board, Improves bal.1n~ and
lt:.11.ches students to use their h.11.nds and
arms to keep from falling.
The msts. just es those used in any
gymnaslics courtt, ktt:p heads. knees
and bottoms from hitting the hardwood
nonr
\\rhen the course ends, this Friday, all
Sl students v.•hl'l range 1n age from f!vt tl'l
lO. "·ill bt retested on their physic.-! skil l.~
to determint how the course may have
ht-Jped them .
\\'hen they return In Uieir ~gu lo11r
schools next fall. m.iny m1y be expec1ed
lo outstrip thelr clasam1tes 1n scboolyird
performance due to 1ummer class
train1nR they've rect:ived.
-
TODAY
by
J. C. HUM!tHlllll
dhi!fr\IJ•$ll\ • JiJOi A I I f
Most Diamond
Losses Are
Preventable
I'd like to have even hall of the
diamonds that are lost from their
settings ... gone forever ! But al.so
I'd like to .see more people take the
.simple precautions "'·hich can pre-
vent the majority of ~uch losses.
~1ost stones lost £rom their set·
tings have given months of fair
1\•arning that they are in such dan-
,(!er; they hsi ve be co n1 e loose,
usually due to v.·orn prongs, and
can remain loose in the setting for
many n1onths before the final los:\
1\•hich occurs so often during some
such activity as housework or re-
creation. And it is exaclly under
these circumstances .•. work or
play, that a diamond llteralJy goes
down the drain or intn the water
with little or no possibility of re-
:overy.
About 90% of such losses could be
prevented if the mountings on your
ie" elry were checked twice a year.
So why not !Ake out the best and
c heRpcst Insurance 11vaiJ able ..•
the security of having us check
ynur mounti ng~ It takes on!y a few
minutes. and lhere ls no charge.
••
-.
From!'.,• I
APOLLO : ..
din, ~lte ).'' WlndJer r@parttd at 1n early
momina bri~ing today .
• • Tbe three Apolllf 15 crewmen ~tired at
l :~a.m. EDT uct·atept~muc:h ol WI
morftlzl(.
Aii>llo 15 was ar1du11l y alowl11g undu
U\e dkree11ing Influence of earth's tug of
gravity.
lt'1 apeed was dropping from 2,750
miles per hour at 12:34 a.m. wbeo lhe
astronauts were 100,SM mile! from \ht
moon, to 2.134 miles per hour at 7:34.p,tn.
when they will be $3 ,464 miles away. t
Apollo 15 y,·ill slow to t,887 mile's A!"
hour and then start to ac~ler1te Th•a.
d11y !"-omlq: under the pull of the ~·
gr11v1ty. •
One other probleni wa s fnund Tuesday
night when Scott and Irwin opentxt the
hatch to the Lunar Module :-and
discovered during a lwo-hour Jru~
that the glass covt:r to • an aJtlineter
somehow had shattered lince launch
Monday morning from Cape Kennedy.
"~e don't have any ideJ .why it broke,"
lrwm said. He estimattit he .11.nd Scott
picked up about 60 percent of the gl11!s
pieces with a piece of tape and the
spacecraft vac:.ium cleaner .11.nd Windler
sa.id tbe remaining glass should be oo
problem. ~-
The meter-normally is sealed under
pressure in• helium. With the glass
broken. It was exposed lo a near vacuum
and then Oiygen when the cabin wa.s
pressurized.
Mission Control Communicator Karl G.
Heinze told the astronauts engineers were
running tests ln see if the change in con·
dltinns would affect the meter.
"It would be interesting to he1tr what
they find oul." Scott said.
Even if the meter fa ils, Windler said,
lhe ast ronauts can read the necessary
d;ila off their computer and their landing
pl;ins would nnt be changed.
Fo rty-nine minu tes of lhf' lunar modul e
inspection "'as televised hack to earth.
Rut the te!ecasl was devoted to the
v.·ork ;it hand and without the hiJink!
snmetime11 seen on earlier fl ights. It was
no! carried on network television .
The lun;ir module check showed that all
lls systems "'ere in ~ood shape including
the cri1ical ba llerie~. landing engine
system , fuel pressurization system and
the crafl's cnntrol ro c kets . Com-
munications between Falccin and earth
v.•ere excellent.
Indians to Perform
At Fashion Island
tllembers frnm fnur Ar izona Indian
tribes will Inv ade Fashion Island in
Newport Beach Thursday where they v.•i\I
perfnrm traditinnal d11nces fnr the public.
Dancers from the 1\p.11.che, P:av11jn,
Papago and Pim11 nations will be
dressed in full costume fnr pt:rformances
1tt noon , !:JO p.m. ;ind J p.m. Camt:ras
may be used at each dance.
Marries Secretly
LA S V~G AS (UPll -Otristinit
Onassis, the daughter of Gre-ek billionaire
Arislotle Onassis, was married secrt:tly
In this gambl ing rellOrt at A lawyer's of·
flee.
GARBENSTANGELERS ENTRY
Rosie Eaquivel, Veronic• Sarmiento
Garbenstangel
Team at Coast
Facing 'Penalty'
A bedraggled Orange Coast College
gar~nstangel team, facing a probable
penalty for "delaying the game," ruefully
<idmitted this morning that OCC ts run-
ni ng a little !ale in completing 11n entry
frJr the Build a Better Garbenat.ana;el
Contest.
For contest detniL(. see special sec-
tio n starting on Page 49.
The team coached by tec.b.noloo
division instructor Bill Abt:rnathy spent
'"half the night welding stuff together" at
the school , he explained today .
But the problem was the garbenstangel
had pups. It is now tv•o garbenslangels,
both of v.·hich the ace men's team ex·
peeled to assemble this afternoon at
South Coast Plaza.
Tuesday afterooorc. both the men 's
team.a~id an ah-girl aggregation coached
by Dick Her.nandei, director o! special
programs at OCC. were to build their
g;irbenstangcls al the shopping center.
The girls sho11.·ed up and a5sembl_ed
their turn· the'· criink ·and· the . wbee:\s
-go • around thing. Rut garbenstan(el
contest officials "''ailed in vain tor the
men ·s team.
This could be lhP da v nf 1he r;re<'lt Con-
frontatkin. The garberista118el team froni:
Golden West College was due to arrive at
the shnppi ng center about 3 o'clock lhil
11flernoon to try to build its better
~arbenstangl"I.
•-~I/tie•. •-dl•I e~r0/!0;•1 0~. Ma11~ro1 ···~·~ ll'IMN&!t e' ~e~"'· ... +~~Te• •~d 11ce~d 1. 81••~'•u 1te1t e111.
M1lt~•ftl brttt lll. W1r.!'rtao111r1 •••••••••• s1ts.
J. L fiumphrieJ Jeuietr:I
1823 NEWPORT BL VD., COSTA MESA
CONVlNIEN1 TllMS
IANKA MEl.ICAJIO-MASTfl. CHAI.GE
r: l. ··-~-· -· .J.L.,~'
2' 'l'U.lS IN SA.Ml LOG.ATION
,HONl l4f.J401
. -
U.S. Trade
Dips T~ld
By Official ..
WASHING TO!' (AP)
Secm.aeyf ~ Comm.ere•~
Maurice H. stans aays im
may be the first year of tbJ•
century the United stat.es bu
been unable lo maintain •
1urplus in Its foreign trade.
"Our ecooom.ic fut u r •
depends an maintaining our
technology," St.ans told the
HCIWle Sc i ence Committee
Tuesday. He said the U.S.
trade suprlus ol exports over
imports, which has been"
declining ln recent years, may
hit zero for the first tlmf: 1lnce
OIJEENIE By Phll lnt1rlalidl
1893. l~~~~~~~:::2~~~~~[j Tne .surplus was $2.7 billion ~
last year, down from rr.1
billion in 1964, Stans said.
The last otticial comment on "I thiJ>k cloga should be lnlned to keel>theiropinlcu
the balance of trade was July ot judgee to t hanaelvea!•
8 when the Commerce Depart·------''--''------------
ment forecast a $500,000
15Ufl>IUS for 1m. It predicted
exports would rise 7 to 8 per·
cent, while lmports increased
13 to 14 pereenL
Stans urged Congress t&
consider stimu l ating
techniolgical advancement to
break the cycle.
"It may well be time,'' he
said, to modify antitrust
regulations so that Industries
can pool resources and make
advances he said are needed.
Although the Nilon ad-
tnlnistration hasn't decided
''whlcb way we want to go,"
Stans said, four options exist:
-Direct federal grants and
loan guarantees for
te chnological deve1opment;
and such Indirect aid u tax
breaks, investment credits and
depreciation allowances.
Officers Alkgedly
Relieved for Racism
DETROIT (UPI) -Frank
W. Render, Deputy Asmtant
Secretary cf Defense for
Equal Opportunities, s a I d
Tuesday at Ie.w: seven of.
IU:en. Including one general,
have been relieved of duty for
violating armed forces civil
* * * UAW Chief
Seeks More
Public Jobs
rights regulations.
Render made the statement
during a news conference
which coincided with the Na-
tional Urban League'1 61st an-
nual COllvention. Render, a
black, held his conference in a
hotel acro&s the street from
the convention stte.
"There are people who wore
st.an, bars, oak leaves and
birds on their ahouJders who
have been· relieved of duty,"
be said.
w~. J1.1l1 28, 1971 DAILY mol' J
M•f Spark Coatrover-v 1
Nixon Eyes Reserve Board Boost ·
a clnaed club and that ooly by
doulllln& Ill lho can ti really
fUnctkli rtllably."
to -the ... "' Ille ..J ' -and antomaUcally .... ldM)
W ASIDNGTON (UPI) -
~tN" ....... _.,
• propooal to clouhle the me of
.tbe Federal Jlf9erve Boord; U wu leeme<l lnday. 'riie ·q· a .~. fl'oln Artbut , F.
gestion, If put b e f o r e . Burns -chairman al the
Omgresa. could touch off a reserve board -for a $20,000
controversy rivaling Preaident a year pay raise. Burn1 cur-
Franklin D. Roosevelt'• at· renUy make. $41,500.
moet tru.atlld economl.c ad.
v!Rr, bu bt<n crJllcaJ .,.. 16-
min!Wstlon pollcy !er mon
111!'1 • ,..... lie bu called
reputedly tor the President to
tab •. tougher •land •pinlt
tnnaUonary wage and pnce m..
creases.
'Ille opoteomao did not
elaborate.
11le Fede-al Reserve,
!<gaily Independent o! lhe ad-
mlnlst:raUon. 1eta the nation'•
baaic money and credit policy.
Ita membera are appoinled by
the President but t b e I r
cverlapping 14-yur terms are
designed to lnsulat. tbem
from day-!OOay polltio.
the aUlbority to aame _....
new membm -It eOldd ~
ger a ccntrowny not mlllte1
the ..,. that !ollow<d Pruh'
dent Franklin D. -t'e
effort to tncreaM the Iba ~
the suprem e Coart_:t
Roootv<lt'• tin ,... roje<Ud
tempt to "pack" the Supreme Bums, lklwever, denied be '"!'be Prqldent bu received
1everaJ rtqUeSta from higti
level economic advben that
he expand membenhip cf the
Federal Reserve Board," aa
administration spokesman
said. '"'Ibere bas b e e n
crttidam that it Ls too much ol
Compromise
On Draft
Said Near
WASHINGTON (UPI)
'Ibere were reports today that
a compromise may be tn the
works to revive the dran,
perhapt; before Co n ire a s
begins a month-long recess
oerl week.
The President's power to
draft men into the service ex-
pired June 30 when the House
and Senate could not agree on
legi.slatioh to extend the draft
for ano~r two years. 'l'he
specific point of disagreement
was over a Senate-backed
amendment which w o u I d
declare it the naticnal policy
to be out cit Indochina nine
month! after the mea.rure
becomes law, provided the u.s: war prisoners were
released before then.
One ment>er of a House-
Sehate conference committee
which b&s bttn trylDg to soJ.ve
the impasse Wd Tuesday the
negotiaton had tentatively
agreed oo a comprcmise. It
would involve changing the
out-in-nine-months amendment
to make It a "sense of the
Congress" expression t h a t
President Nixon 1 h o u l d
negotiate a Vietnam
withdrawal date. in exchange
for a cease-fire and release of
the war prisoners.
had "k>bbied for an increase
in .salary."
The dev<lopment& left no
doubt that the once warm
personal relationship between
Nixon and Bllrtl! bas chllJed.
Bums, at ooe time Nuon'•
alttt opponent< --of trytne to "pack tile ~..-
lo waler down lta conlerf~
maj<rity. If Nizon does ask Ccngreu
Free Real Estate
CAREER NIGHT
Hear how F. M. Tarb1U Co., Inc. said 111> billion dolors In
properties. Liam haw you can achl1v1 unlimited Income.
* Learn all the facts on how to get your license. * Hear special guest speakers and presentations. * Video television tra ining demonstration.
* Meet ou r managerial staff and ask questions. * Learn how our "fast start" program trains you to success. * Discover the inside story how 219 of the Tarbell sales
people won the coveted "Gold Key" sales award given for
selling over $100,000 in home sales in the month.
.)
·' ' l
,
)
'l
' l
J
{
'
M a 1i Found
Tied Up
Inside Tomb
DETROIT (UPI) -United
Auto Workers President
Leonard Woodcock, reerring
ta unemployment u "the
romi.b:y's Dl06t serious pro-
blem,,., bas called for the crea-
tion ol up to a million public
service jobs,
Render initially said fl\ere
were 10 to 12 officers who
were relieved of duty but in a
telephone interview later he
said the figure may have been
seven er less.. "If I'm asked to
produce seven names I pro-
bably couldn't do it," be said.
Render declined to name the,;::;;========;11
WESTWEGO, La. (UPI) -
Police found David A. Melan-
con, 22, tied and gagged and
stuffed in an abov.the-ground
tomb Tuesday in the
Westwego Cemetary. H~ was
alive, but suffering from
shock.
"He was u: white u a
ghost," said policeman
Woodrow Chambert.
Chambert said the man wa.!
robbed and then bound and
deposited in the u p p e r
chamber tom!). W o r km e n
isuspected something w a s
wrong when they saw plastic
flowers covering the (lpening
of the chamber, which was
supposed to be vacant.
They removed the flowers
and found the tomb was not
sealed with bricks and mortar,
but open, with Melancon in-
aide.
Chambert said Melancon
faint.ea every time hf!! at·
tempted to speak to cff:ieers.
He was hospitalized. PoUc.
be.llevt'd he had been in the
tomb since Monday night.
Woodcock, tn an addresa
delivered at the 6lst Annual
Convention of the National
Url>an League Tuwlay, at.o
recommended the fonnation
of a coal.itioh "of the
economically disadvantaged,"
embracing all ract'S and col-
ors, to find mere jobs.
Woodcock did not elaborate
on Otis proposal. However, in
remarks to newsmen following
his. ~ he noted that an
economic coalition already ex.
ists within the Democratl,c
Party, but said It has not
given enough consideration to
the problemJ of blue-collar
workers.
woodcock said during the
past 10 years the Democratic
Party, which the UAW tradi·
tionally gupports, bad moved
away from the recognition of
basic problems such a .s
unemployment
officers. "I don't think it
would serve any u 1 e f u I
purpose," be said.
Render said o[ the cnes he
knew al who were disciplined
~ lowest ranking officer was
a captain -a mililary lawyer
-who was discharged in
Okinawa earlier this year for
refusing to shake bands with a
black officer.
Render said the individual
services also could have taken
action without hUI knowledge.
"'% Ji,,LL ~emons
semi-annual
clearance
sale
WMtcltff plau
I
I
I
I Personalse
•• ,J,I' -......
STARTS TODAY!
I• "" Sovtll CNSI' ~ .. ,. _,left .....
tll1y'1 IUINI,
LICENSED OR UNLICENSED
Don 't Miss This Great Opportunity!
Monday, August 2nd, 8:00 P.M.
Reta il Clerk's Union Bldg .
8530 STANTON AVE. !NEAR. CRESCENTI BUENA PARK
NEAR KNOm BERRY FARM, STANTON & CRESCENT
••
,.
• ,
'
.,
" ~~ ~ F. M. TARBELL CO. . ., , .
FABRICS
JOVTN COAST PLAZA MALL
(C-.1 i.....J
HOU RS: 10 A.M. t9 t :OO P.M.
10 ,..1-11191)
REALTORS
"a network of 39 offices"
• at Mutual ~r)QS
The Big M Is big enough (owr $400,<XXl,IXXl) to pay the nation'•
hlghlll lnterlll on Insured aavings ••. 5% to 8".
But equally Jmportant-cares enough to give you very personal aarvlce.
-
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• DAILY PROT E DITORIAL PAGE
I
Refuge on
Fifth Di.strict Supervisor Ronald E. Caspers appean to be on his way toward getting the federal governme.nL
to designate at least part of Upper Newport Bay as a
national wildlife refuge.
While Caspers jun1ped the gun la st 'veek in sayi ng
the Department of Interior was ready to acl on the mat·
ter, of(iciaJs in Washington confirmed they are consider·
ing it seriously.
lnttrior Secretary Rogers ?iforton also is appal'ent·
ly about to declare the bay some kind of national land·
mark. Interior Departn1ent spokesmen said this \v iii hap·
pen soon. although they were oot specific abou t \l'hat
the action means ft does not involve any land acquis i·
lion.
\Vlule the department's concern for the bay is cer·
ta1nly understandable. its procedures do prompt a num·
ber of questi ons.
ft seems the secretarv is about to act on th e laud·
1na rk .status \\'ilhout consUJtation "'ith either Newport
Beach offi cials or the land owner, the Irvine Company.
Similarly. it is curious that neither the city nor the
Jrvine Co mpany has been contacted about the proposed
sanctuary, especially since a controversy on bay develop·
ment exists and the federal government usually doesn't
intrude where local squabbles exist.
Through Many Eyes
\Vbat really happened on Costa Mesa's College
Drive last \Vednesday night~
The versions vary greatly, except in the depth of
emotional involvement on the part of nearly everyone
concerned 'vilh a party that turned into a virtual riot.
Essentially. a loud party thrown by a youth whose
parents were away degenerated into a nuisance that re·
Church Issue Stirs
Another Response
To lhe Editor :
Written well enough to deserve a better
premise. David G. Peary·s letter
(Mailbox July 21 1 brought up the age-old
cl.iche that if the Laxpayer.:i do not sup-
port the parochial schools the church
might flood the public domain with
Catholic students and cli»e down the
parochial schools.
Rubbish! The Roman Catholic Church
ls too smart to do a stupid thing like that.
for it would defeat !heir purpose Cf
Catholic instruction or tht!ir members
which was the goal of the Catholic
Church in the first place.
THE THREAT to send them all to
public schools is nothing leu than a veil-
ed attempt at extortion, and 1t is working
in some localities, but there will always
be opposition to a uniDn of chW'ch and
state. Note what the Russians did with the
church-sponsored Rasputin and t h e
church itself. Kicked out would be. a con-
cervative estimate of what happened.
If the Pope would melt down the golden
images in tht cathedrals around the
world at which most of the pover1y-
1tricke n ~pie worship , or sell some of
the vast real estate holdings !tax-free, of
course) there would be money enough to
1upport the parochial schools forever.
And that goes ror the Buddhist religion
whose statues of Buddha, which he did
not authorize, could feed many Asians
v.•ho now are dependent on Ame rican
v.·heat.
S. G. UNDIN E
Now They're 'Pigs'
To the Editor
In the put, 1 have always referred lo
policemen as "cops" or just poli~men.
Many people called them "plg11." I
always thought lhat was a bit tiarsh.
L.asl week I attended a Costa Mesa
party wh.ich was overcrowded. Il was
supposed to be a bloek party when J
heard about It. But everybody had to stay
i\'lailhox
L1t1•1'1 tr.io. '"''" .... -.~me, Nen!llllf ... u .... &tl01,1141 (lftVIY !Mir .......... Ill ,.. wonh
•• ltu. T ... r l9111 M Cofltll nM ltntn M flt .....
•• tNm1t111t tlbtt i1 r•M•vltCI. •n ltlttn rnurt lflo
<llHll lito""llN't -m.1Hlfl1 1te1dr111, .... t ,.._ "'"' M wlTMwlf lfl rMUft'I ff tulflcllftt , .. _ h
-..it. httl"I' wlQ -.. "~
on the lawn and there just wasn't enough:
room for everybody.
f\.fy chick and I were standing on the
grass drinking beer. Suddenly we sl.arted
getting pushed down the street very
rapidly. When I saw through lhe crowd.
the Costa Mesa Riot Squad, without as
much as a warning, had their clubs
drawn and were "dispersing'~ the crowd.
When I saw this, I split because 1 didn'L
want my girl's head or mine spilt open.
My parents saw what happened after I
left. They I old me how they ! the pigs 1
marched down the street with cluba
drawn, J:lcrding the crowd dow n the street
-not to their cars, just down the street,
and they beat the hell out of some kid
across the street for no apparent reason.
No I must refer to thern as pigs.
BRAD BOt:RGEOIS
Judge ond Jury?
To the Editor .
"All we want is to m11ke sure he can
ne,·er teach again.'' remarked Costa
f\·lesa Police Detective Sgt. John Regan
after Carlton Polk pleaded guilty to drug
charges -from your Monday, July 19,
front page article.
1 suspecl that Mr. Polk wHI have great
difficulty again finding employment as a
teacher. J am not condoning Mr. Polk's
actions, but whether he ever teaches
again is not a police responsibility. rt i~
my understanding that the functions of
the police are to enforce the laws and to
gather evidence of infr actions -not to
serve as judge and jury.
DAVID C. BARROWS
400 Pages Long Enough
Jumping lo conclusions :
You'll enjoy your 11re more after 40 if
''OU make it • rule never to re&d a book
"more than 400 pages long-except the Bi-
ble. Any •ulhor who can't say what's on
his mind ln tOO pages i3 only mumbling to
himself,
The two most dlacontented type• of
people In Amartea are Army colonels and
the vice pr~ident.s
of large corpor•
tlons. They are sym-
bols or top-level fail-
ure. The colonel who
never wln.s a gen·
eral's star. the vi~
president Yr'ho never
gets his name letttr·
ed In gold on the
Big Door -Nell
feel& 1n hlf: heart like an alao ran, who
almost made It but dkln't quite.
This would ~ a happier world It at
least once a year everyone In it would 1tt
down 1n the Jr"IMO with his heart 'a des I.rt'
and spend an hour lofj:ether doing nothing
1Nt look for four-l eaf clover•.
Ac:hlevtment of some kind Is posaible
to anybody, no matter what the h11hdic1p.
'rhat'• why '° many glrl1 WYr lonR
flngunana.. It fl tbf: only way they can
&blnk of to gain attention.
WHAT IS 11fE most disappointing food
you've ever bad ? Mint was pomegranate.
h aiund1 '° exotic and romantic. but lhe
~K and lut Ume J tasted a
pomegranate. It turned out to be a
mouthful of disillusion. It was not nearly
as e1citlng as a simple 1llee or
watennelon.
The thing .1 wif~ hates most for her
husband to say about her in public Is that
she snores in private. She'd almoat ••
soon have him liay she u.tes 1nu!f or
chews tobacco.
Dear
Gloomy
t Gus
What does the: city council el'pect !
Mayor Wilton staled during tht
Del Mtir widen ing controvtrsy th11t
he ftlt It wair their duty to solve
Newport Be11ch·s lra.ffic problems.
Ne'4•port just ga\:t. thtm another
small Lraffic problem -the Paci·
fie Coast rree\4·ay.
-P. C. F.
"'" "'"''' ftllK'l'a ..... ,... ......... "'' MCIUlrllJ 1"911 itl 1"' ft._.,.,., llMI
'IHI' "' -... " GfM.rn~ ha. 0111>' l'lltl,
.:· -:-r::'''fiia..,,.....,... ..~ .... -
Upper Bay
quired police intervention. Children u young as 12 arui
13 were dead drunk in the bushes. One bad element -
almo$t predicUbly -forced a confrontation and the
result was a disaster for all involved, good kids Included.
Only now comes the bitterness and aftermath
anln1osity.
Bitter residents whose property and peace suffered
describe it like Armageddon with marijuana cigarettes.
Bitter young people whose behinds suffered when
baton-carrying police swept the street clear describe it
like Kent State without gunfire.
Bitter police1nen ask what else they could do (one
resident had already threatened to use his own gun if
they didn't Intervene) under a barrage or rocks, bottles
and beer cans, after repeatedly ordering the crowd to
disperse.
We have to sympathize -to a certain degree -
with the position in each of these three cases.
Residents had a r ight to be angry; young people who
may have been caught up \Vhile trying t.o follow orders
have a right to their feelings; and the police had their
duty to do too.
. Only we must also attempt to put the related points
into proper perspective, a feat made more difficult be·
cause people with subjective feelings rarely have objec-
tive viewpoints.
By sticking to written police reports and quoting
the youthful party-giver about his attempt to secure city
approval for a street party, we are charged by one neigh·
bor as portraying him as a hero.
By the same token. the host claims he was hardly
portrayed as a hero and hasn't been allowed to give his
side of the story.
Things will probably be simmering in the neighbor·
hood for some time until the incident is forgotten but
if those involved try to be reasonable the process ~ould
be less painful.
''NCVJ ilE:o12.S'~ //IV PLAN ...• ,
c
Their Tony
On Schedule
Party Time in Kenya
With Didos
You can depend on it, once: a year Lord
Snowdon stages a cutup which has the old
bucko s in the Ulndon clubs shaking their
heads.
You recall Snowdon, v.·hose nan1e is
Tony Something-or-Other, is the husband
of Prin~ss Mar·
garet, and is a pho-
tographer of some
repute. You don't see
·~" many of his pictures, \ °" ' but if you catch the
, ·-London garden
,-." ;' ~ • \ parties regularly
• ~ ,. you 'll always be
....... \stumbling over
Tony, and probably
the Princess. too. There have been TU•
1nors they don't get along, bul it must be
a canard. because they're alw1ys at the
same bashes. 1bey were made ror each
other, perhepo deserve each other.
SO IT SEEMS they attended a ~1ayfair
garden party thr own by a millionaire,
and all the lords and ladies and the
mere ri ch v.·ere there, among them the
\ ,..; ,;
· Royce ' Brier r,•..,
beautiful Countess Westmoreland . The
Countess v.·a~ dancing wit h a gentleman
named Peter Cauilel , \vhen Snowdon ta p.
ped him and tried to cut in.
"Th is is not America:' snapped 111r.
C&'lalel, referring to Tony's frequent
\ 1sits to New ·vork, .,. .. here they do gauche
things. like tapping people at dances.
You may remember th at Lady Chat·
terly 's Lover was the gamekeeper at the
Ch atterly estate, and pretty gauche
himself. But times have changed,
because Mr. Cazalet is a horse trainer for
Queen Elizabeth:, and here he i.~ dancing
with COW'lleSSes and the like at the same
party with Tony and the Princess.
Anyway, Lord Snowdon was in 1 snit,
so he picked up a ready glass of white
wine and doll!ed Mr. Cazalet. ApperenUy
the horse trainer dldn't even t~s a curry·
comb at Lord Snowdon, but he did have
the gall to walk by Snowdon's table a few
minutes later. Whereupon, Lord Snowdon
seited a glass of red wine and drenched
Mr. Caialet, and t.hat's really sticky stuff.
OF COURSE, everybody WU paralyzed
i nd couldn't talk after that Reporte.rs
braced Snowdon. and no dice. Then they
asked Buckingham Palace:, which is
always being asked such questions, and
has never answered yet. Rtporters
haven't won one of I.hose sinct Geora:e N
took Mrs. Fitzherbert to mistress.
But the reporters did !ee Mr. Caialet's
son, Victor, and he confirmed the story,
and with dignity said he had been told his
father was "the perfect gentleman." This
wu hearlening, since 1enllemanly hor11e
trainers dripping with wine tolised by
spouseg of Princesses are comparatively
rare In our day. Be damn sure Chat-
lerly's pmekeeper would have clobbered
mi lord.
, ~HE DENSE AIR OF embanassment
which suffuses the Buckingham Palace
p9oplt every time one of these cc.
trttemps occurs iJi mysterious, because
the people dole on t.htm. They think all
the better of lhe Buckingham folk for
.such hanky·panky, proving royal ty i~
1Ull alivi and fun-loving. like the le11st of
us.
Think how ll would ha ve cleared the air
had some Palace ractotun1 told the
reporters· .. 'Right. you chap., art on ,
There was :t bit of :l bra"''l involving Tony
Wal sis nan1t, hu.~b11nd or the Prinress,
who took rxccptlon to Slime gentlemtin's
mention or America. and let him have a
glass or the bubbly down his shirtfront. A
JOiiy mess, wot , but amusin,,"
Diplomat Loses Diplomacy
WASHINGTON -The raucou s
behavior of a top American diplomat dur-
ing Vice President Agnew's recent visit
to Kenya has created a behind-the-scenes
uproar.
The errant dipl~
mat is AID admin·
istrator in Kenya ,
Bert ~1. Tollefson,
Jr .. 41 , an ex-com
lobbyist and Repub-
lican polltico from
South Dakota. His
antks are colorful·
ly detailed in a ser·
ies or confidential
State Department telegrams.
The American Ambassador to Kenya,
Robinson Mcllvalne , was so outraged.
that he fired off the blistering "eyes
only" wires to Tollefson's boss. John A.
Hann ah:, head or the Agency ror Intema·
dona! Development. We have obta ined
copies of Mcllvaine's missives.
"I REGRET to jnform you," Mcllvaine
'4'role in one cable , "that Bert Tollefsoo
blotted his copy book (diplomatic jargon
for 'fouled up') so badly during the Vice
President's visit as to raise serious ques·
lion as to his suitability for service
abroad, Indeed you may be hearing from
the Vice President directly on the matter.
"The problem started with Bert's well-
known pushiness and general lack or
sensitivity and culmin ated in his getting
:.Joshed at Treetops (a fancy lodge on the
edge of the jungle). making passes at the
Vice President's secretary and trying to
drag her d ow n the steps to meet an
elephant at ground level ... "
TUE SEQUENCE of events that led up
to this climax, wrote Mcilvaine. began
when Tollefson was officially informed
that "no Americans were invited to JOin
the Vice President's group at Treetops.
(Tollefson) came anyhow on hi1 own and
canvassed Kenyan s for a be<! in one of
their roomg. In lhe end he talked llOme.
one out of a room lO himself .. .''
In the course of I.he evening , !tlcllvaine
related, Tollefson ' 'repeate d I y in·
terrupted'' Kenyan officials who "were
explaining anin1als" to the Vice Presi-
dent. "The owner of Treelops," the
Ambassador wrote, "at one point asked
me. 'Who is that jackass?' -pointing t.o
Bert.
"The incident with the Vice President's
secretary,·· continued Mcilvaine , "took
place in the small hours of the morning.
According lo her it took all her strength
to gel away from him."
EVEN KENYAN Ambassador to the u_s. Leonard Kibinge, who v.·as there,
commented on Tollefson 's "condition,"
Mcilvaine said.
"The next morning , Bert slept throtq:::;i
the departure of 0900 and when t.~ did
~wake took the remaining Secret Service
car to Nyeri leaving them stranded and
furious ... A car had to be :sent lhe 100
miles up to Nyeri to bring Bert back."
The whole alfair. McUvaine concluded,
had substantiated his misglvings about
Tollefson's performance duriag his three
months as head of the AJD program in
Kenya .
,;I can. of course, live with the situation
but '¥1.'ill have to spend a lot of time riding
herd and wonder whether all that effort
is warranted in support of 'Peter's Prill·
ciple.' " (The Peter Principle is a tongue·
in-cheek tbe«Y . wbk:h bolds th a t
everyOne eventually 'rises to his own level
of incompetence. f
When asked about the incident. AID
Administrator Hannah refused comment
except to call Tollefson "a very reprec·
table fellow " and to inquire where we ob·
tained the confidential cables. They had
come to him "highly restricted, hand-car·
ried and sealed,'' he huffed to my
associate Joseph Spear.
Reached 1n Nairobi, Tollefson denied
the Ambassador's charges and said they
were based on a complete misun-
derstanding. "Thad only two drinks," he
said, and took the President's secretary
to meet the elephant "at her request."
He blamed the imbroglio on unnamed
''Democratic holdovers" in the Foreign
Service.
Lawn Order Wins the War
Once upon a time in the country called
Wonderfuland, lhe people worshiped
twin gods. One they called Law. The
other they called Order.
As the years pa1111-
ed the people came
to think of the two
gods a!I one 1od.
whom they referred
to in their daily de-
votions as "Lawn
Order.''
It \4'iS from this
great god, Lawn Or·
der, they be lieved,
that sll blessings flowed-bless:lnia such
as frttdom, justlc:-e. the purauit of hap-
piness and 1 soarmg gross national p~
duct.
So !ht people of Wonderfuland dwelt
happily and prosperously under the pro-
~--By Geot'fle ---
Dear Georae:
I havt heard t.hlt Southemen
are polite , Irishmen are im·
aglnaUve. and new!lpapennen are
very literate. I have just met this
Southerner who ls a newspapennan
of Irish descent. Don't you think be
i3 a aoocl m1trimon!al risk!
HOPEFUL
Dear Hopeful :
Don't make 1 move ! The
!!emergency helicopter is on the
way! (W e sent a SL Bernard on the"
la,t cue like this. and the Southmn
rrlfl'h new11p1pertnf.n kept him on a
111.·o-we-e.k binge).
Dear George
If a dog is a man·s be.1t frlffld .
v.•ho Is a dog's best friend ?
C. R.
'Dear C. R. ·
Jr's never w1S(! to date a married
v.01nan. IYesh, I know, but a guy
who would >ATilc a quMl11'\n lik e
TllAT needs to be confused -It
will give h1n1 somethlnti lo think
.about).
"
•
tection of Lawn Order. But then came
The Turbulent Times.
THE TURBULENT Times were very
turbulent. Those who were young grew
angry with those who were old, because
the old kept sending them off to fight for
cau.ses they didn't believe ln.
Those who!e skin was black or brown
or yellow or red grew anery at those
whose skin was whlt.e, because they
didn 't have as much freedom. justice,
happiness or gross national products.
So there were alt-tns and lie-ins and bf.
lns. And marches and strikes and
demonstrations:. And riots and rock
lhrowlnr and •••
AND TBOSE who were older and
whiter and more well-olf gnw uneasier
and unusler. The uneaaler t.hey 1rew.
the mort devouUy they wgrshiped Lawn
Order, hoplng the great &od would
preserve their freedom, justice, hap-
piness and rross national products.
And the more they wor'lhlped, the
angrier they grew at those who com·
mitled offenses against Lawn Order -
like the blaeb, lbe browns, the A19llow1,
the reds and the young. "At all edits, n
must prtaerve I.Awn Order!" thjlide~
The Leaden: of Wonderfuland (who were
all older and whiter snd more well.()ff ).
So when the blacks delayed their lrla\s
by costly legal maneuveriflgs And ap-
peals, The Leaders frowned and 5akf.
''This destroys resptet for Lawn Order ."
And the people ce rtainly agreed.
And when lhe young gathered In the
rounlr>·'s capital lo protest • war. The
Leaders arrested every young person in
si~ht -whether they were doini.t
11nything illegal or nol "It's lhc only way
to mnintJ1 in Lawn Order," they s1ld . And
the people certainly agreed.
SO lT WENT. Eventually, of course, as
the times grew more turbulent, 1 nrw
Leader emerged who was more devoted
to Lawn Order then anybody an ywhere.
To restore respect for Lawn Order, hi!:
did a\\·ay with cosUy, disorderly trials. ·ro
maintain Lawn Order. he arrested
everyone with disorderly hair. djsor·
derty clothes, disorderly ideas or non·
white skin.
To lncrease Worship of Lawn Crder. hf"
put everyone in orderly uniforms . houi;e<f
them in orderly barracks. filled tbeir
heads with orderly thoughts and required
them to mow the grass twice a week.
Never in history had the worship ot
Lawn Order flourished so. And yet, oddly
enough. the people of Wonderfu land
didn't seem to be enjoying the bleas1ngs
of freedom, jusUce and happine.u that
Lawn Order bestowed.
But they did have lots or gross nalion1l
products. Not to mention the most ordt.r·
ly lawns the world has ever seen.
MORAL: You can worship Law. And
you can worship Order. But sometimes,
you've got to choose.
-----Wednesday, July 28. 197l '
't1't tditorial page of tht Daily
Pilot 1etks to inform and stim·
vlatt rtader.t by pre.tenting this
aewipaper's opinion.t and com-
~ntarrt an topics of interest
011d significance. by providing a
forum for tile e.:prtssion of
our readers' opinion1. a11d by
pr~atntinq t11t divtrtt vitw-
pmnts Of Informed obstrtlt1'S
and spaketmen 01) topic., o/ the dov.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher -----
'
-.
Saddlehaek
I ,,_ f • • I ' E'l>ITlpN
YO~. 64, NO. 179, 5 SECTIONS, 74 PAGES
' u
Mosquitoes
Invading
California
By TERRY COVILLE
OI tlM O.ltt l"llRI Still
A mosquito plague that has killed 1.300
horses in Texas and now threatens the
San Joaquin Valley is nol expected to
r each Orange County this season.
"But," y,1arns Jack H. Kimball, n1an-
11ger of the Orange County Mosquito
Abatement Dis1ric l. ''sleeping sickness
!encephalitis) is always a po!enlial
danger.··
t\1mball said methods used in Orange
Coun ty to reduce the mosquito population
have kept the situation normal.
In Texas, mosquitoes have inflicted the
horse JXlpulation with Venezuelan Equine
Encephalilis, a deadly disease which can
also spread to humans.
Thls wee k directors of I.he Delta Mos·
quito Abatement Di~trict announced that
pesticides are no longer effective against
mosqu.itoes in the San Jooquin Valley.
"\\'e're just sitling on a powder keg,''
warned Dr. Don Murray, manager of the
Oelta district· in Visalia. "Mosquitoes are
thicker than they have been in some
years.··
The San Joariuin mosquil.oes . ho wever,
have ,oot yet been found to carry the
veouueJan Encep!\alitis. They have just
devck>ped an immunity to chemical
killers.
"T~ danger is in infeclion from Tex-
11 s,'' Kimball explained. "The VenezueiaJ'I
disease can be transferred from a mos-
quito to a horse and back to another mos--
quito."
A current embargo on any horse
movements in Texas or surrounding
st11tes is expected lo hold the encephalitis
for at least a season, Kimball said.
Meanwhile, the government is preparing
11 special vaccine for use throughout the
1,1.·estern slates.
"All or our horse owners are extremely
"''Orried." Kimball said, "But we're safer
in Orange C-Ounly. We don·t use
p~ticides so heavily and mosquitoes here
have nol developed an immunity to
chemicals."
Kin1ball said the Orange Counly pro-
gram relies heavily on backyard cleanup
and lhe use of spe<:Jal mosquito fish
which eat the mosquito larvae.
"We plantrd 200,000 mosqu ito fish in
water sources throughoul the county this
r;ummer:· he said. "Our bigge st targets
are fi~ll ponds, 2rxl miles of flood and
drainage channels. park pond.~. and i;::ol(
cour11e v•.<11er haz11rds. We plan1 fish in all
of thl.'m ··
The Ort1ni;:.e Count~· dis\rl('1 has a list or
S.OOo nrna1ne ntal ponds "''here fi sh arc
plan!crl 1n keep mns~uitoc~ dnwn. The
inosquito fish is iihou! two inches long and
mixes well with olher fish.
San Clementean
Joins Fray In
Freewa y Fuss
•'
A San Clemente ally has been found for
Costa ~tesa Councilmen Alvin Pinkley's
alteck on the Newport Beach freeway
&tend.
Last week Pinkley charged that
Newport Bcaeh"s word was ·•worthless,
even wr>rse than a wooden nickle," dur-
ing a long dialrihe on that city's op-
position to the Pacific Coai;t Freew.ey.
Thil! week he received the following Jet·
ler from Nelson W. Barcus. 210 Monterey
Ave., San Clemente ;
··Dear Sir : You are so right about
Newport Beach. Are you willing to sug-
ge!t a special license plate for Newport
Be.ech? Something likl! No No Newport.
Cars with this license would not be allow -
ed on any freeway."
Ronald Olsen Choice
For Planning Post
Roland Ol11en o( 25352 Mariposa . San
Juan Capistrano, h11s bttn named to lhe
c:h y'g planning commission.
The gener11l l'Onlractor was M>lecled
from fivl! eand ld ateii lo assume the pos~
v11cated by C, Russell Cook. Cook resign-td recently art~r 10 years 11ervlce to the
city.
Olsen was appointed by the City Coun-
cil Monda1 afler 11n ex~tlV! !e8SJon.
• IC
•
Guilt Admitted
Deputy Faces Jail in Theft Case
A former Orange County sheriff's depu-
ty waived jury trial Tuesday and pleaded
guilty to lesser charges stemming from
the burglary Sept. 20 of the Mission Viejo
Country Club.
Ex-deputy Frederick 8 . Irvine, 44, of
La Habra, pleaded guilty to receiving
stolen property and insisted on filing the
plea alter Superior Court Judge Byron K.
McMillan warned him that it would
amost certainly mean slate prison .
Irvine was ordered to return to court
Oct. 21 for sentencing. Related charges of
bt.irglary , grand theft , auto theft and con-
spiracy were dismissed.
The burly, ex-deputy faces a possible
state prison term of up to 10 years and
Judge McMillan made it clear Tutsday
!hat he can almost bank on that sentence.
Irvine was one of two "moonlighting''
deputies arrested out.side the country
club shortly after the golf pro assertedly
saw the two security guards carrying
cases of liquor and golfing equipment
from the go1r shop to their patrol car.
Deputy Arthur B. Duncan, 34, of Hun·
tlngton Beach, immediately surrendered
lo fellow deputies but Irvine seized a
patrol car and led his former colleagues
on a wild chase that ended in Riverside
County after shots were exchanged by
pursuers and pursued.
Irvine was finally persuaded to sur-
render after he threatened several times
to shoot himself.
Both men were indicted by lhe Orange
County Grand Jury but Duncan was
found dead, hanged from the raflers in
!he garage of his Huntington Beach home
before he could be arraigned on the
charges.
Friends and former colleagues sa id
Duncan became deeply depressed after
charges were filed and commented on
many occasions that he could not face
court ~ction. He spent much of his career
wilh the sheriff's offi ce as a bailiff in
several Supe rior Court locations.
Motl1e1· of Rape Victim
Committed to Hospital
her financial affairs while she was in-A San Clemente woman who allegedly
encouraged .a young Marine to rape btr
14-year-old daughter Wall committed
Tuesday to a .stat' hospital for prolonged
psyc hiatric investigation.
carcerated. ~-'
But the. jurist ·~of! .'lls ~
court hearing w9en Ole •te~ · _ ~J.
to discuss from the prisoners' bo~ 1=.
OrangP. Co un ty Supe rior Cour! Jud,i:e
Byron K . McM illan l'IUspended criminal
proceedings against the 58-year-old defen-
dant and ordered her immediate transfer
to Patton State Hospital after a
courtroom exchange.
The gray-haired defendant asked Judge
J\.1cMi llan to confirm that her son and
daughter were holding her funds and
complained to the jurist th11t neither
member or her family would com-
municate with her and confirm that they
did hold lhe money.
Judge McM illan got the admii;sion from
the son and daughler and got lhe agree·
ment of a family friend who was present
in the courtroom to take over the power
of attorney for the defendant and hand le
Dana School Biel
Let, $254,870
A low bid of $254,870 was acceplerl
~Ionday for the Richard Henr.v Dana
Elen1entary School addit ion.
Tru~lees of the Capistrano L'nilierl
S<·hool District accepted the bid of r . ,J.
P ietrok Company of Anaheim .
Ten companies sought the contract for
the Dana Point project which ranged
from Pielrok's low bid up lo $300,000. The
accepted bid was 10 percent below the
architect's projection.
Construction is expected to begin BS
soon as the stale gives its routine arr
proval with 190 days estimated as IW!e
time needed for compll!tioo.
Fleel of Concordes
LONDON (UPI) -The British Aircraft
Corp. ( BAC) pred icted Tuesday that
wilhin eight years at least l&O Concorde
supersonic jet transports (SSTl will be in
service all over the world.
Security Package
of ·the lessons I've le.erned in Orange
County jail and the way sounds
reverberat• in that place."
'"There's several things I'd like you lo
do for me 11nd I sure would like to sit
down and talk wi th you.' the defendant
com mented to the judge.
"Well, we may be able lo work all that
out but first 1 want to get you to Patton
just as soon as possible," the judge
replied.
The defendant and Marine Robert Dean
Smith, 21, were arrested after the .!lister
of the young victim told police lh.at her
mother had invited Smith to rape her
sister with a view to "calming her
down ."
The sexual assaulL" occu rred in 11
nearby motel room and it was te.!ltified
!hat the defendant aided Smith in sub-
duing his victun.
Smith 1~ nov.· serving a slat' prison
term of six months to 50 years for his
role in the series of rapes .
Delay Paint Job
So Birds May
Res t In Peace
You'll find no "swallowcide" at San
Clemente High School.
In fact, l!chool officials admitted Mon·
day they have gone out of their way to
preserve and protect the tiny birds and
their brood this summer.
San Chicas, assistant superintendent
for business, told Trustee! of the
Capistrano J.;nified School District lhet a
proposed repa inting project is being
postponed until the end of August so nesu
won't be disturbed.
He said the postponement is not adding
cost or inconvenience because other
~chool~ were also part of the painting
contract.
The request for a delay was made by
ecology-minded San Clemente cililens.
. '
•
Totirist Trap?
A nun hatci been stationed at th~ door of .. SL Peter's Basilica, by ·the ·
Vatican . Her t·ask: Keep out women whO..e garb reveals too · much.
thig h or bosom. It was the first timt a woman had been ~siped. to
rule on hemlines and necklines. Vatican officials felt male securify
guards were lax in their value judgments. This woman tourist seems
to be finding fault with the nun,'s determination.
Like Vietna111 Beach?
Va1·ied Color£ ul Con1ment s
E11ter Salt Ci·eek Debate
Because or the apparent widespread
support for the proposed county purchue
llf Sall Crl!ek Bl!a~h and lmprovementg,
the tenor of public meetings .Jlas mellow-
ed rl!centl~ .
Nnnetheless, Tue&dafs . hMbor corn-mis~ion hearings on the Plan hid ils
share of brisk commentary.
Here is some of i~:
-AVCO Executive Vice President
Richard We iser, wbo outlined IIUK:lt..t
the·offtr whld\ his flnn Is making to lhe
(?OW]ty, allitded to the early days of his
firm's ownershlp of the embattled pro-
perty. "We 1at down last fall and decided
we ,.hat-two options .••. either have the
aftl. !DOie 1'k'e Vlitnant. Or" makt i1
'avaDable to ltlt JX)bltc. We cho~ \he tat-
ter approach."
(The e:1i1tm~ ol concertina • barbed
Wire alid Imported .cacW.1 t.o keep the
public Out apparently 1Hrred the Vletnam
allusion)
U.S. OKs Clemente Grant
-Reinfttrcing t.he executive's ~om·
meni.,, Vietnam veteran Rustin ~alish or
Sanla Ana klJd cominlasione~s he ·~nOws
what Vietoam be~chea are Ilke, "Wheo 1
surfed there I had l.q_ take a l.njsty. Viet-
namese to read the 1igh,, for mi, gq we
knew where ~mine 'flelds were. The on-
ly difference I pelj:el•"1 '' s.J' Creek wu tbatl.could rtild'lho .llP.J myMJI."
The seoond 1egment or 1 three-year
federal grant to aMist San Clemente In
providing aecurity for President Nixon
won approval in Congress Tuesday.
The $133,0IXI allocaUon had been ei-
pectt<i and was included in the city
budget for the oew fiscal year.
Under terma of lhP. grant the city
receives an amount each year for three
years. The last incremPnt under the eir·
isling format wnuld come next summrr
for the IR72-·73 fiscal year.
The funds are U!!ed in sa larir~ fnr 10
new police patrolme.o added to the force
last year. Much of the funds also are us-
ed for training and some equipment,
San Clemente's police force playl'I '
constant role ln Presidential security dur-
ing Visits by the first [ami!y.
The initial grant amount made last
year was for $99, 792, and formed the
largest single allocation for crime
!ighUng to • 1:lty or San C~te'1 siz.e.
The figure wa~ augm~nted .last year
by t1bout $33,000 In ttate aid which went
lnward rf'<:n1iling oew men and training
lhP.m.
The total program or fund!I -~hared
by the federal government and the Stall!!
of California -11 J>tUed at abo ut
$5/l!'i.000.
But before lhe new year'• tlllocatlon
can be forthcomin(,. justification of tJ>e.
~vious yl!ar'a allotment. mw1 be made
to federal and state otflclf]s:
The first year of the prograpt pqlnted.
QUl 1aherent difficulties in ' law en-
forcement "urlng preatol timla in ftnelln&
qualified appllcantl.
Since then1 however, Police Cbl~ CUI·
ford Murray ha3 strelle<l that th,. 10 oew
men hired havl! upgraded t h •
dtparlment'll quaUty substl.l\Ually. He
.Also forecast l111t 1prl~g th11t he 1or~see11
no need In the next few year1 to add new
positions to the ro5ler qi -47 police
employts.
-B!J'O••• ''.Hevo" MCCle(land._lq • •co)o~UI aod. inllU,,eui,l ,n;ure aloof 111e
$olltb ~~ llul!Jl ,hlt'coinrtl<ntary with
tradillonll. luiclarllti.rbont: "1' 1:)>!Hent \Jle-Save Salt Q-ett COmmluee, which
every<Jlt )c/lov(i'I> 1 loo1el)"lmtt :liWp. t
don't ape~ 16r evtr)'<)no," lie uld, "only
about .$.OOp or:io/' ,
"At ~ beginning or tho batue," n.
odded, "II wu Ill• flghl of the little pe"°'
pit. Now. lt'1.comln1 close to victory. "But'·
if ynu talk to the youn·, 'surfer's, they
dQJi't want It OJ>tn. because thty know
hnw to breAk lhrou~h the hftrbed win
And gtt t~ the ~th. They're 1lrald it'll
&et ~ C1'9W~t_d."
•
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•
Crowd Asks
County Bu~
Beachfront
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of IM 0.11' ,1111 lrtff
The issue over public use of Salt Creek
Beach -one which has stirred dozens ot
angry hearings Jn recent years -created
a dillerenl mood Tuesday.
It was friendly, for & change.
ln a crowded Laguna Niguel courtroom
mort than 100 South Goa.st residents \irg.
ed Orange Coun ty harbor commissioners
lo hasten a plan to purchase public rights
to the beach, parking lots -.and otbe.1'
facilities ~ong the embattled rtretch ol
shoreli~ between Monarch Bay and
Dana Point.
Commissioners, who ca.lied tbe hear-
ings to sample public opinion before draf•
ting a. final recommendation to count1
supervisors, first heard from county
department aides, then Avoo spokesmen.
An encroachment on the dry saod are&
of the beach -needed so that a revet~
ment CM be built to stem a major
landslide problem -took up much. of the
testimony.
County official!! repeated the total in-
vutment projection for the project -
complete. with two large parking Iola.
three pedestrian trails t.o the beach and
restroom buildinga -at $2.6 million.
That sum, said County Director of
Harbors, Beaches and Parks Kenneth
Sampson, 1! the projected coat ii Avcn
Community Devele>pers handled all Imo
ptQJemenll and turned over a complete
project UI the county. ,
~ "tum-key" approach, Sampson
l'ltreaed, would be chl!aper tha.n if the
county obtained the new land and
developed the same faci!itJes itself.
Rancor over the Salt Creek issue was
mlssing among the audience.
BreMan ''Hev.!l" McCfeUand, o I
Laruna Beach the spokesman for the
St.ve Salt Creek Committee, related the
5,000-plus members' position that the
purchase plan should be put to use u
i;oon as possible.
Alluding to the distance between park·
lng lots and the beach itself, McClelland
pointed out that it follows a con·
temyorary policy of nl!w beach develo~
menL
•·And, .enyway, t think Ille majority ot
the people would rather walk 1,500 feet
down a trail than trade for the 'ituation
of not being allowed to use the beach at
a!L" he said.
He stressed that the encroachment on
!he sand in the landslide project should
follow promises by Avco that little if any
material in the operation would cover lbe
valuable dry sand.
Firth District Supervisor Ron Caspers
also attended the meeting as an
onlooker. He stressed that the Salt Creek:
solution is amolli his top three priority
projects.
While Caspers did not commit ~imself
on the 1egments of the feasibility itudy,
he said he was keenly aware of lhe need
tor good planning of the beach..
If poorly planned and developed, ha
said, it "it could become 'Caspers'
Folly.' •·
C-Ommissionera especially sought public
comment on or>e special point.
or .. fe Coat
Weather
Cloudy skies predlcttd for tod1y
and 'JbursW.y, clearing Jn the
afternoons to a warm lllll, brin1·
in& with It temperatures of around
72 at the coast, 18 inland. Lows to-
night In t!Jt 60'1. • .. '-·
INSIDETOD4Y
Superui.sor1 Mt>t! htltit&t!Kl a
program iohkh. could cr~k
1.000 nti.o job• for tht co""'~
gowrnment over tkt ntxt 18
month.I. Set 1tor11, "'age 10.
IWMli • ""'""' ...... Ctni.n.11 • MIMI llW!Mh U. °"'"" U• 1 Jtat"'91 N-. '"tllfltf Jr• or..,.. c-" 11 c:-iu " •~ '°""' n °""" Mrlc.a 11 ........ .._.., jl....,i.j ,... I Si'tc' MlrttK l'J-.U
111,.,_...,..., •ii Tt!e'Yl•ltll -ll l'lrl•11t• ti Tlllif!'" ~ U WM!tl«
A.-.. YIMA M Wwlll ~ 4
M.m... Lift""9 11 l'«N H-f .... .. ,.,.,... ..
\
~ .--~ . ,..,.__ ----~ '' •7 ),_, -. -..L.A. 1-_,. • ' •...-;..._ ... .-.. -~ , .. .., .. A'-}.r """' . -. ;;;;,z. .. ,111•-i
' • •
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I
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• • • ,.
J DAll.Y PILOT SC
·Apollo
w ........ ~ a,.lf!~ . •
Bugs Eat Dust
'
"; ~ !!9.JL~ _Speed Toward Destiny on Moon
AC! ci:NTEi!,' Housion ' iuPl) -day IDOl'Dlq '{Mir 11>1 pull ol ~ ...... .-Ir.t; llld. Ht <Jt!inated bo and ·~
!'ll<ir troublea bohlnd. Apollo 15·, ~vtty. pld<ed up tboul IO percelll ol Ill\ llall
-utronaub closed ln calmly and ac:· One other ~ltm wa.a found Tuesday Pltce1 wlih a piece of LIP. and the piratel.Y on the moon today with . 1pacecraft vacuum cleaner and Windler
. ~rythina clea'r for a Friday landing at night when Scott and Irwin operied the aald the remaining glai! should be no "IJM: foot of some of the hlghe.!t lunar hitch 00 the Lunar Module ind prt>blem.
·~tpountains. discovered during a two-hou r inspection The met.er normally Is sealed unde r
•. )' '"Tbe moon '• ~!ting bigger out lhe that the &li.!S cover to an altimet.cr pressure in helium . With the aJass :'ff'lodow," niported Alfred M. \l/orden as S-Omehow bl'ld shattered sinct launch broken, it was exposed to a near ~acuum
the spacecraft waa 75,500 miles from it Monday morning from Cape Kennedy. and th~n oxygen when the cabin w11
Th1I wu the Wt easy day for Worden, ··we don 't have any idea why It broke," preuurued.
Pavld R. Scott and James B. Irwin ~tetor. they bt1in a record alx davs of '
: ....., tcUv1ty. Their •chedule washgbt Property Owner•
• : , iround controllers let them sleep an --
Coast Resiclents Battling ·: tra hour, awakening them at 10:40 a.m.
:!1 OT. "We certainlY. did have a good ni&ht's
eep," Worden reported.
A abort circuit that cut doubt oa
an's most arilblLious lunar expedition
, d been overcome Tuesday and .a
: ! · liminary check indic11ted that the Ian· :.: · nc lhip Falcon was ready. The landing site I• at the base of the
·: pennine Mounta in& ranging 10,000 feet
• • higher, 11nd alM near a gorge which
·ps 1,000 feet down .
-: Glynn S. Lunney, fiiiht direct-Or on the
·: ound, reported at a m!dmomina brief·
:: g: "The statu8 of the mission Is that
·: e're on schedule, the trajectory is v~ry
ose to norm.al. the performance of the
stems i11 now very clo1e to normal."
.. Scolt and Irwin cb"e.Cked the Falcon late
• eaday and plan to lru:pect it again . t. •
Tbey will try to clean up remalnln& bits
• glass from an instrument cover they
• ; und shattered. Lunney a aid controllers
· • Janted the utronauta to make certain no
:. foltin& sl••• particle• Interfered with
'. •bin equipment, particul arly hatch
• ~·la ·: ~"We're 1oln1 to run the cabin fan for
· t 15 minutes and try to c1tch what we
. -n in the filter ," Lunney s.a!d.
The "45-milllon mission of Apollo 15 Ui
mo1t demandin( ever assi(ntd to an ~ erican space crew. Scott and Irwin
: ill spend mo re time on the moon, stay
: -.it on the surface lon1er, cover more
: t)rrain and brlng b1ck more samples
• Ulan their predeceuor1. Worden will
: .Jbit the moon longer than anyone and
:.C)Onduct the first truly work In i
~ JPlctwalk.
: The astronauts Tuesday ended the!r se-
tond day in space u lt 1ta.rted -trouble
thoollng an electrical problem that tr1a·
&ertd an alarm signal in the command
inodule cabin.
. They found a circuit breaker for part of
tht cabin It&htinr had opened bec11use of
in •Pl'!l!llll~t faull ... llilt f'l!IJll Pl·
fector·Mlltoh Windier reJll'Nd tMU,,U11le iv•• mJnar and·could be worked aro'und.
I
1High Rise at Mammoth
IC group of !rate Oran1e Cout
re•denta, all ownln1 property or aeoond
ho&,.e!I in the Mammoth Like area, bu
joined a 11111 battle to keep hl1b rist
l dini!I out of the mountain co mmunity.
pearbeacfinC the move are Ch1rle1 and
y · Grlffln of Newport Beach, co-
cli.airman for the Southern California
beach citlu area of an oraanlzatlon call·
ing ltRU Frlende of Mammoth .
Griffin wu the appellant In a tult flied
In behalf of the P'riendl earlier thlt
month, char&ina Mono County authoritlu
wtth vtollt1ont of state and federal l1w1
in authorWna a developer to put ln
seven-atory apartment bulldina• on a
milt lon1 atretch of acenlc mountain land
adjacent to popular 1kf alopea.
II'he auit chara• that the U.foot ccn-
crete atructurea, houatna 10me 200 con·
dominlum apartments, which the LI
Jiilla firm of Recreation Inc. wants to
build. would dlminl1h property value. ln
an area of expensive R·l homes acro11
the atreet, ruin the view and destroy the
environment.
The property owner• maintain that the
Mono County Board of Supervisor• and
Planning Comml11lon, in approvina the
hleh density project, vlol1ted the l1w by
failln& to 1lve proper notice of publie
htarinp and dlsreqardlna re111!1Uoo1
designed to preserve open 1p1ce.
Amons the Mammoth 1Upporter1 whOH
names have entered the hllh rise fl1lit
are two Olympic champloru. 1kier
Andrea Mead Lawrence, a Mammoth
resident, and dec1thion medalilt Bill
Toomey of Llguna Beach.
Mr1. GrUfin 11ld 1he 1nd h,r hu1band.
a McDonnell Dou1la1 enatneer. have llv·
ed al :WO Opal St. oo Balboa lll111d for the
put 11 years, but have alway• been
reruJar Mammoth villtors. Three year•
110 t.hey built a lar1e 1econd home there,
confident that .the entire area around
lhem would be developed with 1ln1le
re11idence11.
"The zonln1 already provided for co~
domlnlllmll in other areu '° there didn 't
1eem to be any problem ," uid Mrs. Grlf·
fin . "We are not 11atn1t hJah rile pro-
vided 1t'1 ln the rlat'it place and with plen-
ty of open 1pace left around U. which 11
definitely not the case wilh thill planned
development.''
The land on which the development ll
planned would be cluaified 11 "1oenlc''
under any open 1pace procram, ahe 1d-
ded , and contairui a larae crove or trees
which would have to be removed for the
plaMed coru:tructlon .
"Mammoth la mushrooming and 11 trua
1oe11 throu1h everyone will start buildln1
high r!1e without any m11ter pl1n or pro-
per UJe of ttpace." 1he maintained.
"Local facilltJe1 will be overtaxed by put.-
tins too many people In one place. Wtt
1ay let'1 attt 1 master plan, 1low down,
plan the irowth and do It rl1ht."
About 50 property own_.1 fonn the
nucleUll of the Friend! of Mammoth, Mr•.
Grlffln 1ald. The iroup wa1 formed after
Mono County plannin1 comrn111!oner1 ap-
proved the high riae plan despite 80 let·
tera prote1tin1 It and only aeven In favor,
lhe added .
It will seek 1upport of 111 Sierra Clu b
chapters and circularize all Mammoth
area property owners, ur1tn1 attendance
1t hearllli• affecUna developmept of th e
11e1. •
1.;J::ll::?~~1..:~~:,;~~':E . Rad~ Malfunction Seen
: 'liit· l".W ·: . ' . ··~~;~! I T' . . t ' M. .d . >/ r,. h·.
l~~·l! ... alepl"~'ol!hls , n ramc l all" ~ras
: Apollo 16 ,. ... pad,ually 1lowln( ·untW ~ -
the decreul.nl influence of earth?1 tug·of
DAILY PILOT lftff PlleM
COSTA MESA'S MAYOR WILSON WITH SOME OF THE WOMEN IN HIS LIFE
__________ F_ro_m __ L•_l..:;t, Mmta. St. Clair, Pinkley, Wiison, Jord1n and Hammett
Judge Overturns
Jury's Verdict
In Stock Case
A South Laruna 1tockbroker who wa1
once convicted of grand theft charges by
an Orange County Su~lor Court Jury
was cleared of the 111ne chargea today
mom~ts btfore he was to face a new
trial.
Judge Raymond Thompson fouhd
Erh11n Gedik. 31, of 31619 Jewel St., In·
nocent after reading the transcript of tha
broker 's previou!I trial last April.
The 11me judge had ordered a new
tr!al for Gedlk Immediately afle r the jury
found the broker 1uilty of grand thtft and
lJ'lnocenl of charges that he viola ted state
corporate laws.
Gtdik had been tnd\cal.ed by the
Orlllnge County Grand Jury after 11
number of women clients. all but one of
them widows, testified that he had bil ked
them of an amount e1tl ma t.ed by th,e pro·
secution at $180.000.
The prosecution contended that Gedik
was guilty of "churning ·• -a term used
by broker!! to describe needless .1ale1 of
stock.!i and bonds for th e pur~e of
generating bfokers' eommis.!ion~.
Judge Thompson conceded that his re-
jection of the jury·s verdict v.·as the fir~l
.!Uch ru!lng he had made In 50me 40 years
on Ula Or1nge G9unty bench.
Bllt. he math It ele.T that he w11a fa r
from 1at\1ifled with the evidence nffered
to I.hf. jury during the twn-week. trial
de1plte Deputy Oisl!ict Attorney Stu
Grant'1 comment that it w11.11 "In·
e<>mprebensi ble that you would take this
laaua away from the jury 1y1tem."
"Maybe IGedlk l 1hould be J>Unlahed fnr
aomethin1." Judge Thompaon said. "H•
i;eems pretty busine111!ke but then aga in.
the women he was dealing with teemed
to have been naive, inei:per lencl'!d and
Hail to Women
Mesa Mayor Credits Fernale Push
'
Women have been traditionally con·
1idered the power behind the throne.
Co1la Mesa Mayor Robert WU!on
doesn 't feel modem tlrn~a and city
government have altered the oltl adage.
"A ~·ife i5 resporu;ib!e for the success
of the office holder," he 111ys.
To honor the secret powers of Cosl!!.
Mesa, 1'.f11yor Wilson has decbrated the
walls of hir; new offiC2 at city hall with
color photogr11phic port r1ils of each city
councilman 's v.·ife.
"They have to put up with so much of
nur public and personal Jives. They in·
tercept All the nasty phone calls." Wilson
explained. "They should be honored."
The colnr portraits we.re tak en by the
1"Qllce department photoRfRpher. Not
surprisingly, the women had the lasl
word . Two -Mrs. \\lilson an d Mrs. Jack
Hammet t -had their picturPs ret;:iken .
But ;i ll lhe portraits ha\'e been ap-
proved now. ~nd \I'll! go on t.he walls of
\\lilson's fi fth floor office this week.
"This is the fir~t office 11 mayor or city
councilman in Costa Mesa hits hAd,"
Wilson &aid. "J"m going to try and brini
snme nl the city's no11talgi11 to ii."
The portraits of city council wives forrn
Free Press Editor
Ordered to Trial
the first 1tep ln this tndeavor.
\\lilson is quite proud of lhe sound fami·
ly life demonstr11t.ed by each city council
couple. He rapidly ticks off the longevity
of each marriage : "Lucille and Alvitt
Pinkley, 44 years; ~111ryalice and Robert
\Yilson, 32 years; ~1ary Jo Rryd Jack
Hammett. 31 years; Ruth and Willard
Jordan. 30 years, fnd Claudine and
William St. Clair, 29 years."
"I'm extremely pleased th•l our wive!
a.re go patient with us ," Wilson 1mlled.
President Nixon
' Planning Visit
In. Mid-August?
Source.'! in Wash ington and 1n S.a.n
Clemente have hinted that President Nix·
on ia plannin,ll to retur n In the Weater11
\Vhlt.e House In mld·Augusl for a lhree-
v.•eek stay.
While no conf1rmat1on h11s been made
by the Presirlential slaH. !rips west dur-
ing that month are sta ndard for the Chief
Executive.
The August trips generally are th e
longest -the f1rsl in 1969 lastins mor1
than four weeks.
Sources Jn Wa~htngton told the DAIL V
PILOT that a visit by Briti11h Prime
WEST COVINA (LJP IJ -Publisher Minis!er F.:dw;ird He11Lh mlgh! be
Arthur Kunkln pleaded innocent Tueeday forthcoming during the Presidenf s next
to a charge of printing an obscene picture working vAca!ion here .
and 11 jury trlal was sel for Sept. 27. The P'reside nt am! F1rsl Lady 11i:>ent
Kunktn . 43, is !he editor of the Lo11 two week11 earlier !hi• month at their
Angeles f ree Pres!!, an undergrou'nrl Span ish e~t11tc, leaving for Washington
~·eckly, but the ob11ce nity charge involved July 11 After Mr. Nll«ln announced be
$avlty.
:· It's 1peed wu droppln1 from l ,7&0
·Dli1es per . hour at 1:2 :34 a.m. when the
.. tronaut.I were 100,666 mllea from the
tnoon, to 1.13' miln pe.r hour at '1'_;34 p.m.
"1bert they will be '3j'64 mllea away.
Special .. the DAILY PILOT over enthu11i11stlc ."
another publication wllh which he planned 11 trip to Peking before cam paip
LltUe new waa added In the way of eye-11llegedly i5 a.'laociated. seasnn heginl! next year.
witness testimony and It will be month& J:;;;;;;:;;;;;-----====-----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;,;;;;;;;:,;;;,;;;;;;;•;;;;I before the NTSB panel \11ues a flndlnl on .... '*"" .. -'
•
ApollO 15 will atow to l.187 miles per
~our and then ·sW"t to acctlerate Thurs-
Indians to Perlor.m
At Fashion Island
Member• from four Arirona Indian
trlbM wtl\ lnv1d~ P'ashlon Island in
Newport Beach Thursday where they will
perform traditional dances for the public.
• Oa.ncer1 from the Apache, Nava jo,
Pipe.co and Pima nations will be
(rt1aed in tull costume for performance.,, 4t noon , 1 :30 p.m. and 3 p.m. Cameraa
171av be u&ed at each dance.
OUN•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
OAAHOi:I CO.UT PUI LISl'l lHG COMl"AH'f
lt\•,. N. Wt•4
.. ._:1eoi1 •"" "\lllllller
Jatlr l . C11rl1y
Ylee l",_111 ... 1 t"'lll 0.-rt l Mt MfM'
1'•"'•• K ..... u 1111 ...
l1i•••• A. M 11,..i.1 ~,
Ma/111"'9 Ji'lfOr
Cli1rl tt H. L-1 Ricl1tt4 I'. Nill
1<91i1111I MIMtlr.g IOllWl
Lei1H IMct Office
222 ~tit Aw111uf'
M1ili11t 144r111: 11',0. le• i66, t 265Z
S.1 c:i •••• ,. °""' JOI Nertlii El C.1"'1111 l11I, t2671
0-.. OHtcH
C.11 ~·· la W11I l•'I' Strftl H .... rt IMc:fl! ~ ""°"'" ._,,_rf Huilltl..,,... tMctl: 17111 ... di ..,....,.,.
PASADENA -Te1tlmony of radar
malfunction• ln both planes and vt1ual
flyln1 by landmarks below nne of the
worlds busiest aerial crnssroads came
today at hearings into a l!agic miliU!.ry·
commercial jet collision.
The June S inc ident that sent a Hughes
Air West •l"lrallng 15,000 feet dov.·n into
the San Gabriel ~fountains killed SO
persons. one tbe F4 Phantom '• l"ilot,
frl"lm El Toro ~tarine Corps Air 11tation.
The victims included a small brother
and sister frnm San Clemente en route
for • gummer vacalion with thelr father,
plus an ~asterner headed home from a
visit in fAs!.a Mesa.
Sole survivor of the arcidenl which ill
bf;'ing prnhed in lhree days of National
Transportation Safely Bnard hearings 11 t
lhe Pasad~na Hilton hotel was the Msrine
jet's radsr in tercept officer.
During mid·momlng te gt\mnny. Isl Lt.
Christopher E. Schiess. 24 . of El Tnro,
said pilol error ~·as probably to bla me.
He did not suggest which pUol. Lt.
James R. Phillips. 27, of El Toro. or the
Hu2hes Air West DC9 captain.
Iiiitial witnesses said they r;aw the Air
"'est pl.!!ne carrying 44 passengers and
crew of five 1pir11I \aiily into 1n almost·
lnaccesslble mountain canyon le1vin1 a
trail of amok:e and flame.
the definite or probable cause of the
crash.
Jeff Willington, 15. of Duarte. testified
hP saw the jet fighter en route (rom
Nevada to El Toro MCAS engage in
acrobatic1 just before the cr11h.
Radannan Schiess, who was able to
parachute . denied thi&, saying his pilot
made a 361'.klegree roll for added air tr11f·
fie visibility several minute1 prior to lm·
pact.
He. said he sav.' the jetliner looming out
of the. right sidt of the canopy st conds
btfore impact \v\th I.he. Phantom. u·hich
1ufftTed aeveral mechanical defecla.
"\V3tch It Rich !' he told of shoutina Ill
Lt Phillips. a veteran or ;:ibout ooe ye1r 's
fl.vinii: e:q>t>rience.
The jetliner then collided with the
Phantom's rear t1il portion. he leltifl~.
t1dding he saw jt ml'lke no ev3s1ve
maneuver.
Killed with !ht other passengers were
1'.iichael Potter, 7, and hi! 1ister June, ft ,
daughters of Mrs . Sandra Potter, of 709
Calle Puente in San Clemente.
Federal investigators are intrigued
with a mystery r1dar transponder unit
signal mon itored in P a I m d a 1 t
1imultaneously with the jet's Cfllllsioa.
Workers Picket Office
Of Pacific Teleplwne
In a hold over fr om the lelr.phone strike
of two weeka agn, member~ of the
lntern1Uonal Brotherhood of Electrlc1l
Workerg t<lday picketed offices of Pac!fle
Telephone ln Oranae Count:/.
Union spokesman Jackie Goldsteln said
I.he picket lines, which art beina honored
by members nf the other telephone
unions, will only Ju t 1 day 11l a ti me.
"\\'e only h11ve 200 members ID t.ht Los
An&eles chapter, so we picke t in Ollf' area
at 1 time. Yeaterday It was the South
Bay area oI Loi An1ele1, today It'•
Orange County," she said. She declined to
name Thursday'• taraet for the plcketa.
~tiss Goldstein said the un ion 11 1tlll on
1tr1k e because they have not reached a
contract agreement with Pa c I f Jc
Telephone.
Pacific Telephone t1ffices In the county,
conditions have retumtd to what they
were duri ng the height of the &trike two
weeks ago.
Information operators and I o n a
dlst.ance oi>erator1 have not reparted for
work and their potU are being manned
by a skeleton crew ef supervisors.
The IBE\V consisLs of directory per1on·
nel. Mllll Goldstein said. These are the
~ple who IM!t up the phone dlrectorle1
and &ell the 1dvert18emtnt8 for the
yellow pages.
She explained that the union 1tren1th
was much creattr In the San 1"rancl11co
Bay area and I.he IB!:W haa been ablt la
m1lntAtn constant pickets et P1 c!tlc
Telephone offices; there.
"The strike Is 11ncUoned by the Af'[...
CIO 11nd we intend to atay out unlU •e
reach a contract a1reement," Mis.a
C<lldateln added.
GEM TALK
~
TODAY
by
.. ,.os• a 11• 41 a ; 1w&.:
Most Diamond
Losses Are
Preventable
I'd like to h.!ve even half of the
diamonds lh11t are lost from their
1etting1 .•. gone forever! But a110
l'd like to see. more people take t.he
simple precautions which can pre--
vent the majority or such 101111.
Most 1t.one11 lost fr om their 1et-
ting11 have given months of fall
wsrning that they are In such dan-
ger ; they have b e c o m e loose,
usually due to worn prongs, and
can rem11in loose in the setting for
many month!! be fore the final ]OS!!
which occurs so often during some
such activity as hou!lework or r e-
crl!i1tion. And it Is exa~tly under
these clrcum1t.ance1 •• , work or
play, th!lt !I diamond literally goes
down the drain or into the wit.er
Y<ith little or no po11ibllity of r ..
covery.
About 90% of 1ucb losses: could be
prevented i1 the mountina:• on your
jewelry were checked twice a year.
So why not take out the best and
cheapest insurance 1vaU1ble •••
the 1ecurity of having us che ck
your mounUne1. lt ta.kes only 1 few
minutes, and there t1 no cb&r&•·
:: ~~"!!". 4..-d ti c'•e·M·•~~-M•t,u•e1 elt~•<i 1,..,..,,1, "' •!,,,,'" "Yltt 1'6 11ca,~1. Sii ~ eu 1'.!I cut.
.N1Jdllllll tf&etlll. W11e,_,..l11.L,I ,.,,..,,,.11ts •.
J. C. .JJumphrieJ Jewefer'1
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVlN llN1 TElMS
IANKAMEl lCA•D--MASTE• CHARGE
24 YEAIS IN SAMI LOCATION
,HONE l41·J401
"\\'e are an affiliate of the AFJ.,.CIO
and v.·e are gefUn; tremendous response
from other affill1t.e unions. They have all
agrffd not to cr031 ou r picket lines," she
aalrl
8PC"au st of th~ picket~ .. , th!! dnlen
The offices of General Telephone In
Oran1e County . •·hlch bav11 not been af·
f!cted by the strlke:a. wert not picketed !--------------~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ and 11r~ doing norm•I buslne~ Wday.
r ---~ -.• . i,.. ..... 1 -----... -·~
•
'? r
I
'
l
Laguna BeaeJt
• "' \.,, EDITJO.N
·Today'• Flaal
N.Y. Stoeks ,.,
* YOL M, NO. 179, 5 SECTIONS, 74 PAGES TEN CENTS
Citizens Urge Purchase of S.alt Creek Beach
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of HM 0.ilY 1'1111 lletl
Tht i3sue over p1.1bllc use of Salt Creek
Beach -·one which has 11ti!Ted doz.ens of
angry hearings in recent years -created
a different mood Tuesday.
l t was friendly, for 2. change.
In a crowded Laguna Niguel courtroom
more than 100 South Coast resident~ urg-
E.d Orange County harbor commissioners
to hasten a plan to purchase public rights
lo the beach, parking lots and other
facilities along the emba ttled stretch of
Ahoreline between Monarch Bay and
Dana Point.
Commissioners. who called Uu~ hear·
inHS to aamph~ public opinion before draf-
ting a final recooimt.ndation to county
supervisors, first heard from count}'
department aides, then Avco spokesmen.
An encroachment on lhe dry sand area
of the beach -needed so that a revet-
ment cw be built lo stem a major
laodilide problem -look up much of the
~timony.
County officials repeated the tolal in-
vestment projection for the project -
complete with two large parking lots,
three pedestrian trails to the beach and
Like Vietna:ttt Beach?
Varied Color£ ul Con1ments
Enter Salt Creek Debaie
Because ef the apparent widespread
support for the proposed county purchase
flf Salt Creek Beach and improvements,
the tenor of public meetings has mellow-
ed recently.
No netheless. Tuesday'.!! harbor com-
mission hearings on the plan had il.!i
share of brisk commentary,
Here is some of ii;
-AVCO Executive Vice President
Richard Weiser. who outlined much of
the offer which his firm is making to the
county, alluded to the early days of his
firm '.!i ownership of the embattled pro-
perty. "We sat down last fall and decided
we ltad two options .... either have the
area look like Vietnam, nr make it
available to the public. We chose the lat-
ter approa ch."
(The existence <>f concertina barbed
wlre and imported cactu!I to keep the
public out apparently stirred the Viet nam
all usion)
-Reinforcing the eJ:ecutive'1 com-
men!.!. Vietnam veteran Rustin Kali sh or
Santa Ana told commissioners he knows
wha t Vietnam beaches are like. "When I
surfed there 1 had lo take a trusty Viel·
namese to read the sign:ii for me so we
knew where the mine fields were. The on-
ly difference I perceived at Salt Creek
v.·as that I could read lite sign:ii myseH."
-Brennan "Hevs" McC\el!and , long 1t
colo rful and influential figure along the
South Coast, began his commentary with
traditional understatement : "I represent
the Save Salt Creek Committee:. which
everyone knows is a loosely-knit group. I
don't speak for everyone ," he said, '"only
about $.000 or so.''
"At Uie beginning of lhe battle," he
added, "it "'·as the light of t.ht little peo-
ple. Now it's coming close to victory. But
if you talk to, the young surfers, they
don't want it open, because they know
how to break through the barbed wire
and get to the beach. They 're afraid it'll
get loo crowded.''
Invasion of Mosquitoes
Threaten Areas of State
By TERRY C0\1ILLE
Of IMt Dallr ,llfl SltH
A mosquito pl8gue that hes killed 1,300
horse~ in TeJ:as and now threatens the
San Joaquin Valley is not expected to
reach Orange County this &easoo .
"But.'' warns Jack H. Kimball, man·
ager of the Orange Coonty Mosquito
Abatement District, "sleeping sickness
<encephalitis) is always a potential
danger.''
Kin1ball said methods used in Orange
County to reduce the mosqu ito population
ha ve kept the situation normal.
In Texa 8, mosquitoes have inflicled !he
horse population with Venezuelfln Equine
Enceph alitis, a deadly disease which can
Also spread to humans.
This week directors of lhe Delta Mos-
quito Abatement Di~trict announced that
peslicides are no longer effective against
mo.~uit.oes in the San Joaquin Valley .
''\Ve're just sitting on a powder keg,''
~·arned Dr. Don Murray, manager of the
Delta district in Visalia. "MGSquitoes are
thicker than they have beea in some
years."
The S<1n Joaquin mosquitoes. however,
have not yel been fouad lo carry the
\'en1;1zuelan Encephalitis. They ha ve just
developed an immunity lo chemical
killers.
"The danger is in Infection from Tex·
Oruge Coaat
lt'eatller
Cloudy skies predicted for today
and Thursday, cJeartng In the
aftemoon.!i to a warm sun, brtnx-
ing with it ttmperaturtll of l!lround
72 at the coast, 86 Inland. Lows lo-
night in the 6()'.s.
INSIDE TODAY
Supervisora havr initiated l'I
prof}rom which cotdd crtal.e
1,000 new job3 for the cnunt.y
uou,.rnmr.nt over tht nt%1 18
month!. See 3tOTfl, Pagt. 10. ... ,.... ,.
CtH,.,,.I• t
CIMoc•ln' U• 1
c11nt1i.1 n..e ,_ .
DN111 N9t1Ctt It
., • ..,ltl "•" ' • .....,.,."""""! .. II
""''"'' " --. AM L•llM., :N
Mt"I-l.kM .. 1 U Mtfl ltl I-It.I ft
MMllM .,,
MlltMI ,.,... d
MtlltMI ..... I °"'_. c_,., " tfl¥4t ,..,,., H
--.. u llMk Ml.rt•h u-u ,_ .
"ftlt.sl'" .. ,,
WMIMI" 4
Wwtll N...-. t ,.,. .. ""'" .
"~ .. . .... ,_
,.
11s," Kimball explained. "The Venezuelan
d.i!ease can be transferred from a mo~
quito to a horse and back to another mos.
quito."
A current embargo on any horse
movement.! ln Texas or surrounding
states is expected to hold the encephaliH:.
for" at least a season, Kimball said.
Meanwh.ile, the government is prepar\ng
a special vacci~ for use throughout lhe
v.·estem i;tate.11.
"All of our horse owners are extremel y
worried:' Kimball said. "But we're safer
in Orange County. We don't u~e
pesticides so heavily and mosquitoes here
have not developed an Immunity lo
chemicals."
Kimball said the Orange Counly pro-
gram relies heavily on backyard cleanu p
and the use of special mosquito fish
which eat the mosquito larvae.
"We planted 200,000 ftiosqulto fish in
water sources throughout the county th is
summer," he s,ald. "Our biUest targets
are fish ponds, 250 miles of flood and
drainage channels, park ponds, and golr
course wi.lter hazards. We plant fish in all
of them."
The Orange County district has a list of
S,000 ornamenlal ponds where fish are
ph1nted to keep mosquitoe! down. The
m05quilo fish is .about two inchrA long and
mixes weU with e\her fish .
Laguna Resident
Sells Her Novel
For Publication
A well-known . Laguna 8 ea c h
newswoman h11s joined the rank! of pro-
fessional noveli.!i4 with sale of book titled
"Grand Jury'' to the Avon Publiahing
DiviJion of the Hearst Corporation.
Author Betsy Rose; who retired m do
freelance writing in 1966, "after 13 years
a:ii editor of the Laguna Beach Post. was
herself a member of the Orange County
Grand Jury in 1968, but says her book is
a work of fiction , despite its name.
Schedulf4 for spring publication the
"conttmporary · dra'ma" behefited from
her eiperience as an editor . .!iays Mrs.
Rose, when she applied an editorial pen-
cil to cut its original 900 pages lo the 400
purchased by Avon for spring publication.
She added that IM byline 90 famtliar to
Laguna re11der1 will be tlevated to 11
more dlgnlned Ellzabeth Rose on lhe
book COVIi'.
-.... , ..... :;olP;; -j I J....r'""' ~ t.
restroom buildings -at $2.6 million.
That sum, aald C.ounty Director of
Harbors, Beadles and Parka Kenneth
Sampson, Is the projected cost If Avco
Community Developers handled all im-
provement! and turned over a complete
project lo the county.
The "turn-key"" approach. Sampson
stressed, would be cheaper than if the
COWlly obtained the new land and
de11eloped the same facili ties Itself.
Rancor over the Salt Creek issue was
mWing among the audience .
Brennan "Hevs" McClelland, of
Laguna Beach. the spokesman for the
Save Salt Creek C.Ommltlet, related the
5,000-plus membus' position Uiat the
purchase plan should be put t.o use a!
liOOn as pos.sible.
Alluding to the distance between perk·
ing lots and the beaclt itself, McClelland
pointed out that it follo}\'a: 11 con-
temporary policy of new beach develop-
ment.
"And, anyway, I think !he majority of
the people would rather walk 1,.500 feet
down a trail than trade for the situaUoi;a
or not being allowed to use the beach at
all," he •aid.
He stressed that the encroachment on
the sand In the landslide project should-
follow promises by Avco that little if any
material in the operation would cover the
valuable dry sand.
Fifth District Supervisor Ron Caspers
also attend~ the mttt.ipg as an
<1nlooker. He stressed that the Sall Creek
solution ls amoog bis top three priority
projects.
While Caspers did not commit himself
on th e segments of the feasibility study,
he said he was keenly aware of the need
for good planning of the beach.
If poorly plarmed and developed, be
Mid, It "It could become 'Caspers'
Folly.'"
Commissioners e11pecially sought public
comment on one special point.
\Vhile no decision was reached Tues.
day, commissioners must agree whether
to ask superviaors to place the develop-
ment project under control of the Harbor
District which can enter into contracU to
purchase the beach and pay the $2.8
millio n back to Avco on a time-payment
principle.
Because of a special district status, that
long-term purchase ls po5sible.
Pro-high Rise Material
Sent to Laguna Voters
llp for Spike
Play wUJ begin Saturday .and Sunday at 9 a.m. on _Laguna's "Main
Beach .as the 17th .ann.ual volleyb~l tournament gets ' unde'r wa)r. It will
include playen from• thrO'Ughout Southern Call!ornia. There, will be
32 tw~man teams. _Shown spiking ball is Nick Wood.bury.
Drug Report Countered
ln the wake of a report citing a high
drug arru\ rate for Laguna Beach, ac·
ting, police cblef Oavld Brown Mid today
that the majority of such persot11 .v-
re1ted are· not local residents. -
According" to Chler Brown, only 38 per·
cent of those ptrMlru: taken Into cumxty
by the Special Enforoemcni Del.all (SEO)
during the past year Uved ln the com·
munity. The SEO ii responsible for
almost all of lhe department's drug ar-
Feared for Nation
6.5% Jobless Rate
WASHINGTON (UP\) -AfUIO
Re.1earch Director Nathaniel Goldrlnger
believes the nation'1 unemploytnent rat~
could jump to 8.S perctnt In the coming
months unle~ President Nixon a.dopl.a
different policies lo fl&ht unemployment.
'. •· ~--~-.;s ~-·
'
rests, Chief Brown noted.
For the· purpose of complUnf the
figure.s. :arown said even ov~rnJght hotel
gueeta were comid«ed to be wildentl or
the cqmmunity. The remaiolng 61 percent
of persons anuted for drug vlolationa
gave police out-of-town ad~ses.
However, the acting chief said be wu
in no way cr!Uc&I o~ the concluaJ.ons
drawn by South Orange County Com-
muhlty Mental Health Serv~e!, which
issued the drug ~·te report after •,year·
JOng heal~ aurvey. -
Tb1 heaJUi 1urvey , c&c1osed that
JUvenlle a~eatJ for danatrom'druJ viol•·
tlons In the Art Colony were three time!!
hiiher than the county and five times
hjghu than the att.t.e rate. A4ult arrMtl
lot auch vJolationl, the report uld, were
twice !he COW\ty average .
Ollef Brown 1ald the report "couldn't
have come al a btU.er time;' since he was
Preparlnj: to ask the c1ty for more r;nen
and eqµJpmeol lo cope, wJth the problem.
Group Describes
Law as a 'Hoax'
I ,\
By BARBARA XREIBICH
01 IM DfillY Plllf Jltlt
A. twa-pagt argwntnt -111inJt the
-' height limit ordinance proposed for
Laguna Beach has been mailed to Art
Colony voters by a group calling ltstlf the
NO on August 3 Committee.
Otscribing the initiative oi:dinance as a Amu.....-.:rur wamillg . el:. .. .rulnoui..tth
blke.s" that could result from ha adop-
tion, l.bt statement taYs3.aruna needs
1·1,0 or three new hotel• and improved
~Pini ceni,ra" to improve the tu
~ ri)all-oot It over the JJinaturea o{
W.H\ Llmboume and Jame& Schmilz, but
doea ~ot further ldentJfy them.
La.J:r\bourM, a realtor, is chairman of
the city Planning C.Omml~lon. Schmltz, a buJ!.ct:.i:\.~ a member or the Planning
Commi.Baion.
AddreM for tbe NO on August 3 Com-
mittee Printed on the envelopes con-
taining ·1be mail-out ii Laguna Beach
Post Offic"t Bo:1 537.
This is 'the Post Office Box of the
Laguna NeWs-Post 11ewapaper.
A pa.ragr.8.ph headed "Unfair Taclics4
leads off tltf argument against the in-
itiative and points out that sample. ballots
mailed out by the city c6ntain an. argu-
ment for the proposition but none
against
Lagun~ W oma11
Dies on Freeway
•
In Anaheim
A 27-year-<ild Laguna Beach woman
died at Orange C.Owity Medical Center
hfonday night after being struck by an
auto while walk ing iu the traffic lanes or
the Santa Ana Freeway in Anaheim.
A coroner':ii spokesman s2.id NandJ
Cassandra Henderson, of 428 Park Ave.,
died at about 10 p.m. from inj uriea sus-
tained in the 8:30 p.m. accident.
The California Hi&hway Patrol aaid
Mrs, Henderaon waii will.in& north· in the
10Uthbound traffic lane of the freewa y
near the Manchener Avenue offramp
when she was struck.
The driver of the auto was Identified as
1t1ary Padilla , 49, ol Anaheim. and she
was not injured. After 5lriking the
Henderson woman, the car eareened off
t.he fretway. tearing up al'<>ut 60 feet of
lence before coming to a halt.
A friend of Mr1. H'ender~ aald today
she had come to J.4iguna Stach only two
monlha igo and had no local relatlvea. A
widow, &he had no chUdren'and· was the
daughter M a proftssor ·p,t a Soulh
African University. Her tam.Jly still lives
in South Africa , the friend &ald,
1lthou1b she baa relatives In DttroJt,
Councilmen to Meet
• • '1
Wednesda)' :\fter All
Laguna Beach city CO!l"'"nL, who
had plaooed a .rare w~t;iitu off,
h11ve decided lnste1d to meet In ~IC!C\ltlVe
ses11ion for further dlacusakm Of dtf
employt. aalarles and btnelitl.
The dJscusslona are pr1llmlNry to
finalization of a 1971·72 city budgtt, whkh
city manager Lawrence l\ose Hid Tuts-
day may 1Ull be...IOm~ee.ka•w~>'·
"No argument against the proposlUon
w11 enclosed, despite the fact that the
majority of the cit"y's elected officials,
planning commissioners and civic leaders
have expressed opposition," th e:
paragraph states, adding that the ballot
argument agaiMt the proposition is being
malled ·1t private expeme. ID comict thi1
<uatioa .
LIJU11.1. Beach Civic League President
Jon Brand joined 1pok:esmen for the Yei
on Aug. 3 Committee, sponsors of the
three-story height limit ordinance, ln
decrying the "Unfair Tactics" aJlegaUon.
"Who Is being unfair?" asked Brand.
"The election schedule, with deadlines,
was posted at City Hall as required. by
the election code. They either chett not
to argue, or didn 't do their homework,
whic h ill almost Inconceivable, since
Lambourne is a former city councilman
anri kn ows all about election deadlines."
City Clerk Dorothy Mwfelt confirmed
that she posted the election schedule May
20 and it slated that dead line for filing
arguments was 5 p.nl. June IO.
"l}ie proponents made a point of com.
Ing Ill just before the deadline so no one
"'ould see their argument," said Mrs.
~1usfe/t. "I remember because we had to
hurry to count the words -lhey"re not
allowed more than 300. They were sur-
prised the other side hadn't brooght any.
thing in."
The argument e.~ainst the height limit
ordinan ce warns that cutting 14 fee t ofr
building height.!! will result in "wall to
wall development" of ocean front prt>
perty: cites the fact that the Surf and
Sand Hotel pays city taxes the equivalent
of 500 Laguna homes with no.cost to tha
school di.1trict: and warns that the Irvine
annexation will never lake place If
Laguna adopts a 36--foot height limit.
Brand and the Yes on Aug. S
spokesmen pointed out that the initiativt
ordinance ~regulating height would hivl!'
not repea led an y sidcyard requirer:nent5
now in effect, but is designed to preven~
further "adjuatmenls" by varianCe of the
50-foot hejght the initiative opponent! aay
lhey find more rea&>nable. ·
To the charge that "Laguna can
deteriorate and become a slum like
Venice," Brand comments, "Carmel for
several years now bu had a JO.-fooL
height limit and has it ·turned into a
Venice _ .. Carmel is very much lika
Laguna. If they can make a 30 foot limit
work, we can make a 36-foot limit work."
Regarding the Irvihe aMexation. tha
Civic League offlclal said, "Newport
Beach now haa a 3$-Coot height Ihnit
moratorium very /b\Och like ours and [f
that 1Uck.s, then""° will Irvine join? I
don 't thlnk Irvble ahould dlcltte buildllli
llyles Jn l.afulla."
"Bigger ts not necessarily better," be
concluded, '<and lbere are aome cuu
whep bigger'ts much more cosily •• _the
Irvine anqu could be a dlsaeter. Palo
Alto jU3l bough.l a large puctl of land to
keep It empty because development
would have tncre1sed thetr taxes."
Fleet of Concordes
LONDON !UPI) -'!be Brltlab Aln:raft
Corp. !BAC ) predlcted Tueoday lhat
wl\hln elcht yean at least l&O Concord•
aupersonk: jet lr11n11ports (~T) will be ln
urvlc.·tll over the world.
I
: . u..:.'l_..._.. 31. •
• :-J b.ln. Y PILOT
1Apollo
~·~~~1971 ~
Bugs E:at ·Dust ·
' '.: '.Altr:opa~~ Speed Toward Destiny on Moo_n . .. . .. . -~ .. -~
" "SPACE CEN1'!:!\, HoU!tM rtJPll -day mornlll& under the pull of tho ll\000'1 trwtn Aid. He eltlma~ ...i 8c\lli
I
l
'rbrir ,_blea behind, Apollo l!'s .,.vlty. picked up' 1boul llO perctllt of tllt flus
1 . • &G'mauta closed in calml y and 1.c· plecea wltb a piece: of tape and7 the
curat61y on the ITK>ftn today with One other problem Wi s found Tund•Y 1pacecralt vacuum cleaner and W~er
• ~vtrythtng clfl1r for a Friday landina: at niaht wtien ScGtt And Irwin ot'ttled the said die remaining glass should be no
• , ~ foot of eome of the ltighest lunar hatch to the Lunar Module and problem. ~:, IJM>untains:. discovered during a two-hour inspectlon The met_er nor:nally is. Sf!Bltd under
,. "The moon 's getting bigger out the that the glass cove r to an altimeter pressure tn hl!hum. With the glas.s
" Window," reporte~ Alfred M. Worden as somehow hAd sh :ttlered sln~ launch broken, It wa.s exposed to a near ~acuum the. IJ)K'ta'att wu '75,500 miles from it. Monday morning from Cape KeMedy. and th~ orygen when the cabin was
'IbiJ wu the lut u.sy day for Worden , "We don't have any idea '.l'hy it broke," pressur1:ted.
Vavid R. Scott and James B. Irwin
be.lore they be&:in a record six days of ·=• inooo activity. Thtir schedule 11.·as hght Prope r t y Owners
· And ground controllers let the.m sleep an
:: ~a hour, awakening them Al 10:40 a.m.
:: JOT.
f "We certainly did have a good night'!
:. eep," Warden reported.
... A short circuit that cast doubt on
•. an '1 most ambttlbus lunar ezpedilion
E heen overcome Tuesday and a
lmlna.ry check indlcatM that the Ian •
Coast Re sidents Battling
High Rise at Mammoth . . •• Mtip Falcon was ready.
~ The landing site is 1t the base of the
... i peMine Mountains ranging 10,000 feet
.ind higher, and also near ll gor1e which .· f ps 1,000 feet down .
.• ~Glynn S. Lunney, flight director on the
·, itound, reported at a midmorning brief-
•. Ilg: ''The status of the mission is that
·: We're on schedule. the trajectory is very · · fose to oormat. the performance of th&
i}'stems is now very close to normal."
: Scott And Irwin cbecked the Falcon late
Tuesday and plan to inspect it again
lbnight.
.. ~ They will try to clean up remaining bl~
I glass from an instrument cover they
und shattered. Lunney said controllers
'· anted the astronauts to make certain no
oatin.g glw particles interfered with
~bin equipment, particularly hatch
1eals. .. "We 're 1oing to run the cabin fan for
4bout JS mi11utes and try to catch what 11.·e
can in the filter," Lu Mey said.
; The $445-millio~ QliMion of Apollo 15 is
the most demanfilng ever assigned to an
American space crew. Scott and Irwin
_. Will spend more time on the moon , stay
&zt on the surface longer, cover more
terrain and bring back more samples
Chan their predecessors. Worden will
Orbit the moon longer than Anyone and
d:lndu ct the first truly w o r k i n g
1"pa:cewalk.
The astron auts Tuesday ended their se-
tood day in space as it star~ -trouble
shooting an ~lectric,al problem that trig·
iered an alarm signal ln lhe command
module cabln.
They foWld a circuit breaker for part of
the cabin .lighting hid opened btcaUAe of
tn 1pplienl. clrcult fault,. but F'Ugb~ Di·
rectet'MUlo!n Windler reported ~ trOuble
M a mibor and could be worked atouod.
"Other than that. I guess we're ops
· (operations) normal, goinr to the moon ~planning oa going to Hadley .(the lan.
; , silo .; ... j'l=p·,\f ;41~.~~1,. ' ~ 1·, . . ~~1..i t " • r en : i ll·'a<i\il< '· · n\u · ·• ·iii&
. ~::.i~·~ Ii wi 1 '~ lbe ~~nfliil!uericl ~:~th~~:ot
.... cravity. .
• ; l It's speed w11s dropping from 2,7:>0
.; Miles per hour 1t 12:34 a.m. when the
• astrolla utt ·were 100.666 miles from the
: moon, to 2.134 miles per hour at 7:34 p.m.
: When they will be 5.1.464 miles, away.
· Afiollo 15 will !low W 1,887 mlles per
: hour and tben start to aceelar1te Thun-
~ Indians to Perform
:·At Fashion Island
Members from four Arizona Indian
tribes will lnvade Fashion Island in
' Newport Beach Thurgday where they will
-perform tra.ditional dances for the publi c.
" Dancers from the Apache, Navajo.
: Pape.go and Pima nations ~·ill ~
dresaed in full costume for performan~
· 11t noon. 1:30 p.m. and 3 p.m. Cameras
:-mav be used at each dance.
-.
·!
.. • ..
• I .
OlANll COAST
DAILY PILOT
OfrAMGt!: COAST "UI L!SHING COM l"AN'(
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,.......ly1 tll'llU"'ry f9111Wllt"'f. tt.S -111r,.
A group of Irate Orange Coast
~sidents. all owning property or second
homes 1n the Mammoth Lake arer, hu
joined a legal battle to keep high rise
build ings out of the mountain co mmunity.
Spearheading the move are Charles and
Mary Griffin uf Newport Beach, co-
chairman for the Southern California
beach cities area of an organizAtion c•ll·
lng i~lf Friends of Mammoth.
Griffin w.u the appellant in a suit filed
in bthalf of the f'riends earlier thi!
month. charging Mono County authorities
v.·ith violations of state and fede:-al laws
in authorizing a developer to put in
seven.story apartment buildings on a
mile long slretch of scenic mountain land
adjacent to popular skl slopes.
The suit charges that the 8&-foot con.
crete structures, housing some 200 con·
dominlum apartments. which the La
Jolla firm of R.ecrealion Inc. wants to
build, would diminish property v~lues in
an area of expensive R·I homes across
the street. ruin the view and destroy the
environment.
The property owners ma intain that the
Mono County Board of Supervisors .. nd
Pl3nning Commission. in approving the
high density project , violated the law by
failing to give proper noUce of public
bearings and disreagarcling regulations
designed to preserve open space.
Among the Mammoth supporters 1,~1hose
names have entered the high rise fight
are two Olympic champions. skier
Andrea r-.iead Lawrence. a Mamm oth
resident. and decathlon medalist Bill
Toomey of Laguna Beach.
Mrs. Griffin said she and her husband,
a McDonnell Douglas engineer, have liv-
ed at 208 OpaJ St. on Balboa Island for the1
past 11 years, but have always been
rtgula.r Mammoth visitor!, Three years
ago they built a large second home there.
conlilient that the entire area around
the.qi "t'OuJd be developed with single
residences.
·"The. z.onini already provided for con·
domtniums th.other areas so there didn't
1>eem to be an.Y ,problem," said Mrs. Grif-
fin . "We are not against high rise pro-
vided it's In the right place and with plen·
ty of optn space left around It, which i!
definitely not the case with this planned
development.''
The land on which 1he development is
planned wollld be classified as "scenic"
under any open space program , she ad-
ded , and contains a large grove or trees
which would have to bt removed for the
planned construction.
"h-1ammoth is mushrooming and if this
goes through everyone will start buildlng
high rise without any master plan or pro-
ptr ~ of space," she maintained.
"Local facilities will be overla::;:ed by pul·
ting too many people Jn one place. We
say let's gel a master plan, slow down,
plan the growth and do it right."
About Ml property owners form the
nucleus of the Friends of Mammoth , Mrs.
Griffin said. The group was farmed Aller
Mono County plaMing commissioners ap-
proved the hi&h rise plan despite 80 let-
ters protesting it and only seven in fAvor,
Shi! addf!CI.
It will seek support of all Sierra Club
chaptera and circularize all Mammoth
area prdperty owneri, urltnl atttnd.ance
at heariftgs afiectin1 dev!foPme.rit of the
area .
' Radar Malfunctfun Seen
-1 ~ .,. I ;'!'; ~
' ' I ' "11
In Tragic l\;lidair Crash
Speclaf to the DAILY PlLOT
PASADENA -Testimony of r1dar
malfunctions In both pl.tnes and visual
nying by landmarks below one of the
w(lr\ds busiest aerial crossroads came
today :11t hearings into 11 tragic military·
commercial jet collislon.
The June 6 inciden t that sent a Hughes
Air West spiraling tS.000 lttt down into
the San Gabriel Mountains killed 50
persons. one the F4 Phantom's pilot,
from El Toro fo.i1rine O'.lrps Air station.
The victims included 11 small brothe.r
11nd sister from San Clemente en route
for a summer vAcation with their father,
plus an eastemer headed home from a
visit in C.Osta r.lesa .
Sole survivor of the accident which IS
being probed in three days of National
Transportation Safety Board hearings at
the Pasadena Hilton hotel was the Marine
jet's radar intercept officer.
During mid.morning testimony, \st Lt.
Christ opher E. Schiess. 24. of El To ro,
said pilot error was probably to blame.
He did not sugg!'~t which pllot. LI
James R. Phillips. 27, of El Toro . or the
Hughes Air West DC!! captain.
Initial witnesses said they saw the Air
\\1est plane carryina ~4 passenrers and
crew of five spiral la:tily into an almost·
inaccessible mountain canyon leaving •
Lrail of smoke and flame.
Little new was Added In the way Gf eye-
witness te1tlmony and it will be months
be.fore the NTSB panel issues 1 findini on
the defini~ or probable cau1e o( the
crash.
Jeff Wittington, 15, of Duarte, testified
he saw tht jet fighter en route from
Nevada to El Toro MCAS engaae In
acrobatics just before the crash.
Radarman Schiess. who was able to
p1LTachute. den ied this. saying his pilot
made a 360-degrtt roll for added air traf·
fie visibility several minutes prior to Im·
pact.
He said ht sa~' the jetliner looming out
of the right side of the c11nopy seconds
before impact with the Phantom . whlch
sufftred severa.1 mecbanical def~ts .
"WAtch it Rich ~' he told of shouting to
LL Ph.illips, a veteran of about one year'•
flying experience.
The jetliner thf!n collided with the
Phantom's rear tall portion, he testified,
adding he SAW it m:11ke no evasive
m11:neuver.
Killed with the other passengers were
fo.1ichaet Potter. 7, and his sister June,&.
daughters of r-.trs. Sandra Potter, of 709
Calle Puente in San Cle mente.
Federal investigators are VilriJUed
i;o;ith a mys!ery rad.Ir transponder unit
siRn.ll monito~d in P 8: I m di 1 e
simultaneously with the jet's collision.
Workers Picket Office
Of Pacific Teleplwne
ln a bold over from the telephone strike
of tv.'O wee~• aao. members of the
International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workeni today plcketf'd offices of Pacific
Telepbooe in. Orange County .
Union spokesman Jackie Gol dsietn sa id
Lhe picket lines. which are being honorl!d
by members of the other ttlephooe
unions. will only Jut 1 day al 11 time.
"\l.'e only have 200 members in the Ltls
Angeles chapter. so we picket in one area
at a tiltlf:. '\'eate.rday il was the South
Bay area , of Los Ang ele.A. todfY it'~
Orange County," 1he 11id. She declined t•
name Thursday'1 t1rget for the pliliU.
Miss Gcldsttln sald the union la still on
strike becluse they have not reached a
contract rireeme11t with Pae If I c
Telephone.
"\Ve 11rl! an allillale M the AF't..CTO
and w p -'Ire gelfing tremendous response
from ot.htr •ffillalfl un ions. They have 111
agretd not to cross our picket l!nes," she
said.
Bteaul:f! ol lhe pirktt.' •! the dottn
Pac1f1c Telephone offices In the c<1unty,
condili(lns bave returned to what they
wf!re during the height of the strike two
weeks Ago.
Information operators :11nd 1 on g
distance optrator11 have not reported for
work and their posts are being manned
by a skeleton crew fif su pervisors.
The !BEW ccinsists of directory person·
nel. M is~ Goldstein said. These Art the
peopll! who set up the phone directories
and sell the adYertL!!ement.s for the
yellow pages.
She explained th1l the union stren(th
was much greater in the San Francltco
Bay area aad lhe IBEW has been able to
maintain constant pickets of Prclflc
Telephone offiee.s lbert .
"The strike is sanctioned by the AFL-
CIO and we intend to !lay out untU Wt
rP•ch s contract agreement," ~Uss
GoldstPin added.
Thf' offices of Gtneral Te.Jephone In
()rAnge County, which have not bMn af.
fected by the strikes. were not picketed
~nd 11re dolna nnrm1l buslneM today.
11--""-4.J. "'I , T.tw·•
Dilll Y ~!LOT lltff ,..,. COSTA MESA'S MAYOR WILSON WITH SOME OF THE WOMEN IN HIS LIFE
_________ _cF_r_o_m_L_•__::ft, Mmes, St. Cl1 lr1 Pin kl t y, Wf1 10n, Jordan and Ha mmett
J udge Overturns
Jury's Verdict
In Stock Case
A South Laguna stock.broker who wa!
en~ convicted of grand theft chara:es by
an Orange County Superior Court jury
was cleared of the same charges today
moment! before he w .. s to face a new
trial.
Judge Raymond Thompson found
Erhan Gedik, 31, of 31619 Jewel St .. [n.
nocent after reading the transcript of lhe
broker's previ(lus trial last April .
The same judge had ordered ll new
I.rial for Gedik immediately after the jury
found the broker guilty of grand theft and
Innocent of charges that he violated state
corporate laws.
Gedik had been indicated by the
Orange County Grand Jury alter a
number or women clients, all but one or
them widowii, testified Ulat he had bilked
I.hem of an amount estimated by the pro-
sacutlon at $180,000.
The prosecution contended that Gedik
w1s guilty of "churning" -a term used
by brokers to describe needles:i &ales ol
stocks and bonds for the purpou of
generating broker!!' commis3ons.
Judge Thompson conceded that his re-
jection of the jury's verdict was the first
such ruling he had made in some 4-0 years
on the Oran1e County bench .
But he made it clear that he was far
from u tisified with the evidence offered
to the jury during I.he tw<>-week trial
despite Deputy District Attorney Stu
Grant's comment thaC it was "in·
comprehena!ble th at you would take this
issue away fr om the jury system."
"Maybe (Gedlk) should be punished for
1omethlng." Judge Thomp8on said. "He
seems pretty businesslike but then aaain.
the women he w1s dealing with seemed
lo have been naive, lne1perienced and
over enthusl1stic."
GEM TALK ,
TODAY
by
Most Diamond
Losses Are
Preventable
I'd like to have even half of the
diamond! that Me lost from tbeir
settings .•. gone forever ! But &lso
I'd like lo see more people take the
simple precautio ns which can pre--
vent the majority of i;uch losses.
Most 1itones lost from their set·
tings have given months of fair
~·arning that they are in such dan·
ger; they have become loose,
usually due to worn prongs, and
can remain loose in the setting for
many months before the final los!
which occurs so often during some
such actl,•lty as house~:ork or r,.
creation. And it 1~ exactly under
these circumstances .•• work or
play, thAt a dlamond literally goes
down the drain or into the water
..,,.ith little or no possibility of re--
covery .
About 90% of such losses could be
prevented if the mountings on your
jewelry wue checked twice a year.
So why not take ou t the best Md
che111pest insurance available •.•
the security of having us check
your mountings. It tak~5 onJ y R fev-·
minutes, And there i$ no char&•·
Hail to Women
Mesa Ma yor Credits Feniale Push •
Women have been traditionally con·
i;iderf!CI the power behind the throne.
Costa Mesa r-..la yor Robert Wilson
doeen 't feel modern times and city
gtivemment have alte red the old adJ.ge.
"A 11.·ife is responsible for lhe. success
of the office holder," he says.
To ho nor the secret powers of Costa
Mesa, Mayor Wilson has deco;ated the
WAiis of his new office at city hall with
rol or photographic portraits of each city
councilman 's wife.
"They have to put up with so much of
our publlc and personal lives. They in-
tercept all the na sty _phone calls," Wilson
explained. "They should be honored."
The color portraits were taken by the
police department photographer. Not
surprisingly, the women h11d the last
word . Two -Mrs. Wilson :ind Mr.<1. Jack
Hammett -had their pictures retaken.
But all the portr:iits have been ap-
proved now. and wUI go on the walls of
\\'ilson's riHh floor office this week.
"This is the first offire a mayor or city
cou ncilm:in in Costa Mesa has had,"
\Vilson said. "I'm going to try and bring
some of the city 's nostalgia to it."
The portraits of city council wives form
Free P ress Ed it or
Ordered to T r ial
WEST COVINA (U PI ) -Publisher
Arthur Kunkin pleaded innocent Tuesday
to A charge of printing An obscene picture
and a jury tria l Wlll5 set for Sept. 27.
Kunkin , ~3. Is the editor of the Lo.o;
Angeles Free Press, an underground
"'eekly, but the obscenity charge involved
Another publication with wh ic h he
111Je~edl.v is 11ssociated.
)
· the first step in this endeavor.
\ Wilson ls quite proud of the SOtJnd f1ml·
',Iy life demonstrated by each clfy counell
~uple. He rapidly ticks off the longevity
of each marria5e: "Lucille and Alvin fink.le~. 44 years: Marya lice and Robert
Wilson, 32 years: Mary Jo and Jack
tJammett, 31 years; Ruth and Willard
~an, 30 years, and Claudine and
'f~~iem St. Clair, 29 years."
"I'm e:rtremely pleased that OW' wives
are sO patient with us," Wilson.imiled.
President Nixon
Planning Vi sit .
In. Mid-Au g ust?
Sources in \liashlni;:ton 11nd in San
Clemente have hinted that President Nii ·
nn is plann ing lo return to the Western
White House in mid.August for a three-
11t'eek stay.
\Vhile no confirma!ion has been mad&
by the Presidential staff. trips west dur·
ing that month are st~ndard for the Chief
Executi ve.
The August trips generally llrf' th 11
longest -the first in 1969 lasting more
tha n four wee k.~.
SQurces in Wa.<ihington to!d the DAILY
PILOT that ;i visit by British Prim11
Minister Erl11·.lrd He;ith might be
forthcoming dur1nj( the President 's ne1t
11.·orking vacation here.
The President and First La dy spent
!11·0 weeks earlier thi.~ mnnth ::it. their
Spanish es!atr. leaving for Washi ngt(ln
./uly 11 after Mr. Nixon anoounced he
planned a tri p to Peking before camp.!l ign
:;;eeson begins next year .
l}IEWEST UERSl[]l}I []f
THE flAST WRT~H []!}!
THE l';')[][]l';i
2·t ul1,,.., 4-dll\ •h-e~··i~. '-l111urt1 111~11~ lf'l rYll• ,. 't•"· "''ft"''"'"" 1•:1111!1. j :1 ~1oru •l•• c.ua., .M11'111n1 ~&c.tl4L l'ill•N'Hltt&.'ll , ... , •• ,. •• 1t1.,
J. C. J./umphr ie& Jeu 1elert1
1823 NEWPO RT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TEAMS
IANKAM!llCAll.0-MASTll CHAii.GE
24 YEA•S 1N SAM' LOCATION
PHONE 14t .J40 1
--·-...,--
!
I
I
I
' EDIT19N
*: * ..
VOL 64, NO. 179, 5 SECTIONS, 74' P~&ES
' u
Mosquitoes
Invading
California
By TERRY COVILLE
Ci IM ~IJ f'li.t l lllf
A mosqtJito plague that has killed t.~
horses in· Texas and now thrutens tht
San Joaquin Valley is not expected to
reach Orange County this season.
"But," warns Jack H. Kimball, man-
.ag!!r or the Orange County Mosquito
Abatement District, "sleeping ilcknes&
tenceph alitis) is always a potential
danger."
Kimball J1aid methods used in Orange
County to reduce the mosquito population
have kept the situation normal.
In Texas, mosquitoes haye inflicted t~
horse population with Venezuelan Equine
Encephalitis, a deadly disease which can
also spread to humans.
Thii week directors of the Delta Mos.-
quito Abat.ement Dii;trict &Mounted that
pesticides are no longer effective against
mosquitoes in the San Joaquin Valley.
"We're just si tting on a poyvder keg~;•
warned Dr. Don Murray, maJ{ager of the.
Delta district in Visalia . "Mosquitoes are
thicker than they hive been in some
year11."
The San Joaquin mosquitoes, however,
havt not yel been found to carry ttie
VeneiueJan Encephalitis. They ha ve just
developed, an immunity to chemical
killers.
"The danger is in•i.nfedion 1fmm ·-Tex4
as,'' Kin\ball' ~xplainedr '°The'V'ene!Uelan
disease can be tral'ISfured from a m()&.
/ ~ito to a horse an~fblck to l{lb~IIMfr ..
' ..,, ... ito." 4 4~ I A current embargo on any hor;ae
movements ·in Texas or surrOundlnc
,tates i! expected to hold the encepl1ai)m
Ior at least a seuon, Kimball aaid.
Meanwhile. the government is preparing
a special vaccine for use throughout the
western state111.
"All of our horse owners are extremely
worr ied," Kimball said "But we're safer
in Orange ()runty. We don't use
pesticides so heavily and m05f':lultoes here
have not developed an immunlt,y to
chemicals."
Kimball said tht Orange ~unty pro.-
gram relies heavily on backyafd cleanup
and the use of special mosqu..ita fbb
wh ich eat the mosquito larvae:.
"We planted 200,000 mosquit~ fish in
water sources throughout the county this
,;ummer," he said . "Our biggest targets
are (ish ponds, 250 mile! of flood and
drainage ch.!tnnels, park ponds. and golf
cour~ water hazards. We plant fish in all
of them." '
The Orange County district has • list r.f
fi.000 nrnamental po'nds where fish ar'
pl anted In keep mosquitoes down. Tht
mosquito fish i~ about two inch~ long and
mixe s well with ether fish .
San Clementean
Joins Fray In
Freeway Fuss
A San Clementt aUy ·hu.been found for
Costa Mesa C:Ouncilman Alv!n Pinkley' 1
attack on the Ne,wport BM~b freeway
1t1nd.
La.<it week Pinkley charged that
Newport Beach's word WM "worlhlesii.
evefl worse than a wooden nick.le." dur-
ing a long diatribe on that city'• op-
position to the Pacific C.oast Freeway.
This week he N!Ceiv~ the foUowin& let4
ter from Nelson Vi. Barcu!, 210 Monterey
Ave ., San Clemente::
• IC a
Guilt Admitted
Depµty Faces Jail i1i Theft Case
A former Orange County sheriffs depu-
ty wajved· jury trial Tueaday and pleaded
guilty to lesser charges1 stemming from
the burglary Sept. 1.0 of the Mission Viejo
Country Club.
Ex-Oeputy Frederick ,'B. Irvine, 44, of
La Habra, plea<Jed gujlty to receiving
stolen property and insist~ on filing 1he
plea after SupEirlor Court Judge Byron K.
McMillan warned him th"at it would
amos{ eertainly mean 1tate prison.
Irvine-was ordered lo return to court
Oct. 21 for sente nci ng. flelated charges of
burglary. grand theft, auto theft and con.
spiracy were dismissed.
Tht burly, ex-deputy faces a possible
iitate prison term or up to 10 years and
Judge McMillan made il clear. Tuesday
that he can almost bank on that senlence.
Irvine was one of IMI "moonlighting"
deputies arrested out.Side the country
club shortly after the gOJf pro asser1.edly
saw the two 1ecurity 'guards carrying
cases or liquor and aolflng equipment
from the golf .!hop to· their patrol car.
Deputy Arthur B. Duncan, 34. of Hun-
tington Beach, imme<li1tely surrendered
to fellow deputies but Irvine seized a
patrol car and led hi.11 former colleaguM
on a wild chase that ended in Rivertide
C:Ounty after sho~ were exchanged by
pur!uers ·and pursued.
Irvint was finally persuaded to ,.,ur-
render after he ·threatened several times
to stlool himself.
Both men were indicted by the Orange
County Grand Jury but Duncan was
found dead, hanged from the rafters in
the garage of ,his Huntington Beach homt
before he could be arraigned on the
charges.
F'r1'00s and former colleagues said
Dunclin became deeply depressed after
charges were fHed and commented on
many 0ttasions Lbat ht C1M..1ld not fact
court action . He spent moch of his career
with the sheriff's offia as a bailiff ill
several Supti:rior Court ln<;ations.
Motlier of Rape Victµti
Committed to Hospital
A San Clemente woman who allegedly
encouraged a you ng Ma'rine to rape her
1•-year..old daughter was committed
Tuesday to • state hospitaf for prolonaed
psychiatric ilavtslil•tjoa·· I -
Orange County Superior Court Judge
Byron K. McMillan suape:n~ cr~inal
preceedincs ~ UIC SI-year.old Je.fen-
dant and ~ her irtunefl~ate tran.s!er
to · Patton • sui. HOIPltai ilter •
courtroom exchanje.
Tht gray·h~red.dtfendant asked Judge
McMillan to confirm that her 10l1 and
daughter were holdinf htr fund! and
complained to the jurist that neither
member nr her family would com-
municate with her and eonftrm that they
did hold the money. •
Judge McMiiian got the admission from
the ~ and daughter and iOt the agree-
ment of a family friend who was pruent
Jn.·· UM! courtroom-to late over the power
of attorney for ibe deftndant and handle
Dana School Bid
Let, $254,870
A low bid of $254,871) was accepted
Monday for the Ri chard Henry Dani
Elementary School addition.
Trustees of the Capistram Unified
School District accepted the bid of P. J.
Pietrok Com pany of Anaheim.
Ten companies 10Ught the contract for
the Dana Point project whi ch ranged
from Pietrok's low bid up ·to $000,000. The
~ccepted bid was 10 percent below the
architect's projecUon.
ConstnlcUon ia expected t.o begin u
8000 u \he state glve.s its routine •!>'
proval with 191) daya estimated aa th•
time needed for completion.
Fleet of Concordes
LONOON (UPI) -The Brlllstl Aircraft
Corp. (BAC) predicted Tuesday that
within eight years 1t least lMI Concorde
superlOnk jet transport& ISST) wlll"be irt
terVite all over the world.
Securlt9 Package
her fin.ancial affairs while lhe was ln-
car<:era~:
But the juri.t cio3ed the unscheduled
~urt hei.rini when the defendant began
to cli.!ICUM from th#' box ''iome
of th< 1-na l'v , 'llecl li!·: otoni•
C.OUnty jail and the" way so\mda
reverberate irt that plact."
.. There's several things I'd lite )'<)U tn
do for me ~d I JW'e would Uke ·to sit
down and lllk with )PU,' the defendant
conutlented "' tho Jullp. ''Well, w.·.may b9 able to work all that
nut bu t [int I want to a:et you tc Patton
just. as soon as possible." the judge
replied.
The defendant and Marine Robert Dean
Smith, 21, were al'T'e!ted after the sister
ot ~ young victim told police that her
mother had invited Smith lo rspe her
Aister with a view to "calming her
down."
Tht sexual a.ssault.s occurred in •
nearby motel room and it wa.s testified
that the defendant aided Smith Jn sub-
duing his victim .
Smith Js now i;ervlng a slak priMn
t.erm or six months to 50 years fOT hia
role In the series of rapes.
Delay Paint Job
So Birds May
Rest In Peace
You'll find no "swaJJowcide" at San
Clemente High School.
In facl, school officials 11.dmitt.ed Mon·
da:Y they have gone out or their way to
preserve and protect the tiny blrd8 and
their brood this summer.
San Chicas, 1ssistant ~uperintendent
ror bu11lness, told Trustees o't the
Capi11trano Unified School District that a
proposed Ttpajnting project is being
po1tpone<I unUI the end of AuiUsl so nests
woit't be disturbed.
He said I.he portponement is "°" adding cost or lnoonvenlenct because other
llChoob were also part of the painting
CQntract.
The request for a delay •u: made by
ecok>gy.mJ'nded San Clemente dtiuru.
WEDNESDAY, JUl.Y 28, 1971
...__..ree ('
•
"'' ftl9MM Tourist Trap?
A nun has been stationed at the door of St. Pe'ter 's Basilica by the
Vatican. Her t1sk; Keep out women whose gatb reveals too much
thigh or bosom. It was the fir st time a woman had been assigned to
rule on hemlines and necklines. Vatican officials felt male security
guards were lax in their value _iudgmcnl?. T~is woman tourist see ms
to be findi ng fault wilh lhe nun'i; determination.
Like Viettuim Beach?
Varied Colo1~f t1l Con11nents
Enter Salt C1·eel\: Debate
~ause ar Lhe apparent widespread
1upport for the proposed county purchase
f'lf Salt Creek Beach and improvement.I!,
the tenor {)f public meeting~ has mellow-
ed recen tly.
Nonetheless, ·Tuesday's barbor com·
mi.laion hearings on the plan had its
Matt ef brisk commenlary.
Here is some or lt :
-AVCO 'Executive Vice Presid ent
Richard Weiser, who outlined mucb &f
the offer \\.'hich)li.5: firm is 1naking to !.he
county, al\ud~ lo I.he early days or his
firm's nwnershi,p or the embattled pro-
perty. "We sat down last fall and decided
we had two oplions .•. ,either have the
area look like :Vietnam. or mike lt
available to the pub.lie. We chose the tat-
ter approach.''
(The existence of concertina barbed'
wire and impf1rted cactus to keep 'the
publi c out apparently stirred the Vie~
allusion) ....._
"Dear Sir: You are JO J:i.ght about
Newport Beach. Are you willing to su g.
aest a sp«ial license plate for Newport
Aeach? Something like No No Newport.
Cars with this license would not be allow-
ed on any freeway."
U.S. Ol(s Clemente Grant
-Reinforcing the execulive·s com·
menl..'l, Vietnam veteran Rustin Kalish of
Santa Ana told commissioners he · knows
"'hat Vietnarii beaches are like. "When I
8urfed there I had to lake a tru!lty Viel·
namese to read the sign11 for me so• we
knew whae the mine fields were. The. on4
ly, difference 1 perceived· at salt Creek
W1s tbat:I oould read tM signs myse.U."
Ronald Olsen Choice
))or Planning Poat
Roi.and Olsen of %$IS2 Mar:lpog, Sart
Juan C&plstrano, h11 been named to the
city's planning cnmmisa lon. ,
The general cont.rlC~ was 1elecuid
from five candidates to 1&11ume &he poat
vacated by C. Russell Cook. Cook re.!lign-
ed recently llter 10 years te.rVfct to the
city, ·
Olsen 'w11s 1ppninted by tht Cfty Coo&
c:U MoQday after an executive .-sion .
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The se0011d 11tgment "' 1 three-year federaJ ~r1nt to assist' San Oemente In
providing aecW"lty, for President Nixon
1'on approval ln Conlf68 Tuesday.
The $133,000 aJJocatlon. hJd been ~x~
pected and was Included in the cfly
'budiet for the new fiacel yur.
Under term• of tho vant the ,cily
n:eelvt8 a.n amount each yNr for thrff
yell"9. The luL tnaement .under lhf: ex·
lsting form1t would come Mil 1wnmer
for the .tm-'73 fbcaJ year.
TM f'llld> att Wied in ..iart., for 10 ,,.,. J'Ollee p111o!J)1tn •dd!d to lht 1.,...
II.st )'IAt!. Mtich·of the tt.mdl 1l1n •rt V>
ed for tr1inin1 and tome equipment.
,,
$an Clemenk'a police .force play1 a ~nt rofe In Pna!~al acurlly dur·
ins vi.alta by the fitat family. ,
The inJUal frlnl arnOunt made l11l
year wu for •J.m , and tonnect the
llflell alnj:le allocation for crime
flgtlttng to a city DI San Clemen~·· rlr.e.
The flrutt "" aucmented" .tut ~
by -.1 W ,llOO In ..... •kl which went
tow1;d recn.iltiJll neW .men a~ traln~I
'them.
The total program of funds -ahared
by tho -rll ·10vamment and tho State
o(. ClllfO!J!.ia -Is peped at ' about
$53!;00tl.
•• ..
But befOrf. tht new year'• allocation
.l .
can be forthcoming, juatiflcation of the
previoua year'• allotment mll!l be made
to federal and 1tate offiCial1.
The first year of the proi:ram pointed
out inherent· dHftcultles In law en-
forcement during prirltent tiihet In finding
qWJllfied appllca.nti.
Since tben, however. Poltce Chief Cllf·
ford Murray has 11ttes:se:d U,at tbt 10 new
men hired ha.we upgr1ded th e
def>artment'1 quality. rubstantially. He
also forecut lut tpring that he foresee11
no need in the nest few years to add new
potltkms to I.he roeter of 47 polict
employu.
-,
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-Brennan "Hen" McClelland, loJt a
colorful acd lrifluenUal ligure along · the
South· coalit. btgan· hi• commentary With
traditional .understatement: "l ··repreient
the Save Sal~ Creek ·Committee. which
1everyone "knows .ll a ·loose.Jy.Jtnit. gr~. I
don't 1pe1k-for everyone..'' be sald, "only
about ~.000 or.so.''
"At the b<glMinl! of lht bottle," he
added. "it w" tho fillll of th• llttlo peo-
ple. Now it'• coming close lo victocy • .But
if you talk to the young 1urfers, they
don't want It open , because they know
how to break throl1gh the barbed wire
and get to the be11.ch. They're afraid-It'll
get t08 crowded."
•
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•
Today'• FfnaJ
N.Y. Steeb
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TEN CENTS
Crowd Asks
County Buy
Beachfront
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of !I'll DellY r11tt St.n
The issue over public we of Sah Creelci
Beach -one which has stirred dozene: ot
angry hearings in recent years -created
a different mood Tuesday.
lt was friendly, (or & change.
In a crowded Laguna Niguel courtroom
more than 100 South Coast residenb urg ..
ed Orange County harbor commissioner,L
to hasten a plan lo purchase public righ~
to the beach, parking lots and other:
facilities 2..long the embattled stretch of.:
shoreline between Monarch Bay and'
Dana Point
C-Ornmlssioners. who called the hear·
lngs to sample public opinJon before drafJ
ting a final recorruttendaUon to counti
supervisors, first heard from county:
department aides, then Avco spokesmen,'
· An encroachment on the dry sand area
of the beach -needed so that a revet.:.
ment CM be built to stem a major
landslide problem -took up. much of the'
testimony.
County offi cials repeated the total In.-;
vestment projection for the project -
complete with two large parking lots,
three pedestriJn trails to the beach and
restroom buildinga -at $2.6. million.
Thal sum, s3id Cowity Director of
Harbors., Beache.s and Parks K~eth
SamPscm. is the pfojetted · eot:t if AVca
ComritUnity Developers handled all tm•
provements Md· turned over a complete
project to the county .
The "turn-key" approach, Sampson
·stressed, would be cheaper than if the
~ty ,()htalned the new Jand and
developeil the aame l1cllllits lt3elf.
Rancor over tht Salt Creek i&sue was
missing among Ule audience.
Brennan "Heva" McClelland, of
Laguna Beach the spokeaman for the
St.ve Sall Creek Commlttee, related the
5,000-ph.ts members' position that the
purchase pl1n should ht put to ust u
soon as posaible.
Alluding to the distance between park·
Ing Jots and the beach itself. McClelland
pointed out that It follows a con-
temporary policy of new beach develo~
ment.
';And, anyway, 1 think the majority of
the people would rather walk 1.500 feet
down a trail than trade for the si tuation
ol not being allowed to use the beach at
all." he said.
He stressed that the encroachment on
!he sand In the landslide project should
follow promises by Avco that little if any
material in the operation would cover the
valuable dry sand.
Fifth District Supervisor Ron Caspers
also aUended I.he meetint a.a an
onlooker. He stressed that the Salt Creek
solution is among his top three priority
projects.
While Caspe rs did not commit himself
on the !legments of the featlbility study,
he said he was keenly aware of the need
tor good planning of the beach.
Tf poorly planned and developed, he
Mid, It "it could become 'Caspers•
Folly.'"
&>mmissioners especially sought public
comment on one apeclaJ poinL
Weather
Cloudy skies prt<llctod for today
and Thuriiday, clearing In the
afternoons to a warm 111n. brln1-
lng with it temperatures of ai'oUnd
72 at the coast, 86 inland. Lowa to.
night in the llO't. • INSmi: TODAY
SupttVilor• Mot iniei4Cfd 4
progrom which could create
I .000 new jobs for the countt1
pOt>m"llmeni owr the u:rt 11
fnO!tth.t. Set itorv. Page 10.
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(IJIJlrnll a
Clltdi:IM UI" 1 C.llttlfMll 17 ...
CIW>kt -" 0..lll NetkM 1t
•llWlal l"tM ' •ftttrtl lR-1 »JI =.. ll Allll (lftlllth I+
IM!Tt"* Llcet!Mt 11 MM laJro~.
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• • , I II.Illy PILOT SC Wtdnts.di)', July 28, 1 t71
·polio Bugs Eat Dus·t
; A•t_i;onauts Speed Toward Desti11y on Moon
•
;. SPACE CENTER. Houston rUPI \ -
'Ibeir troubles behtnd, Apo llo 15 s
~Uta cloeed in calmly and ar-
. • aUit.fy on the moon loday "''1th
.evtr')1bin& cltar for a Friday landing at Abe foot of some of the highest lunar . . ;m~untaln.<.
'!!I ~ moon's getting bigger out the
.P*tDdOw," reported Alfred M. Worden as
: .the tp&Oecr1ft wu 7~,500 miles from it
•Ii' TbJs wu tht last easy day for Worden.
David R. Scott and James B. Irwin e they begin a record six days of
:, activity. Thtlr schedull! was hght
: ground controllers let them sleep an
' · :rtra Mur, awakening them at 10 40 am
DT.
"We certainly did have a good n1ghl's
Jeep," Worden reported.
A short ctrcllit that cast doubt on
an's most ambitiOWI lunar expedition
d been overcome Tuesday and a
re.liminary check indicated that the lan-
. ·ni thip Falcon was ready.
· The landing site is at the ba.!ie of the
pennlne Mountains ranging 10,000 feet
P.~d higher. and also near a gorge which
pps 1,000 feet down.
' Glynn S. Lunney. flight director 'On the
und. reported at a midmorning brief-
, g: "Th~ status of the mission 1s that
e're on schedule, the trajectory is very
ose to .normal, the performance of lhe
stems is now very close to normal."
· Scott and Irwin checked the Fale<1n l<1te
esday and plan to inspect it again
• ight.
They will try fll clean up remaining bits
f glass from an i.rultnunent cover they
ioW1d shattered. L_unney said controllers
:§wanted the a!ltron.auts to make certain no
;!lotting glass particles ln~rfered with
:~bin equipment, partlcularly hatch :,tals.
: "We're going to run the cabin fan for
fbout 15 minutes and try lo catch what we
Un in the filter," Lunney said.
-: The $44!1-million mission of Apollo 15 I!
.the most demanding ever assigned to an
$merican space crew. Scott and Irwin 7i!I spend more time on the moon, stay
· t on the surface longer, cover more
&in and bring back more samples
their predecessors. Worden will
;brbit the moon longer than anyone and
l;onduct the first truly w o r k i n g
ipacewalk.
The astronauts Tu esday ended their se-
O)Ild day in space as it started -trouble
Mooting an electrical problem that trig·
gered an alarm signal in the command
module cabin.
They found a ci rcuit br!aker for p<1rl of
, the cabin lightmg had opened because of
an apparent circuit fault. but F'light Di·
rector Miltoo Windler reported the trouble
-was.minor and oouJd be worked around.
: "OOW_,tbu that, (~• w<·~ •;s
. ,(opera~onsJ nonnal, goin g to. the moon • ;and pJa:nnin.g on going to Hadley (the Ian-
.~ site)," Windler reported at an early
morning ,briefing today, .
The three Apollo 15 crewmen retired at ,
'. 1:33,•M · ~J?T ai'.il~ ;)11Udt.,of. thia"i •, 'rnOryp!!f-1 I · 't . -~ ~)1l"if'Y'
Atio)!O'ls ,.~ · idiWIY'ojowfnt'ilndir'
tht: deereulng bi uerlce Of earth's tug ot
gravity. ·
It's speed was dropping from 2.750
: ·miles per hour at 1.1 :34 a.m. when the
:: 11atronauts were 100.666 miles from the
: 'moon, to 2.lM milt! Per hoor at 7·34 p.m.
: wh en they wUJ be ~.404 miles away.
: Apollo 1~ will slow to 1.887 mileg per :; hour and then · start to accelera te Thurs-.
:Indians to P erform
: At Fashion I sland
~. Member& from four Arizona Indian
:: tribes will invade Fiashinn Island In
:: Newport Beach Thursday wh~re they 9.'ill
:.;perfonn traditional dances for the public.
:· · Dancers from the Apache , N"•V"-JO,
:. Papago 3tll:I Pima nations v.'\l! be
: dres~d in full costume for pcrformancPS
::et nnon , J :JO p.m. and 3 p.m. Cameras
. · rnt11v ~ u~ed ;it p;ich d<1nce
•. ·.
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ORANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Ol:ANGt: CO.UT 'Ulll IS>llNG-COM,AN'f
lttlt•rl N. W1.d
,._ C1tn1 •"" t>1101111•er
J1c~ It C11rl1y
Vici ,.,Wiele<!T t rd G-11\t'll Mt~t;er
llio"'•t IC11vil
l!dltor
Tl!1,.•1 A. M11rplt•ft1 Mln&tlftg l!O•!Or
01rl11 H. leo1 llie h1r4 '1'. Nt /I Aui.11n1 #.1n&;f"11 a,u.,...
....... IMcll Offfce
1!2 Forest Av1~u•
.M1 iling 1ddr1u: '1'.0 . ler •66, '12•5Z
S.. c-.... Offke
JOI Nertlt l l C1n1ine llt1I, '16'72
Ott..t-Offlr." Coll• >Ml•· a wnr ••r l!•lt'I
Ntwll0'1 •...c~: lUl "ltwfl(lrr l&u !VI P"d Munt111Q""1 IV<~: 17111 t••dl &eultvl•d
da y morrung unde.r the pull of the moon's
gT•Vity
One olh!r probltm was found Tuesday
night \.\ten Scott and Irwin opened the
haf<'h to the Lunar Module 8nd
discov ered during a two-hour 1nspe.clion
tha t the glass cover to as:i a!timeler
somehow had shattered since launch
t.1ondiiy morning from Cape Ken nedy
"'\\'e do n't have any idea why it broke ,"
Irwin said. He estim1~d he and Scott
picked up about &O percent of the glass
pieces with a piece of tape And the
spacecraft vacuum cleaner and Windler
s.ald the remaining glass should be no
prohle m.
The merer normally is sealed under
pressure in hehum . With the glaM
brok~n. it WiiS exposP.d to 8 near vacuum
arid !hen oxygen "·hen the cabin was
pressurized.
Property Owners
Coast Re sidents BattliI1g
High Rise at Mammoth
A group of tr.ate Orange Coast
ruldents, all owni.n1 property or second
homes in the Mammoth Lake iarea. h1111
joiOed a leg;! battle to keep high rise
buildings out of lhe mounta in community.
Spearhe<1ding the move are Charles and
M!lry Griffin of Newport Beach, co-
cllairman for the Southern California
beach citles area of an organization call·
ing itself Friend! of Mammoth.
Griffin was the appellant in a suit filed
In behalf of the Friends earlier th ia
month. ch arging Mono Coilnty authoritie!I
""ilh violations of-st.ale a.nd federal laws
in authorizing .a developer to put in
seven-story apartment buildings on a
mile long 5tretch of scenic mountain land
adjacent to popular ski slopes.
ed at 208 Opal St on Balboa Island for the
past 11 years, but have always been
re(Ular Mammoth visitor11. Three. years
ago they built a large second Mme there .
confident that the entire area around
them would be developed with slngle
residences.
"The zoning already provided for con-
dominiums in other areas so therE: dirin 't
seem to be any problem," said Mrs. Grif-
fin. "We are not against high rise pro-
vidfd it's in the right place and "''ilh plen.
ty of open space left around it. which i.~
definitely nol the case with this planned
development."
The suit charges that the S.S·foot con-"
ere~ structures, housing some 200 con·
domlnium apartments. which the La
Jollii firm of Recreation Inc. wants to
build, would diminish property values In
an area of e1pensive R·l homes across
the street. ruin the view and destroy the
environment.
The l1nd on which the development l:i;
planned would be classified 11.11 '"scen ie"
under an y open space program, she ad.
ded. and contains a large grove of trees
whi ch would ha\•e to he reritoved for the
planned construction.
"Mammoth is mushrooming and if !hii.
goes through everyone will start buUding
high rise "'ithout any master pl.an or pro-
per use. of space," she maintained.
•·Locel facilities will be overtaxed by put-
t ing too many people in one place. Vi1e
say let 's get a master plan. slow down,
plan the growth and do It right."
The property owners maintain that the
Mono County Board of Supervisors <1nd
Planning Commission. In approving the
hlih density pro~ct , violated the law by
failing to give proper notice of public
hearings and dlsresgarding regulations
designed to preserve ope.n space.
Among the Mammoth supporters whose
names have entered the high ri11e fight
are two Olympic champions. skier
Andrea Mead Lawrence. a Mammoth
resident. and decalhlon medalist Bill
Toomey of Laguna Beach.
Mrs. Griffin said she and her husband.
a McDonnell Douglas engineer, have Jiv.
I
About 50 property owners form Lhe
nucleus nf thP. Friends of Mammoth. Mrs.
Griffin st11irl The group wa~ formed ;iftP.r
Mono County planning corumiMioners ap·
proved 1he high rise plan despite llO lf't·
ler,; prnfesting it and only i;even in fa vnr.
she added.
It will seek support of all Sierra t:luh
ch<1pters and circularize alt l'l.1ammnth
areii property O\l.'ners, urging attendancf'
at hearings affecting development of the
area.
Rada'r Malf u11ction Seen
I ,,. \ '
In Tragic Midair C1'ash
I
Special lo the DAILY PILOT
PASADENA -Tes!imony of radar
malfunctions In bnth planes and visual
fl ying by \andmt11rks below one of the
"·orlds busitst aerial <'rossroad ~ came
today at hearings in1n a tragic m 1l itar~·
commercial jf't co!l is1on .
The June 6 incident that sPnl a Hughes
Ai r \\lest spiraling l~.000 lttt down into
rhe San Gabriel Mounta ins killed 50
persons. nne the F4 Phantom"5 p1\nl.
from El Toro Marine Oirps Air s1atinn .
The t·iclims inclurlf'd a ~m:tt l hrolhf'r
and sister frn m San Clemen~ en route
for ii summer \"3Catinn "'ith lht.>lr f;!her,
plus an ell'~crncr headed home from a
visit lf1 Cnsta .\les::i.
Snle <:.urvt\'nr nf thP arc1dcnt 1i.·hlch is
bP1ng probed ln three rlavs nr Natinn;il
Tr<1nspor!.:it1on Safe(\' Rnar·rl hearings at
the Pas<1dena H1ll on hn lel 1i.·as the ~1ar1ne
jet's radar in tercept officrr
During mid-mnrning t r.<:.tirnnn~·. l<:.' LL
Chr1s!ophf'r E Srhi(>SS. 24, nf El Tnrn,
said ptlot f'rrC'lr was probably to blame
He. did not suggest wh ic h pilot. LI
,James R. Phillips. 27, of E! To ro . or lhe
Hugh,.s Air West DC9 caplAln.
Initial wi lnt'sses s1ud thr~· sa"· the Air
~·est pl<1ne carrying 44 passengers And
ere"' nf five spiral !azUy into an aJmnst·
Inaccessible mountain canyon leaving a
lriiil of smoke and flame.
Little ne"' "'as added in lh' wa~ of e''e·
"·Hness testimony and it will be monlhs
be.fore !he t'-.JSB Panel issuts a find ing nn
the definite or probable cause nf lhe
cra"h.
.lf'ff \Vi!tington. I:>. nf DuarlP. tcstUirrl
hP saw !he jet !iizhter en routP. from
Npvada to 81 Tnro ~ICAS t'nga~e in
.;:i crnbetics just hefort. the crash. ·
R;:irlarman Schiess. who was abl P tn
piir!l <'hUte. dPnied this, s<1ying hi~ pilot
madP .11 :160-drgrf'P roll for added air traf·
fir visibility i;f'veral minutes pnor to 1m·
p:~rt.
HP ~a1rl he ~aw the 1ethnrr lonm1n2 oul
!"If the right ~1clP nf !he ranor \ sPrflnd<:.
be fore imp.:ict "1th the Phantom. "'hich
su ffered sevpr;l ml'chia n1ca l rlef('(;ts.
··\\';itch it R1rh' · he tnld nf shnulln~ tn
Lt Philli ps. a \"~JPran ol about nnf' \·ear"s
fl~ ing expenPn\P
ThP jl'\l 1ner lhen cn!11rl f'rl with the
Ph;:intom'I' rPar tail portinn . hP t e~!Jfierl.
arlrltnc he sa1i.· !t makr nn e\·;is11·e
mane111·er
K1llea w1th the n!h<>r pai>sPngrr~ werr
l\lichae l Potter. 7. <tnd his s1sl er June, 6.
rl aughtf'rs of ~tr~ Sa ndra Pnt!er. of 709
Calle Pue nte in San Cl!"nlrn1r
Federal 1 n \·pst1,gatC'lr~ arP intrigued
"·ith a mystery radii r tra11sponder uni t
signal monllored in Pa ! m d a I e
simultaneously w1lh the jet's collision.
Workers Picket Office •
Of Pacific Telephone
In .a hold over from !he telephone slrlke
of two \l'f"l!ks ;go. mf'.mbers nf the
lnttrnaliol"al Brotherhood of Electrical
\\'orkers today picketed offices of P.-iciflc
Telepho~ In Orange Connty.
Union spokesman Jackie GoldsteUl said
the picket lines. which are being honored
by members of the other telephone
unkins. will only las! a d111y at l!I time.
"'Ve only have 200 members In Uie Los
Angeles chapter. 50 we picket in one are111
at a time . Yesterday It wa s lhe South
Bay area of Lo5 Angeles. tod1y it"s
Orange County." she said. She declined lo
n1me Thursda y's target for the pickets.
~1iss Gt'ildste in ~ald the uninn is itlill nn
~trike because they h!IVI' nnt re11.rheri a
rontract agreement with P 11 c i f I c
Telephone
"We art an affili11.!e of rhe AF LrC IO
11nd Wf' arP gPrting tremendnus respons,
from othl'r afhHa!e unions They have all
agreed not to Ctt'\55 our pic ket llnes,'' she
gaid
8Prau~f' nl \hf' pirkel.~ a1 lhe dnzr n
Pac1 !1c Telephone nff1ces In !he rounty.
co ndit ions have returned to "'hat they
were duri'lg t.he he ight of the stri ke two
wP,eks ago.
Information opera lnrs anrl I o ng
dlA!ance operators have not rf']ll)rted for
work and their posl.1 are be:ini;: mannett
by e skeleton <"rew of supervisors
The IBE\IJ con sists of dirrctor)' pPr~no·
net. f\11ss Gol dstein said. These 're the
people who set up the phone dirPcloriP!
and !!ell the adverti!lement.' for the
yt llow page11.
She explained that f.he un ion sl rengl h
was mooh gre11ter in the San F'rancisco
Bay area and Lhe IBEW h&s been able to
m<1lntain constant pickets of Pacific
Telephone nffices there.
"Thf' strike is sanctioned by tht AFI ..
CIO And wd. lnltnd to stay out until w11
re11.C'h a c0ntract agrttment." t.11~s
Gofdstein added
Thf offices of General Telephone 1n
Oranse County. "'hlcl'I h11ve not been llf·
ff'cted b.v th!' strikes, "'erf' not plcke:led
anrl are doing normal husi ne!>.' tod~\·.
COST , DAILY l"lLOT Sllff....,.. A MESAS MAYOR WILSON ~ITH SOME OF THE WOMEN IN HtS LIFE
__________ F_r_o_m_L_•_f_t_, M~es. St. Cleir, P}.nkl•y, Wilson, Jordan o1nd Ho1mm•tt ,,
Judge Overtur11s
Jury's Verdict
In Stock Case
A South Laguna stockbroker who "·as
once convicted of grand theft charges by
an Orange County Superior Court jury
"'as cleiirPd nf the same cha rges toda y
moments before he \\'as to face a new
trtal.
.Judge Raymond Thom pson fo wid
Erh<1n Ged.Jk, 31. of 31619 Jewel St., in·
nncent after readtn.t:{ the transcript of the
broker's pre\•inus trial lasl April.
The same judge had ordered il new
trial for Gedik immf'diately after the jury
found the broker gu!.lty of grand theft and
lnnocent of charges thal he violated state
corporate l~ws.
GPd ik had bC'cn indicated hv the
Or;ioge Coun tv Gr;ind Jurv ;i fl er a
numhcr nf wnmen clients. ;iii bul onP of
them \vidows, testified Lhiit he had bilked
then\ nf an amount estimated by the pro-
SCC'U l1on at $1Rfi.OOO.
The prosrcu11nn cnnlcndC'd that 1;crl 1k
wa-" ,e:ui l!v nf ''churning" -::i term USPrl
by brnkcrs lo de.'\cribe needles.s sales nr
:-locks Anrl bonds for the purpose of
,!!l'nPrating brnkrr<:' <'nmm1s.o;1nn~.
.lurlgP Thnmpson rnnceded tha1 ht!' rr·
Ji'.'Cl1on nf thf' Jury·s verdict was the fir sl
such ruli n,1:: he hari m;ide in some 40 vears
on the Oran.l!e County bench . ·
But he made 1l clear that he WAS far
from salisi fied with the evide nce offered
lo lhe Jury duri n11: Lh e twn-1•1t"rk fri::il
despite De puty District Attorney Stu
<~ra.nt"s cnmn1eot that it "'ilS ''in·
rClmprchens1ble that you woul rl lak e this
issue awa~· from the jur y s.vslem ·•
"'Maybe !Gertik ) shou ld be pu ni~hed fnr
snmet.htn,I!."' .lurl,1:e Thtlmpson said. "He
seemg prett.v businesslikr but then again.
the "'nmen he wa.~ dPal in.I{ wi!h seemrrl
lo have been naivr , inexperienred and
nv('r Pnthu.~1;i~t ic."
Most Diamond
Losses Are
Preventable
J"d like to ha\1e even half of tht;
d1am0nds !hat are lost from lhe1r
i:;ett1ngs ... gone fore\·er! But also
1 ·d like lo see more people take t.he
sim ple precautions which can pre·
\·ent the mA.10rity of such losses .
!vt nsl stonE's lost from their set·
fjn~s ha ve given months of fair
\\'arning that they are in s uch d3n-
ger ; they have b e c o m e loose,
usually d1ie tn \1·orn prnngi:;, a nd
can rf'ma1n lnose 1n lhe i:;eftin;:-fnr
1n anv ninnths before the final loss
\\ hlch occurs so oflen during some
such activity as house\\"Ork or re•
creAtinn. And It is e>.:acUy under
lhc~e circumstances ..• "'Ork nr
plfl v. th at a diamond literally ~oes
do\\1n the drain or into the \l'al.t>r
with httle or no possibility of re.
::overy.
. .\bout 90% of such losses could be
prevented U the mountings on your J'" elry were c hecked twice a year.
Sn v,ohy. not take out the best and
cheapest insuranre ava il able •••
the security of having u.~ check
your mounting!!. It takes only a few
minute s, ;i.nd U1e re is n() charge.
Hail to Women
Mesa Mayor Credits Fe111a.le Pu.sh •
'Vomrn h<1ve bt en traditionally con-
sidered the powf~ behind the throne. ' Cos ta ~1Psa Ma,vor Robert Wilson
doesn't feel mOOern times and , city
government ha ve altered the old adage.
•·A wife is res111nsible for the success
of the nffice holder ," he says.
Tn honor the ~.ccret po"•ers of Costa
r.1esa. i\.111yor '\'i\son ha~ decorated the
walls of his new ;office et city hall with
C(llnr phot ogr<tph ic portraits of each city
councilman's \\'ife.
'"The.v have tn put up ...,,.ilh so much or
our public ;ind personal !tves. Thev ln·
tercept ;i!I lhe nasty phone retl ls.'' w·n~on
explained. "They should be honored ."
The cnlo r porLr.:i its wrrP taken by thP.
polir l' department phot.o.11;r.:ipher. Not
su rpr isini:i:ly, the \\'On1 rn h.:irl the lasl
\vord . Twn -1\·l r~. \Vilson and Mrs. Jack
H11mmrtt -h;:ict lhetr pictures re1aken .
But <tll the portr;i its have been ap·
r rC'll'rd nnv.-. anct 1~·111 i:i:n on thr w.:ills of
\\'il~nn 's fiflh fl oor nff1rc I his >l'l"rk.
"This is !hr firsl off1cr ;i rnavnr or c·1 tv
crninci!man in Costa ~fesa has hari.:'
\\'1l1;on i.aid. ' l "m ~n1ng 1n try and bnnJ?,
some of !hr cit~··.~ nni;\;ilg1;i 1n ii "
The pnr!ra11s of Cl!} counc il 11 1rrs forn1
Free Pre ~~ Editor
Orde red l.o Trial
\\'EST r n \'INA r1·r1 1 -r uhHsh"r
Arthur Kunk1n plrarlf'rl 1nn....,..en! TUt'!<dR y
Ill a rh::irge of pnn11n.(: <10 nbi;cene pirture
Rnd a 1ury tria l was set fnr Sepl. 27.
Kun kin, 4.1, i.~ the editor of lhe Loi;
Angrlcs l·"rrc Pres:-, an undrrgrounrl
1rrrkly. but lhr ob~ccn i!y r harge involved
Annthrr puhl ica1 ion with which he
11 llei;:rd ly is ai:.~Clc1atrri.
the fir~l step in th!!! endeevor.
Wilson is quite proud of the. sound fA mi·
Jy life demonstrated hy e1ch city council
couple. He rapidly' ticks Off lhe longevity
of e.11ch marri11ge : ''Lucllle and Alvin
Pinkley, 44 years; M11ryalice and Robert
Wilson. 32 years; MBfY Jo Af'.\d Jack
Hammett. 31 years; Ruth and "°'.lllard
Jordan , 30 years. and Claudine and
William St. Clair. 29 yeers."
Vrm extremely plt1lted that oor wives
art so patient with us,'1 Wilson smiled.
President Nixon
Planning Visit
111, Mid-August?
' Sou rce!! in \\IAshinglnn t11nd in !San
Clemente have hinted that Pre~ident Nix-
nn 1s plann ln..:: to return to the "1estern
\\'h1 te House in mid-August for .a three-
\.\·eck ~lay.
'''hilP no <·onfi rm a!1(ln has hPe n madi
h.r lhP r rrsuirn!ial i;tarr, trips "''est dur·
1ng that monl h <1 re standArd for the Chief
}~xecutive.
The Au,i:-ui;t trip~ J;:ener111!y t11rf' th e
1nn,1::e~t -the first in 1969 l11sting mor•
than four "'eek.~ .
Sou rces in V.'ash1n~ton !old the DAJLV
PILOT tha t a \isit by Brili sh Prime
Mini ster F.dward Het11lh mlgtit be
forthrom1n g duri ng the President"s nex1\
11·nrk1ng \ :i ration hrrr '·
The President anrl First Lady sPf!nl
1 .... ·n ~ek~ carllf'r lhl~ monLh t11l their
Spanish c.~!ate. lea v!n.I{ fnr Washin gton
.July 11 afler Mr. Ni xon announced he
planned A trip !o Peking before campaign
seasfln heg ins next year.
~EVJEST lJERSi[]l.'I []f
THE fiRST VJRTCH []I.'!
THE r.I[][]~
; ~ .... •·-11,"···1·"· ~ ........ ·~i•1 ··,r11!•
e· •e~•1, r.. •.t•• •'a 110~•~1 $'> ~ "',., e•u . Ma~ong ~11r.eltl. \\'1t1r-111.1t1n1 • , , ••• , •••• :IS.
J. L fiumphrie6 Jeu 1e fer:1
1823 NEWPORT BLV D., COSTA ME SA
CONVENIENT TEll:MS
8ANICAM,lt 1 CA.lt~M ,A,5lf ll: CHARG E
14 YE,f,P:S IN SAME LOCATION
PHONE l41.J40 1
r -· ..JUrlllllt:l: .• .:....__....,.,
I
~ •
'Burts
ChUMd by PT&T
BY ROBERT STRAND . .
SAN FRANCISCO I UPI) -
oge, out of ten new pbotiea
.
~ld!ft ,ori, that teleftK>ne
eompant would to out of
business:
Yet. says the president of
PacUic Tell!phone, four out of
teo prQducU o! tbe school
s)'1ttm lon 'l functlor\ preperly
and It keeps operating.
Jerome W. Hull, 58, presi-
dent of P'l'&T, CalHornJe'•
largest employer, fetls d!tply
aboUt ~ educational system
because hU compa ny annually
hires 30,000 people afte r 300,·
000 interviews. Four out of ev-
ery ter higb school graduates
interviewed. or lztl,000 in-
dtviditals, can't n1ea!ure up to
PT&'f's readin g and writing
'"iarda which are about lhe eigh grade level,
W h thost "'ho do, Pa~lfle
Telfj>tiooe has had some frus-
tra~hg experiences, Hull toltl
of cme young high school grad-
uate who got along fine in
training as long distance op-
erci:tor until It developed she
had' "absolutely no conception
of 11.S. geograi)hy."
An apprentice telephone ln-
DAil V l'ILDT J l
County Man Hangs High
Crocker Bank Taking 'Ci ti ze ns' Off Bu if.ding Signs
occu1>1Uon. Joni r 11 c e Ive,.~;' "To oor men the heiaht
h1zardou1 pay, which he c111ls dotm't matter -whether Jt'1
"high U1ne." But he isn't 60 fttl or 600 fett. The only
auperstitious. doesn 't carry dlffe~nce ii that at 600 feet
along iood luck chann&, and you have more Ume to think ll
1ay1 hla family -wife. and you fall down," he laughl ldd-
tnree chlldren -don't worry dingly.
-4
Juat 'hana:ln a r o u n d '
skyscrapers -on the outisde
-ls jwt a job for a
Weatminster man wbo..txpect&
10 be doing It pretty regularly
for the next few months.
He 's John Jonz of 14471 Cas-
tle, Westminster.
Jonz is a regular name
dropper and professional sign
hanier. As an · employe of
P'oderal Sign and S I g n al
Corporation, he takes down
and puts up signs wherever
he '! told. Even 42 stories up .
In this latest case , Jonz
might more accurately be
called a cliff hanger. He
recently put up a sign near the
top of Crocker Plaza, a 623
foot high riae and the tallest
occupied structure in Los
Angele!.
Ask him il il is the highest
alga he's eve r pasted on the
side of a building and hi9 blase
attitude reasserts i t s e l f .
"Hmm. Let me think. ·Yea, I
guess it is."
The sign thal brought Jonz
to such great height.a consisted
or 19 letters and read :
Crocker..Citiiens Bank.
Crocker Bank, ts well 11 a
new symbol. The 11 new let·
\.eri are 1% feel hlah. while the
aymbol is 28 ft 1 25 ft.
It took sl1 days to take the
lettera down and eight day! It>
repl1ce them.
What did Joru: dt> while
perched up there wa!Ung for a
letter?
"I'd just sit and wait," he
says nonchalanUy. "Or some-
times I'd watch the 'sidewalk
supervisors' watch ing me."
Working in 1uch a dangerous
•bout him. Actually, a 1ign hanrer'a job
Needlw to say, he isn't Is relaUvely aafe, clalma
afraid of heigh ti, and m<>flt Degler. "We probably have
Important of 111, he doe1n't get fewer accldenta than other• tn
diuy up there. the CQMlructlon tield, ctr-
"Slp hangers are 1 speclal ta.inly not more."
bree:d," uy1 Ruslell Degler, Add!! Jonz: "A• uaual, J
foreman on the Crocker job. wore safety equipment on the
UCB Reports Loss
job. Even if I fell out of the
chair up thttt. a safety line
and 11afety belt would break
my fall within thrtt feet at the
maximum. Then l would just
hang there until aomeone
came and got me," he muses. United California B a n II:
reported tode.y that its net In-
come declined by 5 percent for
the first sit months of 1911 to
$15,314,077, or 12.52 per share.
Investment ae cur i t I ea
transactions contributed a
profit or $508,760, or $.08 per
share, to net income for the
flrst six months, compared
with $15,815 during the same
period in l970.
reasons for the lower 1lx
months performance are a
decreue In loan yields and
continued normal increases in
operattng e1pen5!$.
Net income for the first 1it
monthl or 1070 waa restated to
Include the full amount of t.n
extraordinary charge in the
amount of $19,400,000 reflected
later In 1970.
Jonz Is no tyro when lt
Cf)me to high adventure. He't
been climbins •round the 1lgn
bu.!lineas for 17 years. and
before that he was scaling
Texss oil rl&:• that were over
100 feet high.
Now. you might ••Y he'&
reached the top of hia pro-
fe~s!on . Mariner s
T,ell s High • •ltller. h• said, cooldn't "'d CREWMEN REMOVE OLD NAME FROM SKYSCRAPER a 1lfitreet map. A prospective , · , -· ,
With the help of a five·man
crew. he took these 10 foot let-
ters down and replaced them
with the bank's new name.
Income before Investment
securities tran&actioJU for tha
fiNlt si x months of 1971 declln-
ed by 8 percent to $14,805,317,
or $2.44 per share as com-
pared with $18,116,831, or $2.1111
per share in 1970. Principal
The charge shown for 1970
resulted from a loa1 sustained
by United California Bank in
Basel, Swltz.er\ahd. After In-
clusion of $19,.00,000, or $3 .20
per share, the first six months
of 1970 show!! a net loS.! of
$3,267,353, or $ . .W per share.
And since the Federal Sign
company will be changing
Crock e r office 1lgn a
throu11:hout Southern Callfomla
over the next few months, you
might keep an eye out for
John J,..nz. He'll be "hangtn'
around." First Half se:rvlce representative couldn't For W11tmln1ter • John Joni, Hi s Wo rk Just a Job
figure a basic monthly bill. I
Capital Alliance C o r p ..
owner of Mariners Savings &
Lolfl. Association of Newport
Beach. announced the highest
firit half earnings In its h~lory.
Por the six months ended Jurie 30, earnings we re
$431,799 , compared w i th
$233,1 15 during the like period
in '1970, an increase of 87
percent.
Eihl.lngs per share for the
pe'.r1od were 48 cents, based on
common shares and common
tqalva\ent shares of 918,460,
ca:mpared with 28 cents per I
share for the \970 period,
computed on the 884,290 total 1
shares outstanding at June 30.
Total assets as or June 30
were '62,85S.442 . Total loans
reached $45.179 ,034 at .June 30.
vs. '36.938.966 at .June 30, 1970.
S•vlngs of S40.ti46.930 <'om-
p11red with $34.363,341 11 year
agn.
~uhlisl1in g
Firm Ge ts
New P la n t
He ndrick11 Printing Com·
pany, a leading Orange Count}t'
printing and publishing firm
for nearly 11 quarter of a cen·
tuty, has completed the sc-
qulsition of Sl0-0,000.00 worth
or new equipmcnl. marking
the tecond phase or a major
expansion progrllm.
installation of m o d ! r n ,
multi-color offset pr i n r i n g
equipment was co mpleted at
the fi rm·~ plant in Ulf' lrv\nP
Industrial Complex, Record ing
to Rupert ~1. Hendricks of
Corona de\ Mar , president
The exµ11nsion program "·as
lnitlated 18 mo\')ths B,l{o with
the company's ma"e from
Campu s drive In the new
15.000 squerr f0t1l p ! ant
located at 1762 Kaiser Ave.
To get labor , Pacific
1'.IeDllone oilers ."mediRI VOTE SLA TED reading courses which work
~ith moti<ated •PPliCAnts. FOR COLLI NS "But for olhera," said Hull,
''the sense of failure Is too
deeply ingrained, and the
chance for success so remote,
that man y just give up."
Hull believes edu c 11 tor !
w11ste too much time debating
techniques anrl not enough in
determining what the. system
, tries to achieve.
Hull likes to Quote Dr. Alvin
Eurich. a dissident educator,
who feels school'! equ11te
"years of schooling wit.h
education : hours of teachlnJl:
vdth real learning," Eurich
s11ys the result ha s been to cut
business and industry off
from great resources of talent
and crta!e drop<iu\s with no
chance In build legitimate
lives for themselves.··
Hull noted that 70,000 native
born Americans in San Fr.11;n.
cisco. or 10 percent of the city
population, are functional il·
liUirateii. He urged t he
teaching of occupational skllll'I
in high schools ftnd develop-
ment of a greater knowledge or
the nation·111 pclltic11l-ecnnomic
sy,lem. He cited a survey
sOOwing that 45 percent of the
U.S. teenagers llre unaw11re
that indul;trlal growth depends
on produclivity a n d in·
vestment.
New Furniture
' Rentals Ope'n I
Apa.rtment Furnit ure Ren·
tals, Inc. llMOUnce.'i the open.
ing 'of !l's Orange County
snowr oom 11! 1877 H11rbor
Blvd .. In Olsta Mesa.
The .1,200 square f oo t
showroom features 11 wide
range . of furn itu ne sr!ectfons
\l•ith ~enta ! aod lease pro-
grams r.o sulle bot h the tenan t
and landlord <l r prope rty
mAna•er ,
DALLAS -(BW ) -Collins
Radio Co. announced that its (.
board of directors has called a
special shareholders meeting
for Aug . 24. on which date l.
~hareholders of record as of
July 26 will vot e on a stoc k
purchase Bgreement between
Collins and North American
Rockwell Corp.
The a~reement w o u 1 d
provide for NR to purchase
$35 million of a new class of
Collins convertible preferred
tHock an d warrants to
purchase up lo $.JO million of a
new class <lf common stock.
The adopt ion of amended
articles of inCQ rporation of
Collins also will be voted on by
the shareholders. The meeting
will he held al Collins offices
in Cedear R11pids. Iowa .
Net l11come
Rise Li sted
By Allerg an
lflVtNE !BW \ -Allergan
Pharm11ceuticals of Irvine se-
cond quarter consolid;ited nt:t
~ales were $3.306.143 com-
pared In $2.746.020, an In·
crease nl 20 per cent nver the
second quarter l!J70.
N~t sales for the first six
months werl': SG. 156,855 com·
p::ircd to $4,997,048 for 1970, an l
inrrea~e of 2J percent.
Second qu11r tt r ('a r n i n g s
v.·ere $157.801. or 17 cents per
shAre with more s h a r e s
nutst11nd\ng. compared I o
$2.18,067, nr 19 cents per share
a .l'ear agn
Six·mnn!h \ earnings f<ir 197 1
we re SJ7!i 905. nr 25 cent~ per
sh11re. nn 1.479.729 shares
nutstandi ni;.
Mat t e l Buys Circ u s
To y Compa11 y Bra11ch es Oi1t
By BOB THOMAS
A1.-ClllH ~r111 lftwl Wflttr
HAWTHORNE !AP ) -Why
<Sota a toy company buy a
circus'?
'~Growt h i!1 hesllhy for a
cofhpany."' explains Ruth
Handler, president of Mattel.
Inc ., new owner of the
Rlilgling Brolhers·Barnum and
Balley Circus.
oriented products and
iel\'Yices.
Matters diyersificatlon wa1
de tail ed by ~~r1. Handler dur·
in1 a break in a conference
with the circus people. headed
by president-producer 1rvln
Feld, in the executive offices
of the Hawthorne factor)'.
When the company grew so
much that we needed more
vice presiden ts, 1 moved up
from executive vice prc.oident
and Elllol became chairman.
The circus deal happened In
a f1irly casual way, she said .
. ..... -..
DuPONT
NYLON PILI
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$ 79
sq. yd.
DuPONT
NYLON PLUSH
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Many lovely col<Jrt ava1\uble,
$ 95
sq. yd .
DuPONT
NYLON iWEED
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-········--. "'"".l'r -.. .,~
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100% nylcn pile. Double ivte bocking, mode
for yeor1 of enioymerit. 17 brillioril breo1h1c k·
ing color combrn o1ions. •
$ 49
sq. yd.
POLYISTIR
SHAG
0.ep, rich 1ho9 rorpel mcde for 'f90r'I of
beauty ond weor. So lough ond durable i1'•
f oro1ily·p r oof. Lo r ge 1e lectio n of brillic'll
Cc !iforn10 color1.
$ 49
sq. yd.
RANDOM TEXTURED
POLYESTER PILE
A lu .. uriovs eo1v to t ort ccrpet fl\ o deep
1culi:tturecl po tter,,, 100 ~.4 poly11ter fiber , ..
•••'• truthir1g a nd f'l'IOl!ing. took1 great W.
O"Y decor, Mony lovely cOlor1.
$ 98
sq. yd.
CUSTOM MADI "We had done very well in
tha merchandising business.
No1' II seetncd llke a logical
stei; lO use the expertise we
had built wilh the fam!ly
au6ience and move into en·
te(.lAlnmenl, communication
I.lid education."
"\Ye believe there is •
powerful nted bl this country
for parents 11nd ch!ldren to
communicate wl!h each other.
Our company l'la11 been suc·
ces.lful in the a.rea1 of com·
municating and mottvatlng.
"If we can convert thoae
abilltie1 into helping the fam l·
ly unit find It! way in today's
world, then the company will
be able to· 1coompllsh 80me
social food and do Jtl thins at
the .111me time ...
"We ha d met lrvln Feld
when he w11nted to !ell u1 11
te lev ision 1how b11sed on the
clrcu1. We asked him to come
out here, and we looke d at the
show bu t It didn"l seem ri&ht
for us. But then we beaan
talking about a purchase."
The result : a $47.5 million
!lock exchange by which Mat·
tel acqulred th!! IOl·year.old
1\in1Itn1 Brothers.Barnum and
Balley !l:st Decernber.
REMNANTS
175.00 Io 1115.00 values ,f sold by~'
yard. Many, many to choose from.
•39 DRAPERY
50%0FF llOW u ..
TO
TM House thtt Barb~ Doll
BuUt is moving tn many dlrec·
tlom. Beside.1 the etreu&, It
hll;
Acquired Audio
Mfgnetlcs, 11 G11rden a, Calif ..
firm that makes tJpe cas·
sell<!.
-Formed 11 movie <'Otl'l-
JllO)' with producer Robert
ftadnltl ''Misty", "Island nt
tht !)tie Dophlns" for makln(
f101Uy fllnu.
-Dev~l()f'led tilt Opt11an
Mu1lc-M111ker. "a new form of
mul\c ,which anyone can
plaj."
-Formed f"i"itnk!lir! COrn·
munications. spcr.li"'lir.in~ In
rea('hlng :--nun~ people rind
fa.mU Jea thro~h y 11 u1 h -
•
The word "we " cornea ea1lly
to Mrs. Handler. She and her
husband Elliot began M11tel In
thkr 1aragt 26 years ago. The
company stilt an annual f$60
million worth of Barbles, Baby
Teodcr Lovu. Hot WhMb and
otbtr producta In more uw eo
countriea.
Her husband l.s ch•ltman of
lhe board . ind it rtmatnJ a
inom;tnd·pop operatJon: ThftT have two children,
three grandchildren . The firm
but fc m'nlne t<.irs. Ha .. dler
rrn1:ikrcd · "J"n1 still dnin g
wh at I have always done.
Feld emerged from the
meet1n1 lo express h I a
pleasure wltl1 thl!: m11rrlage to
Mattel. He continues ttl run
the ciTUll -" we 're Ued up
with expert. and we let them
do their thing." e1plah11 Ml"I.
Handler.
"We bavt two circuses tour.
In& I.be country, each on a two-
year run ," 11ld Feld. "Thl1
h11a been our blggeat year in
history.''
He expect! businesa to be
even bttter next year, twelve
ne'N areas will open up cltltt
thst h11ven't been vL,ited since
the ''Grtate~t Shr.w On Earth'"
folded its tend lo work un·
dl'!r·root.
UCH
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!I lWl.Y PILOT SC
Ye11r Money
<;ambling in Gold
Nothing But Risk
$15,000 INVESTMENT
80°/o WRITE OFF-1971
OUTSTANDING ORANGE COUNTY
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY -LEASE BACK
M .,,,,...., ,. .. POI 1560 Cnt• 1111-tZ424
Announ c ng
lllYESTMOO PROPERTY ANALYSIS
IY
REAL TRON COMPUTER
A11alyz• Your Equity In Any Investment Property
lntrodlildory Serv1c• Includes • Look At Pr•1 ~n t Pro
,.r+y Status !u Cornp•r•d to Pest Perlor m•nc• As
Wtlf •• • lon9 rang• Forecast
"O OIU6AflOH-CAll fOl .,,OINTMENT
'4Z-4J53
Pill IARRm REALTY
OVER THE COVN11ER
·~..,l•llv• lll!tr "1111 -l•llolll •I ,,.,._llNI"" f A.M. ,.._ MAID. ,.,IC•• •• not IMIMO. , ... u ., ,,..,.IOI'. ITWlrlt ...... , am1t11 .. i...
NASO L1•t1ng• for Tuesday, July 'l7, 1971
MUTUAL
FUNDS
McDonnell
Aide Honored
-A-.. " ,, .. ' . ,.,
'" " " " . '" " ,'
" '" ,,.
" ,. ,,,
" .. ' . "
Complete-New York Stock List
111 JI,,. llCIO )ti'! Pi ::11 . ' 11 !\1 IJI ..
t~ \~~
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SC DAILY PILOT ~
Wt dnesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
...... . ... t------'-----~' ... L• Olit Qe.
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
,.~ ...,-,-·--·
-w:;-0>; ~-
··-.... 1.-.. 1 Hiii! L-CltM QI ..
......, ... ·7~ ...
hlM Mlf
(WI ) Hl!lfl 1-ew CffH Cl\9.
Wall Street
Chatter
Steps t.oward f 1 s c a 1
st1mulat1on and evidence of
future profit rec ove ry ma y be
rquired lo move the market
oiff its present platea11, Spear
and Staff says Much of th&
markel s current mtralnt
stems from speculation as to
what the rooera t reserve
board will do next ''A turn oft
or the money spigots could
tum off prospective security
buyers, ' the llnn be.heves
-.
The bull market has come to
a pause which could last for
awhile a~ rt absorbs recent
developments, says Standard
& Poor's Corp Groundwork
for aMther, aJbe1t selective,
leg should be laid rn the period
JU.'lt ahead Meanwhll,., CQm•
mltment3 Jn carefully chosen
stocks are timely, S &r P says.
Symbolt
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I . If DAn. 'Y 'tlOT Wediwsd.17, J11ly 28, 1 '71
Yep, It's On--Clay VS Quarry
HOUSTON (API -Muhommad Ali
11)'1 h1I nert fight will be •1ain1l Jerry
Quan,. In the ~t.rodorne. in September.
nigh.t victory over Jimmy Ellis, ••s In
high spirits. Ht pral&ed Ellis and the
Astrodome and ttlrew verbal jabs al
Fruier.
jamrned with 66.000 perSOM few such 11
fight.
he.avyweight champion, sat beside Ali at
the news conference_
.. The formtr huvywelghl champion also
• would lllte a return match wtth champion
: Joe P'rlller In I.he domed structure nut •· Mardi.
Frazier has been reported as aaying he
w.ant! $S million for such a match.
Ali had high praise for Ellis, ti rormer
1parrtng partner.
He said tM Astrodome "would bt
ideal " for the Fralier match.
"Anybody who fought like he loughl
ll'ill be around for :i long time to CMlt ,"
All told newsmen Tuesday he un-
de.ratood hi.I nut fight would be against
;, Quany in the dome •!though "nothlnt:
baa boon •i«ned." ~ All. fresh from his 12th-round Monday
"l think a fight so greal should bt held
where as many people as possible could
11ee It," All sa.icl. "We could draw 100,000
people."
"He lAlks like an amateur:· All
shooted. "Why doe!! he wanl s:-i million~
Why does he think he's such a draw?
"He won't ~·ear me down. He won 't
catch me. He'll bt in such pitiful con·
ditlon he'll have to retire. Ellis ls 11 much
better boxer than Frazier.'·
Ali said, "He's not washed up.'' \
Also at the news conference was
Angelo Dundee, who trained Ali for a ll
hil'i pro fights before the Ellis match but
who w.1.5 in Ellis' corner as trainer and
manager Monday night.
• • ,,
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Tht Astrodome conceivably could be Ellis, former World Boxing AssocieLion
PITTSBURGH'S MANNY SANGUILLEN TA GS OUT DUKE SIMS BUT LA WINS, s.s.
;contracts Only
~Protect Coaches
~ ~So It Seems • ~ Rambling about:
<t You realize how v;ist Disneyland i~
~when yoll plod through it looking fo r a
...,Brazilian soccer team . Sn it was Wed-~nesday as a photog and l vainly searched
"for Pele and his mates who were roaming
.tebout somewhere.
:, Disneyland was the leam·s unanimous ~first d'loice for sight.seeing during its l brief stay In the Southland.
~ lncidentally, it's not likely area fans • '
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WHITE
WASH . ··----------------' <
l wi!I ever have another rhance to see Pelf!
tptay here after tonight'$ game al the
(.Coliseum. < ln the \vorld of soccer l h ll I,· 1
-#r.omparah!e to setting your I a ~ t ~compclit1ve look at Babe. Ruth, Bobby
~Jones. Arnold Palmer. JM Louis. the
iFour Horsemen, Willle Shoemaker, Peter
•Snell, elc. >
,<i. Afltr IO many st.oriel of coache1
.,breakiag contract• }'GD begt.n. to get Cbe
j fetling that 1ach pi.ell serve only to
protect the employe. not the employer. l Joe Blow 11(111 for five yean to coach
~le.am X. But be get1 a belier deal after
~·o ~ars and almply wenders off to bel·
er plck..l.n"a wllh occasional lhre•ltned i lawsuits rar~ly ~ylng off.
{ But U Joe Blow•a bo11 gels tired or him
'faller a couple of years, be generally hat ~ buy up the remala.ln1 lime on Blow'1
tnntract. Now don that seem rlfbl? !~fa 1ot&t1 10 even hlgb 11cbool coachu
Ink HUit er notblttr of breaking their
{ rttm•U ..... or hu everyone forgot-
• how Ernie Johnson left Newport +: Rarbor Bl&h hl,it, and dry In mid-year?
i ~A number of Orange Coast area
0: sidt:nit wen at the preview party for
elm1 Hall opening Monday night. ln-u4.lne: Manny P~a (Costa Mesa),
•ul Zimmerman (i..Aguna H 11 11 ) •
Dodgers Rally, 8·5
Murtaugh's Prophecy
Proves All Too True
LOS ANGELES (APl Ot1nny
Murtaugh, the m11nager of the P!ttsbur~h
Piratei1 was asked to comment on th!! rr-
cent downhill skid of the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
"It looks like they're going through 1t
rebuilding program with 1111 their youn~
players," Murteugh analyud Tuesd;iy
night. '"But the manegt!' over there
jWalt.er Alslon J has all the patience in
the world and It'll pay off. These kids wtll
make the Dodgers 11 winner. Real ly, ifs
sort of a dynasty they'rt building.··
Murtaugh"s word!i made ~n se whr.n he
said them and even more sense ~ver;il
hours later.
Rill Buckner. 11 2!-ye.11.r-old rookie out-
fielder, slammed his first grand slam
home run in !hf' majors to highlight 11 six ·
run seventh inning as the Dodgers spilled
the Pirates B·.'i.
Doyle Alexander, 11 2 0 -y e "" r -o l rl
righthander. eamed th!' vi ctory which
Snfl]'.lped the winn ing Streak of
Pittsburgh's Dock Ellis. Ellis lost t.o the
Chargers Trade
Post to Denver
SAN DIEGO -Dickie Post says the
San Diego Oiargers "are a 'bia back'
team" and his trade to Denver was the
culmination or a negaUve attJtude against
his lack of size.
The Chargers, meanwhile, simply ssid
they have .t11 Jot of very good runners and,
':besides. we already have a small back
in Mike Gtlrrell."
Thus the 5-fool-9, 191)..pound l>ost, nne n(
the old American Footb11ll LeailJe"s top
rushers since he broke in back In 1~7,
Wa! ll'aded Tuesday to Denver's Broncos
for • No. 2 draft choice. The Char1ers
admitted il was tht be:l!t offer made to
lhtm.
Dodgers ln April, then won 1.1 straight
before \osinjil'. Tuesday night.
"Ellis was really tough," Buckner ~aid
afterward. '"The first twn 1.imrs up Lhrre
he broke my bat. I had lo borrow nne the
!a.11t timP.''
The Dodger~ chased F:llJ!'i in the
seventh after loading thf' base11 and 11cor·
ing tv,.ice after two were oul. Pinch hitter
Tom Haller and Maury Will s f'ach singled
in a run. Jim "Mudcal" Gran! replaced
Elllis and. aftrr getting two strikes on
Buckner, surrendered !ht> grt1nd slam
whiC'h put thr Dodgers nn top
Willie Cr11i,1•fn rd added the c111.hth run
with his sevrnth homer or the season 1n
the eighth with nn one aboard
The vict(lry was nnly !he Oodgf'rs ' sixth
In the lll!'il 20 game.~ but for !hf' first. time
in a wef'k they mana11.td to slirr intn S11n
Fr,11ncis m "s big lead in lhf' !\11111nnal
l,ca!;fuP·s \.\'estrm Division Thi> deficit. is
7'-'I games.
"Pla.vini;: hkr "''1'v" hcrn playtni.: lhr
1Ast few v.·eeks just isn"t. fun," Rurkner
said afterw;in·I. "!l"s a lot morr fun "'htn
you're winning -nr 11t leasl play1nJ1: well
-And having something In shoot l'll
•· 1 thought tonight we played ll lol l1 k.-:
v.·e pl ayed earlier in the season. We got a
lot or guys on base."'
l'!TtSIUllG14 OOOGll:llS
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11'! Cl•mffltf, $11\tU+fltn 1. Mii •· fluckr>tr J.
Crowfflrl! I.
ti' H It 1!11 II SO
F.lllO L, 1.\·4 ' 11.1 I • A I 1
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Stop Foes;
Boxer Dies
QUEBEC -Second seeded Rod Lavr r
nr Corona del Mar fought off a stron.I(
challenge from a relatively unknown
South African 'l\iesday t.o win 6-4 . 4-6. 7-6,
sind advancerl intll .~f'c0nd·round singlr~
play ii! the Quebec lnterniltional Tenn(~
Open ,
Bnh Maud, a native of .lohannesbuq;f,
fought tooth and nt1il with Laver through
three Actinn-pAt:ked sets lh;it took two
hours. The final set wenl to lhe seven-
poinl tie-breaker and the Australian star
triumphed 16--8 in the decisive \~th gamf'.
In other singles matches, Nikki Pilic (lf
Yugoslavia defeated F'red Stolle of
Australia 7-6, fi-4 , Rnv Emerson of
Newport Beach downed Tom LCQnard nr
the United States li-2. 7-6.
Tom Okker of the Netherlands beA!..
American Ron Holmber.'( li-2, 6·2. South
Afric11"s Cliff Drysd;ilr scored a pair of 6-
-4 wins over Rill "Rnwrey of AustrAlia, Ray
Ruffels of Australia beat Mark Cox of
Engl11nd, 7-6, 4-6. li-2, sind Ken Rosewall
of Au.~tr111i11 downed England's Graharii
Stilwell, 6-4, 7-.~.
e Turker IJie•
MONTRF:AL -f);:inny Tucker. a 2~
year.old .JamairAn·hnrn boxer had .1u~t
been stopped by Reynalrl Cantin. the
Canad ian junio r welterweight champion,
ln the fina l round of I.heir scheduled ten-
round non·LiUe match at Paul Saure
Ar~na when he pleaderl with the referee
"Come on ref." hP s(l1d. "rm all ri ght.,
don"! stop the fight."
Seconds latf'r. hr slumped to the can
''<IS, lap~ed into a <'nma And ~·a~ taken
from the ring on ;i stret cher In ll Mon-
treal hospi1;il r-.1onday
Early Tuesday, Tuckrr underwent
llUrgery In remove blood clnls from hnth
~ides nf the brain. Then, hospHsil official~
reporter! he had suffered ;i Cfln11<1r ar·
rest A !'ihor! lime la1er . he \vas dr.ad .
e Gortttnt1 l\li11~
COLUMBUS, Ohin -Srf'ond-~eerlrd
Tom Gorman of Seattle highlighted play
1n the $20.000 RurkeyP TPnni.~ Ch;im .
pionship.~ Tuesday by whipping .Jamaican
Richarcl Russell . 6-:J, 6-4
In olher matche.~. Paki~t;in·s l!aroon
Rahim ousted Chile ·~ .Jainif' Fillnl. 6-4, n .
2: Rosr~ T<innrr dumped Franf'P ·i; P1e.r·
rt> Barthes. 4-fi, 7-~. fi-2 : l'lnd Jeff
Borowi;ik slopped \1 1lan Holocck nf
Czecho~lovakiA, 6-4, 'i -2
e l ,11,ker,. f11 Sui1
SALT LAKE flTY -A district rourl
Jlidge 111rantPd a motion Tuesday a llnw1n~
the Los An~eles Lakrr~ tn hr 1nch1drd a,
defendant.~ in the I 1<1h Star~ ~I million
11uit against Bill Sharman, former l'tah
coach.
But a co11rt lri;il on thr !\111! .~a1cl .J11r!ii;r
frank \Vllk tn!'i nf 1 ·1ah·~ .1rd l11stnr1
Court. depencls nn y,·hrthrr lit.:ih hll •
Jt1r1sdirtion fhroui;!h 1t~ so-c;:ill rd "lnnlo!
l'lrm sta1utr" in hnngini:: the L;ikrri> rn
f'OUTl
e Goff~·r.'f llf1t111red
r11i'SRURr;H . Four i;nlf Prs, 1n-
cludin~ cnn!l'm1"\0r11ne' .lul1us Rnro!i <inrl
Dr C':iry M1drllrrnrf, "rrr inrl11c!rd 1ntn
lhe Aincrican Gnlf Hall of F";ime Tursrtay
n111.h!
.Jor k Hutchinson, the late \Valter .I
Tra\'iS. Borns and t-.1iddlecnff Jntned :ii
nlhrr jlolfrrs already inductee! Hut
chin~n "'as nnl prcsenl for !he
ceremonies.
e 1 .. ealty l111prf11.·es
PORTLANn. Ore. -Fr;ink Leahy is
much imprnved and lhe former Notre
Da mr foothall Nlllf'h's (Ondition i.~ nn
lnnjl;er ~crious. hospital nffi cials said to·
dll y.
Lrahv. 62. ha.~ hef'n at SL Vincent
Hospital since .lulv 1~. He underwent
surgery for rem{lval (If fatty tissue in
lrrfering with I.ht functions of Lhf' kiri·
neys and liver.
e Racer .fii1t•·1.•1tt11bN
SAN OIEGO -Bill Brl!rl'ton. who "'llS
fest Cnsast midge!. Huto r11cing champinn
In 19-40. died in Naval Hospital Monda y Ill
'" Hf' w;ii1 11 tQp rlnvpr
throughoul Callfom la.
on dirt tracks
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PELE, DAILY PILOT SPORTS EDITOR GLENN WHITE CHAT
Pele in Spotlight
Tonight at Coliseum
'• LOS ANGELES -Pele, presumably the greatest soccer player who ever
.: lived Rnd surely the highesl. paid alhlete in }listory, leads Santos of Bra.r:U
against Jai!sco from Mexico tonight at the ColiseUm. ~ A thror1g nf 20.000 i.~ 11nlicipalf>d for the soccer :-trugli{le betwttn the
Latin clubs and Santos is looki ng for its second triumph in thrte Loi! Angeles
11ppearRnces.
It lost to Rivrr Pla te of Argentina in 1967 and then came back last year tn nip (;uadalajara from Mexico.
Pele, who eam11 S2.000 per da y. recently retired from his n11t.ional team l 11nd ;i crowd or 2.18.(1()() turned out lo bid him adios.
~ " h
He sparked Brazil to 11 sweep of World Cup compcl.itlon a year ago In
Mexico City.
Sanl.ns fe11lure11 an Argentinian s!anrlout. He i11 25-year--nld Mario Ceja~
purchased from Racing Club for $350.000 five month!! ajl;o.
'In 1964. Cej11s was Ari:entina·11 goalkeeper at the Olympics: and In 1965
starred for hill country·s World Cup side.
His spectacular goalkeepinR led Racing to the ~·orld club championship
over Glasgow Celtic in !9ft8 l!nd now Cejas cl11ims the lillr of top goalkeeper
!n Br;izit.
Carlos Alberto "·as sent bark lo Rrazil fnr kntt surjl;ery following th•
ma tch in Mexico <inrl hA s been replaced by Orlando Pererir11 . a fullbllck with
.. much inlemationlll experience.
1 While all t>yes 11r!' focused on Pele and hi.!l familiar number JO jersey, ~ ;inolhf'r fori,1•ard, ~du 1Edua rdo Americo) at left wing ma y wf'll be instrumen·
r !t1l 1n St1nto11' effort11 tonight.
' F.du end Pele spend a ii;reat rlea! nf time loge1her bnlh ori and nff th e
field and have in fact become close fri ends during the past several months. • ~;arly in hi.~ c a r f' er, Edu wa.o: hllmpered by 11 ~erif's of injuriell", bu t
nnw lhe 23 year old is back on lop and together with Pele. has been the spark· 1 plug in the Sankls attack.
The Sl'lnl.n.'1 lineup f<'atures several ne w f11cr:s , as man11ger M11uro Ramos
rontln ue11 hi.o: efforf$ l.o devr.k1p more 11nd more young and fast playeni:, cap.
Able of nine ty minute!! of att11ckinl!. SOf'cer.
Since t;i king nvr.r in December Qf las! year, Ramo., h11~ lf'd SAnlos to
the rr.n1<1rkab!e rf'cord of only 2 losses in 62 games!
rt11mos is high ly respected throu.i;:hout South America and his e.xpe rlence
;:i~ rrnlerhalr for Rrazil's Wnrld Cup champion team-as teammate of Pelt--,.
u1 1!151\ and 1962 ha!! proven of Rre;it v;ilue to Sankls.
Fol lowing il!! appeit rance in the Coliseu m l.Onight, Santo..~ leaves for •
mat.rh .11gainst r.ermany'!! Hannover in Vancouver Frida.v, wit.h final g1me11
of thP tour set ln New York Sunday and \Vednesday in Chicap:o
Ticket!\ are on sale Rt the Cnlistum and SporlS Arena Box Office. Adults
;ire!.~-JUn1o rs under 18 years $1 , and under 10 free.
-~ ----::ra.~:sr.:.:~;;;o -~1 -~" ;:'M';~,,., ....
Every Defeat Is Tough,
Moans Hru'£l-lucl{ W1igl1t
C:LF.VELANO (AP) -"II was !ht ktnrl
(If ii;amr Sam tisu11 ll.v lose~ thrn11gh nn
f:\ult or hi~ own," Cleveland manajler
Alvin 0,11rk said Afte r hi~ Indians Nlgerl
Cal iforni;i 4-:1 Tuellday night.
Mcl1nwr11 i;:11ve up only 11ix hil~ in ur-
r inii; hi.~ rf'Cord In 11\-1{1. but hi!i mnu nrl
Julv 111
Ju11 l"I Jolv .11
Jlngel SI.ate
All O•""" ... ltMf"C (111) ... .,..,, •• c1.,,.1.,..,
A"9~h U (1•~•11...,,
l>."11•1• al O•l•oll
' ., ~ "'I.
I Ill o"'
I I 10 ~ '"•
opponent. Clyd~ Wright , pitched hitles~
ball for fivf' innings before gtvinjl; up
three r11ns on two hit.<; in the sixth.
Wright saw his recon1 r;1.ll lo 9·10 dP.spile
a four-h itter.
"You "rf" right, he pitchPrl 11 bf'!ler
~11me. 11 ffir belter ga me," ~ai d
r.1cnowetl. "I h11d just about ~ood enou);fh
i:;tuff l.o 1hrow batting pr11ctice.. hu t our
J:UYS rouJ:ht back And won it for nit."
"'Ever.v loss is 11 tough oot," said
Wright, who ha d glvtn up Me run in lhP
f1rsl Inning on a wa.lk , wild pitch and
sacrifice ny.
Ken M cMullen ·.~ lwn-run homer, ht1
!4th nf lht ytar. had given Wrlgh! a 2-1
le11d in the top of the !llxlh
The lndian11 bouncerl back in the bot-
lnm of the sixth with Kr:n Su11rez· loop
single, A pa ssed hall, a sacrlf1ct bunt, a
WA ik, an error In score Su11rc1, Vart1
Pinson's run-sco ring '1nglr and a
sacrificr Oy by Grl'lig Ntlt lf's.
.. Maybe I should have lollipoppefl the
ball up therr.:· said Wrl¢it ('(In·
temptuously of the !nditns. "Ynu r•n't
take lwo lnsses. They clidn't hit 1 hall
hard enough to hit ll kid."'
McnowetJ gaw b11ck one of the n.11\! In
the seventh when .Jim Spe11cer hit his
!~th homer of lhe Sell.Son. It w118 tht la ~t
h1r surrendered by Sudden S11 m.
"I rlidn 't feel bad except I.hat I rlidn't
have a good fal!-1. hall ," s11id McOnwr ll ... T
ROt into trouble anyltme 1 trierl t.n
challenge them -like when I pitched tn
Spene1!r. .
ey Ann Buhllj: !Laguna Beach), !l;~Geller (Newport Beach ). Mu
: .. (Santo Ana). <,. 'Ibe hill Js a ahrine of alhletlca with
mementos ol .U 1porta, t h e l r ~lltfn. It ls open to the public and ~-located aL United S•vints. 9800
~ftdl. 1.os Anatlu -ll\at'1 a few
il>locb on the San Dlt;o Freeway side of
J nlmlltlooai Alrport.
Finagling Charged • ID Johnso11 Case
"[ should hll l'f" kno"•n b rt t ~ r . • •
f\.1c0ow"rll said or Spencer's drlvt ... w,.
Wt'rt lwn nins 11he1d 11orl I was pltyinii: It
1111 f!'. T trlr.rl In ch111engt him with 11 ra!t
b1.ll, bur it w11sn ·r good e11ough ·•
lnduded amoae Lhe Uhlbll.I ii • large
pte_r showing Dick Attlt.aey of Newport
'3UCh when ht waa a hurdler It USC. Tl
.PJintl out how he Ued the world record al
"3.& and then came back to twlct run U.l ~ter that.
'llW! C..lifomla Anl;elll, with the aid nf
btlseball commis1klntr &w1e Kuhn, havtt
liken the nest lltep ill peoalizing Alex
Johngon.
Kuhn anl"IOUtlctd Tue!day In New York
that Johnsnn, 1u1prnded June 28 by the
Angels for hill lazy play, h11s been placM
no the restricted lliit. A pl1ye r ('8n nn lv
bf. suspendr:d :111 days and hy pl11rinJ1: him
nn !ht rt~trlcled li.'l ll will not CQUnt
against lhr: club·s 2.'1-m11n ros!tr
•
-· .z. l........_. I ... '1. -....
After the move against John90n,
Ctillfomia reae:Uvsted catcher Jeff
Torborg, Though still ailing rrom s frllc·
lured finger, he was 11blt &o w11-rm up
hullpenners Tuesday nig ht.
Marvin Miller, erecuUve dlrtelor of th•
Majnr Lt11gue Player!\ A~.roclalion. said
In New York th.!11 thl': 11clion aJ{aiJlsl
.lohn'°n is ''another e111m plt nf the
fln11.r1tn11: lh11 l Jll'lt !. nn bt>twren the cluh.~
11nd thl' comn1l~sloner"s office:
"Tht n.ilr on susptn~ions says " rlub
m11y suspend for a period 'not f'xceedinJ.:
JO days' So ""'h111 lhr.v do i.~ fnrget mt-
rule and po int to ano!ht.r -1n this Cll~t' ;i
phrase in the re.~Lricted list.
.. Rut !he purpo~r flf the reslnrtrrl list
nrvcr w11~ to add on to .11 maximum
f:f'nlf'nrf'.··
Millrr 1111irl 11 phr11~f' In thP n1IP~ nn thf'
rcstrlc!ed l1~t. 11•hirh drlll ~ primarily "'l !h
preseason nccurrenct-1';, allowJ11 Juguf'
presldenL<; ln put pla yers on the list if
··unu!iual c.ireumslanc:es t'1t1t. ··
''Olher than that all I cim 1111y is Iha~
lhf' club r('rtain.l y Is lncrr11111lng tts pottn-
ti11t liability in terms o( bACk $11111.ry ..
Thf' .Johnson CllJlle hA~ betn 11 ppc11ted bv
!hf' player~ Jlroup tn 11 n lmp111r!i~I
11.rb1tr11lnr. The m1Httr IJll nnt likel y In tW'
heard beforl' the end of August,
• -· ! ,,...,_..
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\Vednrsday, July 28, 1971 s DAILY PlLOT 3
Pr0gress on Capistrano Ho·spital s ·idetracl{edt
111 PAMELA !W.LAN
Of t1tt 0.ltt' ~ Sl•fl
Aftei a surprise groundbreaking an-
nouncement, developers of a proposed
126-bed acut.e-care hospital in San Juan
qptst.rano I were temporarily aground
this wetk on a county stoi>-work order
pendiflg Issuance of necessary pennits.
Santa t.1argarita de Las Flores Jfospital
was annou~ recently by Santa Ana
publld.st Frank Gelinas.
It Is the fourth new hospital planned for
SOO:therft Oranae County, and would be
owned by the Mission Viejo Medical
Cmnpany. The company also owns the
125-bed Mission Community Hospital that
is·to Open in Mission Viejo next month.
Cecil .Holloo, grading division chief fur
tht. Orange County Department of
B\l.lkting and Safety, ~id the contractor
was ordered to stop grading and hauling
Taking the Heltta
earth from the Santa Margarlla Site -
on San Juan Creek Road adjacent to San
Juao Hills Country Club -until a pennit
"M'85 submitted Tuesday morning," said
Holloo. "The permit will grant the right
to move the dirt, but another will be
necessary if grading Is to be to
specllicBtlom."
Grading began on the site soon after
Gelinas announced that the
groundbi::eak.ing had taken place.
The ''ceremonies" took place July 14.
Some San Juan Capistrano city ofnclals
tenned the groumfbreaklng "premature"
becalll'ie a land-use permit had not been
obtained.
The Mission Viejo Medical Company,
v;hose chairman is Dr. 4'.1uis Cella, physi·
cian and Democralic political force in
Orange County, was first granted a land
use permit in April of 1970.
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DAILY PILOT l llft l"Mi.
Bernard Syfan (right), out-going president of the Laguna Beach
Chamber of Commerce , relinquishes the helm to his successor, Roy
Marcom, who will head the chamber for a one-year term.
Capo Saf ety Head Sought
A director of public u.fety who will
c.rgarUu the city's first police rlepart·
ment is being sought this week in San
Juan Capistrano.
Sadclleback OK's
One Per-Month
Board Meetings
Saddleback College trustees Monday
voted to only hold meetings once a month
rather than continue the present policy of
bl-monthly sessions.
In add.it.ion lo establishing the third
r-.tonday of each month as the meeting
date, the members changed the metting
lime: from 7:45 p.m. to 7 p.m.
The new policy will take effect Aug. 15.
The trustees have already scheduled a
session for Aug. 2 in order lo hold a
·public hearing on the 1971-72 budget and
_ 11dopt the financial plan.
The city cooncil approved a recruiting
buJ!etin Monday which will be circulated
in an effort to encourage applicants for
the po!ition.
"The city Will be looking for a man
with proven capabilities," said City
Manager Don Weidner. "He will be re-
quired to have a strong background in the
administration of multipurpose org aniza-
tions."
\Veidner said the bulletin will stress a
preference for extensiv• work experience
in criminology or the police field with 10
years of progressively responsible police
experience. .
"He wlll have to be-between 35 and M
but will not be required to have a college
degree u long as he bu current college
credlb," said Weidner. •
He said the candidates will be screened
by a professional board with about 15
candidates selected for subsequent oral
interviews. He added that about 15 ap-
plications already have been received so
far, without an active recruilmeDl pro-
gram .
The appointment of a police chief ls ex-
pected in November.
Docto r's Cl1arges Delayed
In ~ounty ~i\.hortion Case
By TOM BARLEY
Of "" .... , ~"" fl•ll
Abortion charges again.st Dr. John
~river Gwynne of Santa Ana were held
over for ten days today fo enabls both
11ide~ in the Orange County Superior
Court acUon to study the itnpact of a re-
. cent State Court of Appeal ruling on the
abortion issue. ,
Judge Byron K. McMillan. held the 29-
year-old doctor's· arraignment over to Aug. 6 and allowed the acrused phyalc:lan
to remain free on h'is promise to appeJr.
It is expected that the delay will enable
the St.ate Board of Medical Examiners to
188\lt its ruling on Gwynne's slatua
following its e'lamination of the mulUp]e
abortion chargtl filed against the defen-
dant •
Deputy district attorney Martin J.
Heneghan commented today that he did
not believe the appellate court'11 ruling
.J11nd the abortion Issue would greatly a{·
feet the charges riled ·against Gwynne.
The st.ate court ruled in reviewing an
Alameda County case that a woman IDllY
obtain an abort.ion in any licensed
California hospital lf her doctor deekkl
lhat the operation Is required to preserve
her physical or ment11l health.
All charge5 filed against Gwynne
!'lem from abortJonll allegedly caJTied
"C)UI. in his 17th Street clinic. Ile has !tattd
1n frequent court appearances that all he
..oeeds to know is that a ,~·oman requires
An nbortion and that he will then perform
Ulat operation,
\llh1!c JudRe ~1rMil1an was Rr~nling the
drlay two of Gwynne's female RS."lslanl.I
..-ere beina cleared of related aborUoa
charges in Santa Ana Munidpal Court.
Judge John Flynn granted a prn-
aecution motion for dismissal of charges
filed against Diana Grimstad, 22, of 3111
21st St.1 Cost.a Mesa, and Barbara
Johnson, 32, of TusUn.
Both women wtre arrested June 22 in a
Sant.a Ana pollct raid lhat allegedly pro-
duced evidence from Gwynne's office
filea.
Or. Robert CUmmlng Robb, the Legtma
Beach physician who faces Identical
ch.arges, ill due in Superior Court Friday
for a pretrial bearing ll'imllarly deferred
a week ago in the liiht of the appellate
court ruling. ·
Dr. Robb, 68, of 34517 Scenic Drive,
Dana Point, is a~ of pa-fonnlng
abortion!! in his Art Colony oft!~. He ia:
now reprtseDted in the ~In.al lctlon by
American Civll Uber:tles )Unloft t.Wyer1
A. L. Wlr!n and Fred Okrand. '
The .. mJ.rttir<d physictan'1 trial dai.
la ... for Sept 29.
Creative Day Care
Center Gets $100
'The Ml!ndon Viejo Democratic Club h8s
pre.Mpted a $100 gift to the Creative Day
Care Center, 1200 W. First SL. Slnt1'
Ana.
The money will aid the <:enter'11 drive
to acquire supporting members for Its
work, providing care for underprivileged
child~ to entible their TTl<llhers lo attend
1chools or learn 1kll11 leadinz to tmploy-
ment.
.---~
Sub5equent action by the • t 1 t e
prevented the city from enendlng the
permit for the hospltal'1 construction
wbe nthe Orne limit ran out, becawe it
was a variance and zone varianeea are no
longer permJtted under state law.
On June 15 the dty Planning Com-
mission adopted • resolution approving
general hospitals as a compatible use ln a
planned development mne, 1t1bjeet to an
approved condltioruil use permit.
"The contractor told us Tuesday that
an application -for a coodl.UonaJ use
permit is in the mail," a.aid Phil
Schwartze, assistant city planner.
Once the application is on file, the
developers will be required to resubmit
their detailed plans to the city planning
commission. Because the hospital Is a
conditional use, a public hearing will be
required.
Admission Price
To Be Increased
At Grid Games
Saddleback Collegt trustees havt acted
to klck up the admission price of r;chool
football games by increases of from 15
pert>ent for single admissions to 45 per-
cent for season tickeLS.
College president Fred Bremer h·londay
night told the trustees he wa s requesting
the price increases in order to bring the
admission prices in line with what othtr
area junior colleges charge spectators.
The single admission price for adults Is
now 12. as compared with the previous
$1.75 per game. High sdiool students and
service1nen will now pay $1 , instead of 75
cents. Children's admission will remain
the same at 50 cents.
The general admission aeason tickets
will now cost $8 rather than $5.50 and a
reserved seat season pass will be $9 ln·
i.tead of $7.50.
Dr. Bremer tllld the trustees the col-
lege will play five homt football games
during the !971 season, thus lowering the
general admission season ticket savings
from P .25 to only $2.
The justification Or. Bremer gave for
the price Increase was to conform to tid·
mission prices charged by other coUeges.
None of the five trustees objected to the
price hike.
R ai11 Insurance
Soa ked Up Cas h
The1i R ai1is Came
ATLANTIC CITY. N.J. (UPI) -For 58
sunny days, insurance agent Frank J.
Siracusa revelled in profits.
Then rain fell three times in four dayg,
and Siracusa waa out •t least $20,000.
His lMurance company's profit and
loss statement was tied ao closely to the
'"'eather because Siracma devised a rain
insurance program for summer visitors
to this beach resort clty two months ago.
Tourisb who paid a premium of $1.25
to $3.75, added to their hotel '>ills, coold
claim $25 kl $75 if trained more than
one hundredth of an inch, between 10
a.m. and 4 p.m., on two occasioDs within
any seven day period.
Siracusa's company CXJllected the
premiums from the hotel owners aOO
reimbursed them for any payoffs.
For 58 straight daya the sun shone
steadily. "They were: calling me the Sun-
dant'e Kid," Siracusa recaJled.
But showef!! occurred Saturday and
Monday, and Siracusa figured his payoffs
totalled $10,000. Tuesday's rain meant
another $10,000, he aaid .
Siracusa would not comment on
whether his profits exceeded his losses. A
rough calculation Indicated he could
survive a few mor-e days of showera
without going into the red. Which was
just as well, since the five day forecast
indicated showers are likely in the next
week,
Capo Councilmen
Appr ove Budget
San Juan Capistrano'a $3.4 mlllion
budget won formal approvaJ by the City
Council Monday.
The budget includes $915,726 for the
general fund and a $2,214,400 item for tx·
pansion of the city sewer plant, a joint
Pl'l>itd pa.id for prlmartly by the
Moulton-Niguel Water Dltttict.
Althou&h a re90!utlon waa oot passed to
atabllah the tax rate, City offidala have
promised tt will remain tbe same u lut
fiscal year -90 centa per tlOO asaessed
valuation for general ·purpoRs and 30
centa to pey back bond debta .
The budget also Includes a $40 monthly
acroe:11-the-boardi cdst-of-Uving lncreue
for all city emp oyes.
Troop 35 Scouts
To Get Awards
Boy Scoull of Troop IS, Laguna Beach
will rece.tve •wards Sund•y tor their
perfonnance in 11wimming, archtry and
rnarltm111nshlp ln competlUons with
troops from Tustln, Colt.a Me51 and San-
ta Ana.
Cornpetltlon11 in the varlou.,, events
were held July 10 lhrough July 17 while
the troops camped at Lot!t Valley Camp In
the Anz.a Borrego Mountains.
The 1wards presentation wlll be part of
t'n llflemoon campout at Heisler Park,
tr om 2 kl 7 p.m. Sunday.
·11.1 -~
The hultb-care eomplei: ls being built
by Sunset Builders. wbtlse headquarters
are Auahelrn. It is being designed by the
Archlu.ctural firm of Rochlin and Baran
of Los Ange!et.
It Is to be one-story, covertng '13,700
square feet with a 12-bed matem1ty unit
and • slx-bed •urglcal unll
The hosptta1 would be a private facility
headed by Dr. Russell Hendrickson,
chairman of the hospltal'1 executive com·
mlttee. Later plans call for t.he addlllon
of an 13'-bed convalescent bosplta1 at lhe
rear of t.he site.
The Mlsslon Viejo hospital owned by
Mission Viejo Medical Company was
recently embroiled in a heated dispute
when It WIS learned lhal Arnold Forde,
Ori:inge County PlaMing Commbaklner
appointed by Fifth District Supervisor
Ronald Caspers, wa1 assert.edly an In-
terest-holder in the company.
Forde was reportedly instrumental In
blocklng approval for saddltback Com·
munity Hospital, 1 nonprofit facility In
Laguna Hills. A permit for the Laguna
HH!s hospital to be operated by the
Lutheran Hosplta! Society, was even-
tually granted Qy the Corttmisslon after a
seriei of unusual adiona which tncluded
commissioners stalking out of a county
planning commission meeUng before a
decision could be reached and a
threatcrcd Grand Jury investigation that
"
never ocmrred. •
Prevlou1 to the recent flurry oi-:
building, South Coast Commun t l {
Hospital served the enUre area from San
Clemente to El Toro.
Preliminary cooatructlon bas be11:un. nl
Sadd.Ieba.ck Comnumlty.
~1is&k>n Viejo Community Hospital will
open its doors next mooth.
San Clemente General Ho s p it a I ,
another proprietary project, is in the
mkist of construction with foundaUon and"
basement work nearing completion. Tkatr
health-care complei: which will occupy 21!
acres of view land on Camino Lo« Mares.,
will open for its flrst patients early next
spring.
SATURDAY, JULY 31
4 3 . ;. ·~
STORE S , ~ !. J
TO 111-~~-,,111
150 TABLES LOADED WITH
lOOO'S OF DOLLARS WORTH OF
FANTASTIC VALUES -JUST IN
TIME FOR BACK TO SCHOOL SERVE
YOU
2300 HARBOR BLVD.
AT
WILSON
JUST SOUTH OF
KIDS!
COME MEET YOUR FAVORITE
DISNEY CHARACTERS
HERE ALL DAY .SATURDAY
SAN DIEGO FREEWAY
IN THE HEART OF COSTA MESA 2300 HARBOR Bl VD., COSTA MESA '
GENERAL TIRE
JULY 21st
thru 31st
WIDE Glass-Belted Jumbo 780
The Same Tire That Comes On Ne w 1971 Can !
~$
R
Sit• A.71-I J (6.00-11) T11b•l1u Whil•w•I!,
,tu1 $J,,O FM. (x. T11 p•• tir•
TWINSTRIPE
• Polye1ter Cord Body
e Gla1s·Belted
Co"'p&~•bl• ••
,.-1cn on 1lnt!t1,
l'Oln •IHI
~l•ckw1111.
11.ll
A711-13
E711-14
F7Jl.14 ----F711-15
WHITEW.-.Ll..I ...... I!•. Tix '•It "•k.o 4 Tira JIW Tir•
4 fol" $80.00 "·" ..
4 fol" $95.00 tz.11 ...
4 for $105.00 lt.J4 ...
4 for $110.00 lt.•t ... CADILLAC OWNERS
WHITEWALL CW 3-JUMBO 780
----G711-14 4 for $115.00 It.ff ...
~---G711-15 4 for $120.00 IZ.M ...
H7Jl.15 4 fo r $135.00 11.11 -4 for $150~
Fa mous Delco Pleat urlur
SHOCK ABSORBERS
1' SALE
• ., J ..... ,.. .... _,-Hy ,_ Niii .. "'"' ... .-... '••rttl fet .,.
Hl•H YlllllLITY YI LLOW
TENNIS BALLS ..... , ..
., J ltelt.
...... f,1.1t '"'· I•. Tb '4f ti"'
FRONT-END
ALIGNMENT
DYNAMIC Hl•H·ll>llD
WHEEL BALANCE
p.11 ...
w •• .,.,.,~ • ......, .... ............ ,. .,_ ....... ,_n,.,·, .,..ffk--., -4
MfMy U..11 -4 Mf-t ,_.., -...
BRAKE
RELINE
4
FOR
• CtflVllOl.ITI
9uaker State .........
MOTOR OIL
Charge it at General
DON SWEDLUND
• COM,.Actll
AVERY
Coast General Tire General Tire Service
-·
115 W..t 1 "'-c .. ,. M.,.
P\.-M0-1711., 646-IOJJ
11941 ...................... .....
""9 M1·1111
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OM.Y 'II.OT *
l
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~\ •• I ~ps ,
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Not Politics! :r;
Heaven Forbid
~~-·By TlfOMAS MURPHlNE t Ol "'9 O.llr PJ111 lt•tt
~EW TWISTS DEPT. -Reports have
red down to the coastline 1b1s week
t a new set <>f charges and counter·
:arges have been flying in the hall.! of
ven1ment up in the Coun ty Seal.
;As lhe reports heve lt, leaders of
, fl llge County 's Buildi ng Industr y
soc1ahon have charged that some pea-+ in c_ounty government }Jave bten 1t.8aged 1n ";xiht1cs."
trhat aweoome disclosure mwil ha ve
y set lhings a-buu.in' up around
c Center Dr ive
spite the seriou.sncss ol the allega. +,i. you ca n rest a51ured that the
4airn1 an of the Board of Supenisors,
~rt &ttin of Santa Ana, kept his cool.
fuE IMMEDIATELY i1sued a denial of tfe wh ole thing.
£. ow on th is one, you certainly have to
along with Board Chairman Battin.
w in the world could a.."tybody .suggest,
*
n in a whisper, that tbing1 going on
se days up in the County Seat could be
itiC? I
;_,n order to be politic, my Webster's
d\:tionary sugg5st.s that the party must ~· "Wise, pnldent and s1gacious in
d~islng and pursuing measures , •. "
1Jeavens. That doesn't sound like
ctange County government we know to-
4y. Not the way some of them are
c:pstiing about up lhere, tllPlin& in the
bOslness of government with ·•U the
dblle nuances of a meataxe: •
:ANYWA l', WHAT touched off the latest
round of charge and counter.charge v.·as If allegation by the builder'.'! group that
Cfunty employes v.·ere being affected by
pOUUcs and county workers were thus
~arm of making too rnaiiy movn on tieir owb.
;Well, wtUt Ille cllJnate being what it ls,
~ might tend to suspect that county
efnptoyes are a Utile skittery thea days.
: What if you were a county trft-trim-• ~r. You might be given to wonder when
~mmtng tree• mi&ht •udd<nly become
Wss than routine. What if you trimmed
fte tree in front or Supervl.!IOr Ron
qaspers' ofUce window?
' ; AF"l'ER AU., the Fl!Ut District
apperviaor from Newport Beach bills
timself as something of a con-
Rrvatlonisl Hacking away at hl1 ttte
~t not be very politic for the county
qee-t.rimmer. He might figure it would
be politic to check with Ca1pers flr1t in
crder to pre.serve hi.! position of punching
9 county time clock. 'And"' tt might go.
But as for the charge that all things to-
day in county government are politic
witbln the wise. prudent ind se.gacious
definition, you might ha ve some doubl.'l.
ON THE OTHER HAND, 50me folks
might wonder lacking politics, if "'e have
any politi cians up at the County Seit!'.'
Another quic k check on Webster's tells
you tbat the word politician is "fre-
quently used in a derogatory sense , \Vilh
irnpUcatioru of seeking person11l or
partisan gain, scheming, opportunism ,
etc .• "
Hey, that sounds more familiar. Wt
... may have some of lhosc .
•
Big Cutcla
Fishermen casting from the jetty at the east end of
the Cape Cod Channe! near Sandwich, Mass., might
hook a big one as the deStroyer U.S.S. ·Harlan It
Dickson lies hard aground offshore. The craft
erounded Tuesda y after noon when it suddenly lost
power. Efforts will be made to refloat the destroyer
at hiih tide.
Lightning Kills
Cable Cond11ctor
111 Alpine Rain
CHAMONIX. France (UPI) -Lightn•
ing sent a cable car smashing inlo a
n1ountainside during an al pine lilorm
Tuesday night .killing it3 conductor. It left
65 tourists stranded more lhan three
hours in another car swaying 165 feet
above a valley floor.
The lightly dressed tourists, including a
72·year-old woman were lowered to the
ground on rope ladders in a nearly
nightlong operation and made their way
to Chamonix early today.
Those ·rescued pra ised thei r cable car
conductor, Philipe Adam . They said he
began mating rescue arrangement! as
soon as thelr car stopped aftu lighting
hit an empty car carrying conduc tor
f\farcel Chamel , v.·ho W8.'l killed.
Chamal's car broke loose and smashed
into Aiguil!e DuMid i Peak · near Mont
Bh1 nc, Europe's highest peak .
A mountain climber among Adam's
passengers volunteered to go down a rope
to keep it steady for othera. Several
passefller& already had bem lowered to
safej,1 throush rain, ball and brilliant
displays of llg!1tnlng bY Ille time moon-
tain police and rescue workers arrlved by
beJ.icopter.
Sudan Convicts, Hangs
Communist Party Leader
KHARTOUM (UPI) The Sudan
hanged C.Ommunist Party Leader Abdel
Kbalek Mahjoub today aft.er conviction of
masterminding the leftwing coup against
President Jaafar Numeiry, Omdurman
radio said. It brought to 14 the number
executed since the regime was restored
to power Thursday.
Mahjoub, 45, was sentenced to death by
a supreme military court Tuesdav. The
govemment-nm radio in .Kharioum ·s
sister city, Omdurman, bad earlier said
"President Numetry approved th e
sentence which will be carried out after
midnight."
Joseph Garang, an avowed Communist
and former Minister for Southern Affair s
\\'ho was fired from the cabinet by
Numeiry after .loyalist military force$
staged a countercoup Thursday, \.\'a~
hanged Tuesday. Sudanese offlcials said
Garang was seen conferring with r<'bel
leaders during their three days of power.
The capltal of Khartoum, fiv e miles
•cross the confiuence of the Wh1te Nile
and the Blue Nile from the ancienl
· · capital <lf Otndurman, remained c1lm un·
der a duSk to dawn curfaw. Bustnesses
,,.,ere open but scores of riflemen p.troll·
eel the city's st reets under a blistering
i;un.
Military tribunals .have sent 11 arr:Dy
officers to firing squads and three
civilians to the gallows since Numeiry,
\vho seized power in a coup May 25, 1969.
began his purge of Communist "traitors''
from the nation of 15 million, Afr ica's
largest country in land area.
The Sudane11e Communists opposed
Numeiry 's proposal to join Egypt, Libya
;ind Syria in their projected federation
beginning Sept. I and had been under at·
tack by Numeiry since February.
E111ergency Declared
BOISE, ldaho (UPI) -Gov. Cecil
Andrus has declared a state of emergen-
cy ln fi ve Idaho counties because or a
grasshopper infest ation .
He asked the U.S. Secretary of
Agriculture to concur and lo make his
department's resources available to
"alleviate this serious problem."
Sttuletap Jlep!!'t
' Wllf ~op Worry
Of 'Cll1na's Chou
HONG KONG (UPI) -~ 0,m..
n)O.nist Premler Olou En·!al h~ placed
U.S. withdrawal from Ind~l first
. among the topics to be dlscussed with
P~ident Nixon during t'lxon's vlait to
Peking, a group of Amirlcan ~ts
reported today on their return 1 fr6ni
Chin a. 1
,
The students released an wt0l'tk:ii1
tran script of a conversation with 0100 ln
v.·hich he said discussion of Indochina
took precedeoce over the tubject of
Taiwan (Formosa) or the normalization
or relations with the United states. He
also made It clear he opposed any two-
Ch.ina policy.
Chou al10 called for U.S. withdrawal
from South Korea and a peace treaty to
end the war to repla~ the annistice now
in effect. He al,a warned again~t revived
militarism in Japan with American help.
The 15 studenta talked with Chou and
other top Chinese Jeaderii on July 19 in
Peking. In re.leasing t}\e transcript they
said Chou's remark• "are clearly not an
official, .fonnal statement of the position
or the Chinese government "
In the l.ranscrlpt, Chou al~ was quoted
that "maybe I will say something wrong
or the interpreter migh~ interpn:t
wrong." He said if the material were
publicized it should be accompanied by a
statement that "there are bound to be
Laborites Vote
Against Market
LONDON (UPI J -The top leadership
of Britain'• oppo!lition labor party and of
the country's trade unions voted by
overwhelming majorities today against
joining the European Common Market.
The parly's national execulive corn·
mittce. 1vhich sets labor party policy,
\'olcd 16-6 against entering the nlarket.
The general council of the Trades
Union Congres~ (TUC), wh1ch represents
more than nine million British workers,
voted 15·11 lo recommend Britain slaying
out of the booming six.nation community.
The present com mon market member
countries are France, West Germany,
Italy. Belgium, Netherlands and Lux4
embourg.
The two bodies met and \'Oted
separately .
so1ne v.Tong statements In t h I s
recording."
Chou '• top\cli ranged fro1n why
student.I wear k>ng hair to the key
abstruct.ions in improving Sino-American
relaUons.
"No matter whether in the U.S. itself
or abroad, we believe the gn:atut cry ls
for the U.S. to withdraw Its troops from
Vietnam and the whole or Indochina."
Oaou sald. "And tilt troops of other coun-
tries which have followed the United
States inlo Indochi na should also be
withdrawn. I believe that our mod on
this is also clear. And we also believe
that at the president day among the
American people thi s issue Ls the most
outstanding.
Poor South Viet
Security Cited
Jn Red Attacks
SAIGON <UPI) -The UniLed Statu
evacuated dozens of helicopters and other
major support unit.'J from two big burs
Mrth, of Saigon and near the Clmbodian
border today because of poor Sooth Viet·
namese security around them, field
rep.Orts said.
' The reports said the evacuations were
()rdered by Lt. Gen. J. J. Wagstaff, U.S.
Comm ander of Military Regiori I~l
around Saigon, in thf wake of Communist
commando attacks oa the two bases that
resulted in six U.S. helicopters blown up
and six Americans wounded.
One attack was at Tay Ninh West, 65
miles nor thwest of the ci ty, where the
comm andos penetrated ti~ wire July 23
under cover of a mo rtar barr;,ige. But at
Lai Khe. 30 miles north.of Saigon , the
Communists walked unopposed tllrough
tl1e perin1eter to inflict heavy damage.
Corresporydents at f ay Ninh Wt.st said
more than 400 American soldiers worked
through the nighl Tuesday and early ~
day . hurriedly packing military equip-
ment and their pcr.sona1 gear into ship-
ping crates.
The'material left aboard a convoy of 30
trucks today for Phu Loi. a major U.S.
Airbase 13 miles norih of Saigon whe re
the perimeter is sti ll guarded by
Am erican lroops.
Bush mills.
Disney Sues
Cartoon Characters 'Lewd'
The whis~ey .that spans
the generations gap.
CHICAGO (UPI) -Altomeys for Wa lt Disney Productions Tuesday hied
suit in federal court seeking to stop reproductions of famous Disney characters
being portrayed on tee·shirts and posters in a "lewd, drug-addictive manner."
Attorneys Edv•ard AUas and Roy E. Olin asked the court for $50,000 in
damages .against each of 18 periOns allegedly selling the reproductions in
violation of aipyrighl laws.
"Some of the cartoons portrayed by th ese people are pornographic,'' Atlas
said . Included ~·ith lhe suit were examples of poste rs, showin·g Micke y i\lou~f',
Donald Duck and Goofy sitting around a water pipe (ccmmonly used for sn1uk·
ing marijuana ) with dazed looks on their [aces.
Another poster showed the seven dwarfs, Dumbo the elephant, Tin ker·
belle, J\llckey Mouse and Dona ld Duck at some thing akin to a love·in. On one
poster J\1ickey J\1ouse was using a hypodermic needle.
The suit charges that the posters and tee-sh1rt.IJ are "degrading. !ev.d. and
drug·add1ctivc " It said Disney Productions v.'orked long and hard ''lo <1cr1uirc
the image of innocent delightfulness .•. known and loved by pccple o.11 o\'t!I'
the world, particularly. but not only, by children ."
Nan1ed in the suit \Vere the operators of several stores in <.:hic;igo·i; Old
Town area, and other businesses in the Chicago aret1. Old Town is sirnilar to
New York 's Greenwich Village.
Atlas said the only out-of-town business ·named in the suit was Specially
Products of Memphis, Tenn.
Rains Dampen Many States
Cool Air Prevails in. Midwest; Some Warming Expected
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For JOO yea rs, a \Vhiskey from Bushn1ills has been
wi th us. Cha rm ing us. Beguiling us in a smooth,
polished and allogether lighthearted fashion.
15 generations have refined it.15 generations have
~1 pped it.Theverdict :Near perfec 1 ion.Bushmills.Full
of c:har;icter. But not heavy·handed about it. Fl avor·
!ul. But nevC"r ovrr-powering. Bu sh mil ts. It reflects
the p<1 sl '.vi th a light and lively fl avor 1hat 1sall 1oday.
Compare it to your present whiskey. You needn't
purchase a botlle. One sip at yo ur favo rile pub wi ll
tell you why B~sh mill s has inlrigued so many gen·
c r.Jtions. It is, simrly, out of sight
IMPOlmD
BUSH MILLS
FROM THE WOAID'S OLDEST 01mLtfllY.
' ILEt•D Of 100\ IRISH WHISKllS-H rROOf -IOOUO tN IRUAllO. I Ill JDS GAllNLIU CO , !i!W YOR~. NT. •"II
•
• • -.... --·---......-.,....t
-
U.S. Trade
Dips Told
By Official
WASHINGTON (AP)
SecrdarYt,. 1" Comm ere •
MIW'iee H. Stans .says 1971
may be lhe first year of this
century the United States has
been unable to mainlain a
surplus in its foreign trade.
•·our economic future
depends on maintaining our
technology," Stans told the
House Sc J e n c e O'>mmittee
Tuesday. He said the U.S.
trade suprlus of exports over
imports, which has been
declining in recent years, may
hit zero for the first time since
QUEENIE By Phll lnt1rlandl
W«lllftdq, Jul1 28, 1971 oAA. v nur a
May Spark ContNWer•fl
Nixon Eyes Reserve Board Boost
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Qidrl. moot trusted -1< ad-
-· baa bt<n <rtllcal " 111-minlstrltm policy for more
Prealdent NU.on Is considering " Adm!nlllrotloo -lb<>
a proposal ~dou!>le lbe s~ol . dllclo9ed lbet N!Icn· ~j<ded lbe Federal l!eserve Board, It was teamed too.ay. The aug. • request from . A.rtb~ F., tb;tll a year. He bu called
1eat1on, if put b e for a BUf1'.s -cba1nnan ol tbe -rtpeat.edly f« the Preeldent to
Congress. could toucb otf · a re9en'e board -for a $20;(MX) take: a tougher stand agalnat
oontroversy rivaling Prtsldent a year pay r1lle. Bums. c:ur--t:nflationary w11e and price Jn.'
Franklin D. Roosevelt's at~ renUy make• $0,500. creaaea.
tempt io "pick" the Supreme Bums, however, denied he ('The Pruldent hu ncetfed
Compromise
On Draft
Said Near
had "lobbied tor an ~ase aever1J rilquests from high
in sala!'}'.'' level economic advlaen that
The developments' left no he expand rntmbenhlp of the
doubt that the once warm Federal Re1erve Board,'' u
personal relationship between admllililtration spokt!man
Ni.ron ud Burns hu cbilltd. sa!d. "There hu bee n
Burns, at ooe time Nixon's criticlnn·that it Is too much ol
I clooed elllb and that only by
doublln& it.a abe can it really
-nllably."
Tbe spokesman did not
elaborato.
Tht Federal Reserve,
Jqally Independent or lhe ad-
mlnlstiaClon, sets the nation'a
basic l'DOPeY and credit policy.
Jta tnembera are appointed by
the Ptuident but t h e l r
overlapping 16-ye:ar terms are
deaianed to insulate lbem
from day-to-day politics. Ir Nixon does ask Congre.u
to dollbie tho me o1 the 11oar4
-and automallcally &t<e him
the authority to nama le'l'lll
new medim -It CClllld triiJ
ier .a<Olllrcveny not~
the ... that tollowod Pr.a.
dent Franklin D. Rooaevett'i
effort to increase tM me of
the Supreme Court.
Robsevelt'a plan was rejed:ed,_
11fter opponent. accused hira
ol trying to "pack ti!< court~
to water down Ila a:mervatfir'
majorJty.
1893.
The surplus was Sl.7 billion 1~~~~~~~~~:::2~g~~~"1;·~"'~"j last year, down from $7.7 ~
billioo in 1964, Stans said.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
There. were report& today that
a compromise may be in the
works to revive the dratt,
perhaps before Co n gr e s 1
begins a month-long recess
next week.
Free Real Estate
The last offi cia1 comment on ;'I th.ink dogs should be trained to keep their opinions
the balance of trade.was July of judges to the:mselvea."
8 when the Commerce Depart· --------------------
ment foreca st a $~.ooo
surplus for 1971. It predicted
exports would rise 7 to 8 w·
cent, while imports increased
13 to 14 percent.
Stans urged Congress ' to
consider stim ulating
techniolgical advancement te
break the cycle.
''It may well be time," he
said, to modify antitrust
regulalions so that indu.stries
can pool resources and make
advances he said are needed.
Although the Nixon ad·
ministration hasn't decided
"which way we want to go , ..
St.ans said, four options exist:
-Direct federal grants and
Joan guarantees for
te chnological development:
11nd such indirect aid as tax
break.!, investment credits and
depreciation allowances.
Ma1iFound
Tied Up
J 11,side Tomb
WESTWEGO, La. (UPI) -
PoUce found Davld A. Melan-
con, 22. lied and gagged and
stuffed in an above-Lhe-ground
tomb Tuesday in t h e
Westwego Cemetary. He was
ative, but suffering from
shoe It.
''He was as white as a
~t." said policeman
Woodrow Chambert.
Chambert said the man was
robbed and then bound and
deposited in the u p p e r
chamber tomb. W o r km e n
11uspected something w a s
wrong when they saw plast.ic
flowers covermg· the opening
(If the chamber, which was
gUppo:!lecl to be vacant.
They removed the · flowers
snd round the tomb was not
sealed with bricks and mortar,
but open, with Melancon in·
1lde.
Chambert said Melancon
fainted evtry time he at-
tempted to speak to officers.
He was hospitalized. Police
believed. he had been in the
tomb since Mooday night.
Officers Allegedly
Relieved for Racism
The President's power to
draft men into the service e.r-
p!red JW1e 30 when the House
and Senate could not agree on
legislation to extend the draft
for another two years. The
specific point of disagreement
DETROIT (UPI) -Frank
W. Render, Deputy Assistant
Secretary of ·nerense for
Equal Opportunities, 11 a i d
Tuesday at least seven of.
ficers. including one general,
have been relieved of duty for
violating armed forces civil
* * * UAW Chief
Seeks More
Public Jobs
DETROIT (UPI) -United
Auto Workers Presldent
Leonard Woodcock, referring
to Wlemployment as "the
country's most serious pro-
blem," has called for the ere a·
lion of. up to 3 million public
service jobs.
Woodcock. in an address
delivered at the 61st Annual
C.Onvention of tbe National
Urban League Tuesday, also
recommended the formation
of a eoali.Uon ••or t b e
economically disa.dvant.aged,"
embracing; all races and col-
U"s. to iiod more jobs.
Woodcock did not elaborate
on this proposal. However, in
remarks to newsmen following
bi.S., speech, he noted that an
economic coalitlori already ex-
ists within the Democratic
Party, but said it has not
given enough considerc.tion to
the problems of blue<0Uar
workers.
Woodcock said during the
past 10 years the Democratic
Party, which the UAW tradi·
tionalty supports, had moved
away from \he rtCOgnition of
basic problems such a s
unemploymenL
was over a Senate-backed
rights regulalions. amendment which w o u Id
Render made the statement declare it the national policy
during a news conference to be out or Indochina nine
wtiich roincided with the Na-months after the measure
tional Urban League's 6lst an. becomes law. provided the
nual convention. Render, a U.S. war prisoners were relea9ed before then. black, held his coore~nce in a One member of a House-
hotel across the street from Sehate conference committee the convenUon site. .. ~,-people h ore which ha.s been trying to .solve ...... are wow stars, bars, oak leaves and the. impasse said Tuesday the
birds on their shoulders who negotiators had tentaUvely
have been relieved of duty," agreed on a compromise. It
he said. would involve changing the
Render tnitially said there out-in-nine-months amendment
were 10 to 12 officers who to make it a "sense of the
were relieved o~duty but in a Congress" expression that
telephone interview later he President Nixon s h o u 1 d
said the figure may have been n e g o t I a t e a Vietnam
seven or less. "If I'm asked to withdrawal date In exchange
produce seven names I pro-for a cee.se-fire and release of
bably couldn't do it," he said. -=the=;;;wa;;;r;;;;;pr;;;ls;;;o;;;ne;;;r;;;•·===;;;
Render declined lo name their
officers. "J don't think it
would serve any u s e f u t
purpose," he !aid.
Render said of the ones he
knew of who were disciplined
the lowest ranking officer was
a captain -a military lawyer
-who was discharged ln
Oldnawa earlier this year [or
refllsing to ~ake hands with a
black officer.
Render 1aid the individual
services al.so could have taken
action without his knowledge.
L ~effi~ns
Hmi-annual
clearance
sale
STARTS TODAY!
s.. "" Se.vlfl c ... ,
Pl&1• -llMI • • • ...
city'• IHve,
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FABRICS
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HOUIS: 10 A.M.,. t :DO P.M.
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I
• DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
On With the Election
Barring California Supreme Court intervenUon, 1t
~ppears that Laguna's on-again~ff-again high rise elec-
tion will be held alter all Aug. 8.
Hero of the day for the anti·high rise faction was
attorney William Wilcoxen. He had his clients' appeal
ready to rush over to the Fourth DistMct Cou.rt of Ap-
peaJ in San Bernardino almost before the ink was dry
on the Superior Court order· cancelling the election.
ApparenUy impressed by Wilcoxen's swift ac~ion
and the fact that the critical election date was looming,
the ap~llate court set a few records of its own in
responding.
The legality of using the initiative proce~ure to
adopt a height limit ordinance appears to remain open
to question but the judges were firm in upholding the
right of the voters to record their views.
While realizing the ordinance may be chaUenged,
its proponents now are principally concerned with turn·
ing out a record vote in favor of the height limit.
Their aim is to convince the City Council, even it
the initiative ordinance should be invalidated, of the ad·
visabilily of establishing the sort of height limit the
people want.
The Access Dilemma
The controversy is over -at least for now -in
the months-old batUe between a San Clemente develop-
er and several hundred golf course area residents.
City councilmen have finally agreed that one of the
early access suggestions by developer John Douglass Jr.
was probably the best.
But it will not be among the most popular .
Council men chose to accept a plan showing two
country lanes, one traversing the city golf course and
one a1 ong an existing neighborhood roadway, to serve
the first 100 units of the largest housing projects plan·
ned f or the city in years.
Church Issue Stirs
Another Response
To the Editor:
Written well enough to deserve a better
premise, David G. Peary 's Jetter
'Mailbox July 21 ) brought up the age.old
cliche that if the taxpayers do not !lu~
port the parochial schools the church
might nood the public domain with
Catholic students and close down the
parochia l schools.
Rubbish! The Roman Catholic Church
Is too smart to do a stupid thing like th.al.
for it would defeat their purpose of
C.ttholic instruction of their members
which was the goal of the Catholic
Oiurch in the first place.
THE THREAT to send them all t.o
public schools is nothing less than a veil-
ed attempt al extortion, and ll is working
in some localities, but there will always
be opposition to a union of church and
stale. Note what the Russians did with the
church.sponsored Rasputin and the
church itself. Kicked out would be a con·
servative estimate of what happened.
IH.he Pope would melt down the golden
Images in the cathedrals around the
world at which most of the poverty-
stricken people worship, or sell some of
the vast real estate holdings flax.free, of
course) there would be money enough to
1upport the parochial schools forever.
And that goes for the Buddhist religion
whose statues of Buddha. ·which he did
not authorize, could feed many Asians
who oow are dependent on American
wheat.
S. G. UNDINE
/Hore OH High Rise
To the Editor:
For the profit of less than 30 landlords
llhould the beautifu l marine aura of
Laguna be lost forever by high rise ?
After all. there are thousands of
Laguna rtsidents that enjoy the e~
v1ronment of natural ocean shores. Don't
!heir interests rate? 4,000 petitioning
residents vs. a couple doien landlords
Mailliox
I ...
l•""'-~ ,....,.. ·~ ""~'"'' N9m11rr, w•llH' ~kl <tnwt' tt1.ir mtut1t1 IR * -.'1111
....... T ... rl1hl ,. COftlltftM lttttl'l ,. fll ... ce
er t NmllNllt llllool 11 ,.. .. ,.., .... All """'' mutt 11!• <ludt l lllNllllrt •nC rn.1111i.. HMtu. ...,, 1t1m" m•' ... w1tll~tkl .., '"'"' tt tw"l<IMI r-Ml _....llt. l"MIN 11t1H 1111 .. hllll.,._
who really ckin't need more money, and
many of whom don 't even live here.
SAM LUDWIG
Election Reform
To the Editor ;
The member of t.he Mission Viej~Sad
dleback Democratic Clu b wish to an·
nounce their endorsement pro~al for
federal financing of a presldenlial cam-
paign. Among lhe other highly desirable
objectives presented in lhe proposal, we
bhould like to bring to the attention of lhe
community the one which we feel is most
urgently needed. To 11horten the cam·
paign period and reduce campaign costs
btfore 1972.
With the recent releaae of information
about the campaign expenditures in·
curred by the presidential candidates 1n
1968, the need to press for reform at th is
time is pa tiently obvioos.
WE ~tUST NOT allow our candidates to
become increasingly dependent on the ex-
cessive ct1ntributions v"hich only special
interest and favor seeking groups can af.
ford to contribute. If we permit this to
continue we can expect legislation which
will benefit these same groups at the ex·
pense to the average citizen.
We urge other groups and all citizens,
regardless of political party affilialion to
]Oin in creating a truly bi·parlisan grass
roots sentiment in order to induce our
legislators to act upon reform of political
campaigns before the 1972 presidentia l
election.
r-.11KE MICHAELS
President r-.t1Ssion Viejo-Saddleback
Democratic Club
400 Pages Long Enough
Jumping to conclusions :
You'll enjoy your life more after 40 if
vou make il a rule never to read a book
'more than 400 pages long-except the Bi·
ble. Any author who can't say whafs on
his mind in 400 pages is only mumbllng to
himself.
The two most discontented types of
people in America are Anny colonels and
the vice president.I
of large oorpora-
lions. They are sym-
bols of top-level fail-
ure. The co lonel who
n~ver wins a ge~
eral"s star, the vice
president "'ho never ~-•..,, geU his name letter.
YI eel in gold on tht
I Bic Door -each
reels in his hurt like an Wo ran, who
~most made it but didn't qulte..
This would be a happier world if at
least once a year everyone in it would sit
down lo the grus with his heart's desire
and 1pond an hour together doing nothing
"" iook ror rour-luf clover5.
AdlieYement of some kind Is po511ible
to anybody. no n:1JU.er what the ha.ndlcap.
Ttut't why 90 many girls we11r long
~· Jt ii the ooly way they can
thinl al ta pin at~ion.
WR4T 11 T!IE most disappointing food
~·Ye na had~ Mine was pomegranatf!.
It soundl 10 uoUc and romantic. but lhe
----.,,...·-·--·--· ,... --... "W"1 . '•"' I
• ' " '
Hal Boyle
-~'"•lll'"·· ... ,.,
rirst and last lime J tasted a
pomegranate. it turned out to be a
mouthful of disUluslon. It was not nearly
as exciting as a 11imple slice of
watennelon,
The thing a wife hate s most for her
husband to say about her in public Is that
she snores In private. She'd almost as
soon have him say she ui1e1 snuff or
chews tobacco.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Heavens t.o Bel.$y. Why fill down·
town Laguna with filthy gum t.rtts
just bccalUfl they once were plant~
ed lhere (or homestead purpo!!e1'!
There are many beautiful lrets
that .1ren't as dirty.
-Mr.a. B. M.
"''' r.•t~rw ••llKTI •-n· ,,........ NI INl(:fHlrlt¥ ...... •I !~t ~··-~.,.. ,_
f Mlr Ml _,,. .. GIM"'' O~lo Dlll~ l'l .. t.
Hearings on the issue set Jength recOrds -obvious-
ly because councilmen .knew the anger of the home own-
en and teared time limits for speakers would only have
fanned the flames.
What should not be forgotten, however, is that the
present solution is only temporary at best. >Jo more and
more back country comes up for development, more ac-
cess hassles will erupt as well,
The problem will be around in San Clemente for
some time to come.
Roadblocks Ahead?
\Vhen Laguna's new city manager, Larry Rose,
bravely volunteered to get the Art Colony's summer
transportation problems ironed out, he little kn ew the
rocky road that lay ahead.
Now, with the aid of a lot of perseverance and a
resident mechanic. the wheels are rolling -most o! the
time.
First disappointment came when it was learned the
four new city buses couldn't possibly be ready for 5llm·
mer use.
Undaunted, Rose opened negotiations with the
Venice Tram Company whose quaint vehicles had been
ordered off the road la5t summer for safety violations.
This time, Rose was assured, the trams were up to
code. Fortunately he had th e foresight to back them up
with a couple of leased minibuses, because the trams be·
gan breaking down as soo n as they hit town. The tram
firm now appears to have straightened this out by send-
ing a mechanic to Laguna for the summer to tend its
(hopefu lly) rolling stock.
Clouding the unhappy transportation scene were
the !lat refusal o{ down town employes to take advan·
tage of free parking spaces in the high school lot and
minibus rides to work and an abortive attempt to charge
for e·1ening parking in city lots.
Rose at least gets an A for eliort.
Their Tony
On Schedule
Party Titne in Ketayo
W ·ith Didos
You can depend on it, once a year Lord
Snowdon stages ~ cutup whi ch has the old
buckos in the London clubs shaking their
heads.
You rec.an Snowdon, whose name i1'
Tony Something-or-Other, is the husband
of Princess P.1ar-
garet, and is a pho-
tographer of some
repute . You don 'l see
many of h.is pictures,
t v ' but if you catch the
_, London ga rd en
,..'-';' . ~:\ parties regularly
''-..... ~ · ,.,1 you'll always be ~-,~stumbling over
Tony, and probably
the Princess, too. 'Ihere have been ru-
mors they don'l get along. but it must be
a canard, because they're alway:s ~t the
same bashes. 'Ibey were made: for each
other, perhaps deserve: each other.
SO IT SEEMS lhey attended a Mayfair
ga rden party thrown by a millionaire,
and all lhe lords and ladie s and the
mere ricli were Uiere, among U>em the
~ ' 4. . ' . ··1.-R.o'yc~ Bri~J. i&;
beautiful Countess \Vestmoreland . The
Countess ""'as dancing with a gentleman
named Peter Caza.Jet, when Snowdon la~
peel him and tried to cut in.
"This is not America," snapped ?rlr.
Caza.let, referring to Tony's frequent
visits to New York, where they do gauche
things, like tapping people at dances.
You may remember that Lady Chat·
terly's i..A>ver was the gamekeeper at the
Chatterly estate. and pretty gauche
himself. But times have changed,
because Mr. Cazalet is a horse trainer for
Queen Elizabeth, and here he is dancing
with countesses and lhe like a l the same
party wlth Tony and the Princess.
Anyway, Lord Snowdon was in a snit,
.w he picked up a ready glass of white-
~·ine and doused Mr. Caza.le t. Apparently
the horse trainer didn't even toss a curry·
comb al Lord Snowdon, but he did have
the gall to walk by Snowdon's table a few
minutes later. Whereupon, Lord Snowdon
'kiztd a glass of red wine and drenched
Mr. Cazalet, and that's really st icky stuff.
OF COURSE. everybOOy was paralyied
snd ct1uldn't talk after that. Report.us
braced Snowdon. and no ditt. Titen they
asked Buckingham Palatt, whlch is
always being asked such questions, and
has never an!Wered yet. Reporters
haven't won ooe of those sincf: George JV
look Mr!. Fitzherbert to mistress.
Bui the reporter! did :stt Mr. Cazalet's
son, Victor, and he confirmed the story,
and with dignity said he had been told his
father was "the perfect gentleman." This
was heartening, since gentlemanly horse
trainers dripping with wine tossed by
spouses of Princesses are comparatively
rare in our day. Be damn sure. Chat·
terly's gamekeeper would have clobbertd
milord .
THE DENSE AIR OF embarrassment
'Which suffuses the Bucklngtiam Palace
people every time one of these con-
tret.emi-occurs i.B mysterious, betause
lhe people dote on them. They think all
the better of the Buckingham folk fqr
:.uch hAnky-panky, proving royalty i!I'.
JJUll allve and fun.loving, like the \e1st ()(
us.
Think how it woo Id have cltared lhe air
had some Palace factotum told the
reportC"rs: "Right, you chaps art on.
'!'here was a bit of R brawl involving Tony
\Yatsisnan1e, husband or the Princess.
who look exception lo some gentleman's
mention of America, and let him ha ve 111
Rlass of the bubbly down his sh.l rtfront. A
jolly mess. wot, but 11m1111ing."
-.. .;~ .. --~
Diplomat Loses Diplomacy
WA SHINGTON -The r au co u a
behavior of a top American diplomat dur-
ing Vice President Agnew's recent visit
to Kenya has created a behind·the-scenes
uproar.
The errant diplo-
mat is AID admln·
istrator in Kenya,
Bert ~1. Tollefson,
Jr., 41. an ex-corn
lobbyist and Repub-
lican politico from
South Dakota, His
antics are cO!orful·
Jy detailed in a ser·
!es of confidential
State Department telegrams.
The American Ambassador to Kenya,
Robllllon Mcilvaine, was so oolraged
that he fired off the blistering "eyes
only" wire1 to Tollefson's boss, John A.
Hannah, head of the Agency for Interna·
lional Development. We have obtained
<.'Opies of Mcllvaine"s missives.
••J REGRET to inform you," MclJva ine
wrote in one cable, ''that Bert Tollefson
blotted his copy book (diplomatic jargon
for 'fouled up') so badly during the Vice
President's visit as to rais e serious ques-
tion as to his suitability for service
abroad. Indeed you may be hearing from
the Vice President direcUy on the matter.
··The prob lem started with Bert's well·
known pushiness and general Jack of
sensitivity and culminated in his getting
sloshed at Treetops (a fancy lodge on the
edge of the jungle), making passes at the
Vice President's secretary and trying to
drag her d ow n the steps t.o meet an
elephant at ground level ••. "
TUE SEQUENCE of events that led up
to this climax, wrote P.tcllvaine. began
when Tollefson was officially Wonned
that "no Americans were invited to join
the Vice President"s group al Treetops.
(Tollefson) came anyhow on his own and
canvassed Kenyans for a bed in one of
their rooms. In the fttd he talked some.-
one out of a room to himself ••. "
In the course of the evening, ~1cllvaine
related, Tollefson • 're p eate d 1 y in-
terrupted" Kenyan officials who ··were
explaining animals" lo the Vice Presi-
clent. "The owner of Treetops," the
Ambassador wrote, "at one point asked
me. 'Who is that jackass?' -pointing to
Bert.
"The incident vo'ith the Vice President's
secretary," continued Mcilvaine, "took
place in the sma ll hours of the morning.
According to her it took all her st rength
to get away from him ."
EVEN KENYAN Ambas sador to the
U.S. Leonard Klbinge, who was there,
commented on Tollefson's "condition,"
Mcllvaine said.
"The next morning. Bert slept through
the departure of 0900 and when be· did
awake took the remaining Secret Service
car to Nyeri leaving them stranded and
furious , , • A car had to be sent the 100
miles up to Nyeri to bring Bert back.'•
The whole affair, Mcilvaine concluded.
had substantiated his misgivings aboul
Tollefson's ~rformance during his ti.ee
months as head of tht AID program in
Kenya.
"I can, of course, live with the situation
but will have to spend a lot of time riding
herd and wonder whether all that effort
is warranted in support or 'Peter's Prin·
ciple.'" (The Peter Principle is a tongue--
in-cheek theory which holds-t b·a t
everyoM: eventually rises lo his own level
of incompetence.)
When asked about the incident, AID
Administrator Hannah refused comment
except to call Tollefson ''a very reprec·
table fellow '' and to inquire where we ob-
tained the confidential cobles. They had
come to him "highly reslricted, hand-car-
ried and sealed ," he huffed to my
associate Joseph Spear.
Reached in Nairobi, Toll efson denied
the Ambassador 's charges and said they
were based on a complete mlsun·
derstanding. '11 had only two drinks," h•
said, and took the President's secretary
to meel the elephant "at her request."
He blamed the imbroglio ()n unnamed
"Democratic holdovers " in the Foreijin
Servict.
Lawn Order Wins the War
Once upon a Lime in the country called
\Vonderfuland, lhe people worshiped
twin gods. One they called Law. The
other they called Order.
As the years pass-
~d the people came
to think of the twn
gods as one god,
whom they referred
to in their daily d'"'
volions as "La"'TI
Order."
It was from this
great god, Lawn Or-
der, they believed,
that all blessings nowed-blessings such
as freedom , justice, the pursuit of hal>"
piness and a soaring gross national pro-
duct.
So the people of \Vonderfuland dwelt
happily and prosperously under the pro-
.---B" George--~
Dear George:
I have heard that SouUlerners:
are polite, Irishmen: are im·
aginaUve. and newspapennen are
very literate. I have just met this
Southerner who is a neW3f>8perman
of Irish descent. Don't you think he
is a good matrimonial risk?
HOPEFUL
Dear Hoperul :
Don't make a move! The:
emergeocy helict1pter is: on the
way ! (We sent 1 St. Bernard on the
last case like this, and the Southern
Trish newspaperman kept. him on a
tw~week binge).
Dear George :
If a dog Is .a man's besL fritnd,
who is a dog 's best friend?
c. R.
Dear C. R.:
It 's never wi.w: to date a married
\\'Oman. {Yeah, I know, but a guy
who wnutd write a qut'l5tlon like
THAT needs to be confused -It
will give him iOmething to think
about).
Art H~ppe ,, ..
teclion or Lawn Order. But then came
The Turbulent Times .
TH.E TURBULENT Times were very
turbulent. Those who were young grew
angry with those who were old, because -the old kept sending them ()ff to fight ror
causes they didn't believe-in.
Those whose skin was black or brown
or yellow or red gn!w angry at those
whose skin was white, because they
didn't have as much freedom. justice,
happiness or gross nalional products.
So there were slt·ins and lie·ins and be--
Ins. And m.11rches and strikes and
demonstrations. And rk>ts and rock
tllrowinc and ••.
AND THOSE who were older and
whiter and lflore well-off grew uneasier
and Wleasier~ The uneasier they grew,
the more devoutly they worshiped Lawn
Order. boplng the great god would
preserve their freedom, junlce, ha~
piness and gross natlonaJ products.
And the more they worshiped, the
angrier they grew at those who com-
mitted offenses against Lawn Order -
like the black.I, the browns, the yelloW1.;·
the rtds and the young . "At all (Oils, 1We
must pn!serve La'lft'!l Order!" thunde~
The Leaders or Wonderfuland (who were
all older and whiter and more well-off ).
So when the blacks delayed their trials
by costly legal ma.neuverlngs and ap-
peals. The Leaders frowned and said,
''This destroy1 rc11pe.ct for Lawn Order."
And the people certainly agreed.
And when the young gathered ln lba
country's capltAI to protest ft war, Tht
Leaders arrested every young person In
~ight -whether they were doing
anythlng \!legal or not. '"It's the only way
to maiiltain Lawn Order." they said. And
lhc people certainly agreed.
.. 'Jitl' .. .. '""" ----·----
SO IT WENT. Eventually, of course, as
the times grew more turbulent, a new
Leader emerged who w.11~ more devoted
to Lawn Order than anybody anywhere.
To restore respect for Lawn Order, he
did a"''l:lY with costly, disorderly trials. To
maintain Lawn Order. he arrested
everyone with disorderly ·ha:lr. disor-
derly clothe.s, disorderly ideas or non-
white skin.
To increase Worship of Lawn Order, he
put everyone in orderly unifonns, housed
them in orderly barracks , filled their
head s with orderl y thoughts and required
them to mow the grasi twice. a week.
Never in history had the worship or
Lawn Order nourished so. And yet, oddly
enough. the people of Wonderfuland
didn't seem to be enjoying the blesiines
of freedom . justice and happinesa that
Lawn~Order bestow~.
But they dld have lots of gross n1tton1I
produtfs. Not to mention the most. order-
ly lawns the world has ever seen. I
MORA'.L : You can worshlp Law. And
you can worship Order. But sometimes,
y<>u've got to choose.
"
-~--' I I
Wedrlesday, July 28, 1971
},., tditoriol poge of the Dailv
Pilot seek,, to i11form and 1tim-
•lflaee rtodtrs bu presenting rh.U
~tospciper't opit1fmt.S and com.-
lfuntary on topics of interest
jlnd 1iQnificance, by providing a
forum for the e:rprtstion of
our reader!' oplnfo~. and br !~r.«senUng tht di1'tfs1 vi~
poinU of tft/ormed obserwrt
nd tpOktrmtn on topfC.3 of the
' dn11.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
CHECKING
•UP•
Bourbon f 01· Him,
Scotch for Lady
SOLON RIPS
PRISONS
LOS. ANG'1-ES CUP)) -
Auembly M1}or1ty Leader
.... waiter H. Klrabia.n said 1\ies-
day Calllorn\11 priJOn ter™
run three years lon&er lhM
the naUon1J average and call -
ed for reforms lo mike 1t11te
prisons "instrume.nts f or
rehlbilllation not revenge."
The Democr1t lc
Assemblyman from the "5t h
dl1trlct addrwed lhe Town
Hall of Call!or'nia at a lunch
mettln1.
DAILY PILOT 7
Friends of FBI Tax-exempt Status Being Queried
WASHlNGTON {A.Pl -Ju &roup IJ not liiiled IS a. LU-ex·
lax -exempt s1.11tus under qut.~· en1pt organiza!ion, Although
lion. Friends of the FBI denies the Com1ni~10.n for lnterna·
II 1.s a "prG--Hoover" nrga n1za. t1onal Ouf' Process of law is.
lion. but admits to being •·11 will be lnC'u mbent on the
partial to the agency H was donor to !!how that Friends of
formed lo dtfend the FBI L!, an eicempt activity
Jn letters sohc1ling funds /or nl the Comm1ss1or. for
A study to counter crit1cism or lnternatiooal Due Process of
of tht United NatlOM "
Under rRS rules, nonprorlt
org3nit1l1ons may qualify A!
t.u 1x1mpt ii lheir purpoM 1&
religious, educatlonal o r
charitable. Proscribed by the
All·DAY CLASSES
Kiaderprtea th111 8th Grade
• T 11chi1t1 ~· • R1s wlth phonics
• Do•r·to-Doot Bits S1Nic1
• Btfffl llld Afttr School CIA
• Rt111111blt Tuitlo•
rules are acUvltit:1 that In·
~(ll'lc propag11ndlllnf , lobbylng
or NM1ng for political office.
HAWTHORNE
CHRISTIAN
SCHOOLS
By L. M. BOYD
the FBI and its director, J. Law," an IRS spokesman said.
Edgar Hoovl'r . the grou1> The commission 11 ba.!led ln
de!cribtd itself 11s an offshoot Chicago where its president
of I.he tax -exemp1 Commission and direclOr. Louis Kutner, js
for lnternatio.1111 Due Process a lawyrr In its application for
of Law. 111i·rxempl status. the com-
AT HAND is note from that Sally Bananas Asking prospective donors to mission says ils purposr. is "to
finr. fellow John Okrasinski , R II I bt' generaus , Friend of lhr FBI promote and enrouraae ln-
Enroll
Now
Fall
Semester l'n Fountain Vn.ll'!J
1683:) Brookh.ur.,t Street
982-3312
KHp Your
Chlldr•n In
Good Hi1nds
CAN A MOTHER ~ char~
tel with iodttent e.1.posurt 1(
!!he nursea her infant in
public? So inquires a clir.nt. In
a rew towns, ma ybe. But nnl
in most. The old ordinancl"-
maker.i thought or th1J Thl"y
"'rote the ir indecent-exposure
1:11vs to prole.ct the nursing
lady, bless her. Such is why so
ftw municipalilie~ h ave
slatute.s to prosecute those
mischievous topless girls .
boss of I.he Windmill Thealrr ea Y ' • • • claimed that ctinlributlons lo tt'rtst in 11nd understanding of
Bananas , That Is it wou ld be tax·dtductiblt. ' human rights as re:ated to in·I In fort Worth. •·Enclosed," 1 t t R ·d t' , ••• ,.:n ... t t•w ••d the ch•rt"'·
'A'flles he . "are two ti ckets 101!,,==========d_ _ _"."n~e~rna~_o:~·~"~""~'__!'~"".'...~"~''._~~:'.""~"~""~~~~ .. ~~""'C'."C:.:==================================
th'! o~ning perform1act of
WHAT CONTEST would you
most like to witne11s! A hl&h·
diving compt!lilion between
tenants and landlords? M.11yht:
a spellin~ bee betwee n cab-
driver~ and pol icrn1en? Or
how aboul-an Argentinian
bnla-lhrowing lxiut between
prirller~ and proofreaders?
Whal l"d like to Sf'e is a
grudge match an1ong bridgf
playtrs wherein contestants
attempt to say ·'goodnight " in
25 words or less
WHO bought it? 1f 11 ·s
bourbon, odd.II are he did it. If
it's vodka , odds are she. did it.
If it'1 scotch, odds are the
butler did It ... DID I TELL
you moat hair spray works in
a dandy manner to dissolve.
the ballpoint ink stains out of
clo the.a'! • , . YOU OUGHT
NOT call yourself a pioneer,
cnn!ends our Language man.
unle.s~ your annu!l property
I.ax now excer.ds whal you
paid for the place. ... TOWNS
WITH p.'lrking mettrs take in
the Jeas1 from same in July,
1ht most in December ... AS
TO \\'HAT proportion or tht
Nation·s husbands and w1ve.s
now sleep in separale. beds.
please note the latest polls
show Just 13 per cent dn so.
OPEN QUESTION: ls it a
fact a sailor can be court·
mart!ated ror getting a sun -
burn?
our new play for yoo and ont>
friend . if any" How kind ~
Can 1 make ii that night. un-
fortunately. Must ask John .
however. for two lickels in-
stead lo the second
performance, if any.
CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q.
··1 just turned 35. Legally, can
l atop carrying my drafl card
now?" A. Supposedly not. All
regisll"red under currr.nt law,
which covers men born afler
Aug . 30. l922, art techni cally
required to pack that card.
And nothing in the. la w l!ays
when l.hr.y can stop. How
abou! that, violators! Did you
realiie this wrinkle makes ii
lhenrr.tically possible for ttu~
draft boardc; to pick up about
90 per~nt of Uie midd1e-aged
men?
AVERAGE working woman
owns seven dresses. That are
wearable. And anothe.r four
that aren't. Such is the
e.stimate of a clathina
specialist. That's not enough
dressrs for an industrious girl.
She ought to own 12. I decided
thaL ... "NAME the prettiest
town in tht country," directs 1
client. Difficult assignment.
Maybe It's Lewi ston, ICla ., or
Naples, Fla., or Salem, Ore.,
or S!n Antonio, Texas. or
Oce;inside , Calif. Nevermind,
the list runs too long.
Your questions and com·
tnent.~ nre 1velcomed and
1..oi ll be used in Checking
Up whe.rever p os1ib l t .
Please addres.~ your letters
to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box
JR7S , Newport Be a ch,
92660.
Huge Surplus
New Teachers Flood
Nation's Job Market
WASHINGTON (APl -Thf' High school employment
Wnrld War 11 baby boom hJts Also has bef'n hit but the fu ll
passed through the nalion·~ irnpac\ or unemployment pro-
public schools and lcr1 in ii,~ bably wnn'I reach that educ.11-
wake lhe worsl job market rnr lional level until the. m1d·70s,
tea chcrli liinC'e the depression. said the NEA .
Nn rther \.~ in sigh• for lhp The job pinch is just begin-""~!. decadf'. says the National I n1ng Lo be felt at the callegiate
lt vel. noneth eless , the Education Association, predic-Cooperative College Re1istry,
ling that the teacher surpl us originally formed to f I n d
""Ill douhle. bv 1976. qualified insrructol'I, finds its
ThP Job siiuation iii lin blrl role changing. Now it.a IO()king
lhal one. larflle eastern sclfoo l for JObs.
ha~ ~t>.nl a lettrr !o e.lementary r.1rs. Eli zabeth S. Fisher.
educaunn st1ulenL~ suggestinR exrcut1ve direc1or of t.he
thP V may ~·1sh tn reconsider rPg1 stry, said that or 6.139
ttach1 ng llli a career. pe rsonli with doctorate! who
Unlt'lili nrw jnb~ are created, reg1 st erf'rl fnr jobs, 34 piorcent
Iii}"!" the NEA in a priva!r werr still ~·ithnul work l;i~t
rnrmn to its !ililff, ov trprnrlur· l\'Cek ~·ourlren of tho~e wh o
11nn nf tc;icher~ v.•i!l rcarh found 1obs aren't going into
Jfl0.000 tn l~.000 annually. Arl· tcachin~.
ded to 1hi~ 1s tha1 each year ··r-.tany n1 these people are
1~.0IXI lo :lfi.000 c>:~ricnced ha vinR In settle for less."
te11chl"rs who 11u1t teaching ssatd ~1rs. Fishe.r. "They don 't
""'llnl to return to school johli. Rel univtrsity lt vel jobs an d
an NE A officiil said. . ha ve lo take jobs in junior col-
The 1·ob niclurt. l~ furlhtr lt.i;;es and high schools and ,.. busi ness . ln one C16e. the min comp\ic1tfil by fin.11ncially bea1n driving a taxi rather pres~ 1chool dist ricts cut· th•n te11ch at a le.vel below his tin~ back on progrJtrns and the dearee.."
size. nr their teaching 1talf11.,-~'----------I
and by profession1l!f laid off
by business and industry turn-
ing to the fitld of education ln
search of work .
"Th• i:itu1Uon i1 completely
unlike 11nythin1 we. have. face.d
.!lntt !he Great Oeprtal9on ol
the 1930s," die NEA Rese1rch
DepJtrtment said In the memo .
"Not only brgln ning teachers
bul persons with Above.
ave.rage r.xpc.rlenct a n d
11ualific11l!on~ Are un11blr eve.n
lo find v11c1ncif'~ ror which lo
11pply."'
----=~ [I :~,~~~~u!JI I~
•'
Our colorful white event.
All Penneys super-size sheets on
sale. Starring no-iron Penn-Prest.
Sele prices ettective through Satvrday only!
Penn·Pre1te percale white sheets
50% ~H1er/5094 cornb6d ootton
227 TMn n.t or Elast&·fil
bottom, reg. 2.99~--···now
Full nat or El1sta·fit bottom, reg. 3.99.--¥ftOW 3.27
Pillow c1ses. reg. 2 for 2.09 ............... now 2 tor 1.17
OOMin 1111 or E!1sta·fi1 bottc.-m, reg. e.99,.MW s.n
Ou•en pltlow cases. re;. 2 lot 3.00 •. .now 2 lot' 2.U
King flat Cl' El11ta·flt bottom, reg, 8.99, ... ....llOW 7.J1
King pillow ceee&. n!g. 2 tot" 3.39-.now 2 tor 2.11
Penn-Prntc. bJeeohed m .. lin
1es TMl'I f\11 or Elllllt.-flt ... -. .... ..,.._ _____ _
fut'! ti.It er El....m~. NO· 209 ew2.11
Pillow e.s... ,.g. ":? for 1.e9 .,. 2 tor •.2•
N1tlowwlcto• bloect""' -tllllllln ........
T"'ln "'1 OJ ElastHtt 1 43 ................ , __ ._ ....
Fun f\ft er a.t..ot boftOm. NG-2..21t_....,. t .&7
PillOW ~.reg. 2 tor 1..osi.--....now 2 lor Uc
Fun flit or Elaet•·rit bottom, reg. 3.99. now 1SZ
Pillow cases, reg. 2 tor 2.49, ........ ·--········--now 2 tor 2.0I
Queen rlat or Elast1..fll bottom, reg. 6..49 ........ -.ftOW ua
Queen pilloW ctses, reg. 2 lot 2.89, .•. --.no• 2 I« U 7
King l~t 0t a.ta-fit bottom, reg. 8.49,__ ..... -.. MrW LM
King pmow CllSA. reg. z tor 3.19 """2 tort.a
Penn•Prnt" mua.Rn B~aaom
Boutique prints
ICI% polye1t•rl50'llo cot10n
FIJI\ nat or EJ.et .. m bottom. reg, 3.99,._.now !.ft
Pillow cues. reg. 2 lor 2.49, ................ --no• l.OZ
OuMtl 1111 or Et1s1 .. til bottom. reg. 6.A9-.. --.. now ua
Queen plHow CISM, reg. 2 lor 2.89 ... --..tlOW 2 for J.31
King ft.i OI a.t*4tt boUOl'ft, l'80-&49--_ __. LM
K~ pllow <*t!IS, reg. 2 IOt 3.t now 2 Jet z.ar
Penn .. PrHt«' mualin 'Duotone• atrfpes
50% potyetler/50"-" con.on
~';!~,: ~---·····-····-232
Fut 1tM or a.tHlt bottom. ..;, 3.99_._... 1.:.1
Pltlow <*eS. r-89-2 for 2.49--.. ·-·-.ftOW J tor 2.0I
Ot.Mten flat or Et11S11.ftt bottom, reg. 6.49,_.llOW 5.3Z
Klrig !tat or El•stlt..fll bottom. reg. 8.49_.--NIW 6.M
King plUow ew. reg. 2 tor 3.19, eo-2tor 2.U
Charge these values at your local Penney store
The following Penney stores are open Sunday noon to 5 p.m •
BUENA PARK BURBANK CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD CHULA VISTA COLLEGE GROVE DOWNEY FASHION VALLEY.SAii lllEQC>
FULLERTON GLENDALE HUNTINGTON BEACH INGL.EWOOD LAKEWOOD LONG BEACH LOS ALTOS MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOLLVWOO!>
ORANG E '"THE CtTY.. RIVE RSIDE SAN FERNANDO SANTA MONICA TORRANCE VAN NUYS VENTURA WESTCHESTER WEST COVINA WHITlWOOD
All other atore1 open Mond1y through &1turd1y
••I I•• ••I I •• 11) (JI
" ..
"
"
" ..
COLORFUL INDIAN DANCERS AT FASHION ISLAND
THURSDAY • BRING YOUR COLOR CAMERAS
TOMORROW, 12 NOON, 1:30 and 3 pm on the mall ti
" :: 11 :1 ,, 11 •• n I I•• ••I I•• II 11 I I II 11 •• •1 !1&W11 II 11 II II ! I 11 :1 ) ! II II 11 •• ••I .. r
•
..
·.·,~ ' ---· .;"ltl< --~-·~ -];' ...... ..... ...... --'It<"'--. ,. -,, .1 ..._!. -w 1 l1IC .r, -..... : -" "~ 1 ..
....
J
I'
.... -.
!·a DAILY I'll.OT
c,..o~
Declares
Innocence
YUBA CITY (UPI) -ID a
ftrm. clear votoe, Juan V.
ConJoa dedarod "not IUl!ty, sir,. 25 dma T\laday to I
murder tndicbnent aCJCUl!n&
• him of the slaytnp ti. Itinerant
i '": :"!"c..nty Superior
C.OUrt Judge John G. Hauck
re.ad each count cf the 25-·~ indictment, the ..Uow
cqnple.doned d e f e n d • n t
npeated bis plea of irmocenct
to the charges.
Corona. a tad.tum. Mexican-
bom fann labor contractor.
was lndkted by a county
grand jury early this month in
the deaths of 25 transient farm
laborers whOR bodies wtre
found buried along t h e
Feather River.
Hauck set Corona's trial for
Oct. 5 at the 40-minute ar·
·ralgnment, attended by the
au~'a wife, mother and
two brothers, a ft e r con-
siderable discussion about his
WtdnHdly, July 26, llJ71
John Law
Wins One
SACRAMENTO (UPI 1-
Jcim Law -John E. Law
t.o be precise -won a v1ctorJ tor tho California
Hlgbway·Palrol n-Jay.
Law, a lobbyist for the
palm~ testified before
-Judldary Com-miUee .,ahlst a bill which
wauk1 permit aelllln1 of
records of teen-agers ar-
rested where narcotics
were·uaed, but never con-
vk:ted of a crime.
The committee killed the
bill -bot not until mem-
b<n bad que&Uoned the
~ closely about bis
name.
"What was that name
again?" aeveral Senators
asked in wmoo as the w:it-
,,... identifted himself.
"John E. Law," he ~
pealed 1Jowly, addini his
middle initia1.
"Yoo mean your name
W really John Law, and
)ltll're a highway petrol-
man?" one committee
member asked again.
Lew smiled and nodded.
Comproml•e Seen 'VEE' Prt>ttttlon
State Solons Near Accord I W ashingion .Bans
On Welfare Reform Plan AH State Horses
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Rafael.) As the bill J>dSSed the the Democrat said. "It should RENTON, Wuh. (UPI) -Otto L. Montgomery. State
Gov. Ronald Reagan and Senate last week it woold have make the taxpayers of The Washington Department Aasiltant Veterinar~, and of.
Jeglllaton neared final agree-saved $24 million. California very happy." of Agriculturti Tuesday closed fic.lals o( I.he Washlna:tort
ment today 00 1 compromise MoretU declined to estimate A primary cone.em o f Che state'• borders lo all Hor11e Breeders• Auoclatioo
how much savings the pending Reagan's ls that the slate hor · _.._ and Longacn1·race track.
welfare rd'Onn plan that one compromise would generate, needs to save $108 million on -----------California ses 10 1 pn::ven. Venezuelan Equine
Democratic leader said but said it's "in the same welfare to balance the new Who Cares? tivernea11.1reagalrutthehorM: Encephalomyelitis, D.>wn..,
"should make the taxpayera of general magnitude" as lhe $6.78 biJlioo budget for the No other newsp11pe:r in the sleeping sickness, Venezuelan "VEE'', broke out in Tex11
Callfomia very happy." A 11 em b I y c.o mm i l tee current fiscal year. Wilhout world ·carH about your com-Equine Encepbalomyelitis. earlier thil month in epJdemic
Reagan and leaders e( both amendment!. that savings, the governor has munity like your community 1lle announcement follcwed proportions, causing other
''A very subslanlllll number warned, a tax increase will be daily newspaper does. It'• a meeting between St.ale neighboring rtata to act with
parties bargained across the. _•::f:....:doll="::.' _:w::ou=ld:...:be::.._sa=..:v.::ed::,_"__:n:•:ce::""='Y:..:...· ______ _:::lh::e::D=AIL=Y=P=ILO=T=.====-_:V::.•t.r:::in::ar:.:ian::.:J::·.:.K::·.:.A:::t::w::•:U:.., °'::.:·__.:•:imil=· :ar:_:bo::yco=lll=:.· ___ _ governor 's private c.onferencer
table for the second at:ra.lght
day Tuesday, then scheduled
more negotiations for this
afternoon.
'"l'he moet lrlgnificant p~
gresa on wellare refonn thi!
year," is how assembly
speaker Bob Moretti (D·Van
Nuys), described Tuesday's
marathon six-hour bargaining
session which slretc.hed well
past the dinner hour.
health. The 37-year-old Corona~----------'
suffered a heart attack June
"We have not got a final
commitment from either side,
but just a very few incidental
issues are left to be decided
upon. Conceptually, we have
11greed on the direction we
Your home would nevef\ __
forgive you, if you missed
our furniture clearance! 18 in his jail cell.
The defendant ut quietly
throughout the arraignment.
1tanding once at the side of bia
attorney, Richard Hawk, to
formally deny the chargu:.
Not once dld he g1ance back at
hls family seated nearby in
the small courtroom.
Rail Halt
'Serious'
SACRAMENTO (UPl)
Gov. Ronald Reagan says the
rail strike is ttreatening
closure of major industries
and "endangering the physical
as well as the economic
health" of California.
Reagan told Transportation
Secretary John Volpe Tuesday
thal agricullu re alone has auf.
fered losses in excess of $11
million a day and there it a
"serious shortage" of chlorine
for water treatment in several
Southern California cities.
The governor said he based
his conclusions on findings
made by a special "emergen-
cy econtmic committee" he
named to assess the impact of
the rail strike in the state.
"Our major crops •re fm.
periled and the jobs ol
thousands who depend upoo
agriculture 111.re endangered ...
Reagan tol:d the NlJ:on ad-
minlitration cabinet member.
Kids Taught
To Hate
Policemen
LOI A!IOELES (UPI)
OilJdra ,.nlc!patlng in the
BJact Panth ers' free
treakfMt program we re
taught to bate police and in-
doc tr In ate d in party
philosophy, a fonner Panther
t.estifled Tuesday.
Melvin C. Smith told jurors
ln the murder conspiracy trial
of 13 Panthers that the
children were taught, among
other things, antipollc.e songs.
Lyrics from one of the
30ngs, he said, were: "Piggy
wiggy, you gotta gG now, oink,
oink, bang, bang."
''They were taught to draw
pictures: of pe:ople k:iling these
pigs (R_Olic.e)," he said.
The 13 defendants are being
tried on charges ranging from
J>OS!ess:ion of illegal weapons
to conspiracy to murder police
officera stemming from s
shootout w1tb offic.en at the
Panther building Jn the Walt3
-Jn Dece-ol.l!li>. Smith Jnld the jury the mill-
tant group planned to kill
poliee if they came to tile
building and then escape in a
tunnel.
want to go."
Reagan. in a brief sl.atement
Issued t h To u g h Press
Secretary Paul Beck, said,
"we're making progress. The
meetings have been good.
There still are unresolved
issues."
Reagan and the: legislative
negotiators were dissecilng,·
word by word, proposed
assembly amendment! to a
Senate·paased bill 1ponsored
by Sen. Anthony C. Beilenson
()}.Beverly Hills.) It is the on..
ly major welfare reform bill
still alive in the legislature.
"If they get too piggy about
It," Beilenson told a reporter,
"they'll I01e the bill."
Amendments drafted by the
Assembly Welfare Committee
would save the state a net SM
million. according to chalrman
William T. Bagley (R.San
How To Hole!
FALSE TEETH • SecuNly
Do falt• t.nth mbur ... 1'!t1I l:iJ'
eomi121 1-"Ma J'OU at. lauib,. or Wk? A du.~Mi.d" cu~ 1'.ABTEET:!f: M:itarw • .._., •• ftrme:r, bold. Kat. •to. hie moN '8Q,)oysble. For_.. -.:arit;r
1!ld comfort, ..-P ASTEETB 0-.. ture Adhnl"• Po"dfl'. O.t1.t1rf'lil t.ba' ftt .,. -at.le.I to baltb. ..
)'OW' detlat ,..ulub'.
Sparkle more, pay less.
All Penney diamonds
are on sale. 20% off.
Ladles' Solitaire. 14K
g old, .50 ct. Reg.
350.00.
Now280.00
Bridal Tri o, 14'K gold,
.39 ct. total weight.
Reg. 331.50.
Now2&5.20
Ladle&' Coc::kt•ll Ring ,
1-4K gold, Reg. 250.00.
Now200.00
Men'a Ring, 141< gold,
.39 cl. totll weight.
Rog. 250.00.
Now200.00
Bridal Set, 14K gold,
.50 ct. total weight.
Rog. 289.50.
Now231.60
Brid•I Trio, 14K gold,
• 28 ct. total weight.
Reg. 227.50.
Now 112.00
ladles' Cocktail Ring,
14K gold, .29 ct. total
weight. Reg. 200.00.
N-110.00
Men's Ring, 14'K gold,
• 25 ct. total weight.
Rog. 137.!50.
Now 110.00
'
Bridal Set, ~4K gold,
Reg. 175.00.
Now 140.00
Bridal Trio, 14K gold,
Reg. 246.50 .
Now 197.20
Wedding Band, 14K
gold, .50 ct. total
weight. Reg. 289.50.
Now 231.60
Men'• Ring, 14'K gold,
.27 ct. Rog. 200.00 •
Now 160.00
l\!\!!~'11
Shop Sunday noon to 9 p.m. et the•• Penney •tore•1
Awitobt• at th. forlow'nt ator• CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD DOWNEY FASHION VALLEY-
s.AH DIEGO FUllEllTON HUNTINGTON BE.A.CH lAICEWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT SE.A.CH
OltAHGl"'lHI CITr' RJVfRSIDI VENTURA Ut• P•nn1y1 Tim• Payment Pion.
~---· -'·"Tllll'r •--:-r-.... ··-· -·-·--··-
•
Penney's furniture prices include delivery within local delivery area.
Clearance
$544
Reg. $744, Save $200! 6·Pc. trod itionol
d ining room group include• .,.2"x6.,. .. ovol toble, 4
1ide choirs, chino tob1nel Wi!h troy drawer, and
odjvslobli 1helf . .A.II piece1 have ric h pecan veneer1
over hardwood. Also sold 1eporat•IY 01 our low sole
prite1.
Ovol toble,Orig.$199 ••.••.••.•• NOW$149
Side chair, Orig. $.56.2.S •••••• , •••• NOW $39
Chino cobinel. Orig. $320 • , •• , , , • NOW $239
.A.rm Choir, Orig. S6.S ••••••••••••• NOW $49
Bvffet.Orig.$249 ••••••••••••••• NOW$188
Ro und table (not 1hown), Orig. $2-4' NOW$179
'
· JCPenney ·
The values are here every day.
•
Clearance
SOfa $189
r . I
Orfs.$219.Save$SOI
and cushion. Durable Kiln Drt.d
Hardwood Frame. 8'atk.Oti¥. ·
love S•ot, Orig, $1 59
NOW$139
Choir, Orig, $119
NOW$99
II
•. -I
Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at these Penney! Stores:
Avai!ob!e at tha following 1tore1: CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD CHULA VISTA DOWNEY FASHION VALLEY-SAN 01EG0 FULLERTON HUNTINGTON IEACH
lAKrNOOO MONTCLAIR NrNPOR:T BEACH ORANGE "TH E CITY'' RIVERSIDE VENTURA. U~e Penney'1 Time Payment P1on.
"'. '-;r. --.-· --, I... . ··-----• •
--. ... , .. ' .~· ,...,
.,
.,
• ._ ..
WtdntsdAY, J11I) 28, 14J71 DAILY PILOf 8
Swl1nmers Can Beat Pulling Waters
_Panic·--Rip Currents' Big Danger
Chamber
U nit Wins TONITE AT 8!
v '2.1::) ~8~ By C4NDACE PEARSON
01 _,.... 0..1~ "-~. , ....
'T'ht current storm more
thin s:z.oo miles away in the
Solomon Island~ I~ or passing
riotlce lb mo.!i\ Newporl Beach
residents.
But to .liregu ard of!Jc1als
each suc:h wea~r change ls
sci~lifical)y watched -for
the smallest varia ncP cao
orea~ dangers th r o u g h
re.siting rip currents.
,..II-too-familiar factnrs to
Ne:wport Beach l1reguards, but
oken mysteries to people 1n
the wate:r. np Nrrents are
strong, narrow curren1s flow-
ing out lo sea perpendicular to
the shore. carrying back to the
gea w11ler brought ~ by wa\'ts
an d currents. along the shore.
They can lravPI three ftnles
per hour ancl carry unwilling
passengers to perilous and
&ften fatal clepths. The ir pret-
ty line: o{ petpendicul11r white
fo11m i.~ decei11ing. It can drag
iiW immers far out to sea and
cause quirk exhaustion if
foughl against.
Newport Beach has· it le"ast
10 dirferent configurat.ions of
rip currents, says Marine
Safety Director Rober1 Reed.
who has preparecl a lengthly
paper. on the subject for use in
lifejliard trAining.
"Other cities don'! hll\'' thi.~
problem to the f'Xtent Ne.,...port
Bfi cb. has~· he says. f'X-
pl-inin1 that the angle with Wti\:11 lhf bcacti,s face. in-
comin1 waves st.e~ up the
amounl of rip currents.
"This is generally recogn!!-
ed as one of I.he toughest
stre1ches or beach to guard
anywhere in the wnrld,'' he
explains, because or l he
currents and the surf that
generate& them.
It takes only 3-4 fee;t or surf
tn cause he;avy currents.
Beaches that face wha t
Reed calls the "field of wave
expos ure" (the direction from
\\'hich most si gnificant wave..'
come) a.re mnre stab.le., hut
mos! of Newport B e a c h
be11ches face th at field with
varying angles.
In fact. Reed explains , thf'
beach at Newport Pier ill on as
much a!I a fl> degree angle. 1.----;...;... ___ ..,;...,.I
The problem is not a.!i acute
now ~c<1use su rf has ~n
1nw , but 11 11 ocean-users should
bf! fully in formed of the cur-
renl.ll, he insists.
Bt:cause the ave.rage person
;.~ ignorant nf the 11itu1\ion.
Reed says. he often makes a
"f;ital mistake " and swims
''\olfard the moat tangible
point -the shore.·•
It is 1lmost impossible to
swim against the force nf the
<'Urrent and although different
;i ~enucs of exit e:c:isl. the most
buic solution is te swim
p1rallel to shore until escaping
the current. .
. A swimmer can recognize
the current by tht drifting
feeling, ·the choppy foam line •
THINK SALE
W•stcliff P laza Only
FOlfR DAY CELEBRATION
,
NOON"ID~lfl'llflS TltUL· .. 1.-SAT,SUN., ,. JUl.T 2'-l0.l1, AUG. 1
W•N -A NEW SUIT
COME IN AND llliGl5111 •• , A NEW SUIT TO
• AWARDED EACH DAY OF OUR CELEIRATION
• N• ,_.._ • TM --' -M ,,_.., no ....
~noN HOii 1\
~-:'61i11m...,,-
,JuLT 1'·) .. )1
' AH.I
COME
~ ONE
COME
ALL!
-
SUITS SPORT
COATS
"'~ "1•"· ~·· leillt<od ..... 1¥ llfl<od all
---bl-•· •M ,..i..,.. LM .. 1 •Iv!•
• .-1 """'"' 1 .. r.1,..,1,,.
..,.....,_ -1""" f ......
Oeui>lo K"lh
IO""° ,..,.., SJt.•
.... --
SLACKS
CNs !MG Mir et
olKB te -Ir""'
.\!• .... te .s.i.. "'"" """ ---'1•"'-'
• ""'' "' 1lllt l<ll "' T•!I"• lor V~I.,., I!_,
0..011'1 K"lll. ,_ .......... .
s4"
SUN
GLASSES
FOR YOU OR YOlll WIR
fGs1!1 lllllTl .. -SOM! M.llf M llllY . .., •.
J.rt Itri•• ..... CO"pe<'I I• evt tfOtt ••f\/ 1., • ., •••...it o"""'"• c.r.li•••••• •""
..., •• ..,., '''"'""'· O•• wty •' ••r'"I ."'Tio••• Ye•" f.,, t•""'"• i• kl 9•t •c-•••i•+••· y ............... ~., • th;.,.
BRIN!i THE FAMILY
I ' ~MEET -THE CLOWN
,I\" FREE BAUOOHS ';J
~1f,REE MERRY-GO-ROUND RIDE ~
'lll DIMONllllAllON
!h, Seli n•• •I lif• e H • .,. '• lre•th t e H.,w lo Cone •"''•'• e lh1 K•i lo Sutc•u
k•lld•1 •• .i lfl1t1•tt
2 gallons for 9.99
A very special buy of one coat
exterior latex. Match that!
•
... ,.
Penncran · Orte Coat P1us Lltt r E•ttrior
Trim En1mel withe ve1r guar1nt••· Give1 on~
coal coveraQ~ ov~r ,,.ny color. Has bu11t.in
pri me r for "asy appl 1cat1nn. G re; at lor door$,
railings and shul\~r~
9~~on
1799
Penncraf115' ~l um1num 1•len1ion l1dder.
Wide !lat rungs. hi>Avy duty Cycolac •
pl11 atic end caps. 13' working heigh!.
20· extension ltdder (17 ' workino height). 23.99
24' e•tcns1on 1.!dder (21 ' working height). 29.99
" ; -·
Spitcial. 1 gal, Pennc ra,, • OM Coat Ph11
E•tetiot La tex wilh B vear guaranlee.
lml'lg1n~ 2 g,..11.,ns n! n11r hro:;t 1e!l1ng
ei;lerior h l1Pll. ;'II 11 lant11sl1c11lly
l<>w price'. Tll1s p11 1n! will rnv.-r 11ny Cf'>lor
111111st onP. 11ppl+1..<1\1011 011,. .. 10 a sla•n
and tade res1slan\ t1n1sh. 9.99
8 year guarantee
When this Pennc1an' Pain\ is applied
to a prevoout.IY p211nled "'"d properly
prepiued sl.ld 11cr. we auaranl ee It !or
8 yf!:ers as stat~d bPlow. One g21\lon
qives \-coal cove1a9e tor up to -400 &Q.
It on non-porous surfaC"" ?50 sq. II . on
porou:o. sur!l!lces (not 1nclud1ng shakes
and !";h1ngles).
• Stain re1 is111n1 • Fade re1 lsl•nt
• Non yellowing • Ch1lk r•1l1l1nl
11 the paint f21ils lo perform as guaran-
te ed. let us kn"w ahool ii. w" will pro-
vide l'\8W paint "' a fuU refu nd.
' Die td from itucco rellw ,
1.99
Tip o"d Dip troy 191
2 .98
tf;cv1'£17JUMP ,,M < •
lt.i l•:rt «iuf\:lng c&Mpou"d
99c · '
,.
enne1f1
The values are here every day.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 p .m. at these Penneys Stores
Avotloble ot 1t,1 f,,llowi"g stor1"1. CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD DOWNEY fASH!ON VALLEY-SAN DIEGO FU\LERTON HUNTINGTON 0!.404
LAKEWOOD MONTCL AIR NEWPO"T 8£ACH O~ANGE "THE CITY" RIVE RSIDE VENTURA. U•• Penne'fl Tim• .Payment Plan.
-
i rr=-·~'·•~ • --...Jr,-.·--....... -~·--·--• • ·'."it:-" ......
. '
f
I I
I f bM. y I'll.OT • • I;ooo Jobs on Way
BJ JlCl BROBACK .............. ,lilt«
SANT.\ ANA -Orange 9>onty Sllpmllon Tue.ct.y
tllted a prosram whk:b
-ciw. 1,008 new jobt.ln ClOlll!b ~q>tol wltllln lbt .Wh~.
They wdtred department
beadg to find Wl}'I t D
implement a $10 m 1111 o n
federakounty unemployment
relief program under lhe
Emergency Employment Act
approved this year by
Congress.
. Of the slo mi.Ilion, lhe coun-
ty would put up $1 millloo and
the federaJ government $9
l'ed McCon ville
-ew Road Chie f
• SANTA ANA -Lawrenct L.
•'Ted" McConville oI Balboa
Jsland was formally named
Oran1e-County Road Com-
mWk>ner and Surveyor TtJej-
d.ay after a public hearing.
The bearing was required by
a 11t.ate law applying only to
such pooilions in coun ty
sovernment.
McO:lnvHle, 50, sueceed11 Al
S. Koch of Newport Beach,
who resigned the post last April
after ZS years wilh the county.
The new commissioner had
been chief assistant te Koch
for more than 15 years.
He wu selected for the pMt
July f by county supervi!IQr!I
from thrtt finalists, thinned
dowis., from 44 applicanl!I for
the job, which pays $2,600 a
month. '
McConville was with the
state Division ef .Highways
btfore joining the cou.nty staff
IT'S OFFICIAL NOW
Commissioner lt\cConville
in 1955. He has bee.a acting
commissioner &ince K f cb
resigned.
Students Propose First
Arboretum for County
FUU.ERTON -Plans are
blossoming for Orange Coon.
ty's first arboretum, a n
ecological preserve w i t h
botanical g a r d en 1 . The
student.proposed project has
earm1rked 20 acres of dying
&range trees on the northeast
corner of the Cal Sl!ate Ful-
lerton campus for th .e
sanC'tuary fOf' native flora and
faun1.
Acc.erding to Olarles M.
Lovelesi, chairman el the
college's Arb<retum Com·
mittee, the preserve will have
iruirud.ional, ecological and
ttc~ali011al purposa, and
hold a higher priority than
more parking facilities, which
were originally designated for
the area.
Once developed. the $75.000
complex can be utilized by the
college, area school s, and the
community al large, Loveless
explained. The most pressing
problem facing him and his
committee is lo raise lhis
sum. Fullerton studenl!I have
committee is to raise this
sum. Fullerton students have
already donated $15,00o fmm
lhe student body treasury and
fund-raising activitie~.
Talkative
Duo A dmit
Thei r Guilt
SANTA ANA -Two men
whose arrest was credited ·by
police lo the 68 -y ear-cld
woman victim who kept them
talking at her Newport Beach
place of employment until f>f-
ficers arrived have pleaded
gu ilty to reduced cbarges iD
Harbor Judicial District Court.
Terry Engleman , 20,
Alameda, pleaded guilty to il-
legal entry and will be
sentenced Aug. 3. Rexford
Teig, 21, of Riverside, pleaded
guilty to malicious mischief
and will serve probation in lieu
or a !USpended 80-<lay jail
lerm.
A woman sailmaker 1t
Frank Rice Sailmakers, 2110
Newpert Blvd., jdeotified the
two men as the pair who broke
Into the premises la1t June 25.
Table tennis anyone ?
Challenge
Judy to a
gam~ of
pin·g pong.
Meet and play table tennis with Miss Judy Bochenski at the Penney
store listed below. 15-year-old Judy is National Junior Girl's
Champion for the se<;ond time, and rece~tly toured Red. China as a
member of the United States Table Tennis Team . She will play all
chall&ngers regardless of experience or sex.
Thursday, July 29-FASHION ISLAND
2:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m.
-,,,1_
NEWPORT BEACH
t\nne111
• JJ:__--
-.
i i ,._.... ·-·
Man Faces
Charges
In Pursuit
SEE Explosive LR.A. World Champi onship • , Jr
, I l , Ii
1or s CLUI' OF
HUNTINGTON BEACH
' , . '·'i. -.. ·.,.
..... :0· a
Real action with cowboys competing on rough
broncs and r.ugged bulls for top prize money
and world champlonllhlp points.
SHEUE FIELD, HUNTINGTON BEACH HIGH SCHOOL
SALE NOWI
TICKETS ONEST ERN STORE
HANDW TOP 11EACH llLVD.
17151 EACH
HUNTI NGTON II ,
s.1., July 31
'2 •nd I p.m.
Sun., Aug. 1
2 p.m.
ADULTS $2.80
17 YNn ...i UIMkr
1/J Pl lCI
For Top Sports Coverage
Read tl1e DAI LY PILOT
Tent clearance!
Orig. 79.99 Orig. 129.98
Now6488
NOW 10988
Foremost v ·x 15'
double sideroom
, t" sleeps up kl 8.
. 1. '.\ 2 screen wall .._.., windowsanddoor
-~, I_. "th --··-~. • \\ WI uui~
· \\ stormeurta4ns. , bl'assT-
Orig. 59.99 49ss
NOW
Foremost 8' X 'O' tanW)' lodge tent. 2.«loz..
cotton drill top, side'! and ftoor; brass
door zipper, three large 9Cntel'.ed Mrldowe..
Storm flaps, rust resistant steel and
aluminum frames.
Orig. 99.98 84BB
NOW
fOf'emost 9' X 12' lamily IOOge tent. Top.,
sides are heavy.Ne9ght 8. 74 ootton drill
with nyton reinlorced vinyl rtoor. e· CMter
height, 6' end wall ~ght, rvsl resistant
steel and aluminum frames.
ZiPP8f'I.
Orig. 149.98
NOW 12988
Foremost 11' X 13'
lodge tent Heavy-
weight 6. 7'4 o.z.
cotton dritt top
9nd sides; nyton
retnforced vinyf
ftoor. Rust
resistant steel
and aluminum
lrames.
Deluxe \O' X 12'
hi-watl tent.
Sleeps 8 to 8.
8' cen1er height.
Cotton canvas
with Talon9 zipper
windows. door;
protective ak>rm
dolutes.
Orig. 69.99
Now5488
O' x go hi-w811 tent.
Sleepe up to 6
tn double deck
bunks. AD
1luminurri ovt.side
frame on cotton
do'lll;-
window;Tf!'"
at center. S"" wan.
t\n~e111
The values are here every day.
Foremost S i>. acrylic Slleeo'ng bag.
Poptin ootershell. ftannel lining. 100"'
T--· 5 lb. ocrytlc ftlling.
9"
. '
Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at th,ese Penney stores:
Av1 ilable at ttiese stores : CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD DOWNEY FASHION VALLEY·SAN CHEGO
FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY" RIVERSIDE
VENTURA Use Penneyg Time Paymenl Plan.
,
--t '~ ..,. 'T1 ).-..l"""' ....... "L ~ .... _ 1-i.Pt ..... -·-..----,, ~'),,... ... • ,;
*
• •
DAI LY PILOT JJ.
Kaiser Honor Holl Students Disrlosed Men in Servi~e Heiru. Kal!er M..iddlt School, $60,000 b a I an c e , ' ' says ii::'t....'~T·•~-' ,.!:;:: lttfll l •t n K r nn r a ¥ D e n f\o B•n••""" "'""" Am y MorQ.,..I "'"''" Sorce. 11 ... v 11 .........
Coast Guard Se am an
JtetTUit Joe D. De\'.qwic, .son,
of Mr. and llta.'.. 'Ailbert E.
DeVoung fA,fDT ~id~Nord,
Newport B~ hitmi~ ii\
the U.S. Coa3' C'1ird Re!trve:
at the Costa Guard Recruit
Training Center, Alameda
U?(ln con1 pleUon of EJijhl
weeks basic training, he wtll
be assigned to a Coast Guard
Field unit for five months ac-
tive duty for t~ing. He wiJl
ttien be released to a reserve
tt-aining unit to complete a .lilx-
}t'ar m ilitary obligation.
Costa Mesa has named 17' Lovt.lt>sa. o.v~ '::::~ Julie ,._,,., Ll!VI•
kh~wlrlct.. M•,~·· M'1>t fl•AOtum, J1lnH• M.t•llr"°", D•"-"""'1111 . Jc.hf\ Gwo"N Ulflll"I .... __ Vlteolk, Cory
Ot>erm1n. W1•<1,
aeve\lh and eighth 'JT&de Once c o m p I e t t d , the w""'11•• Mlh ,,~ It~ Kell~ l(o.111n, E"t "'"~' Jon 1t1o<11!1 L ... •! llln•l<tl, •nn.t11 lon•lll•n w11.,.,, L111•• wo-. Jt ..
ltu"' l""°'lul>!, Jon•1> "'-°'• ll°"°'<ry, EvelFtl ~ .... , Cynlllll ,,,.., Will<t•, 5MrO<I Wolle lflO ,. ...
popU. lo Its year~ booor arberetum, which will lnclude -..io:i"•i Go.twlft, w~ .._."°"·
roll including 10 students who a large lake and two small 1"11r11:1.1 Moril, c;!...ir tt111M1, W1111111
1't>rf...., MO<i!i, "'"" N•Ylli., Ellltlltl~ Wll .. ltl, l imme•m•n
P11111ion, ----------------------Fredericks, son of Mrs. James
B, Fredericks ol 38 Beacon
Bay, Newpcil Beach, was ad·
va~ to ntiJ Jl resent rate
wh ile servirig ~l the C".S. Coast
Guard Training and Supply
Center, Alameda.
-"' ta'--" rfect straight A ponds , will cost about $4,000 to K!:'. Kii•-· Sheller L..,,, ttow ... "'r"'n uicu P' ' • operate annually, Loveless M1r1n. JoY<t IN.V••· P•-1• MM•'"· averages. J~lll M llll!r, M¥l1 MOiner, 5"~ estimates. Mor111, J.ct1u1Uno Mwti.r, AnOt-
The seventh grade students Donations to lhe arboretum Nelu••.
Wl'lh straight-As are: l'•m Perrv. Jill P1•oon1. Mir' kott, may be sent to the Foundation l"•~I• $11••· ~1...,.. int•-·
YlrOlltw ll1mo1. "'"""' ll:l<1 ... .-W11i.~ R011mo, J1nnllff llo.z••n, Jul!t
Sl\ofmalo.f r,
Chrl1 ~hu•d• Su1on s,m,111, M111n<10
~1""'1.f•d . Po.,i<•t l ""'plfof""' Oonold
T"""np,oon,
fllTl<>lflY l !>om,;\Ol'I, KlfO<I Trlff,
Jtnlct rw ,,.,, Oonou We11t, P••
W•r<I, lt1cl• Whit* oOO Al,.on Wlllt,
EIOHTli GllADlf Stephen Babb, Kirk Boes, of California Stale College, 51'~, ,."",. ~"',~''" .,",.'",~!h~',1':!; EllZ. abelh Flon1·e, c•-,·,•~ber '•'•",,·. 1• • .. ""' ·-.. '" ....., Fullerton, 800 N. Sla te College Kur! A ~•n 1,i1 A11•t><rv, vi...,.. Hodson , David Jio.SSO, Edward The tot1ow1no 11ua1nt1 wt•• nem«I la 8•!<11»lng~. 1100.111• B11w1u11<1, Ko!ll1H n Blvd., Fullerton . lh• "°""' ro11 tor m11ni.1n1,.. tr1<11 e inel•v~
N'.y Se.man GI.. A. Killins, Steve Morihiro and Ni-POlnl 11/flfltOt l>llw••n 3.0 Ind 3.S; J&nent (l lU•O!>· Donn Blac:~--L•Cln<I• 8o1Nki~, Jomto 8r1n1on, n .. • I b f M nd M quila Wilkinson . 1111r:NtH 1;11-.011 : SEV&:NTH GRADll 01•1,. Bru•neei, nuu0 p • SOfl O r. <I l""S. The • hlh d "th LI._ 8tr0aull, \llCIOPI 8tr~r. 0....,IMl Al,n, K11htrln4' AMleri.on, Lew'itn(f (ll<lu1>11. Jo"L C1u, (l<Ktl Ja1nes M. Rudolph Of 2866 Boa elg 11ra erS Wl Cvnthli 8lnlll!!, St•<•v B<llk~lfr, MIC1111I A•h;oo, SIH>ll.,,I• 81~..,, 01vl<I Clwfl>. P11rleo1 Co·mie111. L or, r '
K' be [j T-'• Ch••on, Vista Drive, Cosla Mesa, has per ec averages are im r Ellr11>e-1n Fl1c1>..-. Pamel• Fr1nli\ln, 8~".".'i'.n lhl•11. R+Ch••<I 8 11t1e:hln1, (•~:::~.~ (rou, Thom•• Oenl••n, returned to his homeport o{ }<~Joyd and Michelle Robertson. Juli'""' How•, Stacey IClr-Nlrlck. l •" Connoe Btta!or<I, 0.Yl<I l ••ni.on, Bt..ce Olc••n•°"• Wlrf<•fl °"""~' Th t d U . g d Kumtmol~. D•n,.1 8rH1l1r ROl>trl Ori~•. San l)iegO aboard the anti-sub-e S U en earning ra e Sled>en L•n1. Kiron ltY. Ell111>11~ l'hllln t e•li'l'l;o, M1r~ Chtot. Ann11>1I Sluan E•ll, Cn.,yl ["lino•<, l ln<IA marine warfare aircraft car-point averages <>f 3.5 to 4.0 Ml<Don•ta. ~••n Pirry, J••nne !tl<I... cnu. L•ud co.,..,, G•ffOI"• Cu•ltr, G1tffy, U•• c;.,,,.'"'"· c11r1111ne 111v•.
BONG KONG
CUl10M TAILOal a IHlaTMAIClll 1'11.MANlNT IN 1.1.HTA ANA
0-... 10.-S..tl.tlM C•u-.,, -100'1. G_, .. _ S..11•'-tlt•
2 SUITS $135 BOlllll 11111
fllll-e .. -..... Jlilrt
lPICIAt PllKI l•'l· MOW
O.obl• l "" ..• , , ••s ...
Silk -h•" ..... I.I tS ShaoMkl• •••• , , • I S 11.2
C.o~'"•'• . " ...• 91 Sf
Silk WMI ...... 11 If
S•i•h ..... , •.... \0 I
..i •• .,., ' ""''~' , ..... 11o•11 l1lto ........ ~1.
t'•·"'· It 9 -· S~ VE UP TO 50 •/.
..... -1.11 .. o.t "'·-.. _ s.:,,. 5..,,_,,, l l1<h , Sh\•11.
7,000 llN!ST 1111111< '"1110
•WI PIT ANT llZf
• 4 WfflC DW'llllT
• •lltf Atlllt.l.TIOHS
• lAIT ,.ATMfHTI
r named lo the SChol.rshl'p roU Tom UnY1rt, D11n1 W1hl•lf<U, O.nl.. Lu<Y Oemou•ony!, lr•cle Oo.111111, Tl'l<>mt• HP•>O•I~\. Joi! Uornel!. \/IC· m rier USS Tit'Olldcroga a I.er a W•111>1>• •nd J•"" wnll""•· 8•ina1 Fin~"'"· llol>e<"I Ii 1 n ~ •, IOl'll Jein« D••n• ~emplir, JO•lof> rw ._,,..,, .... , ,..,.., 117-lm _
A P l I• 1 •· th , " , 1111 w • .-.. -.,,"' 11v• .. "-· 2". rrny nva r au "-· four-month deployment to e are: EIGHTH 011Aolf '"""'"'" n••rn, Koor, i.~'• ""•I-'"'"~··.,.,.,,.,_
Lockhart, son of Mr. and Mrs. -~n;~··~~n'.:"":n~=~~~-=·"=-~_.!~·-·w~e;·~.,~~o~;n~g~l<l~h~a="~"'~tjur~n~;:"~~2, ~·:••:m~··~,..:."=·~·=·~-~·::'':·_J~'~' ~~~~2:"':"~'~'·::":"~~·-· ~0~00~·~'":__;'~··~·~·~"~"-· ~'':":_'"~":•:"~'M~·:""'=·~o..::::":":' ::"•:::•::":"::·•:::'-:::' =-=·='============ V\.°" ~I.Cl John .o.11110n, w_, Bttr, ICtrtfl IC•ne"-J•~lt• KeH!., .. t, P h 1 1111 .... Lld<ll<o•e, J•t~ l oll!<IO<>, MM"lhl VJiHiam E Lockhart, 908 Pacific. lo the community for the eO'fd~. l(ompi.., .~KOontld.
Tanana Place. Coota t.1esa, 1s
assigned to Ft. Ord, where he
is training under the n1ociern
volunteer army field ex-
periment.
Navy Petty Offlccr SeconO
Clmis Ste.vtn J. Rlchtet, hu~
band of the forme~ Miss Peg-
gy L. de la Carza of 90988
Continental Courts, J--luntington
Beach, is now deployed to the
Western Pacific aboard the
ocean minesweeper U S S
Conflict .
. Matin~ tan·~ Colp or a:l
Bradley E. fl.l eek, husband of
the former Miss Deborah S.
Sexton of 579 1 Middlecoff
Drive, Huntington Beach, was
graduated in the top 10 per-
cent of his class fro m
Aerographer's Mate School at
the Na val Air Technical
Training Center, Lakehurst,
N.J.
Navy Petty Officer Second
ctass· Lawrence w. LoW1'1la11 , -
son of Mr . and Mrs. Carl W.
Lowman of 976 W. !_7th St.,
Costa Mesii.; Is now ·se r\rmg
with · 1. h e decommissioning
ei:t:;W foe tbmm~bioos cargp ~,_,,lJ.,. · 'eb'' al Norfo!W, "'llP.' "'~ 'I ' 'I r Va.': ~ 1 ·' 1 ( !
RiJ:. shlp will· ht ret~tr
AaaUjt, completing 28 yee S1 •.
seriiee . wllk:h spaM
.Wwld War II to1 l!m> am ·bf
ious ..,-atlons in Ole Mediter·
ranead: sea. -__.__
Navy Petty Office r Th ird
Class Phillip J. Orman. son ol
Mrs. Ltvina Whalen of 3282
California St., Cost.a Mesa , ls
now serving 11bo11rd the attack
aircraft carrier USS Saratoga
with the U.S. Sixth Fleet in the
?tfedilerran~an . · "
Airman Roy A. Gallagher,
M>n of Mr. aod Mrs. Harvey L.
Gallagher of 7rl Man zanila
Drivo, ·Laguna Beach, has
completed basic trainin.g at
Lackland "11''8, Tex. He ls re-riulinin~ at Lackland '.for
trainine as a se c urity
pofloen181\. Airman Gallagher
is a 1.9lf9 'graiuate of Lagun.a
Beach Iii·~~~·, '
Navy Fire • Apprentice
Johll L. .H n~ 1 of '911
F.dmonds 'Ciitle, Huntington
Bqch, J_,, 1\0w\ ... rvtna a oo~ nl
the a&kk aarcraft carrier
USS Si<a"""'\ wilti .the U.S.
sU't• Ft~t 1io the
).fMilerranean.,
eoa~ Q;ud \ P;tty Officer
Secoruf tlai6\ David G .
Jlohson, husban of the former
~1iss Lyn n D. S lll•an of 1588
San Bernardino 1ptace, Costa
Mesa. was ad\'l-flced to his
presen t rate wh1l.e serving at
the Coast Guard, Air Station.
San Francisco.
Navy Petty Officer First
Claso Pblll• A. ;B>ict, husband
of the former Mis! Darlene R.
Salfer or 162\t-=l:iowland Lane,
lfuntington Beach, ts now serv-
ing aboard the 11mphibio~s
cargo ship USS Durham 1n
~pport of MariDe Corps de-
deployment from \.1etnain.
Navy Ainnan Charles C.
Palmer\ son of Mr. ~Mrs.'
Georgt A. Pa1mer \41 1':1
Alier Place, Cost.a Mes.I(
retwned to hi:oi homipof\ o
San D1efo aboanl the an<k\I mar~ warfare alr~raft
carrier USS Ticonderoga. after
a tour: month deploymlnt to
the Indilin Ocean and Weste
p~.
lj•VY r.uy om"r Ftrq
Clllf".Yemort W. Jacksoa Jr ..
h~and of Mrs. Nancy L.
Jacbon of 16672 Cooper Lane ,
HLl1tlngt0f1 Beach. was ad-
vanced to his present r a!e
while serving aboard the light
guided mls.,ile cruiser USS
Qk\aboma City al Yokosuka,
Japan.
U. S. Air Fortt SLaff
Sergeant Ronald E. HoHman
Sr., son ol Mr. and Mrs.
Edward H. 1-loffman of 20222
Ramona . La n e. Huntington
Beadl. hu arrlv.ed klr duty al
Ent AFB, Colo.
Sergeant Hoffman I~ a
medical technician at the
USAF di~Bry at Ent He
fl'eviously !!etved at Beale
AFB.
Qwt r.uM"d Petty Officer
Thltd Cla55 Anthcmy 0 •
•... • ....,, ... ,,_, -.·~a • .. . . .... .. -. '
D A
I OOO's OF REMNANTS
lARGE 60 % SIZE o
SAVINGS
UP TO .....
SM All
SIZE
SAVINGS 80%
UP TO ...
HALLWAYS, BATHS , LIVING ROOM, DINING ·
ROOM, BEDROOMS CARS, ETC.
DUPONT NYLON TRI-COLOR
SHAG 99
100% DuPont Nylon Pile: Deep, Rich
Durob1e Shog. Beautiful New Three·
Color Designs.
NOW SALE PRICED ......... .
SQ.TD.
SAYE
$3.M
-
OUR .WAREHOUSE IS OVERLOADED'
NOW IS THE TIME TO SAVE!
COMPARABLE RETAIL .............. $6.99
CLLANEH' ...,,.El TRI-COLOR SHAG
THl lfSTlON°""f IM ftlfll
l 00% Fortrel Polyester. lush, Deep
l ong Wearing And Hord To Soil. Stoys
Beouliful Wilh A Minimum Of Core.
Very Resilient. Beourifuf Decorator
99
CARPET TILES-SAVE $ 1 ST QUAL!TY NAME BRAND CARPETS
AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES
SELECT FROM THE LARGEST CARPET
INVENTORY IN TlfE WEST
Feels Uke Velvet -Outweo" Olher Corpe!• DO-IT-YOURSELF EVERY ROLL Df CARPET IS MARKED
l PRICEDifDR YOUR SHOPPING
CONVENIENCE
EosyTolns1011.1rx12" 29C
• lndoor-Ooldoor • 10-Yr.Weor Tes!ed SAVE
• Stain Resistant • 8 Decorator Colors .
• l 00% Nylon p;re. 59'
NOW SALE PRICED ....................... EA. ALL LABOR UNCOND ITI ONALLY
GUARANTEED
DUPONT NYLON
100% Continuous Fil1me1t Nylon\Pl11. ·299
Popul.1r Twa·lewel P.1tt1r• Combl111 Be11tJ,
Durabil ity. Ma11y Colors Tt Ch11s1 Fr1m st. to.
IAYI NOW SAll ,llCIO........ \t.M
COMPARABLE RETAIL .............. $4.99
KODELPLUSH
HERCULON
· l 00% Herculon 'Olefin Pile. New Miroc!e 2 99
fiber, Stain and weor Res1s1ont. Beautiful
Decorolor Colors.
SQ. YD. NOW SALi P'RICE D ..................... , •• ,,.. SAY!$2.00
COMPARABLE RETAJL.,, ........ ,_,,,,,,$4.99
DACRON SHAG DEEP PILE
Three-Color Shag.
NOW SALE PRICED ............ .
SQ.YD.
SAVE
IJ.IO
COMPARABLE RETAIL .. $1.99 . Ce lo~•••"' fe•lrel It• T11d•.,~•k ti fibt< In~,.,,,;,,, ll'o(.
[!IEw] KODEL TRI-COLOR SHAG ~l~i
l OO"o Kodel Polyesler Pile -Rich, Deep,
lu>turiously Thick Pile. M.ony New Hi -· .
style Decoralor Three-Color Shog To
Select from. Resist Dirt And Soil Stains
NOW SALE PRICED .......... ..
99
SllD.
S.IYE
13.lt
COMPARABLE RETAIL .... : ......... $1.99
KODEL POLYESTER
I 00"!. Kode l Polyester Pile. 3 Pile 4· 99
Height Pottern In Groceful Design.
Rugged Durobi ll!y. Beovliful Colors. se. , •.
SAVI NOW SAlt PllCID........ 11.M
COMPARABLE RETAIL .............. $1.99
GLLANESE0 ...,,.EL Hl·LOW
UH lf~llONAM( IM fllflS
l 00% Kodel Polyester Pile. Rich, 499
luxuriously Thick Pile. New
Decorotor Colors. st. YO.
SAVI HOW SALi PllCID........ \J.00
J 00% Oocron Polyesler Pile. Brov11fvl 499
Ntw Deep Shog With A fuU Dttp
Pile. Mony Ntw Detorolor Calor! To 141 l'O
Cl'K>ou from, sivt . . . NOW SALi PllCID,,, SJ.ti
I 00% forlrel Polye ster Pile. Populor 599
two-level pollern. Com bines beo uty ond
durob1lily. Disl inclive bu! subtle tweed s:.~:·
coloration. NOW SALi PRICID •4•.• $S
COMPARABLE RETAIL ........... ~ ............ $8.99
Ctlontstr.«l fof!r~ is o trodtmor~ of f1bef lndustrirs, loc.
DUPOnT" .sta~~Oft
Ro0t·li~t rot, vt>•11\ of li.000 Denifr stovloh
nylon by D11Pon1 ~Ofciolly dl'ltlD!)rd for critp,
tlt<Jn, permonent !hng tex!v~1,
Fabulou s! Frizz-Free Shog Corpel with the
shimmering appeara nce of hand made India
Broodloom... 99
Your Choice NOW
of 12 Multi·Hutd SALE
Tweeds... PRICED
SQ. YD.
SAVE
$4.00
ENCRON ® POLYESTER
Pile of 100% Encron Polyester. Deen. Thick,
luxurious Carpel, Opt1murn Performance, long
Wear. Easy Core. Res ilient. Many Colors lo
Choose From.
NOW SALE PRICED •••••.•.......•••••••••••••••••••.•••••••
SQ. YD.
SAVE
6.00
RETAIL •••••••••••••••••••.••.••••••••••••••••••• $11.99 COMPARABLE RETAJL ...................... , ... _,,,,, ......... .$15.99
WEST LOS ANGELES
11141w111•ire11•4.
477.5525
Soll Die!lo ,~ to w~siw.
Tum off. ' blotks Wttt on W~·
&hire.
CANOGA PARK
21031 SIM.-o Woy
347.2334
Vtntvni fr.....,.,to Conoto ,,,,.,._
North to Slltrmon WVf thto "9+1t,
• 31-11-M DAYS ND llITTIEST • CDllYENIE."T CREDIT PLANS AllD IAllK TUMS AYAIWLE • CAll FOi FREE SNDP-AT-HOME SERVICE • VISIT 11111 CUSBM HIPU'f DEPl
WEST COVINA ANAHEIM
2s2• L W•rk .. 1 Awe.
'6M471
Son llemontnt hwy. llO (itrw
St. 1 til«b No. OJI ChM lo Wort·
NORTH HOLL YWOOO
70071Aooro1Cooyu
lld.-912·2200
HHolo""'t'WDOd""" fr'lfWO'!' to Shtnnan WVf. (Olt to,l.ovftl (llftYOn ~d.
M9 M. l•cli4 St.
63S.7U4
2 blotb Hri of Sonto Ano frw-
-.or °" ludiitl Atrosi from Coltf. , ..
NOllYWOOD
1115 N. VerMHt Awe.
666-7455
I W.Cb..,.. et ... .,.... ........ '"""'
PASADENA
2660 E. Colored• 11¥4.
577·1900
L C olonido 8i'vd. Of
Son Gobrill 8IYd.
MONTEBEUO
7 lS W. Wlilttlw lh4.
72M167
'°""'«Mont ... • ond 'iYlllnitf llvd.
... .)......_. -
I
•
•
-
TORRANCE
4236 ArtHI• 11•4.
S42·U'6
I Sloek fost of liow'lhome
Blvd. orr Mtlio.
VENTURA
2501 L Melo St.
641-5041
3 bl«U Wnl ff flvt Poirtl1 on Moin
lONG BEACH
3001 lellftower lln.
421 .. '34
Soo Dil9o f~ to ~
llvd. llJf'Tt off Horttt en lelflcNi.r.
COSTA MESA
. 1714 M..,.rt ll•L
~
~M•l7fhSt.
---~
OPEN
SUNDAYS&.
EVENINGS
SAN FRANCISCO
MIWRAE ''·
120 El C••IH IMI
6'2·2555
••
•
'
II
I'
'
•
• •
For the .
Record
Marriage
Llce1ases
' ~ JULY I"'
*tftH<OCHlllAM -MIU11.t A •• :Ill .r
+;ib l"vffl"' AVt .• Foullltllfl Y•lltY t M
• ,._.."'" o.. ,. ol !Id """''''"'''· • A"l\tMm.
'JHOMl"sot.1-llt&DMONO -Cf\1r1 t1 "·· • 1• #/I lt111 H11e .. 1 O•iv•, H11nlln""'"
' ... jtdl •nd ll11tk:l1 A., U o1 10)91 W-Drlvt , HU'111 .... llll'I lllC~
D•OHf:.l'ISHEll -EOw1rd W . M Ill
'!21f Crtllvltw Ori¥•. l ltU"I i!l•ttll
~t•'!Cf Mtrwo IC .. l l <ti l 11Nn1 ll11c1> ··~·FULKER SON -Ht vdM J., n
''fl// ll!f Gl1lt r •••, C<>"' f•••~ •<>ii ""GI..,,.. K., 11 01 1>0'2 Blecl<bl•<I Gtrden Grovo,
MENOOZA·ll45S -A•Ut>onv A .. l'O o!
• 77Vl w..-,.., Av1 •• Hunu,..ron ltlct>
1nc1 Llfld• s .. u ol +i~nu,..,.,, 81..:h.
1"01111AIS..PLUNKETl -.t.rvln £ .. 11 ot
1110 "'ort M•f'll•t•. N,,_"°" S•tch
•IMI Mtrtt.• 0 .• l~ ot N•w...,•t l'llMll.
8 Allt0-ZtTNIK -M•rk I! .• 70 of 311C16
• .1111 SrrHI. Soutn Ltgon• •nd Juc11t11
, L., !• DI lS9 Oer!moo.. L•1un1
..-1!111tn.
A9EllNATHT.PETEll50N -Artlt l ,
21 DI 1Q Grtna<11. St n c .. ,,..ntf 1nd
'. llnd• R .• ;>II of 101 L1 Pt lome , 5tn
Cle m1nt1.
L,ENHAV5EN·McPHEDltAN -RI V·
.mond G.. U of 101 G1,..v1, Hun•
l lntto~ l•1cn •nd C<>llffn Z .. II or
.7717 A!h1mt;ra Drive, H11nt1n.ion
• 9e1cn
ME55ANO.JV9"1C -Frenk I' .. ~ of • 1s•s1 Nlnrn Str••I, Sunwt !111c~ Incl
Ctrol C .. 7f ot Sun>r! B11ch,
IJVTCHE R·DELONG L•wr•ncr L., .H or Jin Rot>inwood Otlv1, Hun·
••ng1<1n Bre<:n '"" sn~I• l . 11 "'
.. 1oi.1 El Cen1ro. """"'''" v 1n1,. LEWELLEN-GOLDBERG -M•lwln I ..
l'3 ot 11151 e • ...,~ Orhlt, Loi "l•mlltll
: '"" Rf•tl s .. 1l or 5J.oll ll•rk•lrt
""'. W11!mlnuer. FERGVSOr'<l·ST"N -Vlnct n1 I., ll or
lt61 Wlllt!i1r. Cos11 Mtuo 1nll C1r1I
J ., ll ot 100" SP•"-· F11<1ntoln
. V1t11v.
\lt'I LLl-S·!VER$0N -Earl1 l ., 1' ol
76.llll W 1m1n1ca. Miu i<>n Vl1lo '"" • ~l1'lcl1 A., !I er )jt,,j7 C8llfornl1.
Tu11ln.
W•LSON·FINCO -F•~erlc-J ,. 11 of
1051~ M1r111rll1 A•• .. Founlfln Vt lltv
l"TICI Bonnie J .• 19 DI 11"3 Orchl<I
A.Je .. Foont1ln Viii••·
l !OlfDl"·NOAIEGA -"Uonlolt It , 31
6''1il606 S1nt1 lne1. F11<1n!1ln '11111•
• 1nd Mlrl<>n J .. ll ol Foun1'1n Ye ll••
... L ... NIO-HE lflEll" -"n1111, 11 ol t U
• Wtll Myrlle, S•nl1 ""• I nd Si n
Jv1n!t1. 16 ol 11Qlf ~l1w1r1, Hun-li,..ton 811cro .
JVL't' llh
811: ... DllVA't'·M.t.1111 -L~rrv W. •1'7 Ill
S11 !•vine .4v1 .• New""" 811<h •'Id
-Aeblecl E .. 21 cl JOI "lvtro<lo
' Str1e!, 911~.
E A"S·W ... 01! -Cl>1rl•• P .. •1 of 6"1
W1rn1r •ve., Hunlin1Ton l11c.h anti 'A""•~• J , JI ol Jl71 8011r1vr .
G11r<1tn G•OYI .
,M~VElt·SWEGELS -Seal!, 1' el 7 ..
Gr1nff1, Si n Cl-ante 1fld V1!1rlt
L.. 11 ot 142 Espl1n1<11. Si n
cw.m1nl1.
l.AM8AECHT·I OHLEN -Otrtin K.,
U" DI 1'51 81,,.lnl Pl1ce, Coil• Me11
' 1nd l>lbor1h 0 .• 11 ol C:e111 Me11
(UD"·FVLLEll -A1vmDnd T., 11 DI
116 Monttrev J.vt . ~•n Ctem•nte l 'ld
11·r1nd1 L , »of Son Clem1nr1.
COROOVA·TOVGH -JMn F .. 11 o1
~ 1111 O.nbt""' Cl•C't . Hunlln"tn • llt1cl> ,no Mt!"/ Ann, l• et Hon1ln111on
II lat/\,
.D~RMONO·O"VIS -P•lrlc-0 . II or
• ""ll Ft lcofl, f""n1•1n V•lit• 1nd
l vnn M .. 16 of lllll s,...,.. Ro.Id,
W••tonlnst".
jl,lf(HlllALD·POWELL -Garv M., 11
of Incl O.t M•r. L•9uno Bei en Ind
Connl1 l ., JJ Of 7tf Cllll<>n. '"""'"°'' l!e1cn.
MtCVNE'r·MIHUN -J\mml1 It , lt or 113 (~nl~r )lrPtl, (°"'" Ml>O onO M•··~· M .• :Ill or tll D1rrl!I Slrlt!,
• """'" i.o ....
Dealh Notires
I OOTS
l<tollv W , (1111) 9 00" llU Mt<l•DllCl r
~·. Co1•1 Mu1. 01•1 o! de•tn. July U.
1911. Survived bY ''"fe. Ci1•1 ; tl1llf,
~l\y Turn•r. o! F••mlnonom, M•UI·
r n"'''"· 5•rvlcts T""''""•· 11 1.m .. ' p.,~1r,( Vltw Cn1a•I. wo1n ll•v Lo•en
Fllc idnoet atllc11tlno. lnurnmen!, FO•I
lilOlo•C•tn• Ntll-1 C -el~<Y. 5tn 011...,,
Poclllc VllW MOt!Ul fV, Dir1c10 ...
E"TON
Cl4u<le S.muel E1•0~. lh11<1•nt ol l •· IU~ .. l4it11. 0.•• ol <le .. •~. JU•• )I. !t71
Survlyto b• wlfo, P1u11 M. l!.1lon; Ill •
1••. M•• M1vO*n1 Har~ln1, Co•on1 dt l
Ml~ S1•vlc11. ~rlOt•, Julv JO, I D.m ..
11111 C:eron1 dfl Mar c:n1oe1 Enlomi..
.,..;,...,, Mfl'°"' ~!>My Mem~.!1 1 P•r~
11 .. 111 Cerone Gt! Mar Mor1u1r•, 01•..c· •••
1i LG•"I
l(~..J'"et~ C. E•o•n ""• ~· ol IOOI V1lt n•
c"' Dr ive, Hunllngoon B•tth 0•!• 11
0~1Th J"li 1l, 1'1! ~Ufv,v!!<I bY wllo,
c~tt.t"""· '""'' C1•I Elo•n' M v•n1u1. "'•!•IClt •~rrllY , lonl Lvnn• ll!•""r 1n(I c.ih .. Jo E lge~; Mn•~••, G•<1r01 T
E l<11" "'" 0•1.,acn•tdre" St •••(••· l~u"
t!•Y. J o"', ,.,_. F1..,01y C11<1nl1! l"u·,
r e"llt l<!"""t
HOWE\..L
"•!"Co• • i...,....11 J.o• II. N xi.. Jud•"·
San F••ncl1co. 0 1•• nf <!~~'"' Joi• 16,
1971 ,u..,\vl<'f bv ""''""" O•o• How111,
hit\••. ~rtne>• l H<>..,ell ; 111•0•, Lind•
Ma•1•es, b•<>'"""' RoM•I """ M•·~
..,_<ti! Stf'v•c••· ~"d~•. •O )() 1 m , I
r ... F •mll• Coto.,111 Funt ••I Home,
' SliCICLEA
P"""rt SKldor, 119H MavrJt ld olv•, Lo•
"~'" 0.1t eof """"'· Jul• ti, 191! Svrv·~l!(I bv ,..1,., ~.a.e. '""· "•no!<!, of
l'11e,1l1t PtllMdH I <IAU91'1t<. "'"'· c;..,,o
0•1• l!llum. Loo l..nttlr~: II• 9r1nd-
r.,U!lren 5,...,c11 wOIJ ~ n~ld Tnu,.O••·
I • rn . Pt dflc View Cn11>1I tntormoM, •
"'•<•foe VlfW M......,"11 Park, l"ttl!lt
Vltw Mo'1u1•v. DlrK 1<>••. I
Tll'!'1NG fl"'' 11 •• 1~0. ltt ,,,., s1 .. ~1w"""1 I
!INC". D&ll ol <!q i ... July II, lt ll l t rV ·
··~· l>fr>dlM M W~1lcllll c ... p~ Mt d\I· ''¥· 6'6 .....
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCUFF MORTUARY
C7 E. 17U11 St .. Costa Me1a
..... 888 • BALTZ t.tORTUARIES
Corona dal Mir 17~.t•st
Cot ta Meis Mf.!4M • BELL BROA OWA V
MORTUARY
,tto Bro1dw1y, Costa ~le••
LI S.3433 • McCORMICK LAG UNA
BEACH MORTUAllY
11N lAfUBI Cl9}'0D Rd. '""'1s • ~ PACJFlC VIEW
I MEMORIAL. PARK
r • cm.etery MMtu1ry
" Cltapol ~ •Ult Pacific Vte,. r>rh••
· N~ Bcae•. Collforala : ' ICU7ll
• •
' rEl!S FAMILY
, .COWNIAL P'UNBllAL
I HOME
711l 'lthl A••·
. W--oltt -II : . .
!.fMJTH'S MORTUARY
a7 Milo SL
5H'511
ANAHEIM
2636 W. La Palma -
821-1900 ~
GRAND OPINING HOURS AT IOTH STORIS
OPEN 9AM 9PM
DAILY TO
SAT. 9 TO 6
SUNDAY I 0 'TIL S SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE at BOTH STORES!
BODY SHIRTS
OltANT'S hU 'lfi• l•t11t
1tyl11 1f th1,..lft11t t•P· ul1r b1llly 1hl,.., 411,H 1r1.
I
I
'I
\I
•
llELL BOTTOM JEANS
STA-PREST
"Now" ittfll for .. tod1y'1°' $850
l !Jfl Gr1nr1 ht1 "•m ht 11·
1orlt' celor1. 11111 21·36.
STRAIGHT LEG CORDS
rick your ft vtrltt colo r 1f
ollvt, •old,"'''· ll1h1 brewn.·$691
lljht blu•. b1ilt 111111 ch1110•
It t , 51111 26·3
Thr••·on·th•·•ly
BRUSHED DENIM FLARES
26.JI. l lut $800
DOUBLE KNIT SLACKS
NEEDLEPOINT CORDS
Now 111 Whitrn1fl Orty1 Slits 21·:1•. lir•11t'1 h11 '1"'
"hlrrt flu 111111 '1111 • $10
BELL CORbS
'''""· caintl, ,rt111, llur·
tuntl!y, ll•'tY, Mitt 11141 f,'"
pit. •ll•t, 1r1y, chlc1 t tt.
Sitt• 21.JI. •a•o
SEXTANT llLLS
HlW HIP·HUIOll tit. 100%
.. ,1.1hru11• 111111111 r,•m1 11
1111rtt tl c1l1r1. An 1111.
•7
-... r ; -. .Jli· 7• 7-. . .. .......
S·M·L·XL •
FROM
EVERY SIZE
EVERY COLOR
EVERY STYLE
..
.
I .
. '·
", . ·,::
•
LADIES·
FAMOUS NAME IUND
SALE
FASHION FLARE STRIPES
Slz11 S-16.
A11ort1d color1, '4'' BRUSHED DENIM FLARES
ltif•, rust, bl u•. •4•• S\111 5-16.
CORD FLARES
LEVI 'S~
for GALS
Levi' Brushed
Denim Hot Ponts
Anofh1r grl!af tev i'1• f11hlon
In yellow, red, vloltt. Sl11s
S-1 6.
LEVI 'S ~ FASHION STRIPES
Sta·prelt fabric s In fl-
1ort1d colors. Sl111 6-16. $13
Levi's~ Polyester Flares
Green, white, navy, brown,
51111 6-16. $17
A11orted color1. S·M·L hom '6
•15 HILLlllLL Y HOT PANTS
Gretn, red, brown vtlvtlten. 6-14
Hang-Ten Tops ........ 57•."
uv1·s• CORDS Lnl'1• lrush D1nln11 $11
All colors, 1ii11 S· 16. A11t rt1I cel1r1 . SJJ11 S·l•
SUPER TOUGH
XX JEANS
SUP(R·TOUOH J•1n1 ... W1rltl'1
t1u1ht1! d11I"', rtl11fortt d wit h cop•
lt r rl'ttft t111I 1titch1tl tt illy. 51111 1.so
IOY SIZU 0-12 ........ $6.00
LEVI'S' FAMOUS
DENIM JACKETS
Ttot f1mou1 ltvl'•' tltn!111 l1clitt1. prt ·
1hru11lc t1 1111. You11 find th1 1h t y1u
'"''II Gr1nl'1. •9
lloy'1 Sl1e1 ............ $71
-'
'
'\ '
COSTA MESA
1750 Newport Blvd.
646·1696
.SAN DftGO 'VtY.
HARBOR: 8LVD
)(' NEWPORT FWV
1 ·THE
NEWPOR:T AVf • ( ::::J GRANT '»• BOYS Sr
USE YOUR CREDIT
AT '~RANT1SI
* BANKAMERICARD
*MASTER CHARGE
N·O•Wf
SPLIT ·COWHIDE
JACKETS
by Levi's• •oo Site1 36-46
JUST ARRIVED
STETSON HATS
•2000
"Th1" W11tern Hat In 4
r119e14 1tyl11. All 1lze1.
3X le1ver.
t; GANT SHIRTS ,
'8 ,ROM
Gant Ties from $8.SO
You c1n lttl 1iit•• ftxfurtd 1tri,l1111 ll~t t ll·
1 r1vtlll lttt1rln1 111 11111 •l1tiontry. Th1y h••• 1
wiry tltgflll ltolt. T1il1r1d with tl rt In "no·ittn ..
forlrt l polytllfr. Trim llptrtd body.
HANG-TEN
TEE-SHIRTS
Stttk up now Bii th1 wld•
ltltttion of ntrt•W 1tri1111,
wl'• 1•rlr11, 111111 w Id tr
1trl1111. Al 1it11 I
s6so.s7so.s9so
H1n1 Ttn Tt11k Te,1 $1.00
Htttl Tt11 Trunk1, fro"' $11 .00
H1111 Tt11 Tow1l1 SS.00
l oy'1 Htllt T111 Shlrt1 SS.CO
FLOWlltED T ·SHIRTS
by O••ltn• Alt~•
THI "NOW" OIS1GNS th1t ''' •500 pt~ultr with MUI rntn 111d wo·
mt11. All Ctltrl ••• 111 1itt1.
HAPPY JACKET
1r1wn, 1111ck, ''''"· S.M·l ·XL. S49S
N1w 1t th1 Or111t l1ytl
WALLACE IEERY.S
AHlh1r 1r••f d1lrt 11 1tlid1 1nl
1trl,.1. All c•lers, 111 11t11.
llLTS
fJAND u~
Woltl 21 to II. I l
:~~_®,''$10
....... 1J,.1a
~
' . , I
""
~ I
~
~
' , r
~ !
• \\ ·~
, ,I
I
! I
ANAHEIM
2636 W. la Palma
821-8900
GRANO OPINING HOURS AT BOTH STORES
OPEN .
DAILY 9~~ 9PM
---'
'Ne•·•· ~ ... 1971
---COSTA . M~SA
1750 Newport Blvd.
640..-1696
~N OIEGO FWY.
HARBOR BLVO
)(' NfWPORT f'N'f
1 ·THE
1••'4-<-:;J GRANT
NEWPORT AVE I),,, BOYS ,,
USE YOUR CREDIT
AT GRANT'S
SAT. 9 TO 6. SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE at BOTH STORES
* IANKAMERICARD * MASTER CHARGE
SUNDAY 10 'Tll 5
G ANDEUR
7 ". ~~,~~. !~~~~""'" t11ll1. rack, 2 cu11, brid11e, t halk and
inllruction booklet. REG. S490.
545095
INCLUDE5 OEllVfltY 1114 SET .up
St• our II! 1"!•~0;01 dl.liy with I C• ).~t 550ry ind tlblil.
ON D#SPlAY AT
ANAHEIM Si"ORE
ONlY!
PENN 500M REEL
ALBACORE SPECIAL
NOW AT GIANT'S I $1197
MITCHELL 300 REEL
A must for
every fi,herm1n l $1395
1------------------i
':. i w•TER SKI DEPARTMENT I
\ L-----------------• \
TAPERFLEX WATER SKIS
1SL59F ...... $49 95
;CT9A .......... $59.95 & $64.95
for ski ropes, f101ls, skis, i•tkets ind other
-1i w1ter sk~ ntfds, 111 the Gran! Boys flntl
11.
'I
•\
11
AIR MATIRESSES
$179 All
VINYL
Thi C1mp1r SJ.II
Thi Veta1io"'' , • , •. $7.95
The Grtn1dir r $1.9S
Utllity Do11bl1 $9.9S
Rt1t•ze $9.95
\' RUBBER UFE BOATS
1·
I:
•
"
1-man helcb 250 lbs.
' l ·rl'llll (400 1111.) •. $2f.fJ
4.m1,. (IJO 1111,J .S49.f5
•·mtn 11000 1111.l $6f.t5
•
\'
I
\1' .,.
I
. ' 'qi
l' ,,
"
!'\ I' I
,\II ,,,
..... ____
WILSON
T-2000 $32aa ONf Of T"l f!H£ST ho•it
t .ck1t1 ........ i •••• ~.
Wll-1 U! 01 .. 1 Ito r,...,.flt•
er rt;j1•l11·1!1•. h•• MOW!
TENNIS BALL SALE
PINN. HEAVY DUTY
Whitt R19. $3.2S
PENN. YELLOW
~1911larly $3.50
SPALDING
f!uoreJte"f. futh1 i1 GIANT'S i1 Or11t11 Ce1,1".
tr'• 011lr 1Utcl1I C•I•·
ma11 eJpll111tt ,-.p1ir
1t1tlo11. Wt fi1 'eml
SPALDING MATCHED CLUBS I
~ ,
' DAVE STOCKTON SIGNATURE MODEL
J Spiilding's foremost sign1tu re
Matched "' of 1.7.3 Wood•
th rough 9 Irons. REG. $179.95.
model.
ind 7
CAROL MANN GOLF CLUBS
KEN VENTURI U.S.G.A.
"FIREBALL" MOOELS
Gv1r1nl1tlll Cut·Prtt0f
PKG. of 4
COLEMAN
3-BURNER STOVE
JUMIO FAMILY 51%11 M1k11
tamp cookln1 fu 1t IMt1 homt . , .
loll mort fun toe. a19. $2f.95
$6995
• e •• e •••
WILSON'S
INO!STRUCTO
PKG. af 3
1119.95
$179
98c'-=--
COLEMAN ® 10x13 HOLIDAY
SALE s7 49s
8x10 HOl.ll>,AY ........... $49.95
8x 1 0 OASIS ....••......... $14 •• 1
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
REMINGTON MOHAWK 600 ......-! RE~.~~~.~:~TER l-243~6mm-308
RIGULAR $1 24. 9 5 ........... , •79 ..
DOUBLE NINE 77 REVOLVER R1t1ll $72.00 ... $39.95
RUGER STD 77 AUTOMATIC Ret1ll $47.SO ... $39.81
I ALL SCOPES 25°/o OFF
UNIVERSAL SCOPE 4X
--·----
$39.95
LIST
--·---·~
$14aa
----
·······················1······················
RCBS JR. PRESS COMBO .....•..••..•.... $28.18
RCBS DIES Reg. $15.00 NOW .. .. • • . • .. .. . S9. 99
MEC 600 JR. All GAUGES ................. $39.18
REMINGTON CHILLED SHOT ....••••.•..... $22.00 •u c
SHOTGUN PRIMERS ..................... $9.00n• M
RIFU & PISTOL PRIMERS .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. SS.00,. M
ALL SHOTGUN WADS ....... .,,1 .........
•
DAILY PILOT Jf-
... IRE~ .. ,~ ......... """l!n'
-..
For The··
Record
Marriage
licenses
m VIOAI Nr1I -M1rr1 ... k ...,., l1,10t:
I ft1uN\~y -'1111"r 4, Al'9fl Jowoll )I, &A Wuflll"'IGrl aucfl. a'llil Vlc~l1 ltft~ 21 pf Ml .. lon lllt le. l \CHTO~UTTE lt -Julv <t, •ot11r1 ., i1 , "' w..-m1 ........ ,,.,. w~ Mtlre. 3-1, II ~rOln (irov1;:. 11"01VoU·AHOltEW£ -JulY 4, D-1'
l.OYl1, 21, tnd Hlk•Y Aeou. Jt, Mth of Cos!• Mts1. D'ACiOSTIN!).ltOMl!:ltO -JI/IV • ""'m o. ... 11<1o. ~. •1'4 Tom•""•· , "'" ,,,..... ' wi( 1t-fv~KEft -Jlll"f' 4, Tllorna• M . .k" .• 23, ot LI Htllft, tnd ~
22, ot l•lbol. Hl!lt$H-Wl!L$H -Ju!v 5, EcNln Otllt1, )1, ....i Jov Ann, 29, klh'•f "~~~,~~ 1lt~i"1i: -Jll!V I, l'r ... k 0 ., JI, tlld $UNn JH n, 2~ tiofh ol
Wt11mhurer. ,.ltAVST!).\ll!:CCHIO -Jutv "' E..,,,.,., lt, t nd ltot>!n ()11,,,., 17,
l>Dlh Ol N•WPQ(I ftlefl,
DIECH EllT·WE!ISTElll: -J11IY t. Gtnielt A., 16, of L"""' Hiit., Md Ev1lvn Mty, 541, Ol Dini l"olnt,. D'AMOlllE·5TEAltNI -Jutv t, -•Id Rlbtrl, n, of N._t kech. 1r14 B1rblr1 An11, It. OI' El Toro. '
Chrl•lcoher IC..,I, 2l, ot N LtNOSAY·CLAYTON -JU!l'io'.";19
ltKh. 1nd Nancy Lou!M, , of
Ci••den pGrovt. ~ JONES·llOll lSON -J111V t , ll_.111\., ,1, 11'4 Lltl11n l"lrtnlr, ... , bolh of
(0111 ..........
J WINTH-SCOTT -Julv t, "f'tdrk1c" l!l""''' It, aNI Gau M9fl•, 22, llolft 'ol Hunrlnaton Bttth. , l lMS·KELLOGG-Ju!v I. J~n W., fl',
Ol ••llllowff, 1nd Lindi ElalM, t.1. of H1;n!lnq_fon Betch, • COLZAN1·8ECK -J1;ly 1. •ober1 ~
34, of N9-«I fBt<:h, .and Al1•endf1.
JI, of Loni !lucn.
"INHElltO-BIUSTOL -Julr 2, Mlcl'l..i W1yne, 1'1, •nd 111vl1n Dlt nnt, 11, bofll of Coront dll Mar. LAVOIE-PLOWMAN -JUIY 1, G9r¥
Jol\ll, '°· of W•""lrt1W, •nd Pl ....... K1r. 11, of Sa11t1 ........ WOLFF-JOHNSON -JI/Iv !, ltOl>trf w., ,7, ot L1ovn1 B11o:h, 9ftd l!l•l,... v .• ,,, ol Lllllint HMI .. WILLIAMS-SCHEAl'FElt -Jurr, ' 01vld Ct rl, 13, 11'4 Sendra Mtr 1 ;a; both of Co.It MtN.
\'Ell:BEEK·Pltl!:NUT -July 1 Jaft H .• .k, ol wn1mf1151tr, tnd Anl(,, a , or <.~ion. BEltGliR·IHLI -July t , 1£'-H., 41, of U.. A-r•, •11111 MtrY El.,.,., u. « w .. 1m1n1ter,
CllUZ·MAltKLEY -Ju!v 1, Al"" Y&mlnlkl, 21. I nd AllrU, u. both °' Co.!1 Mn1. ClttCIC Y-GAltNl!lt -J1,1Jy 1, Fr1no11s Tlrnolftv, 22, Ol Hllflt!"111on klCl'I.
~nd ICtlhY Ann, It, of Slnta Aria. DAV!S·LANHAM -Jwl'V l. J-Wll!llm Jr,, 2t, of T1;1ttn. ,...., "'""'., El!ttbltto, 11, ot Hunl!llCllM INCll Mr.E-CLEMENTS -JLHV _J1 E"""ln °l :, , of LaguM ... ch, &"II Jlidltlt A., "i. o! LI Htllft. I EMl!IEltlCM·"ALO -Jwtv ). Wtlti~ F .• )l, of HunllMllon -..Ch, Ind M•rltl1 E ll..,, ''' ol Din....,. Colo. LAMl1t:•T·eAILl!Y -Jl.ll'Y j, HI""" Mldl&tl, 15, of WHtmlrt1tl1", MIOil
••tr!tle 7t.. ol C•t• MIN. · NUDSON·5HAW -J11lv , Oonlld D. :J"N~~ eC:.~.•h Alli_,, lL c,th
S~IAll:P·lltUSSELL -Julv I, °'""" It., 1', of L-l11c11, &I'd \.11111.11, •• ol W1•tmlr>1tt1". ltAOLE·WAltNCICE -JulV J, lt:dwl,. Cltude, ]$, ol Hvnll"'t°"' •-.ch. a.Ml Connie Bell, :!J, ol O..lloe, Mo. GU~TAl"SOH-DIAMOMO -Jut... 3. II ch•rd c., 41. of eor-dll M.9,.. and M1rl1 B l7 04' Br11.
MAGGIANO OOU\.b -J1;1Y J, Mill· thew, 1•, tl'ICI Sl'ttfry Lft. It. bllltl ol N .... Porl B...:h. HOFP'MAN·SEElll!ltS -Jvlv J, Jahn Edwtrd. Q, ~ 81!tv Jaen, M, both or Wntmln1ttr. J11fy 7111 •• COll:N!LL-SHALLAH -Dontld W., .,. qf 11'1 Sowtll Avl ., Wfltmlnt'-r Sfld Oorol'-F ., Jl of 1111 S-111 A~•, WntmlM1ter ·
aELL·ltUtl EOGE -keMMtfl It., tt-Clf
~U¥.t l'ernl11f, ~ dll M•r lfMI H11tl>f1'" 0., 24 oA Cor-dtl Mer l Wll'T·IUTTOH -WUll1m I' .• » ol 11.n 011 ""'·· Wntrnr,.rwr ..,. Ell11btth E • ..a of W•tm''ll"' . TATl!'-MILL.f -T-1'., I f/I Jlt• "'11 $1!""1, N-rl IHCll end c.r.· "' H., It of 1100 PlferMn Wey, Coda t~'~'·IOL TON -Marlt C., ,, '11 20J21 Ml ..... va Lt lll, HIMll"'l'aon Btld'I Ind P1trldt H., 1, of 2Qlt2
81\IV/tW AVI. 51ntt Mt llEllL Y-FAllLfY -P1ftlck J:1 :lJ of IUJ] MCP'..,.,, Strwt Tw1nn •1'14
Dllm1 A .. n of "''1 t 1r11 o.ior-.-. C11>11trano Betch ,
Gl!ltAltO-lllt:AMAN -~· H., Hof . J! 81lb Co¥n, NI IHdl 11'11/ •e1rlcl1 A .• 21 flfl I I Pt lm. H-,·
!lnct!Otl l!lt1ch , I EMM·TAGGl!ltT -llobMf A., 1f ol~··
12115 LO(Ull, But~I P1rk end Cl&udf' •• U of 16!5l WlnMmllr, Hul'flnoi.n·, If Ch . FULTON-MrLLElt -Wllll1m •. , .a If,;, .un Nototl Avt., Yorbl Undl •lld Norme M., .. of \Jo. lttr.111, U"
c i-i. ' HEIDt.l!lt·LONCAlllC -L&rlY N., lf° ,-
ol s.n "l11e1r Awt., W111(;!+J:,r •lld · OtOorth L., 11 ot 14'11 ....... '
Wnlmln1!1r MILLl!ll-FLEISCHHACICl!ll -Jlmff • J.., lt of fVI o,.,.. Pl•''°"~ W11tmhut1r tnd Ju1en C., II of l.Mli, L• ,.,t, Wnlll'llftlt.r • klMMl!L·OUSl!NO•lt -Llrrr L., ,.~r ef 75'5 J(a1.i11 lt1nr1111 Ind Su ......
M .• 2> or u.61 Tri"'"' AY1., O.t~ Grove L.-BOltDl!·ICIOWELL -Cov1111 S., q ol :Not ltod'll118!" StrHI, Cll" ,,_. ' t "ll Lffnl v .. , O of 326 l!ttl ,..,.. Pltct , Collt ,,,,.. '
CLAll.IC-McllltlOE -Brl1n A., 21 .. ,
:MPG' Ct lle Lt• Flol"ft, Ct P111,.no, .:
llHCh tnd Chetl S., 24 ol Cl!llllrtl'IG ,
l••th '· July Ull -:
HUODLESTUN-MOONIEll -CGOlal'• ..
F" .1(1 of Ml Wtll Wlj-j COfll MIV ~ t nd Sylvlt, 4 of 1% J 1k1r Strwt,
Co1l1 Ml" MA,lfT·G AISFll!LO -Horta S., 61
ol IU Norlll fll/ """'~ l!la!llol ltlt nd ,-tnG Li nd• S., ol ••-l1land •. GllEl!NE..v.AY -lt"'r.';: H., n of 1010 ' ::~er:-"'f:;n;~r,flf 1'.gl' crl'1t"'Dt"1~ .>
Ntw_.r 11,.cl'I ._
SMULL-WltlGHT -C•cll It .. 31 .. '· IUV.•JOl('I S!rett, N-1 I t.ch tnd.,, 11.oltnt S., 'll of Nrwport Bttch
PA,ltlC-ICIM -Won Hoon u. "' m Vtrtno Pita, lnolne al'ICI Yovnci Sook.
15 &A 11'4! Wfltl ..... IOCI W11 l"'lM , '~ AQUILA -lllVEltA -Htrm fo A.1 .M •' W Ctn!fr Strtf'f L•j$' 11.,cn tnd c11m..,de Ml~ or tGUn• .. 11.:11~, llO•BIN$-MAT KE -lt_I J ., ti )11 Mornlnq 1nr1111 " , """""1 • Mar and M9Cldtltfl9, n or m Sovfft • Minni• •trwt St nll AN ' OAULOl!N.o'•ll!liN -J1<n11 HJ 21 .• , "' Mlm ...... .niiiii c•ui., s... u.l'I • C1ol1tf1no end lrl()f P., '' ot 11D¥t" (..,..,t LIM, Sin Cl-It a u1ttZO.CHA\/Il -Ct r""'" M .• ,. •
llf 11t! Amerlc• Av• .• COJI• M--l •!'Id COl>llll L., 2t or C..f1 Ml'N , " JYly tlfl HOLMES-8EH$0N -Cr1!0 W., 21 llf '1
nl WfOllo, eo.11 M-ind ker1na, 1' 4
1t~1i'l~lrt•K8('1t ... "'.!'1:' ~ ir 1 1:1611 Wilton ltntt, w11rmlt11t1r 1nd ..
Mfladt J,. n llf 2u12 OC..rwllW ' LI M, Hu1111no,.,,, BMdl
.l lEalltT-1.IOHHET -Hord, It If Jl21 Lot lnolol Circle, llutM ,._,,.
...i Mtr11'<11 "Vi a flfl tuJ2 E. Mio 111.1'o'&J~11:'r~\1~ ~::.11 M .. 9' of • TtDtoo l"latl, COJll Mfla lftd •••blr• t .. n or c .. 1. M ... WtNSHl,.~HARTl!ll -JllTlll M., U It/ 20t ~.... Clfty'" ....... LIOlm• t.U. lfHI Yurt -,. .• " of SI
'i:.IJne lto¥1tt South l."""9 IA llllAA-COlltAL -Clltr1", l'f f1' J GWMll_, 111"1 J,,.ft C•ltlflflol
end Jvoillltl I.., " ., 11ft1 Vie lele.,,.,, S1t1 J\llfl C"lttr-~•" "" QAHL-Flt!lft V•H• -0.¥14 I)., 14t. ""1 W•lhl':f',.,, AYI., Mlft•r Cr
•IHI It-j;' n " JtUt Mffnol • vit'~n'!'Nl~111 ... ~1"rts -1tlcfl91'd ..lfJ ~• of S4C St. /Vitt ,c.,,r ... '!"l""' Gtltw, 11 II ._, Of"-.. ,,...,, ~ Alt ll'll!M
O!L"·JACOlll!N -JmJ., U tt 147QI A........,..n, Hllfl lllKf't a nd P11;R"' -$., If WI,..._ A..-., L~ IMCtl 'o'I'"~" T!ll -AAM. • tf ,., Ml n S , WlltfmlNW 11111 iv1M K., ff 1JlmlniP1r <A~T-P'INL! Y-,l'f., 0 et
21 1 eroo11;11,ir11, "'i:fJi ..:.: 4 ·~ .J ,,r_ Wiii ~r1f ,f,s..i, n e Ill
Llllv a.1 '' of t01 , 1t~:f.t1\S~"'"*-~ -Clelt II:., • r,.s: i~;;..,~ .............. ~
T~~~IGltL-M~L., 2' ~l"l!'. r.·~ A '1i. ' -
0 't11R ~~. '
cq r.~.Ri~. ~"!jl.
; ' ~="3.X"lf:t~ d~ ·-THE BEST
RMdershlp p o l l 1 prove
"Peanu.ll" l5 ODI! ot the
world'a most popular comte'"
str\p1, Read It daJiy ln the
DAIL'( PILOT •
---·--.. -c..--1
•
'I
l
'•
--.-···~ ...... ~ 1 --
f
I !
i ! • • •
I
!
J 4 DAit Y PllOT S N
WOMEN'S
HANDBAG CUARANCE
,.,..,._ .. ..,.., --'-'""' All roditCed te claor fast. w..., I• "tltt fOf foll .
•ROUP' I OltOUP II GltOUP Ill
88c $1.88 $2.88
COSTUME JEWELRY
h11tostk M¥htl' -fl1tol d-reM• prlu.
OllG, Sl.00 OltUi. SJ.OD ORIG. SJ.00
MOW 25c MOW 44c MOW 99c
WOMEN'S SUP CLEARANCE
'°" • •off •lpo lo • wldo 88' 288 ra1199 of f'Clbrl" a colon. h1cl11det TO
.-bro-s!lpt. Orft 1.00°6.00 NOW
HOT WHEELS® CARS
ty Mottel-lcn.t y .. rs .44 -0.11 pricacl t•
clear.
Orft .. 77 MOW
.
' SPORTSWEAR CLEA'RANCE
Pe11h, teps, & .. Im. All ...W 4Nltkolly ,.diteetl.
••our 1 $ROUP II GROUP Ill
$1.88 $2.88 $3.88
.
WOMEN'S SWIMWEAR
llkh1h, ... , •• ' 2 p!M•.
GROU,. I GROUP II GROUI" Ill
Orlt. 1.00·11.00 ORIG. 11 .00·14.00 ORIG. 11.00·18.00
MOW '4" MOW '6" MOW '8"
GROUP I WOMl!N'S FASHIONS
DrHI & Pont Sult $6.88 J1111lor, Mlt~1 & Holf Orl9. S9.00°S12.00
GROUP II WOMIN'S FASHIONS
Drest.ft & ,Ollt Suitt $9.88 Junior Mlues & Half SJM1. Orfg. 12.00·1 4.00
GROUP Ill WOMEN'S FASHIONS
Dret.1 Ponh & Sult $12.88 J1111)or Miu & Half. Orlljl. 16.00-11.00
MEN'S SUIT CLEARANCE
GROUP' I GROUP' II GROUP Ill
$24.88 $34.88 $49.00
R-,. 571.00 .... 560.00-$75.00 •• ,. 575.00-$90.00
Do11blt lrecntff 150 To ClloOM from lrolP Slzn Good Sbiet
f 1 WOMEN'S ACCESSORIES 11'-__ G_!R_L'_S _DE_P_T. _ ___,
£ ~;h~~~1!TRAW HANDBAGS
~ ~jg'i(~ tvO~EN1s··suSPE0N~Ei;>
; T1pe1try f•brlc-2D only
E =~~W01HANriBAG ... C.L.E.AR'::~c~·00
± Pl"ll clNr•nce prlce1 on f1shlon 1 88 2 88
: LtEA'THE·R··HA1~1~i~n~~w • • •
~ G9nuln• IHther-prh::.ct 44 ~ tR1N~L.'E 'PA"T'Et-iT "'GLOV~S11' I.GO NOW • - '
' Vinyl p11tent-bl•ck & 88 ( G'ENUi1~·E··Le·ArH·eR···GLoer~~ :a.oo Now • I Driving styl• with 2 00 I r:A~c~""st.ii~ c:.\i>s ... 0''•· '·" Now •
r
i~J;10Ji1W;·s~·:ETCH ~rllf;s 5.00 NOW 1.88
p,.ctlc1I & v•r11tlle. Alsortm•nt 5 88 SlD71°PARfwiiis ....... 0 "•· ,.... Now . •
i Synthetlc-..1y styling. Complete
with c• ................................. Orig. 25.00
NOW 1.66
NOW 044
NOW 7.88
MEN'S. WIG CLEARANCE
"MMl10n" & "mod" style•
:.tu~~sHdA'iR ·LoN·G 0 f1lL3C'00 NOW 19.88
GIRLS SWIMWEAR -ASSORTED
Styl•• & color•.
Sii• 3-6x, 7·14 ................ Orig. 4.00-7.00
GIRLS 100% COTTON CORD
3 pc. P•nt Sult
511• l-6x ... , ......................... Orig. 3.88
GIRLS SUMMER PLAYWEAR
MOW
NOW
2.88
1.88
~1::~ ;~h6°:.'~~ ... '.~.~~.~ .. ~.-~~~~··· Orig. 3.00 NOW 1.88
GIRLS DRESSES & PANTS DRESSES
A11orted stylH & fabrics. 4 88
~~o/01-~"vLo·N···rwo 0P:i·,~oc;;!:~ SE~~w •
Solid pink. 3 88 ;WlMWE·AFf ·:: .. ifiK.iN'i' .. orig. 6·00 Now •
Si1H 3-6x.
~fltS0f'Wo ··p·1EcE··s·HOR~1~e\00 Now
1.88
No Iron 100% cotton
Sl1a1 7-14 ............................... Orig. 1.ff NOW
GIRLS TWO PIECE SHORT SET
1.44
No Iron 100~. cotton
S/1e1 3-6x ......................... Orlf. 1.49 NOW 099
TERRY·BEACH JACKET
Whit• & prints
~~E~i~4L 'Bl.J"Y""T"OOO;~ ~~'Ti&~1•00
NOW
2.88
::;;." ~~~~~~ ... ~ .............................. ·-·····-·-"'" ......... .,_. 1 .44
Sm1ll Hlectfon left. 12 88 I ~°'"-"'-'""-"'_°"_· ._ .... _ ..... _ .. _0 '_'•_· '-'·'° __ N_o_w __ ·-... INFANT'S DEPT.
WOMEN'S FURNISHINGS I INFANTS GIRLS DRESS
I • i I
! '. I
CONVENTIONAL HOSE CLEARANCE
DIKontlnuacl 1tyl•, brokan 25 39
1l1es ............................. Orig .. 99 NOW • •e
FULL LENGTH CULOTTE LOUNGER
Bright colorful prints.
51 ...... 1 ... 1tyla. .................... Orig. 1.00 NOW S.88
KNIT LOUNGE SETS
Tunic top & pantL
~~AN~Re~ft· L"OlfNG.e0~t~'·00
s1 ...... 1 ... print long top
& p11nta. ................ -.............. Orig. 10.00
MINI-SHIFT SLEEP SET
Witt. short 1hort1. ~~i~T~ &A~Dt~l1EE.PSH1~rt\ '·00
Variety of stylff.
Ell:callent for lountlnf-........ Orig. 6.00
WOMEN'S BRUNCH COAT
Light batls'9 fabric.
Pa1t1I colors. . ................ .. Orig. 5.00
WOMEN'S GIRDLE CLEARANCE
Many 1tylu to choooe from.
Broken slin. ................ Orig. 6.00-7.00
NOW 3.88
NOW 2.88
NOW 2.88
MOW 3.88
MOW 1.88
NOW 1.88
WOMEN'S SPORTSW·EAR
MISSES ANKLE PANTS
6.88
NOW 3.88
I woMEN:s READY-TO-WEAR J
WOMENS SPORT JACKETS
Wa1habl• fabrlu.
S .. M .. L .................... Orig. S.00 & 6.00
, BRIDAL GOWNS & ACCESSORIES
NOW 2.88
' ~l:;:,~,n~o.''Y'.... .... 2S0/o·30% OFF
• WOMENS PANTS JACKETS
100•;. polyeat•r knit
Sprhtt colors ................... Orig. 25.00
WOMENS PANTS UNIFORMS
Top, 'ant & Skirt cowt n«k •tylhtt ........... . or11. 12.00
1 PINAFORE UNIFORMS
Stripe •l'Mf solllls.
1 Wafhabla. ................................ OrJ9. 5.00
WOMEN'S FASHIONS
aett.. d,.... and pant 1ult1
·····-----·-··-·······-· Orig. 20.00-)0.00
WOMEN'S SUITS
~ .;:r:.t~ .. ~.~.'.~ ........ orig. 40.oo
MOW 14.88
NOW 5.88
NOW 2.88
MOW 14.88
NOW 29.88
and Diaper Sets
fN1~~NT10Di'sNE·v···cHARl'C~E~00
Now
1.44
Pl1ywear
Broken 1l1e1 .......................... Orig. 4.00 NOW
GIRLS H·BACK TOP
1.44
with contrasting Slt1ck1
................................. ··--····· ... Orig. 2.2' NOW 1.44
BOYS TOP AND MATCHING
Swimsuit
Sl1H 2T~T. , . ....... Orig. 5.DO NOW 2.88
INFANTS· GIRLS · BOYS
Se1r1ucker pl1ywear
f~FlN~· Gi"tfL·s .. ·sw1MwEA~rlg. 2·
2
'
MOW 088
Ono •nd 2 pion 1 88 2 88 ro3;5 "S't-ii"RT"& 0S~o~·i8 NOW • • •
S1t1
51111 2-lT. ... . Orig. 3.29 NOW
BOYS PANT & SHIRT SET
B1lted & Aut. colors 2T~T. ... . .... .. ..... . . . .. Orig, 4.DO ' NOW
TODDLETIME TENNIS
Shoe1-Solld1 & Pl 1ld1
Sl1e1 1-5. . . ... Orig. 1.99 NOW
GIRLS PANT SETS
2-pt. Sl1a 1_.
............................. Orig. l .00 NOW
BOY'S DE'PT.
1.88
1.88
1.44
1.44
BOYS SPORT SHIRT CLEARANCE
A11orted 1trlpe1, solld1 & print•
Sl1e1 8-18 ............. Orig. 2.91-3.91 NOW
BOYS CASUAL SLACKS
Small qu1ntltl• left
3/S.00
............ Orig. 3.91~.t8
BOYS SWEATER VESTS
100~. orion acryllc.
Slie1 t -18 .............................. Orig. 2.H
BOYS JAMMER SWIMWEAR
l!nd of ••••on clNrance
All slzH ........................ ., ........ Orig. 2.91
BOYS HAWAIIAN PRINT
Swim Trunks
511•1 8-11. . ....... _ .. , Orig. 3.91
BOYS VESTS PRE SCHOOi SIZES
Pre Khool 1l1e1
Broken sl1e1. -~······· ......... -.. O..lg. 2.11
BOYS FLARE BOTTOM JEANS
NOW 2.88
NOW 1.66
MOW 1.88
NOW .88
::!~.~tr!r.:.. & ·-~·~.1.1.~~ ........................................ 2 /7 .oo
BOYS SWIMWEAR CLEARANCE
All 1l1H •nd ltyles
luy now. ... ...... . ....... Orig. 1.66-1 .tl
BOYS NYLON SURFER JACKETS
MOW .88
........... ,... 2 33
All slll"K ... -................................................................... •
SPORT COATS
JOO CMtS .. Mlect fHM. 24 88 .
MOit oll 11 .... Sl119le ..-4e11W. '--tM
Orlt. tlf.9$. $47.91
MOW
SLACKS
GIOUP' I GIOUP' II GIOUP' Ill
C-..ol Slocb o,._ si.u D,_ Slocb
Flore let ar ,... Moa11foc:t11.-.t1 Sbe JO to 4J.
Coseoet bettw lolhlor~. 1e9. s1 ... J0-34. Slock• lO te 40 All weol. Ora,, 515
$5.88 $7.44 $9.88
FAMILY SHOE CLEARANCE
Clearcuice ICl'l'lllfl 011 sllHS for tfie "91re fOMllr -loy1,
9lrl1, & wor11e11's. ll111ltod 1111a"!ftlet ••II i,,ekn 11-, "'' -11
wort\ loo•ln1 for ro11r 1iq,
GROUP I GIOUP' II GROUP' Ill
Orl9. J.99·4.ft Ori9. 5,99·•.tt Orl9. 6.99-7.99
MOW '1" MOW '2" '3" MOW
BOY'S KNIT SHIRTS
100% Acrytlc k111t h1 solld1 ..-strlpn. Shick 2(,22 up 11ow for bock·to"'"hool ot this law price.
Orl9. J.99 MOW
BOYS OENIM WALKSHORTS
As1orted-fancy p1ttern1
Sl1ff 6-18 -· .. ·-..... -.. -·-...... -Orig. 3.50
MEN 'S DEPT.
MEN'S WHITE DRESS SHIRTl
NOW 1.88
Short 1J .. w11, spread collar 2 88
~EN·$4 ~~~·NcH···cliF'F"" J'R1ls~·9:HIR~~w •
fashion solidi, med. 1prHd coli1r 3 88
All Penn-Prfft ..................... Orig. S.91 NOW •
MEN'S SHIRT CLEARANCE
Varlaty of 1tyl11 and colora. Sport Shirts 3/S 00
& Dr111 Shlrt1 .... OrlJ. 3.98-5.00 NOW •
MEN 'S TANK TOPS
Gre1t c11ual wear. F•1hlonable .•trJp••· 1 88 Sl1e1 S·M-L-XL ..... , ......... Ong. 3.ta NOW •
MEN 'S POLO SHIRTS
100"/. combod cotton, short tlffv••. crew neck.
Si1e1 5-M·l-XL ... _ ................ Orig. J.91 NOW
"LONG JOHN" SWIMSUITS
Knit stripe style.
Sl1•1 S·M-L ......................... Orig. 6.98 NOW
SUMMER SLACKS
109 pr. 30 to 3'4 waist.
~ifi'o '~OL:ort ··swiM ··surrs .............. .
1.88
1.88
2.88
.Denim blua
51111 S·M·L ........... ··-·. Orig. 3.fl MOW 088
MEN' SUMMER CLEARANCE
Varlaty of 1ty\e1, Jammars, La1ta11; Knits,
Long John Knits, Plaid Bonn.
....... -. ............... Orig. 3.f1"'4.98
MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
MOW 1.88
Ai1ortment of colorful plaids & 1trlpe1, short 1 88
1lffv••· Sizes 5·M·L·XL ..... Orig. 3.t8 NOW •
MEN'S ACRYLIC KNIT SHIRTS
Short 1le1wn, crew n.c:k, colorful horl-2/S 00
1ontal 1trlpe1. Sl1ff 5-M-l-XL . . ................ •
MEN"S FASHION SWEATERS
Sl1•v1les1 styling, 100 -r. Shetland wool. 3 88
Sizes S-M-L-XL. , . . . .... Orig. 7.11 NOW •
MEN'S FASHION SWEATSHIRTS
Wtdnttdar. July 28, lWl N PILOT·ADvrmSER
STORE HOURS:
MON., FiRI. 10-9:30
TUES.0 WED.·THURS. 10·9
I SAT. 10·6
•
1 SUN. 12·5 .
L-P RECORD ALBUMS
TOP' NAMI AITISn
GltOUP' I GIOUP' II
97c $.1~57
CORNINGWARE STARTER SET
t P11c1 sn.
NOW $9.98 9 ONLY
ORIO. $19.88
TABLE MODEL COLOR TV
18" SCREIN fl ONLYJ $277.
Olt/G . $329.97 NOW
. "
HEAVY SHAG CARPETING
H>RTIL® POLYISTll
NOW$5.'99
19,
I COLOl5. YD.
ORIG. $8.97
PIECE GOODS DEPT.
POLYESTER SINGLE KNIT MATERIAL
Popular stripes. 99
7D yd1. only ....................... O:tlf. 2.98 NOW • VD.
NYLON /SPANDEX BUBBLE KNIT
Gr••t for Blou1e1 & Top• 3 4 4 90 yardt only ................ Orig. 4.79 NOW • YD.
SPORTSWEAR PIECE GOODS
Cotton• & cotton blends.
Assorted prints ........ Orig •. 7f•1.t8 NOW oSO YD.
POLYESTER DOUBLE KNIT
Seed• of fa1hlon color1. 3 33 51/61" wlda-1peclal purcha10 ........... _. ..... • YD.
DRAPERY DEPT.
INFLATABLE FURNITURE
Chairs and plllow1.
50 only. .. . ......... Orig. 2.00·3.98
CURTAIN CLEARANCE
NOW .so
Many pattern• •nd color•
Dra1tlcally r9Cluced ._ ................... . 1.66-2.44
HOME FURNISHINGS l
FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS
B11utlful ro•••
15 only . ............... . Orig. 5.00 NOW 2.88
KOKO JOE® LAVAWARE
Cuti 1tatu1ttu
75 only. ....... . .. Orig. 1.ao.2.00 NOW oSO
ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS
Sewerel 1cana1 available
29 only .......................... Orlt• 5.ff-4.99 NOW 4088
Short 1feev••· crew nffk, 1tyll•h 9.am•trlc 1 88
,'-'_'n'_· -•'_' '_''-"_· ·-····_· · _ .. _ .... _ .... _o_''_•·_'·_" __ No_w __ ._ I CAMERA
1
DE'PT.
SHOE DEPT. I ' L...-----------------...l PENNCREST ELECTRIC EYE CAMERA GIRLS STRAP SHOES Eaay, •utomatlc operation 10 88
Antlqu1 gold-fltlrfect for 4 88 Tak•• 126 film. -·· ... Orig. ,,_95 NOW •
Back·to-1choot Orig. s .tt NOW • PENNCREST TRANSISTORIZED CAMERA
GIRLS SLIP-ON SHOES Fully 1lectronlc ••po1ur• control. 19 88
Whit• crlnkle p1t1nt 2 88 Orig. 29.91 NOW •
43 p1ir only. Orig. 5.9t NOW • POLAROID COLOR PACK 11
BOYS WING OXFORDS Instant aaw or color plcturas. Push 19 88
Black sprue• color S 88 button OJMratlon ........ Orig. 23.18 NOi.t •
Bur now tor achool. . . ..... Orig. 7.99 NOW • WOMENS FASHION SHOE CLEARANCE BELL & HOWELL SUPER 8 PROJECTOR
Too many itylH to /lit thim-•11 4 88 8 88 Salf threading, warlabl• •peed, will work ,, 8S 00
hffll & f11t1 .. Orlq. 7.9'-10.99 NOW e • e w/Fllm-o-sound . ., ......... Orig. 105.00 NO\¥ •
WOMEN 'S HIGH·STYLE SANDALS '""'"·m••~··" quollty-om"t 6 88 7 88 WORK CLOTHri's colors. Orig. 8.99-9.99 NOW • • • 1if
MEN'S BOOTS
G1nulne l1ath•r-up·to-d1t• 12 88
styllnR. .. Orig. 11.99 NOW •
WOMEN'S CORKSOLE SANDALS
Crinkle p1tent upper• In all colors.
S'>Klal purth•ff . , , .. , .
SPECIAL PURCHASE BOOTS
for women-<rlnkl• pet1nt-
Gr1nny 1tyle too ..
················ 2.00
'7.99
GIRLS STRETCH BOOTS
Granny 1tyla
Girls 1l1H .. 6.99
RECORDS & STATIONERY
BOXE'o CHRISTMAS CARDS
All 1tylu
Buy Early and Save . , . . .
LADIES CARRY·ON FLIGHT BAG
Hhwy--duty ¥1nyl
14-only. . . ...... Orig. 29.SO HALLMARK® PARTY GOODS
Asat. occe1lon1
NOW
Odd lots ... ~ ......................................... -..... .
.BE'DDING DEPT.
BEACH TOWEL SPECIAL
PRICI[
17.88
PRICE
~uirY,1=~~~-~· .. ~ .. ~~1.~.r~ ............................................ 1.44
SHEET CLEARANCE
Percale Pinn Pr11t 1trlpe1, florals.
M°" '''"'· 3 88 4 88 ...................... Orig. 4.ff.S.ff NOW • • •
PENN LEVEL LINE 350 SALT WATER REEL
:•;~l;.r~~~.r .. ~.~-~.~· .. ~. tOr}g. 17.9f NCW 10.88
WILSON PROFESSION PLUS TENNIS RACKET
l only-2"'4'h-1"'4Yt NOW 16.88 .• Orl1. lf.ft
LADIES TENNIS TOP
100"/. polya1ter dou•I• knit 1 88 f only. .... . .... ,,, ......... Orig. 11 .9' ' NOW •
SLIM·QUICK BELT ,
~~1!n11~~l~-~~--'-~--~-~fl~.~ .. ~~.~-~-6:r: ~9u9"'9• NOW 2.88
BYRON RELSON ALUMINUM SHAFT GOLF CLUBS
I l'°n>-3 Wood• 48 88 1 1at enly •... -~ ....... , .. , .. Orl9. 104.11 NOW •
BETTY JAMESSON ALUMINUM 'GOLF CLUBS
I l•on>-3 Wood• 48 88 I S.t only. . . ..... Orlt. 15.81 NOW e
FOREMOST liild) COVERS
For wood~/ m•tch
3t only.. . ........ Orig, 1.29 NOW e33
GOLF YARDAGE METER
[a11!y ln1talled-flt1 ma1t cart•
I only. . .. ........ ~ .. -Orig, S.H NOW .88
GOLFS SHORT GAME
Play In your own back yard.
4 only. •. . ...................... pr11. 19.98 NOW 6.88
LAWN DART SET
Outdoor fun 1ame.
26 M'lly ........... -................ _._}Orig. 3.9' NOW
WORK CLOTHES
MEN'S "BIG MAC" WORK HATS
Or•y •nd putty only
2.8a
Slzff 6% to 71/,. .............. ...... Orig. 1.98 NOW WOMEN'S WET LOOK COATS
Solid• & i.t.ft•
Ml ... .U.. .................... Orig. 25.00
HOSTESS lo FORMAL WEAR
NOW 14.88
Cul-a 1own1 2se1 30•' Jun• •Ml ml.,.. ........... ,, .. 70• 70 Of P' AL!s~sn~'11 "BIG MAC" WORK GLOVES
Cowhide lqther with flannel llnln9, ltrown only
27 1Nlr1 only. .. .. . ,. .. Orig. 2.4t NOW
MEN 'S "BIG MAC" WORK SOCKS
.99
.99
Lo'11• •to<k., whlto. t••Y ond 3/ 1 00
FASHION ISLAND-NEWPORT BEACH
ran41om. Sl1u 10·11 Orl1. 2/1.JS NOW • ,
-·~ ......... . . ·"I' ._. __ .,_ ',___ I: D ,.__. ,._ .... ~ ""]:I _; . -'
~ .
o\I ~
I
'JO'
•
. r •
J J PILOT·ADV!RTISCR '~, W!dntiday, July 28, 1~71 Wtdnt5daJ, Juty 21, 1qn s N
~
DAILY PILOT J If '
!
r
I
• \
r
1
• • '
' .
. «t "!.' ••
L'AUN Rt ARTS ,
PMiNI Print S.1ket ' '
t...nlr. •••••••••-•••••••-••o••••••••••W 0r1,. "'"
'
MAPLE OXBOW IE D
HeH -"' Poot ... ~ •--•r· ,...,an 11 ............ 0r1,. n .oo NOW 33.00
' . I-PC. DINING ROOM SIT
NOW 3.18 ChlM caWMt, t~•le aM 4 chalra. 544 00 P•on •I"""--······-O.lt-HfM NOW . o
SLEEPER SOFA
MUL Tl -COLORED ROCKER
Web artcl vtnyi tvlll"t
12-only. . . ....... Orl1-IS.H
MULTI.COLORED CHAIR
WM and vlnyl Mint
11 ..... 1y. -·-·-··············· ···-·-°'"· '·"
~ --~·
.~
NOW 10.88
NOW 5.88
.. ,MO~.-FRI. 10-9:30 ' TUES.-WED.-THURS. 10-9
SAT. 10-6
SUN. 12·5
18.81
PORTABLE I TRACK PLAYER
J ,co ster ... AC •r 12 welt.
!&a.only. . . Orl9, 79.tS NOW 59,88
DELUXE I TRACK TAPE DECK
Ir Automatic Ra41 .. With 2 4•h•••• ,,..11...._ 50 00 J-only. ....... . Orl9. 7t.ts NOW •
12"xl" MARllLE SLAB
lclaal for candy Miiklnt1.
6-.nly ...... ···--• .. ··-·'-•···· ..... Orlt. l'OO
5.J'C. COl'PER MOLD SET
A 1Mit1 t.. any lll1h.
HOW 1.88 Early AnMrlr:aft •tyle.
l•nly ....................... Ortw. Mf.H
NOW 288_.oo l ____ G_A_R_o_E_N_s_H_o_P ___ ... I ;,:~~ .~~~ ... o.,,. '" NOW 1.88 ' SOFA CLEARANCE
74"1)1' ••.... : ..... ···········Tr·-··:;-Orl9. LIO
HOUSEHOLD GADGETS
l91nethlftt fer any n.-lf.
.S" eur t•ltle. ···········-·····Orig •• It te 1.49
N,OW 3.44
1
NOW 044
DELUXE ELECTRIC HAIRSJiTTER
ay Clalrel w/llthhtl mlrrer
a...nty •.............. : ............... Orf1-2'.11 NO~ 19.88
TradltlOMI M' CNtern,.rary
l-onfy ....................... Orlt. 2".DO
LOVE SEATS
Tradltlonel 1tyllnt
2-only. .. -·······-·········· Orl9. 22'.to
OCCASIONAL CHAI RS
TradltlOMI 1tfla.
2-only •...... ··········--Orlt. 17'.ll
' .. 1 h ; 'a " · 4 " \ C)CCASIONAL CHAIRS
.. I _li_o_M_E_· _EN_t_E_R_T_A_IN_M_E_N_T __ I ~t1r~-··· ... '"'°': o.,,. ""''
• • -OCCASIONAL TABLES
BOOKSHELF COMPONENT STEREO
W•
1
"'
1
""'"" • 248 00 2-lflly. -·········· ···--~ Orig. ~-fS NOW •
Cocktail. Intl •r CllhrMllll
.~ly. -·-············ Orlf. I0.00 ta ff.H
NOW 244.00
NOW 188.00
NOW 144.00
NOW 99.00
NOW 59.00
20" PUSH ROTARY MOWER
>Yi H.P.
J-only .•............................• Orit. 14..ff
21" PUSH ROTARY MOWER
l Y, H.P.
l-only. . . _ .............. Orlt. 11t.ff
NOW 68.99
NOW 99.99
21 " POWER PROPELLED MOWER
l Y1 H.P. 109 99 1-only. .. .... . .. Orlf. 1St." NOW •
22" ROTARY MOWER
J Y1 H.P. Pow..-Propell..-
2-only .............................. Orl9. ff.ff
1 GAL . PLANTS
NOW 69.99
BENELL! MINI CYCLES
SOcc tlemu t• cl11r
2•nly. ......... .. Orl9. 2".00 NOW 225.00
CAMPER TRAILER DELUXE
1-only. D1m1n1tr1tor F•hl •••Y 1tyle. Orl9. 164t.OO
I TRACK TAPE DECK
st.,.. • autOPflatlc.
NOW
6-only. o.mu. _ ......... Orl1. 4t.ll
SMALL STEERING WHEEL
P'oem grip, 1r chr°"" •!Mk•
7-only .... ·······························--Orl9. t.U
1499.00
NOW 39.88
NOW 4.88
' ' •
A11ortld Yltl1t:11. 66
72-41nly ............................................................. S,oclel • OIL & GAS FILTERS Hl:BACK CHAIR
TRADITIONAL STEREO'coNSOLE Ool• ••1~ ....... 88 00 /I · k I 299 oo I.only. ·~-'················· ..... Or't. lff.tS NOW • Odtl• •n end1 to tle1r :::~~:~::~0:1~v·tf·" . NOW . • l ___ F_L_o_o_R_c_o_v_ER __ ,_N_G ____ J :.;:,~N'.?,.BAS~~~s ' 1'°'101 1 •77 ::;·C~VERS, ~~~~~~~:·'•· ....
NOW ~
15" acrMn. 238' ·oo F•r m .. t car1. Aut. colort. 14 88 1-enly •..................... Or'9-:Jlf.00 NOW • 1a...,,1y Orig 2t t!I NOW • ~:~~!'.'~~~~~·~:~. ''"'' Now 438.00 T~~:~~~~~~~".;~~=:NTSNow 7.50 ,,l._ ____ A_U_T_o __ c_E_N_T_E_R _____ l MAG ~POK: WHEELS ..
\ · Solltl on• 11lec:1. Ch1wy1. Old' P'orllL
STEREb TAPE RECORbER ' ROOM Sil& RUGS TRAILER HITCH CLEARANCE It.only. · .. ·· ........... o.i,. >Us
~::1: -~-~--~"or1,.:;...f~ NOW 148.88 ~~!.•:. ~-~~-~-·-·········· .... Orlt. II.It NOW 49.88 ~=:. ~~: .. ~t~~--~~ al~.·~. 11.11 NOW 8.oo
•ELECTRIG DRYE!I
Whlt-all1htly tl•m•ted . .
1-o:"ly ............... ···········-Orlt. 12'.00 NOW 99.00
HI -LO PILE CARPETING
6 color• hi ch"'•·
...... . ....... .......... .. Orlt. I.SO 1111. y4. NOW 2,99 PINTO MtNl BIKE CLEARANCE
31/1 H.P. lrl111• •"llne 78 88 J-only. Derr.on1tr1tor ... Orl1. 15t.OO NOW •
STEEL DISH WHEELS
ChNm• flnl1h. (heyy & Ollis.
2Wnly. ... . ............. Orl1. 22.ts
OIL FILTER CLOSE OUTS
NOW 18.00
NOW 15.00
0
PORTABLE STEREO
With ltr ... l5fht1
Odd• 'n endL lome 1l1u & 1u fllt•rL
SO.....ly .................. -............... Orlt. 1.s+ NOW 025 I I MINI A.M. RADIO WITH SPEAKER
NOW 42.88 HARDWARE & PATIO All·t.oo•lot0< ool14 "•to. Spoclol 14.88 :S.-ly. --·--·--, ....... _.. 0r1, •• ,,,, •~----------------" 14-only. ....... ···-OrJt. 24.11 NOW CHROME LUG NUTS
-----------------.. ; I .l ____ Rl_ .. •_N ..... • •. 11U ... _·_R_E .... _D_E_P __ T_. ___ .. I ~;~~!!FT SABRE SA:,,,... NOW 6.88 r;;.~~~.!, ~~~.~~~~~~;,:~:.:$ ,.,. most tlf'I. Dreu up yevr wfteeta.
It-only. ... .. . Orfg • .It Heh NOW 025 i
NOW 3,49 ' .
' G60 WIDE SCAT TRACK TIRES
MODERN ROCKER/RECLINER
1.-.W" Of frlln Ylftyl
2-on1y •......... ··-······· or11• 12'.oo
-: ' 99' oo· ~P.!Ev~!Eorl!.~:. ;~:IRS 1 88 1000 RPM meuure 20 00 :!!i!~ ~~~ ·~--~·~.'· ...... Orig. SI.to NOW 40.00 :
NOW • JS-only . ... . . .. Orl1. J.44 NOW • I-only Demi. . . . . Orlt. Jt.tl NOW • • + Fed. Tar ..
' ~-~~----~-------..... ~~---~~~-~~--..... -~----~~~~----..... ~-~~---~~~~~:
FORMllT-II 4 Pl Y. TIRES
STURDY I LONG WEARJNG
NYLON Pl Y'S BLACK
............. '. 15.88
"" " . " ... ..: ; . ·15.88
'"'" ""."... 18.88
"''" .. "". "'.'.'.18.88
G71•14 •••• , •••
H71.114 ••••••••••
571111 ..•••••••.
H71111 ••••••••••
' + PH. T4' & Ohl rtr-Wlll .. w.ih SJ.00 eme
21.88
21.88
21.Sf
21.88
...
" '
GP 4 PLY .POLYESTER CORD
78 SER·IES TIRES
WIDE TREAD BLACK or WHITE
IU.CI WAUS
700.112 ••••••••••
C7b11 ••••••... •
.,.,, .......... .
15.00
18.00
24.00
"''" """"" .. 28.00
WHITI WA.LU
"''" """""" 18.00
C7bl4 ., ........ 2t~OO
,;, ... "" "'". 23.00
,.H71.114 , , , •• , • , , •. 29.00
""" ............ 3t00
WIDE TIRES
BANSHEE -70 PROFILE
4 PLY STURDY WEAR
WHITI WALLS DILUU
17h14 ............. , ...... 19.88 + SJ.11 .... Tu
"''" .................. 19.88 + "·" ... , .. ,.,.,,. .................. 22.88 + n.n,.. Tu
'"'" ......... '"""" 19.88 + ......... , ..
•71•11 . , .•. , ••.••.•.• ,. . 22.88 + S2.M .... Ta
' l
t
' ' 'I
+ J.4, l•• & 01.t Tlrn H7h11 • , , •.•• , . .• •. .. .. . 25.88 + SJ.ti .... Ta ,
• NSTAWD FREE INSTALLED FREE INSTALLED FREE : ======::::;:;============~============:::::!;;:::====~====================!
' :
. ' . • "' AL!s9!!!!!11
•• t;ASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH
........... ---~ 1~-fi! -.. -----
t
I r
I
I
--
1
1
J '
i
'I
\-·-. . . . . . . .
' .
..
1.75 oi. SUPER SIZE
·· ''Colgate''
DfNTAL
CREAM
With MFP
FLUORIDE
•sgc
32 01. SIZE
''Micrin''
MOUTHWASH
& GARGLE
For protection
against germs.
·:1.09
klNG SIZE
''Nestle's''
'.CHOCOLATE BA~ j
Choice of ·
AlmURd,
Milk, Crunch',
Fruit & NuL
Touch of Sweden
HAND LOTION
16 or. SIZE
Aqua Net '·
HAIR
SPRAY
Re&u lar,
Super, and
Unsc ented
•4ec ea.
1S01. SIZE
''Breck''
'Gohltn Formula'
SHAMPOO
Dry, Normal and
Oily Formulas
.97~
BOTTLE OF 200
''Squibb''
ASPIRIN
Analgesic
and
Effective.
A speci~ ~Old or ricb ...,rnen1s, and 1 09 rooistmirers that bring saltne~ to
yoar ski• le(. 159 l&er. •
i ' l I
16124,. OZITE
Floor Mat
i I
The all purpose irn1oor foutdm1r I I
mat made with 100% nylon i J
fiber lace bonded ta vinyl I
I CIPSUUS
80111• 1 .39 of 100 •
200 Intl. Units.
-.;;-· 1 Hair Color
...... -I BATH
In Al mi Assort meat Replar or I Of C1lors Unscntad
.99c· •ea~ . ..
COOL IT THIS SUMMER .
•1:1f 11l'1llI1J:f 1.
"J & B"
SCOTCH
Rare Scotc~ •••
I& pro1f
~.~·1·15 75 1811 • . ~. . . . ~ .. Old Charter
Kentucky Straight
BOURBON
) Jll. Oll.16 '"'' Y,Gal.11 95 ~:;s •
Natura l Vitami n C
and acerola. 250 mr.
10D's 2.49
~
Tanqueray
GIN
YAGo Sant' Gria
WINE
Imported from Spain
241?. 1.69
.
TOYS! TOYS!
"Brute" Buggies
Buddy L ••• Buggys are coming .••
and what could lead Ille pack better
than sturdy steel
brutes in a variety
of distinct style)
tu choose from.
Flat
KING SIZE
6.49
PILOT·ADV£mS!R 8 ! .
. t'! fast . ' , 1'al1 Relllf ••• With
lflfdache, MJ11tall1 ·
Sinn C1nrutlea, GfillHd
'Swl1g-Away' .Cllds 11d Flu. UL111Gtir; ..
• 9Jt 'J 9· . ' ~' . #245 ' ..
Rer, 1%.49 •
. -I ~
"NO-IRON" Suets .:
Cn111 -white "m11Sfin sheets that wi!f
aive years of service and satislactio~.
Smooth, even texture, balanc~
weave.
' PILLOW CASIS
4M6" 2~1.59
'
I
.
' ~,~!ll 2 i1 .99 " Cotton Muslin so smoct• ' :
Twin Flat er 2 69 Fitted B1tto111
•••. 2.99 •
• •
. Uoolle nat 3' 29 • or Fitted'
• . Rof. 3.19 •
'Tropical Print'· SHEET
and even textured. Garners . '
wf"Stretch-e<lge." for fast. • ·
elf artless bed·maling. ·~ .f.
Twin Sire 1 9§ Fittt~ or ,
Flat Bottom •
Can101 Alo•1 -NG-Iron Muslin. All--0ver PILLOW CASES
print flat and fitted styles tn choose 2 , 1 09 fro111. Assorted ~un & shade colors. o ..-......;':!"i \ PILLOW CASE 1 •
-• 42r36" 2 i2.49 ~f===~
PUROFl(O
=~~ ~,~~~e~~ 11 9 I Reg. 1.91 • I Vitamin E
· !Offs
3.98 97~ .. Twin flat or Fitted Bottom 2 69
Reg. J.41 •
F•ll Flll or : 3 99 F1tte.eo11011
Reg. 4.49 •
Bed Pillow
-HIGH QUALITY
VITAMINS
VitaDlin "A"
HAWK Super Beetle
Sliii11 S11 TIJ -With 11 chrome
engine and chromr.
~~·9i~.
Drive Ya Nuts Puznr
"Stripe" SHEETS
t11111 "l1llip r -II'• tooes of color
racing across a sky ofJthite. On No-Iron Musli~ that adds !Eavty and decor
ID any be&oom ieL
PILLOW CASIS
42136" 2:2.49 · ·
JOO':: Shredded foam
F1U. In a va~~ soft comfortable L
·'f
•
' f.< ,,
:;:,
"
•. < ~i>
:~:
·.< .Jl
~, .. • .f
.;>;·
:i'
;:;: •
25,000 USP Units. 99c Rec. 1.09
Bottle of 100
\
Vitamin "B-12"
full flat or 3 69 R11.1.21 ,99C ' ,·_ Fitte d Bottom (tlxlS")
Rt1. 3.99 • Twi1 flat or Fitted 81t111m 2 gg
Rec. l.41 ,
Training Pants SNAP.ON Shirt
!EN DALL ••• "Cu ity"
;';~~~ Sll3P w/short ~ sl~ves &
diaper
~ tapes.
1e1.11c 55c
~·
• 121h ll. J1hRS11's Ba•y SU11poo
• 24 1z. J1kRs11's BJ•y P1wier
• 1 & IL 11•11111'1 Ba~y Oil
• 11 oz. J1•ns11's81q l1tlt1 ggc
\ •
25 mcg. Re(. 1.09 98C Bottle ol 100 =-------Vitamin "C"
Jscorl~ ltld .. · 1 29 500 "'? ltf. 1.&9
littlo or 100 ,
C.J1c11trJt1 •••
400 Intl. Unils. 5 98 Rt1. &.95
ltttll ,, 100 •
Baseball Helmet
Ml' Tilt ... 30" bat
llitl 3 plastic baseballs.
Tllat dr~e !!le .tun nght
Into Ile 1ame. 97c
---
~'Masterpieces 11• in Chocolates'
A most delicious usortment
of milk. and da!I -ates.
forcating fo• 1 35 lib. Boo
R11. 1.15 •
~"Baby Roth" or
~ "Butterfinger"
6'1 "".1::::11t~~;;;i&l;;;11tei' Rer. 11c 2 : 13c
B1rs l
.. -
Deli cious orange slices,
ium drops, spiced midget
1eJ1ies for snack or treats.
~~ .. 5~DIC£ 2 ! BBC " 2 lb.llC I 0 I~
' PLANTER'S "Nuts"
• Choice al 7 ~ ot. illJ lllasl-1 ed, M'•edVll!itty 01 f3 or.
~~~ .. Peonant'1 Mired •uts. VP'"'
' . .: ' ~ uura packed for 's"'r.eu.sc
-~ ... ....., R lk =·---' 11. -.;.:;;....; YOUR CHOICE 11.'
•
"
•• . 9 PILOT·ADVERTISU
. . , c >C :::a c
Neckties
•t~ ~· . '~ose fiom nlinf;rlil-• , ortul styles & fairies
• including "wrinkle-
·~ 'free" mater.iii.
1. Sitel ·~now at
' ', tills )erril~
\ liaYings.
.,.1~9
2: '2.50 l ~ ··~'::2li::::==ZJ . -~
Wrdll6day1 J1ly 28. 1971'
6'hot.cANS
·friskies .. · ..
;:~:a r ·'JUI' ._,__...
11 Asnrted
Flnfrs.
bavesbads
,feeling solt
aid smooth.
f)Radio
Desl11 uri1s .• .-·a1n Mu"'
the S-pace age.performer. Witf'I
I toutb of a llultan, ligh~ up
·a blue cylindrical sea tllrough
~~y~os:: 12· 88
1 PZ7&0 Rer.1s.aa •
PANASONIC
14oLCANS
''Comet''
CLEANSER
Will S1per
ChlorilDI
. Ii llACl I. WHIR
~i:i. .... TV SET
'•scittlllll•"' 12" handsome pc.bbl•
· with 75 square
inches of
wiewing area.
#AN132 / 82.88
Tape Recorder , , ~__,, ·sb .. i1 .. • •••• portabl• POLAR010 Square Shooter
cas~e~erecorderwi.th .CAMERA -Now you ca~ fJuilt-1n FMIAM radta. . . shoot square film that gives
Push btltton controls. you instant color s~.ols -
79 95 ::::;:YQu.26 88 #RQ-23& • Reg. 29.88 •
aEALTONE Table Radio
lnstamatic X15 ~.~A
POLAIOID Rel 309 2 77 Color Film ·1'11 aa" •
"FLASHCUBES" .
•1 WESTIH&H~E
12 beautiful
i~.l;. 59c ol3Cdu fnllll1 Kaak -flM pictures with()11t flasll
batteries! Drop-in loadiag.
bigger, brightet view 5x7" Color ENLARGEMENTS ~;~~-15 88 lJ llm!J P11otoca11t 49c 19.95 • Made lromyo11negatm.
KODAcoLoa x Color Film •
cha ... 1 ...... cx.121, JuM•o Color Pnnts l Bc ~~fz::12 Exp. BBC •1 ilnlllJ PlotRGlor made ~ .,,
TOUR CHOICE IL YDOI llodaoJlor or GAf Hegali
Wednesday, July 28, l 971
64.LUQUID
.Downy
fAIRIC
SGmNER
It's
Cuc11trated
·1.19
FAMILY SIZE
Cascade
Automatic
Dishwashers
"Dishes
Sparkle"
· 200 Ft. ROLL OF
Reynolds
WRAP
ALUMINUM
FOIL
,I
OAILY ~ II.
TWIN PAK
''Aurora'', :
10 ROLLS •sac
"Designer"
Color Prints
PAKOFSIX-1201.
, Pepsi-Cola .
,,-~~~~~~ ......
RAND 99 TOWEL • C
. llq.1.11 :
was~ci: 2:9gc
i
rau.s1u 2 FOi BIJl~11un1 •• llil. Z.ll
sijlod in -179 1ssorted ,
soft cotors. ••
.
•Steam & Dry Iron
8 Fully automatic fabric dial gj>1'S
e<m<:t heat 15 steam venb-
giws greatr< 8 49 cGVerage.
#f62 R1i. 9AI •
e 2-Slice Toaster
With 9 position toast control,
binged crumb tray. Nickel
chrome plated she!~ reressed
~1-~111e!s. 1 0 49
Reg.11.&9 a
s can Opener
Opens rms! standard size cans
-even large juice. Magnet holds lid lor you.
:.r::.~ 8. 49
11Polilfenf' DENTURE
WANSER POWDER
t11st111t' peoe!Jaling actioo cla!ns 55c false teelll Id.
-lla11DL
SAY.ON BRAND
Platinum Chrome
DOUBIJ IDGI
Razor Blades_, 44c
R11-19c o,._ 1110
9" Paper Plate
P11111111ld -for your
summer picnics.
Rq.1.Dt
P•kaf150 59c
STYROFOAM Ice Chest
30 q1.1rt-fdeal for picnics
& beath parties. I 7*"xl2"
dJ".foam 69 . chest wlhandle. C
Rec. 1.09
•Jamaica' Spices .
% FOR COOKING
'Corn Cob'
PIPES
Tobacc!l Pouch
i "Sh.fmk" -leather
grained 55c Piat,_ UQ llSIHI 1 IL 59c MINCED
Onion
'"· 1.00 66c
1Pipe' Tobacco
.. Po cket" in Tuxedo, Bond .
Street. Briggs. Granger and
Ve~et aromas. 11c Ya1r:haie1
Ill. 21C IL
Playing Cards
Poker. C
cLAiaoL Hair Curler
Set'°" lialr in mlmi1'~ No ~" water ••• no waiting. Works ' · : '·
oo all types of liair •• • 1 o 49 . " You'D look lovely as ever.
Rq.1&.49 #Kll • ,
SCHICK Hair Styler FOR MIN
Styl~ groom, and dry your Rec. 11.81
hair professionally at home.14 88 Comb attachment for easy
styling & shaping. (#33&) •
Sulrud -
"lualit1 ICup"
Bag ol 51-7 oz.
• , foam Plastic for
keeping drinks
hotorC(lld.
LADIES' Syringe ·
1,~ ~ by •
FAULTLESS
•spectra" -2 ·qt l4!ex
syringe. Bag with bJbina &
shut otf. 1 69 leg. 3.19
(#125) •
I Ho~t -Bridge,
Pinoc~~ 39 ••c.55c Ice Cream 1cE cRUM Toppings
l.3dios', for ~Isom or play.
In ciloice of Rt1.1.99
wMe, bla<k 1 49 skippeT blue
colors. •
AD PllCES PREYAll..
lhnUy, Illy 291-
"" S11d1y, A11. 1st
EsiJ:: 55c
P1i 1f l
Orv•stleis 59c P1k 11 &
I
SMUCKEIS -1111. Jin
• c•1c1l1t1
• l11ttusc1tca
• Cara•1l 11•
1t1irnmrs
R11.41c 39c
UCH
I
·-.. ....._. -: ·---. . --·t> --· --· ------. 1J 1(..;... -----> --• '» ·-.. __ ,_.,._ .. . ., --">--il-> ---r • .J . , :)lllllO'-· •
I
,,
1-
I
' I .
I,
t
I
(
J I ~L ... PILOT
<:&poGoH zoNE DELAY Japan~s Pn ~h ers Do· Better in the S·um~er
1:"~ GIVEN OKAY . ••· 1 · ' ' ~ .11~ , · ~KYO (AP) -,., pen·, to a_par ~ for!IOf... . ~ lwaentl seekq work.as part-~ UIUAlly have bacb to someUmes they ~ven thank us railroad slop ovaluffln&. It
., . nothin1 lib the_ ~~d sum-"ptoplt ~-ftrt-a •'Y time · pc&.Wn. Most ot tbe tM pbitform: Pusben have 14,\· because 'the,· want to make sakt 200 paase nsm were IUf-
Un • SA.CR.AMEN!fO (6P) -The mertlme to ~ up the overcoa~." li ~,,., "ID pushen co.cne trom t b e Ue trouble placing thelr bandS the traiD ud nOt be late for ficitnt in each car. But it u -
,4 ~<lain i Almnbly 'fOCed 41.JO Tuaday pusberl' ~..-SWJUJ1'f ft ~11( t~t 300 railroad's rlit!J.ar atafr. They Oil shoulder ~adts. wort." plairu it ca.nnof enforce: ill
; -"!'"w& --~for a on&-J'tlt moratorium on 1be pulberl--. are men passengers mto tbe 111ne ~a Und ~ nlitl 'hours. "But sometimet: a paslfngtr -Bot distortelt faces preliSed recommendation. It bellnu
~ . .!_ ·-mdng cbane• m 17-aquare-~loJed_by tbr. Japanese Na:, roach." . · i W~ .'\& 53 ~ a enda up fa~ tbt P,.latf~," against doocs sometimes mir-pre11Ute will be alleviMed in
Su JIJa ,~Mf'a City mile area ol tbt Santa Mm:dca honal RailwlJI to stuff com-Stuffing 11 a.n art. jUdotat, .!}tit ~ say.s nimble says Watanabe. In iuCh ror discomforts,' especially two ~ ihrtt ye.ara when new
Council ICll *tf!!lil't "-" U It llffxmtalk ~ l • muW1 '1to co.acbel. "YOU' don't. paah too tovr but han<IS ~than atrooe arms cases, especiallJ 1f t IJ.e during sumIDEr wheo coacbeJ lines ~ cov.stru.cted.
; wanta lit ..... a mlD1on , In winter, says H)'otchi.ro just ·around the . .sbouldet are the JJ.USfter's best ¥ts. passenger • a wom8', fe ~re like i. sauna bath. ftl~o Ueda, a coed of 1J.
·· doll.In flii• d ciourte. -'I'M vote wu Ute mWmum Watanabe, an UBi,slilJlt staUoa blades, which 1' the Q1?!t ef· f 11 1 e n I e r a Qtinging apologize fir#. then folll;lw p-1be Ttar,.:;,eort Mj n i s t try comp\aµls th.it ~ take
. And ~ areo't even needed to aend the bW to the master, he and bis fellow ftcllvt poln&;" .,y.t Waw.aJie, precariously to flt Io w stnicUon1 anl! shove bet in ., rttQmmmeMed la.st year that advantage of crowded coachM
1 aure if tl:l!IJ ._. to 1f*X1 Senate. pushers 1et UO J>&Men1er1 ~ who beJpa interview college passenger.a at the ed&e ,of • "No one ever complaln& and l he gov emment-operated to paw women. ·
$S,OOO"far a ltllllr lo aee if thr , ,. •
~ ~ )le I IOO< .' ,. ' . ' • I 1;, .
ST":::)~ PRICES SLASHED~ .OUT THEY-GO •• HURRY,,Ll~ITiD QUANTITifS·
detaDed econom ic and . 1-ll!llilY _, ... tht poul-
. hie ~ (If the San J111n
Hills Country Club.
The vote wu t-2 with cne
:. abstenUon.
' Voting "yes" were Chennak
; and Mayor Tony FOrsief'.
Voting no wert Councilmen
' Bill Bathgato and JOlb Gam·
moll. Jim Thorpe ablWned,
· leaving the luut deadlocked.
:; "I think we should first find
· out If the purchue price is
,;. wilhin our raoge," sil.d Gam· ,,• me.ll .
::: The ~· did detmnlne,
' however, nact.17 what part of
• the property ii for aale.
"It would l>o oil ol the golf
· course. ttM: ltnJ~ known as
the San JUan HUJs Country
. Club, and nine acres whidi is
:, divided ~ween a drivi ng
' range and acme undeveloped
;~ land,'" Mid City Manqer Don
il-Weidner. • .:~ '1be area which the eOuncil
::: wanted to ftlflsider for the
~· pennanent cf'vic center site
. · wu the nine acre parcel
;•: which lies betwl!t!l1 the country
·:· club and the proposed Santa
:;~ Margarita. de Las F1orea
··! hospital. .
::, "The whole thing is L-1 limbo
" at present," saMI Weidner.
~· •'The proposal isn't dead, but
:. the eoundl haa given no
·. further directions to the
staff."
Smoki1ig,
Pregnan cy
Give n Eye
NEW YORK (UPI) -For
some 10 years medical i;cien-
tist.s have been noUni &hat
women who smoke dgaretle8
during prepancy are more
likely lo have low b~welght
bablea then womtn who don't.
Now coma Dr. Yerusha1my
, with an imposing statistical
base from which to conlirm or
refute. namely 13,083 pregnant
women and the blrth-weighta
of their babies.
The relaUon betW'ffn amok·
.· hi& mothen and low blrtJ>.
weigbt babies ii stalil!Ucally
""'· he confirmed. But then he producod relllod atatlallc:af
findings fnxn the same base
which confused the meaning.
These findinp he c a 11 e d
paradox ea.
It ia established that Wants
weighting five and. one half
pounds or leas at birth have a
much higher risk of dylng dur-
ing the first month than
heavier ones.
Yet the mortality rate and
the deformity" risk or the
babi~ of his smoking mothers
wu considerably lower than
for the babies of tht women
wbo hadn't smoked during
pregnancy, Yeruahalm y
reported.
"The healthiest low birth-
we.ighl infants were found for
cooplts where \he wife smok-
ed and hl!'T husband did not
smoke," he said. ''The most
· wlnl!nble wtre prod~ by
· couplet where the wife did not
smoke and the husbabd .amot-
. ed."
Thb Jalt paradoi: caused
him to oommmt ironically
that "it Is dlfticult to vbualize
a b}ologic mtebnlJm for an
association" between a smok-
ing husband and his wife ha v-
l'lR a skkly lo• birth-weight
baby.
Hil paradoxes put together
quesUoned the CllIT'elll con-
•ictlon of many obstetricians
Ind gynecolottst. that smoli-
lng dur1 ng pregnancy can
CIUMl Jow birth-weights In in·
fant.s -or, u ·Teruahllmy put
It, "clgareUe ~oklng acts as
an e:rogenoua factor which tn.
terferes w I th lnlra·uterine
•velopment of the fetus."
The womtft dJecked Wert
• ruembe:rs <:l Che Kaiser Foon-
•• daUon ueam. Plan which la a
: Pl'Plld _. """ provam
: oporlllnl Id tht Son Franc~"'
: .,.... Y4c'mtJ,almy is 1
.. biottljllflcl• at the Kaiser
i FOtlndltbl Jll11wd1 lnstltute
: ond . Ille' llll••ll(J ' • f Cllllomla' 9dioof" l(,~lk
l!eeliJI. ~ '
In .. orst i>t -otbe1
END OF MONTH SALE!.-OVER 1000 ITEMS!, ·1~\~v~~~~.,
GREATLY REDUCED! Quantities LIMl·TEDI nlv
LISTE ·D 'EL.OW ARE -Just Som;e Of Qur Grea ' Values!
HOM FURNISHING ~.p~. ·MEN'S & BOY'S D.... Ladies 'urnishi~gs Dep•. LADIES· FASHIONS D•,t.
0%to603 10%t0 6030FF 20%to90% F 20%t0 70%0FF
UTILITY SHELF 2so C~SUAL PANTS & FLA2R~. GRANNY DRESSES JAMICA SETS 200
REG . 3.99 •••••• now REG. 5.97 ••••• NOW Val. to 8.97 • . • . . . • . 2oo REG. 4.98 , •••• NOW
Pictures •••• 403 OFF DRESS or SPORT .SHiRTS PANTYHOSE i~~Y(f'~ 300 500 REG.·2.97 • NOW 2,.,300 :i~ 2.00 NOW , · • to
SWAG & TABLE LAMPS -BOY'S.SHORT SETS 11p'""' 4 : 1 00· SHIFTS AND CULOTIEs -
Up to 19.97 Vr1!ue • • • $600 REG. 1.97 ••.. ~ NOW 100 BRAS & SLIPS .50 REG. 6.97 '. .•• : NOW 3oo
TOY Dopf. '
O%t0 75%0.FF
AUTOMOTIVE Din. ; HOME FASHIONS DEPT.
I 0% to 50% OFI . 10% to 50% OFF
CYCLONESETTNING 13 oz. SPRAY PAIN! 00 BED PILLOWS CLOS E-U P 63 4 ,,, 2 : 100
REG. 9.99 •.•• NOW$ 500 REG. 88' .. NOW 2 : 1 REG . 2 5.00 NOW 2 i 300
1
.
· BARBASOL SWIMMING POOL SEAT COVERS 00 ASST.AREA RUGs2 ~.300 SHAVE CREAM 1101.4 iloo
2 11a1,P1011ic 99c REG. 4.47 ..•.• NOW 3 Up to 3.97 NOW • · lnfl1table.
AUTO SEAT CUSHIONS Room-Size Rugs INTENSIVE CARE Don't Cook Your Goose
REG. 2.99 .•... llOW 150 REG. 99' , • NOW 2 : 100 REG. 19.88 • • NOW 1000 LOTION : 6 Oz. .44
CHILDREN'S DEPT.
10%t0 75%0FF
HOUSEWARES DEPT.
10% to 70% OFF
.JAMAICAS DOW CLEANER
REG. 1.97 ••••• NOW 1 OO REG. 88' •. NOW 3 ! 1 OO
SUMMER DRESSES IRONSTONE R~G. 4.97 & 6.97 200 300 -997 NOW • • • • • to 45 Pc. Dinnerware •.•
SHlnS/CULOTIES BEER GLASS SET
REG."3.99 •••• ., 2 : 3oo 4 Pack, Reg. 1.59 ••• sac
' SANYO ~
21v12 12i' PORTABLE T.V.
"
. s110 PHILCQ
811 PORTABLE T.V.
.RJG. 69.97 5900
NOW •••••
REG. 69.97 5900
NOW ·• •••.••
'
WPSS4 MOTOROLA QUASAR ' CfA4SO HITACHI
14" POrtable COLOR T.V.. 18" P9'hlble COLORT.V.
.. I i . . . . .
REG. 269.97 21900 .REG.,339.97 · 29· 900 NOW • • • , NOW' •••• ,.
'
SPORTING GOODS DEPT. Electric Appliance Dop•.
I 0% to 50% OFF 103 to 50% OFF
FA M OU$
RODD Y RODS 503 0FF
SALT & FRESH WATER
TENT CLEARANCE ~: 30%0,,
Woll & U11nbr1ll1
SHOTGUN AMMUNITION
NOW )99 12 GA #I shot
REG. 2.39 ..--------------------.
M962SB PACKARD BELL
19" PORT ABLE T.V.
REG. 139.97
NOW •••• 10900
SS26S
Ol YMPIC STEREO
REG. 199.97
NOW •••• $16900
WEST BEND 30 CUP URN 1 , 7sa REG. 10.88 •••• NOW
G.E. FAN 20" I loo
REG. 27.~& •• NOW
WESTMARK
POPCORN POPPER
REG. 9.88 \ ••••• NOW 500
EP402 RCA
14" Portab le COLOR T.V.
REG. 269.97 22900 NOW •• , •
1000 WAS l E Kl"G
FOOD DISPOSAL
........ ~. 241s
nrilblo _, ar.okfns and • ·•
noa ........ Ylnllllalmy1rr============;---~------=------+'-----:---:---:-----=-----------------------------:•r--;:==========~ =~rllle~ *CHARGE IT* COSTA · M. ESA . *STORE HouRs* :::~ ;:"::.:' m~ • IANIAMDfCAIO -3088 BRISTOL AVE. • JUST OFF NEWPORT 4t£. Daily 12 to 9 p.m.
"becaUM: tt Is mown .,.. 1,,. • WHmPlONT CAlD ~ s 10
I •· ol •·rt re •r • at. to 9 p.m. an~ ••N """''"' , v BETWEEN SAN DIEGO FREEWAY and BAKER ST. the average, 1maller than • MAJTll CHAIGI Sun., 10 to 7 p.m.
thoM ol tall women." lt.============'..r---------------------------:----------------;------------------~========:'.
i-~ --,,.,. --.., >-w----... ___ ... -~ ;.;.__ ,, r )).~ -·I>-··-. -..
4 PILOT·ADVEATIS(R
Retailing
Career
·Outlined
By JOYCE LA.JN KENNEDY
Dear Joytt: Please lnrorm
me of career pos1ibllltle1 In
the flekl ol retaUloi. My main
Interest b In becomlng a
buyer of women'• clotblng, but
I would also like to know
abcKlt other possible positions.
-L.B., Saa Jose, Calif.
Hundreds of d ifferent types
of rel.ailing jobll and careers
art found in department
stores, diS<.-ount and other
chain organizations, and with
independent merchant!, of-
fering ...
• Rapid advancement lo
micklle management potential,
Career
Corner
especially at larger stores, due
to a high ratio of execs to non-
execs (I to 10).
• Progressive retail~s are
now giving early responsibility
to trainees, realizing that
young manager types won't
stick around for low--challenge
duties.
• Fast evaluation of your
job performance in the mer-
chandising area -either your
department is making money
or it isn't, you know where you
.i.n<1.
• Sucressful retailing execs
(buyer level and up) generally
receive high pay.
CLUES FOR YOU: Do you
<have an ener~tic, "wilh·it''
approach to the work you
unde_rtake~ Trading ability?
Intelligence and enthusiasm?
The knack or getting along
with people? Do you enjoy
browsing through stores? Do
friends ask your advice about
clothes or othe.r products? If
most answers are yes, you
may find your best·buy ca ree
in 1 of the 5 major divisions o
retailing:
( l l M E ROlANDISING
which includes all of the com
pany's trade operations, fron
buying decisions to the actu
sale of goods. l-1ore than hai
of all peCIJlle in retailing a
employed in merchandising;
about 60 percent of all relai
ing execs are in merchan
d;s!ng. \
(}J STORE OPRRATJON
a division responsible fol
maintenance: and operation d
the store's physical plant an(
supplies, and the warehousinj
and delivery of goods. Also
development of new brand
stores, and security operation;
are included.
(31 SALES PROMOTION
activities of a large store are
handled by those with a
creative flair, and include
advertising tcopywriting a~
art), public relatio ns, special
merchandisinR events, windo w
and interio r displays.
· I.fl CONTROL functions are
financial in nature
economic soundness or the
business. merchandising and
stock control, accounting,
fin ance. \\:age and ta x
payments. and credit.
(5) PERSONNEL operations
are much the same as in anv
industry, except for season31
hiring needs. and emphasis on
basic training prograrns.
EOUCATIONAL RE·
QUIREMENTS vary with the
job goa! -from less than a
high school diploma lo a 4·
year college degree. One re·
cent study by a relailtnR
educalor concludes 1ha! the 2·
year junior col!ege retail pro·
grarri is adequate for students
seeking careers in retail mid·
management positions. The
sam~ study says that many
retail merchants believe the 2·
year college retail graduate is
more job-stable than the 4-
ye a r bus ines,s.markeling
graduate.
However, not all merchant
employers sigree. Some prefer
a 4·year degree l business.
liberal arts, or many other
• majors) r or management I
trainees. Others will accept
high school graduates or col·
lege drop.out~ of any major
Th.is i~ a decision you'll havr
to make, preferably after con ·
r;ultalion with several up!'('r
legel retailing execs in your
communlly. • • •
FREE BOOKLET : 1\e '.loll·
tlom.I Retail M e r e b a n t s
A11oclatttm will 1end JOI •
w.lagle copy of the II-page
bookJtl, "Opportunity 11
RetaUblg." For a copy. send
yoar req..est m1 • postcard to
Joyce Lall Kennedy •l this
HWlpaptr, aitd allow geveral
walu: for dell\•ery.
Chock tho Mod
Popular New
Column Alive • .
'Chocking Up'
·-
Wr!trit~)'. July 28. 1971 Wed11rs61y, July 28, 1971 DAil Y PILOT JD
HAV! YOU VISl"l'ED OUR NEW STORE:
30222 CROWM VALLEY PAIKWAl-ANO HIUHURST IN LAGUNA Nl6UR
l'OUNTAIN VALLfV-11'6.I M...,.ile • .. T1h1
FOUNTAIN YALl..EV-16!•1 1-i1tDClt ti• t. (t i-
ll TOl O-El 1 .. 1·11 111.UllllCI ltOH
loWNTtll(Ol"Oft 11.\04-llUI ._,, ltyO 11 AllMlll
.,..., ........ ..._ •••• "" .... ' .... l •llJol ,,
•stMUUTlt:lt ......... w..i~ .i ...... W.I
$)54 Pledge $)09 Glo Coat
"""~ FINI' W•x
27 OL c •• Fvmlture
Pell sh
'~-•::' 71 c
• Uael
FANIASllC
.·SAYlll&S
$391·.Easy Care
Ladies' Shifts
~::.~ _.;;s s294·
l<•?•in, b•i9kt
P"""· ""P"'•
,o lld •• ,
·.~$12 88 Metal Folding
$5'" Women's ·
No Iron Shifts
. fold•"1J h.td ""'h. ·
t l,.l,J.,1.1~ 1 'h" rilic~. co-
!;:; • f..,,ob1• -"''... •
G•ect for co"'p-
1"9 or gu••N..
Gu~~·:.~11 ·Twin Bed Size
Electric Blankets
~~~ 7o;;:~,.~:·~,~ s 119 s «>yon, 20% 1-n ,,..i!h 1 nyl..,. binding. Gold,
A.._.,do, l lu1.
SJ.98 Scootor
& Jamaica Se\•'---'H'
.... $294 $1.G4
Co110" o<oot11 .. h &
ffubt. •nil 11ylo11 fo·
"'°ito wit. Wo-11'• 1i11l. Reg.$)" Children's
Tennis Shoes
1-1....., coHOfl c:lu<• upp1<1,
l<>ng _,,,;ng rubb1r ..ol .. ,
lull 1u1hio1> iMOIK with $)47
orch •uppDl1l. ll1d, 11 ...
o .. iit Ploid. Si1K S to 1~.
$488 Contour I
Plastic Chair
S•le of Wo111en's 'I" S•adals
S•le! Women's
9' S•ad•ls
Mold.cl' of tovlil1o ,, ... , .. ,, .. ,.,. ~ s2 99
f it t i lt•r, y 1 t
llrD "liJDr lho11 ·
-•al, A•<><odo,
l o"g1rin1, Y1llow.
12" Qt. Saucep•n
or 13" 8" Skillet
0~01 •• ., J>Of<.10; ......
••@•I. H•o"Y"'•ight, du .. $) 99
obi •. In A.o<etd• o"d
O rang•. 'l'ovr Cho«e,
8~' Globe Swim Goggles ......... 58'
$10 49-3 Lb. Polyester
1 ~~ .. · Sleeping Bags ...r• .,..,
-· ~ Spn s7w
. $2.52
. 1113 \\'\\'Hour Glasses ........ 4i 99 '
l ••u!olad •ilh
P vrololt~ p1ly· ••l•r fob.rfilt Cot-
"'" poplir1 c ..... . 1 4-Pc. Canister Sets .......... 14"
77' lodiwidual Dutch Owens 69'
~ae r.: .. · ~'. ..
Qffllty K1liM1r
71l35 llnecul•r•
$)687
11 ...... 1
.....
Cltoic•
$)49
... ,g.d Mo ........
t• h .... with full Sne 64c
fl•w bro" •-P· $ • ""•'· c...... 247 ~ l 1•d -lop
q uality!
r::'\ $6 99 Zebco
'~Rod&Reel
' Fresh W•ttr Spl,..I .. s499
l olofttad 111 of'
'707 ....... & 'Ill'
11"·11" Tiny Tonk•
r.i-"rY Trucks •nd <•rs
1.,:11 ,. '••I ., 11 •• 1 &
l ....... lif1ti-1;,.... 99 c
fotl, colorful, ri<hly
d.1oil1d.
-·
COSTA Ml.SA-DOI Ha.-SIYll. 1t WllloOtl U.
'°5TA. Ml!'SA-W f 11111 51
MUNrrNGTON llACM-•I "°""'"II e.-.1 ..... ,
HUNTINGTON llACK-... dl .. [I ....... H~N TINGT~ •&a.c;H-W.,_ ' *°lnOINll
75~.'"' Alka
Seltzer
Bottle of 25 44c
Reg. 59c Styrofoam
~Hot or Cold Cups
~ PeckefSI
7-os • .,,.)Iii• •tyrofoo"'
cu~ \11p c:ldnko ~oil••
or coldlf" 101111••· Pitnic
, 6. porl)' fovo1ilK 32c
• 79t Pick tf 100 P!aSlit Sp11ns 1r f1As 59t
"Mayfoir",,..ith
AC odop•••·
•lop -~lort
••~•· Co rl-
O.T11•• to"'P .,,.;,Ji rod;o
to 1nho'lt1 "'"Y d•ok.
llodio con b1 plPY•d in·
d1p•ndDn!ly of liliJhl & _, .. ~ ......
-... -~--.... ----·-' il..w. ... ~-"'. --. --------------' .ll.-.~· -
I
I
•
Job Unit Finds Times Are Hard·
•1 RUDI NlEDZJELSID ......... ,.. .•
'"Cu you belp mt aet •
job!"
Tbt-qvut\on ii always -the
nme. And it'a bunt at least
20 or 3'I limes a day tl the
'YOU.th Employment Service of
Huntlqtoo e .. c:h.
'lbe anawer 11 always "yes." a1lbou&h I.here ii never a pro-
mllt Lo provide 1 job. But the
vnploymeni 1tTVice is willing
to belp.
"Jt'1 frustralin& sometimes
becaUM tbt economy is down.
Sometbnea we bave to pull
jobs out ol the wall for tbeie
kids," says Janey' Koch. a
rnernMr of tbt Junior Women's
Cub operaUn& the )ob referral
Men • Ill
Service
service in the ~luntington
Centu.
Through painstaking work.
often as much u 100 hours a
week. the Youth Employment
Service ha1 been su~ful ia
rinding 280 jobs for youths ag·
ed 15-22 since it opened in
ti.tay. But there are 700 more
standing in line.
"Right now we only bave 10
jobs av.ailable. They're mostly
for babysitting and housework.
Tilete are no jobs for boys.
It's rully surprising because
we generally have half 1 dozen
requests for yar d work,'•
lamtnted Mn1. Kodi's assis-
tant, Joan Sutake.
The Y o u I h Employment
Service will try to find jobs for
any kid, even if it's only two
or three houn a day. But it
has been .successful in seeking
out only three or four full·timt
jobs.
"If tht economy .,.,;eren'l
down wt would probably have
a lot mo~ lid,, placed in sales
joba tban we do now. M it is,
they jutt have to take what
they can pt," sald Mr1. K«h.
Son1t boys and girls come to
the office with hl1h ex·
pectations. "They t h i n k
they're going lo make a real
killing and earn $6 an hour,"
she said. "But the okl.er ones
are more aware of the
ecooomy and the way things
a~ and are willing to sett.le
for less."
Mrs. Koch and f\.1rs. Sut.ake
are especially proud of finding
a job for pr«tental student
wl)o now drives a ratering
truck along the beach to earn
h~ tuHion rmney. They say he
would b~ve had to drop out ot vet)' intelligeqf .and yeey !?-
cottege 1f the JOb· Mt not bee.n dependent tor a pencn in bJs
available. poaiUon. He says ht would be
·'The boy~ are ea,er to take , williq'to wub dilbes. answer
most anything, but the eirls I.he phone, or atufl en'(elopea If
are a !iii.le more picky. We !IO!tlfl>ne would hire him,"
Joee a few jobs to girls doing &aid Mn. Koch.
hru.stwork who aren't too hep Altbou&h Dyen have ~
on the y,·ork," said Mrs. d.iltributed to 500 businesmltn
Sutake. through the Huntington Beach
""They think they want to do Chamber of Commerct. many
it but when tbey actually do, more jobs are neflled to fill
they decide 1rs nol so hot. But the demand.
we also have others who really Jobs need not bt lull-time.
like tha t kind of work and 'Itlt office will even :wpply
have set up their own cleaninr workers for jobs lasting only a
r~~:':r~::~om dilfiL'ult !:n_ ~ ~~ldM~
tasks so far has been to locate somewhere bttwetn $1.50 and
summer work for a I5-year--0ld $1.75 per hour.
blind boy, who i:'! now \.\'Orking Any prospective employers
four hours a .,.,.eek peeling rnay call the Ywth Empl.oy-
bananas. ment Service at 817-'Tl55, 162-
.. l really admire him. lfe's 2001 or 848-5li37.
PILOT-AOVEITJSO f
FLAT• 01 FmlD . .
KING. SIZE SHEETS
50°/o Polyester Ji 50°/o Cotton
Never Never •Iron by Burlington
............ rr, s5t7
Matching CtMf $3.97 a Pair
Shoot• 'urchuod Without Ca, .... $6.97 EACH
For Top Sports Coverage
Read the DAILY PILOT
••~ ... .,..,...,~,..c1:s1r .... ....,. ~ .._,_u~
.r ·
~----
Army private first class
James E. Utt, son or Mrs.
Roberta Reed, 4107 Sea Shore
Dr., Newport Beach, recently
completed bask army ad·
ministration course at Ft. Ord.
hil father , James S. Utt, lives
•I 710 12th St., Huntington.
Anny Sergeant Tllomas L.
Orcllarll, son of Mrs. Billie R.
Orchard, 794 W. 18th St., Costa
Mesa. recenll y rtred expert
with the M-16 rifle at Ft.
Richardson, Alaska .
The expert rating is the
highest mark a soldier can
achieve on his w e a p o n s
qualification test.
He is a stock control clerk
with Company B, 172nd Sup-
port Battalion at Ft .
Richardson.
Anny private Dean.ls L. Orr,
son of Mn. Betty J. Orr, 558
S.E. Second St., Ontario, Ore ..
is assigned lo Ft. Ord, where
ht is training under the
modem volunteer army field
experiment.
His father, \Vi\liam L. Orr,
lives in Costa Mesa.
Na vy Seaman Jerry N. V.
Rankin , ~ of Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond L. Rankin of 1264
Starlit Drive. Lagun11 Beach.
y,·as graduated from recruit
trainin& al the Naval Training .
Cent.er, San Diego.
Anny Sergeant Jefl W.
Gammell, son of ~tr. and ~trs.
H. M. Gammell or 4607
Gorham Drive, Corona del
1.1ar, is completing the last sit.
months or a 3 year enlistment
at the U.S. Army base in
Frankfurt, Germany, where
tie is assigned to the 143rd
Stana! Batt a 11 on . Sgt.
Gammell is 1968 graduate of
C<l-ona del Mar High School,
Newport Beach.
Sergeant llnce A. Nelson,
son of Mr . and Mn. Glen A.
Nelton of 41&4 Birehwood
Ave., Seal Beach, bu .arrived
for duty at Hamilton AFB.
Sergeant NeltlOn, a security
J>O'lceman, is asaitned to a
unit ol the Aerospace Defense
Command which protect.a the
U.S. a1ainst hostile aircraft
and missiles.
He previously 1erved at Bien
Hoa AB, Vietnam.
U.S. Ai r force Sergeant
ftobut DeCubelll1, son of Mr.
and Mr.11. William R .
DeCubellla, 311 Bucknell Ro1d.
C:C.ta Mesa, has 1rrtved for
duty at Hamilton AFB.
Sergeant DeCubellls, a law
enforcement • specialist . i s
aMl.gned to a unit of the
Aerospace Defense Command
which protect& the u . s .
11alnat hosUle atrcraft and
miasilea. He previoualy served
•t Bien Hoe AB , VW!tnam.
Ainnan~W.V111,U..
t00 of Mr. and Mn. Raymood
R. Vaupm of Oil Cornell
Drive, HunUngton Beach, has
graduated at Chanutt AFB,
Ill ., from the U.S. Air Force
jet engine mechanic course.
1be airman, now trained to
lnapect and repair turbojet
and 1u turbine englnes. is beiJ11 aalgned to Ellsworth
AP'B, S.0 ., for duty with a unit
ol lhe Strategic Air C.Ommand,
Arnf.rica's nuclear deterrent
force cf Jone raqe bombers
;tuJ:rcontinental balllatlc
N1.y Solmon ApprenUce Ge«p l . lldey, dlu1ht" of
Mr. BIU1 G. B1Uty ol !Of S.
Olive, HurtUnctm Bbdt, was .....,.!<Id rrom 10 -a o1
'1tlnltvt lo1lructlon m
nillltory joumollam 1t tht
-lnlormoUon Sdlool, Pl. Benjunln llllTllon, lllcl.
14•V1 Pttty Offl«r Th1rd d,.. Mon w. r-. o1 ..
MJll:kln, co.ti Meu, hu
-to hit homtport ol
MlyJ>ort, Fl•.. lbolrd tht
IOlded miafle cruJHr l1SS
Albany ,. later a tdx-monlh
deplo y mtnt to the
~turancan.
---
HUNDREDS OF l·TEMS ON SALE "ICK U" TOUa Pall
SAU •-KUT AT YOUR
LOCAL a.I. ITORI
MIRROR TILES
12''x12'' SIJ:I
GOLD VEIN OR GOLD
YllN ANTIQUI , • • 79'
World's most
beautiful wall
._.decor I Do it
,.~ Yourself and sove.
"LAIN 49.:.
TAM JUNIPERS
ONI OALLON
Perfect for g round covers for hillsides or borde r
plants. Grow s 3' to 5 ' w ide
end l 4" high. The hardie s!
spreading juniper you con g row.
BUILDERS Best-
LATEX STUCCO PAINT
NEW! GIMITONE-
TUMBLING AND JEWILRY
Beautify and p~ote ct your l~f.::,..,""";;-;~:::!~~
home with thiS;quolity finish.
1
Glides on so fast you con I
a ctually point your home
MAKING KIT
Foslest growing hobby for oll oges.
kit include s gem tumbling rnochine,
.tumbling barrel and lin er. Assorled
over o weekend. Features
fosf drying. Easy clean up
ith soap 'n water ond offers 1
hundreds of colors for your
seleclion.
DELUXE 24"
FOLDING BAR·B·QUE
AD,USTA•U
-ILi OUAllTITllS LAST
Procticol -portable ond bea utifu l
describ e lhis barbecue brazi e r.
T h ~ ru st -proof grid is chrome
rioted for
eo1y cleaning.
•·•·G aalQUITS
10 # aAO
68c
4''
BUILDERS Be.~t·
IMPACT HEAD ,,
SOLI D BRASS with f111 g er~:p
adjustments for po rt cir cl e
polferns.
gem stone rock,, grits for grinding
rocks (coarse, medium, fine),
polishing pellets, jewelry findings
ond ce ment ond instruction mo nu al.
Nolhing e lse to b uy~
CERAMIC SW
~/ ~~ Se tifully styled to odd
1 gro e e nd lux ury to any
TOUa CHOICI -
YELLOW, GRllM
O• aLACK
room. mplete with switch,
12 eel of chain ond 15
/-;j feet o f cord.
\~~:Z'\ {~-"··. ~
NEW! PLAYMATE
COMPACT PORTA8LI
COOLE;.::.;R::::_..="",
• One-pi ece lid swings t.ip
O"d down eo s1!y
• L•d p 1voT ~ on cyc oloc
!or slreng rh
• foorT1 e d·in-plot e
polyurethane ir1su!otion
~
l"alNKLEa
STAND
• Holds 12 king size bo1tles
v1ith plenty of room for ic e-
'ERMA ICE
2 1/J ll. llXI 8
649
TUIT•
ROTARY
LAWN·MOWIR
20·1NCH
J H.P., 4-cycle Briggs & S1ro llon
engine. f ingertip safety switch,
self-locking handle,
1, BANKAMER/r.ARo
IUILP,llUI
,.,.
lllYN ... W.
1MllL.
ttATIU'.A-AW.
~
38''
UTM•na
LA R&aaa
1••
m1w.
TY·D-BOL
TOILIT aOWL CLIAllll•
Cl eo n~ 101le1s o u1omo t1c oll y
e verytime you flush.
In o tiew pla stic b o 1tle.
11 .si•t·•
-VALLIYYIEWIT.
LA ff.URA ILYD. P-.URTOll ,_L
CHAPMAN AVI,
PRES TONE
ANTl•FREEZE
Prestone onti·boil, e nli-le ok,
.. ·o nti·freeze w ith m oney b ock
, 1 leakage prote ciion. A must·
for ai r c.ond11ioned cors.
IL TOllO
COIT& MllA
'""'' "OCKFIELD -£.1?tt! ST.
• U.KIRIFllLD e CHAflllCM1'tt e C0VtttA • llCOMMDO. • GOLITA •. ~ tlLLI • t.A ClllCIJfl'A • LAOlllA HEIGHTS • LANCAITIJt • 1.U:. ANGllU • ... DA • ltlVIRllDl a SAN ll"NAllDINO
• MUOUI • ... e 9'111NO VAL.LIV • TARZMA • TlfDUIMD OAJCI • Wt.AND •VAN NUVS • VICTOflVILLS • NACllNDA HIJGHTS
7 ,. .. -------~ .. •> ... --,,,. :)}"Ir;·· ._,... , .... -----·· ' r-,,,. ·-·>---, ... ~~ ...... ---
I I" !~ "ffaiits Ba~btess
~ ' . ~ Scho.ol F ailur'es " ~ I
Chid,id by PT&T
By ROSERT STRAND
Mariners
Tells High
First Half
~·· .J
Puhlisl1i11g
Firm Gets
New Plant
Ht!ndricks Println1 Com-
J)any, a leadin,; Orange County
printing and publishing firm
for nearly a quarter of JI cen-
tury, ha s con1pleted the ac·
qulsitlon of $100,000.00 worth
of new equipment. marking
tht second phase of a major
ex~anslon progt'am.
Installation of moder n,
multi-col or offsf't p r i n t i n g
equipment was CTJmp!eted at
tht flrm "s plant in the Irvine
lndust:i al Complex, according
to . Rupert ~I. Hendricks or
Corona del M:;ir. pre sident.
The ell'pansion program was
!nilil1lf~d 18 n1onlhs .11go with
the company's move from
Campus drive to the ne\I.'
JS,000 square font p I an l
louted at Ji62 Kaiser Ave.
New Furniture
Rentals . Open
Apartment F'ui-niturt Rtn·
talii, Inc. aMoµnces lbe open·
ing of ifs Orang!'! County
sllO\\'room at 1877 Harbor
Blvd .. In C<isla Mt!s a.
The :i .200 ~quare f oot
showroom featur~ 1 wide
ra nge or furniture. ~Jectlol'I&
.,.,•ith rental and ltase prtr
grams to suite both the tenant
and · landlord or pro!)f:rly
manage r.
f!Jattel Buys Clf.cus
Net Income
Rise Listed
By Allergan
IRVINE 'BW l -Allercan
Pharmactuticals of Irvine le·
cond quarttr consolidated net
sales were $3,306,143 com·
pared to S2,746,020, an In·
crease of 20 percent over the
second quarttr 1970.
Net sales for lhe first. ai.t
months were S6.1 5'.8~t'I com·
pared to $4.997.048 for 1~70, an
incrta&e of 23 percent
Second quarter ea r n I ng s
v.•ere $257.861. or 17 ct!nl! per
share with mnre 1 h 11 re I
out&t anding. cnm par!d Io
S231.067, or 19 cents per share
a ytar ago .
S!x-months earnin!S for 1971
wen! S37fl,llOS, or 25 etnt5 ptr
shart, on 1,,79 ,72§ ihare&
out1t•11di111.
Toy Company Branches Out
By BOii THOMAS
Au.tlt tN '''" N1w1 Wrl!llr
HAWTHORNE IAPl -Wh y
doe5 a toy company buy 11
circus? .,
''Growth is healthy for a
company," explains R u t h
Handler. -president of Mattel.
Inc.. riew owner of the
Rii;t1llng Brothers-Barnum and
Ballty Cirt"Us.
"We had dont very well in
the merchandising buslnus.
Now It seemed like a Iocical
step to use lhe expertitt we
lia d bu ilt with lhe fami ly
audience and move into en·
ter.tainment, communication
•nd education ."
The House that Barbie Doll
Built is movina in many direc·
tlons. Besidel the circUJ, it
has:
-Acqulrt.d Audio
Magne(ics, a Gardana. Calif.,
firm that makes tape cas·
let~.
-Formed a movie com-
pany with producer ftobtrt
Rdnlti "Misty ", "Island of
the .Blue Oophins" for m"in&
family films.
-Developed the ~ti&an
Mus'tc·Maker. "a new fnrm of
m\lllc wltlch anyone e•11
plu.''
-Fomitd Frantturf. Com·
municaUon•. apctjaJl.Gis In
rea:ching young people and
familie$ through yout h -
orlenttd produc11 and
aervic.es.
M'llll.l"s diverslfkition was
dela!led by Mra. Handler <lur· Jrl&t a break In a conference
wlth the circus ptople, headed
by presi(ient-prOduoer lrvio
F;ld, in the exffuUve offiCt!
of the H1wtMrne factory.
"We believe there is a
powe rful need In fhis country
for parentl and children to
communlcal.e with tach other.
Our company has Detn suc-
ce1sful in the areas of com-
municating and motiVatlftg.
"If we can convert those
abiliti•• intO helping l.M famJ·
Jy unil find lt1 way in today's
world, then the company will
be a1'1t to accompllah 1eme
social iood and do ita thin& at
the same tline." .
The word "we" ~mt-eaaily
to Mrt . Handler. She and her
husbaM !'.:lUot began Mattel in
their .cara1e 2.1 ye art qo. 'l'l'le
coQl.ptpy s•Us an annual PIO
millloli worth ftf 8arhle1. iaby
Ttnder Lovea, Hot Whttl.l and
other produota in mert tl'11ft '°
countrJes.
Ker tiusb1nd ls ch4irman ef
the board, 1nd it rtrftalftl 1
mnm·11nd·pot> operat.l&n.
Th~havt two childr19.
three an6d!Udi-t". 'the firm
but !"IM Mr1. Ha~er
rem11kred : ''I'm still doin1
what I havt •lways don..
'
When the company crew so
rnuch that we nttded more
vice presidents, I moved up
frorn executive vice president
and Elliot IM!c11me chairman.
The clrcus deal happened in
1 fairly ca1ual way. she aa!d.
"We had met Irvin Feld
when he wanted to u:ll u11 a I
televlalon show based e" the I
eirtus. Wt asked him to come
out here, and we looked at the
show but it dldn 't seem rl1ht
for us. But then we began
talking about a purcb11se."
The re1ult: a '47.5 million
stock ei:chan1e by wtUcll M•l·
t.l acquired the tOl·ye1r.old
Rin1Un1 Brolhers·Barnum ind
Bailey laat December.
Feld emerged t_r.i,m tht
meeting to expre11 h I 1
pleas:IU'e wltl'I ti!• m1rrill1e tO
Matta!. Ht continua1 to run
lhe cirus -" we'rt tied up
with nperta arid we let them
do thtl.r lhlna." explaJ111 Mr1.
Handler.
"We have two circusff toor·
Ina Ule country, each on 1 two.
year run ," aald Feld. "Thia
has been our bi11e1t year Jn
history."
Ht expect! 'bu1inen to be
even better n•id year. twelve
new •r.-• will optn up eltlee
that hnen't been vltit-4 olnce
th·e "Gfe·atest Show On Earth·"
foldtd IU tend to work un-
der·roo r.
Wtdntsday, July 28. 1971 DAILY PILOT II
County Man Hangs High
Crocker Bank Taking 'Citizens' Off Building Signs
DuPONT
NYLON PILE
5oh ond curle d down yorP'I! fo• dill'len!iOP'ICI
•ffect. More foce yorl'I fo r longer weor. Mo,..y
lcvely celo1s ovool oble.
$ 79
sq. yd.
DuPONT
NYLON PLUSH
1001/o continuous filomen! nylon plu~h. Mein·
tO ins fresh look. wi1h li ttle effor1. Nylctn ye!rn1
ore 1o ugh ond long weoring. Cleon1 eo1 ily.
Mony lovely colors ovo•.lobht.
$ 95
sq. yd.
DuPONT
NYLON TWEED
Mull•·ce\01ed yorns with o different ct11uol
texr urt . A corpt t t!oiot imports 'porld1 ond
prcc1•c etity. Double lorT1•no11d iu!e betk.
fxci!•n~ color comb;11otion1.
49
OOM SIZE CARPIT
DuPONT ''501''
HI-LO NYLON PILE
Al\ nylo,.. foc e rof"ldt1n'I '••lured hi.lo loop,
double jule bock.ing. Re111ts fu tzing ond pilli11g,
Eo1y to mo•nloin, Mony 1mor! colors.
$ 88
sq. yd.
TONl·ON•TONE
NYLON PILE
Continuou' folo,.,,1nt ny!en pile c:orpet in o
deep, ,;ch hi-lo t11rtur!!d, tone-on-lone polfern.
R11 i,1ont lo 11'011 ond 1toin1. Do1.1ble jute
bocki"'9· Mo"y love ly cc\or1.
95
sq. yd.
•uPONT
NYlON SHAG
100% DvPont nylon foce. Double lult bocki110.
d11p luxurioui pile . losy to mointcif"I. Moth·
¢'1oof1d ond non·o tlerg enic, An orrcy of
dtcorctor coler1.
s 88
TRl·COLOR
SHAG
100°-' nylon pile. Double jute bocldng, moda
for yeors of enjoyment, 17 brillio1'll b reothrok.·
ll'lg color combinotio"'·
$ 49
sq. yd.
POLYESTER
SHAG
Oetp, tich shog corpet mode for yeors of
bl!t'Juty ond weor. So tough ond duroble i1'1
fol'f"l ily-pro~L Lo rge sele ction of brilli ont
Colifornio celor1.
$ 49
sq. yd.
RANDOM TEXTURED
POLYESTER PILE
A lu )(u1iou1 eo1y lo core corpet in c ~ •• ,,
1culptu•ed peliitrn. I 00% l'Olye•ter fiber r•
sitt• cru1l,;119 et11d mottinQ. Looks greet W.
ony decor. Mo11y lovely color\.
$ 98
CUITOMMADI
REMNANTS
$75.00 to 1125.00 v1lues tt sold l'y Iha
yfrd. MlftY; man y to ciloost fro"'.
•39 DRAPERY
50%0FF UCH e Lala I
•
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D~LY PILOT 5 Wt4nr.ie!•)' Jul)' 28 1971
YoU' Money OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List
Gambling in Gold • ..,_Mllv• llllw••W ..,ti,.._ "' • ...,_,......,, t AM.. ..... JIAJD. A-"-' MM
,,k .. * Mf IM.lv<H rt11ll er IMl1! .... _,._... IN'_...... Alf.A i'te•J.:"
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0 lng U lS HEW YORI( {AP)alrl(IV ~ '"'l°"'y El 31' ~E<1utr 0 1 ''"lD\lo ltl c ..... JV. J (' ~' A,,,,. 1\t
:•,,',::•. 'toll~,::~.!.-,',1~:1··.~·~,-",'t"•' ).i~ ~DI•" Crv I~ ""'° Erl<I Toe. -611'o b ~ 2'111 ~ r Tl" Jl"'-11 Armll Jf .. ---;: .... -_......,~,., 1~~,!~g:'t)°",.. ~~ .. r..,~:Ac~o T~ ;"' ~~11bll 2!1ro'~ c~~ ,:,.,f: f'lftc~.·,.,
C1111rl Ann ~\ff.•ftro101ro 6. 1 c 1c 111~ 1 l .t l'1tir1 or"*•!•.., Afrc !"" ~"" • t Ir 61~'1 ~Ji'rt1110 lie <OWltlt 6111k 6rll'lkt 61 , ii~ o ~n Cn.i 1t 19:W. Fob l1k :I\~ 2+. lt!EJ , .... t'-!o Pl( G Jt1 2tV. 11 14 8•----------------·li111wr1nc. &. 111<1u er10 k • 21111 2li\lo 00<11111 •\• l'°'F1r<1r11 E ,._ t \li 1tt1n J .W. l"•k~ itli ot Hid DG 1 Jt lrl•1 >1Kk' ,,..,.. ... Ar It 11 oon.tl LJ 11 \'< 11-.Flridl1r 6. 1\lo i.1i.1t 73\lr ,, .... 1"9'!Col I~ 2 Ml S• l'llb By llYLVJA PORTER
It ls increasingly J1kely that
ane day you U bf able t.o gain-.
ble freely in gold on .a U S
commodlty exchange -by
baying and selhng commodity
fu~ contracts for pre-1934
gold COlllS Just as you buy and
aell ecmmod1ty futures con
tracts for pork bellies
(uncured bacon) or frmen
orange 1wce coneenlrate or
pLahnum or soybeans on any
of the nation s 12 commoch11es
e1cbanges
Gold -once the sole and fo r
centuries the greatest of aJI
mon1e... -is to be treated as
Just another corrunochly
GOLD -oace the monetary
ba:ie for all paper currencies
and the only yardstick against
which the values of paper
currencies were measured -
Ls lo have its value determined
not m secret by powerful
governments or central banks
but by amateurs a n d I o r
professronals bidding <1penly in
an open marketplace against
each other
Gold is to ccme out <lf the
twilight of money and into the
cold world of commod1t1es
Before I get into detatls will
these contracts -bags of pre
1934 gold COJil5 priced at
around $10 000 a bag -be a
sound Jnvestment for YOU?
Almost surely NO
Should you speculate even if
you don t invest? Again the
S peaker
Rep Richard J.J an n a
iD Anaheim) w 1 l l dis-
cuss housing leg1sJa ..
t1on \vhen he de!Jvers
the main s peech }.-ton
day before the county
Bu1Jd1ng Industry Assn
dinner meeting The
Bf i\ meeting \Vlll be
he I d 1n con3unct1on
w 1th t h e Southl and
Home and Garde n
Show opening Friday
and contintung through
Aug 8 at Anaheun
Convention Center
answer is that YOU almost -----------
should NOT
But lets say you shrug off
my warnings, the futures
marlr.et.s are open t h e
Treasury ends 1t opposition
and y ou are eager to try your
luck. What would you do?
-YOU WOULD buy and
sell your gold com contracts
as you would any other com-
modities contract through
your commodities trader at
the brokerage firm with which
you have a cornmod1t1es
trading occount or through a
broker directly on the com
modibes exchange floor with
wbom you establish. a
relationship
-YOU WOULD need to put
down a deposit margin of only
around $75U for each $10 000
contract -a ishm margin
which would grve y O u
enormous leeway to win or
lose on your commitment
YOUR BROKERAGE
com1TUSS1on would be onfy $25
$35 for a complete round turn
-buy and sell -transaction
-YOU COULD hold your
futures contract for up to 17
months or sell it any lime 1n
the interim -or actually take
delivery of bags of gold corns
Gold is an emotional subject
and gold trading says David
callaban president of the
West Coast Commodity Ex
change will be o f t e n
dommated not by logic but by
emotions
AS AN ll.LUSTRATION,
Callahan c 1 t e. s November
1970 when the Tteaii ury
finally emptied its stockp1le or
.silver and when the v.e!I
.known foct that the dema nd
for silver 1n the US far e:'I
ceed the supply inspired a
widespread behef that the
i;r1ce of !llver would head for
$2 SO an ounce Jnstead it
promptly sank from $1 70 to
$161 caUahan remembers
wonder fu his voice st.ill Only
emotional response can ex
plam 1t"
Trading in gold also ...,111 be
marked by many more pltfalls
than trading in other c om-
modities -even though gold
1s neither a seasonal nor a
perishable product and gold
mined 8t the tnne of Lhe
pharaohs has the s a m e
characteristics as the current
product ol South Africa
As a world commodity 1l~
pnce in the open market w1 \I
be crucially affected by cur
rency revaluations pohtical
upheavals. changes 1n the
stockpile poUc1es of Russia.
and South Alrica,. moves by
hoarders 10 France India and
other lands where thousands
of tons or gold are b uried 1n
'backyard vaults '
WllA T S MORE 1{ you go
into the gold futures market
you w1ll 1mmed1ately come up
against professionals w h o
know on a hour lo hour basis
what s happening to gold
prices If\ mukels from Zur1ck
to Singapore who are deeply
fanuhar with all the forces
'\\.tuch could poss ibly influence
gold prices and who can
outmaneuver you any time
Jn fact says Franz P ick the
gold and currency market e.x
pert the pros usually stand by
early 1n Uie day when lhe lltUe
guy IS settling his trades and
the market is moving without
me&ilfJg They v.a1t for a
trend a fter that and then they
ride it -either v. ay
NEVERTHELESS T suspect
the mystique of the metal will
far outweigh in your mind the
drawbacks and risks of
l.rading 1n gold I suspect
you ll hot believe how high are
the odds against your making
a profit and for your taking a
loss until you find out ior
yourself
I suspec t the best service I
COllld perform JS lo give you
the rules the pros have for
trading 1n gold -so you 1l
have 31. least m 1 n 1 mu m
protf'CI inn Thus next 10
rules for gold lrad1ng
Bank's Net
LOS AN GE LES (BW~ -St>
c ur 1ty Pac1f1c National Bank
r eported a shght earnings in
cr cnse of J 8 percent on 1n
co me before iiec ur1t1es
transa ctions for the first six
n1 onths ended June JO
Frederick G Larkin Jr
cha1rrn@.n of the board and
chief e xe-cut1ve off 1 c er
rep<rled coosohdated first
half income before securities
gains or losses Qf $27 465 254
or $135 per share on
20 431 530 sha res outsl.andmg.
compared \\1th $26 479 997 or
$1 31 per share for the hke
year ago period -sd1usted to
reflect the 20 percent stock
d1v1dend o! April 23
Net Hlcome a fter renectlng
gains or losses from the sale
of securtltes eq u a I e d
$25 £09 554 or $1 2S per ,;hare
dov.n ~lightly from hrst half
1970 totals or l26 093 000
$15,000 INVESTMENT
80°/o WRITE Off-1971
OUTSTANDING ORANGE COUNTY
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY -LEASE BACK
Al •171, hly Pnot POI 1160 Cotto Meter t2626
Announc1n9
INVESTMENT PROPERTY ANALYSIS
IY
R!ALTRON COMPUTER
An•lyie Your Equity In Any lnve ltment Property
1nttocluetory Service l1"1clude1 • Look A+ Prfllent Pro-
..,+y St•tu1 A1 Comperod to Pait Perform•nce As
Welf •• • lon9°tange Forec•st
NO 011.IGATION-CALL JO• .,,,OINTMINT
60-4]53
f'ITE IARRm REALTY
·~-------
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A. 11 8•v .;>~ 1 c ''" Mtg l4'1o 11 I~""~~:,. Ji: ,l~ 2'f•11;,~ s V. 5.,., :••belill 11
All<I EqlJf tlo 9V.CU1nUI .Ii 18 1o » FUNDS lnlw Inc: 1~ 11 ll:aqtn Pf ni. tli< •rO C 251
Al vn Bae 1 1~ ll:W. llnUI fl 21'4 21i;, lnlO o so s"" ~ Rah.ii c 10 101.0 ::::~ !'rl,: Aloe C:•n\ 2 2 Jo ~lar~ Ml 2u: 1l~ 1n1r1 lf\d 2111 ll'o Ran11>Q E l•V. 2J 4 e1ta Mf<t :::~"~oo ~~ ~!: c 1~~"110 I i~ 1"' 11::r:ii~ ~n 1~~ 1~~ ::~~~c,. tt""' ~~ G:l~~;:1 ;: 1
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81 0 SOl'I .U SJ Del lntBr 2JA. ""AAmm .~~!" .·~ •'•"> Liii r"v 127 9().1 L••dv CP 1~ 14 •SI •wtl Cl 45 .tS\:i Sorman lOo "" "'"' '' N t 11ll12 O Liii (()a! 1 .... JV. Svbl< T v J o 4 8osEd I 136 A.m M11tl f 10 10 OS '-"" 1 Jl.lo tl'o SU<lll•1 F 11"" 17.\io Sos EO Ola U AmN G-rh 3 52 J t:.:..1, S•v !190 ~!:: ,G~oF 10 11 s.,0er E:I 11 , 19 Bw "' Inc Anct)llr iiroup C•n•O Jl ().I J 11• Lin 6cosf HK 15,., TIME DC 10.'r 11 fl enll A.lrw C•(lll & 59 '41 c:ip t 11 s..i 11 s..i LIQOr> c .,_,, sv. Tamoa• l117 m B GoSI r 40 Grwlh \ll.412 Mui l461Ji,1LotleW 7"'-~Tl•~'' ltt'ol•~BrsJMy 120 lftCm• a l I f l Lord Abt 10.., Loo E•rn ' '" T•V or t 211. 2~ fl• •IMy pl l F'O lnY t161DC>I Lu!h Bro 110oll311 lvnr:h C 19 l9 h Tay1r WI 1 l ltt14 8 llPtl lOD V1nt <6l.'6'66l M .. lnl In In 958 Modl•n G 15 lS'h Tech Pub •\'lo 5 fl Pol In ))f,O A5t on 4 1Q J 1 Manntn s 02 s 49 Me\ Pool '"" Jl'o Tec11rn P 115 Ill f!Owy H• t I Al<•How~IOR MJHGh eJ16JlMe Rl!V 1~1 1 T•lt<:om 946 BdWl'HelP11 Frid A ~ 17 6 JI Ma"1cnu1e" Co M1llkr! 'l t. 'J'I{, TV Com ! !'1-'o llrkwyGrg 70 FnO 8 7" 1.'ll Frltl<I •jl to:l M_, C 6V.. 6'/o T"'nan 2s>4 26\I. Bk YllUG 111 ~lock C().I . 1n0to 6 l JJlM Btowr 31'11. Jlilt Te ><AmO I . 1 'o fl OWi\ Co 5cltn ~ II j 2(1 Matl 11 lS 17 33 Mtul LI> '""° la:l't Th""m II ~ 4~• BwnSt rp XI eabson •l 0 t 30 Mou Flnencl McCor t.i 6.!V> T Inv C<> '""' '1" BwnS~"" LSO 8ayrll. F<I I j' t32 MIT 1• O'l 15 40 McCkJaY 1' , 2(1 T flnV '"' t V. '"' 8 un1wk 11 8aYrk G J6t 122 MG 12111'08Me<IC H 6/f T Tian Grp 3'/o •~Bucy E•!lO Btacn 11 106S101>5 MD 150416•4Ml!<l< M 'l5':\76'11fOIE Lt 3 Jli &udd Co f!ta<ft tn H JOU:IOMaeo • 8 •l!M1drn J'?~,-T acc C lo 3V.suOd Cool5
Low Bid
UCB Submits
on
Sewer Bonds
8...-9 ICen 9 'l'I ''l'I Ml hll'f"I 1l 71 13 ll Mt 0 In 10Vo ~ Trncnl G ,, .. 11'11 flud1F ol all
U led C I f B -'· h flt k G!h • 11 e •t Md AM unaval Md s~ W I.I~ 16 I'> Transo 0 li'l4 ll'li! Bud9e1 Ind nl a1orn1a a1111. asecnd$1~ 050 l!llM<>odv 1'921792Mdld Ct 1~; 7,TrJMob Ii .1 ... s""eu11f'oro 10
Purchased 11 rrutllon In Con BoSln Siie I 62 '42 MOOQ)"s 12 SI 11 SI Mid!t~ o 1 !lo Tr CO Po 36"" 37 IJ Bulcv&W 60 SOS! f'nd 11 'l6 11 Jl MIF Fd I all f XI M rtw Gt n 2J Trld41 r 4 4'1i Bunkt R•mo
struct1on bonds for Orange ~o~n F~~ ~ii ~;: :~~sG:;'.,. ,it;,~}~ ~111 ~u• ~~ ;~ ~~'~" ~ i·~ 11~\ g~~r~.J~l M'
Coooty Sarutat1on District 7 su 1oc;k C•lv n M o.,.c; s 11 'l2 M1ptr 1~ lo 1w. Unlt.c J~ 3"' Burl No 1 211 SUI(~ l~G111 651 MOmahl10.loll16!>M~l•GI 3•/o:i;~UnCH01 2J.1 ... But1Norp!5.I
UCBs b id of S~l percent canon 19lt1161Mut Sh1 l6l1 H 22 M" RT lf"l~~~ ~l~g' ~ ... ~l'oBundv 10 D~o J6t 405MutT_,t 200700MnllG ,V.,V'>USBn~nr n'lll •Bu~h•liO was the lowest of seven ~.tw $ 10 "'11 •9 NEii Mut 10 ia 10 40 Mil 11 ~ch '' ,,.,. us Envlp 11 ~ 11 Bu•h u~1 .. N'f vnr 16 9110 '' Nat Ind 1110 1110 Mof>wk II: ~· received by lhe district which Burnn F• ,, -,, ,, Na S•cur Ser Monr co1 1v, 7'\i. u5 T ~Ln """ 2e .., B•&n 10.681167Mooa P av,~ UMv A '"' l~•c (
covers poi:tions of east and ~~·,.'t~ 1~~1g~o ~\'!'~ :;, ~::~::nslC ~:7.~~~~,.T~n' ~1,.~!..,c!:~re"1~g
south: Santa Ana Costa Mesa c0,•-,,, , , ,1 ~ 1 \t Grwth 'l.I 10 77 M oT• wi 1:i.. 1.,, v111v Fa• 9:.J; 10 ~ Cat F ~•n1
" .,. J .. Pl 5k 7:10 711 MO!Ch M 6\.lo 6"" V& ~V Gs 10 ... IOh C611fhn Mn11 north of Paularino Street and C1P t •~ 1 .1• 7 n 1,,.0m 5 J• .111 Mo c un 33"" ~ V•lu• LD 6"" 1 ... CamoRlk ..s C&p Trn ll7714<;a Steck 106 61 Mu~ or I '>11 V&nO Ar 9"1ol0 Cam1> S1>1 10 the city of Orange 'A est of ~ntrv Sh •a~ B 79 N• Gr h t 19 10 SJ Mu 1111 "' 1 m V•11e• s 11 11 n con B •w "°
S C ·-" II f 'T Ch&nnlng FuM<lS NO'\JW Cel 6 •l J OJ NCC "d ,,,,. l'li Velcro Ullo I~ ConPAc l 1!.q antlago r!Xf\ a fl UStln 811&n r 77 J1MNfl.l wF<J ll0•1101Na•<1Co 1•,,.1H>.Ytnlron ~11o211 CdP nJ2]1
and Orange-County airport a'::11.st ~ ;1 ~ ;: ~:: ... ~1" I?~:: u ~:1ct,~ ,~~i litt 'Z:"~ :~ 11 I, W'" ~:~.~n 1
1 .IO
and the Marine Corps Air inc:.om 7 51) s 11 Nell s1 o 110611 °" N H~11 4 ' •\.'ow llHd• ri;, 1 c:' ~loh61l s Sl>'IC 1 89 l 07 NOfen1 JS 09 15 09 Not L 0 31 ,,..,. W•h NG 1~ 15>,i; Ct o Pll 1 "6
Far.illtymSantaAna C~•o.e Gr Sos oc1anor 11a 71tN l>atent '8 1>~ti'J W•!• Tr t'ltlOV.c•oTec 110 C•o 164 I lS Drr>e<I& 6 92 I 04 N Sec lhh "1> 9 Webb Re I~ ' C•rr t C1> 60 The issue JS part ()f the $6 Fund 10 111 13100 F"rld 1•4D1JJ•Not Snow 1 . ~.w,1Qhf w 15""16 cerr Gen Fron! 1116 101 Fund '2Jl00tNo Slv Sli SoWfldt n ~' C&rtW&I -milhon in bonds approved Shrhlc$ 11 e• n ,. one wms 15 75 1S 15 "' En<>GE 11~ ,..., We!!r1<1 M ~li.r. '' <••t eC~e "°
h b di Soec 10 61 loONtll 11Jll1JINJNal G !'1"1410,We sf M lt''OXl~c.tuT lol(l ?vtarc 17 1970 y StriCl Cll•mcl USl2(1JJ0Poenh ISlfl?:NChlsnF 25 h 21t.We11Gf ,,~ lS~CCI COP
f t f Co onla ooo Jl,.IM 11U13 79 N tlsn II 41"• ''"' W> <d f' 111' 11!tli CCI Co oil 25 voters or cons ruction () E<1ury , 27 , ,, ore sec 10 10 11 '1 1<1 •!•n a ,1,, ''~ w. n N.o. 9~ ""' coco cor.. 'II)
5tJ f r F p Fd 9•710~NcCtrGs 14"11l•V.WtnMt<1 1. , ... CellllfM(P 1 000 eet o maior s~wer 0~~11 1~ ll J ~ P:~r R;, 1 •6 , 25 N eur 011 P 1 , w, n P'ub 10,,,, 19~, c11•n .,,,.. • .10
trunkhnesthroughSan1tallon ncom 'J210111PennM~ !~ !t}~~~~~~ 11 Vill.ii.W11StUr 1 • '"Cenco lnJ :10
D T V•nt ! tl s 10 Pa " Ol 16 '1 ti C ik 1!t: ~:~ ~',, ~ U"'° t!~rn~'i"' 11y,°' istnct 7to reatment Planl cc1u G-r1h1J'l'IJJ'l'l"na 15 511 09~0><111 ° 9,,. 0 wnoWM ,,.,,, 5\loC•nlPS 110 N I h c-~ Com$ Id 5 l $II p larlm lO 1 :Jl UC •C 31 lo ll'io w nil M' 16 111~ c~ l~EI I O 1 aong te ...-nta Anacw1tt1Aa 140151;1~~nt 1 7 ~1:69 ~1~'"'..,;: 91.1 1o1ow~PL ~1,.2~ce~Pw120
River 1n Fountain Valley 8S ~~~h, •'• ,' ,•, ,",', ., 1111 Fn<I 11 u J? 98• 01110 I"• , 11\ 1a 1o Wdw <1 L Jl JJ i, Cen1sw,1 ~ P'lan Inv 11 Jl 12 0 ~~-t •~1 4 o W dW E 1"" 2~ Ctn! SoV• I One or a (W(;p"( prO)eCt to Como Co 6 76 J 41 Pl orll> unovf Olli Scan ln ,, I Wr aM W ?1lM l lV, Cenl• U! 90 Como 8d 9 lS 10 6 p l FU"dl Oil IC To< ~ y , 'frdnv E 7:.J; l C~ 0 CP 1111 expand sewage faciht1es of the Com., Fd '91 10 n 'c~~h ?6 ,) "~ o ~ Mn > 1o 1~. i onu e 51,1, 11\'o ~: : :~,,'I,
d rem'~ •15 4 15 N Er• 1G:lJ1Q33'\----------------\ JSlncl Conco d ll 16 11 6 N Hori• ltl ~JO O.'i r ouM.O.lr 60
Th f l d Con> Inv I Ull•t po Fund 107•107• Cl' 5!1 llO& e 1rs secllon now un er ccn1re1 G 5 u 6 .wi P~~ p.,,.1, 1 oJ J 69 ~~~DS ?~
construction 1s south of ttie f~ ~u" 1~~ 1g ~ ~~~1dFo ~ :: t ~ N~~w YORftO::P~.t~~~:~··o~lc~~mo1e e f:;:,~\...~"v l
Santa Ana Freeway co p L<t 1~11112•P•u s1> 10.-11 '7 Y•k Cl>•MT 1 1::iri C!ry Cao ll Ji U 91 Pu•111m Fv<l<I• !ll•t tht Chec~er Mol
The total project Is C n wo1v s 'l'I 's.s i::au' I 43 9 1 c11111 l Hl•I> Lew CIDt• Ch• c,•,•,'.",',2', CnWD•l7JJl01GO'O<ll~l•16rl ~· estimated to co.st $9 9 rniU1on d•Vetn "' ~'" u Grw!h lo ss 11 5<I c1>.mNv , "
be h D• tWa I G•CUP lncorn 1 19 I ti -A-Cl>•!\/& 60 Stage two will t e in Oecai 1v4110.1 1nve.i e11 !)ll Che~ Oho •
l 11 l r 39 000 f I r ~aw JJ 0114 24 v , • •I• 'n -.o~~v1" )09 10 &•• 161.lo H'I. C~t•t<Jh J nl s a a ion O ee O oeta 150 !l'O vov•• 111.1 Sl.I AbbtLb 110 '"" .s.6» ~ 55 . -' c~1 E"•• t trunk line north of the SanlaD•C•~ 661 1 11 11~•e• 1os111"11.cF 1n01•0 ~' JJ\.o 51 • ;'~-1 ,.,c~IMH SPf> D<x!; Co~ H JO 15 30 Rini e lS 1115 6S A.cm1C11v to •9 l.. J 1 l • -C~I MI SP pl Ana Freeway to the vicinity of Drexol 1i 4J I• o seql!a s l .11 ,', •,•, A<me Mkl lb , s;~ ~ s;,,, -_. c,t,"'';fu,r, .'.-D•••' FO 1?)1 l ,,Sc!IU•! U 21 A.dtn1E• 69 II ;, ll • .., " v.-Ora nge Park Acres It JS o ev1 Lv 1• ?? u 5ll scuc10•r Fun",',,,,, Ad M 1 "1 1 13 1'4 ,',' • -. , ',~~,'I ",~ E~lon&How• d ln! nv 1' Add "'~ Uq S91 ll\• JI _, "~ "" Scheduled for CQnSlruC\JOO l!&an 10t71 01 SOK n i~3;~Ad"''" ~J 11 1 ~"' ,•,'>-l•,~~ .... 'm;•,0 belweenl974and1979 G w~ lJ171494 ~a•nst 10 •1 10 • Ae n•L'")10 10~ ~!" ~!' •9 +\.,ch,,... 01 t~co"' 6)7 6!1 S ""'v f. n<I• A•n•L! I' 2 1 11 ..., Ch V• 6'l The second stage will be Scect •68 10 51 e~v• u1 11 •O'l11.1u rec:~ 11 _.., ,_,, ,c~.':',,' -•, S!ock 1J8t15 11 QV V1 Ill to A.l e~" nc 11 ll • ...., "'
paid for by connecLion charges Eb • 01 11911i 1• lJ~:! • 1, ~ oi 11.1 •""" 10t1 ,..~ s,; , ;1•· ~ V: ... ~ ~l~~a$1,' ",', r Evel c;t 11 1014 01s oA 9 91 ouAI e<1 '°"' '4 '• ,__ ...... or new housing and 1ndustr1al E !un T u ts ,e 1 l<M!~S 11 1~ n 10 A.J r1<1 'tr co 1J ~ • J • l • + "" c nG o • 15
h d Eme Sec 61'6 80 • c; l7'1tl511kron• • 211 •1"' •O • 40 1 ~CnMac l•D c onstruction In t e 1str1ct Ene 9,. 1J 1 n n ~~:...., ~ ,. 36 is 4 -.1. G•• 10 u 1s~ n • -lo CtT F+n 1
The n'w trunk t'"e• Wll(Ento •~ •61 77'Sl>&,;,'Fd \1 0?1llJ?Al•lk1 ln~t 1l Tl 1 1 1't 1•C l e•Svc 1 1~ .. Equ tv ~ JI o 14 Sheo~ AP 30 J'1 n 11 Allle toe JI O za" 1& • 29'-+ f tv nv so
more than dO\lble flow line Eou11 GI~ 9 )3 D u Shear Inv 11 01 'OJ II bt! 1·~· Ji 14 ,r.:: 11" 1 ~ = "" c ( ~ S" r I!? E0\11 PQ 4 J1 •ns~~·m 0 lS.181!5!.0.ICanA v"' 1 II 21 1'.' '. capacity 1n the district and Fa rtld 10 JS 11 11 5 d• Fo 9 u 10 11 A cos 8nd JO Jo 20." 19•• 10--• • o • Fa m flu vn•v•ll 'nm• Fund• Al•~r><l" 30r 1 11>.<, 1W. ~~ • ~ • ~ 0 \ '° fulfill demands for full F ld~tv o'""" C•o• 9•l0'1 AIA.mL! ?•q 1l s. 1$\oot Hh -~C1•vc111 10
d I Cai>I 1 OOlJ OJ hWt>I I )~11 42 A ln C o Oii '° l • ,,,. ll •-("'•11' 114 eve opment use of the area 1n c onrto , XI 1o 16 T "~' 8 •> 'H "k:Qlu<I 1 io 101 1 ~. 1<1 10 -v. ~l'" 1 1~0
lh r bl r t t Oslnv 7 l'I Sm !h 8 10 57 10 51 II e<1L11d 1> ) 20 Jl"i l6 )6\lo -1 C!~e~iP , 'ID e oreseea e uure san1a E••e( 1J 41ue1 swinv' '"''1""lfllPw1J.1 1n 11 1 11 1, 1 ,_, CNAFr~150 bon district studJ"' show Evrsr 1Jo.iun sw ~GI 130 119 .o.11e<1 c11110 1 1 >"' l ~ J1 'II -"CNA 1>•A1 o '= F;<M: 16Dllall~e nvll•i1'1'llllldM•n 40 > J7 JI ll -'li co1'1SIG••
Pul! ... 10J1111fSotcl•• Ill 1'7AldM lh 1.1 9 '"' 7 '••"+ CllSGI ofllt Selem S4'1 J9.S StFrmGI •66 •MA le<l P'd68 26 II 161'> '°CoC8(0 1$11 T 1nd 14 11 l• Ji S!ele SI •I H!h4ll lll A l~OPO ol l 73 ~;... .tt ;1 Coco 8f g Mo "O~~l•I p~~ •Bl Sl~~"l~d "1"'6 •t1!\\\~s1;_.,;.oo I I i.lo "• J'4+1,~~~~~1 .. 8n~b 11\dusl llll75 A.uoF \3Q l'7Atl1Ch 1SO 11114 1ll< 11"' _.CQ tPall.0 l"COm 3 ts 6 )1 F due 'IS 7 51 llllrlg!Aut 60 • 14 13"-23'4 -I< Co !lnAlk 56 VMI 4 1.1 4 M St-In Rot FOt A. oty P Cem 11 16-4\ 10 16 /.< 1--4 Col ns Rid FJll"O VI ll 1'1ltf fl••no ~~!~~; ll{(lf 190 B• s 4 ,,~ 51 -,, (O OtlS 1~
Fl! ln•ntors C•o , ~ '' .. A.ma!S"' 1 60 1 1n.. '"" ''"' Co1ctlnttt 1 ao DKO JC IJJ Sloe~ '" "A.Mfl,AC 50 ~' 1)"4o 1) l~ Cc t nil1 Grwlll • 61 10 5l Sy!)"'Vlsd Inv 2fl 11""1" E1 l 70 1 :n , """° n~ -" Cott ln of0 7f Slock t 4) 10 l!I Grw!ll ,,' •00 >'> -Am El pfl 14 l 42 41 41 Call In (111 IO
Profit Told
By Crocker
'
su ... n "A.mHett ISO SI l>O\ M M'll-YoCIS l<Oto Fs1 Mu i un1val T 11 115 145 1 H5 ~115 H5'4 -1> COS pll SAN FRANCJSIY'l (BW) Fit Nat '" l:lt$ ecGtll 1q7iouAmeH "'350 11 ~• 61\oo ~• +1\io C01uG•• 11' .....V -1'•1 SJ~,,. un1v1 I T'M~ A.oP 11 9l 14 1l llA. '" l•r IHI 114 ?f"'-11 71 4 _ ~ ColvP'lcl •?I Crocker National Corp s 1n ~::: ~: ~ ~ T11d••" 1~ ~ 1~ :~ !";.:!,1 1~°: 31 7,., 11 11 _ en soah 1 ea
come before securities trans Ft10 Gth 4 so 'is~::~~' ~ ,, ,, ,1: &~fld•1 \ ~ ~~ :~~ :i~ ::; =,..., ?::tiv1 4~tt
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' Jilly '1971 OAILY PI LOT
Wall Street
Chatter
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#'_DAIL V P1LDT Wtdllt1day, Juty 28, 1971
Yep, It's On--Clay vs Quarry l HOUSTON (AP) -Muhammad All ni&hl victory nvtr J immy Ellis . wu In Jammed wilh 6'.000 per'°"' for 1ucb a
1111 hil nt1.l flaht will be 1&ain1t Jerry high spirits. Ht praised Elll1 and the fighl.
Quarry 1n the Altradome ln Stpt.ember. Astrodome and threw vubal jab!i at Fratler ~s. been reported as saying he
• 1be former helvywelght champion also wants $5 m1lhon for such a match.
• • ....td llki 1 return match with champkln Frazier. "He talks li ke an amateur," Ali ! J~ Jl'rultr ln the domed !lruetun nelt He said the Astrodomt "would be !tiouled. "Why does he want $5 millitin?
''March. ideal " for tht Fratier malth. Why d0ts he think he's such a draw?
: All toJA ntwsmen Tuesday he un-··1 think a fia;ht so great should be held ".He won't ~ear n:ie down. He won 't
' cletalood hll next fight would be agJinst where as many people as possible could catch me. Hell be In such plllful con-.. :tQuarry ln the dome although "nothing see it," Ali said. "We could draw 100,000 dition he 'll have W retire. Ellills a much
.,.hal beth sJ«ned." peopl e." better boxer than Frazier."
AU. frtsb from hLs 12th-round Monday The Astrodome conceivabl y could bt Ellis, former World Bo1lng Assocl1tlon
' •
'
• '
' •
PlTT!ilURGH'S MANNY SANGU!LLEN TA GS OUT DUK.E SIMS BUT ·L'A WINS, 1-5.
'.S '
ontracts Only
rotect Coaches
o It Seems
Rambling about:
•l vou realize how vasl Di&ney\and is
hen you plod through It looking for a
· razilian .soccer team. So it was Wed·
'ksday as a photog Jnd I vainly i;earched "t>r Pele and hi s mates woo were roaming
J~ut somewhere.
tDisneyland was the team's unanimous
st choice for .!lighbeeing during ils
ief stay in the Southland.
lncidMtally, it'!i not likely arta fans
~ • • ~------WHITE
WA SH 1------>
1 OL•NN WMIT•
E-« ·11 ever hsve another chance to 1ee Pele
ay here all.et tonighl's game at the
llseum.
i In the world of soccer t h a t · s
t'.imp,11rable lo gelling your I as t
ft>mpetitive look at Babe J'luth, Bobby ~es. Arnold Palmer, Jot Loui!i. th ..
our Horsemen, Willie Shoema ker. Peter
ell , etc.
~ter '° many •Lories of co11c.bes
aklq contract• you begin tc cet the
line that 111eb p1.ct1 serve only ta
tect the employe, not th e employer.
..p Joe Blow 1la:a1 for fi ve yean ta coach
lum X. But be gell a better deal after
... o yur1 and •Imply wanden off to bet·
ft:r pkkin's with occasional threatened
twsuitt r1rely paying off.
· But If Joe Blow'a boll gets tired of him
ter • couple of years, he generally hts
buy up tbt remalnlnc time on Blow'•
lnct. Now does that attm right?
.t'1 Joltea so even hlgh 1cbool coaches
llUJe or aotblng of break1111 their menu ..... ' or hlla everyone forgot·
bow EnaJe ,Jolmaon left Newport friir"'1< B111t lltp and dry In mld·year?
nUDJber or ()range Coast a.re11 ~~""" were at the preview party for
1 Hall opening Monday night. in·
: Minny Pineda (Colli Mesa\,
Dodgers Rally, 8·5
Murtaugh' s Prophecy
Proves All Too True
LOS ANGELES t A Pl Danny
Murtlugh. the manager or !hi'. Pittsburgh
Pirates was asked to romment on the re·
cent downhill skid or the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
"It looks like they·re going through 11
rebuilding program with all their young
players," Murtaugh analyzed Tuesday
night. ''But the manager over there
(Walter Alston! has all the patience in
the world and it'll pay ofl. These kids will
make the Dodgers 11 -...·inner. Really. 1rs
sort of 11 dynasty they're building '•
Murtaugh 's words made S(nse when he
said them and even more smSf several
hours lat.er.
Bill Buckner, a 21-yc;ir.o!d ronk1e nu1·
fielder. slammed his first r;:rand sl;im
home run in the major.!i to highll~ht a s1:c-
run seventh inning as the Dodgers spilled
the Pirates 8-5_
Doyle Alexander. 11 2 n · ~ e A r. n Id
tighthander, earned the virtory which
snapped the winn ing strt'ak n r
Pittsburgh's Dock Ellis. EJ!ls lost tn !he
Chargers Trade
Post to Denver
SAN DIEGO -Dickie Post Silyg 1ht'
San Diego Chargerft "are 1 'big back'
learn" 11nd his trade to Denver was !he
culmination oft neg1tive ~ttl!ude a,gainsl
his lack or size.
The Charger!i, meanwhile. 11imply said
they hive • lot of very good n1nnerl'l and.
"besides, we already have a "mtill ba ck
in Mi ke Garrett."
Thus the S-foot-9, 190-pound Post, one of
the old American football League's top
rushers i;ince he broke in back in 1967,
wa.s traded Tuesday lo Denver's Arone~
for a No. 2 drift choice. The Charger~
admitted It was the bel!il ofter made to
them .
Dodgers in April, then won 13 straight
be fore losing Tuesday night..
"Ellis was reall y tough," Buckner said
afterward . "The first two times up there
he broke my bat. I had t.o borrow one the
last time"
The Dodger:r; chased Ellis in the
seventh after loading thf' basf's and scor-
ing twice after two were. out.. Pinch hitter
Tom Haller and r.1aury \Vi!ls each singled
in 11 run _ Jim "~ludcat" I.rant replaced
Elllis and. after ,Reiling two strikes nn
Buckner. :o;urrendered !hr ~rand slam
which put the Dodgers on lop.
Willie Crawforrl added the e11o1h!h run
with his seventh hnmrr nf thf' season in
the eighth v>'ith no one ahoard.
The victory was onlv !he 11nd,t:er~· s1;c\h
in the lR~l 20 games but fnr lhf'-first time
1n A werk they m11n<t11,ed lo slire inlo Siin
Francisco's hig lead in 1he t-:11t1oniil
Lra.':ue's \Vestern Dil•ision Thr drftci! is
7'"2 games.
''PJayin~ like \ve 've been playinp. thr
last few weeks JllSl isn ·t fun ." Ruf'kner
said aHerward. ''ll's <1 lot mnre fun when
ynu·re winnin,I! -or at least playing -...·ell
-and having something to shoot 11t.
"I thought tonight we; played 11 1ol like
we played earlier in the season \Ve got a
lot nf ~uys on hai;e. ·'
OOOGll S .. ' . ~· •b•~··· MA"OI• 1 11) • • ' ' WIUJ " ' ' ' ' Cll~•s n ' • • 8 11ck,,., " ' ' • C1~m1n•• rl • ' • w DAV It " • • • s..,111llln t ' ' J • Atl~n Jb • ' • 8 lt1>btlln .. ' ' Cr1 .. 1o111 u ' ' ' P•l8n Jb • ' • Lelt~vt0 " ' • ' • • OllV•• " ' • • w P•rkor " ' ' J • HtrMrocll .. ' ' ' ' Sim• ' • ' ' • Eltl• • ' • ' ' O-..ln9 • " • • • G•1nt • • • • • ,\l••~<>dtr I> ' • ' • 0 .... 11110 .. ~ ' • • • ><Alie• .. ' • ' ' lluu111 .. • ' • • Mlkkrhn " • • • • Toti I " "' • Tot~I " ' " ' '""'""''~" '" ... .,._,
D<ldttrl ... ... 6\~-· E -It, ...... LC'~ -Pttt1buf1~ A. De ... ro J
" -Cl•mt nlO, i..n111ill..,
(r1 .. 11>rd 1, ' "' -811ckntr ' " " • .. .. •• E•llo L. lJ·• • ~/J • • • ' ' Gri n! ' 1•l ' ' ' • ' 0own1.,. ' 21J ' ' • ' ' ' ,l,l•••nll~• w. ,,, • j IJ ' ' • • ' MT~~tll'!n ' • • • • ' S1vt -.&,\l~k•IMn . .. -O()w"lnt ' -' 11. A -HMI
heavywtlstil champion, u t beside Ali at
the news conference.
Ali had high praise for Ellis. a former
1parring partner.
"Anybody who fough t like he f()ughl
will be around for a long tlme to comt, ·•
Ali said. "Ht's not wa shed up "
Also I L the. news conference was
Ana:elo Dundee, who trained All for 111
his pro fighl11 before the Ellis match but
who was In Ellis' corner aa trainer and
m1n1.a:er Monday night.
Laver, Emo
Stop Foes;
Boxer Dies
QUEBEC -Second seeded Rod Laver
of Corona de! Ma r fought off a strong
challenge from a relatively unknown
South African Tuesday to win 6-4, H , 7-61
and advanced into second-round singles
play at the Quebec International Tennls
Open. '
Bob Maud, a native of Johannesburg,
fought tooth and nail with Laver th rough
three action-packed sets that took two
hours. The final set went to the seven-
point tie.breaker and the Australian star
triumphed J(l.8 in the decisive 13lh game.
In other single! matches, Nikki Pilic of
Yugoslavia defeated Fred Stolle of
Auslralia 7-fi, G-4, Roy Emerson nf
Newport Beach downed Tom Leonard of
the United States 6-2, 7-6.
Tom Okker of lhe Net herlands beat
American Ron Hol mberg 6-2. 6-2, South
Africa's Cliff Drysdale scored a pair of &-
'4 wins nver Bill Bowrey of Australia , Ray
Ruffels of Australia beat ~lark Cox of
England, 7-6, '4-6, 6-2, and Ken Rosewall
(lf Austre lia downed England'!! Graham
Slilwell , 6--4 . 7-5.
e Tucker Die•
MONTREAL -Dlll1ny Tucker, a 25-
yea r-o\d Jamaican-born bnxer had just
been stopped by Reynald Cantin, the
Canadian junior welterweight cham pion ,
in the final round of their scheduled ten·
round non-t.iUe match at Paul Saure
Arena when he pleaded with the referee :
"Come on ref." hf' said, "I'm all right,
don ·t stop the fight.'·
Seconds later, he slumped to the can-
V8.!i. lapsed into a CQma and wa.!i taken
from the ring on a strtlcher tn a Mon·
treal hospital Mnnday.
Early Tuesday, Tucker underwent
l!;urgery to remove blood clols from both
,;ides of !he brain. Then, hospital offici1'.l.'I
reported he had suffered a cardiac ar·
resl. A short lime later, he wa s dead.
e Gorman lfin•
COLU MBUS, Ohio -Second·seeded
Tom Gorman of Seal.Ile highlighted play
1n the $20,000 Buckeye Tennis Qiam-
pionships Tuesday by whipping Jamaican
Richard Russell, 6-3. 6-4.
Jn other matche:;;. Pakistan's Haroon
Rahim ousted Chile's Jaime Fillol. 6-4, l;-
2; Roscoe Tanner dumped France's Pier-
re Barthes, '4·6, 7·5, fi-2: and Jeff
Borowiak ~topped Milan HoJocek ot
Czechoslovakia, 6-~. G-2.
e f,nker• 111 Snll
SALT LAKE CITY -A district court
judge granted a motion Tuesday allowing
lhe Los Angeles Lakers to be included as
defenda nl<t in tlle Utah Star's$\ milhnn
suit against Bill Sharman, former Ulah
coach.
But a CQurt trial on the ~u1t ~aid Jud1:.e
Vrank Wilkins of Utah's 3rd District
Courl , depends on whether Utah h11"
.iurisdictinn through Hs so-called "\onR,
arm statute" ln bringing the L<tkC"rs {.()
court.
e Goffe r~ ffot1ore1l
PITTSBURGH -f our golfers. 1n·
eluding contemporarie.~ Juliu.o; Boros and
Dr. Cary Middlecoff, were indurtc.d cnlo
!he Ame rica n Golf Hell of Fame Tuesday
night.
.lock Hutchinson, the late \Va!ter .J ,
Travis. Boros and Middlecoff joined :11
nther golfers already inducted . Hl1t-
chinson wa s not present for !he
ceremonies.
e Leahy l1nprove•
PORTLAND, Ort> -Frank. Leah y 11'1
much tmproved and the former Notre
OAmP foot b!ll roach'i; rondition Is no
longe;r serious. hospital officials said lo-
da y.
Le;ahy, 1\2, has been al St Vinr.e.nt
llnspilAl i;ince July 15. He underwent
i;urgery for re.moval Of fatty liSSUf! in-
lerfering with th!': !unctions or the kid·
neys and liver.
e Rocer Succuttabs
SAN DIEGO -Bill Brereton. who was
\Vest Coast midge~ auto racing champion
10 \9'40. died in N11val Hosj>lt.81 Monday 11t
M.
He was a lo p driver
throughout C&li!ornia.
on dirt, lracks
PE LE, DAILY PILOT SPORTS EDITOR GLENN · WHITE CHAT )
Pele in Spotlight
Tonight at Coliseum
f' LOS ANGELES -Pele, presumably the greatest soccer player who ever
tr !iv~ and surely the highest paid athlete in ltistory, lead.!I Santos of Brazil
•· against Jailsco from fJfexico tonight at the C<ili:seum.
( . A throng nf 20,000 is anticipal.ed fllr lhe soccer struggle belw!!(ri Utt
+-Latin clubs and Santos is looking for its seeond triumph in three Lo!! Angele9 ~.· i' appearances.
It lost to River Plate or Argentina in 1967 and then came back last year t to nip Guadalajara frnm Mex ico.
Pele, who earns $2,000 P"'r da.v. recently retired from his national teani ~1"1 and a crowd of 238,000 turned out to bid hi m adio5.
He sparked Brazil to ll tiweep of World Cup rompelilion a year ago in
Mexico City.
tj Santos features an Argentinian standout. Re is 2&-year-old Mario CeJai.
t1 purchased from Racing Club for $350,000 five months ago.
Jn 1964 . Cejas was Argentina·s goalkeeper at the Olympics and in t968
starred for his country's World Cup side, . His spech1cular goalkeeping led Racing to the world club champion1hlp
over Glasgow Celtic in 19fiB .and now Cejas claims the tille of top gO&lkttper
,. ln Rrazil. ~
i
CArlos Alberto was sent back to Brazil for knee surgery rolln Wing the
match in Meiico and has been replaced by Orlando Pererira, A fullback with
much international experience.
While .all eyes are focused on Pele ;ind his familiar number 10 jersey,
another forward , Edu (Edua rdo Americo) at left wing may well be in!f.rul'tlen· \~ ta! in Santos' efforts tonight.
t Edu and Pele spend e gre;at d<?al of time lll~elher both on and off th t
field and have in fact become close friends during lhe ·past several months.
,.. Early in hi:oi c Are P. r, Edu wa~ h11mpered by a series of inj urit!, but rt now !he 23 year old is back on lop and together with Pele, hu been the spark·
µ plug in the Santos attack.
~ The Santos lineup features several new feces, ;is manager Mauro Ramoii
con1in ues his efforts to develop mort. and more·young and fast players, cap-
able of ninety minutes of ett;icking·soccer.
f
~
Since taking over in December of last year, ltamo11 ha! ltd SantOB to
the re markable record of only 2 losses in 82 _game~!
'
Ramos is highly respected throughout South America and his e;c perience
as centerhalf for Brazi l"s World Cup champion team-as teammate of Pele-
1n 1958 and 1962 has proven of great value to Santos.
Following ils appearance in the Coliseum tonight. Santos leave! for I
miitch against Germany's Hannover in Vancouver Friday, with final games ~ of 1he tour set in Ne~· York Sunday 11nd Wednesday in Chicago.
•. Tickets lll'f: nn sale Rt the Co liseum and Sports Arena Soi Office. Adul!J
are $.'i, juniors under 18 years $1, and under 10 free.
.......,..-_•.,_~:::t:!!EL1'-!.L......1£'i..:::::::E!!i2±£5'11 itS·
Every Defeat Is Tough,
Moan s Hru·d-lucl{ W rigJ1t
CLl':VEl.AND (AP ) -"II was the k1ncl
nf game Sam u11u111!y loses through no
fault nf h1s own,'' Cleveland manager
Alvin Dark said after his Indians edged
California 4-J Tuesday night.
McDowell gave up only six hits in u~
ping hi.'1 rl'.Cnrd to 10-10, but his mound
Jutv 711
Ju!v :If
Julw JI
Angel Sl4te
AM 0•,.... Ml kM'C O lt)
A,.._rl• •I Clov•l•nll
.... n1•I• •' Clt v•l•...i
•-•• •t O•troll
..... ~-"'· J:oltl p ....
11 :1ft • ''"
opponent. Clyde Wright. pitched hitless
ball for five inn ings before giving up
three runs on twn hils in the sixth .
Wright saw his rf!cord fall to 9-10 de.!lpH.e
a four -hilt.er.
•·vou·re right, he pitched R bettt>r
gan1e, a fa r better game," ~aid
McDtl\''ell. ''I hid ]u~l abou t good enoujilh
' !jtuff to throw battJng practice, but our
guy.~ fought back and won it for me ."
"Every loss is " tough Oflf'," saJd
Wr ighl, wtio had given up one ·run in the
(irst inning on a walk, wild pitch 11nd
sacrifice ny.
Ken McMullcn's two-nin homer, hl•
14th or the yea r, h11d fl!iven \Vright. a 2-1
lead ln the !op e>f the sixth
The Indians bounced ba tk 1n lht bn1·
tom of the sixth witll Ken Stu1trez· loop
single, a passed ba ll, a sacrifice bunt, a
walk , 11n error to score Suartz, VadA
Plnson's nin-scnring ,;ingle and a
sacrifice fly by Graig Nettles .
"Maybe I .'lhould havf! lnl11popped the
ba n up therf',." !111d Wri ght con-
tl':mp.luou~ly of the IndlAn.'I. "You can·t
lilke lwo losses. They didn't hil a ball
hard enough to hit a kid."
McDowel l gave back ont of the runs In
the $fVCnth when .Jim Spencer hit hi.'1
131h homer or the season. It wa~ th" 111.st
hit surrendered by· Sudden Sa m.
"I didn 'I feel bad except that I didn't
have A good fast b811," said McDowell. "I
got into trouble anyt.ime I tried tn
challenge them -like when I pltchM to
Spennr.
Zlmmmnan (LagW\I H i 11 1 l ,
Ann Buhlig 1Laguna Beach\, GPker (Newport Be•ch l, Mu • ' (Santa Ana ).
~t1111 la 1 shrine of athletics with
tw of all sports, th e i r
Finagling Cl1arged Joh11so11 • ID Case
"l should have known be L le r . • 1
McDowell !!Aid nf Spencer'.!i rlr ivt . "We
wert'two funs ahead and I was pl•ying it
llllff'. I tried to chA1len1e him with a fast
ball, bul it w11sn 't good enough.''
lt ii open to lhe public and
1t Vnlted Savings, 9800 U. Angeles -that'1 11 few the S&h Diego Freeway side of
lllemationJI Airport.
Jf.Jncluded mnong the llhibil.$ i11 a large 91ter lhowlnc rMct AtUesey or Newport Stacb when he Wll I hurdler at USC. tt
l lnll out bow he tied the world record tit .e and then came back to twice run 13.5
ter that. >
The Callfomil An&els, wl\h tilt 11id of
baseball comml!sioner Bowle Kuhn, have
taken th e nt'lt At.ep In. penalliing AJes:
Johnson.
Kuhn 11nnounet.d Tutsday in New York
that Johnson, suspended June 2& by the
Angels for hig l1iy play, has been plactd
nn the ~stricted list. A pl1yer can only
be tu~pended 30 d1ys 1nd by pl1cin1i him
on the re.'ltricted liat lt will nnt count
11Jl:ainst tht tlub's 2."i-mRn r0fif£>t' ... '
After the move against Johnson.
California reactivated catcher .I e fr
Torborg. Though !illll ailing from a fra c-
tured finger. he was 11ble to warm up
bullpenners Tuesday niji;hl.
M11rvin Miller. c.iecu Uvt. directnr of !he
Major League Players Association, sRld
In New York that the action 1galnat
,John!IOn i~ "anoth tr examp!t of the
finagling th11t. Jl:Of"S on betwetn the cl ubs
Anri the comn1i~sioner ·~ oHlre.
'·The rule on suspensions say.!i a clu b
may .!iUSptnd fnr 1 Period ·not exceeding
JO d!lys.' So ""ha! thty do i.'I forget on!!;
rule And point{.() another -in this case .a
ph r11se fn the restricted list.
"But tht. purpose of the restricted h~t
nt"ver w•s to ,11dd on to a m11xlmum
sentence "
Miiler .'l11id • phr11se in the rules on lhe
reslrlcted Ji~t. which deAl~ primarily with
pr~ason occurttncu, allows INgut
presldenlA to put p\1ye11 on the list if
"unusu1tl clrcum1t.anct& e:ritt."
"Other than that all I can 11y Is that
th' clu b certAlnly Is lncl"Using it! poten·
ti1l li.abili ty In term5 of back s1tl8ry ."
The Johnson ca~ has been appealed by
lhe player~ group to an imp11rL1al
~rbltr11tnr, The matter \5 not llkely to be
ht"ard befort tM end of August.
-.. -. ..:--,,.,. .... -T ••. 1 ',;i-. -~ .......... -., .. .._. .. i.r--·~ ·~
MJi Prodaet
Reb Late-comer
Proving Worth
By PIUL R06S
O!f 1M DellJ Plitt !la"
Biuerlat.e lhaa Dever.
~·· ... of the oldeat cllch ..
In the boot. ',. Howertr, It's jwt 1hoot the
bes~ WI,)' to •um up the selee.-
Uon 'ot Newport Beach 's Bob
~ to perform. for
the ·~· Aq. lJ In the !Ith
1nnual· Orallie. County alktar
football•&ame 1t OmJae CoaJt
College.
While-the Mat.er Dei High
pi6dl)ct Rtmlngly could end
up ui a ltarting"'berth at inside
(middle) linebaci<OI' Md call· inl ' ow-Jiebels• defensive
-In the clal.!lk'• 12th renewal, he just feels fortunate
enough to be able to wear an
alktar uniform.
Or perhapa: jwtified ls an
even better definition.
At any rate, the &--1, 198--
pound defensive captain of
coach Bob Woods' 1 9 7 o
Monarch squad was not one of
lhe original players chosen on
the South roster. ·
The bYPassing of the dream
game by Newport Harbor's
1ton Tripp, however, enabled
deLancdlotti to get In fln the
•ction.
E.stancla coach Phil Brown,
South head man who"s direc-
ting the team's drills daily on
the Eagle campus, figures he
made a good choice in replac-
lng TriPp with deLancellotti.
Brown da ys, "I had to single
aut :some players and slight
others.
"But there were several
people worth menlioning who
stood out in practice our first
day IMonday)."
And one of the lndividual!t
mentioned prominently by
Brown was the hustling
deLancellottL
The former Monarch
llnebacking star was hoping to
be picked initially to the South
roster but expressed disap-
pointment when he learned he
wasn't.
"l bad made ether plans,
Lomelin
To Perform
In Tijuana
One of Mexico's most ex·
citing matadors, the daring
Antonio Lomelin, has tn-.
terropted his brilli811l Spanish
campaign to head\lne the card
Sunday at the bullring by ~
t ea, Plaza Monumental de Ti·
Juana.
On the same program will
be-the brilliant arUst with
cape and banda"illas, Chucho
Solorzano, and the daring
young popular favorite, Arturo
Ruiz Loredo,
As a comparable 11.ttraction
they will face the greal bulls
of Mimiahuapan, booked for
Tijuaha for the first time
1ince thil ranch's outstanding
triumph last spring in the
world's most Important
bullfight event, the Feria de
San Isidro in Mulrid.
The corrida will st.art at •
p.m.
BO&," deLANCELLOTTI
like wroklng out and just keep-
ing in shape," the Brooklyn
native confides.
"Not being picked to the
South team was an emotional
disa ppointment at first. But
when I found out later that I
was going to be on it, 1 waa
glad I was physically in shape
for jt.
"I'll jwt.have to work my
way up because of the late
start.
"Competing against s i x
ether guys -all of them good
-for the starting inside
linebacker job will be tough.
But that's my goal , to earn the
starting job in the game."
The two most serious con·
lenders deLancellotli figures
he'll have to puSh. aside in
order to garner the starter's ·
berth are Tustin's Marc Pad-
bury, the Crestview League's
lineman of the year, and Bolsa
Grande's John Baize, who
prepped at Westminster as a
junior.
''Playing at inside
linebacker is also a new ex·
perlence for me, since I've
always played mostly at
outsict.: linebacker," says d&-
Lancellotti.
"Being in the middle, I'll
have to use my s.lrength more.
"Up to now, the emotional
part or the game bas been the
most exciting to me because I
haven't depended that much
nn my strength."
The graduated Mater Dei
defensive stop~r moved to
thi s area as sixth grader when
his fa mily came here from
Brooklyn.
"1 joined the Pop Warner
~am in Co~ta Mesa when I
moved out here aod I was the
last guy to lll.fkt° ~ team,"
deLancellotti 1 siys •. a4ding, "I
was ~ ,\(I ·be a
defensive end the n."
One of del..ancellotti's team·
mat~ at Kaiser Intermediate
School, befcn be transferred
to Mater Dei, wu Costa
Me11a's Pat Sweetland, an end
en the South roster.
After Ult" all-star lill, del..an·
cellotti is headed for Colum·
bian Prep in Washington,
D.C., for sii: months and then
the U.S. Naval Academ y.
"I turned down a full ride to
Arizona State because I think
1"11 be getting the best possible
education for me al the Naval
Academ y." he concludes.
Mesa Man
Survives
Keg Cut
Coda Mesa's Fred Dougher-
ty wa1 the only Orange Coast
atta compeUtor able to make
the final cut Mooday night in
the We.st Coast Match Game
Ellminationa bclwling tourna ·
ment at Kona Lanes In Costa
Mesi.
Doug~rty dropped from
third to sixth place and ha11
accounted for a total of 7,361
pins thus far.
He trails pacesetting Marty
Anderson (7,485) of Anaheim
by 124 pin.!.
Sixteen bowler• qualified for
neJ:I Monday 's finaJs with
another -Lomita rookie Pat
Triffon -earn ing a spot as an
alternate. He"ll Immediately
rmve up into a finili berth
should one of lhe Iinalisls be
unable to compete.
Competition was se tight in
this week's eliminations that
no less than 10 entranls were
trying to sqUttze Into the last
four remaining finals berths
with only two frames left in
the last game.
San Deigo'!t Tom Thurber
bowled the highest four-game
block at 876 as he advanced
into the runnerup position
ahead of Ontario's Greg
Baderdeen.
POS. l owl..-, ,._,_ Pint
1. Mtrtv And..-..,.., A,..MI"' T,4.5
1. Torn Tl>urber. M n DI-J,US
l. Gr•• l-r04tttl, Onltrle J.(11
'· GtrY Midi..,.,. 51n litt111rcllno1.>97
.J. 11!ol1nd Ait'><lncll!'I'.
1'111t LOI A"9t\K J,)9?
L Fred Dou$Mrtv. C'"lt M111 7.)61
l . ~ Jahn..,.., L-1 .. th J.J'l
I. JOI Mlt11Iitt, At11M!m l .»0
•. Ml~• 5mllfl, Anetl<llm J,ltl
10. Ltt Tt vlor, 5 011 DI"° 7,2:1-1
11. L1m1r Ktt•. R•M<il T.71,
17. Slt Yt 5cl!w.rlln1r. Pemo"' l,J!O
IJ. 8ol:t R•"ll<••· A111helm 1.m H . J1v Rl)(llnoon, Sonu $u ... n1 7.~
U. L1rrY M0tdl!•""'· lln1/1tl"I 7.11~ 16. Wi lly W1•nitt, 51ntt An1 1.17'
11. (1!1.) 1'11 lrlt!oon, L""'I!• 7.111
Othe,. fMn ... u1nt11r•I: n. C!vd•
L•th•r !Otnl l"olnt) 1.130
Barr's Bat,
Pitching
AidGWC
Mark Barr led his Senik
Rustlers teammates with his
pitching and hitting as the
Metropolitan Baseball League
leaders dumped Cypress, 4--0,
al La Palma Park Tuesday
night.
Barr limited the opposition
to four scratch singles, walked
none and struck out 11 as the
Rustlers kept their margin
over second place La Fonda
by two full games.
Barr was also instrumental
in the balling altack. stroking
a bases-loaded si ngle in these·
cond inning for a pair of
markers.
The uprising came arter Bud
Bulling·s leadoff homer in the
.econd frame and that was all
B.11fr needed as he had
Cyprets throttled throughout.
Coach Fred Hoover's clu b
returns to action Sunday (4:30
p.m.) at Memorial Park in
Santa Ana against Cal State
(Fullerton),
Sto11lt llu1llt<0 CO
11r ~r111
Oclclcl. 1b 1 0 0 0
Cu,.1n, t i l o o 0
Ct ldt r, \II 1 1 0 0
l ullln;, c J 1 I I
lll°"'mtl!1nt1r, JI) J II 1 I
Adotm1. II I ' 0 e w!l1(M"l,u 1~en
5hubon. rl J I I 0
Embrv. 11 l 0 0 II
..... ~ 111 1 1
To!t l1 '1 l 4
1c.r. ., lfthlftl l . " . OOC000 0-11 • t OllOOC~-I Jl
Baseball· Standings
Nutrilite
Still Atop
Standings
Nutrilite held on to its slim
half-game margin over Wilson
Tuesday night in the Costa
Mesa open summer basketball
league with a 51-46 decision
(Iver La Fonda's at Southern
Californ ia College.
In the other h<ilf of the dou-
ble feature Wilson kept pace
with a 67-58 verdict over Woo-
dy's.
DM Rogers and Gordy
Martin led the Nutrilite five
with 14 and 13 poir1U as the
winners jumped to an ti.point
lead at the half , then held on
for the victory.
Ron Todd was high for La
Fonda 's with 13.
Wilson's crew snapped a 35-
all standoff aL the half and
went on to ease by Woody's
with Tom Read's eight
counters in the second half
vital to the winner's coose.
Mlllm111
l'!t1pelrltk
k nlH
Nt1r1l11
Rt19oro
1111111
N~trlllr. U ll
It ft 111 t.
' I 1 t
J l t 1
1 • ) • • , . " . " ' " )J JI
Lt Pon.da .. UO
ft " ti " ltdlft !IGI
TOdcl 5 3 S lS
Beaton 1119
JKllMl'I J?S I
l-l~mer 41tt
ller111I II J
Tot••• Ir 11 H "
H11ttimt : Nu!rilot• 11. l.1 F~'I 16.
Con~u ..
G. Thort11&11
AmbrOllCI!
GlllHOIO M--J. Pev111
'"' Tott!•
l~IOOIS
Gran!
k ind
Ntinl1I
"""II Ta!•I•
jol1IHimo;
• ' " Wooclv't \Ml
:U.11.
" ' • • ' • "
" ti "' 0 ' • . , .
't J lo . ' ' 2 1 IG , . ~ s a 11
1t u ''
" t i .. ' , • • I ! 14 " " , 6 ' II
16 1 ..
Free Bus Ride
To Shrine Tiff
A round-trip bus r ide ls
being offered to anyonf: in-
terested in attending Friday
nigh t's Shrine all-star football
classic at the LA Coliseum.
The bus is being sponsored
by Saddleback Inn's Bruce
r.elker. father of Soulh all·slar
lineman Grant Gelker. and
will depart from the Irvine
A \'e. side of Newport Harbor
High School at 5:30 p.m.
At last count only 2U of lhe
\00 available seats y,·ere lf'ft
y,•ith reservations possible by
calling 673--0031.
Game seats run $5 apiece
with no charge for the bus
trip.
!T(OJY!()!T!AJ
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Pittsburgh
Oticago
East Dlvlslo•
W L
llS 37
P<L
.637
.53S
.534 .sz .....
.398
GB
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Ea1t Olvl1ion
W L Pct. GB
Baltimore. 62 38 .620
ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS
'71 COROLLA
Sl Louis
New York
Philadelphia
Montreal
S4 " 5$ ..
52 47
" 59 41 62
Well Division
San Franci.9co 62 42
Dod1er1 54 49
AUanta. M S2
Houston 51 51
Cincinnati 49 56
San Diego 36 6R ,..,,....., ........ ,ti
New York J, SI, LOUii '
l'Mlldt!llll'tlt .. ,. !ioullC!n J.J
-!•HI 6, Chkl911 1
Cll'tClnMI! 11, S1n Dino )
Dtcl"'°' I. Pln1bl.o•tf> .5
Allthll .;, &.In Fr111clM:11 J ,.....,. .. ··-
.596
.524 ....
.lOO ·"' .348
101<
IOI<
II \0
21
241<
71\ • 10
131,)
"
SI. LDUlt f(t•ll'Clll JU) t t New Ytft; !Mt!t.Kll .,,
Alltl!lt /l(el...., J.S) 11 SI~ P,llW.!ICO '(lll'f!IW!"-
lalld S.I) "'°"'""' (Wll-1•1J 11 l'llllMlllllllll {WIM M l,
~"' Cllk-fJ"*IM IU) 11 ............ CMlorii!n ..
11 !, llfll'tl
CltlclNWlt (!JrllOltln 4"11 11 Sall Dlftol llClrttY
•n.P:..,_ iw111iitt 4-1) *' ~ (Slflt4lr •
'12!, """'
Boston 58 42 .580 4
Detroit $2 48 .520 10
New York 51 42 .4~ 12~
Cleveland 42 59 .416 20'h
Washington 40 59 .404 21\.l
Welt Dlvl1ioa
Oak.land 83 37 .830
Kansas City 52 4S .531 10
Angels 49 55 .471 IS
Olicago ~ 54 .460 17
Minnesota. 44 M .400 17
Milwaukee 41 58 .414 21 \.l
T ....... \r"I ltHoVlh C:~Ytllr,cl l , ......... J
a1nlmor1 1·•· O.kl•nd Oo-'
Min-It 4. Wtlh"'9ten I
8001"" 4·1. MllwtulcH M
Ce!rolt J. 1(1~ ... 1 (llv I, 11 llll'f"lll
(1!!('90 t, M1w Yer~ 6, U !Ml!Wt ,. .... ., ..• _,
A""'41 fMtv :kl 11 (1-ltN (LAnlb J..11,
""'' OtkllN!I (Odom ,_ti ort ltttlmon ICINllt r 1~
,), nltf>I
ktnNt CltY CStllt1'11rtf Wl .t ~t ICt ln ..
6). "ltM New YOor"ll (l"litfHI'! t.1') Ill Cl'lk tff IWol>cl II·
7). t1ftl!t
SO.hlrt IPtMrl .. 11 1! Mllwt \111:11 !Sl11eft S.Jl,
"'" W•i.lllN"" IT ...... PIOI! 0-ll t i M'-Mfl (I'll!"..,'
IJ·ll l. nlllW
ISTH ANNIVERSARY SALEll BIGGEST I. BEST YETI
DEAN LEWIS
1966 HARIOR ILVD., COSTA MESA
IPICIAL $1777
DEMO.• $991
~ Ill THI ALL NIW
TOYOTA CILICA Sn, CPL
IMMIDIATI DILIYIRY
~
VOLVO
~;" .,,. I ,,... ,', ... . .,.,,U""" • ' ..
' --.I -· ..... j
1971 DEMO
$4098
164 SEDAN
Aulo,..t li,, R1clio, H1tl1r •JJ71
DAILY PILOT !Iii
Title Meet Champion CdM Breezes;
At OCC Oikrs Bop V ikes , 6 7 -54
Next week Corona del M~'s HunUngton Ml!Mllt""' ... ell 01) ....... UI)
La rry Stuart got off •
JifeUme be.st. of 285-10 in the
Javelin Tue9day evening to
highlight acllvlty 1t the open
tr!.Ck and field meet at
Orange Coast College .
Stua rt's mark:, howev er, Is
met with some 11keptlclsm due
to pa.st jave!ln mar\CJI at
OrMje Coast which were dill·
counted because of la ck of
lt!'t.tl1' '9ft Beach summer basketball are.».. ' 10 e e1t11 • t
~ague cbampioM romped to ::;;1 ; ' : ~: !~ ~ :
their 11th straight conq:.iest ~.:1:.:;" ~ 1: : ,~ ~::,,,, ! \
Tuesda" night as the" put the T111111 • ,, " ., ''""'' ' o I J M•tlftl IMI Mckln ... y t 0
lid on their summer acUvity. 131 " tf "' C•"-" o o loldtft l J TMth 1) 1 The Sea Kings of coach Tan. Mllll• • ) • 11 t'ou11"1" v.,11, 111>
A<Mmt J OJ• !1 H dy Gillis stumbled a. bit In the s ..... -' , 1 a~·~· 1 G
early goings, then turned It on ::! .. , ! ~ : 1 ~ ~~·.1;;11 1
and raced to a ~-33 conquest ~1;;1, ,. 1r 2~ ~ ~::.~;: ! : or Villa Park at Huntington &uo .. IW'Ooltntrt '-ll'UIY..U. ) '
Hutll!"lton II tt II ~· -" Adtm• 10 0 Beach in the lasl regular M1dn1 11 11 11 t' -.w Tdu11 t7 1
Ct""'" Ml M.or (U> lttn ff OHfttfl
I• H ti '-EdltO<l 16 I• I I I
t 0 r • ~OUll!t!~ V1Hn I II I n J
1 ' 1 • w .. 1m1111ttt tn J
' . , .... • • • I I, t
t ,11 , . ' . ••• ' " " ' ,, " .... ' . ' . ' . ' . ' " ~ ,: u: ti ,
·-J.1 J -JI observing foul 11 n e s , ac·
credited olflcials and proper
....... w_,
,..,~ ,., ..
(lrMAl'I
L-trM
7 IJ I 16 Mtl......,1lmtr J J J lt
1 el l JOM.011 30 JI
IOl2 l.oln!tU f HJ Je measuring devices.
Neit Tuesday the ch.am·
pionship meet will be held at
OCC with fjeld events begin·
ning at 5 and fir st running
event a.t. 5: 15.
""" Grk11llY
wvnn•
l11o!wl11
McCO<\!I
llll•ll
1 J 1 1 WI .. ~ I J J IJ
I 0 I ? ll1•t l'1' J I I lt
1 J o s C••• a 1 1 i
l)OJM••• 100 1
0 0 I 0 S""'t~wlc~ J ! J 1 I
OO IOTWillo 110)
II Jl ,, }l 70111~ )I la ti t2
SOIN ~y 0\11m" Sc.rt llY Oltrlt"
l ltthltlt TY~lflU Jiu
7.00-13
C78·14
E78-l.4
F78-l4
G78-14
H78·14
• J78-14
F7S-15
G78-15
H78·15
• J78·15
"9.00-15
"l78-15
''\l'r'" '°'' ""' ....., .... ..,,_ ,. liltT""'1 'rrt•• llM•N .... lll
-$35.20 $.21.11 $1.99
6.95-14 $35.20 $21.11 $2.15
7J5-1 4 $36.50 $21JO $2.37
7.75-1 4 $38.60 $30.11 $2.54
8.25-14 $42.2S $33.IO $2.69
8.5>1 4 $46.2S $37.00 $2.95
8.SS.14 $~.75 $43.MI $2.91
7.75-15 $39.45 JJ1.51 $2.62
8.2>1 5 .$43.10 $3<.4' $2.80
8.55-15 $47JS $37.11 $3.01
8.85-15 $55.85 $44.11 $2.96
-$56.90 $45.52 $2.89
9.15-15 S57.95 $48.ll $3.19
T\vCt fibe rglass be\11 •• , today's most
preferred tirs belt cord plu1 two plie1
of polyest~r cord.,. today'r moat
pref erred tire body cord. You get 4-plies
under the tread for extra 1treagth-
that's the Goodyear Polyglea tire. r•4 body plies in sizes J78·14, J78~1 5,
9.00-15 aad L78·15.)
Corono <fol Mir 11 111 I I 11 -U We'1ml1111or JI JS 11 11 -ti
Vll11P1r-1• 1 11 1 -M Gar<l..,Grcwt 11 lJ 10 22 -'ll
MaterDei Romps, 13-7
-IP . ' Power Belt Polyglas·
' • • • • ' ' '
•I"' ' ' " . " ' • • ~ ~ ,, .
i: • • • ' . • • ' ' • • • • ~ .
•
blackwall tires. '
Save'704 to'1159 per tire!·
" f
HURRY ••• OFFER ENDS SATURDAY NIQtlT
GOODfYEAll ~ ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS• TIRES
8AHK c"r:o:T CARDS
HOHOlll!D AT OOODYEA"
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u1r 011• l&IN ClltCK IJlllCR.11>1 lttlUH DI 'n 1rp1e1H ~ •• .,~'''"""for lirioif1111 llrtl, ... ""1 11/ft DUI It IOlllt 1J111 •unn1 11111
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tlr1 tlfl t i tllt tcl¥1111ttl P<ICI '"' 111111 )'OU • rain ~h«~ for NI:., dt:ivert of th• '"''e~1nGl1t.
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.. ~I •
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DAILY PILOT
Start Mater Dei, Tied for 1st
Mesa,HB Romp
Midgets'
Twin Bill
Fountain Varley Nine ·
Wins Playoff Berth Yow·
Engine s!
by Deke Hou/gate
We shall call him neginald, bt'Clluse our last rtcollecllnn
i& that Reginald is nol his rPal name. He camf' from a t•nut1lry
thousands of miles awa.11, and to get to Wendover, Utah. he had
to save his money for )ears. He arnvrd in the US hy tramp
steamer.
Reginald 'ol·as one nl lhr Rt\flllal v1si!ors tn Spt'l'd Week at
the Bonneville Salt F!at.i:, an event. that began in 1949 when
Southern California hot rodders held their f1rsl ultimate speed
event on that eerie plain. . . The other hot rodders marveled at tum when Re~1na!d ar·
riv~ in Wendover. He had dnvtn from California in an Old
Studebaker that somehow had evaded the 1unkyard. Its radia·
tnr had holes in it which Reggie had plugged by Jarr.ming brok-
en sticks in lhl'm
They lned 111\ 1t1ng hun UJ have d111ner with 1hcm. bPCause Re~inald obviously had no monry. \\1hen t_hls didn 't v.·ork. the
racers made up a ganH' and !ricked him into eatini;: a square
meal. They would coa1 him into throwing the dice. a_nd always
one of the others would "Jose .. and be forced to pick up the
dinner check.
WJl'CS and girlfriends of the racrrs detided lo take up a
collection Jnr h1n1, possihl_I' so he could buy some clothes. H_e
epparenlly wore everything he owned, eJ{cepl for the dttrep1t
car hi' drove 1tnd slept in and a motorcycle he brought to Bon·
nevillr lo race.
Hut Reginald was ;1 pr(lud 1nan, and lhe racers knew he
wouldn't take a handout. They came up with a plan. 'The col-
lec!ion monev 11·;1s <:nnverted into si lver dollar!! at the casinG
just arross ihe s1a!e in Nl.'vadn, and on an appropriale day
R bucket or silver dollars was presented to Regina ld as an award
for be 1 n g 1he n1an who come the fa rthest distance to par-
!Jcipate in Bonneville Speed Week. . Re~inald"s dc~ire {l) see how fasl he could ride his motor-
c~cJe is part nr the human quirk that attracts large number!!
or otherwise reasonable people to one of the most forelom places
on God's earth.
A11r111nl Trek lfpt"onting
The speed mechanics are warming up lo their annua1 trek
t4' Bonneville tlte1e day1, preparing their road1Uir1. l1ke1Uir1,
couptl, sedans, iporl' c1r1 ind bot rCKls for the %.3rd 1nnu1I run
on the Salt Aug. ?!·28.
Bonneville Spttd Weeki were first to expose the gentu1e1
11f Mickey Tbomp!IOn and Cral( Breedlove. If It were:n't for
lhelr early experience on a 1afe cour1e •here there w11 no
1peed Jimtt. the engineering ma1terplett1 of these and other
brave men might never have come to the attention of tbt outside
world.
Speed Wttk bas done more than provide 1 l<'hool for Land
Speed Re cord drivers. It has nurtured an entire :.\merlc111 sub-
culture.
"There ire nn J>COPie In tht world like Bonneville people,''
clalms George ~alloway, a frtt lance pboto(rapher who travels
t.vtry year Ml Booheville either to compete or take pictures.
"They leave their can costtn·g tbou1and1 of dollars, and
all lheir tools a•d part1, out there on the 1alt and never clve
a thought lo the posslblllly that something ml1llt be tlolen. It
1lmply ha s never occured to anybody to worry about lbtft.
"You need a part, or a whole·englne, and cbanctt are lhe
guy In your class you are raclnK against will tear down his car
to lend you ~hat you need , e\•en if ll means )'OU beat him.
"And all anybody gets is a trophy. Lot5 of times the win·
ner~ forget to pick their trophies up. Jrs unlike auto racing any-
where el.'e In the ~-orld. ll's the closest thh11 lo an amateur
tp0rllng e\•enl there ever was."
Air Polltlllot1 Aid
EC'ologists are gelling support and encouragement from wh;it
jto theml must he an une1pected quarter, the high perform<1nce
automotive aftcrmarkeL ~1anufaclurers who make parts for race car!! and sell equip-
ment tn motorists lo make their cars look "racy" or perform
belier than they were designed to do are making a real con!ri·
hution to the fight against air pollution.
One or the reasons is that this segment of the auto business
is loosPly tied together through the Specialty k:quipment r-.1anu-
faclurers Assn. 1SEMA J. which has as its e1ecutive director ont
i;,;ric P. Grant. Ht used to be California's top air pollution of-
ficial.
Another is the fact that politicians and do-gooders inslin<'·
lively attack the high performance industry as a chief culprit in
creating dirty air. Pecip1e in ttie industry are scared they may
be 1eR1slated out of business, and tht is not an idle fear.
The overlooked reason for their concern with clean air is
1ha1 JX'(>ple in the performance business are more sensitive In
aulomntive problems. It's their mission to make cars work better
and look better, to fill the demand of the "automotive buH ·•
SEMA 's st.and is that engin~ working al m11ximum eff1r·
ienr~· produce minimum pollution. The biRgest pollutants are
hydrocarbons, which art nothing mnre than unbumed g1snline
l'-pitl1nR nut the tailpipe. Hydrocarbons are a product of incnm-
plf'1f' C'nmbuslinn.
* * * Thr high perFormAn('e nut. meanvt'hlle., •·anlr; an enRinr
lh•1 Ri\·t~ him lhe mo11t romplr.tt combu11tlnn po11lhle. Ht buys
h1.ncy ln1hH'lion 11ystf'm5. ronstantly check~ 11nd up1r1dt~ hi11
,.leclriral .~~·~tem, installs r;pechtl tamJhaftr; 11nd acquirr5
"tuned"' eih::iu~t 11ystem11.
"A ynung per&on who demands ptrformanee of hl11 car."
1;Lat.-d a Sl-J\1 A spokesman, "is ROIOR tn h11vr. cleaner e:xh<1u11t.
becau~e ht take11 rare of hi~ car.
.. Tht hlghesl ~Landarrl~ possiblr won't 1,:lean up the air II
the~· rontrol eml51kin~ nnl~· when the c-ars leave llte factory.
Molnris111 typlcally run around "·Ith fou led ptu,111. dirty oil and
In need or 11 ne"' 1et of points. They are the real vll1lns. not U1e
tlllb pcrlorman~ driver.
* * * ~lost nl SEMA"s members are small cflmpan1es with very
l1ttlt tn spend on research. Yf'l many of them are putting every-
lhin.(! they can into their ov.·n <'le an Atr development programll
-v.·ilhout govemment a.uislance. il might be noted. These in·
elude carburetor. manifold. c11 msh11ft, exhaust he11dtr and el·
ectrieal part11 m:inufacturer~.
The megsage may gr;.dually be g<'lt1ng through lo smog of·
ficial!!.
Last January in Ph{)('n1x. American Hot Rod Assn. prP:si.
df.nt .lim Tiet was shocktd to see state orficial!I setting up emii!I·
aion measuring equipment at th e starting line of the AHRA
Natinnsls.
"My first inclination was to throw !hem nut of the r11ce
track." be sAid , "and then I lhouRh L m11ybe we·11 lel'lrn aome-
lhlng."
To his dellght tbe 11mog lf'slers found lhf' racing area. with
amoU &nn buring rubbf'r from race car! t ~ i n I in R !ht ~ir,
wla many times cleaner lhan 11 nearby interseclion in SC111tsdale.
Air 1t the drag 1trlp was cleaner, in f111ct . than it w1s in the ~pee·
talorl' parkiril lot I few hundred fr.e l away.
Deep Sea Fish Report
---
2'CI (I ii<• ll&I" 11 •tw ll&U. 1 Fllt~ <M, 11~ 'M<•t••I
Maw~•t ~O•~••'• LKl!tr\ -IU • ,,.11r, t t lb.otCl<t , • M t<•cu-., 111 ~·-~l I l'l•lil)o.ol, /J .... <fotfl fAtl'I
l • ... llltl l!ICI .... 1... :)ll •11>•<11••.
lit boH, J '""' <O<I. I moo•or•I
Sl:AL •IACll 111 """'"" :.i ""' •tCUdl , 110 "'" I "'o rO(! •• "•'1'1<JI lt~t UO O"OI•'! >I 11•,,•l,,do Ol
"°"rtt . ., """ CAN~ WH•itt 1H •~ol•" 11• """· 111 bt •••<1><1•, 11 '-""'"'e , "•1t1>t.o,
Ill •lr•1t..-•
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N u , a l 111~• 1>1>1 • ~·"~u•, I """'"' .......
Santa Ana
Tag Rivals S I n c e a n ea r 1 l er Fountain Valley·~ American
doublehe1der altlempt drew a Legion ba5eball outfit is b!..l!!y
hearty response. the m1nage-competing in the 29th District
Matf!f" l"lei and Santa An.a f El T s~ h playoffs this evening al La ment o oro VL~...,way IS Palma Park against American
In Summer Polo
put !he finishing tnuckes on picked this Saturd.ay night for l.eflgue tillist Anaheim Hef.
the Co.Ila Mesa Recreation Costa Mesa and Huntington the: Sallot"5 !(I their come--!un1mer basketball I e 1 g u e Beach share first place in the 1 "·hi d ,1 ,_ another intereslifli twln bill. pfron lhank.s lo a solo homer b)'
Ml!fl>el<. 111
Von' .. •. :Ill
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OUl'ltlte. t
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Etl••· 11
<-•"oll. "" ~~ .. ~
101111
' • • ' ' • ' I I • • • I • ' ' ' • • • • • • H •
rnm·ue n cwi y. Comb1'ned In the d-·bl•ba•-IL Marley. 1~'• '' IAN~u Tuesday night with wins over Cos.la Mesa sum1ntr A water d vu 00-• • " J
• • • • I
' • • • '
S Cl d ho E I I f II . h . The U>s Amigos crew ha 1 d .11 be th M1rley unloaded bis blast in ••nc ..... ~•c11i·-c1o 001 n•-• o", an emente 1n st ·•t•n-po o e•gue o owing t e1r ..... e ~ogram w1 e Na -" -fashioned a 2-1 lead at the half '"' ""' · the bottam of the eighth tnn1 .... -;;ii,~ii"ii"ii'"•'•"•"'-"•' ii~ii' ii"ii•ii-ii'iiiO'ii';;; cia. conquesls of Rancho Alamitos tional Midget Racing A.ssocla-Tuesday ni&ht and hh: 38(1.f~ll
1'he Monarchs of M·•er Del 11nd Bols1 Grande Tuesday before Newport shook loose ..,,. t1on full -midget racers and the shot gave coach G e 0 e pushed aside San Clemente, night at Estancia High School. for f111ti S('C{)nd ha1f !allies. i
LlllOI lfllCTION
1971 CAPRI 5.'1-45, while charnpkln Santa The Mustangs of Costa Me.!la Aside from SmiLh"s three three-quarter midgets of the ~:~~~hci~~ cr;l:yftlfS--4 vfir::,·
Ana whipped Estancia, 57.-46. swept by Rancho, 4·3. v.·h1le Rood ones, the Sailor!! were United States Racing Cub. wotn •ulo. 1ro~1 1tlll'.kc
''Import Car of the Year" The other test involving Huntington was h<tving an Time trials are set for 7 over Rancho-Pacifica at
t. 'th Sol G d <11dec1 by .Jeff Duyndan, Tofn Amerige Park in FuJlerton. M;s•lon Vl•J'o •-" Or•nge w•s easy tme wi sa ran e, · I k 'th th f I ~ rru S.1 Feitchmann and Rocky Beek, (I c oc wi e irs com· Fountain Valley entered the
ruled a double forfeit when · " It t •-f 8 h neither team showed up. Bol<ia Grande's loss knocked earh with a goal to his credit. pet ive even on wop or .30. c ampionship playoffs as the
ll out of a first place tie white Coron;i clel r-.1ar's scQrin.1: Westminster's Duane Sear!! second place repre!tnlatlvt
1'he evening's battles were lA A . 1 1 th T 1 d Sc will be one or .!I ever a 1 from the National Ueague with
1MMIDIATI DILIVlllY
GARDEN GROVE
LINCOLN-MEftCURY supposed to be the firsl round sa~e ;,:~~~ a:t:~ r:f1~ng t~ was by im ,o1tz ;in . nit challengers going after USRC a sp11.rklin1 17--4 mark.
of a post season tournament Newport Harbor, 6.~ Mrireno. -e111Rt•I" v111., cu Getdtfl Gtov1 •t lrool<llltl'll ..... •»-t• but loop officials d@Cided to points leader Bob Olivi>ro in _.
'd In the other issue winles! Loitz had a pa ir nf markers the full midget competiliOfl,_==~-~---'~--"-
consi er the season complete Corona del Mar fell to while Moreno had one. while last week·s main event1-
after Tuesda.y's games. I" 1 I t' t' Downey. 11·:1. -.a er J>fl o 11c ion con 1nur~ "'i nner -Canoga Park's Mike
Santa Ana won the regular Clay Evans "'as again the l.onlght al Estancia in the AAA Shaw _ is at the forefront of
campaign and Tuts day' !I dominan! force for Huntington d iv ision with host Estancia the Nr---fRA entries.
games we re n 'I considered Beach as he tallied f!ve times. meeting Chaffey in the 6 ,,,;iiOiiOiiOiiOOiiiiOiiOiiOoo'ii.;;;;;;;,[
regarding the championship. He aod his mateJ1 held a slim o'clock opener.
Santa Aoa won seven ol JO 2.0 lead at lhe half before the Other games includP Buena
regular games for first place Oilers got busy in the second Park· Valencia at fi : 5 0 .
while San Clemente was se--hair. F"noLhill·Anaheim at 7:-40 and
co~~t;~~~aa ~~dmar~:ler Dei Cosla Mesa held a :i.2 Millikan-Long Reach Wil son at
each posted a S-5 slate pr;or to margin al Lhe half and upped 8:30. tlie count to 4-2 before R:incho Frosh-Soph activity is on lap Tue~ay. scored again in the latter Friday night at F.11tancia with
Maler Dei's 10--point decisirin stages against Me 5 a• s five Orange Coast area teams
over San Clemente came with reserves. involved.
four players hitting in double John Whitmnre led Costa[,---------· -iiii•o-
ligures. Mesa's scoring with two goals
Steve C u C' u I i c , the wh ile mates Steve Sponagle
Monar.chs' cen ter, was hlih and Bob Walters had one goal Wllfl L•w-H•Mlc1p1,
f th . I h J . l'••cTk• •• T~t or e winner!! wt I poin\3 apiece. NEWPORTER 11\ri!N
on five field goals and lhree Newport Harbor"s S le v e
GOLFERS
LEASING
SALES
SERVl~E
lmmedit le Dtliv1ry
Pt.EASE CAll M0-1100
'71 Chevrolet
0 ton
pick-up
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124 Ha1bor Blvd. at First. Santa Ano11
Te lephone 531·0607
lree throws. Smith cracked the nets for PAR 3 GOLF COURSE COSTAMW.
Others in double figures for ilh~r~•~•~s~ec~o~n~dJh~a~Jf~g~o~•~ls~to~p~A~c;e!!;S~l~.o~o~w;lt;h~t~h~";.;••~w~•;••~•~•;Y';Jlb~~~;;;;~~~J!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1'.1ater Dei were Georg e -
Herold, Greg Green and Jr.ff
Kiley. each with 10 point.1.
Herold and Kiley led the se-
cond half assault.
S11n Clemente's twin attack
or M:ke Dowling and Rick
Bauer wa!I limited to four
points in the firsi half.
Bauer finished up with a
do zen counters while male
Dowling wa s held to six points
by lhe Mater Del defense.
Santa Ana's Bob Woolsey
and Ron Ha rrell Jed a rugged
Sa nta Ana zone defense tha.t
turned back Estancia in the
second half.
1'he host Eagl~ had con-
tai ned the Saint!! through the
first half of action and led the
champions by two \27-25) at
the midway point
But the 1.one df'fen~e. led by
the Saints' two quick guards
turned things around.
Woolsey scored JO of his 18
counters in the 11econd half
while Herrell added eight to
the Saints' totals.
Bill Pattee, Sailla Ana's f.·7
center, scored 13 points and
Willie Martinez hsid JO more.
Estanc1a'll Doug Confer and
Hank Moore were in double
figure.~ with the f Q rm e r
notchinj; 1-4 polnls and Monrr
adding I! to the Eagles' tally
sheet.
.........
Grtl" (uC~li!
Mtltr Oel Oil
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7 -6 Victory
•
For Comets
Starling pitcher N n rm
Blandel socked a base hit tn
~end home Tim Farrel from
second base with the winnina
run ·~ the Costa Mf's• Coml'l.3
rf'<'ordecl 11 7-6 Sn 11 I her n
('.ali fn rniA Ba~eball
As!!ocialion triumph over 1he
Invading G11rdena Chief~ Sun·
day 111 Costa Mesa·s TeWlnklt
Park
Although Rlandel knocked In
lhf' decisive tally, re Ii e f
pitcher Tim Cunnin~h11m l!TI1
the v.·Jn after taking over
mound chore.s ln the sixth
fr•mt.
Riagest bla.\l nf the clay for
the Comf't~ wa11 Mtkf' Spruill'~
1v.·n-run hnme.r in the ~~nd.
Cffll MtoM O ! .. • ·~ ~••ulll ' ' ' ' ~r:.~.:i:: • ! • • • ' Avo .. o. I& • • ' ' Yo~ft·•· ti l ! ' • E•1n1. ti ' i G""••'••· " I • 0· I" I I " ' ' ! 111 • ...,,1 .• 0 , l ' C"ft"'"'n""' • , .! To!•I• • ~ttr• ~¥ 1 .... 1 ... , • ' • C.••••~• c~1,11 •• ... . ... • • '" CDtNll "' •• Gl •-1 .r '
Fiber glass belts
wide profile
Clearance priced
Foremost Tigre-belt
220 with 2 fiber glass
belts on a 2 ply
nylon cord body.
• • 88
olus 1 88 led. tax arirl old tire
e78-1 J bl<1C ~Wiii! tubelioss
Blackwall tubeless
Size Fed. ta1 Price
F7 8-\.-i •••••. ' t\4 ••••••••• ,23 88
(•,7 3.1,1 •.••• ;i 6'l •••• ,., •. ,?5 BR
Dual whitewall tubeless
Size Fed. tax Price
8 78-13 ••••. 1 88 •••••••••• 2 1 88
E 78-14 ..... ,:' 37 •••.• , •••• 24.88
F78-1>\ •••••• ? $it •••••••••• 26 88
G78-14 ..••. ? 69 ••••••.••• ?8 88
H78-14 .•••• 'l 9"'.. ••••••••• 30 88
G7a-1s. .••• ? fl0 •••..••••. ?8.88
H78-15, ••.• 3 0 1 •••..••..• 30 88
'JOO· I~ •• , , •• 2 96 •• ,, • , •• , .32 .88
Plus Fed 1a11: ind old t!r•
30 MONTHS <;;UARANTEE
WITH 9 MONTHS 100% ALLOWANCE
Fo•tmott l'r11tecli11• Gu~••nlt•. You• ~ ... •most 1u• 0tnteciklft
""·"•ntee co~•" Oii r o•t mou o_.,,e"'I"' lu~• !• <Cf'OI '"" 1otclt l
_.ppllcollOft llr1• w>lh se o•i •I• Oll"'onlff\) Allf•n•I ~•• '"•d h1111d
'" <1•f1[! toilu•••· Yoo •'~ P•Otec!e<I 101 1'1• t nt"" •••lf'd mp.,\h1
of QU•< 1nte• 11 V"'" I"" !••" du•l"9 th •~,,.,_.,,!.,, """"'<I, r•l u• n It Ill "' •"" we ..,,u, •t ,..,,. n11l,tm, lt01lr your 11'f , 01 mt ~t •rl
•llt1w1nct 11•,e<I '"' · '" .. ""~•n•I "'"""""' 1u1ce. 1wcl1,1d1nt 1 nn1>cohl• r ede•ol I "'"e 1 ••. lftW••n lh• ""''h"'" nl 1 "•wthr.
Wt wHI fll Ow lr!TI"-n! .!•1~ '"'"'"II O"o ctio•t O•l~t. f'~tlli<ll"O
•1>11ll<1DI• F~de••• (•C••• I•~.(!"''"~ the 100·••1!0"""' .. 11111 ..... lh.,!tlll~r. W~ Wiii Al'nw '•0 • '" :•,•-pl ll>t Of•41P•I DV<CI'>_.,. ""ce, "•ctunonq •nDl•c•I:>'" I •rlt•~I I.,,., I •~. towud I~• '""'-"11" "'A,,~ .... , .. f'_ !~•e th~•1 Dela ... ). l·•Ol•AI f>1cl~~ l#( •d1uSlm •1lt •liow~nct W•+I D"-fri•OI o" tn• D•S!• DI !l>ft ~Ctn! n l •~• P•"''"•I I teoo 1em1l,.too,
FOllll:MOST f'lllOfl:CTlON CiUA"ANTl.l CMAlll T
Ml:lllll'S HOW YOUR GUAlllANTllll WOlllM;S
Enlfrttu1•1nltl Pt,,od •• , . , • , •.••••.. , ..••••.•... JO mo"!"" IDD'll.1llow1oct PflroOd ...• •••••·••• ..•.•...••.•. , 1·9 mttftlllt ~~1Ho-nc•Pl•'.n d ,,, ••• 1 .••.•••••...••.•••• 10·11mtnllu
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Trt1d Liit l"rtt1cllot1. Wo bu+l<I 1010 f'-•••v Fottmo•t uro ••I•
l•ltl•O"I lnDlt t lD"-1'1'>•v "'""11 W"I" .... ,,. f'ff'-·~·"JI (! Of ., •• ~..,
H t0"" llf• w•1" .,,., Je~ceoi Int •nco.,eel ll•Onm•"tl w1 w11i
"'' • '" 1now1nce b1~ 11n !hf "''<I'""' riu••n1,1 .,, ,,. ~•chu!onq l!'Dllc1Dlfl Ftd••I! L~•••f 'f.'I• OnwMd t•1e p1u •h1>• 01"1 nt w!"•
Wt w•ll 11•11w I /3 """"" 11-\" 11"1 1>111 n• r /t (lu""O ,,.~ '"'!'"<! ~·· i nt r~r •l•t•d "'""'~i "' I 011r1nt•1 I •{1••11 r,,.,e r~~•<liuumtnl
1llOWfl'lt fl ..... 11 bt ""•!!•DO lh• bl l•l lll 111 1 TW•t tnl or ,~. """'"II l•••d •l m•lnlflo. 11•1• ou1tonte• " nnr h 1n1J11ie•1 11 f< l>nly 1
0<1•111 D•"fl'I,.. ~·· ()< DIUlftt•• 'II ••'"" w1•on< • ""
Yes, you can shop 12 to 5 Sundays, too, at any of these Penney Auto Centers:
AUEN A PAl1K• C.4.NOGA PA.II( CARLS8AD CHULA VISTA
1--!UN llNr.lON BEACH MONTCt.A.111 N£1NPORT BEACH
•oro,,oetli omt 01 Voll....-View (C1o•ecl Svndov•)
,. .. ... .............. f~•· --~ --a
DOWNEY
OR AN(;E
FASHION VALlEY-SAN DIEGO FULlEf!TON
"THE CITY" ll 1Vf l1S IDE VENTU l:A
U11 Pt l'lney• l1mt Poyrneri! Pion.
I I · \J'lll.., -"
HOW TO MAKE A TOUGH SHOT LOOK EASY
NO -----. ... -· ... ;'";' .. ----.....
#-NO .-· . . . . . . .. . . . v••
Y•e
. '
. '
I'm sure 1bat you'YC run into 'hots like this: you're
just oft the &recn and there is a slope between you
and the Oagstick, which sits on a p!alcau just past the
top of the rise.
This may look like a 'tough shot, but it really isn't
-if you plan it propc-rly.
Yoa don't \.\ant to lry to piti.:h the hall over the
rise lo lhc hole because you may either lcB\'C it short-
into the ~ope-or carry it too far.
Wha t you ll.hould do is use a club with Jess lo£t-
say a 6 or 7 iron-to land the ball j u.;t short of lbc
slope and let it .run up to lhe hole.
Or. use the same club and land into the bank. The
s\OJ>C. will take some of the forward montc ntum from
the b.a.11, but this will be offset by 1hc fact that you've
carried it ck:lscr lo the hole.
Actually, you have a suitable landing area of sevtral
feet-fron1 the base of t~ slope to aQy where along it.
This ~lly makes such a shot easier. than il would be
if the ground.were level all the way to the hole.
"ff. e 1911 "'A!1 No...,, S,n, !!1i1i11
l onri Irons from The Rou&ll, Pitchin& from Woods, Uphill ;ind
D<iwnll1ll Lies-ti!•~• 1'1d oth•r shou. are del•iltd lor you 1ri
Arnold P~!mer's booklet, "Trouble Shot$." for your copy, $tnd
20c and 1 stamped, seU-addr•sSld envelope to Arnold Palm•r, in
care of this newspaper.
Alamitos Entries
Alamitos
Results
TU•l<l•Y. July 11. 1'11
CIMr a F•>I
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ill•mltos B•r ll, M1. P•rr llvTltr.
Borrarnb!. Mr. Sue ll•r. C~rge Em, ~cr1tche<1 -Ea•! lndl•n.
THlll:O ltACI -lSO ¥lrd1. 7 ve1r
cild melo.n1. Cl1lmin11. ,.ur<t 1!900. "II Nit., LDnO (Cr1>1b1l •.20 •.70 3,IO Gr•r><lP<ll Hell~ l,\dalrJ J,:!O l .ID
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l'OUllTH llACI -t10 Yt rd1. J Y•I•
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Bold Ad\'t nlurl (Hlr1l l 00
Tlmt -.Al •110. Al1a Ill/\ -Sir DK'l<t. full M-
M•n. ' 5cr1tc--Ya Qloiro.
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mtldtnf. PurH Sl!'CIO. Arete !A1llS011J n.•o 1.00 1 ta
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Rio N ROJI! (lltnlU) t .IO
Tlmt -.11 1110 <ll•O "1an -Mr. Aullm•n M.,\ 11
N0.,, C•tc~ Dt<k. M1" Gold r""'· "T eul C~argtf , Gilly G>rl1, Fo• D•••d
!">ul1<"'d -Gvo F•e. l'orl<tr Bye, lr.,h'I B•rrad, 5~ar1 Roc:l••I.
iEYENTtl RACI -l5G Yt•d•. l ~•••
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Morblt Mtn !Pnn") '·'° l .C ,.•0 NlllY' N"'• lSmllh) (.IQ l,!»
0 1vlder>cr1' Bt• !"d•l•I l 00
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EIGHTH ltACE -400 v••d•. l Ytlr
o•d1 & UP Allawat><ll. Pu••~ nllOO. S/\.ldoW Mt n (Ad•lt' 770 ~.:IO l,l'O
Ooublt Al'"" !S't'lllll 190 l t0
"'"' Ta M!n 1Llolotml t.10 ~11':''ii.a'~ ~lG\.t..Clt r;nocK. $11111•
Rotttf, A~Uo Rttlm. ()rtll Na 1tr1ldlfl.
NINTH •A(a -=-l5G vs•OS. l Ytt r
old•. CltlMTl'"IQ Pur11 $1100 Bald s1nv !Ad•lrl 1.10 l.111 J ta SntM.Y Tetl<Y {LJoht"l) J. l ~
Stir"" ll•n 11'trntr) I.-Tl--II 1110. AllO Rln -S..1d• Mttl<•1, B•"nn l!ld. F •tt• l(ltlQ ~arn, 8lm Deel<, Nll<I N~1;;.r(~d'1':_Jl~'J¥ Wl1t. l•~l't
Mtrl<, Ga "1~• Um ll, RoA•lno R<1<~t1,
Ho t Ca rd Set
At Li ons Strip
\VlLM INGTON -With l11st
AIM Eligible
ffiole A Ofcl< IAdt lrl Mon!tnt Moon (,.a.otJ 5l.,,anl {O•tYUI Gl.crgor'1 Ch•"O• l,.aac )
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War Gal•xlt JLIP"•m) 1 \9 Fl•l>M• iC•t oul Ill
Jtlltre !Wtl!Of\I "' Petltr Bob (!">m '"! 119 R~" Men1ce (Pernetl 111 Triple C Truly (CrOll>Yl 1\1
L111n1nTnci Rid<!• (Adelt I Ill Sccin Mtc!ean (P•Qe/ 119
FOURTH ltACI -l5C yard1. J vttr
old>. Allow1nc:t1. l"llnt SJ200. c ... , ..... ~u. {CrMbVI 116 ~~~1:v11W:~: .. \c.tii/!°O:,i1 ll;
'L laf>lnl»<r Bld (Llpl>fml lit fl a••I Call fWrl.crM) l tl Double Pennlt Bid tWilJOnJ 111
w1 .. Wiiiie lWal>onf lit S!!'Vt T/\t Yet (Adt1t) IH
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Old" Allawtnc:t1. Put" lllOD.
M•le.rk Moan \Ad•l•l Go Go ,\uvred Ptrnu) '" "' "' '" "' '" "' '"
Ttlutna T••I (Bll'llc$)
Bid Bid !Wtrd l Fa nny F1rklt (C1rdo11l
Mld Po!M" {Lloll1ml ViY• l t lla'!'t l (,\!llMl"l Mo 1 11111 Bou! II !Hl fl\
l:IOlolTM •a.ct -l5CI Ylfd•. l v••· aid• I. uo ,\llaw1nc11. PUrH UOOO "T~t Rtlklndo 8 N dl. Sh•'s A Gou Clla/\aMl Ml" OK~& S""°d (W1!1<1nl SellO• Panda IHaffl "' "' "' "' '" '" '"
Oueenlt Cnaroe !C•OIDY)
C.•tnd Ot<~ \Prrn"l Hiio Tnt A""'• !"d~"l Rt!e<1'1 Tonio (Alll1on1
NINTH ltACE -l50 Yt•dl J VI•• citd• c11lml119. Puro• S2QIXl. Cl•lmlno
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C•e EtM !C1rdo1•l LloM~~•rt•d I Welc~l Nimbi• Nott p,,,,.,\ ~"" Moon RUft (ONt r)
Trul• A BOOQtr !Wt!Mlnl Ste.re! With l Bt.,~•I
Truly B•• (Wrlohll
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~ouev·, St<:rt! {Htrtl T•udY1 Trllh {\'lrll•Oft}
Cou/\IN c .. ou•ll· {Cltdol•I
l lol>Dy llloD ((rlllllY)
Opening
At Del Mai·
'" '" '" "' '" "' "' "' '" '" '" '"
DEL MAR -Del Mar,
wht're the turf meets the surf,
opehs a 43-<lr.y racing meeting
today with 28 horses entered
in two divisions of the
Palomar lfandicap for fillie!
and mares.
Slreet OallCcr, with Rill
Shoe1naker Rboard. figu res :is
the morning line favori te ln
the first divi8ion or the $12,rx>O
sle1ku. The race is over 71h
furlongs on the turf.
weckelld's Profes s Ion a lr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I
Dragster Championship at the
NaUonsl Hot Rod Associ a·
Lion's Orange County lnterna·
tional RocewRy out or the
v.•ay. drivers can concentrale
on Saturday's top-rate card at
Lion! Drag Strip, a member of
lhl!! r!Val American Jlot Rod
Association.
Drag racing's thrtt fa!lll!St
and mosl popular eliminaton
-top fuel, funny cart and fuel
tiltereds -will .sh11:~ tht
spotlight with R h i g h
perfonnance show which w!ll
feature some of the m~I
famout; naml's in I he
automotive industry.
TODAY IS YOUR
DAY TO OWN A
1971 CADILLAC
DAILY PILOT .2 7 •f
Checliing Coast Area Golf Links.
Costa Me:sa Country Club's
v.·ornen 's club held lb criers
tournament last week With
Jtuth Schilling in C flight com·
piling lhe lowest ucl score in
!ht' three flights contested
with a 60.
Merilee Dungan was the B
night winner with 11 net 63
wttue Lucille Wilson (net GS)
and Mary Evelyn Imler (net
6') posted the tourney'• top
low gross scores with 9ls.
UpcQming are the DAILY
PILOT tournament th i s
Saturday -.nd lhe J~isha Golf
Club to1.1t11ey Aug. 8.
IRVINE COAS'I'
The 16lh annual rnl!!mber·
guest tourney is on tap for a
three-day run from Thursday
through Saturd:iy "'ilh all
competitors playing 54 holes.
OLD RANCH
la last week's Bill Bryant
Jr. League play, Old Ranch
hosted golfers from California,
Rolllng Hills, Mesa VerdP. and
Palos Verdes country clubs.
r.1esa Verde ~at out Palos
Verdes, 73-53, and Rolling
llllls triumphed f)Ver
California, 9Q.18.
rtf.EAOOWLARK
The wome11 's club held a
home • and · home tournan1ent
against the v1s1llng Huntington
Scaclif{ women 's club last
week.
Scores were tallied on Lhe
bt:st two balls of a foursome
basis with the v1ctoriou.s
quartet or Cheri 1'homas,
Jackie Fitzgerald, June Clasu1
and Barbara Dunham firina 1
126.
The runnerup foursome al
129 consisted of Roberta
Andrews, Shirley CUmmaro,
Noreen Sheldon and Pat
Hemphill.
A men's club sweepstakes
pick·a·pro tournt-y was also
held last week .
In the pick·a·pro. each of the
contestants picked a pro in
one of the big tournament~
(lhe Westchester Classl<' was
used in this easel and the
Jocalite"s net score was
1natched with the pro's gross.
Low scort at 130 Y.'l!I
re:eorded by Dick Turner. who
picked pnXeulonal Ray i;·1oyd
aa his partner.
John Stanko, with Arnold
Palmer as his simulated com-
panion, shot a 131 for the se-
cond spot
MESA VER.DE
Members John and Clar'
Owens teamed wi!h Los
Coyotes gue!lts John and Betty
Jotm,,on foc first place in last
Sunday 's member·guesl
tourney with the roursom'
TUBELESS TIRES
AIR CLIPPER BLACKWALLS
88 6.00•13,
1SMONTH
GUARANTEE*
4PLY
NYLON CORD
............ .,$1.60
chalking up a 127.
In addition, junior clQb
member Terry Kniaht, an.
Estancla High links ~ qualified for ne1Ct week'• na
tional amateur champktnsh"
in 1'taryl1nd by placing htgb
on the list in lhe national
qualification round.'! last wee.k: -~
at Whittier's California Coon·
try Club.
EL NIGUEL
·randy Coleman and Tom
Pierce led last week ·~ mat·
ched play competition with a
net of 65.
"
"
. . ,,.
·:;·
" ' It~ ...... 12'5 "··~ ........ ~ .. ~.·= 14'5 '•';
"
lu•nm .. ~ 110.
•lACllWAlL ""' (i.,,( Jl.J
7,l )/1.00,.-14 134'
2.01 7.15".M!•H :;1,1, ,,,,/630 .. ll 2.16
t .7,,.,00 • 14 1436 2.)7
t .U/1.10,.U :1.)7
WIDE TREAD BELTED
WITH STEEL
UNDERTREAD
TUBEUSS WHITEWALLS
PllCF .......... .. ,, 3003 7Jj/7.!i0 '" . " G71·1'
2FULLPLIES
DYNACDR"
RAYON CORD
PLUS 2 BELTID PLIES
DYHACDR"
RAYON CORD
G71-1•
l.2j /l .OO . " J7t-14
... _ .....
THE NO THUMP TIRE!
CORNELL ARISTOCllA T
TUllUSS ILACKWALL
4 PLY DYNACOR'" RAYON CORD
27 MONTH GUARANTEE *
.........
'" •r , .
. .,
'
.;•1
·!
..
3101 l .IJ/7.10 :2.10 l .l.5/f.00
"' "' 7.00~lJ 1554 1.ts RECONDITI NED : PERFORMANCE TESTE
WATER PUMPS
1\. ,., ....... -
··-c ... o11 Tl• .. ,., • ·-111 ......... .... .,_loo .....
-II ..... t>eroo ..... i.. ---.... P•-t•~ II•• ...... ~~ __.,..,, _,.,.., .. .. -...... ·-... , .... 1., •• 1u.1
.... i.. ....... " ,... .. .....
FREE
$6.98WHEEL
ALIGNMENT
-.4th flti'FCh•• ol lw•
~ fllor. povtflO•r llr ..
(111111 A111t •ltooft c11rs)
•
7.75/],'!J{)•l4 1658 2.14 6.95/1.JS ... 7.00R14
,_,,,.11,10 1764 = ..,
1865 ....
CORNEU EXTRA-WIDE TREAD
TUBELESS
WHITEWALL
4 PLY NYLON CORD
70 SERIES TIRE
GUARANTEm
36 MONTHS* 070·1.5
•.70/7.lOal
RADIAL
!lll~
6 PLY TRIAD
70 SIRllS Tiii
,.,..._ WllWAU.S
#AAOle. WI TH TYi~ IATOH CO.O
NO •LAT Sl'OTTINO OW THUMP
.:t6MONTH GUAlAHTD0
1RUCK11RES
IOR PICK-UPS,
PANELS & CAMPERS
65;-=-=~·
34,r,;·.~. ··"·"I Twbld ''"
,...,..,,_,,.a..a ·~.:J' l695 1 ··~· 1845 1,,. ,,,. ...
'f..:l' 1911 1'~~."28" ''" 11 ... , .. ~
50 ...
00 1,41 """ '-'· toi• of $1Jt flt SJ.tl
'
" ,.
...
--t"I .. ___ T•n I/Ir " -------~----. ,,, __
• l ;.t__ --• --- -·--lll.
•
'
•
,.
' I
ll
~
Cal-20
On Tap
Friday
By At>fON LOCKABEY llAll Y P'llllT ... ff .... ,,.,.
Bud Gardlner oC Hermosa
Beach will be lhe defender
when the Cal-20 National
Oiampionship regatta gets un·
der way Friday at King
J1arbor Yacht Club, Redondo
Beach.
Gardiner, a McDonnell·
Douglas engineer, i! a veteran
Southland sailor who has com·
peted in maay classes as well
as long distance ocean racing.
He was the foonder of the
widely-known Costa Mesa sail
loft, Baxter & Cicero. The
finn started in the 1930! as
Gardiner and Bax:ter and
Gardiner later sold his in-
terest to Saint Cicero.
The championship regalia
started today with t w o
preliminary ra<.'M to nduce
the field of 60 entries to SO for
the championship beat& Satur-
day and Sunday.
KHYC is provi~ng spectator
OOats for those who wish to
Iollow the races on the water.
DEFENDS TITLE -Bud Gardiner of Hennosa Beach iJ ~· del_ending champ~on
in the Ca1·20 CJass which begins its ninth national champ1onsh1p regatta at King
Harbor, Redondo Beach, Friday. The regatta continues through Sunday.
The entry list includes
participants from as far west
as HoooluJu and as far east as·
Texas.
The upcoming Cal·20 na-
tionals will be the ninth in a
series that date back to 1962,
the first year that the Cal-%0
skipperJ took to the water to
determine who was the best in
the nation.
American, Canada Saiwrs
Will Square Off Monday
First champion In the-class
was Lloyd (Swede) Johnson or
Newport Beach in Taco II.
Johnson l! a member of the
sailmaking firm or Baxter &
Cicero.
Twenty-nine ol the hottest up the U.S. Olympic contender
sailor.! in the U.S. and Canada in Uie class. 'The Soling was
will _square off l'le~t Mon~ay at ~levated to Olympic status
Marina del Rey tn a bid for fter th"e 1968 Olympics the North American ch am· 8. . •
pionship in the 27-foot Soling ._ displacing the S.5 rneler.
Class. Since being bestowed Uie
The cast may very well turn Olympic mantle, the class has
British University
Sailing Team in U.S.
A seven-member British
anivenity sailing team. led by
Capt, N. Martln of the
University of London is mak·
ing j~ biennial invasion el the
U.S. and is scheduled to arrive
en the West Coa.!!t Aug. 7.
The team arrived in New
York last week and were met
by officers of the Middle
Atlantic Intercollegiate Sailing
Association.
The British collegians will
visit the Midwest July 28
through Aug. 5.
Americans
Take Lead
In Races
HELSINKI (AP) -Louis
Pocharsky. the 1967 world
champion. and Rill Shore led
an American charge Tuesday
after the first day of the
1.ighln ing Sai!craft W o r Id
Championships.
After two r::ices. I he
Americ<ins captured eight of
the fir st 10 places in total
standings. Lack of wind Mon·
day caused both races to be
CQntested Tuesday. Four more
races will be held to
determine the champion.
Pocharsky held a one-point
edge over Shore or Buffalo,
N.Y., 79-78. The results were
unoffi cial. pending a protest in
the RCOnd race because of a
dense fog.
Shore won lht first rare
11head of Pocharsky .md \\'SS
third In the second which
Pocharsky won.
Rites Set
For Boater
Hovey, 91
NEWTON, Mass. (UPI)
FWltraJ services will be held
Thur9day at the Oiurch of the
Redeemer for C h 1 n d I e r
Hovey, 91, yachtsmAn, b11nker
and Bolton sociaJ figure who
died Tue.tay at his homt in
°""'1IJt Hiii.
Programs of sailing ind
entertainment have been plan-
ned by the Pacific Coast
lntercollegiate Sailing Associa-
tion during the team '! stay,
Aug. 7-19.
After leaving lhe Wesl Coast
the team will return to the
East for some competition in
the W a shington·Annapoli.os
area, Aug. 23-27.
From Annapolis the team
will go to Kingston, Ontario,
Canada where they wlll com·
pete in Cork Week, Aug. 28-
Sept. 4. They will be back in
New York Sept. 5-10, com·
peting in races in New
England before returning
home.
Three major trophies are at
stake in the annual British·
American competition . They
are the John Lord King and
British·American Universities
trophies -now held by the
Americans. and the Lipton
Trophy, held by the British.
The King Trophy will be
i;alJed at Chicago Aug. :J..4. and
the British·American Trophy
off Newport Harbor Au,R. 16·
17. The Lipton Trophy will be
raced in New England. pro·
bably at MIT. on dates yet to
be announced.
The Pacific Coast portion of
the tour will start in San 'r~rancisco where tile team will
compete in OK Dinghies at
Tinsley Island. Aug. 7-8.
Alter a day Clf sightseeing,
the next slop will be at
~fonterey. Aug. 10 for Shields
Class racing versus the Navy
Postgraduate School.
On Aug. 11. the British will
engage in informal mcidel 12·
meter racing at Newport
Beach. and on Aug . 12 will sail
Lehman· 12s 1n N H Y C ' 1
Twilight Series.
Snipe Race
Scheduled
Earl Elms of MiS!iOfl Bay,
San Diego will be after his
111111 straight national cham-
pionship when the Snipe Na.
tionals get under way at An-
napolis Md .• Aug. 13.
grown rapidly in the U.S., at· LEGAL NOTICE
trading top skippers froml ---'--------1
lh I SUl'Ell:IOll COURT 01' THI! numerous o er c ~sses. STAT• o" cat.1Fo11N1.t. 1'011
Top ~ulhlander in next THI( COUHTY 01' llRANct• No. A·1'111, week's competition wi.11 be NOTICI! 01' 'Hl! ... RINGI OP' P'ETITION
Lowell North of San Diego, l'ort ,.1101 ... TE OI' w1LL ANO 1'011 lETTl!ltS Ta5TAMl!NTAltY (IONll three·time world champion wAu1101
and 1ru-o Q]ymp;o g 0) d E1lal11 ol M&rle Dominick. DK•••M. :roo NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tli•I ll~n medalist in the Star Class. Br....ie1 h•• fllMI h<l••ln 1 Hll110t1 !or . problo!e of will •nd for lnu•nce or Lt1!ff1 Another ex·world champion Ttt!•mfnt••1 10 Pt1111 ..... .,. (llon"
In the Star Class who has swit~ 'Z~~:-;!1~;.~;~~:'.~ !°n,t:'~~~ ~. 'ri~: .':
ched to the Solings is Don <>l•c• °' he••lng th• s.me f'I•• ~ ••• r Soulh t Y ...._.. foir Augu1I 19. itn. 11 •:» 1.m .. Jn the Bever O WCS ern a1..--.1~ court.-oom of O•o•rlmenl No. l ol wld Club San Diego. court. 11 700 Civic c ... ,,, 0r1_.. W•1I, In
• ir.. cnv Gt 51n111 An1. C•1lkwnl1. Top cont.enders r r 0 m D•t..:1 J\ltf '17. l'tn
Be h .11 be T' w. e. sr JOHN, Newport ac WI Im counll' c1H11; Hogan a former collegiate MJtctMll •"" o.ict. • . . SC "" wrb111r1 ••ir.r•N, All·American sailor from U , ._..... Hiiis. c.1tt'"'"' "''t
and Roger Welsh former na-T•" u1u "'°"", . • . A!lomev1 ,_. P'etllll!Mr tional champ1011 in the Put>ll•'*' 0r.,.. c-t 01rr-, .. 11ot.
JnternationaJ.14 Class. Both Jui... fL 2f •"" .t..11u11u 4, '"' 1'tlll.n
are from Newport Harbor LEGAL NOTICE
Yacht _Club. . NOT•c• 0,. P'u1L1c H•A1t11o10. Considered the skipper to NOTICE JS HEAE:llY GIVEN ll\et
beat is John Dane Ill. anolher Ptl•MJ•nt to SKtlon ~ll.l of Artlcl• tv. . · I Ch•Plfr VI, of P1 rt lft, Ohrl11..., Y of lhP collegiate All-American rom H"'1"' •nd se1e11 co<1e of tt.e s111e 01
Tulane University New ca11rorn1a, • PYbll, f'leor1,.. w111 bl ,,.kl
D I h. . lh "" AVOllSI 11, 1911, •' 1:>CI P.m. In lh• Orleans. ane s avmg e Cw<><:U c111mbPr1 of 111e c11y H•ll of "'• greatest year of his ymmg cuv ot Cos!• Mes•. 11 n l'•!r Dr!vt. , CM!• ~e. C1llfornl1, el which 1eld career in sailing. picking up tim e !ht Board ot Olr.ctor• o1 ttw t:osto
II · I 1"11 · · I II MtSt Sen!lery Olslrlcl wlU f'le1r 1nd CO eg1a e I es In V1r Ua Y de!irmlne orottsh el\d oblectrona •ntl ••·
every class i" which he bas •ivu.i. 1or ••emou°""' r1 '""· ro the · prOl)OS...:I lt..,tllmftll tor lr•5h tnd sailed. Q••Nv• catlec!l0t1 •• .. , '°'"' In • ._i Here Is the full list of skip.. 111..:1 wrth !ht s.c~•rv"' tho Olotrlct 1!
ho th• ot1lco1 of ll'lt Dl1trkt, n Ftlr Orlv•, pers w are even now rea· c"''' MtSt, C•llfornte. dy;ng their craft at the NOTICE IS HEll.E:l!Y 'Ull.THER GIVEN ll'lel the wld •HOrl M fl1't In ff-.. sponsoring California Yacht 0111cn o1 the Coot• Mui S1ntt1rv
Cl b Oltlrlcl, n F1 lr Drive, 111 Fl-. ltoorn
U · I IJ, me.-bt v:1m lned bllwMn llM' hours
LA Times
Trophy
Race Set
of 1:00 a.m. """' J :CIO P.m. JJl.NE ANGEL ClEltK OF THE OJSTltlCT
Poti!!shed Clr1nve Coell Otllf P!lcrl, J111.-'l'I. un no.11
LEGAL NCY!1CE
IUPERIOlt COUltT 01' THI! STATE 0, CALll'OllHI ... FOii THE COUHTY 01' 011.t.NCPE No. A·!'l111 NOTICE OF Hl!AltlNO 01' l'ETITION l'Olt P'ltO.ATE 01' Will ANll 1"011 ll!TI"ERS TESTAMENTA.ltV E'1111 of FlOltlOA M , Clt,..,IG, Ore~••""· The Lo!'! Angeles Times NOTICE 1~ HEREBY GIVEN 11'11t Loy · . M1r1 Crolt "'"' filed hortln • ~tlllon lor Trophy. one of oldest yachting <>rob.-t• 01 w111 ftn<! 1or iuuonce of l.lfler• k d · So h C J"f · TM!•m•n•orv To Pe!Hle"e" rrltr~nce to u os in ut em a l ornia, wM<h 1, m•o• IO<" ,11,.,ti., P•r•1c..1er1. 1nd will be the top award as sail-1~u me 11me """ Pl•c• at ~earl"• t~• · _._ ..,..,. ~·• b""n ••I tor A.11g1111 19. !ti!, •I 1ng yac hts from the Ya...-ul 9:.xi o.m . 1" t~t courl•oom o•
Hacing Union of Southern o .... ,1men1 No. • "' ••Id court. 11 700 c_,,.,c Center Or!~t Weot, In !~• City of California take off Thursday Sent• Ano. ce111ornl1.
lh I ·. t 011eo Ju1v ll, 1'11 on e annua race-cruise o w.e. 51 JOH"1
Catalina Island. coun1.-Cleo-~ . . W•ll1c1, Ir-" tfOCI Cr11ft IOKWI The racing contingent gets w o.. ... llr1••· suit• NurntMr 11,
the starting ,;gnal at Los NewPorl B•Kll, C•ltlllt'lli. ""• Tel: (11'1 -77 Angeles Yacht Club at noon . ..,11_,, tor "'-tlt11 .....
.. h . II I d' PubllohMI Or•n.u. C091t Oolt1 Piiaf. The f1nt! 1s al ·ow an s 1.,1.,. ,., ,, ,1111 ..,...,11 ... ,,.,, :!Oft·11
Landing near the west end of
Catalina Island. LEGAL NCY!1CE
On rriday the fleet WilJ Sa il NOTIC• lll' DISSOLUTION
I • •--01' P'AllTMlll.SNI" from 11ow ands to ,,.,.,,,stone Publl< l\Oll« 11 l'ltr.i>v •lven "'•' HAii· CClve for the Robert. M. Allan 11v M. 1t.t..1NVILLI!, 1rii1 0Av10 .... ""'"'· YlllE. he!"t'lolorlt doll>tl bu11,_1 ,,...,., Jr. Gabboon and Broom . ""' t1ctlfl<:1U• urm n1~ 1nd •ll'lll of Saturday will~ 8 Jay-day at H .. 0 CONSTRUCTION. It 11'2V K.iloll Or1vtt Cltr ol Yo<blt LI""•· Ctutrt1 ol Moonstone, and (In Sunday the Onin~. Slit• o1 C•llfl!rnl1. did on tr..
II I "II h d II t ht .SOY e1 o~ lt7t i,., ""''~! ee w1 up enc or an sa o eonwnt. dludv• II'!• .. 1c1 "''""r•hlo Alamitos Bay for the West •"" ,.,..,.1 ..... 11>a1r ... 111on1 •• .,.,,,,....
Trophy, 111;.':~ notlu Is heretw •lw.., "''' -Overall winner of the three un<Jeroi<aned wflt no1 bot •ff1>on1lbM, trom . . . !hi• d•V M tor AIW <lb!lttl!ona rnc:u"ld days or racing will receive the DY M .. 0 CONSTRUCTION "' bY ''""'"
Wyman Tro..l.y ol -under1lgntd "" blti•ll of H .. 0 I"' • CONSTJtUCTION.
Voyagers Set
31s t Regatta
O.ted a.t S1nl1 An"' r.1HI01"nl1 1111• '"" "''or J-itn. HI,.., M. 111\nvlt[t o,wlit A.. A:11nv•ll• JtOY I. GIOllOAMO AtftrNT at llW !Ill N. Mol11 SlrMI
$nU Au, C1lltornle T•h t1U) 10·16'' P'ubllohld °''".. Laefl llollh' Pllol, Jvtv , .. lt'1l t1tJ,.n Voyagers Yacht Club b,l.::::...::_:::::_ ___ -=-'-'-
hcilding il'J list annual Sum-LEGAL NOTICE
mer Regalla a11d 6th annual ., ,.,..,
Dinghy Match Race Series, ,.ICTITICIUI IVSINlll NAMI ITATl'MINT Sllturday and Sunday. ,.,,. to11ow1 ... __, 1. c1o1.,. ''""'"'" VYC ia one of the Clldest 10:
"letter-head" yacht clubs In ..,,:A~~s ~~: C:,,M,.:::-.w»•Mdl.
s V'E '3! .. Sears oltBattery
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• large, full length tuning cham-
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• 22 ga. outer shell ga!Y11Di3ed oa
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Expert Installation
Available
AU Weather
lOW-30 Motor on
3~
Meets or eu:eeds tlll
new car manufaaure.n.'
watnD<f requJremems.
Priceo Effecti>e Wedoeoday, Iu1128 lhra Saturdll}',Joly 31
Hovey entered four yachts
1n tria1i to ptck the defender
fA. yacbtiog'1 blae!lt prize, the
Amerk:l'1 Cup, over 1 J4.ye.ar
porlod ending In 1961.
Hll; Oa11JaioopYank.et1tl
a recard fer t})t JO mile
Amtrlei'• Urp coutR o(f
Ne~ R.I.. In the 1930
trials, attbougb UHi sloop was
""' odected lo defend tho rup.
The junior national ch1m-
pklnship far the class at.arts
Aug. 9 and oonUnues thrC1ugh
Aug. 12 at Annapolis.
The senior national cham-
pknshfp!!L ror such a:iveted
perpetual trophiez fll the
<Zosby, Heinzerling and Wel111
will cootinue 1 full wctk, en.
dine Aug . 20.
Southern California. The club c&1ttorn11 ,,...,, , ,,_ • ··---. ,.__ Mr G. C. IY 11, v• · .._. now occupies quarters on un: .t........O., c..i1 MllM. c1IH01"n11 t»H.
lop SlOry at 33SS Vii Lido T1111 l>u•I._. Is l:M:lne; -..ivtled "' 1n
\HOP ~l•'l :l /11 17 .. t•Cl N 1,, ~ 00 IJ ,., • rJIONDA' th•u 111101\Y g 10 u "' !u 0 00 I''" • $1\JUS:OA1~ Q JO n "' '"II O(I P "' • fll!I PllP1'1N'
' lndlvldu1l. Newport Beach. G. c. l'•Yln
-h Pr ''" I Tftlf 1111-1 111111' wl"' ,.,. C-1¥ • •vP y eaen on or ci .. 1o; 111 °''"" coiinll' .,.,! Jvnt •· 1111. bolh evenfll will be held Sun-R.-lleveriv J. MHctoA, o-rtv Count'/
day llvenlng at an "open C1~111oe<1 0"'"" c .. ,, o111~ l'!lot, Jw·
house" in the club's quarteri. 1, 14. ,1, ,. '"" Awull 4. 1t11 nlt-n
I
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Mnrines'
'
Training
~oGarden ' -·
PARRIS ISLAND, S. C.
CAP) -"This i.5 no rose
garden."
That'! how Maj. Gen. Carl
W. Hoffman de1cfibell the
l\far~ -Corps ft e c r u i' Training Depot / on t h f s
palmetto-~lnged ialand on the
Soutb Ca _ ina "COast. .
Few <Jf he 'rhore tl'lan 4·,000
recruits in boot training here
would quarrel.with the assess-
ment orfered by Hoffman, wlio
took over in l\lay as con1-
manding general.
T h1•rt y-nine .'young Leatbernec~ were 1fulspitalh-
ed July 3 with 1ddpey pro-
blems blamed on e:s:cessive ex-
erci.9e ()rdered by a drill in-
struetor.
The I't(fUiL!l told a ?i.iaririe
invtslj.galing officer the drill
instructot eiercf!td them up
to 15 minutes ~~ a time on
several ooa3s.ions over a 36-how' period. 'fhe exercise
broke down muscle tissue and
alfec{ed the kidneys.
Re8:ulnlions prohibit the ex-
erCising of a recruit during' the
first two weeks of training for
longer than five minutes at a
time, with a JP.second rest re-
quired hAJf\vay through. The
recrttits had been training two
days when they were
bospit.alized.
~ drill instructor has been
as,,lgnfd oilier duties, away
from recruit training, and Co.
Theodore Metzger. head or the
recruit training.regiment here.
says the DI probably wlll face
punitive action .
~letzger;expects most of the
rec;rul.t.s to. return to duly but
some rii.ay be discharged .
The lncident stirred unhappy
menwrles of .a 1956 tragedy ~n
whi ch six recruits drowned in
one of the island'S tidal
creeks. 'A drHI instructor, .
deciding his platoon needed ·
extra d~clpline, had taken. the
recrujtsl on an \Qlauthor11ed
night itlarcli. ~
Largely because .. of the
drownings: the Manne Qirps 1
today is highl y sensitive to
charges that drill instructors
are allov•ed to mis l re at
recruits under the guise of
tra ining.
The Mlrine .Corps says, the
deatb. nuirch resulted in Jno!'e
contr-Oh and restrictions being
placed on Dls. Those controls
and1 restrlctlq'I are .in effect
todaj, Hoffman said, but boot
training remains otherwise
almost the same.
Recruits -at Parris Island,
one of two such dej,ots run by
the M.arine&, put in JG-hour
days tilled with the sound ()f
shoutlng d r·111 instructors
'"earing Smokey-the-bear felt
hats and vdth cons.t an!
marching on asphalt parade
grounds.
A recruit al Parris Island
Jtoes 'almost noWhere ·by
himself. During his nine weeks
on the island, he is allowed no
,,·eekpid, pas:ses, g9es ~o no
movit!s on ba$C, ma)' vls1l the
base exchanse only with the
pl atoon. and talks with fellow
recruits only ~uring an hour of
free time before taps each
night.
Every n1on1cn! of a recruit's
day is planned, from the time
he brushes his teeth in the
n1orni ng lin!il three D I s
assign ed to-\hc platoon put the
recruits to bed.
If the training on the i'!lland
remains essentially the same
as that offered for the past 30
)·ears. the fa cilities have in1·
proved. Tfle quonset huts and
tents that housed tens of
thousands of rec.ruit.s during
"nd after World W~r Tl are
gone. Jn their place 11re
rnodern new barracks, some
air condi11oncd .
"We basically have tht'
s11me pollcy and ph\1011ophy
that we .have always had ,"
said Metzger, who passed
through Parris Island as a
recruit in HM4. ''Our bt1si c
philosophy is that service in
1he Marines is toua:h and that
the training has to be tough."
Other branches of the Arm-
r.d Forces may mRke tra.ining
rnore co mf ort a b I e for
servicemen -beer in the bar-
racks, go--go dancing with din·
ncr -but the Marine
Cor p11 ha.-; no inclinations in
lhat dlrectiM." '
"Lace curtain!! in lhe bar-
racks," sald Metzger. a trim.
tHnntd man with iron grey
hair, "leads to liice curtain
perform,aOCt! on the bat-
tlefield.'"
Hoffrrfait and ~1tt.tgcr sny
lhe MariM C:Orps is determfn..
cd to "preserve the image of
being tough but ruaonable." · ·w• think we need to k~ it
tougb .... ~ meet o t r " re-
quirement." liof!man 11kt In
an in terview .
!\1etiger ,1nd Hoffman say
rC'erults are encour111ed to
rrporl any mistreatment. Bui
hccause many recruits fear
!heir remarks may backfire,
1rioet say nothing.
•
Sears
("HOGA , •••
340·0•11
COtll''0H ., •. ,,.1 , ''2·)111
U M0f'<lll
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__!!,'i8-.!_4fl:_:l5x ~ :tl.95 23.96
_F7H-l •l1J.~' l·I .13.95 25.46
1 ;i8-14(H.~!i,14 :ifi.95 27.il
2.37_
2.54
.i .1.t11,1.-; :.!CJ.95 Z2.46.~_,__l.f.0
_1 ;7f1.!:i/8.2.'l ~1.; :l7.9S 28.46 2.80
TUBELESS WHITEWALi. -----··---_1 :18-1.11.·,~·""'~'~'c---+-·'~'~··~·'~+-;'~4.~;~·-1-~2-~0C'-0 F.78-11' 7 .. 1:i~lo\ 35.95 26.96
...... ,.,
INOUWOOD ., .. ,,,,
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·'
DAILY PILOT Wtdntsd.17, J~t1 28, 1971
··,Orson Welles Wi~l Do Host Stint
.., IJ lliat DU BROW
HOU. YWOOD !UPll .,,.., a,-w.u.. .... Dick
Cl:wtt.'1 &Ole iueat ror two 91}.
mlqule oullap on ABC-TV, it
· beewne .immedlately clear
1hlt 1l:ie legtndary movi e
• lil!Ure bad dellghltul potenti•I
•a tele\IWofl hoft himself.
And now Well& will have
the (lppOl'tunlty to develop that
~ quite ap-.
propricitely, on Cavett's late·
nJtht talk program. For the
week or Sept. 6-10, Welles will
be the ho.st filling in for
Cavett, wbo is scheduled to go
on vacat!Ott .
Viel'!'en who saw the Caveu-
Welles broadcast:. will recall
lbe sparkling good fun. good
nature and good conversation
t ha t resulted, parttcularly
\\.'hen Welles pulled a switch
.and began questioning Cavett,
specifically about his reticence
to reveal much of anything
about himself. Welles, v;ho has
al.so appeared on NBC. TV's
Dean Martin Show, was a
clear winner with the studio
audience as a result of hi~
l~ck of preten51! and self·
aimed humor_
TV DAILY LOG
Wednesday
Evening
JULY 28
1:00 8 ti1 Nn$ 1-ry Dunphy.
(})MC Mllll Reuontr /Smith.
0 IQllC fltn To111 Snyd11.
0 \lkJllll• ...... _ ""'
I
l :lO B Tt It•• W'itll LM {R) Whl'll
tht ftmi!J !tees eviction bectus•
tneir Rome 1111rtmtnl bulldina: 1s
1bout lo be torA down, G11ndp1
comes I~ !ht 1ncu1 with his horu ·
111dinf ltlenls.
OStM aii.1 '"" o rn (I) m • s.rt11 ,..,
(R) 0'Tht Crtt'iltr",tstu1es." Chad
Smith J, lempttd to .upt 1 •I•
jotl 11 1 pri'IAlf dltldi't't iflrr ht
is injured urving 1 wurtnl. Bir ·
b1r1 Piicl!ols 1nd Btrt f1ud 1ue~1.
(j) City itt MotM1 m Dr•Pft
fD S.st ltz:z "'Billy Ec~sline Oii
Trumpel."
Aoo<her '""81JllJ1o '!lost !or
Cavett durlftl hll l~eet
vacaUon i1 also a ~al in-
terest. Steve AUen is the man
In question. He wiU •t "1 for
Cavett Aug. 31 and Sept. I,
and, though he still bas his
own off-network. t ._.J k ·'a "d •
entenainmerit series, it will ibe
nice to see him Dack on one (lf
the three major televialon
outle1s. For tl'\ose who may
have forgolten, Allen preceiled
Jack Paar as NBC-TV's late-
riight host. He also bad one of
the wonderfully individual
network (omedy .s e r i e ~ ,
developin ~uch regulars as
Don Knotts, Louis Nye and
'f01n Poston.
Baseball is far from fading
as a video altraction -al! you
tiave to do is give it to viewers
at an hour that appeals to
them. and dress it up in style.
Al least that's a pretty logical
conclus;on to be dra...,·n from
the 70.markel Nielsen ratings
for the week ending July 18.
In lhese ratings, NBC-TV's
night.fune broadcast ol the
major league all.star game
was the top-ranked program
among all shows. It was well
ahead of the second·rated
"Hawaii Fi ve·O."
The annual aJl..gtar game is
known to be a good television
attraction, but it has become
1nllCh more appealing since
being presented at night, in
prime time. And the fact that
t:OO E Ci) Mtdlc:tf C...llr (R) M1 rtii. lhe glamor of the occasion
Sheen 1uesb as • you"g ministtr also gives it a special style is
Jt's no secrel th.It NBCTV,
~1.artlng 1~ year, will be
putlq on more regular·
season games at night with
the hope that weekly viewers
ol the cootest..s will find the
OOurs more enticing, and the
after-dark setting m o re
glamol"Oll5. If the network can
package it.1 J'ljgtit-time game
broadcasts as colorfully as
ABC-TV 's prime time Monday
pro footbalJ contests, baseball
viewing wiU take a sharp
p ing upwards.
•
Not too many year.'i 8.80 , a
one-shbt NBC-TV special call-
ed "Rowan and Martin's
Latigh-ln" was so successful
1n creating r.lk that Jt earned
I place IS I stri. Md tamed
the look ' of teleVl!ioo around.
Now Georgt Schlatter, boss of
"L..aueh-In," ~Ul offer on Sept.
13 another °"""""' NBC-TV
special alao aimed for series
airing , and alM seemingly as
nutty as iLs Rowan a.pd Martin
p~ecessor.
'I1U! one is called "It's a
Wacky World!", it is being
produced in 15 foreign locaJes
as well as th1& country ,
features more than zoo in-
ternational actors and com·
edians including Tony Curtis
in London, Jacques Tali in
Paris and Elke Sommer in
Munich. '
0 Sh: O'a..t MMe: (90) "A ltti·
111 lit ttlt S1111., Part I (dUITll) '61
-Sidnty Poititr. Cltudit McJrlei1
Rubr Dee, Ditnt S1i*. When ttle
proutl Nlritr'h of t lru1t111ld but
irldatructib1• tllk'k l•m~y In Chi·
ato nc:ti* 1 SI0,000 llft iniu1·
1nc1 ptJmenl, !ht win di 1tr lh1t1!tr1s
to rend the household 11o1Jnde1.
0 1 Sn
ta TM Aimto111s
IDS1tr TIM
ft)Art SW., Ttt
@?)JIWcWt l4
w!ml h11rt corldition tltrtl up, a rea!!On for its great populari-fj 1 ..... jeojNrdiii"I his ch1nces at ma1nt1in· 1na t'.:011onnaJJC! tonight •••
'"'. '""""'" I« '"''"'· fy. URDllV'l~ ¥.! B'C'[llESW
m De.u. _.., o.,,
a) lhW5 Jlf'I Htlfl11'1or111
l:!O (J) Nin 8111 Hllddy.
O Quick Rel ief from the JIJlllQ.IllpJUW ,_ I(! * summer TV doldrums
The Des O'Connor Show 'n; :1 d ~.~~.':': .. ':':7~.::::. .vtsneyaon
0 ID ClH!l '-" • •-Open._y"'7!rom8AM ·IAll
Th Adul1141.1J Jr'I Sl.21CMldren1.lo; (R) •• Ke'• Got11 Bt Somethl"I Joi.n WaYM ••• raultllere7a1UJezlraCOflt!
Wrooa: Wittl HK." Juli• h•s •n I.Ill· ··11!1 JAICE'" IGPI
ftotn Conege DayS 10 Now!
Witll .. EarRidtr• and '"Fivt E11y PiktC-a:tar
Jack Nicholson c <
Candice Bergen
! Arthur G(lrfunkel
) Ann -Margret
~ Jules Feiffer "g
g ~";;:.~~ ~
~ ~ £ [jy-..;..~~-· g
~l '3 4dasor JaonpoJd a1111n::ia:-:3 · JaJJ!a;f sapir ~ UOU!JM • lJ~J~S PJP4JJCI Ja~ ~f
EXCLUSIVE' ENGAGEMENT
For Top Sports Coverage
Read the DAILY PILOT '
Ci) Trwlll « Cei\l*lllttlCIS
([} CIS Jltn Willer Cronk111.
. O JllC ..... D11id lrink~1.
:· m • flJi111 "INI :m~11LMct
: (En.st lhport
elptd!ld a>nf""1!tlion with 1 tirl \l~~~~"~"~'~.~~'~:"~w~"~0~ .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~-! ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~I Dl'VI u'8d to dtlf. Thrill\119 !r\11! Ill• .odv..,turt J... Ji-
m DI Iii fllltf S"°'!tl ICl41 Mtllt!M-l.11., I 'll p,rn. V V '~~====::======::;~~~~~~~~============;;! fl)l'IM1 u. w-,... ,_,.. ONTINUOUS MATINEE 2N0 rnl: AT WCCll • Q!)~Aftd9AIOll•llCM1111i4ad :m ... -uoo CIJ oo Ill"' ,._.. (111 EXCLUSIVE E"NGAGEMEWT DAILY JllW:U llWdl. .,, "" '"'' "°"'·""' R<hMO. SPECIAL 12:00 MIDNIGHT "'•cu-w.n."""'"'. IJC13NIClllnDrtid!iinkltJ.
11 Wlllll lcr.-TilllW. (90) "'I~·
battles his old nlmelis, .Jord.11
8rtddoek. 81rry Sulliv111 1uestl.
C:Jlutinkd .....
Im LI C.... • MlriM tr---· (l)'hl .... Trdl CJ..,, Mr U.? lt:t9 D (j) Hnll ~ Slotw fllancy
9 ..... fCJ (2~ ~ ht· WillOll 1£1'* 11 lailin1 ll'lfall [ ..
_, die .lon!Oft, wlml ~11tt 1tt1mpt
........ ( .... ) '60-Jttltq" Hunt11, « 1 CIOl'llllld; k )hltt1rld by Mr
, Cwtlw lOWllt.. ioi.-...ment bl ~ 1111-aflnc.
. 811 Liit lltf ~lllJ t:urdi!IO ,_as 11 Eadie's m (I) DncMt pi1nrst:~ntnd.
·•• • , ~1e1 1 .. c.ioi 0 1R11mr .. ,.i.o.c s.. ,,...
>m.'" dlCll tmruaMll (R) "Supemnic:
..,....... .... lrtmport." .Jim Conrtd aigub • 1' ID.... studJ h midi ., tflt SST Ind
: .... tlllds Wllltllf iJi COllllid wt!ti llomt-f3l II (I) llM tt ln (II) 1 .. Gnni OM'IW1 ind tilt Mport 1:01r11nimon.
&Hits n 1 .. pill·Pl'PPin1" llDuse· Lew Ay1• it 1uMf·lt1r. Lloyd
witt wtlO becoinel tht chief suspecl 8ridps 1l1B "' Corn1d.
In 111t lll)'lk'riOll& -.ndinr el Mr O Ntws IW¥in S1nd1rl.
hm.nd. 0 MoM: (2111) "'Int 11 E11Ml11"
D m .. fr9ll Shlltlll (R) "flltllt (comtdy) "'2-Dl•id Hi'll!n, Albtfto
John Wayne
Richard Boone
''BIG JAKE''
''Immensely entertaining! Filled with i11credible energy •.
fistfights and gunfights by tbe score! John WayR• ia tOP. farm!"
Co-Hit at Pacific Drive-Ins
"VON RIC~THOFEH AND BROWN "
BDI Ollice opeas J,15 P.l. Show Starts •t Dnk
ll oc'-'dC....i.elll')H-id f_...;_.
C•llit
'~THE McKENZIE BREAK"
Co~tinuous Daily
from 2:00 PM.
from M•ll'IOIJ." 8ur1ess Mtredllh. Sordi. ... _ .__ ,.,.,mesa Tisha st11lin1 tllCI Robert Fulla1 tD Ntn PulMm/rishmill. ~";.',: '-
11,111{ In • «1r11111 d I bride·to·bt m Mutnii Hon. Phil G11l1rdt, lf'll l~!:==~~~~~§'~'~"§'~=~~~~~~,;:;,§::§'~·.:o.~·~·~::!!::~!!i!!~~~~!!!!~l:::~l_ I who 11Ufttr1 •Ytfl lntune. whilt •P· Minilt• of Wtlftrt fvr Briliah to-
P1rtnt11 lletin1 llom Mr wtildinr. lumbit , iuesh.
0 Cl) (l) &J Colll't*lp el Eddi1'1
F ... (R) "O.tr Mr. Cooper." 'em· fil Ewtllin11t l'lps {II)
1111 V .st1on1ul Gofdon Cooper, fJl) lo1 "'9i.uitn1I
tue&ting t~ himaelf, lcct_pb I writ· lO:lO 0 Mnh: ~Ill IKt 1ht Ollfn" !tn fnvltrhon from Edd11 lo drop (drtm•) ·•i _ Oli'li• dt Hivlllind. •n fOf lunch t!ld ~talk 1boul i.ptce
and thinp." 0 CD (JJ m Nft Actitll "Tht D•·
0 MlmOll $ Moftl: (21111 "Tht ~:~:"and Rist of IM Dill.ls Cow·
c.MmMll If l ltlflt" (dnmt) '63 .
-Sophil l.OAn, Muimi!iu Scht!t. Q) Jil"'5 8111 .»hrn.
w .. tlhJ StrmH »lip bui!dn, kl'IOW· ma Di1rit " 11111 SnMttt
in1 ht ~11 but li• mo11lh1 to fi"t, Oectntt
lrie_s lo intti~ tli1 )'OU"llSf Kin in ll;OO O r.'\ n, N
1akine: O'll!I 1ttit lamily busi11H1. · L11 i:.1i1 •••
•hilt tilt oldest '°" has edled him· 0 ®l m Newt
s.elf to tht loo llOCH of thei1 l!Qmt @ D..tll Viii., Drys
be!ievinc Ctrmt ny to bt iii 1u1ns. 0 (]) &J Jlns
m lrwttl ti Ctm.tq111ncei ID Dtvid frest Show Gut~I 111
@ It Tt~n t Thill' JclOf llich11d 8oont, tht Hui l'u
l!lhMlfU M ltc.t lhni H1w1ii1n cl!oru!, p~/Com·
poi.er Rod McKuen tri«I 1clrell!
d Q (})@ Q)llotM 222 (R) "I!! ~U:ltl'lnlh York.
11'1 Hot Htft. Wh1r1 I! 111" A 19 ffi Btft tfN Clod
YNr-old Virtnam wleran his prob fD look lttt
ltms winn111a: 1ccep1 1nct from o1ht1
s1u0tftls wllln ht returns l'CI school 11 :30 D (j) M«v Criffin
Murr•r ~Kltod 1unb. D @) m Jlfl11nr Ctrton m Motit: O (fir) "lorn 'fut.da~M 0 rn Ci) m Die' C.vttt
(corn.0,) 51-ludy Holl1d1y, Wrl
Jiam Hold1n, 8rodtntl CitwfOld. ,m Movie.: "Wltltd City .. {dr1m1)
Howt1d SI. John. Wt1 lthy junk dttl SJ-M1n1 MO!ltll,
ei hires writer to in:slrllCI r11tfritfld 12:00 m M11it: "My Ou1 S.Crtta~ (i11o-
t11 tl•q1.1ttlt manc.e) '48--K11k Dou11lt s. lar11n1
fD Tiii flWl'K~ tlltl Oap, Kwi1n Wynn.
l!l lKM l iti11
llil""' 1:00 f) Mmt: 'Ttw i~ 1 Mtp-(d11m1)
'51-Rtlph Metker. Vi"'' lind1ors,
FOR ADVERTISING IN THE
WEEKENDER
PHONE 642-4321
' ~ ,, .. ,.". . ..
'"BLUE WATER, WHITE DEATH~ :'~~
INCLUDES SOME OF THE MOST ; •.. :1't;j:~ · . ,
SMASHING MAN-AGAINST-/ .;;~·~;~[ .. :_'· 1~
BEAST FOOTAGE EVER FILMED!{:" '· _::.,~>::·:;, ~,~
"ABSOLIJTELY I ', . . .
f '• BREATH-TAKING,
GASP-PRODUCING!"
"BLUE WATER, WHITE DEATH"
The hunt for the Great White Shark
·~.O.CENTU'!rLMS....:S:N1iO.TIOIO ,
--~PllD!~·DIN.cledh\IPl'lOl_l_ .... 11£S"5COMI
1 l Cl*<OCOl.C.-.0. Nln!Ott.O.l ('.£1'1!;~"4. Pit T\ff S 1'tU'.ASE. IQl-
o;~ "KE ST A TION
ZlllA" Continuous Showing Daily
I•• Offlt1 o, .. 1 7:15 , ...
SHOW Sl•rt.• .. h•• wPilfil'!l1
""""'"":.~WJllARD-BRUCE DAVISON· SONDRA LOCKE· ElSA LANCHESTER . ,._.,,"' ........... _ ,,,,_.,.,, --... ERNEST BORGNINE n Marlin CllBlRIA ill~°" -:,-.;;,.,""=; --~·~"llll!IH O'AAUS•PRAIT
-.. ~Bl!ISl\!ft • EICPPllCOXTOt -· .. -,...., ... IMCOlOR ""'"'"'lWflllMMN G IOQO' .,.._ llUl-
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co ltlr "HOUSE Hl'AJ oiwno 11.000" IG'l ' \IS-4J M.i .. "-
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C........i..t• ,..,_ oo Iott.,. 10: lS ,,.. CONTIN~ OAll. Y PIOlol 1 rOO ,,..
lri sit'.~:i;tfllift".if1J.fi.it-lflfifiJtM VfCIA! MIONIGtfl SHOW ON fll & SAl
c ..... "1,,. .i.e. .. .,. lol• :·~':.:"::.::•~::'·~··::"~..:.:.P.:L.:U:.:S:..'_'.:.W:..H;;.:;l:.:Nc.:f.:.I G:..::H:.:T_::B:.:E:.:L:.:L:.:S_T;..O:.L:.L04'"
•
SHOWS ON FRI. & SAT. IPliLLAID
~ ~ • o ••ACH e LYO. AT •L\.11 • •
..-T, C:O••• _.,., & S&ot 0<••0 "'W¥
M7·1HSOCS • ... U .. TINGTON -.cof
• 2ND TOP THRILLER•
Pet« Cushing & ChtislOJIMf tee
"TH£ HOUSE THAT
DllPPED BLOOD"
2ND HELD OVER! WlfK
PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT
EDWARDS
2nd
Top Allraclion
Michael Coin•
Omo/ Sharif In
M?c··cena,.,.,.. __ _
"THE LAST VALLEY'<GPJ
11!C'9«)1 .. n-
~~-.z.-
POSITIYRY INDS
TUIS .. AUG. 3
IDWAIDS
CINEMA YIUO
MISSION lltlJO
IJO.ltM
STEVE McQUEEN
2HO Hll Ki.~ DOUGlA~•.IO!iNN• CA.s.H
II "A llllffllT 'If'
LAST WEEKS!
IN "LEMANS"
Wolter Matthau ·Elaine Mo "A N!W LEAF"
STARTSWEDNESDAY AUGUS 11
' -
"SONG OF NORWAY"
-..... -..... ~. ---· •'!9>'-· ·--·---· -.-.. ... ·---._ • .__. •1> --,,,.._..,--·• --........ --------
"
f
I
NOW PLAYING
Pla yhouse
1'o Hold 4
"It is a trip much worth
taking. NoJr ~i'1ce
'2001 ' has 8i movie so
cannily inv.erted
consciousness and
Readings
Open readings will bf' h11ld
Jtl the L/lguna Mn u 11 on
Playhouse on S11lurday 11nd
Sunday, Augu8t 7th and 8th,
from I pm. to 5 p.n1. ' Hap Gr11h1un and Marthella
Randall will be h' a r i n g
readings from "f"l a:ia Su1le,"
"The Teahou se of the Au11:11sl
Moon ." "Thf! Effl"Ct of Gam -
ma R1y1 on Man·in-theMoon
Marigolds" and ''Butterfllu
Are F'ree."
' altered audience
perception."
~ay Cocks, Time Magazine
HRONICLE
At lhe Sfllnf' hour~ nn S11tur-
day, August 7th, Lila Zall .... ·ill
be aud1t1on1n11: diincf'rs or
''The Boy Frif'nd" 1n the
Greenroorn. And nn Sunday,
Dori.~ Shields wi ll a11di !1on
singers for tha t musical pro-
duction.
LET'S BE FRIENDl Y
A D.t.-l..~'9-.......... -~ .. w--.
-~---.-~U.O-.••-C-1 Jl.ARl):Ql
11 ynu ha .. ·r nf'\11 11ch:::hh<lr11
<1r knnw of &nyonf' movini::;
ID our arra, plea~e lrll u1
so tha.l "'" may f'Xlo •nd a
friendly "·rrcomr 11nd h"lt•
thrn1 lo h<-"omr 111·quRintrfl
in thl.'.'ir n{'1\· s111Tou11d1ngs.
CO-HIT
•
CO-HIT
"CONQU EROR
WO RM "
So. Coast Visitor
4~579 494-93"
Harber Visitor
M4-0174
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SHOWING NOW!!
WOW! FANTASTIC
BETTER THAN
~ENDLESS SUMMER'
-aoi. J••••, Ttllltift•
RT AND THE MEN WHO RIDE
SU II DAY
PLUS
Bo x Office
,__,opens 7:1 5 p.m.
Steve McQueen 1:-:»
·-rhe Rei vers" ~
MATINEES Diil!
FROM 1:30 P.M.
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY
NOW PLAYING
PETER~BIT
:.\1"0
'!ALES 0F BEATRIX P0TTER
'
• '
' 1/) ...,._,
I I
I I
I ,
' .
...
PERFOR~IELJ BY lJA!\'CERS Of
THE R0Y~ BALLET
l\Nll PRESENTED IN ~O U R ·ni)~CK STl:l!f.(-l S0U:'\'ll '
M01 ..... r ... 1dvo, n·\' "" r,.," "" \ }t>i." ""''""'"' · "" '"'d 1 ~~-1~ '" r .. ~'"· • '"" J,,.,.. I \t I r,1,., r .... 1. L14. ·r.,.., JtM.~" •"" 1.1,,"' "°'""" ""'"-1• "ho'"''""' 1 h• ll..,,111.1 • ., 1 1~ '""' "'""' ~"h
... "--•1°"'"''11 ...... ,l '"~"' (,.,.!.nl • ~J•r"J '"' •h• "'""lo. JI ,. ~.,J < """'"'" '"J LI"'"'"' 1,t"'' a..., • .,..,,..., ... , ,.,i.,,.\ '\>~<..., ,\t,.. ..... ~.hn 1 •n• hh.h ...,.,. 4n,I, '"'""'" ,1,,.,,.,J ... l h'""~• l .t1 .. ~.
[1.,.,1;,,. ~...i,.. . ., "'hn llnl•"""' • r .... 1,,,,.f ~-~ .. h•nl ! •••h·•~ · '"'" 1<J"' ll•c•••ld .11,11,. 1., ~ •• ,,.1~.
• -.. •11:_1.; ..... ··-\ 1-Y· .... --
OAJL Y PI LOT :J_'
Jill St. John Has It A ll -• A l1nos i.
fly Ll"IJA DElJfst'H
HOLLYWOOD 1APJ -"!l's
difficult not to be ,Jealous of
mt," sighs Jill SL. John. "I am
go incredibly lucky, Md 50
many wonderful. n i ft y ,
m11.rvelous things happen to
"'' Still. Jill is dl5l'ontent. She
says she plans lo gel uul of
he-r golden rut. ju~t "take off "
After. of course, the de·
nouncement of the !;\lest
wonderful, nifty, marvelous
thing th<it has happened to
her. She's caught Jan\es Bond.
The flame-haired o?tCtre~s,
better known for her entlcing
fa ce and form that her
t>moting, has 11 plum role in
•·Oi?.monds are Forf'\t'r."
which n1arks the rf'lurn of
Sean Connery a~ the sexy
superspy, James Bond.
Jill. u Tiffany. hts first
Ameriran girl friend has the
d1sunclion of be ing the first
Rood playmate lo su rvive the
tlosing credits.
"She·.~ a very sn1arl lad~'."
says Jill of Tiffany . "She's a
surviror ... In some ways,
shf''s a lot like n1e."
What has .Jill survived?
Well, a difficult though pro-
flt;<.~!e childhood as an ac-
tress: lwo bfie f thoug h
glamorous marriages -to
Lance Reventlow and singe;
.Jack Jones: and do1.cns of
vacuous sexpot roles in forget -
.O.l P.O.Cll'IC'!I
FOUNTAIN ~ALLIY
DflllV•-1'111
DON'T MISS IT!
't! OIRlCiORH S
BlLOW '0~ ')(11FOUl!5
PACIFIC WALK-INS
10)( Ol'l'ICI! OPINS
Mon. lftru Pr!. I OI p.m.
S•!. • Jwn.: n :ff p.191.
Th• l!"llr• Cort.•d .fldmlttod I'•• ~rlc• ti o,,. .fldult .fldmlu~n 1 7lt
Ulld•r 17 M U•! bo Wit~ ,.~,ent1 ~ "I VMMl!ll 01' 'j1'" !Il l
PIUI • .Ilion .Ocll"
"Hl.t.llT It .t. lOH•L Y
HVllTlll:"
~···-..... g._
Jll·IOll
Jo~n W•v"' • M•urOf'n O'H•ra
"1 10 J.t.l<I '' IGPI
Plu' • Jonn P~l!lle l•"'
"VO N 111C HlOl'IH
.. l•OWH" IOPJ
.1111 (OIOr Ftmol~ -En1••!9)nmMt
W •U Olon•r'•
"Mlll l(IH DOll.llJI OUCIC" ,.,
bit fll111s -''ll rnad' n1y
ltne.1 ras1rr lo remember,
th'Y wtre al ways the same."
Feeling torry for Jiii I\ dlf-
ficull She survives ln style.
'!'here's h e r rn<1g111hcC'n~
ho111e on a lulltop in Beverly
Hlll3 with a view of the v:.1.ll1•y
and an 1ntt'nOr t·rrJ11111ed with
anl1qur11 . ·111t.'f"i:"s IM:r string of
~y fri,nds, ranp,ing frurn titl-
ed royally tu f>residl'nt Nix·
""·~ :.1)('1.:1al a<l\'JSt'r for nat1011·
o?tl security, Jlenry l\issi nger.
Of Kissin1o:er, she si1 ys: "Ile':.
" fner1rJ for life" A11d !here's
her swinging iet·set exi stence,
trolllng about the a!obe when
the fa ncy strikes.
•·1 lt'ad a great hfe,'' she
s11 ys. "I'd be the la~l one to
1·on1 plain ah11111 11 l travrl
11roonci, ;:uirl ski 111 the \\'1ntrr
;ind JIO to all lhr bes! Wlllering
l1ole-~. 1'he onl y diflerener
bf-1 ween n1e and the rest of
the people et these pla ce5 15
thn~ I wor k the rest nr Lhe
year."
~!le NrlC'f"'rlcs ont' problr n1
for a ~ir l who hlls r1·rrytlti ng :
ii de11r!h nf women fr irnds. ,Jill
lrlls or :;ivini:: a luncheon par-
ty by swim n1inJ( pool for a few
larl y friends r~tn!ly. Tht>y
were barely seated when
".~!tf'at lhlng5 started h<'lp-
pening." Ro,.;es Arrived fron1 ll
.~u llnr . nnol her boy friend
phoned : her 11 gcnl l'lllled with
a rnovie offer .
"The v.·on1rn all lurnec! to
me and said , '\\'e h11te you.'"
"It's very diff1eull to be n1y
n"11t I think It would bf: She 1ell' wistfully or thur
1musln1, .. bing through a movie f,
Jill also 1& bored with the maaatine and see:ing piclur
movie world empha5111 on of aging n1ovle star& who tu
glamor "(;lanwr 1 ~ n ' l !t>t the mselve~ go
something worth while to •·1 could understand it,";
strive for. !l 's almo.,l 11 1940s says_ "It 's such a drag toe
\1•ord . An y kind of glamor ercisr, to get your h11 ir dOI
11tarl.!I with heellh·phy51ral and everv dav. all !hit! narclMiS
e1not1on11I heellh. I do yoga , . .' 1 cOu!d undrr~t!nd wh
,1 . ~ ~ 11nd mt'd it11t r ... M)' f'nt ire hi,iv1ng. pa.o.se<l !hill point • ":rf.~-.M~t goal in lift i5 tn ach1t 11e peace being a rnovie queen , th~ \"lt1;~ of mind and 11n inner hap-snid, 'Oh. Lhe hPll with il,' Ill fdlAllliftr~f~ ,._p~;"='~""-·-"~---""----~--1'-1 ~H='1=1="-'_"_"_"_"_'_"_-==
friend," says Jill. "I've goltt-n
f'\'e ry thing in life thal I e1·er
TAKE TliE NEWS Q UIZ
We Dore You
v.·ant~. l may not ha 1e heen'1'--=============,..,,...,==
11 ble tu keep it /or very Jong ,
but I got 1\."
El·er~lhing~ \\'ell. not quite.
At 30. Jill adn1its she rnvie.'11
v.·om<'n with sulid r11arr111gf's
?.tld !locks of children. "My'
fondt'st wishes ha1'e been
b!f'sst"d upon .sorneune els<· " I
Lounging on h e r rrn·
bro1dered sofa in front of her i
n1assi1•e stone fireplace, tlad
in velvet Jeans and a SWl'!lter,
.Jill says she 's planning lo ,i.:1ve
up the splendiferous house.
leave the boy frit•nds Ut•hind
;ind hike uff on 11 trip Lo lndi;i
in' search of "inner pt:,il't'."'
She 's tired of Hollywood,
tirC'd of the dunib sexpol rule.
tired of i,:ctting dirty f11n n1ail.
•·so111e of the lel\C'rs are re~.lly
obscene, really sitk. l'n1 plan-
ning to eol!ecl thern 11nd print 1
a book uf n1y obscene Jau l
So you met someone ond now you kn ow how it fnls.
Goody, Goody *
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
RIFRl,ERATED
COMFORT
IN All
THEATRE S
1----------------
EXCLUSI IN ORANG&. COUN
D•ilJ M•ti11111 1 :JO
(G)
"!<.!" I 00 i HI JO
3rd ond flNAl WEEKI
G~orge Homilton
"EVEL KNIEVEL " '"'
AIR COND1r1 (Git)
,,
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.wvi Ho·~roo
"THE llESER TER"
FREE PARKING (GP')
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5T.ADIUM # 2
ORANG[
639-8850
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WE51MINSTER
892-4-493
Also · "SICILIAN CLAN .. Also "VANISHING POINT ..
AT"""' •BALBO~
673-4048
Cl .. DOIN. TH£AT•
OPEN
&:45 l'lut Jca 'lvnn
"1.flllll'OOT l!l<l!CUTtV•"
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E<>0•t1~"""11 ''WILLY WOMll.t. .. TNI:
CHOCOl .t.T• l'.t.CTO•Y" tGI
Plvt
MI OY 01' TWO WOll:lOS" (GI ............. .. ,,,_, .... .......
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All C•ler Premle1 • Et><1•g•m•~t
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NOW SHOf;;iWiil;;NG~~~i>l
I ~it:'iillWi.1_ .. _i~j!!iii and [l]]Dl§J lf ~ -~ NtWPOAT BfACH • OA.J 83~0
ALSO
"JENNY " ~ S•11dey -Th1n'1dey .• 1:00 '·""·
frld•y & S.t11rdrt , , l :JO '·""·
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Penn y Pincher Ads
1'u rn Sen s«> J nto Doll ars
I
Oro"'' Ceu"lr'•
l i1-<li•Uol1r J ... w V•lu•
"KLUTE" I RI
"VANISHING
POINT"
e NOW SHOWING e
M11r th• tw1etett li ttle
"mo1~1f' lhel •v•r ft1vll9fl
h•r ew11 p..-11011 pl1111I
She may not be
''WHISTLER'S
MOTHER"
--AND-
The be•11ty 1f "l'"'9tl CIMI
J11llet" e1111bh1ff with tti1
1111,..c.t •f "Le .... Stery"
IDldh1rl11g ••••• ANNA' c:;,
CALDER.MARSHALL
TIMOTHY
@] DALTON
CO\OR JI
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\J•I L1' I ll'I .\II:~ 1
WHY SOUTHERN PACIFIC
IS TAKING
A SENSELESS STRIKE ·
The United Transportation Union's strike against the Southern
Pacific is unnecessary and is an irresponsible strike action wward ..
the public.
It brought to a halt 750 daily fre igh t trains in eight states,
Amtrak passenger trains on three long-distance routes, and 44 com·
mute trains on lhe San Francisco Peninsula. It stalled lumber ship.
ments in Oregon, automobile assembly in California, chemicals in
Texas, ores in Arizona, perishable !oocls, ra\V materials and mann•
factured goods throughout the \Vest and Southwest-virtually
isolating this great area from ihe nation's commerce.
Yet, we must take lhis strike. Why? Simply because one union-
tbe UTU-has refused to accept work rule changes which another
union-the Bro therhood of Locomotive Engineers-has agreed to.
The UTU is willing to accept a 42 % wage increase over 42
months, but it still insistoi upon maintaining tum-of-the-century
work rules ~·hich have no place in a modern transportation system.
A Preaidential Emergency Board recommended the wage in·
crease, but only with work rule changes which the railroad ind11&-
try must have if it is to modernize. :Management accepted these
recommendations. Three other unions have accepted them. Only
the UTU refuses to permit the railroads to make any progress
whatever in increasing produc tivity and efficiency in return for
the largest wage increase in railroad history, while providing pro-
tection for people adversely affected.
By this senseless refusal to accept what others have seen as
right and neces.wy, the UTU is Willing to inflict a crippling blow
to the entire country's economy through whipsaw strike tactics
aimed at bringing the whole railroad industry to its knees.
Why senseless?
The UTU still insista on a foll day's pay for 89 lit& 1111 two
hours' work. It insists we muat continne to use five crews 011 a trip
between Oakland and Los Angeles, for example, wbere two crews
could cover the distance within a normal working day for each.
'The UTU still insists on strict division of work between ovet-
the-road and yard crews. This means that road crews carmo$ per·
form certain work in oonnection with their own trains and engines
when they are within yard or terminal limits. This Is like being able
to drive your own automobile home bui having w bep a pa.id
at:twda"* t.o park ii in yoar garagw.
The UTU still insists on make-work practices which prohibit
efficient use of ·locomotives and cre ws within yard limits. For
example, one crew can place cars on tracks for Interchange with
a connecting railroad but cannot bring any cars back on the
~ame trip.
The UTU still insists that if some crew members use radio com·
mUDication, like a simple walkie-talkie, those workers must receive
extra pay and so must most other crew members.
The UTU still insists on the use of Ull1UlC6lSary extra crews
in industrial switching operations within four mile.! of present
yard boundaries.
No one can afford this senseless strike
If railroads are not to be permitted to make use al these work
rule changes, the very heavy wage increases which have already
been granted to most employee-and which have been offered to
the uTu-could very quickly place the industry in desperate
financial crisis, jeopardizing service to 'thousands of vital industries
and ultimately to the public.
Our ~ployes are Jo:yal and dedicated railroaders, yet they
are pmented from realizing their full productivity by these and
other antiquated work ntlee.
We hope that oar customers and the public will appreciate that
this dispute is not jnst botween the UTU and Sou them Pacific. It
involves all of the nation's major railroads. Southern Pacific-now
ornever-mustatandwith the industry. Many railroads are in
serious financial trouble, and for them time is running out. We our·
selves badly need to be able to make better uae of the transportation
fa'bnnlogyavaiiahle to us. Soothem Pacific must accept the burden
of thisridiculmisstrike, and lllllBt ask the understanding and support
of the gmeml public ea well as of our customers.
We want to be sensible and fair
It is time for the trru to be sensible and fair. You, the pnb!ic,
are being hart by the railroe.d strikes in progres.~ right now, but
you will suffer far more in the future if the railroads do not-this
time-take a firm stand to gain improvement in the work rules.
We urg11 JOU to IUJlPOR t11 in our st.and and to make your foolings
known fl>,.,....,.,,··-lltl• Q 1tative&
Southern Pacific
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Free Enterprise on Way Out?
Big B •
By JO 01.BON
01 t ... 0.111 P'lt•• ... ,.
Jack of enforcement and a lack of educ•
lion.
Why is it that you can't be sure the $300
chriMtning dress you buy ror your baby
won't go up in flames when a floodlight
hit.5 it for more than 10 seconds during
picture-taking time?
"The t'ederal Trade Commission is a
sleeping giant beginning to wake up. It's
beginning to file suil!I against companies
for lying to tbe public."
ADVERTISING VAWABLE
And that the pacemaker that helps
heart patien ts is not subject to inspection
but the valve on a toilet must be checked
twice?
She conceded that advertising is a
valuable contribution to our society but
asked, "Why is this false puffery ·allowed
to continue?"
Posing these questions was Treesa
Drury, director of consumer affairs for
KHJ.rv who spoke for I.he Orange Coun·
ty Forum of Town Hall in the Disneyland
Hotel.
Miss Drury warned that unless con·
gumers speak out individually and col·
lectively, America's free enterprise
system will become a partnership
between big. business and government.
What i.s the false puffery? MW Drury
cited as an ei:ample a te.leviiion. cOm-
mercial advertising land for vac•tion and
retirement homes. Tiie scene is a
beautiful one. with a stream running
through the property, but the spoken
message does not say the stream is on
tbe land. In reality, the land is many
miles from the stream.
Americans last year were taken by
$174-231 billion . including $175 million for
b'louthwash they didn't need, she related.
She said the nation's drug problem tnay
well stem from the constant barrage of
ads for pills for eyerything. ''And, does
anyone ever just take one pill?" she ask·
ed . "If anyone from Mars came they'd
think we popped a dozen pills a day to
l!iurvive ."
"Consumer problems are twofold. A Con.sumer tducalion 1bould be t<.w,Jgb.l
6men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
'NtdM1•hr, Jult a, U71 P•n Ill
Home News and Views
Housewives Beware:
Danger Everywhere
By DOROTHY WENCK
Or•nH C•u•lr Homo Advl11•
W~at room is the most dangerous room
ln y6ur house?
Every room has its ha1,ards. bul the
kitchen has more than any other room.
Consider the possibilities:
Cuts from knives. broken glass, sharp
can edges.
Burns from name, electrical units. hot
liquids , hot utensils.
fin~ from flames, grease. faulry 1o11ir·
lng, Oammab\e liquio s.
Shocks from electric appliances. y,•ir·
lng. outlets.
Poisoning from many substancC's, in·
eluding detergents. furn iture polish . am-
mon ia. bleach, clean ing fluids, 1n-
1Seclicides.
Falls from climbing or from slipping on
spilled food s, waler. or highl y polished
floors, or from stumbling over objects,
parlicularly toys.
KITCHEN'S DANGEROUS
Yes, it is easy to aee that the kitchen
Is a da11gcrous place. More than one-
third of all household accidents occu r
there. The dangers are always present.
The accidents occur because or the way
we beh.!lve -because of our faulty habits
and attitudes.
Think over some of your kitchC'n habits.
t>o you store knives in a drawer along
with other silverware. or do you store
them in a special holder where the blades
are protected?
Do you put sharp knives in the
dishwater along with the rest of the
silverware, or do you wash them
separately, one al a time? Do you make
it a point to always keep your hand
behind the knife and always cut or slice
away from yourself? Do you tea ch these
good habits to the: rest of your family ?
Do you coolc breakfast in a ruffly or
furry robe which could catch fire while
you cook? Do you hang towels or hot pads
ovei-'the stove where they might flame up
from the heat? Do you tum pan handles
inward on the range or work area &O they
will not be knocked off and contents
spilled?
SAFE STORAGE
Where: do you store cleaning fluids. rat
and bug killen. bleaches, Ammonia. floor
was.es and the like? Jn that favorite cup-
board underneath the sink, or high up. or
under lock. out of all possible reach of
curious toddlers?
Do you use these materials with proper
respect? Do you re.ad the label, e:it·
pecia\ly the sm111l print and follow the
directions carefully? Remember that
some substances can cause damage not
only by being eaten, but 11.lso through skin
contact and from the breathing of vapor11.
Do you have and use a safe step.stool ..
for reaching high cupboard .shelves or do
you tempt fate by climbing up on
anything that is handy?
Do you wipe up spills promptly and use
a non-slip wax on your kitchen floor? Do
you insist that children not play directly
underfoot in the kitchen?
Are you aware of the serious ba1.ards
Involved in the use of electrical
equipment~ Remember, your body is an
excellent conductor of electricity; so i1
water.
If you handle an electric applianct: or
wiring device such as a i wltdl with wet
or damp hands. if you handle at the same:
time an electrical appliance or wiring
device and a good conntttion to the
ground such as a water faucet, or if you
handle more than one electrical appliance
or wiring device at one time, you ar.e
placinJi: yourself in the posilioa of a con--
ductor of 115 vol!s of fllectriclty, should
there be any kind of defect in the wiring
or insulation.
More people are killed annually by 115
volts than by any other voltage. Check
your habits, check your appliances. don't
become an electrical conductor !
QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED
Q. My daughter does not like milk and
never drinks the four glasses she's su~
posed to have every day. Whal can l do
to get her to drink more milk?
A. Be careful about nagging and fort·
ing. this may cause a temporary &ituaUon
to come permanent. Try offeriq amaU
amounts of milk more often. I
Perk up milk drinks with surpri9e
flavors -molasses. instant coffee (non--
caffeine ), malled milk, eggnog, mashed
banana, or fruit flavored drink powders.
Use milk in other dishes -creamed
soups, creamed vegetables , !~milk, pud-
dings.
Cook cereal In it. Add non·fal dry milk
to meat loaf , meat balls. cake and cookie
recipes. See that she eats cottage dMleSt
or cheddar cheese often.
Q. Why do cookbooks suggest lowering
the oven temperature 25 degrees when us-
ing glass baking dishes?
A. Glas!! absorbs and molds heal so
that the food baked in glasr tends to
brown more rapidly than when baked In a
metal pan. By baking food in glass baking
dishes at a lower temperature it will bl!
R"Oiden brown by the time it is completely
baked.
Q. can you freeze cream cheese, cot-
tage cheese and sour crum?
A. Cottage cheese doea not freeze wen
-it tends to 1ep1rate and became
watery -but both cream cheese and
sour cream can be froi.e:n.
Cream cheese can be kept In the
freezer about four month&; aour cream
should be used within a month. The 90ur
·cream may sep.arate slightly, but thil
disappears lf the cream is stirrc!d after
thnwing.
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Wtdnndl.)', July 28, 1971 r s PILOT-ADVUTISqt j~
A Consum-er Threat
from klnde.rgarle.11 through 12th grade,
she feels. Yet, school administrators ob-
ject. "It would take in·serv1ce training
for our teachers'' Is one of the reasons
given for its omission.
that organized crime is Involved In big
business. This is highly possible."
Her example was a case where aeveral
corporations wtre involved in .e:Ulng
cameras for close to $flOO each. After one
and on~-half years and an $11 million
"There Is no concentrated effort to
teach our children how to live in a free
enterprise system," lhe CO!l!umcr ad-
vocate charged ... Yet we say 'why don'l
kids have any respect for laws?' "
profit, lhe parties involved were cauitit ,,,_,....
and found guilty on all counui.
REVERSt TREND
Miss Drury said Lhat there now is a
''reverse competition" trend in the "build
a better mousetrap" philoaopby o[
American business.
''If one business can put out a product
for $100 that lasts a year we shouJd be
able to put ooe out for $109 that Iasis 10
mootbs" is the reuoalng in this 'trenct;'
l!ihe said.
Instead of being happy t.o tell how
much water is in their orange juice or
orange drink, manufacturers refuse: to
put that information on a label, she ad-
ded.
.. The punishment ihat goes. alonJ{ with
O)flSUJDer laws i6 interesting. Some aat
GOOD GAMBLE
The four ringleaders were fined $10,000
each and given suspended sentences. "A
pretty good gamble if you don't cal'9
about your record," Miss Drury com·
mented.
She also meJJtioned lhe recent botulism
case on the East Coast where a couple
was poisoned after eating part of a can
of soup. Botulism, one of the two most
powerful !tillers known to man, which
was fatal to the husband, was not
prevented because the processing plant
where the soup was made had not betn
inspected by the Food and Drug
Administration since 1967, she stated.
She also hit lhe automobile industry,
which she said, is making cars more
Fruit Picked for
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A EUROPEAN TRADITION-TORTE FOR DESSERT
LIGHT, AIRY PIE BLEND.II THREE KINDS OF MELON
•• l 1.ai:
unsafe each year Instead of makinc
strides toward aafety.
Miss Drury, who titled her talk And
'Then There Were None, using the oJd
nursery rhyme theme about 10 litUe In·
dl ans, concluded with a paraphrase of the
rhyme that blasted smog, drugs, botu·
!ism, nammable clothing and unsafe
autos. Her Indians met their demhie when
their faulty auto bit a tree.
A slim redhead, Miss Drury majored in
television, radio and communications at
the University of Michigan and got her
first job in television as a me!3age es.·
pediter on Queen for a Day.
On camera, she said, women usually
were relegated lo the recipe departmenL
''Recipes bored me," she aaid, ao when
she finally got before the camera she
"told them how to buy." This ehed her
into her role as a consumer advocate.
Miss Drury was appointed I 1 at
December to Gov. Reagan's Consumer
Fraud Task Force. She: also serves on the
board of American Women in Rad)o and
Television and is a member of lhe Home
Economics Department Advisory Com·
mlttee at CalifonUa State C.Ollege at Los
Angelea. ,
1 "-'
Desserts .
When summer seems like a bot, heavy
blanket all over, then look to lovely, fn:sh
fruit for something that refreshes.
Both nectarines and melons are in plen-
tiful supply, so why not take your choice
and make s scrumptious dessert for ~
ner?
Better still, why not take the pick ol.
both crops and make one dessert toni&ht
Md the other tomorrow? ·
For an elegant dessert we suggest Net·
larine Linicr Torie -a confection con·
sidered in most European countries aa
the epitome of perfection.
This recipe lives up lo the tradition,
too. The "skill" of making It suc~ssfully
ls a matter of simply following the recipe
carefully, The distinctive tang of fresh
califomla nectarines offsets th•
sweetness of almond paste in this superb
treat.
Because melons are in such good sup-
ply we offer Fresh Melon Pie, a recipe
that combines honeydew, cantaloupe ar1d
watermelon.
While shopping for them it does help lo
know the ripeness ma rking of each.
For instance, honeydews tbat an
mature have a creamy outer color and a
waxy feel lo the surface. With can·
taloupes, when the webbing 1tand1 out
distinctly it's a ripeness s l·g n a I.
Watermelons that are mature are Jlkely
to have a bloom over the surface of the
rind giving a somewhat velvety ap-
J)farance.
A delightful iummer meal might bl
composed of an appelizlng, yet nutritious
Ham and Chicken Salad topped oU with
one of these exciting desserts.
NECTARINE UNZER TORTE
4 to 7 fresh nectarines
Water
Sugar
11:tick cinnamon (about i inches)
1 cup almond paste
t egg white
2 teaspoons lemon jui~
·~ cup margarjne or butter
2 cups sifted flour
Slice nectarines to get 4 cups. Comt-ine
with 2 cups water, JJ,<, cups sugar and the
cinnamon in saucepan. Bring to boil and
boil for about 0 minutes or until very
lender. Drain.
Beat almond paste with egg whlt.e,
lemon juice and 2 teaspoons water to
make a smooth filling.
F'or pastry, work together margarln~.
flour and 1/3 cup sugar to a dough. Take
2/3 of d01Jgh and preS5 into bottom and
about 2 inches up sides or 9-lnch round
springform pan (or regular cake pap
dosely lined with (oil).
Spread almond paste filling over bot-
tom of dough ; top with nectarines. Roll
oul re:maln.in1 dough to about atS.lnch
thicknesa. cut Into lh--inch wide stripe and
lay In latticework .on top of torte. Bate at
550 deg!'fff for SS to 65 minute.. Cool.
Makes I servings.
FRESH MEWN PIE
I package (3 ounces) lemon flavored
gelatin
14 cup heavy cream, whipped
I cup cubed honeydew melon, we.)J
drained
I cup cubed cantaloupe, well drained
1 cup cubed watennelon. well drained
9-lnch baked pastry shell
Prepare gelatin according to prM:kJt
dlreCtions using only 11i» cups waWir. Chlll
unUI mixture is sllgbUy thickened. Fold
in whipped cream and melons. Tum in*'>
pastry shell. Oiill several hours or W1W
finn. Makes : I serving•.
HAM AND CIUCKEN SAI.Ul
1 ~ cups cubed cooked chicken
1 % cups cubed cooked ham
t cup chopped ceiery
II cup mayopnabo
I tablespoon mlnc<d tr.th -~ teaspoon salt
Few grains pepper
Combine chicken. him and ctlery "-a
bowl. Mix tofl:etber re:malnlna Ina""'
dle:nts. Lightly mix with meat mixturt;
Serve with ali~ cucumbers. Makes: f
servinas. ~
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.. IWlV PllOT WedM1c111. July 28. 1971
1 After Years of Marriage Wife Wants to -Rewrite V-0ws t . \ . .r
ANN f..A!1DERS ' I am 35, ha" I heoitale to comptalo -.t ~. •boul. One day I realll*i 1 wu. !G1iJJ1 1111 .-.ming lii;e a ll•hw~e and ~
matrled Ji yean ~ am the ~ be<ause f don '! """" to hwt ,..yoo1•1 Npecl cl my d6lnm ,-1 &lllinc Ille kids to ruin my dlopolillon -and cl'
of three dllldttn.. ¥'Y husband la 0 feehng5. How can I get the klu attON noo.rltltre u flt 'u i!lldpline wu con.-course I was ruining theirs. Pit.alt print : ~· ntoe tchow, and I like hl:m a lot. But "'""' .t~ tractfully? -HOSPITABLE BU1J'TIRED cemed. I decided.on A-~ and ttiis, Ann. I want to Pre it'lif new •P" ~.ant hlm for a fritod from now on. I .~ ... -~ IN MARION,EODHITO. U ~• -~I It works likONe maCE11c.11. th! lelll the lddll ~~ proAch.R-EAN EX1-SCREA"!~-n.... 1 __ , wyukl appreciale it very much U he DEAR TIR : e yCMar wue u:-.. Y ~ . ey goo~ me .. ,.., DEA X: We come ta ... ..-rvm -
di4n'l bother me for sc11: any mote. how you fed. If 1be wu.l1 to.01 ol con>-get a couple of ""'at! acrou the bacDi.de Land. And isn't it wooduful? CbllUe•
1 Jam not tnt.eresied In anyone We, in pany, ftne, ltt bet eo1ertaia Ot11 ber on and all ·prlvUeegs are~ away foc the ltarn to Lreat olM:n at they •re tttated .
..-.. yau are wondering . My huaband. iJ a dllfere11ce of opinion. people all da_y 1001~d-. lh. 1 time, but your ae.fld1 1bould be COi· rest ol h day. (C>iessirt, T.V., aames, Tbank yoa for tharln1. ~ J sugge1t yoci ltl a medical cbeck-ap Some evenings give any mg or a l don'I --...1 I .. •t · Id · · uW.ie every nlaht and "there Is nothing d r d quiet time with only my wilt and child. 1ldered alao. etc.) ·naa aiiu "'°" ICO · wrong with" him. He bBttles rt""larly and an n1 out If there IR a pby1lcal rea10n Set up a system. Telepboae ewery even· I've talr.en .the einphaals off wbat's ' Drinking may b& ;'in" to the kid~ you
•· lo• your !Olaf lack of lnlere•I In ''' A But this Is a luxury that appears to be Ill l '"-'=.1 ..... "oot" f we don't fi&ht. I need to know il my way • In& before you leave lbe Q ce or -mt,. wrong and pw. .ir) on "ual's rigllt. Tbey run wtlh -but it cyn put yoo or of thinking is all right. Please be frank women of 35 should ht In her prime. out of my reach. Every lime I open the Yoo call wlll be lbt ilpal to clear out Ule get lavish pralJe (Of obedience, coopera• keeps. VDU can cool ll and atay popular, -1' give . me the Mraight factll . _ DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a young door I am grtel.ed by a rtlativt. Someone viiltorl. It Ii up w, her to tell &htm tk8I lion and a job well done. Anyone who is Read •·Booz.e .and You -for Tttn1111er1
8 ERSFtELD WIFE man who has tleen blessed with nice in-ls at our place morning, noon and night. )'Ou're oa the way home _ tired ud ta sUrty 'oi uitpltuant ieta no aUention Only" by Aim Landers. Send 35 cenll in
AR BAKE: II'• all ritht wllll ME _ laws. 1 like all ·my w\fe's t'elallves and I On weekends it is st.anding room only. t1eed of 1 quiet t\leolng. whatever. NoW t wonder why il took me coln and a loog, self-addressed. it.amped
the quesdon la, la It all rtiht w:ltil el\}oy seeing them . The problem Is that I Please understand, Ann, I enjoy my DEAR ANN' LANDEHS: 1 was one of 80 1mi lo aet· am.art. I could ltick myself enveloPe with your requests in care of the
haihand? 11 It la, yoa have no work long hours for a large sales com· wife's family but I wish they wouldn 't those .screaming mothers ~OU write for havinl wuted IO many years DAILY PILOT.
tem. nie trouble aLlrlt wbea Lbere'i pany and my Job K_eepa me talking to come 50 often and stay 'o Jong ,
fWomen Travel
f
lT o Tel I Truth • • • j Despite caau1t 1 u m m er ~rs. area cluba are planning
·~ariety ol ac~ivlties ~anging
yoga wtruct1on to
evialon tapings.
Beto Alpha Xi
l.
! Members of Beta Alpha Xi
bilpter, Beta Sigma Phi rush-
~ into the club year with a ofb!h1>atty in the home of Mrs.
Jo-Anne Elmer. Games and
pril.es were the order of the
eveninJ as members greeted
guest.I. l:ncluding the. Mmes.
LatTy MarOn, John Silv a, Tom
l\edd, Scott Morton 1 n d
8htron McMiUln. ..
:_ Unity Wom en
. ~A commentary covering the.
hktorical background a n d
pliiiosophy of the yoga wa y of
life will be presented by Mr11.
M a r I e y Steverui, a yoga
aUthOrlty and owner-manager ti. an Anaheim studio on Tuea-
48)', Aug. 3.
, ' Mn. Stevens, who will be
~ eo:ompanie.d by s t u d t n t a
pre.sen.Un& demonstralions of
tGga positions and exertise!I,
will addreaa a 7:30 meeting of
·.Newport Unity Women In
Cmta Mesa Bethtl Towers.
FV Newcomers
:A whi te elephant auction
will OCCtJPY members cl the
Jl'tiunt.ain Valley Newcombers
Club btginning with a social
thtiur 1t 11 :30 a.m. in Je.rlco'a
re&taurant, Huntinaton Beach,
on Wednesday, Aug. 4.
i SC Juni ors • · : Member1 and Guests of South Co.Rst Junior Women's
'. tlub will bus to ABC television
l STARS
j Sydney Omarr 11 on' ot !he world01 gr,11 astrolo· ~r1. Hi1 rolumn ls one of
e DAILY PILOTS Jtt&l
a tu res . •
• . l THE N-E·W
• LG>QK l
mallie~
MID-SUMMER
• ' , SALE '
ENDS AUG. 4TH
WIGS
w~~.'~~~··········· 8'' HUM~~. ~~I~.,""" 19"
.
SAVE 20°/o-
50%
ON ALL
HAIR GOODS!
YIYfANI WOODAlD c:osi1i1n1cs
malhe;
WIG I BEAUTY
SALON
S41 3446
Jlf.D ._ 17" S.....
HILL&llN SOUAll
COSTA lilUA
--.I
studios in Hollyv.·ood on Fri· '
day, Aug . 6, for tht Let's
Make a Deal Show.
The group wlll ga lher In
Fountain Valley Civic Center
parking lot at 5 p.m. bound for
the studio. The fund raising
event will include two shows
and a party ln the Chateau
Bl a nc Co nd ominiu m
clubhowe, Chainnen are Mrs.
Kip Payne. and Mrs. Donald
Anderson.
Au xi liary
The Women's Auxiliary d
the Boys Club of Fountain
Valley will stqe a steak
barbecue. ln the Fount.sin
Valley home. of Mn:. R. Bond
Thompson at 8 p.m. on Satur·
day. Aug. 7. t
The public ls invited to et· !!
tend the fund-raising event.
During the regular meeting
on Tuesday, Aug. 10, the aux.
J!iary will present an ap-
preciaUon award to Mike.
Corbin for volunteer work at
the Boys Club.
OC Auxi li ary
The aMual summer party ol
the Orange County Chiroprac·
tic Auxiliary starb at I p.m.
Saturday. July 31, at Dohtny
State Beach Park, San Juan
Capistrano.
Co-chairmen Mrs. Robert
Reed and Mn. John Such In-
vite all chiropractic doctors
and their families and list as a
special guest, Dr. John 0.
Hemauer, president of the
Californ ia Chiropractic
Association.
YWCA Comp
Girls interested in an instct
l'!afari, music of all culture.a
and ecology may register at
the. YWCA, Santa Ana , for the.
second seSl!llon at Camp Tah-
quitz f\.1eadows which start!
Tuesday, Aug. 3.
Mi ss Yvonne· Benson, camp
director, said that recycling
and organic gardening lessons
will be added to the. usual fare or horseback riding, 5Wim-
ming . hiking, arts and crafts.
The camp. localed in pine
fore.st 125 miles from Los
Angeles. ia open to girl!: from
fourth to 12th grade,
El Toro Sparks fiesta
Summertim~ is fiesta time as members of the Newport Harbor Business and
Professional Women 's Club gather pina tu and all the trimmings for a Thurs-
da y, Aug. 5, party in the ho me of Mrs. Don~.d Dungan. Mrs. C. Robert Cham~
erlain (l eft) and Mrs. J. L. Baletka will be tlle·bpstesses.
New Calendar Mastered
Activities and bene.fil.s of Los Angeles Junior League groups should be lilted to
Oranie County or1anitation1 and chairman of the Master avoid connict ()f dates •nd
may now be listed on the Calendar. duplication of e.venls.
Master Calender of Greater The events of 50Cial. civic There. la no charge for
Los An geles. and philanthropic:, charitable, listing dales but a year's
The calendar, which serves,_l_"_t_em_a_f _a_n_d __ •_d,_c_a_tio_n_a_l _s_"b_s_cr_i_pt_io_n_i_s_16_. _____ 11 a~ a clearing house for major
social Md cheritab le. events In
lhe Southland, is be Ing
published In September fo r the
19th year.
Mrs. Sumner ManJll of the
Orange County John Tracy
Guild will rec,ive listings up
to Aug. 10. She was appointed
by Mrs. Arthur McClure of the.
Two rings
for two"
lovers •••
both ,;,;,
$88.00 "----_, ''*"'•-'!
Aloha! ~
u are invited
to learn
how to put on
a Luau.
11141•W-N-'
&.ya.lit ,...,,. • lflwfMt atmun1&
cnail1h11.• Upfo 12 monthtft~ lo..u-iconl•-°'°""
Come and enjoy our special program
which Jets you in on secrets of making
famed luau dishes. We've prepared
a new recipe booklet entitled, "Poly-
nesian Flavor," which we would like
you to have. You'll also learn the short
cute which adapt traditional dishes
so they're more fun to make. Imagine
your guests' deli ght when you serve
goodies like Orange-Almond Chicken,
HaoleFriedruce,HonorableVegetables,
Sesame Crescents .•. Polynesian Party
Punch ••. and more. Plan now to attend. "THE STORES CONP'IDENC!: Btl1LT"
l1talilbhod <la Yoaral
om MOH .. THUU. & ,.,. 'nL t .....
-:.--
MDlllDAY, AUIUST t. UM . 1:M "·"'· -TuaSDAY, AUOUST .. ,.,,. 1•1• A.M. •t Tt .. af!-lv.IM:U Otlkt -1:26'11 ( ....... ti M .. rltMt, •t Tt,.
wa• .. AU•U•t •• 1''1, 71» .. .M. -TMUllS •• AU•u•t .. ''"· ,,,,. .........
P-lllt VII .. , (t""-"l' (_.ltr -lft'M iltltr Av-P-11111• Vt ll9y
weo .. AUOUST 11, 1'71, ri• P..M, -TNUllS .• AU•UIT 11, 1m , 1•:• AuM. ,......., ,._., ,,_ ltllfllf, "-" .tofffl
W•D~ AUO, 11. ltTI . 11• '·"'· -TMUllS .. AUO. U, 1th, 1t1• A.M. & ,,. '.M· Ol'ttt W•h,. lt v. 4 LM--C:_,.,....lty ._,_ W•I""""" Aw ,. IMI ·-·
Pt< ~-c.th tel'tl MllM. f»-MA. tl(f, qt. Nt ,.....,,iMI --.ry.
-.lod .. -:sce
Southern Ca lifornia Edison
-..... --
·sails Set
For Ship
'
J'.'orm~r WAVES wW '*1lt
by land and by ... to the porl
of l.o"ll Buch klr ~ 's111i>board
reunion .luncbeon t,turd1y,
July 31.
20 F ASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT BEACH
271 FOREST AVENUE, LAGUNA BEACH
SponS<lring the 29lh an-
niversary gala in the Queen·s
Sa lon aboard the Queen Mary
will be the CbMar WAVES
Council, the only Navy League
Council composed entirely of
former women of the Navy.
LAST 3 DAYS!
fabulous fabric
Included in its membership
are former Coast Guard
Spars, Lady Marines. WA VES
of the Navy, Navy nurses and
a World W1r I Y~manelte.
ICE
An ll a.m. social hour on the
Promenade De.ck will be fol-
lowed by luncheon at I p.m.
and a tour of the ship will
complete the day.
Serving as co.chairmen are
Mrs. Betsy Pigg And Mra.
Barbara Reid .
SAVE
UI' TO
0
:AND
MORI!
SEMI·
ANNUAL
SALE
THURSDAY-JULY 29th
9 A.M. TO 9 l'.M.
THIS IS THE BIG ONE!
REDUCTIONS Up To 75 %
ALL SUMMER MERCHANDISE GOES!
NO GIMMICKS!
Just Tremendous Volues from The Wet Seal Stock
ENTIRE STOCK DF
SWIM SUITS R19ul•r
to $35.00
IJSE Y OIJR
HUNDREDS OF COTTON
MAXI & MINI SHIFTS R.oguler
to $25.00
WET SEAL CHARGE
ARNEL & COTTON
HOT PANT SETS Re9uler
to u a.oo
MASTER CH AR GE
ENTIRE STOCK OF SUMMER
SHORTS & TEE SHIRTS Regular . $300 TO $600
to St3.00
BANKAMERICARD
ONE AND TWO.PIECI
DRESSES Regular
to $50.00
ALL SALES A RE FINAL .
POLYESTE~. COTTON I BLIND
JEANS Rogula•
to $17.00
DOOR$ Ol'EN AT ALL wn SEAL STORES
9:00 A.M. JULY 29th 9:00 l'.M.
All Store1 o,.n Sunday, Aueu1t 1 at, from 12 'tll 5
....... .. ...... -17ttl ltfMt, c:.... .....
J04MorlH,WMol ......
270 I. 11 .. St., C:-M ...
JZ1 Melo St., II s .......
JUJ ltl.,of, So. C:-t l'lou
7777 Mio.,., Huot'-Cootor
240 ltMdw.y, i.atuM IOMll
4000 W. Cha-. City C_., O..,o
•
·..l>:---_1
•
•
, ,
•
I
' .
' j
' . • • --'
·' ' '
.
j ,
1
i
I
)
.\
•
'
O~IL Y PILOT iS$
Horoscope: Scorpio
Finds~ Cycle High -....
THURSDAY
JU LY 29
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES tMarch 21-April 19 ):
~toney aftecting mate or
busines.'l partner requires your
attention. Stress original ap-
proach. Refuse to follow
crowd. Uliliie innate sense of
independence. Wh at was hid-
den may now· be revealed le>
your advantage.
TAURUS {April 20-May 20):
Lie tow; play waiting game.
Permit one close to you to ex~
press ideas. Be attentive.
Listen and absorb knowledge.
You may be drawn in two
directions at once. B e
discriminating in choice.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
taio valid hint from Cancer
mes.sage. E.1tablish lines of
communication with Scorpio.
Stick to familiar ground. Cor-
l'e(:t aafety hazards at home.
Additional research necessary on special project.
VIRGO (Aug. >:>Sept. 22):
In clude family member in
social plans. Surprise visit
may be on 11genda. Realize
that being a good gueat. i3
more difficult than being a
fine host. Adhere to principles
of Golden Rule.
LIBRA (Sept. 23.0ct. 22):
Avoid self-deception where
money matters, p e r s o n a I
possessions enter pictu~. One
born under Pl<;ces may be
well-meaning b u t misin-
formed. Heed your o w n
counsel. Collect data : perfect
techniques.
SCORPIO IOct. 23-Nov. 21):
PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20):
Favorable lunar aspect now i
coincides with journeys ,,
publl.$hing activity. Open Unesl
ol communication. Clear away I
emoUonal debris. Aries, Sl&it. 1
2717 E. Co1it Hithw111y
Cor11111• t1.1 ""•!'"-'"· 61J. lfl0
et1111t1on1trkt/W eMM.tw C'-"
U YNl"I i. St-Leutlloil
•.
·..;
r~··~~pe~non~~·~w~ill~pro~~ve~~~~~~~~~~~ '
valuable allies. No need for -. '
1tlf-doubt.
VIRGINIA'S
ANNIVERSARY
SALE
LAST 3 DAYS
SAVE
1 0°10 to S0°At
; Sq uare Dancers Sw ing Into Luau
Accent on proper pacing: be
wary or over e x tending
yourself. Highlight versatHity.
Use material at h 11 n d .
Establish social contact with
one you admired a t a distance.
Activity due to accelerate.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Lunar cycle coincides with
time w h e n circumstances
favor your efforts. One in
authority backs your position.
Be confident -take initiative.
Caprlcom is in your comer. A way of sayh•t thnk you to our 1reot
customers. Gift C•rtlflcate chanc" with
each purcha1•. Winners to be announced
A.utgust 2ftd.
·:!If embers of Single Stars (left to right). Jim Spencer,
: t-.1.rs. Geneva Slegner and rvtrs. Bonnie Thomas are in
·'.the mood for an J·Ia\.vaiian luau on Friday. July 30.
;
; Budget Booster s
Dancers \Vill ga ther in the Orange F'arn1 .Bureau at
7 p .111. \\'ith calling by Ron Russell.
Good lunar aspect coincides
with creative endeavors, ex-
pressions of love. Leo in·
dividual figures prominently.
LEO {July Zl·Aug. 22): Ob-
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Work quietl y;
bthind scenes efforts will pay
dividends. Finish rather than
begin project!. Aries person
helps put together puule
pieces. Be receptive without
bei nfi!" subservient.
Virginia's S11ip & Stitch Shoppe
3334 IE". Cout Hwy. e Coroq cfel Mar
Supplies Closeted CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan.
191: Hopes, wishes, 11re fulfi ll-
ed if willing to discard out·
moded concepts. F r i e n d I y
persuasion is a requisite. You
will receive go-ahead signal.
Accept social invitation. Ad-
ded recomiition due .
e IANKAMlllCAID e MA.STIR CHAl•I
. : ~'t ;Jj~l,' ""'' "" ' ~en1ons
. semi-annual
clearance
sale
w•stcllff plaza
SEE/ ...
THE ONl Y MAJOR
FlOWER & CARDEN
SHOW IN
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA!
SEEi •••
Tlir INSTANT
"'AOO·A·IOO/o\"
//NFIATAllf)
PN£U.DOMt
HOUSf .. ,
•• '•"'•'-" '" I• •• ,.i., f,.,., M.,_. ...... ,1 ..
MEET/ •••
TOP DESIGNERS
IN THEIR FUll·SlZE
r-:'JRATOI
r.::OMS
.... 't~-
Not all aspects of an ac.
cident or sickness have to be
expensive, thanks to the Hun·
!ington Beach Junior \\'on1an's
Club.
The club 1naintains a closet
of sickroom supplies to be
loa ned to Huntington Beach
residents for a nominal fee, in-
cluding adults' and children's
crutches, canes, v•heelchairs
and a hospital bed.
ri.trs. J a n1 cs Strecansky,
Get Well CI o s c t chairman,
may be contacted by anyone
\vishi ng to donate such items
for the closet.
In its continuing outreach
into the community, the club
Summer
Clearance
4 DAYS ONLY
e THURS. e FRI.
e SAT. e SUN .
JULY 29 · AUG.
e DRESSES
e PANT SUITS
e SEPARATES
UP TO
V20FF
Sale Hours f tt 6
Char9e C111rds Welcefll•
WHITE-HALL
FASHIONS
JOS·E North Cotnt Hl91'1w111y
La.g11n11 lectch, Callfor•l111
rho.,. 4•4·lZtJ
• ,ACKED WITH THE
lATEST IEAIURIS fOl
IITTIR llVINGI .
• IT FR.LS THE ENTntE
CONVffjllON CINHRI
• ICOLOGY IXHlllTS
AND DISPIAYSI
•THI lATm IN MOllU
HOMI l VACATION
llVINGI
SHOW HOURS '
5.11 , .... "'••t-•yo
N&on-11 '·"'· Sotv•'oti
"'"'"·' , .... l ..... ,.
ADULTS •••• $2.00
JUNIORS •• $1.00
f(lol ......... l,,.,, ..... _,
has adopted a serviceman
missing in action in \lietnan1
and \\'ill conduct a letter
\1-riting campaign on behalf of
Lt. Cn1dr . James Patlerson,
1vho was lost in action ri.-ta y 19,
1967.
Club men1bers \\'ill man
tables everv Sa!urdav in
August in H'untington Center
where concerned citizens may
sign form letters to be given
to Robert Frishman. a
prisoner released from North
Vietna1n and president of San
Diego Concern for Prisoners
of \Var, Inc.
The letters will be presented
by Frishman in \Va shington,
D.C. to the Senate and House
foreign relations and foreign
affai rs committees.
Juniors also 111ill offer PO\V-
~11A bracelets with Lt . i
Cmdr. Patterson's name and •
bumper stickers. Mrs. David
Crandall is chairman of the "'
Americanism project. assisted >.
by Mr~. James Sull\ivan. '"
Americanism chaim1an for
lht: club.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21).Feb.
IS): Professional endeavors
receive public reco~ition.
Strive for the unique: look to
future rath~r than brooding
11bout past. Answer which has
been elusivt: can now be ob-
tained. Key is confidence.
detennination.
THE STITCHERY NOOK
CUSTOM NIEDLll"OIMT
Ol!llllf>" IY JINICI! PATl"llNAYAN f'lllSIAN YA ltN
CJIEWIL AND
NIEDLll'OINT
KITS ' surrLllS
• IU(lllA e l'AltAOON e UNGllt e £11.!CA WILSON e l"LSA WILLIAMl
l'Bl1tr~• C•nv••
NH<ll-1"' C1nv11
Ry• ltua Klrs
~9 ·-•• "'• ~·,;)· OH, COME ON!! >'' I ''". I '•11 Th•ra'l • great sale going on now at
.C I th• Bidtique. We've taken further r•~
'JC~ ~=:~"'ite0;,, •llin:1:1;in:•t;~~~'~\::: ~1
~L ,,,..
"I
dre11es, lhorts •nd tops, •r• now
1/1 price •nd LESS! There'1 • whole
c•s• full of 1•le i•welry, too :-:-:-:ii
of it 1/1 price . The 1•le e nd s thi1
week, so what •r• you wa iting for?
You'll nevar 9et • 9enuin1 Bidtiqu•
8•rgain by l ittin9 home. l ,.,,
Jt ~.k 1~;. BIDTIQUB
HllDLlrOINT CU.SllS ~
l\L---------·'\1, , 3'467 Via Lido-Newport Be•ch
READY TO RENT -Inspecting the closetfuJ of s up-210 I . 11,. St, 641-7674 ~'' ~~
j •
0
•• . " I ~. .~: • ' ' ' . ' j
\. 111 Hlll9ret1 S-i••r-C"tti M•• ~ki!J r_. (L ··'-' plies for the sick maint3..ined by Jluntington Beach lf'•t1ti~th•,•••-Ytu'r••t .. ;~ /".! 1~r. •. -. · Jf..
I .Juniors are (left to tjght) Mrs. Karl lil f'oss and Mrs, ••r ,,.'" , .. ,11 --~ " · . • Comp ement James Strec ansky, chairman. Mui.re-...... . i)._ •
A ne w perrnancnt·press/J__::.::::;.;.~;_~~:.:;:-~-:.:;;:-:;_:;j::.. ____ ..;;iiiiiiiiiiiiJ~~~~~~~~~~~-iiiiiiii;;_iiiiiiiiiiii~iiii.;...,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~=;;;;iiii;,
drying center designed to ~~ (-· r' \' ,. complement any automatic
v.·asher has been introduced. · · " ._, ~.
It is built 10 inches higher a ir "'~fl;i~U . .--·..J
U:an conventional units, allo\I'-IL t\J. '\
ing room for a storage drawer
at the bottom.
The manufacturer says 1he
dryer has a self-storing hide·'
away rod for hang ing
permanent press clothing. I
The drawer is designed to be
a convenient place to keep
,-small laund~~~~t~m~. j
THINK SALE
v
. · STARTS TODAY!
" ! /r S<r !h• \outh Coe•I
Pl~•• •ec!lon ... •o· <l•Y'• lu11e. I~ ~ ~fk1! 1.'~ : /// ·.; CY! r,.r/le
'· FABRICS
SOUTH COAST ,LAZA MALL
{ Coroin111I L..qt)
HOURS: 10 A.M. to 9:00 r .M.
<Op11t1 lff11ht91l
SP'll INGl'll!LD-DILIC!OUS
ALL MEAT
WIENERS
10 to the 12 0"1. P'•9.
45'
AMllllCAN Qll SWISS
Sliced Cheese
I l~d. w,,..,,,,_4 Sllcn-6 es. l'•t·
,.
~L/J&~f~,"
·_%e ~ToodO~ -.. -, ··-···---601 EAST BALBOA BLVD., BALBAD
REFRIGERATED DELIVERY SERVICE: PHONE 673-1310
BEEF ENCHILADA
CHEESE ENCHILADA
MEXICAN DINNER
COMBINATION DINNER
12 Oz. Frozen
PATIO DINNERS
c
ea
INTERSTATE BAl<ERIES
BLUE SEAL
WIENER
BUNS
I To Pkg.
c
••
' •
. ,
'
I •,
•
' \ .
·'
' .'
:·
45' JWJn OOhl
1~~Vl~·~·~·c~l~;f~f~P~l~·~··~-=O=n~l~y==~~~~~~::.:..:.~;:--~-=-~:c~~=~--=-~~:!::::::::::::::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=:~w~1~·~··~·~··~·~·~H~l~·~··~H~T~TO~L~l·~·~·~o~·~·~·~"~''~'~;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;::::;::;;;;~~'
' .
Choose One of the Many
Coast & Southern Federal
Offices to Serve You:
* MAIN OFFIC!:ttti l Hiii, Lo1 Angeles • 823-1351
* WILSHl"t: at GAAMERCY PLA CE: 3933 Wilshire
Blvd., LA. •3&&-1265
LA. CMC CENTER: 2nd l Bro•dway • 628-1102 * HUNTINGTON IEACH: 91 Huntington Ctnttr •
(714) 897·1 0"47 * SANTA ANA LOAN SERVICE AGENCY:
1905 N. Main St • (714) 5<47·9257 * IANTA MONICA: 718 Wi!shi,. Blvd.• 393·0746 * SAN P!DllO: 101h l P1cific •831·2341 * WflTCOYINA: Eastland Shopping Cir.• 33 1·2201 * PANORAllACITY: 8618 Van Nuys Bl1.1d. • 892-1171 * TARZANA: 18751 Ventura Boule11ard • 345-&e14 * I.ONO IEACH: 3rd & locust• C37·7481
* OpenSahfUn-91mtotp111 DailJHolKs-9amlo(plfl
ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION
.. :-,.. . ------' ..
Art Linkletter Shows You
a New Way to Beat Inflation
... Just Join
&'he ...... s.
Oub
Wilh e $2,500 bal1nce In your aavfnga
t ecount. you '" eUQlbl• to btcOme
a member. 8ubttantl•t aavlnga 1r•
•v•ll•bC•when purchllfng m1ny It~•
Including a.1tomobU11, fUmlture.
appllon-,)owelry. Plua 1111ny
frM Hrviola-money ordetl.
11'9 dtpoeu box•. ate.
. --~--~ f . COAST
AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS
',_,... _::. -, -
Coast & Southern Federal
Offers You These 1
•
Highest Prevailing Rates: .
} COMPOUNDID DAILY AND PAID QUARTl,.LY.•
' 5.000/•-5.13 •1. (
PulbOOk: No Minimum. .
" 5.250/e-5.39°1• ' lhrwe Month Certificate; No Minimum.
5.75°1•·5.920/•
On•Year C.rtlne1tt: $1.000 Mln1mum.
6.000/o-6,180/e • l
Two-Y•rCertmcate; 15,000 Minimum. ' • ' • lfttctfY• Annul E•rnlng• •
1.
• INSURANCE TO s20,ooo •
' .
. ,
•
"
-· If DAILY PllOT Wtdn!U!ay, July ZS, 1971
'•.
Barbecue Chef Swings Along • 'Free and Easy' Season
•'. i • ' . . . • . • • • ' ' • • ' • ,
' ,
Al "lbe warm weatber
'-blme IUIOll IO. swlnglnt
... lo hlit> sty!<, •
~1 hint cornea from
.. Calllornla -Council. AccordlaC to t b e 1 e beef
bart>eeGe uper1a. almost .111>·
cut of beef, when prope.
~ can be cooked O\
Ille coals.
I L's &imply a matter ol
be •. l\ing familiar with which
cut.a are tendu enough to wse
"aa purchased" and which to
treat wllb a marinade or
tenderir.er before cooking. II
: } you don't see what you want,
• rtng for the butcher. He'll be
" happy 10 cut 1orruethlng special
for you and may even oiler a
helpful auggeiUon.
In this round up of recipes ,
ground beef chuck is mixed
with egg, spinach and a bit of
oregano 10 give a good tei:ture
and interesting flavor. Serve
,, , the beefburger1 on sour dough
'· t rolls or thick slices ri French
.~ • bread. Nothing will be amiss
however if you ~ hamburger
buN.
• The fint cut of beef top
· ~ round -sometimes known as
Loodon Broll -ls a popular
.· • cut lD barbecue. Being lean
and boneless it may be done in
one piece as a family steak 2r
cut into buaky square& and
cooked on a skewer. These lit·
Ue roasts are delicious when
cut into thin slices and lopped
~i cup chopped green pepper
I cup cMp ped oele.ry
I cup drained chopped
tomato
~ teaspoon aall
l (7.(IW)Cf:) can green chili
saba.
I
I
Combine all lngredlents.
Qi,111 several bow"11. fttakea
about J cups.
CAU:FORNIA. STYLE
SMOKED BEEF BRISKET
Lean and flavorful, fresh
EASTERN
GRAIN FED
, • with homemade chili salsa -
< • that marvelous C&lifornia in-
,. • ventioo of canned green chill PORK
; salsa m.lxed with chopped SPARERIBS
: fresh green pepper, onion,
bee! bnsket is great for cook·
.ing slo~·ly in a smoke oven or
covered b~cue. !l's a mea-
ty cut to fl avo r with aromat ic
woods as it cooks.
4 to 6 pounds f re sh
etilirornia brisket
FRYING
CHICKEN
YOUNG·N·
TENDEl
,BEEF
: celery an<1 tomato. FINE FOR BAR·B·QUE
And for those who like bee~.}lf r-------::=::--------------4 with a smoky tang, ther
fresh beef brlJi:et cooked au
naturel in a covered barbecue
EASTERN
LIVER
. .• . . , .· .. ,• .• . .. . :: ~
; ' :: i
.
' > • •
or kamada, Cook over I o w
beat with a few chips o(
aromatic wood sprinkled over
the charooal. Slice the smoked
brisket thinly and serve either
hot or cold.
JOE'S SPECIAL BEEF·
BURGERS
The national hero for picnics
and barbecues takes on a
di5tinctive California l o o k
aeasoned with spinach and
oregano, then served in crusty
10Ur dough roll!1.
o/, cup chopped onion
l tablespoon cooking oil
1h package 11.lklunce) froi.en PORK
chopped spmach
I egg
J:I/, teaspoons salt ROAST
GRAIN FED
BONELESS
ROLLED
; .,
~
V. teaspoon pepper
th: teaspoon oreg ano
1i;,:ru;;~,fOWld Californi•, .. -.... I a ;l. }j i: Ii ·I·] ·I• . g thick slices French bread
C.OOk ooion slowly in oil unUI ROSARIT A DINNERS transparent but not browned.
• Add apload> and heat until e M!XICAN e COMBINATION 39'
; , thawed and liquid evaporates. e IEEF ENCHILADA
: , Cool. Beat egg with salt, ~ e CHEESE ENCHILADA ~ per and oregano. Mix in beef
~ • and aplnach mlxttrre with fork . JOHNSTON 'S NEW FROZEN 5/$1 ~ ·~. Shape inl.G S patlies about 4 YOGURT .-........ ~ inchM in diameter. Grill o•er SOFT ••OIEN ~
•· ... hot coals to desired degree of AND READY TO EAT 1.--:-
•
Covered barbeque•
Trim almcist •II visible
out!lde fat from fresh beef
brilket, leaving only • thin
covering to keep beef from
drying out. Place beef on rack
of covered barbecue. With
GRADE "A"
PAN READY
l ·LEGGED
BIG
ROLLS
cover down, slowly brown first
side over low beat for ~ bour .
Turn and brown stt0nd 1Jde
from ~ hour. Turn beef again
and continue cootJn1 without
turning over low heat for 1
hour. Wet hickory chipJ, or
twi&1 of aromatie wood added
to charcoal wUJ impart added
navor. Slice 011 diagonal
acrou: grain of beef to serve.
Makes I to 10 serving s.
•Kam a d o (Japanese
earthenware smoker). cov~
gas, grill, or covered keUle
barbecue may be u s ed
satisfactorily. With a small
barbeque or hibachi you may
use a large overturned kettle
or Chin~ wok to serve as •
cover .
BAR M SHANKLESS
HICKORY
SHANK
HALF
SMOKED ,
Butt Part Ham 59c LI
I AR M IULK STYLI
WIENERS
GRADE "A'"
FRY IN G
CHICKEN
G RADE "A"
FJl:YI NG
CHICKEN IRUST
--:~1u 59c L1.
I AR M HICKORY SMOIU!D 69"
SI• d B I ULK ... ice aeon nn• LI .
1.ACHl9UITA
CORN
TORTI LI.AS
FRISH LU M
P'ltt. •• 10
Ground .Beef
PEPSI
COLA F
0
R
l
t 26 OZ. BOTTLES
PLUS TAX l DEi'.
HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS
CLOSE-UP "~;.~'
10' .•.
.· :
to chunb and skewer before DINNERS going to the coals. Cook so it's
'1. crusty on the outside and rare and juicy on the inside. IL ________ _. ____ _. __
CAKE
MIXES
FAMILY :.~~:.~:~ST~ ... 69'
LARGE SIZE 59c -·-MEDIUM SIZE 49c
WILKINSON SWORD-f'IUi. OF FIVE I LADES -
BARBECUED BEEF ROUND lr:r.l~':f1f'lr:r.r.T:',,.T.lr:lll ~-._.,
AL FRESCO ,,_ ....... 1; ;l fi: 1 :J ;t·l .1•r31 • • . • • . . .
2 pounds California beef top
round, fint cut about 2 in·
cbH thick.
1 • cup tarragon wine vinegar
11, cup sherry
J mashed clove garlic
, • 1 Cut beet round into 2-inch
i "• squares. Combine vinegar,
~ sherry and garlic. Pour over
, beef chunks, tossing to coat all
' ·, .
sides. Let stand 15 minutes.
Thread on skewers, leaving
about an inch between beef
; t squares. Grill on barbecue or ~ : tn broiler, turning to brown all
( ; sides. Remove from skewer
) : and cut into thin slice> acro5'
; """.1 the gra.ln. Delicious to serve
' with French bread and Ollli ~ ~ ' Sa1sa. Makes about f servings.
~ :'"i Sometime.! known as Lendon
;~ : 4J Broil.
;
' • ~ • . • • • • '
• • • • I • ? • ' . •
. .;
'.•
; . ·~~
'
CHll.J SA~A
y, cmi chopped grwi Onion.
Tart Dish
Caps Meal
JCE CREAM CARDINAL
Al eplcureaa dessert
1 package (10 ounces)
raspberries in syrup, de-
frosted
2 tablespoons kirsch
POTATOES
u.s. No. 1 -aussrn
10 POUND 39' CELLO
IAG
SQUASH
ITAL IAN 10' FRESH
LOCAL LI.
PEACHES
LARIOI SIZE
FlllSTONI 19'u.
CANTALOUPE
EXTRA FANCY
LARGE SII! 5~$1
APPLES
NEW CROP GlAVlNSTllN
2 LIS. 29'
• • . 1 pint strawberries (rinsed,
hulled and sliced) 11~-.... --------------.... -' • . l quart vanilla Ice crum
SPRINGFllLD
MACARON I a.
71/i oz. 101
Cheese
Dinners
Jiff'!"
2/29'
10' Corn Muffin
Ml·x '01.
ll l NUZIT-AlROSOL CAN
AIR 28' FRESHENERS 7
llNG'S'°lD
CHARCOAL
BRIQUETS
10 LI . U.• 6'9' ·----------
NABISCO
FIG
NEWTONS ---
1 LI. PKG.
39'
CASCADE FOR
AUTOMATIC
DISHWASHERS 'oz.
l LI.
~ • ' ,, q ' . ~=-.. ~,
~~
ln an electric blender puree
raspberries with their syrup;
force through a fine-mesh
strainer ; discard 1 e e. d y ,
,..;mi.. I' Ml:a: with kirsch a n d I strawbtrr~; chill. (Makes 2 I
cup&.) Serve scoops of i~ I
cream wUh the raspberry-
atnwberry sauce. fli akes 8
DOUBLE BLUE 11
CHIP ST~,~!~ COUPON I
VOID AFTE R SUNDAY, AUGUST 1.
'· '· . .. servinga.
Note: 1'ie sauce ia on Ille
tart side; if you want ill
nveeter add sugar to taste to
Iba •trawberrlts.
NO M!NIMU'M ,URCHASE--NO MAXIMUM PURCHASE
ONE ORDER ONLY ANY AMOUNT
YOU CHOOSE TO IUY
"Goon ONLY AT •••GAIN IASXn
ALL 43<
VARIETIES
FACIAL
TISSUE
17S 2·PLY
RIG. ff¢
69'
F
0
R
SUPl!R CHROMIUM 49" DO UI Ll·lDGl lle9wlor 19t .,.. RAZOR BLADES •••·-,.,_
PllOTEIN 11
14 FLUI D OZ. IOTTLl
SHAMPOO
RIG UU.R Sl.4f AT SOMI STOltlS
Prices Effective:
Thursday thru Sunday
July 29, 30, 31 & Aug. 1
I Prtc.es subject to stock OA hmtd.
~ I .......... W.E·G·L.A .. D.LY .. A·C·C·E" ........... ~ ~ '• U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS
F
0
R
I
Wf GIVI
ILU ! CHIP
STAMPS
COSTA MESA
PLACENTIA
I FREE I . OHi IATH 1111 1u o• DIAL
WITH THI f'U RCHASI OP ONI
U.TH SIZI U R AT OUI l lGU·
LAR LOW PllCI.
Wf GIVl
llUE CHIP
STAMPS
19th and Placentia
71 O W. Chapman
Off•• ••pill\ OIO A119. I
Llll'lil 0"• co11pon P''
f11r1 i1y.
•OOD ONLY AT U.IGAJN IASllT
-···-·-~-
.. . ·.
:· .: ' ·•
. .. .. .
·. ·:
-. ~
. .
· .. ..
• .
FRESHNESS ASSUREDlll
ltlR<\T DEPARTMENT MEAT DEPARTMENT
''Tende,..Lee''
FINE QUALITY
FULLY COOKED
MS
IVll KAM
POlflOM ............. SJ~ .. SLICES •···-····'1.29l ..
r ... ~r;11,,.
PAClfK •OCKflSN •.•••• 79:.,
FRESH OREGON ,,., ... 1i...r-;1 ..
SILVER sn ... (.1 $139 r11cu99c OCIAM PEIKll •••••••••• 89~.,
10 10 .... ~'""''' t SALMON HOil LB. IAKl LB, DOYIR SOLi ......... 1.19la.
DISCO UN'I' St:Af'OOI,
DISCOUN'l' t 'UOZt:N FOOD
TINDER AGED
STEIR BIEP
CHUCK
STEAK
WELL TRIMMED
BONELESS
HUCK ROAST
85~.
ll<lll-T!NDA 98 C f Ill'PI: BEEF FRITIERS ••••••••• u.!CORN DOGS •••••• ~·~:~. 79f.. POPPY BRAND -CRY-0-VAC WRAPPED
JONES READY TO BROWN 75
LINK SAUSAGE .'~?;·:~~· c
U.l.D.A, GRADE 'A' COLORID 39 C
BAKING HENS i~t LB.
PRODUCE DEPAR'l'MEN'l'
, FIRST OF THE SEASON c BARTLETT .
, PEARS .....
TENOER SWEET II fl!SH PICKED
CORN ...... 6 ~ 49c SPINACH .. :~~~~ 1 Q•
SOUD HEAOS -GIEEH 8 P.Ull O' VITAMINS t -lb.
CABBAGE ~. CARROTS .:~·:.":~ 14 •
EVERYDAY DISCO UN'l' l'RICES ON t 'UOZEN F OO
Sl<UPHllDl• i 1--68' BIEAD DOUGH •••••••••• ~~~.
BiRDsEYE"ORANGill p'tUs -~ ~·. 5 7 c
""'°"l"'fOt •llQ lflfM 65' PASRAMI SANDWICH •• ~.:·.
l OID •lll 45' SIRLOIN TIPS ............. :::-.
''~1D-• o~o~owr ·-·· ~ .. s23• 11'1 llW '''''''"'"'''
JOU,AI~ 49< FABRIC FINISH ••••••••••• ~.~·;
GiA',(ju1c1 ...•......... !::·.23c
(AH Y'i .
POOR BOY S,ANDWICH ••• '!.".'; 79'
;QHNSTo'N PIES •••••••••. a:::: 79c
JOllNJlOM (1 Pt.(Q • C
PIE SHELLS ••••••••••••••• :::; 3 J
VAN IH!U.W'S •ll.f.,C.__ 17' ENCHILADA DIN ..... ,,,t/:r,
l'-"""lf WoiOt-1 OlD fASll!Qff9""",,, I $I •• APPLE PIE •••••• ,J,;,,,,;lft:.
i"""IJIMO>I Ol~lo.i.i-...l~tf.ff' $119 CHEllY PIE •••••• ,., •• ,,,r.r.-
c.uH• "°" $ i •• 81EADID FISH snau .... /'.~;
Dt:LICA'fESSEN DEPART~lt:NT •.
WILSON'S CORN COUNTRY
FRANKS
, ~~~\ p~~O~F .,. c
• f1' Ci:. '. , 0 . ~ :@<.,,.,
' ~ ~lllEO (6-0 l . 'h) 51 C -ITALIAN SALAMI ...... ~.
OK.U """'"'AU OlllAT !11-0L 754 9' BOLOGNA •••••••••••• ::'" 4
OKA.I M Yll TM!((
ILICID BOLOGNA .. ,.;'.~·. 75'
Dtl!llGfWf 83' DASH ••••••.•••...•..•••• ~·. ~-~ 79' SALVO •••••••••••••••••••• ~:.~.
Dff!Ol)f..... '145 CHEER •••••••••·••·····•••··~· fAtflOC '°'11Mlt J" t i •• DOWNY •.••••••.•••••••••••. ~
Compore LIGHT BULB PRICES 1
• • • ARE NOT THE SA.Ml IN ALL STORES•
OUR TOTAL DISCOUNT PRICES ON LIGHT BULBS ARE LOWEST AROUND
NO FAIR TRADE PRICES HERE. THE LOWEST PRICES ON THE FINEST LIGHT
BULBS ARE FOUND AT TOTAL DISCOUNT THR IFTIMART!
SYLVANIA
BLUE DOT LIGHT BULBS
60-75-100 WATT
cr::.:o •.... 2/79')
• 60 Wcrn I BUG LITE ( ~i:~)..... . ... 2/71'
I 100 Wott on;-1 BUG LITl (';:) ........... 2 /78'
I Jj(I Wott-Ye ll-11•...0...n-AMb.r or lted
1 PLOOD LAMPS <~::::.$2.99J•237
I
I
I
Cheek These Prices on
:62cj SOFT WHITE BULBS
40-60-75-100 WATT
SOME CHARGE I OUR PRICE
4~$1 31 ! 2~53c
I
JE:ISE:YM.AIO flESH 8 l C .Grade' AA' Butter .... ;~';
PEN & QUlll "NON·OAllY'
Whip Topping ......... •~:~ 45c
c'hii'l~d orange Juice.~":~ 49c
JANf ANDERSO N 2 Sliced Bread ............ !:"; 5c f.'ii!:\ HOSTESS 0 ~Twinkles ........... !:'; I c
GIA.NI« GOOSE-IEGULAI 73c Pill.OW PAK 4 9.
Potato Chips ........... !~ :~
POMPt!AN 88• Olive Oii .................. :~"~
~ flEISCHMANN "S IEGU l.AI 44• ~ Margarine ........ ;~;
COFFEE $159 lnst'"9t Pol1or'1 ....... ;~:·;
ii'eW1"1'• corn •••k••rtlt~
Bees Whls .•.......• · .••• i~:t.tl• •wm" · ·71c .. .... 011 •••••••••••••• !!: ..
CH ICIM Ofl JHI llA 45 C C una.Whlto Tun• ... : .. ':~
!'14• "'"""'. ··9 c ... -'lra110 Whip ... ~:~ .. ... -19• Lefllon Juice ••..•••••••• ?! :·~
WELCH"I 4J• Grape Juice ............. :~~·;
DEt MOMTE 2 9C Fruit Cocktail ........... ~.
Apple Sauce ............. ~'!~ 20•
Ofl MONTE s C Prepared Prune1 .... :::~ 4
~ QUAILCtNTflt CUT 33• ~Asparagus .. : ..... ~
flENCH'S INSTANT 29• Mashed Potatoes .•. :;~:·;
"" 59c Long Grain Rice ...... :~ :·;
HUNT'I a1G JOHN 39 B , , Fi • :201/JOI. c eans n x1ns .......... .
OE~ MONTE -REGU lAlt
Tomato Sauce ........... ~:~ 11 •
!>TllllO-BEEf or CHI)( 2 l C Bouillon Cubes .......... ·;·:
WOOD PANELLING WAX $165 Scott Liquid Gold ...... '!:~
MOIST DOG fOOO 89 C Gaine's Prime ......... ~:~
~ 5";';ii';.';y Napklns::.45"
PLASTIC WIAP J11..i.o 59• • W 12"10()' aran rap ............ : .. .
~ (3c DL4.l) ASSOltTEDCot.OIS 33 ~ ScotTowels ....... '."!~. ·•
"SCOTT-WHIT! or ASSOltTfO Slngle loll 13 Bathroom Tissue .. ~~::-:: •
LIQUOR DEPARTMENT
l l K>N Of lf~N UGHT or DMIC llfth $2 98 ~, Rum ...................... .
V';dka ............... ~l~h. $,,,
SUNOllL4ND •2•• Dry Gin ••........... !'~~
MEAT DEPARTMENT
WILSON'S or OSCAR MAYER
EASTERN PORK
SPARE
RIBS
POPSICLES OR
"'°' FUDGSICLES 1JOll.I'
ITALIAli 19c l(lS 6·BAR PACK
~"59c
QUAIL LOTION LIQUID ~
DETERGENT
~~~~e~:ING ~~ 2 7c
OISHtS
REFRIED BEANS
2 Y,TIN 25c
FOLGER'S
1·LB.TIN 79c (3~LI. TIN $2.29)
SWISS MISS -All VARIETIES
PUDDINGS
S·OJ:. 32c 2PAC
FAMILY SIZE 89 C 16-01.
2701 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA
5858 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH e 23811 EL TORO, EL TORO
• •
-~. . __ , -
-'i r ;"Oi'=" -· j. J\fit4' -.. ''' l>= '• .. ''ll. ' ~ • .l~ ...
Summer·
OUTDOOR FARE 'KEEPS FOOO'S MOOD CAREFREE
When ou buy the Tang'"inside this
pitch ,you don't have to buy the
pitche It's free.
The itch er is glass with a screw.on
plastic op. And its packed with 27
ounces I Tang.
The ang is a nutritious, orange.,
Aavore instant breakfast drink. And its pa ed with more vitamin C than
freSho r.inge juice.
Tang. Fpr spacemen and earth families.
I i
... ~-...........
...
. .
~· ..
1:. ~ ~
'!, ..
-rf:J l~~---,.,,..~, -
•••
...
, .
'
. ····~,·-·-J .. ..ti·:..~
/' ... ~.· lo\• •
# -. ...
J
"' • -., . 1_.-:--':b...--.. ,
Wtd11tM:J.1y, Jul1 28, 1971 *
Should Be
The sun is golden. the
garden ablau with flowers,
the children giddy with all lhe
summer fun aclivipes. If all
this makes you feel like click·
Ing your heels, it's jmt the
time for a carefree outdoor
feast. You will want. of
course, s o me happy-mood
!ood.
Summer Picnic Salad Is
easy enough to keep you light
hearted, delicious enough to
make the lnfonnal p a rt y
festive. Unlike other delicate
salads youngsters tend to re-
ject, lhis' is a robust com-
bination that features their
favorite foods ... macaroni,
ham chunks. cubed Cheddar
cheese and-sliced hard-cooked
eggs. lf you want to get really
fancy, add raisins, cashews ()r
flaked COC-OnUt.
'Keep the cleanup as easy as
the food preparation by serv·
ing the meal on plaslic<00ted
plates,· and use plastk-coated
cups for the accompanying
milk or juice. Nothing makes
a good mood evaporate faster
than kltchen chores .• , so get
away from it all with these
convenient disposable prcr
ducts.
A Goody Log is real happy·
mood food, too .•. 90 fancy
looking, so easy to make. !l's
a long loaf of French bread
filled with a delicious mixture
based on caMed deviled ham.
Blend the meat with softened
cream cheese and niinced
onlon.
Scoop out the Inside of the
bread with a 1001 knife , spoc;m
In the filling, and chill . to cet
firm enough for slicing. It'a a
delicious accompa.rUmmit to
the salad, ()r you may serve
the Gobdy Log slices as ap-
petizer!.
Next time you're In a
particularly carefree mood,
spread the good feelings with
a flavorful happy-mood meal.·
SUMME R PICNIC SALAD
3 cups coo ked macaroni,
well drained and chilled
2 CUf>3 diagonally sliced
celery
3 CUJ)3 cooked ham ctnmJu
1 cup Cheddar cheese
hunks or· 1 pa cake (i to
8 ounces) 'cubtd sharp
Cheddar cheese
;, cup mayonnaf&e-or·ealad
dressinr
2 teaspoons curry powder
i,J·teaspoon Tabasco pepper
sauce
1h: te~n salt
lf.t cup sour cream
Cashews
Raisfns
Combine macaroni , celery,
ham and cheese. In small
bowl, combine mayonnai~.
curry powder, Tabasco and
sour cream for dressing. TOSI
Avant Garde Avocados
PlLOT·ADVERTISER
Easy
with u.lad. Chlll. S e r v •
ta:mlshed with cashews and
rai.llln!. Yield: 6 to I servings.
WbeJl cooking macaroni add
2 tablespoons sal&d oil and \i,
teaspoon Tabasco to cooltine
wate r.
GOODY LOG OF HAM
3 cau (3 ounces each) devil-
ed ham
2 packages (8 ounc~ each)
cream cheese, softened
t smitn onion, minced
I tablespoon parsley, minced
1,~ teaspoon Tabasco pepper
'"""' 1 teaspoon. Worcestershire
sa\K'1!
1 small loaf French b~ad
1 tablespoon mayonnaise or
salad dressing
Jn large mixing bowl, blend
first sii: ingredienl!: until
smoolh and creamy ; reserve.
Cut French bread loaf in ball
lengthwise. S:oop oot a cavity
along.center of each loaf half,
leaving a. shell of crust and
bread abOut 11.t·inch thick.
Spread each cavity w It h
mayonnaise. Fill with reserv·
ed ham-ch~se mii:ture. Put
loaf halves together. Wrap in
wax paper ; rerrigerate 2
hours. When ready to suve,
slice thinly and garnish with
parsley or watercress. Yield:
Caoapes for 6.
For Av ant Garde Avocados, hollo\v out avocados and fill with a blend of avocado,
crabmeat, water chestnuts, hard-cooked eggs, ripe olives and cashews. Top
with a tan gy dressing mad e by blending 1 cup dairy sour cream :and 1A cup
Am erican blue cheese (about 11/i ounces, crumbled). Add a dash of Worcester·
shire sauce, cayenne, sugar and enough pineapple juice to thin dressing. Stir
in another ~ cup blue cheese and refrigerate.
A Die.fer' s Delight:
This summer treat is a Melon Salad tbal contains less than 300 calori'H-per
serving. Cut melon in ~alf and scoop out to make balls. Combin~ melon balls.
stMps of honey loaf, 1 cup sliced green grapes and an orange which bas been sec-
tioned. Fill melon shells. Add Celery Seed Dressing made from one 6-ounce
can unsweetened pineapple juice, 2 tablespoons honey, 2 tablespoons lemon
juice, ~ teaspoons cornstarch and 1h: tea spoon celery seed. Heat to boilinz, 1Urr·
J,ng constanUy. ·
-----·--lb·---.• ·"Jd,.,. .. -
•
•
--
•
OAl l Y PILOT Wtdne~i. JLJI~ 28, 1971
In the Pink With Rhubarb
Favorite Fruits 'Go Bananas'
Cool Dish
Beats Heat
Unusual ingredients make a
speqial summer salad.
CREAMY 1\1ACARONI EGG
SALAD
S hard.cooked eggs. chopped
2 a.pa chopped apple
'h cup elbow macaroni.
coOked and drained
1h ·cup chopped carrot
1~ cup chopped celery
1-i cup pickle relish
I tabl:~n minced onion
t tablespoon salt
1h teaspoon pre p ared
mustard
t cup real mayonnaise
Lettuce cups and cherry
toma toes
Toss together all the in-
gredients eltcept Ute lettuce
and tomatoes; chill. Serve in
lettuce cups with tomatoes.
Makes 5 to 6 ~erving!I,
Quick Crochet
EVERYDAY LOW PRICES!
U.S.O.A. Grade A
FRYING 2 .:;~~b. 29
CHICKENS lb .•
Meat Master Beef
ROUND c~~~~R 89 STEAK CUTS lb .•
EJ'ERlDAY LOW PRICES!
Meat Master Beef .... ,... 89 BRAISING STRIPS 1b.,
siRLOIN TIP STEAKS lb. 1.39
fa1y ta Carve
RUMP ROASTS lb •• 93
Rofiss'Eiile RoAsT ,~ 1.29
sREAKFA'sr' srEAKs lb. 1.49
lb .99
lb .• 35
VEAL-PARMAGIANA lb .• 98
C•nler Cut Round
BONELESS STEAKS
Whale or Oic1d
BEEF KIDNEYS
INTERNATIONAL Sit.VER Ff01ur• ef the WHk
s'AiAD .. FDRK .. ,h .19
UNl/PLUS RUVS
arf' manufacturenr. 1peclal allow11nre1
.,.,.i th thr t1a\•int" pnRM'd on to you.
Health & Beauty Aids
(0190•• "100"
ORAL ANTISEPTIC .,., "'"" .99
ii"A°liY SHAMPOO ,,..., ""''' 1.43
8ob1 Mov•c
BABY LOTION '·"' ltott!e .91 Ory, Q.l,, No,....,I
BRECK SHAMPOO , .... 11.111 •• n
Lili H.,;, Leho<'
CONDITIONER .. __ ...... 1.85
Ri9~t G.oo..t -l<>eludet 1 0. OH Lobel
ANTI-PERS Pl RANT ) }4L co" .52
S<:~lc~ Su-Ro,... Blod11
CHROME INJECTOR S<hlc~ l"lflfi"''"' -l"\11 ol 5
DOUBLE EDGE BLADES
,~ •• -' 4 • 7'l
.85
EJ'ERYl14Y WIT PRlCES!
EvllY Sllced -Miias
FRESH 39 BEEF LIVER lb .•
llllPbS 1 lb. pkg.
SLICm
BACON lb .• 55
EVEllYDAY' wrv rRICES:
FRYIN'GcHiCi<eN"s~lb. .33
OSCAR fMXr 'BACON i73
wAF°ER -ilirN ·BAcoN .Bii
Honnel er Rath • 83 SLICED B~OON ,, .... ,... ,
M'Tn-u~~NSAuSAGE'LINKS .79
CIKkihy -1 lb. flti:g. 89 SLICED BACON ,
t1N'i<'s.6.us.\Gt .21
f,...h Fn1et 98 OCEAN PERCH, lb •
Allfmi ' Pear HatviS-.. _ .39
Household Needs
UoUID DETER(JENT ,,_ ...... 89
oiSHWASHER ALL ,,_.., .85
1 ... 1v.i.. JO<: Off L..l>.1
DASH DETERGENT .. ,.,,_,., 2.07
1,.dwd•• SOc Off lab.I • 37 TIDE DETERGENT ·~• ,,_ ,,, L.
PLASTIC0
BAGS .... 37
(Iliff ...
DINNER NAPKINS
C......-llSTllJ'f'
WORK GLOVES w-~w ....
SALAD BOWLS
.. ....... 27
•••• 29
• ... 29
EVERYDAY LOF PRICES!
DELICATESSEN DEPARTMENT
A1
l°L MEAT 65 FRANKS , ........ •
Heb•-Nalionol Chub• & hlog"tl Clwb1 1 09 KOSHER SALAMl12 .... ,.,. ,
GELATINliSAeLADS7~:::: .35
Rolph• All Meal Of' All Be•f 43
SLICED BOLOGNA ......... ,
Gollo
SLICED SALAME l.r. plig .• 49
Gollo
SLICED SALAME ......... 89
DAIRY DEPARTMENT
latph. -A1aortecl FkiYOn 21 YOGURTS ....... ,,
tolpM 25 FRUIT DRINKS ~L .. -,
" '--;., LIQUOR DEPARTMENT 1·, '. '
ll:olpM lilchuiv" ~.
Sartdy MocAllister l"'fM'rW 10'98
SCOTCH ~·'· ,
Old G"'--ci 6-Yr. OW ,_;girt 3 79 BOURBON ,.,. ,
......... lal<MhiN 7 59 VODKA or GIN ._. ,
Edelw•iM .-Premivnt 1-..,. 6 pk. 1 25 BEER ....... ••• •
GOl'dP p,.l'l'lium COb.rHt S.u.i9no"1
WiN'Es'·'"·-· ""' 2.19
Frozen Food
"" ·~ STUFFED POTATOES ... "' .35 s-11 ...
TUNA & NODDLES .,,_ "'· .89
CRE°AMED CHICKEN ,,._ ..... 89
--35 GARLIC BREAD •-"·''" •
'f'RjE'[) RICEw/Almonds "ft,., .. 45
w ... i-·· "-.....,. lltMtolM,. 69 PIES ·~· Ria;P'Ets & MUSHROOMS .40
CHiCKEN A LA KING ._,.,. JS
'
Pl LOT ·ADVERTISE R
EVERYDAY WW PRODUCE PRICESt '
VN._ened
c.im1a 10 CANTALOUPE lb.• .
New Crop Calif.
All Purpose Gravenstein 19 APPLES S ib .•
s-1.Julcylof'Oda
PLUMS lb •• 25 Colilomio Hao•
AVOCADOS 25 1 . -'· TOMcATO'ES' Rip1 n1d lb .• 29
Lo"g, Grffn, Cri1p
CUCUMBERS
U.S. No. I p,.mium Bold,,f Si11 Ru11et ,.,, .10
lb .• 10 POTATOES
BAKERY DEPARTMENT
RALP'H's•·· • ""''d who.. 35
BREAD '·"-'·••·'~' •
Rolph• 49 DANISH APPLE RING "'',
Rolph• 39 CORN MUFFINS "•·"'•,
Rolph• 29 APPLE TURNOVER"• .12,
AllStar ~ Corn Wholo """'' & c-m ''"' 18 16-aJ. cort 11
Pantry Fillers
MIO
COFFEE
f ,,.lt """"" Hl-C DRIN KS
O.ncan Hin••
LAYER CAKF. MIXES
o..,n9• Drink
TANG INSTANT
Kroft llquld I 000 lolo"d
SALAD DRESSING
ALPO DOG FOOD
l•rly Colofo..,la l •·l<>•11• P•"•d
RIPE OLIVES
R.,.lpe
DOG FOOD
'" '°" 2.29
......... 33
181'.·ot. plqr •• 37
,, .. 1.27
I M1. bottle ,81
1 .. y, ..... ·-.30
~ ........ 33
l•l'J-t1L -.25
Ji.lake pretty put-togelhers
In, whi~ or col ors.
Easy lo crochel companions
-·long vest., skirt are today's
fastiion. Use knitting worsted
nr string, big hook. Pattern
-----No everyday supermarket prices are lower prices than~~~------
7173: NEW Misses ' Sizes 10.16
included.
Froi•n Food Panlty Fille r' Ponlry f illers Hovi.hold N..Os Ho111eholcl Needs Health & Beoutv Aids
SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS for
each pattern -add 25 cents
for each pii ttern for Air Mai l
and Special U 11 n d I in g :
otherw ise third-clas!I delivery
will take three weeks or more.
Send to Alice Brooks tht DAI·
LY PILOT 105 Needlecraft
Dept.1 Box 163, Old Oielsea
StaUcm, New Vork . N.Y. 10011.
Pr1ot Name. Addres1, Zip ,
Patkl.'I' Namht:r.
NEW 1971 N t t d I e c raft
Catalol( -more I n s I e n I
fashions, knits. croc h ets,
quilts, embroidet y. gifl!i, 3
free p;iuern.s. 50 cenl~.
NEW: "Instant Crochet"
Rook, Step-by.5tep pictures
te1u:h you how lo crochet in-
stantly~ Plu~ newest patterns
I I.
M"f.l'r Pns ,,, .... 19
('NCHILA'oA DINNERS 11 .. ; ••• 49
COM11NATION PLA I I 'I-·· •••. .49 ...... '" ORANGE PL US .... ·-.53 i;r.,.., ....... .
WAfflES ........ 16 _ ..
CHICKIN DINNIRS
~~-49 HYO( PAA:K COOK1lS 11 ... .-.. • .... ,. 4 IOUILLOHCUIES ,,._ ...,, • 5 sou .. MIXlS .... 10
·~· 11 PUDDINGS 1 ......... • ,,_ 06 HOT COCOA MIX .__,... •
'-'""'.._. 55 MAYONNAIS! -i-•
... COffll ~· INSTANT(Offfl ··~~ ... INSTANT Tll ..._$1.o ....
IAIYfOOO G ..... ,,J .. ,.,
IAIYFOOD --~ SUGAR WA.FIRS
lo\ .... 14 !-... 1.39
.... 1.19
.... -~ .09
·"'-.... 13
-.... 39
£'AWN CHAIRS -2.99 ·-· ICE CHIS TS v ••
PHOTO ALBUMS
l-c.tw~J.IH-1 1 INSTAMATIC FILM .. -SNAPONSHIRTS
~ NO.,IST STRIPS
.......
-l.99
w .99
-,at
... 1.65
More than just low prices
lllPllSOAK.
COMflClEAHSIR ... c_
LIQUID CLEA'~ER ~~OUID
DCiVlLIOUID -· TOILITTISSUI
Complete ln~h111l (jlfl Bonk RALPHS
-more t.han 100 gi!U for alll
occasions, ages $1.
STORES ARE LOCATED AT: 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH; 15471 S. BROOKHURST, WESTMINSTER
. ---·-· ' --......
..
I,.,..,,."' ----....-.-... --
75 1... ... •.•o.•~··••<• l 34 • DEODORANT ,... •
.26 l•NO.•IDl•o·•~•·t• ...... o .68 11 ..... SHEER STRIPS
.73 Qi10t KO !O< ....... <•"-.-Mo ~.o1 101.49 n ., ,..,,, RAZOR8ANDS
"--.57 ANACIN .... ~o!M ,79
al-'-lo .82 M-""'--"''""'"''''Olf •.•. 1.15 ANTl-PERSPIRANT
~ ... , .27 . ........ .76 ORY SKIN CREAM 1 11-.
ivolii CoiiOUID 39
DETERGENT •
COUPON GOOD JULY 29 to AUGUST <4, 1971
LIMIT 1 -ONLY ONE COUPON P£R CUSTOMER
·llnn~m:wrn · .. !~:!:~!!~!'!~!!!!!~~ .. ~.!\.~.~=~ ..
STORE HOURS: 9-10 DAILY, 9-9 SUNDAY
•
-> "" : 11f ~·---•
\
Wtd.....,, July 2ll, 1911
• hots Wining and Dining Circuit
Actres ·s-Improvises At -home Meals
17 .IOrBNl IUNN and the wboit blt. It'• mind· and qwtertd over briad crumbs. Cover, (alufflnJ), rout ch I ck en .
1/10 t.e•_....... mac1 eoak 1 hour. Beat rnilture capon. turkey, Ir o u ~ t . -·;y ~·•-"[ "~ -~· -·--~ uau: Good pinch cay«me with fork uht.il amooth. Add pheasant or partrldce. Serves ~! I'm a bomltlody SUSAN CLARX'S Salt. frelhly ground pepper aeuooinp, place top on lower 4.
NOiiy. I thlol: It's bocalll< u BREAD BAUCE lo tute part ol boiler flll<G with boil·
U ldrlll l'v• 1pent JG much 3 cups milk 3 tablespoons butter lng water. Cook about 20 SUSAN'S CREAMED ONIONS
tbM: ii hotela wtnlnl and dln· Stale bread, cruats removed Simmer quartered oniM In minutea (or unUI very thick 2 doW13 pearl onions, peeled Inc. (lhttdded to make 1¥1 milk until tender. Break bread and 1mooth). Stir ofte.n, lute Salted boilini water
boflllnl. ! ..
t cup ll&ht cream
1f.t teaspoon 11lt
Good pinch paprika
Freshl y ground pepper, to
taste
Melt butter in aaucep.an, ~.
gradually 1tir ln flour until
smooth. Cover over low heat
for 2 minutes untll amoolh. "'
Stir In light cream gradually.
Continue cooking, stirring eon-
alahUy until sauet Is smooth
and thick.. Add seuonin&ll.
Pour over cooked hot onioM.
'
"
0 1 don't rtlax al bis cups) into amall piecea, put in top of to correct aeuoninp. Serve 3 t1ble&p0001 buttu
......... fGrma1 dlnnen." l&id l rnediurn-e:iz.ed onioo, peeled double-broUer; 1traln milk very bot with trud puddiDg 2 tablespoons flour SUSAN CLARK Caaa<lluHom s.... aart,.1-...:..:=::::=:-==..::::;~:::::=--...:..:~...:..:=--...:..:--.:_~~~-'-~~~~-'~-.::.~~~--'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Cover oniona with boiling
sa!~ water In saucepan .
Cook slowly, uncovered . unti l
oniMs are t.eDder when tested
with I fOrk.. Dr1in ; let. Mide . Serve.s 4.
-ti tM most soulht-alter aw drlft'll.tic stars i n
movlidom today .
Sht'a under contract to the
Un.Jversil Stud.loll. but ber
IDMt recenUy relea&ed flick is
United ArtbU' "Valdu la
Coming."
&uan lives hert in a
am.111, coey two.bedroom hou.se
]lt!'Ched hiP ift th• hill•. She
l~uned to cook during her slu·
~t days in London whilt at-tend.in& the Academy e f
Dramatk: Arll.
Leatnin1 to cook for her is
lnutric1bly linked with grow-
ia& up aM her own unljue in·
trGducUOn to lht art&. " 'm an
hnproviiaUM cook. All thia
J'J)Ovt. business usually means
~body hU to ht on a diet.
1bf: thln&s I like to cook are
good old.fuhionM rol$f. beef
and YOrkshire p u d d i n i ,
vegetable& and nice fatt.enlna
;ravy.
"I leirhed from my London
la.n4lady .tnd 1ood friend , Mrs.
Marjoria Brtdgtwatu Whitt.
-hid • fsntutlc kitchen with four ps ovtru:. Her fam.i-
ly suffered in the 1•t9 crash so
they movtd from the coun-
ttyaide to Htn'l!>!ltad in Lon-
d6ft and ran • very ~lect
private hotel. I ahared a bed-
alt (bachelor pad) with
anothrr litl from t h e
Academy.
"1'here wis mostly 11\i.iden
ladiu llvii'I lht .... ..,, ~ulet
i1td campJ.ain1na! We were the fill! of tlit YOWi( poop!<. It
wb a OMdlJC•UMal affair
and later 10mt other young
p&iater IMI a potl moved in.
)l wu JQ.ln'tlow:. The wir
wu an and we bicame alm~t
lib Oii• bif family.
"W~ bad lht most
JMrvtloul Sundays. We'd 1tt
~ early an4 go lo U.. pub.
rU.d thl 'ntw1p1pers .11.nd have
a. driak. Than I would oomt
back early with one of th•
jirlt: a1td cook dinner." con-
titn*1 Susan. "I'd cook either
• bl« j61nt cl ~ or a lar&t
~icktn."
"'IM: rest of the menu would
bt: vt1et1ibl• -potatoes.
Cf'UJ'ft-'. « brown rotslM;
parllliJlll, c a u l i f I o w e r or
Cl'"MJned Cl\ions.-lnd a grtt11
vea:ttUie-fresh peas. beans
er bruaael rpreuta-cood fat-
tenlnl; trlNY. tither aiblet or
bftad Nuct, and bread pud·
ciifti (•tufflq)."
''"'htt t:n&Uth a.rtn't very ei:-
cltld atieut ,.Pd," SQw 11i!I,
''IO my aalads weit tllt North
Amtrtcltl Contribution. they
nevtr reilly caught on . The
tlhWI to our Sqnd1y lwich was
appJ~ tart or jam pulf. cofftt.
fl'uit i:nd ehelfe, It W2''\ I rlUt l
fe11t and laatff from 1:30 to 3
p.m.
"Tht.n we woWd 1ta11er t.o
our cha.in, re1d lhe papers or
rtcltt a play or poetry out
loud. All in front of an open
lire. It •13 marvtlom. hi&hlv
roina.nt.ic, very 11th c.entury ! "
Su.Mn said she mi...,ed those
1.tJndon Swtdaya. "It was a
Vlry &Mllt Wl Y Gf growing up
and for mt, a. m1rvelous ln-
trlXfud,ion to the arU. Alsc
the rtvtrtnct. we hid for
older, not old. people is not
pre:valtnt in North America.
Wt ranced in •It from 17 ttJ
JO. Mrt. Wh ite WIJ: our media·
tor er referM in viol en t
ditc'lllliM!, and often our die·
tieftary u well.
"We didn't hive tt\tvision,
«tly an old r1d.io. and we
couM.n't afford 1 pbonogr1ph
or NCOn!.1. 1'hl!: wis oor
t n t t r t ainmenl. And "'"
INrMd. Tht 1ubUe com·
pttitioft llttr lunch wa8 ir~at.
Obviouily. If y(IU'N!: roing to
crltitll.e a ltownlnJ pbtm. )'all'•• got to knaw wl\lt
you're talkin1 about be(11Jat if
}'GU fUt: it, you knew )'GU'rt
reinc te ht called by tom10n1.
"'Itlt t..int.aa of sayin1 •J
~·t kne.,,. or 'I'm WTeQI !' 11
dlflieult when you'rt Yt!UJll,
but tt'• lmportsnl lb IW!t
ho'll'. Ooe Cly, 11'~ J btve a
faml.ly, I bopt we can do Uliis
at ltut OftCoe a mtlftth."
Suun'1 married te writer
llolwt L. Jl>sepl\.
-· flMs un 1n Calli°""' very .uftnAt. "lt'a vuy hi-
~ You UY1 «it.aide •
t ..... ~ lt'• • pllet of
. If II', fonnal, "'Y
, H f~ wlUt cold·
rtntat..i '""" l>trl>y -
Helpful Hint
1'lben mskift1 ham11ut11r ,.W. moisten haftda with
®Id wit.er &o prtvtnt I.ht meat
ir... llickinf lo hands.
I !il~~!HICPSl4!~19.,G ........... 59c I
ro9.~! !!!~ss '!l'~.~~.E ....................... 2 9c
CANADIAN BACON BY THE $1 09
CENTER CUT PIECES$1.Z9 LB. PIECE WHOLE/HALF LI. e
,l'.«'<!.~' CO.M. ......... · "· · 5 9c ~.~~~ ,~~~~~~~~ ....... 1•. 98c
ClLlf, IROWll FIOM FOSTEI FlllllS
FRYER PARTS
WHOLE
LEGS
SHOULDER CLOD '
ROASTS ~
U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR'S l
llLUE RIBBON STEER BEEF
SEAFOOD FOOD SPEClllSi-----..
HEAT •UT ••E•D•D '1SH PEICH ..................... LB. tic BREASTS SPLIT o~ WHOLE 79'"· 69~i.
IOllLISS ~ •• )09}.:~ FDA ou1e< TASTY MEALS COD ........................ LB. tic
,(ATSUP
DEL. MONTE
14 OZ . BOTTLE
SOLE ....................... Le.11"
SCALLOPS ................. Le.11"
1HRIMP ..
F
0
R
l,t,H!~.~ ......... 5 ~s1 C_
----------~~
PORK TENDERLOINs .s 12t'
IWHOL£ °" 11.•CEO ......................... lb. • -con
~ ....
KOSHEl~n 49 MALVES DILL 22 OZ... c
DIAL
ANTl·PERSPIPtANT
I OZ. CAN
88c
JROI~ DAIRY SP!CIAIS
COTTAGE CHEESE
.ARDEN .. ~.: 6·~m~37c
QUARTS 7·
!Ml~~J~.t~IL~.. . .. 39c
!MP,~~~~s~1.~.~ .......... 33c
IC
'" ~.~.~~~z.4 ~ 89c ------J· ·RI
• ~.~,!~.~!::~"~: 6 .!1 wl .f, IODM(T • CMIC. t V• OZ. l lYf:ll i CIOC. 1 11' Ol. '4 O ~ .~ll
MAYFAIR FARM FRESH FRUITS 6. VEGETABLES , ~OT'
~ -~··· JiSWE!!,.~.ORN ~~!~!!!!.~~~~-....... 4 F ~ I
!!~p~ !!!~ ............. ~~f.: .... 2 9 c
~!~~XT~A~~~~-~.~ ............ lb.29c ·,
''-'?!!:"'="""~-... -•• -t .... ~---f' ~~ l·---.,,_ " -----·-'-··,.~-..-.-•. r ---·---~---··---· ---.. ---·-I r1
..
~-
0.t.ILV ltlLOT ' _, ,,
Clues Gi -ven for Clea r ·Filling~, Fluffy Rice
DEAR NAN : I wo•ld
111ready •pprtcllte y o a r
dl•cu!•lff ti lemH pie fftllnr
In a f1U11rt column. My
mother's melhed lnow loalJ
v.•as unu11ual but ber flUl11g
was beautifully cle1r, 1lmo1 L
translucent. My clear mb:lure
turn& cre1my when the yolk1
t1re added. No f11rther amount
of cooking or ttirrln( clurs IL
up a1ain. PleaJe help. KAY
SOLES, LONG BEACH.
BONELESS
More ~ks have more trou-
ble with lemon pie fillings than
any other klnd. Here is Fresh.
Lemon MerinJUe Pie the way
the Sunkist economists have
worked it out and they should
know if anyone does.
In a saucepan combine l L,1
cups sugar, ~. cup plus 2
tablespoons cornstarch and v,
teaspoon salt. Blend in 1111 cup
freshl y squeeted lemon juice,
then ~ cup rold water and 3
well beaten erg Yolll. Thi.$
&hould be \"ery smooth. Add 2
table spoon bu tter or
margarine . Gradually stir in
J 1'1 cups boiling w11.lel'.
Bring lo a boil over·medium
heat -no hl11:her -stirring
constantly. Boll lwo or three
minutes. Sti r In 1 teaspoon
graltd lemon peel and a few
drops of yellow food coloring.
Partially cool while preparing
meringue.
. ' ' y '* ~' ,..,.? ..... •;.,.. . ,,,,.,,
You Can make that in the
usual v.·ay t2 tablespoons
sugar ptr egg whitei or, for a
really glorious meringue, use 5
egg whites, •:. cup plus l
tablespoon sugar and 12 tea-
spoon cream of tartar. Pour
the hot filling Into a baked 9·
inch pie shell. Top with mer-
ingue, ri ght to the edges of the
filling for good sealing. bake
at 3&0 for 12·15 minutes till
FAMILY
!STEAK
CHUCK
snAKS
U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR'S BLUE
RIBBON STEER BEEF
EXCELLENT FOR BARBECUE
.,
U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR
MAYFAIR'S BL.UE RIBBON
s
. WASTE
·FRE E LI.
BEEF SHORT
RIBS
t u.s.D.A. CHOI CE Oft MAYF AIR 'S
BLUE fl1BION STEER BEEF
! LEAll 49c ': ~-TlllDER LI.
IROZIN 1000 SPICIAlS
VEGETABLES iilr l! GREE N GIANT ·~ -8UTT[ll SC( 'l.U. Nl8LETI , COllr.I ;~,.._~ MIXED \llG. CllM C°"H. MIXICOllN
~::z.3 6 ~
PK:G, R~
~!,~.~~E .. fl~S. . ..... 49<
ROSA•ITA ~~:~~'~•'.'0"49c '"lEU I~. 12 Ol. ·~ INCN. ti oz .. ,,,,.
. ·!I~~ P..E.~.E.R..~E~~ ...... s 11•
~J.S!"DJ~E.R..~~-~.J. ..... s )3t
'OJ~~ ,~!S~!.~~ ... ~,~ ~"' 4 ~ '1
CHUCK WAGON STYLE
SLAB BACON ~"~}t43
ClllTll CUT PIECES 49r.. Ill. c
,,f,flji[.]!ji0!if.\I 'Viti' l!l!IJ! I [(iii!! Iii I j ii
B NELESS ROUNDS A ScENTER cur ........ "SJ 29
BEEF RIB STEAKS ................................... us12•
CUBE STEAKSEXTRA LEAN ... ,. ...................... u SJ59
BEEF RIB ROASTS' .................................... 111•
ROUND ROASTSaoNELEss TOP OR BOTTOM ......... "S J 39
ENGLISH CUT SHORT RIBS ..................... ll. 69'
MAYFAll'S DILICATESSEll
CHIPPED MEATS
' IUDDIGS 3 ••·
SMolCEO BEEF-C ORNED 3 9 BEEF-SMOKED HAM c
TURKEY-CHI CKEN '
PASTRAMI •
111 MEAT FRANiC's ............. •A. silcio '4A1'il ............. · · · · ·· · · · ·· · · · ....... 5 Sc
INov. WRAPPED·K RAFT~~! 1lf'GlfS 45c PllLSBURY B . PKG ............... . ;~;;~RMILK -SWEETM'!~~~~~ .. ,.,,,. .,. .. " .. ,6 ~ 4 9c
........ ~ ~~5IT~ll ........ 3 i• r lllU CHHSl
'"L°"• D•1o11c1o wroers. .. 4 •• , ..... 49'
INSTANT COFFEE:::';'.,_$109
INSTANT COFFEE~~".~ .,_$149
WHITE ~!NG~;u:~:;:.~ .......... SSc
CASCADE ~~i;i:"":~~'°.''· 011L ,.c, 7 Sc
VODKA
$
10 PIOOF
HAl.F SAi..
WOYAl..OCC~O.I
CllAICOAl. fl Tllfl
t,~~A !'~ !YR~F .. ,.,,,~,3 27
C:CQTtll""' ..... $3 99 IEIR r:ii " ""' $ 2 29 r.:u,, ,,, ... :,(Ill 'll•IFTM 11111 Ol. ,Of' 6 ,OUll CAN,
1olden brown . Cool on a wire
rack.
One warning about corn·
starch. t think thal 1s where
many of you run into trouble.
Oddly enough, if too much is
used 111 piC's it loses its
thickening power very quickly.
Nor should cornstarch fillings
be ove rcooked or overbealen
or the saine thing happens.
You~ mother n\ay ha\'e used
arrowroot in place of ~
starch but it isn 't generally
recommended for len1on pies
unleSB romhtned with some-
other thickening agent. If you
want to Lry it, use 2 1~ tea.
spoons arrowrool for each cup
of liquid. Many hon1c cooks
i re puzzled es to why thtir
chow meln or other Orient.Bl
dishea turn watery when they
use arrowroot ln them and try
to make them up ahead of
time or even freeze them .
175 E. 17th St., Costa Meaa
\' ·~· Ill"'-. -----): ··M .)~,.I' ,. ___ -....... ' ,.._ -----I ' .,,. .' ' l."'-' .. 'I lt' -..... ,...... __
Arrowroot does mak~ a
wonderfully delicate. lr1nalu.
cPnl sauce but it o;,hnuld Mt be
added lo any dish lhat ls not
going to be served wilhin 10
minut es. It will nol hold or
reheat. Nor is It wise lo let the
dish boil. All you can do to
reclaim Jl on reheating is to
add another batch of ar-
rowroot.
DEAR NAN : How dn )'oo
•. ·-
ceok rlet M 11 eomff oat llcti
ind fluffy? ~11Df: la oev1r
right. Ne oar I 11k 1Mm1 to
know. 0o you tllr It., not. Do
you 11u • double bodtr'!' 1
would also nke a rood recipe
for 5p1nlllt rice. JEAN
SCROGGS, CAMDEN POINT,
MO.
Don'l stir rice e1cept once
as it come!! to a boll . Stirring
mashes the grains.· makes
them gummy. Don't peek
when cooking rice. You let oot
steam. lower ll!mperature.
Don't wash rice either before
or after cooking. It is one or
the mMl sanitary of foods. Ill
smooth surface helps keep It
genn free.
U.S. grown rice hasn't been
touch ed by human hands until
1t tou ches you rs. Qoo't use too
much water in lhe cooking.
Anything you drain orr meaos
LET'S ASK
THE COOK
by
Nan Wiiey
wasted food valul!. Too much
watl!r makes rice soggy, loo
little dries Jt Out before It Is
cooked .
I'll bet you 'd like steamed ~
rice, known. as the 1~2.1 Ouf(
method. !l's hard to b~t.
f.ieallu re I CllP, ·~a o_unCe)
regular milled v.·hite rice. 2
cu ps water end I teaspoon salt
int() a uucepan. Place ovl!r
high heat. When the water
boils stir about three lime.~
around the p<1n. then Cf'lver
wi!h a tight lid. turn lhe heat
as low as possiblP. Cook for 14
minute.'!. Tum of£ th.c heat, lift
the grains ii:entl y with a fork
so th e rice shows rising steam.
The water should be absorb-
rd and the gra ins .'leparate,
flakv and tender, yel with
som'e firmness . If you like still
drier rice cover and let stand
for ~ {f) 10 minutes after the
fork-fluffing . It will steam dry.
Now here is your Spanish
rice . Combine I cup water, 1,i
cup cooked re~ular rice and 11
teaspoon salt. Heal to boiling,
stir briefh•. rrduce hl!al. Sim·
mer till ·tender, all liquid
absorbtd, that same I 4
minutes. In the meantime
cook 11 cup cho pped onion. 'II
cup chopped celery 11.nd Il l
cup green ·pepper in l\lii
t.:iblellpoon melted butler or
margarine.
Add I cup S1l'wed lnma!oe.'!
(I prefer undiluted cream nf
tom11.to soup l I teaspoon
le::ich1 ~ugar and chili pnwder
;ind abnul l.z teaspo on
\Vorcestershire sauce. Stir in·
tn the cooked rice, simmer till
thick.
DEAR NAN : Somt y1ars
hack I found a recipe for
S~rlpture Cake hut now I have
lost fir mislaid H and 1 "Wondl!r
If aomeone Wfluld have U. For
1"11ch Ingredient you look In a
ve rse and chapter fir thl! Blble.
I dfl hope yo u can flnd thl11
because It Is re11ly • ,:ood
rake. ARDELYA JOHNSON,
FT. \\'ORTH, TEX .
Thal one dales way back. ll
appe1ir11 in a 1904 Christmae:
edi!ion of a Gold r-.1edal
CQ()kbook which we.~ reproduc·
ed la~l Christma~ 1n it11
origin;il format but no in·
gredient an1ounl11 wl're given.
Recently I ran across a
clear end reliable recipe I am
pleased to pass along . Even
lhe high al titude erea11 11hou!d
do fine with 1! although h11.king
powder m11y havr lo be reduC'·
ed by 1 tea11poon . S<i hert ls
Scripture Cake.
Look up the references in
your Bible. They are !n-
ler~9ting. Ingredients : .Judges
5·?5, 11 cu p butter or
margarinl!: Jl!remiah &:?O. l
cu p 11ugar. Isaiah 111:14. 3 eggs
separated ; El!odlt!I 16:31. L
tablesppon honey ; 1 Kings
4·22, 2 C'Up.!i sifted all purpoge
flour : Leviticus 2: ll, 1'l tea-
spoon salt! I Corinthians 5:6. 2
teaspoons baking powder, l
Kings 10: 10, ~'i. teaspoon cin·
namon and 14 tl!aspoon (each)
nf ground rtove~. allspice and
nutmeg . (Or you could use I
teaspoon readymixed pumpkin
pie spice.)
Judges 4.19, 1/3 cup milk :
Genesia 43: 11. Va cup chopped
blanched almonds : I Samuel
30: 12, 'ii cup chopJM!d dried
figs •nd ~ cu p chopped seed·
ed raisins. The original recipe
also included a reference to
Solomon and Proverba but
they arl! not needed here.
Cre1m butter and sugar un-
til Uii:ht and fluffy. 111 1ugar
dluclved well Add egg yolks,
one at a time . be1tlng well
11rter e1ch one, Beat ln honey.
Add 1ifted dry ingredlentt
alll:rnately with milk and beat
only until 1mnolh. Stir In nul3
and ·fn1its. Fold In stiffly
beaten egg whiles. Pour Into I
,;ireastd loaf p11n lined on the
boltom with w111ed paper cul
to !It. Rake at l50 1btillt 1 hour
nr until cake tt1JI$ dOne In the
ce nt.er .
•
.,
·,
I
I
DAJL 'V PILOT
Decorative
Decorative and cu~.y ""hen
)'OU want a touch u! warn1th!
J NSTAN T AF'C.HAN !
Crochet in 3 vivid colors ur
i:ay scraps, in shell-stitch y,•ith
puff-stitch rid~es for accent.
Adds c<J1.y touch to evf'r yone's
home. Pat. 7335 : directions.
FIF'TY CENTS ror each pat-
tern -add 25 cents for e<ieh
pattern for Air Mail and
Special l~<.>.ndling : otherv.•ise
third-class delivery y,•ill take
three weeks or more. Send to
Alice Brook~ tile DAILY
PILOT. 105 Needlecraft Dept.,
Box 163, Old Chelsea Station,
New York, N.Y. J0\111. Print
Name, Address, Zip Patlern
Numbtt.
NEW 1~1 N ee d \ec r a ft
Catalog -more Instant fa sh-
ions. kniU, crodleL-;, quilts em-
broidery, gifts. 3 free patterns.
flO cents.
Ne w ! ''Instant (.'rocbet''
Book. Slep-by-step pictures
teach you how to crochet in-
stantly! Plus newest palterns.
11.00.
Complete lnslant Gift Book
-more than 100 gifts for aJl
occa.s ions, ages. $1.
Complele Afghan Bn:ik -$1.
j•11 Jiffy Rugs " Book. f!O
cents. Book of 12 Prize
Afghans. 50 eenls
Quill Book I -16 patterns.
IO cehls Mu seum Quilt Book :!
-50 cents Book 3. "Quilts for
Todays Uvillg'', 15 pallerns.
Ml cenl'J.
Onion Soup
Pops Over
Some foods never lose their
appeal and some recipes
change little over the cen-
turies -like popovers. onre
hawked on the streels of mer-
rie old London and sti ll a
favorite. Today, a package or
onitn soup mix transfo rn1!'
thi5 classic inlo a bread with
real 21st century t.iste <ind
convenien<'c
Serve Onion Popover s
any time a ho-hu1n mr;il nrt·ds
rescue. 1'rv this trirk · split
popovers ~nd fill 1hc ho!lo...,·
cen1ers w11h r r r a rn e d
vegetables, i-.c•,1fr)(}d .-.alads nr
scra1nbled eg~s.
There is ll!l dangt·r ri!
~vermixing lh1 s .~11.'arn lt';1ven
ed bre<1d. r.o ll't your n11xer gn
tn work nn ttu1l lhu1 b:it1er. A
vigorous beati ng drvt>lt1ps 1hr
gluten in flour and i·rralcs \hi>
elasticity nl'cessary for "pop-
ping over."
Popo vers have ::ino1t1('r old
fashioned but UJ>-lo-d<:ile virtu1•
-nutrition . Thanks to !hl'
modern enru:hn1ent rro('css of
flou r. all homenl.1de bread
conta ins essential B-v1\a1n1ns.
I hi a m i n " . n1<1c1n and
r1bonavin. and !ht' lh tncral.
lroo.
ONION POPO\"F;RS
3 eg~s. "M'f'll beaten
1 cup m ilk
2 lablespnons dry 11n1f1n !-OUp
m"
1 tablespoon e1I
l cup en riched nnur
Combine eggs. n11lk . onion
80U r> mix and f,1!_ Blend in
floor unt il smoo1h. Bf>at 1
minute with electric n11xe r 011
medium speed or 3 ll}inutes
with rot ary bl'a1cr
Fill greasl'd po1:iover pan~ nr
cuslHrd l'Up!'I h~lf full B:ikc in
preheated '420 degrf't' nvrn 40
lo 45 minules, or un11l brown
100 firm to touch For cr1sl>f'r
popovers prick sides In releasr
.teem and reduce o v e n
t'emperatura to 350 dl'grel'~
Bake 20 minutes 1ongl'r makr~
6 large or 11 small popovrrs.
Ivory Whiter
M1tke ¥ Ivory knHI' h11nd lr
•hiter by nibbing It w1\h :i I
,, ~on dippe.d in !alt.
::! ' •• I
j
; ..... . ..:.
· 1 @ 1-LB. PACKAGE
l WILSON'S CRISPRITE ~j BACON
" .l ' I ' I
•' '
c
DUBUQUE ROYAL BUFFET BACON S8c 1•.
B!ITCHED.'S Pl\IDE
ECO NO-PAK '• 3-LBS. OR OVER
in this ad, including 74 DOUBLE DISCDUNTS,
Your Alpha Beto Neighborhood Butcher (the Mon in the Red Apron) Proudly Offers
BUTCHER'S PRIDE MEATS
ME.A.TS YOU'LL BE PROUD TO SERV.E
• Quor.ty ond Satisfaction Guaronteed •Discount Priced
FRESH JUNIOR TUR
Btl!CllED.'S PD.IDE
USDA GRADE A
4 TO 8 LBS.
PERFECT
FOR
ROTISSffil E
ALPHA BETA IVTCHU'S P!ID~ BEEF AT EVERYDAY LOW DISC UNT PRICES I
BONELESS FAMILY STUK
BONELESS RIB STEAK
09
lb.
' T·BONE STEAK 1.58 ... ~
BONE IN 99c .. ~.rll--l!W_UN_CE_eam.£ __ _
. '
'i-r '
FRESH GROUND BEEF
ROUND STEAK
CHUCK STEAK BLADE CUT 65t "° •; REGULAR SIZE ·-·
·1
\
- -,, __
1°'~,. IVORY FRESH FROZEN
HALIBUT STEAKS
FOUR P!Sl~ERMEN •FROZEN • 16-0t. PltG. c
lb.
BBQ CHICKENS
FULLY
COOKED
DELICIOUS
HOT OR COLD 68c1b.
BREADED SHRIMP 1.69 ~ :-LIQUID DmRGENT
53c -s:k~32c
77c ' ·~
CHUCK'S • FROZEN• 12...()Z.. P«G,
BUTTERED BEEF STEAKS
}5C 541
-----------
7.(lTIN"CJ: }IQT1 Lf"
GREAT BODY
SHAMPOO 121
3>}z-001'"CE llOITl.r . Rl:r.. <Jfl run: HAIR Great Body Instant
Conditioner z,ofi 1 s•
135
n ~ :::~~:~·~--691
U, :~-co11~.,. rArr.Ar.r:;.10.oz 1UGRBAU.oo ~ 07 OtD f /l:;HJC'•/ •
DISPOSABLE
TUMBLERS ~9c 481 ------------P(}.(;01.JNT r>..Cr.Ar.r:.
'•OfMfTlC SQUARf:S • CO"ITT'>tl'
COE TS 60c 521
-----------
M.AG!C OR tru'RAIJ.SH !'t..J.C!:: 01!. BJIOWH
MAYBELLllE
MASCARA
MAGIC MA.SCAM. R!tllJ.
Ofl ULTRALASH RtIUl. "' ·-----------
\P-Act:AGf. or 'XI
...,,.. ~IM !"i~rn
-OTTER POPS~
..... 8-0'Z. 'PKO .•• v AJUI:Trrs
J.39 111 D-DAllA }at
D.-; k'.O.LO~j('i~ ~G.
------------"-POP TARTS _Wt
SINAREST
TA BLETS
1l<".GtiLAR AND ffllO TO HOLD 17-0UtlC£ A~OGOL
V0-5
HAIR SPRAY
7 DilN"CT A.I:ROGOL
MENNEN
DEODORANT ):49
--:<=LJ:EP1NGTAiitDS-------
rAcrAGr. CF u
QUIET
WORLD
---------------•..-=-D_-.... BlG Q • ie-m. PACKAG'I: r:~~h of's~~J';~ 9tc 781 D .. ~··· WHEATIES ~c
-7'.°"UTt=.:::Ai:L~O[s --------I-LA •l.T.ORDARX'.BROWN " ' OR. f>oWDDl£0 LIPSTICK or ]9' 631 C&H SUGAR ,J.(c LIP GLOSS . c "--~ COID "'"" --------------D·--·· 5·LB, FtOUR ja'c 1M0~U'RulsNn°E-aom.E, = 0•0a'ri. 71' .flo ~ D.......; GOLD Lrnt>At. • ~~Nl~ --------D·-5·LB. FLOUK· )j!J;
3-0Ur-ICE. • f l:MtNltH; HTGltNr. D-w,; 81.'JC 1lOtfNP.T o \..l& ".!~
rf.:::::. FDS '"" t.50 109 D--· MARGARlllE jX
-----,_,,1c.
TlJNGSITN srcr.t . PACKAGE or' fl~.,u~~ P0ERSONN 4'-"'" ~ 7 21 "''"
591
32 1
421
, .... ~
r.;B)wbOo&uR'Y
:;;;:(BAR SOAP }fc 271
.. ---------
22·0UNCE BOTILE
DOVE
LIQUID DmRGllfl'
SOME
SI ORES
CHARGE
59c 57'
4%-0UNCE BAR
WHITE OR PINK
DOVE
BAR SOAP
SOME STORES 24' CHARGE
25c
5-0UNCE BAR
BATI-1 SIZE
LUX
@"illRic""" BOmJ: BAR SOAP
-----. SOFTENER 1,59 ) 29 SOME 18C , • STORES
4 71 CHARGE !!Jc
)~ 165
1-------
4%-0UNCE BAR
PINK OR AQUA
PHASE Ill
BAR SOAP
SOME STORES
CHARGE
25c 24c
OW CLEANER
29c
(A.LB TO ca.i.MERCtAL DEALns
DOUl.E DISCOUrtTS SAVE fou MORE
-• ' ' I •
i l -,. '
....-------DO-U_l_l_E_D_l_SC_:0\1-.-.. TS---,,... '.J t:OSTA MlSA -241 r. T7tti St .
••• or• t'Xtfo 9CJ'lltngs ~~· ~ M'\por-• NVNTINGTON llACH -9041 A.._
·-
-tl>-
.__ orypo.scho.ollowonanftomtHt'ManufOc.tuNs,". HUNT&MfTON IU.CH -,,,,, N. Mltl• St.
ond poswd on to youf the~, ob1g with .0\fNTAIN YAllrY -1)90 w-
our rtouktf .-yday '°"' ~ ~f(A HILLS -23541 Cat .. 6-1• L•M
,ll'Ytffl -11040 c.1.,.,, u.1 .. ,...,,. ,.,..
SOUTH LAGUNA -lOIJJ S. c ... t Hltllw.y
-··~
--
' ·, r ,
...
~ .
"'
•
'.•
-
. 21..0UNCE CONTAINER
G1"1NT SIZE
COMET
CLD~SIR
SOME STORES 27( CHARGE
27c --------------14-0 UNCE CONTAINER
AJAX@
CLEANSER
SOME STORES 15( CHAR GE 20t ------------84-0Z. BOX-KING SIZE
~AJAX '=' DETERGENT
SOME STORES 1" CHARGE 1.48 . ----:-·-----------! 49.0Z. BOX • GIANT SIZE
BOLD
DETERGENT
SOME-910R5 88( tHARGI: 89c
,, 1;., ~"~l Jiil',
[~[l<T [l Al
~SONI Al.Jtfu. 1n.1.
STOAfS DISCOUfllr CIWtr.E ft IC[
S-0: PKG •WlflT£TUflKEY •CBlalH •COflNOf s.trf •PASTJU.MJ LEO'S
SLICED MEATS J9'C 451
Roo·s CA LA VO . a.oz. COlrrAtNLI\
AVOCADO DIP .sefc 531
11-0'l'. • n.RM£SAN & ROMANO
BOllDEll1$
GRATED CHEESE,95C 931
llt'8RB£nt • VOKTtREY 9.5. JACK CHEESE ~:(Lit •
TAC012SHELLSCXAG'% 451
tS.az. PACUG£ • l\CGUUR
•-CHIFFDll
MARGARlllE ..soi: 451
UliSALTeD "'
PLANNING A PARTY
OR OUTING?
Ltt Alpho S.to's •CQ11omico l buTk
food pion sav. you both tim• ond
""""'· Contact the-•Man In Siu." far rutther
informollon.
f.A!l.'.JI: ~rlr . 8-0 Z PL4.IN OR o.....,;: ""~-CZ. ALMOND • ll.JL~ CHOCO!...ATC .,_., HERSHEY
BARS ;'36 361
------------1,.,.._"°'"~' LAUPA SCUDOtR"S . e.oz. BAG
49-0Z. BOX • GIANT SIZE "'-·· TORTILLA
GAIN
DETERGENT
SOME STORES 8·8( CHARGE 89c
CHIPS JsC 391
·"--= coliN' i:\4 (ps')a£ 391
35-0Z. PACKAGE GIAN T SIZE
DISHWASHER PUNCH
DETERGENT(§ ALL
SOME STORES
CHARGE 75c 68' SOME STORES 66( CHARGE 89c ---------·-------------------84-0Z. BOX • KI NG SIZE
PUNCH
DETEllGENT (§
SOM( STORES 109 ....__
CHARGE 1.48
11-0llNCI: PA.CY.AGE ,... 69 ' 81RKHOLM'S COOKIES .IOc
D-l l'Hll B£Ht' •;.\JI. PKG. 33' D--ISIN BREAD ::x VALUE:
lllPHR 8£Tlt • l!>-OUNCI:
POUND CAkE C9e Y ALt:~ 45'
HAM"s~GtR at HOT noa PACO OP8 •37t1VAL.llf: --------------ALPHA lfTABUNS
•9-0Z. BOX • GIANT SIZE
.... RINSO
@ DHERGENT
SOME 68 STORES (
CHARGE
89c ---
28-0U N~E BOTTLE
GIANT SIZE
TOP
JOB
LIQUID
CLEANER
SOME ~ii~ 73c 75c .
.
S4-0Z. BOTTLE
Gl>.NT .SIZE •
1SPIC &
SPAN
CLEANER
SOME STillts
CltAllGE 1GS
99~.
••. --l \l ·-
Wtdntsda1, July 28, 1971
LARGE VINE RIP ENED
,, CANTALOUPE
' -
00
SEEDLESS
Gl.IAPES
. I
FOR
·c
' .lb.
LARGE'• TROPICAL U.S. N0.-1 WHITE ROSE -STE'>,K. SIZE
MANGOES & POTATOES MUSHROOMS KY.BEAtfS PAPA.YAS . 10 39c 1h39c 25c~-= 39!,h LB. LB. BAG lb.
·LffiUCE
•BELL
• RED LEAF
BUTTIR
SALAD &OWL
YOUR
CHOICE
c
6·0Z. JARS • CARA MIA
MARINATED
ARTICHOKE
HEARTS
"7..ui. (!4"
MARIGOLD
78~nch PEPPERS
·CUCUMBERS 3 i100 ea. CH.A.SE OF ALL CUT FLOWERS
THESE PRODUCE PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY, JULY 29 -AUGU ST 4.
TOTAt DISCOUNTS
EVERY DAY
SOM( r..t1ill l[Tl
STOllfS. DISCOUNT CMA~CC ftlt[
TOTAL OISCOUNT S
lV(RY DAY
10 ,-,z • rRO?l'~I
AlrHA BEJ A : 1c VAll'".
!OM£ AIJIMA lllTt,
STOflE9 OlSCOUlrlT
CKAJIGt: tlHC(
lll iAL OISl OltHI S
EYlRY DAY
tlUTCI{ PRIDr. •"•CALLON'
D •• -D ..... ~,
BROCCOLI 29 1
'M"'ir"a'c'1'e·0'w.,h,ip o...' 81 ·1 ,,,,,.,,·oz·· ',·, ... ORANGE J"u1cE'")Tu' 291
IMITATION • ./
ICE MILK ~Jc 39'
~: ~, ''i('E: !AR
i':-C::OUIH" POX • r~01.fN
DIXIE DOODLE
lie~n':r i::l'il~' _we a11
1.....--.-::;
BARS ]Sc 691
·w-:t-:::11 f':. • ro.-OUNCE IA1'
'GilaP'E''JA'M sat 441 -
D-,,; ''"" nr. ~A!.IP"S . ICl/z-O'Z. llOX ~• fHOZlt! ,..__.., CHICKEN PIE ~ 41 1
@ cH1..::;:rr1 or111:: srA ~'i 'OUNCE: CAN • UOHl'
CHUNK TUllA J9c
p: ---i ~' • OUNC"E CAN $1., . le•/• O:"NCE CAN ~
@ c~k't~1i''s°h':hp ssc
41/J-OZ. MW. tltVl:!Jri.Ut 85':
361
"' ...
491
"'
~ a3e
D-..: A,"'.-1' Mll-!A •I' ir,lf!M ILJ:: •-~-wa'fl:i.'Es"" ~ 43e
'~ ()!JliC! CA ti • RtGOU\R • ntOZrM
ALPHA BETA
LEMONADE ,;ilic 23 1
MIX-.D rRTJJT
Our Growin' is Showin' Again •••
with our new Store Opening
at 500 Camiro de Estrella
in San Clemente.
OUR MAN JN BLUE OF THE MONTH
He's Jim Gill igan, manager of Alpha Beta's market at 2017 Mission Driva in
Oceanside. Jim always seems to be there when his customers need him to make
their shopping easier and more enjoyable ••• always ready to offer friendly,
helpful servi ....
As an Alpha Beta Man in Blue, he takes pride in his store and in its
products. He keeps everything work ing smoothly ••• by making sure
there art plenty of shopping carts and checkers on hend, by keeping the
shelves fully stocked and the aisles clean and clutter-free, by
answering questions, cashing checks, and helping customers find
what they are looking for. But most important, you'll find his
genuine interest in his CtJstomers is
shared by fNery member of his staff.
This is Jim Gilligan, our Man in Blue of
'the month.
i You'll find a man like Jim in wery
Alpha Beta market. He's your Man in
Blue, The man you can trust to take
QOO!Rsrt Of you,
I
Trust the folks at Alpha Beta
to take good care of you.
'
Budget Beauty
Quic k and in exp!! n si ve
crochet for bedroom.
NEW! Lace-look spread.
curtains have old-world charm
in washable string , whitt or
colors. Crochet 13" strips ot
solid and open.mesh blocks ;1
join. Pat. 7341 : direcUons.
SEVENTY·FIVE CENTS f&r
each pattern-add ZS cenb for
each pattern for Air Mail and
Special Handing: otherwise
third<lass delivery will take
three weeks or more. Send to
Alice Brooks, the DAILY
PILOT, 105, Nee d I e craf t
Dept., Box 163, Old Oiel~a
Station. New York, N.Y. 10011.
Print Name, Addres:ii, Zip,
Pattern Number.
NE\Y 1971 Needlecrart
Catalog n10re Instant fashions,
knits, crochets, quilts. em4
broidery , gifts. J free patterns.
50 cents.
N fl w ~ '"lnslanl Crochet"
Book. Step-by-step pictures
teac h you how to crochel in~
stantly! Plus newest patterns.
11.
Complete Instant Gift Boole
-more than 100 gifts for all
occasions, ages. $1 .
Comp!ele Afghan Book-$!.
"II Jiffy Rugs" Book. SO
cents.
Spinach
Saucey
A French-type 1 .11 u c t
benefits this vegetable.
SPINACH PAULETJ'E
2 packages (each to ounces)
frozen chopped spinach
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour
1:i teaspoon salt
~'9 teaspoon white pepper
1 !/, cups milk
2 egg yolks
I tablespoon lemon juice
Cook spinach accordinlit to
package directions; turn into t
strainer to drain -makes 21'1
cups.
rn a 1111;-quart saucepan over
Tow heat melt butter: stir ln
Oour. salt and pepper; rernove
from heat. Gradually stir 1n I
cup of the milk, keeping
smooth.
Cook over moderately lo1v
heat. stirring constantly, until
thickened and bubbly. In :'!
small bowl beat egg yolks and
remaining I/• cup milk enou~h
to combine: gradually stir inta
hot sauce; cook over low he:if,
slirring constanlly, u n I I I
slightly thickened -a few
minutes : do not boil.
Stir in lemon juice, !hen
drained spi!lach. Reheat but
do not boil . Make& 6 1o 8 serv·
in gs.
Quiches
Go Easy
Latest version o( one of our
favorite hors d'oeuvre.
MINIATURE QUICHES
I large egg, slightly beaten
b cup milk
1 cup grated (medium-fine)
Swiss or cheddar cheese,
not packed down
Pastry Shells, see below
Combine egg, milk and s<.
Pat Cheese into unbaked
pastry shells. Slawly dribble
eg mixture over cheese. Bake
in a preheated 350-degree
ovem 30 minutea. S e r v •
warm: Makes 24.
Pa5try Shells: Cream ~ cup
butter and a 3-ounce paclta.ge
or cream cheese: work in l
cup unsifted flour. Chi ll if very
soft.
Roll into 24 balls and preM
each over bottom end &Ides
(up \o top) of small tnuffln-
pan cups, each 1~ Inches
acro8s top.
-'.~ -l·--··111 --.,....---_ _,,,_ ,.....___ • -- --"D----i . .
1
I '
l
• .
' . • .
• I
t'
• •
44 a.n.Y PILOT Wrdntsd11, Jwlr 28, 1971
Protein Rich
New foods rich in protein, good to taste and
easy for the cook to handle are available in the
market place.
Developed through Agriculture Department re-
search, the food ranges from orange drinks to candy
and snacks.
Photo shows some of the new products pro-
Tot's Mascot
Food Products
duced from oraages: orange juice tablets, oranee
juice crystals, On.nge-Bo, a bev~ge conai.sting of
whole fruit -skins and pulp u well a.s the juice.
Also photographed is MOD, a millt-or111&• clrink
which look!i like pale orange milk and tut.es like
creamy orange sherbet, and oranges from which
these products come.
, .. Jn.1«XI .. ......_ " ........ ,...
~coled if·IOI •• ,
Complete Your Set ... Teahouse Rose PorcC'lain China ... All Pieces & Accessories Now on Sale! wt are p/easMI to a~t
U.S.D.l FOOD STIMP
P2J for a d1ild, mascot for a
class or club! Fun to make.
Flop him on bed. dresser,
i;ofa -hi s long, flexible legs
drape in !he most amusing
way ! Easy enough for a
1eenager to 1nake! Patte rn
7206: patterns ro·r cowboy, out-
fit.
FIFI'Y CENTS for each pat·
lem -add 25 cents for each
pattern for Air Mail and
Special Hahding; otherwise
t.hird<lass delivery will take
three weeks or more. Send to
Alice Brooks, the DAILY
PILOT. 105 Needlecraft Dept..
llor; 16.'I. Old Chelsea Station,
New York, N.Y. 10011. Print
Name, Address, Zip, Pattern
N umbtr, NEW 19 71
Needlecraft Catalog -more
Jnstant fashions kn i ls,
1.:rochets, quilts. embroidery,
~ilts. :! free patterns. SO cents.
New ! "Instanl Crochet''
Book. Step-by-step pictures
teach you how to crochet in·
stanlly! Plus newest patterns.
II.
Complete losta.nl Gift Book
-1nore than 100 gifts for all
vccasions. ages. $1.
Complete Afghan Book-$l.
'"16 Jiffy Rugs" Book . 50
cents. Book of I? Prize
Afgha ns. SO cents.
C~uilt &>ok 1-16 patterns. 50
<:cnts.
l\1useum Quilt Book 2 -50
cents. Book 3. ..Quilts for
Today's Lh•lng''. 15 patlem~.
50 crn!s
Tomatoes
Top Chops
There·s pure collntry-kitchen
lnspiralion in this recipe for
Tomato-Topped Chops. Juicy
pork chops are breaded wilh a
c·ombinalion of pancake mix,
garlic salt and ore g an o.
<Flavorful pancake mix also
makes a savory mating for
chic.ken or fish.)
Transferred to a baking dish
and covered "'ith on1ons and
to1n<1lo sauce. the chops are
baked 't1l tender. trs a recipe
:o:ure lo enhance your culinary
repul<1llon : lh('re·11 be calls
for seconds <ind praise for the
c-ook'
TO~I ATO.. TOPP Ell CJIOPS
~t cup pancake mix
1 tablespoon garlic sail
I teaspoon oregano
I egg, beaten
I table~1>00n '".,.atcr a lean pork chops. ~ •. inch
thick
2 me<lium onions, sliced 1 i
inch thick
Two S..OUnce cans tomato
sauce
lleat oven lo moderate (3$0
degrees F.). Place pancake
mix. garlic salt and oregano in
paper bag: shake Lo combine.
Combine egg and water. Dip
pork chops in egg wash, then
shake. O"" -it a time, in bag.
Browr k chops in large
skillet . , hot shortening .
Transfer to glass baking dish:
top w:llh onions and Lomato
,,__......,,, . -
STEAKS $147 Barbecue LL
Favor1fes .
PORTERHOUSE ~ 11 57~
, ......
~
Top Sirloi1 Steaks ~ 'l'J.
lloaeless Roua "'.=11'1
Top Roullll Steaks .::. 'Pl
Cliuck Steaks ... !':-5'
Center Cut Cbuck :.~ 69•
I Fresh Ground Beef .::re:~ 59~
Tyson's Game Hens =-~69!
Eastern Spare Ribs :.--= 59,
Table King Bacon ~":.c:= 57~
BEEF
--SI" ...-cw .....
DUNGENESS .-...590 CRABS.~wr ..
Rallbot s..-.-.......... •1~
lresklHS--......... ft~
.lolelSlillllacOl'::'.::'791
llak eu.i 111C01 ~ ::::' 191
Swift SllSIZI =n-:..-= 651 I
OSCAl llAYll sum llCOK
t.:t. '"-"'.""' 73' I ~ =. 61' I r:t: ~ •141
LOWER THAN DISCOUNT PRICE PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS !
POTATO
CHIPS
Von1 Jw~ f'od. t 05
RIJ9. or Dip. 1'(0.
PUREX
FRESH B'IEAD ;$ 25•
FRESH I lnER 5 81•
\.ARGE l ~Gs llUNDll! ......... 38• j GIADE M. 0... a....
PEACHES ,_,21 llrit1th
~ lb.
Graveatei1 Apples ~ 19~
Papayas or langos ~ 39~
CHrryToutoes.=r:291
imi's~79'
S~nsweet. '!une~ -~:. 39c I
Libby Fruit 1n Juice ~':r~ 25c fl
Wilshire Whole DOis '!a.-.: 69c I
Salad Dressings ..=.-~ 39c
OIUCArlSSIN 7-IJAY WDICIND SHCIAUI
ha• Joa • 1eners
,........., ., o..111y, ll . -G
Wut.""'""' in fl11Y0tl 1 • • ra •
EllGUSH IUmNS na II.JOEi 33c
::.:.. 6-11(.
IOIS HAPPY CIPS """""" """" 25-~ :0 ICI«) 3-PI.
COUPONS
fY/o}N/SliiiJ,fjJlli1I1l0i :lltlM
Minut• Maid Oran(I• Jui<t II.QI. t"" !><. '4L .•.•. 27c
kold Kilt Sirloin Tip; OI tu!IOUIC'f aw MoOI.. ••••• $1 A9
V0t11 El!Chilodcn om OI atmc. ..01. n o;;.······••••·• 3.5c:
Gino'1 0.-Pina 1M;11. rm. ...................... '9c
Gino's~ Pina oo -11-<>.L ••• : ....... B5c
CarnciftcR '-ch flllni w.ar. ND.. ................... 15c
Carnation Holibi.rt fdlet. 1..01. -............ Sl.59
Cornatlon 81'90d&d fWi 5t.aks 1-1&. rm ..•••••••• $1 .7!
Carnation FI1h Cabs u-0i. """'" ................... -"c;
~/,!19,'.~.~~p 0'. PIZZJl.5. 75-• """"°"" OI l•""'GI. '" <ll. ...,...,. , ..
Veal Si"KikJ Cite\!~ PWllD OI PUI" ............ •98c
Ml1. fridoy Go<irmet Shrimp IJ.OL •><. l'4l. ••••• $1 .W
Gor1'on Fish Sticks H-01. 11,,.. 14.-0? .................. 89c
Gomin Sc11iloi;i C11sps 1-0L. PIG. ................... 96c
NJ§/N/S) i I J.i I Ii l :i :] J;iiJ i i .i I ·fl
COLGATE TOOTHPASTE
5~~.56« ~-------~ '.Colgate""
Tek Toothbrv1h -~.;.. 19'
Anacin Tablets '':.::" 100 ~ 11 11
J&J Baby Shampoo '.~ 99'
IOYALYELm
WHISKEY
~IY, $359
MIRACLE
WHIP
Jfui@l•I """
f i~~ ... 2"1
~ DRY 'Glll
a•'3!
,.... •....
tngals
-~j~
'.J~
KRA" SolOil Dressing
lal.1 lli!-1
PEPSI-CO
12-0Z. ITU. I KING SID! ,,,..
sauce. C<wer end b•k• in 101 l l preheated oven (350 degrees
F.). I hour "' ""Iii tonder. 34081
Serves 4.
Adams Ave., at Brookhurst, H11"fi~gton Beach
Doheny Park Drive, Capistrano E:c;ch
5922 Edinger Ave., at Springdale, Huntington Beacll
Laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro
21082 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach
17950 Magnolia, Fountain Valley -
--...... -r.· ... _.--.I --·---r,~--'~L •
I
I
I
I
I
I
J
..
ch
lley
'
5 PILOT-ADVERTISER s
ALL MEAT
WIENERS
HORMEL'S
1-POUND PACKAGE
c
LB.
LUNCHEON MEATS
MANHATTAN• 5-0UNQ PKGS.
COMBINATION LOAF • PEPPER LOAF
BEEF SALAMI• ALL Mf:AT BOLOGNA ~ 7 c ALL lf:EF BOLOGNA• 11-1·0 LOAF
1 :i~tg:,~::E ~.~~~.~.~.~.............. .. . EA.
USDA OtOIClOISTATllUOS.CllT!JffD ltlF 69
ROUND BONE ROAST . .. "· '
IASTllN GIAIN FED SMAU Siii ·MIA TY 6 3 C PORK SPARE RIBS .. . ..... LB. ·
ot.9 OWN C<>ll'4nY STYll •Pl.Ml 3 9< PORK SAUSAGE BULK ' ... LB.
.MonaL PltlDI 4 9• " ALL MEAT WIENERS .......... 12-oz.
FA,IMIRJC>ttol·CHUI 29• BRAUNSCHWEIGER .......... •-oz.
MOlllU YOl:ICSHlll 1-ll. llG. 011-U . THIO: 49 C
SUCED BACON ....... ·-·--·-· 'LB .
CUT-UP STEWING CHICKENS . . ......... "· 29'
...... ...,, ,,.,, 2B. 1971 DAil Y PILOT i$
CHUCK GROUND
R!A~T ~IS~(~
OR STATER BROS. DELICIOUS
CERTIFIED BEEF GROUND HOURLY
47~. 57~.
PORK
STEAK
EASTERN
GRAIN-FED
TENDER SHOULDER
69L~
SLICED
BACON i
IAR-MIULK
DELICIOUSLY
SMOKED
59~.
JUN I OR U5D•CHOICIOllSTATflUOS.CllTlf lfOllEf 89 ROUND STEAK IONUN ..... . LB. •
TURKEY i00UNDsiJiAsi(•~:::;~1 ............. LB. 99c
1STTHIU5THlll ... ll.99c 79 1 '
RIB ROAST 6TH~ nHt1Bs ......... ll. c~
US.DA CHOICIOI STA.Tiii lllOS. CllTlfllOlllf 95
RIBSTEAKI ............ ... .LB. ',.
USDA CHOICfOt STATfltla<>S. OITIJllDlllF 99 C ~"P"!t"' ROLLED ROAST:~~~~: •............. LB. FINE FOR BARBECUEING \ 'j USOAOtOICIOISTATlllJIOS.CEllTlf1f0 1(ff 89'
USDA GRIDl-A 4 9 . RUMP ROAST .... ' '''' LB.
PRINCESS c lITIALIANANDFlAVOIFUL 89'
BRAID GROUND ROUND ' LB.
6 TO 8-1.1. HAL McCOY All lflf 2 7
AYllAGI LB . BEEF LINKIES ' .... 8-0l. PKG. •
LJ1DACHOICt OISTATUlllOS.CllTlfllOlllf $ 1 '9 '
STEAKS ~~l'~~~.. ........ . '''''''' ...... LB. '
US DACHOICIOISTATllllOS.ctlTlflfDlllf s 145
I-BONE STEAKS ·-·· ................. LB. •
US DA CHOICE 01 '1 A Tft llOS. CllTtfllD lllF s 1 4 9 '
PORTERHOUSE STEAK ........ LB . •
USOACHOICIOI STATfllltOS.CllTlfllDIHF s 119 '
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ...... ' ' LB. '
•
' VEL LIQUID ................. uoz .45'~$e
DETERGENT.1No>1u 5 1. 19
' siiiiiWRAP ~~ 59'
DETERGENT '.~~~y 5 2.39·
LIBBY• CHUNK-CRUSHED-SLICED OR TIDBITS
PINEAPPLE
' PULl·OH VINYl PANTS
5 .M•LG .)I. LG . 3 PR. REG. A9t EA-................. -·
SNAP-OH VINYL PANTS
5·M·lG.-X lG. i PR . REG.69tPR ................. ,.
lRAINING PANTS ,
S-M·L·ll. LC.. 3 PIL REG-59t Pit ................. .
SLEEVELESS SHI RTS
l-'2·3· & A ~EAR 2 FOR
REG. 79, [A. .. .... ,
VINYL BABY BIB
Sl\OE" f ASTENER 2 f OR
'llEG .5~c£A ...
.t-. ~ ~ 'looa P~
FRiEDCHICKEN .... , .. o 5 1 59
JQtlNiTOH QOAUTY HACH · •·INCH .•• 7•<
APPLE PIES -·--INO< 71'
1\JPflTT•ST"~'·
FISH-N-CHIPS ...... Ll 79•
llA'IOU{l fRIHl ssc J0~N510N ~ssnhl!l.i 7nc
• HALF CHICKEN ...... "" ECLAIR PIES . . ""' ~ :
0"80>'5UP[ll SU8 83C !;UN••Sl •no1 ~·c 26'
SANDWICHES . ·-1"" ORANGE JUICE . , .. '.. , " : llUP£"' 7nc JONIS 1i11Huu • 79' , PERCH FILLETS . .. "' ~.. PORK SAUSAGE •. ""
llUl"lllT ggc: MOlllO"l••lLlXCl P! l f lf 64'
SOLE FILLETS ... • " 3-COURSE OINNERS ""· .
II TOWNHOUSI 59 ESKIMO PIES .. ..PKO .Of 6 c
. Aloiioir&>iliii""R's~~-.... 39·
Tllf(SWf:fT . 11-01 ~le 26c 911105 (Y{ WIO~!ON ,..l/Ct 41 c ORANGE JUICE __ •. '"" MIX VEGETABLES . '"
flllfSWllf 29c ... SSOllTED 75' GRAPEFRUIT JUICE _'"' KOLO KIST STEAKS .• • •• ,~or 41c BAGGEo STEAKS , ,. 51°9
EFRRDINJ CUTIX
T _ABUTI UPITICKI
:G'° $I .09 tr~::: 79~.
VlllNG GILLDTI IYIDROPS DRY LOOK
U.O:
1 1. 19 >.OL • 1.09
COMMAND
DlllSllNG OfMA-A HAIR l ... AY ~ 99' ::-..:.::-•1.23 ~·1.09
WB.LA IHOo.fUA DINTUn
BAUAM DOG TAGI ADHUIVI
'""""'' 1.59 "'= • 1. 98 ~~;'.:,',_ 69'
FOR
SJIAllllD
ASSC>aTID
VAltlTY
AVOCAD
LARGE FANCY CALIF. HASS s
FOR
* GLADE
AIR
FRESHENER
~~~0•110
•••C.••N<f~
~fG.c•.-~
YIUOWMfAT 4 •1 PEACHULaar.'laWln ..... · .. .... lbs
LARGIJ.ANCYROYALGIAND 3 s1
NECT ARINU ........... · · .. · · Lbs ""I
UTRAFANCYLARODAOttNUltANA 4 • LARGE PLUMS ......... ... · .. ... · .... Lbs
LOHG-TEHOll (llSP OHM 3 25 C cucu•ms................. ............... ,.,
LIBBY• F-RUIT COCKTAIL -CLING PEACH-OR PEARS
KLEENEX DESIGNER LINE 2 9 TOWEL5JUME ~FJ OLL ....... EACH c,
IN RETURNABLE BOTTLES 6 5 9 c DI ET RI TE COLA .................... 12-oi ,
iOGCKIFOOD.. I 0 ~:~~$1
CHIFFOOOLOLORT 155 u E ... 4 2-RoLL$1
PKGS.
,iii"iERGENT .. 49-0Z.Box7Bc;'
NOODLES ,., u w•" (flQW ME IN NO ] ''> CAN 35(
> Ol 25'
12 01 53c
SOY SAUCE ·'" ,, '""
TERIYAKI SAUCE '"" W•"
FRIED RICE ~~.7c~~~11"1
DRESSING .............. .
OA5""H' t'< ~'11'"
'°' 53'
A Ol 41 (
MIRACLE WHITE~~:::.. ~~:: 11.49
HUNT'S HERB SAUCE .... "Ol 27'
SNOWDRIFT 5"0"""" "Ol 86'
HUNTS KETCHUP ""' 24'
VANILLA n .oi 42'
WARRS W "5t11Mf •·•••• ......
PORK & BEANS """' s ....... ,, o• 27'
HUNT'S TOMATO JUICE ........ "~z 37'
HUNT'S TOMATOES 5'EWEO "' "oz 39'
GLAD F1.lOD BAGS 5'0,AGE .... "°' 39'
GLAD GARBAGE BAGS Jo" 49'
GLAD TEXTURED WRAP .. 200 n 55'
CRISCO OIL Mceueeose .. .. • ••oz 11.08
PEANUT OIL ..,..,,,,, ....... ,. 02 73'
MARGARINE ~6~~ ~?~~Nlr l ll @
BORDEN'S KAVA COFFEE , oz. '1.67
FROSTED SHAKES :~:8iM2 5 ,o, '1
STARKIST TUNA f.~~~· ........ ",':~ 37'
KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP ____ ... oz 89'
TEXIZE SPRAY & WASH ....... •oz 89' CHIFFON MARGARINE ''°"""·· ............ " 48'
KLEENEX AMERICANA TISSUES . . .. "" 29'
WALTER KENDALL DOG FOOD ···········-·" oz. 39'
WALTER KENDALL DOG FOOD ...... a" '1.32
PAR KAY SOFT MARGARINE . • .. " 45'
BALLARD BISCUITS . . ... 3, oz. 29'
COTTAGE CHEESE ~~~h\'"6'.a, ' ' " '" PINT 37'
JAN-U-Wllll
DINNERS GINO'S PIZZA 14,00 s. ........ "'A .... w .. "".._
707 W"t N...,._. StrMt, c..t• M-
l 6161 fdl"9ff A..-.., H ....... 111 ...... FIODI ~:::.c ......................................... 63'
::=:::..~ .............................. 19 oz 83'
l'Ollltllll' .. I' ............. s111 Mf,tllOf'Rlr
•1111100• Ill ... l.l<tl
IMllWIMOW•I. tMt.
.z•oJ w"' s. .... ,,, ... ,.,..., Sate A ..
I 1818 Ch.,M ........ , ........ ,.,,_
JJ60 N•rttl TntlR An-. ~tw AH
1100 IMt Collhu AYMwe. Oro1HJ9
1122 W""911•~ 11 .. 111., W"t1t1l1tst..,
J4JI W"t Ll1teoh1 A.•11111•, 4Jtot..I"'
26)0 ldl"'" A'•nu•. So11ta An111
11JO Mc"-'fden A'•nue, Santa Ana
'" -~----""'· '~-·' -I .. ,~ ........... -· --
'
f •
1 ·
'
DAI\. Y PILOT Wfd11tsday, July 28, 1971 Wtdnesd~1. Jul1 28, 1971 N PILOT ·ADVERTISER (J
. fltllll ~----~ Prieet ~------~1-!l~ ?------~
WHITE MAGIC ~"-"NO PHOSPHATE ZAIK HAIDW MEDIUM SIZE ~~ LUCERNE
PAR" BRIQUEIS -Af-EGGS BLEACH MILK
Evoporo!ed.JJifomin O Added -So Rich1 Whittns, Deodorizes And Disinfects.
Gallon
Jug •••
•
~SDA Choice
· .Grade Beef
'Rolled & Tied
·;seet Chuck
\ To Pot Roos t lb.
~
IO·BONE ROAST
USDA Choice Beef -Ideal 69C
for A Delicious Pot Roost. J~.
Bo I R t l'ID<<""''" SJ•• ne ess QI$ P0und Or Rump Cuti It
Beef Clod Roost "'" '"°"' '"' SJ•• Bor>eJ~•• 0v .... Reod t It
Sirloin Tip Roast ~:~~~~!~, "·$12'
PRE-GROUND
COFFEE
Sofewoy -A Rich Blerid Of Rich Coffee.
(2-lb. SJ")
. 1-lb.
Bag
• 1-
COTIAGE
CHEESE
tuce me-Adds f1Clro Goodness To Salads.
Pint
Carton
•
~
Biodegradable Laundry Detergent.
King
Size
Savory-Smoked
So fresh And
Appetizing!
FULL SHANK
PORTION
COOKED HAM
Full Bu!IPort1on-Sa-59c vary Smoked. Rea l Tasty. 1•.
Smoked Picnics sa~:v~·~~~td
Beef LI.Yer si.ct<l Or 1n P.ec, T tndt< "1IO f!o~ortul
Center Ham Slices
Camed Beef B•,.ket -Sotewoy
O• Mc<:.1¥f-Po1n! (u!
F P rt frf'>h -•Whole l~1•Thvih1 ryer a s . O•U"''"'~'~Your (hOO(t
Fresh Fryer Breasts •:;~";;·
F h F W• '•"'·~· res ryer 1ngs rtO!IOmH.olBuy
Fryer Backs & Necks
11 48 '
11.69 '
SJ19 •
11.98 '
J• 65 '
11.69 '
11 39 '
11.10'
SAFEWAY LIQUOR BUYS!
Pnces EHtc\Jvr in L1ct~se-d Safeway~·
~~~~~" SCOTCH
Imported From s399 Scotland 86-Pr.
(S AV E 90c) FIFTH
SAVE sr~r~~,o~~,~-JO~;lth $3 39
Blended Whiskey ';~·"~:· ""' s3"
Burns Hotter longer-A Great Buyt
10-q,.
Bag .
•
USDA Choice
Grode Beef
Full Center
Cuts
(Bone·ln) lb.
CHUCK STEAKS
USDA Choice Beef-Bl ode 5 9 C
C1.1t -!deolT0Borb!cue. I ~.
S ·s St k uso.i.ct.ow::e8'ef 79, WI s ea s 1hoc~Arl'I' Shoulder(urs IL
Boneless Steaks (~~r~~~:= n.99 C
Family Steaks 11~~cci:;~;:n •~.$1 1 '
LAMB CHOPS
b· :·I· 'i• ; !·. • ·
"'<.•'''' ., 99
lomb Rob Ch op' (
Aegulor CUI \ It-. ":.1.4q fb.
GROUND BEEF
~.~t ·. . 59c r, . ,
!lib Chub ~, >; lb
FRESH BAKERY BUYS!
2-Layer s119
Each
•DOG FOOD
• LEMONADE BEL-AIR
CONCENTRATE e. OLIVES
&-oz. , ~C PmOlru•-H~h '" p,,,,,,_ ,s.oz .
Can ~ .
eFRENCH FRIES e;,~-,
s-oz. ,5c pkg.
~ e&El ·AIR WAFFLES~::: Ile
.• CREAM PIE.S :i~~ s;::·J5c
0.1pp1~ Broccoli ~ 'f.:20'
fnit P• .._ •• 35 ' ltf(h<Nr-;,. . .17() "'
,_ & Cn i:':' ':: 15 '
• Dressel's Cak1w~C:.,, 't,~s1 •• 8 Strawberries \.",::; 'IO.' 25 ' 8 Grape Juice ~~; '1.:' 35'
Mummo lh Town 39 Pitt rd Hous e C
, .b-oz.
PRICES EFFECTIVE
IN LOS ANGELES
& ORANGE COUNTY.
(E XCEPT CATALINA)
Cream O' the Crop-"Safeway Goorontttd."
• doz •
from The
Northern
Pacific
To Bak e Or
Barbecue.
((NTU CUT 39c lb, STEAKS ll
~ Tall
Can
•
USDA Grade 'A'
Whole Body
2 to 3·1b. Avg.
Cut· 35c Up lb. lb.
e
-DINNERS HUNT 'SSKILLET 15-oz79e For A Delicious Meal -•
Serve In Just Minutes! Pkg ,
eMINUTE RICE 1;k~~·4 7e ·IJELL WELL GELATIN J-oz. 9e • DESSERTS Pkg.
a SHRIMP ~~~~o!~,!! ~-k~·29e
DOWNY SOFTENER
forMosl fobrics-~ 64:ar. $) 29
Clothes Feel Softer! lillll Su e
..:.
~l
''
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rtrr..·-'"-·.r1-»· ni ,.. 'I .J.})ri-•1---........_._1.:' -";:...~ :1:1 ~· .. --' ·--· --,, ',, . ...,,,.. ___ )J•--· I /~ -I I• --· -
l
" '1
'
..
'
'
,,
,
•
'f'.
W1dntMf1y, Jufy 28, 19n DAIL V PILOT 47 "
WITH
SALLIE
GREEN MINCE MAKE
BIG ENTRY INTO
ITALIAN CUISINE
Tazio Nuvoh1ri streaked
to win the Mille Miglia on a
blazing hot day In 1930 with
a diMer napkin lapping
around his neck. Here's the
~tory. Tazio was grimly
dueling for the lead when he
became violently ill. He
~werved his Alra to the side
· of the road and 1laggered to
~ nearby farmhouse end
collapsed In a heap on the
kitchen floor. The housewife
recognized him. Wh;it could
she do! How could she
revive him! She had a men-
tal flash. Sorci Verdi ! A
family recipe which proved
lo have great hea l ing
powers for generations. She
whipped some up and .!!luf-
fed a few spoonfuls into the
mouth of our racing hero.
He Wa.!I up and at 'em in-
stantly. Grabbed the bowl,
gobbled up it.1 contents.
Bellering "Sorci Verdi'' he
dashed for his Alla and on
Lo fi na1 victory.
FRESH SPINACH
IS BIG NEWS
Perhaps Stouffer started
lhe rush to spinach with
their frozen Spinach Sou f-
fl e .. More and more salad
enthusiasts are adding fresh
!pinach to their greenery of
watercress, lettuce, and Ro·
miline or using it slraighl
with any good French or
Italian dressing .. To make
exlra delicious, add &
couple or 11:rated hard boiled
eggs. Warit U1e recipe for
Sorci Verdi, lransleted Into
Green Mice: Spinach balls
the ~iie of a mouse. Perhaps
you'll want to savf' it for a
day when vou're not quite
up lo par. Pleez 85k in the
produce department.
Sol'"ci Verdi! Whal utter
party elegance along with a
superb Spencer Roast. . Nol
enough people know about
Spen<;e,r Roasts. Take a Ri b
ROllst. Take the eye, the
middle 11:ood solid meat part
out of the middle from one
end to the other and vou've
got a Spencer Roast. Throw
in a thermon1etcr. Throw in
the oven 11! 350. Roast till
I.he" thermometer says wh at
you want it to . Rare is best.
And belleve me, you Just
can't not cook it I o
perfeclion, and your Green
,\1ice will nev er h11ve had
such n;ivorfu[ togetherness.
SAN JOAQLi lN
NUf\.fBER I
Sir nectarine is one of the
world's mo&~ ancient fruits .
. ~aid to be grown in China,
centuries bernre Ch r I~ t .
They've ne\"Pr hePn very
popular In this cnuotr~· un·
Iii the San Joaquin Valley
torik 1hem over. Practically
all the nation's nPctarines
are grown there. And dnn't
just eal nrctarines, do other
things with them. Mak e a
m11r inated grCfn be11n
salad : 2 sliced fresh nee·
t<irines, I can green beans.
I chopped red onion, toss
"·ith a good lemon--0il dres·
sing. Add fresh nectarines
to your fayorite shrimp or
chicken ctfr ry. Use nectar·
ines in pl8ce or pineapple in
any S\Yttl·!IOUr anything.
Summer show--0rt · Blitz
Torte Nectarlnt, Take any
cake, chocolale. 11pplesauce,
sponge or what. . . Slither
fresh nectarines and !Wt'et
meringue betw ren I he
layers and on top. Sprinkle
wi th slice-cl almonds.
Another new -never been
doae before. . When you're
faced with 2 cup:ii of lefr .
over chicken or turkey, add
2 cups pitted cherries and you're ln the che"rry chicken
salad busineS"!, 3'fle dressing
~~ cup 1our cream, 11, cup
mayonnaise:. 1/ii teas. s11H, v, te&s. curry pow<Wr, plus
~ sli d almond!i,
113 cup oppe ery.
Here at Richard's, the
People StoT't'. you'll ne r
get In 1 cooking ru t. Tr y 11
nted YoUr idea ll&hl tume
"'· .1sk th! butcher . the
b,_ker, Md the product
prM.ty m1ker.
PHONE 673-6360 FOR HOME DELIVERY PRICES EFFECTIVe JULY 22, 2l, 24, 25
,7k;;~3M! IN OUR DELjVERY AHA
JUST RIGHT WITH l f.<RBECUlO FOODS! GROWER'S C~EARANCE
GLOXINIA
PLANTS
FRENCH BREAD 45¢
LEMON-FILLED
Colorful in 6" pols!
2.79 EACH
LIDO MARKET CENTER
NEWPORT BLVD. AT THE ENTRANCE TO LIDO ISLE
OT91n Sere nades for your plea iu re by Bernice Fay
TROLLEY BUNS
WHEAT TEA ROLLS
SOUR CREAM CAKE
6 for 41¢
6 fer 31¢
79¢
Ba rbe cued st eaks end bu rge rs-yes! But
do n't miu the greet eating of charco al
br oilod chi cko n bested with butter, sherry e nd
current je ll y, er wiene rs bested wi th sp icy
tomato sauce. or ba rbecued shrimp
T eri yaki or Lamb Shi sh Kebab, mer ineted
1n en herb -laced wine marinade!
OR
Liv en up the pr oceed in gs wit h savory side ·
dis hes like potatoes scelloped with oheddar and
Ortega Ch ili s, or Eggplant Tomato
Ceuerole or Block Beens with Rum or
Vegetables Vine igette sprinkled with Dill.
THE BEST PART OF SUMMER - A BARBECUE!
.,~-\ -.,,, •1.•1,· • 't ..... ' I' •· ' --··--: ,,.._,· i ,-; .. -::_-:.3;: .. ', ,,..·
~v :j-7. -· .. -' , I I '
NOT JUST ANOTH ER CHICKEN -BUT THE BE ST,
CALIFO RN IA GROWN I No Preserva tives ) FROM
ZACKY FARMSI
SERVE WITH SLICES OF PROSCUITTO OR SALAMI IN
PLACE OF SALAD OR WIH ICE CREAM FOR D!SSERTI
FANCY, SWEET, VINE-RIPENED
WHOLE BODY FRYERS HOW ABOUT CHICKIN CURRY? CANTALOUPES 4 FOR
CUT-UP FRYERS BRAISE IN AN ORANGE-ALMOND 'SAUCE SERV E TH EM STUFFED, FOR A LIGHT SUPPER I FRESH,
COMPACT, NORTHERN GROWN
SPLIT BROILERS PER FECT FOR THE BARBECUE ARTICHOKES 6 FOR
ROASTING CHICKENS TO STUFF AND SP IT ROAST!
39¢LB.
49¢LS.
49~LS.
59¢L8. BUY PLENTY -FOR WINE COOLER S "d SANGRI A I SWEET,
SPLIT OR WHOLE
CHICKEN BREAST
Legs or Thighs 79¢ LB
CHICKEN LIVERS
CHICKEN WINGS
GIBLETS
Whole Cornish Game Hen
BOX OF 12 HENS
BAR-M
22 oz.
Very f•1tlve ••ting
$9.45 BOX
BACON THICK OR REG. SLICE
CHICKEN BALLOTINE '""" .,,, •k•, ....... _ .. "''", ,,.,.,,
IOX Of 12 ........•........• , , • , .••• , •..•.•• ''·"'
MARINATED CHICKEN WINGS ......... .,. ••n" ... -
STUFF-ED BELL PEPPERS '""" wl•h M H'l -•• "'"""
PLUS
PHEASANTS. SQUA BS, CAPONS, DUCKS, TURKEYS
KRAFT NATURAL CHEESE STICKS 10 ••·
Mo ntery Jack or Ce rewey •oz.
LONGACRE ALL WHITE
SLICED CH ICKEN • oz. 53¢
VAN DE KAMPS I 0 e•.
CHICKEN PIE
KNUDSEN
ICE MILK 'h GAL.
89¢ lb.
89¢ lb.
49¢ lb.
79¢eA.
79c ...
49¢ LI.
91¢ LI.
39¢
PILLS BURY BUTTERMILK o• COUNTRY
BISCUITS 'oz.
C&W 6 •'-WITH WATER CHESTNUTS
CH INESE PEA PODS 39¢
OSCAR MEYER •II mttf or gril1 1izt
W IENERS I LI.
FISHERMAN WHARF
DRESSINGS
IOOUIN>IT I OL Slc
I OZ.
IOOUlfOIT 16 OL
75¢
39¢
89c
NO FUSS BARBECUES : Get all the
foods read y-cooked from our
Deli.like Barbecued Ch icken
and Ribs , ba ke d ham , Cowboy
S.:s;resh Salads . .
Cl W 10 o•.
VEGETABLES DELICIEUX 5 for $1
39¢ C&W PETITE PEAS
SHEEPHERDER
WHITE BREAD
SHEEPHERDER
SOURDOUGH . ROLLS
MINUTE MA IO 6 OL
Tangarine Juice
MINUT E MAI O 6 oz.
ORANGE . JUICE
21 et.
39¢
11 er. 49¢
4 POR $1
4 for Sl
JUICY, DIRECT FROM GROWER
Valencia ORANGES 8 LIS.
DIP STRIPS IN CORN DOG MIX AND DEEP FRY -GREAT
BAR BECUE APPETI ZER. GAR DEN-FR ESH,
ZUCCHINI ITALIAN SQUASH Ls.19¢
G~~i~I .-
HEINZ
. .
KETCHUP 2FOR 49¢
1 LI.
1 I.I .
ARDEN AA BUTT ER
FOLG ER S COFF EE
FO LGERS COFFEE I LI. 1.57 J LI.
83¢
79¢
:Z.29
NABISCO
RITZ CRACKERS
Fl eischman So ft Marga rine
SMUCK ER S Bo ysen berry Syru p
ASST. FLAVORS
HAWAIIAN
HUNTS BIG JOHNS
BEAN 'N FIXI N'S
LAURA SCU DDERS
PUNCH
PARTY NUT MIX
NEW! GENERAL MILLS
BUC WHEATS CEREAL
REE SE
ARTICHOKE BOTTOMS
HILO SHOYU
SOY SAUCE '"" ""''"
CROSSE & BLACKWEL L
HOT DOG. RELISH
HAMBURGER RELISH
COLLIER
CHARCOAL BRIQUETS
.
12 oz. 39¢
1 LI. 47¢
12 oz. 39¢
46 oz. 3 FOR $1
JI 01.
ll oz.
14 oz.
14 oz.
11•11 01.
11 !/4 01.
11 LL
59¢
69¢
39¢
89¢
59¢
4ferS1
4 fer $1
"£~MARKET HOM'f-.&._GIFT SHOP
OPEN DAILY f.7, SUN. t.6 OPEN ~~Y-t
LIDO YACHT SHOP ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR FLOWER SHOP CLEANERS
•
,..--..
OPEN DAILY, 9°6 SUN. I D·l
_ Jlll'· • ,_.. . .
DA il Y t -5:10, SAT. f .5
I .... _' I ~·-.....
OPEN DAILY 9°6 DAILY l :J0.6, SAT. l :l0-5
.. --...... ·-
. . • " • •
• . ..
• I
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l's a,_moneg-saving sta~t .to · Super-Summer. • •• It's El Rancho's
r . ,
' " 1 '
, .
In every El Ra.ncho Frozen Foods Depa.rtment, you'll
find the widest selection of your favorite brands. And,
this week, look at the slashed prices/
I
-,,. 1 p· • 79c · . 100 S Illa ....................... .
~ Great crust, lots of sauce and v•ith . either pepperoni, sau.sage or choose lhe popular combination!
' Rosarita Dinners .............. 39¢ Ho's T eriyaki Beef ........ $1.09
Your choice, of four Mexican varieties! Ne\v llav.-i:liian entree! fcied Rice ••• 10 OL 49c
Chun King Dinners . . .. . . . . . 63¢
· "Xour choice of four Oriental combinations!
Hawaiian Pork Kalua ...... 59¢
Ne'.\' .. and "·ith the name "Ho," it's Ha,vaiian!
' · Larry's . Sandwiches .......... 59¢ Fresh 'n' Ready Omelettes 69'
Chuck-\r:i,gon, Beef,.Ham & Cheese, Pastr11.mi! Jilake an omlette in 2 minutes! They're great!
Super Values in Meat!
An outstanding example o! the difference you find at El Rancho's! Compare the riuality, the trim! . .
Thick! 'render! llearty goodness, cut front selected beef rou nds to affo:·d you tender rol\sl'.
Swiss Steak .. .. .. .. ... 89~
El Rancho quality at a bud get price !
Sliced Bacon ............... 59~
El ·n~ncho'S O\\"ll ranch style, thicker, leaner!
Fresh Salmon .... 811
.E.
1
H ••• 99~
Rump Roast ............ , .... 89~
Enjoy the hearty fla,·or of better beef! .
Sirloin Tip Steaks ..... '1.89 "·
Con1parc lhe good eating for your n1oner !
R d S FRESH FILLETS! 99t e napper .... ... .. . n.
From the Columbia l!i,·cr ... \rholc or half! Delightful flavor, rushed to us to keep it so'!
It's Fun to Barbecue!
Split Broilers .......... 49~
B~; plump Cali!ornia birds ••• split into halves, perfect broiling portion.s !
• Eastern Pork Ribs .............. 89ft.
Extra meaty, cut from the meaty b~ck loin ••• exce llE"nt to barbecue!
Fresh Ground Round Patties ................... 89~
Hamburger! are fun anytlmc ••• bulk freslt rround round, too, at this price!
Liquor Values
Bacardi Rum ........ ~~~~~~~ .......... s1 ()85
Summer toolers are in! ... and so n1any of the best call for rum!
~~~!. ~~~~]:: $~1:~! WI.• k El !1ncho'1 $3 99 n-111s ey .......... Ill •
Blended smoothness! Quart 4.tt
•
' .
lcB Cr1aB1 ..... ~~~~~~~~~ ........• ,
Smooth, Creamy ••• catering.quality in the premium pack round carton .. , \ride choice of tempting flavoral ' .
f lfJ/f PiBB ...... H.~;;~:s .......... 1/28
Not Lo be c~mpared \\'ith ordinary pies! Nine inches big, heavy \\·i th fruit, lender crusls! Try one!
' .
~he.ki·nds you like best! Chopped SirlPin, Ji'ried Chicken, Ocean }'ish, 1\ieat Loaf or Turkey!' ' .' fjf \ ' ' .
. .'. . . . LARGE SIZE tckBn PIBB. .. v~~. ~~ .~~~~.. .·
Bii''ones . ,'. lQ.~~ ounces o! lender tasty chicken, ''"ilh gravy, encased in Van de Kan1p's flaky crust I
.
. Macaroni & Cheese .............. 6 1o. $1
Morton's •.. 8 oz. packag~s ••• i·eady to heat nnd enjoy ••• a flavor combination that'.s prov·en .so popula.rl
International ·Vegetables ....... 39'
Round the 'rorld fa,·orites fron1 Bi.rdse re! Add ''ariety and interest to your nlenu ,,·ith any of the varietie&I . .
Creamed Chicken ................. 69¢ Orange Juice ................. 4 1c.':" $1
Stouffer's~., delicious o\·cr Englisl1 muffins! T rees,veet ..• from Florida ! 12 ot cin ••••••••• 49t
Macaroni & Beef ................ 69¢ Cocktail Mixes ................ 5 '" '1
Slouffer'.s ... a casserole that v.·ins fa,·or ,.,.il11 men! Don the Beachcomber ••. choice of 3 kinds! 6 oz.
Tuna and Noodles ...... . . . .. . . . . 69' Jeno's Pizza Rolls ............... 59'
Stouffer's lakes the \\"Ol'k out, just heat and serYe! Delightful hors d'oeu,·res, ready to heat and serve l
Super Shopper Grocery Specials!
CHUNK • CRUSHED • ~" '
" ~ '' rlBBP/J 9, ... s.t~c~~ .. ~. ~p~1!~ .....
Dolc·s ••• of course ... lo give you all the goodness! Sa"e on No.:! cans this '''eek at El Rancho!
Salad Dressing ....... ~E.R~~1:f!H:~ ••••••• 39c
l'rcnch! Green (:octdcss! Blue Cheese~ Vinaigrette'. lt.a\jan! l'antous quality.,. 10 ounce bottle.sf
Jell·O ......................... 2 '" 39¢
Big 6 ounce pkgs. of fa\'Ol'itc flaYor s:
Wesson Oil ....................... 53c
s.~ve on the popular :!·J oz. size!
Yuban Coffee .................. 83~
Friskies Cat Food 8 6 oz $1 ~NS
Choice or fi\"C of l\:itty's fa\·oriles!
Miracle White . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . 1.29
J .. aundry additive that ,,·orks! halt gallon!
Janitor in a Drum . .. . . .. . .. . . 1.29
2 lb. can •••••••• 1.i5 3 lb. can •••.•... 2.39 }'or all hou sehold cleaning jobs'. llalf~gaJ.
Fresh Produce Specials!
Ripe Peaches ............. 4 'b· $1
Large size .•• ~'ellO\\' n1cat, so firm 'rith so n1u ch fla,·or! Compare 'vith theirs!
Ripe Cantaloupes ......................... 4 '" $1
Another of ihe wonderful re,,·ards of shopping at El Rancho! You'll love these!
Blueberries ................ 49' Italian Squash ......... 19f.
Plump, ripe .. ?llorc goodness per basket! A favorite i~getable any tin1e of yearl
Delicatessen Specials!
Jack Cheese .......... ~L·R·'~~-~~~~R·ET·J~:1 ........ 79:.,
By the piece •. ; soft and cream)'' , , . great. for cooking •.. delightful for snacking!
Farmer John Franks .. 59' Price's Cheese Spreads 49•
California Gold Medal -A·innerl J lb. pkg. 71,4 oz. size llJ's Cocktail lye •••. J5c
Yin Rose.: .. ~ ..... '1. 99 Whiskey Sour Mix 89' Pritu ;,. •lf•cl TAu,.,. through Sim.
July 29, 30, 111, Auo.1. No 1alt1 to dcaltr8
Ope" daily 9 to 9 •.• Sundo.v 10 to 7
Shredded Cheddar ...... 37' Fishennan' s Wharf -.. 39•
.All rurpoae "'ine from Alianca. ! Bartender's make it eA!Y ! .. 12 o?!. l\Jia& \Vi~consin 4 oz.! Great !o'r TacO! ! Eight ounce (lfat CllMst 4lt ...,.Ion llt)
ARCADIA : s,,, .e1 '"'' HuntinRton 01 r/i'ij; PASADENA : /'/ii/. SOUTH PASADENA : ~I/id· HUNTINGTON BEACH : /1/M. NEWPORT BEACH : 111 1 Newpo<t sr,, .1111
! 1it.(l1iJ Cr'.11, . 370 We\I Colorado Riv~ rrr1hl111! 1"1! ~11 Jl!'11p'1111 [h .. Wlt fl Pf ~nil Alf.OllQ \Pll rBoardwal~ CPntPr' ]~15 (~-;t hlu ll Or [1~f~\)1,f! v,r:iyr ~~11[•'1
•
. .Jir... "--........ ~----l'!'"--·-
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\'JtdMSday, Jul~ 28. l'l71 DAIL 'I' PILOT 49
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Garbenstantel 5ummer Clearance
ALL STORES •.. all this week ... A la Card, Alberts Hosiery, Alroe Womens Weir, Avco Saving & Loan, Bak
Stud ios, Bank of America, C. H. Baker, Bergstrom's Baby News, Berens Tall Fashions, Better Barbers, Cabot's
Childrens Shoes, Cameo Shoes, Ca rat's, Chasin'• Mens Wear, Chic Accessories, Chris' Fa1hions, King 's R•slaurants,
Cli ne Office Supply, Crowning Glory Beauty, Decorator Line, Field's Shoes, Finn's Fashion Botique, Galleon Gifts,
Gene's, Gentry Ltd., Golden Needle, Grodin's, Gudes Barnett, Harris & Frank, Hickory Firms, House of Fabrics,
House of Nine, House of Tailoring, Hou se of Terry, Household Finance, Hubbub, lnnet Shott, Jewels by Joteph, Joyce
Shoe Tree, Judy's, Kaplans Delicatessen, Knit Wit, Koven Jewelers, Lane Bryant, LHCIS Shoes, Lllllen's, Llndb.rg
Nutrition, J oseph Magnin Inc;,, Marlene's, Mey Co., Miss Heweii , George Murrey,· Nettonel General Theatre, On the
' Go Travel, Optometrist, Pace Setter, Pac;ific Savings & Loa n, Peter Pan Beeuty Salon, P'iCkwiCli: &ookstor,, Prep Shop,
Rei of Ind ia, Raj International, Rebe l Sliop, Riviera Restaurant, Rooten's Luggage, Sabrina, ·seers Roebuck & Co.,
See's Candies, Singer Sewing Center, South Coast Drugs, Sunset House, Thom McAn, Tit Reck Storts, Inc., Tinder
Box, Toy Center, Udoff's Home Furnishing, Well ichs Music City, Welsfitld's Jewelers, The Wet Seel, Winstead Cam·
era, F. W. Woolworth , U.S. National Bank, Young Maternity, Zelig's. Parking for more than 6500 automoblles.
---... --11 -..-.... --·-l ,,, _______ •• ' I lJI'"· -1-
~oath Coast ?taza
•
.. 1'/lf,' GRANDEST MALL OF ALL"
Bristol at San Diego Freeway, Costa M-
. _,.,,' ,,,_ -~·-•
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. .... ' ... -. . . . . . • .-.. ~ 'f ..... -("-" .. • ............ . ~ . . . . ..,....,...-.,....,_,. • r .,., . .. . .. -. . .... . • • •
Wtd~sdil)', July 28, 11171
Build a Better Garbenstangel Contest and International Rall }e.:.
'
THE
GARBENSTANGELS
ARE HERE!
(See Them Before
They Disappear)
,
~ ' i .
•
GARBENSTANGELER TUNES UP HIS COMPITIT(ON MODEL AT SOUTH COAST PLAZA, GARBENSTANGEL WATCHERS WATCH
Da Judges
I HUMAN GARBENSTANGELS? PATENT ATTORNEY
Loui1 J. Knobbti
GWC INSTRUCTOR
Gene T1rdy
READY FOR 'COLLISION'
KMPC's G1ry Owens ' Skile1 and Hend1r10n
r Show Bi z Zanies To Judge Garbenstangels
. .. .. • G(tJ'Y 0 1uens . Skiles & Hende rsou. Local 1vien to Confront Contr(tptions
~ Three of the z a n i e st
~personalities the ~·orld of show
:buslnes.!1 ever knew w i I 1
:"collide" Saturday al the
•Build a Belter Garbenstangel
.:Conte;,l and lntern.alional
i:Rallye. And Costa Mesa may ;not survive the explosion.
; Laugh~ln's · ' fr i e n d I y
-:drogue," Gary Owens, has
:ae:reed to act as a
.&>a Ks "
a ~ -a. e •
ti " g ~ Uo
i 0 Ill
-I
judge-along with the comedy
team of Skiles and flen-
derson-at S a l u rd ay 's
festivities climaxing the blg
Garl>enstangel Rallye.
The kooky trio will be
backstopped by more serious
judges-Louis J. Knobbe , a
patent attorney, and Gene
Tardy, Golden West College
graphic arts instructor who
builds "do nothing machines"
as a. hobby.
The cry or '"Here come da
judge'' is expected at 10 :30
a.m. Saturday wh en the f1\·e·
man pane! will begin its tour
or exhibited garbenstangels :it
Carousel Cou rt in South Coast
Plaza
For many fans the occasion
will offer a closeup preview of
the humor Bill Skiles and Pete
Henderson will bring to their
new television series which
goes on the air next !2Jl
SEM~
ANNUAL
The young t:omics starled
their professional ca re e r s
riiiht here in the Orange Coast
area and have gone on to ap-
pearances on the Dean Martin
show (~·hich led to a regular
spol on f\1artin 's summer
replacement, th e "Gold-
diggers"), on the Joey Bishop
Sho'A'. Hollywood Palace, Mike
Dougie.& show, Johnny Cash
show and the Ed Sullivan
shO\\".
Skiles and Henderson also
have done concerts "'ith Henry
~1anc1ni and have n1ade road
show appearances wilh Laugh -
Jn"i; llowan and Martin.
Gary Ov•ens. a regular nn
Radio KMPC, has been named
'"United St a t es Radio
Personality of the Year" for
four of the past six years. lie
is announcrr and writer n(
Se.same Street, has done 2.000
TV commercials and has nar-
rall'd 15 record albums. California bar in 1960 and also the past 10 yea rs.
He is the cartoon voice of has been admitted to practice The graphic arts instructor
Roger Ramjet and Space before the U.S. District Court. has built at least 25 of lhem
Ghost e.nd is the narrator on the U.S. Supreme Court and during the pasl decade. His
the Perils of Penelope Pitstop. the U.S. Patent Office. machines whir, buzz, blink,
Born in Mitchell . S. Oak.. He maintain.5 orflce:ii In the flash, grind, ding and clank.
011·ens worked his w a y city of Orange as a patent at-But in most cases they do
through college as a reporter-torney, is a member of both nothing practical.
cartoonist on a d a i I y the Orange Cowity and !he It's obvious, with the design
ne"·spaper and as a radio American Bar associations a nd construction of such
newscaster. and the American Patent Law machines in his background
He later \1·as among the Association. that Tardy is qualified for the
locally top-rated rad i o The f i f th garbenstangel judging task that lays ahead
personalities in Denver, San judge. Golden West Coltege·.5 for him and hi.5 fellow
Antonio. New Orle2.ns, St. Instructor Tardy, has been garbenstangel judges.
Louis and San Francisco bu i I d i n g m in i at u re: The public, of course, Is in-
before toming to Southern garberut"angels (he calls them vited lo \Vatch the judges do I
Cal ifornia. "do noth ing machinf!s"') for their judging on Saturday .
Attornf!y Knobbe was born -----~
in Iowa, earned a BS degree :n
electrical engineering at Iowa
State University be fore ob-
taining his legal education at
Loyola University in Los
Angeles.
He \\"as admitted to the
Hot
Pants
CLEARANCE Panty Hose
All Nucl•
All Sh•d•s
C•ntr•c• Stretch
Clearance of Selected Patterns of Famous
Makes of B~ne Chino, Earthenware, Crystal
Now $1.99
Stemware and Accessories, .... 112 Price
Chint • Crys~I •Silver •Gifts • Br~I Registry
Pew& ~&tt&r
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
• I ----... -'"-·-''' ,,.._....._.. • l r1,.1"tr ) I .,.. ~ .. -.,.i I'•-*'"" ' ~ ___:
l•,,..-tP....,M ... ........
Alt Sl1tt
.... '3" S4.tt NOW
HOSIERY
ONI rAlll ,llll
WITH rUlCHASI
OF TWILYI PA.Ill
South Co•1f Plei•, Bristol •t the S•n Diego Frwy.
C oste Me11-Ph on• 5'40-4''9'17
--·1-.. ----
"; ~~,.
Another Attempt .
This is a mini garbenstangel Gene Tardy calls Per--
petual Motion Reattempted. It performs -along
\\•ith other machine s from Gene's collection-once
each hour.
~~ANT
J
I
ORDER
TODAY
-7717
C';STA MESA
SPECIAL
PURCHASE
WHILE THEY LAST!
4 for $6
Reg. 3 pr. for $6
Fullon® nylon p•ntyho1e fh•t r••lly stretch
from waist to toe, g iv e that comfort•ble fit
you've be•n look ing for. Durable mesh with
rein forced h••I •nd to•, in fan, f•upe,
b•i9 e or pure white.
IX (-4'8".5'2", 35 to -45 hips )
2X ! 5'J".s'a", -40 to so hip• I
lX (S'l ".ov•r, -40 to 50 hip1 )
4X I i ll hei9hts, SO & ov•r ~i p1)
REMEM BER, YOU CAN CONSULT OUR
EXPERTS FOR PERFECT FIT IN SPECIAL SIZES.
~II •'Id ""°""' orllt'I l lllfld. Alld !"lo •• ,.,, !I• PlllO lk II C.0 o .
lk llt·i.~ry Cfllt~ 0<1 111 or<l•f1 Ct 'ltfPI C.O O.l
A'5tl •1111>111"' c~••tn bf.,...., UP ••!!~ry ION. 1!< char11 lo,. Pk~11H,
South Coast Plaza, Co5ta Mesa
•
(
.~
l
'
-11 -
---·-.. -------. -, -,.. -~ . .,. ... . .
Wtdltt'WJ, July 28, 1971 DAILY •ILOT II ~,
It's a World 'First' at South Coast Plaza This Week
Gary Garbenstange l
This little robot head is acting as master or ceremonies all week of the "Gary
Garbenstangel and Hi s Do Nothing h1achines Show" at South Coast PJaza. He is
one of several mini garbenstangels bull t by Golden West College instructor
Gene Tirdy which are on display at the great Garbensj.angel Rallye. Gary and
his gang "turn on" once each hour.
EXECUTIVE PENCIL SHARPENER IS
It's One of Most f•scinating in
ONE OF STARS IN GARY'S SHOW
Collection of Gene's Machines
•
Garbenstangelers Reverse the 'Put-on'
The world's first Build e
Better Garbenst.angel Conte.st
and lnlernational Rallye, now
in full swing at South Coast
Plaza, started as an innocent
game of double talk in the
DAILY P IL 0 T Oassified
Advertising Section.
It erupted into the full·fledg·
ed I nternational
Garbenstangel Rallye now
holding forth on the mall at
the shopping center.
A display featuring a wide
variety of garbenstangels
built, found, reconditioned or
otherwise made ready for com·
petilion by DAILY PILOT
readers is centered a t
Carousel Court at South Coast
Plaza through Saturday.
The original ed w h I c h
1tarted it all was in the DAI-
LY PIWT'S Dime-A-Lines.
This ill the ad which appeared
for two Saturdays only:
"WANTED: Would llke lo
buy used garbenslangel. Must
have right·handed zoenstift
with power dipolleck. Would
accept early model with bat·
tery-operaled piddlebottom.''
Nezt, it ran in slightly di~
ferenl fonn for several days
under "Miscellaneous Wan·
led." That ad read like this:
"USED GARBENSTANGEL.
Must have righUlanded zoen-
stifl with power dipolleck.
Would accept early model with
battery-operated piddlebot·
tom ."
Finally. the DAJLY PILOT
shifted the approach entirely,
pretending to aJready own a
garbenstangel and a s k i n g
* * * * * * Ma ny Read ers' Letters
Top Original Ad Gags
readers what lhty would trade\
for it. Thi.!i ad ran in Trader's
Paradise section &f the
classified 8ds:
"GARBENSTANGEL on I y
slightly used. What will you
trade for good, u s e d
garbenstangel with right-hand-
ed zoenstifl, power dipolleck
a n d battery-operated pid·
dlebottom?"
The response from readers
was far beyond expectations .
It was surprising how many
owned garbenstangels a n d
were willing to sell. It was not
so surprising hQw many were
"anx:ious to get their hands on
a garbcnstangle" through
tra<ks.
The amazing fact might be
that an amusing classified ad
grew into the competitive
rally at the South Coast Plaza.
The do-nothing machines
(however, in some cases they
do something) are the in-
venlions of contestants from
all ages and all occupations
(at least one doctor has en·
tered a garbenstangel powered
by a pacemaker).
<:I EVER~.:,DY'~
LIPS
annual summer
CLEARANCE
UP
TO 50% OFF
<: ~
THE HOU:SE ()f'
TERRY
"I have one that belonged to Patent Office (No.·37) and Whatever their origin and SOUTH COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA, 546-2066
my great grandfather -but held in perpetuity for his whatever the outcome .. .the Bri$IOI Street Entr•nce
alas and alack -the :r:oenstift decendallts, alive or nol. This GARBENSTANGELS ARE (Between J. Magnin •nd U.S. Nit'I B•nk)
is Jeft·baJlded. The dippoleck;1 j"..;l~Co~o~tln~u~ed~on~N~e~xt~P2ag~•~liiii~H~E~R~E~' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii:iii:iii:iii:iii:iii:iii:iii:iii:iii:iii:iii:iii:iii:iii:iii:iii:iiiii runs by treadle power so l~ll
you have two left feet }'O!J're
out of luck!
··The piddlebottom Is slight-
ly off it.s rocker -(aren't we
all) -as the stoopenwhang is
missing.''
Sincerely confused,
Marge Zander
Jl untington Beach
"l have a silent fog horn for
clear weal.her which I will
trade even /Hom is located in
Winnemucca )."
Mel Morrison
Corona del Mar
"Sounds like 1 winner and
certainly gave me a hearty
chuckle this A.M What is it?"
Eima Flathers
Santa A ·11a
"In reference lo your ad·
vertisment requesting a Used
Garbenstangel ...
"The original Model (U.K.
Patent No. Ohl69.X) was
designed ih 1690 by T, TUrgit
Swamptsone of East
Northwestershire, E n g I a n d
(my late. Great Aun t, on the
maternal side), for (as of
course you are aware) the
reproduction end perpetuation
of that an<:ient art form "a.
esterid oculatum", contrived
by The Third Grandel Druid,
Poptu, Cir. 400-01 B.C. Please
note for future reference that
both he and my Aunt were
right-handed ... also, thal her
design was not actually paten.
table in 1690 or now (I learned
this last week), since the first
sketches (those of Poptu) .are
still on file In the No. London
REG.
$18.DO
NOW
PLEATED
JERSEY
$ 88 ~
FABRICS
POLYESTER
DOUBLE KNITS
SOLIDS-60" WIDE
REG.
$6.50
REG.
$4.50
NOW
$
54" WIDE
$ 88
WALL FURNITURE ••• SPACE ORGANIZERS °lo
•
----
UNIT AS SHOWN
474.SO
--
• •• •
LET'S FACE ITlllll
at decorator line
we hove "hong
ups." and right now
during our July Sole
if you would like
one of our "Hang
Ups" we'll do the
h anging up FREE.
Yes, f ree installa-
tion with the pur-
chase of a wall
unit .••. BIG EF-
FECTS for little
1moey .••• Don't wait
another minute
come to Decorator
line and get oc-expensively styled ••• ~,,.iv' quainted wilh our
reasonably priced.. • "hong ups."
Bristol ot the Son Oieqo Freeway, Costa Mesa
Lower Moll level -540-7777
-~· -.r, ,.,.~
a practical way to
creatire designs for
Us• your BonkAmericard
or Mosler Charge
Officeettt.tM
llM.ry W•lls
St.4yC .. ten
M1slc c..,ten
-·1• ----------
OFF REG.
$2.49
NOW
SOUTH COAST PLAZA MALL
CAROUSEL LEVEL
HOURS: I 0 A.M. to 9: 30 P.M,
FABRICS
OPEN EVENINGS
I ·-
'
--
• . . .... . . ' . . . . .. .... -~· .....
SI D<ILY' PILOT WtdntSd.ii, July 28, 197 l
GARBENSTANGELS--SOME ARE EVEN HEIRLOOMS .. -
, ,
Craftsman 85 l'c.Mechanic's 'fool Set •
Priced Stparatrly $8::?.?0 Cut SJ:!
Sec includes Quick Release Ratchets, 4999
drive .sockets and accessories: 10-pc.
ignition wrench sec, hacksaw wi th ex era
b lad es. Steel wol box.
••••••
SAVE
$10!
I '
"
SAVE '10 Craftsman ¥.!-HP Bench Grinder
! i r I Regnhr$4•1.9'1
Adjustable rool r('Sts ril us C\\'(> grinding 3 999
wheels for fini shing or coarse grinding.
Handyoff-0n switch.
I•
•
Latex Exterior AcryliePainL
5?.u?.
Covers any color in one coat even in <lamp weather.
Goes on smoolhly. D ries in Vi hr. Gives betcer pro·
u::c 1 ion. In dt·co r .tt\)r l l l ! 11 r~ :ind \'.'hi re:.
PORCH, HOOR
AND PATIO
1 .. ~Tl·S
l ~\J\"1'
l'r1::d 1, bright beauty fur sutfaces
c>l L<Jncrete, wooJ or mcral. Ap-
pl ics ~moothly,casi l y with brush
or roller. Resists oil, grease.
:~t:L AJnminun1
Steplacldrr
.. , :nntl"
]fl.1:1. _.\luminum
}~xtr1115 ion Ladcfe1·
(E\tr.1uls lo J:I')
SAVE I 099 $3
Rt-r;u l1tr $JJ. '"J
J7or houscholddury. ~l!J'
resistant .~in. MC[l.). liot-
tum pail shelf.
~~J 'f;l 099
l<r~·u lar S I b.99
'1";1p " • .11 !.u nq1eri-.
:-'al1·1~-~wi\'f'I frrl. 111.'f;i.
in. l,:1!"r. J\o ro1H' or pullry.
$2'.t91'i j().J.'1. "llrltrr ..
r\Juminun1 1-;,1. J,:ultlrr
~..!IL'/•111 .. 1•1. .. J\1•,\ ..
Alu1ni1111rn t-;,,, l.a•ldrr
\\ 11lt rornrur11Wle 2099
tl,!•h'I'"'
~.~:-;. ?') !!0.1"1.
.\lumi11 n1n E:tt. f411ld rr 2699
SAVE •1 Ny lon
MnmJDY Sleeping Bag
1299
..,.,,19.99
. --r com-
comn«t l\JXC, 6'--. h r --h less we1g r.
fort -\t outer cover,
100% 1:')' 00341:76". nylon hoer.
cool Ni£h1. 11.99 51...,ing BC
SAVE •.'J to '4!
Alnm.innm
Window anti
Door Awnings
AA Low As $8.99
Popular ribbed all -white
aluminum awnings with
baked-on enamel finish.
Adds year-round beauty anJ
weather protection.
Description
W indow Awnin
Window Awnin
Win owAwnin
Window Awnin
Door Awning
31"
40"
49"
85.,
40"'
SALE CONTINUES!
REYNOLD'S
YARN V2 PRICE
AU SALU PINAL! LIMnlD COLOISI
A.Mclnl I ..... l .Olt ••••• ,, ....... $1 .SCI
c.IMllM f ..... 1."J ............ 1.Jlt
Ki ll Mfflll ( ..... fMI .......... 1-"
c.m.i.-"""· 1.•I .......... 1.•
C•Ki'f911ot Int. l.lll ,,_,. .. _ 1.11
K.,.... ( ...... 1.tfl ······-·· .. ..lit
........ .,.....,. (rwf, 4.lf) ...... , ..
s.. C:O.tl 1"11••
170 Cnbie Foot Storage Building
I .ow Priced
S turdy, double ribbed panels JOJO 7483 securely. Double doors slide open.
Galvani zed pai.nted steel fights cor·
rosion. Jn whice with gree n trim.
$129.95 lOx~FL SlOrage Buildin;,..-.SJ 09.88
Chain I.ink Fencing
Prorccts your family, home and 5 0 % 01 J;l'F
pets. Galvanized afttr weav· '.L' .
j ng to ptt"ttot rusting. Square
gatewi th ornamenu.1 !Krol ls on
top and diamond mesh pat· FabricwbenimtalledbySNnExE •
tern.
P-, nila,gate flnings, CedarGrapeStako Fencing
aLso ffllil11ble at Sean Low Prices
W at1 $49.991970 CataioJ
<lx8-Foot Size Cl1ildren's Cont inental 2 999 Tent. Outside alwninum frame. Z i1)percd
door. Side windows have awnings. Wate r
repelleot dry wax finish. 4 k center.
8xl0-Ft. Cabin Tent 54.99
$20.00
$23.00
$36.00 3 1.99
$22.00 18.99
A•k About Seart Convenient Credil Plruu
SHOP SUNDAYS 12 NOON to S PM ••• MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30 AM to 9:00 PM .•• SATURDAYS 9 :30 AM to 6:00 PM -FREE PARKING! -·-COVIMA HOUYWOOO 01Y,.,_,,1c a. soto Sears
... _ SAN1'A MONICA TOlll.Nct Satisfaction 12lo4400, JJl-t.uo tU-0.11 •••• ,.41 :J•l-)211 •2t·S1f1 3••·f1'11 J•2·1S11
c,ueoe.t PAil: IL MOMTl INGlfWOOO OIANCF ""' SOUTH (OAJT PlilA VAlllY Guaranteed
::tt0H•1 44J..J911 ., •• ,,,1 6J7·1100 tJM2f2 .S~JJJ 76l·•••t, f'4·J2l0 Or Yow Money
COMffOll OUNOAll IONO M.Aot ~AjAOfJ\IA SANTA n lnlNGS TMOfJl).ND OAk'S Vt I MONT
~J ... 1Sl1, "'·S1•1 24J01004, , ...... 11 43)·012 1 61T·l ll1, l51 ·411 1 SEA.1151 ~OUUCX.AND CO. , .. ~011 '"""'"' 122·1131 1 st.1•11 Bock
• I
,.
I --,'..-;~-~ ·-· -""""' _,
I ;i 'It!-" -r..-''""--..... )I' ._ -· ' ~ ... -. -' .. \! ~,..,..__-1\t-,,.._
Wrdnt~. July 28, 1971 DAILY PILUT 1i3
SOME GARBENSTANGELJ; WE'RE SUR~ ]UST INVENTED BY READERS
(Conl. lrom Prrttdlac Page)
po""·er operated dlppoleck J.ii Jn
e»eellenl condition; power
t:>perated plddlebotfom Ls near
new and is ideally 11luated
asometrically left lo nouth.
Hinges hBve been recently
n:placed. Tone quallties are
outstanding. Unit has placed
well in local competition.
"'No reasonable offer refw·
ed -or what do you have to
trade for a u s td
Garbenstangel-no finer in the
country. Priced right to im-
mediate sale, or low down and
take over payments.''
#4999
Mich.cul Power
NetDport
'I have such 8 unit
available with a left handed
staffenpohl in lleu o{ a. right
handed 20enStift. The control
panel has both •·ON" and
"OFF" buttons with th e
following capt.ion :
''Oas ~ ts
nidlt for der
fLngerpoken und mit-
tengraben.
Ven der kl ink.enlites
is red turn
off def-Pitche:!i -
und don 't be a
Dumkopf.''
Very truly your.!,
Eric H. Widell
Newport Beach
"I've spent many years
look.init for • Gartienstangel.
only 3Ugt11ly uitd. The pn».
lem is that l need a u:ied
Garbenstangel with a ltfi.
handtd wenstift, power d1p.
poleclt and battery operated
plddlobo!lom.
"the only reuor. I ' m
writing lo }'00 is to let }'OU
know that there really Is a
market for used Garbensta•
gels, I'm hoping that you will
Jet me know if you ever ruo
aCl'05s a lefl~handed on e •
1banks.''
Gretchen Gauthier
Costa Mesa
,;First of aJJ, one question :
does the garbenst.angel have a
sta nd a rd o.r autom.mllc
poopschnitz.el Also, is it the
model that has to be frosted?
Simt11all!d Tek-ri!Jon lluzption.
"l have 11200 equity ln two
0 u t.stand.lng pooftnpopher1.
Ole has a ataln right near the
Lop, but the President slept in
the other one."
C. J. SJIZYUU
Newport Beach
"Might Trade--One I 9 6 1
beige Thunderbird, n t v e r
driven. p e r f e c t condition,
whitewall Ures , bucket seats,
two door, hardtop, cruise--o.
matic drive, power steering
and l'>elf-adjusting brakes.
"Have been looking for a
Garbenstangel. ls it adaptable
to a tropical climate?"
Donna Morlan
Huntington Beach
9-lnch Black and White Portable TV
• Fearures 44 sq. jn. of viewable
pjcrure. Keyed auromatic gain
control. Up front conuols. Lighr-
weight.
I
Low Priced! 5899
SAYE '20! Portable Color TV
• ll-in. diagonal measured picture.
Automatic chroma control plus a
k eyed automatic gain control ..
Color purifier.
7VDept.
Regular $199.95
17899
Kenmore
2 Speed 6-Cycle
Automatic Washer
Sale
Priced 21488
6 cycles including permanent press and prc-
soak. Off-balance signal. Super roto-swirl agi-
rator. 3 water levels. Optiollal second rinse.
#2o6IO
Maj1Jr 11.pplitma D,Pr.
SAVE $30!
Sears ALL-FROSTLESS
Refrigerator-Freezer
Big 141 cu. ft. model with icemaker. Never
defrost either section. Fami ly-size 105-lb.
freezer. Crisper and door shelves. Model 68400.
Icemaker lnatallation Optional
at Additional Cost
Af4j1Jr Applu111a D.p1.
"I have a &ood uaed
FortepedjUI Quayz.lng with a
rceenUy rebuilt encephalicyn
and spr«klon drive.
"l would consider a trade
l"r your Garbenstangel if it
can be eot1verted to a left·
handed ioemtift."
Si'nctr1:L11 yours,
A. C. Petitte
Costa Mesa
"I would be happy to sell
my Gart>en5tangel at the rig!tt
price and to someone who
would give it tender loving
~are."
P. D. S!arkenburg
"You will be happy to know
that since the demand for
garbenstangels has been bad I
will 5tlJ nune cbt:ap."
Thank you,
R. Keim
Coata Me1a
''f or lease : PClfiseMlon or
yellow-breasted, red·lhroated
garbenst.a.ngcl vintage 1800
equipped wwlth left-handed
tumsit and reverse through
about, unharmed coodltlon,
used slightly by "Llttle Old
Lady !rom Pasadena."
1. flar'is
Corona del Mar
"WOW! You mean you ac-
tually have a ''rea l''
Garbenstangel? That's almost
"\.inbelievable, but with a right·
handed zoe:nstift, (I ain't ever
=·:~~:~~~~BOOKS batlery-operated pld·
<ileboU001, now "°'"" off It, ~i'a !:e~ ~ wildest B,OOKS
drMms drN.med, &hat there
cool<i I>< oae or them ID u -BOOKS lstence. Goocl-1
"I IUppoMl I am the ric:best
woman in the whole world, but
I woul<i not even <Ian to think BOOKS I mlaht have anythln( I cool<i
trade for IL ----------"Anyway. It's pleasant to let
my mind play with "the Thol"
of having one of my very
own."
Thank$ for listening,
La Vtda HtrT
OUvehurat
"'~" ~ .... ~ PICKWICK BOOKSHOPS nn (ITT . 0.-... (114) Qt.711111
$0UfK COAST P'LA.lA o,.. C...r. ~ ... (114) .... ,,,, ._..,.
Kenmore I-Speed Canister Vacuum
• Attad=ents included to =nnm
and dust carpets, uphoiltcry
•Toggle switch; 15·ft. cord
•Disposab le dust bags
•Model #2130 or #2924
Super Vaine!
$27
Handsome Drape
Light Fixtures
9 99 tol999
Choose from a wide •election of styles, designs lllld
colors. Elegant velvet, glass and decorative vinyl shldes.
EIKlrkd Dept.
Low, Low Priced!
Kenmore Automatic
Electric Dryers
Sale
Priced 16488
Soft.H eat auromatically adjusts temperature. "'Air
Only" fluffs blankets. Linc screen safecy door switch.
Doo r shelf. #60600
Kenmore Gae Drye 84.88
Major Applianct D,PI.
SAVE $20!
15.0 Cu. Ft. Coldspot
Chest Freezer
Hcgular
'199.95
Thiowall insu lati on saves space. Count·
er balanced lid opens at a touch. Flush
lid hinging. Holds 525 lbs. Model
#ll20
Mmf ...... u: COVINA HOUTWOOD OlYMJtlC&SOTO
a21-uoo, 521-45lO •••·04i11 41•·l .. I '''·5211
CAHOOA PAIK IL MONTI INOlfWDOO CIA.NOi ........ , 443-391 1 67 ... 2521 ..,7-2100 Sears POMQJU SANTA MONICA
'1:9·1111 394·1711
PICO IOUTH COAIT run
9ll-4262 J40-l333
TOllANCI
142·1111
VAUIY
713-14,1, tl4·2ll0
SOtlsfadlon
Guoron!Md
Or Your MOM)'
Bock COllM'fOH GlfNDAll 1DNOllAQ4 P.UADINA SANTA rt IPllHGI TliOUIAHO OAO VllMONT
6M-l.511, ..U.JTfl 24.S..1004,2""""11 43).0lll 611-.Jl 111 311""21 t 1.UU,IOUU<XAND CO. 944·1011 .,, ... , .. ,.JJ,.1131 ,,,..,,,,
'
''
j ,,,. __ -. -. ·--) ._,,. .. ...-____ )
)
I
•
'
Sf \WlY PllOT w-. J.ly 28, 1971
l Out Of 500
DiAMOND WINNER -The diamond certainly was
this gal's best friend. J. R. Metcalf, manager of Sears
Costa Mesa, joins with Mrs. Jeanne Hanstad to ad·
mire half-carat diamond she found in cube of ice
. . ............... -.. -..... -... -...... _..._ . .,.~-..-····· ..
THE
GARBENSTANGELS ~
ARE HERE! . ·~~
"
on One Touch Sewing!
Newest Touch & Sew'
sewing machine with
handy carrying case.
Reg. $3"49.95
NOW$27495
!" If f ~ :; : . I ~
"11 '; ~"' L't j;~ !~11..~
One touch and you switch from
straight to zig-zag. Sew 7 stretch
stitches, too.
Free instructions on use of arry new fil._ng~sewing machine you buy.
The Singer 1to36•credlt Plan SINGER ForatfretlsoflhflSirQe!"Sewing helps you f'lsve tf'le11 values eaiter nearest rou,seeWhil!PageG
now-within Y.QUF budget. Lrner SINGERCOMPANY.
<AT-ol-rn tllNOUICIDMNK1
RENT A SINGER TOUCH
& SEW* SEWING MACHINE ONLY" ...
WllK
banded her at store's Krazidaze Sale. There were COSTA MESA-lrl1tol &: St11tflo-, sod Coast Pima, 540-26lJ
499 rhinestones frozen in ice cubes. Mrs. Hanstad COSTA MESA-2JOO H•rbor lhd., Harbor Ceter, xr '·1195
of Mission Viejo go t the one in 500 whic h contain ed HUNTINGTON IUCH-ldl119 ... crt lttoch, Hu•tlittto11 hoch c .. '-t', 1t1.10•1
a real diamond. First 500 customers into the store ORANGE-21 ShoMo• 1.,1. ''Th9 City" Ce11ter, 542-l"'s
_w_er_e_e_a_c_h_h_an_d_e_d_o_n_e_o_r_t1h1_e_c_u_be_•· ______________ r_h_l•_'_•_O_n_•_•_f _F_ir_•t_c_._"_te_•_t_E_n_t_ri_••_P_ut_o1_n_D_i•_P_l•y ______ __'_!,,....,,,..,,,..,,,..,,,=a=•=••=•=N=a=•=o=v=E-..,,,••=•='=c=•·=•=m=•·=·=o=~=·=.,=c...,,,'='~..,,,•=•~..,,,.=''='="-"-'----=="
•• ~ a L.Jdof f's
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a> ::I + QC I: J ·-a>
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AUGUST'S BIRTHSTONE
1h.i PitiJot
Oiilt b llfaht and on l"OJ•l
MthoritJ' could 1earch N made In
ancierlt tinwa for the Poridot.
It wu u l• to~ eloq11ence and
pernui~ to npd tbe t.erron
afths nlcht and .tten 1et in told,
to a1rt·great power onr all eTil
mptrita. The Peridot -wu moch
~ b1 the Croaaden.
1" promt.. i• marrl&d happlnea.
~ mMCuline-lookin« Sa..rdonyx
Ill aim the bbihdone far Aqwt.
fte .... of ht OpaqlM nd and
)lfowa tOM9 II popalar
for .... ha eameor1, int.JIIOll,
far ft'Mtl and IJ'liUal1.
w ... .....,.. •lrtA.u... '°" 11M~ /•,._ e1uf goH /(lf'/11.'flc w,J
MYt~ C.t1t Pl111
Mtt.t .. th1 S111 Diet• Fwy.
. c..t1 Met• 140°9066
I
SUMMER
~~~ WHITE
SALE
AT SOUTH COAST PLAZA
All Perfect Quality
CANTERBURY PRINT
Reg. $6.50
TWIN FLAT $399 TWIN FITTED
Reg . 7.50 Full .......... 4. 99
Reg. 10.00 Queen ....... 6.99
Reg . 13.50 King ........
Reg. 4.60 coses ........
Reg. 5.20 Cases ........
I J.P. STEVENS NO-IRON PERCALE PRINTS
•Jungle Cat• Big Red• Flower Patch• Chelsea
Reg, S.50
Twill flat
Twin Fitt•I
Reg. 7.50
Full flat
Full fitted
Reg. 11.50
Queen flat
Qu11n fitted
Reg. 13.SO
Kin g flat
King Fitted
4.99 5.99 8.99 11.50
SA LEI 20% OFF ON J.P. STEVENS
Luxury Sheared Velvet
• PRINTS· SOllDS • JACQUARDS
• Nocturne• Big Red • Rayena
I TOWELS I
~.2.lO
BATH
1.99
Rt;. 6Sc
WASH
SSC...
Reg. 1.5-0
HAND
1.29
Reg. 79c Fingertips .......... 59c eo.
Reg. 3.50 Bath Mots ••.....•. 2.50 ea.
Stoc k up tho$1 lin!n closets now wilh these perfect qual-
ity · Top brand lowth. Sheels by Stevens! All al Low
Whitt Sole Prieet. Colorful, decorative and pnx:ricol.
' •
•
8.99
3.29p,
3. 79,,
SO~TH COAST PLAZA
o, ... (y'"""' 'tll t, .M.. S.t. 'tll 6, .M.
Br1Stol at San Diego Fwy.
Costa Mesa
Phone 546-6812
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• •
. :· ,.
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'
'i THAT'S RIGHT, MEN-you rud It loud and clear-JUST 155 ~ for thue lmpeccablytailorld fashion Suits that net YoU a uvfnc '
cf $55 on eVtry suit you buy(1nt1 mek• no mitl1ke about It-SO
GREAT ARE THE SAVINGS, rn1ny·m•n will buy 1t le11t TWO
· SUITii-or MOREi 1971 Fashion details lnclud9 Wide Uipets.,. '
Deep c.nter Y1111s ••• cholc• cf 2· er 3·Button models ••. in fit>-•
rics for •~ynr-'rcund California wear. Briefly, You Pay $55 ... l
You SAVE $551 Who could ult for 1 better deal I Al a!I HARRIS L FRANK slores .•. NOWI -Open,., H1rrts & Ft11nk Oswt·End Credit Account or Use
Your BankAmerictrd or MU1er Charp.
arris&Fran
COSTA MESA
South Coast Pla:.a
Bristcl at San Diego Frw y .
11 ~-
•
SINCE 1856
BUENA PARK
Shopping Center
Stanton at l1 P1lm1
....
HUNTINCOTON CENTER
Huntington C1nter
• Ed inger 1t 8e1ch Blvd .
•·\>-
•
SANTA ANA
Honer Plet1
17th at Bristol
........ -
•
K
--.. . , -. . . • -..... f
I
Wldnnd1y, Jwly 28, 1'171 DAILY PILOT f/f
:Sot1th • Coast -Plaza: World Garbenstangel Capital '
Garbenstangel
Prizes Told
In addition to cash prize. of
SlOO (AmericNJ) in the Open
Division and $75 (also in
United States m-0ney) in the
Junior Division, the world'•
first Build a Better
Garbenstahgel Contest a t
South Coast Pim o f f e r s
plaques. trophies and ribbons
to all first, second and third
place winner.s and to U'°6e
wbo earn hon orable mention.
Contributors include:
Bak Studios, certlflcete for
$20 portrait sitting; Berens Contest JV i1111er
Tall Shop, $10 gift ctrllficate; Nona Krizon of Tustin gels briefing from Nancy Logsden, owner of The KnJt
Cameo Shop, $10 g i It 'Vil Shop, on Brolher Knitting ?i.1achine she won in the shop's recent Count
certificeJ.e: Gene's, $10 gift The Stitches Contest. Actual number of stitches used in knitting the wearing
certificate: Udo::·s, $10 girt apparel involved in the contest was 76,901; Mrs. Krizon's winning guess wu
certificate: Pace Setter, a 76,800 stitches.
sterling silver "Official" yoJ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ yo; Pickwick Book!tore, copy Mt" q,
of "Farewell to Steam;" -.~ ~'I
"Carat's Men 's Sbop, bottle of
Brill.sh Sterling; Cline's Sta·
!lone", stationery: Welsfleld's EARN 253 TO 50% MORE Jewelers, Spiro /ognew watch ;
Mo ny banks pay a reduced savings passbook rate
of a low 4°/0 • Al Pacific you still earn the some
. LLEGE SPIRIT -Spurred on by perpetual tro-
phy (upper right) designed and donated by Noack
Trophy Co of Costa Mesa Orange Coast College gar·
j)enstangelerl (upper left photo) and those from
Golden West CoUege added zest to world's first Build
a Better Garbenstangel Contest today and Tuesday.
ID photo at top, OCC teammates "suiting up" in lock ·
er room are Dave Perry (foreground), Steve Lilly
and Glenn Pruitt. Above, Golden West College ath-
letic equipment staffer Ernie Keven and college's
community relations director, Bruce \Villiams
(right), try GWC garbenstangeler tee-shirt on Don
?i.1cKinney, one of school's team members.
Decorator Line, a wall plaque
or $10 gift certificate; Harris
& Frank. $10 gift cerUficate;
Miss Hawe.ii, perfume ;
Koven's, a sil ver platter:
House of Terry, $10 girt
certificate; Finn's, a choker:
Wlnstead's, "Smile Saver Kit"
la Kodak X·lS camera ouUit):
Sears. Field's, HI c k or y
F'a.nrui, South Co~st Drug Co.,
hfay Co. and WCV'llwort.h's.
ANNUAL YIELD
6.18°1o
high roles 01 before.
ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS
6.00 °lo 5,000~ TWO .-
Plaza Salutes College T earns
C om p et i ti on in the Donald Gradowski. Jo Ank, participation of the two
CQJ!egiate Division of the Michael Tackaberry and David ichools were Don Jacobs and
wOtld'!i first Build a Better Vigil. Bruce \V Hliams. community G' b t ! c 1 e L He 1 P i n g Garbenslangcl relations directors of OCC uid ,a r ens ange 0 n s ex · Rallye officials coordinate !he GWC, respectively .
ltnded even to restaurants at _ -------------------!
sOOth Coast Plaza -and to
other merchants, too.
l:veryone wanted to have a
hind in furnishing t he
'·training table" for
g.arbenst.angelers.
9°he way It worked out,
hdwever, was that King'1
J\e:!te.urant hosted one team of
"8nge Coast College com·
pe!itors: Lindberg Nutrition
~ited the other ace team to
litve a meal the.re.
'.7 he Golden West
¢arbens tangelers were to dine
l.Oi:lay at Kaplan 's.
··Winning team from among
the three highly competlUve
eQl.rle:i i:n the Col leg late
Dfvision wW be coplpletely
oatfilted in Hang Ten shirts add cord flares or hot pants -
an to "" furnlshed by Gentry,
~~hnology Division Jnstruc· t4r Bill Abernathy of Or&..'lge
Q:)ast College was coach of a t.tam comprl&ed of Glenn
ftYiU, Dave Perry, Steve Lilly.
~d Morwer and Dan Swo!-
lji'd.
CITATION WHEEL
SWISS
Regular 20' : 169
1.89 lb. OFF w "·
OfferGooJJ•l11B lbr.A•1.1
The be1t Swis1 Ch4•w i1 mod• t.. huoe wh.e•l1 w•lghing obout
700 lbt. from qvohty ..,Jlk p•od11e•d ..VV durfftg ~•rtoln P••lod1 of
the y ... r. In our 1tor•, Ci!o•IO"I Wh.11 Swln 11 tut f•••h fr...., the
wlle1l wh~• ii telO"ll ·~• moi1l~•• ond ... e110.., h.otelnu! flovor
flftb'7 t•!!'· s ...... r~. ?Ian
ll h•tol o ! tht 5,,., 0 \f'llo P.....,y
COSTA MESA PHONE 540·6991
(Pick Htrnandez, director or
~11.pJ"OCJ'am at OCC, waJ
ctach for the other team. Tts
diembtrt included Rolle es-~1. Yolanda Diaz, Jo Ann
Kaw z.mura, Nancy Padilla and I
Veronica Sarmiento. Golden West College'• entry. __________________ _.
Semi-Annual QualiCraft •
further price cuts!
e e USE YOUll llANKAMElllCARD e e
' were 5.99
to 7.99
• • • • • • • • • • • • •
were 8.99
to 10.99
..A
Slvti now on Qu•liCrtft•1 f11Non shot pteetttt•rst
Choose 1mral •t th••• terrific: prk>tl. But hurry
for • pd 11ltc&n. Not •II 1tyl11 In every alze.
South Coast ?taz11
"'""'d by Fioe Mts Instruc· 1(1.ds L1.ke le• A"k A11d y tor Darrell Ebert. incluflcd , v -Don McKinney, llaymond llay, ________________________ Bd_11_0_1 _s1_._•_t _S_•n_O_i•_,uc..•_f_,_w_,y_.,_c_o_•_••_M_•.".---1
-----,.....__ -•. lO (J•.----' •... --. --· -· --. ~....-...... -•:l i..-1.-.. . .. -.-•
5.92°1o 5.75°~ 1,0009.2 ONE
5.39°1o 5.25°1o 500~ Y.th
5.13°~ 5.00°~ 5~ ONE DAY
Interest compounded dally and paid from date of
deposit to date of withdrawal even if it's just one day
Ask how you can obtain all these benefits service charge
FREE
PREPARATION OF PERSONAL STATE and
FEDERAL INCOME TAX RETURNS
•
FREE
[; TRAVELER'S CHECKS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES • COLLECTION OF NOTES MANY OTHERS •'
' .
*
OPEN NIGHTand DAY
Hours: Monday·Frlday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M .
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
-HllTO'-ITAEfT • COITA MIU. CALl'OftHIA • PKOM1 .........
~.!a .... ....-.. • .... • ·-. --·----
l
1)
I'
\I
I
I
J
I
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DAAY PILOT
'Lilli Ann'
Fashion look comes to new "Lilli Ann" collection
for fall from which comes this outfit modeled at
Lane Bryant's South Coast Plaza shop, w~re it can
be bought. The "Lilli Ann" line includes half, full,
"chubby" and "missy" sizes for children. Junior
sizes range from 17 to 27 and women's wear comes
in 38-52 range. Complete line of dresses, sports·
wear, coats, suits and intimate apparel comes in the
sizes listed -all available at Lane Bryant.
you should see tfie
WIERD~OS at • • •
SOUTH
COAST
PLAZA
LOWER
LEVEL
NEXT TO
MAY CO.
540-8262
Fantastic Savi1g5
NOW
ALL STYLES ORIGINALLY $17.00 TO $22.00
2 Pr. $19.00 · 2 Pr. $24.00
GAlvili-0 . . .
SHOES
"THI FASHION SHO, THAT FITS YOU"
South Coast Plaza
Lower Level by the Waterfall
..... I •t rM s-D"'to Frft'woy
COSTA MESA Phone 546-5210
.,.llfl .,...,..., llH ht _,_ wll•l ... H Wiit! ....
A,...,k111 N•l-.,.1 ... Crou , ~
• C.-. .. ·~-= ---
.. .. " . ; ..... -' ~ t.1 . ,,
·~.s
· · ·~1·· ~iff·~·I t , ·-· ~~r~s!.?mm.~rt1me ~a\'.et ~:~I(~ 'fou~· -. ~ • -' · · · · effloy· e<iwards 0a<!:ron8 de11Bfe· kni15
VACATION Travel anywhere. loaf someplace. Enjoy your leisure in whaleVer way strikes your fancy.
Indulge yourself1n a set of coordinates by Edwards of California.
• . ,._.:.. .... ~· .. , ...
All machine washable Du Pont Dacron'" polyester. KNITS lush colors like burgundy, azure, brown. Sma;hin g worn together
or mixed with your other sportswea r. Fcom ou r 11cw vacation selection:
a. zip.front Dacron" shirt in mix ed tones. M-XL 12.00
b. doubl e knit pant of Dacron"' polyester, 32-40 23.00
c. moc-turtle shirt, medium to extra-large 11.00
d. cardigan sweater, medium to extra-large 18.00
e. striped Dacron" shirt with 4-buUon placket, M·Xl 12.00
m1y co. south co11t pl111, ••n diego fwy. at bristol, cost• meu; 546-9321
ahop mond1y thru t•turdey 10 1.m. to 9:JO p.m., sunday noon Jtll 5 p.m.
I ·-!._. ·-----. .... ~ -~.-_, '""-~-~
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J7 PILOT-ADVERTISER: Wtdntsdat, J11J7 28, 11)71 Wtdntsd17, July 28. 1971
WATERFRONT BEAUTY s .. aulifully redecorated, J _la_rge bcdroorns, 31A bath~. living room. formal dining room, breakfast
room a la1-ge sunny kitchen on the bay, plus .a
proper sludy with fireplace & we~bar. All this
coupled with off stret"t guc~t J>!lrking. space for
ll swimming pool and a large private patio, m11kP.
1hi:<; the mo.st f'Xciting oUering of t.he year for
only $164.000. Call 673-8550 for dPtails.
DUPLEX-'-WALK TO THE BEACH
Don't fii:ht 1he summC'r traffic. U•avr the car at
ho1ne and \1•alk a fe"' short blocks to eilhcr
China Cove or Big Corona. 2-1\vo bedroom units
In one of Corona del l\.1ar"s best ~ou th·of-t.h!'
highway duplf'.x locaUOns. Only $45.950. Call
67J-8550
V"ry ~m"°' :·<'""'·. ,);--• ..,_. , <" ~ ·~.'!;~· ";.\' ,·· J ' ... : .. "" ~ ' i ,~:>)t .~· '' • :., ,,~
~.· .. ,;" /f<, .• }!' 11'.< ...
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PARK HUNTINGTON
ASSUMABLE VA LOAN · s6,ooo DOWN
Almost ne"·· "H,.Jn1sman" model fcaiures 4
bedrooms, 2~ baths. large family room \l'ilh
brick nreplace. E1nplny1nt>nt rf'location to Wash·
lni;:1on, D.C. Nl'('r~sitat<"s sal" quickly al lf'Sl!
than market vahil'.'. SC'e a ne"' one priced at
$40.490 -then co1npare \\'ith this hon1e ha\'inc;
improvement~ of S3,000 in vahle. Rarr opror·
tunily•at $41,500 but hurry! Phone 546-2313.
MESA VERDE 'S
LOWEST PRICED HOME
\\'nl\" ... !! Only $:l7.SIXI fnr a sharp 3 bt>dronm
2 h11th hnmP \1·ith pnnl .~izrd ff'ar yard ~i tua!f'd
'1n ,11, trre linf'd lo1v tnlffic slrrf't. (I nly JQr ,
dn,,·11. C11ll 67:{..RS:""i! tn -sr<".
. WALK. TO
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
<4 bedroom. 3·be.th home tMl look~ like a modr.1.
A double fireplece opt'ns to both conversation pit
and f11mily roOi;n.. Glamorous 2ardrn ·s!"rvtce
kitchen with self~e,11,,nlng oven, separtltl" dining
rOflm walk·lrr closets in master suite&. two other
bedr00ms. Front courtyard with lush landsaipini;{.
Quiet cul·d'e-sac street. Pi-ii:e' $38,950. C&IJ now
tor 1howina: 546-2313.
·~ -. ..; _
!y==-~ .. _. ,_J,. . ~ ..
NO ONE Of FEii
"TRANSFERRED"
Ar('hcd C'Olrance way op!"ns intn a Jar~f' 4 bt'd·
room homf'. Wrou~ht. iron railin11;s. lf!vrly car·
fM.'"lS and drapes, a for1r1Bl dlning room. plus 11.
bonus Jot. The O\,·nrrs are mnvin~ and mu~t
sacrifice. 842-25?.5
' l !
; ', W• ...
j '. . I • .. ;
"POOL TIME"
Beautiful bf'a1t.>d pool with Jove s!'aL Gas BBQ
in patio, Jots of <'<'mf'nL work, plus a sprinkler
s.v~t .. m. A very sharp home available for only
$31,900. A rt-al buy. 842-2535
ONE OF A KIND
Beautiful home on a corner lot with com·
plete privacy, lovely .. P-alio wit~ panoramic
ocean view, four bedrooms, dining roo:rn ,
family room, custom pool, no yard_ main-
tenance. A H a r b o r View Lusk Home.
$84 ,500.-Call 673-8550 to see.
WONDERFUL WESTCLIFF
POSSESSION IN 2 ·wEEKS
The enclosed entry leads to a charming 3
Bedroom, 2 bath ,1,ith completely enclosed
lanai. Separate Laundry Roo1n. No traffic
street -Lovely landscaping -Close to
all schools. $47,500; Phone 673-8550 for
appointment to see'. ··
MEREDITH GARDENS
$39,900
What a rare opportunity to own a beauli·
ful spJit.Jevel home in excellent, prestige
neighborhood! Features 3 bedrooms, 272
baths, huge walnut-paneled family room
with palos1 verdes stone fireplace, Large
formal dining room. All this on a 60 x 120
ft. lot. Ov,inei: very anxious tq__se!I, so Hurry)
For more info, P~one 546-2313.
COLLEGE PARK
FIRST TIME ON MARKET
3 bedroom, 2 balhs. best area of College
Park. Excellent cond ition but needs car·
pets, you can pick the color. Roon1 for boat
or trailer. Many, many extras in this adult
occuried home. Sec now $32,500. 546..2313
DRASTICALLY REDUCED
3 bedroom Mesa v·erde corner home 1s
priced for a quick sale since owners have
moved to their ne\11 home. 11urr.v -this
won't last at this price. $29,500. 546-2313
r • • I , .
IRVINE TERRACE
Cozy &: cl<'an, high ahnve thl" hey on Dolphin
Terrace. Frre from noise and cooled by !he
ocean breeze. Dbl. d<'l.ach«I gara~e - 6 1 x 1~
lot with glde driv(>V.•ay -room for boat &. trail-
er, l'lectric TV antenna Included. Just l49,500.
Phone 673-8550.
TATBRS .Ne.1
Ne.1
•• ·1
• 'I
MEREDITH GARDENS
Lare" Bt>droon1 and bath on first floor. Thrf'e
bedrooms and 2 haths on sl'cond flnor. Panelled
family ronn1, forn1al dini ng roon1, three car i::a·
ragr iind a <"nrn('r lot. ()\vnC'r 1ransferred to tile
.:-O·lid·\Vi-~1. Prie(·d !H $45,500. 646-7171
"BEER" POCKETBOOK??
Hav" y•JU bren lnoking for a 4 bcdf"Om hnlTl'"
fnr lrs~ than $27.000? Uiok al this nnP'. Great
hnusr, grriit yard. and just minutes front Hunt·
inglon Cenlrr. 842-2535
GET STARTED!
STOP RENTING -Save money. This pride
o~ O\Vn~rsh ip 2 bedroom, 2 balh condomin-
_ium with · dining area and a great J)atio
for entertaining. \fery little or no upkeep.
Club house + pools at your disposal. C.ou\d
be for you $21,950. 646-7171
EASTSIDE
Assumable 51;, r~ Loan. Sparkling clean
3 Br Home. 2 Baths, dining area. terrific
kitchen. Pool sized yard \\'ith nice land·
scaping. $27,900 -Call 546-2313 .
BLUFFS CONDOMINIUM
Tired of being a perpetual v"eekend gar·
dener & handyman? Then enjoy your week-
ends \vilh family & friends and forget all
about it. \Ve have found a three bedroom
home in The Bluffs where everything Is
done for you, even a community pool where
you can sv1im & sun and entertain your
friends. ,\)] yours for $43.500. Call
673.8550.
NATURE LOVERS
\Viii love· this duplex nestled in a setting
of towering trees & lush greenery. You can
look out any wlndo\v and imagine your-
!ielf in the heart of a forest. Once in a llfe·
time \Ve find a setting like this combined
\vith an opportunity for added incorne.
Don't miss seeing this 3 bedroon1 plus guest
and a 1 bedroom unit for $84,500. Call
673-8550.
OWNER TRANSFERR ED
-$2,800 DOWN -
and as!iume a VA loan on a 3 bedroom 2
bath home in North Costa Mesa. 1-lome will
be vacant ,July 15, bring all offers. Price
$27 .800. Call 546-2313.
~ .,
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TURTLE ROCK
View of University o! Calif. Don"t drlay to 1rr
lhi!; fantastic 3 bedroom 2 bath adult occupi~
homr. Jl'~ ~potlf'SS, Jullt 1tr.ps from a beautiful
parks+ppnl. Only $37.~. Do Jt:now. no obliga·
Uon for more information call 546-2313
r
,. ' . '
~: ! <-/~ ·4:->-.
\· '"'"'"''
• i b . .
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MESA VERDE
Can1bridgr Esl.ates llon1e 4 BR~ Formal dining
-Larte family rooin plu.~ a. convertible df'n top
Mei;a V.erde lo<:a!ion. Largo;-ll8Lin -Easy care
Ja.ndsoeping. Addition offstrl'1't parking and much
n101'f'. As..~uroe a $30,800 VA loan. Priced a t
$36,500. 646-7171
TWO YEARS NEW!
O\\'TI('rs lo~-Your gain \\"ilh this twauliful!y tlfl'"
pointed ·"Pall'J'mc" hoine in !!arbor View Hil!:s,
lncalcd on a spariou~ cornrr lot lynu own the
Jandl. The O\\'llf'rs r('al!v wrn! '"all-out" in Ufl-~J'Bdini;! Lovely 4 hC'droOm. dining rnnm + fam•
ily room \Vith \\'et bar. A Vrry Speri;i! homf' fnr
vl'ry special fll'Op!e. Call for an appointment wilh
charm. 646; 7J 71.
BEAUTIFUL POOL IN
·NEWPORT .BEACH
An-oUtstandlng -nl!w pOol with whirlpooi
bath and hu'ge patio and deck areas. Cloud
soft deep pile carpets and custom floor
t~les through out. This near new home has
2 bedrooms, .a den, formal dining room.
eat in kitchen, and a beautiful family room
w ith fireplace. Come see why this home
made such a BIG SPLASH with us. Fee
land at $46,700. Call 673·8550.
HURRY -
CHOOSE YOUR COLORS
This three bedroom and family room cor-
ner home in sought after Mesa Verde i!'I
about to be redecorated inside and out
including new carpets in the bedrooms. Act
fast and have your choice. $33,500 includ·
ing VA + Fl·!.<\ terms. 546-2313.
LONGING FOR LAGUNA?
This is the hon1e for you. Lava rock water·
fall aiid cathedral ceiling in the living
room set the stage. '!'here are decks, ter-
races. formal and informel dining. even
your O\\'n "cocktail lounge" in additiop tb
3 bedrooms, a ran1ily room and an office
or den. Can you imagine all this for
$65,000? Se«riryg is ·tre·Jieving! Appoin"tment
only·673-8550.
MESA VERDE'S
"FAMOUS REPUBLIC"
f'hoice location: Corner lot on a qui-et •.
.~trceL Luxlirioos 5 bedroom. 3 bath, fam·
ily room. separate dining area, and a gour-
1net kitchen. 1.ot has room for your boat
and trailer and pool. Fantastic 13ndscaped
grounds. lf you have a large family this
home is great for the kids. Only $42,500.
Call 546·2313
OWNER TIRED OF
COMMUTING ! !
2 story. 4 bedroom, plus a formal dining
room . Home ne>'ily decorated including
new shag carpet, just wailing fo r a new
owner. A home buyers dream, 842-2535.
N~,QRT . Hl!~GHTS . VI~
SpacfoUl'l~'10mt>, 'vlew·ot N('W{l(lrt, ,Bay and 00"&n.
Large living J'O<lm with Bll·in shclv'"es + stprage,
formll1 dining + breakf8st area; Huge upstairs
family room + Bar. All with View One of-a-kind
Cli.!lto111.boine. LoveJy br.ick patio shown by' ap.
Pointrneri't,·$72,500. 646-7171 , • '. I
. ' . .
In ..... le• W.... afMI art.r ...... Je.,,.,tfalMiil ........... i. ,,. • .tit• .. ,..,.., fflrv-'
In Ailw.rflth•,.....C..n,t.te cner...:-9'!,,.,. H• -~..,...., ... ,.
•flt ,S..I• ln the H•~ Ana .....,,,.aittw.:. "!'''·~•.~"!_he~e."T~.~l~I":" ~...... ·;-,;-:-
ESTATE sm LOT
IN NEWPORT
Right down the street from a. big commullllt.
park and 1 .. vim ·club. 1lii1 beautiful home is !~
catf'd on a quiet cul·de·sac 1treet. Lots of custom
brick in a prnff'ssionally Jand~caf}('d front yard.
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room, forma1 dininl
roon1, & gourmet kitchen with sel!-cleaning oven.
What more could you ask for $42,800. C&ll
673·8550.
' .. -. • • I
SAPIDITY!
This custom home in one of Newport's cholcesf
locatiohs. '3 big bedrooms, a larJ(e family + a d~
li.i:-htfu! kltchrn "'Ith f'aling area. Lush nf'w st;iac
carpPting --! custom drapes thruout. You'll Wl'lnt
to see this one! S~.900.'646-7171
Brautiful Republic ~plit-Jevel home combines lor-
maJ .rlegance !lnd family comfort.in quiet 1ettin1
of c01.1ntry almo&phere with maximum privacy,
Featurrs 5 lx>droom~. large family room wit.It
qric,k flr,.pl,11.c1> -1 ~et~bay. Forn;al dini!'g .rOOm,
tiui;:e ma3ler suite.-ldvcly i::old 1hag oo.rpetini;:. . ' SrP it. to apprecia tP ! · Fu II price $54,500. ·Phone
545-2313
"RANCH-HAND"
Carrying our "Lazy R"' ~lgn thi:s J bedroom,
plus penrlled rumpus room l~ avaUabl1> at all
term~. Wal~ing distance to 11chools. 842-2535
" .
•
. ' '
f\SiliMABLE FHA' :
Ohly uoo6:1downr 4 bl( bedrooms, family roqin,
MeSll del 'Mar &rea, very sharp~A cl~an. OwMr
may cerry amall 2nd TD. Prlce1nl.Y $33./50-c!II
$46-2313. • '. • -:
:: .. . .
. I " '
R -··
' TATB:lall
NEWPORT BEACH
1700 Newport Bl vd.
646 .7171
COSTA MESA
2790 Harbor Bl vd.
546.2 313
HUNTINGTON BEACH
17931 Beach Blvd.
842 ·2535
---.·.......-------" • L t µJ ' .... ••
CORONA DEL M,._R
33 2 Marguerite
673-8550
-'., .... l • .,..,-
INVESTMENTS
278'4 Harbor Blvd., Suite 2011
Costa Mesa 54-.2316
r
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" .
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'.
H DAJlV l'ILOT
" " , r ...
...
let's
. • I
.~
Wtd1ttsd•f. July W, 1'71
. '· .
• •
Once there was a beaut iful
'
, .. • .• r
-r.'· • ••
• '
•
clean up
country. Clean and clear
sparkling stre ams, bright blue skie s, happy
~ :-proud and took care of their people. The people were
country Then, the times changed. The people became care-
~
less. They threw their ~~ttles and cans and trash anywhere
and everywhere. Soon their beautiful countryside was littered
wrth debris. Streams were clogged.
, .
covered with beer cans. The people becam~amed.@
Then they heard
about the Reynolds Recycling Truck! Th ey
ALL-ALUMINUM cans, i pie tins,~ 11;:& 1\fi gathered their
~abyfood cans,@5@JwT.V. dinner trays, ""\e'~~'1i~!iii baked-
goods containers, and any scraps they had made of aluminum .
They cleaned up their homes, and they c lea ned
up streets . And th ey took their trash to the
Re cyclin g Tru ck. There, they found to thei r happ y
surpr ise,
country, bu t th ey had clea ned up other ways. • 1n
Like with mon ey!! They were paid (@ a pound for their clean
household scrap aluminum. The people were proud
and happy again. Th ey learned about permanent
recycling plants so
And, they got paid for it. The people in our story cared.
DO YOU? (1/1i The Reynolds Recycling Trucks are coming
to OJ May Co Costa Me sa, Wednesday, July 28 PLEASE CARE.
,
THANK YOU REYNOLDS, THANK YOU MADEMOISELLE,
AND Tt1 .. ~ vp w M AY CO, .fOR MA1<1NG Irr ALL POSSIBLE!
any sroop or i n4wl~~,l~ii,1~;59 po<incls or ~· will be 11.,.,, ~ ~tft iflc.ate of IPP<~•boo from Los ~les
m•Y co. aouth coest plaza, tan ddl190 fwy. a t lllrittol, co1ta m•••; 544-9321
1hop mond•y th ru 1aturd1y 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., 1unday noon 'til S p.m.
"" ... r ,.
Buut~ul.
j_
•
(
,·~
LEGAL NOTICE ----1
" 11111 ,ICTITIOUS •UllN•l l
NAMI: I TATl:Ml.NT
T,.. followlna """"' ••• 4ol"" 1>u11-. •• .,
REhll ,O,L llEAOI Ell. M-9 W I"" $!,.
CM!t M•••• 92&11
P•ul M Gllle'flll , 1••1 O••V•lllt,
CO"• M~SI, 9"1671,
M&rot n,.. Gl•l••Pi r, 1U2 O••uwlll.,
c;,,.1, M••1, t?.111.
Tl'>i• w .. n • ., ;, N in• co•••hld.-1 bv •
l•hab1 r><1 & wl••.
P &ul M G1llH Pl1
ll'>lt •T•tt m •<>I lilt<! W•'" lhl COYntv
Clr r• ol 0,1no1 Couniv "'" Jul• It, 1n 1
Sv !l•urrlv J. Mf<l<IOA ~l'Ull' C0<1nty
(tor~ l"v~li•"'"d Or~nr;19 (OH! O•llv Pl>ol,
Jv•• Jl, 11 '"" 1<u11u•! •, 11. 1911 l"J.lt
LEGAL NOTICll: )
LEGAL NOTICE £11111 ot
LEGAL NOTICE ,______ ------~. p 111• NOTICE IS HE~EAV GIVEN I& ,,..
IUl'•ltlOR COUltT 01' TH•
1T.-,lt: 0 1" C ... ltl'ORNt ... l'Oll
THt: COUNTY 01' 011;.-NG• Ht . ..,_,..,,
NOTICl 01' Hl.AltlNG 0 1' l'l.T!TIOH
l'OR l'ROl.,TI. O" WILL .-No
COOICtL ANO "Oil L I. T T I.R I
TESTAMRHT.-,llY
Eu111 o1 LEO
OK•••Nl.
SCH ... (TM ... YEll.
NOTICE IS HE REllY GIVEH ffl1t ~tcurilv Pa<>lit N11ian1I l•n-1>11 !it..a n ••• 1 ... ~1i11 .... tor o>•OO•I• "' Wiii -(Qdi(ol ond tor lu ,.1nc:• ol l t tto"
11111n1Ml!1•v 10 f'o!,l\o>ner. ••'••t nu IC
-lc.h it m1Q1 tor lurlhor por!lcul•ro. 1nd
1!'11! !he lime ond oll(I el hl orlno '"'
1""11 hi< l>e•n o•t tor ... u•u•! ll, 1'1), II •JO o m . on t<11 '1>Utlt<1•>m o• 0 1D1r!
,.,.,.,.,, ND } of Ol ld CllU•• II 100 Clvot
C.1n11' Ot1111 W•>t• 1<1 1111 City 01 S1n11
Ano. C1•oforn11.
0 11...i Ju•• 11, 1'71
W E. ST JOHN
(1><Jn1Y (ll rO
l CUOOfR, ,t)RDI' •...i Nl'Ol EY,
11)01 ~un••I l ""l1•1rd, ,..,.11c '•ll•••"· c1 11t11"1>11
T1I (1111 GL 4-1Jl1
•norn•v• "" "•tlll•~•• l'ubli•nod or .. no• Co••I
Iv 1'1 , n. JJ. lt/I
0 11Jv Pl\(!!. Ju•
l'Od ·ll
LEGAL NO'n CE
NOT!CI' TO Clll!OITO•S
I U,E•IOR COUllT O' THI.
il l.f f. 0 1' C.,l l ,OllHI ... l'OR
T HI! COUNTY 01' 011.-,NOI
No ....... u
Ellll• al ALICE IEllNI(( GOllDON
1110 known •• '""N I(( ...... w ... llllUM,
0 KtlH'll. NOTICE I!. HE llEIY GIVEN to ll>o
cr-.Ji!.,..., Cf fht I C.Ill nom...i <!llC ... f'<ll
t1>11 I I! "'"""' hovont r11.m• 111lnt l •t>t
.. Id d._,fettnl l tl r ... ultf<I ID Iii. !htm,
<o1l1n tno ...c .... ,,. vouch1r1. 1 .. 11>1 Ifft!«
ol '''" rlork "' Ill• •bo•• f'nflllt<I c.,rt . .,..
"' ...... n. ......... wlln ..... MCI UI N w.ut.Ntl, lo th~ und•••it n.cl •I IN oil!<•
o1 "'' 1ttorMv. llOI E RT .... l! ... STMAN
ll'tO Hlfbof" Blvd .• C<1tl1 M ... , C1I·
l~11l• rnl6. -lch lo "" •loct t i
flul lftlU of ,,, ............. -'" •II m •ttH"I
H rto!nlno 10 the 1it111 ol' u ld ~-"'·
wl"'l" ,....,, ,._,.,, o!!ff ,... flrtt 'u•llct·
tlon ft! rt.I • nolic1
O.locl Jir!v 'Jiii, 1'71
M1r11rol V l ur,.1101
Adml<1l1tr1!•l• ol' ltlt .. 1111
01 tht 11Jovt nomlO dKtcllf'll
llO•l •T .-,, 1 ... lTMAH
,,.. "'''-1.1•1. Cool• MIM, C11u1 ... 1. tt6M
Toft 1110 ,.._ ... .
Al•ttf'llV 101 "'"'lftltlrolri•
.,.,n•ith.., 0<1nt t Coaot OtilY Pl\~. J11·
!'I' )I 1roO ... ut utt I, 11, 11. lf11 '°"'"]\
'ICTITIOUI I UllN•tl <r id!!"'' ol !ht l f>O•t "'"""" d•ctd11t lllAMI ITATIM.l"NT !1'>111 •II 01'"°"' hl •in11 tl&lmo 1ooln>1 11'>1
"' ,.,.,_1"9 P*fl<lf'li 1r• 4ol"9 ll!d d~.O•llt •to r-'l<Hr•<I lo hlo IM m. with ,,,. f>•c•uuy vou<h•<t, In •h• ofl l<t
ol !ho <•t•~ ol •ht •l•Cw• •n!llllt<I covd or
!o <>••••nt lnitm. wllh ,.,, '"''"""'"
,.....,<,..•1. to 11'1<1 """'"'"""" •' tho orfiCt ol t>lo A!tornrv, COLONEL ~ELllA
,_ERRING F lt ... Nl(L!N, 101 E1t1 l fl ~
Slrffl, Co"• M•I•. C1i.1orn•1 t1in.
-kh h Int pll (• of b!J1lnh1 al '"•
vndtM lt .,td •n •II mu11,. 01r11 "'"II 10
!hi •••111 ol •l id <11<1!<!1n1. wlf'!on '""'
mM>tno 111rr !ht llflt publ•t1•ie., o! '"'' no tic•
bu1lnt•• 10: I a. J, M.-,N U F ... C T U RIN G
JEWE L ERS, \.fH So Grond, S1n11 ... no
w llltm o. J1no1m 1, I~• Clltl Ori.,•,
N1w""'1 l •och.
Jo•••us '· "•"""•111:<1, Ill ) WHI (.,II..., l'I•<•• S1nl1 A,...
Tll" """"'" I• Deln• conduCIN 11'1 I Porlnt 'lhlo
J, F, V1ndttl11n
1111 J1n1prn1
Tll•I "1!1m1n! lllP<I with 11'11 (0>,only (llH"~ of Or1no1 i:ountv "'" Ju•• \t, 1•71
!Iv ll1111•IY J. Mldd ... °'""'Y Count¥
Cit•~ Pu~ll-Or•"'• c ... ,, Doll., "'i•or,
Jut• I\, M 1nd AUllul1 .. II. 1111 l".0.11
HOTICI 01'
NON·• 1 l "O"'Sl•lll T-Y
l<ol•C• If lltr•bY olv•n '"'' "1• un·
dt f•lll"Pd w•ij nct1 DI ,.,_.11111 '"' •nv
dl'lllO or h•tlohhtl cDn.,1c1.o bv anv""•
Oiled Julv 4, l•IJ
LLOYO M er[[
01111, '""" ,.,.,,.,11."".,... .n ... in•• d••• LP.CAI. r-;rrr1c~:
Ownor "°"' ""' •<oool 1n'r r ul>O"lllbllltv•I·----~
tor lo bt>r, m o!•d •h or llnP'OVlm'"" lo
11J Vl1 l\do NDrd, Li<lo ltlf, NOWOC<I lie•'"· r 1111ornl1. l.o! 1)7, Troe• ll07,
Oo•IO 1111' lllh <t•v o/ Jul,, 11/T
(>I Gll<lyt WilMl<11..., Lo.,..r.t\CI
10 .. 1 Sun•tl l lV<I. !lel ..,,,
L"' Anoolo" C1 l1!Mnl1 '°'111
Publl•""d Or•n1~ (Oil! Oolly f'Hot,
j"IY 17, )ll 111<1 Aut Utl 1, 1'11 107'·11
LEGAL NOTICE
' '
--·--------.
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTI AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
LETS SE£ •.•
IF K!T'S £16Hf YEAR'S
"-D AND FIFTY-E16"T
INCHES TALL NOW ..•
AC COR'PING TO THE CHART1
{ ~~ HE'S SEVENT£EN, I :~~ ... 6000 6RIEF .
.....
PLAIN JANE
ACROSS 44 Hurr itd
45 Untidy
1 Ottoman situation
Empi·.e 41i Faithful
officials. 48 Tl.l'kish im1
r; Part of mil~ 50 ~las
'iu ~;Old mdicat-
ing agreement
1~ Ma~cu1 1ne
15 !Aain trunlr
of the bod y
!6 An emotion
17 Pert61nmg I?
crrta1n
V!ClOfiOllS
51 Ass,ssor
53 s,lf-de nying
person
57 Sma!l circ l,
bl NOf\h African
bZ Go Lhrovg11
r--------r POOll Ll'L LC7TSA LUCK.HE
---.... --
WANiS 10 IALK SO MDLY
00T HE ISN'T Al'LE 10
UTTER A l'.ORD .... 11'5 A
SHAME.
WOULD YOU LI KE
TO BUY SOME
NICE FRESH
STRAWBERRIES"
..
NO!NoBOOY
PEANUTS
8 ''Take -··-3fi A lens' JUDGE PARKER
Iv Chftter Gould
,_ ~ 51NDA.
MN>ecll .. Mf BIG CltANI!
w.t4.0\MMl1 AMO
..... S11'CNG
SCU:!
By Tom K. Ryan
WHY COOLDN'T
HE HAVE l>IN
A DAME?
By Al Smith
WELL, THEN WHY
OOYOU HAVETO
UVE UPON THE
TOP Fl.OOR9
By Dale Hale
By Frank Baginski
• Y/fdntsd~, JLJfJ 28, 1971
U'L AINBt
!iALL Y BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MUWNS
.----------.,-SURE> 9055, 81.JT MM ... ~lf:li
IT DOESN'T DO QUITE AN IDEA
MUCHFORMYTAN. M,<11,WILLIE:·/r-.J
I SHOULI> <l•T r----f
OUT MOf>E ...
SPENI> MOR~
"TIME IN THE:
P,Al<K.
ANIMAL CRACKERS
ro~ EJ<AMP~.11.le.
w.iur ro eo /JOl!ri11 RleKT ? >U.weoo
as~~£ ~'flt$T.4.tl'!~
By Charin M. Schulz .--------. lllE 80<$' CA>IP I> ACRD93
iHE LAKf-I IOOl<JA COOf'l.E ll' mnv MOO" BO\':> klHO
ARE THERE. lVo-
I
I. 1: ...
' ' '
By Harold Le Doux
DAIL V ,,LOT Q
ly Al Capp
By Charles Barsotti
" • $'
By Gus Arriola
By Ferd Johnson
.,---,,<;ET 'ybUI<. --'
RED HOTS
HEl<E:,FOLl(S !
, I
~M \
By Roger Bollen
., 1~ :c HAb II
~ss ... :r.
COOi.i> ll<LL I/A
I~ A Ml~UT~ !
THE GIRLS
,~,
(~
I '
s11halom1c
part .cit s
Iq lncr~asrd
111 s l1e
2 worrls
b4 S1mp l,'s
parlnfr
from me: 39 Apportion
2 word s 40 Pr intings of DID MAltlE HE!:? MJ.ID~ WE WEl<'E
A~ A MATIEI<' OF t=A<.T, I
C.ALLED SEVER'-'L ~OSP1T.-.LS
tJ(),.PO '1011 MINPJT C>H u: I SIT POWN, I 1-<ELP
SE:R6E-'NT? I i;eEL 'r'OU ?'
20 Ai:t o!
l.ikiny irt
21 Fathe r ar:d
mat her
23 C.lothil'ICJ
21 Arm~ conflict
2& As white • --:
-"l words
29 fastest
34 Protruding pin
In a mach111'
3S formal potm
17 lm;wili,ntly
'xpectant
38 E. Ind ian
cy!llhals
39 Chan11rd av'r
to fit
41 Arlican
anlmal
42 "~ot --!":
2 words
b5 Mr. de Valer a
&b Nine: Pref1 l
b7 V:'inter vehicle
bB Equestrian
9t~r
b9 Head up
tilt c:ast
00.'ltJ
l 01 lht USA ·
Abt.r.
2 Kind of
"""' :3 f 1sh sauce
4 WithdrtW
lormally fio m
'"'mbersh1p u\
an 1111arK e
5 Did 1 !loor
covtri119 jab
Ii B1slc cores
7 Sea bir d
'I Aras a nrwsp~p~r
10 Repuhl ic 43 Cam' down
of Afr ica 45 l'tt'r typer's
11 Tim' ol day prcbl'm
12 Newt.: Var. ~7 Joins t09,l11c1
13 Tidings 49 Sulfix l!S'tf
lB Auto &ectss01y with govern
22 Classilittf a11d intern
24 OM In \he 52 Oefensiv'
tr1n spt1rtation
btJS inrss
eQuipm,11\
53 Eltctfical
lb"--1.. ll'lits:
Sorn": 1nlorma1
2 words 54 A hum1n
27 Condition being
28 Ctrt1ln dances 55 Apple pail
JO Entr' --: 5!i Fellow
Intermission 58 Boo.ly
JI Kind of motli s• Slcill1n resort
JZ Sound 60 Fcrmtr
jud;l!llnl l\USsi an ruler
33 Kind of bl ''Down
acco1111t Under" bird
• J 'it. ' • • " n " ,,. . ..
" • "
" " " ,. ... • n
J) "2 ~
J7 " :p ;;-JO JI " JJ
•
' " t•· " -,, .. ""'' .. -I" "
" ., :I" l 'iil" .. " ~ -..
I . ·~-Jil" " ~ ~ ••• '· Soll -;..: " -
' ~·~·· -
11· ,, I . ., .. . ,,
.
AltWOlD WORK WOltl!'IED A~OUT 1-lElt WHEN
FOi:? M1SS ';>I-IE DIDN'T RETURN l-IER'E
~PEN (EQ'7 LAST Nl6HT A~TER 601 N6
L!~~~'•:.,;;ro~w~N TO ... MOV IE:
MISS PEACH
FR,\NCINE, :t l.OVE YOU "'°"" HERE INTME
COUNTl"V
Tl-<AN 1 DO
IN 'fl.ll2 CrrY.
_ .... , .. , .
1,
PERKINS
"' '"
'"
WHY DO "r'OIA
SUPPOSE
'fHAT IS?
MY FRESH
SUN~TAN ?
MV CASU AL.
CLOTHES? ryJ '
...... -·. • I•) r,..:::_ .• , ...... •· I r>•.
•
MV EASY,
NATURAL,
otrr·CXX>JrSY
AIR?
MY 9AREF'OOi, ATHa...er1c
L.OOK ?
'·
A LITTLE-'SICK'.
NO.
IT"S .JlJ5r
'fl.IAT
COMPA~ED -ro T HE cows ...
By Mel
ly John Miies
-t t--. --. -·' ---.·-~-•\4 .1'111'·· ---··
•
1'\Vould you happen to know how l\.tartha 11 Vineyard feels
about sex?''
DENNIS THE MENACE
'I CNfr NJl.E Lf MY MIND MOOr
~T I SIWl.1> 1111tjK Of.' . .,-:--
---a '! )j~ ' :,!"" ~'---·~-'---;:.,,_ -. ..
J
I
I I
;.· -·. . .. ' '
OAILV PILOT WtdlM'sd.IJ July 28, l~ll WtdnewS.ly, JllTy l8, J97l PILOT-ADVERTISEA j~
,.,. Everyone Hes
Somethin g Tha t
Someone Else Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You C a n Sell It,
Fi nd It, Trade It
Wrth 11 Went Ad
':·
. ·
The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
( _ .... J~I _..... I~ I _ .... I~ I -.. -I~ I _,,,.. 1~1 ·---l~ ! _,,,.. I~
General
UP GOES THE CURTAIN
On Ou r House Of The Wffk
3 Roomy bedrooins, 20' x 30' soJariu m, 3
baths, 2 fireplaces, huge covered patio. Don't
miss out on .seeing this UPPER BACK BAY ·
BEAUTY. You'll Jove it at .......... $59,500.
ONE MILE RI.OM BEACH
l &-2 Bedroom. l 1h baths, very desirable units,
situated on a generous 180' x 132' Jot. All
electric kitchens. ceiling radiant heat, in-
dividual hot water heaters, garbage d~sal.
Priced right at . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... $ ,000.
lrLL STEAL YOUR HEART
A delight to show thi s ahnost new split level
4 bedrooms, 3 baths, huge game room, family
room , 3 car garage, J.ton refrigeration, ank.Je
deep shag thrnout. custom draperies, fabu-
lous drop li ghts. Professional landscaping &
sprinkler s. Assume 79'Q VA loan. Own er anx·
ious ! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .............. S42,650.
TRIPLE THREAT
3 Deluxe units, 1-3 bedroom, 1·2 bedroom. 1-1
bedroom. This is what you've been waiting
for. OWNER'S PLUSH 3 bedroom, 2 baths.
bltin kitchen, fireplace, heavy shag. Other 2
units unusually roomy, sha~ and loaded v.·ith
appeal. Don't hesitate on thJs one ... $55,500.
CIRCLE ME
I need you, I'm a 2·story. vacant. ready and
anxious for your fam ily to enjoy 1ny 5 super
bedrooms, 21h baths. family room, for1na1
dining room, 2 fireplaces. I'll go for a 101\',
low do\vn . Sacrifice sale at .•....... S43.950.
TAX SHELTER
52 BRAND NEW garden-type apartments.
Check on the 200 % depreciation. A·LA·DE·
LUXE UNJTS featuring indoor-outdoor kit-
chens, private patios, built.in range and oven.
dish-washer. recreation hall, heated and
filtered POOL, Bar-B-Q units, billiard table,
shuffle board areas, a card room and lush
landscaping. Very desirable rental area, con-
venient to shopping and recreation areas.
Financing is excellent. INVESTORS, you'll
be delighted at the return on th is investment
Priced right at .................... $827,000.
GerM rl l
RE ALTORS 8 644-7270
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DE L MAR , CALIF.
G•n•ral
$31 ,000 VETS
HERE IT 15!
4 Bedrm, 3 ba1tl!I, 1n Cos111
IORL \'I [ Ol,O\ ,,
RF A lTOPJ
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
I ACRE RANCH
COLONIA L
4 +DEN + 4 BA
"HORSES"
WALK TO LAKE
BACK BAY
AREA
UnlX'lirvab!e! Qu!f'l tree
hned SI. lo U11s gorji:e-
ous "old "'orld charn1·
er." 4. mMsive bPdroom• + huge panelt>d family room? 25" pielurt" \\•jn.
dow in li ving roo m with
unique fireplace. LargE"
250 sq. f t. drt"am kitch-
en. Wail of glass opens
\o eleva tt"d 1111.tio "'ilh
sptttacular ''iew. Zollf'd
for horses. Truly a sh-Ow-
plact". Great area for
childrf"Jl. ¥ust sell quick.
DIAL 64s.G303
"SPANISH"
Reduced to Sell
QUICK
JN FOTiECLOSURE t !
VACANT!! Bank wants
a Cast sell. :1 big bed·
rooms. EJCtra large fam-
ily roorn. Sharp and
clean J y"'ar old home.
Carpe l~ and d rape!; in·
<:luded. Compl<'tely llllld·
.~capt>d. Huge · huge all
f('nced In yard . Existing-
ti;&% Joan cnn be as-
i<umt'd ""ith low dO"'"· Also -excellt•nt ref i-
nancinir available. Don't
Delay
DIAL 64s.G303'
IORISI [ 01.\ll\
" N£A l T0 /1 j
WHAT'S IN A NAME?
\Vhen it's just an ordinary na1ne like PETE
BARRETT REALT''· you knO\\' the service
has to be extraordinary to get !:i3tisf1ed
clientele.
But when the names !hat are associated v.•ith
this extraordinary realty busi ness are out of
ordinary. it becomes a super-extraordinary
group of experts.
Names like BERTULEIT, HOLLIS. PFIS-
TER. OTHAL. NEWT, BELOUS, DINWID·
DIE take some getting used to! But once· you
master the pronunciation, you have a master-
ful realtor a t your service.
Then for those who haven't the ti me nor the
desire to call on a special na me, \Ve have a
few nice easy names -names like BENTS.
BENTS (two ol them), JEAN, RICK, JERRY,
MIKE, and, of course, PETE -all with spe~
cialties in .a variety of realty fields.
Office Open Saturdays & Sunday•
PETE BARRETT REALTY
1605 W"tcliff Dr •• N.B.
642-5200
~{ZJ@:~~
General
* * * * * * TAYLOR CO.
SPAC IOUS 5 BEDROOM HOME
In \Vestcliff's most delightlul area. lfuge
rumpus room with outside stairway to rear
patio. Rm for pool. Close to schools . .l\1ust
be seen inside to realize the full value. Call
for appointment to see ............... $79.950
••0ur 26th Y•1r''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
General
WANT ACTION???
\l.'E'RE SOU> OUT. Business
has been fjl) terrific", lllQSt
or our lil.11 ngs are now in
f'~tu\9. 0wtl('r·tnW"!!t'tors an'
nKw1ng be'fort' intel"f'f!t r.ite1
gu up? Call for a lree ap-
pra1saJ-!'-lo nblu::-at1om. U
you wan1 a fast ~ale le! pro.
fessionals. 1n a long time
establ1lihctl ofr 1ee, 1'l'presen1
you. A t·alJ is all you need
to do.
Eves call • 64a.OJ33
$26,950
College Park area J ~.
2 bath, corner lot home "l'i!h
big a..<;SUmable loan at 6%
in1e~t. J"aymt"nts are just
$174/mo. incl. taJl:l's & in·
surance. Owner Just ~
to nE"w home and you can
move r,ght in!
Newport
et
GtMrll
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
72 Linda Isle Dr ive
Tradltional 6 BR., 51h ba. home on lagoon.
w/dock. Furnished, decorated & lndscpd. 2
instr. BR. suites. $200,000 Furn., $175,000 Unf.
3 BDRM.
$29,500
Newport llelght11/Clitfhaven,
near Cliff Dr. Kitchen bitns,
bath w/ttle Or, carpeting,
HW tin. Back yard big
f'llOUil'h for adi.!i!LUoal u111l °'" sw1m111ing pool,
3 Bdrm, & Fam. Rm.
$32,500
Near Nl'\\'Pf>rt Ht"ights on a
For Complete Information t'ul df' sac street. l BR I.:
341
On All Homes & Lot1, Please Ca ll : family rm, 2 ba, :z tire·
p.act"6, kitchen bitn!I w:th
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR D\V. Rambling ranch 11yl"'
NEW LOCATION "''ith shake rool. Priced righ1
At entr1nce to Linda Isle f'1 sell.
Bayside Or., Suite I, N.B. 675-6161 CALL 0 •••·1414
~G~en~e~,~.~1"'""'""'""'°"'"~G~en~e~,~.l~"'""'""'""'"..,..j ~~~
:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-I "71;;;;;.; -Nt1r Ntwp•rt P•1t Offlte
Waterfront
Corona def Mar
Last large fee parcel on Newport Harbor.
Approx. l acre -170 ft. on water. with 3300
sq. ft. beach home and dock. Will sell all or
part. ~riced under comparable waterfron t
properties.
Phone: 642·2171 or '" your' broker
Macnab-Irvine
Reatty Company
San Juan Capi1trano
J\fagnificent viE'W of va.Hey,
n"IOWltains &: Dana Pt. A-la-
-rina from st"veral I~ acrf'
fftalt" siZE" parcels in rolling
hill~. Lots offer plenty of
room for spacioug home,
pool, barn, 1:orrals. pasture.
~~~l""""""""""""""~""""~""""""""""""' I Horses welcome. Nevt":r &ny . G.neral smog. Easy aCCE'"SS to S.D .
Frl""way. For a ppt. call
I ;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= -:-:::::-::,.,.,.-,.,--...--1 675-3210. (anytime) I' 4 BDRM., 2 BATH Cool s12,195
Or assumt> eJCisting 6'>~ loan
on this xlra sharp J hfod.
room, larg~ fanuly roon1,
1% bath home. Walk to all
schools & shopping_ aOllt' ro
frwy. N. Colf!a Mesa. Asking
$27.900 on all tE'rnl~. Call
54&-5880 l(}p£>n Evt"s.I.
Bu ilt On Your Land
Ocean -1>13 ••• fl. lh'ing .....
-Ali larh le plaster
-Hardwood cabinet.
Macnab-Irvine
642-8235 675-3210
A LITTLE BIT OF
PARADISE
IN THE COUNTRY -1:3reakfa!t bar
Breeze -Pullman balhs ;\ lush gan:IE"n l!iUITOunds a
-.~pacinus "'ardrobes charrrung 2 bedroom, l bath
& den homt" 1n tt.e country. JUST $9.53 SQ. FT. 5 Hug" Oak trc('S growing
$28,950 Planning-Design-F1nanring in the !J-ont givt" contrast to .~,. ltOllTAGE "1400 Home.~ it. Apar1n1cnls -1 -buil! Sirlet" 'J7" thi> Avocado, citrus & many
IUl OTAR Behind a ,1alled t'nlryv.-ay C fa1nily fruil 1f'l:'('f; !hat rover ~=-:'.'"='===-== rests this tovt"iy home, only AL L _53 7·0380 ~.he b~lanC'f' ~~this ~2 a cre TAYLOR CO. 6 y('ars young. L.a.rgl• livuig IOGGG \Vestn11nsrer Avt', G.G. R.ANCHITO.
JUST LISTED 1~ion1 1-ith dramati(' 11r,.. OPEN SUN 10 10 -4 $2<J,2SO -TER.i\1S
2299 lfarbor, CMlA Mesa NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 n1a<· horn.· on J)ll'-sha/)('d drlux~ .. bll1lt1n.~. 4 qu1•1•n s11.e I The SAWDAY Co. 2111 Sin Joaquin Hills Road ,I BR., 3 ba. A sh;1rp & 1111-plac1· <in•un1 krtch(•u 1111h i;)STANCO "Come ioFallbrook Country"
-----General 101. "givrng IJ:;t>. rear yard lx.><lrooms 2 ba1hs. Livable Realtor 714: 728-8301
OCEAN VIEW -;;;::;;::;;:;::;;::;I General ""/room for pool. Convenient t'Ovt'rffi µi:itio, tdeal ioca.t1on aUILDllS, INC. 701 S. J\.tain, f'aUbrook
Gracious Laguna Home • ---------:;;! ro st~hools, park & llhop'g, neer shopping aOO S"hools. 11.dja~t ro Emerald Bay YOUR OWN Ca111oday, $48.~. NOdo\YfttoVE"tt..Lowclo\Y11 DOVER SHORES EXECUTIVE HOME
N T I C ' '~ B h 4 BR. -4 BATHS with s\\'l'~nng Ol.>ean vitw Wesley . ay or o. o 01,"'"rs. r ller uny on Al S.it6 800 th" . "D-In_ Newport Beach on Fran-
on quiet cul--de-1'8.t" HORSE ACRE! Realtors this~ .. ' 15 . 15 a ~1 t·1sro Dr. A must lo .stt!
l Bedrooms & 3 Ba u. rt you've f'vrr dreamrd ol 2111 San Jo-.Jquin Hdls P.d. • COATS Buy ' ~-~i~ws _from ilS Cu:o:iom sing!t" sl\Jry homt"
Livn1g room 1,1,'ft:h h1tving lots of ~'thint; Newpor'.: Cen1rr 644-'1910 & roonis. pani~ mteMO!', 1 e that is truly exceptk>ne.I.
"''hite mllJ'ble tireplac. ·11 I --1 "· :-vrouglir iron in fomial l\.111.ster bdrm is huge with a room, wi. 1 • 10rse or 1wo HEALTH • WALUCE dining rm. l Car garage, <>rent drc-.ssing area • pvt. r-ormal dining room for the kids. your o.,.•n 11tl1e llEAL To•• ' «
BeautTful grounds farm, then here il h! r>:ot ...• or 'vt"a l!h? 01~ncr or IW ~ balh. r-ormal Din rm. & a
$92.500 lor 23 yf'ar~ has This acrt' sharp 3 bdnn. & \]e11 L'n1. Open Evening s ~ ............... a living rm. This homt":
of land been offt'l't'd• Ir h11s \"Cl'S!ty Perk homr. C0!\1-• 962-445-4 • r,J.,1.. • .JI D--L-sho""ll prkle of owne~hip.
REALTORS
SINCE J944
673-4400
THE P 0 I N T I
~1•>1'1 fahldnl1s !ilf\' \ iew. Lrg
4 hdm1 2 b;1. !nrmal dining,
lam al't'a o[f kitchen. Coni-
plt'l•'ly rr-carp1;•1«1. Ju~r
p111nte<l. LarY,l'S1 lnl Ill
t-;,\:.Oi'BLUt"F! $-19,~iOO "'I
npl!(•n 10 Uuy l"nd. lll1RR'l'
-l:\1 ~11-.;uJATt: POSt:s-
~!0:'">1. Call S.t:l-11421 !opt'n
p1·r~1
\outh , (. oast . -.
UNHl UI'. t1()~U
l'IM! E111i., 67"'°°°
MR. J ORDAN'S
:'llr. Jordan's 1!1 a qual11y
homf' in an estabhshf'd res1-
den1ial area. \Vilh !hr: homf'
you get your own kl'y to thf'
priva1,. Cameo $hol'("s
bl"11.ch. You also gM 3 largt"
bcdroon1s. a. fan1ily room,
ft n111s.-.:1•'" !1n•pl111·r, a
/11~"' yard 11nd lot.5 o/
gocwhf'$
ONLY $·16 . .".{l(l
a charming CUSJ'O.\f J!Ol\JE !11ITTI NG to San Frrnando ~WWVllrlJrm9\UI" Owrlf'r retiring &· ready lo
wnh two GARAGES and HI' Vallry? Ask1ng4.35.T:Xl . suh-j ~---~ St'll. $~'5.00J call l\l r. Harrill
x 36' F'OOL l"()mplrle 11·i1 h n1it YOUR J)flCr ,i· 11•rn1~. I A PRIVATE ..._...._ at !"iotllh Coast Rea.I .Estatf'
t'.'.ibaua end th-e~s1n~ roon1~. 675-3000 I Ool>' !'~.OOOIN.G~5'gM3 "l•m, 83~0700 644-2430 545-8124_. ---~=--1
Jr's Ollf' tlf a lnnd 1n thf' "" ur· °'' 1210 Starboard, View Call !or "llomc~ 2 Ba, ~.,"ti.I·' <v•un-·• TURTLE ROC BACK 81\Y ARt:A on 21rd · "" w v .. iLu K SPACIOUS 4 bd For Livuig" l\lagazirw patto V.'/firepil! Lots 01 cun.. rm., C1n1n1;
St. Tola.I parka.gt" $&l,900.. ~N t' nail Distributed! " nn. & family rm., with 211 and OW\'Nt:K WILL l'I-a 10 Y boards in garage. So niany Broadmoor beauty, J hcd-bath~. Oioict' corner with 3 NANCE'! E'Xtrall you ?-.!UST .SEE!! Call 545-8-124 !open rvf'sl. rooms, 2 baths. Better than ear garagE". VACANT. Loa n
new &: only $42,500! can ~ assun1<'d at &~':-ii
CORBIN-'"·"" _._
MARTIN Colclwetl,Banker
$22,950
BAY• BEACl-I
REALTY 1~ co: Ts
. WALL ACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-3 BDR M. & DEN
\outh . (. oast
. -.
BLUFFS Vlfw-_RE_A_L_TO_R_S~~"-"_7_66_11 ......._~·--~
8f'st front row loc-,111011 ln --....-
O!"IKJna! Bluft~ tlf'Xl IQ 1~·idt * FHA -G.I. *
(Open E vening\) \'r"l"IY dt.;'QratM. 1'.:ntry h1tll,
U,_.l fJUI: tf()MfS _ __ convenient ll'.""'r plan. wo.ll to ~t•I Etl•l•.&15-eooo 1 FOR RENT 11all l'llrjlf't1tl!'!. Parle l1kf'
?"l c. Coa\t ttwv. L· 1 1 ., h 1 1 .1, \'ard ~110-l7~lfl. < I rOUr IC'r mom., nT 1~. 1111 H ,bo TARBELL
'"-0a1 "'••,C.lif. 111 k1rct1E'n. C1n1ng rn1. 1·ar· 2955 a !'...
-! P"'f'd and 1\N1Pf'd plus llUio:tf' $25 950 -~-20:\:!2 n1mpu~ Rrn. LAn<I-1
1.......J 11c11pffi -fl'ncl'd. Only f.ffi .C BDRM. +
gri"t'nbelt End uiu! .1 RH, Lovrly ·1 BR., 2 ha's; nit·rly 833-0700 &44-2430
211 b!lth "rondo. H11gr Pncl. JnrJs1·r><1. Int f:lt>c . blths. -*--RA'7=~==~-c-·I 1'~lu1g !lrrrt 1n klich J\las-RE FIND * 1:;x37 ft. patio. Rarr 011por-· :i-1vp trplr, ~:iur. rov'1t, pa-A SPE CIAL HOME IUtJl(y ar ~1,:'i()() HELE N B. DOWD i.u. Onl:---~26 .. -iOO. :-.1,.~a Verde ll1£"hlands ~Ord-
REALTOR &ll-OlJ4" MORGAN REALTY roon1s, 2 Baths, J;;rue livin11;
673-6642 675-6459 -I family rrn. dhl fll'l"pla('f'.
Newport Hei9hts • 2 DH. 11, BA ('Ondo . 2 e great ldscpini:-. shaq root
\\'111 11.'llSt' or lea~r-np-gnr, $20,7~() *" 3 BR, i~t All terms ava1/11b1f'.
I Triple ]'s a inontti inti. ganl<!n<"r. FAMILY RM.
.----Th" wiSt> owi: .st>Z O-O-O·n hr: 8'-aulilul horn,., dream kit-
$27,950 quick on the!le :i thrrr bt"d-chl'n, hu1lt-1ns. assu111r !'>\.';,
room hon1es on one Jot. loan, epr, Jlll y111f'n1s of $1·13 1ion 5 bdrm hon1r, BA, lg yd, 11('w crptg $~7.990 4 BDRM.+
FAMILY RM.
La.rgt" rooms thruou1. dinini:;
rm., nan.ital used brick tn~
plaCf', r:ntry Mii, oversized
Jiving rm, 540-1'120.
Mesa. No clo""·n In you. AFk-5 BDRM. +
1ng SZl,9':JO. Seen and hurry FAMIL y RM.
l n11nediatr OCCU~Hll.'Y• ... Sharp -4 BR -$.16,75(1 *
ALSO l bdrm homf' l11r 4 BR. l r gar S46,5!'Xl.
Priced !or imm•'<11a:1· sale fl 1nonth. ':>-10-1720.
at $48.<Xx:l. CALL NO\\" 2955 Harbor TARBELL Lochenmyer '7549311 --. I REPOS~F.SSION ·~&CQI 220 E.17tti 46·0555 Thruout Org. Co. 1'-or add. &
-Call ~1151 !Open e~.1 rnn11!y rm. 11·1th rireµIRf'I', lf'll:<e.
AGENT
Cor11ac1
6.\ \.J;r-,5
Re altor *Patti Wa lker' Rlty.*
17171 Beach, H.B. 84"2·1·118 Call 646·3928 Ev~. 8JS..~
T_um those Whitt" Elt"phants ~ rasrer;t dniw in ttw: we~t
1nto casli thru & Dally Pilot •.. 111 Daily Pilot ~
2955 Harbor TARBELL
DAILY PILOT for action!
Call 642-5678 Ii Sev"!
I II f'n!f·y h11.U. dirnng rm., n9 ~. ~. BITAGE urat \\"OOd panE"ling, built..
_ ~ IUl tnAn . Ins. ~ Bdrm:;, en. f>.K>.174(). ~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 29 55 Harbo' TAR BE L L
·--~T~UI "" Evening.\Cail557-3006 Info, \.\'il ls RE. 51&-1739.
For that item under $31, I Fai;t result• Are just a phone A good "'ant ad is a good
SELLING Your boat~ .. List"
with us . .sE"ll It fast. Daily
Pilot Clu.11ifll'!d. M2-Sfi78
Gener el
Dtmt"-a-1\ne 11d! t Ad, 642-5678 try tJ\E' Penny P incher call away • 642-56711 Investment
General Gener1I General Gener ii ~neral General Gener ii
list your home ~~
with your friendly, loca1'A\'1~~
real estate giant .fi111•
I •• ,
s I .WALKER & LEE, INC.
Fountain VaDey Office
Sreokhurst K,.... rrom Llnlwook Hardw•re
9"'3371 Open 'Ill 9:00 P.M. •
GOV'T RESALE
4 quetn-1lzt>d bl"drooll\.\ on nearly '4 11rre Int 11~t1.r bt"ech •
(OJf t'()Um. ,A nyone Clll\ l&Jcf' nv,.r 11'.Ubject In G°lv't Lotin
wtth a llt\lr: dab of ce&h a nd payments or $195 pf'.r m(lnlh
~ all. 125,9!50.
HACH COTTAGE $21 ,000
Full pr\ce:. Cute 4 11Mrp. Fun living at lh" IX'a c.h. No down
nta. $550 down FJ1A. Call today. •
2 STO RT 3 1R + IONUS
Room finl~hf'<I "'Ith bfilutlful pe.nl"'l lni:; And b111!1-ln hook-ahrl!fves I cabinru. CelU. kitchen with brlrk J'&t!•• 11nd bfo1n1·
t1lul )'&rd tor h11nlly 11 \'lfll':· Fnuntllln VRIJ".)' .Sehool~. VA
a.ppraJA&.l and pnrf' S.'K>,900. f'Rntastlr V11luf'.
I Q,._•
.... /:llit'
'
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY ~
Costa Mesa Office Doys 545-9491 Newport Beach Office -646-7711 Huntin9ton
7682 Edinger
Beach Office
D.t.NCE UNDER THE STARS
842-4455
540-5140
nn 1hr dr1·k of 'hi!I •'TYfil.al rnol 11nd 1011ded \~·ith f'X1rll ~. Add·
on dr n, rnodrrn kitl'hl"n, ru·rpl11cr, dish"·a!lhr r 111"1<1 1nnrP.
1'~.~umr lo"' aov't lnan nr use yuur VA • •)r fIIA rit;hL~.
$27.500 total.
COOL OCUN IREEIE
11.dd:o: hf'1lvt>n\y comfort iu IJ1ls sflOtlr~ 4 hror01>m brau1y,
Bridf''i kitchPn, custo1n drajw' Ii r11rprt~ lhroughntlt. Un-
brll<·Vablt" ~25,950 11.nd nnly 19.'> r.rr month. Don't mis11 thia.:
Oil!',
EXECUTIVE MOVED OUT
Tirf'd of making J.IRYffifl'nl!I on v11.r11n1 hnu•f' 11nd sRy~ "JUST
SEl.J..." s ll l)ffer~ f'nrour.or.i;:rd :t ovtrsh:('d h<•droom~. f1 mily
rQOm, fnrn1e.l d1n1ni: room, .and Sp;1n15h (1n>ph1c£'. $3.'l,000 or
b<-i;t 11/ rt·r.
2 STORT STUL
r11ntil ~ti<' bt1n:ll1n Ill (Jiiiy $26.:>00 1\hlCh inc"llldf~ 4 hUI:" h"d·
rnoim~. 15 'o: :JO h1mlty room, rnrrn'J d!nlna room. 2 l)llth~.
1•nrprl~ &: rl r111Jrs lhru,..ut plu~ 0\'1'1" 1800 MJ, ft, XIJ mi~r>rint
or n11slek,.. Trarlc yout"!I.
2790 Horbor Blvd. Nights 545-0465 2043 Westcllff Dr. et ll'Vlno Open Evenings
COSTA MESA WEST SIDE STORY
Prit·l'd to i;cll a t $2.'\.95(1 1\·lt h hii::h VA Joan "·ith total Jll'IY·
1111,nts ••r $163 IM'r n1onth. :i. hU!.:P IK•d rO<)flls ""ith tuxuriou~
bath. llu~r kilt-hi•n ,~·i lh ln1.11 or cophoard speC'f'. Ne\!.• t•tlr·
pelini:: and dra ~ thruufl:houl. Grf'al fenct'd yard for tht"
kids. Subn11l your dn"'" !\llYITil'nt aftrr lnsptttlon.
IAY fRONT-"OOL
1:)0\•rr Shon •s "'1th 3 boat IPftCl'R Qn the "'&Irr. Thill br11rut1.
ful 1>Slal-.' hll'I twn mllrs lt"r suit"s plus :\ extra bedrooms. 5
bcuirtifu1 b31hs. Thr Cinest of car11t'tln1t evailRhle ,,.,·ith lovf'ly
drR.[X'~ metch1ni;:. A hu1i:e kitchen y(lU must sl:'f' to twu,..,•r:
in(•\udr!l 3 f1"H"n'r$. Owner mul't if'll this v.·eek at wxler the
\'a.lur "'1th a spc1•lft("1il8t priN" of $167.!"lOO. CALI...
519,950 IS THE PRICE
for !hi ~ \o•ry lov('l,v 3 bf'dronm, ~ bath hon1r . Tht" loan fJ
hi~h <'nouizh NO you c:an n~11mr \\]th 1:mymrnls of $160 per
month. which lnclud"s "II. l\ilodern hullt-in!l, dl¥J) pill" l"&r•
pt'is, Al~n ma!chinc dr3Jlf'~. Do11blr Kllr&~e to boot. CA il.
HALE CREST-NORTH COSTA MESA
/\, vrry fillf' nf'ighborhood lo livr In. Alro lnrh1d~ .-lub hout1"'
.11nd ll1vimn1ln1: pool in lhr arf'a, This home has 4 spe.eloua
bedroonu locat!'d lll rrnr or tht" hou5e. f-h1i::r living room
"1th pleturf' wlndn"'· Country Jttylr Jd lehrn "'ith dooni:11.y
io t:Tf'AI flll lio "'hic•h i.~ ~urrnundf'CI by lmplcnl C11li fornia htnrl~cnrunJ! G1'11 no n1onr)' drrv1tn on tlu.; nnP. A l.~n JlfA
Trrms. I'll 11<'1 "'" can J<r! llf'ltrr lo pay your cost.I 11.lso.
C111l -
OCEANFRONT
Trlp!f')C -.1F'/~F'/~. tormal dining, b11thll 4/412, (irrplllf't't.. r11r~11 & draf)l's, 2300 1;q. fl/2300 aq. ll/1300 aq It/ 3 storleit. · •
CORONA DEL M.t.l
~~~xn sou1h of hii;hw1y, $47.~. 1\ro l!"p&Nlti:-buiJdinp "'I~ a 2 4lld 3 hf'droom apt. built in, clori~ gan.~1 and alto a f1replace-A \\.' &L Exclll!ilve.
Cliff DRIVE
IWaulifully 1111ndsC11.prd N""•port l ltight!I rh1tnnrr "'ith 3
hcdroom11 and l?lenty of cozy cumforL This i~ a mu~t 11tt for
you a.t a discriminate buyf'r. Pril.'ed for lt!llin~ 1111 i44,500!
l+ ACRES
R4?0ft1 to roam. f...Jllrgf' 4 lx-dm(lm home ~ltu11ttd nn this nneh
with room for k ids. doiri;. e nd hoT'IMJ. Ov.·nt>r wlll n rianc. at
7<;\o annual Pt"rcE"ntage ralf'. A muat el $97,500!
WALKER & LEE IS AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE
~· • -"
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...
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J9 PILOT-ADllQTISE A WtdllHdly, July 28, 1'171 Wtdnttday, July 28. 1CJ71 DA!LV PILOl--.J I
_ ...... I~ I-·-I~ I -...... l~l ]~ ;;I ;;_;;;;; .. -;;;J;;~;;;:J~l._;;;;;;•o._";;;;.!._':.-;;;;1 '_·;;;'~1 ~~11.'-__ ,;;;;;;~;;;;;;;:::·;;;;;;·· -;;;;_~_1 '----'""""_,'-~-1 f
General
VIEW LOT
WESTSIDE BLUFFS
(~:an & ~lountaina) Quiet
('U!-de-N.i· ~trttt_ $16.500.
v.·/rcr1us.
MESA VERDE 7-story
4 Bdrn1 & den, 2\) baU1,
tirepl, bllins. rov'd patio,
stwkr J'l.iClf. hid & lltrd
• POO L e . auto garage
door op._•ner, rooin for tl(l.'11
or can111rr or tNUJe-r $47 .000.
Roy McCardl• Realtor
lSlO i\'c"11011 Blvd., C.111.
5411-7729
EASTSIDE C.M.
2 HOMES ON LOT
.\ f'{'l1l buy 1\'ho 1\·ants added
lncon1e . I 1ve 111 unc and let
th;:• <JI.her IH-·lp 1nake tli(' pay.
1nr11 t.~. Spo1less 3 bffiroon1,
1 ~i hulh honl<' + 2 bedroom.
l b;i .h, Thcsr arc clean units
a nd ready to n101•c in. ,\
i:::ood 1n1'l'stnl•'nt. P.S./rocnn
for gardl•n. Only $:G,OOO.
Lac hen my er
Realtor
OPEN 'I DAYS \\'EEK
l/l(i(l N('11-por1 Blvd., C.;\1,
(i 1&3<JZS F:ves. 646-5649
1912 TERESITA LN.
* * * * • LUXURIOUS
4 Bedroom Baycftlt home
with tonnal dininl' rm. le
klvt"!y family nn. with wel
bar, A delight to ahow!
Arnold & Freud
38il E. 17th, C.M. NG-7755
1 ACRE VACANT
Try 1 )-T, prepaid irrt.eres! +
5 yrs inttn?'S't only. asking st'.i,ooo. Zone ru.
PERRON REALTY Co.
6-12-lnt ANYTl~fF.
Back B•Y
BACK BAY BEAUTY
Lovely roun1ry home on qulet
cu' de sac street. IM:\fENSE
baC'k yard, 3 bdrms, 2 baths,
tarnily room. Under market
price at $36.000. Vogel Co
Jk altors, #10 2052 Newport
Blvd, C.M. 5-18-9346.
Balboa Island * SO. BAY FRONT * UTILE ISLAND
J BR. 3 ba. older beach
house; frpl c. & view PLUS
1-BR. 1 ba. fUrn. ttnta.I ovtr
<lb!. gar. PLUS pier & dock.
J.'inest Joe. .l avail. f'lrst
time at $140,000. Principe.ls
only. Bkr. &12-0117.
Balboa Peninsula
Fountain V•lley
RED TILE ROOF
Vm, wry Spanillh 3 bl!d·
roum townhOl.Utes, choice
Founta.in Va.lley kJcation all
tor $22,SOO. Vacarr:. Mu.tit
sen. Bl'oker SU-Z135
Callfomla Uving
S bedroom, 1% be.th. 10\.\'n·
house. Buyer's eOOice of
color cal'pe't.'l. Undt>r S23,000.
Good .Fountain Valley loca-
tion, Broker 842-2535
Huntington Beach
FOR SALE
FOR TRADE
OR LEASE/OPT ION
Superb, architecturally de-
sit:nC'd home, blended into
the Ecological wonderment
of STATl:.:LY TREES, SAN-
DY BEACHES A..~D A
NEVER ENDING VIE\V Q_f
1'HE OCEAN & CATALINA
ISLAND DeW!.ed all v.-'OOd
extelior,' located. on the
OCEAN SIDE OF 'MfE
HWY., wrth PATll\'IAY
LEADrNG TO THE BEACH.
Irvine
LOWEST PRICED
4 Bdrm., family rm. on
the market, in Univer~
sity Park. 211.a Baths,
bltns., 2 frp!cs. ( 1 in
mstr. bdrm.) ONLY
$30,500. Call us today
to see it !!
LOOKING ••.•
FOR EXTRAS?
Not l n c J u d e d el se-
where? This 4 bdrm.
individual hon1e is not
only located ln lovely
UNIVERSITY PAHK,
but is complete w/cov.
patios, elec. g a t e s ,
finest qual. carpeting,
w /dyed to n1atch liv-
ing nn. couches. Wall·
-ed garden & perfect
division or adult &
family a reas.
AWARD WINNING
Plan 4, in Turtle Roc k.
Broadmoor, 4 BR. 21h
ba., for the very spe-
cial price o! $44. 750
INCLUDING TH E
LAND.
1.lnb'l 1vlhl.
Irvine Mission Viejo 150 R••I Estate Wanted 184 HouHs Furni•htd 300
SA;-;:;:CR~.t:;:FJ:;:C:;;E;-! -:M:;:,:::.,-::.,:;;11-.l -c'°H'"'o-1c"°·c-· -,.,-Ac'"'·1-<c'""·s-* CASH BUYER * G e neral
FAMIL y GONE-Pf'Ol*r1)' ~ettlemenL :i. br 'J. Near B1JJ1un S O.·v. Jluld o r
ba, $29.~. 26.'!01 AJi(1lnt(', :;ub!livult• & rnnk•· l)•u "' Don 't llst )'Qut hon1e, or just getting started? M.IMk>n Viejo, 837-7677. prnh1' Nf\\1t: YOUR OWN sell 11 10 us.
Be sure to see tb' Newport Beach Ttlt,\IS! ~t1rril1Cf', leav1n1: Siive tJn1e .s<i•' mol'l('v
VE JtY SPECIAL 2 bd-1 ;;;::;;;;;:;;::;;;;;:;;;;;;::;;;;;;::;;;;;:;;1 111r Sw1tit:r!and, 1 1 1-1:r.~l lJ.l imint"d. rl~ ottc;, sr0ktr
$HJ()..f\'1>11r '['o\vn Co ~ y
611<..'lu:ll)r w/tul1 kltc!J_. Sn\I
yuril. ,\V'Q tl No""'·
BE,\CO:O-: " ~lll
rm .. 2 ba. townhouse. SPECULATORS '1'Y "' "'" • LEADERSHIP W · d II $60-H(Xll!M 1\TF: wanted to h1te stucco, re t . e 1n AC. rarh:h :.1h', NO INVESTMENTS e ct ., 6 1 BARGAIN :;har1· hr;111 new -r. ux toof & unglazed Italian DO\\'N. Rc·.<spon ran111y Jus t S.12-4466 & :MO-!i336 11p1, \\/p,i0I. ~!ale 0 r
t ile firs. thruout A HUNTERS rak<' O\rr S2J per mu. \Vf\NT TO BUy-5-,-,-. -6-.1 f~rnal··
GllEAT •reenbelt loc py n1111s. ~i8-lKH7 ,._ 1 1 ,,~ "lll n ' Unbel1e•·able Beach llous1· --~ .,.•()room i0n1e n l!u11-l)F.1\('0N " .,.........,
for $30,000! ba rgair~. \\'alk to OCl'Ull, '.l W J\C-11'.!. flal.. •, l1n,1h1•r, lul~lvu Re rn:h t.n:im 011'1H•r. LOS ALTOS
COMPLETELY Bl( 2 BA & dining, !irepl, \l/SJlbHI!,; s\V .~v~j~'~ek Ph0/1{> G·l1--0fliO. Pride of Ownership
REDECORATED b!(1rt~ d bl gar VuU prk<e Rrl, re. l~. ' '. Home
Thruout, is this spark· tl6.!'>00. Just lis!erl, ~·on't Cemet•ry I )~ Family wll h teenagcn1 ok.
Jing clean 3 bd rm., 21h his• Ion!;~ C-all ~G-llSI (Opt•n Lots/Crypt s 156 "---'-""-~---'-__, • 4 Bedroon1 2 bath, buil t In!',
bath Plan. Not a [hill. g I ,, hi. I I" -carpcting, di'tl pes, lease s2s,; r-4-~jji;~~~~[llA RBOR Hes1 Ceme!ery Lot1·---------needed to move in & -~· llllTAGll f<ir s;i!», $20l \\'n te P . o.i• pe-r mn. Phone Long Beach
start enjoying the good qu{ llM. 111,n l'.I_\.,. j2'~ P11w Grovr, Calif. Business c'~'~'=--'="~-~""=·c1._~·---I
Ji(e in University Park. ~;:;;;'.;::;;;;::;::::::;·1 ~-";o-,_ · Opportunity 200 Balboa Peninsula
Offered at only $29,950. ~ EW * ~ LUTl'i n1 H!u•' Spru<'" St'!'· * THE PROOF IS ~~ block to beach 3 BH. 2 BA
NEW ON MARKET * VJ lr.•n :•1 11,1rbor Rl'li l IN THE PUDDING* Aug. dat<'s avail. wkly.
Pf'rchecl on a blufr O\'t'1iook· '.\!t'J1\•H'1:1l P;irk, $175 l'al'h. DI STRlBUTOfilHlPS llf>" Davis Realty &12-7000.
Fully lndscpd., very ing t111> hay, you'll f~1ll 1n Ll :-:.:1!11.• po1ntet1 by the leader, Costa Mesa
priv. 3 bdrn1. home in love at first ~igt11 w1 Jh rh 1~ Commercial NE\\' POR T INTF:RNA-
Juxurious 3 bdrrn .. 3 bh . 7.1()(1 Properfu 1.S8 TIONAL, ca n cxpert J11cr11-Broadn1oor. T u r t I e 1-"'" 1 I • · ·1 ~q . f(, home, ''~··NV • II Hve r :1 r n 1 11 gs \\'hie
Rock Located JUSt lf.i ~·Julies lnnd. INVESTMENTS working u11ly ;1 fp\1' hours
blk.frommajorparks RICHIRWIN \\'JTH "'~IAJOH." P t'r Wl't>k r(•f 1ll l ng
\'I/pools, tennis els., Realtor 675-6060 TENANT.-;.LEASEBAO\S ;\U1'QJ\1AT IC J\1F'.ltCHAN·
BAYCREST. 1st 1veck on Of'rJCE D lS~llS wll h n '1 I 1 {l n a 11.Y full recreation facili-k • , p u o o l N c ~ n1arkeL ln1n1a e 4 AR (J BH C0;\171\ERClAL t~iwn ; ,. t ies. Priced at $35,950 . a ~tudio) z~~ bti, F'am nn, & APT BL.D'GS l-'){UJT CUP" Snacks. anrl
D. b kl 1 W R DUBOIS INC 1:11!1ecting the inoney bo\t•s.
E:LEGANT 3 Br, den, 2 sty.
Anti que decor. $350 Ml. Incl
gardenf'r. 557--0-HI.
Newport Bea-c7h---· I
BAYS!IORES, winter ninla\.
St'p\, 1 J !o June 10. 4 BR,
Sf>Chldf'd patio. S200. No pets
:~18-:i.22:,_ 111 rn1, sep 1· st rn1. Iv . . , .
trn v:/hi-tx-arn cr i l l 11g. !H.E. Bro kers) 8.13-9'1-l.'i \\'hat an l:'USY way to niakl' i3AY----::<;!l0 RES -4 hr,
deo;.'Or1lll)r (lrps. ~l11h lnr -:;.~:. Ni"T con1n1 . acres. n1011ry! H you ari-reliable, IV1n1rr rt>nl al. $3'25 "SI:\'CE 1946" 3 ha,
boat. lovely yard, \V111d11';1rd .1. , , 0 have a good l'll!', and can Call 6~2-5211. l:>l '\l1estcrn Bank Bldg. a mo.
4 BR, den, 3 ba. Nr. Racquel
llarllor llighlands-close tu Club & boat ramp, $59,&lO
ilt ar\rt('rs park & school. ,V!arshall Realty 6754600
u~ J-bdrm 1JOOI' plan
has rurt!c llv. rm. with
\Valls of cork & natural "'ood
panelling. 10 FT. HIGH
CEILINGS OF OPEN Tl~1-
BERS, exten&lve use of col-
oN!d GLASS SKYLIGHTS.
11assive BRICK FIRE-
PLACE W/ORNATE HOOD.
Center stair>A:e-n has antique
CATiiEDRAL \V!NDOW OF
STAINED GLASS & CRYS-
TAL. Approx. 100 YRS.
OLD, A truly Gounnet kit-
chen w/ELEC. RANGE &
SEL.F-CLEAN OVEN. DSH·
WSHR., CUISINE CENTER.
---'llP nl!ur Unlver~ity Park
Days 83J..0101 Nights
U1' ltl ,,vr. ra nge 1n1n1"diatn!y ,-,, .... ~1 SS00.00 Ln, :J11J'.~ assurn. loan, l'lO ·~ ·r ,,_ ' v'" f 30S •· •'""' errns 1.o $2100.!l<l, you inay be Houses Un urn.
$59,500. 646-2027. Call \VhC<"l1'r, Sa ni:;ster. R.E , selected 10 joi n your success -G-
0
-n-.-,-.-1------•I
BE:AlrrlFUL NC\\-port Beach Phone 5.12--2200 1ean1. Dro11 us a note show· iltUST BE SOLD. Owners of
this charn1i11g home have College Park Huntington 8e•ch homt>, .1 hr, 2 ha, fani rni, Income Property 166 ing your sl ncert> 1ntert>sl,
util r1n, hl!ns, 2 frplcs 11nd 11·c'll show you ho1v. FREE!!
l a ndlords-Owners added a den _and CXltnpletcly 4 BR. 2 BA, famil.Y rm, elec.
re---Ult the kitchen \Vilh all kit. w/pantry. Dlning rm or
::IT/steel 11 lrc fixture~ incl s!ud), New carpt!ts,
dishwasher & C'ven a BBQ. lireplace, patio deck &
\Ve belie ve this to be the sprinklers. $32,900 '>''I 1070
he sl value 1n Nc\vport dn. 549-31()5 for app't.
Beach. Cal! tllr. Harris lo I ~---""°""~-
se.... now, PriC(X! reduced Corona del Mar
Lower level fcaturea 3
bdrms., lo: 2 bat~. f\fstr,
bdrn1. suite & dress. mi.
ha.'> Van Luit 11·all coverings.
MA.sSJVg OLD AOOBE
FJ'REPLACE. ELEGANT
BATH JIAS HUGE SUNKEN
TUB, dbl_ pulln1ans, all lav-
e.tory & bath trlm are AN-
TIQUED BRASS. Perfect
blerxhng of casual elegance,
for:
WHIPPOORWILL
Move up to this beaut 3 BR
2 Ba condo. Priced low at
$23,0C.O. New, upgraded ernls
& dll'JS, bltin R/0, dish~·shr,
.FA hl, pa tio, dbl gar, niCt"
ne ighhorhood. L<-1 son1ronc
else do the \1·o rk. Just «nJOY
th!? pool and recrr<i,tion Ja.-
<·ilities. Call . , •
CHARMIR
Shingle exterior. Spacious
living roonl with th't'pla(.'('.
Dlning roon1. 2 Brlrn1s. &
loft. 2 Priva1e pa!ios-sur-
rounde,J by niatun-fruit
tr«>s. Only SJ-j,500. Ca!J ..
rov'd patio, f'flJl!lf'r plun1-•COSTA f\l ESA Senrt nnnl(', a(!/Jt'('SS, .u11I
bing, un(l<'t~round u(il. Nr Bamboo Village l:l-2 BR µhon<' nuni lx'r To : Ne\.\·port \\',.. 1vill refer lenan1s ro you
shop'g, s~·hls, pal'k, librar;.-Garden Houses all \l'/alt. FREE of chargC' ... ~1any
& tennis 1·our1~. Hy o"·nrr. garages & pat ios. 0 n Jrt>:"111ation.1I Dislributing desirlll)le te11ants on our Con1pany lJepl. No. '.!llA $46.500. tJ.12-i6SG. valuable l72x20~. 1 hlk Bank \\'a1ting list. -----• -----., . :1100 Newport Blvd.: ALAR t I e 64,3~ WATERFRONT or America, • n11. ocean. N 1 ('~· C"ll , •. 611 e n a s ;;,-.. l'U\I
Jnroine Sl .9-10/nro. Good ~po~ ""aC'h, ·""' · · 40 •
Channing Cnndominium nn tt•rms. Gail Page owntr. ;,,.i:; PLJ\STI CS e DARLJNG Dump-2 Br,
<>nC'' gar, kid/pets ok. Av!
today Sl Zl.
$33,:j()(). ~I·ake your otter! 1----------
&.iuth Coast Real Estate Bachelor's Paradiu 1h" bay. 0.:-lighlfuJ view -Bernard SI, C.~1. 646----4·1.10. * Manufacturing *
~1'15·3·12-1, Home + Income 0 Ja. #'I pool, p1t·r l~.~· *LAGUNA BE-ACH* E>-.p:lnd1ng manufac!unng ~· II/ ~ _ "-'JW 8 UNITS $89,500 l\), rrr1u•rf'S mt1n lo operate ALA Rcnl<tls e li-15-3900
1 ----==~---10\.\'llf"r says sell. movir!g back VETS to 1'exas. He'll throw in the REAL fSTATE TEI> BUBERT & A.~SOC. 1 11000 ,1 Cl . , ~111 . plan1. ProduL1s arr pre-'• COZY Coll ngc-2 Br r/yrd .. 171 v· L d ,--'""" ncon1c owr . . o, os( 1 J ,1 ~ bl , , NO DOWN 40 M.. lot, neat l·BR. income
unil. pool, patio & jacuzzi
TO YOU '°' 159."iOO
l' illage Real Estate
"2-4471I::::.)546-llOJ
1190 Glenncyre S L :!' 18 1 o, i;i-,l\N in wal k lo shop:; ,t· hPi11'h. l'O l · ' us t ~ a e 10 SUf!<"r· f'n<·l gar, kids/p£•1s. $130,
494-9-17,~ 549-0316 N\VPT HGTS-2 lge Ur, 1 ba. N~s a il ltle work_ \'IS!• f~l'O<'.luctiou. pllrl'ha~ing, J\LA Rentals • 645·3900
* TRI-LEVEL * Jge kit & srrv porch, din PLACE HEALTY •l!l·l-\l7lH ~h1p1nng & ,N'ee,1v1ng, Sl.1.000
321.500 full price . Big, beaut· Univ•rsity R•alty r m, dbl 1<a1·. :\Int Joe. ''""" . C . _ II . L ,, 1nve~L rt''I d. $,«XJ pe r 11'C<'k l BR. 2 ba/ Dining balcony. "''""' ·"'· oasl \\y., ,._,, + r· 1 1 $29,$00. Owner ~.l:.i.-4:".'..!1. -~ Ill s!:lrl piu 11$ 11· 111• 1
e }·!NJ-'. J_j)('• 1 Br, l'ntl
~ar, l/y1l, k1 ds/()et!>. $150.
1ful .1 bcdr111 ran<"h stylr , 3001 E. Cst. llwy. 673~0 $74,500
MISSION REALTY
98(1 So. Coas1 Hwy, Laguna
Phone (714) 494-0731
4 BEDRM + 2 BA. Un1quf' interior. f\1ove-1n --,-1-l 1-E-l3I UFJ.:..,,-.-*NEW -UNDER should 1•an1 party sf'leeicrl Al.A P.1·nl :tls e 6-l.>3900
shak1· roof. !irepl, huge rovd CORONA DEL MAR $ 000 ('l')ndhion . 3 BR 2, ' Im · f · 1 CONSTRUCTION -$;i0,000 pi•r year. Yo1.1r 1nrn;I 21, Asking $-12,500 . • ·~ '· 31111 Y rnl 10 UNIT APTS. ri1<id inv1•sliga11on 111v1te{i, • 1-'RE.'.Sll & i•lran-2 Br, nu
cpts, lrg yd, ('ncl gar,
kldsl JH.'ls. Sl"i!J.
pa110. v.·alk tf'l au sch!~. HOME & APT.
Hurry -Cal! ~·J0-1151 (0pc11 l fo choose from. Lrg 4 BR "Sparkling·• clean, quality PLACE REALTY 49-1-9704 V~~I\',. C'Qll\'C niC"nt 10
1
fJark, lO D1•lux 2 BR/2 BA. 23:12 Re f's cx(·hanged f'or per· 2969 S Coast H"J' LB S11vpp1ng & st•l100 s. By .:· CM 'I . _, --. <."9J'P{'ls, "all the built-ins," · :~ _. _. _ 614 .17. 1 6 r.·dcn Ave, . "ust see :,'Onru 1nte1v1e1\, phone ELEGANT in1maculately land!>caped! IRVINE Cove re~iden;:e-Lge ov.·ner. · _,. ·'" lei:__ lo appt"C'cla!e !' Sl7'J ,CXXI. 71-1/870-5310 ext l-l .
eves.• tri-levct home + 1 BR apt. ALA RP11la!s e 6-5-3900
It's VACANT! O\.\'Tler mus-I pool/patio. Principals only. NPT llclg11ls ~ 4 Br, 2 Ila, o~·ne"''"~E~v~"'-'64~6-~53~0~2 -~J""-~::':~::;"';:::90iiiiiii" 111 S'TEPS 10 heh! n'ally nice MANSION sell OO\V .•• submit all :::tiown b,v app1 494-~i. la in rn1. gar , fnt'd. $3•1,000. {3) 2 BR/1 BA HOMES TO BUY OR z P.r. CI D, baby & llml
Vacanl 4 bedroom tri~e\'el, terms. _o._,_·oe_r :,.1~8·177 SELL A BUSINESS i k 1·-
• ~. I 10';~ dn. $63,500.
lllllTAGI PERRON REALTY CO.
, IUl ISl'•n _ 642-1771 1,,,:;;::::::::==:::;:::;:::;1 -~1MA=G1N=E!~
SANDPOINTE
!Jran1a11t' l-lx•droo1n , :.!' 1 bath
1wo stc•ry :::tu i:c'O home 1n
Orange Cot1 nty's n1ost con-
venient location. Only ODf'
year old but fully and
beauufully landscaped, nt>ar
schools. P\ll'ks & p 1 a y
grountl~. 3 n11nu!es to 3 rrce-
\'13}5, Sou!h Coast Plaza.
Sh;,1:: ca rricting, l1replacc,
l.3\'JOO. Owner selling prin-
eipaJ~ 6n1y. 5:>7-311 1, ---------lido Isle Estate
On 3 ht':,1ul1fully lndsepd. lots
al Lido's I::ast en<l, l\-'e offer
fl I lxlrni., 6 bath, 5500 gq.
ft. hon1r with pool, priced at
"180.000-.........
Coldwell, Banker ............ 833-0700 644-2430
5 Bedrooms
V1e\\' of bay fr /Jm up!'l('r
s\01;.: b]IJ1$.: 21-. baths.
13P.'.IU1!1ully furn_ $63.'.f.iO.
CalL 673-~1 6T.r8886 Eves.
associated
BROKER5-REAL TORS
2025 W Balbo111 673·366)
-stiY TODAY
Move in Tomorrow
,\'otl11n~ to do, llnrhor View.
·I BIL. 'l't b<i ., w fan11ly rm.
A11 ff'nef'd, tnclscpc!_ & dec-
oratrd. f,il,!XXI.
Homesliow R•altor
"Armchair H0Lr.~ehunt111g'"
353.5 I::. Const l-f1vy., CdM
675-7225
-INCOME -
PROPERTY
s:;oo. ninv\'ll y01.1 111
lo <1uajifil'.'d buye r.
BY (lll'ncr, 3 AR 1-luntinJ.:IOn COMPLETELY flP.I o . i 1.1.
inclu<les l baths, l car gar , C.'l.ll i'l47-122t c onllncutal rondo "'/sink Newport Heights REDONE HOLLAND BUS. SALES ALA Rrn1a!:-; e
separate formal dining area, SEYMOUR REAL TY ('l'llh•r. $1600 dwn. T.O.P. ---..,:--:c:-c-,..=,---IN,.11, tTpl s, new flrps, ra•w "The Broker \\'l!h Emp:l thy"
CORNE R DUPLEX L;u..:e :1 story entt')'. SU11ric11 171·11 B1•at·ll Blvd., Hign Heh %8-!16·IL 2 ON LOT 111,, 11,.w flvo r nl'w pain·. 1716 Orange /Iv" .• C.f\1.
SOUTH OF HWY. living roooi, large kitchen 0?('n 'Iii 9 Pi'>f I !,'AUST GO! l!i.igc 101, 1:!36.Eldeu ,\~(·. &lJ-4170: 5-J0.0608 anytime
$40,500 wi th eating area, plus out-Laguna Nigu• Cl1•311, ._. br hoinP • r1•ar 1 C'l Iii() 1lOO 0 .. L'.,~-.· \Ve nr cd sales "'""Pie
b I N N • -• • l•Jl1 !. .I:.•~" .. -¥
University Realty side B-B·Q, balrony and $28,950. MONARCH BAY r ioine o11 • ,' 't•11·p1)11 64t>-53t~ll~-------1 •-::'i:°i":';;:f::"\'i:':'::;:'-
3001 E. Cs1. J{~y. 673-6.)10 tating area. Separate fan1-4 BED RMS & 2 BATHS 3 BR. \\'i lli vil'IV Sli!l.~iOO LaBlvd., 1 nr t7 \\f's11n1ns1cr. -1 -.-1~.k 10 hi•·i•·h ;. .. n, ,,., ... -~ Nlct' Lil\11• &tsiness
i!y room with v.·et bar, plen-rgl' OT, ~O!lf'. Offer '~ · · ' u"""" Ari ~11.llr1'). frames, 1:ifts,
Can1eo Shore!. luxury 2 hr & ty o! A"torage, fireplace and Rea.I fllC(' home in Dutt1l Ha. ~\'~~'.j;;·~;.l~d~r))~ &1!:·.~ $26,500. Call 2l.l 661 -3900, 11 (213n1 f1"n t, 2 a ~ls rci11·. All good u~ed rurniturr. Very
den honlf'. beaut garden. Sliding glas.o; door 10 rear ven illal'111a area. llns used an1-l pm ('I' all 6 lJn1, Bkr. :I l!•ga.! n •111aJ inu ls un :!-H-1 :1 ll rac11ve stor<', low rcn1,
\Viii sac rif1L'f> HI S69,500 Jor bti<.:k teti-around hunt 1al\'Jl Oen, 21 ba's. $230 ,000 hil~, 3 g:iragr.~. 0 \1·nt'r ~~• I 1,~ , .1 . 1 · k I o 6"-~98 yard. O\'e.rsized mas'ter sui te L N" I R It San Juan Capistrano , gvuv cu~f' '"""' r~q ( In<:' fjU1<: sa e. nr, 1r ...., . & entry. Pnced 10 ;;ell -aguna 1gue ea Y -----~----I •107-40'.l P o r• p y , ttl;"o.1 ln\'rntory ,«., Dalgtin s!ation * SAV~--Call 011·ner. 3 hr, 2 ~~~kla~1~~.e!re~\1::.:~~::;: Cali ~oday for showing, 83~5050 496-5791 HILLTOP ACHE li73-i7i~. \i'gn.&12----1:?.'11 or&·!Z.:>l lS.
ha. R-2. Cd.\1, So ol hwy. super c-lean. MARINER REAL TY Lido Isle .1 B1lrn1s., 2 baths. F.-in1ily C.M . (2) 4--PLEXES AJo'Vtl:iATE:. r,,.1 111 0 11 !lir
673--2399 842-;J;ttl 24 hr. ;tns. scrv. fill Iii S\1'1'1 · l' " scp. u · rm. 1, · Lrg delux u111ts, Mesa Verdr. J1.1c-rative <'nd of incirhinc
Cost• Mes• DELUXE DEN 216 Via Lorca MING POOL. All located on NI' shopping, Fwy·.~. f'1 <·. sales. 14 stall' arrii. Active
3 Bdrms. plus J"". added den. Artr., l'Xposeci beam l BR. 3 !.2() acre hilltop with great Assun1e Joa n princ11m\ 11n-·1 1 ~· "'" Out t nd. L . ,,. ••711-1 ••• "IOJ •· B "~ I .c . 0 I , ur s1 en , ;>o<>-UO<JV. S a 1ng ocat1on ...._.. .... L --Magnificent lndscpg. Va-a. nvln<' w ~Uui patio. n. va ley view. II or se s ly. $J41,9W. 5~7-2876,1----------1
e 4 Bil !:kn. nr heh.
8!ins. L'/D, hugc yd. 1i1ds/
P<'IS_ S~.
/\LA Tten1al~ • fi4j..:¥.KXJ
e PRf BCH, CdM, :! Brr.!
Bu, f/yd. Child & pe!. $250.
/\LA flt'n lals • 64:J.3!KX)
e YOUR 011·11 Pnol-J Br +
den, :! Ba, frplt:, <:hrlfll ok.
PO{'ll serv provided. $275.
/\LA Hentals • &15-3900
!!)!)9 Harbor Blvd, C~l
4 br, 2 ba, lge kitchen/din'g cant, ready 10 rnovf' ln. Jy $65,000. ~·cl comt'. Asking $42.500. 54~i.16 l. CAFE, f'qu ippe<J_ ld,.al fu r
area, frplc, brick patio, * * * l-lones-t price of $30,200. 912 Via Lido Soud Call ·19.1-llZ.!. Rrallor ---------org:-nn1e f()(l(I.~ •lr t·ater1n~. fr.••• '" J,,,,,,11,,rJ•
trees, ('(ltner huuse 1\·/side LARRY ALMQUIST LEADERSHIP R. E . Charn1iug si ngle-sty. 3 BR. 2 PRIME R-4 C.M. etc. Rf'as. 6<1 ~-2149. 645 0111 San Clem•nte 3n \\r. Bay S:.1, C1111 build -' yard tor boat or trailer. 2 25012 SPADRA LN. 842-4466 847-1734 Eves. ba. liomt' on 00 fl. lo!. Used M t L 240 4lS w. lt•h. COSTA. UEU
minutes !o major shop"g MISSION VIEJO brick rronl, li;e. patio. :;; ADJOINING del ux triplex-!1 un11s. lot ;,jx~.1G .. pn·l'1·nt oney 0 oan _--,~---
cente1·, itte'>''a)'.li, scll<Xlis, YO\J are tlie winner of Priced For Quick s.1.1 ~.000. (':>, all bHn~. ind l!l lt'rt'Qnl, l!K'Onli' $2,8SO, P11n(tpll.1 Ofl· 1 t TD L n I
50 acre p ark . $31,~. 2 tickets to the VACANT! ONLY $28,SOO! Tip of Lido Isle al11~n1, va~· sys!l'nis, pvt ly, S:!7,~ ~,.J~,_7;u;1, .i."17-~76. s oa , -.-- . ' -~3086. Southland Lovely COr lot~ Spac -4 BR! Beaut. 4 BR., 5 Ba. hon1c 2 pa tloi:. t'h'c gait's. frpli·, Nt·11· 27 Adult /\p! "' , . J Sl:.O -STE~S 10 ocean
CLEAN & NR Nodn!VA or Lo F1iA tt'nns! frpl cll. 56 fl. water rrontagl', i(ar. i!oor opt'llPr.~. Closi• !u $·)22.000 7 ,a INTF.RF:ST (0 1y 1 Br. Cotlagc. Stv/nif,
SCHOOLS Hom•s~oe•rden HAFFDAL REALTY Room for large ix-~t slips. heh &_shpg _ $7400 ()wn per l\'11\.1, Rr1Jkf'~_lf>12-'l~~r,1 _ 2nd TD Loan ("hild ilk, li-t >--011 1
31 I ._, 342-4405 Ev~: :1<tl-244G Prier Sj()(),000, unit. &12-:1·190. I d t · I p t l" xrm. bath & "'· Jge ~·ailed at the
5
A n us r1a roper Y .,.. $J \n.r srn1.;, 'l Br, Sep. Y-~ 716,-Ralc· I St Id-• ANAHEIM Irvine Bill Grundy, Rltr. anta na Term! based on ('ff11i!v, ....... ig1 . e.u ,.,_ . NB ~~61 ----------11\l·l ZONE[) !!Ilg B<'t11 or-642-2 171 54'0.611 hl)1nr . N1cp ).1rd ror fol & home for kid! " peU:. CONVENTION J4l D.ilymde, .,,.,...,, -.,.. (' i'r 0111 ~2.\900. Flexible ~nns. By CENTER Would You Bel i •v~? -4 AR" 3 Ba, OOx!Kl •••• $77.500 HOUSF. ron .S,\LE r,a·rs , siuragc yard. ldral Serving llarbor are,1 21 yrs. pr·1. .at:ii;•'. ~ .i. •
O\.\'ner-hroker, 533-8515 or You can move inlo thii R l 3 1~ b th BY O\\'i\F:R 0~ r'1nlrilr,1~~ nr~_ 1,nc••11,11' Sattler Mortgage Co. 528-1917 a:trer 4:30. J uly 30-Aug. g J H " fainl y rn1., , a s 3 Hi· :2 fJi\ lan11ly--<li~1 1 11r, ra1 .$i>ti()(J yr. $.1~ .. iOO } .J. \\!II 3.16 E. 17th Street ~11:'!-f)ELUX F 1 Br. 2 Ba Pl~ call &12-5678. l"X'I. 314 love'ly 3 ~!rm. 2in ba., tam-.14~~:.. ~1 h~'1hs'.' 70~80$;.l~ (·arp<>l/tlt'aJX"~ s 2 :; , 9 :, ri i•onsHl«r· •'.\i'h:,11i,;.. f 0 r .-;11ul10 11 /frplr-. r n patio & * MESA VER OE * be-t~·een 9 and 1 pm lo ily rM., din. nn .. on primC' 1 1 1 1 1125 000 4)3!1-.11~3 2~2:1 \\'_ (,.11·1 r.11. lar~r·r 1111!ustr111 I or ape. c h F 1 I 1~·.-11. Vat·.1111 . 0.1:'!-0lll.
4 DR, 2 BA, Top cond. In claim yCJUQ.)tiCk~. (Nortb greenbelt, for as l1trJr as .O:P. ot ~· Po0 ·••• • &i nt.a An(l .':·!li<l71i9 "r 1'·1Z.14'.l5. as as
0 ~. -" t •· · $4 000 ctow• LIDO REAL TY INC. ·" " · 1 t • 1op location, Cornet-lot w/ UJUnty 1w.i· ree num..,.,r 1S • "' Open ·11',.1,.,p Si~! F. ~un Lots for Sale $1."':~,..111 ):-; •· nr1." !Jl'M'! .,
m:it\rre tree!.. Owner am:-!>ll}-1220) I d h II 3377 Vla Lirlo 673·7300 ~.;1 pm l70 lit & 2nd Trust Deeds !1r. '!Br, Fn1•d yard S, gar.
ioug. \Vtll Mil bclow apprai-* * t: _.-· · .. ·. ": re •• COZY 2 Ar, den. 1 ha. Small ~~-~~ -~--l'l!OICJ'.: Jn1. R-2. 10Ux1.'t'i, FREE APPRAIS/\LS 6-l •·Ol 11.
sal. Asking $29.SOO w/10% $42.00 rooms, 2 walled t-ourt yaros. Univ•rsity Park Pavi·tl ;ill"Y· ~-Ill ~_:, Costa Mesa Investment ,
do1\11. 545-5~ or 54j-l951. Can be your only COJ,t if you 81,0: potf'ntial. S 4 4 , 0~ 0 , 4 Br roi\nho1isr . 2' ~ ha, z !l1'!Ch1.;_.,1t•r ,'ii,. Cf1\la :Vlesa 548-7711 anytime I SI 1t1.11 Pt~JL l l!r:. ~tudio.
SELL OR TRADE al"t' a Vet, with payments of REAL'fY (}.>.'l1cr 67:>-.1913. J..:ve:<; I lnilcll. i\lrnlcl h•inw , 11,111y Closo' ro lilh SL ~11upµing _ B/1 11.,, t·p1s. drp~ Kid.<> & pel
4 BR/2 Ba homt> • for 4 only $200 per month, l B~· Univ, Park Cen!er. Jrv1ne wk11ds. exl n1.~-XlnT 1 o r· a I ion . ;11·C'n . $2~.000 673-'.l:,0~)_ Money Wanted 250 (fk, fi l.).()111 .
units or 24 'xfi0' mobile home, rooms. separate laundry, Call Anytime 833-0$20 M•s• Verde S36,:i00. 10',~ dn. 18102 C\t;uNA-[-W11cJ~nia lTJOt:l ---,--.---.---
lLB. or F.V. * l BR on hardwood noon. F'WI price ~~':""."""""~""":":'.:'.I Leatherwood. Call 'Ci!l-3311 All ul il, si;,ooo. HOWARD PYLE
R' I 1 ~, ~ I'"~• 4 BR. 2~ ba townhouse, 2,•100 BY OWNER; 3 br-2 ha, fam tor appl B;ok~r """·'""· 642·4116 ~R.~. I E t t b sq tt, lrg !am rm, liv rm & rm. 2 trplc, bltr-6, new , WEED ·1 & .. 77·1·2i5J 24202 TWIG ea 5 a e Y clin 1m, lnd~C'p. S40,7j() <' p1 I d p11 , fncd yrrl. , " 1 reap · .clean Mountain Desert EL TORO, CALIF.
F'OR sale by owner-4 hr McVAY 01vner. 811-1337. A.~i;uma ble ~i1 1 'i; Lo an . ~~~ th;to~:~~~I~; atr~~~1; Resort ' ' 174 You al\' t11e v.·inricr ot l11Jn1r nr school.~ Ir. A"hpg., $'.!.!!!JOO 67? MI09 1----------·1 2 ticket~ to 1be $28,000_ Assumabl~ F1-IA DAILY PILOT DIME -A ··· · .,. ·· Tradtor'sPararlil'lecolumnls 10 ACRES $1595 FP Southla nd
Loa n at J~l·;~. 1185 Dorset -LINES cost you just pen-Turn unuJ<ed Hems Into <;ulck f~r you! 5 Lines, 5 Days for Nr nc\v rrcew11y & olfrn.nip. Hom~ & Garden
Lane, c.~1. Phone, 51;>.2421.1 ":::::'-~'~53~3~ ___ _::54~5-'.:'.:04~'8~ 1 ~"~"='=':;::: .. ='=":;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::::...=C~M~h=·~"":;:::ll=":;:::,_=,..='~';;::::::;:::;;:::::~="="~cru;;:::::~' ~'~='="="=·=·~"~'=·=061~·~·"' Riverside Counly, dlrl Show
l Br, large gar, fenced yd~ l\l8ds, ac<.-ess1hle. Bctl\'11 at th1•
$~0!!-~ Bil. }'ain lly l!OmP..
Si(>Vr, 1•pls , ga.rai;:e, l''ncd
for kids & pets. &15-0111.
BEACON * 645-0111
• * •
MRS. STEPHEN VlbA
6042 ARROWHEAD OR.
HUNTINGTON BE"~CH
close to llChools l ih>pping. TIBURON CONDO Jake & ci1y, 10'.iO dwn, EZ ANAHEIM
SHERWOOD REALTY $16,000. :m Co1ta Mesa St. Larwin built and btautltul. Ci ~' ( j) ~ t1•nns. For fu1urc invest· CONVENTION
CALL 540-8555 646-9136. A decorator'• delight, with \:)~"\\,Qt.I .L"J.-~ ~((•Se merit. 7141537-77.13. CENTER
You 11re lhc winner 9'
2 tlckcts to th& :,.
Southland ~·
$150 TOTAL DOWN l ·.~cu=T=E~l~b-,,-,~ba-.-,.-l~io. bo~ w"hlle auper stwlg ct.r· 1-iAMILTAIR, L a.ke .Ar· JUiy 30-Aug. 8 Jge yard. sm down or petln;. l BR, 2 Ba, din rm, The Punfe with 1he Buiff.fn C/Jacl/e ro\vhead, lo1 \\'Jthin 250 ol P!ens(' f'ail 642.5678, ext 314
;>pon 1sh 3 hedrOOll• !own-assume $189/mo. pymnts, lam rm,~;t a~r cond'oA~· A Rearrange J.tl9n cl the :ak~ & ~t~kf,~?r8~~e ur bt'twL•en 9 anrl 1 pn1 to
hou.-.e. Oloire Fountain $24,000. By ov.-ner 646-8139. sum~ oan. ny •tow a::n::irnb'9d Ylb'dl be-rart:. · · "·>-· or cl.~1n1 .vour llcke is. (North
Valley Jocat1on. $2.1,900. BY owner-Westide Bluff 3 S'29.900. law to fonn four simpl. words. 213/Z46--1 37t Coun ly toll.free numlJeC' is-
Home & Garden
Show
at the
ANAHEIM t
CONVENTION :
CENTER Broker 8-12-25.l'> ==°'"-I br, Jrg . atio, Jrg fenced yd. 1
1
6 E E H I M I Out of State Prop. 178 5'10-ll20J ;-:; U .S .AFF ILIATE O ·-i•
1 1 1
, ·, * * * J11Jy30-Aug,I ~EPOSSESSIONS S:l,950. ~32· __ BROKERS -:l AC v.·/ncw 1Y"d1\"001I 2 Br ~--------!Please rall 642-;£78, tt£; 314
Sparkling clean homes, some BY owner, Spanish gtyl~ 3 {1ormerly Brashear RltyJ h~<'. fnc<l, drilled \Vi'tl, nr Mortga g•S, bct1\·cen 9 11.nd 1 Pill, lo ne~·Jy J)'linted & carpeted. 2 BR In thf' Golden Triangle, 147.t507 I cnt y rd. Oreg. $14.500. Trust De~~--···--~60 claim your ticket.'l. fNorth
3. 4 & 5 bdrm.•. Some with 557-6541 by appt ohly. SUPER SHARP • L U D A T I t lc646-6663~~=·------·ICl-lOICE $72.000 TD Emerg. County toll-free numbtr is
Po'1ls. F'llA-VA conv. term.$, East Bluff j j I Ii i · Real Estate ~lu.'l! Sell quickly. Pays 540·l22flJ •
Jrom $20.CXXI to S<IO.CXXI, -====-o==-.Assume Go/o VA Joe.n.
3
Bed· f •U M E R,
1
, ~ ... _,.... ___ ....,~./ Exchange 182 S2.291 mo. 9~~. 714-72~1155 * * * \ COLLINS & \\IATTS INC. e EXCLUSIVE AGENTS e rooms. family room, funnal I . di . W·''-..... boot d d&y or t'VC, 3 BR. 2 00. unf. hon~ W/ 83\1 Arla1ns Ave. 962-5523 SALES • LEASF.S null. ILU\ "'SC 1 Ml YOUR equlty can do mort'l=---------· I 1 1 .,~ lh r~ lhopl.. i r-""'' lh-uoh a well PVT pty wlshc11 2nd for 4 br, l)(lt'I a _,., mon · .....,.,,.a, Vl.B1,A!~,RLO•"~.T.,A,.,,PT1s5.110 ,. R--• Es ...... by I I I' I • &O~~aThei....e:!~!~ "'-.,v,,. ....... 3 bf!. Udo 1 0 , Park. Costa Mesa. ""' uu '" -~!>..~ WUI •u•• • • • • • WTJ9 wuu •--~ wno designed ex change. No area I !lie hOme. 1 ',c 2 BH .. l1011:sc tint. S2'l5, Avail
avalt. rrom $31,500. SeU Gt c ~--~: 1:1{ McVAY I ff 0 c D I R I .... to-~ 't·~s limitation, By appr. Mr. al 10 ptl. 675-~97. E'tl(I Aug, N'pt Bch, I Of.Sf ~·~ • ~ ~ dldlt StttJe, 54&-8450. FIR.ST T. D. a pprox $13,!XX), C.all: 673-.1663 &12-2253 EW!I. 6~~;;:e ':l~lla~·:.s ~~~~1 rca •r r..: .. ..,. ~ -~~~ I I I I r 17 ,.::,...,!~~= RMI Elt•t• W•nted 1u,d_'""" __ ._1 _'k._'._';..._"'_; __ _
I .._-.,........,.."" (1'7-r-"'IW WE need a 3 br house 1\·ith1-8EAC~·~~o~GAIN 2414 Vi«ta Del Oro SELLING ~ ~~l~~~~Rf~mw [ r r r r r I' I bc-nrnrd c·r illnlis t:a~t side,
nn 1 .1 Nl!wport ~&eh &«--1133 YOUR HOME? - - - _ _ _ . • C11~1a o\lrsa or BAek Hny n;~1~: 2
3c;; i~r. ~7i1 ~111":1~ 5 BR, J ba. 3-<:M< ~. lltt •ppralsal • w,, buy fj ~~~ LETIW I I I I • I · f I :~d:001~1~or 1;1:-~:":~m~~
only $1'l500. OIJtstanding I n d s c P n I. ~itltt.. Pn110rW atlentlon. tmt·1s. lip 10 S::Ki.000 cn~h .
CAYWOOD REAL TY $75,000. Owf'll"r. ~-25 yn, ~rlence. Vogi'f (:r) HrAh1Jr.~. 20~>2
~106 W. COOS! llwy., N.Jl. Foe <hat !ttm ""'" IOO, COLLINS lo WATTS SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 Nowpocl Blvd. Co"• '1"'· 548--1290 try the Peney P incher 96!-:'1623 Ews. 642 -0.121 :,.llJ..93•Ui. -
9UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
associated
DROKERS-.-AEJ\L TO I,, S
2015 W lolboo 6JJ.J.,11 J
GOV'T REPOSSESSION;·~ow
dn. Assume low int Joan.
EM.Y qunUfying. Bl r ,
642--4245 anytim". ;.;
1 C:ioU t\12-t11173 Now!
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SO YOUR LITilE . RED WAGON
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IS REALLY DRAGGIN'
l\1.L
BILL.
ADD HORSEPOWER TO THE FAMILY BUDGET
'
You can handle those bills. All you need are the dol·
lars you'll get for all the still-good, but· nobo~y ·uses·
them items you'll find all over the house. Make a list
of them today and decide to turn those unwanted ar·
ticles into extra cash. It won't cost you ... it'll pay
you. And you'll be surprised at how fast you can sell
iust about anything with a DAILY PILOT classified ad.
Try it today. Every day is a good day to use
DAILY PILOT WANT ADS
(And You Can Charge Them)
E 642·567
-• • ..... -,.Jllll -·-. ,s: -p.•-·---'""I .~ ..!..._ .-I},"' .. '.\JI --~-, .... ~.. ....,_ -----·--"' ·--... -·~ •' ~
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21 PILOT·ADVt.•>••~i:H Wtdntsday, Jul) 28, 1~71
\O ''fHEREAL ,'"'\., ESTATERS \ '' ·. 1.·, ' ,, I'\>
DON'T PINCH
YOURSELF
(You're Not Dreaming)
But You Can
PINCH YOUR
PENNIES
with a
PILOT
PENNY PINCHER
Classified Ad
3 LINES
2 TIMES
$2.00
Any Item Priced
$50. or Less
(If more than one Item, the combined total
c.annot exc.ffd $50.)
642-5678
':)<_--
1Job'l 11'ilil,
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US Apt. Unfurn.
Newport h•Gh
MARINER SQUARE
APARTMENTS
tor adu.Jlll d!Strlnc to ltve
admicbt ~auty by the tea
ln Ole PttSt.l&:IOl.ll We1tditf ......
CAN'T BE BEAT
SINGLE STORY
South Sea Atmosphere
2 BR .• 2 BATii
Carpets k d~
,-\ir Conditioned
Private PatiO!I
l!EATED POOL
P!enly of la.,.,·n
Carport & Sloraje
l-1fDDEN VILLAGE
2~iOO South S&.l!a
San!a Ana e 546-lj25
or Unfurn. 370
Gen•ral
PALM MESA APTS.
Bathe tor untum •..... Sl3J.
Barhelor turn •••••••• $145.
1-BR unfurn •...•.•••• S\40.
1-BR turn ••••••.• from $lj.~
2-BR unfurn ••••••.•.• $160.
2-BR furn ......•. 1rom $175.
e POOL
e SAUNA e JACUZZI
ON BEACH!
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84 DAILY !'!LOT '1LOT-AOVERTISEI !2
I~-=-' .... ;;; ... ;;;-;;1[S);;;, _ ... _ 1 ~ [ -~·-1~ [ L .... ,... ![II] ~r ;;;;·-,;;;;-·~1w~'1
--L «5 c.-te.r HouieelNnlnn He lp Wa n ted, M & F 7_1~ Help Wanted, M & ,.,710 Aptt., G•r•ge• for Rent 415 lndu1trlal Rental 450 Auto tr•naportatlon stS Olt -._.. :..:~==;,.·..:.,··,...--f ==::==:;;;;;;;;:::;:;;;o-;;;;;
I~[ l~I !~I ... "'"'"' 5 te ......
Fum. or Unfurn. 370 LCX:KED DBL GARAGE • * COSTA MESA * P~N to help drtve wtth \\'llJTE German Shepbeord irJ CARPINTRY Hoo~ei,aning By Day. Adm . Sales
•95 $167 th tady to Sun Valley. Idaho, vie. ol S&llta Ant Jlghll:. P.fiNOR REPAIRS. No Job Own TraNlportaUOn .Uk.able Jor irnal.I boat. "' • & pmr mon · Jtom~ a ddress 10101 Too Small. C.btnet 1n gar. Call 8l&-O&l8 campe-r or penonal prop· lndusu1al UllllS. rt.lu.ly Jar July 30 or lL 675--0737. EX-M ILITARY MEN
NO EX PERIENCE
N E CESSARY
ORT LIVING I0-220 Po ~ Cyp~u:. Sania Ana Hg ta. ages &: o t b e r' eablneu.1--;M'-,::,.:-;ci.=a-::ru.,=•s.n="·ice--I RES erl}', In E. ?2nd St. CM _ Ot.'C'upancyin~ss HLTR"": Approx 100 lb&. Hu: choker 545-8175 lt no aNWer leave Carpetll, Windows, F1oor etc.
Luxury •Pl Uvlna' v.·/ $1 mil-Office Ren t•I 440 _. C. NA1: 17 h C " · I 11•1 ehain with HuntiJJ&:ton Bch wg. al 646-2312. H. 0, R~!ld. & Commc'l, 5'\S-1.lll I. . 230 E.. I ' .• ' Penon.ts tag. Alllil\'Cl"'J !\) "Sam'', Andenon. Kiil recreation ... 11wimIJWJ&, 612-l~SS I I
tennis, billiards, SllJld vol· ·" bl ~"'l -=:-;::;:;;; Reward. 546--082:1 Mike or 'EXP=~rn~-~.--r~•=m~o~d~,~1~,~,~.-. ron ng OUR CO~IPANY \\'Otn..D
Llk."E TO 1:.'MPLOY YOU/t
'11lAININC & ABlLITY IL
APPLY IT TOWARDS A,'IJ
EXCITING. REWARDING
DESK space •v ..... a e ..., -'l·l 1....., .,. re. new bid< 67' "~ D'-· alt 6 t •~• kyball, health clubfi, u.una&, -o. \"ill p-·"d• '"""''".... ,...... ,,....J.N .... ie or Wui cahtnets, -··;-, malnt. No IRONING ·" · ho -• ""-·--.......... ...., '" ~ ,.,v, ......... ~ w/oll '''· lge rt!ar rloor, 1787 Porsonols 5311 num"·n ... ,~o . uune in my me ci11. ... -.-. l""' v roon1, ·~ • at 15 mo. Al\liwerlng &ervice .,., · job too amal.J . Re a 1. $1 25 an hr I & I \Vh1tt1er St, C:'l-1. Also 12.10 I~===~""""=--~= · id1.> 1eru1 s pro pro' IOP available. '122 Forest Ave, CH ILDREN SAD, l.O S'f 646-4224. * • 6-15.-0826 • ._,
& much more. Singles, l & Laguna &.ach. 494-9-166 l.ot:1111 Sc, C~t. L'iltl sq fl, Sl'EVE l\1cQUEEJ'I!: YOU SMALL WllT FUZZY P00-
2 UR. F'Urn/ Vnturn, Rents SI~:itn10. Dny,o;, &16-503.1, AN'D '.!ALCO' ~· "'llTll DLE 'f"PE. FEMALE Ce ment,. Con crete Moving U:~:-:::-------1 PROFESSJONAl. CAR.EEH.
DELUXE: 0F}'£CES, 1nodern '" ""DI " '-" .,.., ~
•-m 1135 ..• No lea~ re. evt•s 6...........,,, A•.··o MERT LA \VL! LL DOG. RED COLI.Al' & p 0 S 'aJ· d '!OV!N '"-uv pro.I building. crpts/drps I " \ AT! peel lfilli, Ad " ll ·For your wo.:al or
111ROUGH OVR C0~1-
P AN\''S TRAJNING PRO-
(;RAf,1 YOU 'LL LLAR.i'l
OUH PROVEN PROFE.':i-
SIONAL J\!ETHODS 01'
BUSrNESS THAT CA:-/
LEAD YOU TO\\' ARDS
t.IAKINC BIG i\fONEY }·or.
\'OURSELF &. A CAREt:H
\'lITH l'RE~ENOOL:S St.:.
CUR!TY & PRESTJG£.
quired. ~todcls Open Daily air cond, ttmple parking, Storage 4SS \IJER.E GREAT lN .. ONE FLEA COLLAR, VIC; distinction to your home long dUitance moving, call
lD to 8, Jlunltnglon Harbour area. 2 ANY SUNDAY ", WHEN N\\'PRT !ITS, 7 / 21 · with a custom patio de~i_gn. OK Van & S1oragr, your
SOUTH BAY CLUB
!Just tlr 11.Llll\.e people)
Ne1vport Beach
Unus 750 sq. ft. Day or BOAT & TRAlU.R ARF: YOU CO)tJ)rH.i-TO RE\l/ARD, PLEASE CALL ed especially for your horn~. locaJ allied agent. PaUetized
e\·e~: 714/839-8411. STORAGE ORANGE COUNTY FOR 646-9011. _ QuaJity, Exp e r 1 enc e . storage also avail. 8.11--0400.
Irvine & l6th. 6-15--0550
DESK spare ava1labl e ~
mo. \Viii provide furnilurt'
al $j mo. Ans1>o-ering servit'f!
lhin1111ii:1on &·h 11 r,.a ·r !I}-: S PEED \YA Y 2 dogs, .)'Ou ng Jen1a.Jes, l·Blk Salls!actlon. Eason & Sons Painting & 8·l7~ alt 4 pm J\10TORCYCLE RACES ON Lah. l·mixed ~11n. s1~11. Construction. 548--0769. p h •
OAKWOOD GARDEN Bvailable. 17875 Beach Blvd.
7 -,-.--,,"c-;--,---;.,70;; I t·RIDA Y NIGHT? SJGNEU, aper a ng1ng Rental• W anted _ & Lab. Vic l91h & Harbor. TRlJ, concrete \loTk for 88 Ml
HARRY. s,; Reward for ei1hPr. 313 yd!! or while carpeting. PO PAINTE!l, now srhool
APARTMENTS Huntington Beach. 642-4321
\VANTI-;J) to rr111 or lease 2 (re510rt livtng for adults) PROF'E~IONAL Bldg, 4Sc yrs 1Jr 1noi't': 3 br, 2 ba min,
Newport Beach sq ft. A~-cond, crpts. _drps, 1 tu 3 mi fron1 beach. Qu iet
16th & Irvine 642-8110 gd parktng. Xlnt Joe 3~ E. 10('. Adult.s w /im~cablt" 17th St. C.i\t. PETE BAR-,~.~
VISTA DEL MESA RETI' RLTY &\2-4 35J ttfs as lcsoors lm:n Rolling
Apartments _ •::n ll1lls Estares. $300 n1flX.
l &: 2 BR. Fu &: U f Dish-DESK i;pace available ~ ~;,7-'.19 12 or 213137S.-01·16 i\lr. rn. n · . mo. Will provide furniture
1.1·ashf'r . Stove and Refr1g • at S5 mo. Answt"ring 5('rvice Ceorge.
Shag crp!'g-Lrg Rf"C C"E'nter, available. 305 No. EI Sft::ADY employed !e111ale
RENT Starla $155 Cainino Re;ril, Sa n neeils I BR hOuse or apt,
Tustin & Me1a Drive aemcnte. 492-4420 C.:0.1. or N.B. area. \\'ould * S4s.48SS * BAY VIEW OFFICES like sinall ynrd or patio.
•-A Mux. S90 mo. Good rel's ~nta n1 Deluxe Air-Conditiorl<'d e.vn il. P!l.'ase call 540-8J08 Lido Ari!a • 50c Sq. FL
VILLA MARSEILLES Rcalouoin1cs Bkr. 67j..!i700 PVT. parry 11.•ilt ll.'asc mod."
N NEW BR hon1c 1.1•/pool for ap-BRA D STORE or ofiice. Newport &
S C S pmx. $300. mo. C.~I .. F.V .. PA IOU Bay Center, l)j2 Newport N.B. or H.B. S39-5746 aft !i 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apt$. Blvd, C:\1. 525· Util pd.
Adult Living 1 ;"~&-~1~25~'·;.;-;:c=-;-;;;;-o,; [ i~pjjmjj.>i:E;;;/Jct;idn;-o;;itt furn. & Unfurn. 1i6?0 SANTA ANA AVE, cr-.1 COUPLE w/ 3 chldrn desire
Dishwasher . color coordinat. From 300 sq/ft. l5c sq. f t. to manage apt unl1s. 2 yn
ed appliances • plush •ha.a 67.>-24&4 or 541_5032 eX"p, Rel'5. Call anytime,
carpet • choice ol l color e XL!\T OFFICE SPACE I 7647'~--79-58-.·~-.,.-~---c
.cheme1 • l baths • stall roiv at·ail. Lido Blrlg, 3355 Misc. Rentals 46S
showers • mlrTored wanJ. Jia Lido. N.B. 67l-4501. robe donf'I: • Indirect llght-.
In&: In kitchen • brealdasl GROUND floor executive of-
ba.r • huge private fenced !ice ~pace for N'nl.('.oast
patio • plush landscap!ng . H1vy Lil N.B. 646-9647. __
brick Bar-B·Q'g. liuv heat. • NEIVPORT BEACI-1
cd pools & llUllll. m:ioo.:-ioo ft. 3:"JC
3101 So. Bristol St. Ph. l\lr. Ervin, 67~>-1001
(%Mi N. oJ So. Coast Plaza) •300 SQ. F"T. S-6~5~/-m-o-.
S.nta Ana Crpt'd, drp'd. Ccsta i\lesa.
P HONE: 557·8200 Call 646-2130
~ Bu siness Rental 445 l ft1nt1ls J[,a j S~lALL SHOP wJ J i .,.1ng
I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~1 q(1Hrters suitable for ant1qur
II shop, offlcf', f'tr Par1ly
Room1 400 furn. 2656 Newport Blvd ..
1----------C.i\1. 548-213'1
$15 PER wk up w/klt . $30 ATTRAC s!ore &. ollice
y,•eek up. aplli, t.tarEL * •= ~. u r..11ntwr1 8 7__ spaces ~ "' fl. ..,,
5-1 -9 ~· San Juan Capistrano, nr
ROOf'.1 1n exchange for yard mission. 493+11 j3.
• • • R ICHARO PULL
9827 SWAN CIR.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
CALIF.
You are the \\'inner of
2 I 1ckets 10 the
Southla nd
Hom• & Garden
Sliow
at tile
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
July 30-Aug. A
Please call &12-5678, cK1. 31·1
between 9 and 1 pn1 to
claln1 yoo.1 r tJckets. (Nor!h
County toll-free number is
5'!0-12'20 ) • • •
work. Ne~r1;1·1c8.;~· SHO\\'ROOr.1 mfl:'. &. off ice I 11 ~J l~=~=;;t> .:::.~" _ space. Close to La~una Joc. . Arino1111tem1ntt _
ROOi\f f'OR ~entlen1.1n. 1.l.3 $95 To p.jQ r.10. 494-46,jl. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
Momevista, Ccr.r;ta :'llesa. MARBOR Blvri. t r6 n 1 a gr I
&$6.0969 ·l380 sq ft, atr cone:!, crptd. Announcements SOO
e BEAUTIFUL View, 11, :S32:l mo. Ph &l2-8()6()_
block to Ocean, $2'.; \Vk &. * • *
*FULLY LICENSEIJ * Apt A Bernard, C .\1 Box 235.1, Laguna !1Uls, lf'acht:"r -Exter/Jnter.,
Reoo"'ned llindu Sp1r1tua.Ju;t j.1[)..'.1630, Oiar!1e Goet1, 8-6 926.iJ. accou.s. ct'1hngs, fl 1 r If' s s
Advice on all matters. p.m. fi!UIP. \York guarn. Reas. QUALITY Cement \\'ork. Lei "·'" .;19_ • Sl4rt Jn1n1e1.hatt>ly
l.<111l', 1'1arriage, Business DESEHT 1t11tle : 1>1nk, gold, George do 11. L1c'd. bonded, """,_," • Company Car Plan
---7':c-;;;:::-;;:c:---1 0 Plush Offires Readings given 1 day1 a red & turquo1M' spots oil 645-1695. Ko Waiting
\1·eek, 10 a.m. to 10 p.n1. shell. Vic: \\'hlte Sails, RESrD. Concl'ete Special.isl&. * WALLPAPER *
312 N. El Camino Real, Cdi\1. Please call nie 1.f you \Vhen )'OU call "f\1ac"
• Full Fringe Bt"nl.'!1LS
San Clemente t'alher &-Son Te am· 5-IS-!44-I 616•1711 YOUR NE\V JOB \VILL
find him. 53~9456 a nytime. ENABLE YOU TO BENE-
492·9136, 492--0010 Signed Rohbie: 644-I53G. p,\TIOS, 1.1•alks, drive, install PROF. painting ext/int, 11ea1 FIT i--RO?tt OUR M.ANY
EXPERIENCED LOST: Rlond Afghan, black work, Ac.:~s cei l ings, JNCENTTVE PLANS_ UJ(f; I il new lawns, saw, break, House·s tiers ava mask. 8 mo's. Vic: Anaht'im airlt•ss sprayi.siK. Re f s:. YOUR CHOICE OF A NE\V Protect YQUr home & prop. 0 R ren1ove. 54S---8668 for est. 8~7_13~.
Current l<K'<U rel's ~1~i;RT~rt6'KEN, ~~~~S~ 'c=E=.,~!E=.N~T""W~O~R=K-, ~no-:--;jo~b:-7too~ INT & l·:xil.'r. Painting. ~~ ~.~~L~CA; ;~E;;
(for board onlyJ R E TU RN . 5 4 8 -561 3 , sniall, reasonable. F r e~ Lic'd. ins. J"ree est. 30 yrs SOCIATE OF DA VE LOOl\-
545-3.'.llS &IB-7290. Estim. H .. Stu!J ick, 54&-Bli!S. exper. Chuck, local ref's. lNCLAND , F1NANCIAL IN·
"Gl-IOST \\1rlter" neerled. l ·L-0-ST~,-G-.,-,-,-Sc~h-M-u-,,-,-.~v-i""c. PATIOS & WALKS 64.a--0809. \1EST1'1ENT ANALYST, R.
PapE'r researched, You \Vestcl!U Shopng ct r . Joffe estim. ~5-0826 v=iN"Y~L--.-,-,-,-,-h-,-n-g"i_n_g~1 E. BROh.'ER, YOU CAN
V.'l'ile, 1 pay, Call MS-4816 Florida tag. Ans.,.,·ers to Contractor .!i~cialist, \vork guaranteed, EAR.t'l $20,000 + YOUR
bt1>o n 12 p.m. & 4 p.n1 . Ask Tru!Oes. R4!:ward. 1215 free est, Dan Schwartz F'ffiST ,~EAR IN COr.t?.11S-
for Ron Pembroke Ln. 6$-9134. ADDITIONS to Com' I . 5'17-5846 or 846-2182. SJONS &. SERVICE FEES.
be 7 f'l2 ~1AL.AMUTE dog light Complete Service, plans, lonely-dll~ lessons. no fiutly female "foxy" Bch t'stima\f'S. JOc R.o1.1•e. Cen,
contracts. 534-22"11 alt. 6 area reward. 536-4202 Contr. 642-599i/646-9W3.
S I NGLES , Don't
pm.
NEED use or car for 2 mo's,
\Viii rent ~r spar4!: car.
Reliable. Call 896-4Hi0 dByli,
53&-6095 alt 6 pm & wknds.
PREGNANT? Ad option ,
aborJon ''ase c tom y counse!i~g: &r information.
&12-4136.
PHOTCXiRAP~l a beaulilul
nl\Jdel. Son1a·.:s Studio 1725
\\'. Chapman, Orange, 1-7
pn1. 67 3--1166.
/' LCOHOLICS Anonymous,
Phone 542·7117 or \\Tile
p .0. Box 1223 Costa ~1esa.
r,ti\SS,\GE a relaxing ex-
pcrienc~ 163&.'i 0 Balsa
Chica Rd, H.B. 846--5222.
J AXON the Magician -1 ii
hour o! magic tor childrens
parties $5. 494-3669.
Social Club' SJS
629-B&tl ~1Y Way, quali!y hon1e 0scUcN".~s-pa-ul""'d_m_g-.,.<o-,-,7,,-,c,o,-_ I rcrnod. Walls, ceiling, floors
quet. vie Niguel R/Cro1>o'n etc. No job too small
Valley Pk\l'Y, rewar d •1 _5471--0036;:;;;;::·c":--:;"':<c.a:"':·:"';:c"':·;;-
495+4290. Additions * Remodeling:
DARl( colored male Collie Gel'\\·ick & Son, Lie.
rittds "Special care. Rewnrd, 673-6041 * 549-2170
San Oemente, 492-n29. Electrical 'LO=ST=::--~, ,c,,,h:-0&=1°1,=,=. <g•=mcoc, I
fernalc, vie ~1onrovia & Na-ELECTRICIAN, licensed,
tional. Re"·a.rcl. 646-6375. bcn1ded. Small johs, mil.int.
&. rl.'pairs. 548-5203. LOST -Lge male Sealpoint I o;--;-~-::----
Si11mew. vie N. Laguna Bch. Gardening
REWARD. 491--0283. * LANDSCAP ING*
SMA.Ll. hlk &. brown female Neiv la wns. sprinkler.;, ar·
sheph<'rd, vie of 15!h &. hors. patios, (rnCf"S 1>o'all11.
Orange, Ci\1. 5'18-1749. Lic'd contr, i\las!er Charge.
r.1ALE Cock-a-lie!,
19!h &: Irvine.
646--2977.
lost \'i<'.
Re'ol.·ard.
·13 }'N loc exp. 536-122i.i.
GEN.YARD
CLEAN-UP ~~~~~~~~~~I Trees shMJI>.;, ivy. ShaJ)l'd,
I 1[5l reshaped or reinoved. J\cw
Servkn Ind Replin Ja·••ns. sprink!rrs 111stallcd.
. · Jto1oull1ng, bed weeding.
:.;1>o·1nging Couples Auto Waxinn \\'IDE V.'OIU.D •
Cc.mpo,;r, dirt. gra1·l.'J de-
livl'rffl. £.Jj-.~.J~.
714 '7764j,q(), ~.21.mg Skeeter s Was li N Wax ~~~~~~~~~~~I Con1pacts S7 .25 Standard.ll
AL'S GARDF.NING
PROFESSIONAL Painting •
1nter/extcr. Honest work.
Llc. & ins. 54&-2759. 645-5J.50.
CALL NOW
558 -0444
Ask for M r. Free PAINTING : H onest,
guaranteed 1.1·ork. LiC''d.
Any size job. call 6Ta-5740. I :B~A~B~Y~S~l,.~f~E~R"". "m"y""ho""n"1e".~,
PA IN Tl NC/papering, 18 children, C.:-01. 5 day 1.1•k.
Yrs, in Harbor area. Lie & Call aft 5 pm. 646-5105.
handed. 'Ref's '.urn: 642-2,356. BABYSIT you r hon1e, boy R
PAINTlNG, he d HIS. F rce yrs old, Vic, Go Iden
es!Im. Quality marl, depen-West/Heil. 8'11·2331 alt 6
riab!e. 2·1 hrs. 847-4128. pm.
P la~ter. Patch, Re;Jair LB;;AoR;c--;MoAJ;-;;D,..-,c,=.,c,c,odc, -:-Acp,,-ply
* PATCI! PLASTt:ftJNG clays, VIKKI'S Lou ng,.'
1i!l111 Newport Bl vd, C.l\i. All typrs. Frr.e es1imates ;j.!~92.12 Call 540-6825
BAKI::R, t>xper i~n('ed,
Plumbing pr rm an en t. Trotter'!>
TAKAS & Sons Plumbing Bakery, 234 Forest, Laguna
he'd, bonded , repipe Bcacl1.
remodel new cons!. Yree l;BcACNCKC.·-;;11~v."'n"N"E°'E0,-Cc.--::::,onc, -;&
est. 64&-8340 earn with large modern
PLUMBING REPAIR bank. Great chance for ad-
No JOb loo s111all vana'ment for a man s~k-
• 6-12-3128 • inl:' a C'lU"l't'r. $6000 •
-'C'O"L'E"'P"'L'U"M'°'B"1•N;;Goo--1 CaU llelt>n J!ayi·s. 5-1()...f>O:hl
C'OAST,\L AGENCY 2-1 hr. sl•rvicr. 6-l:i-!llil :nm Ha rl>or Bl at Adan1~
.s_._w_i_n_o_i_A_1_._._'c"-"-·-"-·---1BARi\tAIDS--E:\"p0d. Apply in
DH!'.:SS.~tAKIN(; -111':.\1S pr rs o n bt\vn 1-2 pm,
A!1erat1ons -Fas! !<l'rv1cr i'.lon--f'r1 a t tl11' Gret>n
Jnauir .,, fi.l>-0708 l.an\rrn, 1930 Placentia,
co:>KJNG It I~ p.i#ra-
ilon Ship A'my Li.ium
Beach il!H·2000 t.fale flus!
ha11e ch•an a1,1:1eara~• '1
good worl< Juiln1s.
COOi<, rxp'd, eap11sr: Con-
valeM.~nt llospi.taJ, ;ti 61
Center St, C.~1.
COOK, quick order Uy cook..
Steady en1ployn1cnt. 'Mesa
l.arl('S, 1703 Su1ler1or, 01.
CQ,s:t;1~"TICIAN -Drug
Cl~ Fully rxp only.
Do"·n!o\\·n II B. 'CaU
536-2701
COUNSELING
Wanted a t
PACIFIC VI E W
MEMOR IAL PARK
Tv.o Professional
i\le1noria! C0t1nsellor1.
e ln1•;:-n11ve Programs
e Com1wiy Benefits
• High Earn11igs
C a ll Peggy
To A rra nge Appt.
644-0212
t'OUNTER h!!lp, ru11 or
p/time. Apply Chow Bell,
2:i74 NC\VjlOJ'I Blvd., C:'I!.
CPL TO manage 18 U mole!
in C.:'.11 , $200 mo. + 1 BR.
furn apt. & u1il. 557-4242.
DF.J,ICATESSE.'1 Boy or
Girl. 18 or over. 2 Positions
.avail. 10am·2 pm Z:
4pm-8pm. Start $1.75. Ask
for Jlarold 9r Te rry,
Hi-Timr, 49,:; E. 17th St.
C.i\l. No Ptionr Calls.
DENTAL ASSIST~ACN~T;;--_-1
Exp'd. Full tinie. Recep-
tionist-Assistant, Over 25.
Call &J&.-3535.
DENTAL ASSISTANT
CHAIH.SIDI:: -81.lsy oflice,
son1e Saturday's. }'rin~
bf>ne!Hs. Hunt, Bch, area.
Ph: 8·16-3540 8 am-6 pnt
DENTAL RECEPT.
[X'sk only. Dental cxper.
neccss. Some Sais. Salary
open, lnllb'C benefits. 1-!.B.
area. Ph. 8~G·35-10 8AM-6P1\t
DENTAL Assis1anr, e x p ,
l'hairside, 2 days per 1.11<
leading to full lime. IH&-0697
--DI SHWASHER
l\Ius1 I.If' clean & neat, ovcr
21. Apply in person, Surf "-
S1rlo1n, 5930 W. Coast Hwy,
NB.
D!Sl 'RIBIITORS 1.1·1u1tpd, sell
Basic ii -Protein -
Vilam1n. &\6.4:i23 up. 2JIXl Senvtew, Cd~l. Jndustri•I R1ntal 1'R~oo=-:-m-:-,&;;-;Bo.,-a-,d.--•40~5'I
R . K. T HERIOT
1871 IRVINE
NEWPORT BEACH,
CAL IF.
; lfSJ $9.25 Quick Serv. Campers
\
Lost .nd found &: t'.1obile scrv. a 11ail. Your
. _ tiome or pi tk up. Reas.
Oean-up &. reg. niaint.
for gardening &. s ma 11
lanciscapin;::: services, call
540-5198. Serving Newport.
CdM, O:>sta ?.tesa, Dover
Shores, Westc!iff.
I · 642-5845 '-;';cc;.i\c-t.=~-;o;-=-:c=::-A terat1ons 1 ~
Neat, accural('. 20 years e.~p. BAl1.J\1AID S\nglt'. at!ract. l)Q ynu 1vanl a slcady
No costume. The f:SC'!lpade
FOR LEASF. 4800 sq II.
COSTA !\IESA, .$150 mo. Carpeled olc.~. a ir cnnfl , t1lr
f\fatul'e 1\'0n1an, quiet pla\'e floors, fl uorescent Jite~. kit 2
for rrs1 . \.';'rite ClassifiC'tl Ad sclg of haths. B<'au1 hldk
No. 173 cfo 1he Uail.v Pilot, for lilr mfg. 155.1 P\acr111ia
P.O. Box 156!1, Coi;ta ~le511. Avr N.8. 64>-0110.
Guest Home 41S f..1.1 ZONED !H!g Rehl Of-
l----::-:c"'c:-::-=--,--:-::.--:-:-1 fices, s!oraze, fnccl yard.
*PRIVATE ROOM lrlc11.\ for contract o r .
tar eldeT"ly lady. Bright • 8-}6-2769 or !W2--143J.
cheery garden surroundings. .
Nutrll1ous menJ~. Avail Aug RENT i\1-1_, 1125 sq ft, $1l.1
• '" A I t". ··, 1. Cali :»8-4753. mo. A\·au ut:; st. ,-..,.,
S R I •20 Logan. No. 7. C ~I.
ummer enta s 6TrJllli.
HILLSIDE home, l secl. STORAGE unit av111I
acres. Vl('11o , J TVs, p.a1io, 1-Nrwport BPaf'h, .$£.-0.
Yul.I a1'C' lhe \\'inner of
2 tic:kf't,o; to the
Southland
H ome & G ard en
Show
l\T the•
ANAHEIM
CONVE NTION
C ENTER
July :10-Aui:. 8
Pleasr call 642-:i67.~. eiet. 31 ·1
brt\\l't'u 9 and 1 pm ro
c-'n1m }1\11r 11ckrt.i;. (North
Count,v toll.free nu1nber is
5-10-17101 • • *
Found (frff ads ) sso
YOUNG le1nale dog -
\vh ltish, n1any blk inark·
uigs, soine tan, vie. S11.n1a
Ii-abcl, C.f'.t. Plse pick-up at
l i7 Cecil Pl., C.f'.1. &l:>-41762.
&15.25JO.
Ba by1itting
COSTA MESA
PRE-SCHOOL
Special Sun1mcr Progl'am
IS.I-& t\lonrovia, ~I day +
fu ll day .9essions. Planned
fUUNL> -l't11r ~ ng grl!y & progran1, hot lunches, Ages
1\·h11e cat vie Labrador & Z.6 hrs 6:30 Af'.! - 6 Pilt
};.:1n1oa, iltesa Verde. Call Sli 1.1·k-C0:-.1PARE! &12-'1050
j.IG---i!63-l._~-~---~I CHILD care, infant to 4 yr.1.
FND: L11tle Beagle puppy, 2 Large hon1e & yartl. Havel
Professiooal Liardt'nrr
Trel' 11o·ork, p r 11 n 1 n !; ,
sprinkle11', clean up JObs,
landscapi11g. Ccnrge
6-16-,'J8~3.
SPENCER'S Ja\1·n
rree est. Lawn ca r r ,
<·!ea11uµ>. Reasonablf'.
!'143-5213.
EXP. .Jap<inr~c Gardt>nrr.
l\riow hell, uirkeep, plant
pest. tr1nl1n!ng, i.:lcan-up.
96.t-3lS6.
collars. Brn, 1.1ht, b I k year old l' h 11 d . El · T i\l.'S Lanrll'('apins. rec re-fen1alf'. \'1r: Fire Station, Toro/Mission V1eJn nrea. tnova.J. Yatd renlodelini::.
T'I p/1l1ne j oh? Interesting 1 e Room, 1664 Ne"'f>Orl Bl11d, :.urvry l>fH' ii ork lrnm
Ct:llA.YITC file rl('111 & __::.~!. hnn1r. No ~Plli 11g, &12-3285.
rP1nodel . FrN.' <'!'L Small BEAUTY Qi:ir r x pr r . ~·l'on1 ~l11n1-J~ noon ror app(
jobs 1r~lco_rn_e. SY._,2_-1_26. r111mc. Take ovrr clwn1<•!1' .----·••••--·--••·--
111 husy 1-1.B. s~h,n, Prl'~rnt D raftsm a n $800 up
onr, 1i,ovin~ our of ~talr.
96S-R081J. 542-0-l?i2, Evf's. l[Il] '-----~ 545-3440.
BECOi\fF. A DIS'ffiJBL;1'0R.
Job W.!nted, Mala 700 lnrome Xlnt nfler trn1n1ng
con1plc1ed. Unrnatchrd oir --,-K-.-, P-P-E-.~R-O""R-C~R.E:--ooW--I por1unity _ Phone 54:,.s15..t
job. i\lu<'h l.'xper1l.'1u"1!. 21 & -BOAT CARPENTERS
can travel. Dennis 12131 \\'J1h t"X/)('r. bnilrling largf'
4·lti-2J3li. ruslom vach!s. \'\!lard Boat
J"ROfESSJONAI. Bar1eni:lt"r \\'.-.rk<', J:mo lngnn A1·l', C' i\1
\Va ler, n1unic:irnl civil rn-
i.:ln•'t•11ng Loac:kg1'ouncl, Good
bf•r1c[1 1~
NEWPORT
Personnel Agency
833 Dover Dr., N .B.
642-3870
DRAPER\' work room girl,
rxp only COIT ORA PERY
~J::R\ilCF:, li02 Newport
Blvrl. C \\ barbq, d-1.1 ashe1· slp.!i 5-6 646-17'2·1
1
2 n11 bch $2'90 Aug. 12·24 1iilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllttiiiiiiiiiiiii•iiimllliiiiiii."."iiiiiiiii~
!nr longer~. S. L a g .* * * * * * 49')..1186
l:l1h SI C ~1 &12...sll26. 830-1l'i0. Trash hauling, lot cleanup.
\\'l.l~t/\H.ANt:R, Vil'. neN DAY care, m)' OOme. Vic Hf'pa tr spr1nklrrs. 61.t-1166.
C.rant':or; store on Estrella Adams & Brookhw'St. 1.oi·t' JACK & Son l awn
·:-'c::....c:c··~ro,c!k:;;:hc.:-:'"';::;c'~'c"c·-;;;;: 1 _;,_fa~1."_'"-'-"''c'-'-~,c.c""-c·c"c':~'· sf'r11ice·:'llow1n~. f' rl g Ing , ~·ound Ycl!o1.,. stnPf'(I lot-BAl3YSJTIINL; my OOn1e. va(•uun11ng k (']<'an-up.
ll'n \\' n"" eollar 1111! :-Olar-lrg lncd yd, hot n1cals, day Fl'('P r~1 9GJ!:..99~
available lur home parties,
673-3f07.
Job Wanted, Fem a le 702 BOOKKEEPING
MACHINE
OPERATOR
* DRIVERS*
No Experience
P-R-IV-ATE beaC'h on ha-,-.-, ,r--------------------°'I
br. furn. collage s1:, 11·k. 112
W, Pac1 f1c Coast H1.1y, DS,
N.8 . \\'Ulter !'ate, $00.
inrr '" PArk. &-16-~ s, ni\1" &l2-::i'Z!l9,-,,.--,,c:c::::c I E XPE!it£0:CED'--J;-,-p;--.-,.-,-.,.
{;Rt:t..."'I ParakC'et, \ii: San1a ExPf::!~Re!s, p!ayr111, G11rdenf'r. r.111in1en11nre &
Ana & Colleen Pl., C.\I. fncrl yd, r.1on.rr1. V1('. cl,..1111 up, :..17·AA'i1
Necessary! ---------·-LADY 11.11\lS hOllst'l:lran1ng,
Trader 's Paradise
6\6--:zti:l2. Orang•'/22nr!, C:0.1• !'~U!-9:ill. C.'Oi11PLETE la1l'n & garclcn-
e\p!'.'r, u11·n 11·<1ns., S.t50 per
hr. 8.\7-3637 alter 6 p.rn.
AIDES for Con\'alcscenec,
elderly care or fa n1ily care.
Homemakers, 547-6681.
He lp Wented, M &-F 710
~tust have clean Cahl. driv.
In~ record. Nn! under 25.
YELLOW CAB C O. 642-7fi~>ll.
STUDIO 1."al'a~e .o.pt"'l'.'.IVSf' to
NHYC k bay beach. Sleep~
2 or 3. Avail Au g 10 thr11 1 LaOOr Doy $100 1.1·k or S'.::.0 1
for 4 1\'ks, 6i3-0820.
* BAI.BOA I S LAND
HOTEi~. Apts.Rooms. By
Day/V.'eek or !'ti o n th,
67.>-3613.
L.AGUNA Beach -2 BR hill-
side rottag~. $Xi0 tor last l • * 20 Unit f>ro!essional
v.·k,; in Aug, 497-IRJB. Bldg. 11.•ill .i.ccrpt Tru~t
LAGUNA, slttpa 4. \\'ttks Deed~ or -: ~ to new loan.
avail -J uly 31.st. Au.f. J ~lh Brokc·r.
&: 2ls1. Call 17141 8:JS-.{J440. 636-24fi0
:J Br nr Bay & Oubhou.se. l\i acre Sprogue Rl\.er, Or-
Lido Isle. $1 50/w k . egon lot. Beaut entry.side.
.$485/mo. Call fi7J.7JS:,. No smog&. lew pC"l'.lrfP, $!;.{)(}
l ===~~,..,-~-~~.-1 eq !Clr jewelry, car, bonl, BALBOA Island, attr 2 br, b · 671 0802 fine l.oc:-; nice patio. Owner; antiques or 111 in~ · ·-
67l-1503. 4 OR S Units. >..1111 inc'Ome.
V•cation Rent•ls Trade equHy for 2 BR. 2 BA
425 mobllf' home. or .l Rn
hon1e. \Vill Htkc 'lnd TD to
t.A KE, adJ. MJtY . 962-4219, BIG BEAR
f'\'erylhlng furn
sl«Pll 7. S\00 --bu1 hnens, HA\'e 40 acres l'C"Cfr('lt\(ln
"''k for 4· land nr Redding, lakrs, riv-
ers. \Vant TD'a, other trade
Rental' to Share 430 or any terms for $4.'100 "'1·
.... ,....,,_--.,..,-,..---Stlln Meyer 546-:~ 549-1366
SHARE ap1 W/i\rl art sf\J-llAVF. 10 HOUSES. L.A. &:
drrnt In Cdr.t Very plNL~t Ol'l\ngf' County in<'l B<'1•,
&: pvt. 5 P.iin, lo UC!, 5 n1ln llit!G, JloUywood. Newport.
to NB. SIOO JK'r mo, Rf'arly Cd.i\t. Owner! ..,.,.llllt l11nd,
by Aug, IJ,th. &!·~. unitli, boat or ? Bia. 673-41~4
WWI Ore. furn 2 bT e:>l, \\111 trRde 10 levt>l, irrigal·
$77.50 mo. Cal.I alt S p.m .• t"d aCT'f'!! w/J rmrllls In
66-77Sr5. li{'fllet for Orange Co ln-
G e rages for Rent 43S t"Om4I propert,y.
Call TI4/962-251H ** Sl!Onp iranre5• Sl5 per LOVELY 3 br l~ h11 ba~r-monlb • • · mt:nt. 11.tucco, prime N. Phone 5C2-639l u.nlll 6 p.m. Glrnrl•lt irt rnr quirt Cdi\f
CA,RM;E: tor nnt. pleuant l bl' + lf'IC. 11J31 747-21?1 or
kn.Cb\, "'9ld7 atte•.•· SIO m Spr1'0M' St, (il,.nd11h:. mo. M&-3.t'iO.
lines
times
dollars
~I' :.tahon inlert'<'>m 1ys-
Trrr1. rnniplf'te }'OR phone
.in~\\'f'r\n~ marhine or >A'llnl
Foond Jnsh SeltM' puppy, Ca rpet-Se rvic e ins service.
rnaJr_ in 11.B. nrea 847-~ I·----------Jim 343-t»O;, JO!-I N'S Carprt ,',,Upholstery I ;--;-..,cor; --~-Pl~ identlfy. Clrancrs. Extra Drl • L i\ N D S CAPINC·Prun1ni.:·
,\!AL~ S1a1111'sr v1r Bol~a SJ•iunj){)O frre Scotchguarrl Cll.'fln-up, SP r i n k 1 l.' rs
I Chi(·a & Edulgt'r. H.B. 213 ~ s 0 1 1 n e tar d ant,, ) . n•pall'<'r!. ~·n·c est, jj7-0070.
596-0024. D"RT't'asers & all color -Expcr. Japanese CarUrnl.'r
FND: LittJe \\·lit. ('O('lrnJ'IOO lirigh1t!ners It 10 minute Con1ple!e yd ~Prvn·r. Nl.'at
pup. rricndly, I o v a II I e, hll'ach for white carpets. & Rel in. frf"e l'S1. &12-4389
j.4$.-9138. Save yo1tr money by saving Complctl.' Gardening
Blk Lflbl"d<kir pup. gi n . ..:ollar mP-CX'tra trips. \Viii dedn Service
Vic of Brookhunl & Adams livi ng rm dlning rm &: hall Frl'f' Esrimates 673-1166
$15, Any nn $7.50. couch
• • •
E LME R COT E
1915 SAN BRUNO
NEWPORT BEACH
)'ou are the winner ol
2 1icke1s to lhe
Southland
Home & Garden
Show
Pff'rcrahly 11\lh t>xprnenre
"n ihe Burroughs E'-·1000
~.1·.~tcn1, 1nclurlf's pos11ng 0!
;11•1·n1a11~ 1~·l'e11 ;•hlr, i;t'•wr;il
h'rlgrr, payroll rl<'. fine
1rnrk1111: ronfli!iorL~. i;:ood pay
.t-~ltracti\·e tr1n1:;r l)f'1ll'f1T~.
C;1l l i\lr~ (;t'f'Cnrnan at 111<'
J)i\fLY PILOT, 6-12-t~Zl. f".,1.
m .
186 E. 161h St., C.M.
lJl~IVE:\Vi\Y ~l,..sn1en, f',~
fl 1' r 'l/!Uhf' t'.~pPr,
()VPrl11n1• ;11 l!1n<' ,~ '!i.
Bnyd's i\rrn, 4f1(1 I· 17111 SI.,
C\>
~;.~pcrif'nred
TELLERS
11.B. 96'2-(fj9J SIO. f'l,air $5. 15 yrs. exp. Is I.A\\'N ~taint , llauling, nc1.1·
kit-\\'hat counts. 00, mer.hod, I la\\ns. clcan·UP, pruning.
call 00 work myself. C"-ood ref. Frt'e es!. Call 5.J0.-1319.
ha\r )'Oii? Call fA,:M285. ~7'U: J.\itlens. killen~.
'.\:ii 161h Pl, Apt B. 0 1. tens. All rotors. Pis
ac !ht>
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
BOOKKEEPER
Bt'lllHlfUI Tl('\\' Of('! The sl(y
1~ tlw Jimil !flt' gal \\' polSf",
a h1l1ty. sroo.
Call l\!ary Ll>e. 540-60:i"1,
COASTAL ACENC\'
11 you rp bright. like talking
10 pro11lc. h.a\·e .a i:,'OOd fig-
ure ap1111111e, fl pler1s."J.nt per-
1'0nnllly & b11.~1nrss exper.
lpreft•rahly as a hank 1 .. 11.
eri )OU "ould (p1.1l1r)' lor
'""'of ou r hank lclll.'r open-
ings. ACt'('a.t:e near Old Wom11n J.18-!1138. 531-0101. DICK'S GARDENING
Sprini.:1<. Cal. & lot in Hn.\•a· FND: One parakee1.
.~u. Ari1. nr Lon1\on Brirli.:e Lido Isle 67~90 to
-want lnl 10 p.<1rk mobilt' lily.
Vic: Carpet Service Rf'Siclrntlal-CClmmercial
ideD-& CJean-UP!>. Ph. 642-IJ.173 Ji:;~~~.I:'~ 8 _2~ Harbor 'Bl at Adan111_
hoinc. Qu in!ard Rlt. 642-2991 \'NG malt tabby cat found
Ja~uur XJ.\ 12()..C type fixf'ri vie 22nd St. N.8 . 64'l-4025.
h<'11d ('(lltp!', r<'buil! f'ng. F'NO: Littlt• blk & \\ill po,1p.
runs g'IO!l. <·lcri11 body, <'I!;· p~·· Adorablf'. ~9738.
ll!'f'11e mn(•h, \1•/ch('~. Vnlut' "°'=~cc-;k-0640.,;;--;;;;o~.;---1 ~'ND· Ha\\· . _,,.,.,, SHOO for TD or 7 5.'\1·5033 ----------1
\\111nl $10,000 bon1 or R oll~
Rovce -llave !M!lefl bldg-s
t.· ·101 1~4· x 32ir Bt 21-W
ll11rbor -Ch11rle1 Quintard
Rt'nl1or &12-2992
llQfne shop ! :0.11."('h·fJ{'(',)
R11dlo-1V tuhes, lrstf'r,
f'fll1!,, 11oOrk!hop hart'IWllrf'
u"m.~. \rant 1970 Honda 170-
XiO. ::.'8.~
JIAVE $14.oo.'.I eq. in f\11.
cabin Ill llur.ninr Sprtng1, \~'1tnl buUdablt-land or unils
In Ortingf' C1J1mty.
ttlllrr Rritl1y 5-16-0!14
\\Mt /lo Y"U have to trade?
l.J:"1 Ir /wn> • in Ortl.flKl!
C11u111y·11 IArl:'r~I reAd !rad·
11'1$: ixist. 64'Z·~i678
Lost SSS
$100 n-·,vard for black m11le
r11 i11lature poodle, Lo51 ln
!'.i\ 111~ area, around J uly
10 1\t\fi.,.,.t to "SA~1·'. 1'1ea.
coilnr only. 6 46-9928,
~16-2166.
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
* • * ALICE RULE
28'0 NO. 2 LA SALLE
COSTA MESA, CAL,
You a~ the 11.•lnncr -Of
2 tkkt'ls to the
Sou thla nd
Home & Garden
Show
•t thl'
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
July 30-Aug. S
Plt!ll!lf' call 642-5673, ext. 314
between 9 and 1 pm to
d11im ynu:r tkket:or;. (Norlh
County toll-frft numbf':r ill
541).1710) • • •
Diamond Carpet ae~inc
A\•g 11lze room $8
RepalrinJ A lru;taUahon11
F'lte EsL 64S-J31 7
Carpenter
EXPER. Ha>A·au<in Gardener
Complvte Ganleni11~ &t-
11iC1'. Kama.Jani, 64&--467fi.
Hauting
PlcoiSf' call &l2-Jbltl ext. 314 BKKPR. One 1.11W> has 1.1'tlrk-BA~:r~F
between 9 and i pm 10 N1 >A'/CPA ofc. ExPt"r. in
rlaim your 11ckcts. (North posliniz to }nirnals 8' J!:"n'I AMERICA
County 1olJ-troc number is if'd~rr. rie,vroll. Sr n 11 1016 Ir vine Avenue
;,10.1iJo 1 r,..~umr 10 P.O Box 2203. Newpor t Beach * • * Nl1. Equal Oppor. ~:rnployt'r
y:e:·,., g~;:;s~' d~~~.an\1~: --$-ACT NOW_$ __ ---Bc5YS1~14 LXP'D hookkf'eJ>('r ror N.B.
"kip Io ad f' r, back hoe . 300 E..'\.'TM !:i to /!l.'liVer pa~ in the San ~PorlinR KOCXlF> shirt. Good
847•2006, /Ind bit parl pli!.yC'n;, Also, C1emcn1e, San Jufln Capls· .~tartin,o:: -~alury. Prf"lt>t'
~~~~=-c-.,.--,,.,.,cc-:-1 new 1a ces lar romn1crc11tl.~ trano and Capistrano Beach person arquainted 1.1·/rr!ail TRASJ-1 & Garage rlean-up. & non union lihns, fll3J 11rea. salf'!<, Pennanrnl position. 7 doi••.110 a loarf. i--ree est DAILY PILOT 461-30:)]. Xlnt 1>o'Orkln~ ('(lnd in con-Anylimt'. 548·50~1. -•~2-4.\2() I d · Adminlstrati\.'e Traintt .i.::enia sur r ou11 t rig s , ~IOVlNG, l{art1ge i·lran-up & AO :\!AN APPRENTICE CASHIER·C•r W•1h R<li·5006.
lite hauling. Rl"a:;onable Part Time f'ul\ or Pl timf', 644-4·1JO EXPER fl E. SalN1inan for Free esti,ma!rs. 643-1602. _
$118 prr wttk. }:xpt'r helpful, (111L1) carf' v.-an!M for girl, fast growing Co. O. c. S1rout
TRASH Hau1ing, Garni;i:c 8.:. but ool nc'CeSS&l'Y, fl & bov ~ nr Cort'lilll"ra He11lt)•, 3'!090 COll.~I }I\\')',
YIU'd Clean-up. Rl'AS. Small 8J5..5701 penionnel Eleni. Sc'tioo'1. i\hssion Vlr-!)11na Po1n1, 49&-1811.
jobl! v.·e\come, 5-ls-R:i78. 'd B · ·--ft•-AI DES. exp , ap1 11t JO.~"" a ,..,,,,, F /C B kkp r $5S0
CLEANUP. garage & yard, n>nva!~nt Hoi;pital, 661 COOK.RELI EF SHIFT Tiin1 Trial Bnlanct-
1.ile hauling & gardening. Ct'nter St, C.~t. BF.AUTlFUL NE\\' p O RT C"ll 1.nralne ** Call 5-13-9735 **" A N'spon.<ilble v.-oman to VILLA 2 09.)"!I 1 an'l.J .30 \\es1cl1lt
Houaecle•ning m11nage lrnni11 shop. Xlnt pm. l days 10;30 am.7 pm, 2011 \\'rs1rl1 rt D1·. i\'lt
oVl)ty. 1977 Harbor. C.M 2 days atr. Somf" kno9.•ledi;:~ l'<'r5(1nnrl Ai;t'enc)'
645-3441 10 to 6. of ftStrictril diet helpful. &1;,.mo
ATTRACT, WAITRESS AU ~ kl!ch<'n & tquir>.1 ---------
EX"p<>r. Not under 21. NO C11.H bt>twn 8 11m-) pill for \Vhy i;lorr tr In th~ altlc
Pl-ION£ C/l.LLS. Apply in Rppt. r~12-5.116l. N.B. \\ hrn YQU can lnrn lt tn to
DaUy Pilot WL" Ada ha~ * * * * borplN plo.-.. I!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!'!!!!!!'!!!!!!'!!'!. !!!!!'!1!!11!!!!!'!!!!!!'!!!!!!'!1111!1!!!111!!!!!111!!!!!!!!! *
WANT AD
642-5678
CARPF.NTRY by l).1rltftn
Jones. Cuslom wood\lo'Ofk,
Formit'fl, t'!r. Rf'slr!, emnrn.
f46..~l68,
Ba.y & ~srh JanirorinJ
CrptJ, w!nc\ows, floor.i etc.
RH . .\ Comm'I. 64f>.-140L
DAY work \l.'an!<'d from!) to
4. S18 per rlny. All 8rt'i1.ll .
~'.Wi-830~.
nlOflol'y !hrough • 0,\ILY J>('rroll Sur( & !'1rloin, b930 Turn unu.o;ed ltem11 lnto quick PILOT \Vi1nl Act.
W. COllllll Hwy. NB. CRl>h, call 612-5678
~ ... ' ,_ ~"''"". "
' ' .. 11'Ji · •• ··~ ') -' ~.
10
•· no
" •
61
g
ly.
all
or
ll,
"' R.
O'
"' &
y ,
SL
..
25.
T
'" .. ...
. B.
M .. wk
97
" r •
ell
<ly
'""
" y
"
,,.
'. " " '
ing ·,. •· '· IJ.
lor ,.
...... -•f"' .. .__ -
, M1U1. Pll.01 ·A DVERTI5£R Wedn00<11, Julf 28, 1971 Wtd11t~da7, July 28, 1971 DAILY PILllT 85
• ,.
SEE IT FREE Find .Your Name
Everything For Your Home
Only /tfajor Flower Show in
Southern €alifornia This Year!
If your n•me is llstecl In • special ed -It could •PpMr und•r •ny
cla•siflc•tion, so look •t them •II -~Ont 642-5678, Exten1lon
314, betwMn 9 a .m . •nd 1 p.m . to m•ke •rrang•m.nt1 to pick up
your tickets at •ny convenient DAILY PILOT office .
Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT
··FISHING TACKLE
Sales & service. Good oppor·
tunlly for aggrcsslve yng
man w/growini;: L'On1pany.
Good knowieOge ol sa.H wa.
ler fishing & 1nech ability
.req'd. Send resun1e & salary
requirement 10 Classified
,\,, #193, Daily Pilot, P .O.
1560, C.!11. 92626.
FOOD & Cocktall Waitress
exper. P/tune. Could
develop inlo f/lltne, Day
shift. Rancho San Joaquin
Golf Course, 18021 Culver
Rd, Irvine, Near U.C.J. Ask
ior Wayne, 833-0112.
.GENERAL OFFICE
Good 'typing skills
Cal.1 Loraine
\VestclHf
Personnel Agency
3'.143 Westcliff Dr., NB
&&Z771J
GENERAL housework &
·cooking Must have l'ef's.
Live-in. 673-3275.
GENERAL Ofc. Teleph-One
personality. \Vil\ Ir a in_
IRVINE PERSONNEt
SERYICES•Aai'.CY
free & Fee Pos~!ions
Gen'I Office to $475
Mature attituck', 53 typing,
lite SH.
Secretary $500
Co. Paid Ftt. SH 80, lyp1ng
60.
A/ R Bkkp• $SOD
Fee Nego1, AIR e:.:pcr. in
insura1x~.
Secretary 10 $600
Co. Paid z.~ee. Sel"'y tor busy
co. pres.
488 E. 17th (at Irvine ) C.M.
642-1470
644-0065 bct\vn 4:30 p.m. & 7 * JONES TIRE SERVICE
p.1n . ls expanding in Orange
GENERAL CLERK County and requires
If you en.ioy using your mind EXPERlENCED
& have run a JO-key adding · * Comn1rrcial Salesn1en
1nadlil'I(', ~·e have an open-* Tire Servicemen
Jng for you in our H.B. * Front End Mechanics
;.cet'g dept. Xlnt l'.'Orking * Brake Mechanics
cond & benefits. Salary plus bonus
Call PC'rsonne! Oppor!unity to advance
842-7751 Con1pany paid benefits
lJnigard Jnsura~ Group Apply: IDl9 Harbor Blvd.
Costa il!esa Equal opportunity employer
HELP \Vanted in pel shop.
No ex per n<:'c, will train.
Femah"· only. 113 Broadway,
C'. M. No plione calls please.
H0~1EMAKER for plt'asant
homt'. \\'oman capable of
ca.ring ior 2 children +
home. Mother ill. All duties.
Tl1ust drive & do marketing.
548-31:"1-l or 5411-154·1.
HOUSEKEEPER needed, to
care for 2 boys ages 3 and 2.
Live-in or out. References
essential, 546-6380, for a~
pointn1ent.
HSKPRS Emplyr P8)'S fee.
George Allen Byland Agcn·
cy 100-B E. 16th, S.A.
547-0395.
HOUSEKEEPER LiYe tn,
wife deceased, 2 children,
age 9 -1~. 646--3056 or
e67--6167 eves or wkends.
NSTRUCTIONAL
TE RIALS
CENTER
AUDIO.VISUAL
ASSISTANT
Distributes audio-visual
J. W. ROBINSON 'S
e NEWPORT BEACJI e
Has ilnmcdiate
opening !or
BETTER
SPORTSWEAR
SALESWOMEN
• Full or p/1.ime, t":io:per pre-
ferred, xln't co. benefit~.
Apply ·in person 10-S p.m,
• 2 Fashion 1st, N.B.
Equal opporhlnity employer
• KEYPUNCH OPR.
WORK WHEN &
WHERE YOU WANT
VOLT
Instant Personnel
on temporary as.signments
3348 Campu.~ Dr., Suite 106
Newport Beach 546-47·11
Equal opportunity <'mplo~r
equip111ent 11ssi~ts in layout LEGAi, Sec'y \Vant e. d
k design O! audio systems. Criminal exper. Call Pam, 54:).8458. Supervises operation & ----------
tnalnteuance ol equipinent; ~lAfNTENANCE man-Baptist
11$sists inslructors in use; Convalescent Hospital 661
ma1n1 a1 ns inventory; super. Cen!t>r St, C.M.
vi ses rer.sonnf'I. MAID, exp'd or will train.
AUDIO VISUAL
OPERATOR
Chalmers Apts.
49-1-911,t
~~·t:DNV•NTIDN mCENTER
DOORS OPEN
We•kends -12 Noon
Womkd•ys • S p.m.
--·
812 Miscell•neous 1-.....;:_ ____ .,; 81& M isceilaneous
COFFEE tbl , wroughtlron
legs, 2 olc desks, 3 typhus
chrs, 30 cup collre pol, 2
forn1ic1t top folding tOls,
books, loll; of O(lds & ends. ** AUCTION ** FRIDAY 1 P.M., JULY JOTH
Ill
MOTEL MAIDS -Part time,
goOd pay, G days/week.
l.aguna &h 494-7535.
MOTHER"S helper 17 or over
he.Ip \l.·/children & househld
chores Balboa Peninsula Un+
tll Aug 14th. l~ive..in
preferably. Call 673.-827:5.
800 West Kat•lla, Anaheim, California 23962 El Mirage, Laguna ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! Niguel, 4~361:> or 495-0695
Estate of Camlll• Atol , Actrass & Dancer
Mesan Baby Grand piano & bench, 11-pc.
dining room set, Bdrm set. Old & Wlusual
pieces, Tables, Sewing 1nac.hines, Radios,
Lamps & so forth. Some boxes & personal
items, Colored TV's. Late model organs.
Antique pianos, Bdrm sets, Chests Mattress-
es, Divans, Dinettes. 1 lot of sto'rage AND
MUCH MOREi
I ~ --PATIO SALE--
)fjlll ,, .. _, ... ,,...___,Jfj'll ~~-~· ~]fKl~r>.. !~Twi,~bcd~•pri~""'· ::''mp,
OMIJSTANC
l!!J ~ . l!!J . ~ clothh'l< ""! mi.,. ;,,m,.
\Ved 9 ALVl-2 P~1. 2431 Duke
Pl, S.16-5293.
Help Want.cf, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M • F 710 AppHane.1 802 SAT & SUN JO -'-'---------I to 5. Misc,
KENMORE auto washer $65, brk'--a-bra, some furniture.
Norgeautowasher$55. Both 1100 Cambr i dg e Ln,
xlnt cond, late m<xlelll, guar Ne.,.,·porl Bch. Employmant Agency
1856 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mesa
r.fajor Appl Repairman SSGS
Gas-A/C Serv. Man S866
Lab Tech. Medical $800 +
Lil"'d Med. Lab Tech $700
Tool & ·nie Maker S8ti6
Salesman, Con1m + $600
Med , Records Trans $.~ hr
lnslituliona! Cook $2.SO hr
Asst ntKr, Cpl, apt + $350 mo
Back Ore Med. (wkndsl $4 hr
Many Clerical
Position• Avail.
642-5812
SERVICE Station At1cnclanL~
Real Estate Sales _ All shifts. Apply -4678
INSTANT MONEY! ca Join Th• Profe5siona ls mpus Dr, N".B.
Sall's Trainees-nien & wo-SEH.VICE Sta. Attendant. 4-10 pn1 f'\'f.' 1>hih & v."icnds.
men needed to join highly Ex-per. prefrl. '545-lGl9.
sucet!ssful team ol real es· I --'-~~..::....c.:..::...:c.:.:__
tale professionals. Bonus, SERV. Sta. !.He:-.d. Exper,
paid niedical coverage pd, mature, bondablt' .. "hell Sta.-
vacations, training proiram !Ion, 191h & Placf'ntia, Of.
for inexperienced, dra1Ys SE\\'JNG mach operaror,
availal>lc if you qualify. Htg. hourly ra\f', good pay for
Bch. Ole. open. Call Jerry nf'at exp operator. 67:>-7952.
Grosso 176-2231 Anaheim, SHIPPING CLERK
*SEYMOUR* R•alty & Investment Start S2.6:5/hr. Will train. 540-J·t:J.4.
$ ACT NOW_$_ SOILS TECH.
Beautiful," attractive feniales, Exper. \Y/compaclion test
G to 60 for commercials, t'al'th Ulls in field. ONicell \Voodland llllls & Irvine. films & contcstanis. (ZIJ) (213) 346--0565.
461-3051.
[ ~-~.~-!'!!!""""""""""'-"-"-"-"-' [ssAALLESES~.,~r'lr ''°;;r~bo>ru,iftiq~"~'~';;hop;;;;; [ S!\tALL industrial p I a n t i\tUSICIANS -Bass & drun1· N B ''"' p.,, .1. needs alert p/time gal to do . . · " " . ~ i . pos1 ion. 'I r , I b mer lo form trio \V/p1ano Age 21 .JO. Must he gen o c "' a v.·ork. Must
player. l\1odern, not rock. thoroughly exper. St> n d be gd typist. Call Mrs.
646-I843. rt>sumc, Clall!>ified ad No., _T_,_ll~y~, _546-4_:__1~"~·---
NEWPORTER l11n needs J93, Daily Pilo!, P. O. Box SUMMER EMPLOYMENT:
middle aged or olde r male J~. Costa r.tesa, Calif. College students--a.re yoo
gardener !or permanen1 92626. looking for part time or full
position. No ph calls pls.l'SA=L~E~S--------1 time v;ork? Advertising Co .
Appty in person, ask for Mr. PHARi\lACEUTICALS has 5 management poeitio1111
Ellis (Head Gardener! 1107 $7800 +CAR + EXP open. fltust be neat in ap-
Jamboree Rd., N.B. fl1t' Paid pearance, demonstrate
leAde.rship ability, Up to NEWSP1\PER n1orniiig auto '.\1ajor lirn1 av.•aits an alrrt $600. mo. Apply 225 So,
route. Appro:< hrs. 4--6 ain an1 bitious indiv. for once in State College B I v d., 7-days v.·k. Excel pt tin1c a 11fct.in1c career oppor, Anaheim.
lncomt> for responsible, Profit sharing.
married man over 30 yrs. Call John Booe!. 8~2100 TA..'\ ACCOUNTANT
Call 8-11 a.m., :ri0-3006. Also Fee Jobs 1'01· busy CPA ofc, in coastal
DEN'ls & DENNIS city. Heavy individual, cor· NURSES neeoed for pvl 1 • 1
'"S'> 't••h•I""" D•· poratr, partnt>rship duty, All types-all shift~ -~v; -" ... ~ ""' •
Rrf nee. Lescoulie Nurses Irvine, Calif. preparation. Also. tax research. Call 547-7061 for Reg\SllJ', 351 Hospital Rd., SALES -Men appt. or send resume to
N.B. Call 642-9955 any hour. STOPlll P.O. Box 539, Orange, Ca. lnlerv hrs 9a~p. M-f·. •• •
& delivered. $46-8672, Housahold Goods 814
847-3115.
c;E auln washer S 3 0, 60 YARDS seulptul'ed carpt-
\Vestinghouse c!ec dryer ting, ne\vly cleaned, :I yn;
$30. Both good cond, guar & old $65. 837-25.12
delivered. 5'16-8612, 847-8115. Machiner 816 XLNT COND--O'Keefe & y 1--------Merritt, ga.s sto~, chrom_e l>IODEL H F'arn1all tractor
!OP w/stor & tin1ei·, $7:>. wl 8' tandem disc & 15' 3
548-4472. ~ecUon tooth harrow,
REl''RlGERATORS, washers 545--7154.
S3.5 & u.p. Guaranteed. Dis-17M~i~,-c-0~11-1-n-eou-,----8-18-
count i! cash &: carry.
Char-Rons 64&-7820. ----------* G!GA.VI'JC * \\'EDGE\VOOD gas 11tove, J.'Lr:A MARKET!
Good cond, $95. July 29th, 30th, 12-9 p.m. July
Call 67;,...fj596 aft 6 31st, 12-6 p. m. Anli-~.~M~A~Y=T~A~G~...,-.. ~,,-. m-,-,~,-,-s1 ques ·Boutique-Collectibles·
..,,asher xlnt cond. delv w/90 Dolls· Gourinet !OOd-Rum-
day guar_ SSO. 531-8637 mage. Y.W.C.A., 1411 N.
WASHER. Frigidai~. de!uxc Broad\\•ay, S.A. BARGAINS GALORE! jet action, 2 yn old, excel1--~~~~----
cond. $55. or oHer. fJ36-7426. JOHN'S BIKES
Furniture 110 New * Used
Rep.I rs
2340 Ne1vport Blvd.
STIJNNI NG, contemporary Open 6-10 Wkdays
furn. White, 10~~· {'(]Urb & Sat & Sun 9-6
WINDY'S AUCTION
COME Bl\OWSE AROUND
20751/2 Nawport Blvd.
Behind Tony's Bldg. M•teriels
Coste Mesa * 64tr86M
OPEN DAILY 9 TO 4
_M_i_•<_•_1_1._n_•_•_•_• ___ •_1_1 Pianos/Organ• 126
* * * SUMMER CLEARANC E
BARBARA SLOMER SALE
1924 SO. CST. HWY. #C Kawai, Steinway, Baldwin,
LAGUNA BEACH Wurtitzer, Kimball, Lowrey,
You are the winner o{ Conn. A!Jen, Etc. $29-5 &: up.
2 tickets to tllf' RE~'TAUi. PLAYERS.
Southland 1-'riendly telephone intor.
Home & G•rden FIELD'S PIANO co.
Show 1833 Newport BIVd.
at the Costa Mesa 714/64.5-3250
ANAHEIM WOULD YOU
CONVENTION BELIEVE
CENTER FREE ORGAN LESSONS
July 3(}.Aug. 8 11.s long u you like! Na fti"·
Please call 6-i2-5678, ert. 314 ls1ration. No obligatiott. Just
betv.·een 9 and I pm to Comt". Mondays 7: 30 pm
ctaim your tickets. <North COAST MUSIC
County Nil-free number i:i 642-2851
540.1220)
* * * n1atc-hing 5" love-seat & of. 645-4720 Sporting Good1 l30 toman, table & 4 directors -Will take Trade-l ns-NEW Buffum broy,·n wig &
chain ot SIS chrome, FOR SALB: w a 1 h Ing f'rosted \v1g, best olfer. ls~U~R~F;BO;;;:A7RD;:::-, -,,,~. ,,-.. .. -.-.-, .
glass, plastic & w h 1 t e n1achine $25, dryer $75• Binocularn S40; Reco r d cellent cond, good shape.
JeatllCr, hlk & .,.,.hite area dresser I nnrror / & nl1e player $20; Dbl mattress & Must sacrifice, $35. 671-951.'i
ru.gs. Thayer Cogan blk & sland, $15, de~k SIO many box spring.& nE'w $75; Maple
white cocktail table, 4' other 11ems. Aft ii noon coffee table S25: Maple TV, Radio, H iF i,
squarf'. Tl1usl s 11 c r i J i c e 26:-.0 Riverside Dr. CM. ' rocker $20; Short \vave port
67:>-4596. =..--~--'-"-='---1 ratlio $35; 3 Danish stack Stereo ~==~~~-~~-1BOX springs, rnattttsses, tables $10. 673-7553 aft 6 136
LEAVING Slate! fl.I us t 11·ork benl·h, Vise. Cllairs, I ~=~c..c:...cc....=:.,::c.:c_
Sacrilicl'! J.louseful of near Tahl('s, \~·igs, guilar, prtbl GOOD Buy? Boy's bikt', 5 sp STEREO, 1971 unelalmed
new 1Vl e d i terranean record changer, tU.!ltm Murray Stingray, loaded lay -away. Ga r r ard
furniture, ~onnaJ di~ in g made rnd chair. 91l2-7'991, wl!h J1Jissy bar, hand brakes turntable, Ai'\f/FM iterro
roonl set with larg<' china, 3 202:IB Magnolia, NB. &eneracor light, etc. Lik~ radio & tape player. A.k
bedroom sets, g· sola & love 1' t new. Ridden r;paringly by •peak er 1 w/cron-ovn
TWX TELEX OPR seat, coffee I.abl e & end _con emporary couch, $30; li'I young boy in tennis system. Still brand ntw
PALM SPRINGS -"'"LOOKING & ACT l.ii'"'iiiii'·-----------
clerk for tennis & golf shop. Sales minded person, see for
645-3441 10 IQ 6. yot.irsell. a real career op. Blind Tana commodes, stereo, patio 8e!. 450 pwr telcscl)fle, SS-0; shoes. $Z,O complete, Phone sold for $319 w/wa?Tan-'.
Parking
LEAD CASHIER
portuni!y, Xlnt future fur
right man. Earnings com·
mcnce in1mediately .should
Seek indivl<lual to supervise be in excess ol $250. per wk.
parking opera t 1 on al No canvass.ing or soliciting.
Nev.'POrt Center. Requires Irrterviews by appointment
n1ln. 2 yrs related exper .. , only 9-l weekday!! ~2771.
including some supervision. SAL.ES ·
Per n1 anent position WINE COMPANY
beneJ!ts. If qualified, caJI ~ir. Erickson, 644 -202 0No . ~xper. neces11. Xln't
bet1\·een Sam & 5pm. tra1n1~, protected terr.,
•-1 la1Yn mower, •=·, H·•-h ., ... •""· fl 6 ~ \VORK \VHEN & amps pichin>s, etc. Prlv. """" " •' 0~~~-'-"'-'-'_;___:_P_·m~·----I Pay oU balance of $120 or
IVHERE YOU WANT Ply. 213-532-1337 Earthenware, $50; Wroughi 3M "609" '" 11n1all P•Ym<n'·. Crodit ---~--~---! iron dining roon1 set, bes! copy pa.per v()(° ..a on temporary assignmenu 6-Drawer chellt & chair $15: Oller. Call 557_1658 aJt S 642. Jn original cartorlll. dept, 893--0501.
VOLT desk &: chair $15; dinette & p.m. 2.000 !heetll 8 ~~ X 14" and i oT~APci;;E~·sO:d~<c~k<C:".-H""°•m-mond-~S'I
lnatant Personn•I 2 chairs $1.;; m e t11l --0=7~=~=~--3,000 sheets 81~ X 11". fur outs \V/2 llPkrs $00.
3848 Campus Dr., Sui1e 106 bookcase $5; frAmed o!I WATERBEDS Su rpl ull fro m tr iil TEAC Stereo, prof. moMJ
Newport Beach 5464741 painting $25 .t up: li;e mir· All lizes $13.95. Package demonstrstlon, Pritt .$100, 1v/prt'-amps, record &: play
EquaJ opportunity employer ror $10: many mo r e deal, paddi!d ne.Ugahyde I -C~all..;..64:.::.2-l_c32=1~. -"~'-· ="~'~· __ back. Like new .$ 2 5 o ,
bargaim. 1666 Ne w po r l frame, $49.95. Water chairs 534-8451
TRAINEE RECEPI'JONJST: mvd, CM. 642-5448. fl.50. 838-5.587. Mwi•c.·n','.•dneous DUAL llS-14 model ~
Lor:a1 otc. of large national GIANT hou fu1 I SOF 820 co. Load• of public contact. se o near new A &: rocking chair, 12x18 record player with 2 + car + ex""nse.!l _ Med\! furn, exan1ple: 8' blk grttn ahag .rug w/un-matchingspeake.rs . Ex· ,,~ Lite typing. No rut llere! f lovell Ne1\' plush !luite of oles OJ>l"Tr comm. Hurry? $345. naug go a & ee.1, never derpad, 2 Colonial end cellent condition S 100 .
--~~C::.."-"-''---1 congenial co-worken. S74nl
PBX TRAINEE
ing now needs a!rr!, sh11rp, Cell John Bond, 833-2700 UM>d $150. Elegant Sp11.nilih tables, misc items. &ls.-0531 646--2998
attrac!. :wrson. No ex~r. DENNIS & DENNIS Cal~~.;?'AL i.ezi:;=· king·IU , bdrm aet, Hide-COMPLETE bdrm se-t S7S; CASH PAID FOR 21" Color TV. sacrifft $95. necc.~s. $3::(1. ~2 !t1ichf'ISlln Dr. 2790 1-Iarbor Bl at Adams a-bed, S ?°Uee table, 2 end maplt' dining rm set $50; tirw furniture, appliances, 19" portable $25. 21 .. table
Call ,\1 ari1'n i\!0nn, ,l\:\3-2700 Jrvirn', Cal1L commodes. Very reason-boy111 1ovs 2~-Sl 725 St antique!!, One piece or modeJ $20. AU are in xl.J!,t
DENNIS & DENNIS l,S~L~E~S~,71-'---~--TRAVEL AGT. able. TI4/:J48-4918. Jamt'S Fi.d, N. 8. &i&-.1891. . houseful. Cali day or nlg111, con<!, 557-8082. 2082 .Ylichrlson Dr. A . i·anager w/proven Aloha! Hav.·aii Callinr . M9-224 Irvirlf', Cali!. door-to-rioor exper to head You'll oevrr bel.ieve it FINE rurn -il1oYing sn1aller 300'-1 x 11-5, 9, 16 fl. Sr ft. S 1 or 547-77:13, 23" Zenith remote control
. Set up, operates, 1noo11urs,
a.dJus1 va!"i{·1y or aud10-\·1~-
1Jfll equip1nen1:, 1,e. ovl'f-
)lcad projcctors, r<'i.'Ord
players, r.--•rur<lers. :slide or
!ilm fll'OJec1or·s: 01,..,ral,,i.,
n1onlhll'S & tidJUSIS f'l!UJP·
m cn1 lt\r rear s.·r~t:n pro-
jection on do~etl c1rcu1t
!elev1s1on 161nn1 & se!ecl·
O-ma11c ·:shdc p1'tlJec1ors;
perfonns roulln1> n1a1ntcn-
a.11ce of c11u1p1nenl.
__ ._:cc::._:..c:c:::::~--1 up Orange Cnty sales force, unles!! you St'f' lt! What an h fl me q u 1 ck : _de sk 11 pc, 2 .x U-8' at J2c u~. black & v.·hile TV. $75 . MANAGEMENT PERSONNEL $20,000 yr & up. Apply 225 oppo;! Book & schedule v.·/chain, Wnll m I r ror , clean. 402 Costa lllesa St e w A NTEo--t"o-b~y 64Z-3975.
DIRECTOR So. Stale CoUege Blvd, trs.vel for co, opening new Vanity bnch, co!t tbl, comer J.48-7392. · Governor \Vinthro('I de~k. X-MILTTARY OFFICERS })egret' A h · tbl, table Imp, &; mott-!eak ,I=~==~-----19n ZENITH & Admiral
GR APHICS LAB
TECHNICIAN
Oprraies slide rcprodUt"
lion ca111l'ra; handJc.s 8 &
lGn1n1 still <"anicra: pro-
dUCf'S microfiche; cartoons,
iHustrat~ itnd lelleni; pl'e-
pftN'S transparencies, in·
ud1ng ll.~c of <:olor; over-
sees produciion or all graph-
ics niaterials l'elaled to in-
struction.
OFFSET
RESS OPERATOR
BET\l/EEN ,\GES 2>-30. . Experienc:W na eim. orrices locally. $7,280. ""'Int antq wht. $Pt' 273-1 COL~ECTORS: Handmade * Cnlt 9M-4771 . * dose--0ut .<;alf>. Low.,• t
lF YOU HAVt: RECENT· Cs.11 Mrs. Schmidt SEC'Y LEGAL $550 Call Pat Lucas, 833-2700 Cardinal Dr, C\f, 546-TI-M . llal1an accordeon $175: aJso Musical lnstrum•nts 822 prices. 3 yr picture tube, 1
LY RETURr\ED FR o r.f \\1estcliff An atniosphcrf' of ex£"i!r.ment DENNIS & DENNIS ---.-.-h!lnd ru1, Jt>arl rrystol ship'g yr pnrts & ~t'rvl~. Antenna
VIETNA.\l \\'f; !!AVE A :"r.rsonne! Agency & diversity v./a .11harp atcy Per.;nnne\ Agell<"y SPANTS!I ding rm lbl v.:/6 dr.cantor SJ50 673--0802 IG;::::'.'.::~°"'""""'""':"'--ins(al!eO v.·/all consolet.
JOB T!IAT YOUR LEAD· 20-13 W(>S!clitt Dr., NB awaits }QU if yo\l Me can•er 2082 !lliche.!son Dr. f'hl""l' t. Ch1na cahint't. Pd . . rBSON ES3;15 Hu1nbueking m '
-.. -. c.•,·f. 11~ ... ,·11 ··ll lo· •o= Dlv ANTIQUE yarner S50. Oil pickups. R.ose1~·ood 11(."('k . ABC color TV, 9021 Atlanta,
ERSllIP QUALITY \\'ILL 6-15-0 millderl. '~""' ......., ..;v.1 '"' ...,. ' """" " fl B !lSS-3329 FIT RIGHT !:\'TO. YOU p=11~0~N~E~S~OCL~l~C~!TO.:.:_R_S __ -y-.,..-rl Call r.1arion Tl1ann. f!JZ-2'100 --~=='==--~I Kenmore Sf'11·ing m ~ch. p_:itng.~ by rcnownd artists $260. ;,w:._2740 ' . ·
ho DE',.NJS & 0ENN1s * TY!ISTS *I i~w~'~"f."'f.'~' fi"'}b;--';;1'.,"'c~·"";;'~-~"~'°'d,~15t>-~·~1~125~· (l("'c'.!"'~'0,_.,•~1c_"_,._''_i' Ol1~,·~~::•nriiii1;;r:;,11'~~ I ~~~~~~~ \VJLL ACT AS A RECRUIT-me, your hoors. \Ve pro--'~ S l 1100 8'" 09
P r A •~,,., Jor pie f'r · .11rl 2· Equo·p. 824 ER FOR A LARGE LAND vidr Ji;oad.~. Local rails only ersonne gency ''""'IS' "" JlOUSEfULL of furn incl.
INVESTMENT ro. INTER.. E:i S40 day. Apply, 22;, State 2082 Miche!oon Dr. a tempor&ry job atereo eq1.1lp, brand new CHAIRS,. i;ofa, bed, lamps,
VIEW PEOPLE WHO RE-Collf'~P Blvd, Anaheim orl--~='~="~'=· =C~"~"=·~--I today aewing ma.chine. ~lust s~ll. a q u 8 r 1 u nl s · Pi 8 no •1c ·-0-,-,-P-L_ET_E_P_l_!M_y __ Bo_w_'_'
SPOND TO OUR ADS. 6.15-4450. SECRETARY Jntervwa: 9-l2 For more. info call 548-5981, bookcal!f'g, desks, ~ t c • addressograph equipment.
Free to You
3 Linet, 2 Tim.s. $2.00
CAN'T BE AFRAID TO I ~=o====~----lp k'U .._ Equa.t Oppor. Employer VERY, W'"" reasonable. 540-59S5. Take over lease payn1"'nt or PR FESSJONAL phone ut your s 1 s to use I.If":-Male Ir Female ·~ TABLE '" MEET OBJECTIONS, solicitor • Dana Poinr. San ing right hand gal to pm. W•stern Girl Inc. MAPLE dining room te.hle & saw 10", DaviB &: $44.75 per mo, CaU 67~. FREE !o good home, 4 mo's
Lab mix, male, All sbota A:
license. 548-7947. • Salary + Bonus Plan
• Plush Ollices
• Fringe Benefits
• Start fmmediately
CALL NOW
Mr.
547·6771
Ask for
K..,t Ad•ms
Cle.men!e, Capistrano 11.rea. of growing co. that pays fee. 4667 MacArthur Blvd. 4 chairs, $70; 2 Ma1>le end ~ells, ~I h.p. motor, $100. Pianos/Organ• 826
\Vork in your own home. St.a.rt $650. Newport Beach table. lo oollee table, $.;()(:;;55~7~-488,,_.~",-,~-~~-~
Best deal in aren. Phone Other fee jobg avail. 540-0325 seL 557-1384 1971 Smith Corona !Coronet)
8.13-146.J bet\l.·een 9:00 a .in. Call Jean Bro"1n, 540-6?'6 I--~~.::.::,:::::,=~-8' CONTEMP oil-whit~ lintn e~ portable typewriter $85.
and noon. ·COASTAL AGENCY URGENTL y couch, k>ose cu~hions, $.">0.1,,67=3-=24~257._=---~-
RECEPT. 'TRAINJ::E; 11!W,) J.ltu"tlor Bl at Adam« Library alept1, wrought iron FOR Sale : Dinette set, Pro
SECRETARY NEEDED w/wa.lnut 5tepB. 548-3227 Mot car tack, ironing bo&.rd,
Good skills, xln'1 CO. BR set $1;1, 2 maple lamps1~54&-3381~--·-------
CaH L<>ra.iM $25 ea.ell. paid $125. 1 maple Antique• 800
Westclifl e SECRET ARJES alngle, box spr. &. mattress Personnel Agency 642-4697 aJt 4.
No f"ee
HAMMOND, S teinwa y, GP.EY fiier altered mNe cat
Yamaha. New A used desperately need.a home by
pianoii ot most makes. Best Sunday 673--5956; 6Th-4l35.
buys in So. Calif. at Schmidt The tutest draw in thP Wat
Music Co., l.907 N, Main, .. a Daily Pilot C11a1lfied
Santa Ana. Ad. &U-5678
iAnii1ii1qiui•ii•iiiiiiiiii800
iiii;Antiques iiiiiiiiilllOiiil
Half-time posltioo S\Vlng MATURE SalC"slady, no eX:
11hit1, 4prn 1o 9pm Monday pr.r necess. Jntervws only
"thnl Thursday, O~rate-s off· 12:30--5 PM. Show--01.f, 22
tie! and dtl"t'CI impres.<;ion Fashion Island, N.B.
duplicating equ1pn1t'n!; prt!-..:.::.:..._:.="'_:.;.:,..;c:c_ __
part's nt'gal ivl."9 and pl11.1es: MECHANIC I
En.JOY day long prrsti11e &
heavy public contact in
pluah 1urroundin~s 1\/!h1s
ex«pt. orianizalion, Merit
ram, + the nicest bos.~.
Call Linda Day, 8.'\J-2700
2043 We.c;tclitf Dr., NB e TYPISTS M:rmo
Al90 Fee Jobs
DENNIS & DENNIS SERVICE CENTER
~2 Michel Dr. AGENCY
Irvine, Calif. 500 Newport Cenler Dr ., NB
Work When le v.·hen
you wlint:
Interim
Personnel Service
COMPLETE house of
furniture. 111 39th S t,
Newport Beach. 67~1159
SPANISH bar. 2 hi back
stools, be11t offf"l'. Xlnt oond.
54>-3588.
CLIFT'S ANTIQUES ! QUITS !!
4-DAY LIQUIDATION AUCTION
opaquing and masking;
maintains inventory: oper·
ates phot<X:Of)ier, binding,
collating, JogginR, cutting
and paper drillin&' equip-
m ....
Oc•en View
School District
$3.517 hr.
Resident Manager * Cust, Service $700
ror nt"'.· 27 unit adult apart-Supervise sales order ~t.
meilt 1n Cotta Mesa. R.ePlY * Lab Tech $850
stating experience, marita.I Oln'lcal exper.-~ical.
771 W. 20th, C.M.
642'7523 54&.1591
•llrllJf, income requlreme. •~ * Gen'I Ofc. $450 and bac"-·nd W t WA I TRE.SS, experienced,
Gar•t• S•I• 112
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: Largest antique inventory
ever offered at public auction in Southem Calif.
PlU1 'imt (4 hn:I ~.Auto-. · ~"" ' r 1 e: EXpe'I'. loan/finanor. tull time. Benton's Coffee
Send Resume Clusificd Ad motlv~ mainl, IYork, Th'O ~:~ a:o:~°,8"11~ *Ex~~ SG~•rlc'y0011,~! $550 Shop, 133 S. Coast Hwy,
'19-1, Delly Pilo!, P.O. Box yrs expe-r. O:>mpletKm nl 81 h ~, Cal t vi., """ Laguna Bch. 494--4898.
. 1560. Costa Mesa, Calif. grade. ApyMicaHorvi must be. ~·-1 ' * Jr. ~c'y $500 1..:::::w"'-A~ITR,,::~55...c::.:.....::::.__
MANY VW part.a -12V, 2
lnll'fbouds, b r a• 1 chan-
delier, etc. 844 Sonora Rd ,
CM 540--4511.
SALE -Clolhe11, fl')ys, skis,
furn, etc. 646-6991. 7010 W,
Ooeantront 'I'hun-S&t.
OVER 3000 ITEMS -APPROX. $200,000 EVALUATION
14,000 SQ. FT. OF FINE ANTIQUES MUST BE SOLD
NOTE: Office equip. & fixtures
ca nnot be removed until saJe is completed.
REI'AJL SALES n-.. ... 1 ... """"/··-~. * * E WANTED, 9))26. fijed, Pf!l'8C:lnnd. O:immi9'rion rlTil•wr: w ....... ~, -r,,v• · 11 ~-• ~ ll~T.~;:~~;;~~1 jii'.;~~:;;:~:::~~ CINDERELLA! * Rocopt. $520 eve:mng Mt f • uvuu • .,.~, Ofc, 797'2 We.rner Ave., fill, h = ~1 _____ - ----CINDEREl~L.!l l G-·y •-.,~, ' ~~"~·~·:.:.:.·~~~=-----' By August 9th. ........ ""'" ,., 1 •
INSTALLMENT Like beautiful clothes &.. Jo1VE Women Netded to
NEAT, CHEAP S'T1.TFF
•WED THRU SUNe
... I.mwo< b., C.M. MEDICAL At111lllt&T1I w/2 "'"!" I l A -~1 •, • t'"~ I '··I LOAN CLERK ,, .... P"DJ>e l"I! you a ... ...,cw. F-& •·•~It:....· ....,am"' au.n proe111..,,. exf). for 08--GYN, Back of. • ··<-'"~ ,-,,., '"'"' ... r 11 /ti R~1a-·ro• _ Unit.cl _ outgoing? If thia K1111s Helan Schaff•r m .... e-U'P. I me, p me. .,,..-,.,. "'"""' n.. Wuher.
Caltfornia Bank fkt & 16b dutie~. 25-30 m !lllpPer oppor, rlta YoU. a 644-4981 Exec. position avaU. c.ll T.blet A chain, beds,
3l•l E Coa!!I HI'.)', of age. Call 638-1120. delightful IWinaing boutlque•J """""""""""""""""""'J Vlviane Woodard Cotmetlct, drelMrs. 642--:i611
"-'• d·' ,.~... will train. No exper, ~58, 5*-Jf64, Fo. RESULTS .-....... ..._ \.NIV" "" ,..,., "WEED It ls ~ap" . .cltan I O!A'·•I-"~" ..-ri..ft-,~ .. _., ...,.. 67).9240 out the, tttairutt' " tnah. Cttl Susan St11.de, flll-2700 u U'l.......,,o ..... ,_. • ., "WEED It I. rea.p" •. d ean pend on. CaD tht SUpe:ro
tum Into cub thru 8 Dally DENNIS It DENNIS your ad, Ulen #It baclt ud out the trea1ure1 A truh. da le1m~n. .D&U7 PUot
Pllot Clauttled Ml. &42--S678 ))32 Mlchelt0n Or. turn Into euh thru a Dalb Qaal.fled 6Q..6871 • p1aoe
lr\lihf', C&lit. Ustmi to n. phone rtrwt Pilot OauU!ed ad. ~ 10UJ' ad A ~ Ill
" ' ..
·~ ..... --\ I ,,,_._.. f' --• ,-~ ··--·-.:. ~J.• ,; :~.
SALE CONDUCTED ON PREMISES BY
WESTERN LIQUIDATORS AND.ASSOC.
SITE -CLIFT'S ANTIQUES -108Q2 BEACH BLVD., ST.l.NTON
DATE-THURSDA, FRIDAY I SATURDAY I SUND.l.Y
July 29, July 30, July 31, AUii. ht
1:00 P.M. loOO P.M. 1:00 P.M. 1:00 P.M.
TERMS -25°1• Deposit et t lm• of wle -Verified checks accepted.
INSPECTION -3 days prior to sale 9 to 5 -
AUCTIONEER: G. L. Gardner
~-,!\l } '>lti .
' • --
I
I.
DAILY l'ILOT Wtd-. July 28, 1971
,,,.__, .. _ .. '""___,~I ...... _ I~! -~=-I~ I
~~.~-Llilw.liml:i.Tl•.,....i',;,$2.•00• lfil ~I ~----""..::lfil:J~!---... --;;::l~-.-;i ;;[ ---..... ~1§1~1 1:.;;-_ ... _-~l§l~I lfil I
{": * * •.
U.RRY McLAUGHLIN
"20COMETCIR.
.WESTMINSTER, CAL.
You are the winntt of
2 tk:kets 10 the
Southlond
Home & Garden
Show .. "" ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
JUly 3().Aug. S
Pleue call 00-5678, ext. 314
between 9 and 1 pm to
daim your tickct1. (North
County toU-tree number is * • • .... 1220,
HotNI 15' 8oaf1, Sllps/Docko 110 Campo", Solo/Rent 920
1 BLUE att.f..aeldinc, •xptr 56' SUP avaU now. Da1-
rider, $DI. 5'1>977T uk Jot Point Marina. Temporary
Linda. monthly basis. E v e s :
'69 FORD Ra.ftcu 'A. ton
w/alr a: 11' cab over
camper. Recite tollt-l , e)'t!
lc.>wl oven. All jacltl &
equlp. you nefii. Xlnt corid.
125 ~r,lo ... ~tor;;;;H~'"";:;·;;'";::'~.--MO-il·T-ruck_.;,' _____ "2~ Auio. Wonted ffl Aulos, lmporfod 970 CONDOR .... ANNIVERSARY •SO
<Th-3831
* * * FltANK LLOYD
111 JAOE
BALBOA ISLAND
You are the wlMtt ol
2 ticketl to the
Southlond
Home & Garden
Show
1."' yadrt u..r, .._a boat. ~
' BU..L CORWIN FORD ~
[ "°"'.., II" )f! l WANTED • private or ~m-$4750. 5<17-@l d a YI, Merft Equipment Y. merclal slip for 30' catch, 673-1901 evn.
I;· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~"~;:J Nwpt area Ali 2-5695 or t.11 ;.:~==-=;'"""';-;=-;::;; &-1242. DANA 36" Shell top, !ull
Gener•I 900 PRIVATE mooring for 5ale, boot. $~i:m.2SlT
CAPTAIN 4th of July Cove, [)..12, ac-~~__:~:;=:::;_;_ __
comodates 45'. 7l4/5#-357R. Cycles, Bikes,
Unlimited lK"t'nse ·any grogs . Scooter• tons. 30 Years eXperience BOAT sl,IP ~va1l.' Jul~ lat, for
~ -Coanf1'i O:indor DI&. In1f'mational Harvestu
tribu.klt, 230 ~ Malb St., RECREATION CENTER
~ C'?'e "~~~ROY CARVER, Inc.
,.,,-wa)'L --2925 Harbor Blvd. K.. 7-out, ~ Colt& Men 546-4444
35' MACK BuJ. Completely MUST SELL
aetf conlaloed. Xlnt rwming '65 Chevy VS ulil bed 'A
oond. SH il make o.Her. ton, New pai~t Eng 4 tirn
Mil &. po11rer. Professional 60-10. \V1de slip.
spon fishing glride; Mexican 61l-6606
548--0022 anytime. in good cond $85(1 or bes!
THM Trailers, Tr•vel MS Ofil'f'. ~9-2.iti. July 3().Aug , 8
at t~
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
• & Central Ameri"°"& Pacif-SLIP SPACE AV1\H.,
ic Coasr \\"&.ten; -lnstruc-2J'-30' SAILBOATS
tion in boat handling. sea-* 673-6606 *
manship, DR & celestial •
navlgalxln. PICK UP & Boats, Speed & Ski 911
HONDA Ple;i.se l"alJ 642-5678, ex:. 31<1 lj' SCOTSMAN Tr• t I er '62 STUDEBAKE""=R-cp~l~ck""-P
betv.·een 9 and 1 ptn ro Chemical Porta Pot 12 bolt V-8, automalic b>o « be~t -"fRIEDf.AHDBI,. claim }'OUt ticlttls. (Nof'fh and 110 light.!. Best otter. oUer. 732 \V. 18th St., C.M.
County toll-free number is 548-8995 _ or 531-7164. Apt A
PINTO W /·AUTO.
Trani. $5 day, 5c mile.
THEOOORE
ROBINS FORD
2060 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTJ. MESA 6c2-0010
Autos, Imported 970
-MERCEDEfi'ENZ
DEALER OFFICE
• '70 Datsun 2(K)(I Rdi;ter e
DATSUN
'71 DATSUN 4 DR.
SEDAN
Low miltq;e, fact. warranty
4 ,pd, dlr. R&H, was $2186,
now $1886 (639CAX) Small
down or Jorelgn c8.r 111\U
tln. pvt. ply. Call Kc.>n
5-16-8736 • 494-6811.
'67 DATSUN SEDAN
KITTENS -Black, grey, DELl~EllY . ANYWllERE: SKI or lishing boat + lrir,
male &. female. 21JO-C cap1111n av.a~able for ~x-glass on v:ood htile, nl'ar
Orange A11e., C. M · tendffi_ cru~s1ng. Ext:ns1ve new Chrsysler 'J.J lisp.
, .. ...al fWW'I', .., 54Q..12'l0) -V~A=CA-=T~IO-N_::~ .. ~-:.:..~,.=.,.::...-,.-.i;.,"1"'c~M~c"""1~11-,to-n-,·-an-,tru-07k
531-6.124 e 8!:3-15611 * * * Crown. Full side tent v.•fhydro tail gate, rebulll
eTHE BIKE SHACKe • '70 PENTON, Top co1xl, w/aJum poles. AU only eng, $550 or best offer. Call
'68 TR 250 e '68 Fiat S:io Ratt 3 ~. d\r. R. Excellent
$pyder • '68 ?¥lGV • '68 condition thru out, Old car
MGC GT • '69 ?-.1GB GT or small down can fin.
air e '10 MBG GT <21 e pvt. ply, Plea."-t aft 9 am
'58, 't.o & Tl 190 S1.. soft & :,.JG-8736 ¥.H-6811. ~·· .: ~".:" ~:''i ! ~,s=1~D~A=rs=u=N~P~1c=K=u'-"'P1
646-6623. arlln1n1struti\·e expC'rience. Runs like a tlreatn . s,Jj(I.
2 YEAR old Brownish • 646-2977. ------5:J7-3683.
NEW BICYCLES Konb1, $515. Anxious, $490. 54!>-.71&4, days. 548-7223 or 968-5160 to &tt.
PARTS e ACCESSORIES _•_73-_3fl.l8 __ . -------1 NI MROD hrdtp tent trailer. flfUST !ell '59 Dodge 3/4 ton '63 Healey 3000 Rds.er • 'M
Fiat 124 Spt Cpe, air. MANY
MORE! For info caU .. , poodle". Found nt'ar 2'lnd & SCRAM LETS --.~~---oo,.-,,.-1'\e"·port, &till unclaimed, • ~LASSIC :\laOOgany 16' ~ere
must find good h 0 m e . inboard, '64 Ch r y s J e r
EXPERT REPAIRS Mobile Homes 935 l SlP-6, tabl e, sto\'e, ice box Van. 1'.loslly good cond.
ON ALL MAKES ---------$195. Pv1 Pty: 548-4156. $'100.-or be:st otter. 543-9682.
Brazing &: \\'elding HAD ENOUGH Auto Service, P•rts 949 .::5·
1
.
HOUSE Of'~ 1111PORTS
(1) 523.T.50
.i spd. d lr. R&H . 1 o"·rier.
Take fore ign car or small
down <ZCJS75J c11U 546-8736
• 494-6.Sll. ANSWERS i\larine 6. See to appreciate. ~18-136!1. Bes! olfcr over $1,000. 1093 C BAKER, CM OF DAMPNESS? ""Erono Van: 6plys, o m1,
r..'efU' Fe.irview e 546-4130 P.fove to SIERRA DA\\'N. I ·-----'""'.,-00'.,-,•I gd cond $850 548-6478 ALFA ROMEO DATSUN 2000 ronvt
Less than 8,000 mi.
'67 SPYDER Red ronvert, new. $2100. f>.U-5633 .
KITI'EN. black / orange I
\vhite & hon1eless. Come &
gc! "meo1•""· 2157 Pacific,
C:\f. &17-38'18.
FREE !I.mall ~ize puppy.
{we've allergy problems)
F ema ],, Love kids.
847-J,llj,
LOVABLE dog xlnt
""/chldm & gd v.•atch dog,
Needs Jrg yrd. All shots &
lie. 546-00J.1.
----~ i.argc.> male dog, ab1 4
)'I'S old, free to good
home. 548-2893
4 ADORABLE kitrens. 2
11:hite, l black & while.
Free. 968-2344.
'fO A Happy Home, mixed
blklwht Spaniel, fem. 9
• mo's. CaU 548-S964.
JVEIMARANER puppy t1botil
•6 mo. Likl'.'s kids, needs
:Yftrd. 548.-6142
l S:O.iALL breed fem. pup-
;pies, 21 ~ mo's. Adorable.
.MS-9439.
AOORABLE male kil\€'n~
:tree 968+1913. 10021 Cliff Dr,
;H.B.
r REE KITTENS: very
:lovable muJti-eolo~, male
& female". 538-1385.
LABRADOR Fen1 61) mo
old. Very rr~ndly. To gd
home. 54S-6883.
Al d b-• 1 5 Spoke mag ~·heels. \\'W flt 497_1~.. · ' · -End 1••ays ry, .umy, c ear. ....... 968-1691.
Engine -Adult -Fl"fTlur '69 YAt\1AllA ~,,.., uro. N Id 1 Cougar, t-.1uataf1£ or tno51 . _ .
Orchid -DL"\'E OUT. t4· GLASPAR, ~O hp Johnson 21'' 1ires-<:ompn.>ssion re-0 smog or fog. ea\ or American cars. Size l4x6. 65 CHEVY Van: lo nn, new
H Th 1 + 11·a1ll•r, xln l cond. $800. ll'"ast. Excellent cond. $·l?:i. arthr1!ic or hronch1al prob· .. ~=. ••• 0099 tires, gd rond $945 54~~78, app1ness: e n101 rrn 6~ 03_ l•m 't SIEl'R \ D'\VN ~ • ~
Xlnt cond, Lo mi's, Best of-___ F_E_R_RA--R-1---0.I
fer, Uavlng country, Days:
~'i fe ~·no has a hllsbll.nd who ~~-------1 6:l3-:.'90:t nr 612-5769. ,. s, " J' ' " [ TRR~3lj;;m;::-2c;;;ritmrebW;;o;;;n.ll -'~9~7-~1~084'::_. -------~ likes to DINE OUT. '70 Hoston \\lhulC'r v.•/·IO hp --~=~=E~D.---you own ~'our o1>.·n mohile-T . parls: 2 car tors $10 1955 FORD PICK UP 1100 632-6650, l.'ves & \vknds: 1 ·--F-E-R-RARI
96S-0443 At.rrHORJZED WANT horn€' lot. Rents ke<>p gi:iing ea, d i stributor $10. · · 35· ELCO CLASSIC Cruiser <'ng. 13.c~t offer over ~lOOO Honda 250.305 Scrambler. up. \\lhy pay rent'!' For free generator & starter S5 ea. nee01 traflfl work. BENnEY
including Harbor mooring .l~&1~4~-t~t~9'~--~-~~~~~~ Running or not. \\'Iii buy brochure, V.Tile Dept, 3, Coil $2. 2381 Carlton Pl, Ct\t. 540..{)133
All xtl'as. lmmac rond. Nev.·)~ pans. 551-9305. SIERRA DAWN, Hemet, Ca '63 CORVAIR, 4 1 pd Autos Wenttd
eng. Slip avail. !di) '6') y ~~ 9-•3 . AJ\1AliA ~"""c. S1reet "-"" · transaxle, complete v.·ith $4500 548-6n2 Tr1nsport~t1on · I Scrambler. Real C I ea n ! CONTEMPO-clutch $7S. ~ar auspetuion, 6 IT. dinghy. 3 HP Johnson ~------~ Good condition. S 3 5 0 . LAGUNA HILLS ume car $25. 5'15--0906
Complete $125. \Vill i;elJI•········-835-14!12. ~301 RJOGE ROUTE DR. BRAND ne.1v V\V tire lncl
WE PAY TOP CASH
968 1952 Bentley. Very ~
concl. Runs good, $6000 or
best offer. 546-3778 wknds
only.
&eparately. 544--0268 evc.>s. Campers, Sale/ Rent 920 t\1UST Sell! ·n Yan1aha 250 (Corner of Moulton Plew:-') rim, Still has guaranltt,
Boats, Power 906 1----------Enduro. Bough! in J\lay, 900 Prestige adult com1 iun ity ad-$:ll. 645-3423. tor used can A trucks, JUJI /.[;~~~1 mi. Perfccl 6'12-5919 Sceve. jacent to Leisure \Vorld. ~~~~~~~~~~! call u1 for free estimates.
Tr' CUSTOM Roamer Flying <-"·;·«-~.i '68 650 TRIU.1~H chopper. Beautifut surrotindings, all :: §) GROTH CHEVROLET
B1idge Cruiser. Built 1965. Excellent rond. After 5 pm, luxury appointmenrs, Ther-Aut11tfatW. 1.-
Sleel hull, r./s radio, very --"1-"'1 ~zr:i.5. apeutic pool Saunas, extr· ~;;;;;;;~" ;~J e~ gym, 4 billiard tables, Al!k for Sale• Manaaer comfortable. An.xious I 01 &,~oOj--=....L'(C'J".' RALEIGH Reconl 10 epd much much more! 18211 Beach Blvd.
sell. $5495. Call <'0llectl VW C bike. Immac, co od. $70. Sec beau!, lurn niodels fn Antiques/Classics 953 Hwitington Beach -',c"'c,·u,_m;;;"·;;;','',"v;'-c'o;,...;-'-::"=c II amper &IZ-4580. !47-6087 KI ~33Jl " ""-o===~=--park.like srlling.
BMW
Automotlvl" E:occellence
& ROY CARVER, Inc.
2925 Harbor Blvd.
Cn~ta. l\Icsa 546-4144
CORTINA
SALES & SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 \V. Cout Hw;y.
Newport Beach
FIAT
• Con1plete Stock of mas a
Thia• s-..
"FRIEDLANDER" 18' SOUTH COAST utl!ity, Rentals ~o TRIUMPH 500 CALL 830-3900 or g30.;900 192.i Lincoln 4--0.oor sedan. ANNIVERSARY •so-1
hail tank. SIS radio, good ~75 a week-Se a mire CLEAN * r.rusr SELL CLEA N AIR, CLE AN' Ori~. mint cond. 56,000 n1i. AUTOS WANTED ----------~ f ed t ti of '68 CORTI NA GT. $149j 13750 ll!ACH ILYD. eng. ,,ans err . mus S<'. Mac H-·----b 536-!M?l AFT 6Pt\I \VATF..R, TtlE GOOD Lf>'E EJ>cellent running cond. Top dollar 1-cl•an "'" 'H 391 1,t ·-t k (2131 -0 •0 •s ~,... • v• Absolulely classic condition! • wy • ......., a e& ...,.,.....,,... · '70 YAMAHA 125 EnduJ'O. on a low budget. 2 BR. 2 b3. Cw.tom body. $3,250, Call cr>J's, See Andy Bro\\'fi, Red \l'/chrome wheels_ on-___ 893-_7_;;;s __ e_53_'_7.SS_2' __ 1 24' CHRIS Crall Cabin AUTO l TRUCK UASING 1 139· b. b 6.16-2388 an. 6 pm . THEODORE 124 No. Harbor at Bolsa n1mac. ;,. mo 1te homes on th!' ay iri ly 21 ,000 mi,_ 4 ~peEd. P1'i. FIAT 850 Spyder l970, Xlnt
CruiS4"r 183hp VS marine Santa Ana-531·0607 673-1350 Newport Beach. Priv. brach 1928 ~1odel A -roupe. Early ROBINS FORD rxl • -·· AM/FM ong. Top 111nnin" cond .• ~~~iii'liiiltiir"!i~~~: 1 0---cc-c-,:_:'-"Ci-=-;= & 11 . 1 1 .1.1. ~ par1y. Call eves. only • ro . ...., mis, , "' •-;9 Norton model 99, 600cc · a recreat1011a ac1 1 1es. model ':lllrest.ored orig. c~"· ~ HARBOR BLVD. IHfi.-7891. radio, $1530. 310 Balboa
fl1ake of:". 6·14-&-143. __ \\'ILL tra'!t> equity in 196'1 .,103. Adul1s only. No pets. Con1t> Bod'y' 1n mint rood. $150. COS-TA MESA '"-·"·IO ----B!l'l.l, No. 6. ~ -t UV '67 CORTINA D!'IUX(' auto 2--~--21' "'"'"'"· fiybmt,,, 3 f mu ·\ too "'"""' .< * * 'l&-1"2 * * look. s ,,.,;,, Vlll'I<<. ?.00 >:. '3&-... 88 ''"•pm. ----., ' ~ 1 -----~--~-\\'E PAY ~ DOLL\R rlr ~dan. Good cond, New 1968 FIAT 850 cc Spi1Jer . im-mo old. 700 HP. l\tany ex-101 ~· 5elf-eontained carnp<-r, Coa.~l J~wy., r.'.B. . · 1v P '
tra.l!. $l5.~:00. Da)'S 546_7781: 20,000 mi. i'acks. bouncl'· 1970 J-IONDA 350 SL, v.•/cov-1957 l'\0;\IAD. lhe~e. Ht no FOR TOP USED CARS 11rr.-.. J,69:). 536-l l~L macula!l', 11e1v ra dia l s,
er. under 4500 mi, xlnt FOR jus1 SlO,JOO ~ou can cleaner: all or1g1nal & 1 --·-----s1.2:i0 51S-8Sj3"-----evcs 831-2~61. ,'j\VBY~. hoots, !or r amp 4 2 8320 own 8 20'x5:'>' mobile honie •t-k •17,.,., ,,~7 /\L'2-If your ear ls extra c can, DATSUN _
'"""'· Be~t offer, 9 · · "'" · -1 ""· ""....,,, .l. ..,.., .. , f•-t. 1068 >"I\T Ill S t C 32' TOLJ..Y ti-ailrr or good <'lean car. on golr course ai the ix'ach "'"" .. ·~ · ' · por oupe-1!93-2ii~l 1970 YAMAHA '.nice twin. ex-. A rare find ';)4 Chrysler; BAUER BUICK X l n t con d . Extr a•. BY Ov.'flc.>r. 1966 T.S., F.B .. 1 =~~·--~~~-o:-~~ !las largrd ~<'l'<'enl'd room bl k 2 d d Gd--" N '71 p• k •-1-o•-237
*•FREE KITTENS,
.:kind&.
eel rond. All l'lec. $50. $450. ac . r ~e an. '""''"· 231 E. 17th St. ew IC Up • .,,.rn t<'P. '";i-J extras. Jmmac. Bl'st oiler '59 Dodge 1/2 Ton PU k fenct'd patio. Park ha5 S.too. :x.6-86,;J. Costa l\lcsa :;.ig...1765 all ovc.>r $13.000 548--5098 ~;,ton, 8',l ft . overhear! can1p. 612·'1SCH. all !acili1ic~ 5.%-171n. B(g l'ngine 1·adio 3 speed dl r. '70 Fiat 124 SpydC'r A,\1/Fi\f,
I I · HONDA 1:,0 cc -$150. 29262 :-;9 >'LAl-·ltN._G_O_d 0 1-::--;;-,, Dune Bunnies 956 -vt'PORTS \\',\NT~ cam""r 6 ply 1t!'{'s. i\1any $2800 . 17' 1969 CHRYSLER l~ lip er. s et>ps 4 'v range. ice ., .. .. •• ,,...
'
IQ mnrinc radio '"'' box, O\'t>n, \\'ired, e!c., \'Cl) Vi;i Sun Sf>bas1ian, South 1-1 1 N 1 [ Orange Counties rxtras.Sat'ririce.T<1 kcsmall ** 833-JO:iS **
" PART SJA.\1ESE J\ITTEr\S.
~ v.•ks old .
Call 646--0793
' · f c ti 5-7 9792 Lam1n11, 963-1540. nioii e ronir . e '\' y '64 INT SCOU_J_P U-TOP ; BUYER down or 11·i;1 rinancc pri1·.:ilf' 1-----------I co\.'f'r. Xlnt cond. $2895. cean. a ,;, . . "" furn ished air cfJnd palio l JAGUAR , , · , · , • • BlLL J\·IA.XEY TOYOTA par ty. Sr. Ss.1692 _ ~S-S7~ii 613-2.119. FACTORY d Ire ct dealer, '71 SUZUKI TS.185. Like new cov d . Xln_t con<l, S3000. Call !S88l Beach Blvd. or 49-4.Qill.
BOSTON WHALE-RlJ J\tajorv.•ay & J1al! Pini, fro1,1 2500 mi. 1'.lust !!ell. best of-for app!, :l'1S-5608_:_ l \\'D, dJr. Good runner H. Beach. Ph. 847-s:>55 l=rr~·~s~g,~,-,,'""'"°".,--~-~lim-c._--;;B~ig-'6.i XKE '1.2 b! ,1· /,v
. f Pell and ~· l[B
v.·/3J Evinrude Ski 11~1n. S79J, $795. 869 \V .1R1h St, C.t\l. fer. 675-1801 Bill '!'£Great Lakes 20x50'. l11n1i-strong heart, take~ small The fastest drav1 in the \\'est gest selection ever~ See the J\fichelins $2,09j. a m/fin
838-3210 or 673-8325. Turn unused items intu quick 1969 HONDA 90, $450 Jy park. $!!,200. Call alt 11 do11'!l. Call art . 10:00 546-8136 a Dail Pilot Classified DAILY P iwr Cla.ssifil!d 4ftfi.3048 34%6 cam in 0 MUST ~ell. 25' OwPns Ex-cash, cnl! 642-5678 540-3258 a.m., 8-17-6531. • 494.n,,~11 (WBJ879l. Ad. 641-~ . section now! Capistrano.
-~-~--m--~--~--~-~ --~ m-~ m Offrr. Evf'. &l?-M6Z. --------------------jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 850 17' STAR!.l~E.. 5:0 l!P
j•A-LK-IN•C->•fy_oo_h_B_lnl_•_•ith EvinnHlt> I.· cvvrr. ('.oocJ I
P ets, General
cage, $lZ5. cond. SS93. 67H;)82. I
* 64~2921 * I JI' CHRIS CRAFT <'abln
PARAKEE.IS CTUisl'r. T. \\'. Head &
Just out of the nest. S3.~. galley, etc. S31-69j7,
l-O-s.;.1-s;-'-'33-1 _____ = I Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908
·tats 852 ---------1 ~-.,--n:-cr-10-N·.,-T-E--h -1 ,-ck Cal 2S + Catline 27
Gtiat'anltt the \o~·est ra!cs in
male short haired cal, 1 yr. So. Cshl, "CaUina cruis-0 w ne rs moving to :r.Jaryland. 592-5-142 'lil 9 ing club". Location Ne111port
:p.m.
Dogs
POODLES AKC
·~-~~--~= Boats, Sail 909
14' Fiberglass
10 \\'K old AKC Reagle pup-Runabout
ptf'S; mal .. &· 1,.111 S2~$·l l E xcellent ton<ltllon~
Also 1 yr Ol(I lem $30. I lnt':llldes 3:1hr. ;\lcrcllJ')' 3.·i0.
lU-1526 Trn1l<'r. life ctish1on~. fu'C'
eXtlOG"lllSh<'r, 1arp. $700 or
'2 I R 1 S H Set! er s. Bl'.'st olfi•r'. 0.!6-SOl8
m.ale/lemale, ~ lllQS & 9 ----------,-~ . mos. "BAl~BOA 20" \\ /tro1!Pr &_
612·2fi19
MID\\'AY KE!\'NELS
extension. I/Pad, 4 l!P
.:\lrrcul)' outhoarrl k many
exllns. Call aller 6 pm,
, . ~erman Shepherds. Pet & 968-8817.
ahow atock. Board & 11 =~==--~--breeds. 891-5..'H!I, 16' O'DAY flay aailer incl 3
hp. Seagull o.b. Good
· BEAGLES. Champion blood shape. niust ~II quick? Call
tint-mllles & lt'maJes. Bud al 675-IJ93. *** 831-2431 *** 24' ~'BGLS Sloop, head, gal·
A:rGHANS for 4 da)'~ only, lry. Vttra salla, O/B SIS.
$I!i0 ea, <I dog~. AKC. Ex-Ex1r11.s. Like new. Scotr
ttptlonal pedigree. 962-9805. 673-49-l'J.
GEru.1AN Shon M.ir. 16 mos, 's.~1c-,-0-,-c,.~.,,~,.-o,,r~,.,.~,-,-,~,.
, inlrihgent, gentle, obedient. sailboat, inboard motor,
:S45. 540-3769 good ~ape. 642-5106.
{USH Setter ft'male pup, WOO 14 No. <Ill. Xlnt rnnd.
KC, Champ line. Shots. Tra.iler, sling, ho.at rover.
HlO. 83Q..1&30. $800. Call: 546-8739.
~ OLES AKC, Teacup • 1!169 14' INTERNATIONAL
foys. Pup11/Adult1., all col-41'. XJnt cond. v.·i rh 5pin·
on. Slurt MN. 89l-9719. 1'18ktr. $8.1(). 846-lliOC.
Schock-bit Endeavor
26', •40, Xlnt <'Ond. $4200.
642-3584 days; 6'1,?..5303 ~VH.
WANTED: K1TE aallboe.t, in
rood cond. Must be under
$400. ~74.
HOUDA Y 24' Y8"1, ~ sails,
inbrd eng, s1P6 4. Survt>yed.
i\1!nt oond 499-2066
LIDO 14 &. tmilf'r. xlnt cond.
Sall No. 2194, $850. (213)
424-2041, L.B.
HOBIE 14. 11 mo. old. Frtt
&I Isle mooring for mo ol
Alli. $tl50. GT>-T!Oi.
FLIPPER · $265
3' dinghy. 9fi&.76G7
Al.CORT Sunlish sailboat
red, fiberglu11. t>ar roof
YR OLD ~ Qua11r-r -'~'~n1~"=·~~~'"=· "~-~7-5389=~· ~~
..... -bo>k<n. Hiii l INTERNATIONAL 14
1'act. $1'1l 5f5..8685 US29'J. $150, 548-694.f
' --, -~ --~ -... -:.U~ ..... ~-
Th•• b •~111, hi' .AulomM•C T•an~m,..
~\on, Power Sl~'llllil·
Fnc•o•y .Air Con<tl·
rlon•ng, II 'loll Io &
1-ieoltr, IVIO 21')
This 1 Ooor. H1,dtop
hi' Autflm&!I< Tran~
'llinlon, POWtr ~Ttfr·
!ng, Powtr B••~H,
Air (Ondl!lcnlng, R1-
Ctfl & Heat". lWQO 43!)
• Or H 1 AulO.,,.·
1:c, 11111 pew••· f•c·
lor r 1i•. n~V~l•t>.
ONLY
DYNAMIC II
1 or H. T 1u!oma1.c,
pcwer 1tttrlr>Q, &
& b••~t1. r&dl1t,
hHI .... 0'1(( Ull
. PURCHASE WITH CONFIDENCE
1 DO% MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
r Used Car Purchas•d From ·
WithR Ev•PYnt'1ac 48 Hour Guarantee to You Dave 011 o • .
'67 CAPRICE
1 dr Hf., Aulom.llt, pCI-Sl"rlfl!I & "'"~· .. , llclO•y •Ir, ylnVI rv111, r1dl9.
h•eter. CULD •UI
$1388
'70 CHEVY
L•11 Than 4,000 Mllff
4 ti>ttld 1r1n1ml11kln, rlCllO " hMftr. f IM (IH) Only
$2188
'69 FORD
CUSTOM
'66 MUSTANG
lltM!o a Nlltt, Au!Omlllc Tr1nt111J11lon.
l\lr (ondllllllllnt, (SAY J#)
$995
--
Impala Cu1tom
1 d• 1-1 1 VI. pewo•
o•e-rrinq, •lnyl roof,
focTory 1lr, (YO)(.
IOI).
ONLY
1 D o• r l-l1rdloo.
Automo!IC T••"~"'ll·
1kwl. roWflr !ott"·
Ing, Powo• rl••~t..1.
Air (or>dl!lonlng, R•·
dlo j, H"'Ttr, (VJV ..,
ONLY
W11'1 111to,...llc tr1n1ml'flen. llOWfl• 1!ur-
l1'111, pewer bokq, f1ctorr 1lr, PCW9•
wl<IOOWI Ind IOPPld W(lh • Ylnyl "'"'·
12CA IM)
$1997
'69 PONTIAC
C1t1l1'1, J °"°" Hlf"lllto~. lltMIO " He1ter, Au-rk; Tr•n,mtnllNI, P•.,..r $!ttdf>O,
Poww llr•k ... Air CondHllnJno. (IUJ &XOI
$1997
'70 MERCURY
COLONY ,ARK WAGON
,1111 PO_., llctory l lr, llt.•1 ewntr, _,ry
)J.000 mll ... 1111 .... rrlnly tr111t,.rrtelt,
M111t '"· ,..,._ .i"l•r.
I -
CLOSE-OUT
OF ALL REMAINING
'71 MERCURYS
BRAND
NEW 1971
COUGAR
S1 l1cl 'hifl. w~if, w1!h, P<>"'•r 1te .. rin q. ''"'ol• control !1fl
h1ncl minor, AM 11dio, li"l1d 911 11, dlx ... hi, cover1,
CIF'l lH!.Sl79'J !
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
ANY BRAND NEW 1971
MERCURY MONTEGO
IN STOCK-WE WILL SELL FOR
3% OVER DEALER
INVOICE!
OUR SELECTION OF 1971 MERCURYS
HAS NEVER BEEN BETTER. IT'S TIME
FOR YOU TO MAKE OUTSTANDING
SAVINGS RIGHT NOW AT •••
1 \}""' -
I _,,__ . :...•
PILOT ·ADVER TISER
l§l I -...... l§f I ..........
OAILY PILOT S7
..... ..... ).-.
lutos, tmportM 970 Autos, Imported
i--J-EN_S_E_N--1
970 Autos, lmportM 990 A_uto_•_. _u:'.a".:Od'.".·:':::--"°-Autoe, UMd
~-D~O-D_G_E --1 FORD
990 Autos, UMd
TOYOTA VOLVO CADILLAC CA MARO CHEVROLn
l---J-E_N_S""E-N---·l;;ll<;;9:--:;1'0;;;;V;;OT;;A;--;C::-o;:,;-,;:-,;,,-:,1 ------------------11967 SS Camlll'O, auto P/S,
AUTHORIZED Sprinter, Yt"Uow w/camel ~ THINI LARGEST P""T di1c b.rks, fac. a ir. N"w
1966 O!EVELL£ Me.l!bu, e '62 DOOCE LANCER
SALES~ Sl!:RVJCE Interior. Newly 6"-r\'iCf'd, 'VOLVO' SELECTION OF 1't'd paint. Radia15. Or1a:.
t'.'l<'el c(-.r\d, 962-l~J. ID CADILLACS IN o'vner. $15.'JO. 67>-22'26.
&uto, p/1, r /h, gnod tr&l\I. Good tran~portalion car.
S500 firm. 963-8316. $Hl6 ll7:1-6521
CHRYSLER -,-.-.co.,~,,o=oc~E~s~,-.. -, ~s..~, NEWPORT
IMPORTS
ORANGE COUNTY .~~-
1!16!! ·rovcrrA com11., '"'' "FRIEDLANDER" SALES-LEASING .... CAMARO 327, k pd, mtlt'ai.::e. Xlnt cond. Mu51 rh.sc brakea.
lf'll. j7l4l 644-W97. IU» au.Ch CNWT, n, AUTHORIZED Sl400.
893-7566 e 537-81124 ·SERVICE·
:uoo w. "°"" wy. TRIUMPH fl5"-'S9 v01 _,,, ""'' ..... Nabers Cadillac
1 ___ N_•_wpo~"-"'-""-'---l ------=~--I Different! 26CO HARBOR BL,
"68 CAMARO, xlnt cond, low
miles. Sl600. Ph. Jackie
67J.-8050 or 642-~l f've5.
'10 T & C WA GON &-J>A&I,
Air, 16,000 ml"a P"T at, d1.~c
br, lu& rack Call (T14J
776-5890 dyg, MS-0379.
LOTUS THE TRIUMPH • Ph ~16 • COSTA MESA VS ST AG >lo.9100 o,,.n Sond., "67 CAMARO 121.17-Stlck COMET
LOTUS NOW ON DISPLAY Auto., Used 990 V1braaonic, nf'w ~int & '64 COMET Calle nte , 4-apd, 'JJ COUPE DE VILLE ti~s. $9'.:Kl. 5-18-651;2. V-fl, E.T. mags, MUST AtrrHORIZEO
SALES &: SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
Como in '°' a ''" drl"'' ,67 CAMARO J96 SAC. th" wknd. Mu• 0110< FRITZ WARREN'S MERCEDES BENZ ''''',pm «7-2319. DEALER OF , __ _, _ _. --' '000 U 4·spd. Vt'ry fut. $1800. Call ..,., SPORT CAR CENTER FICE ...........,""''· w 11y ... m eJ.
n o E. 1st St., S.A. 547-0764 e '70 Torino Bro\JR'fulm e Corporation preside nts' 64~1244 1960 Comet, new ba~ry.
Open daily 9-9: closed Sunday '70 Chc\"y C1pr1rr e 'ti7 .,.,;Jes' pri\'ate car. Like new 0·1~0-CA=J~IA-R~C>-~A-I,-. -,-,.-,-,-,-,_"· ~eds tran~ work. rood
C'''l" ,1 c e '68 in e, .• ...., res""'ct. Cali K!"nl 1Prlnr. 12.;){)() ml. 12895. uri-s. 510--8981. e t969 TR.(> XJnt cond. \\'ire .. ss :, premr Pe ·~ r-1-~~~==~=-oC'C'-J.entans (f>P e '6.11 (;TQ C. Allen 8'2..4tl5., tor de.mpn-~7-1 141 . "-ONTl.,"NTA'
',,,•-~-r.~·nr. . 1--.===,,=:-· I ""' ..,. " '" • '"6 Amb•"·""' w... ~' -,~ ·~ CHEVROLIT, ' ' . 3100 V..'. Coas1 Hwy. \\"his. In m1.
Ne1\•por1 Be11ch s73-i:u_:_a!_!___ 6 __
1-M-E_R_C_E-DES BENZ ·70 SPITFIRE. lo°'""· roll ba r , l ugi::agf' r ac·k ,
S2500/bf>sl offer. 67:>-52l).
VOLKSWAGEN
on, air • "68 Firetl1rd Con\lt, ".,~,CA~. DIU.=~,C~i--.-,--Whl~~. -.. -1 / ~liij MARI<' 111 "'
air • '6.!J Spor-1 Fury Conyt, ,1·/rtf;t, Jtht int. ~ Pft1'~ ',Full A "'f>mple_~
lac .,.,'8rr. MANY MQRE:! S2!KX'l. 90 fina •vall. '70 CKEV\', ·K l n a: &.~O,od ~ryequipptd.b:ally OW\'·
for lnlo call. ~C~•~I~~· ~·~..,.~~«C~.p~tn~.;;;;;;;;' btate, g..pu1 1!n·1t'lll'asoJI. ~ 6" hU ~~ 1'y HOUSE OF !", ~RTS VI, u • ..-_ PIS, P/W. Tilt 'autho;..: • ....a • ' -.L..altr ... rv '70 Er. ado blk "'fVl""I • ..,...... u ''ACll.I ..,.. •
283 -~·actory S1r:r~. Call
frt.'1-1006 11.fle-r 1·no P.M.
'63 Dodf e Dart, good cond.
1300
646-3184
'67 DODGE Van, Al08, 3 apd,
autn. new fut'!, lihocka,
paint & brakes. 546-2612.
FORD
'69 FORD Wagon
Coun!J)' Squt~ 9 Pas.s, f'aC'·
tory Air Cnodnloning, V-8,
A~!o., ilo11er 51CE'nrig, Pow.
tt·!Jrakes, Luggage Rt.ck,
Low M ile~. <SKG412J
SAVE
H,1rbor American
646·0261
1969 HARBOR COSTA MESA
Or a1v3c County's
L.irqcst S el~!Cl10 n
N!!w & Used
Merced£>!. Be nt
11) 523 7250 "'" stePring 11.heel, s tert<l, 11tr, ""000 II · 1 · -" -' top. A!l ext ra~. $6:ioo. ...,, \\'e ma1na.in~ ---------·1----------aulo door Jock~. lugg•ae 1 ThJ 1 · ~R °'LE ,., F d -fi-1'1-1727 or 673-2942 eves. ......, nu rs. 5 U)(Ury car 1.s F .._, .:v• ~ "" o r '69 VW BUG BUICK rilrk. U>s5 than Z4.000 mi ·~. nawlcss & mu~t ~ seen & Fairlane, V_. stick, nin~ ~hlj CAD Rrough11m. Pvl. pl y far warran1y !or 2.1,000 driv,.n tn be appreciated. It J:OCJ<I, new br11.kes. an<! tire8,
............ _..... ---.. must sell ex. cnnrl . S17:'i0 rnore nid ... <. Must .•ell now. · --' r k I "-" II t I'~ "· Low mileag e>IC'rl!cnt CQnr! '69 BU ICK RIVIERA i~ p11 c....__. nr 11 11u1r .511e l '"~'Y exeP "11, .,...... or ""st e · ~re at 100 ~-Np! Rlvrl . Rob-Day~: 644·6110, Ev e I : 11 1 11~50_ Phnne 673-8811. 117 nffrr. tel ~38...fl992.
Jim Slemons Imps.
War ner & Main St.
Santa An r, 546 411 4
MUSTANG
G~ !he beat HCOndW --------~1
$1,000 C'an bity-1967 Galax1e "69 MUSTANG, pWf!r dly
In mint condition. Radio, br&.ke!. AC, Del..uxe int
tteat,.r. factory air, 390 Vinyl top. Perfect cone!
engine with auto. trans. 1;1195 or best oUer . 5'7-91'1
or 613-3338. Interior, paint .l body are
perl~cl. Good ~1. 644-72Ul 1968 MUSTANG 300, V-S,
R&H, factory a ir. Vinyl top
"62 ECONOLINE -Reb!t "X'-l-;"17'°-,-"_d ._968--0~~l_2'7·-~-I
eng, new rtrea, whla &. '65 Mustang 2+2. 4 apd, ex·
paint. Beat olfer. 673-9403. eel cond, $900 or best oUer
1955 FORD PICK·UP $100. ~974·
"'""' tran•. wock. OLDSMOBILE
540-0!3J
'62 ECONOLINE Van. Good '68 OLDS 442 a:invt·Xlnt
cond. Good tire!. Some cond. Muaf 1eU imrt.1ed
paneling. S950. 846-6864. 11700 or best oUer. Call
'70 Ford Cu.strim 9---pa.s.s V11.n
!i yr warranty. &!st ofter
.. 673-j()29 ..
537-6972 art 5.
"68CUTL.ASSCon \It. X l n t
cond. Air, Pia. P/b, mazs .
·n PINTO "'/map & ioOO 1 -'•_m_t.=0="'~'~· =962-<092~=-· --1
.vear ures. All extras. Paid PONTIAC
52750. al! 6. 645--2633.
1969 Firebird, vinyl top, Alf.
350 c/l, auto, \!")w ml. Be1t
'65 Custom Jeep W.11.roneer, _•_ll_•_<._54~]],.c.3122==..,~'-'c.· ---I
au tom trar.. power strg, T -BIRD
brk!, po&1tractlon, ?W!W t1\ler·
JEEP
s1~ llres, 53.0i')) mi. $1675. ---------494-1-tffi. '69 T·BfRD 4 Dr. Vinyl top,
MERCURY thruout. 4 ~pd. rllr. Va!encu1. Factory air, lull po1ver. an1 I hie fi42.71100. SJ..1-8293. v,·, Kn ........ , Lir!~. l•I•. ~EDES BE red, take old car or sm all f ! "'' · ,u,, '-' .,,_ '68 FORD w ~ -' MER"' · NZ m s l'l'OO, &lf'enng, lan·' Jii70 BLACK-Ei Dorado -"f,6 Malibu. White/bl ue in· --CORY. AIR--agon. ~....,... cooo. MUST ae!l. elep.nt 1970 DEALER OFF. ICE down Clllt fin . P\'t. pty. (3JQ. dau roof Ui\'Y962 New tf~•. pO\o.·ft, J'M radlo, AQK 1 546·8736 • 49-1-6811 aft · · _ · 16,000 mi. Loaded w/extras. ter., buckets, auto, R&.H Mercury l\l arqu\8, Lo mi's,
full p1.1T., AM/FM ateN-o.
Tilt ,st,eer. whrel, air. Und~r
\l.'lllT@ty. S500 Undt'r mkt.
.!It u;oo:-,494-9473 '
'58 T-BIRD. Xlnt. meeh.
cond_ Damaged beak. Sell
for bird-seed $7S. 546-96l2.
• '69 280 SL • "68 2.10 SL $.i79.• $2000 & assume bal of Xln 't running cond. Low I----------SliOO. &1).9371. rully rquip"d, Bank blue
.... 'hll 210 s Cla!>SI" ""nvt. 9 R.ni. k "63 CORVAIR VAN c ..• c;;,,-;;f"o"n"o:-;;n= .. , .. :;:h:-,_::---::,c;.,,..liil hook e•200. M•k• .,,,,, ;,. ._ '"" pyn1n1s. 64>-0350. boo $1050. 548-:>435. * SI50 -r "'"' ._ · v .,..
"!* ·10 2':ict c Cpr. '70 280 * "t59 * 1964 CADILLAC * '65 CHEV. Impala 2 Dr . New 642--06U 289 crui;;o. VeT)' goori cond, -".-"'-.1;:"'::'0-===-0-:;:c
'6E • '611 T.l(I S • '64 220 C " v ·11 -· t p 327 -·-t & I--=====;--new liN'5. $~1.':IO. 646-6781. '68 Mere Montclair 4-dr, -£ ti\A/\'',.' f.tORE! For Info oupe ue l e . ..-11va e ar· • eng. .---wi. I eer. CORVETIE
call VOLKSWAGEN '10 Riviera, Full power. Fae/ ty $700. 675-1564. brakes. Auto. &au!. In-'&I GALAXIE 5()1).-X!nt mnd. hrdtp. vinyl lop, 11ir, x.ln! ---------
HOUSI:: or JMPOflTS '62 engin•. Good condi-air. Till '-'"her I, Yrllo11· 1 ·61 CadiUac Coupe fiP-Ville. 0•:;•~"~"';.'::7~"°"· ;;8'3~·":;::""· =c-· I '."".':~:::':::::=:::-:::::-:;:-;: Ne\\' !ire5 It. brakt s. ™5· cor)d, S~. 67~1.36.
VALIANT
! \I 523-i~ tion. $150. 64S..028S \\"/blk vinyl lop, Nf'w 1ires. Nearly pPrlect. $275 les1 ·57 DEL REY 2 dr. $150 or • '69 CORVE'TTE 427. \Viii ~C-;•~117"o-&-'Cl0_7_'·,...,=,---ll ,;Me<ER=cu=R'"V"""'6J"'"'""=•"n-. -;A";\",
btwn 4 & 7 pm. Ar>1/F'.\I slerro, S 3 8 9 5. th11n whls.L 1)46.2365 or best orter . Runa a:aod. aa.critice tor $3000 firm. Ca.II Sell idle !terns now! trans, PIS, R!H, Air, Orig
·~ VAL(ANT 4-dr, air cond .
R&H. 1 01.1•ner car. Dri11en
only 35,000 mi. Body lntack,
tires ne1\•. Cail 646--0106. •CLASSIC 'jfj 190 SL --S."ID-i4~. 8."\7-9460. -1 83>16.ll, ask 1or Earl. I 548-29JH. 5.57-2070. Call 642-5678 & St.\'e! owner, 644--0245.
h><dlop. Good rood. &•< •59· YW BUG offer. 67.'\.-1066. Auto~ N•w 980 Autos, New 980 , Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 1 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New HO
·~ 221)..S,_ Air, F~1. radial w/mae: wh4:iels. ·dlr. '(YXlJ.
tll'es, Sll.iO. 787: S1395 full prioe. Call
.... 5411.Jfi17 • • 4!W-7744.
MG '69 VOLKS -wltite/red int.
l.Dv.• mi.l@age, -S u nroo f,
1----------1 AM·FM radio, excellent AlIT~O<;_lZED condition, Quir k sale $1250.
6§5-1982 or 5.'i 7-3683. SALES & SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
'69 VW Bus-Brokt>n . I n
properly. Must !<ell this
week. Only $1!"fi) N>e it to
believe 11. Call 642-604~.
'69 VIV Sl>rlRn, newly reblt
3100 IV. Coa1( HW)'. e~. New pa int , dark any.
Ne11,•port Beact. Ai\.-f/f":'.f radio & h t r . 1---~------· 968-9307
~THINK ~ ,,~,,
"FRIEDLANDER"
u1» aa.t.cw tllWT. •1
893-7566 • 537.Q24
I =~=--~-~ '68 VIV Van, exrellenr con<!,
t1E'11· eng, camper ~u1 pperi.
Prired lo sell. 644-5702 early
A i\l.
"61 VV.', runs very well. New
tires &. paint. Radin &.
sunroof. 1 ownr, $350 .
546--4096.
1963 ?-fG l 100 srdaa. Must '66 VW cornpl~ti!!y CU1tomiz~
&t"!l. S"2S.i. er!. Mu!11 sell fast. Sl ,00)
f.16-4.'>42 11l11>r fi pm d11ys &l.'i-~120 : eves 833-1209
'63 MG MIDGET A~k for Gary
$~. CaJ1 518-3164 ·ao, vw PANc'E=.L~s~u~s~.~s=,.,= ..
MGB exrharigP 1500 rem enRlnr.
nr1v paint, Good cone!.
1;96.i 1\.1GR. rt>buil! trans. nrw1 =5:IB-'--R=·ffic.:l_. ----~
-trip. hrake~. 1vire 11,•heel~. '70 V\V Bug, 11. m It m , ~$6.'JO. 61:~14:=,~ eves. green/bl11ck, xln't cond.
1969 :'ltGB-O"rlr i\"t>, ehrm $1595. Call 6"1 5-82 3 7,
!Wh!!I, lo mi. f:-.1/A:'lf r11rlio.1_67_,.._2006 __ · ------
tanras11r conn. f.46-8:!6(1 1968 V\V BUG -2 new t!reF.,
" PORSCHE 1 n1<'ner . Sllj(} or best ofler
8:ID---R917
":-: W_E_B_U_Y_U_S_E_D_, .,. vw v .. '""'
RUNS: 011.y~: 54 8-1610. :.: Porsches E,., ....... ,"
'• 'f,6 V\\' Fastback, rehlt '• DON BURNS E ng 1 o11.·n,,r, gr! C"Onrl. ~ SIM '"·'420
PRESTIGE 11."i V\''· C'IP;in 11p~;iri1n{'r.
Gno<:I mrch Mnrl 51;75 l'lr PORSCHE, AUDI "'"' """ D>y• '4>-18.12, ''.: E1·;>~: :,.\~l fi lO.
Lb.Jsal Harhnr Blvd., G.li. 'fi4 -,rw--:c:;q1111-,,-,-,,-, -.,~.iiOO~
:; (Just S, nt G.G. friiy.) 1111·~. Xlnr ,...,nrl in & out,
1 -==~"=-'=-·=2113 SflO'l. 4!l6-Ji02.
·:MERCEOE-S BEN Z-7r,q -F1!1r..f",l/A~,~1-,-,7d~I ,-,
:; DEALER OFFICE vinyl tnr ~111ny .11tr;is, s~.
-'7() Portch~ 914 • 'f.6 1·rarlr. fi·lfi-.26'.J)i".
J>nr~(·hr 912 e ·1;11 r11r~rhe "'O-RUC'O ·-~A~.1--"
1600 • "fill VVV Dix Au s • '' "· -ran. ffiPC11. ~ \lW But • ,64 VW RiiR <'"nd. S_1.1~J C11ll e(!Pr 6 pm,
'iharp. FOR MORE: INFO. 1144:.12~·i_. --~-~~ ·bll "fi.l V\V .'Xp111r't'h11rk: rehll '66
·: HOUS1': OF' J.'VIJ'ORTS r111: t-.'Pv.• brakrs J.· cJulch.
.. : (\I 511-72511 $.'i.)() or bs1 olr. ~2636.
:i PORSCHE 912: B.lul"-hlk, '66-V\V. Am/Fm, 1uMXJf.
fm-S\\', lintrd rlas~. mags, Good condirion, $T~.
;lemplrlb, coro ma1~. f'~-Di.II 646-4041.
."1u~r. I own~r. 2!1.000 11.r!ual e·liR VW SQUARE.BACK -
1f11. $3700 ~78 497·1DM. Clea.n. runs xlnt. $1400.
6i:l-7436 1 PORSCHE 9tol, W1 lhan
OCll ml. Nlre~l in !o"'" l--"o,76l'~vw=-B=u~G,-
~'236S or SJ.>-1631, fl.~k !or
,Eerl. r.oon rond. • • • 549-~
VOLVO !.j Porsctw-, Xlnt cond, Musi
'•e, 11500 or ~lrl ofter
:i\5-<lm. i--DE_A_N_LE_W-IS-
! * '70 POR. 911 T.
' : Ph. "'""" VOLVO . .
'.
TOYOTA
DEAN LEWIS
TOYOTA
1971 Toyota
Dt'mo •5991
$1777
$65 .31 mo.*
DEMO SALE
$2998
1911 Vtilve 144 Sed.
O..mo • 7360
$3098
1971 Volvo 142 Sed
~mo • 3268
$4098
1971 Volvo 16-t Sed
• · mos Defemd payment
"-$23Sl.16 or caih prtct" factory Direct Stles, Se:r\'i ce
.85 Jncl To: k LJc, APR le Pl.rtl, J!MEi Harbor Blvd.,
W.5$«i . •on .11ppl'O\·ed ~it. C.M. 646-9303 ,-., .. ,,. °'""'' s.'""""''"' '68 144S Seda 'P•rt1, 1!!166 H1rbor Blvd., ft ~· Mesa. 646-9~3. AM/f'M $95 Ovtr whole'Mlt
. TfjV&rA Sronts 1100. Blue· Rook. $l-f1l5 full ~
..,,, oHer. (AS70Z0).
:; cau "'-'"' ''' • Marquis Motors
USE Honting? W11lch the 900 Sn. <Al. lfithlV)•, L. Bch.
·P EN HOUSE Mlumn. 494-77il3 e 5411-31 00
Jr -·
IT'S CLEANU
TIME! LEASE
A '1971
NEW 1971 FORD F-108 STYLESIDE PICKUP
Cu1tom. VI , r1~9 1r pkg .. i mp & oil 91u911, loo1 box, crul101r11lic, op+. 'llC Uutll
booil••, AM.FM 't•••o ••cl}o. po w•r 1l11ri"q, G71x l' t ir11. 1 0~5 11
Wh1d•w Stlck•r S4S50.20 A11~lwert•ry Prlca Sll.t,.70
SAVE '913'°
GET SEPTEMBER DISCOUNTS:-··
IN JULY! •..
Hundreds of new 1971 cors ond trvikt
thot must be sold before the 72's ar-
rive now or final yur end cH1count1.
Come In while selections are ' full!
'MUSTANG . '•UIT~N· 'M.T. , $8950 .. ........ ,....,.. . ' --··· FREE 50 GAL, GAS TOOi
DISCOUNTS ON ·ALL JRUCKS
~NI~.
1' MO. OP'IN IND LIASI
RENT A PINTO tAuto. Trans.)
$5 DAY 5C MILE
~~ "' T
PLUI TAX I llC.
ON ANY TORINO IN OUR llG STOC•
BE SURE TO GET YOUR 50
GALLONS OF GAS FREE.
PLUS
50 GALLONS
OF GAS FREE!
Demonstrator Sale! BRAND NEW
1971 MUSTANG STATION WAl50Nl-l.TD'-41AU.XIU-MACH I
BUY WHERE You, ·WISH, '
WE WILL PAT FOi IT!
DIAGNOSTIC CENTER
TORINOS-MUiTANGl-U.NCHllOS
SUPER
SAVINGS!
-· .... ·~~ ................ ~
ANNIV RSARY
429 Rt"' 1ir 111..,., Sport l"l1r.
Grp., Crui10M1lic, Co11 ... 6 rp.,
P.S .. Pwr. Oi1c Brk1 .. t ilt wh11I,
1lr co"cl., AM .FM 1t1r10, p • ...,;11.
tfow1. 11 00059f 10651)
o.,.., J JO Ylt•I fe1h f•r rellobillty, ,.,t•rM••u
e11d iefety. 111 /u•t JO "'l1111t", fuN wrln.tl ,..
port l11cluded. 50 GAL. CAMPER SALE
EVHY NEW 1970 CAMPER s50 OVH FACTORY
W·S~r. Sl55t A1111l•ert0ry
Prlc• S46tt.IO
SAVE s959so IEGUU.I ''·'' SPECIAL $7.50
WITM TNll AD
FREE
GAS
IN STOCK SLASHED TO INVOICE
l llJ SILICTION-NO OULIR ADDID CHAlGIS-15 MODILS TO CHOOSI PROM .
W• Ar• n. o,.... C.v11ty Slrtow c-Owlet,.. II Defie49 Ca1njNn.
RENT A CAMPER--Reserve Toda . for Assured Dates PLUS FREE 50
GAL. GAS.
50 GALLONS FREE GAS WITH , IV.ERV NEW & USED CAR· & TRUCK SOLD . ' . (FL!IT PURCHA.5£5)
EXCEPTED
'MUSTAll• SAL• Mt~V to choo11 fro"'· '05 lkru '70 "'od1l1. Coup••. h••dtop1,
con~1rli b!1 i nd 2+2 f•1lb•cl<1. Som1 with 4 1p111h, 1110
•'• concl itionin9 ~nd 1u!om1tic me.deli.
EXAMP~~: 1969 MACH I
roof, Radio. H11l•r, Pow~r St•1rin9, Air Co"ditjonjn9,
Mil•1. !Yl'U 76 l I
OUR PRICE $1996
'65 MUSTANG H.T.
Radio, h11ffr, •ulo .. \'I. 9e.04'
mil11. IAT I JJ4 )
$896
'71 PL YM. DUSTER
Sport c1up1 . Low mil11, r1clio,
h11l1r, 1tldr 1hlft. I 9t11SY l
$2296
'66 Ol.DS. CUTLASS
2 d,, H.T. Full ,...,,,, 1lr to.,di-
tionlng, VI , qood mll11 . (WIJ.
I Ol I
'69 CORTINA G.T.
4 1pt1cl lr1n1mi11ion, low mil11.
I ZVCOt t J
$996
'71 PINTO
F1c+o'Y 111 ulpp1d. Go•d 1'1•111.
! 127COT J
$1796
'69 CAD Cpe. da Ville
H,T, Full pow1r, fati, ,;,, AM -
FM, -.jnyl roof. crui11 control,
till-t1l1, wh!., 9e.ocl tir11. (Ill·
.,., $4096
SALIS DIPT.
..HOURS '
I AM Ta t PM M0tMia
I AM T• 6 PM SAT
11 AMT• 6 PM IUN
'
PUl H lf"WHl!tl YOU WIS H ··· WI WILL PAY P:Olt IT!
ALJ. .O,FIRS CONSIDERED
. " .TRADES ACCEPTED
PAID FOR OR NOT!
• '67
'64
'66
'67
'62
CHEVY NOVA WAGON
4,tl•or.•,.•di•; htt .. r, •utom1 li c. pow1r
•• ,,,;.,. IVIA216l l ow mil11.
CHEV. MALIBU S.S.
luc~et tl•h. r•dio, h11 l1•. 1ulo.,
1ir, r.s, !W!AI l •I
CH!VY STA. WAGON
M1llbu. \'I, r1clio, h11 +1r. 1ut11M1tic.
, .... , tf11ri119. 'fOOcl ,.,;1, •. IT EX6Jll
F~LCQN ST>\TION WAGON
A1iilio. h•&'ler, •uto'm.tic, pow1• 1l11rin9,
''' colMI., 909d rtilt•t. {VS 8l7!)
PALCON WAGON
Super 1h1r,. Good !!'lil11. (GUW079)
$1296
$795
$996
$1196
$496
POID-LTD-tAUXll-TORINO-WAGON SALE ·
... ....... ,.__, ...... .,. ... L ......... f ..... f ... 64 ....... , ..... Nl_,.., ............. ....rloi_......
EXAM PLE: 1970 FORD CUSTOM
4 ci r., 1ulo., l'.S., P.I., RIH, c1rp1h. chrome !rim, 9 00<!1 l'lil11,
W11r1111v •••il1bl1, f 150592 1
OUR PRICE $1596
'61 MERCURY
W .. tn. Mon+110 MX J 1111,
r141o, h••t1r, 1uto .. P.S .. 1ir
col!J. bead mll••· !XEW•l91
$1696
'61 CHARGER
VI, 1ulem1llc, r1dio, h11!1"
p•wet 1t11 rl"'f· 1it co"d. l ow
mil 11. f6JJCIBl
$1796
'6' OLDS 88
D1lf• Cvt+.m 1 Or. H.T. Full
pow1r, f"11k1v 1ir. Good "'H11.
455 '"'11• w/lurbo. [YCL6l 1 I
$2596
H.T. ~1cl i11, h1tf1r, aule,.
good mil11. fTGMS91 1
$896
'69 TOYOTA
H.T. Co•o"• 2 ci r, Aulom1llc,
•adlo, h11 l1r, low mil11. !ZUP-
205)
$1396
'69 DODGE CHARGER
R1dlo. h11!1r, e ulo., P'.5., elr
condilio ni"'il • good 1'11111, (671·
AZGJ
$2196
PARTS-SIRYICI
HOURS
7 AM Te t PM MON I PARTS DIPT. O"LY
I AM 19 1 PM SATURDAYS • 7 AM To 6 PM M·AI
I
'• I l)lo"-... ---~ :.~--·-... ,.J,, ,,__ -----·I -
I
' I
,. ,.
OPEN
EVERYDAY
9 AM To 10.
NEW1971
···~
" .. IMMED llTE '··
'$' ,. , ,.,o· $' ·; .• · .,,. u· . .
' ' . . ..
o I ,_. ' • '
· .. TOTAL',, ' . , : OTAL . ~~=~·c .:'. -'.· M~~~~LY
DELIVERY ..
$191 .90 ii ·rh• totcll dn.!pymt. cind $69;BB tl1 tatul"l'l'Kl.,pyrnl. lncl,·toJC,71 t;. ' . cente & all finO'nee £horge1 Oii oppt. credlt'Jor 3&mo,J. Deferred pyml. price
.__;, $23~1-~8 inc l. on !inane• chorgei,.tdit• ... /'l ltr...n•• Of if.you prefer.to pay
co5~,-fuU cosh price i1 $'2046'.95 il'ICI. se1Jt1i lox & ~cfinse•(l R\OW!84093 ), ·
AMIUAL PllCEMTAGE1U 1Tl 10.00
IMMIDIATI DilLIYIR;y AT WILIOll FORD SPICIAL PINANCING AY .. ILABLI
·-:::· 1971 ·MUSTANG RAND
MEW RINO
65 ~.~~~ ~.~?~.~ ... ,$48
tratu., rad1a, ltt alar,
(NH07SS) .
VWBUG $'68 '67 ladlo,ha1ttr, l111pi E11vipt. . '
(VGll071) .
FULL
. 'PRICE
:t_6~ ~.~.~!.:.~!~ .. ·.~ h•et1r, vi1yl roof
' ... fl· • .,. (IZH-40n sass
FULL
PRICE
.,6.~~~!Y;.~~~~r.~ ... ,$a· a· a. '66 ~~~~~~,;!i!:··~::~.$1· ·aa ..
/ Sleeri119 {TPJ4J1) ' . , !rant., radio, heater,
• · · 11.tra 11ict
-.
'
I ICONOllNI VAN . (1,t. FORD amper $138 66 wit~ 11owe, 1inlt, iceb~1,
radio, It.eater, wacal1011
re11d . 113700.
1,69 ~~~!~.~~M/fM <~15·. 8 1.,~10 , p'la1 llr••· : . ~
' .C!..-Z•l4) . ' ·6·9· QRD . ..ft16 ·8;. /1 i , alL.,J-so• \v•a. •'!to. ~ . " tNlllJ'~~, ..... ,'i.IWtr1119,. · ~ · ·
· r1dl9•tl•1tan· lica11tt . ,
612-APS.
...... .,,,,.__ ~----•l l •-~-· --' .
.. ~~ --•
,.
FULL
PRICE:
) · FORD · ' $ 78 . C.Utto:11I YI AM ... ttHf., 10 11"ow1r1te1ri111,·r1lla , 1
heater. {0220fl)