HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-07-29 - Orange Coast Pilot,, ---·--
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,County Issues Wa:rni~g DAILY PILOT
On * * * 10' * * *
THURSDAY AmRNOON, JULY 29, [97J • \'«,,Mo Me. 1111. • S•CTIONS. •PA•••
Apollo Ready to Enter Lunar Orbit
Joe Hy.de
Gets Boot
Fron1LAFC
By TOM BARLEY
01 th• O•llY l'llot ll•fl
Los Alamitos Councilman Jot Hyde
was hu stled out of his seat on the Local
Agency For mation Commission and
Asse mbly man John Briggs lost local sup-
JXlrl for his Harbor District dissolution
proposal \Vednesday night in a sto~my
Orange Count y League of Cities meetmg.
Sixteen of 25 Orange County cities re-
jected the angry Hyde in a secret ballot
that apparently left lhe way clear for the
reelection to the coveted LAFC post of
Fullerton Cou ncilman Louis "Red''
Reinhardt. iSee related story. page 13. I
The county's mavors. sitting z.t the
i;ame mectin"g in Oriinge as the Le;1gue"s
city se!ec1ion commiuce, ra\!ed an elec-
tion for Aug. 12 after apponting t.lfl~or
Ed Just of Fountain Valley as the com·
mittee's chairman. Just also chairs the
league meetin~s.
Reinhardt. Who was Immediately ?"-·
cused by Hvde or collusion with t.he
trv ine cOmpiiny, offered to dc!fly the suit
he filed J::ist v.f'ek agalnsl 25 Orange
County mayors and !he county board of
supervisors and v.•hich is schedu led for
hearing Aug . 12 in Orange County
Superior Courl. .. That lav.·suit challenges the validity or
the eleclion which ousted Reinhardt Md
gave Hyde the LAFC post and contends
that several of the votes cast in the 13 ~o
12 cliff hanger last July 8 were cast 11·
legally for person.s who were not present.
Reinhardt refused to comment on the
lawsuit's status if t:e fails to wln reelec·
lion to the LAFC post. His spot ~n th!!
LAFC board and in lhe group's chair '_Vas
takm Wed11esda y afternoon for the flfsl
(See LEAGUE, Pa1e %)
Son of Chavez
Freed in Draft
FRESNO (AP) -The son of farm
labor leader Cesar Chavez was cleared
today of a charge of refusillg induclion
into the armed forces.
U.S. District Court Judge M.0 . Crocker
granted a mot.ion of acquittal for Fernan-
do Chavez, 22. who cited his commitment
to nonviolence In refusing Induction here
on April 2.l, 1969.
The ruling was based on lhe Supreme
Courl'a decision in the case of Welsh
versus the United Stales In June which
broadened grounW for consclenlio~ ob-
jedim, said Asst. U.S. AUy. W11llam
Allen, the prosecutor. .
Tipsy W arclen
Frees Convicts
IGUALA, tiexico (AP)
Porfirio Roman , the warden of the
locaJ prison, came hoJJle drunk:
Monday night. Shouting "Long live
Mexict1 and our glork>us revolu·
lion !" be opened tht cells and told
his 125 prisoners they were free.
When the prisoners started filing
out of the building. guards on the
walls turned on the searchlights
and warned the men to retu rn to
their cells. Most obeyed, but five
managed to escape amid a bail of
bullets.
Roman was subdued by some or
his subordinates and locked in one
:ir the cells. The government fired
him and said Wednesday it will
prosecute him.
Gunhattle Aborts
NY Bank Heist;
1 Slain, 3 Held
NEW )'ORK /U PI) -Five robbers
held up a bank and fled with 12 hostages
loday before one of the gunme n was kill-
ed and three others captured in a gun-
battle wit h police on upper Broadway.
"lt was like an Old West shootou t," 11
police spokesman said.
One of the captured gunmen and a
bystander were wounded in th e exchange
of fire at Broadway and 95lh Street.
Police sa id they believed the one robber
who escaped also had been shot in the
leg.
Police said four radio patrol cars rush·
ed to lhe Bankers Trust Co. branch al
Broadway al !Mth Streef at 9:35 A.M. in
response to a holdup alarm.
As the cars drew up in fr ont of the
bank, an armed man peered out the bank
door, then retreated inside. police said,
Shortly after that five men lef t the bank.
herding 12 men and women before them
as hostages.
At tbe 95th Street intersection all 12
hostages suddenly dropped to lhe ground
and the boldupmen opened fire, Seve n
policemen returned lire.
"It was the moe t amazing thing," the
police spokesman said. "That sort of
thing just never happens. They all drop-
ped to the ground al once ."
The bystander. shot in the hand. and
the wounded robber were t.aken to the
Knickerbocker Hospital. Police said none
ol the patrolmen or the hostages ap-
peared to be hurt.
An undetermined amount or money
taken by the holdupmen was recovered
along with four guns, police said.
Rubin lo Tour Chile
'Mle ruling allo~ coll!c1entlous ob-
jector status to people whose CHICAGO (AP) -The way Is clear for
philosophic;~ beliefs prohibited them . Jerry Rubin, one of five .persons free on
frQm kJlllil.g or commiting vl?lenCe. Al!en • bond pending appeal of convictions in the
said. PreviOU91y, prior religJOus traln,mg Olicago riot lr ial. to travel to Chile for
had to be shown, he said. research on • book on youth culture.
Cracker's ruling on 1t defense motion The 7lh U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
came before fina l arguments lo the jury. granted Rubin permission Wednesday l1
The trial begAn Tuesday. travel oulside of the country.
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Bo11 Vivant
Can Brands
Get Recall
B.v TOM BARL EY
01 t~t D•ll1 l'lllM Sllff
Bon· Vivant canned goods -and some
under several other labels -arl!! coming
off the shelves tod ay in Orange Coast
stores and supennarkets just as fast as
Orange County Health Department in·
spcctors can make their rounds of the
outlets.
But there may be many cans or the
foods condemned by the federal Foood
and Drug Administration tucked away on
housewives' shelves throughout the coun-
ty and in smal! grocery stores that have
ove rlooked the health department order
or have been overloo ked by both cour.~)'
and stale ins pe:lors. .
"If you find it, get rid or it.'' warns
Coun ty Health Officer John Philp.
·· Des1 roy it or send it back to tile
man uf acturer but, either way, get rid o(
ii. "
\V ithdrawal of the affected Foods has
been complicated by the fac t tha t Bon Vi-
vant not only canned their own soups and
drlicacies but canned products for other
companlell and , on occasions, supplied
rnany homes with a personalized line of
canned gourmet foods.
The Bon Vivant. business got its death
blow last week when a New York slate
man died of botulism poisoning short.!y
efter he and his wife consumed a can o!
Bon Vivant vichyssoise. The woman,
almost totally paralyzed, Is stiU on tbe
hospital's critical list.
Bon Vivant this week filed for
bankruptcy in . an acticm that noted the
FDA demand that the firm recall pro--
duels di stributed under 34 labels ~
among them Sey.Qi, Van Nuys, Reese
Finer Foods, Los Angeles. S & w, San
Francisco, Rykoff and Hickory Farms in
addition to private labels.
''But the last thing I want to do," Or.
Philp said, "is promote hysteria abOut
this Bon Vivant recall. We certainly want
them off the shelves but what we l!!"I!!
primarily interested in as far as the other
labels are concerned are the vichyssoise
and black bean soups,
"We've had no cases of poisoning in
Orange County," Dr. Philp said . "And
people who read o( this recall action by
us should be assured that lhis is purely c.
precautionary measure.''
This writer's shopping tour Wednesday
failed to produce a single can of any or
the Listed products but it did reveal the
determination of several shop managers
to whip off the shelves sev.eral canned
gourmet productt ·that have not betn
listed by health authorities. ·
"We've taken off the Bon Vivant line
llnd all UM! others we were warned
about," said Slee Brimer, manager of
Jurgensen 's, 250 Broadway. LagWla
Beach. "l don't want to be quoted on the
additiona l brands I've withdrawn but we
didn't take any chances here.··
Everything listed by the health depart.
Ment Is no tonger available at Richard'11
Lido Market. 3433 Via Lido, Newport
(See BON VIVANT, Paget)
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'· . Ton.red . China. ,.
PING PONG DIPLOMAT DEMONSTRATES SERVE CHINESE STYLE
Judy Bochon1kl Shook Honda With Chou En·lol
She ~aw China
' Ping Pong Player Visits Harbor
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
ot tM O.llY l"ult ltafl
Red China -It 's a)8scinating place to
vi1il but not exactly1rtke spending time on
the rRlviera. 1·
'!'h~t's the oplQton of Judy Bochenski.
at 16 the nal19611 younge!.t ping pong
diplomat. She ared at tbe Huntington
Ctnter We ay afternoon to engage
challenger_s • few rounds of her
f•vor:i te
"It see like a sbnple, pleasant al·
1JlOlphe: ,"said the girl whose picture of
a f hankshake with •Chou En.Jal
appea throughout the woQd. -··w n we w.ent ~alkjng 1 ou~ pn ·the
we saw that none. of the people
}lad car~. Most of them rode bicycles or
wiilked.'' 11hl!! said.
"It's llll intersting and fa scinating
tJlaC!; to go, It has such an interesting
culture. But ll·1 not llke the Riv iera . It's
nol nearly a.s western~ aa Japan or
. ,.. -~;:-· ,.,~~
Hong Kong."_
Miss J39chenskl sa id the American
group of ping pong players frequently
engaged their hOfits in dll!cusaiofl. it:,>ut
their political beliefs.
"·We talked a lot about Mao and things
like that. U secm.s that their main idea ill
to equallie the economy whlle the U.S. is.
striving Jot eQuallzallon In politics," &he
commented.
Ping· pong ii the number o~ sport In
Red China. according to MIM Bochwki.
The Country takes the game quite
11eriously, much as America does football
and ba,.bau.
"They hold their paddles differently
than we do and these have rubber only on
one s1<fe:· .ruay expia1ned. ·'Wt use w~at
we ~11 the 'aha~e hands' ~ltion ~nd
Ibey "" ""' ii>onli61dw' w)llch '"''""' Ibey hold--thetr p,dd\ts betWt•n the,
!See PING l'ONG, Po .. 11 .
Science tab
Opened Up;
' Bug Beaten
SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPl)-ni.
Apollo 15 astronauts reached the outer
approaches to the moon with unerring ac-
curacy today and unveiled a SJ 7 milllo11
i;cience laboratory in their spacecraft to
begin man's most ambitious lunar e1·
ploralion.
The cover of the especially equipped
laboratory was jettisoned in space a few
hours before the three-man shJp reached
the point to begin orbit or the moon,
preparatory to a landing on the surface
Friday.
AU was reported well by the trio -
David R. Scott. Allred M. Worden and
James B. Irwin -in their fourth day of
the elaborate, 12-day mission.
The astronauts fir:;t corrected their
rnurse with a precise rocket burst and
then triggered a string of e11:plosives that
discarded the doo r lo the · laboratory
')3.200 miles from the moon.
"We felt a little shudder. but not too
much," Scott reported as the door feJ.1
away.
This was an Important. significa nt step
In the $445 million mission . It opened up
the command ship's new moon mapplns
cameras, and radiation sensors.
The three American spacemen then
prepared their 107,000 pound craft for Its
crilical swing into orbit around the moon
at 4:06 p.m. EDT.
The astronauts wore spacesuits jud In
case something went wrong. But the
operation went smoothly and th t
spacemen reported they fe1t far lea•
shock than expected from jettisoning of
the lab cover. The 5-by-91h foot panel
floated away from the spaceshlp.
Scott, the mission c o m m a n d er 1 reported to the ground :
"'Jim's got it out his window and he 't
(Stt APOLLO, Page Z)
Oruge ,
1''e•thei'
SUMy skies are on the merw
again for today and Friday wlt'h
highs along the beachl?lt at 72, rfs.
Ing to 86 Inland. Lowa tonlahl
around 65 degrees.
INSWE TODAY
Gouernor Ronald lteOQG" Ma
Itemized a widf ooriety of louu
Califor"ia i3 tufferino due to t.lle
1'all stri.IU'. He soid the re1Wt
could b.e disa.ctroU&. Story Page
9.
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'
I
J D.llLY PILOT s
Lockh eed
Loan Debate
~ay Close
WASIDNG1"N (UPI) -Senate
Democratic Leader Mike Man!field came
cm •tattve)y today in. favor or 1teppi1'1
a ttllbuater that has been blocldn& a
Smite vote oa ltliJlation aimed 11.. giving
1onnuntnt 'backing to a $250 vote on
lecl!Jatioo aimed at tivini 1cwemment back1n& to a Q50 million loan to
Lockheed Aireratt Corp.
Mansfield stressed a key condition -
that Lbe ilJ&rantee in the bill be lintited
to l..tM:kheed. The pending legislation
would allow up to $2 billion In federal
guarantees for loans to cerporations
whose collapse woul d have an adverse ef·
feet on the nation's economy.
Manditld bas voled against twe
previoos attempts this week to invoke the
Sen1te's debate.-halting mechanism -the
cloture rule -but said he wculd go Alona
with the third such effort.
Manafield made clear be still was op-
posed to the Lockheed rescue plan but his
decision in favor of allowing the lslue to
dlme to a vote appeared to enhance
chances by supporters of the plan to ii:ain
passage befoce Congress takes a month·
long reces.!I starting Aug . 6.
Lockheed says it will fall into
bankruptcy If the goverD111ent guarantee
is oot forthcoming by Aug. 8.
A cloture moUon Monday was fiv e
votes short of a majority, much less th•
two-third majority rt:quired to invoke the
rule. 'l1le supporten: made substantial
gains ln the next two days and a:ot a 5~39
majority in the second effort Wednesday.
'Ibat wu seven votes shy ef the
necessary twt>thlrd! majority.
Sen.ate Republ ican Leader Hugh Scott
1aid he disli ked the kind of arrangement
Mansfield demanded but said he would
not "st.and in the way'' if there was
general agreement It was the only way to
get a bill passed before Congress takes
its monlh-loni vacation.
Mansfield said he would not even vete
for a Lockheed-only loan bill but said he
saw no reason the. admln.f.5traUon wouJd
not go along with limiting the legislation
.. !Ackhe<d.
''Tbeir main interest is Lockheed." he
said. "'Ibe other is just window dress--
ing."
The Senate's top critic of the leglslation
said Lockheed would lose millions &f
dollars even with government help.
Sen. William Proxmire (D-Wis.), in·
strt.ed in the Congres.sional Record -the
daily publication which ffi:Ords the
eolngs-on In the Hou.se and Senate -a
thick report attacking I...otlbetd 's Tristar
jet pr&ject.
Four Persons
Die in Count y
Traf fie Mishaps
Four persons have !011t Lhtlr Hves In
Orance C.ounty traffic accidents in a 24-
bour period.
The known dead:
JoAnn Lorenzen . 22. Bonita.
Jeffrey P. Meyer, 17, Garden Grove.
Ernest. Loer1, 59, Stanton.
An unidentified man also wu: killed
early today in the Fullerton crash in
v.·hlch Miss Lorenzen lost her life.
A 20-year~ld San Pedro man wa~ jailer!
on &Usplcion of manslaughter following
the crash bn Commonwealth Avenue near
DaJe Street.
Mot.orcycllst Meyer WM kiUtd We;d-
lle'Sd1.y afternoon ln Garden Grove when
he was thrown from hls cycle ln the 6600
block or Amy Avenue.
Loera wl.'I killed early Wednesday
when he wu riding his bicycle north on
Beach Boulevard in Anaheim and swerv·
ed into the path or an oncnming car.
police said.
OIAll•I COAST
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OAIL0Y 'ILOT lt1tf ~Mt1
Golden West Garbe1astangelers
\Vhen they stand her up. this cardboard, crepe paper, chicken wire,
assorted motors, lights and psychedelic pajnt job becomes •·Zelda
Jane," a 15-foot-taJ\ garbenstangel which Golden West College stu·
dents completed Wednesday at Carous~l Cour~ in South Coast Plaza.
Darrell Ebert, fine arts instructor (striped shirt), coached the GWC
garbenstangel team. '
Bruce Ends Envoy Role
With Ceas e-fire Appeal
PARTS (UPIJ -U.S. Ambassador
David K. E. Bruce ended his role as chitf
negotiator at the Vietnam peace talks to-
day with an appeal for immediate
negotiations on a five-polnt cease-fire
plan and a charge the Communists were
imperiling the talks by violatlng the
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
Bruce told Communist de!egale5 his
plan would move all belligerents. towa rd
peace, but Viet Cong delegate Mme.
NjUyen Thi Binh said Bruce was merely
reviving old proposals and Hanoi's Xuan
Thuy said "Bruce committed a calumny
against the North Vietnamese by falsely
accusing them of Infiltrating into the
Demilitarized Zone."
The 123rd session appeared to have
made no progress at all, and South Viel·
namese negotiator Pham Dang Lam call·
ed it a "negalive·• one.
Bruce, 13, will depart Paris Sunday tn
make way for \Vi!liam J. Porter. the
former U.S. Ambassador to South Korea .
after serving for a year ss head Of the
American delegation. Deputy Philip
Habib will fill in until Porter arrives at
60me later datP.
In hls farewell speech he scored Hanoi
and the Viet Cong for calling prPvlo11s
cease-fire proposals abusrb aid said, "[
From Page J
BONV IVANT • •
Beach. assistant manager Roger Lm-
derman seid.
"We've had both county and st.ate in-
spectors here and they're both satlsfled
that we·v~ taken all the afltcte<i brand!
off our shelves." he said.
But the apparently prompt and
unanimous action by county distributors
of banned Bon Vivant deli cacies does not
rult nut lhe possibility that the firm's
products may turn up ~·ears hence ln
homeov,.ners· food cupbo11rrls.
Former CBS ne'.l"!i commenlalor Pele
Pringle stressed that po..~ibility by
bringing to the DAILY PILOT offices
several can~ of gourmet products, among
them Bon Viv:int soups.
Several c:ins were 1n poor condition and
1111 were pulled from Mr11 . Pringle's
shelves at 160 S. B11y Front. Balboa
Island. aflA'!r the concerned couple learn-
ed of the Bon Vivanl ban .
.. Many boat owners may h11ve some or
this !!tuff tucked away in their loc kers."'
Pringle pointed out. "It's the kind of stuf r
that you might keep on hand and anyone
with a boat -or. for that matter,
without one -should lakt ll close look at
his c11nned stuff immediately."
Mrs. Pringle raised another f11ctor th11l
h11.s not been overlooked by be8lth
authorities -the door tn door 1111les by
auch firms as the Sty-Co CompAny.
"They seemed to do 11 pn~tty fa ir
business In Newport &nd they ltft their
brochu~s at mll!ly homes. Including
mine." she s•1d. "But I've cleared their
stuff from my ~Ives And l"ll be looking
to ~ee if the local i;tnrt:! hi ve done the
1111me lhlng "
The can~ unf!arthed by !ht Prlngles In·
r.lude gourmet mtat hells. green pea
90up, tom1tn rreserv,.s 11nd other pro-
ducts reg•rdl'(f hy ~tnre m11nagers ti
p11.rt of their luxury line.
•
see nothing abwrb about trylne to end
the killing now." And in en off-the-cuff
at.atement he isaid Hanot waa building a
road network in the DMZ in violation of
the sgree:metits tbat got the talk!
atar!e<l .
He said the Uniled States was prepared
to carry out an immediate cease-fire
throughout Indochina on the following
principles:
-Effeclive supervision by lnlernational
observers and the two sides.
-Neither side should use the cease-fire
to build up Its strength.
-The cease-fire should cover "all kinds
of warfare and violence," presumably in·
eluding vengeance against individuals.
-It should cover the fighting In all em-
battled Indochinese states: Vietnam,
Laos and Cambodia.
-It would be "part nf a general move
lo end the "'ar" by both sides.
Bruce·s expected resignation w11s ac-
cepted by the \Vhite Housfl! in Washington
\Vednesdt1y night. The \Vhite House said
Bn1ce was resigning for "imperative·•
health re11sons .
His place at the Priris bargaining tabll!
will be taken bv Pnrter sometime in the
near future. th.e V.'hile House said . Hr
will be temporarily replaced b y
Amb11~~ador Philip C. Habib, Bruce"s
deputy.
\Vhlte House spokesmen rejected as un·
founded suggestions that 8 r u c e ' "
departure meant thl! United States .,.,.as
"downgrading" the talk~ especially in
vitw of the departure from Pari~ of lhe
highest Communi~t official at the t.alks,
Ha noi Politburo member Le Due Tho.
From Page J
PING PO NG . • •
thumb. rorefinger and middle finger ."
"They're very good with their serve~
and smashes. but I don 't th ink the grip
makes a se rious difference. About the on-
ly advant;.ge is that !hey don 't have to
decide v•hich sirh: of the paddle to u~e
5ince they play with only one side ."
Judy, whn \\'ent to mainlanrl China as
the !'A'O time \I S. Girls Champion , said
she played some exhibition matches with
the Chinese, winning twice.
·•They called them 'friendly m11t chf'~." I
played one match in Shanghai and nne in
Peking. They wt.re playing so that the
matches were more even and I wasn·t
very happy about that ," she 11aid.
~fis~ Bochenski. who will be • junior at
Sheldon High School in Eugent. Ore .. this
fal l. is now on a tour or variou! wesl
co11st cHies. She pla)'ll exhibition games
and l/llks about her trip to China.
Back homt, she is a celebrlly, hav ing
been chosen grand marshal of the
Portland Rose Parade and having "Judy
Bochenski D•y" proclaimed in her honor
by the Ortgon l.egislAture.
She he\iev~ President Nixon 's trip to
China "''111 ease relations with f.hat coun-
try 11nd the US. and that It will lead !l'I
Ch1n8'11 arlm isslon into the Unlled
Nations.
"It's Ironic 1h.:1! he ii. ~oing to a coontry
we don't e\·en recognize. It i~ much bet.-
ltr to commttnlcate with ~nmeone you
don't understand ratht.r than being
enemie~,. .. 5ht ~aid.
f
-· •
Frott1 P .. e J F i ghter Not Seen
APOLLO . • •
lakfna: plcture5 ," rtlemng to Irwin. "He
1ay1 It's slowly tumbling." Novice Watched
Trailing Apollo 15 by several thouhlld
miles at the time was the spent last stage
ot the Salum rocket Uurt ataned the
at.sron11ut1 on their adventure Monday.
Scott and Irwin are 5Cheduled to land
on the moon late Friday, several !'lours
after the lunar module,.Falcon, separates
from Endeavour. the command ship,
Je.aving Worden in lunar orbit.
Doomed Airliner
The last stage of the Saturn was on 11
collision course with a site at the center
of the moon's surface facing the earth,
lmpact was set for late this afternoon.
!'he Apollo 15 neared the conclusion <i
the voyage to the moon with the cabin
looking like a house wife's laundry room.
It was the aftennath of a leaky drink ing
wAter flrlul'f: that the astronauts were
able to fi:r with a wrench Wednesday
night.
The a1tronaut1 tA'ere aroused at 7:37
a.m. EDT Crom a good night's sleep with
the report: "All systems no rmal."
Flight Dlreclor Glynn S, Lunney said of
the water leak, ''we don't have any re~
concern about that at this time.
The tremor of the impacting st.age was
l& be measured by tw& mt>Onquak•
meters left beh in d by earlier Apolll)
crews. Scientists hoped the nature ef the
sub6urface vibration!'! would tell more
abou t the moon'!'! makeup.
At I :29 a.m., Apollo !S's $44:>-million.
12-day mission crossed the imaginary line
tn apace where the moon's gravitational
Influence overpowers earth's and the
astronauts started speeding up toward
the mooo. They were 39,000 milee away
a t the time.
Scott, Worden and Irwin were asleep by
then, resting up fo r the start of a record
aix days or moon exploration.
Before retiring, Scott and Irwin
slithe~ into the landing craft Falcon fur
e second time and found all systems
ready for the 6: 15 p.m. landing Friday ln
a moon basin hemmed in on three sides
by mountains and flanked on the other by
a deep gorge.
Scolt and Irwin will spend a record 67
hours lhere. using their ntw moon buggy
to prowl 11bout an area almosl as large a!
Manhatlan.
They will spend 2(1 heurs outside on the
gurf ace. exploring die base of the moun·
tains. the mysterious caoy&n. a set nf
hills that may be ancient volcanoes, a
111trel.ch ef flal11nd and 1 cluster •I
craters.
Water Board's
Mee t Date Set
A typographical printing error on date
or a California Regional Water Quality
Control Board hearing on coast.al
e~tuaries Aug . 12 incorrectly set it on "
Sunday 11 days earlier.
The digit 2 was dropped in announcing
the session by the Santa Ana Region
panel Thursday, Aug. 12 at 9:30 a.m. in
Room 178 of the UC! Humanities
Building.
The public Is lnvil.ed to attend and
participate in review of existing or poten·
tial waler problems a:ffecting Anaheim,
Sunset. Bolsa &nd Newport bay•.
Special to lb< DAILY PILOT
PASADENA -A Hughes Air West
jetliner that collided with an El Toro
MCAS gupersonic fighter. killing 50
persons, was being radar-monit()red by
an air traffic controller on-the-job
trainee.
The disclosure came Wednesday.
T~timony resumed here today before
a National Transportation Safety Board
panel attempting to detennine cause or
cauaea ol. the tragic June 8 eollis:ioo over
Duarte.
The jetliner spiralled down into a
From Page 1
LEA GUE ...
time by Hyde julll sit hours before the
le.ague dumped him .
Hyde refused to allnw the league lo
further debate his dismissal from the
LAFC post after the 16 to 9 vote was
recorded.
"I do not inlend Lo prolong this
discussion and I vacate the post," he
said.
"[ resent Hyde's remark about the
Irvine Company," Reinhardt told the
league in a brief addre..iis. "M God is my
witness, no one from the Irvine Company
has ever contacted me."
In other equally stormy u:tion. the
league abandoned its long standing sup-
port of the Harbor District di ssolution
measure proposed by A~emblyman John
Briggs IR-Fullerton) and switched its
gested by Assemblyman Kenneth Cory
allegiance to a fairly recent bill sug-
gested by Assemblyman Kenneth Cory
( D-Anahcim J.
Their action c<ime after the reading of
a telegram from Briggs in which the
as..-.emblyman pointed out that Orange
County cities, county supervisors and !he
area's legisla!nrs were hopelessly divided
on a solution lo the thorny Harbor
DistricW!:ro~~·-
Briggs asKed for a delay of any
measure <'ldopted by the league until the
legislature's !972 session. The suggestion
appeared to find little favor at the league
meeting .
Cory·s alternative bill was adopted lS
kl 7 with three cilie!'I abstaining. Costa
Mesa . Los Alamitos. Newport Beach. San
Clemente, San Juan Capistrano. Seal
Beach and Westminster voted for the
Cory bill and Fountain VAiley. Huntington
Beach and Laguna Beach ve>ted against
It.
Briggs' bill calls for expansion of the
Harbor District to Inc lude all county
beaches and park.s or for dissolution of
the. district but only after a public vote on
the issue.
Cory·!! bill calls for similar expansion
with 75 percent of the district's revenues
to be utilized for inland parks until ex-
penditure equal!! that devoted to harbors
and beachPs when future expenditures
would revert. ln A 50-50 basis. It does not
call for a public vote on the issue.
QUEEN SIZE
crevasse.like San Gabriel Mountain can·
yon carrying 44 passenge'l"s And a crew ' Of five to death, while the M11.rine F4
Phantom pilol also perished.
Victims included Michael Potter. 7. Md
his sister Sandra, 6, chHdren of Mrs. San·
dra Potter of 709 Calle Puente, San
Clemente.
Palmdale Air Traffic Conlro\ Center
suptrvisory controller Robert . Feis.ter
teslifif'd his rookie had been doing fine
until the 9:34 a.m. impact, in clear
weather.
Feister said he stood directly behind
trainee Harry A. Grove and neither he
nor Grove saw a blip representin g the
Phantom jet, whO!ie radar transponder
was inoperative.
A 11.rge audience. listened at the
Pasadena Hilton hot.el 11.s Feister told of
realizing 15omething wu wrong when I
radar emergency signal fleshed on a se-
cond controller's scope.
Glancing up for 20 seconds maximum ,
he said he turned back lo Grovee'
radarscope to find the DC9 blip had
vanished.
He then took over for Groves.
Testimony \Vednesday indicated that
while the Sall Lake City.bound jetliner
was groond-11\0flitored , its own trans-
ponder radar unit was also faulty.
The DC9 em •rgency signal designed l<J
pinpoint a flight crisis or collision never
appea red, althou~h a mystery light flash·
ed on the screen simultaneously from
some other alrcrart.
Mooitored for 10 minutes. it vanished ln
the area of Norton AFB, deepening the
element of intrigur.
One 0f the key witnesses is ~1arine 1st
Lt. Christopher Schiess. 24, radAr
nperator abo;irrl the Phantom, who
survived by parachuting.
He denied in testimony Tuesday any
aerobatic flying imn1erliatrly before I.he
collision at 1~.000 feet. contrary to Initial
ststements by eyewitne55es on the
ground. .
Lieutenant Schies!'!. who lives on·base.
said pilot Lt. .J;imcs R. Phillips. 27, had
completed a '.160-<legree rollover so they
could check the surrounrlini:t air space for
other planes.
The Marine aircraft was rl'turninR: on 11
relatively lnw-level course due to oxygen
svstem failure. nying on a see-and·be·
s.ren basis becau~ of rlefectiv e radar.
The Air \Vesl plane kniferl into the t11Jl
5ection of the Phantom seconds after Lt.
Schiess saw it looming, he test1herl and
Lt. Ph illips was unable to bail out
himself.
Hearings will wind up Friday. but It
will be some time before a fin al
determination is i~ued by the fed erAI
agency on what caused the tragedy.
Wea pons H un t Sla ted
SANTA CRUZ IUPll -A complete
survey Qf the area surrflunding a Na·
tiooa\ Guard armory ill under way in a11
effort to recover SO pistol~. 20 machine
~uns ;ind a grenade launcher that were
stn!en !hl':re list y,·eekend.
• F.ULL SIZE
NOW $299 OMI
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Your favarltf lnttrior designer will bf happ11 lo assis& 11ou •••
-
H.J.GARl\ETT fURNITLJRE
PROFESSIONAL
INTER IOR DESIGNERS
12 15 HARI OR BLVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF,
b4b-027S b4b-0276
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Huntington Beaeh
Fountain Valley
EDITION
*
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VOL 1><4, NO. 180, 4 SECTIONS, '44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNtA
N.Y. Stocks
.
'
TEN CENTS
New Challenge Hurled at Top of Pier Project
By RUDI NJEDZfELSKJ
01 IN D.tll7 l'llol 51•H
Bob Terry. chairman of the Downtown
Property Owners Associatipn, rolled
another boulder lnto the p.ath of the con -
troversial Top of the Pier project today
by announcing a plan which could cut off
its funding.
Terry said his group would begin with
the circulation of petitions next week
which are aimed at "closing a legal
loophole whlch avoids voter control of ci-
ty e1penditure."
"This is not an attack on the Top of the
Pier plan as such, but a move to make
sure the City of Huntington Beach and its
parking authority are more careful of
how they spend their money," Terry said.
•·we want to ask the people , 'Do you
want the right to vote on such a pro-
ject?' "
The plan, as advanced by lhe city
would pave the way for renewal n£ the
downtown area by creating a t~acre
parking lot as the first step. Terry's
group of 50 landowners is opposed to this
and now has an $8.5 million suit pending
against the city for alleged conspiracy to
lower their property values.
''The costs of this monstrous project
have now escalated above the $3.2 million
to over S7 million today," Terry charged.
He. believes lhe cost could easily go up to
$10 million. .
If the more than S,f,00 required
signatures can be collected. the people
would be able to decide whether all long-
term revenue bonds should be approved
by them before the city goes into debt.
according to Terry.
Vincent Moorhouse, the city's director
of development in charge of the Top of
the Pier project was not. available today
to comment on the effect Terry's action
could have on city plans.
The lnltl.ative drive, according lo Ter-
ry, will serve to "correct the inequity
now existing in the normal bond-in-
debtedness requirement '' wh ich
necessitates voter approval of el·
penditures.
He said the city council found a
loophole around the requirement by
establishing a parking authority, which,
under the California Parking Authority
Act of 1949, does not require voter a~
proval before incurring debts.
"I am confident that the people really
do want the!r say, and that the requisite
Apollo Nears Moon's Pull
$17 Million Science Lab Set to Do Its Stuff
SPACE CENTER, Houston IUPl)-The
Apollo 15 astronauts reached the outer
approaches to the moon with unerring ac-
cu racy today and unveiled a $17 million
science laboratory in their spacecraft to
begin man 's most ambitious lunar ex-
ploration.
The cover of the especially equipped
laboratory was jettisoned in space a few
hours before the three-man ship reached
the point to begin orbit of the moon,
LOSES LAFC SEAT
ShortJti mer Hyd•
Aristotle Onassis
Upset at Ala1Tiage
ATHENS, Greece I APJ -Greek ship--
ping magnate Aristolle Onassis has
declined public comment on the marriage
fJf his 2!l-year--0ld daughter, Christin<'l, to
a ·47-year-old Holl y>vood real estate man.
But an unidentified relative says he was
angry.
A spokesman for Onassis refused to ac-
cept questions for Onassis on the mar-
riage, saying he couldn't be bothered on
!amily affairs.
preparatory to a landing on the surface
Friday.
All was reported well by the trio -
David R. Scott, Alfred M. Worden and
James B. Irwin -in their fourth day of
the elaborate, 12:-day mission.
The astronauts first corrected their
course with a precise rocket burst and
then triggered a string of explosives that
discarded the door to the laboratory
13.200 miles from the moon.
"We felt a little shudder, but not too
Hyde Loses
LAFC Post
In Voting
~
By TOM BARLEY
Of "'' Dtlly "'''°" 11•11 Lo!!: Alamito~ Councilman Jot Hyde
was hustled out of his seal on the Locsl
Agency Formalion Commission .11nd
Assemblyman John Briggs lost loco?.! sup·
port for his Harbor District dissolutinn
proposal \\'ednesday night in a stormy
Orange County League of Cities meeting.
Sixteen of 25 Orange County cities re-
jected the: angry Hyde in a secret ba!lot
that apparently left the ~ay clear for lhe
re:electlon to the coveted LAFC post or
Fullerton Councilman Louis "Red''
Reinhardt. (See related story, page 13. l
The county·s mayors, sitting & the
1arne meeting in Orange as the League's
city selection committee, callrd an eltc-
tlon for Aug. 12 after apponting Aiayor
Ed Just of Fountain Va lley as the com·
mittee's chairman. Just also chairs the
league me.clings.
Reinhardt, who wa5 immediately PC-
cused by Hyde of collusion with !he
Irvine Company. offered to delay the suit
he filed last wee!< against 2S Orange
County mayors and the coun!y board of
11upervlsors and y,•hich is scheduled fnr
hearing Aug . 12 in Orange County
Superior Court
Thal lawsuit challenges the validity of
the: election which ousted Reinhardt Md
g::ive Hyde the LAF'C post and contends
that several of the votes cast in the \:J to
12 cliff hanger last July 8 were cast il·
legally for persons who were not present.
Rei'nhardt refused to comment on the
lawsuit's status H he fails to win reelcc·
lion to the LAFC post. His 8pot on the
LAFC board and in lhe group's chair was
taken Wednesday afternoon for the first
CSee LEAGUE, Pase Zl
much.'' Scott reported as the door fell
away.
This was an important, significant step
in the $445 million mission. It. opened up
the command ship's new moon mapping
cameras, and radiation sensors.
The three American spacemen then
prepared their 107,000 pound cfaft for its
critical swing into orbit around the moon
at 4:06 p.m. EDT.
The astronauts wore spacesuits just in
case something went wrong. But the
Ringy-dingy
Thief Hunted
Fountain Vi!lley policl! are look-
ing for a souvenir hunter who walk-
ed off w I th a p a y telephone
Wednesday.
The phone. which was formerly
located behind the snack bar ::it the
Fountain V::illey Drive In was ap-
parently t.aken dur ing the early
morning hours.
Officer Michael McKay reported
that the phone had been pried off
the mountings and the wires con·
necting it h11d been cul.
Estimated loss to the telephone
company was SIOO for the phone
and SIOO for the roins in it.
Mother Charges
Son Under Spell,
Hits Mar1iage
A Santa Ana woman who cla ims that
her 19-year-old son is s pi r i l u a l l y
dominated by the leader of an obscure
religious sect today lost her batUe to halt
his marriage Saturday to his mentor's
daughter. ,
Orange County Superior Court Judge J .
E. T. "Ned" Rutter refused to sign the
restraining order demanded by Mr!'i .
Catherine Zitinsky Cass after reading a
lawsuit. which allege11 that her son "can-
not help himself un til the spell of the
defendant is broken."
~frs. Cass identifies the dcfendanl a!'i
Albert G. Pearson who is s<tid in the
lawsuit to Jive on the grounds of the
Hesperia Country Club in Hesperia.
Sbe claims that Pearson. named by her
(See SPELL, Pa1e ZI
ope ration went smoothly and t h •
spacemen reported they felt far less
shock than expected from jettisoning of
the Jab cover. The ~by·91f.t fool panel
floated away from the spaceship.
Scott , the mission commander,
reported to the ground:
"Jim's got it out his window and he's
taking pictures." referring to Irwin . "He
says it's slowly tumbling."
Trailing Apollo ts by several thousand
(See APOLLO, Page 2)
Supervisors
Bear Down
On Budget
By JACK BROBACK
Of lllt lMU, l"li.t Sltff
Orange County supervisors got down lo
the hard fa cts of budget trimming today
after five days of listening to department
heads state their cases for more money.
They 11re raced with a S244 million
general fund budget up $20 million from
1970-71 and showing a S12 million revenu~
defici t. equal to 30 cents on top of the
present Sl.70 tax rate.
The grand total budget, including all
special districts such aii; harbor. flood
control, structural fire. etc.. i~ $270
milliorl compared with $238 million in
]971}-71.
To make t~e task of cutting the budget
mc.rP difficult, the board members must
decide the: fale of S6.8 million in so-called
''policy nlatters " not included in the
budget.
They include such significant items as
finishin~ the fourth floor of the county
jail, Sl.5 million: delayed bujldin~ proj-
ects, Sl.3 millio"; and emergency
employment program , $1 million and
refuse disposal equipment and land
purchase, SL7 million .
Supervisnrs Wednesday looked Rt a
proposed S4 .5 million capital project
program (new buildings, add it ions ,
remodeling ) which Robert Thomas coun-
ly administrative officer said he had
trimmed from $17.4 million in requests
from the variou5 departments.
Principal expenditures to es c 111 p e
Thomas' blue pencil were the Harbor
District Municipal Courts building, $2.12
million ; a down payment on a county
refuse disposal site nort h of San Juan
fSee BUDGET, Page 2)
JJuilding Site Heists Show Jump
By JOANNE REYNOLOO
01 !I'll Delly 1"1191 It.If
Residential burglaries are noth ing new
In.Orange County.
But police say they are rinding a gmw-
1113 number of burglars who are
burglariiing houses before they bec'ome
homes.
Construction bclrglaries and burglariu
from model homes are common in Hun
tiogt.on Beach and Fountain Valley.
Deteetive11 in the two cltie! estimate
there-are 22 re&idenllal construction pr(l+
jecta curren tly going up -· 10 ·In Hun-
tlngtOO Beach Ind l2 in F'ounlala Valley.
And thieves '1td burglars are mating a
reguJar harvest of the construcUon
m1terh1ls. tools, furn ishings and a~
pliances that are med on these sites.
Fountain Valley Detective Jack Trott
11k1 these kinds of thieves can be.
.separa1ed Into 1wn groups ... There are
the ones th::it steal 1hin~s for their own
ust and the one11 that steal to sell," he
said.
It ts diffitult to tJiUmate· whit tht
thefts cmt lht contractors a.nd sub con·
tractors. Detective Luis Ochoa of Hun-
lngton Beach says "it's uaually only the
big things that get reported."
In the pa.st three months he has in-
vestigated 34 construction burglaries.
"We 've had some theft 1 from con-
struction site! run up IOMCs of between
$11,000 and $12,0UO," he 11ld.
Ochoa a.nd Trott agree that the men
who do the stealing Art &0metietimes
those employed on the site.
Sometimes these t hef t·m i aded
employes will lake thing11 from the site
during the day, but more often, they will
note where thi ngs are stored a.nd return
with a truck under cover of darkness.
Troll tells of a recen t case in which
the burglars toured model homes and got
a copy of the house's noor plan.
"They'd mark the location of the it~ms
they wanted so lhe y could find them easl·
ly whf'n they retumed," he ~aid.
Bolh cities h•ve rteently been hit with
1 11erle1 of trutk thett1. The burglars
break into a compound on a job site, load
up a oompany truck with materlals or
appliances and drive off. The trucks have
all been located a few d11ys later, relieved
of their cargo.
Huntington Beach detective Sgt. Forrest
Lewis notes that Investigation Of these
cases and prevention of the burglaries is
somewhat dirficult.
Construction material~ have no 11erial
numbers as a means of identificaUon, so
once they are removed from a site. il'1
impossible to prove they were stolen. And
the investigators noted that Wia.I
nurnbef'I on apptl.anceii; are sometimes
not recorded 110 the same problem with
Identifying tfiese items as stolen goods
occurs.
Some contractors have taken to hirllg
guards to patrol the construction areas.
hut security guards are costly and moil
builders c11nnot afford the '1:XJ>f'nse .
In Huntington Beach. the use of th11
heticnpter has helped catch some thieves
on the s!te. Conttructlon areas provide:
numerou!I places to hide and nndercovtr
of darkness. lhieve5 aren't visible to the
casual observer who might 1 p o l
something out of place in an occupied
nei11hborhood.
Trott said help from residenta of areas
near construction projects will probably
cut down some of these burglaries.
"If people see something and It oc-
cupies them long enough lo make them
wonder what ls iJolng on, they 1bould call
us. We'd rather check out 15 people a.nd
find they have bu1ine1s on 11 construction
site than have to Investigate • CO!l4
1trucUon burglary," he stated.
Selling stolen items, especially power
construction tools 11 another area where
'f"llce can be effective. The tools have
!ierial numbers and attempts to sell thei;e
items al swap meet.I are carefully check-
ed in Oran1e cilies.
Ochoa 1iay11 construction burglaries and
lht'.fts tend to nuctuate, but Rt the mo-
ment they are eapeclally active.
"Between the lime that the buildings
Kn up and the tlmt they ue occupled. the
activity Is the he1v!est," he said.
number of signall.lres for such a petition
will be easily obtained," said Terry.
"Once having this matter lo a VQ.te: the
city will probably hall its reckless s~·
ding until the electorate ha,, spoken. If
not, the further remedy of recall pelilions
against the principal vlolaters would be
warranted.''
Condemnation proceedings have been
filed by the city as a means of acqujrjng
• five block-long stretch of downtown
property for ronversion into the patklng
lot.
The area involved is a block deep along
Pacific Coast Highway from Fifth Street
lo First Street, plus another pared
southeast of Lake Streel.
City officials view the l,BOO space .park4
ing lot as the heart of a downtown
redevelopment plan which would attract
S35 million in private development.
Terry said he hopes the election could
be held by April tm to coincide witb tbl
city's general election In April.
He said the petitions would bt
circulated by professionals who have
guaranteed to produce the required.'
number of signatures.
PING PONG DIPLOMAT 'DEMONSTRATES SERVE CHINESE STYLI
Judy Bochenski Shook H1nd1 With Chou En-Tai
Sl1e Saw China
Ping Pong Player Visits Harbor
By RUDI NIEDZlELSK1
01 thl 0 111, 1"1191 "'"
Red China -it's a fascinating place ln
vis!l but not exactly like spending lime on
the Riviera .
That'! the opinion of Judy Bochenski,
al !6 the nation's youngest ping pong
diplomat. She appeared at the Huntington
Center Wednesday afternoon to engage
challengers in a few rounds of her
favor ite sporl.
"It seemed !ike a sim11le. pleasant at·
mcxsphere." said the girl whose. picture of
a friendly henkshake with Chou En-lai
appeared throughout the world.
"When we went walking out on lhe
streets we ~aw that none of the people
had cars. Most of them rode . bicycles or
walked," sh~ eaid.
"It's · aa intersting and fascinating
pl.!lae to . go. It has 8Uch. an intereetlng
culture .. But it's not like. the Riviera . It's
not nearly as westernized as Japan or
Hong Kcmg."
Miss Bochenski said the American
group of ping pong players frequently
engaged their hosl.5 ln discu!sions about
their polilical beliefs.
·•we talked a lot.about r.lao and things
like that. It seems that their main idea is
tn·e:qualiz! the econj>my while the U.S. i!1
slr'iving for equalization in politics." she
commented.
Ping pong is the number one sport In
Red China , according to Miss BochenskJ.
T!\e country taku the ~ame quite
serloosly, much as America does football
and baseball.
"They ~o14. their paddles differ~ntly
than we do and t!iese have rub~ oply on
tlnt 1lde,".Judy explained. "We Ille what
we call lhe 'sh1ke hands' poslUorJ •nd
they use the 'penholdtr' which mean11
they hold their paddle11 betwetn the
thumb. forefinger aDd ,mlddle finae~."
"They're very good with their serves
ind smashes, but r don'l think tlJe grip
mak'es a 1erious dUfecence. About'U\e on·
ly advantage is that tl'ley do1,.t have to
decide which 111de of the paddle to U3C
slnce they play with only one side.''
Jud,y, who wtnt to malnland China as
the lwa Ume U.S. Glrl1 Ch1mpion, 1a1d
she played some exhibition matches wtt.b
the Chinese win ning twice.
"They called them 'friendly matches.' I
played one match in Shanghai and one in
Peking. They were playing so that tbt
matche..-. were more even and 1 wasn''
ve ry happy about that.'' 1he said.
Miss Bochenski, who will be a junior· at
Sheldon High School in Eugene. Ore., this
fall , i~ now on a tour of various west
coast cities. She plays exhibition garn~
and talks about her trip to China.
Back home, she is a celebrity, hawin,
been chosen grand marshal of tbt
Portland Rose Parade and having "Judy
Bochenski D<ty" proclaimed in her honor
by the Oregon Legisl<tture.
She believes President Nixon's trip to
China will ea!e relations with that coun-
try and the U.S. and that it will lead te
(See· PING PONG, P•1e !:)
Orange
1''eatber
Sunny skies art on the menu
again for today and Friday · wllb
highs along Uie beache1 at 72. ris-
ing to 86 inland. Lows tonlgbt
around 65 degree&.
INSJ:PE TODAY
Govtrnor Ronald Reaad'n hot
ittmized 11 wide·varie't11 of,loas.Q
California ii suffering dl4! to tM •
rail rtrike. Ht sizid th~ 'reti.clt
could be disastrour. Storv Ptlge
9.
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I DAILY ~ILOT K
Lockheed
Loan Debate
May Close
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen a I e
Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield came
ouftent.atively today ln favor of slopping
• filibwter that has been blocking a
Senate vote on ieglslatlon aimed at 1ivtng
gavtrnment backing to a $250 vote on
le(ialation aimed at giving government
backing to a $250 million loan to
Lockheed Aircraft Corp
Mansfield stressed a key condition -
that the guarantee in the bill be limited
le Lackheed. Th!: pending legislation
would allow up to $2 billion in f~eral
guarantees for loans to corporatioru
whose collapse would have an adverse ef •
feet on the nalion·.s ec<>nomy.
1ofarufield has voted against two
previous attempts this week to invoke the
Senate's deb1te-ha lting mechanlsm -tha
cloture rule -but said he would iO along
with the third such effort.
M&Mfield made clear be still was op-
J>G!ed to the Lockheed rescue plan but his
dtci5Jon Jn favor of allowing the Issue to
come to a vote appeared to enhance
chances by supporters of the plan to gain
passage before Congress takes a month·
long recess starting Aug. 6.
Lockheed SI }'! it will fall into
b.tnkruptcy If the government guarantee
ia: not forthcoming by AIJi. 8.
A cloture motion Monday was five
votu short of a majority. much lee the
two-third m1jorlty required to invokt the
rule. The supporters made substantial
1tim in the ne1t two days and got a 59-39
majcrity in tht second effort Wednesday.
Tb1t wa.s 5even votes shy ef the
11eceasary two-thirds majerity.
DAILY r'ILDT J!lll 1'111111
-
Wild Shootout
Stops Gunmen
NEW YORK (UPI ) -Five robber1
he ld up a bank and fled with 12 hostages
today before one of the gunmen "''as kill-
ed and three others captured In a gun.
battle with police on upper Broadway.
"ft was like an Old West shootout," a
police spokesman said.
One of thto: captured gunmen and a
bystander were wounded 111 the e1change
of fire at Broadway and 95th Streel.
Pollce. said they believed the one robber
who escaped al!O had been 1hot in the
leg.
Police said four radio patrol cars rush·
ed to the Bankers Trust Co. branch at
Broadway at 94th Street at 9:35 A.M. in
response to a holdup alarm.
As the cars drew up in front of the
bank, an armed man peered out the bank
door, then retreated inside, police said.
Shortly after that five men left the bank,
herding 12 men and women before them
as hostages.
• Tipsy Warden
Frees Convicts
IGVALA, Mexico (AP)
Porfirio Roman, the warden of ~
local prl60n, came home drunk
Monday night. Shouting "Long live
~fexico and our glorious re vnlu·
lion!" he npened the cells and told
his 125 prisonera they were free.
When the prisoners started filing
out of the building, guards on the
wall~ turned on the se11rch!ights
and warned the men lo return to
their cells. Mosl obeyed, but tlve
managed to escape am.id .a hall of
bullets.
Roman was subdued by some !'If
hi.s subordinates and locked in one
Jf the cells. The government fired
him and said Wednesday it will
prosecute him.
Frotn Page 1
BUDGET. • •
Job Search
May Cost Arm
For Mexican
At the 951h Street intersection all 12
hostages suddenly dropped to the ground
and the holdupmen open ed fire. Seven
policemen returned firt. Capistrano, $500,000; new fire stations
"It was the most amazing thing." the and addil.ions, $329,000; S!'luth Santa. An.a
police spokesman said. "That sort of branch welfare, health and probati!'lll
A Mex ican National'~ attempt to find thing just never happens. They all drop-depariments, $1 million .
work in the United States migtit cost him ped to the ground at once." Thomas characterized the proposal' an arm authorities said toda y. The bystander. shot In the hand, and
the wounded robber were taken to the which he had cut by $13.2 mUlion to the Juan Perez, 21. who wa.s found at Se n
Onofre Bluffs Stale Park Monday, suf-Knickerbocker Ho.spilal. Police said none $4.5 million as "absolutely rock bottom."
fering from a. rattlesnake bite. remained of the patrolmen !'Ir the hostages ap-In additie>n, $579,692 in 1970-71 project.!
tn Orange County Medical Center today peared to be hurt. not completed but budgeted last year
d An undetermined amount of mo1u~y In "only fair (."{lndition," nurse.s sai . His d were Included to brillg the total t!'I $5.1 .... · ta.ken by the holdupmen was recovere right arm recelvo:u extensive llssue 1 ·d m1·111·0n. d r al!'lng with four guns, po ice sa1 . amage rom the venom. Rents and leases will cos t the county
The illegal immign:int was bitten by a $2,8 million in the current year, Thomas
snake before dawn Monday as he hiked f'roni f•o.ge J said.
along the slopes of San Onofre Bluffs Rcrreation and cultural activities ex·
State Park to ev&de a Border Patrol APOLLO penditures were also pre!!ented Wed·
checkpoint. • "• • nesday, largely composed of beaches and
By the time help arrived to the man he re11:ional parks.
had gone inl-0 shock from a full dose of miles at the time wa s the spent last stage The budget recommended Iola!~ $18 SM.ate Republican Lf:ader Hu1h Scott
said he disliked the kind of arranaernent
Mamfield demanded but aaid he would
Mt "stand in the way'' if there was
general acreement Jt was the only way to
eet a blll paned before Congru:s takes
it.a monlb-long vacation.
Golden West Garbetastangelers venom in his right forearm. of the Saturn rocket that started the million including such projects as 11.3
Authorities quoted Perez as saying he atsronauts on their adventure Monday. million for acquisition of proposed Yorba
had been walking for three da ys after Park in the Santa Ana River Can y!'ln;
Mansfield said he would Mt even vote
for a Lockheed-only loan bill but said he
11w no reason the adminJ.stration would
not go along with limiting the leeislat.ion
to Lockheed.
"Their main Interest la Lockheed," he
1aid. "The other is ju.at window dress-l.n . It
he Senate's top critic of the legislation
11id Lockheed would lose millions of
dollars even with government help.
Sen. William ProzmJre (0-Wis.), in-
serted in the Congressi!'lnal Record -the
daily publication wblcb records the
goine&-fln in the HOU!e and Senate -a
thick report attacking Lock.betd'1 Tri.star
Jet project.
From Pflfle 1
SPELL ...
u the leader of an unknown rtli(ious
group, firllt came to koow her aon David
A. Cass in 1968 when the boy was at.
tendin& Santa Ana High School.
She at.ates that her son became
1'psycbologlcally imprei nl!l ted'' because
of his exposure to Pearson and that he
left H11rvard University and abandoned
plans to enter United States government
urvice In favor of a life at Hesperia with
the defendant.
She claims her son has told he r that
"the will of the. Lortl" h11s led him t!'I his
marriage with the defendant's daughter,
Kim Pearson. The ceremony is scheduled
for Saturday in Victorville.
Mrs. Cass claims Pearson is not an or-
dained minister .'Ind that he cnnstantly
contacLt; minor children in public i;chools
and persuades them to join in rel igious
cerem!'lnies in his home.
She states that she f!'IUnd her son at the
Hesperia h!'lme holding hands v:ith
Pearson and joining the defendant in
some fonn of religious service. The
la wsuit notes that she .... ·as ejected frnm
the residence afler Pearson called police .
DAILY PILOT
OU."IGE COolUT P'Vll.1'141NG COMl>AllV
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Cett1 Mlw: lJO W11U •11" Str-.t
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DAILY ll'IUJT, Wflll -.file.II r, _,.,,... ,.._ 11'1 l"tW, ...... ..,...., dilly •t.,I S--l'I ...,... .. ,__ i... l.le<Mt kKfl. ......,., ...... a.s. ~.. .. ... ,i..e-..... ,....._ v1ow. s.~ c..._,.,
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When they stand her up, this cardboard, crepe paper, chicken wire.
assorted motors, lights and psychede lic paint job becomes "Zelda
Jane," a 15-foot-tall garbenstangcl which Gol den West College stu·
dents completed Wednesday at Carousel Court in South Coast Plaza.
Darrell Ebert, fine arts instructor (striped shirt), coached the GWC
garbenstangel team.
crossing the border. At some point in the Scott and Irwin are scheduled to land $775,000 for county beach development,
predawn hours he was bitten by the viper on the moon late Friday, several hours and $1.1!' million for parks development.
and attempted to apply a tourniquet after the lunar module, Falcon, separates Cut by Thomas from an accumulative
himself and tried to make cuts near the from Endeavour, the command ship, capital outlay program, presented by
fang mark.s . leaving Worden in lunar orbit. Director of Harbors. Beaches and Parks
Perez: finally received help when he Kenneth Sampson were projects totallini
I I d f . 1 d 1 The last stage or the Saturn was on l l l."i milli·on. a er e operators o a concession s an a ..
the new slate park. Workers then notified collision course with a 5ile at the center Included were acquisition of land for a
border patrolmen and called for an am· of the moon's surface facing the earth, Chiquita Flats Park on Ortega Highway,
bulance. impact was set for late this afternoon. $500.000; Villa Park Dam Park develop-
Spokesmen for the Oceanside office of !'he Apollo 15 neared the conclusion ol ment. $500.000 and Fullerton Dam Park
the patrol said the y hz.ve been told Perez development. SJ00.000.
might lose the arm. the voyage to the moon with lhe cabin Approved by Thomas were Villa Park
Bruce Ends En,voy Role
They added that the victim v:ould re-lookinR like a house wife's laundry room, acquisiti!'ln , $400.000; Yorba Park ac·
main at the medical center for treat· II was the aftennath of a leaky drinking quisition. $1.3 million: 11-lile Square Park
menl. When bf: i.s released, standard pro-\\'.:tier fixture that the astronauts were development, $262,900; University Park
cedures for illegal entry wiU prevail. able to fix with a wrench \l.'ednesday devel!'lpment, $884,000; Laguna Niguel
"He'll be deported," said th • Park de .. ·elo pment, $650,000.
With Cease-fire Appeal
PARIS (UPI) -U.S. Ambassador
David K. E. Bruce ended his role as chief
~gotiatt>r at the Vletfl am peace talks Ur
day with an appeal for immediate
negotiations on a five-point cease-fire
plan and a charge the Communists were
imperiling the talks by violating the
Demilit.ari.z:ed Zone (DMZ ).
Bruce told Communist delegates hiii
plan would move all belHgerents toward
peace, but Viet Cong delega te Mme.
Nguyen Thi Binh said Bruce was merely
reviving old proposals 11nd Han oi's Xuan
Thuy said "Bruce C<1mmitted a calumny
against the North Vietnamese by falsely
accusing them of infiltrating into the
Demilitarized Zone."
The l23rd session appe;:ired In have
made no progress al all. and South Viet-
namese negotiator Pham Dang Lam call·
ed it a "negative" one.
Bruce. 73, will depart Pari~ Sunday to
make "''ay for \Villiam J. Port.er. the
forme r U.S. Ambassador tn South K'lrea,
after serving for a year as head of the
American delegation. Deputy Philip
Habib will fill in until Porter arrives at
some later date.
Four Persons
Die in Countv
.,'
Traffic Misha1Js
Four persons have lost the.ir llves In
Orange County traffic accidents in a 24·
hour perlod.
The known dead
JoAnn Lorenzen , 22 , Bonita.
Jeffrey P. r.teyer. 17. Garden Grove.
Ernest Loera, 59, Stanton.
An unident.ified man also was killed
early today in the Fullerton crash in
which Miss Lorenzen Jost her life.
A 20-year-old San Pedro man was jailed
on sus picion of manslaughter following
the crash on Commonweallh Avenue ne~r
Date Street.
Motorcyclist Meyer was killed Wed-
nesday afternoon in Garden Grove when
he was thrown from hiii cycle In the 6600
block of Amy Avenue.
Loera was killed early Wednesday
when he '-''as riding his bicycle north on
Beach Boulevard in Anaheim and swerv-
ed into the path or an oncoming car,
police said.
From Page I
LEAGUE •..
time by Hyde just slx hour.!! bef!'lre I.he
league dumped him.
Hyde refu."""1 to allow the league to
further debate his diamlssal from the
LAFC post after Ult 16 to II vnte was
reoordtd.
··1 do not intenrl to prolonlil this
di~uS$iOn and I vacall!. the post." he
aaid.
"I resent Hyde 's rl'mark abnul the
Irvine Compan y," Reinhardt told lhe
le1gue In 1 brief addrP.ss. "As Cnd Is my
\\'itness. no one from the Lrvlne CompAny
ha~ evl!.r contacted me ."'
&poke.sman. night. Sampson plugged for reinstatement of
Jn his farewell speech he scored Han!'ll The ;istronauts were aroused 11t 7:37 the Chiquita Flats, Fullerton Dam and
and the Viet Cong for calling previous l'!.m. F.DT from a good night"s ~leep with Villa Park development funds .
cease-fire proposals abusrb aAd said, "l From Page 1 the report : "All systems normal.'' He said that his department was re-
see nothing absurb aboUt trying to end Flight Director G!ynn S. Lunney said of questing $7 million for parks; $1 million
the killing now." And in an off-the-cuff PJNG PONG of parks operation, and $6.4 million for statement he said Hanoi was building a • • • the \\'ater leak. "we don"t have any re~ beaches. The latter would be In the
road network in the DMZ in violation nr concern about that at this time. Harbor District budget under a separate
the agreemertt.s that got the talks China's admission Into the Unit~ The tremor of the impacting stage wa s tax rate.
started Nations. tn be measured by tw!'I moonquake Sampson said the estimated cost of th• He said the United Slates was prepared "It's ironic that he is going to 11 Cl'luntry Niguel beach (Salt Creek ) purchase. from
l.o carry out an immediate cease-fire we don't even recognize . Tl is mucb be t-meters left behind by earlil!'r Apolll'l AVCO Community Developers was $2.f
throughout Indochina on the following ler to communicate with someone you crews. Scientists hoped 1he nature tif the million. He said the Harb!'lr District com·
principles : don't understand rather than being subsurface vibrations would tell more missioners were willing to place this u·
-Effective supervision by international enem ies." she Silid. about the moon's makeup . penditure in the district budget.
observers and the two sides. ----------------------------------------------
-Neither side should use thl' cease·fire
to build up its st rength.
-The cease-fire should cover "all kinds
of warfare and violence." presumably in-
cluding vengeance against individuals.
-It should cover the fighting in all em,
battled Indochinese states: Vietnam,
La1Js and Cambodia.
-lt \\'ould be "part of a general move
to end the war" by both sides.
Brwce's expected resignation v.·as 11c,
cPpfcd by the \\'hite House in Washington
\\'ednesday night. The \rhite House said
Bruce v.•as resigning for '"imperative"
health reasons.
His place at the Paris bargaining fable
will be taken by Porter sometime in the
ne::ir future. the White Housr said . He
will be temporarily replaced by
Ambassador Philip C. Habib. Bruce·s
deput.v,
\\lhite Hnuse spokesmen rejected ai; un-
founded suggestions that 8 r u c e · s
departure meant the United Stale$ was
1'downgradin1f' the talks especially in
virw of the departure from Paris of the
highest Communist offici:il at !he talks.
Hanoi Politburo member Le Due Tho.
Ex-Counciln1an's
Wife Succumbs
!\1ary E. Fregeau, wife of former P'oun,
lain Valley City Councilman Donald
Fregeau died Wednesday in Long: Be1ch.
Mrs. Fregeau, 39, had been hospitalized
there a week prior to her death.
Her husband served on the Fountain
Valley "ouncil from April of 1666 until
Septe1nber. 1969.
In addition to her hu"sband, Mrs.
Fregeau leaves two sons . Donald Jr. and
Stephen ; a daughter. J acqueline Kushner,
and a brother, Arthur Landry.
Her remains will be sent to Westhavcn,
Conn.. for burial there. Peek Family
Mortuary 111 handling the arrangements.
Huntington Boy Hurt
Jn S ... im Pool Fall
A nine-ye1.r~ld Huntington Beach boy
lnjurf'd in s fall Wednesday at the Edl80n
High School .swimming pool was reporttd
In gMd condition today at Pacifica
Hnspital.
\\'r!nesses tnld pollr.e that Doug\15
Cornell. 91112 Veronica Drive . w.1s clim-
bing the ladder to the h.tgh dlvinf boArd
end ..... a.'I about three 11tep.'I from the tnp
\\'he.n he. fe!l to the concrete pool deck .
•
... ~
• n... -.-y c-t.rt.W. •'-Mcfr ,., •lttltt ........... e A w .. ~fl.it ef t.brla ...i ••l•N ......... .,.."''
• ·~ Mdt -.... 1..ati...
a
9UEEN SIZE -f .ULL SIZE
NOW $299 ONt
WllK
ONLY
Your fo1>0rit• in~rior dt1igntr wili bll! happ11 lo asail t 11ou •••
H.J.GAR~ETT fURNlllJRE
PROFtSSIONAL
INT ERIOR DESrGNERS
.. ':)P-.. .... " .
22'5 HARIOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA , CALrF.
646-027, 646-0276
-
I· ,1
~1
J
I
,I
UCI 'Ecology Catalogue'
Pleasing to All Parties
By GEORGE LEIDAL
, Of l~t D•llY ~1191 lll H
. With bows to both ecologists and tax·
p~yers, UC Jrvine's 1971 ·72 General
Catalogue promises to be a camp
nouveau best seller among lhe usually
st ;ild issues or dignified academic pro3e
frnn1 other universities.
The eye-catching brown corrugated
paper cover with rubber-st.amped titles is
wrapped around 330 pages listing courses,
d~gree requirements and essential in-
fnrmation about programs, schools and
departments at UC!.
The tome should please ecologists when
they find oUt the use of recycled paper
6aved nearly 200 trees from woodsmen.
A $2,000 sav ing in the cost of printing
the necessary 22,000 copies should please
ta.xpayers concerned about rising costs of
education.
·Rober t Goings, publication manager at
UCI, said the catalogue budget has oot
been increased in three years. Yet. the
ri.'!ing numbers of students at UCl mean
increase.s in the numbers of pages of in·
formation to be included in the book.
Circulation of the document, tM, has in-
creased each year.
.Because 8,000 copu~s must be given free
ti\ other institutions and libraries in
California, only 14,000 remain for 5ale at
Sl each.
To cram 10 percent more in formation
Into Lhe book at a savings of 15 ~rcent
from last year"s Sl7,000 cost, creativity
v.·as needed, Goings agreed.
Kathy Pearse, of the instructional
media services department at UCJ,
surveyed !he usual line of cheap cover
ir;tocks and found them wanting. ''They're
enough to make you throw up ."
Asking paper suppliers lo search nooks
and crannies of thtir warehouses resulted
In a cheap supply of corrugated brown
paper that resembles shopping bag sheets
pasted together like two-thirds of the wan
flf a flims y cardboard boir
Tille type in headline .style. was com-
posed using a simple set of rubber
alphabet stamps "imported from Long
Beach". Kathy noted .
Zelltrbach Pa.per Company's induitrial
division pointed out the easiest route to
printing on the corrugated stock. The
"type" images were photographically
1tretched, the brown paper stock was
printed flat, and then pasted in the cor-
rugated fashion to "shrink" the stretched
type, Goings explained.
Despite the savings of the cover 111d
the in.side pages of recycled paper.
economy is not the only virtue of the
catalogue presentation.
1...&!it February, Kathy and
photographer r-.1ike Jones toyed with the
idea of adding a "human touch'' to thf!I
document that in past years ha5 been
cast in the usual stuffy, dignified format
expected or academic institutions.
Th e human touch, approved by
Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr., is a
tongue·in-cheek tourist's-eye view or the
campus through a series or typical
amateur camera buff snapshots.
Actually, Jones shot more than 400
frames of film using aophislicated. pr().
fessional equipment to provide the
humorous ahot.s . ·
"You have no idea how difficult it ls '"
make every photographic mistake in the
book," Jones said .
Weeks of planning for the one-day
"tour" of the campus by rour "models"
\1."ere necessary, Kathy noted. In all, tht
ent ire fogged film -chopped heads -
missed buildines folksy photo album took
only seven hours to shoot.
Selecting the few photo., actually used
In the book to break up the serious
departmental dissertations . took longer.
"The most dHficult decision ," Goings
s.;id, "was whteher or not to run the pic-
tures with captions."
One concern the catalogue producers
shared was how the book would be receiv-
ed . Brad Atwood, vice. chancellor for
public affairs said "commenU on the.
catalogue are running 95 percent
fa vorable ."
Now, the unoffici al concern is whether
the book will prove so popular that 1) a
reprinted edition might be necessary, or,
2) hi1h school students \\.'ill turn on to it
and waJ1t to atte11d UCI. Admissions for
the coming year a.lready are closed.
Laguna High Rise Vote
Approved by High Court
BULL ETIN
The CalHornlt Supreme Court today de-
fended the rf1ht of Lliuna Beach to bold
It& btgb rise elttdon and 1upported the
writ flied for the "Yes on Aaf. 3" com-
mittee by Art ,Colony attorney WUJlam
Wl!coitD.
Tbe court deDlect the Benaoa writ and
1upporkd the Fourth District Court of
Appeal rejection of Superior Court Jad11
J.E.T. "Ned" Rutltr'1 rulln1. 1ccord·
tn1 to Supreme Court Oerk Mark Tbomp-
•on.
"It wa1 a brief bearins," Tbomp1on
added, ''and I g6l tlle Supreme Coort'i
ruling Ju1t before nooa. The Ja1dce.a
we.re well 1ware of tlle lmmlnenct of the
LI gun a Beech e.ltlftion."
* ''Thi! case ls UllWIUal ?n that the pell·
lion tor a hearina wa~ received just a
wee:k before the election date," the
apokesman told thr: DAILY PILOT.
"Such petitions usually are handled on a
weekly basis at Wednesday conferences.
Attorney William Wilcoxe n, represen-
ting lhl!I propoDf'nts of the \nltlativa
ordinJnee lo limit building height in the
Art Colony to :16 reel or three ~torle.,,
ntw to San FrRncisco Wednelid11y to file
hls response In thl': h1test legal move to
ha lt the election.
On Monday, 11ttornl:YI for Laguna
reaHor Vern 1'1.t1:hntr, who filed the
&r!pnal Superior C-Ourt action to block
the election, llled the petition In tht Statf!
Supreme court 1eeJting to have the
Superior Court's order to cancel the elec·
tion upheld.
Su~rior Coort Judge J . E. T. "Ned"
Ruuer·a ruling In favor of Taschner's re-
quc,,t was overturned by the Fourth
District C.ourl of Appealll In San
Bem1rdlno. which ruled lhat validity of
the hlelght limit ordinance could be
decided after the election but the people
ahoold be given the right to have their
vote In lhe matter reeorded.
The appellate court clied a Staie
Supreme Court Mciaion in an earlier case
tn which it held that halting an election
would constitute • • I n to I er ab I e in·
lerference'' with the Je1i!lative process.
Wilcoxen 1ald before leaving for San
Francl11ro that he could not recall &n ln-
tt.allce In which the Supreme Court had
halted an election under ll Im 11 a r
circumstance.s.
Meanwhile routine preparations for I.he
Tuesday election conlinued In Laguna
Beach, where more than 8,000 sample
ballota already are in the han<b of voters.
Deputy City Cle rk Velma Ne.winger
said that 215 absentee bRllot applications
h1d been received by the Tuesday
de1dllne and noted that absenltt b1!10L'll
must be Jn the city clerk 's office by 5
p.m. Mond1y, to qualify for Inclusio n in
the tall y m1de after the polls close Tues·
day.
Tllursd•J, July 2', 14171 H OIJL Y PILOT «
County Removes Tainted Soup
Health Inspecwrs Zero In on Bon V·ivant
By ror-.1 BARLEY
01 tM O.lty f'l .. 1 1111t
Bon Vivant canned goods -and some
under several other labels -are coming
off the shelves to<l<1y in Orange Coast
stores and supermarkets just as fast as
Orange County Health Department in-
spectors can make their rounds of the
outlels.
But there may be many cans of the
foods condemned by the federal Foood
and Drug Administration tucked away on
housewives' shelves throughout the coun-
ty and in small grocery stores that have
overlooked the health department order
or have been overlooked by both county
and state inspectors.
"Ir you fi.nd it, get rid of it," \1.'a.tns
County Health Officer John Philp.
"Destroy il or send 1t back to the
manulacturer but, either way, get rid of
It."
Withdrawal of the affected foods has
been complicated by the fact that Bon Vi-
vant not only canned their own soups and
delicacies but canned products for other
companies and. on occasions, supplied
many homes with a personalized line of
canned gourmet foods .
The Bon Vlvant business got its death
blow last week when a New York state
man died of botulism poisoning shortly
after he and his wife consumed a can ot
Bon Vivant vichyssoiS't. The woman,
almost totally paralyzed, is still on the
hospital's critical list.
Bon Vivant this week filed ror
bankruptcy in an action that noted the
FDA demand that the firm recall pro-
ducts distributed under 34 labels -
among them Sey-Co, Van Nuys, Reese
Finer Foods . Los Angeles. S & W, San
Francisco, Rykoff and Hickory Farms in
sddition to private labels .
"But the last thing I want to do," Dr.
Philp said, "is promote hysteria about
this Bon Vivan! recall. We certainly want
them off the shelves but what we 11.re
primarily interested in as far as the other
labels are concerned are Uil!I vichys..win
and black bean soups.
"We've had no cases or poisoning in
Orange County," Dr. Philp !II.id. "And
people who read of this recall action by
us should be assured lhat this Is purely a
precautionary measure.''
This writer's shopping tour \Vednesday
failed to produce a single can of any of
the listed products but it did reveal the
determination of several shop managers
to whip off the shelves several canned
gourmet products that have not been
listed by health authorities.
'"We 've taken off the Bon Vivant line
And all the others we were warned
about." said Slee Brimt>r. manager or
.Jurgensen's, 2.'iO Broadway, Laguna
Beach. ''!don't want to be quoted on the
additional brands I've withdr;iwn but we
didn't take any chances here."
E\'erything listed by the heaHh depart-
ment is no longer available at Richard's
Lido Markel, 3433 ViA Lido, Newport
Beach, assistant manager Roger Lin·
derman seid.
'"We've had both county and state In·
spectors here and they're both satisfied
that we'v e taken all the affected brands
off our shelves," he sriid.
But the apparently prompt and
unanimous action by county distrihutors
of banned Bon Vivant delicacies does not
rule out the possibility that the firm's
products: may turn up years hence in
homeowners' food cupboards.
Former CBS news commentator Pete
Pringle stressed that poss ibility by
bringing to the DAILY PILOT offices
several cans of gourmet products, among
them Bon VJvan t ir;oups.
Several cans were in poor condition and
all were pulled from Mr;oi;. Pringle's
shelves al 160 S. Ba y Front, Balboa
Island . afler the concerned couple learn-
ed of thf! Bnn Vivant ban.
'"i\1any hoat ov;ners may have snme of
this stuff tucked away in their lockers."
Pringle pointed out. "It's the kind of stufr
thal ynu might keep on hand and an yone
with a boat -or. for that mailer,
\vithout one -should lake a close look at
hi!!: canned 11tuff im mediately."
r-.frs. Pringle raised ano!hcr factor lhal
h"s not been overlooked hy health
authorities -I.he door to door sales by
such firms RS the Sey-Co Company.
"They seemed to do a pretty fa ir
business in Newport and they left their
brochures at many homes. Including
mine." she said. "But I've cleared their
stuff from my shelves and ru be looking
Suspect Hunted
As 8 Infants
Badly Battered
HAMf\.f, Genn11ony (UPI) -Police 11ld
today they were looking for • young.
bearded man in the beating of el11ht
newborn babiell in the. maternity ward of
1 hospital last weekend.
Police said hospital employea saw the
man in the nun:ery Sunday moming. An
orderly saw him get on an elevator.
A spokesman for Evangelical Hospit al
said the babies 1uffered a variety of In-
juries ranging from broken arms to frac-
lured tkulls but that all were out l'lf
danger and would probably suffer no
permanent damage. They were all
younger than two weeks.
"These lnjur~ could have been In·
nlcted by t m811's flat," said Dr. Walt.e.r
Achenbach, director of the hospital.
"Whoever did thil! must have knocked the
bable~ out °'en broken their arms."
A nurse d!llCovered one child's injury
"'hen she noticed it! l'rm was twisted at
an odd angle.
An armed i'Jlrd has been 1tationed
l'IOU!lde the maternity ward.
to see if the local atores bave dorte the
11ame thing."
'J1le cans unearthed by the Prinales In-
clude gourmet meat balls. green pea
anup, tomato preserves ·and other pr().
ducts regarded by store man-iers aa
part of their luiury line.
AU wl!J be analyzed by Dr. Philp'!
laboratory a.nd lhe county's health chief
hopes to have the reaull.a of those tesb in
a few days.
~Mind )'t!U,'' be uid. "l don't re.ally
ttiink it's necessary. But we will anaJyze
this food and e!labll3h any trace ol
botulism or other bacteria that could prQoo
mote food poisoning.
"We want to be careful," he said. "But
we don't went people to panic and reeard
Nixon to Conclude Busy
Weekend n1 San Oemente
President Nixon will end 1 busy week·
end of 1peeches in the Midwest alld
California, for a brief visit to San Cle-
mente White HouSfl spokesmen said
Wednesday.
The Chief Executive -who had been
expected to return to the South Coast in
mid-August -has chosen to Oy to San
Clemente after speaking engagements in
Ohio, Iowa and San Francisco.
He Is expected to return to Washington,
D.C., either late Sunday or Monday.
On Friday, Mr. Niion will addrf:sl
pe.rsons attending a pro-football Hall~f
Fame dinner In Canion, Ohio. Then on
Saturday he will dedicate a $7l7·milllon
Rathbun Dam &t Ottumwa, Iowa. l"rom
here he will fly to San Francisco for
another spttch at Bohemian Grove -a
gathering of business and professional
leaders.
After the Saturday afternoon talk in the
Bay Area, the Chief Executive will board
Air Force. One for a flight to El Toro
MCAS. then board his helicopter for thl!I
short flight to San Clemente.
foods manufactured by people who have
never be1rd of Bon Vivant as prime CU"-
riers of botuli!m."
FDA Inspector Lionel Marl! confirmed
tha t Lit ts the al'm of his department to
sweep the affected product.! t1ff the
shelves with the "minimum of alarm to
housewives who may fear wholeaahw
poisoning by hundred.'! of perfectly
reputable gourmet produce specialists.
··Bon Vivant and certain soups canned
for other firms by the company are cer-
tainly banned," he said . "Shoppers should
certainly be on lhe alert frr the labels but
at this stage of the game it's highly
unlikely that Lhese product.s will be found
in the stores. ,,.A thorough check of the food 1he.lvei
al home ls just about the best advice wt
can give to the general public at this
time," Marks said. "As Dr. Philp said, if
you find it get rid of it fast and elim.inat.'
Lhe possibility that youngsters who have·
never heard of Bon Vivan! or the ban on
Its producl.s may eat the food ."
"Vichyssoise -made from a guarded
old French recifle. This creamy, deliclou!
soup may be. served hot or chilled •.. "'
reads the Bon Vivant label adorned with
a coat or arms.
A desperately ill woman in a New York·
hospital would agree that the creat might
justifiably be replaced today with. a 11rull
and crossbones. ·
Penneys Garden Shop
Specials
Your choice of Tam Juniper
or Japanese Black Pine
for evergre en beauty. ln one
gallon containers.
Hanging baskets planted with
Artillery Fern, Double Begonias
an d Plectranthus In 7Y4" pots.
Vince. Rosea (Peri ..
wlnklea) for garden
beauty. Assorted
colors. In 1 gallon
conta in ers. 77C
Bedding plant
1peclal. Choose
from Po rtulaca
and Zinnias. Aaeort•d
colors. In trays.
44c
•
177
Charge It at theae Penney stores :
llAN DIEGO MONTCLAIR
'
' ~ " ~.~~ .. ' . ~· . •'I"' . \. ' ..
~·
',,, ~"'' ~ ~ .:. •" .... ::-~'
Hollywood Jun iper. A very
artistic, dense, upright
growing juniper. In 5 gallo n
container. 4"
Fantastic water action ftberglas
cascade waterfall. 29" H x 211h." W
x 27" D. 1QQH
10 in. high x 10
ft. long expanding
border fence. In
whtta on ly. 2"
l\nn~111
CARLSBAD
NEWPORT BEACH
DOWNEY
RIVERSIDE
r
FASHION VAllEY•
. .
• ~.t:< .. >~:-.... -:, 1;)~ -· -• --~ .,.
1 • l
I
· 4 DAILY l'ILOT
\ l \ ~ps'
~~~~~
I
jProven Porno
• ! Irks Jurist
' ' . ' ,
l
By THOMAS MllllPBINE
l OF SEXY STUFF: r oeo by ....,
~reports that they're going to trial over ln
:westmirulter with • case that bu been
~described by law officen u the largest
~ 1ingle seizure of racy movies and .wt
: photol'I In the bi.story of Orange County. ' '$ To read the report.a, you art given to
~ believe this thing is even going to ec::lipee i the night Newport Police Cltiet Jim ' • Glavas closed down the Balboa Theatre.
during the s~nd showing o( the l5i::lo
~flick knovm. as, "l am CUriou8 -
~Yellow.''
i One of the interesting part.I of that ' ? Great Balboa Raid was that our Editor
~Tom Keevil had gone to the first ahow.
~He had just been curiou.s. Keevll was '° ' ~ enthralled by the sexy acamperinp on i the silver ICI'een _that he went IOund
: asleep about halfway into the goinpon.
HE DID AWAKEN, however, just at
:. the popcorn break in time to disappear
:-lnto the evening mi.st.. before all the
: lawmen charged into the pliice and down
:. the aisles.
:: Thus our leader ml5sed what certainly
::. would have been an interestJne con.
• frontation just 90Utb ti. the candy
: counter.
Anyway, I disagree. ne legal pro-
ceedings in the West Orange County
Municipal Court in the sexy film aelzure
case should make the Great Balboa Raid
' look like a meeting of the Rose Garden
• Auxiliary.
DISTRICT A1TORNEY Cecil Hicks
· alleges that the raid in Huntington Beach
resulted in confiscation of $500,000 worth
of films and photos that were deaUned to
be distributed to film loven all across
the United State.s. He also U!erfa it took
two truckloads to haul all the stuff away
for safe keeping.
Of course, whether or not all this ~l'.·
posed celluloid is too racy for public or
private consumptkin must yet be
determined by the court.
i Already the defense attorneys have
~ loudly and clearly proclaimed that the
M?izure was unconstitutional.
, ANYWAY, IT SHOULD be noted with
: some interest that the presidi1g jurist in
• the case Ill Municipal Judge Walter W.
' Charamza who, prior to his elevaUon to
the bench, served a11 Newport Beach city
, attorney.
-Among his lnllmates, Charamza ls
, known as a hale fellow well met, a nlce
· person, a Jover of good football and
regular guy. He cannot be claa.sifled a1
wme blue.nosed jurist He is, however,
: recognized 'as a devoted student of tht
• law.
IT lS AIM TRUE that Judge
Charamza is no stranger to cases
wherein pornography charge11 have been
lcx:l ged. He presided a few years back in
one where a Huntington B e a ch
storekeeper had been charged with sell.
ing dirty books. The case was somewhat
extended and followed very carefully In
the press. In the end. the poor fellow was
round guilty and Judge Otaramza threw
the maximum at him for his ttans--
gressions.
The current case, of course,fmust yet
be judged on its legal merits. But It ~
epparent that Judge Charami.a doem 't
care much for proven pornography.
I sure know the la.st thing I'd want to
be if standing before O:iaramza's bench.
Guilty, that's wbal
Th"1daJ, Ju~ 2', 1971
RELIEVED PARENTS CHECK WEIGHT LOSS OF SON , ~•••N
Mrs. Carolyn Dye, {left) and D•d Phillip (right) at Hospital
Instincts Saved Youth
Lost 11 Days in Wilds
CASPER, Wyo. (AP) -Reunited with
his mother after 10 days in the wilderness
of Wyoming's high country, young Kevin
Dye Said he was fine. "But then," she
gaid, "he always says fine."
The S.year-0ld boy'g physician said the
fact that the retarded and epileptic
youngster ls hyperactive probably enabl·
ed him to survive chill nights only on
water from mountain streams.
The youngster apparently played a
game of hide and seek with search teams
before his stamina gav.e out and he was
unable to CMtlnue fleeing would·be
rescuers. Search parties said he was seen
et least tw ice but when they went to the
spot he was gone.
He was found Wednesday lying near a
tiny stream 21h miles from the cabin of a
family friend where he was last seen July
!B
Two hours tater he w.as in a Casper
hospital, a bit scratched, a bit bruised
but too week to have lasted another 48
Wicks /~
'They say he's in here
every night rehearsing!'
hours in the open, hi11 physician, Dr.
Robert Fowler, said.
The boy is also a victim of aphasia,
which limits his ability to under.!iland and
use language.
"His doctor told us that If we went
about it genl!y, over a period of time we
might get some information from him,"
the youngster's mother, Carolyn Dye,
1a1d.
"I doubt U Kevin had any food,"
Fowler said. "He got water until 48 hours
ago when ht became so weak he was
Ullable to get a drink. He was a bit
dehydrated at the end and teJTibly gtarv·
ed ."
Several times during the 11earch there
were reports of small amounts of food
missing from campsites Bild cabins on
the mountain.
The doctor de scribed Kevin as hyperac·
tive and said the unusual endurance that
his constant activity has given him pro-
bably helped him survive nights on which
the temperature dipped to 35 degrees.
"I think Kevin was instinctual enough
to find a warm spot where the terrain
would maintain his body heat," Fowler
said.
"Kevin ceased being hyperactive as he
got more tired and this slowed him down.
I don't think there Is anything peculiar
about this boy's physical makeup ..• but
because of his great physical activity his
muscle lone and endurance were better
than most kids."
He said Kevin had lost lS of his 85
pounds.
During his 225-hour ordeal, Kevin
managed to elude thousands of vohmteer
searchers, Air Force and National Guard
helicopter crews, numerous tracking
dogs, and for most of three days som e of
the top rescue teams in the Western
gtates.
The boy was found by members of the
Rocky Mountain Rescue Group from
Boulder, Colo.
Nuclear Future 'Grim'
Declining American Str.ength Reported
LONDON (UPI) -The Soviet Union
will have the nuclear punch by the mid-
1970s to destroy virtually all American
lahd-based m.Wlle1 and bombers in one
11urpris. attack, the authoritative Janea
Fighting Ship< satll today.
It said this leaves America's 41 Polaris
Md Poseidon sumbarine~ as ''the most
survivable" U.S. strategic deterrent
forces for the foreseeable future .
The 1t'11·72 edition of Jane's painied
this grim picture of the declining
American and booming Soviet naval and
balli.sUc misaile .strength:
-The 1ize and relative capabilities of
the U.S. Navy.continue to decline "at an
alarming rate". 'Ille Soviet fleet now
represent.a "the lllper·na.vy of a super·
power."
-The Soviet Navy h8.!'1 already ex·
ceeded the United States in active
surface ship and 1ubmarine numbers. It
has near parity in nqclear submarine
strength and a larger nuclear submarine
building program.
-The only category of w.UShiIJ3 in
which the U.S. Navy now and for the near
future maintains a decisive advantage ia:
the aircraft carrier.
-The Soviets have gained .superiorlly
over the United States jn numbers of
Jntercontinental Ballistic Missiles and the
megatonnage that can be delivered. Cur-
rent Soviet con.struction ot six sub-
marines a year could give the Soviet
Union parity if not superiority in Polaris
type submarines by 1975.
"Soviet progress in the strategic
weapons area is of utmost concern to
U.S. defense leaders," Jane's i;aid
American Banks
'Directly Owned
By Underworld'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Senate sub.
committee probing crime has been told
by a witness some American banks are
"owned directly" by the organized
underworld.
Edward H. Wuensche told the Senate
Investigations subcommittee Wednesday
he had used such banks to obtain loans
totaling in the millions of dollars, putting
up stolen and counterfeit securities as
collateral.
Wuensche, who said he had been con.
victed four times of financial crimes,
said some bankJ are owned oulright by
mobsters while others cooperate with the
mob.
"From my own personal knowledge,
there are situations where the banks are
ov.11ed Indirectly by members of organiz-
ed crime," Wuensche said. "The persons
at the top front for them and they don't
make a move without consulting someone
else.''
Wuensche said bankers he waii directly
involved with "knew what was going on."
But in some cases, he said, he dealt with
loan officers, and top management of the
banks did not know what their loan of·
ricers were doing. Loan officers took a
i;tandard "cut" of 5 percent, be said.
\Vuensche referred to more than a
' dozen domestic and foreign banks in bis
prepared testimony, but named only
thr~. They were the Long Island Trust
Co. in New York, 'The First National
Bank or Miami and the Devon Bank of
Chicago.
But under queslioning, he named other
Chicago banks as involved in a
multimillion-dollar scheme engineered
through Devon wlth the help of Dr.
Sidney DeLove, whom Wuensche said
was president of the Cook County Federal
Savings and Loan As5ociation.
U.S . Air-backed
Cambodia Battle
Costly, to Reds
"because improved Guidance and Multi~
pie Warhead Tecti.nology (MIRV) could
permit the predicted Soviet strategic
forces of the rnitf..197tls to destroy
virtually all U.S. land~ed InternconJ
tinental Ballistic Mis11iles in a surprise
first-strike auack.
"Simultaneously, Soviet missile sub-
marines could deslroy most U.S. manned
bombers before they could become
airborne.
"Accordingly, the U.S. Navy's 41
Polaris-Poseidon a u b m a r i n es are
acknowledged as the most survivable
U.S. strategic deterrent forces for the
foreseeable future."
Jane's e11Umated cwrtnt Soviet Naval
111trength at 83 nuclear powered aubo
marines, 318 conventionally powered 1u1>-
marines, two helicopter carrier1. 26
cruisers lncludlng missile ships, 100
destroyers including missile armed
vessels, 130 small friga!e:f and eorvettwt
and oeary 800 smaller creft.
The U.S. Navy in 19'J2, Jane's said, will
have a force of 13 attack carriers conr
pared with 't6 three. year1 ago, three anti·
submarine carriers instead of six in 1969.
160 cruisers, frigates and destroyers in·
stead. or 2-40 in 1969 r..nd 93 attack 1ub-
marine.s compared with 103 in 1969.
U.S. E1avoy Arrives
ls1·aelis Say Fighter ·Jets
Needed To Break Impasse
By United Pres& l nternationa1
Israeli political sources said today
Assistant Secretary of State Joseph J.
Sisco "will have to pull something out or
the hat'' to break the Egyptian-lsraell
deadlock over reopening the Suez Canal.·
Sisco, who arrived in Israel Wednesday
and may stay 10 days, was scheduled to
meet today with U.S. officials In Tel Aviv
for a briefing on the Middle East crisis
against a backdrop of Egyptian plans to
stage a nationwide mock air raid alert
amid report.s of maximum security
preparedness.
The Jsraell newspaper Davar, often a
reflector of the ruling labor party's think.
lng, said unless Sisco brought U.S.
guarantees of further deliveries of F4
PhaRtom fighter·bombers as requested
by Israel "this would cloud'' his talks
with Israeli leaders.
Sisco "will have to pull something out
of the hat t.o break the current impasse in
discussions" aimed at reopening the
canal, blocked by Egypt during the 1967
Middle East war, the sources said. "We
must wait to see if he has any new ideas
from Egypt:"'
Sisco's mission. his second to Israel In
three months, follows a recent trip to
Cairo by two U.S. State Department of.
ficials who sought to break the stalemate
on the America11 initiative to reopen the
waternay -regarded as an interim Mid·
die East truce prior to permanent peace.
On the Arab front, President Anwar
Sadat of Egypt arrived in Libya today for
an Arab summit conference on the Jorda·
nian-Palestinian guerrilla crisis. Libyan
Premier Moammar Khadary who called
the conference embraced Sadat when he
left his plane at the former U.S. Wheelus
Air Force Base. However. Jess than half
of the -14-nation Arab league members
were expected to attend.
Khadafy sent cables to Arab leaders
last week c~lling for the summl\.to adopt
what he said would be a united\ 1.ance
against the "continuing liquidation b he.
Jordanian government against Pale
nian guerrillas." Jordanian for c e
virtually wiped out guerrilla strongholds
ed July 17.
Sisco was scheduled to meet Friday
north of Amman in a five day battle end·
with Israeli Prime 1-finisler Golda Meir
and Foreign Minister Abba Ehan. Israell
television said Sisco had brought a
message from President Nixon to Mn.
Meir but did not elaborate.
'!11~ arriv~I of the assistant secrel.ary
co1nc1ded with reports in Al Ahram that
Egypt would stage a countrywide mock·
air raid alert for the first time in month.I
today "to test the civil defense systein.'•
Egyptian armed forces were reported in
a state of maximum preparedness for
"expected events."
Israeli newspapers scoffed at the
reports, calling them moves to pressure
Sisco into wringing concessions from
Israel on the canal issue.
Numeiry Reports
011 Red Reaction
To Sudan Deaths
KHARTOUf\.f (UPI) -Pres 1 de" t
Jaafar Numeiry said today the reaction
of the Soviet press to the executic.n of 14
r ingleaders in last week's short-lived
Communist coup has slrained Sudan's
relations with eastern Europe.
"I de. not want any deterioration in our
relations with the Soviet Union and other
Socialist countries. but. if they want to
choose that path we will have no
alternative," Numelry said.
He referred to reports by Moscow's
'Tass News Agenc y and other Communist
outlets that called the execuLions "bloody
terror" and said "absolutely innocent
people" were being convicted.
Jn a news conference for foreign
newsmen, the husky army major general
said his government is investigating the
possibility of foreign involvement In the
coup, but that no proof had been foun d
that the Soviets assisted the plotters.
"I do not know whether the Soviet
nion was in volved or not ," he said.
!, until now, we have not found
evi ce that the Soviet Union had a
hand the recent events.''
Cool Wave Hits Midwest SAIGON (UPI) -·South Vietnamese
troops backed by fighter jets and U.S.
helicopter gunships killed 44 Communist
60ldiers today in day.Jong fjghting in
Scattered Showers Reported Over Much of U.S.
Cambodia, where a grivernment task
force Is sweeping an infiltration route in-.
to the Mekong Delta, military .spokesmen
gaid.
The U.S. command gaid today two
American helicopters were shot down in
the Deilta, and U.S. B52 bombers struck
North Vietnamese positions in the n<rth·
em part of So!Jth Viftnam, below tile
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
TNUltSDAY
S.Con!I hltll i :SI '""'' '~ S.Cond low • 1G:l.f J.m. Lt
.. Int llltll ,.,. , , • , , , .flOO t ,m, ' 1
Flrtl low ............. 1 ~00•."'· f ,(
IKOl'd Moll •.••...•.• , . J:d 1>,m. ...1 SKO<'ld low ,, , .• ,, , 11:001,m, 1,f
$un Ill-•:021.m. 1111 7:U•·"'·
Moon 111:1• 12:S1 jll.lfl. ''" 11: lS ~.m.
Temperatures
I )' IJNITID ,ltlll INTllNATIONAL
TM1!1"9••1v•• •I'd pr1Kl!>lllllon t1ble
fw • 2Ulour J>edDd tndlnt1 11 1 p.m.
PDT, 11 Pt-r.d bY tfM ll.$. WHlflet
lurteu 11 S..n F,..nclKo. The command said 13 Americans were
killed and 88 wounded in the Indochina
war last week and 11 others died of ac· :! !! :: cidents, illnesses and other non-combat Al"""'\ll'l'aUt
... "C.l'lott"
Al!t n!•
lhk ... 11'1tl(f
'°'" .......
Chltall'I
Clf!Clnnalt
C!....itM
"""~ Oeir<•ll
Fort Worth ·---ll'lllY"9llOllt
KtnMll City
L11V-1
LMA-tn
Miami Btotch
M!IW.lll>::H
M l,._Dt>lll
N-0..IN~
N""" Yor11 l'M!tdtlfl/llt
P"°'"nht
Pltts!)!Jr-.1!
Port!tlld
··~ Stc••m~t~
$t. LOlll•
Saltlo~J Cllv
5..,01-
~ .. Fr1Ml1«1
5<0MI 81rto1•1
s...1111 '"*•N WIWll"'IOll
Hl•ll Lew 'nc.
... •' causes. A Saigon spokesman said 29S 1;: ~~ government soldiers were killed last
1' "' week and placed the North Vietnamese
'" '1 '°' and Viet Cong toll at 1.389. u u .n
1e1 M f\,fore than 1,200 men of the 3,500-man
14 .st ·01 South Vietnamese infantry and annored IO J1 .OJ
11 n 1.Jt force sweeping through southeastern
'01 ;: Cambodia· were involved in today'• r, M "' fighting, 12 miles northwest of Svay
1~; ~ ·°' Rleng and just west of the Parrot's Beak
u " area.
M •i Field reports said U.S. AHi Cobra
~ f, gunship crews killed at least 15 Com·
.., n .1• munist soldiers In one engagement and
:: ~ South Vietnamese FS freedom fighter
101 ,tt jets laced into an estimated 400 North
~! .:: Vietnamese troops north of the Plain o(
10' .w Reeds. Eight North Vietnamese and Viet
: ~ .:t11 Cong were rep:>rtcd slain in the area
" Wednesday. ..
'' ,.
" " " v
"' There were no Immediate reporL'I of ~~ South Vietnamese cuualtiel in the
s• fighting, which luted lnto the h1.te af. .. a• temoon.
""' 1~ .. Royal Gero1aiuao
Wea.ring a parachute and a life jacket, Prince Cha rles walks to a plane
at the Royal Air Force parachute school. The prince took the 1200-
foot leap into the English Channel, becoming the Hrst of royalty to
do so.
·-· I ----r .~---•1\•')''\"!,'r -. ..· ... .--:=-·. )/! ....... --·
I
·I I
,I
> ,
Newport B 'eaeh
ED ITION
Today's Fl•al
N.Y. Stoeks
* VOL 6'1, NO. 180, 4 ,SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE . coul\lir, CALJ,bRNIA THURSDAY, JUtY 29, l97f TEN CENTS '
DAILY l"ILllT IMH P''-11
DREDGING ALREADY UNDER WAY FOR PROMONTORY BAY OFF BAYSIDE DR IVE
Plan• for HomU Here Already Approvtd; Ap1rtment1 on Bluff (Background) Await Heiring
Citizens Gii~d f 01· Battle
On Promontory Unit s
By L. PETER KR.IEG
01 tll• Dlolly "llolt St.IH
.. Residents surrounding the Irvine Com·
pa,ny'i proposed Promontory Point apart·
rlient 1-~t ~sting off lht!ir artiilel'y ~or
ai'IGthfir n s1ult ·on . the controvenial
pjOject.
,The Newporl Beadl City Council .Mon-
day nigHt will conduct a public hetrlng
on the $15 million. 536-unit bluff develop-
riumt that "ould overlook Balbot Island.
HOmeowners from the island ind neigh-
borint Beacon Bay and Irvine 'T't.rrace
have !!cheduled 11 mttting tonight at 8
o"clock in the home of Barton Beek to
otganize an attack on the projf!ct.
Thomas Houston, president ol the Bal-
boa Island Impro vement Association
{BllAJ predicted a standing-room-only
crowd 1for the 7:30 p.m. bearing in city
Badham Measure
On Woman Work
Hours Defeated
SA CRA~1ENTO (U Pll
Assembl yman Robert E, Badham IR-
Newport Be;.ichl. blames CaliforniA "s
''labor bosse<s " for the Assembly's ttiec·
tion of his bill to permit non·prole:ssional
wom en to work a four-day, 40-hour Wff.k .
The measure failed 1Nednesday on a 37·
~7 vote: and Badham said his bill wa~
strongly oppoie d hy the Teamsters
Union. Assembly Majority Leader Wal ter
Karabian 10-Monlerey Park), al.so said it
was opposed by the AFL-CIO. . .
Under present !aw. women working tn
llU.ch non.clerical fields as manufaaturing,
mercantile and dry cleaning legally can
work onl,y eight hours per da y unless.they
lire pa.id overtime wAges. U n d e r
~dham's bill, they would have been
pernrltted to voluntarily work 10 hours
per day during a four-day week.
"Th.ls would' be a good thini for tht
liberatiOfl of women," Badbam said, aCI.·
ding CAlifOrnian.s shookt -know tbl( ... the
fabor bosses of this stati refused to give
womell an opportunity to make a t::hoi~"
hall Monday, but said, as yet. the home-
OV.'11ers·h'ave no new testimony to offer.
They want single-family homes on the
30-acre tr act .
11\eir arguments revolving around den·
1ity Ind \taffic su~ in getting plan-
ing comm.lSsion rejection of the proposal
in itially, but when the Irvine Company
cul down the num.ber of uoils from l20
and added more open tpact, the apart.-
ments won a 4-3 ~doritement last month.
Becau5e the developer is seeking a
tone change, the final approval must
come from the council, however.
Councilmen sent an appeal from the
February rejection back tn the planner~
when company ofricials said they would
&cale tbe project.
l\'hile homeowners say they'll stick to
their earlier line or attack, Houston th.i11
moming said they have expanded their
manpower base.
Declining to gi ve any names, Houston
said tooilht's meeting will be: .attended
by "residents other than those in the
immediate ~" of the project but who
nevtf'theless "don't like to 5e.t large
developmenl3."
Houston figi.res the homeowners have a
fighting chalice of convincing tht! coonc1I
to ov~turn the planning comm is."lion.
"rd say our chances .11re ~50." Hou·
ston said, "it seems like a Jot or p:ralis·
roots efforts ha ve beef! successful rP·
centlv."
If 'the council approve,c; the propect .
residenLs have no further recourse e~et.pt
through the courL~.
Jame,c; E. Taylor. directn r '1f gf'ner.ll
pl!tnning admini.~t rat ion for thr Irvine
Company, said this morning. "A~ far a."I
Promontory Point is concerned, the city's
own master plan for the area has servtd
as our guide from !he outset . Thi! ha.~
nol only been helpful ta us. but we feel
it has been help!µ] to the public as well.
"The reason L! tha t the public Yiew
corridor!, park sites, parking areas, pe·
destrian walk! and bicycle paths ROW
Incorporated in the plan would not be
possible if the .pl"O!lerty were to be de-
vt!_oped 11 a llJlllfY nnri@..famlly home
complex, as some ptaple have urged.
"I frankly don'l know whether the
Irvine Company would care to be as-
sociated Yi.th any alternative land use."
Five Robbers
Thwarted
In New York
NEW YORK (U PI ) -Five rob bers
held up a bank and fltd with 12 hoal.agea
today belore one of thf. jW'lmen waJ kill~
ed and three olhera ~ptured i1 a ~
battle with police on upper Broadway.
"It was like an Old Wts1 shootout," a
police spokeaman said.
One ot the captured «unmen and 1
bystander were wounded in the exchange
of fire at Broadw.11y and 9:>th Street.
Police said they believed the one robber
who escaped also had been shot in tht
leg.
Police said four radio patrol car:; rush·
ed to the Bankers Trust Co. branch at
Broadway at 514\h Street at t :35 A.M. in
response to a bolduo alarm.
As the cars drew up in front of the
bank, an armed man peered out the bank
door, then retreated inl.ide. police said.
ShorUy after that five men left the bank,
herding 12 men aod women before them
as hostages.
At the 95th Street intersection all 12
hostages sudden ly dropped lo the rroand
and th e holdupmen opened fire. S"4en
policemen returned fire.
"It v.•as the m05t amazing thing," the
police spokes man said. "That M>rt of
thing jusl never happens. They all drop-
ped lo !he ground at once."
The bystander, shot in the hand . and
1he wounded robber were taken to the
Knickerbocker Hospita l. Poli ce said none
of the patrolmen or the hostages ap-
peared to be hurL
An undPtermined 11mount or motley
taken by the holdupmen wa s recovered
along with four guns. police said.
Lower Bay Ci tizen s
Council Will Meet .
A citizen's adviMry councll 16 the
Lower Newport Bay Civic District ~
mlttee will meet tonight at 7:10 in ;u..
Newport Beach City Hall to ooiltinue its
di9CUSsion of an ordinance cove.tin l
shoreline developmtnt.
Shown Door-Twice
Apollo Closes In
$17 Million Science Lab Poil;ed
SPACE CENTER. H°"'lon (UPll-Th•
ApOllo 15 astron1uts reached the outer
approaches to the moon with unening ae.
curacy loday and unveiled a $17 million
1cience. laboratciry in their spacecraft to
begin man's most r.rnbitious lunar ex·
ploralioo.
The cover or the eapecially equipped
laboratory was jettisoned in space a few
hours before tl\t three-man ship re.ached
the point to begin orblt of the moon,
preparatory to a landing on the surface
Friday.
All was · reported well by tht trio -
David JL Scott, Alfred M. Worden and
Secret Ballot
James B. lrwln -in their fourth day of
lht el1borate, 12-day mission.
The astronauts first corrected their
cou"rse with a precise rocket burst and
then triggered a string of explosives that
discarded the door to the laboratory
13.200 miles from the moon. ·
"We felt a llttJe shudder. but not too
much," Scott reported as the door fell
away.
This was an important, significant atep
ln the $445 mill ion mission. It opened up
the command ship's new moon mapping
cameras . .11nd radiation sensors.
The three American spacemen then
prepared their 107 .000 pow\d craft for its
Angry Hyde Ousted
From LAEC in Flap
By TOM BARLEY
01 lllt Dt l!Y l"llel l lttl
Los Alamitos Councilman Joe Hyde
was huslled out of his seat on the Local
Agency Formation Commission and
Assemblyman John Briggs lost local suir
port fo r his Harbor District dissolution
proposal Wednesd ay night in a stormy
Orange County Lea~ut of Cities meetina:.
Sfxtee.n of 25 Orange Counl y cities re ..
Jected the angry Hyde in a secret ballot
that app.11 rently left the way clear foc the
reeleclio,n to· the coveted LAFC post of
Ful~rton Couac.ilman Louia "~"
Reiol>'!fdl. !Sot r~od 11Dcy •• :-· ll.· I . Thl eoonty"1 mlyors, aiftint' W tht
a.ime meet.inf In Orange as the Le.ague'•
cjty selection cominittee, NI~ an tfet.
Uon for Aug. ll .afltr appontii\c Mll'~r
Ed Just of Fountain Valley A!l tht eom ..
mitlet'I chairman. Just also chair• tht
league meetings.
Reinhardt, who was immediately IC·
ctaed by Hyde of collwion with tht
Irvine Company, offered to delay tht 1uit
he filed last wee:t against 25 Oran1e
County mayors and the county board of
1upervlsor1 and which is scheduled for
hearing Au(. l2 ln Orange County
Superior Court.
That lawsuit challenges the \'&lidity of
(See LEAGUE, Pace !)
LOSES LA'C SEAT
Short·tim•r Hydt
Mansfield Mulls Backing
To Cut Lockheed Debate
"'ASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen a l 1
Democrati~ Leader Mike Mansfit ld came
out tentatively tod ay ln favor of &topping
A fil ibuster that . has been blocking a
Senalt vr11.e on legislation aimed at gtving
government backing lo a $250. vote on
legi:iilation aimed al giving government
backing to a $250 million loan to
Lockheed Aircraft Corp.
Mansfield 1tressed a key condilioii -
that the ruarantte in the bill be limited
In Loc:kbttd. The pending legialatlon
would allow up to $2 billion in federa l
guar111tee1 for loans to corporations
wboae collapat "outd have an adverae el·
fed. on the naUon'1 economy.
MaMfield has voted against tw6
previow attempt. this week to invoke lb•
Senate's debate-halting mechanism -lhe
cloture rule -but said he would go 1Jong
with !ht !h ir d such effort.
A-1ansfie!d made clear he s!ill was op-
posed to the Lockhw:f rescue plan but his
decision in favor of allowing the issue to
come to a vote appeared to enhance
chances by supporters of th e plan to gain
passage before Congress take! a month·
long recess starting Aug. 6.
L«klleed 1ays it will fall into
bankruptcy if the government guAraatee
is not forlhcmnln1 by Aug. a.
A cloture moUon Moiiday was fiYe
vote1 short of a majority, much less the
two-third majority required 'ltl invoke the
rul~. 1be supporters made substantial
galhs ln the next two days and got a 58-39
majority in the second effort Wedntsda y.
That wa.s 1even votes shy of the
necessary tw1>thlrd1 majority .
critical swing into orbit around tht moo1
at 4:06 p.m. EDT.
The astronauts wore spacesuits jull ln
case something wtnt wrong. But tbt
operation went smoothly and t b a
spacemen reported they ft!t far le11
:shock than exf>ected from jetttsonlnc of
the lab cover. The 5-by·llA foot pane.I
floated away from the spa~1hip.
Scott. the mission co m m a n d e r ,
reported to the ground :
"Jim's got it out his window and he'•
t!king pictures," referring to Irwin. "l{t
sayt it's slowly tumbling."
Trailing Apollo 15 by several thou.sand
(See APOLW, Pqe J>
•
Supervisors
Bear Down
On Budget
By JACK BROBACK
Of tllt C11llY ~Uel llltt
Orange County supervisors got down .to
the hard fact! of budget trimmina toda}'
after five days of listenini to department
beads state their cases for more money.
They are faced with a $244 million
general fund budget up $20 million from
1970.71 and showing a $12 million revenufl
deficit, equal to 30 cents on top of tbe
present $1.70 tai: r.11te.
The grand tot&l budget, \ncludinJ all
special district~ 1uch aa harbor, ftood
control, structural fire, etc., if ff70
million CQmpared with $231 million in
lfl0-71.
To ]nake lht task of cutting the budget
more difficult. the bo&td membVi must
decide tbe fate of $8.8 mlll ion in ~led
"policy matters" not included in tbl
budget.
They Include such 11ignUicant Items u
finishing the fourth floor of the crunty
jail, $1.S million : delayed bulldlni proj4
ects, $1.3 milliOfl : IIld emergency
employment program, $1 million and
refuse disposal equipment and land
purchase. $1.7 million.
Supervisors Wednesday looked at a
proposed $4.5 million capi tal project
program (new buildings, 1 d d It Ions.
remodeling) which Robert 'Thomas coon·
ty 1dm.inislr1tive offi~r said he had
trimmed from $17.4 million in requesll
from the various deopartments.
Principal e1penditure1 to e a c a pt
Thomas' bl ue pencil were the Harbor
D!strict Municipal Courts building, $.2Jl
million ; a down payment on a cmurty
re:fu.se disposaJ site north of San Juan
Capistrano, $500,000; ntw fire station•
and additions, $329.000 ; South Sant.a Ana
branch welfare, health and probation
departments. $1 million.
Thomas characterized the proposals
which he had cut by $13.2 mll\lon to the
"1 .5 million as "absolutely rock bottom."
Tn addition, $579.692 in 1970.71 projects
not completed bul budge ted last yur
were included to bri Rg the total to S5. 1
million.
Rents and leases will cost the county
$2.8 million in the current year, Thoma•
said.
Re-Creation and cultural activities e:r:·
penditures were also presented Wed·
nesday. largely composed of beaches and
regional parka.
The budget !"!commended tot!.la 118
million including Allch pro;ect.I •1 11.J
mlllSon for 1eqol111Uon of proposed Yarba
Park in the Santa. Ana River Canyon;
$775 ,000 for cOunty beach' development.
(Se.fl BUDGET,.P11e !)
or ... e
One Cipponent .was Assemblyman Yvon-
ne W. Jlrathwai\e (0.1.oa Angele.a ), who
asketl Badham~ "are you ' 1\.are, 'that
.some women h'ave to pickup the ir
childrer from nut"series and som1
l!usbands want their d~ on time?"
Aq>ther opponent, Assemblyman David
'A .• Roberti (0-Los AligeJes ). •aid
"Tti@re·• nothing voluntary about this
blU'i 'hf!cause employers wbo wanted
women to work J0· 1K>ur11 per .dly oou1d
coetU them intoidolDC It.
Marauder Strikes in Mesa
Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott
said he disliked the kind of arrangement
Mansfield demanded btjt said he would
not "stand in the way" if there w111
iienetal agreement It was I~ only way t&
a:et a bill passed before Congress t1ke1
Wea titer
' . . '.
Ak.itotle Ona1sis
' ' ' Upset at M81Tiag~
AntENS, Gretct (AP) -,Greiek a~i~
pin.I m11gnate Ariltollt C>l)USiJ . bu
dedintCf public comment on tht man'iagt
of biJ to-year-old daughter, Orisllna. to
a 47·ytar-o!d Hollywood real estite man ,
But an unidentified relative a&yt be wu
a ngry.
A 1pokum11n for OnassLI refused to ac-
cept que:sLlons for Onauls on the mar ..
riqe, 1aying he couldn 't be b.thered on
family 11iUalrs.
.• -.. _-------~ ·-... .,_ ... ~--....
By ~RTllUR II. VINSEL
., "" 09lity ,, • .., • ..,,
Cbatlle-~ Midniaht Mlrauder struck
twict In O»t.a Meaa ovem!&bl, bot.h
Um.ea at the amt apartment.·
Ht wu p:iljtely.ahown to the door about
ro)dnigtlt. tbe.n chased out • bedroom
window at 4':45 a.m., the occupanta toJd
PQlice.
The st:range•lnclden!s al the. Jack Shaw
ruidenct, JN2 Wallll~ Ave., are
marledly 1lmll1t to other weslllide ln-
cldentA in recenl months, although
Charlie's de.scrlpUon var lea.
Charlie the MK!night Ma.rauder, made
famowi in aonfby the old LlmeUtert tr io.
was a confu1ed 1uburbanlte who kept
enterina into the wrong tract house
becaUH they all looked alike.
Collta Mt11'1 Charlie seems 11im\111rl1
bewildered by 1partment un ii.,. but poliCfl
traditionally loi the incidents as burglary
1
and 1ttempted rape.
So far victims bavt been ahoc:Ud,1 but
Jll!\ier liam'ied .
Shaw tohi Officer David Brooka:·~
chasing OW-lie out a bedz'oi),rn window,
over a.fence and JoRna.hlm that the first
midnight visit wu considered··liccldental.
He -said the man slipped in the front
door. Uptoed among visiting rel.tiYtl
1l~n1 on the noor and wa1 horribly 1111·
bllrra~sed when confronted.
He repcrttdly s1kt ht had tne wron1
apartment and •was looklnl for Bud or
Jerry.
The Shaws finally retired; w!thou1 call·
Ing police. only to-have the Whole
household awakened again 1hortly btloN
dawn .
Thia Ume, O>arlle -or whattver h11
real 1\1.me ls ..,... Had .. dlrftbtid ,ln&o 1
bedroom window, crept under tht covert
11nd snuggled up to Mra. Daphne Shaw,
-------~
1ccordlni to the police report,
She w111leeplng aoJo and bad her hick
turned at the Ume. '° lhlnking h w1a Mr
buslw>d t ho l~ IQ P>' bis bead. , .
"lnllud o1 reeuni lht 1oni. 1h•11Y
balr and beard pl her hu1baf\d,' ab~ felt
1hort hllr and one or two days'. beard
growth," Officer Brooks wrote In ·hi•
n port.
"Jack!," 1he asked tentaUveJy.
No ,answer. .
"Jack? Jack ••• Jack .•• Jack!," the
called, IWlktnlng lht household.
"Mary, Mary, whJt'1 wroog! ••• •
Mra. Shaw quoted Charlie vlailor as
pleadlna ln •hocked tone1.
By lhll tlmt, her hu1blnd WIS headed
lot the bedroom 1rM1. errived jult Jn Ume
to follow Charlie ou1 the window and over
the bock l<ne<.
OfHcer Brooks recommended a
foUowup inve1Ua:ation by detectives.
tta month·long Vacation. . ,
Mansfield 1ald be Would not even votfl
for 1 t.ockheeck>nly loan "blll but 111d h"e
saw no reason the adminlatraUon would
not go •Jona •Ill> llmlllni l'""'leitsl11lon .. Lockheed. • r'
"1\dr .main 1.ni.reat .i, Lockbeod," ·~•
11id .. ''The olJ>er )I Juai vlla<lo\\' c1re ... ln1." .
The Senate's top cilUc of tht 1el1'1aljpn
•aid Lockhffd Would loN mllllon('",of
dOUart even "Ith tovemment help,
Sen. Willi1ln Proi:ntire (0-Wls.), bt·
stried ln the Conareulonal Record -the
dally pubUc1tion Tthlch r~dl ·°" goincs-on in the lfouse and Senate .:... ~a
thick report auaeklna l.c:lcltbeed~1 Trtatar
Jet project.
' 'Lockheed Is 1st.Inc the tovemmtnt to
b&'ck USO mill I-On In bank l°'11S It' l1 1eek· inl to Jt c1n bulJll the Trlttar, · 1 wide·
boil!O<l jct derlped lo 'carry, 400
pa111en1ers at near the speed ol sound. -
. Sunny 1klt11 are on the meriu
again for today and Friday with
higM along the beachea at 72, r11 ..
Ing lo 8! Inland. Lows tonlahl
around as degreeJ.
INSJDE TODAY
Governor Ronald llcogo.ra haa
_ittmfzed a widf varlet~ of leis••
Ctilifornia ta 1uf/1ring dtce to the
rBi! ttrike. He said tJte reault
could be dl.sa.ttrou1. Storu Pagt
9.
.11o-·-1--
Mlfhltl '""" • MtMNttl N"" I °'"'" t...w ,, .,,..... ,..,,., .
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•
I IWLV PILOT N
,.,....,. .. el
.APOLLO . • •
m.Uta at tbe Umt: ••• the apent taJt stage
~ the Saturn roent that iitarted the
abmnlut.s on lhe1r adventure Monday.
-Pd llWln ... --to 1""4
.. Ibo -.... ll'r1day ... -bouH after thti lunar module, FalCt1n, aeparat.u
rrom Endeavour, lhe: command ship,
leavtna Worden in lunar orbll
The lut stq;e of the Saturn was on 11
colllaion COW'st with a site at I.he centu
of the moon'& surface facing the earth,
impact w•s set ror lite Utis afternoon .
·1be Apollo lfl oe:ared the conclusion <i.
the voyage to t.hl!! moon with the cabin
looking Hke a house wile'1 laundry room.
It was the aftermath of a leaky drinking
water firlure thaL !Jle astronauts were
able to fU W"lth a \.\'rencb \\'edne-sda.y
ni&ht.
'The astronauts were aroused at 7:37
1.m. EDT from 11 good night's sleep with
the report: •·AU 1ystems norm.a.I."
Flight Director Glynn S. Lunney said or
the water leak. "wt! don't have any real
amcem about that at this time.
The tremor of the Impacting stage was
ta be measured by two moonquake
meters left behind by earlier Apollc
crews. Sclentl1ta hoped the nature of the
sub8urf1oe vibrations would tell more
about the moon 's makeup.
At 1:29 a.m., Apollo 1~·1 J.«S..million,
12-dly mi.sslon crossed the imaginary line
in space where the moon's gravitational
influence overpowers earth's and the
a1tronauts started speeding up toward
the moon. They were 39,000 miles aw~
at~ time.
Scott. Worden and Irwin were asltt:p by
then, resting up for the start of 11 record
1ix days of moon exploration.
Before retiring, Scott and Irwin
aiit.htred Into the landing craft Falcon for
a second time and found 1111 sy1tems
ready for the 6:15 p.m. landing Friday in
a moon ha.sin hemmed in on three sides
by mountains and flanked on the other by
1 deep gorge.
Scott and Irwin will spt!:nd a record !57
hours there. using the ir new moon buggy
to prowl .about 1111 11re1 almost as large at
Manhattan.
They will sperid 20 hours outside on the
surface, uplorinl the base of the moun·
ta.ins, the my.sterlous canyon, a set of
hills that may be &ncient volcanoes, a
stretch or flatland and 11 cluster ef
crate rs.
The mi!slon's lunar exp 111 rat l fl n ,
however. begins tonight when the
utronaul! 11t11rt taking pictures from
orbit. Then, at 8:14. p.m., Apollo 15 will
&woop down to within nine miles of the
moon, setting the landing craft up for
P'riday'1 final descent.
Rites Scheduled
For Former
CdM Resident
Memorial services wtll be held Aug . 3
\n Elk Grove for former Corona del Mar
resident Fern Jensen Gomke , who died
July 26 in S11cramento after a long il-
lness .
Mrs. Gomke wa.s born March 24 . 1922 in
Revillo, South Dakota. She w11s the wife
of the Rtv. Ed11o·in C. Gomke, who served
IS minister of Co rona del Mar Com·
munity hurch, Congregational, from July,
1.SS to Sept., 196.1.
Survivors include her husband: a son,
Ooualas, of San Francisco: her father
and mother, the Rev. and Mrs. Ernest
Jensen of South Dakota : a sister Esther
Dun ln South Dakota : and a brother
Sherwood in Texas.
Memorial services \\'ill be held 11t the
C.Ongregational Church in Elk Grove Aug.
3 at 11 a.m. lnurnment will be in Menno,
South Dakota, Aug. It
Friends wishing to honor the memory
of Mrs. Gomke may do so my making
c:ontribution.!i to the church building fund
ln Elk Grove.
DAILY PILOT
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•
DAil Y •t\.OT Slt tf P'llel•
--
~l
'Fence Mending'
Talks Weighed
By Tt:RRY COVll.J..E
Of "'"' iw-1+1 , ........ .,
Newport Beach and Cost& Mesa may
be ready for aome "fence mendin&" talk.!
over the Pacific Coast Freeway.
Costa Mesa Councilman Willard Jordan
11nd Newport Beach Councilman Llridsay
Par!Ons agrel!!d In 5eP<1rate interviews to-
day that the two cilie1 ought to dlacu.ss
mutual solutions lo tht freeway problem.
Such discussions may also include Hu n-
tingtoo Beach and l.aguna Beach.
Huntington officials ha.ve planMd a
mult.i-mUlion dollar downtown redevel&(>-
ment around fr@eway access.
Laguna resident! e1pect the cN sl
freeway lo relieve M>me of t.htir
downtown traffic jams.
"! Wtnl to 11et to1ether with evwyone, 11
ParSOM said . "May~ we v.·on·t 1elvt
anythlng, but wt .should at Jea1t talk."
SCOUT SHIP ARGUS STANDS OUT AMONG SMALLER CRAFT IN NEWPORT HARBOR
Old 01nl1h Kttch Being Racondlti ontd for 'Mlicltn' Voy19• Frld1 y
ParaoM said last w~k he felt Co.st.a
Mesa .. had snubbed" Newport Buch.
becaUlle of Its willingnes.s lo talk lo
Laguna Reach and Hu"htington Beach.
over the freeway.
"I said that becall.$e three or four
weeb ago l suggested to Jordan that we
meet for discussion on this frteway Issue.
He never replied," Parsons aaid today.
"I'm still willing to talk with them ."
Job Search
May Cost Arm
For Mexican
Hold On Argus
Sc outs Agree to $40,000 Price
TM sleek, black Dani.sh freighter, Its
masll'I piercing the sky, seems out of
place anchored among the dinghies and
small sailboats bobbing at the "''estern
end ol Newport Harbor.
"Argus ,'' cryptically pa inted in gold on
the side of its weather-beaten hull , fails
to convey its countless ocean voyages.
And the 69 feet ot simple design give
just 85 few hints to why I.ht Orange
County Boy Scout Council. although
without funds themselves. has a\re!ldy
agrttd to pay the $40.000 asking price.
After failing to find conl.ribuklrs prior
to the purcha5e, the Boy Scout Council
wen t ahead anyway, signing a purchase
agreement for the 50-year-o\d ketch.
They did so ln ord~r to "not lose the
opportunlt'y to have it." said Maury
Hoag, dirtctor or special events for the
Scouts.
Now moored at the Sea Scout hue Jwt
east of the Arche!, the Argu!I ha! been
undergoing much reconstruction to mett
Coast Guard requirements. l l is eIJ>@<:led
to start making regular cruises in
August.
With bertJu for 25 boys, it is tentatively
scheduled to Tn.'lke both weekttd and
week-long cruises up and down the coast
from San Diego to Santa Barbara, Hoag
said. ·
Meanwhile, the Boy Scout C:Ouncil is
i;;till seeking methods of payment, mainly
through r~uests for cootributions from
any interested parl.ie!I.
The ex-freighter will m&ke. I t s
"mai~n" voyage as a peopl@-carrier F'ri-
day at 4:30 p.m. when it sets out for the
nev•ly-of)f!ned Dana Point Harbor 11o'ilh
Scouts on board.
Eventually, Hoag estimates, from 1.200
t.o 1,500 boys annually will sail aboard the
ship.
Newport Attempts Again
To Issue Curve .Warning
Newport Be11cb hi.! done ju,,t 11bout
~f!r)'thing It can to tell motorltta they're
go!N; to kill somebody -qu.ite likely
~Ives -if they don't slow down
aJoni Irvine Avenue.
There's a dahgeroua curve just 1outh of
Santa Is11bel and City Tralfic Engineer
Robe.rt Jaffe s11y1 he'11 about at hl11 wit!
end trying to find a way t.o convince pe<>-
ple of it.
When gimple, but standard, warning
algM didn't work, Jaffe last fall had a
special 16 square foot s\Wt degigned t.o
place in the median announcing the 35
miles per hour speed limit and waming
of the sharp bends ahe11d.
"lt apparently contributed n o
measurable benefit Insofar as slowing the
BUDGET. • •
and SL! million for parks development.
Cut by Thomas from an accumulttive
capital outl•Y program. presented hy
Director of Htrhors. Beaches and Parks
Kenneth Sampson were projects totalling
Sl :17 million.
Included were acquisition of land for a
Chiquita Plats Park on Ortega HighwAy,
$500.000: Villa Park D11m Park develop-
ment. $500.000 and fullf'rton Dam Park
developmen!, $300.000.
Approved by Thomas v.·ere Villa Park
it cquisition, $400.000; Yorba Pa rk ac-
quisition. SJ.3 million: Mile Square Pa rk
development. $262.900. University Park
developmerit, S8B4.000 : Laguna Nigu el
Park developmerit, $650,000.
Sampson plugged for reinstaltmt.nt of
the Chiquita Flats. Fullerton Dam and
Vill11 Park deve lopment fund l!.
He said that his department wts r@-
questina S7 million for parks ; SI million
or parks operation. and $6.t million for
belches. The litter u·ould be In the
Harbor Oislrict budget under a separate
tax rate.
Sampson said the estimated cost of the
Niguel beach (SI.It Creek\ purchase from
AVCO Community Deve\operA w111 $2 7
million. He said the H11rhor District com-
missioners were willing to place thlll el·
penditure In the district bud1et.
Soviet Refugee
Plane Crashes
CALCUTTA CAP) -A Soviet
turboprop Lr1Mport pl1ne crathed in
flames today at Calcutt.a Airport in 1 tor-
rential monsoon rain 11fte.r ferrying 100
E1&t Pakistani refugees to centrtl lndia.
Airport orflclalll st id 1111 teven pe:r!OM
aboard -five Ru11sian crtW members.
an Ind.ian air force pllot, and a local In·
dian rtlief official -mlrt1culous ly
escaped from the n1mlng llt'Te<:keje.
Witne~"! s1id I.ht plane approached
the main runway with ill left wing
1abla l.e. overshot tht 1\ntrlp and cra.s~.
breaking In two.
tveryone aboard 1cr1mbled out ot the
plarie. o!fici1ls .11ald, Md the fire was el·
tingu ished within 30 minutes
:::::-. -_, . : .~\;
pact of traHic," Jaffe said.
So now, the city bu ln!t.alled &till
1nother devk:e. this one with blinking
yellow light! warning of the hawd.
Jaffe isn't countlng on it doing much
good, though.
"On the basis of pa.st observations," he
.1111.id, "only the mo!t optimi.stic or w
could hope for any great ch11nge In the
drivers' approach to this problem ares as
the result of this installal\on."
He explained that speed 51.udies show
the operating speeds through the curvea
"remains unchanged " since the big sign
want up.
He poinh~d out a sign of th t t size in a
residential area should hive the impact
to cut the speeds.
One big reason it doesn't. he observes .
Is the apparen t existence of a general
road-sign credibility gap.
··People just don·1 believe that ifs
dangerous to drive 50 miles per hour
""·hen a speed li mit sign says 40 miles per
hour," J affe said.
J affee said \\·hile much of I.he bl11me
lies with this lack t:il conf"ldence in the
limits decreed by city and state tr11fhc
engineers. soml!! of il rests with o~ercon
fidence of many driver~ in th eir own
ability.
A lot also has t& do with youth and
alcohol. he 511id.
Spe11kin g of the Irvin!" curve. ,Jaffe
~aid. "analysis indict tes the typical ac-
cident involves a young male dr iver,
famillar with the road. driving a Porsche
or Volkswagen, and attemptin g lo
negotiate the curves at loo high • speed,
t1ften after having bttn drinking."·
Jaffe said while .still Another measure
taken recently, the installation of
brighter street lights. hu h e l p e d
somewh1l, the.re bas hffn no significant
chanie in the total number of accident!
in th1t streU:h.
Jaffe 5a.id the city could probably make
a major expenditure and redesign the en-
tire stretch to reduce the danger.
That. in effect. would be protecling
pt"Ople from themselves.
,J affe said he's alread y asked for
prtliminary engineering studie.s tc do just
that.
Injured Ofj4cer
Has Operation
A policeman who suffered a brokLn
no.w in a bloody •truule with 1 Newport
&:ach bar patron wu b1ck tn the
hospital Wedne.!day, after his earlier
rt.lease .
Patrolman Lee Roberts returned to
Hoag. ~1Miort1I Hospital Wedntaday
night 11nd underwent surgery. •Ith
discharge AChedull!!d this morntn1.
R()nald Newslllter. 32. of 2218 West
Oce an Front , w11!1 srresttd and booked on
11 felony charge of assault on a police of-
ficer 1fter allegedly .slugglng Roberta
11o·t1hout provoc•tion.
Robe rn and his partner, OfflN!r
Michael Sullivan. bnlh lost uniform! rui,...
td by profuse bletdin(I: in aubdulng
New.staltr At The Beach Ball taV!m.
near the mspect.:1 home.
. -·-. -I I I 1 __ r
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From P119fl 1
LEAGUE ...
the election which owited Jteoinhardt Md
g11ve Hyde th@ LAFC post and contends
that several of the vote.s ca5t in I.he 13 to
12 cliff hanger last July 8 were cast ii·
legally for persons who were not present.
Reinhard,! refused to comment on the
Jawsuifs .status if he fails to win reelec-
tion to the LAFC po.st. His spot on the
LAFC board and in the group 's chair wa.s
taken Wedaesday afternoon for the firs t
lime by Hyde just ii lr hours before the
league dumped him.
Hyde refused to allo w the league to
further debate his dismi3sal from the
LAF'C post after the 16 to 9 vote wat
recorded.
"[ do not intend to prolong lhis
discu.ssion and I vacate the post," M
said.
•·J resent Hyde's remark about the
Irvine Company," Reinhardt told the
league in a brief addre!s, "As God is my
witness. no one from the Irvine Company
has ever contacted me."
Water Board's
Meet Date Se t
A typographical pr inting error on date
of a California Regional Water Quality
Control Board hearing on coastal
estuaries Aug. 12 incorrectly 11et it on a
Sunday 11 dayt earlier.
The digit 2 v.·as riropped in announcing
the session by the Santa Anil Region
panel Thursday, Aug. 12 at 9:30 a.m. in
Room 178 of the UC! Humanities
Building.
The public is invited lo attend and
parlicipat.e in review of existing or pot.en-
tial water problems 11ffecting Anaheim,
Sunset, Bols a c.rid t-.'ewport bays.
Jordan said he didn't realize that
PaMIOns had expected a call from him.
"We never mea nt to snub Newport
Beach. We ce rtainly Wflnl to keep our
clo.~e relationship going."
'ltie Costa Mesa Council man also said
Newport was not invited lo the meeting
ol the other three cities last Friday
becal1Se ••JI! freewa y position 1s quite
cleflr."
Each councilman heads a three-man in-
ter-city relations committee which has
traditionally discussed problems between
the two h&"bor area communities.
"We're still more than happy to work
with Newport Beach for a solution to !hi!
aerious problem," Jordan repeated.
"\.\'e have to talk," explained Parsons.
''If we build 11 fence between us, no one
will know what the other guy is doing ."
P~rsons said the only alternative so far
to a freeway through Newport Beach was
the one offered hy Cost3 M I' s a
Councilman \\'illiam St. Clair.
St. Clair has sugges ted that the pro-
posed Pacific Coast Freeway be con·
nected at the Santa Ana Hiver mouth lo
an extension of the Newport Freeway,
continued !hrough Costa Mesa'! part of
the proposed Corona del Mar Freeway
and C?J"ried south to Laguna Beach.
llis idea \\'ould miss nearly all of
Nev.·por~each, while theoretically keep-
ing a roast.al freeway intact.
"He's the first man I've seen so far
v.tw has come up with any kind of a plan.
Thl!!re may be other solutions, and I'd like
lo see them." Parsons said.
Jordan w2.s less ehthusiaslk about SL
Clair '11 proposal. "Ile has a right to his
opinion, but freeway designs are not up to
us. Our city staff is checking hi! plan
now."
Besides the fence mending v.·hich may
~et underway with Costa Mesa, Parsons
said he also plans to contact Huntington
Beach and Laguni\ Beach.
"I've already told Councilman Donald
Shipley I'd like to meet wilh hill Hun-
tington Beach people to d i 11 cu A 1
alternatives," Parson5 ~aid. "And I plan
to call Mayor Ri chard Goldberg or
Laguna for similar talk.s ."
a
9UEEN SIZE
A Mexican National'• attempt to find
work in the United State! might c081 him
an arm authorities said tcday.
Juan Perez, 21 , whe> was found at San
Onofre Bluffs State Park Monday, guf.
feiing from a rattlesnake bile, remained
in Orange County Medical Center today·
In "only fair condition," nurses 1aid. Hi1
right arm received extensive time
damage from the veno m.
The illegal immigrant was bitten by a
1nake before dawn 1'1onday as ht hiked
along the slope! or San Onofre Bluff.s
State Park to evade a Border Patrol
checkpoint.
By the time help arrived to the ml.ti he
had gone into shock from 11 full dose of
venom in his right forearm.
Aut horities quoted Perez as sa}•ing he
had been v.•alking for th ree day11 after
crossing the border. At .~ome point in the
predawn hours he V.'aS bitten by the viper
and af\empted to apply a tourniquet
himself and tried lo make cuts neM I.ha
fang marks.
Perez finally received help v.'hen he
alerted operators of a concession st and at
the new stale park . Workers then notifi@d
border patrolmen and called for an am-
bulance.
Spokesmen for the Oceanside office of
the patrol said \hey have been told Perea
might lose the arm .
They added that the victim would re-
main at the medical centtr for treat-
ment. When he is relea.sed, standard pro-
cedures for ill egal eritry will prevail .
·•He'll be dtported,·' said tb t
Epokesman.
Weapons Hunt Slated
SANT A CRUZ f UPI 1 -A complet.a
survey of the area surrounding a Na·
tional Guard armory is under way in a!'I
effort to recover 50 pistnls, 20 machine
guns and a grenade launcher that Wt!:rt
st.ol en there last weeke nd.
• F.ULL SIZE
NOW s299 OH i
Wiil
ONLY
• "'--""f C•!Olf9~• Mf• .... .., •/ftfllt _., ....,..... -
• A wlda .. 1-.tlH af f1brlct ""' C•l•PI
t.clHtoH tt.111,
• l......W. Md _.. INt cnlll•M.
Your faooriU inUrior cUiigMr will be happ11 to 011Ut 11ou , ••
H.J.GARRETT fURNl-pJRE
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
' ')' .. _. •. 6 .
_J_ ,.._ .
22 1S HAR!OR ILVD.
COSTA MESA, CALI F .
6 .. 6.0275 6 .. 6.0276
i .ft ....
I
..
Cosia Mesa . -
•
EDM'ION
'
voe. "4, NO. 180, 4 SECTJONS, ....... i>ASES
OAILY 'IL.OT Steff l"tl9'9
CMCWD'S SCHEAFER LOOKS OUT OVER SAN JOAQUIN RESERVOIR ABOVE NEWPORT BEACH
Cost• Mes• Water Diftrict Shires Bill ion Gillon Facility With Other Aganci•s
Mesans Used 4.3 Billion
Gallons of Water in Year
By TERRY COVILLE
Of ,.., 1)9ff'I' ..... , ti.ff
Daring lillcal 1970-71 the Colt.a Mesa
County Waler District rCMCWD ) poured
13.337 Acre fMt of water through it3
pipeline!!. or more than 4.3 billion gallons.
Translalt<l tn common terms. that
would fill 290 ·~Uioo blth tubs ..
,,,. district, fonn<d lit 11111 with the
muaer Qf four older water diltrictll, is •
$%million annual busine53. lt hu 1MI con.
nection with Cost.I Mesa city 11ovem-
ment, e.s:~pl for 1156 monthly rental for
office iipace at city hall.
TL, job ill tn supply the total water
needJ for 75 percent of Cost.a Mesa -
Santa Ana Height, Waler District cover!'!
tM other portion -and Orange County
Airport.
Most of the lap waler Joc11l re!lidenl,
u.se ill stored at lhe San Joaquin
Reservoir. a one billion gallon fadlitY i.rl
ttle. hills aOOvt Newport Beach.
"We share it with ihe Metropolitan
Work on Sewer
Will Interrupt
Mesa Traffic
'
'TrRfflr will bt intl!rrupled on f1vf! CMt.a
Mesa street .. frnm now through mid·
Ocl.ober whilt wnrk Crl!WS install tM
MM!! \'erde st.nrm drain .
City engineers !!aid Cinnamon Avenue,
C1raway Drive. Mt!.5il Avenue. Royal
Palm Orlvl! 1tnd Baker Street helween
LAbrador Orivl! Md Royal Palm Drivt
will be affected .
Traffic will be allowed rMlricted USI! of
thole streets during con:i1truc:tion and at
variou.! timu one or morl! of the stretL"
may be cklsed. engineers siticl. Drivers
are urg~ to UM other streeU.
1k Chlvas Construction C',ompany won
the contract for the stDrm drain with •
low bid of. '312,725.75. Work is upe~ lo
i,e nrlJshed by <kL 20.
Wit.er Di!!tricl (MWD ) and lhe lrvlnf!
Ranch W1ter Distrlcl.'' say!! Conrad
"Shorty" Scheafer. public relation!! direc-
tor for the Costa Me!tt di!tricl.
Sdleafer often guidt!.5 housewives ,
busines1rTien and anyone else interested
in the district, around lhe main facilities.
Besides the office at city hall, and th!! r~ir, the district ha1 its corporation
yard lt lJ71 P1acentl1 Ave.. and a brand
new wtn, its first. on Sunflower Avenue .
near Fairview Road.
District official.1 ju!l began pumping
water from the 600-foot deep well two
weeb ago. It proved to be quite a find
for the district.
··That wl!IJ can supply us wilh sibout 25
percent of our water needs,'' explain~
Schearer. "And It he!! oo ba cterisi counl
and is t.wi~ as so ft 8!! MWD water ...
Women (and bachelnrs ) can appreeiare
the sofer water when they do the laundry,
it need~ less soap. ll also tastes helter,
says Schealer. A long term advanlajl! of the well is
water cost. it will bt cheaper thsin MWO
water brought in from the Co lorado
River.
When ttte district bought 11.ll of it~
water from the MWD in 1V71J.-71. lt spenl
1635.000. The rost wa~ M9 an sere fool.
This year the price has already jumpt"d
to S5.'\ an ecrP fool and is expected 10
climb over the nexl few years
Ray Wallace. manager of !hP Cosl.:i
Mesa district, estimated the co!!t of the
well wat er at $28 11n 11crt loot.
11 that well continue.~ to pump •.~ well
1111 it has this far, anothpr will bP drillerl
in Hl72 and a third in 197:1. Wall.:ice s;iid.
"Eventually we plan tn supply about 40
percent of our waler need~ th rough th!!
wells." hi! added.
Even though the MWD w.:itf'r continues
t.o rise in price, the Costa Mesa District
was able to drop it.~ tax r;itt. entirely thi~
year, the first timl! that has been possi·
ble.
The highest tax ratp was 211 cents per
$100 assessed valuatkln in 1960. when the
CMCWD wai; formed. The lax rate has
steadily declined. "This year we can
operate lottl.lly from our water billing
revenue ," Wallace said.
Water bills, of course. h.ave 11one up
(SH WATER, Pa1e 1)
Five Robbers
Thwarted
In New York
NEW \'ORK (U PI) -Five robber!!
held up a bank and fled with l2 hostages
today before one cf thl! gunmf!n was kill-
ed and three others captured in a gun-
batlle with police on upper Broadw1y.
"Tl was like an Old West shootout.·• a
police 1pokesman ~ , • ll .. y l One of the ea(lfut'id iunmen am •
byslander were wounded in the e~aiange
of fire al Broadway ind 9Slh Street
Police did the}'. believed the one robber
who estaped .1.!so bad been shot in tbe
leg.
Police said four radio pa trol cars rush-
ed lO the Banker!! Trust Co. branch ;it
Broadway et "4th Strel!t at 9:35 A.M. in
response lo a holdUJ> alarm.
As the cars drew up in fronl of the
bank, an armed man peert!d out the bank
door, then retreated inside. police said.
Shortly after that five men left thl! bank,
herding 12 men and women before them
as ho,,taae:i.
Al the gsth Street inlersection 111 12
hostages suddenly dropped to the ground
And the holdupmen opened fire . Seven
policemen returned f1rt .
"Tl was the most amaziiig thing:· the
pohce spokesman !!aid. "That !!Ort n(
thing just never happens. They all drop-
ped to the ground at ooct.,.
The hysl<!nder. shot in lhe hand, and
the wounded robber were taken to the
Knickerbocker Hospital . Police said nonf!
of tht patrolmen or t.he hostage!! ap-
peared to be hurt .
An undete;rmined amount nf nmnty
talc~ by the holdupmen wa~ recovl!Tf!d
along with four guns . police said.
Ruh in lo Tour Chile
CHICAGO ~AP) -The way ii clear fnr
.Jerry Rubin. onf! of five person!! free on
bond pending appe1l of conviction!! in th!!
Olicago riot lria1. to travel to Chile for
rese.arth on a baok fln youth culture.
The; 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal.~
g~anted Rubin permlS.'!lon Wednesday t&
travel outside er \he country.
~t ol tht: project is sharl!d by the city « Ool!'a Mesa , using_ gas ta:r fund!!. and
the Orante Count)( , Flood C.OOtrol
Dl>bict. Shown Door-Twice
\ .....
Today'• Flul
,
N.Y. Steeb
TEN CENTS
• Ill Apollo Orbit
Rocket Blast Clenches Lunar Grip
SPACE CENTf.R, HCIU!!ton (UP!l -
The Apollo IS ~stronauts, firing their
ma.in spacecraft engine partly by hand,
blasted into lunar orbit Thursday to begin
a rich, six-day hz.rv~t of secrets held by
lh!! moon for ilillions or yea rs.
Behind the moon and oul of touch with
earth. David R. Scott, James B. Jrw in
and Alfred M. Worden braked lheir
Endeavour C-Ominand ship with a rock et
"burn" that began al 1:06 p.m. PDT and
lasted nearly ~even minutes.
The firing slowed Apollo 15 down lO a
litUe more than 2.000 miles an hour Md
put the astronauts into a path looping
Secret Ballot
between 67 ind 195 miles above the
cratered lunar surface. A litUe more than
four hours later, they planned to fire a
longer burst and si,1.·oop down lO a
minimum altitude of nine mile!!.
On Friday, Scott and Irwin will crawl
into the lune.r lander falcon and begin
thl!ir Jong-awaited descent lo a 1maJI
valley ringed on lhree sides by ruiged
mountain!! and flaked by I mile.wide
cha!!m. Touchdown is scheduled for f : t~
p.m. EDT Friday .
-AlmO!t immediately after entering
lunar orbit, the Apollo 15 trio set about
conducting the most extensive and co..5lly
Angry Hyde Ousted
From LAFC in Flap
By TOM BARLEY
Of lllt Dolltp ~11111 Sii i!
Lo.5 Alamito!! Councilman Joe Hyde
was hustled oul of his seat on the Local
Agency Formation Commission and Assemb~~11n John Briggs lost locaJ sup-
port for his Harbor District dissolution
proposal Wednesday night in a stormy
Ora.nge County League of Cities meeting.
Sixteen of 25 Orange County cities re·
]l!Cled thl! angry Hyde in a .secret ballot
that apparently lefl lhl! >¥ay clear for lhe
reelection to the coveted LAFC pofll of
F~Jerton Councilman Louis "Red''
Reinhardt. ! See rl!lated story. page 13.)
The county·1 mayor!!. sitting at the
ume meeting in Orange 83 the IA:ague'1
city selection committee. called AP eJec>
!iOO for 4ui. ~ ·olkr aJ>llmlloi, May" 'U Just Of Founiatn VaileY a.; -fhe com·
mittef:'!! chairman. Just also chairs the
league meetings.
Re.lnhardt, who Wl.1!1 · immediately ac.
cused by Hyde of collusion with ~
Jrvlne; Company, offered to delay the s t
he filed last wee:C against 25 Oran e
County mayors and lhe county board of
supervisors and which is 11cheduJed fo;
hearing Aug. 12 in Orange County
Su perior Court.
That la wsuit challenges the validity of
IStt LEAGUE. Page ZJ
LOSES LAFC .SEAT
Short·tim1r Hyde
Fire, Communications
Workers Balk on Pay Pact
Coota Me!!a '3 83 firemen and 14 com-
municalions workers have failed to rl!ach
an agreement v"ith the city over salary
increases for 1971-~1.
Last week the city council 11el new
:i1Rlaries fnr 500 city workers, including
policemen , but left the fire and com·
munication scalr.s open for further talks.
"They don'l seem to be in 1ny hu1Ty,
Ml negotiation!! are still open," Ro~rl
Duggan, aS.'!ist.ant city manager, ex·
plaine(I.
The city offered a five percent increase
for baJic firemen and 2.S percent for
those above thl! basic rink, but th'!
f'lremen·s Associatioo is asking for a 10
percent Increase.
Communicalion workers are asking for
10 to 13.~ percent wage inereases, while
the Qty offered 2.5 percent to electronics
technicians and nolhlni to superviaors.
'!'he city'!! 17 dl!partmenl heads are also
up in the air over salaries. City Manager
f'red Sors11bal has not. made any recom.
mendations yet, and the department
heads haven"t made their request.! public .
Duggan said thP city council may
discuss deparrment head salaries at Mon-
day nigtit's CTJuncil session.
The salaries lh11l were granted !a~l
week ranged from no raise lo 2.5 percent.
five percenl and 7.5 percent rai.ses.
Policemen were given fivl! percent in-
creases. Most other city employes got 2.5
pe~cent. Only rour workers -two com·
puter programmers, an accounl<lnt and
an accounting supervisor -won 7.5 per-
cent increases.
The total ulary grant.! add up te
$100,000.
One group granted salary increases
wa1n'l tot.folly happy. The city Employe.s'
Association agreed to take the 2.5 percent
raise!!, 'but let fhe city lmflw It wun·t
llli!!fied.
studies ever made of the moon. They U ·
tended a 2>foot·long boom from the rur
of the !pace.ship to examine the com·
position of the lunu crust below by
measuring the radiation it reflected.
Several hours earlier, the astronauts
jettisoned a structural steeJ door from a
$17 million cluster of camera and
sensors in a side bay of the Endeavour'•
service module. lnstrumentl on tht
ground in Houston recorded a "&ood,
healthy jolt," but Scott reported a "vPr'j
minor" .<1hudder.
As the moon grew closer to tbtm
tSee. APOLLO, Pace Z)
Supervisors
Bear Down
On Budget
By JACK BROBACK
Of Tiii DtllJ ~1191 S"tl
Orange County supervisor!! got down to
the hard facts of budget trlmmlhi today
after live days of listening to department
heads state their cases for more money.
They .are faced with a $244 million
general fund budget up '20 million from
1970..71 and showing a $12 million revenue
deficit. equal to 30 cenUi on top of the
present Sl.70 tax rate.
The grand total budgf!t, including all
q>e:cial districts such as harbor, flood
control, strucWral fin, etc., is $%70
million compared with $2.l8 million io
1970..71.
To inake th< taik of cultiol lht bui!aet
more difficult. the boa.rd members ·mult
·~the fate of $6.8 million in !C><alled
.,policy matters" not included in the
bod get.
They include such significant items as
finishin~ the fourth floor of the county
jail, $1.S million; delayed build.Jn.It' proj·
ects. $1.3 millio11 ; and e.meraency
employment program, $1 million and
refuse disposal equipment and land
purch1se, $1.7 million.
Supervisors Wednesday look~ at 1
proposed $4.S million capital project
progr;un (new buildings, add It lo n 1,
remodeling) which Robert Thomas coun·
ty administrative offJcer said he had
trimmed from $17.4 million in reque1lJ
from the various departments.
Principal e.1penditure1 to e 1 c a p e
Thomas' blue pencil were the H.lrbor
Dialrict Municipal Cflurts building '2.lZ
million; a down payment on a County
refuse dispo!!al site north of San Juan
Capi!!lrano, $500,000 : new fire stations
.and additions, $329.000; South Santa Ana
branch welfare, health and probaUon
departmenU;, $1 million.
Thon1as characterized !he proposals
which he had cut by $13.2 million to the
'4.5 million as "absolutely rock bottom."
In addition. $579,692 in 1970.71 projects
not compl~ted but budgeted last yea r
were included to bring the total 10 $5.l
million.
Rents and lease!! will cost the county
$2.8 million in the current year, Thoma1
said.
Recreation and cultural activities e1·
penditures· were also presented Wed·
nesday. largely composed of beaches and
rec:ional park!!.
The budget recommended totals $18
million including such projects as •t.3
million for acquisitlon of proposed Yorba
Park in the Santa Ana River Canyon;
$n5,000 for county beach development,
(See BUDGET, P11e %)
Tipsy Warden
Frees Convicts
Marauder Strikes in Mesa
"We pick our salaries by surveying Hi
comparable cities," Duggan explained.
"Our policy is to pay the average. And
we don't believe in blanket lnc:reue.l.
Each category I!! surveyed.
The cittes used were Anaheim, Sanl<I
Ana. Riverside, Garden Grove, Hun-
tington Beach. ln"lewood, Pomona,
Fullerton, Orange. West Covina, Buena
Park, Westminster. Newport Beach, Le
Habra, Cyprw and Fountain Valley.
Weather
lGUALA, Mexico (AP )
Parflrlo Roman, tlie wan:ttn df ·fbe
local priaan, came horpe drunk:
Monday night. Shouting 'l{.ong li•e
Mexico •nd our glorkltls revolu-
tion!" he opened the ttll& a!lli told
·hi!! 115 prisoners they "~rt free.
When the pritoner• started filing
out (I( the OOilding. gu1nl1 on the
waUs turned on the searchlights
and warned the ~ to return. to
their cells. Most obeyed, but five.
managed to escape amid 1 MU ol
bullet&.
Roman was 1ubdued bf tome flf
hi.! suboi'flnate1 and k>cltod in one
:if the cells. Ttw: government fired
him l!ld ,.id "Wednolclfy tt wID
,.....,.te him.
.. j -·· • • • -
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .. Delh' ~llltt 11111
Charlie the MidniJ:hl Marauder struck
twice In .COSta M~ overnight,· bQth
limes at the aame 1P.artmenl.
He was piolit.ely shOwn Lo the door abOut
midnight, then chalired oul a bedroom
,window .at ·4:4S a.m,,., the oe<:upanu Loki
police.
The stru1e incld!!nlii at the J1ck Sh•• ,
re!idt!!lef:, 1932 Wjllace Ave.. are
markedJy aimilar to• other wutaide i(t-
-cidentl!I in rectnt months, althouih
Charlie's description varies.
Charlie the Mtdnight Marauder. made
famous in IOfli by the flld Llmeliter1 trkl.
was a a>nfuaed su'blirbanl!e •ho kept
entering lllto I.ht '(l'Ong tract house
-..., llley tU.looted tliu.
COst.a Mi!sa11 Owlie aeema similarly
bewildered by 3Partment units. but pollt'f!
traditionally lo& the incidents 1s bur11Jary
L.> •• ~· '..-.llfll'...
and attempted rape.
So far victim! have been !!hocked but
never harmed.
Shew told Officer David Brooks after
chasing Charlie out a bedJoom wlndow.
over a fenct and Joalng him that the first
midnight visit was aintideml 1cci~ntal.
He. said tl'le man slipped in the front
rioor. tiptoed among visiting: relatives
1dttping on the floor .and WIS horribly eln·
barra1sed when confronted.
He reportedly 1Ui he had the wrortg
.apart4nenf and w1s looking for Bud or
Jerry.
The Sl\aw1 finally retired without cill·
Ing prilice, Ol\ly to havl! the whole
household aW"akened a.gain' 1hortly belOJe
d • ' r• ' ' awn ..•• ,.
This time, Charlie -or' ~)lit.eyer hl1
real namt b -had clitrlbfd .into a
bedroom wtndow, •crept under thi cover11
and 1nuggled up to Mrs. Da'phne Shaw.
I " r ..~
according to the police report.
She was sleeping solo and had her back
turned at the Ume, ao th.inking it was her
husband she turned to pat his head.
"h,1tead of reeling the lflng, sh1ggy
hair and heard of her husband, 1he felt
short hair and one or two days' beard
growth," Offictr Brooks wrote in hi•
report.
"Jack?," •he asked tentatively.
No answer.
"J.c:k'!' Jack ... Jack .•.. Jack!," she
called,..awakening the housthold.
"Mary. Mary, what's wrong? .•• •
Mr1. Shlw quoUd Charlie visitor u
pleading ln shocked tonts.
~Y tht• time. her husblM waa headed
for the bedroom ancl arrived just ln time
to follow Charlie out the window and over
tht: back fence.
Officer Brookt recommended t
followup Investigation by detectives.
'Z°A°!' ,... ~ .
Col!la Mua also changed Its lix-atep
salary range to a five-step, eliminating
the. fJrat.. baU·year 1tep. Now employe.'I
·can IO to the top ln four yean instead of
four-and-a-half.
Under lM new salary scale lM lflWt!!t
fulltlme saW'y in lht city ii $315 a month
and the hlghat Ls 12.130. A rook~
polictmao starta at f196 1 month ind in
four yean can wort uP to $!21 u an of·
ficer or •1 .484 as a ~lice captain.
"Our pQuey ll not. lo pay ult: h.ighe1t or
lowe.tl rale, but to ' pay a lair salary lo
recrult ll!d retaln·qualifitd penonnet. We.
base our offers• on the 11lary iurvey."
Duggan aald.
~gan could ftvt no estimate on when
the lire and communication salaries
!Stt SALARY, P.a1t 1)
Sunny 1kiu are on the menu
again for today and Friday with
highs along the beaches at 72, ti•
ing to 86 inland. Lowa tonlgbt
around 65 degrees.
INSmE TOpAY
Go~rnor Ronald Rtagan ha.s
ittmized a wide vnrietu of Joa!tl
Cal.ifornia iJ •Uffering due to the
roil 1trikt, Ht 1ald tht rt11dt
could be diJartrou.s. Storti Pogc
9.
C1ll....... 11 ~==u., ...!
c~, tt ._ " °""' Jlltlk" 11 ...,.It, "'" ' ... ,..,,.._.. 2:Ml
1'1111-• -" AM LI..,, " 1""•'9t .J:t.U
J DAIL V Pl~OT C T"'""'1, J~y Z'l, l'Ul -
'Fence Mending'
-·
Talks Weighed
I)' TEUY COVILLE
9' ""' Dtltr P'lllt lllff
Nwpart: Buch and Costa Me.sa may
be ready fix' IODlt .. feace mendin&" Lalkl
over the Pacltlc Coast J'ttflway.
Costa Mesa COuncilman Willard Jordan
and Newpert :&each Councilman Lindsay
Panom a&retd ln lePlfltt interviews tc>
2 Supervisors
Argue Heatedly
On, Court Site
day that tht two cities ought to dl.scusll
mutual solutions lo tht freeway problMt.
Such discussiorui may also include Hun-
tington Beach and Lacuna Beach
Parson_, said last week he felt Costa
Mesa "hi d snubbed" Newport Beach
beca~ of its wil/ingnes!I lo talk to
l.2.guna Beach and Huntington Beach
over the frttway.
"I said that because: three or four
we eks ago 1 suggested to Jordan that we
mett for discussion on lhis free~·ay issue.
He never replied," ParsonSAa.id loday.
"I'm still wiUing to talk with them "
Jordan said he: d1dn "l realize that
Par.;(lns had expected a call from him.
"We never meant lo snub Newport
~6Ch. We certainly want lo keep our
close relationship going."
DAILY l"ILOT Jllfl
•
•
--,.,._. Pqfl I l
APOLLO . • • -through their l'J'•ettr1/t w I n d it w a ,
mlulon commutder Scott rad)oed : "You
may be inter~ted to know th1t U\ere is a
vtry U!lll crUctl)I moon lo, f""t of 111.''
Ht ..._ U..t 11Jt ft!,ay be tldn, Wt Ifs .. , ... ' ";', .... .
While his C"OmpaOions spend three day!
e:1ploring I.ht bax of 1 1%,000-foot peak,
eraleni and the t'.!rtv~' known as Hadley
llille 1boerd an e lectric bugy, Worden
will orbit alone for M hours ln tbe
Endeavour, mapping one~ighth o{ the
m oon'a !lurf&~e.
'the .utronaut.s overcame one 1erloua
problem and thr=et minor onea durln&
their four-day, 250,flOO..mile journey to the """"· The most aeriOUJ one cropped up first
-an electrical short tircuil in a 1witrh
controlling parl of the main 2'0,:>llG-pound·
thruat spacecraft engine that ror the first
lwo days of the flight threatened to cancel
the all-important moon la nding.
Vtrtlll warfare betwee.n two super-
Vilots hiJ!ill&tited WtdntJd.ay's Orange
COuftly bua,tt hear!np.
Tiie Costa Mesa Councilman also said
r..•ewport was not invited to the meeting
of the other three citif!! lut Friday
because "it.s freeway position is qulte
clear."
THIS IS PUMPING STATION FOR COSTA MESA'S NEWLY-DRILLED WAT!R WILL
At Fairview Road and Sunflower Avenue, SoftMu Bultbles Up From Belew Earth's Surf1c•
l:ngineer!I in mi.ilsion control devised an
unorthodoI hand-operating procedure,
which Worden uted during the first lil111t
into lunar orbil The !lame procedure ,.ill
be uted apin when the a!ltr~auta U!le
the same rocket lo propel themselves out
cf moot! orbit and back toward earth neit
Wednesday.
Far less aerious difficultie11 included a
broken glass altimeter cover in the lunar
lander, a short circuit that popped open
an in1trumenl l(ghtlng circuit breaker,
11.nd a plumbing leak that 11.lmost cau11ed a
sm1ll nood in the Endea vor ti.bin.
.loud Qalrma.n Robert Battin. of San-
ta Ana, in cocnmenti111 on the Harbor
Dtatrict Municipal Courts site ln Newp:irt
OlntM', charged It Wiil "the v.ning 1itt on
land that fa tM erpenslve.
"Wnd ean bt: purr.hued for lees ln the
area or obtained by condemnation," he
arcued. ''The old board (before last
J1.f1Utty) approved the Newport site in
what I t.IUnk was out-and-out stupidity.
They had to kowtow to the Irvine Com·
pany," Battin chatg~.
He went on: "I would say their acts
were al.m61t criminal."
After !bur and one.hall days of weary-
ing budget hearfrip, punctuated hy such
rem.arks, Supervisor David Baker had ob.
viously had all he couJd take.
"I find your remark! per.mally or-
fMSive ," snapped Baker. "You wtrl': a
me.rnber ef that old hMrd a!I wa!I
Suptrvitor (William) Phlllipll and myself.
We were not stupid and we certainly
were not criminal. "
!ater continued, "Your mruta.nt a l·
ta.eks butd ® ybUt' anlm<>eity toward
one caunty landowner (Irvine Campany)
hive beoonw increasingly offenllive.
"We have been here more than four
di.ya and have not taken ont step to
~ thia huae budaet. 1 1uue11t that
ft drop personalltie1 and trivialities and
p t down to buaineBS."
From PllfJfl 1
BUDGET. • •
and SJ.I mUllon for parka development.
Cut by Thom.111 frmn an accumulaUve
capltal autl.ay program. pruenlaf by
Direetor of Harbors, Btaches and Parks
Kenneth Sampl!On were projecla totalling
$1.37 million.
tncJuded were .11cquislUon of land for .11
allqulta Fiala P ark on Orteg1 Highway,
'500.000; Villa .Park Dam Park develop-
ment, $500.000 and Fullerton Dam Park
develepment, $300,000.
Approved by 'I'homlll were VU\a Park
aCflUlaition, $400.000: Yorba P1rk ac·
quiaition, •t.3 million; Mlle Square Park
dtvelopment, n&2,900: Ufti vflralty P11rk
development, $884,000 : Lasuna Niguel
Park development. '650.009.
Slmp.90n piua1ed for reinstatement of
the Chiquita Flats. Fullerton Dam Md
VWa Park deve.Jopment funds .
Ht u1d that his department w1.!I re-quest.in& $7 million for park11: SI mlllion
tJ. ~k! opuation. and $6.4 milllon for
huche1. The Iattllr would be in the
Harbor Diatrict budget under 1 11eparata
tax rate.
Sampaon !la.id the elltim1ted cosl of the Ntcue.J beach (Silt Creek f purcht se from
AVCO C.Ommunlty Developers was S2. 7
million. He said the Harbor District eom·
rnillioner11 wtrt willing to p!1ce this ex·
pendlturt in t.he district budget.
OIAN61 COAST
DAllY PILOT
OUNGt: O!l.t.ST l"UI LISHIH<i C'OMl>ANY
l•li••I N. W•H .... :...i .... l"i*lllllfo<"
J 11.k l. C..f1v
Vice ftl'ltNMI -"-'•1 Ml,..tf'
l\111111 IC ttvil
""" llrit11111 A. Mut.loi111
M ...... lr4 IEl!llor
Ot1rf11 H. l••n l itht•tl ii', Nill
Aullltft. Mlfttll<ID f.lllllrl
c... ..... Offk.1
l )O W11t l1y Str1et
M.1ili•t Ad4re11: 11'.0 . l o• 11•0, •1•1• __. ..... " M....,_, a.di' JU! "--' •tu: ... 1rd ~ l•f:fl: 11l' '°""t "'""'ue W.... ......... lltdlo 1111: •Mt~ l4u1.,..1•d $lfl Ci-ft: lD.S ,.....,. .ll Ct"'"'-ll"I
Each councilman heads a three-man in·
ter-city relations committee which has
tra11itiona!Jy discussed problems between
I.be two harbor area communities.
"We're still more than happy to work
with Newport Beach for a solution to this
serious problem." Jordan re pr.a led.
"We have"to talk,'' explained Parsons.
"If we build a fence between us, no one
"'ill know what the other guy is doing "
Parsons s.aid the: ()n]y alternative so far
to a freeway through Newport Beach wa!I
the one offered by Costa M e s a
Councilman William SL Clair.
St. Clair has suggested that the pro-
posed Pacific Coast freeway be con·
nected at the Santa Ana River mouth lo
an extension of the Newport Freeway,
continued through Costa Me:sa's part of
the proposed Corona del Mar Free"·ay
and carried south to Laguna Beach.
His idea would mi1!I nur!y all of
Newport Beach, while theoretically keep·
ing a coastal freewJ1.y i11tact.
"He'& the fir!lt man I've seen 110 far
who has come up with any kind of a plan.
There may be other solutions, and J"d like
to aee them," Parsons said.
Jordan wa.s Jess enthwias!ic about St.
Clair'• proposal. "He hM a right t.o his
opinion, but frttway designs are not up to
w . Our city staff is checking h1.!i plan
oow."
Besides the fence mending which may
get underway with Costa Mesa. Parsons
said he also plans to contatt Huntington
Beach and Laguna Beach.
"I've already told Councilman Donald
Shipley J'd like to meet with his Hlln·
tington Beach people to d I s c u s 11
a lternatives," Parsons said. "And I plan
to c11l Mayor Richard G<lldberc or
Lacuna for similar tails:'
Huntington officl1!1 h11.ve plaMed ll
multi-million dollar downtown redevelop·
ment around free.way acces!I.
Lllguna re:sldenls expect the coast
fret'Way to r elieve some of their
downtown traffi c jams.
"! want to get toge:tller with everyone ...
Ptr!IOns !la!d. "Maybe we won"l solve
anything, but W@ should at le.11st talk."
r---• ., t ' !
Segerstrom Well
'Twice as Soft'
A chemical analysis of Costa Mesa·s
new St>gerstrom u.·ell proves earlier
cl aims that lhe well produces water twice
as soft as that supplied by lhe
1-fetropo!J tan Water Distric1
Officials of the Costa Mella County
Water District hed their '"'O-'A'eek-0ld
well Malyzed July 2J by a Sa.n
Bernardino lab.
The tests shnwed that !hf' Segerstrom
well produces "'ater with only 54.4 parts
per million !ppm) of Calcium compared
to 88 ppm in MWD water brought from
the Colorado River.
There is also only 10 7 ppm 1-fa,itnesium
1n local water rompared lo 34 ppm 1n
M\\10 samplf's: 42.8 ppm Sodium com·
pared to the MWD's 114 ppm. ;1:nd 1.6
ppm of potassium c<lmpared to 5 ppm.
Both sources proved nearly equal in
natural fluoride. ~·ith .43 ppm in local
water and .4 in the MWD supplies.
From Pagfl l
WATER ...
over the past 10 years. m 1960 the district
charged 22 cents per 100 tubic feet of
"'ater used. In 1971 the rate is 35 cents
per tno cubic feet of "'ater.
Each figure quoted is the: highest rate,
applied lo the smallest wate:r uses. Jn
1960 the 22-cent rate was applied lo the
firn &.000 cubic feet used. then the rate
dropped to 18 cent~ for larger u!le:S.
Now the 35-cent rate 11pplies to !he first
50.000 tubic feet used and drops to 2S
tents for anything nver.
"Whi!e water hills have jumped. the
amount of water us~ hy average
fam ilies has also increased." "'all ace ex-
plained. "More rquipment in the kitchen
i~ drawing a gealf'r amnunt of water to
lhe hnme."
l"ILOT '"" Gol.den WeNt GarbettNtnngelerN
When they Ftand her up. thi~ cardboard, rrepe paper. chicken wire.
assorted motors. light~ 11nd p~ychedellc paint JOb betome" "Zelda
Jane." a 15-foot-tall garbengtan,l!el ..-•hich Golden \Vest College stu·
dent~ completed Wednel5day 111 <"arnusel Court \n South Coast Plaza.
Darrell Ebert, fine 11rUi Instructor lstriped i;hirt), coached the GWC
~arbenstangel team.
I
-I . "" '"' r--.... ._...._ . ,...~ . l _ ··--. -
•••
Frisbees to Fly
Jn Cost.a Mesa
Champion.ships
More than 100 plastic !laucers wil l flut·
!er through the air 11t TeWinkle Park
from l p.m. to 4 p.m .. Friday during the
Costa Mesa Frisbee Championships.
Any youth under 111 who can 11'15!1 a
F'risbtt more than three feel can Join the
conte:st by signing up at the park at l
p.m.
Frisbee.~ will be supplied by the Wham-
0 Co., co-spon!lor nf the evtnt with !he
recreation dep1rtment.
The winner and runner-up in C&.~ta
~1esa·~ contest will be f'l igible for the
reginnal.q Aug . 7 in San Bernardino.
Regional winner~ from -'Ill over lht na.
t1nn will compete for a Sl.000 U.S. Sav·
1ngs Bond al the national finals in Las
Vegas.
Youths will l'W' JUdgecl Friday on the
fine poinl~ of rri!lbet flying including
curved flight!I . 11kip flights. distance
throws plu!I behind-the-back and betw~n·
the-legs novelty catche:~.
TtWinkle Park i!I located nn Arlingtitn
Drive, east of Costa Me.!la Hlgh School.
From Pllflfl .I
SALARY ...
wnuld be ~e!tled, hut pointed out thfo city
rloe!ln'l have to come to an agreement
with them.
"We only hl'lve lo meel. and confer. The
touncil cAn se1 Whatever 8alary it want,~.
but fOf' the moment il has left !he door
open fnr mnr!' 1,qlk~ "
From P119e l
LEAGUE ...
the election which ousted ]teinhardt and
gave Hyde the LAF'C post and contends
th1 t severa l of the votes cast in the 13 to
12 cliff hi nger las! July 3 were cast il-
legally for perMin.~ who we.re not pre~en t.
Reinhardt refused to comment on !ht
Jawsuit'!I stttus if he fa ils lo win reelec-
tion to the LAF'C J>OJ!L His spot oo the
LAF'C board and in lhe grnup'g ch1ir was
taken Wed11esday afternoon for the first
time b~ Hyde just six hours before the
lezgue dumped him.
Hyde refused to allow the league lit
further debatr his di~missal from the
LAFC post after the 16 lo 9 vote was
recorded.
"! do not intend In prolong thi!I
discussion and I vacate the post," he
said.
"I rc~ent Hyde's remark about the
Irvine Company," Reinhardt tnld the
league in a brief addres!I. "A.~ GOO is my
witness. no one from lht Irvine Company
ha!I ever contacted me."
Mesa Police man
Feted at School
Oul3tanding schol11!1lic 11chievemenl 11l
Cal Stale Los Angeles h11s 1~ to inltt11tion
of Cnsta Mesa Police Capt. Edward H.
Glasgow inlo the prestigious Ph i Kappa
Phi honor society.
A veleran lawman. Capt Gl1sg1tw ill A
graduate !ltudent in police !ICience. one of
6.1 new Phi Kappa Phi members
repre~entin51 all 1tcarlemic field.~.
Formerly commander of th,, detective
hureAu, Capt Gla sgnw i!I t urrenlly dire:C'·
tor of lhe department's administrative
and .i;ervicP5 division.
a
Scott and Irwin cleaned up the glass
frorn the Falcon c1bin. Mi111ion cont.ml
11dvised the astronauts to ignore !he lack:
of a few instrument lights. ·And repair
procedures hastily radioed from Houston
11topped the leak in the drinking w1ter
system before it did any damage. Scott
tightened up a leaking faucet and he and
his companion then mopped up the water.
Thur1day'was the start of a long, hard
wttkend for the astronauts. They woke
up at 7:37 a .m. ECYI' and reported they
all relt good. Then they begRn readying
their craft for illl tasks at lhe moon.
The first step wa~ a final midcourse
correction to perfect Apollo 1s·s aim. The
astronauts fired their main engine for
!his maneuver -a.~ they had In m11ke a
similar adjustment in thf'ir course Tues-
day -giving added confidence it would
work to put them into lunar orbit a few
hour!I later.
Then, ;it 11 :~\ a .n1 .. 1he.v lriggererl !I
chain ol explosives to jettison 1he cover
to F.ndeavour's scientific instrument bay.
Tht 5--by-9 112 root panel floated away
toward lhe moon, which was 13.200 miles
a"·ay.
".Jim'~ got it out his winrlnw." Scott
reported. "'He"s taking pictures. He says
it's tumbling."
The .~ciente bay i!I 11 Fir!'! for Apollo 15.
11 rontains eight experimenL,, including a
camera !lo pre:cise it can photograph ob-
jects three feel acrO!IS on the lu nar
surface from an a ltitude of a lmost 70
miles.
Others will analyze lunar surface
chemistry and study the moon's gravtla·
tional and magnetic fields.
Mission controlle r!! reported it began
receiving del~ from lht txperimenL1 te~s
thitn two hour!! after the cover panel was
jetti~oned.
The first scheduled real use of the little
laboratory was the activation nf the fi:8m ·
ma ray spttlrometer. with !\$ se:n~ing
head extended from lhe spaceship on 1
25-fool boom, within a half-hour of the
rocke:t bias! into lunar orbit.
Cj)UEEN SIZE • F,ULL SIZE
• T..._ •r• ""I' c1111f1rt.W. •'-Mih
fer •lftlott •IMI tho.,lftt.
• A w14'1 aelectl•• ef f•ltrics •tul c1l1rs
.. ell•-tt-.
• ll'Nnl~le Mick 9MI '"' c••llle111.
NOW 5299 OMI
Wf:llll
ONLY
)'our /(11X1rit11 itltt-rior dtsfg1111r will be happy to 011i.ft vou .••
H.J.GAl\RETT fURNITURE
PROFESS IONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS o,.. MH., T1Mon. ' l'tl ......
2115 HARBOR I LVO.
COST A MESA , CALIF.
-·
6•6.0175 60-0176
..-i -....-..... -
--I JI-----.. -
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'
'i
,
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Saddlehaek
EDITI O N
* * :VOL 6-4, NO. 180, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES TEN CENTS
Supervisors l(nucl{le Down in Budget A·ssault
By JACK &ROBACK
01 1M Dtll't l'llel Slit!
Orange County supervisors got down lo
the bard facts ol budget trimming today
after five. days of listening to department
heads state their cases for more money.
They are faced with a $244 million
general fund budget up $20 million from
1970-71 and showing a $12 million revenue
dt!icit, equal to 30 cents on top of the
pre.sent $1.70 lax rate.
The grand total budget, including all
special districts such as harbor, flood
control, structural fire , etc., is $270
million compared with $238 million in
1970.71.
'l'o make the task or cutting the budget
more: difficult, the board members must
decide the fate of $6.8 million in so-called
''policy matters'' not included In the
budget.
They include such significant items as
finishing the fourth floor of the county
jail, $1.5 million : delayed buildin~ proj.
ect.s. $1.3 million: and emergency
employment program, SI million and
refuse disposal equipment and land
purchase, Sl.7 million.
Superviso rs Wednesday looked at a
proposed $4.5 million capital project
program (new buildings, addition 11i ,
remodeling ) which Robert Thomas coun-
ty administrative officer said he bad
trimmed from $17.4 million in requests
from the various departments.
Principal expenditures to e s c a p e
Thomas' blue pencil were lhe Harbor
District Municipal Courts building, $2.12
million ; a down payment on a county
refuse disposal site north of San Juan
Capistrano, $500,tXKI; new fire stations
and additions, $329,000; South Santa Ana
branch welfare, health and probation
departments. $1 millk>n.
Thomas characterized the proposals
which he had cut by $13.2 million to the
$4.5 million as "absolutely rock bottom."
Jn addition, $.S79,692 in 1970-71 projects
not completed but budgeted last year
were included to bring the total to $5.l
million.
Rents and leases will cost the cowity
$2.8 million in the current year. Thomas
said.
Recreation and cultural activities ex·
pe.nditures were also presented Wed•
nesday, largely composed of beaches and
re~nal parks.
The budget recommended totals $18
million including such projecb as $1.3
million for acquisition of proposed Yorba
Park in the Santa Ana River Canyon; sns,ooo for county beach development.,
and $1.8 million for parks development.
Cut by Thomas from an accumulative
capital outlay program, presented by
Director of Harbors, Beaches and Parks
Kenneth Sampson were projects totalling
$1.37 million.
Included were acquisilion of land ·far a
Chiquita Flats Park on Ortega Highway,
$500,000: Villa P&rk Dam Park develop-
ment. $:>00.000 and FuUerton Dam Park
development. $300,000.
Approved by Thomas were Villa Park
acquisition, $400,000: Yorba Park ac-
quisition, Sl.3 million; Mile Square Park
development, $262 .900; Universil:t Park
development, $884,l:m; Laguna Niguel
Park development. $850,000.
Sampson plugged for reinstatement of
the Chiquita Flats, Fullerton Dam .nd
Villa Park development tunds.
He said that his department was re-
questing $1 million for parks ; $1. millioa
of parks operation, and $6.t million for
beaches. The latter would be in the
Harbor District budget under a separata
tax rate. 1
Sampson said the estimated cost of the
Niguel beach (Salt Creek) purchase front
AVCO Community Developers was $2.1
million. He said the Harbor District com--
missioner s were willing to place this e1·
penditure in lhe district bod&et.
~ities ust • airman
f:rash Battle
Coast Freeways
Will Get Fences
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of IJle P.llJ '''" st•tf
t\ · Miles. of unguarded freeway divider
strip will be equipped with f~ea ~nd
barrieni along the South Coast w. coming
l months in an attempt to Item the erow-
1 iOg number or fit.al cruhu, • state
· 1pokwnan u.id today .
The first major project calculated to
~ cut down the number of collisions will
take place in the "big curve" sec.lion of
! the San Diego Freeway at Capi strano
Beach, the scene of several multiple-fatal
1mashups in recent months.
State Division of H.ighways press of-
ficer Charles Gust.afsen said that bids on
a major, $4 million widening and barrier
project on the stretch will be opened
April 12.
Down the
Mission
Trail
J unior AA Ball
Signups Saturday
~llSSION VIE.JO -Pros pe.cti v e
participants in the fall Jun1~r . All
American Football program are rnv1ted
to sign up Saturday. . Registration booths will be open at 10
1.m. until noon In the La Paz Plaza.
• Clrcu• Week Set
LAKE FORES'J' -Circus week will
begin Aug. 2 at the Lake Forest Beach
111d Tennis Qub.
Any child in the community. J:>elw~n
the 1ges of 6 and 12 may pa.rt1~pate 1;"
the arts and cr&fts program. whi~h this
week will feat~ puppet-making, .a
bearded fat lady cont.est, ci~ct1s mosaic
making and a trip to a real circus.
For inform ation on the program call
tha club at 837~100.
• Temds c1 ... 1e1
MISSION VIEJO -Registration for
the final series oif teMls classe1. at
Mluion Viejo }Ugh School wlll be Fnday fJ'OID 8:30 to 10 :40 Lm. at th< hlgb ocbool
courts. , '11le first claS5 will be Monday. Aug. •
811d will be. Moodays, Wednesdays and
FrJdays for an hour until Aug. 13.
The fee is $8. The sessions will. be for
edult beginnen and advanced begtMer&.
• Brhtfl Stew
MISSION Vl!t.JO -Admission to one
rpecial event in Mission Vieja Friday Is
one cM of stew.
The event is "hobo day" for fi ve ll1d
1\x year olds and It will begin at 11 a.m.
at the MonlanOIO Recreation Center.
Children will be wearing llabo type
~lothes .Biid will be pooling their 11dmis-
s!o11 for a Pot-luck lunch.
-
Included in that project will be the. in-
stallation of a cenl.er barrier between
Camino de Estrella and a point 1 half.
mile north of Las Rambla!I.
The stretch has been the scene of at
least seven tramc ~atha involving twa
separate mishaps in which autos crossed
the unguarded dirt median .
In that section construction crews will
expand the freeway from six tane5 to
eight , using right.II-of-way already bought
on the inland side of the freeway.
Gustafsen said the estimated con-
struction time for the project will be 465
days.
Yet another median strip project
already ha8 been launched. he said. on
portions of the freeway north of San Juan
Capistrano.
Under a $323,000 contract with the U.S.
St.eel Corporation, critical points of the
freeway from the Junipcro Serra -01framp
111.ll the way to Culver Drive near lrvine
will be fitted with median strip pro-
tection.
The combination or the two projects. he
r;aid, would provide protection on most nf
the unguarded freeway by next year's
end .
Another stretch or busy thoroughfare.
however. will not have medians installed
unlil deep in the 1970s.
A major reC"onstruclion project rrnm
Estra\la southward through Sa n
Clemente to the county line rrma ins in
fiscal limbo.
"We have the plans worked up. but
because of the financ ial pic ture in slate
budgets, it doesn't look like anything can
be done until late in lhe 1970s," he said.
Median-strip crashes have occurred
mostly in the Capistrano Beach sector of
the freeway .
In the most recent of the fatal incident.!
two young women and a small boy died
when the ca r in which they were riding
was struck from behind and sent across
the median strip, headon into a bus.
Four other persons died late last year
when a car veered across the strip in the
same general area and collided headon
into 11 chemical truck.
Highway Patrolmen, who often have
~xpressed concem over the divider. sil~a
lion, have pointed out se.veral maior in·
jury crashes in the area in recent
months. also bl&ned on the lack of center
strip protection.
Services Held '"
For Mrs. Wilt,
Retired Teacher
Funeral services were conducted today
in Glendale for rtlired .school teacher
Mrs. May Girdlestone Wilt of San
demente. She died Sunday. She was 78.
Mrs. Wilt, who lived a~Trafalgar
Lan, leaves a daughter, orle Jane
Wilt of San Clemente: a ton, r. David
Wilt of Fontana; a sister, Mrs. George
Prindle of West Los Angeles, and two
grandchildren.
Mni. Will was 1 rt.tired teacher who
served ill. AriJona and California for 46
years.
Todey's noon rltts were conducted at
the Little Church of the Flowers at
forest Lawn, Glendale.
( . --·--'! >.\Ii--
· DAU.V jo.llOT t i.ff !"MM SALT CR EEK BEACH IS SHOWN BEFORE BLUFFTOPS ARE SHAVED FOR REDEVELOPMENT
Stabilization of Ar•• Will Entail Moving Million Cubic Y1rd1 of Fifi M.teri1 I
New Salt Creek Envisioned
Earth Slippage P rotection Needed if Purchased
!f counly supervisors accept a
fea sibility report and agree to purchase
Sall Creek Beach for S2.6 mi\\ion. what
the public will see on opening day will be
i;ubstantially different than the Salt
Creek of old .
At hearings this week before County
Harbor Commissioners, geologists and
spokesmen for the Avco Development
Company dwelt s i one pob1t on the ex-
treme earthslide aspects of much of tbe
area aboVf: the scenic coveted beach.
Included in plans already approved by
the County Building Department is a
proposal to shave off some blufftops
above the beach and encroach into the
dry sand area. with an expensive
retaining wall of boulden.
the unstable bluff areas. he ,explained.
"This will be no inexpen sive project,"
he said . ''The plan is to move a million
cubic yards o{ soil at a cost of perhaps 30
to 50 cents a cubic yard.''
Without the restoration of the territory,
he said, contir.ulng major earth slides
would be "a certainty," he t;aid.
''The development would probably htlp
!he beach and make tt better than It is
now," be added.
Leaders In the fight lo restore the
public use or the beach expressed mUd
eoncern over the encroachment issue, but
said that if the actual reconstruction of
the bluff areas follows current promises
by the development firm. that there
would be no apparent objection.
Commissioners as well stressed that
the rock keywalls should be kept as close
to the existing sand line as possible.
"We have tried to plan that wall as
close as possible to avoid takini up much
sand," stressed AVCO Executive Vice
Prtsident Richard Weiser'.
"There Will have to be some shaving
off of the blufftops, and the point which
juts seaward will have a crown rtmov ed
lo prf)vent rocks from falling down.
We"re going to try to keep it in as naturaJ
a condition as possible." be added.
The entire project, said county
seologist Cecil Hollon . would Include
moving a million cubic yards of fill
material to stave off the chances of more
earth slippage.
Nixon to Conclude Busy
The encroachment, he said, measures
about 600. feet along the base of bluff& In
the stretch of beach involved ln the
proposed transaction.
W eel{end nt San Clemente
Hollon told commlssioners that the sec-
tion of bluff and uplands _immedlately . "'-r~denitN~ . wllJ end, a bll!y week~
upcaast from Niguel Road 1s extremely , la' ; 1 1 'Jn the Midwest •n<1
active slide . activity. At least stven ' otnt-. '. ·House spdkeimen said
separate maJor earth movemeata a.re ,
evident there, he added . .,.,~f · -
To compound the problem . HDlk:fl pld. The Chief Et:ecutive -who bad been
underground water seeps constantly txptcled to rttum to the Soutti Colll.1t ln
through the material. adding to slldf! mld·Au3ust -h111 chomi lo fly to San
probabilities on the ungtab!e Capistrano Clemeota after speaking eniagemcnts in
formation. Ohio, roilwa and San Francisco.
Grading plans. he said, already have He is expect,M lo rttum to Wa5hington,
been reviewed by a panel of 5-0U D.C., either late Sunday or Monday.
mechanics experll w 11 h In his On Friday, Mr. Nlxon will addrtss
department. persons al:l-ending a pro-football Hall-of·
The encroachment on the inland &trip Fame dinner In Canton, Ohkl. Then on
of the sand would be ntetssary to stem Saturi:lay he win dedlc•te a f117·mlllion
the forward movement of slumps and Is 'Ralhbun Dam at Ottumwa, Iowa. Froln
essenli.al to the AVCO plans to recompact here he will Oy \o Se'n FrlllClJCO for
' ,.
another speech at Bohe.mlan Grove ...., a
gather'lng of bUJlhets:. alld 'profe11ion~
leaders.
Aft.r~tbe Sattl~a.v afterrioon talk in the
Bay Area, the Chief trecutlve will board
Air Force. One for a fll.-ht to El Toro
MCAS. then board his hetic:Opti:r flft' the
shnrt n~ht to San Clemente.
The 1udden announcttntnt of the trip
west c11me at 11 time when 1ever111.I
50UTCell reported that the Pretldeflt l)lan.
ntd a three-wetk trip to San Clemente
1t.rlln1 tn m~~AlllfUliL
Thal Is ill@ tr•dlUOotl month for the
Prtsklen{'1Wngest1tay19t·hi1·compound
along th< Soutb Coaot. • ·
That trip 1tlll Is baillg oonsldtred.
-~ __ .,,._ --"---c--•
Joe Hyde
Gets Boot
FromLAFC
By TOhf BARLEY
ot 1M OllllJ """ SMlft.
Loa Alamitos Councilman Joe Hyd•
was hustled out of ~ seat an the Local
Aaency Formation ~Ommi!'!lott Jnd
A!sefnblyma11 John Brtus lost local ll1P"
port Ior his Harbor District diuolullon
propo5aJ Wednesday nigbt in a rt.army
Orange County League of C1tlea: meeUng.
Sixteen of 25 Orange County cities re-
jected the .ahgry Hyde in a secret ballot
that apparently left the '¥ay clear for the
reelection to the coveted LAFC J>Olt of
Fullerton Councilman Louis "Red"
Rt:inhardt. (See related sfory, page 13.)
The county's mayors, 11itting at t.h9
same meeting in Orange as the League:'•
city selection committee, called an elec-
tion for Aug. 12 after apponting Mayot
Ed Just of Fountain Valley as the com.-
mittee'a chairman. Just also chairs the
league meetings.
Reinhardt, wha was immedi.ltely ac--
cused by Hyde of collusion with the
Irvine Company, offered to delay tbe suit
he filed last wee:C 111.gainst 25 Orange
County mayors and the county board of
11upervlsors and whicb Is scheduled for
hearing Aug. 12 in Orange County
Superior Court.
That lawsuit challenges the validity or
the election which ousted Reinhardt and
!]ave Hyde the LAFC post and contends
that several of the voles cast in the 13 to
12 cliff hanger last July 8 were cut ii·
legally for persons who were oot present.
Reinhardt refused to comment on the
lawsuit"s status if he fails to win reelec-
tion to the LAFC post . His :iipot on the
LAFC board and in the group's chair was
laken Wednesday afternoon for the first
time by Hyde ju.st si:i: hours before the
lc2.gue dumped him.
l-lyde rcfu5Cd to allow the league te
further debale his dismissal from the
LAFC post after the 16 to 9 vote wu
recorded.
"I do not Jnlend to prolong this
discussion and r vacate the post," he
said.
"I resent Hyde's remark about the
Irvine Company," Reinhardt told • the
league in a brief address. "Al God is my
wttnw. no one rrom the Irvine C:OmPIJl1.
has ever contacted me."
Weadler
Sunny skies are on the menu
again for tOOay and Friday with
highs along the beaches at 72, ris-
ing to 88 inland. Lows tootgbl
around6Sd-
INSmE TODAY
Gove.mer Rona~ Reoga~ Ml
ltemiztd a wide vorietu of to·s1e:t
Cal,forn«a ii tufftti'll{/ dut to th•
rail 1trlkt, Ht 1aid tht rtauJt
coutd bt disa.strOil.S'. Storsl Paot
9.
i
I
I IWl.V I'll.OT SC
OrMt Readied
Apollonauts Set
For Rendezvous
SPACE CENTl:lt, Houtton (UPl)-The
Apollo 15 utronauta reached the. outer
.appr6r&Cbu to the moon with untrrlnl •e·
c:uraey today and unveiled a $17 million
ldlft:le laboratory in lh!ir spacecraft to
~ man'• most ambitioUI lunar u -
pl<>ratlon.
The cover of the es~lally equipped
laboratory was jettisoDed in space a few
hours before the three-man t!lhip reached
the pOint to begin crbit of thl: moon,
preparatory to a landing on the surface
F'rldty.
All was reported well by the trio -
David R. Srott, Alfred M. Worden and
James B. Irwin -in their fourth day of
the elaborate, ll-day mi&sion.
The astronauts first corrected their
o:iune with a precise rocket burst and
then triQered a stnni of explosives that
discarded the door to the laboratory
J3JOO milts from the moon.
"We felt a little shudder, but not too
much," Scott reported as the door fell
away •.
Thi! was an important, significant step
tn the $445 million mission. It ope ned up
the command &hip's new moon mapping
cam.eras, and radiation sensors.
The three American spacemen then
prtpared their 107,000 pound craft for its
criUcaJ awing into orbit around the moon
at 4:08 p.m. EDT.
Tbe asttonaut5 wore apacesuits just in
case something went wrone. But the
opentlon went smoothly and t h e
&~en reported they fel t far less
aboek than upect.ed from jettisoning or
the lab co ver. The 5-by-91/i foot panel
floated away from the spaceship.
Scott, the mission c o m m • n d e r,
reported to the ground'
"Jim's got it out his window and he's
taking pictures," referring to Irwin. "He
says it's slowly tumbling."
Trailing Apollo JS by several thousand
miles at the time was the spent last 11tage
of the Saturn rocket that started the
atsronauta: on their adventure Monday.
Scott and Irwin are sc!'leduled to land
on the moon lite Friday, several hours
after the lunar module, Falcon. separates
from Endeavour, the command ship,
leaving Worden in lunar orbiL
TM last r.tage of the Saturn was on a
collision cour11e with a site at the center
of the moon's surface facing the earth,
impad wu set for lite this afternoon.
·1'be Apollo 15 neared the conclusion d.
the voy11e to the moon with the ubin
looking Uke a house wile's laundry room.
rt war the aftennath of a leaky drlnJdng
water fi:l"tuu that tbt a&tronautt' were
able to fu: with a wrtnch Wednesday
nighl
The astronauts were aroused at 7:37
a.m. EDT from a good night's sletp with
the report: "All 11ystems nonnal."
P'li&ht Director Glynn S. Lunney u.id of
the water leak, •·we don't have any re-'I
c::oncem about that at this time.
The tremor of the Impacting stage w111
tc be mtallUTed by two moonqua.kt
meters left behind by earlier Apollo
Summer Classes
Still A vailahle
Several openinp still rtrnain ln the
new aeMion of cla1111es being offered by
the Laguna 'Beach recreation Depart-
ment, offic:i.al11 report.
The classes beini offered lnc.lude balltl
and creative dance: intermediate and
h<&inninl! Jlllilar; golf; boginnin& gurfin•'
beginning and intermediate te.nnia an d
JWimming for persons of all q:et'.
Although In08t of the coorses are
taugbt during the day, several hold even.
ing seuions. Fu.rthur information may be
obtained from the department at 49+\ 124
ei:t. 45.
•
OUNll COAST
DAILY PILOT
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crews. ScitnlJsl! boptd the nature: of the
subsurface vibrations would tell more
about the mt>an's makeup .
At 1:29 a.m, Apollo 15's S«a.milllon,
lZ~ay miuion cro.ssed the imaginary line
in spa~ wbere the moon 's gravitational
influence: overpowers earth's and the
astronauts starlet! speeding up toward
the moon. They were 39,000 milec away
at the time .
Scot\. Wordeo and Irwin were asleep by
then. resting up for the: start of a rerord
six days of moon exploration.
Before retiring, Scott and Irwin
slilhered Into the landing cra ft Falcon fo r
a second time and found all systems
ready for the: 6: 15 p.m. landing Friday in
a moon basin hemmed in on thre:e sides
by mountains and flanked on the ather by
a deep gorge.
Group Will Push
For Saddleback
Bond Passa ge
A commitlff af valley residents. has
been organlzed to work for the pa.Mage of
the $24.7 million Saddleback Colle1e bond
issue, scheduled to 10 before the voters
Sept. 14.
The group, called the Citizen's Bond
Committee, will attempt to win support
for the issue fro m resident.t in the
various communities within the college
district
Named l! general chairman of the
committee was Laguna Beach residenl
l'tobert Makine. 'T"ne cornmitttt represen·
tatives in the individual communities are
Carl Buchheim of San Juan C11pistrano:
Harcourt Bull of San Clemente: Leonard
Geesen « La.gun~ Hills; Mrs. Ronald
McGowen of Misslon Vie}o: Douglas
Moran of Tu.!ltin ; Fern Randolph of
Laguna Beach and John t.old ef South
!.\gun•.
further lnformatiM conerning th e
group'a pegition on the bond isaue may be
ebtained from Mn. McGowen at 837-0641.
San Clemente
Girl Bicyele
Rider Injured
A IJ..year-old San Clemente girl iruf.
fered a fractured wrist and glass-caused
wound! tD an eye Wednesday 11fternoo n
when her bicycle slammed inte a utility
pole.
Jane Elizabeth Douelas of 513 Calle De
Soto, auffered the injuries after her cycle
Jogt control at the base •f Avenida
Presidio near civic center.
Police said the girl, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William R. DoUilas, had been
riding down the long, sleep roadway and
then appa.renUy lost control near the en·
trance to the fire department.
She was taken to South Coast Cam·
munity HO!!pital in a fire department sta.
tion wagon serving as an emergency am·
bulancr, police said.
Her condition at the: hospti al was
described as satisfacl.ory.
The girl ''~ eye was injured by her
brok en &laases.
Adviser Finch
Cai1cels Harbor
Dedication Talk
Top Presidential Advtse:r Rnbert Finch
has left for s funeral in Liberia and will
not appear as acheduled Saturday at
Dana Harbor's dedication ceremonies.
The formtr California Lieutenant
Govemor had been &et to de.liver the ma-
jor address .11 t the 2 p.m. ceremonie:s
heraldin1 the l30 mlllion yachting
(aclllty.
A last·mlnute repla~menl for Finch is
being arraflled.
Spokesmen in Dana Point Mid another
top-le\·el emlu1ry from the \\'hite House
~ill be on hand Saturday.
The ceremonies will take place near
lhe entrance to Doheny State P11 k along
De! Obispo Road lead i11g into the harbor.
Finch was sent t.o Liberia lo represen t
lhe Unitl'd Slates al funeral ri les for
Will iam Tubman. fo rmer preeidenl of
that African country.
After the funeral Finch ·will begin a
month-long world tour.
South Lagunan
Aids Space Shot
The son of a South t.aguna couple Is
among the thou sand!! of U.S. spact team
mtmbtrs whose lndivldual work ti.as
made the Apollo 15 ml"lon po1S1ble.
Bruct G. Cl ft.W!'\y. AOn of Mr . i nd Mrs.
Frank Clsserly, of 31202 Hoity Drive. is a
NASA engine:er wOfk\ng In lht. Manned
Spacecraft Center in Hou~ton. Casserly, A
graduate of UC Be.rkeley , worU in tM
analysis division which has develop-d
plans lo meet tmtrgtncy development.a
durinR the fligh t.
'
Bon Vivant
County Recalls
Poisoned Goods
By TOM BARLEY
01 tlle ~fly P'llfl '"" •
Bon Vivant canned goods -and: Mme
under sever&! other labels -are roming
o{r the i;helves today in Oran1e Coast
stores and supermarkets just as fast as
Orange County Health Department in·
spectors can make their rounds of the
outlets.
But there may be many cans of the
foods condemned by the federal Foood
and Drug Administration lucked away on
housew ives' shelves throughou t the coun·
ty and in small groctry stores that have:
overlooked the health department order
or have ~n overloo ked by both county
and slate inspectors.
"If you find it, get rid of ii," warns
County Health Officer John Philp.
"Destroy it or send it back to the
manufacturer but, ei ther way, get rid of
it."
people who read of this recall action b1
us should be assured that this is purely a
precautionary measure.''
This writer's shopping lour Wednesday
failed lei produce a single can of any of
lhe listed products but It did n veal the
determination of several shop managers
to wh ip off the shelves several canned
gourmet products that have not beea
Jlsted by health authorities.
"We've laken nff the Bon Vivant lina
and all the others we were warned .
about ," said Slee Brimer, manager of :
Jurgensen's, 250 Broadway, Laguna ·
Beach. "I don't want to be quoted on the
additional brands I've withdrawn but wt·
didn't take any chances here." '
Everything listed by the: health depart.
men! is no longer available at Ricbard'1
Lido Markel, 3433 Via Lido, Newport
Beach, assistant manager Roge r Lin·
dennan seld.
"We've had both county and slate ln·
spectors here and they·re both satisfi M
thal we 've taken all !he affected brands
off our shelves." he said.
SAN JU AN DOWNED LAGUNA 6·5
Withdrawal of the affected foods has
been complicated by the fact th~L Bon Vi·
vant not only canned their own soups and
delicacies but canned products for other
companies and, on occasians, supplied
n1any homes v.·ith a personalized line of
canned gourmet foods.
1'he Bon Vivant business got its deat h
blow last week when a New York st.ate
man died of botulism poisonlng shortly
after he and his wife consumed a can of
Bon Vivant vichyssoise, The woman.
almost tolally paralyzed, is slill on the
ho11pital's critical list,
But the apparently prompt lJ'Jd .
unanimous action by counly distributors ·
of banned Bon Vivan! delicacies doe.s not
rule out the possibility that the firm's
products may turn up years hence ln
homeowners' food cupboards.
Laguna's Ben Bacon Tagged at First by Vince Tor r••
Capo Nine Wins
Laguna T earn Beate n for Cro wn
Going into an exlra inning. San Juan
Capi.c;trano little leaguers def~ ate d
Laguna Beach 6-5 to become the district
55 champions Wedne!day night.
San Juan will go on t.o represent
Death Jet
Monitored
By Trainee
Special to the DAILY PU.OT
PASADENA - A Hughea Ai r West
~e~r that collided with an El Toro
MCAS supersonic fighter, killing 50
persons, was being radar·mon.itored by
an air traffic controUer on·the-job
trainee.
The disclosure came Wednesday.
Teetimony resumed here loday before
a National Transportation S11fety Board
panel attempting to determine cause or
causes of the tragic June 6 collision over
Du11te.
The jetliner spiralled do""·n inlo a
crevasse-li ke San Gabriel MoUnlaln can·
yon carrying 44 passengers and a crew
()f five t() death, while the Marine F4
Phantom pilot also perir,hed .
Victims included Michael Potter, 7, and
his sister Sandra. 6, dlildren of Mrs . San·
dra Polter of 7!l9 Calle Puente, San
Clemente .
Palmdale Air Traffic Control Cent er
supervisory controller Robert Feister
testified his rookie harl been dning fine
until the 9 34 a.m. impact, 1n clear
weather.
district 5S in regional playoffs in San
Bernardino next month.
Laguna Beach led in the game. from the
second to the sixth inning, at Riddle Fie!d
when San Juan tied the game up five all,
"·hich was broken in the seventh with an
additional run by the visiting team .
Winning pitcher was Dave Retves of
San Juan. Rich Nunis of Laguna Beach
was the lower.
The opening of the game was marred
when San Juan player Peter Kenney
was hit in the facr: by a pitch from young
Nun.is, Kenney was rushed to South Coast
Community Hospital, where he is listed in
satisfactory condition this morning with a
broken cheekbone.
Several other batters were hit by wild
pitches from both pitchers, but none of
them was injured st'riously.
The only home run for Laguna Beach
was slugged out of the park by Mark
Eagleton, which brought in three other
runs in the second inning.
Two home runs were racked up by
Blayne Suekett and Doug Synde of S.an
Juan.
Roland Rodmar crossed home plate to
win the ball game for San Juan, driven in
on a hit by Nick Romero. Rodmar got on
bast each time at bat during the game.
Approximately 500 fans jammed inlo
Riddle Field to "'atch the game.
Bon Vivant this week flied fo r
bankruptcy in an aclion that noted the
FDA demand that the firm recall pro-
ducts distributed under 34 labels -
among them Sey-Co, Van Nuys. Reese
Finer Foods , Los Ang eles. S & \V, San
Francisco, Rykoff and Hickory Farms in
addition to private labels.
"But the last thing I v.·ant to do," Dr.
Philp said, •·is promote hysteria abou t
this Bon Vivant recall. \Ve certainly want
them off the shelves but what we are
primarily interested in as far as the nlht'!r
labels are concerned are the vidiyssoiSt:
and black bean soups.
"\Ve've had no casc-5 of poisoning in
Orange County," Dr. Philp :said. "And
Lady Volleyball
T ourney Slated
Distaff athletes In the Art Colony 11re
invited to sign up for the Isl Annual
Laguna Beach Women's Open Doubles
Volleyball Toumament to be held Aug. 7
and 8 at the Main Beach Courts.
The rirsl 32 teams which sign up will be
permilled to play in the loumament.s
""'hich begin at 9 a.m. both days.
Registrations must be received by 5 p.m.
Aug . 4 at the recreation department, 175
N. Coast Highway.
lndividual awards will be presented to
members of the top fou r teams in the
tourney.
a
Cj)UEEN SIZE
Forme r CBS news commenlator Pete
Pringle stressed that possibility by ·
bri nging to the DAI LY PILOT offices
several cans of gourmet products, amonc
them Bon Vivant soups.
Several cans were in poor condition and
all were pulled from Mrs. Pringle'•
shelves at 160 S. Bay Fron!. Balboa
Isl and. after the concerned C(luple learn·
ed of the Bon Vivant ban.
Drug Purchase
B ecom es $500
Theft in Laguna
A 17-year-old youth "'ho told Laguna
Beach officers he was attempting to
purch2'Se. drugs: Tuesday night wall rob-
bed at knifepoint of SSOO by his alleged
&upp!ie r.
Police said U1e victim, who gave a La
Crescenta address. met the bandit at S
p.m. in the 700 block or South Coast I
Highway. The youth !old police he gave ' the $500 to the man and went with him in
his car to !he 1200 block of Gaviota Drive, .
where the pair were lo pick up an
amounl of marijuana.
When they arrived there, the youth
reported. the unknown suspect drew a
long bladed knife and ordered th•
youngs ter from the car. Police said the
youth struggled with the bandit, but WJ5
eventually forced from the auto, which
then sped off.
• F.ULL SIZE
Feister said he stood dirrctlv behind
l.rai.nee Harry A. Gr ove and ntithcr he
nor Grove. saw a blip representing !he
Phantom jet, whose radar transponder
was inoperative.
NOW $299 OMI
Wl llC
OML'(
A large audience l i~1cnerl al 1he
Pasaden::i Hilton hotel as f'tister tnld {){
realizing something was wron~ \\'hen a
radar emergency signal flashed on a sc·
cond controller's scope.
Glancing up for 211 seconds maximum,
he said he turned back In Grov!S·
radarSCQpt to find the DC9 blip had
vanished .
He then took over for Groves.
Testimony Wednesda y Indicated that
while the Salt Lake City.'bc!und jetliner
was: ground-monitored, 11.s own tr&ns·
ponder Tad ar unit was also faulty .
The DC9 t mergency 5ignal designed lo
pinpoint a night crisis or collision never
appeared, although a mystery light fla~h·
ed on the screen simultant:ausly from
some other aircraft.
Monitored for 10 minutes. ii vanished in
the area of Norton Af'B. deepening the
element of intrigue.
One of the key witnessts is Ma rine 1~t
Lt. Christopher Sc:hiess. Z4. radar
operator aboard the Phantom. who
survived by parachuting.
He denied in tutimony Tuesday any
•erob&tlc nying lmmedlately before the
collision al 15,000 feet, contrary to lnitial
11l3tement.5 Uy eyewitnesses on the
ground.
Lleuttnant Schiess, who lives on·base,
11aid pilot Lt. James R. Phillips, 27, had
completed a 3fi0..degree rollover so they
could check the fUJT()unding aJr space for
other planes .
The Marine aircraft was returning on a
re!atlvely low-level course due to oxyien
system falture. flying on a se:e-and-bt-
sttn besi~ because of defective radar.
The Air West plane knifed Into the tall
gertlon of the Phantcim second!! srter U .
SchieSJ!I ~Rw il loom inf!'.. he te1tiried and
Lt. Phillips was unable to ball oul
him.self.
Hearings will wind up Friday, but It
wilt be l;()me time be fore 11 final
determination IS Issued by the: feder3.l
agency on what caused the tragedy,
• . .
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COSTA MESA, CALIF.
646-0275 646-0276
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Lag·11na Beaeh.
EDITION
VOL M, NO. 180 , 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES -
ORANGE COUl'lrY, CALIFORNIA • .THURSDAY, JUL t 29, 1971 TEN CENTS
Supervisors l(nuckle Dow·n in Budget A·ssault
By JACK &ROBACK
Ot tM Diii!' .. ~, "'"
Orange C'.ounty supeniaors got down to
the hard facts of budget trimming today
after five days of Jist.ening to department
heads state their cases for more money.
They are fa ced with a $244 million
general fund budget up $20 million from
1970-71 and showing a $12 million revenue
~icit. ~ual to 30 cents on top of the
present $1.70 tax rate.
The grand total budge!, including all
special · districts &uch as harbor, flood
control, st('Uclural fire, etc., is $270
tn,illion compared with $238 million in
Joe Hyde
Gets Boot
FromLAFC
By TOM BARLEY
Of tlle OllllY P'Lllt ll•ff
Los Alamitos Councilman-Joe Hyde
was hustled out of his sut ·~n the Loc1I
AlencY Ftc:u O•· C~ission ~
A!semblYf!ilil .rohn Bnftflll!t ioearlujj'
port for his Harbor Di.strict dissolution
proposal Wednesday night ln a stormy
Orange County League of Cities meeting.
Sixteen of 25 Orange C.ounty cities re-
fected the atigry Hyde in a secret ball ot
that apparenlly left the way clear for the
reelection to the coveted LAFC post ct
Fullerton Councilman Louis "Red"
Reinhardt. fSee related stcry, page 13.)
The county's mayors, silting a.t the
1ame meeting in Orange as the League's
:ity .selection committtt, called an elec-
tion for Aug. 12 after apponting Mayor
Ed Just of Fountain Valley as the com·
mittee's chairman. Ju.st also chairs the
league meetings.
·Reinhardt. who was immediately ac-
eused by Hyde of collusion with the
{rvine Company, offered to delay the suit.
~e filed last wee~ agains t 25 Orange
:ounty mayors and the coun ty board o(
1upervisors and which is scheduled for
bearin; Aug. 12 in Orange Cowity
Superior Court.
That lawsui t challenges the validity of
lhe election wh ich ousted Reinhardt c.nd
gave Hyde the LAFC post and contends
ihat several of the votes cast in the 13 to
12 cliff hanger last July 8 were cast ii·
legally for per.sons who were not present.
Reinhardt refused to comment on the
1awsuil's status if he fail s to y,•in reelec·
lion to the LAFC po.st. His spot on the
LAFC board and in the group's chair was
Lalten Wednesday afternoon for the first
lime by Hyde just six hours before the
letgue dumped him.
Hyde refused to allow ~ league to
further debate his dismissal from the
LAFC post after the 16 to I vote was
reoottled.
"I do not intend to prolong this
discusskln and I vacate the: post.," he
said. "I n.sent Hyde's remark about the
Irvine Company," Reinhardt tel~ the
league in a brief address. "Al. God 1s my
witness, no cne from the Irvine Company
has ever contacted me."
Coaat
Weatlter
Sunny 1kie.s ai'e on the menu
11aln for today and Friday with
highs along the .beache.s at 12. ris-
io1 lo " Inland. Lmn looilhl
around ~ dear~
INSmE TOD,\ Y
Covt rnor Ronald Reagan h&
lt.emited a. wfde variet)I of I03$t3
Ca.li/ornia la 1ufftring d~ to tht
roil strilce. He sa'id the result
co11lrl be disastroui. Ston1 PaQe
9.
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To make the task of cutting th'-budget
more difficult, the board members must
decide the fate of $6.8 million in so-called
•·policy matters" not included in the
budgeL
They include such significant items as
finishing the fourth floor of the CQunty
jail, $1.5 million: delayed buildini proj-
ects, $1.3 mill i0f1; and emergency
employment program, $1 million and
refuse di sposal equipment and land
purchase. $1.7 million.
Supervisors Wednesday looked 11.t 11.
pr;oposed $4 .5 million capital project
pi:ograro (new buildings. add it ions ,
remodeling) which Robert Thomas coun-
ty administrative officer said he had
trimmed from $17.4 million in requests
from the various departments.
Principal espenditures to e s c a p e
Thomas' blue pencil were the Harbor
District Municipal Courts building, $2.12
million; a down payment en a county
re fuse disposal site north of San Juan
Capistrano, $500,000; new fire stations
and additions. $329,000; South Santa Ana
branch welfare, health and probation
departments, $1 million.
Thomas characterized the proposals
which he had cut by $13.2 million to the
$4.5 million as ''absolutely rock bottom."
D"lt.Y "It.Or si.t1 ll'fltlt
KEEPING LAGUNA TRAMS RUNNING TO ART SCENE
Mech1nic Oltg Biro, the ~n Behind the Power Source
Laguna Fest T1·am 'Docto1·'
l{eeps ,'em Rolling Alo11g
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEm..
01 tl'lt O.lly "Ii.I 51tll
Oleg Biro still loves the Festival of
Arts trams even though they have a
kn &k of breaking down 'lloilh great
regularity.
After a tram breaks down , it i.s Biro's
job to nurse it back Into operation a.s soon
as possible. And to make sure it's done
fa st, he lives right here in Laguna Beach
during the run of the festival , rather than
work out of lhe Venice Tram Company
office in Los Angeles.
"'J'he trams aren 't breaking down t.S
much any more," he said. "I've got mosl
of the big problems worked out.
"A lot of the problem was the city
didn't give us final go ahead until a week
and a ha lf before the fe :io:tiva l began,
1Which meant we had to work fast to get
the trams ready.
"And when you work fas t, things don't
get done right,'' Biro added. He said a
month's DOtice would have been a lot bet-
ter.
Most of the problem! now are conJined ,
lo minor brake or transmission ad-
jusbmntl or wock on ligllUng systems.
Biro said. "Usually each repair only
tiles about fi ve mJnulel. Jwit lbta of
mioor thlnis. now."
But tbe minor things add up and keep
Biro working Crom 9 1.rn. to midnight,
seven days • week.
"It's really most unfortunate. because I
don't have time to got around town .
Laguna reminds me or my ho me in
Yugoslavia," he said.
BINI came to America in 1!167, after
11tudy1ng language.1 and e I e c t r I c a I
eng:ineerin8 In the European country. "I
hadn't done 1ny mechank:al work there,
and picked It all up here.'' He started
work with the Venice Tram ln ll!Q, and
is 0ot of two mechanics for lhe company.
"I love these 4G-year-old Model A Ford
engines." Biro said. as he l1nkered with a
distributor. ''They·re a great engine -
nothing like these things they ma ke to-
day.
"In fact, when the festival ls over, J'm
going to take a whole bunch of spare
parts around the shop in L.A. and build
my own Model A truck. I'll never have to
buy another car. A Model A will really
stand up."
Biro was in charge of getting the trams
In shape before this year's festival open-
ing which included pulling: off lhe ~1odel
A rear axles and wheels and replacing
them with Datsun rear ends. "We had to
do it to bring them up to standards -
they mu!Lt have brake11 on all four
v.·hee\s."
Biro also installed the windshlelds an d
headlights on the vehicles.
All of the additions were made follow-
ing stoppage of the trams last summer
by the city after William Leak pointed
9\Jt that the lranu did not meet vehicle
code equipment requirements.
Biro said that as summer goes along,
the trams will require leM attention and
be will be able to roam le the other .art
fe.sUvals. "I've been around the FtlllYa!
of Arts add· It's very nice."
And if he gets even more ti me of(, Blro
may tate. up"' one of his hobbies ·while
ataylng ln the Art Colony -sculpture.
Rubin to Tour Chile
CHICAGO (AP} -The way is clear for
Jerry Rubin, one of five persons free on
bond pendin& appeal or convktiona In the
Oiicago rlot trial, to travel to Chile for
research on a book on youth culture.
The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
1ranted Rubin permission Wednesday le
travel outaidl! of the country.
l
In addition, $579,892 in 1970-71 projects
not completed but budgeted la st year
were included to bring the total to $5.1
million. .
Rents and leases will co st the county
$2.11 million in the current year, Thomas
~aid.
Recreation and cultural activities ex4
penditure.s were 'also presented Wed-
nesday, largely composed cf beaches and
regional parks.
The budget recommended totals Sl8
million including such project! as $1.3
mlllion for acquisition of proposed Yorba
Park in the: Santa Ana River Canyon;
1775,000 (or county beach development,
Nixon Trip
To Coast
Expected
President Nixon will end a busy week·
end of speeches in the 'dldwest aid
Califocnia, ftl' a brief vlslt to $oq €\f'-
m~nte White Houae 1~ 1ald
Wednesday.
The Ct:iief Executive -who had been
expecled to return to the South Coa1t in
mid-August -has -chosen to fly. to San
Clemente after speaking engagements ln
Ohio, Iowa and San Francisco.
He is expected to return to Washington,
D.C., ei ther late Sunday or Aionday.
On Friday, ~1r. Nixon will address
persons attending a pro-football Hall-0f-
Fame dinner in Canton. Ohio. Then on
Saturday he will dedicate .11 $717-rhillion
Rathbun Dam at Ottumwa , Iowa. From
here he will fly to San Francisco for
another s~h lit Bohemian Grove -a
gathering of busine6s and professional
leaders.
After the Saturday aftcmoon talk in the
Bay Area , the Chief Executive will hoard
Air Force One for a flight to El Toro
A1CAS. then board his helicopler for the
short flight to San Clemente.
The sudden announcement of the trip
wes~ came at a time when sP.veral
i;nu rces reported that the President plan·
nffi a three.week trip to San Clemente
starting in mid·AUJ!:U Si.
That ls the traditional month for !he
President's longest stays at his compound
a!flng the Sou1h Coast.
That trip still is being considered
Johnny Carson Drops
Window Washing Snit
NEW YORK (AP) -Television talk
show host Johnny Carson has withdrawn
a suit in which he sought to prohibit early
morning window waslling activities which
dl.sturbed bis slumber.
A spokesman for the cooperative where
Carson has a $375,000 apartment would
say Wednel!iday only that an amical set-
tlement cf the dispute had been reached.
Carson was not available !or comment.
and SLllJ million for parks development.
C\lt by Thomas from an accumulative
capital outlay program, presented by
Director of Harbors, Beaches and Parks
Kenneth Sampson were projects totalling
$1.37 mill ion.
Included were acquisition or land for a
Chiquita Flats Park on Ortega Highway,
'500,000 ; Villa Park Dam Park develop-
ment, $500,000 and Fullerton Da m Park
development, $300.000.
Approved by Thomas were Viii.ii Park
acquisition, $400,000 ; Yorba Park ac-
quisition, $1.3 million ; Mile Square Park
development, $262 ,900 : University Park
development, $884,000; Laguna Niguel
s
,
DAILY "JLDT lllTI l!lltl• FILLS JUDICIAL POST
Judge James T-urner
Lagunan Sworn
Into Judge Post
At Ceremonies
Judge James K. Turner of Laguna
Beach became the Orange County
Superior court's 25th judge Wednesday in
ceremonies that drew , a capacity au-
dience to Presiding Judge William C.
Speirs' courtroom .
Judge Turner. 42. of 2505 Altamar
Drive, was watched by ~s wife. Nancy ,
and four children, f\-lyra, Sue Ellen,
Charles and James Jr. as he took the
oath of office for the posl recently
created by the Legislature and earmark-
ed by Gov . Ronald Reagan for the former
West Orange County municipal court
judge.
Members of the Orange County Grand
Jury were on hand to hear Orange Coun-
ty Bar Association president·elect Garvin
Shallenberger and altomey F. K. "Gus"
Friedemann. a close friend of Judge
Tprner, introduce the appointee to his 24
Superior Court colleague•.
Judge Turner, a Republican , worked as
a deputy district attorney for Orange
County before Gov. Reagan appointed
him to the municipal court in June, 1969.
He practiced law in Corona de! Mar from
19S7 to 1967.
Coast Freeways to Get
Median Divider Fence
By JOHN VAL TERZA
• Of ..... o.ttp P'lltt Stiff .
Miles of untuarded freeway divider ·
strip wtll· be equipped wtlll-!""'" and •
batritra·aloncthe South Coast in coming .
monlhA In M attempt to stem tbe ·grow-J
lng· nwtiber of fat.Id craahea, a state
spokesman 1aid· today, ·
The flr1t major project calculated to
cul ®wn the number of colllllone will
take J>lace In the "big curve" section of
the, San Diego Freeway at Capi1trano
Beach, the scene of several multiple·fatal
amashups In ~nt monthr. .
State Division of Highways press of·
fiCtr thar1cs GustafSen said that bids on
• rn.a)or, $4 mUllorl widening and bi.crier
prc)ect. on the 1tretch will be opened
April 12.
Included in that project. will be the fn-
1tallation of a center barrier be~weel).
c.minO de Estl<lla ond a point a hlll-
mlle north of LI! Rambl&s.
The 1tretch .has been the r;cene of at
least ,sev-en tr4fnC_ctealhs inyolvlng two.
separate mishaps In which autos crossed
the unguarded dirt medif1n. ·
Jn that 11eetion construction crews will
eipand the freeway from six la.net to
eight, using rights--of-way already bought
on the inland side or the freeway.
· Gustafsen s.ald the estimated CtWl-
slrucUon Ume for the project wW be 43$
dl:ys.
Yet . another. median ttrlp project
alrtady has been launched, be tald. on
port.10111 of the freeway north of San Juan
Capi1trano.
-.. , ....... -··-----___ J_
----... .... ,.......
Perk development, $650,000.
Sampaoo plugged for rein.statement of
the Chiquita Flats. Fullerton Dam ud
Villa · Pirk development funds.
He said that his department wn re-
questing $7 million for parb; SI million
of parks ope.ration, and $6.4 million for
beaches. The latter would be jn the
Harbor Di,trict budget under a aepar1t.e
Lai rate.
Sampson said the eslimated coat ot the
Niguel beach (Salt Creek) purchase from
AVCO Community Developers was $2.7
million. He said the Harbor Dislrlct com·
mi ssioners were willing to place Uli! ex·
~nditure in lbe district budget.
High Rise
Election
·BULLETIN
The CaHfornla Supreme Court todly ff-
fended the right or Laguna Beacll to bold
Ifs hip rlH election and 1upPoried tM
wrU flied for the "Ye1 ea .&q. I" eom·
, mlllee ~y Ari C-,. 111or1My WIDlalll
Wilcoxen.
n. , ... rt d-... ----··-.... t~ Jllolrlcl Coart .. ·Appeal rejecdoa of Superior Court Jade•
J .E.T. "Ned" Rutter'• rulln1, •ceord~
111 &o Supreme Court Clerk Mark Tllomp. ....
"It wa1 a brief hearing," Tbompita
added, "and I got &lie Supreme Court'•
ruUa1 just before noon. Tbe JatUce1
were well aware of the lmmiDeace Of the
Lagwta Beach elet:don."
* "This case l.s unusua l in that the peti-
tion for a hearing was received juat a
week before the election date," Ui.
spokesman told the DAlLY PILOT.
"Such petitions usually are handled on a
we ekly ba~is at Wednesday con ferences.
Attorney Willia m WHcoi:eo, repreaen.
ting the proponents of the Initiative
crdinance to li mit building heig ht In the
Art Colony to 36 feet or three storie:i,
new to San Francisco Wednesday to lilt
his response in the latest legal move to
hall the election.
On f..Ionday, attorneys fOf' Laguna
realtor Vern Taschner, who filed the
original Superior Court action to block
the election, filed the pe tition in the State
Supreme court seeking to have the
Superior Court's order to cancel the elec·
tion upheld .
Superior Court Judge J. E. T. "Ned''
Ru tter's ruling in favor of T11schner's r~
QUE?lt was overturned by the Fourth
District Court of Appeals In San
Bernardino, which ruled that validity of
the hieight limit ordinance could be
decided after the election but the people
should be given the right to have their
vote in the matter recorded .
The appellate court cited a Stale
Supreme Court decision In an earlier case
in which it held that h11lting an election
would constitute •' l n to! era bl e 1n.
terference" with the legislative procm.
Wilcoxen sa id before leaving for San
Francisco lhat he could not. recall an In-
stance in which the Supreme Court had
halted an election under a I m i l 1 r
circumstances.
Meanwhile routine preparaUorui·for the
Tuesday election continued In Latuna
Beach, where more Ulan 8,000 satDple
ballots already are ln the hands of voters.
Deputy City Clerk Velma Newtnger
said that 215 abseotee ballot appllcaUona
had been rocelvod by the 1\.ooday
deadline and noted that 1bseotee ballota
muit be in the clty clerk'• of(lce by I
p.m. Monday. lo quallly for tnchwoo In
the ;i.uy made after Ille polla •lOot ll\100-
day •. , ·
Ram Star to Be Sued
•
I D.llt.V l'ILOT SC
OrMt Readied -
Apollonauts Set
For Rendezvo·us
&PACI: CENTER. Houston iUPl)-The
Apollo 11 a.stron1uts nached the outer
•pprot;chu to tht mC'lOn with unerring ac-
curacy today and unveUed a $17 million
acknce laboratory in their spacecraft to
begin man'1 most ambitious lunar ei:·
ploraUon.
The cover of the es~ially equipped
laboratory wag jettisoned in space a few
hours before the three-man ship reached
the · point to begin orbit of the moon,
preparatory to a landing on the surface
Friday.
All was reported well by the trio -
David R. Scott, Alfred M. Worden and
James B. Irwin -in their fourth day of
the elaborate, 12-day mission.
The a!tronauts first corrected their
course with a precise rocket burst and
then trla:aered a string of exp\(')sives that
dilcarded the door to the l&boratory
13,~ mill!& fl'l'lm the moon.
"We felt a little shudder. but not too
much." Scott reported as the door fell
away.
This was an important. significant step
ln the $445 million mission. It opened up
the command ship's new moon mapping
ca.mens, and radiation sensors.
The three American spacemen then
prepared their 107 ,000 pound craft for its
critical awtna lnto orbit around the moon
et 4:06 p.m.-EDT.
The astronauts wore spacesuits just in
case Mmethlng went wrong. But the
operation went smoothly and t h e
spacemen reported they felt far less
llhock than expected from jettisoning of
-the lab cover. The 5-by-91h foot panel
Ooated away from the spaceship.
Scott,· the mission co m m a nd er,
reported to the ground:
"Jim's got it out his window and he'!I
ta.king pictures," referring to Irwin. "He
says it's slowly tumbling."
Trailing Apollo 15 by several thousand
miles at the time was the spent last stage
of the Saturn rocket that started the
atsronauts on their adventure Monday.
Scott and Irw in are scheduled to land
on the moon late Friday, several hours
after the lunar module, Falcon, separates
from Endeavour, the command ship,
leaving Worden in lunar orbit.
The last stage of the Saturn was on a
collision course with a site at the center
of the moon's surface facing' the earth,
impact was set for late this afternoon.
·11le Apollo 15 neared the conclwion c4.
the voyage to the moon with the cabin
Jooldng like a h<>use wife's laundry room.
It wa9 tbf: aftermath of a leaky drinking
wattr fixture that the astronauts we.re
able to flJ: with a wrench Wednesday
!light.
Thfl astronauts were aroused at 7:37
a.m. EDT from a eood night's sleep with
tht rtport: "All systems normal."
Flight Director Glynn S. Lunney said of
tht water leak, "we don't have any res
concern about that at this time.
The tremor of the impacting st.age wa!I
to be measured by two moonquake
meters left behind by earlier Apol!G
Summer Classes
Still A vailahle
Several openings still remain in the
new eession of ci&Mes being offered by
the Laguna Beach recreation Depart-
ment, offidals report.
The classes beina: offered include. ballet
and creative dance; intermediate and
beg\nnlng guitar; golf; beginning surfing:
beginning and intermediate tenn~ and
•wimming for persons of all ages.
Although moot of the cour~ are
taught during the day, several hold even-
ing sessions. Furthur Information may be
obt.ain@d from the department at 494-1124
eit. 45.
DAILY PILOT
O•ANGIS: COAST l'Vl l 1$H1NO C:OMP'AN'(
... ,,,. N. w •• d
l'•n '.""I •nd 1'11Dll~htr
Jaclr •. c~.1 • .,
Viet "'-Id"'! •rid G-r11 Mf"'11tr
lti•"'•• K••vil l!dl!OI'
Th•••• A. Mu1 11~•~•
Mtllftlllt EdllW
Ch111•• H. loo1
Lilt•M IMdl Office
222 Fortd A~111ue
M1ili11t •dd11u: P.O. l o• 4•6, '2652
s..ci....-.~
305 N1rtll El C1111i11e Rea!, 92672
Otlier Off11•
CO.II M1u· lJll Wt 1l lty S!r....t
N ...... lMC~: ml NJWPON •ou •v•'11
HU11ll"1lln IM<~: 1111J l••t~ l ou\fv1"111
crews. Sclenlists hoped the nature nf the
subsurface vibration! would tell more
about the moon 's makeup.
At 1 :29 .!l .m., Apollo 15's 5445-milllon,
12-day mission cro.ssed the imaginary line
in space where the moon's gravitational
influence overpowers earth's and the
astronauts started speeding up tow3rd
tbe moon . 1'1ey were 39,000 miles away
at the time.
Scott, Worden and Irwin v,·ere aslttp by
then, resting up for the start of a record
liix days of moon exploration.
Before reliring, Scott and Irwin
slithered into the landing craft Falcon for
a second time and found all systems
ready for the 6:15 p.m. landing Friday in
a moon basin hemmed in on three sides
by mountains and flanked on the other by
a deep gorge.
Group Will Push
For Saddleback
Bond Passage
A committee of valley residents has
~n organized lo work for the passage tJf
the $24.7 million Saddleback College bond
igsue, scheduled to 1io before the voters
Sept. 14.
The group, called the Citizen's Bond
Committee, y,·i!l attempt to win support
for the issue from residents in the
various communities with.In the college
district.
Named as general chairman of the
committee was Laguna Beach resident
Robert Malone. The committee represen-
t.a.lives in the individual communities are
Carl Buchheim of San Juan Capistrario;
Harcourt Bull of San Clemente; Leonard
Geesen of Laguna Hill5: Mrs. Ronald
McGowen of Mission Viejo: Dougla!I
Moran of TusUn: Fem Randolph of
Laguna Beach and John Zold flf South
Laguna.
Further Information conerning the
group'!i position on the bond issue may be
obtained from Mrs. McGo'ftn at 837-0641.
San Clem'ente
Girl Bicycle
Rider Injured
A 13-year-old San Clemente girl suf-
fered a fractutt:d wrist and glas.s-caused
wounds to an eye Wednesday afternoon
when her bicycle slammed into a utility
pole .
Jane Elizabeth Douglas of 513 Calle De
Soto, suffered the injuries after her cycle
Jost control at the base of Avenida
Presidio near civic center.
Police said the girl. daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William R. Douglas. had been
riding down the long, steep roadway and
then apparently lost control near the en-
trance to the fire department.
She was taken to South Coa~t Com-
munity Hospital in a fire department sta-
tion wagon serving as an emergency am-
bt:lance, police said.
Her condition at the hosptial was
described as satisfactory.
The girl"s eye was injured by tier
broken a-lasses.
Adviser Finch
Cancels Harbor
Dedication Talk
Top Presidential Advrse.r Robert Finch
has left for a funeral in Liberia and will
not appear as scheduled Saturday at
Dana Harbor's dedication ceremonies.
The fory:qer-California Lieutenant
GovemoMfad been set to deliver the ma-
jor address at the 2 p.m. ceremonies
heralding the $30 mllllon yachting
facility.
A last-minute repla cement fur Finch is
being arranged.
Spokesmen in Dana Point said Mother
top-level emissary from the White House
v,·ill be on hand Saturday.
The ceremonies will take place near
lhe entrance to Doheny State Park along
Del Obispo Road leading into the harbor.
Finch was ::;ent. to Liberia to represent
the United States at funeral rites for
\Villiam Tubman, fonner president of
that African country.
After the funeral Finch will begin a
month-long world tour.
South Lagunan
Aids Space Shot
Tht lllln of a Snuth Laguna rouple Is
Among the t.housands of U.S. 8pace te1UT1
me.mbers whose individual work haa
made the Apollo 1~ mission po3slb1e.
Bruce G. CaMier\y, ~n of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Casserly, of 31202 Holly Drive, is a
NASA enginef'r '>''Orking in lhe Manned
Space('taft Ceriter in Hou~ton. Casserly , a
graduate of UC Berkeley. work!! in the
analysi!I division which ha!\ developed
ph1ns to meet emergency development.I
during the Oigtit .
l
Bon Vlvant -· -
County Recalls
Poisoned Goods
By TOM BARLEY
Of ti.. O.H' l'l\ft J111t
Bon Vivant canned goods -and some
under several other labels -are coming
off the shelves today in Orange Coar;t
stores and supermarkets just as fast as
Orange County liealth Deparbnent in-
spectors can make their rounds of the
outlets.
But there may be many cans or the
foods condemned by the federal Foood
and Drug Administration tucked away on
housewives' shelves throughout the coun-
ty and in small grocery stores that bave
overlooked the health department order
or have been overlooked by both county
and state inspectors.
"If you find it, get rid or It.'' warns
County Health Officer John Philp.
"Destroy it or send it back to the
manufacturer but, either way, get rid of
it."
Withdrawal of the affecled foods has
been complicated by the fact that Bon Vi·
vant not only canned their ov,·n soups and
delicacies but canned products for other
companies and, on occasions, supplied
many homes with a personalized line of
canned gourmet foods.
people who read of this recall action by
us should be a5sured that this is purely a
precautionary measure.''
This writer's shopping tour Wednesday
failed to produce a single can of any of
the listed products but it did tt:veal the
determination of several shop managers
to whip off lhe shelves several canned
gourmet products th.!lt have not been
Jlsted by health authorities.
"We've taken off the Bon Vivant line
and all the others we were warnect
about," said Slee Brimer, manaier ot
Jurgensen·s, 250 Broadway, Laguni:
Beach. "I don 't want to be quoted on the;
addit ional brands I've withdrawn but WC:
didn't take any chances here.''
Everjthing listed by the health depart-
ment is no longer available at Richard'•
Lido Market, 3433 Via Lido, Newport
Beach, assistant manager Roger Lin·
derman seid.
"We've had both county and state in-
spectors here and they 're both satisfied
that we've taken all the affected brands
off our shelves," he said.
Capo Nine Wins
The Bon Vivant business got its death
blow last week when a New York state
man died of botulism poisoning shortly
after he and his wife consumed a can of
Bon Vivant vichyssoise. The woman.
almost totally paralyzed, is still on the
hospital's critical list.
Bon Vivant this week filed for
bankruptcy in an action that noted the
FDA demand that the firm recall pro-
ducts distributed under 34 labels ~
among them Sey-Co, Van Nuys, Reese
Finer Foods, Los Angeles, S & W. San
Francisco, Rykoff and Hickory Farms in
addition to private labels.
But the apparently prompt and
unani mous actio n by county distributors
of banned Bon Vivant delicacies does not
rule out the possibility that lhe firm's
products may turn up years hence ln
homeowners' food cupboards.
Former CBS news commentator Pete
Pringlit stressed that possibility by
bringing to the DAILY PILOT off ices
several cans of gourmet products, among
them Bon Vivant soups. Laguna Team Beaten for Crown Several cans were in poor ronditinn and
all were pulled from Mrs. Pringle's
shelves at 160 S. Bay Front. Balboa
Island. aftf:!r the concerned couple learn-
ed of the Bon Vivant ban.
Going into an extra inning , San Juan
Capistrano little leaguers defeated
Laguna Bea ch 6-5 to become the district
55 champions Wednesday night.
San Juan will go on to represent
Death Jet
Monitored
By Trainee
Special to the DAILY PILOT
PASADENA -A Hughes Air West
jetliner that collided with an El Toro
MCAS supersonle fighter, killing SO
persons, was being radsr·monitored by
an air traffic controller on-the-job
trainee.
The disclosure eame Wednesday.
Testimony reswned here today before
a National Tran!portation Safety Board
panel attempting to determine cause or
causes of the tragic June 6 collision over
Duarte.
The jetliner spiralled down into a
crevasse-like San Gabriel Mountain can-
yon carrying 44 passengers and t1 crew
of five to death, while the Marine F4
Phantom pilot also perished.
Victims included Michael Potter, 7, and
his sister Sandra. 6, children of r-.1rs . San-
clra Potter of 709 Calle Puente, San
Clemente.
Palmdale Air Traffic Control Center
super visory controller Robert Feister
testified his rook ie had been doing fine
unt il the 9:34 am. impact, in clear
v.·ealher.
Feist.er said he stood dire ctl y behuid
trainee Harry A. Grove and ne ither he
nor Grove saw a bl ip representing the
Phantom jct . wh ose radar transponder
v,·as inopera tive.
A large Audience listened at the
Pasad ena Hilton hotel as Feister tol<l of
realizing something was wrong \\'hen a
radar emergency signal flashed on a se-
cond controller's scope.
Glancing up for 20 seconds maximum,
he said he turned back to Groves·
radarscope to find the DC9 blip had
vanished.
He then took over for Groves.
Testimony Wednesd11y indicated that
while the Salt Lake City-bound jetliner
was ground-monilored, lls own trans-
ponder radar unit was also faulty.
The DC9 emergency signal designed lo
pinpoint s flight crisis or collision never
appeared, although a mystery light flash-
ed on the screen simultaneously from
some olher aircraft.
Monitored for 10 minutes , it vanished in
the area of Norton AF'B, deepening the
element of Intrigue.
One of the key wilnl"'sses is Marine \st
Lt. Christopher Schies~. 24. radar
operator aboard the Phantom , who
survived by parachuting.
He denied in teatimony Tuesday any
aerobatic flying immediately befort fhe
collision at 15.000 feet, contrary to initial
statements by eyewitnesses on the
ground .
Lieutenant SchleS!, who lives on·bR~.
said pilot Lt. James R. Phillips, 27, had
completed a 360-<tegree rollover 80 they
could check the surrounding air space for
other planes.
The Marine aircraft was returning on 11
relat!vtly low-level cour11e due lo oxygen
system failure-. flying on s see-and ·be.·
see n basis because of defective radar.
The Air West plane knifed into the tall
section of the Phantom !ec()nds 11.fter Lt.
Sc.hies!' saw It. !rioming, he testified anrl
Lt. Phillips was unable to ball out
himself.
1-learings will wind up Friday. Uut It
will be some time before a final
determination Is issued by the federal
11 gency on what caused r.he tragedy.
district 55 in regional playoffs In San
Bernardino next month.
Laguna Beach led In the game from the
second to the siith inning, at Riddle Field
when San Juan tied the game up five all,
which was broken in the seventh with an
additional run by the visiling team.
Winning pitcher was Dave Reeves of
San Juan. Rich Nunis of Laguna Beach
was the lower.
The opening of the game was marred
\\'hen San Juan player Peter Kenney
was hil in the fa ce by a pitclt from young
Nunis, Kenney was rushed to South Coast
Community Hospital, where he is listed in
satisfactory condition this morning with a
broken cheekbone.
Several other batters were hil by wild
pitches from 00!.h pitchers, but none of
them was injured seriously.
The only home run for Laguna Beach
was slugged out of the park by Mark
Eagleton. which brought in three other
runs in lhe serond Inning.
Two home runs were racked up by
Blayne Suekelt and Doug Synde of San
Juan.
Roland Rodmar crossed home plate lo
win the ball game for San Juan, driven In
on a hit by Nick Romero. Rodmar got on
base each time at bat during the game.
Approximately 500 fans jammed into
Riddle Field to watch the game.
"But the last thing I want to do," Dr.
Philp said, "is promote hysteria about
th is Bon Vivant recall. We certainly want
them off the shelves but what we are
primarily interested in as far as the other
labels are concerned are the vichyssoise
and black bean soups.
"We've had no cases of poisoning in
Orange County," Dr. Philp 8aid. "And
Lady Volleyball
Tourney Slated
Distaff athletes in the Art Colony are
invited to sign up for the 1st Annual
Laguna Beach Women's Open Doubles
Volleyball Tournament to be held Aug. 7
and 8 at the Main Beach Courts.
The first 32 teams which sign up will be
pennitted to play in the tournament.!
wh.ich begin at 9 a.m. both days.
Reglstrations must be received by 5 p.m.
Aug. 4 at the recreation department, 175
N. Coast Highway.
Individual awards will be presented to
members of the top four teams in the
toumey.
QUEEN SIZE
Drug Purchase
Becomes $500
Theft in Laguna
A 17-year--0ld youth v.·ho told Laguna
Beach officers he was attempting to
purchase drugs Tuesday night was rn~
bed al knifepoinl of $500 by his alleged
supplier.
Police said U1e victim, who gave 8 La
Crescenta address, mel the bandit at I
p.m. in the 700 block of South Coas t
Higbway. The youth told police he gave
the $500 to the man and went wilh him in
his car to the 1200 b!ock of Gaviota Drive,
where the pair were to pick up ah
amount of marijuana.
When they arrived there, the youth
reported, the unknoY;n suspect drew •
long bladed knife and ordered the
youngster from the car. Police said lhe
youth struggled v,·ith the bandit, but w&s
eventua!Jy forced from the auto, whicl:I
then sped off.
• FULL SIZE
NOW $299 OHi
Wilk
ONLY
e n.. •te ""' •••rtHle ,.,_ bM1
k r tJ"l"f •1111 1IMIJl11t. e A wide Mlecflo11 ef fellorlu "41 cefe l"I
te cllo ... f'1'0111 . e •"usllll• llecll ••II Met callle11t.
Your fooaritc intt.rior dt.rigMr will b• happ11. to osiiJt 11011
I
H.J.GARRETI fURNITURE
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIG~ERS
•
2215 HARBOR SL VO.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
M6-0l75 6'6·01 76
f; -••. ',+).)~ _, __ _ ·-1' -l j i;r..
I
I
l
1
San Clemente
Capistrano
* * VOL 6'4 , NO. 180, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES
•
EDI TI ON.
.
Today's-Flaal
·-•4--
TEN CENTS
Supervisors l(nucl{le Down in Budget Assault
By JACK BROBACK
01 lh• O•llr ~H•I sr1H
Orange Counly supervisors got down to
the hard facts of budget trimming today
after five days of listening to department
heads state their cases ror more money.
They are faced with a $244 million
general fund budget up $20 million from
1970-71 and showing a $12 million revenue
deficit, equal to 30 cents on top of the
present Sl.70 tax rate.
The grand total budget, including ;11\
r;pecial districts such as harbor. flood
control, structural fire, etc., i.c; $270
million compared with $238 million in
1970-71.
To make the task of cutting the budget
more difficult, the board members must
decide I.ht fate of $6.8 million in so-called
"policy matters" not included in the
budget.
They include such significant item.c; as
finishing the fourth floor of the county
jail, $1-5 million; delayed buildin.R: proj·
ects. $1.3 milliofl ; and emergency
employment program, $1 million and
refuse disposal equipment and land
purchase. $1.7 million.
Supervisors Wednesday looked al a
proposed $4 .5 million capital project
program lnew buildings. a d d i l i o n s •
remodeling) which RObert Thomas coun-
ty administrative officer said he had
trimmed from $17.4 million in requests
from the various departments.
Principal expenditures to e s c a p e
Thornas' blue pencil were the Harbor
District Municipal Courts bliilding, $2.12
million ; a dowa payment on a county
refuse disposal site north ()f San Juan
Capistrano, $500,000 ; new fire stations
and additions. $329,000; South Santa Ana
branch welfare, health. and probation
departments. $1 million.
Thomas ch.aracterized the proposals
which he h.ad cut by $13.2 million to the
$4.S million as ;'absolutely rock bottom."
In addition, $579,692 in 1970-71 projects
not compJeted but budge~ last yea:r
were Included to bring the total to f.5.1
million .
Rents and leases will cost the COUtlty
$2.8 million in the current year, Thomas
said.
Recreation and cultural activities el·
penditures were also presented. Wed-
nesday, largely composed of beaches and
reJ!ional parks.
The budget recommended totals $Ul
million including such projects as $1 .3
million for acquisition of proposed Yorba
Park in lhe Santa Ana River Canyon;
$775,000 for county beach development,
and $1.B million for parks Ctevelopment.
CUt by Thomas from an ACCurnulat.ive
capital ouUay program, presented. by
Director of Harbors. Beaches and Parks
Kenneth Sampson were projects totalling
$1.37 million.
Included were acquisition <>f land for a
Chiquita Flats Park on Ortega Hi ghway,
$500,000; Villa Park D11.m Park develop-
ment, $500,000 and Fullerton. Dam Park
development, $300,000.
Approved by Thomas were Villa Park
acquisition. $400.(100; Yorba Park ac-
quisition, $1.3 million : Mile Square Park
development, $262,900: University Park
development, $884,000; Laguna Niguel
Park development. $650,000.
Sampson plugged for reinstatement of
the Chiquita Flats, Fullerton Dam and
Villa Park development fWlds .
He said that his department was re-
questing $7 million for parks; $1 million
of parks operation, and $6.4 million for
beaches. The latter would be in the
Harbor District budget under a separate
tax rate.
Sampson said the estimated cost of the
Niguel beach (Salt Creek) purchase from
AVCO Community Developers was $2.7
million. He said the Harbor District com·
missioners were willing to place this e1.·
penditure in the district budgeL
~ities ust • airman
Crash Battle
Coast Freeways
Will Get Fences
By JOHN VALTERZA lncluded in lhat project wiU be the in·
01 ffl• 011,., '1101 si.11 11la!lation of R center barrier between
Miles of unguarded freeway divider Camino de Estrella and a point a half·
itrtp will be equipped with f~e,.<; ~nd mile north of Las Ramblas.
baniers along the South Coast in coming The slretch has been the scene or .:it
morith.<1 in an attempt to stem lhe grow-least seven traffic t;leaths invnlvinR two
ing number of fatal crashes, a stJile separate mishaps in which autos crossed
spokesman. said today. · the unguarded dirt median.
The first major project calculated to ln tbal section construction crews will
tut down' the number of collisi<1'11 wlfl"<;,r.;xpand the freeway from six lane.~ to
take place In the '"big curve" section of eight, using righ~-of-way already bought
the San Diego Freeway at Capistrano on the inland slde of the freeway.
Beach. the scene of several multiple-fatal Gustafsen said the estimated con-
1mashups in recent months. slruction time for lhe project will be 465
State Division of Highways press of· days.
ficer Charles Gustafsen said that bids on Yet another median strip project
a major. $4 million widening and barrier already has bct'n launched , he sairi. on
project on the stretch will be opened portions of the freeway no rth of San Juan
April 12. Capistrano.
Dow1a the
Mission
Trail
Junior AA Ball
Signups Saturday
MlSSION VIEJO -Prospe ctiv ~
participants in lhe fall Juni~r . All
American Football program are 1nv1led
lo sign up Saturday. .
Registration booths will be npcn at 10
a.m. until noon in the La Paz Ptar.a.
e Clrcu• Week Set.
LAKE FOREST -Circus week will
begin Aug. 2 at the Lake forest Beach
and Tennis Club.
Any child in the community between
the ages of 6 and 12 may participate in
the arts and crafts program which this
week will fealure puppe;making. .•
bei.rded fat lady co~tesi. c1~cus n1osa1c
making and a trip lo a real circus.
For information on the program call
the club at 837-6100.
• Tennb CltU•e•
MJSSJ ON VIEJO -Registration for
the final !Jeri~ of tennis. cla~ at
Mission Viejo High School will be Friday
from 8:30 to 10:40 a.m. at the high school
cOUrlll. 1'be first class will be Monday. Aug. 2
and wlll be Mondays. Wed.r:-iesday1 and
Fridays for an hour until Aug. 13.
The fee is $8. The !!CSSiOM wil~ be for
adult beginners and advanced beginners.
• Bring Ste..,
MISSION VIEJO -Admi~ion lo onf!
.,-,eclal evenl in Mission Viejo Friday ii
cne can of stew.
The event is "hobo day·• for five and
glx year olds and It will begin 1t II 1.m.
at the Montanoso RecreAtlon Centtr.
Children will be wearing hobo ty~
cloth~ and will ht poolin£ their admis-
sion for a pot-luck lunch.
Under a $323,000 contract with the U.S.
Steel Corporation, critical points <>f the
freeway from the Junipero Serra offramp
1111 the way to Culver Drive near Irvine
will be fitted with median strip pro-
tection.
The combination of LhP two projecL~. he
said, would provide protection on most nf
the unguarded freeway by ne1t year's
enrl.
Another stretch of busy lhorou~hf.:ire,
however, will not have medians installed
until deep in the 1970s.
A major reconstructron projc.ct frnrn
Estralla southwarrl through Sa n
Clemenle to the county line remains in
fi scal limbo.
"We have the plan/I wnrkerl up. hut
because of the finar.cial picture in stat e-
budgets, it dnesn"t look like anythin~ can
be done until late in !he 1970s." he saici .
Median·slrip crashes hiive occurred
mostly in the Capistrano Beach sector of
the freeway.
Jn the most recent nf the fatal incident.11
two young women and 11 small boy died
when the car in which they were ridinp;
was struck from behind and sent acrOM
the median strip, headon into a bus.
Four other persons died late last year
when a car veered acrOM the strip in the
same general area and collided headon
lnt.o a chemical truck.
Highway Patrolmen. who often h11ve
expressed concern over the divider sltua-
tion , have pointed out several major in·
jury crashes in the sirea in recent
months, also blamed on the lack of center
strip protection.
Services Held
For Mrs. Wilt,
Retired Teacher
Funeral services were conducted today
In Glendale for retired school teacher
Mrs. .May G!rdl~tone Wilt of San
Clemente. She died Sunday. She was 78.
Mrs. Will, who lived at 153 Trafalgar
Lin, leaves a daughter, Marjorie Jarie
Wilt of San Clemente; a son, Dr. David
Wilt of F'ont.ana ; a sister. Mrs. George
Prindle or West Los Angeles. and two
arandchlklret1.
Mn Wilt was a retired teacher who
M.rved in Arizona and California for 4'
years.
Today's noon rites were conducled a.l
the Little Churdi of the flowers al
Forest Lawn, Glendale.
--..r.&J ~·· ·-· .,,~
•
OAILY ,ILOT ll•H ,lltlt
SALT CREEK BEACH IS SHOWN BEFORE BLUFFTOPS ARE SHAVED FOR REDEVELOPMENT
Stabilization of Area Will Entail Moving Million Cubic Yards of Fill /Material
New Salt Creek Envisioned
Earth Slippage Protection Needed if Purcliased
If rounly supervisnrs accepl a
fea5ibility reporl and agr~ W purchase
Salt Creek Beach for $2.6 million, what
t.hP public will see on npeninfi( day will bf>
substantially different than the Salt
Creek of old .
Al hearings lhis week before County
Harbor Commissioners. geologist.'I and
spokesJtien for the Avco Development
C-OmpaEdwelt a . one poinl on the ex-
treme rthslide aspects of much of the
area a 've the scenic CO\'eted beach.
lnclu in plans already approved by
t.he Co6nty Building Department is a
propo&Rl to shave off some blufftop1
above the beach and encroach into the
dry sand area with an expenslvti'
retaining wait of boulders.
The enlire project, 111id county
,:?eologist Cecil H.ollon. would Include.
moving a million cubic yards of flll
material to stave off the chances ol more
earth slippage.
The encroachment, he said . meas\l(e!!
about llOO feet along the base of bluffs in
the str~tch or beach involved in the
proposed transaction.
Hollon told commlssi<>ners that the sec-
li<>n of bluff and uplands Immediately
upcoast from ~iguel Road is extremely
sictive 5lide activity. Al least seven
11cparate major earth movements are
evident there, he added.
To compound the problem, Hollon said,
underground water seeps constantly
through the material. adding to slide
probabilities on the unstable Capistrano
rormatlon.
GredillJ plans, he said. already have
betn revlewcd by a panel of soil
mechanicl e1perla w i t h I n hls
deputrnetll.
The encroachment on the Inland strip
nf the sand W()Uld be neces11trY to stem
the fnrward mo.-ement or slumps and ht
r,ssential to the A VC.0 plana to recompact
\
the unslable bluff areas. he explained.
"This will be no inex()('nsive projPCt,"
he said ... The plan is !o move 11 million
ctJbic yards of soil al a cost of pcrhAps 30 ,
to 50 cents a cubic yard."
Without the restoration of the territory.
he said. continuing major earth slides
would be "a certainly," he said.
.. The devel<>pment would probably help
the beach and make it better than it is
now:' he added.
Leaders in the flght to restore the
public use of the beach expressed mild
concern over ttie encroachment issue. but
said that If the actual reconstruction of
the bluff areas follows current promises
by the development firm , that there
would be nn 11.pparent objection.
Commissioners as well stressed that
the rock keywal\s should be kept as close
to the existing sand line as possible.
"We have tried to plan that wall as
close as possible to avoid taking up much
11and." stressed AVCO E1ecutive Vice
President Richard Weiser .
.. There will have to be some ahavlng
off of the blufftops. and the point which
Juts seaward will have a crown removed
to prevent rocks from falling down.
We 're going to try to keep tt in as natural
a condition as possible," he added.
Nixo11 to Conclude Busy
Weekend iI1 San Clemente
President Nixon will end .1 busy week·
end Of speecbes In the Midwest a.!Kl
C&lifornia, Whi~ House spokesmen sajd
Wednesday.
The Ch.le.( Exctullve -who hlid been
expected to ref.um to the Soulh Coast in
mid-Augu.sl -has chosen to Oy lei San
Clemenu alter apeaklng engagements in
Ohlo, Iowa and San Francisco.
He ii ea:pected to return to Wa1hlngton,
D.C., either lak: '5unday or Monday.
On Friday, Mr. Nixon will addre11
per30n1 attending a pro-football Hall-<>f·
Fame dinner lo Canton, Ohk>. Thtn on
Saturday he will dedicate a $1l7·milllon
Rathbun Dam at Ottumwa, tow1. Ymm
h.!re he will Oy to San Francisco for
another speech at Bohemian Grove -a
gathering ()f business and proftlslonal
leaders.
After the Satu.r_day a(J.ernOon talk ln the
Bay Area, the 'Chief E1ecutive will board
Ai r Force One for a Otiiht to El Toro
MCAS. Ulen board .his helk:vpter for the
tht\rt filp;ht lei San· Clemente.
The. at.rdden annOunce ment or·u.e trip
west came at a Umt . when aevtral '
tourcts nported that the President plan-,
ntd a three-weU trip to San Clemente
starting tn mld-Aulftllt.
Tha t Is the trad!Oonal month for the
Presldent'1 lon!est 1t1y1 at his compound
alMg the SOvth Col.st. ·
That trtp sttll ls being coos1dered.
Joe Hyde
Gets Boot
FromLAFC
By TOM BARLEY
Of TM 0.HJ l'lllot Slllf
Los Alamitos Councilman Joe Hyde
was hustled ou_t of his seat on the Local
Agency Formation Commission and
Assemblyman John Briggs Jost local sup--
porl tor his Harbor Di.strict dissolution
propooal W~a,y night In a 11«11>1
·brange C<sunty LeagUe-~of Cities meeting.
Six~p of ).S Or~e County d tles ,...
lected lhe' angty'liyi!el!i ·• soi:ret ballot
that apparently Wt the "'9ay clear for the
reelection to the coveted LAFC post or
Fullerton Councilman Louls "Red"
Reinhardt. <See related story, pagt 13.)
The county's mayors, sitting at the
same meeting in Orange as the League's
ctty selection c<l!Tlmittee called an elec·
tion for Aug. 12 after a'pponting Mayor
Ed Just of Fountain Valley as the com·
mlttee's chairman. Just also chairs the
league meetings.
Reinhardt, who was Immediately ec·
cused by Hyde or collusion with the
Irvine Company, offered to delay u,e suit
he filed last week again~t 25 Orange
County mayors and the county board or
supervisors and which is scheduled for
hearing Aug. 12 in Orange County
Superior Court.
That la""·suit challenges the validity or
the election which ousted Reinhardt and
gave Hyde the LAFC post and contends
that aeveral of the votes cast in the 13 to
12 cliff hanger last July 8 were cast II·
legally for person~ who were not present.
Reinhardt refused to comment on the
lawsuit's -status if he fails to win reelec·
lion to the LAFC post. His spol on thll
I~AFC board and in the group's chair was
taken Wednesday afternoon for the fint
time by Hyde just six hours before the
Jee.gue dumped him.
Hyde refused to allow the league tt'I
further debate his dismls!al from lh1t
LAF'C post alter the 16 to 9 vote was
recorded.
"I do not int.end to prolong this
di!!Cussion and I vacate the post," he
said.
"I resent Hyde's remark about ths
Trvine Company," Reinhardt told the
league in a brief addre.s.s. "A.s Goel is my
witness. no one from the Lrvine Company
has ever contacted me."
or .. ge Cout
Weather
Sunny skies are on the menu
again for today and F riday with
highs along lhe beaches at 72. ris-
ing to 16 inland. Lows tonight
around 65 ,dea:rees.
INSmE TODA)'
Govtrnor RoMld' llt'agon· Ml
ltemittd a 101.de oorict11 o/ lonf.S
California ti aufferlna due to th•
rail strik1:. Ht said tht re.aldt
could bl diaaltrolLI. Sto"fl. Poot
9. •
... -:> ~-·+ I
l "'~-·~·--... --. ~;h-·------l
... ..
I
I D4ll. v mor SC
OrWt Readied
Apollonauts Set
Rendezvous
SPACE CENTER, lloustoo (UP!)-Th•
Apollb ts astronauts rtached the ou~r
eP9f'Glcbea to the moon with unerrina: ac-
curacy today and unveiled a $17 million
aclenoe laboratory ln their spacecrafl to
begin man's m011t ambltiow lunar a ·
plorat!on.
'I1te. covtt of the especially equipped
laboratory was jettisoned in space a few
hours beforl!: the three-man ship reached
the point to briiJi orbit of the moon,
preparatory to a landing on the $urface
Friday.
All was reported well by the trio -
David R. ScoU. Alfred M. Worden and
James B. Irwin -in their fowth day of
the elaborate, 11-day miHion.
The astronauts first crirrectf!d the.it
course; with a precise rocket burst and
then triggered a strin& of ei:plosives that
dl.scarded the door to the laboratory
13,200 miles from the moon.
"We felt a little shudder, but not too
much," Scott reported as the door fell
away.
This was an important, significant step
in the $445 million mission. It opened up
the command ship's new moon mapping
cameras, and radiation sensors.
The three American spacemen then
prepared their 107 ,000 JX>und craft for its
critical swing into orbit around the. moon
at 4:08 p.m. EDT.
The astronauts Wt>rl!: spacl!:suilS just in
case something went wrong . But the
operation went smoothly and t h e
spacemen re)Xlrted they felt far less
shock than expected from jettisoning o(
the lab cover. The 5-by.9¥, foot panel
floa~ away from the spaceship.
Scott, the mission c o m m a n d e r.
re)Xlrted to the ground:
"Jim's got it out his window and he's
taking pictures," referring to lrwin. "He
says it's slowly tumbling."
Trailing Apollo 15 by several thousand
miles at the time was the spent last stage
of the Saturn rocket that started the
etsronauts on their adventure Monday .
Scott and trwin are scheduled to land
tin the moon late Friday, several hours
after the lunar module. Falcon, separatt:s
from Endeavour. the command ship.
leaving Worden in lunar orbit.
The last stage of the Saturn was on a
collision course with .11 site at the center
t1f the moon's surface facing the earth.
impact was set for late this afternoon.
·1'he Apollo 15 neared the conclusion <i
the voyage to the moon with the. cabin
Jooking like a house wife's laundry room.
Jt w.u the aftermath of a leaky drinking
water fitturl!: that the astronauts were
able to fit with a wrench Wednesday
nighl
The 1u;tronauts were aroused al 7:37
a.m. EDT from a good night 's sleep with
the report: "All systems normal."
Flight Director Glynn S. Lunney 1aid of
tbe water leak, "we d<ln't have any reS
concern about that at this time.
1be tremor of the impacting st.age wa!
to be ml!:aaured by two moonquake
meters left behind by earlier Apollo
Summer Classes
Still A vailahle
Sever.:I openings still remain ln the
new aesflion of clas&cea being offered by
thl!: Laguna Be.11ch recreation Depart·
menl, officials report.
The clauea being offered include ballet
and crtalive dance ; intennediate and
beginning ,Wtar; goU: beginning surfing;
beginning and intermediate tennis and
swimming for persons of all ages.
Although mor;t of the COUrse! are
taught during the day. Sl!:Veral hold even-
ing seuiona. Furthur information may be
obtained from the department at 494-1124
ext. 45.
DAILY PILOt
OltAHGi:: CO.UT l'IJlllSHING COMl'AN'f
ll:ebert N. We1tl ...... :-1 •nd ,111111.-
J eck It. C11rl1y
Yiu 'r•ld.,t end ~rel Ml/llOlf'
llieMel K1e¥il
fdllOI'
n.,.,, A. Murpl'l!n 1
"' ..... ,.,. fd!ior
0.•rln M. lee1 llt .. erd P. Nell
Aulalenl M1,..1in9 Etrlwn
Utne IMclll Offke
122 hre•f Aw1n111
M1ilin9 ... tlre11: P.O. lo• 461, •26S? s-c1 •• ..,. Offk1
JOS Nortll El C11t1in11 A11I, 91472 --C..lt ""'"'' JJIO Wttf 111' Slrfff ~ 1-n; W3 H....,,....., 10\l l~•rl
H111tt"-to!1 ttedl: 11tlt ... ell tauleYe""
'.... 1714) '4l-4JJ1 Cl Y11\w1 A'"rfWwt '4l·N71
... Cl1111te AA D•,01 .... 1:
, ........ 4t2-44ll . ....... ... ... ... , .... ,
Tsllpl 112 4t4ot4U
.~ ...... 1'11, Orwtwe c...11 ~"" ~-"' -,,...._, t1Mtr11111M. lllWilt _,.... .,, •tl-11-11 ,..... ...
-. M ••lfJCll ~ .aedt l ,...._
........ Cfllf'lrfflM -""·
~ detf .... , ... ,_ .. ti N-' llMfl ~ C-11 MeN, C•lifofrttlt. S411:11d'lllllell 1rf c1rrlef' tt.• .,...,M111y1 W °"II U .71 -1'llY1 ll"!Uttrt ._1111ttlln1. UJI 1N111fPltr.
. -
crews. Scientist! boped lhe nature of the
sub6urface vibrations w(')Uld tell more
about the moon's makeup.
At 1:%9 a.m .. Apollo lS's $44~milhon,
12~y miY:ioo croa~ the imaalna.ry line
in space wbere the moon's 1ravitational
influence overpowers earth's and the
astronau~ started speeding up 1ow11rd
lhe moon . They were 39,000 miles away
at lhe time
Scott, Worden and Irwin 1~1r.re asJet:p by
then , resting up for the start of a record
1ix days of moon exploration.
Before retiring, Scott and 1rwm
slithered into ~landing craft Falcon kl r
a second time and found all systems
ready for the 6:15 p.m. landing Friday in
a moon basin hemmed in on three side:oi
by mountains and flanked on the other by
a deep gorge.
Group Will Push
For Saddlehack
Bond Passage
A committee of valley residents has
beeo. organized I.ti work for the pasaage cf
the $2.4. 7 million Sa.ddleback Collea;e bond
issue. scheduled to go before the voters
5'pL 14.
The grcup, called the Citizen's Bond
Committee, will attempt to ~'in support
for the issue from r@Sident! in thl!:
various communities within the col\,ge
district.
Named as general chairman of the
committee was Laguna &.11cb resident
Robert Malone. The committee represen·
l.atives in the individual communities ire
Carl Buchheim cf Sa n J uan Capistrano:
Harcourt Bull of San Clemente; ~onard
Geesen ef Laguna Hills: Mrs. Ronald
McGowen of Mission Viejo; Douglas
Moran of Tustin: Fem Randolph of
Laguna Beach and John 1.old ef South
Laguna.
Further information coneming Lhe
greup 's position Oii the bond i.uul!: may be
ebtained from Mrs. McGowen at 837~1.
San Clemente
Girl Bicycle
Rider Injured
A 13-year-old San Clemente glrl suJ.
fered a fractured wrist and glass.caused
wounds le an eye Wednesday aftl!:rnoon
when her bicycle slimmed inlfl a utility
pole.
Jane Elizabeth Douglas rA 513 Calle De
Soto, sufferl!:d the injuries aft.er her cycle
lost control al the base ef A venlda
Presidio near civic center~
Police said the girl. da.ughler of Mr.
and Mn. William R. Dougl as, had been
riding down the long, steep roadway and
then apparently Jost aintrol near the en-
tr.11nce to the fire deparlmenl.
She was taken to South Coast Crim-
munity Hospil.31 in a fire department sl11-
tion wagon serving as an emergency am-
bulance. police said.
Her condition at the hnsptial \\'a.~
described as satisfactory
The girl·'s eyt was Injured by her
broken gla.sses.
Adviser Finch
Cancels Harbor
Dedication Talk
Top Prt..i1idential Advrser Robert Finch
has left for a funeral in Liberia and wi ll
not appear as scheduled Saturday at
Dana Harbor's dedication ceremonies.
~ former California Lleutena.nl
Governor had been set to deliver the mB-
jor address at the 2 p.m. Cl!:remonles
he.raiding the $30 million yachting
facility.
A Jast-minuh! replacement for Finch ia
being arranged.
Spokesmen in Dana Point said Another
1.o~level emissary from the White House
will be on hand Saturday.
The ceremonies will take place ne11r
the entrancf: to Doheny State Park along
Del Obispo Road lead~g Into the harbor.
F'inch was .sent to Liberi11 lo represent
the UnitM Stales al. fune r11I rite:; for
William Tubman. former presidenl of
that African country.
After the funer.:J Finch will be:gln a
month-long -·orld tour.
South Lagunan
Aids Space Shot
The 80n of a South l.A(UII• couple Is
among the thousands o( U.S. aptct teAm
members •ho3t Individual work has
made the Apollo 1$ mission poulble .
Bruce G. Cauerly, f!On of Mr. and Mrs.
fo'rank Casserly, of 31202 Holly Drive, is.-
NASA englnetr working 1n the M11nnerl
Spacl!:Crllft Center in Houslo!'I. C11s111erly.,.
gradu1te "' UC &:rkeley, work.11 In the
analysis l'livi~ion which hal'I developed
pl11nk lo mtel emerrency developmenl.'11
during the night.
...._
i
''7..i DAILY PILOT Sll !I PP!tt~
SAN JUAN DOWNED LAGUNA 6-S IN EXTRA INNING
L•gun1'1 Ben Bacon Tagged at Fi r1t by Vince Torres
Capo Nine Wins
Laguna Team Beaten for Crown
Going into an extra Inning. San Juan
Capisl.rano \itUe leaguers defeated
LagUila Beach S.5 to become the district
55 cham pions Wednesday night.
San Juan will go on to represent
Death Jet
Monitored
By Trainee
Spec.la.I to the DAIL\' PILOT
PASADENA -A Hughe.!! Air West.
jeUiner that collided with an El Toro
MCAS supersonic: fighter, killing 511
persona, was being radar-monitor'd by
an air traffic controller on-the-job
trainee.
The disclosure came Wednesda y.
TesUmony resumed here l.oday before
a National Tra.Dsportation Safety Board
panel attempting to determine cause or
causes of the tragic June 6 collision over
Duarte.
The jetliner llipiralled down into a
crevasse-like San Gabriel Mountain f'iln·
yon carrying 44 passengers and a crew
of five to death, while the Marine F~
Phantom pilot also perished.
Victim~ included Mich11el PotLPr . 7, 11nd
hts sister S::indra. 6. C'hildren of Mr11. S<:ln-
r1ra Potter of 709 Calle Puente. San
Clf'mPnle.
PA lmrlAlt Air Traffir ('0n1rn! Crn1f'r
superl'isory controlle r Robert F'eis1rr
testi fied hi~ ronki ' harl heen doing fi ne
until the 9 34 11.m. impact. 1n rlear
~·eal her.
f'ei~ter !:111rl hr sl flOrl r!irPrtl~· hrh1nrl
lra inPe Harrv A f;ro\·e 11.nrl ncdhPr he
nor Grovp ~11.w ;i blip rrprescntin~ !hr
Phantom JE'I. v.·hose radar transponder
WSl'i lnopera\1\·e _
A lilrRe aud1tncr hs1enf'rl ;ii lhr
Pasarlcna Hil1on hotel as F'P151er !old nf
realiziniz s0melhing w;:is wrong "'hen a
radar emf':r~ency s1 Rnal nashed on 11 s'-
cond controll,r's sc.0pP .
Glancing up ror 211 SPconrls maximum.
he said he turned back lo Grove.~·
radarscope lo !ind the DC9 blip had
vanished .
He then tnok over for GrnvP.~.
Testimony Wednesday ind icated !hal
while the Sall Lake City-hounrl jt.tliner
was ground-monitored. ils own trans-
ponder radar unit was also f11ulty.
district ~~ In regional playoffs In S11n
Bernardino next month.
Laguna Beach led in the game from the
second to the sixth inning. at Riddle Field
when San Juan tied the game up five all,
which was broken in the sev,nth with an
additional run by the visiting team .
Winning pitcher was Dave Reeves or
San Juan. Rich Nunis of Laguna Beach
wa.~ the lower.
The opening of the gAme was marred
when San Juan player Peter Kenney
was hit in the face by a pitch rrom young
Nunis. Kenney wa11 n1shed to South Coa11t
Community Hospital, where he i:; listed in
,;atisfactory condition this morning wiih a
broken cheekbone,
Several other batters wPre hit by ~·ild
pitches from both pitchers, but none ot
them was injured ~eriously.
The only home run for Laguna Beach
was slugged out of the park by Mark
Eagleton, whtch brought in t.hree other
runs in the M!aind Inning.
Two home runs were racked up by
Blayne Sueketl and Doug Synde of San
Junn.
Roland Rodmar cros~ed home pl;ite to
~·in thP ball game for San .Juan. driuen in
on 11 hit by Nick Romero. ROOmar got on
base each lime at bat during the game.
Approximately ~ fan!! jam med into
Riddle field to watch the game.
.,
Bon Vivant
County Recalls
Poisoned Goods
By TOM BARLEY
Cl 1111 0.111 .. 1111 5 .. 11
Bon Vlvant canned goods -and some
under st-veral other labf!h1 -11re coming
off the sht1ves today in Orange C.oast
stores and 11uperm11rkets just as fast 11s
Orange County Health Department in·
spectors can make their rounds of the
outlets.
But there may be many cans of the
foods Cilndemned by the federal Foood
and Drug Administration tucked away on
housewives' shelves throughout the coun-
ty and Jn small grocery stores lh<tt have
overlooked the health department order
or have been overlooked by both county
and state inspeetors.
"Jf you find ii, get rid of it," warns
County Health Officer John Philp.
"Destroy it or send it b.11ck to the.
manufacturer but , either way, get rid of
it."
Withdr;iwal I'll the affected foods has
been cnmplicated by the fact that Bon Vi-
vant not only canned their own soups and
delicacies but canned products for other
companies and, on occasions. supplied
nHtny hon1e s with a personalized line of
canned gourmet foods.
The Bon V1vant business ii:ol its rleath
blow last week when a New York state
man died of botulism poisoning shortly
after he And hi! wife consumed a can o(
Bon Vivan! vic hyssoise. The womAn.
almost totally paralyzed, is slill on the
hospital':; critical list.
Bon Vivant this week filed lor
bankruptcy in an action that noted the
FDA demand that the firm recall pro--
ducts di11!ribulecl under 34 !abf>ls -
among them Sey -Co, V;in Nuys. Reese
Finer Foods, Los Angeles. S & W. S<1n
T"rancisco, Rykoff and Hickory Farms in
addition to privale labels.
"Rut the l;i st thing I w11nt lo do," Dr.
Philp st1id. "ii; promote hysteria about
this R0n Vivanl recall. We certainly want
them ofr th~ i;hetves but what we are
primaril y intcrestcrl in a11 f11r a:; the other
labels are rnncernetl Are the vichyssoise
and black bc11n soups.
"We 'vP had no case:-; 01 poisoning in
Orange County," Dr. Pllilp said. "And
Lady 'r olleyball
Tourney Slated
Dist aff athletes In the Art Colony are
inviter! lo 11i,1?n up fnr the l!l Annual
l..agun.11 Reach Women's Open Dnubleit
Volleyball Tournamenl In ht. held Aug. 7
anrl 8 at !hf' Main BPllCh Courts.
The first 32 team! which sign up will be
permitterl to pl11y in the 1.oomamenlll
whirh beJ.:lin Bl II a.m. both d11y ~.
Regil!tr;:i!inn~ mus! he receiver! hy 5 p.m.
AUR. 4 at the recreatif'ln rleparlm1>nt, 175
N_ Coast Hlghwa.v.
lnclivirlu;i) awlln1s will bf> pre.~enterl to
members nf the lflp four te11.m!I in the
tourney.
people who read of this recalJ acuon by
us should be .11ssured that this Is purely a
precautionary measurt.''
Thl1 ~·riter's 5hopping tour Wedne1day
failed to produce a single can of any or
the listf'd product!! but il rlid re.,.Pal the
determination of Sf'\'era! shop managers
to whip off the she lves several canned
gourmet products thnt hllve not been
IL~ted by he<'llth authoritiei;.
"We·vl' taken off thl' Bon Vivlln~ hnt
and all the others we were warn~
about ," said Slee Brimer, mana,11er '1"
Jurgensen·s. 2.'"JO Broadway. LagWJ1..
Reach. "I don 't want to be quoted on~
additional brands I've withdrawn but Wll
didn't take any chances here." :
Everything listed by lhe health depart.
ment ls no long~ available at Richard's
Lido Market. 3411 Via L1dn, Newport
Beach, assistant manager Roger Lin·
derman seicl.
"We've h<1d bol h county and sl~ll' In·
spectors here And they're both s11tisfied
!hat we've taken all the <1ffecled brands
off our shelves." he said.
But the apparently prompt and.
unani mous action by county di stributnrs·
of banned Bon Vivant delicacies does not
rule out the possibility thlll the firm's
produc~ may turn up years henc1 Jn
homeowners' food cupboards.
Former CBS news commenla1f'lr Pele
Pringle stressed that poss1biti1y hy
bringing to the DAILY PILOT offi~
several cans of l(ourmel products. among
them Bon Vivant soups.
Several c;ins were in poor NJorlitinn and
;ill were pulled from Mrs. Pringle·11
shelves :it lfiO S. Ray Front. Balbo1
Island. afler the concerned couple learn-
ed of the Bon Vivant ban.
Drug Purchase
Becom es $500
Theft in Laguna
A !7-year-flld .1•ou th '-''ho 1olri Laguna
Beach officer!\ he Wil!I attempting to
purch<>.se rirugl'I Tuesday nigtil. was rf!h.-
bed at knifepoint of SSOO by his alleged
i;upplier.
Polirf! said thf! victim, who Rave a La
Crescenta ;iddTess. m!'t the ba.nd it Rt 6
p.m. in the 700 hlock of South ('.oa!l
Highway. The youth told police he .11:ave
the $500 to the man and went with him in
his car to the 1200 block of Gaviota Drive,
where the pair were to pick up an
amount of marijuana.
When thPy arrived there, th~ youth
reported, the unknown suspect drew •
long bladed knife ancl ordered 1he
youngster from the car. Police 11a!d the
vouth struggled with I.he bRndit. but wa.,
eventually forced from the auto, which
then sped ott.
QUEEN SIZE • FULL SIZE
NOW s299 ONf
Wll!C
ONLY
The DC9 Pmeq1;ency signal designed In
pinpoint a flight crisis or colli:oiion never
1tppeared, alLhough 11 mystery liRht nash-
td on the screen simultaneously from
som, other aircrart .
• 1"---V Clfftfert•bl• •'• Mft
••• •lrtl11' ••ul •'"1""•·
Mon it(lrrd for lfl rninutf's. 11 v11nishl'cl in
lhP 11rea oI Norton AFB, deepening I.he
element of intrigue.
One nf thP. key witne~se11 i11 M11rinP \st
LL Christo pher Schie~~. 24. r11d11r
oper;:ilor aboarrl the Phan!om . who
survivcrl by p;ir11chuting.
Ht denied in testimony Tuesday An.v
Aerobatic flyini;: immediately beforr !hf'
collision al 15.000 feel. contrAry t.o inil.ia l
i<:latements by f'yf'witnesses on lhe
ground.
Lleutenanl Schiess. who livrs on-base,
Mid pilot Lt. .!Ames R. Phillip!!, 27, hart
completed 11 :lfi(klel(ret rollover !tO lhry
could check the surr11unding air spacf! for
tither pl111e!'!.
The Milrine Aircraft WAS relumin,I( nn 11
rtl3tively low·level course rlue to otygfl:n
1'y11terr\ failure , nying on II Stt·llnd·be·
8ttn basis because of lfrfccl ive rad11r.
The Air West plane knifed inlo the tAil
11t'clion of lhe Phantom seconds After Lt.
Schiess 11aw it loom!n51. he testifit<i ar111
I.I. Phillip!! WA!I unAblf' In bAi1 nut
himi.elf
Hearing!! w1 !1 wind up Friday. but it
will be 11ome time t)rfor'" 11 fin,111
riettrm1nation is i~~uerl by lhl" fecler11J
11gt.ncy nn what caused the lraRt.dy_
e A. -~ .. lectl•• el f•tMiu "4 c•I.,.
II ti..-fT.eM. e l....,.li.111 IHH:k •114 Ifft •nhle•
PR OFE!SIONAL
INTERIOR OESIGNERS
Opff Mot11., Thwn. & Frt l•n. 1215 HARBOR BLVO.
COST A MESA, CALIF.
646-0275 646.027&
~ --
I •No ~,·-• -----
'I
'} .,.,.. I ~ \·-.. I ,. ' ii.• •
High Court Had
Lot More to. Say
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
The jU3lices of the Supreme
Court talked a Jot more in the
U:rm ended June 30 than they
did the previous lerm. They
wrote 291 opinons in 126 cases.
Official statistics show 151
casts were 11rgued from
October to June. Twenty-twG
were decided by brief, un.sign.
ed opinions. Three wiU be
reargued next term. In the
1969-70 term the court heard
14-4 cases and handled them in
only 'J27 opionions.
Justice Will iam 0. Douglas,
always a prolific opinion
"'riter, wrote 52 in the term
just ended. The fact that 7.8
were dissent! -up from 13
last term -indieat.ed the. new
conservative trend or tht
court.
Douglas wrote 14 opinions
for the court, B coneurrin§
opinions and two "separate'
opinions, which merely gave
his views with no -Official !ab le,
Qtief Justice Warren E.
Burger, who has heavy
administrative duties both i~
side and outside the court,
wrote the fewest -20. He
spoke for the court in 17 cases
but confined his dissent and
concurrences to three each.
lie wrote one "separate."
Justice John M. Harlan
followed Douglas with 41
opinions, compared with 33
last term; and Justice William
J . Brennan Jr. was next with
38, compared with 26 la:st
term.
Justices Hugo L. Black and
Poller Stewart each wrote 32,
Justice Bryon R. White, 29,
Justice Harry A. Bl ackmun,
25, and Justice Thurgood
Marshall, 22.
Space Kids Sally Bananas
Reolly Is ...
Bananas, That Is
The. three daughters of ApoUo 15 astronaut James
lr\vtn raise the F lag at their home near the Manned
Spacecraft Cen te r in honor of their father's moon-
bound space.,.flight. From left are Jan, 6; Jill 10; Joy, I I.
-
CHRISTMAS
CARDS Cult Gives Communes
Bad Name--Expert
1/2 OFF
Imprinting FREE
on 1 00 cards or
more of same design
Many ta choose from
Also
Selected Paper Napkins,
Towel1 and Gifts
Some Wall Hanging1.
SATURDAY ONLY!
PAPER UNLIMITED
WESTCLIFF PLAZA . 17th & IRVINE
NEWPORT BEACH
548-7921
RI VER S I DE , ( AP)-
Charlt:s Manson has given
communes a bad n;ime, says a
doctor who ha:s l:ti.udied the
commune movement in Cali-
fornia.
Dr. David E. Smith says the
trend toward group liv ing was
thriving until the bizarre life
style of Manson's hippie-type
clan was thrust into publicity's
glare with the Sharon Tate
murder trial.
"The Manson commune wa11
very atypical." says Smith.
"But unlil Manson was ar·
rested, most people had never
heart! Of communes. In Taos,
N.M .. a commune was burned
lo the ground by t h e
townspeople because of what
they read in Ule newspapers."
Smith, medical director of
the Haigtit-Ashbury Clinic in
San Francisco and a vis.iling
lecturer tlUs summer at the
University or Caiifomia at
Riverside, says the Manson
case has turned most com·
mune members agailllSt the
news media.
SALE
all time reductions
Stripe flair Jea~s Reg. 8.00
Flair Pants Reg. 13 .00
Cuff Pant~ Reg. lo 14.00
28 thru 32 wa;sl only
Sport Shirts Reg. lo 14.00
Knit Shirts Reg. to 13 .00
Jackets Reg. lo 70.00
Now 2.95
Now 4.95
Now Y2 off
Now 4.95
Now 5.95
Now 29.95
GOOD FOR 2 DAYS & 2 NITES
TONITE, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
!SIDEWALK SALE SATURDAY!
1028 lrvlne, N ewport B each, Cl!l.llfornla 92660, Phone 642-7061
l
"They see the media as the
coodiLioning vehicle of the
dominant culture," s ays
Smith. "Haight-Ashbury is
their example. The media ex·
ploited them."
Smith worked in the Haight4
Ashbury district in tlle heyday
of hippie flower children,
bclore its drug-dazed demise
into a crime-ridden slurfl.
There, in 1967, he met
Manson and his tribe of
slavish young followers. who
fascinated him sufficiently to
iru;pire a study of the group's
life style.
"They were participating In
a cultural void," he recalls.
''He (f\.fanson) was the
messiah. He had absolute
power. Whatever he said WM
righl. The girls participate<! in
sexual deviance without ques-
tion. Absolute control ls not
good. H.e was quite disturbed."
Manson and his "family" of
young women e v entual l y
traveled south and settled in
Southern California. Las-t April
the clan leader and three
women followers were
sentenced to death for
murdering Miss Tale and sit
others .
Smilh, who has been
teaching a class in human sex·
ua!ity, has categorized current
communes into three types -
the crash commune which ls
nothing more than a. place for
footloose youngsters to sleep
and then drift on: the fam ily !
commune in which members
share everything but a.re sex-
ually monogamous, and the
group marriage commune in
which members perticipate in
sex with all other group
members but have no single
parlner.
The last which Smith calls
the most destructive system,
was practiced by the Manson l
"family," he notes. Its major
problem arises when child ren
are born and the mother
doesn't know wtio fathered it.
"When the child is born, it
has an excessive identity with
the mother," he say a .
'"['here's a potential for a
psycho-<lynamically disturbed
child. But this is an untapped
research area."
The commune members say
the group is the child's father.
he notes, and many term their
life style a "group marriage."
But he adds: "DestrucUve
marriages tend to end In
crisis. The Manson girls would
have never Jell Manson unlem
they were arrested. Often the
LTisis emanates fonn the male
rather than the female."
-· -
Thursd11. J11ty 2'1, 1971 DAIL y PILOT B
E. Pakistan Destruction
Nature, Man Cover Scars
DACCA, East Pa k 1 st a n at other eumlnation centers.
(UPI) -ltlsh gr e en e r Y No official e%planaUon waa
feel u though they have a
chance.'' brought by the momoon rains and, repair work by the olfered for the heavy Bengali Amonf the things th e
government are c 0 v e r 1 n g absentef:lsm. Many of the Bengtlls fear are arrest!
llOllle ol the visible marb left students doubtless fled with wllhout warning every few
by civil war on Ea 1 t their familiee following the weeks of prominent Bengalls.
Pakistan's capital, but other flrst few days of army terror s<me ol whom Wert not
aears remaln. in Dacca, and aome may have nected wi~ automomy leader
A lasting ooe became ap-been killed. But of those who Sheikh Mujtbur Rahman and
parent with the start of remained, many decided lo his now·forbldden A w am I
I'aklstan'a equivalent of col· stay home and ml:ssed lhe ex-league. No ttUODl!I are given
lege entrance tests for high ams. for the arrests, no charges are
school student.!. Government "The Bengali& a re ex-made and no trials are held.
JtaJn tnha
We•tcllff Plau Only offlciab advertised the tests tremely discouraged and de-Perhaps 75 percent ol the
as a :sign of nonnalcy, but jected," said one western 3llOpS have now reopened in
their words echoed in ex-diplomat who ba.s watched Dacca, and observers here Griffiti is
arriination rooms thal In many what bas happened since the e9timate that about 70 percent
c:ases were abnoM empty. army cracked down in Dacca. of the former population of A Joke ••• Really
At one sctiool 514 boys had li~·~·ni~er~e~h~"'~been~~no~thin~·~g~si~ne~e~m~or~e~lhan:~one:.~mlllio::· ·~:lo~~~~~~~~~~ applied and paid fees for the March 25 that makes them preeent.
tests last December: 124
show"ed up lo be adm itted by
the pollce guards who sur-
rcunded the school building.
The attendance rate was 22
pe:;cent.
At a girl's examination cen·
ter a few blocks away, past the
charred remains of some
peasant Stacks that were
burned by the anny In the
start of the civil war on March
25, the attendance rate was
somewhat higher -37 per-
cent.
-OFF
DESIGNER COLLECTION OF NECK TIES
TUX & CRUISE COATS
,'\t both centers most or the
U rd u -~aking candidates
whose parents are from West
Pakistan showed up, bu!
roughly three-fourtM nf the
Bengali candidates who &.re
f'l "tives of East Pakistan did
not. 'Ille situaUon was similar
• • $2.001 1
SALE SATURDAY, JULY 31 , ONLY!
THE BEST
Readership pol l 1 prove
"Peanuts" is one of the
world's m<111t pnpul&r comic
strips. Read It daily ln the
DAil.Y PILOI'.
DARRELL'S DEDRICK TUX SHOP
WESTCLIFF PLAZA ONLY
17tll • llYINI • NIWPOlT llACH
SATURDAY. JULY 31st ONL Yi
PRICES
SLASHED
APPLIANCES-SOFT GOODS -TOYS-
HUNDREDS OF MISC. ITEMS ON THE OUT-
SIDE PRltED FOR CLEARANCE -ALSO IN
CELEBRATION Of; THE OPENING OF OUR
NEW TORRANCE STORE -HUNDREDS Of'
OTHER VALUES INSIDE OUR STORE~
HURRY! SPECIAL SALE
SATURDAY ONLY
DRUG STORE
WESTCLIFf' PLAZA STORE ONLY
1020 IRVINE -NEWPORT BEACH
Westcllff Pima
Satvtday
548·8365
"
. • '
-I , __
I
I
SC
y..., Money's Wort h
OVER THE CO UNTER Econo mic Misery ............. ~--...... .,... ~ ~ t ... ~ ,.._ ......
"-......... t#6ff .. flWrtltt,. ---·~ l>lfN!lolllJloL
NASO l 1•t1ng• for Wednelday, July 28, 1971
Worst in Years "lfW YOltlC t.t.l'J l vh Ml
f' T": lol'!i-c"1.C:"I ::~. ":..f
• By sYLVIA NlRTER
Your economic m.tser)' 1n
this mid summer 1971 1s the
worst 1l bas been 1n a genera
lion
'ibo '4d1acomfort index ' in
vented by Arthur M Okun
forme.rlt President Johnson s
clUel econorrust and now al
the Brookinp Jruitltute ha!
&hot up to 1 slarUmg 13 4 -
the ~t on my records
hick to the World War II era
1lUs indei: conslst.9 of the two
key figure.! which n:easure our
wtD being the rate of
unemployment and the rise Ln
tb8 Coruumer Price Index
LATESI' FIGURES 1how
consumer prices soaring at an
annual rate of 7.2 percent and
WJempl oyment sticking at a
1teep 6 2 percent E v e n
&SBUm.tng both figures drop 1n
the: months ahead -which 1
assume -1971 1s checking 1n
as another nightmare year on
top of the nightmare or 1970
and the nightmare"' 1969
1be Nixon Admin1stral1on
did not plan lt th is way In
good faith and with the ap
pnwal of virtually every
economist I know -hberal
conservative and Jn between
-the Wlute House and the
Federal Reserve System set
OIJt In 1960 to force a busi ness
fllowdown n order to curb the
rate of 1nilatJon
But the d eliberately
engineered busmess slowdown
intens1f.ied 1nt.o the economu:
rKuslon of 1969-70 At the
aame time the annual rate or
io0at1on ROSE to 6 I percent
in 1969 .stuck at 5 5 percent in
lf70 and now 1t .s questionable
whether 1t will be much under
5 percent (If under SJ by the
end of 1911
De.!lp1te the J mp r e.s .s 1 v e
credentiab ind the grandiose
upeetahons of the planners
neither the blueprints nor the
proJecUons have come out
~~T'S MORE that 6 2
ptrcent rate Is an overall
figure Behind 1t are much
trliher, intolerably higher tax
es for veterans blacks, the
Youn& older workers It s
nothing short or cr1m1nal to
make these groups e (
~N•tlon•I ~e<w• rl••8•1r L•Q 0.l lt I Jr.~1n DW• 81bb Ml nt <OlJllll a.n~ 8lllw1u w
lll.Ju••M:• I. ll>d111 •[" ""' li\11 ll«k1 9 r!clv
8•nt •114 lr1111 81<.k 01 11 •
111 8t n<P UI; 1,.809 .... El
hi 8t .iv Jt • J9flll 8aor AH hlfmp s i•t H \ri 8 1a.., Ht'11 NC ll'loo JJ\i 11 rn~1
Midi 8~1 tl O\Ollt~1 !M;t S~tw l oo 11 Slli0 llrwn9 Ar
U \It lk1 l'l • ))\0 flrlh 8••
V• N llnk 2'~' 2Htllh1Ckb M 1nu>t•nc• l <>ek1vo F>d Un LI JJ~1 J6 l u 91n tn<lw1rri.11 Bu n !t m
iliAI (p ~ .... ~•IW~• AFA P 5 lS 16 •mbt N .t.10 tnc 1 1o llllo C•nn MI Jr.ITS In< • 61> ent'IO<> fl
AYM (p 10 1~ t nred P
.t.De•I Ind 1"-I ... ~ • ., Ml•• /lc1JSl\nl ~ )1"1 •P Swtl A<lmt ) 1~1 (ell(P ~ t
Addll" W 1• H~i•• Ttc w 11... • ....... '" Ar e SI• •'lo ''-~no 81• Air lt\CI 1.. 2 .. or! G••
Al~• H• >•• J o •K Oii('; lllertl 1)~ lJ o t V""l'I f:
Alcolec }" ~;.. ent<•
Alcon Lb 'l"" U '4 •nV! PJ Alden El 11 1'-en.• l t h
Alk:n Ln<I 11 , 11..,i:nanto .t.
iliU letll )"" l">(;~•rl 011
ilill• 81w 'I> ~ (l'lm Lt•
Americans bear the burden or"J1~ .. ':~ 1~1' 1i~~~:~ ~~
restraining inflation l l s !\:..;:'" ~ • ~~ ~ 11:;100
absolutely indefensible A1 .. 1n c;~ J ~ J.., ri•11S•
..,m lu•P I~ • l•ltt ~r1,5 "' Neve rtheless after 1ntens1ve A Et L•t1 1"' ' , c 11n Mt11 ... m E•P 1111'111t \!o CU1nU! .t. consultations President Nixon Am "n1 a"' 1'11 111nu1 a
h h I ... Finl LS 1'"' IS Clerk Ml as announced t al he "OU d ..,m Fu n a, 1 1 c1au1nw
not seek any t.ax cuts or mAJOr !'" M~~~~ ~ .... ~J ;,~l0...'.M c~ 1
hikes In spending to speed up!;:;; ~~ ~nv ·~~ 1: "l~r· Fd
lhe economy s recovery from !g~~t; 11 ~': s~,:c~;;"1 \~ recession ..,n~en 1~ ' 1 , om G~•
I d ilirc~ 1m! \, i ~onw PA He a so again rejecle more• a M~• 11 11 11 l~Com p,.
b th ilirkMol> 11 ll'l>CmD Cm aggressive moves to cur e ··~W•G 11"-n .cm" 1~•
leapfrogging of prices and·~~:; ~n 2~ : J~· c;,n,:: 0,r·~
wages :~:~~· ~· 11!! '~ ~~ ::.~ HE RULED out even the A1cc 110• <1J•\ "6"' o~t en AllG•• LI l~"' 15\0Co enco modest move of a \Vages 11iuto sci .,,,, '"' o•o s
P R B d ti flCC l"d ~"" •' Co•m V l nee ev1ew oar urgen y • •d •• ,,,., ,.,. cr•w C1>
recommended by the man who ~:~a P;.~c 1~': 1~1;~c~~~· ~~~ has been his most trusted ad Bkam ~" 7••~ 71 ~ ullr """' 8arrn9 II ~ I vo Com viser on economics -Federal 1anu1 F <101 •H D•n1l•1>
Reserve Board c h a I r m a n 11~' 7s"' """ 0•~•v M
Arthur F Burns
He 1s say his spokesmen
confident that ' we re on the
right path' to economic
stabihty
To add an unemployment
rate and a consumer price 1n
dex may seem rather silly but
actually the sum does
measure our misery In the
reveahng figures below note
"hat a close to ideal year 1953
was 2 9 percent Jobless ratP
O Ii percent price rise a
pleasantly low index or 3 ~
YE.t.11
1011
\9ln
'"' ...
'"' "~ ·~ ... .. , ., ·-"~ "~ "~ "~ ,,,,
"~
OISCOMFOltl !N OEX ". '" ..
" ..
" . ' " " " " " " " " ,,
'"
T ICKER LISTS
STOCKS F IR ~l
I ncontc Vp
3 New Fir11IS Du e Soon Fo r S rnith
At New Beach Facility
Three new firms whose
J>lantA: will occupy six acres
ar~ expected to announce
rxtov~s soon to lhe llunlmgton
Beach Induslnal Park
WE HAYE WHAT IT
TAK E.S
•Y TERRY GRANT, R Ph
TRUST -Our fr1enO "' Rnd
cuatomers ha v ,. lcarnrd
that they c1111 rtlY on 115 rro expertly t&ke earl" of All
their pharmacy ht a Ith
"""' ACCURACY -It 111 11 ph11r
macy rull" th11.t rvc1v prr
lcipt1on must hf" cht'CkC'd 11t least tv.1ce bcfetfl' it )('a\rs
the pharme.cy to a void aJ\}
ehana-of t>rrrJr
KNOWLEDGE -Thr nr
cesaary yceis of collr2P
uodr, and the pass1n~ of 11
~ns ng Px•m,. rrqu1red for
~ery ph11rm11c1s1
EXPERIENCE -b: th,. 11 h-
llOlute e1..<>en1111I 1n 11.ch1ev1ng
IUCCt'!S 1n 110) f1rld W t 11re
proud Ctf "hal v.r have
JH.rn~ "hilt-flJX'nt l1nc fn1r
pharmacy I h t' ' e many years
SERVICE -'V"' the opPortun!t v t(I
you that sci vice
mot lo
\\r\rnmp
provt to
IS our
YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US wh~ you need a dellvl!'ry We will de·
liYtt promptly without ,.x
t,. char;te A 2rl"11I many ~ple rely on H~ for thefr
helllth nttds \VI' \\elr.o m"' reque11t1 for dPllvt"ry service
&nd charce eccount1
PA•K LIDO PHAlltMACY
UI Hot,lt•I Ro•d
fNw~ .. •th Ml·l.5IO ,,.. o.nvllf"J
( ,,
'
Cham~r of Commercp
manager Ralph Kiser reported
nn progress of the park
operated bv Tohn D Lusk 1n
northwest Hu nttngton Be11cli
at a meehng Clf chamber
directors
Ht: said that Mayor George
McCracken and ch a m b (' r
president A I Khngensm11h
recently loured the park to
\ 1e~ ctJnstruc:t1on progress
Kiser said Engard Coating~
Is 111 full operation in an B l)()n..
8quare foot fac1h1 y on Com
merce Street so uth of McF'::id
den A\enuc and tha1 Slandard
Chemical has nearly t nm
pleted a similar plan l next
dooc
A lZ 000 squarr fool hu1ld10J.:
1~ JU.St completed 1n the saml!'
Rrea end 1t IS for lfase ot salt:
by Lusk II can be leased tn
"hole or d1v1ded
The park which rnllcr~ 11
total ;irea or 320 acres \\as
opened about a year ago Thf'
first 1ncrc.mcnt 1n\otvcs 70
acres about 35 acres nf which
have streets and u t 1 J 1 I y
services
l '
2 Clemente
Men La uded
D ivid ends Set
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COlLEGE G.IRLS EMPLOY THEMSELVES
~ · Artisans Wallace (left), Montgomery
Two Coeds. Creating
. Classy Cable Tables
Looking for t:hat Wh.acky
something to , re~Uy "make"
your living room~ Or how
about 'a dining table? (Roun d
ls romantic -you .can sqeez.e
a lot Qf people aro411d it.)
Scµtdy Mo~tgomery o f
Newport ·Beach and fellow
Mills College coed, Nancy
Wallace of Palo Alto, have ! beeri nianufacturihg "cable
tables;'' made from discarded
spools once wound with elec-
trical cable.
_. _ ~e two girls, both second-
semester freshmen . at Mills,
are· currently living with San-
dy's· paren~. Mr. and Mrs.
R~rt L. :Montgomery, 900
Citrus Place. 1
'They were. forced to become
entrepreneurs when t he
scarcity of summer jobs made
the $4,400 a year tuition look ·
like it could prohibit their
return to the Bay Area cam-
pus in September.
The girls sand and varnish
the spools, but allow them to
retain their ruslic· look. Some
are decorated with colorful
hex symbols. The spool-like
shape remains, compfete with
a hole in the middle, suitable
to support a patio umbrella.
Some tables stand as high as
three·and·a·half feet. Others
are low enough to be coffee
tables.
The coeds sell their finished
products for $35 to $75, depen-
ding on size and amount of
creative energy they figure
went into them.
Outwits Florida
New Hampsh~re's First
Hurdle to White House
'
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• . •' . ... ,.,
CONCORD. N. H. (UP!) -
Ne-N Hampshire, aided by a bit
of ·Jegislative nimbleness arid
20 years of tradilion, is still
the · first high · hurdle in the
Jong run to the presidency.
Sorry, Florida.
primary date to coincide with
Florida set a March 14
New Hampshire's. But New
Hampshire, whose \eg.islature
adjourned Jater, quickly ad-
vanced its .primary to March
7.
"'It's nice to be number
ene," said one legislator. "but
come anyway. The Florida
population simply is not as
. representative as New Hamp-
shire's."
Most state political leaders
feel the same, although
Republican former G o v .
Sherman Adams, who crcatr-d
the original New Hampshire
pr,imacy . in 1952 e. n d
masterminded the st.ate cam-
paign of Dwight D.
Eisenhower, says its value ha!!
been overrated and blunted by
,lavish spending campaigns.
No fewer than six 1972
Democratic hopefuls, headed
by Sem. Edmund Muskie of
Maine aod George S •
McGovern of South Dakota,
already have toured tbe ·New
Hampshire landscape.
McGovern, the only an-
n....o u n c e d Democratic can-
dRLate, promised to end the
Vietnam War "within weeks,"
then approached r u r a I
resideRl.s in a whirlwind se-
cond visit with att.ack! on
welfare ills, defense spending
and unemployment.
Mu.kle, still unannounced.
confined his three visits to big-
ger 50Uthern cities, but ha!
. the support of 40 top state
DemocratA, including t h e
baclrera last time of former
Sen. Eugene McCarthy ol Min·
nesota.
Los A n g e I e s ' third-term
mayor Sam Yorty bu entered
til:f: state twice behind· big ad-
vance publicity.
Sens. Birch Bayh ID-Ind. I,
William Prmmire (D-Wis.),
and Rep. William R. Anderson
~D-Teon.) f o r m e r com-
Mandhlg <4fioer of the nuclea r
tubmarine USS Nautilw, have
Honor. RQII
• ~i " ' Am• E. Goodwin, 92611 Daisy
,r Ave., Foun'-1o V&Pey, has
, • .been oamed to tbe •honor roll
i>r academic eX~llenct dur-
' ;, IDs tbe opring -al the tewrence campu1 of ~
made visits but have not com-
mitted themselves.
Democrotic St.ate Chairman
Harry P. Makris said the state
committee will 'not endorse
any one candidate, to avoid
the disastrous 1968 campaign
rift when the committee gave
Lyndon B. J ohnson its back-
ing.
McCarthy won the bulk of
delegate votes to the 1968
Democratic Nation a 1 Con-
vention in a primary victory
that rewrote politic&I primers.
But Makris said Ulere is not
enough of a gap to exploit
bety,·cen President Nixon and
those who seek the presidency.
"The war. the way it is going
today. will not even be an
issue in 1972," he said.
"Don't look for another
childrcns' crusade in 1972,"
Chairman Robert E. Whelan.
"There are no riots, burning
or bombing. The mood has
changed, and this is to Nixon's
advantage. He is always
popular in New Hampshire."
Although the primary b~Jlol
has been ext.ended to 40,000 in
Ne1111 Hampshire under age 21,
Whelan said neither party has
had any succes.s in registering
them.
"The youth vote will not be
a factod," he said. Let's face
it, only a smaJI percentage in
the 21-26 age group even
bother to register."
A 43-year-o!d ex-Marine,
Rep. Paul N. McCJoskey (R-
CNif.). cont.ends the President
will continue the war Wltil
November, 1972, and said he
intends to challenge Nixon in
the New Hampshire primary.
\Vith a minimum of fanfare,
and no visible support from
st.ate p o l i t i c a 1 chieftains,
McC lo..skey has talked in·
formally with groups of
students,
California Gov. Ron al d
Reagan and New York Ma yo r
John V. Lindsay, b oth
Republicans, each has made
ooe appearance in N e w
Hampshire.
The American Party, which
polled 11 ,173 votes in I.he 1968
election in New Hampshire as
the George C. Wallace party,
is eligible t-0 field candidates
next Marcli.
Under new legislation, a.II
canJldates must produce 500
signatures from each of the
two Congressional districts
and a $500 filing fee. The state
hope!! "crank candidates" ,will
be fewer.
Republicans will send 14
delegates -each with one
vole -to Ille Republican Na·
lional Convention. The number
of Democratic delegates has
not yet been decided.
Choose One of the Many
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PUBLICATIONS CREW STAMPS UCI CATALOG COVERS
Goin91, Pearse •nd Jon•• (from left) Go Camp
UCI 'Ecology Catalogue'
Pleasi11g to All Pa1·ties
By GEORGE LEIDAL
01 tft• O•llY Pll" 111!f
With bows to both ecologists and tax-
payers, UC lrvine·s 1971-72 General
Catalogue promises lo be a camp
nouveau best seller among the usually
staid issues of dignified academic prose
from other universitie.s.
The eye-catching brown corrugated
paper cover with rubber-stamped titles is
wrapped around 330 pages listing courses,
degree requirements i'lnd essential in·
formation about programs, l'iChools and
departments at UCL
The tome should please ecologists v.'hen
they find out the use of recycled paper
,;aved nearly 200 trees from v.·oodsmen.
A $2,000 saving in the cost of printing
the necessary 22,000 copies should please
taxpayers concerned about risi ng costs of
education.
Robert Gnings, publication manager at
UCl, said lhe catalogue budget has not
been increased in three years. Yet, the
rising numbers of students at ucr mean
Increases in the numbers of pages ol in·
formation to be included in the book.
Circulation of the document, too, has in·
creased ea ch year.
Because 8,000 copie.s must be given free
to other institution.\ and libraries in
California, only 14,000 remain for sale at
$1 each.
To cram 10 percent more information
Into the book at a savings (lf 15 percent
from last year·s $17,000 cost, creativity
was needed. Goings agreed.
Kathy Pearse, of the instructional
media Sll!rvices department at UC!.
11urveyed the usual line of cheap cover
f.itock.~ and found them wanting . "They·ra
f'n ough to make you throw up ."
Askin~ paper suppliers to search nooks
snd crann ies of their warehouses resulted
in a cheap supply nf corrugatll!d brown
paper that resembles .shopping bag sheet.s
past ed together like hi,"f>-lhirds of !he waU
of a fl imsy cardboard box.
Title type in headline sl yle, "''as com.
posed using 11 simple set of rubMr
alphabet stamp., "imported from Long
Beach ", Kath y noted.
Zellerbach Pa.per Company's industrial
division pointed out the easiest route to
printing on the carrugatcd stock. The
•·type" images v.·ere photographically
.stretched, lhe brov•n paper sl.ock wall
printed flat, and then pasled in the cor·
rugated fashion to "shrink" the stretched
type, Goings explained.
Despite the savings of the cover a11d
the inside pages of recycled paper,
economy is not the only virtue of the
catalogue presentation.
L2.st February, Kathy and
photographer Mike Jones toyed with the.
idea of adding a "human touch" t.o the
document that ln pasL years has been
cast in lhe usual stuff.v, dignified format
expected of academic institutions.
The human touch, approved by
Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich .Jr., is 11
tongue-in<heek touri st's-eye view of the
campus through a .serie., of typic2J
amateur camera buff .<;napshols.
Actually, Jones shot more than 400
frames of film using soph.isticated, pro·
fessional equipment I.& provide the
humorous shots.
··Yoo have no idea how difficult It Is ,.,
make every photographic mistake in the
book," Jones said.
Weeks of planning for the one-day
"lour" of the campus by four "models"
were necessary. Kathy noted. In al!, the
entire fogged film -chopped heads -
missed buildings folksy photo album took
only seven hours lo shoot.
Selecting the few photos actually used
tn the book to break up the serious
departmental disserlalion.s. took longer.
"The most difficult dec ision," Goings
said, "was whteher or not to run the pie·
lures with captions."
One concern the cal2Jogue producers
shared was how the book would be receiv-
ed. Brad Atwood . vice chancellor for
public affaiti'. said "co mment.s on the
catalogue are runn ing 95 percent
favorable "
NOW". the unoffici al concern is v•hether
the book ~'ill prove so popular tha t I ) a
reprinted e<lition might be necessary, or.
2l high school students will turn on to il
.and want to atteftd UCL Admissions for
the coming yeu already are closed.
Thursd•Y. Jul)' 29. 1~71 s DAILY .,LOT J
Recall Petitions Ol('d
S. Coast Movement Wins Moot Court Victory
By BARBARA KREIBICH
01 TM Dell, ~Ii.I •hltt
Proponents of the ill-fated attempt lo
recall four directors of the South C-Out
County Water District were somewhat
11urprised this week to discover they had
won at least a moral victorv.
An opinion handed down· by the State
Legislative Counsel has ruled that the
steps they had taken for the recall were
sufficient under the state election code to
ln1tlate a recall election.
Water district director• tut March
refused to call the elecUon after being
advised by their attorney, George Logan,
that petitions presented to Initiate the
re:e.a.11 were "defective."
The deJect which invaUdated the peti-
tions, according to Logan, was the fact
that the written response of the four
recall targets had not been circulated
~·1th the petitions.
-w·ec1nud1y, proponents of the recall
Laguna, Capo Vocation
Training Classes Set
The Regional Occupation Program
( ROPl between Lhe Laguna Beach and
Capistrano Unified School DistrkU! will
offer seven different courses this fell .
ROP is designed lo provide upper level
high school studenUI wilh instruction In
fikills so the students can enler lhe job
markeL .Last year two courses y,•ere of·
fered.
Both male and female students in the
junior and senior grade level may aign up
fnr the 1600 hour casmetology class. At
the conclusion of the course, students will
qualify to take the California State Board
of Cosmeto logy exam for a license.
The class will be held at Armands
Bcauly Co llege in Dana Point and the
Majestic Beauty College, scheduled to
open in San Clemente In September.
teamed the 1tate le1aI 1dvlsor disagretl
with Logan, but, with • regular election
for three of the disputed water bo1rd
&eats coming up in November, it ap.-
peared unlikely they would have time to
do anylhing about the new legal opinion.
Said John McComb, 33282 Marina Vista
Drive, Dana Point, who headed the
citizens' committee attempting the
rt;Ca!I, "The time elemll!nt i.t such that we
can't do too much. We can't afford to
take them lthe board) ta caurt to force
them ta call an election on the basis of
this opinion. But I do know that In
November we will run people against
these men."
He and al least one other committee
member would oppose the lncum~l.Jll1
fl.lcComb said .
The seal\ of three of the recall targets.
Robert B. Malone, Ted J . O"Connell and
Gerald S. Pelt will be up for eleclion. The
fourth director named in the recall,
Thomas Brooks Is not up for re-election
at this time . However. director Anthony
Orlandella, who was not named in the
recall, has moved from the district and
resigned his directorship. A new director
will be appointed to serve out his tenn.
McComb explained the developments
that. led up to the unexpecled opinion
from the state attorney.
'"We ·'were disappointed when they
rerused to call the election," he said,
''but we fe.Jt the.re wa!n 'l anythint mo" -
we C()Uid do. However, we were sure we
had acted according to lhe election cod•
so we bundled up all our papers and sent
them to Assrmblyman Robert Badham.. ·
We didn't hear anything for a Jong time.
Then it turned out he had senl our L
documents on to the Legislative Cour13eJ ·
of California, George H. Murphy. Now we •
have received from Badham a copy ol
Murphy"s opinion ."
The stale attorney notes that the .
response of the d1re cLors named In the
recall appeared as 1 news Item In two
area newspapers but was not published
as a legal nolice in the newspaper that
had published the •otice of intent to re..
call, until after the 14-day dll!adline had
passed.
Since the manner of publication
violated slate requiremenU, he said, the ,
response was not valid and did not hav• ·
to be included with the pelitionJ.
The attorney notes that 755 signatures
were obtained on the petitions seeldnll'
recall, of which 5.S7 were validated by the :
County Registrar of Vote~ and that 343.·
valid signatures were required to qualify ..
the recall electlon.
''Jn our opinion," the .tlate counsel C(lfl•.·
eludes, "!he steps taken for recall by the
group of cilizens were suJficient under
the election code to initiate a rteall elec·
lion."
Auto and motorcycle mechanics, health
side. quantity foods. ornament a I
horticulture, construction technology and
co.smetology will make up the 1971-72 pro-
gram, jointly funded by the two school
districts.
ThP auto mechan ics class. open to high
~chool seniors. will be conducted In the
repair shops of several downtown Laguna
Beach automobile dealers. P..lotorcycle
mechanics will be taught through Cycle
Ci!y in Dana Point.
Penneys Garden Shop
Specials
The two year health aide program,
npen to both juniors and seniors will be
conducted at Beverly Manor Con-
valescent Home in Capistrano Beach and
at South Coast Community Hospital in
South Laguna.
Quantity Foods, will o[fer instruction in
general cooking, and such specialties as
the preparation of salads and sandwiches.
The program will begin at Laguna Beach
High School. Later in the year, student.!
v.·ill be given on-the-job experiencl!: at
restaurants.
Students v.·ishing to be employed as
nurserymen. gardeners or caretakera
may take the ornamental horticulture
class which will bl! held at the Sherman
foundation in Daria Point.
Carpentry. cement work and electrical
circuitry will make up part of the con-
struction technology and will be taught at
San Clemente High School.
Eaton Funeral
Slated Friday
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Friday
al Baltz Corona del Mar Chapel for
Claude Samuel Eaton, 728 Q Avenlda Ma·
jorca, Laguna Hills who died Monday at
South Coast Community Hospital.
Dr. Henry Gerhard of I.he Church of
nel igious Science in Laguna Beach will
officiate at the services. Entombment
will follo w at Me lrose Abbey P..temorial
Park.
Mr . Eaton i.s survived by his wire,
Paula, of the fam ily home and a sister,
Mrs. ~1aybelle Harkins of Corona del
f\1ar .
Your choice of Tam Juniper
or Japanese Black Pina
for evergreen beauty. In one
gallon containers.
Hollywood Juniper. A vory
artistic, dense, upright
growing juniper. In 5 gallon
container. 433
•
Principal Hits the Trail
Hanging baskets planted with
Artlltery Fern, Doub le Begon il!ls
and Plectranthus In 7Y"'" pots.
177
Netv Cordillera School Chief Man Witli Challenge
By PAl\1ELA HALLAN
Ken Anderson is a campaigner.
He's willini to ring doorbells. meel
with women's coffee klatches, and keep
his office door open at night.
He's also eager to trudge the hills of
Mission Viejo to push lwo things he
believes in -education artd Cordillera
School.
Anderson I~ Lhe new principal of the
troubled elementary school . He asked for
the job and he got it because he"s a man
who believes there's no problem too big
to solve and no issue too small to receive
his personal attenlion.
"I've always enjoyed my work," said
3.">-year-0ld Anderson.'' Problems don't
bother me. They 're jusl part of the job."
Cordillera has had more than its 11hare
of problems in rect.nl months, problema
that ended with the reassignment of the
achool's principal Lee Popejoy.
They were brought to a head In June
when 150 parents packed the meeting of
the San Joaquin Elementary School
District Board of Trustees and aired
complaints about •·experimental" pro-
grams and "lack of discipline" In the
classrooms.
One major gripe was about "open''
<'.lassrooms in which ~ludents of v1riou1
gr11de levels we~ thru.!it together.
"We opened an entire school In Santa
Ana in which fourth. fifth and ~ixth
~raders y,·ere together under one roof
with movable walls,'' sa id Ander!On.
"J"m not oppnsed to the o~n .~pace
me:thod. Team teaching ha~ a great deal
to offer If done properly and if teachers
work well together and parent.s are made
a p11rt of It.
Anderson, who has ~pent 14 year! In
-·~ ... -·-I
education, carries the team approa ch
even further.
"I'm a firm believer in involving the
entire staff -teachers. custodians.
secretaries -in the school's plans and
programs,'' he said. "I believe ln having
grade level chairmen and frequtnt
NEW CORDILLERA PRINCIPAL
Kenneth E. Anderton
'
. '
meetings for planning, curriculum, and
changes."
Ack.lr!!sing himaelf to the complaint of
''lack nf discipline" Anderson said he
believes in discipline. but each child must
be assesse<I separately.
"The majority of the parents want
dl1cipline in the schools," he said . "They
don "I want their children to do in school
what they are not allowed to do at home.
But I also believe a chHd shoukl have
freedom of expreSl!iori:"'
In order to assess the needs of parent.fl
11nd children and to head off problems
before they begin Anderson is planning a
&erieA of steps.
One will be the fonnatlon or a parent
advisory council set up on I geographic
basis so that every two or thret bloc.ks
are repreBented.
"This: is a good way to get the puls.ebe11t
of the neighborhood, to gqu elch untn.ie
rumors and air concerns," 1 a I d
Anderson .
Another step wlll be lo make himeelr
available in hiA office one night a wetk to
any parent wi.thing to stop ln and chat.
"People appreciate this b e c a u a e
fathers and mothers who work can
participate," he said, "I'm also going to
be at the school the entire month or
August if anyone want! to make an ap-
pointment and get acquainted."
He plans to meet with the PTA and get
out and start knocking on doors and in·
troducing himself in the Cordillera
neighborhOod.
"I want the community to understand
the school's programs and directions and
know what'11 going on," uld Anderson.
"Communication i5 the mo.st important
tool I have."
r--·-.---
• -
Vinca Rosea (Per!-
w lnkles) 1or garden
beauty. Assorted
colors. In 1 gallon
conlalnero. 77c
Beddin g plant
1peclal. Choose
from Portulaca
and Zinnias. A1aorted
colors. In trays.
44c \\.
'·
Fantastic water action fiberglas
cascade waterfall. 29" H x 21 Y.I'' W
x 27" D. 10995
10ln. high x10
ft. long expanding
border fence. In
while only. 2"
Bord1r end ahrub
fencing. 8 gauge
steel wire bonded ~ wllh polyprop ylone
coating. 2111 Hx1Z' L.
29cu. .
l\nne111
Shop Sund •y noon to 5 p.m. •f the fo llowin g 1tores:
Ch1rge It et theae Penney stores:
GAN DIEGO MONTCLAIR
CARLSBAD
NEWPORT BEA~H
-----
DOWNEY
RIVERSIDI
-
FASHION VAUEY• i
Nuclear Future 'Grim~
Declining American Strength Reported
' t
\
\ •• I )
~ps
By TIIOMAS MURPRINB
' > OF SEXY S'IVFF: I Bee by new1 ~eports that they're going to trial over in ~estminster with a case that bu been
~ibed by law oUieen as the largest
'.l'liingle seizure of racy moviea and st.ill
Gootos in the history c;f Orange County.
t' To read the reports, you are given to
.,.. eve this thing is even going to eclipee
nlght Newport Police Otlef Jim
vas closed down the Balboa Theatre
.., ng the second showing of the skin
!."flick known as, 1'! am Curiou& -
t'Yellow."
~ One of the interesUng parts of that
:,Great Balboa Raid wa1 that our Edit.or
!:Tom Keevil had gone to the first show,
~0e~~1~us~;e::e c:~us~~=~!:; :
~the silver screen that he went IDUDd
:.asleep about halfway into the goinga-on.
:: HE DID AWAKEN, however, just at
~the popcorn break ln time to disappear ~Into the evening mists before all the
~ lawmen charged into the place and down
:.the aisles.
: Thus our leader missed what certainly
~ would have been an lnteresUng con-
>-frontation just IOllth of the candy
•": COW1t.er.
: Anyway, I disagree. The legal pro-
f ccedings In the West Orange County .~Municipal Court in the sexy film seizure
:: case should make the Great Balboa Raid
:' look like a meeling of the Rose Garden ~"Auxiliary.
-\ DISTRICT A1TORNEY Cecil Hick!
, alleges that the raid in Huntington Beach
~ re.!lulted in conriscation of $500,000 worth
;. of films and pholo.!1 that were destined to
: be di.!ltributed to film lovers all acrOM
' the United States. He a~ as:iem it took
! two truckloads to haul all the stuff away
~ for safe keeping.
• Of course. whether or Mt all thi.11 ex·
; posed celluloid ill too racy for public or
; private consumption must yet be
~ determined by the court.
~ Already the defense attorneys have
~ loudly and clearly proclaimed that the
' tieizure was unconstitutional. }
: ANYWAY, IT SHOULD be noted wltfl
: some interest that the presidi111g juri5t in t the case ill Municipal Judge Walter W.
• Charamza who, prior to his elevation to
: the bench, served as Newport Beach city
: a ttorney.
; Among his inllmate11, Charamza Is
;. known as a hale fellow well met, a nice
: person, a lover of good football and
~ regular guy. He cannot be classified as i Mme blue-nosed jurist. He ia, however,
, recognized as a devoted student of the
: law. • ! IT IS AU0 TRUE that Judge
i ~·~~=~~gr~hy ~~~~::s i:ve c=~ r lodged. He prealded a few years back in
• one where a Huntington Be a ch
. &torekeeper had been charged with sell·
~ lng dirty books. The case was ~mewhat
;-extended and followed very carefully in
: the press. In the end, the poor fellow was
found guilty and Judge Charamu. threw
the maximum at him for his trans-
gressions.
; 'J'he current case, of CQUrse, must yet
, be judged on its legal merll.!. But It is
!. apparent that Judge Charamza doesn't
~-care much for proven pornography.
~ I sure know the last thing I'd want tb
" be if standing before Charamza 's bench. t Guilty, that'a what.
RELIEVED PARENTS CHECK WEIGHT LOSS OF SON,~ ......
Mrs. C1rolyn Dye, (left) •nd D•d Phillip (right) •t Ho1p it1I
Instincts Saved Youth
Lost 11 Days i1i Wilds
CASPER, Wyo. (AP) -Reunited with
his mother after 10 days in the wilderness
of Wyoming's high country, young Kevin
Dye said he was fine. "But then," she
said, ''he always says fine ."
The 9-year~ld boy's physician said the
fact that the retarded and epileptic
youngster is hyperactive probably enabl·
ed him to survive chill nights only on
water from mountaln streams.
The youngster apparently played a
game of hide and seek with search teams
before his :stamina gave out and he was
unable to continue fleeing would·be
resc:uers. Search parties said he was eeen
at least twice but when they went to the
5pot he was gone.
He was found Wednesday lying near lfl
tiny :stream 21h miles from the cabin of a
family friend where he was last seen July
lB. Two hours laler he was in a Casper
hospital, a bit scratched, a bit bruised
but too weak to have lasted another 48
Wick•
'
'They, iay he's in here
every night rehearsing!'
hours in the open, his physician, Dr.
Robert Fowler, said.
The boy is also a victim of aphasia,
which limits his ability to understand and
use language.
''His doctor told us that lf we went
about U gently, over a period of time we
might get some information from him,"
the youngster's mother, carolyn Dye·,
said.
"I doubt if Kevin had any food ,"
Fowler said. ';He got water until 48 houri
ago when he became so weak be was
unable to get a drink. He was a bit
dehydrated at the end and terribly starv·
ed.''
Several times during the seareh there
were reports of small amounts of food
missing from campsites and cabins on
t.he mountain.
The doctor described Kevin as hyperac·
live and said the unusual endurance that
his constant activity has given him pro-
bably helped him survive nights on which
the temperature dipped to 35 degrees.
"I think Kevin was lnstinctual enough
to find a warm spot where the terrain
would maintain his body heat,'' Fowler
said.
"Kevin ceased being hyperactive as he
got more tired and this slowed him down.
1 don't think there is anything peculiar
about this boy's physical makeup •.• but
because of his great physical activity his
muscle tone and endurance V.'ere better
than most kids,"
lie said Kevin had los t 15 of his 85
pounds.
During his 225-hour ordeal. Kevin
managed to elude thousands of volunteer
seiirchers, Air Force and National Guard
helicopter crews, numerous trackin!!
dogs. and for most of three days some of
the top rescue teams in the Western
stat.cs.
The boy was found by members of the
Rocky Mountain Rescue Group from
Boulder, Colo.
I.ONOON (UPI) -'nle Soviet Union
will have the nuclear punch by the mid·
1970s to destroy virtually all Am'erican
Jalld-based missiles and bombers in one
surprise attack, th&. authoritative Janea
Fighting Ships said today_
Jt said this leaves America's 41 Polaris
.e.'1d Poseidon sumbarines as "the most
survivable" U.S. strategic deterrent
forces for the foreseeable future.
The 1971-72 edition of Jane's painted
this grim picture of the declining
American and booming Soviet navaJ and
ballistic mi!!:ile strength:
-The size and relative capabilities of
tM U.S. Navy continue to decline "at an
alarming rate". .'IJ:ie Soviet fleet now
represent.a "the super-navy of a super·
power."
-The Soviet Navy h83 already ex·
ceeded the United Stales in active
surface ship and submarine nwnbers. It
has near parity in nuclear submarine
strength 11nd a larger nuclear submarine
building program.
-The only category of wf!,rsh.ips ln
which the U.S. Navy now and for the near
future maintains a decisive advantage is
the aircraft carrier.
-The Soviets have gained superiority
over the United States in number.!! of
Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles and the
megatonnage tha.t can be delivered. Cur·
rent Soviet construction of silt sub-
marines a year could give the Soviet
Union parity if not superiority in Polaris
type submarines by 1975.
"Soviet progress in Ule strategic
weapons area is of utmost concern to
U.S. defense leaders," Jane's said
American Banks
'Directly Owned
By Underworld'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Senate sub--
committee probing crime has been told
by a witness some American banks are
"owned directly" by the organized
underworld.
Edward H. Wuensche told the Senate
Investigations subcQmmittee Wednesday
he had used such banks to obtain Joans
totaling in the millions of dollars, putting
up stolen and counterfeit securities as
collateral.
Wuensche, v.·ho said he had been coJto
victed four times of financial crimes,
Mid some banks are owned outright by
mobsters while others cooperate with the
mob. •·From my own personal knowledge.
there are situations where thil banks are
owned indirectly by members of organiz..
eel crime," Wuensche said. "The persons
al the top front for them and they don't
make a move without consulting someone
else .·•
Wuensche said bankers he was direclly
Involved with "knew what was going on."
But in some cases. he said, he dealt with
loan officers, and top management or the
banks did not know what their loan of·
ricers were doing. Loan officers took a
i;tandard "cut" of 5 percent, be said.
Wuensche referred to more than a
dozen domestic and foreign banks in his
prepared testimony, but named only
three. They were the Long Island Trust
C.O. in New York, The First National
Bank of Miami and the Devon Bank of
Chicago. But under questioning. he named other
Chicago banks as involved in a
mullimillion-Ool!ar scheme engineered
I hrough Devon >,.1.•ith the help of Dr.
Sidney DeLove , whom Wuensche i;aid
was president of the Cook County Federal
Savings and Loan Association.
U.S. Air-backed
Cambodia Battle
Costly, to Reds
~= ·.· Cool Wave Hits Midwest SAIGON (U PT ) -South VJetnamese
lroops backed by fi ghter jets and U:S.
helicopter gunships killed 44 Communist
so ldiers today in day-long fighling in
Cambodia, where a government task
force is sweeping an infiltration route in-
to the Mekong Delta, military spokesmen
said.
' • ' ' ' • l
I ' • • • • • • ' • • • ' • • • • • • •
j
• • •
Scattered Showers Reported Over Much of U.S. The U.S. command said today two
American helicopters wene .shot down iB
the Ocilla, and U.S. 852 bombers struck
North Vietnamese positions in the north-
ern part of South Vietnam, below the
Demilltarizcd Zone (DMZ).
..:#'rt : -; r:-J>~.-:-
>----
MM11Y Ju""Y 1'6<!tY. l'9111 v1rlt1>11
.. , .. ,,, 1'1•9"1 '"" ........ 1 ............ l>«<lm·
Ing w11 ... rty It to 1J •t\Cltl In tNt•'-
,_,., lodllv t!ld P:rld.tv, H'911 -Y 111.
teo1ttl Mtnl!C••rures '"''' from 6l ta 1•. ,,..,..., ,..,,,P9,..lur1t r 1119e fllltl'I
•2 Ill 71. Wttrr '"""''rurt "-
TNUllSD.t.Y
Sl<ll'ld 1119'! 1'"4 ··""· •.•
S«and '-• 10 ,, "·"'· ' t 'llll).t.Y
'1rtt 111111 .•• • •.OO 1.m. '1
P:lrtl tow ., ...... , 1·001.m. 1 1
1.-cendMRll JlJpm. 11
SKO'IO kl• 11~00 1.m. 1 I
Su" ti.I"" 4,02 • m. Stll 7:.W ~.m.
Mdlln llthM \1 'll 1>m lel1 ]1 ·)S~ .....
Temper•tures
ly UNITllD l"llll51 INTlllNATION.t.l
The command sa id 13 American! were
T•rnP•rftlUre eM prec;lp!111iot1 llbll
for' • 1f·h<>Y• o>•rlod t'>dlng •! I p m.
PDT. es,,,...,., .... bv 1111! \.I,$, W11ft>1r
llurt11u 1 1 s,.,. Fr1ne11co. killed and 88 wounded in the Indochina
M1e11 Low ,.,,,, war last week and 11 others died of ac.
ti .1J •0' cidents illnesses and other non-combat Alb<l<rut'<lllt
Jlncll.,r1t1
A!lenlt
lltkt•sH•ld
1101 ..
"°'"" Clllc.>9"
(lrwlnnell
Cl•veltlld
O.nv.,.
Del•Oll
l"ortWwT~
Fre~ ,.., ....
1ndlanePolls
1(1ns.11 C!1y
L11V~1
lei"""'"' Mltml 1111•1!
Mllweu~"
Ml ft...,..""' ls
Ntw Ot!t•n,
N~Yton
Pllllftdt ll>l'll1 .._,,
"'"'""''" Ponltfld
··~ S•Crlmff\10
$!, Llll!h
S~I! l•-~ Cllv
!811 01-
Sen Frt"''~'"
Sftnt1 ~""'' $Hl!lt
5Pelo:tM
Wftl!lftOIM
5'U ,0: t
" '' causes. A Saigon spokesman said 295 ':! !~ government soldiers were killed last
11 '5 week and placed the North Vietnamese
15 '1 .OI and Viet Cong toll at 1,389. 15 lS " • ,,. · More than 1,200 men of the 3,500-man
•• .n .os South Vietnamese infantry and armored
tG!t .Ol thh thte ,. n 1.n force sweeping roug sou eaa rn
iot u Cambodia were involved in today 's
.,:,: M .. " ,,, fighting. 12 mile~ northwest of Svay ·°' Rieng and just west of the Parrot's Beak llJ 11
11 ~ area.
1<1 •i Field reports !laid U.S. AH! Cobra
~~ ~ gunship crews killed at least 15 Com·
'IO n .u munlst !!Oldiers In one engagement and :: = South Vietnamese F5 freedom fighter 1~1 " jets laced into an estim8ted 400 North
1' J.o Vietnamese troops north of the Plain of " ~ 1111 .w Reeds. Eight North Vietnamese end Viet
90 •• Cong were reported slaln In the area WI A' .!IO •• r Wednesday.
1s •s There were no Immediate reports of ;~ ~~ South Vietnamese casualties in the
11 s• fighting, which lasted into the late: af· ~ ..
11 ~· ternoon.
"because Improved Guidance and Multi-
pie Warhead Technology (MIRV) could
pennit the predicted Soviet strategic
forces of the mld-19708 to destroy
virtually all U.S. land-based lnterncon-
tinental llalllstic Missiles in a surprise
first-strike attack.
"Simultaneously, Soviet missile sub-
marines could destroy most U.S. manned
bombers before they could become
airborne.
"Accordingly, the U.S. Navy'.s 41
Polaris-P06eidon 11 u b marines are
acknowledged as the most survivable
U.S. strategic deterrent forces for the
fore~r..ble future."
Jane's estimated current Soviet Naval
strength at 83 nuclear powered sub-
marines, 318 conventionally powered sub-
marines, two helicopter carriers, 26
cruisers Including missile ships. 100
destroyers inCluding missile armed
vessels, 130 sma11 frigates and corvettes
and neary 800 smaller crelt.
The U.S. Navy In 1972, Jane's said, will
have a force of 13 attack carriers com-
pared with 16 three years .ago, !.hree anti·
submarine carriers Instead of six In 1969,
160 cruisers, frigates and deslrOyers In·
stead of 240 in 1969 e.nd 9.1 attack: sub-
marines compared with 103 in 1969.
lJ .s. Envoy Arrives
ls1~aelis Say Fighter Jets
Needed To Breal{ Impasse
By Un,lted Press International
Jsraeli political sources :said today
Assistant Secretary of State JGSeph J.
Sisco ''will have to pull something out of
the hat" to break the Egyplian·Israeli
deadlock over reopening I.he Suez Canal.
Sisco, who arrived in Israel Wednesday
and may slay 10 days, was scheduled to
meet today with U.S. officials in Tel Aviv
for a briefing on the Middle East crisis
against a backdrop of Egyptian plans to
stage a nationwide mock air raid alert
amid reporls of maximum security
preparedness.
The Israeli newspaper Davar, often a
renector of the ruling labor party's think·
ing, said unless Sisco brought U.S.
guarantees of further deliveries of F4
Phantom fighter-bombers as requested
by Jsrael "this would cloud" his ta!ks
with Israeli leaders.
Sisco "will have to pull something out
of the ha•. to bn!ak the current impasse in
discussions" aimed at. reopening the
canal, blocked by Egypt during lhe 1967
Middle East war, the sources :said. "We
must wait to see if he has any new ideas
from Egypt."
Sisco's mission, his second to Israel in
three monlhs , follows a recent trip to
Cairo by two U.S. State Department of·
ficials who sought to break the stalemate
on the AmericaA initiative to reopen the
waterway -regarded as an interim l\1id·
dle East truce prior to pennanent peace.
On the Arab front, President Anwar
Sadat of Egypt arrived in Libya today for
an Arab summit conference on the Jorda-
nian-Palestinian guerrilla crisis. Libyan
Prem ier Moammar Khadafy who called
the conference embraced Sadat when he
left his plane at the former U.S. Wheel us
Air Force Bai;e. However, less than .half
of I.he 14-nation Arab league members
were expected to attend .
Khadafy sent cables to Arab leader~
last week calling for the summit to adopt
what he said would be a united stance
against the "continuing liquidation by the
Jordanian government against Palesli·
nian guerrillas." Jordanian for c e !I
virtually wiped out guerrilla strongholds
ed July 17.
Sisco was scheduled to meet Friday
north of Amman in a five day battle end·
Royal Geronittio
with Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir
and Foreign Minister Abba Eban. Israeli
television said Sisco had brought a
message from President Nixon to Mrs.
Meir but dld oot elaborate.
The arrival of the assistant secret.a,-,
coincided with reJ>C'rls in Al Ahram tha t
Egypt would stage a countrywide mock·
air raid alert for the first time in moothl
today •·to test the civil defense system."
Egyptian armed forces "'ere reported in
a state of maximum preparedness for
"expected events."
Israeli newspapers :scoffed et the
reports, calling them moves lo pressure
Sisco into wringing concessions from
Israel on the canal issue.
Numeiry Reports
On Red Reaction
To Sudan Deaths
KHARTOUJ\f (UPI) -Pres Ide Pl t
Jaafar Numeiry said today the reaction
of the Soviet press to the exe<:Ution of 14
ringleaders in last week's short-live d
Communist coup has strained Sudan'!
relations with eastern Europe.
"I do not want any deterioration in our
r elations with the Soviet Union Md other
Socialist countries, but, if they want to
choose that path we will have no
.alternative," Numeiry said.
He referred to reports by Moscow's
Tass New s Agency and other Communist
outlets that called the executions "bloody
I.error" and said "absolutely innocent
people" v.·ere being convicted .
Jn a news conference for foreign
newsmen, the husky army major general
said his government is investigating the
possibility of foreign involvement in the
coup, but that no proof had been found
that the Soviets assisted the plotters.
"l do not know whether the Soviet
Union was involved or not,'' he said.
"but, until now, we have not fotmd
evidence that the Soviet Union had a
hand in the recent events,"
U,1 T•!OtMN
Wearing fl parachute and a life jacket, Prince Charles walks to a plane
11t the Royal Air Force parachute school. The prince took the 1200-
foot leap into the English Channel, becoming the fir5l of royalty to
Cl o so.
" ---, __ ,..
• ·~· ,, .,
Back Seat Rider
•
•
LitUe Wand a Eppr idge, 3, of East Lansing, Mich.
casually sucks her thumb and watches the scenery
roll by as she hugs h er mother's skirts from the
back seat of a bicycle.
Pres iclent Lauds
Aff new 011 Return
WASHINGTON (UPI l
With high praise from Presi-
denl Nixon for a "fine job,''
Vice President Spiro T, Agnew
ha!'I completed his 32-day. 11-
nation around the w o r l d
diplomatic mission.
Nixon welcomed A g n e w
Wednesday shortly afler the
vice president returned to the
United Slates after the longest
overseas mis sion undertaken
by a vice president since
ruchard M. Nixon spent 73
days in the Far East in 1953.
lmmedialely after his plane
touched down at Andrev.·11
AFB, Agnew rushed lo the
While House where Nixon wa!\
waiting to welcome him lo the
United States. which lhe vice
president left June 2fi.
"Welcome back." N i :ic o n
said. shaking Agnew's h11nd.
''You di d a fine job ...
Agnew replied "'I had a good
trip" and then the Presidenl
and Vice President, along with
Secretary of State: \Villiam P.
Rogers, and Dr. Henr y Kiss-
inger, the: Administration's
foreign policy adviser. wen1 tn
th e President's office v.·here
the Vice President delivered
his initial briefing on the
30.000.mile journey.
Agnew visited South Korea,
Siog;;i pore, India, K u w a i I ,
Ethiopia, Saudi A r a h i a ,
Kenya. the Congo. Spllin,
Morocco and Portugal.
He met with chiefs of s1a1e,
Includ ing kings, a m i r s .
emperors And presidents. He
held a series of news con-
fe rences with the small group
of reporters that accompanied
him. but he revealed li!tle
aboot his discus.<;ions .
Mis most critical tal ks ;ip-
parently were with lhe Amir
of Kuvr1 it and Kini: Faisal of
Saudi Arabia. Thf'y 11 re
moderate Arab leaders \.\'hn
might be influential in 11!·
lempls to settle the ~liddle
E •~t d ispule.
Both Arab leaders i;:avl'. him
c on s t ructive suggf'slions.
Agnew said. but he did not
elaboratr.
At one point no his 1rip.
Ajtnew said U.S. bla ck l!'aclers
eould emu!atr thrcP Afric;in
11ttongmen. ..4,gnl!w'! sla1e·
ml!nt was strongly criticitcd
in the United States, and Rep.
John F. Seiberling, (O·Ohio),
fired a new blast Wednesday.
"Surely it goes beyond the
bounds of propriety and com-
mo sense for an American in
public office to use an official
trip abroad as a forum for
public ::ittacks on f e 11 ow
Americans,"' Seiberling said .
Hig h Level
Of Me asles
Now in U.S.
W.A.SHINGTON (U PI ) -An
increase In measlel -to its
highest le vel in five vear,; and
esprclally among -s I u m
children -has forced the Nix·
on Adminislrauoo to revive an
11bandoned health policy n<
fight ing the disease with
.special federal funds.
For the fi rst time since ear-
ly 1969 the federal govf'rnmenl
1s spending money to buy
measles vacc ine. according to
tile Center for Disea!e Control
\CDC) in Atlanta.
The government w i 11
distr ibute $4 .8 million to stales
and communities to immunize
:ibout 8 million children, with
a maJOr focus on inner city
youn gsters.
Thr campaign Is a direct
response to a 78 percent one-
year increase and a :'160 per-
cent two-ye;ir rise in the num-
ber of 1neasles cases reported
1o !tie CDC ln the fir st 28
weeks of this year, 66, \55
cases v.·er~ reported nat.ional-
1.v. com!Jared vdth 37,322 dur-
ing the ~ame period last. year.
"Thf' protllem is a disturb-
ing one because of the trend ,"
COC Assistant Director Dr .
W_ Sn.ice Dull told UPI. H1.s
agency reported m ea s 1 e s
epidemic" this vear in Nrw
York City. Ne-w Orleans,
Dall11s. L11!l!! Rock, Ark.,
Oklahoma Ci!y. Waterbury,
Conn., \\'ich1ta. Kan .. Abf"r·j
deen, S. D., and num erous
othE:r areas.
U.S. Imports Exceeded
Export Good s in June
WASHINGTON (lJPJ) -
U.S. imports exceeded exporls
by $362.6 million in Junr. the
first time in June. the Com-
merce Department reported
Wednesday. It wall the first
time in 21 years that the na-
tton·s trt de account has shown
a deficit for three e<>nsecutlve
months.
Imports exceeded exports
by S303 million during April,
May ~nd June, the large11t
three-month deficit sincr 1946.
The wave of I mp or I ~
eliminated a trade surplu5 in
the first three months <1f the
year and left lhe government
with 1 $372.3 million deficit for
the rirst six months of the
year.
If there Is no Improvement
lri the la!t htlf of the year. the
nation is on Its w~y to the flr.sl
trade deficit sincr 1893.
Harold C. Passer. Assistant
Commerce Secretary for
Ecooomlc Affairs, said, "the
t1.1rrent deterloraUon in our
trade ~it/on \J rel11ted to
l'lpecitd sltu11tinns. such as ac-
tual tir potential strikes. as
well as less transitory In-
fluences."
"lmporls of metals have
been increased and exports
reduced as a result of an-
ticipations of strikes i n
domestic steel and nonferrC1U11
metals industries," Pas.!!Cr
said.
He said lhe We.st CoMI clock
11trike also was a factor.
"More fundamentally, ex·
ports have been restrained by
the slowdown in the rate of
economic growlh in many of
our major markel.s abroad. at
the samr tlmt th1t rising U.S.
busine.ss activ i ty has
stimulated import!," Passer
11aid.
Exports totaled '3.6& bllllon
In June while import.1 totaled
a record $4.02 billton.
For the first six months of
the year, exporls lolaled "1.66
billion in June while Imports
totaled a rtcord '4.02 billion.
For the. first six months or
the year. exports totaled '22.2
billion ~·h!le Imports totaled
$22.6 billion .
---· ... .. -...
Suspe nd Support
Right-wing Organizers Snap
Political Ties Witl1 Nixo11
WASHINGTON (AP ) -A
group of conserv•tlve
org•nlun: and edilors has
broken politlcaUy with Presi-
dent Ni1on, but Republican
leaders say the defectors will
be back becau!.I': therr'.s no
place else for thl!m lo go In
1972.
"Sooner or later. these con-
Rrvalives are going lo look at
the al ternalivC3," 5aid Sen.
Robert J. Dole of Kamas, the
GOP ne.tional chairman.
'"'.hey certainly aren't going
with any of the Democrats.
And there aren 't an y
alternatives on our side. Nix·
on 's the nominee."
Sen. Barry Goldwater of
Arizona said he w a s n ' t
surprised a t conservative
dissatisfaction.
.. But I don't believe this is
going to amount to much,
because when the chips are
down, the y're going to be with
Nixon," Goldw<iter said.
''The alternatives are too
frightening.''
"From a practical point of
view, the conservatives have
nowhere else to go," said Sen.
L;ordon Allott of Colorado,
chairman of the S e n a t e
Republican Policy Committee.
Goldwater and Dole agreed
f.ov Ronald Reagan of
California. the GOP figure
who vrould loom as a potential
rallying point for a con-
servative revolt, is a Nixon
loyalist, and will rema:n one.
This view is shared by others
in lhe admlnislralion who say
lhere is nobody on the right
with credentials and in·
clination to oppose Nixon.
"\Ve do not plan al the mo-
ment lo encourage formal
political opposition to Presi-
dent Ni:icon in the forthcoming
primaries. but we do propose
to keep all options open in the
lighL of political developments
r/!Jarlin ~ A nniverjar'!
LOOSE PILLOW-BACK
SOFA SLEEPER
for co111fort, thl11 looM c11•hlo11 IHK.k 1110•• tt.11 .t",_
look 1111111 alt Ilk• • l11•11rlo111 10!0.
HllCULCN. TM "'"" Mlrocl. fobrlc 111 • c;holco of ploh1
or ll•tl•rM. C111t1o,.,-q11lt'9d for lo~ llt. -Wo11 ld11't
ttil1 look 11fco h1 'l'OIH homo or yo11r M w 11portmo11t .
Regula r Size -Anniversary Sale
PHONE 548·5131
~~-
MEN'S SHOP
1101 JAM!ORE! ROAD PHONE il••-OllO
LAST DAYS OF JULY
Double Knit 4700 New .Blue
BLAZERS
Jlop JMC•ltb. litolr bolt. ll.,. S9S,
NOW
WHITI DOUI LI
NOW 17°0 KNIT
SLAX
l !CJ. S24.SD
in the nexl 1nonlhs," the 11
leaden ol co n 1e r Ya ti ve
organliations and publications
said Wednesday in announcing
.suspension of their .support of
the administration.
The best-known name on lhe
list was that of William F.
Buckley Jr .. editor-in-chief of
Thr: National Review -and
brother of New York Sen.
James L. Buckley.
The sena.tor avoided direct
comment , and said through a
spokesman he wasn't involved
in the dillsrnt, and
wholeheartedly supports Nixon
and Vice PreiidenL Spiro T.
Agnew.
Buckley, elected on the
Conservative ticket in New
York in IQ70, now li.st.1 hi.s af-
filiation a .s Cooservative-
Republican. The two top men
in the New York Conservative
Party were among signers of
the statement.
Despile the statement issued
in Buckley's behalf, the Ne w
York senator h2.s rxpressed
his own misgivings about
some policies or the ad·
ministration, especially a t
Nixon's planned visit to Com·
munist China.
Special/
~ ,_ --
E:J
ALSO RIYOLYING
C HAtlGI
MANY OTHE!t VALUES
SPORT COATS 50% OFFi TAILOtllD NI W MODILS
.... SI O &-SI~ .... S90 I Stl
NOW 39 00
NOW 4700 ofdp;tk o/1m
I SALE LASTS THRU SUN., AUG. 1 J
NEW,ORT I EACH
LOCATED AT THE NEWftOltTEI INN
SUNDAT 10 'TIL J P.Ji!. -DAILY t TO 1-'I I. & SAT. 'TIL I -AMPLI PARIUN6
-··-··· -··· --
l~ur$d1f, July 211, 1q71 DAILY Pilot S
S S $ S S $ S SS S $ S S $ S S
? •
Can LaCJuna really double in size, and
still enjoy the economic and tax advan·
taCJes of a seaside villaCJe?
The opponents of the heiCJht·limit initia·
tive
they
• rise
would
would
would
have you believe it. In fact,
have you believe that hiCJh
actually lower your taxes.
But can two really live as cheaply as
one? Let's look at the facts.
CITY SERVICES
In study after study, it has been shown that high·rise high density in·
crease~. not decreases, the per-person cost of city services. For every
100% increase in population, there is a 110% increase in the cost of muni·
cipal government. The paragraphs below give som e of the reasons. The
accelerated cost of government means one thing: higher taxes for every·
one.
FIRE PROTECTION
Here's just one example of the effect of high rise on Laguna's municipal
expenses. The F ire Depart.inent's present equipment is limited to fight·
Ing fires in buildin~s that are less than 40 feet tall. The first high-rise
slructures will require an $85,000 aerial ladder, plus $75,000 each year for
the men to operate it.
POLICE PROTECTION
! ... I_3 . I. repo~ts_ ha ve proved conclusively that crime increases with popu-
lation. Stat1st1cs sho\\1 that if Laguna should double in size, its robbery
rate PER PERSON could increase 50%, murders could increase 25%.
rape 15%. and a ssault 11 %. This means more police, and more taxes
to pay those police.
ASSESSED VALUATION
High ri.se will indeed increase the assessed valuation of the high-rise
properties, and. of the land surrounding the high-rise structures. The
assessed valuation (and ta:<es ) or properties in the vicinity of the Su rf
and Sand Towers has doubled in recent years. That's how high-rist
breeds high-rise. The owners must build high, just to pay their taxes.
ECONOMIC HEALTH
Tour1 s_m is. Laguna's major in dustry, and the supporters of high rise say
lh~t h1gh·rise hotels must be ~11ilt if Laguna is to avoid economic decay.
This should be news to the city of Carm~J. which has a 30-foot limit, a
ta>: rate of only ~l.25 per $100, compared to Laguna's $1.93, a nd nearly
twice the per capita retail sales tax revenue. Carmel's Chamber of Com ..
merce _will ~ell you that t.he ir city's success as a tourist center is because
of. not in spite of. the limit on the height of their buildings.
So if taxes and economic 9rowth are your concern, your
choice Is clear. A YES vote next Tuesday will protect not
only your health and happinHJ. but also your pocketbook.
Vote YES on Au9ust 3 for our La9una.
Shall an ordinance be
adopted llmltin9 the hel9ht
of buildln9s In La9una Beach
to three Uories7
YES[!]
NO I
STOP HIGH RISE
VOTE YES ON AUG· 3
This advertisement has been prepared by the Committee !or a Yes Vol•
on August 3. Clip it out for futur e reference; show it to your friends. To
support the campaign, mail your check to YES ON AUGUST 3 COM·
MITTEE, Al Hook -Campaign Headquarters Manager; 812 South
Coast Highway. Laguna Beach, Calif. 92851 (Phone: 494-9550 ).
-·~ . ---·,
•
. '
(
• 1 DAD.Y P:Q,OT EDITORIAL PA.GE
"'' ,,
••
...
,.
' •
...
' A $30. 9. Million Matter
While ·the 1overnor and lht Cal i!om la LegiA!aturo
conUnue Lo go around and around over where the sta.tli
w1111et It.I tax money and where it will 11pend it, a little
matt« of '30.9 million bu received fut passage, lltUe
comment and gone right past the governor'• blue pencU.
The $30.9 mUlion is the annual appropriation for
the Legislature and its increase in the past ten years has
been staggering. In 1961, it cost the taxpayers only $6.6
milllon to fund the Legislature for one year.
In 1961, legislators received $6,000 a year -plu11
expeMea. In 1967, that jumped to $16,000. In 1970, they
voted themselves a 20 percent increase, to '19,000 start·
Ing January, 1971.
Daily expense allowances were also raised in Janu·
ary -from $25 to $30 a day.
The biggest jump in costs bas been the increase in
the size and cost of legislative staffs. Some 1,500 persons
are now employed in both houses at an annual cost of
U4.5 million.
The California Journal reports the Lea:islature has
81 staff aides, each paid $18,000 or more a year; 43 in
the Assembly and 18 in the Senate. The Assembly's chief
clerk and· sergeant-at.arms each receive '25,200 a year.
Comparable positloa. in the St.le Senate pay $19,000
and $11,200.
Top aalary on the Senate atall is $28,680 -for the
director of the Office of Research. In the Alisembly, the
chief admini1trative officer is paid $24,000 a yt;ar.
Three key agencies service both houses of the Leg·
lslature: the legislative analyst (with a staff of 63), the
le~slative counsel (a staff of 125) and an auditor general
(with 47). The bead of each of those agepcies is paid
$35,000 a year.
Each assemblyman has a secretary in both his capi·
tol and his di!trict office -plus an administrative as-
1istant who can receive up to $14,000 a year.
Stale Senators, who generally have two secretaries
at the ca.pilot and two in their dlsttict orrlce, can pay
their administrative aides up to $18.000 a year.
It is true that better salaries tend to attract bett.tr
Je gi&lators and for that reason some of the increases un-
doubtedly are justified. But when the Sacramento poli·
ti cians start preaching on paring, sl ashing and cutting
expenses, it would help for them to set an example
with an introspective study of their own spending habits.
Bad News for Thieves
Residents of Monterey Park have been experiment-
ing with a plan that h as startlingly reduced burglaries in
their community.
The plan is remarkably simple. The local Exchange
Club f inanced th e purchase of a ciozen etching tools lo
lend to residents. Citizens then engraved their driver s'
license numbers on valuable items burglars find most
appealing -TV sets, radios, tape recorders, bicycles,
cameras, electric al tools, jewelry, musical instruments.
Then a sticker advising that "all items of value on
these premises have been marked for ready identifica-
tion by law enforcement agencies" is placed on the front
door.
Would-be burglars know they couldn't pl ead stolen
items were their own if they were so marked and they
are much harder to fence if they are identifiable.
Result: Among 4,000 participating households, there
have been only three burglaries sin ce the program has
been initiated. In the 7,000 non-participating homes,
there have been more than 1,800 burglaries.
We commend the plan to the attention of any city
or service club.
P. . Distortion Charges Stand
E CBS Skirts Hardly Clean
Dem
Gloomy
Gus . -. ' '' HOUie'• 228 to J8J refusal to cite . : Coluli>bla Bro8'lwtlng Symm fur
pt.·Wll anything bul a resounding
ror the network.
eacaped proeecuUon for contemp_t,
t'• an.
algnificance of the vote wu a lnJ reafflnnaUon of the con-
Uonal right of freedom of press. But
as no vote of approval of CBS' highly
verslal conduct in producing the
"Sellln& of the Pentagon."
cootempt citaUon wu rejected
ly on the ground of possible in-
ent ·of freedoin of the press:
~, the rul and.on.IY·f'f:UOO CBS was
Jdiaoiplined: Tbroughout the 1tormy
""iate.rinltbe · oetwotll ·wu denouoced In
.,, W1l)a and vigor.
ECEITFUL,'' ''dl1hone1t ,''
rted," "deviou1," "irresponsible"
· aome of the 1eathlng castlgaUons.
the numerous teglslator1 who spoke,
· one aid a word ln approval or
difense of the CBS feature. That'• the
REP EDWARD BOLAND CD-Mass.):
"The accuracy of 'The Selling of the Pen-
tagon' Is not at stake here. That remains
eminently debatable. What is not
debatable Is that the resolution (for a
most notable aspect of the dlsCUM.ion. contempt citation) is a th re at to the
n ...... ,,..11 and De blister freedom of the press." ·-r-u cans mocrati were -Rep. Jack Edwards (R-Ala.): "As in-
ing in their condemnation or CBS-while dividuals we can condemn CBS and we
at the same time voicing opposition to the should. We can hope the Ameri can people
contempt citation. will join in that condemnation. But
Following are graphic Illustrations or however strongly we feel about CBS, or
thla unusual deliberation -whose real NBC or ABC, we must not trespass as a signif~ce has bee'n unmentioned by legislative body in the conslituUonal right
CBS and very litUe elsewhere: of freedom of press."
Rep. Thomas Pelly (Jt..WQi.): "The Rep. Barber Conable (R-N.Y.): "I am
evidence brought forth by the committee voting against the citation for contem pt,
tertainly indicates that the practices us-but my vote should not be construed as
ed by CBS in lhe production of 'The Sell-approval of lhe tactics used by CBS. lt~
Ing of the Pentagon' were deceptive at misrepresentations do a disservice to the
best. Bul much u I deplore what I con-television industry, and they Invite
tider t.o be a lapse of editorial regulation in the interest of fairness and
responsibility by CBS, it does nol seem to honesty. CBS may not have acted
me that it is necessary to bring about responsibly, but as representatives of the
charges of contempt." people, the Congress must."
)·Oui, Bad French Spoken
•
NOON -Virtues of English and
will be up for bi-11.ngu.al diacuss1on.
Saturday when members cf the
Francalse and the English
ing Union meet here 1n the 56th
(,..,. --·---..
:• £litorial
Half of our ecological trash pro~
lems would be solved If manufac-
turers were res tricted from mer-
chandising wares in one simple
package instead of an Jtem inside
a sack inside a boJ: inside anoth er
sack.
-Mrs. G. T.
Tiii• '""'"' nn.n. ... _..,. .,,.... ....
M<;•n•rllr ,.,. .. "' ,,,. ---· s-'wr "' _.,. t. Gle9mr •u. DlllY 'li.t.
,Western U.S.
Will Escape
Brownouts
A bit mOTe conful!ion than light is being
cast ()n the nation's power problems as a
result of the Federal Power Com-
missi()n 's report that the country faces a
power supply problem and that the ~st
coast and midwest can expect mo re
brownou~ this summer.
One can't blame our eastern cousins
for laking the nt:\ff unhappily, in view of
the still unforgotten 1966 northeast
(
... ... . ;: i
·:\· ::-... :, "t. , : • I ·, I
1~,o' 1,:. ~ ~ I
I' ., "< . .
MN-JiJ;;:,. 1-::J
''\T'S AN INfLAIEI> l>f..f'Rt.<;<; \ON.''
Fort Bragg Gls
Easy to Turn On
The Anny's drug rehabilitation
program at Fl. Bragg. N.C., is in such a
sham bles that drugs arc sold right on the
base and $500.000 worth of milil.ary equip-
ment was stolen and pawned last year to
buy narcotics.
These are the distressing findings of a
confidential drafl report to the House
Commerce Conunit·
tee by Rep. John
Murphy. ([)..N,Y.),
Y.·ho ha.'!I jusl com-
pleted. an _on·lhe-spot
mvesll gat1on.
Murphy said the
program, known as
.. Operation Aware·
ness,'' is hopeless·
Jy underfunded. un4
dermanncd and unsuccess ful. ''Drug re4
habilitation.'' he concluded, "is totally
incompatible with the role and mission
of the United St.ates Army ."
Despite President Nixon's avowed com·
mitment to solve the drug problem,
Murphy discovered that there was so lit-
tle money available lo help the Gls at
Fort Bragg that the education niatcrials
used in the prog ram practically had lo be
stolen from other facilities .
"lN DE S P E R A T I o N, • ' the
Congressmen says, "the manai?ers or
'Operation Awareness' finally asked the
Nixon Administration for a niinimum of
$100,000 to operate the program . They got
by military police who told me that In
1968, in one si x-block area of (nearby)
Fayetteville. the mih lary narcotic squad
purchased three bindles {s mall contain-
ers) of heroin.
"IN 1971, in the same area. they werl
offered a t()tal of 10 pounds of the drug by
pushers. . . Enforcement officials ..•
frank ly admitted it v•as beyond their con-
trol."
!l.lurphy found that M percent of th•
drug patients al FL Bragg were
enlistees. not draftees. "Their medical
records indic:ate that the reaS<lns for
vol11nt.eering in the Anny ranged from a
des ire lo get away fro1n a bad home
situation lo making a choice hctween a
prison sentence or going into the
service."
One. captain told r-.1urphy that "the
tnlisted men turn on fgive pol to) the of-
ficers."
Id Esperanto Coo""'.
Bull haa alway• been a dreadful
1 '_. ·-R~Tch \;'°'"'~f\'l '' I .a£i. -· ....
only official language, we shall be show·
ing ourselveiii more European.·• The
Scotsman's editors saw no reason why
the languages of Shakespeare and Proust
could not be equal partners. ~ ~" '31.000.°' Aside from the theft and pawning of
The Congressman heard harrowing
ta les of drug use in Vietnam from
.!'Okliers who had returned fr om the war.
"One trooper (nicknamed Lee Oswald)
claimed he was ·smashed oo heroin for
365 days ' He said he did not seek lo
engage the ronemy ; on the. contrary he
avoided con!acl.
.. l!t. Cbun:hJ.R'1 French w a s
oua aOO Prime Minister Edward
th'1 Jl'rench accent 11 so terrible: he
clalm to be a worthy sucCeuor.
Ptuldent Pompldou, on the other
claim• to speak no English at au .
wonder, then, that language has
an emat.Jonal issue during the
· te over Britain'• entry into the Com-
Markel
In an effort to pacify the French, Heath
told Parliament lha t British civil
servants, when discussing Common
Market Affair5 in Brussels, will use
French u "the main working la nguage."
The Scotsman reacted in an ironic
editorial written in French. Freely
translated, it said: "We do nol see how ,
by accepting French as the community'•
Pesticide Liabilities
---i!W-
. Tbunday, July 28, .1971
TM ..ulorlal pao• o/ the Doilp
PUot uekl to Inform and 1Llm-
..,.,,. r<Odnl b]I prcarntJno tlW
M•plplr"I ~ and com. ..,..., "" topb o/ ,..,...,,
_, "'1rdtv-e<. b]I prM>idhlg •
,.,_ /"' the npreuicm o/
-.-OJ>hdt>n<, ...a bw ,.. •• ,,., ,,.,, dJOlf'll trltw-
~ of lo/omd ob,....,.,
--4 ,,11n-n Oii toplCI of &M ...
a llt rt JI. Wood, Puhlllber
-~ ---'
have to show lack of due can by the
defendant.. but only that the pesticide
was used and that he wall damaged. In
one case, for eiample, an extenninator
sealed a building, then pumped in poison
gu to kill insects. The gas escaped and
injured persollll who lived ntJ:t door. The
court held that there was strict liability
for damages, even though the ex·
lennlnator had used the utmost precau-
Uoo. The court said that when a person
deals with an ultra·hazardous subttance,
and It causu dimage, he mU3t pay for
any damage.
UABllJTY FOR USE or m 0 s l
pestkides,· bowtver, ts based on negli-
aeoce. Th& user ls held liable if he knows
1hat a product may be dangerous. and if
he tbei1 u.Cs It in a way-<>r area-likely
to cause damage. Failure t.o lf:am about
the dangers of pesticides, though. may
!tool! be negll1enco.
StUers of dangerous pe.stlcldea must
&Ive adequate wamln1 about the d1nger1
tnvolv~ in the use or the product Uablli-
ly extends not only lO the buyer i nd UM:r,
but to any ptr90D who may rea!Onably
come within the danger :r.one. Thi3 in-
cludes the UJer's wife, his family or
fellOW' workeo who may be ell'.PQ6ed to
the pesticide.
NoU : California laW11«ir1 offer this
column so uou mav know oboui our
law1. __ _....,.
THE DAILY EXPRESS waspishly
comments that England should not enter
the community because the French lack
proper swear words. Pompidou has said
that besides being a means of expression,
French is a means of shaping the thoughts
which are expressed in it. This makes
French seem like a fonn of cultura l
subversion.
French has enjoyed a prominent world
position ever since the days of Louis XIV
y,·hen the diffusion of French language
and civilization became an objective of
French foreign policy. Through the pro-
digious efforts of three centuries, French
Is now the main language of 80 mi llion
people. However, despite all the fuss.
French ranks only 11th among world
languages, after Chinese, English, Hin-
du-Urdu, Spanish, Russian. Japanese,
German, Arabic, Beng a l i and
Portuguese.
YET 1% PER CENT ol <he Frend>
ztudents choose to learn Engliah.
A3 an international langua1e. French
has AeVere limitations. A number of
French scientific journals a~ now ac-
cepting articles written in English by
French scientists. In an effort to main-
tain contact with world culture, the
French have even developed a new
vocabul ary called ''Franglals."
The list of over-Ang licized French
words includ es le smok.i ng, le dancing,
le parking, le building, lt i tantiing,
or le shampooing. French businel!S-
men would find it diffic ult lo talk
shop without reference to le manape·
ment, le cash-flow, or Je m(lrketing.
Given this corruption or English, one
writer to the London nmcs asked:
"Should we politely correct such in-
trusions of sell-made English into our
mother tongue ()r do we talle coursa in
Conti nen tal English?" The 1 e a din g
French daily, Le Monde, deplores the in-
trusion of such impurities into the
l1nguage t.o such a degree that It ruru: a
regular column on the c:orrtet me of
French.
As Samut'l John1100 once remarked, the
French believe th!l \1nguage! are "the
ped ig~s of nalion$." They want lQ keep
theirs fully blooded. f or the: time being
l.inguist.ic compromise will be. ffilUlrM.'
-EdJtorlal Ruearcll ReporU
blackou t. They do have some problems.
It is true that there is not enough hydro
power, not enough natural gas nor geo-
thennal power to light all the nation '.'!I
lights and turn all the wheels of the in·
dustrial con1plex which provides the jobs
and goods the nalion needs. There is need
as well for fossil fue l and nuclear plants.
TH E IMPLICATION that the western
United States fa ces a summer of
brownouts or res tricted electricity usage,
however, simply isn'l lrue.
We in California and other western
states can sympathize with our eastern
cousi ns on a base of cooficlence. Con·
fidence born of the great power intertie
effec ted by our western utilities whic h
linb production resource! in Canada, the
Northv.·est, California, and other western
1tates.
The intertie pennits the shifting of
gtnerat.ing capa city 1wiftly to areas of
need in a far-sighted and well-engineered
way, and usually without any awareness
on tbe part of customers.
THE DOOMS AYERS would better
serve the people If they were more expli-
cit in stating their facU, and made the
simple but very important point that if
the rest of the nation was half as we?ll
prepaired as California and her neighbor-
ing states, there wouldn't be any power
problem anywhere.
The rest of the trick is to continue to
match an understandable environmental
concern with the neces.sity for getUng
light and pow er when the switch Is turned
on.
CalUornla Feature Senolet•
~--Bw George---·
Dear George :
Do you think ftowen hurt when
they are cut?
BOTANIST
Dear Botanist:
Get, 1 don't know. Ask a couple
-you're the botanist.
(Se nd your problems t.o Ge<Jr~e
and learn how he copes with lift. 11
problem1 . But be c1reful -it's the
UJO.proof 11tuff.)
-~-
military equip ment lo support drug
habits. Gls at Ft. Bra gg have othe1 y,·ays
of getting narcotics, Murph y discovered.
"Another major method. . . is the
practice of many Gls who gn to Atlanta
to purchase 'three spoons' of high.grAde
her oi n y,·hich they cut with dilutant::;.
They shoot up half of the <irug
themse.lvrs And sell !.he other balf to
addicts on the base.
.. The critical lncrcase !n the Bragg
area drug traffic was pointed out to me
''Ol'\E SHAKEOO\\'N by officers in hl5
unil turne(f up 16 kilos or pot. two satchel
charge bngs full of 'Jays' 11narijuana
cig:'lrettes.J obesilol and max1 !one forte
(spred) ... ancl opiun1 and heroin."
i\1 urphy concludes that instead or the
tnl'ffective n1ilit:iry program a! Ft.
Bragg and other places. drug 11sers in th11
mili!ary should be d1~charged for
physical d1~nhil1 t y an<f "turned over t11
the existing federal programs for treat,..
mcnt and rehabdit<H1un."
Perils of Censorship
Every child know~ the law in physics
lhat ·•action and reaction are equal." But
few adults know that much the sam11
law operates in the social sphere as well.
The attiludes of one foolish extreme are
Invariably balanced.
at some future time,
by the other foolish
extreme .
I thought of this
while looking fo r a
suilable movie for
my younger children
over the weekend. ll
has bceome difficult
these day for a par·
ent to find any film he would want to take
a 12-year-old to see. M,y standards are
mo-re per missive than most. but even·
liberalism must have some rational
limits.
IT WAS LESS THAN 4 decade ago that
the barriers fell. One of the landmark
cases in film censorshlp was Times Film
Corp. v. City of Chicago (244 F 2d 432.) In
deciding that case, the court dwelt upon
some of the more arrant absurdities of
movie cen.'IOrsh ip. Jts ob!iervations show
not onl y how far we have come since
then, hut also how the extreme of
repres3ion Inevitably make?s wsy for the
extreme of lasciviousnes.'!I and ir·
respon.,lbility .
The Chicago llcensor.'!I. for Instance.
banned newsreel film.'!1 of Chicag()
policemen shooting at labor pickets, and
• , Jir' .... · t --
ordered the deletion of a scene dcpictinl
the birth of a buffalo in Walt Disney'•
"Vanish.ing Prairie.·•
SHORTLY BEFORE World War II. the
Chicago censor board denied licenses to a
number of films portraying and critlzing
life in 1'1t:.7j Germany. A decade later, th•
board refused a permit for the film,
"Anatomy of a Murder," because it fou nd
the use of the words "rape" and "con-
traceptive·· t.o be objectionable.
When we consider the subhuman
violence on the screen today , it seemll in-
conceivable that the Chicago censor
board excised a scene in "Street With No
Name" in which a girl was slapped,
because this was thought to be a "loo
violent" episode and Charlia
Chaplin's satire on Hitler. "The Gre!'t
Dictator." was banned in Chicago, L..: the
C()urt observed, "apparently out ol:
deference to il, large Gennan popul•·
tion."
Dozens or other equally absurd, unjust
And arbitrary citations are given by thft
court In this c:ise. TI1ey indicllt how
"°'ildly the pendu lum l!Wings, and why ex·
tremism bree<i1 its own opposite e•
cesses.
..... -... _,.. ___ _
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CHECKING r Acheson Denounces Secre s Abuse
•UP•
Bilci11is Serving
Healthy Functio11
By L. M. BOYD
ARGU~T CONTINUES
AS to whether a woman's heart
or a rnan '11 beat.5 fa ster. A
woman's, that's known. By
maybe sevl!n beats a minute,
Among infants, however, it'll
the boy's heart that beats
faster . Th a t's how
obstetricians predict the sex of
unborn babies. Wilh about 85
per-cent accuracy. lf the
thumpily thump is slo...,·, buy
pink.
GARMENT MAKERS claim
tibout one out of every 200
men wear girdles ... STILL
UNEX PLAINED is why you
and I gel more dental cavities
in winter than in summer. ..
WHO WAS IT defined "ex-
pedience" as "hitting your
wife over the head with your
mother-in-law"".' ... AJ\1 ASK-
ED JF the Confcredate
States Of AmPrica ever mintl'd
any coins. Only four -50-cent
pieces. . . IN ITEMIZING
those progressive words, don ·1
forget Wheat . Heat. Eal. At.
OPEN QUESTION : Which
was thf!: name of the "Our
Gang Comedy" dog, Spot or
Pete:?
"1'~1 A SCIENTIF'IC scuha
diver in Puget sound," writeli
"' Seattle subscriber. ''And l
have developed a s e c r e I.
wate:rproor !xix which contains
11 special buzzer and a
particular light to which fish.
crabs and clams are ir·
resistibly attracted. On the
floor or the sea. a big wire
cage containing this box \\'ill
completely fill up with sea lire
NO. 1 ON
THE COAST
Your Hometown
Newspaper Is
The DA ILY PILOT
in about two hour.i. It's worlh
$1 million. At least. ·ro
fishermen, anyway. Bul I need
money desperately. So I'll
sead you lhe Cilmplete plans,
if you 'll mail a check for iust
$10."
CUSTO!'t1ER SERVICE: Q.
"Remember old Buck Rogers~
What century was he su pposed
to have been Jiving in?" A.
The 25th ... Q. "Did you say
18 out of 100 women get
bald?" A. Not totally, not
totally. That's just one
researcher·s claim. . . Q .
'·What pro1X1rtion of the
crmeteries bury the dead 111
double depths?" A. All t can
tell you is gravediggers insist
most of the big: ones do ... Q.
"What's lhe average age of
the working man now?" A. Tn
lhis country, it's 39 ... Q.
"How many men did Grneral
Sherman lose durin~ his
march to the sea"?" A. Exactly
103 dead , 428 wounded. 278
missing .
GWC Signup
Linc Grows
Registration appointmt>nls
for Golden West College's fall
semester are filling fast and
students interested in enrolling
were advised today to make
contact soon with the ad·
missions office .
John Buller, director of
educational services, said he
expects the college to enroll
5,200 day and 6,200 evening
students bcgi1,1nlng in late
August.
Day registration ror con-
tinuing students will be held
from 9 a.nl. to 3 p.m. Aug. 31
and from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m .
Sepl. \, New students wi!I
register from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
PHILOSOPRY I : ''Isn't it Sept. 2. Late day registration
strange that princes 11nd has been scheduled from 8
kings. . . And clowns that a.m. to 4 p.m. Sept. 8 and 9.
t caper in sawdust rings. . . and from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m .
And common people like you Sept. 14 and 16.
and me ..• Arr. builders £or Evening registration will be
<?ternity? ... Each Is given .11 alphabetically by last name
bag of tools. _ . A shapeles!'i beginning Aug. 30 and con-
mass of book of rules ... And cludinR Sept. 16. Hours are
each n1ust make ere life is froin 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. The
flo\vn ... A stumblinJ! block or schedule is A-C, Aug . 30;
a stepping stone." The poet, D-J, Au~. 31; K-Q. Sevt. I:
R. L. Sharpe. and R-Z, Sept. 2. Open re~istration rlal.es will be Sept.
YOUNG LADY. 0 0 not let 9. 13, 14, 1~ and 16.
those disapprovin~ 4Jbscrver~1:;:::::==----======:::;
chastise yoo for running
around all day in your bikini .
Tell them H's a matter of
health. The closer your skin
temperature is lo the wealhcr
tempt"rature. the doctors say,
the better you'll function
physicall y You do want to
rune.lion physically. don't you?
)·n11 r questions mid com·
ri1 ;nt.~ are welcomed and
1r1/L he 1tsed in Checking
{ p ivhcrever poss i b Le.
Pleose nddress yo11r letters
to L, M. Boyd, P.O. Box
JR75. Newport Be a ch,
92660.
UT'S BE FRIENDLY
l( you h!i\"t' new ncighbon:
or know o( .11nyone mov1ni:::
to our 11re11. please t<'ll us
i;o t h11t \\"e may e."1;\1.'nd 11.
friendly "\\"t'lcome 11.nd h!'lp
the1n to br'come ll<'flU!lint rd
in lht'i r n1>w surroundings.
So. Coast Visitor
494-057' 4'~93'1
Harber Visitor
~1 74
~ ~
EARN 253 TO 503 MORE
Many banks pay a reduced savi ngs passbook rate
of a low 4%. At Pacific you stil l earn the sa me
high rate s as before.
ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS
6.18 '%:. 6.00 '%:. 5,0002! TWO
5.92 '%:. 5.75°/o 1,0002! ONE
5.39°~ 5 .25°~ 5002! Y.lh
5.13 ~o 5.00°~ 5!!,q ONE DAY
Inte rest compounde d daily an d paid from date of
deposi t to date of wi thdrawal eve n if it's just one day
Ask how you can obtain all these benefits service charge
FREE
PR EPARATI ON OF PERSONA L STAT E a nd
FEDE RAL INC OM E TAX RE TURNS
I FREE
~ ~ TRA VELERS CHECKS SAFE DEPOS IT BOXES
"......, ; COLLECTION OF NOTES MANY OTHE RS
........ l'l'i
OPEN NIGHTand DAY
Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
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WASHINGTON (UPI)
Former Secretary of State
Dean Acheson said Wedn~sday
ir Sen. J. Willian1 Fu!t.nght
has his way the governrnent
'A'Ould be sub1ected to ex-
tensive ab use by future Joe
McCarthys.
In characteristically blun t
terms, Ache.son denounced the
Arkansas Democrat's proposal
to force government officials
to declare ''executive
privilege" every time they
ref;,.ise to give Congress in-
formation.
Such a requirement. said lhe
78-year-<:1ld former secretary.
would lead to "infinite harass..
ment and embarrassmei\t'' of
the President and executive
branch by host i le con-
gressional committees and
create a held day for ad·
vocate:s of the tactics of the
late Sen. Joe McCarthy, (R-
Wis.)
"ln short," said Ache9on,
"what a hell of 1 way to run a
railroad."
Acheson testified before the
Sen.11te J u di c i a r y Sub-
committee on Separation of
Powers, wh ic h ls holding four
days of hearings on
Fulbright's blll aimed at
ALL STORES
THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN
prying loose inlormalion f1"9m pri'tltlege " and print It t.o with oLber letters asscrUnit
reca lcitrant bureaucrats. the committee in person. priv1le1e, what a picture could
Fulbright, chairman of lhe Otherwise , the requested In· be created of a President 111
Senate Foreign Re l a t i on s form1\\on would. have .to be the cen\er of a web of secre:t
Committee, claims the defense supplied withifi ~ days Or the tnci.c1i1nalion."' he said.
department and other govern· agency Involved w o u Id ·'With wh11t relish nrie C!Hl
menl agencies have flatly automatic'1.IY , • bt prohibited l ma RI n e Se n . Jose ph
relused lo give his committee from aperidlhg government McCarthy conducting these f ds e~amina~ions without judge er
information even in closed un · defending counsei.·· But Acheaon, who headed
sessions on grounds it would the Sta,te Department during Recalling the televised hear·
he "inappropri11le" or "'serve the Truman Adminlstratlon !~ whic;h le'il to McCarthy 's
no use.lul purpose ." said this would ope n up the.ex-censure by the Sen.11te: as 1
His bill would require them ecutive branch to abuse. re:sult o(. his charges of Com·
to get 11 wntlr.n staleml.!nt ··As surrunons. might follow munist infiltration in th•
from the President asserting sumtnorts . . and these government during the early
the rarely used "executive witnes!es followed one another 1950"s, Acheson safd: ~~~~'----~~~~~~~~~~~~
PARTICIPATE
MATT"E S S ;
OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS!
LAKEWOOD
4433 Cend l ewood Av1 n u1
C•ndlewood 8h01>9
SANTA ANA and
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
ANAHEIM·
1811 West Lincoln Ave~ue
·~
(•cro11 from Lakewood Cenler)
Phone: 6J.4·4134
---
,_ _,_ .... __
16131 Harbor Blvd.
(corner of Edlnqflr) Next 10 Zody's
Phone : 839,.ol5 70
Between Euclid and Brookhurst Avenuea .
-...,.,,......--.'b;-1 •Yr -u-.. ... --.i-, :;'JI'---"l.4D----'----·-· ------···· .. -··-M·-·---·-·--·--·-·-
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I I ll-'ILV l"ILOT ThursdiJ, July 29, 1971
• .
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By Phil lnterlandl
.,Quick, a aecretary with a· pad up here-one of thl
hJgh muck-a-mucks has an jdea,11
Marine Wins Acres
Of Land for Sons
A retired Marine Corps Sergeant from Santa Ana has won
a $10,000 contest by naming the thing he wanted most out of
life -an acre or my beloved country for each son."
Henry O'Connell, who won 32 decorations during World \Var
U, Korea and Vietnam, said he would buy four acres of forest
land in Modoc County in northeastern California with his win-
nings.
The contest asked each person the tiling they most wanted
mt of life. O'Connell wrote : "Four acres of land. Through 30
years in the Marine Corps I've had one dream, an acre of my
belowed country for each son."
O'Connell who has seven children, including three sons, said
each son would receive an acre and the fourth acre would be
ahared by the rest of the family.
"In these time.!! of change and youU1ruI unrest no one can
help but love our beautiful country when he owns a part of it,"
O'Connell said.
He was presented wilh his winner's check Tuesday by offic-
ials of Morrell and Co., the national meat firm that sponsored
the contesL
CpaNAta.i
Ex-pot Puffers Can Now
Become Policemen?
MIAMI (AP) -Former pol
puffers can now be Miami
policemen-but only if they
c:an prove to a lie detector
they turned on less lhan 15
limes.
The city'1 Civil Service
Board has compiled new guide-
lines which ease the police
department's policy on hiring
police officer candidates who
have illegally used drugs.
The new rules disqualify
anyone who ever illegally used
heroin, morphine, codeine,
methadone or cocaine. Blue
coats also are denied to those
who have used amphetamines
or barbiturates-10 or more
limes.
But 1 person is eligible for a
badge if he lif up a join t 14
times or less, said Ci·Ji!
Service Director R o b e r t
Richmond.
The old rules aulomaticall y
excluded anyone who ever
knowingly or wtknowingly
took drugs illegally.
"~ liberali:iation w i 11
definitely help us in recruit-
ment becau~r in this day and
age e v e r yon e is e:t-
perimenting," said LL J ack
Farr of the department's
personnel section.
"1be new stale la w
downgrading from a felony lo
a misdemeanor a first offense
for marijU&Jl.I brought about
the aew regulations," Farr
said.
Farr said the department
bu ahudy accepted SP.veral
applications fr:>m young men
who experimented with drugs
JnOf't: than 1 year ago. The
board temporarily disqualified
anyone who used drugs IJ.
legally within the 12 months of
submilling his application.
Farr said past puffers were
tDld when they applied for the
police academy that they
would have tD pass a
polygraph test to make sure
they were honest about :.heir
drug history.
tic saiq no one backed out of
taking the test.
Alan Cole, 25, currently in
training lo become a
policemw , said he is in favor
of relaxing the drug ex·
perience regulations because
soc i a I standards in volving
drug use are ronstantly chang-
ing.
Cole, whose a cad em y
classes began one day before
the ne w guidelines took effect
June 15. said they also might
coax more returning Vietnam
veterans into police work .
"\Ve're beginning to learn
that drugs are more a social
problem than a legal pro-
blem." said Cole. a University
of Miami June graduale.
Kansas 1-lonor·s
FV Graduate
Ann E. Goodwin, 9269 Daisy
Ave., Fountain Valley, has
graduated with h i g h e s t
distinction from the School
of Education in June com-
mencement e:tercises at the
University of Ka nsas, in
Lawrence.
Highest dist i n c tion Is
granted the top three percent
of the graduating class.
TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDITATION
cu /aught b.1
Maharishi
Mahtsh
Yogi
Tta1t1cendtnttl Pl'ledi•tion i1 • n•furel 1ponf•n-
••u1 techntque <whlch ellows ••<::h individuel to
•sp•n-' hi• ,.,,ind •nd improve hi1 lifa . •
FREE PUBLIC LECTURE
1 ... ,., Frl4•.,, • P·"'· l•9innin9 Au91u t 6ih
M•tl11.,·1 llOr•ry. 20015 Do••• Dri"•· N•wpod •••ch
_...,,__ __ --,_,,_.. -------------
I
ALL SWlM SHOPS OPEN TOMORROW, FRIDAY, 8 A.M. FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE
"
I '' I
'I
save 33 1/3 to 40 % on our entire stock of suits,
they're all from the nationally famous makers
It's tha t time agai n. Terrific swimsuit savin gs .
And we open our swi m shops extra earl y. You'll find
every swimsuit fro m your favor ite famou s makers at
33 1/3 to 40% savings. One and two -piece suits,
bikini s, tunics. In wonderful light fabri cs like
nylon, couon, acetate. Choose sunshine prints,
patt ern s, stripes, dots and solids. Sizes 8-18.
Be at one of our may company swim shops tomorrow
at 8 :00 a.m. Great savin gs await you!
were 16.00-36.00
to •
Mo re values in swim wear in our foundations
department (44 ) ope ni ng at 10 a.m.
Bal i, Youthcraft, Perma·l ift and other famou s
makers brin g yo u the swim suits with perfect
fit. Buy tops and bottoms separately ••• bras
in B-C-D-DD cups in many styles. Briefs
o r bikini bottoms. A wild collection of prints,
bu t not all colors in every size so come early .
•
•
4. 99-1
I
may co Inundations 4\f-except oxnard,
!>.ln bernardlno, carl sbi d, whinier
J.nd crenshaw
Also avai lable 5.00-o.OO swi m caps 2 for 5.00
from our nolions departmen t (1) in every swim $hop
except Downto wn L.A. wh ere a tabl e, for you r
convenience, will open on the first floor at 10 a.rn.
/ F f } c l ;
I
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may co. south coa1t pl11a, aan d lego fwy. at \,r(atol, eo1t1 mn11; 546-9321
1hop mond1y thru aaturday 10 a.m. ht 9:30 p.m ., 1und1y noon 'tll 5 p.m.
... ----' I """""" -.. ------•. ~ -· -~--·1or---
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MAVCO
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DAIL V PIL8' 9
Reagan Tells State Strike · Peril ******************* MERCURY SAVINGS
and loa ssociatlon
SACRAMENTO tUPI) -California's agriculture and not yet been felt. There will be are ready for harvest but & problem. NOW OPEN
EVERY '3ATURDAV Gov· Ronald Reagan told the recovery after the walkout an accwnulaUve effect on the without transportaUoo to the The governor r e p o r t e d
Nixon AdministraUon Wed-ends will be slow and hard. present strike and if Santa Fe refioeries, the sugar CQntent automoblle factorif3 will close hesd&y that more than 100,000 loss "will be enormous," the when their current inventorie!
Californians will lose their "It will have such a choollc strikes lhls weekend, this governor said, estimating the are exhall!ted and wamed of
j~ il the rail strike con. effect that many of our clost.S down all of the effective daily IOS!! at $2 million. "grave problems" for the San
tinue!. grower!'! v;ill be WlStable for rail t ransport at Ion for He said so percent of can-Francisco Bay Area'!'! 12,000
.. ::.~, 10 A. f VI . -4 P . M . ,,?'"'~, • fi,,,.,,n _ •f.',\JHl!l
• " ·-111 IN BELGIUM
Mep'1 Anthony
In a report wired to U.S. yean to CQme," Reagan said. California and much of the ning plants are closed because train commuters.
Transportat!on Secretary John "Many small growers cannot west" 80 percent of the product He cited these ma}or losses
A. Volpe, the govehlor warned even survive a few days 1-0ss Reagan satd the livestock normally b moving by rail. tn agriculture: ~taloupes,
lhat a continued strike will of market.'' and poultry industry faces a '"I'he condition will become $595,000; pears, $4 50 ,000 ; have a "devastating effect'' on "The CQnlinuatlon of the rail ''potentlally critical situation" more extreme each day,'' grapel!I, $393,750; I et tu ce,
· II ·1s N 1 ind strike even at its present level in food grains because mills Reagan said. •">1:11. 000 · lern $245 000 e.SPf.<:18 y l 0. ustty, ....,.,-, , ons, , ;
agriculture, will have a devastating effect have only a four-to--six'(lay Reagan also said t he tomatoes, $200,000; plums,
Volpe had re q u e 8 t e d on California's economy and Inventory. He added lack of availability of newsprint for $198,000; oranges, $178,000;
Reagoo's assesllment ol lhe will pose untold hardships on a bailin& wire is "'critical" newspaper! is • • a I r e a d y honeydew melons, $75,000;
great portion of California's because there is no a.ltemate critical" and that the chlorine nectarines ~ OOO· po•••oes strike's impact. • •'"· ' """' '
~~7. ·,..,. 1 ,• OpenMon~-Th .91.m.-(p.m.j frl.91 .m...fi p.m.
BUENA PARK cury Savings Bldg., Valley View at llncoln
HUNTINGTON B H Mercury Savings Bldg.1 Edinge r at Beach
TUSTIN Mer Savings Bldg., Irvine B~d. at Newport AM.
* * * * * */* * * * * * * * * * * * *
Kids Like to Ask Andy
Mesa Gir l
In Belgiurn
For School
The Republican governor ec~~~~~~l~pago~e~o~1~~~ sut~:~omla sugar beet! now ~fi~e~0rp7:i;~ t!"~:~~~ge ~d·O:\ rygra13pe1f500ruit, $40,000;
said direct and indirect effectsr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~·;;;;;;;;;•~·~;·~;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. of the strike are expected to
add another 100,000 workers to
CaJi(omia's already heavy
unemployment rolls.
Joyce Anthony, 17, daughter
of f\1r. and Mrs. David J,
Anthony, 1680 Labrador Drive,
Costa f\Icsa, h;is taken up
residence in Belgium, as an
American Field Service ex:-
change student.
The Estancia High graduate
Is living in Seraing, a city of
50,000, with Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Warlomont and their
nineteen year-old daughter
Rosemarie. There she will
study humanities with
Rosemarie al the Lycee Royal
Luis Degreppe, an ai!-girl
secondary school.
f\!iss Anthony's 13-month
tour i! sponsored by
Americans Ab r o ad , a
subsidiary of the American
Fleld Service (AFS),
According to !'.1rs . Jack H.
Hall, coordinator of the
Americans Abroad program
for Estancia High, Estancia
submitted lYliss Anlhony and
Robert Isaacs for national
consideration after ha v i·n g
hosted Howard Bennett or
South Africa and Pe t er
Tienken of Chile last year.
l saacs, also of Costa Mesa,
departed last January for
South Africa.
Newpor t
To Receive
AAA Award
'(here were 669 ,000
Californians out of work last
month, re pres en t ing an
unemployment rate cl 7.2 per.
cent.
llcagan told Volpe the
100,000 figure "will increase
d2.ily as industry is more and
more affected by the strike."
He said the agriculture in-
dustry which includes
~rowers, farm laborers an
related industries -is losing
$JI.I million each day.
Reagn, holing some growers
are plowing under crops
because lhere is no way to
transport them to markets,
said daily food commodity
losses total $2.7 m i 11 i o n . Losses to related industries'
are reaching $8.3 million daily.
lie said unless so m e
a lte r nate me ans o f
transportation is devised, "the
loss of livestock, particularly
poultry will be disastrous."
The governor told Volpe the
strike affects 75 percent of
Wes tern U.S.
Nude Clubs
Assenihlin g
Delegates from nudist clubs
In California, Arizona, ·New
Mexico, Colorado, and Utah
will meet at the Glen Eden
Sun Club July 30 through Aug . I. .
"A Thousand Bnd 0 n e
Nights" will be the convention
theme , complete with Persian
motifs for night-time en-
tertainment are a sullan to
preside over all activities.
While costumes are requested
for evening wear, claytime ap-
parel will be the traditional
one-button birthday suit for
Newport Beach will receive volleyball, tennis, and swim-
11 "traffic safety av.·ard" from ming.
the Automobile Club o fl ;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,1
Southern California. I,
The award, the result of the
American Au tom ob ii e
Association's 32nd a n n u a I
Pedestrian Safety Inventory,
v.·as won in competition with
141 U.S. cities ha v i n g
populations between 50,000 and
100.000.
According lo the inventory,
in 1970 Newpori Beach had no
periestrian fatalities, com-
pared to the national average
of 2.7 deaths per 100,000
population.
The city's pedestrian injury
rate per 100,000 .,.,.as 66, bclov"
a national average of 72.
This is the. third vear since
1%5 that t-.lewport Reach has
received recognition from the
association.
iewels by ioseph
searches for jewels
Convtrl lll'IW•n'lt<I 11 .. lry II lmrnt<l1'-
•I• c•tll b' 11,. le I Hr"' -.. kn<1wl.clg1, 1•perlltt, •ltd lnt.,rlty 1u11r1 ,011 c1r.!11I 1v•l11111111 11 19-
d•Y• m.,1<11 v11 .....
W1 will H Pl••ttd le •~•mlM Y'll• 11mt HHI 1dvl51 r.,•rflr>t IM1r 1111-
ptNI.
Cell Mr. J""" II Mr. l'lltt It '*" ""·
South Co11I Pl111
Bri1lol a t th, Sin Oi190 fwy,
Co1!1 M1i1 S-4 0-9066
WHAT
DOES IT
TAKE
YOUR
ENEMY?
Something m o re than human love.
It takes a more spiritual look at yourself and the
other fellow. An understanding that you bo th have ,
the same Father·Mother, God.
It takes realizing that no man is your enemy.
Your real enemy is evil -hate, envy, Irritation,
revenge. When these are overcome ypu find you
have no enemy.
Children enjoy the relevance of spirituaUy·bascd
thinking like this. They're always welcome at out
Sunday School.
CHRISllAN SCIENa SUNDAY SOIOOI.
'"'' ....... "'"' ~ " c:ii.m:.. k ....... 2111 M-Vlnlt Dr.· t:ll A.M.
Mwitfftltlll IHCll, J'l~I C"lll'd ef Cllthl, k.IMllrt
111'1 t. 011n llrwi. • •:• • lt•ot A.M.
~ 9Ht ll, J'lnt Cllllrdl If (tn11!. kltnllll
JJtJ ..... LIM · ,,U f, lh • A.M.
Mt.,...i •-"• I« .... Olfl'tll If Gfothl, ki...tltt
ntt l'Hlfk l/llW DI'. ·(I,_... l tl W r • ll:M A.M.
--------
UTILITY SCREEN
DOOR CLOSER
e All p11q>o1 1 pn1um •tic clo11r e Ad iu•l•bl1 clo1in9 pow•r e Ru99•d 1!111 con1f/ucfion,
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BLACK & DECKER
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e Accur•t. i nd f•tl for 1ny
m1l1ri•I e W1ll.b1l1nc1d, co mfort1b!,
8 .. 88
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Challenger Saw
e 26 inch 1aw for cam p,
cott191, hom• e 01ii9"1d to t•k• • b11lin9 e H11vy.dutv. 111y-9ri p
h1rwll1
Scott's
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e Pr1v1nh 1pur91,
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in I w••~•
12.95
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Oigantic . Mid-Summer
House and Darden Sale
Scott's 'Super
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R1 I••••• nufri1nh over
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9 .. 95
Glidden Latex
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wood or 1tucc•
1urf1c11
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1moathly,
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LAWN SPREADER
e l i9htw1i9ht. 111y to h•ndl, e 0!1l·A·M1 tic 11t!in9, fin91r0
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19.95
Glidden Endurance
One·Coat House Paint
• Cov•rs
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&1
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e 81.t 91n1r1I pu1po11 t aw e lmprov1d, burn-out p1ot1ct1d,
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19.99
3, 31h , and 4-lnch
Nylon Paint Brushes
e f11fh1r1d I 00 'lo n'flon brit!l11 e Sturdy h1rdwood h1ndl11
59'u.
Nylon Garden Hose
5/8 INCH X 60 FOOT
e Ny1o" r1inforc1d far 1Jtr1 W-••r
e Fl1•ibl1 -won't knot
Glidden Spred Satin
Latex Wall Paint
e Thick. 1nrich1 d
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w11h up ..;th
to1p •nd w1f1r
5~97
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
'COSTA MESA
PHONE 546-.7080 • •= '
• WEEKDAYS 9 ·to 9
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 9 to 6
••• '=· -........... ~~ •.•. J-==--r----------
I
1 .
. '
'
..
"
I
I
"
It CAILY l'ILOT·
PORTI.AND, 0... (UPI) -
nv.. -&1rla found ool
tblt --ll'• like to be loll In wildemeu without the
-11111 aecurlty of tlleir ~ _....,. bu~ """' ~_..,,t llley oak! they
~ IOm9 vital human
vUles -about themselves
ahd others.
April Gall Divis. l6, and
JUta Ann Bryne, 17, both of
N.,.llrit, N. J., and Vicky Unn
C.rltc:bfldd, 18, of S a n t a
Barbara, had been lost in the
'ftree Slaten wilderness of the
cold and ni.gg~ 0 r e g o n
Cucadu 50 miles east of
Eu&"M for five daya.
100% Modacrylic
Pilgrim Wig
Sean Low Price
A lhertil'a party ushi;ted
bf Expiorer scout troops from
ntlri>y Eugene and Spring!l•ld
~ fOUQd the girls safe,
~kably composed and
pbikoophical abou t th e i r
ordeol.
"Wt &bared a Jot thGse days
we ~ }o.q," Rit.a said in a
leleph<Jne inte rview.
"Eveerjtbing came out, you
know, i.rhlbltations and all ."
Vicky, the only Californian
in the Vio. added, "I got
wrapped ~ with my own pro-
blema, hut then l noticed that
the others bad ~ same ones
1 did and that we'd all have to
be honest ...
She paused awhile and 5aid,
"that's when 1 learned how
Important It Is to communicate
with each other and how we
have to try to iCl a.Jong with
evrryone."
Thi! trio, enrolled in the
Northwetil Outward Bound
School, one of six Outward
Bound educational program.'>
in the country, were among 10
girls biking from Separation
Lake to Indian Hole when tbey
decided to take a sttort cut.
Snow, which stiU covers
much of the area, and the
thick forest. hampered efforts
by rescueni in reaching the
girls. They were found about
SAVE21%!
~heer Al[ilon• Stretch
PantyHose
Re~Jar$1.flJ pr.
3pr.
for $4
Sheer stretch Agilons
panty hose with nude
heel, reinfo rced toe. fa·
sh ion shad es, petite, aver·
age and tall sizes.
$1.99 ~ilon•Enr1·l1r;r.e
IU 3 pr. 85
Hosirry Dept.
The wig th:u goes to all
lengths. Cool, light fit
with natural hairline.
Hll8S the neck, caresses
the face. Simply smash· . I "'8·
/.' t& .. ,
CosnuJjcs Dept.
/
one mile frun their planned
dtstination.
"The first day. we got aort
of panjcky whe.o we rea!Jzcd
we were off the trail," ·11
said. "We used our compass
and map lo f1nd lodlan Hale,
bot we dldn't have any idea
we had already passed it."
The girls camped near a
waterfall for a while aod
"bushwacked" their way to a
clearing in the fortst, built a
large fire to serve as an alert
to aircraft and to keep th em
warm through the night , and
waited paliently for help.
When asked what if anything
csustd the most problem dur·
,.
,....
'~I ---
in« their wail, April said it
was the fear their food would
run out.
.. We started sniping at each
other because of the lack of
food," she &a.id, "we had
enough water becaut>e there
wa s snow around and a river
not too far away."
Sbe added, "but when we'd
get lrrilal.ed at the litUe
things, we'd sit and talk and
get everythi~ straightened
out."
Asked iI Ulere was any fear or wild animab. &he laughed
conridently an ''Oh, no , we
were taught (by Northwest
Outward Bound) that wild
animals are &eared of us a5
much &.!! we're ac.tred Qf
them.''
AprU admitted that after a
COtJple of days, "you start
wondering if you're going to
dle, or if aomeone will come Ln
lime before your food rul'l! out
or something happen11.''
She explained that their
morale dropped a bit when a
heUcopter pilot spotted them
Friday and waved as he left,
appare11tly thinking they were
j~ anodler camping group,
and again on Sunday, ~hen a
forest service light plane circl·
ed over tflem apparently con·
cemed I.hat their fire was too
large, not knowing they wtrc
losl.
The girls were asked if there
was anything they would
rttnember most from their ex·
perlence .
April replied, "at night, 1t
was real quiet. We were all
having more dreams than
usual sleeping out tnere. We
thought aboul a lol or Lhings ..
. aod you know, we had a lol
or lime to think.°'
The girls were enrolled in a
program who~ pull>Ose. ac·
cording to it.s director, Billy
Byrd , "-' to "offer a young
person the chance to discover
himself and to learn how to
• work with people in s.ltuationJ
ol llreu."
Thi!: girl! who feel they hav•
diaoovered them&elva and
each a~r this week, 1avt
this advice to athera who may
find themselve.s ln & similar
situation someday . . ."kttp
your cool and never panic.''
KIDS
LIKE
UNCLE LEN
~ear.., (.;real 1971
Bikini Bonanza
AmatinF: Low Pritt:
6
for $3
Take your choice of com·
fy stretch nylons in pa.5·
rels, brights and prints.
Nylon tricors in Califor·
nia prinrs and pa.5tels. Ba·
sic white, too. Sizes 4
to 7.
Lingerie Dept.
In Women'• Size& Only
' . '
•
'·
Suntime Shilts
Terrific \."alue!
4 7
I 009'h cotton Perma·
Presrll shifts with con·
venient zip front. Sel-
ected California sun
prints for the large
size woman.
Lingerie Dept.
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• d • y
r
1u!"s. Has Hoge Porno Colle~tion
WASWNGTON (AP) The Llbrary ot Congress llfll wtre being fought, thfi pornography'• plus a .s.a.n1pllng volu1ne 111 the Rare Books
Acrou the i!ltl'et:l from the doesn't llOl.iclt or buy erotica, llbrary made Its co p t e 1 of "even barder core' ' Coiled.ion has to ~glster with
0l9ltol, Wlpubllc:li.ed but said Jean Mell, bead of the available to I.he public. material, much of it sei!ed on a receptionist. A member of
avaUable..ao .fhe public, ll one. selection atalf, but plenty of Jt "We had to do some soul its way into the United States
ol the worM's 'largea:t col· pours in. searching," said Mn. M~tz. from such coonlries as Den· the library staff keeps •
Jections of pornography. While publishers seeking "We do get a few so--called mark or Mex ico. watchful eye on the book the
lt't housed Jn the Ubrary of copyrlghls art the source of 'dirty oldmen.' wbo just want At ooe time, most erotic whole time it is being used .
Con..-n. ' most of it, books aeiled by to re•d a dirty book." books went into what was ''O"~ Jn other words, anytime you
Thursda7, Jul7 2'9, 1971 DAILY PILOT JJ
High Court to Hear
Youth . Vote Question
included Alameda, Lot
Angeles, San Diego, San P'rm-
clsco aod Santa Barbara.
Two copies of mm;t books customs officers or other Siqce ever}1hing produced known as the Delta Collection, read 8 dirty book In the
publillhed in the United federal agenta also go lbe by established publishing a hoclgt'-podge of pornography, I -~"'->
States, lllcluding er o t I c library. houses Is kept on file, the expensive art books a n. d Library or CongreS11, someone
SAN FRANCIS<Xl (AP) -
The California S u p re m e
court agreed Wedne11day
to hear three cases challeng-
ing the attorney general's rul-
ing that young voters must
register where their parents
live.
The three suits asked that
the registrars be overruled.
The Supreme Court picked a
plaintiff from each to be
beard. will be looking over your literature, are sent to the •we must have gotten a library'!! problem involves volumes that might be shoulder.
library for copyright regi.stta-thousand copies of "Tropic of what Mrs. Metz calls "the "susceptible lO mutilation." """---'==-=======~
tion. Caneer.'" during· the 1980!" borderline stuff.'' The Delta Collection no ,.
All but a handful of what the when it was banned in some "There's a whole factory longer exists, but many of the
library staff considers hard-areas, Mrs. Metz said. pulling this stuff out," she books that were in il now are
core ponography of "ab-Tbt courts hz.ve removed said. "We don 't buy any of it, in the Rare Books Collection,
solulely no merit" goes on-virtuaJly all legal barriers to but if it's deposited for not because they are rNe but
to die library's shelves. It 's distributing pornography for copyright we usually keep it." to give the library more con-
,.. &vallable to anyone over high adult consumption. But even Some of that, she said. in-trol over Lhem.
_school age. in Lhe days when lhe legal bat-c I tides ' · h a rd core Anyone wanting to read a 1..:.-~-=--~~~~~~_:_-=:.=.c.~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~
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SAJ1': 99c!
Reg. $3.49 2r.~5
f>erma·PrestiB jeans in rally back
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Color~. Sizes 2·6x, regular, slim.
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NEWS QUIZ
We Dore You ...
Every Soturdoy
'
ltltn's Wt4r Dtpl.
'f~tRf5 MonltM6 L'!C't MONEY ro
SRID6f llf CifNtR~TON GAP.'"
The nine youths who brought
the three suit11 had been
denied permission to regi!lter
unless they used their parent's
address as recommended In
an opinion by Atty. Gen.
Evelle Younger.
The cases involved Collette
Jolicoeur, 19, now living In San
Francisco, but whose parents
reside in Ven tura ; James
Tabilio, 20, now living in Su
F rancisco, bis parents in Sac·
cramento, and Mark Steven
Randell, 19, residing I n
Bellflower, his parents in
Woodland Hills.
.
' ' •• \ ) . -t
i
Counties where registrars
followed the Younger ruling
Men's Comfortable Tire Sole Sandala
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Vinyl sandal s with brass rias trim. 2 9 7
!fire cread soles for long wear. In
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DAil Y I'll OT
FOUND IN WILDS
Todd Colw1it
R ewrded
Bo y Found
I n State
• SAN DIEGO, CalU. (AP) -
Searchers loday found a 10-
year-<1ld ret.arded boy who wu
mlssing from his camping
church group. 'There was no
word on hia condition.
Todd Colw•il, who
authorities say has a speech
defect and can become
hyperactive without medica-
tion, was discovered missinf
Wednesday morning.
His church group had been
at the Santa Ysabel Indian
Reservatio n , 40 mile,,
northwest of here, since Sun-
day ror a week-long outing. He
was discovered missing from
his tenl just before breakfast
and campers searched until
past noon before notifying
authorities.
About 45 San Diego sheriff'!!
orficers, including reservists
and a special search and
rescue team, were sent to the
area along with bloodhounds.
The search was suspended
late Wednesday night but W!!I
to resume early today.
The ctfild's m o ther ,
Elizabeth Colw1it of El Cajon,
said her son was "very bright,
active and very alert" but was
afraid of the dark.
"The area ha.s a little bit of
'everythin,i.: -rolling hills.
desert. m nun I a i n .s and
streams.'' said Sheriff's Lt.
Jack Blackwell.
Magee's
Motions
Cut Off
SAN RAFAEL (UPI) -An
appellate court, s a y i n a:
"enough ls enough," Wed-
nesday barred Ruchell Maget,
Angela Davi.s' co-dtfendant In
the Marin County courthouse
ahootout, from filing any more
motion.s.
The action by the Ninth US.
Circuit Court of Appta\4 came
while Magee, 32. 11 San Quen-
tin convict. was in court here
agreeing to delay or his
murder, kldnaping and con-
spiracy trial until after MW
Davis' trial.
1'.fagee and Mis.s Davis, "'ho
pleaded innocent Tuesday and
had her trial set for Sept. Z7.
were charged in connection
with an Aue. 7, 1970, c.scape
and kidnaping attempt which
ended with the deaths or four
persons, including a jud1e.
The federal appellate court
111 San F'ranclsco forbade
Magee to file any further ac-
tions wilh lt after denylnc
everything he had previoUJ.ly
requested.
Noting that the convict has
filed about 30 papers with ~
court so far, "the timt arriYu
when enough i.s enough," said
the order signed by Chief
Judge Richard H. Chambers
and Judge Charles M. Merrill .
The ruling means. Magu
mu.st now lodge petitions
rather than file them. permit-
ting an individual juda:e to
deny the motions without
court action.
Magee's appearance in aiurt
was hi.s first since hi.s case
was severed from that of
Mi.s.!! Davi.s. The ronvicl, who
has repeatedly delayed and
disrupted pretrial proceedings.
was chained to hi.s chair but
appeared--without handcuffs
for the first time.
He again demanded release
on habeas corpus on ground1
he had been unju.stly .sent to
prison before the bloody Marin
incident.
When no action w a 1
lorthcoming, he filed new mi>
tions for removal of the action
to federal court and for di.s-
qua/ification of Superior Court
Judge Richard A. Arnason.
Similar petitions have slll.tled
action 10 his caSt for several
months.
Slash Victim Recovers;
Police Have I Suspect
SACRAMENTO t UPI l -
Doctors say a woman slashed
two weeks ago al Bear River
Des perado,
Gal Hostage
Shot Down
LOS ANGELES (U PI) -A
clolhing store employe wa.s
shot and killed Wednesday by
a robbu'y SU!lpf:('t who in turn
wss killed by police. o!ficer.s.
The viclim.s were Dolori~s
Scott. 30. Inglewood, manager
of Boots and Britches clothing
store, and George E. Ho"·ard,
!9. Los Angeles.
During iin Attempted rob-
bery at the .store, a passing
police1nan V.'11.'i nagged down
bv a 12-ycar-old boy who told
him something was wrong in-
side lht store. Po!ic.-unit~
,;urrnunded the stort but (lne
of !he suspect..! inside saw the
officers.
Authorities said l-loward,
nrmed wilh 11 s11wed-off .12-
fl,!:au~e shotgun. grabbed Mi.s!'I
Scott and u.sed her as 1 human
shield lo get out a side. en-
trance.
Howard then placed tht
shotgun to Misl'i Scott's head,
\\·aming officer! to "step
hack:' Ho"'ever, pnlice 1111id
!he l!'IJn discharged, killing I.he
wom11n.
Officer R. H. W1ttt:rl'i then
fired his .12-11uge iholgun
once. hilling Hov;ard In the
chcsl
eampground in Nevada County
by a mlddle·age man who kill· ro two other campers will
lea ve the ho.spital in the next
few day.s.
Mrs. Kenneth Parker, 25.
Walnut, Calif., is "doing very
well" at Sacramento Medical
Center, her attendini physi-
cian siiid Wednesday. She was
t11ken there shortly alter bein1
viciollllly hacked at t h t
campground July 12.
Tht doctor said Mrs. Parker
ha.s difficulty s p e a k i n,;
btcause her jaws are wired
shut due lo deep wounds but
she can write me.s.sages and
.signal.
She appears lo remember
nothing about \\'hat happened
to her except that she went
campin&, the doctor •ddtd.
Killed in !ht attack by a
powerfully built middle·agt
man with lhinninj!'. iray hair
\vere Mrs. Donna Fitzhugh. 2A .
Ont11rio, llnd John Simmons.
20. Weimar.
Investigators ha vt re.ported
narrowing tht seareh for the
sickle. swincinc kill er to on•
.suspect.
Speeds Limited
lRVTNE -Or&,"!~t County
Supervisors have a:iven Final
approval to a llw limiting the
l'ipetd on Culver Drive in the
University Park area to '4:;
miles per hour.
The aetion cover& the area
from the San Diq o Freeway
lo 600 feet south of Campus
Drive.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e DOGS~ DOGS! DOGS! ...
Thia Wy Ji.Jian Grey.
hound WOUid m1kt a pat
Ptt. Sllf: it sliU a puppy
i 11nd nttds a tood lxlnv.
• TrR£D OF' CA.MPrNG IN
CROWDS~~ ~7~ B~ )"l:IUt
n .. ·n N>cn>auen land in
~a ufltul Northern calil.
Trett, vitw and nnr 2
lalcn, octan. Only 10 acnt
ltfl,
e OU1'RJGGER ........ 16'
t1beri:.111..~. l1kf' new and
nnly 1Uk1n1 a low prle1:.
St. DAILY PILOT cl.&•11.
fitd ads today!!!
Jl!l•·~-=::-::::· •. -t--'
--'? ,--l .. -'
Conjugal Visits
In P1·ison s Nixe d
SACRAMEN'ro (UPI) -
The CaHfomia Assembl y
Wednesday killed a bill 11imed
U. curbing prison homosex-
uality by allowing inmates to
have twCH:lay conjugal visits
wi!.h wive.s or girl friends. Op-
ponents complained about il -
lieit lovencsU and misplaced
prloriUes.
The measure needed 41
votes for passage and was kill·
ed Jt>-46.
Psst ...
Peel off
miles-to Sac
eouq_ty.
and
F PSAfr.am
Strict Rules Okayed
On S acramento Delta
"I don't think with priorilie:s
the. way they are th~ l.<s the
time for honeymoon cotta£es
at each prisoh," said
Assemblymrn W. Craig Biddle.
tR-Riverside).
"If I vote for this bill I don't
think I can go home," observ-
ed 6J.year-0ld assemblyman
Vincenl Thoma.s ( D -San
Pedro), the soft-spoken dean
of the Lower House.
Beach.
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
The State Waler Re.sources
Control Board, in an hi.storic
action influencing u n b o r n
California generations, hall
ordered strict new rulu for
proltction of I.ht I u s h
Sacramento-San Joaquin delta.
To the delight of con-
.11ervationlsl.s, the standards
will require generally greater
relea.su of fresh water from
upstream Sacramento river
rtaervoirs for outnow through
the delta than those proposed
by the State Department of
Waler ~llOUrces and U.S.
Burtw of ~clamalion.
"Larcer delta outflows could
po!e a problem for Ul'i,''
reported Stale Waler
Resourcas Director William
Gianelli, whc:IM agency builds
and operate.s the border·lo·
border California water pro-
ject.
The five-member boa rd
acted unanimously Wednesday
in adopting the standard.s. The
board termed the regult'J.ion.s
permanent hut subjctt to
review again in seven year.s.
Under the bill by
As.semblyman Walter Kara·
bian tD·Monterey Park), in-
mates would be entitled to at
least three conjugal vi.'lits per
year or '48 hours duration
each.
''Forty-eight hours?" ex-
claimed one <'·'iSemblyman .
Amidst tiltcr.s from the
lawmakers and spectators,
PSA knows a capital way to
get to Sacramento. It starts
at Long Beach Airport. Eaiy
to get into and out ~f. '
Plenty of parking. ,.,.,,,
And the crowds haven't
found it yet. Your travel
agent knows the way.
7:10 am (Exo.pt Sun.): 10:00 a'",
1:00 pm, 4:45 pm (Daily}; 7:00 pm
(Frid•)' •nd Sunday),
Chairman Kerry Mulligan
said top priority was assigned
to preserving and enhancing.
tht fragile delta ecology while
al the same. time proteeting
the existing rights to water of
.agricultural. industrial and
muhicipal users.
Biddle told the author: !-================================; "Forty-eight hour.s, three tr
times a year may not be right
for an older man. May J sug·
gest he might wan! five limes
a year and less hours or -14'4
hour.! 11 year and let him split
it up anyway he want~."
For Top Sports Coverage
Read the D AILY PILOT
•
Just because it 's always been so warm, helpful and trustworthy is no reason co
ignore it. In face, lately people realize natural gas needs to be conserved, just like our
other natural resources. Fortunately people are increasingly interested in
our total ecology, of which energy supplies are a vital pare. So a few suggestions
may be welcome.
How to make conservation begin at home:
These suggestions may each sound like a rather small saving, but together they"re
enough to show in your gas bill. And if every household followed them, the total
saving of fuel would be substantial. (If you're a thrifty sort, you ma y be practicing
these economies already.)
Cooking: Don't use a high flame when a low one will do. Don't pre-heat
the oven coo long. Don't use the oven to warm the room. Cover saucepans wlule
cooking.
Washers, dishwashers: Save hot warer (and the gas that heats it) by running
full loads only. (Same for clothes dryers.)
House hearing: When autumn comes, remember co rurn the thermostat down
when you go to bed. Draw the drapes at night; chat curs loss of heat through
the glass. Close fireplace flues, air vents, ere., when not in
use. ADd don 't heat the fu rniture to a toasty 72 degrees
while you're away all day-or on vacation.
Other fuel-saving tips:
Make sure all appliances are operating efficiently.
Don't overwo rk your furnace by making it
struggle to blow air through an old, clogged
filter. Check to see if your range produces
a pure blue flame. (A yellow flame
indicates improper combustion, which
means waste. Have the range adjusted.)
With thes.; suggestions, you can do a lo t
to conserve re5ources -including your own.
I
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Thur~y, July iq, 1~71 DAIL V PILOT J :J
Permissive V nification Bill Despite Court Order
For the Record
Marriage HOFFM.,t.N-91111ES$LE• -Garv '·• 2~, J1tl HIH'nlloldt Dr .• Hf!l.Jtlngl'" .. todl.
•no K•Nll P'l..!f• U. "'*"" I • klNNEY-lllll.LucK -'""""' L., XI of
May Pass State Legislature LAFC Holds Short
Annexation Meet lUeta 116°Ulh SlrMt. St•I ..,_,,•NI Su .. ~ "-8 F., 24 el JM! Ml'dOOJI Dr!vt, Hull> ~ !lngtOll &e«f\.
I TH•Vll•tNG-FAV J•rl, >& of l:MIOI)
Lk:l!Nll:f 1s1v•G '" P•!•-W••· Venice .,,., MM-I• L .• O•AMOI! CC)UMTY 21 of 111 li•ll )lot ~lrMt. C<1t!•
J .. Mo ... ...... .. MEOLEY·SEllASTIAN -Gt1'11d II .• is B JACK BROBACK C"-'-J h H d ' f'ENCE·DUNLAP -II-0., » cf of lo.J Sii,.,_ Ave., ,-Ot.ll!lt!n VIHW Y 1uwman OSef) Y e !I II\ F1lrvlew, $1n11 M.. tfl<I M.orlefle Ind 0.00..ii E .. 11 of ,_,_,,,, OI I I •-0., l6 or Ut42 sunn1crn1 L1111, Hun. V•lln'. """ ,,... oa" ,. lot Sltft seating on tu.: commission.
llnglon llt•ch. 0•8ELlllS·MULllGAN -Mlchttl J .. SPRUENGLl ·MIN!KUS -11.111>11 c .. l1 32 01 111 Oce.n iwe , Hunri,,eron SANTA ANA -The Local The court order was obtain·
of 11111 1mn111 L1n1, H•11•11tiQ!on 811cro .. \dGe,.1c11ne . ..SoflHE11t Ancncy Formation "-m-db d-··'LAFC h · 11e1c11 •nd 0eo111e J. 11 °' ttlO 1.ii. s,,..e1, c.,.11 Mnt. n..io \Al e Y eyu.=u c airman
on:nid Drl~e. Wo•!min11er. •c H 11 E p PER·KOHENSCHURZ · I Lo · Red" R · !!OE5E·PAA;ENTEA U -c1r1 o .• u 0, 1111,..,, 21 ot 10.11 SWiii c.-...i mw oh (LA.FC) continued to uis .. e1nhardt, a Fu!·
~1 8l11el•v circi., Hu"1111Gt(ln ll•e<fl Hler.wav, L1vun1 18•e11 1rw1 ,,...d. conduct business Wednesday lerton city councilman who '"" Gwenaolvn J .. 11 of 6~1 Can-•"""· 26 of Law"• Beach. . 1e•t>U1Y c1n:1•· Hun•1ngto11 llNcto. SOLOMON!>-HODGE -Ro1Mr1 L .. 21 °' despite a court order was replaced by ' --Alamitos l(INCAP-FAAVEll -EMI J,. 24 ~ tlln Queen1 l11>1, Hu11!1ngtl>fl leaCll uuo
J.in Calle Nirlnl•. C1al•1tano Ir.cl N1ncv J .• 79 °' Huntington challenging the legality of cooncilmaB Hyde July 14 fo!-Be1ch tnd O•t>t>I• A. 11 ot 1100s eeich. Cim!nc de Ellrella, CIPl1lr1no llHINE ·NAGlE -TMrt M •• 2l ol Jawing a 13-12 vote by tt.. Be•C~ (HAVANIA·L YLE -II~! J' is ol 2Ul2 M-1111. Mlulo" Vlelo I nd Le ( Ci . ~104 Po••· Circle. Fcxmlaln Vollev and Co<nolia G .. 11 of MIUIOI'> Vl•lo R li ague 0 Ues.
l(ethl'Yn ". 111 o! "°""'•In Vellt\' lEIOEll·lll CHIE -He•m1n P .. 21 °' ecyc ng Superior Judge J .E.T. Rut. JAY·JESSER -JMn, '2 01 1/00 6622 Tt•i.11. Ave., W11!mlnll1r •fl<I
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of llM o.llY •ntt Sllff
SACRAMENTO -A Semite·
approved bill to make school
district unification elections
perm.Lsslve rather than man-
datory could pass t h ~
County Planners OK
Private Park Policy
Legi.6tature thi! session, U the whether or not to bold a
bill make3 lt out of the unification election. Presently.
Assembly EducaUon Com· the.!tate EducaUon Code man·
rn.lttee. dates an election every four
Assemblyman Robert Burke years.
(R-Huntington Beach) said The Huntington Beach Union
Wednesday the bill bas yet to High School District and its
be scheduled for an Assembly feeder elementary district!
vote. are formulating plans for the
Burke has beeh a longtime nezt unification election in
advocate of local delermin&o-June 1972. The Tustin Union
tion of unification votes. His High School District also is
opposlllon to stale~mandated developing a four-Oistrict
unification elections to merge unificalion plan to be voted on
elementary and high school on June, 1972.
districts in California dates Burke noted that even If SB
f-rom his .service on the Hun· 878 passes this year an
-Community act iv l t Y lingtoh Beach City School amendment making the law
buildings which offer a broad (elementary) District Board effective on July t , 1m. would
Peferwn Wav, C-'"lf Me1a •nd Judl!h b~~.~·c.,1!veof lll"2 ~D~tt Slreel, ter issued an Order last week
11·• 15 o1 co.ta M•••· JOHNSON·CONPOH _ •aberi s .. •lot SANTA ANA A new STONEMAN·HOWAlllH -lllC~lrd M.. 119'1 HIYM• St..el, Van N~v· ond May Be Set which called uixin the LAFC to h JI of 900 S•• Lan•, Coron• t1e1 MM Glenn A., 411 of us. Cill<I Ari.,.n. ixilicy W ich will permit
range of activilies for all age or Trustees from 1963 to 1967. mean the law would have little and llobb<e L. n o1 22J1 vos1. l"LOTT-MAvo -Rafi>h c., 11 ot su comply with Reinhardt's com-developers to count private Hu1t11, NeWJ>C•I Beac~. Bernard StrHf, c ... 11 Me•• and w1LSON·MCKERL1e -0 •• 10 L., ,1 of A,lt>ert• 11., 15 ot coua M•••. plaint barring Hyde's seating rec-reational facilities i n 11.JO PoPI••· Sant• An• .,,d Ch.,vl "·· RILEY-LEE -JOl\n c.. 1-t of~ E••t F C t meelin" up to one half of their groups. Senate Bill 878, Burke says, effect on unification plans of
U of 2.S.01 S.lurna Drive, MIHlon B~v AW., 8tlt>oi "1d Shirley E., 41 or oun y Or to ShOW Cause Oil Aug. 12 b v1e10. of 11.111oa. h loca l public p a r k com·
Excluded from consideration would allow districts to decide the Orange County districts.
for credit are golf courses, -----------------=--------00115EY.l(R0SSE -Oonov1n E .. 2j o! CHILDERS.JARVIS _ Jimef O .. 31 of W Y it did not COmply. 1!666 G•e-onw11n Lane. S1M1 An• encl 1013 Solo!~ Ro..o. san1& Ana ar>CI SANTA ,..._ ,..._ milmenls h7.S been approved Jftn• E .. ;1 01 1031 AU• V\1i1 or;ve, Chrl•Teen A .. 11 "' Jl-ll K..,,11wottr., ANA -A massive ut:puty \AIUnty C 0 Un s e I by the Orahge County Plan· N~wpart 8~8c~. Hun!lnvt°" 6tech. recycling prO",.am to reclaim William McCourt r u 1 e d FALlER·B ROWN -J1me1 "·· 24 ot RICH·KNOPKE -Paul M., 2, l>f U3' b" ning (.;ommission. 1•;~1 P11clt1c W••I and M1rce111 L., ..,.11.., Ave., cost• M....., •n<I Cl tlrt glass and metal me.y be Wednesday that the LAFC
19 nt 6J.ll Bannock RPld. we1!mlnn...-. M, 21 of 1734 lliil•nc~urv, Yorba l bl' h d · O "-t" · h" · · Under the Local Park Code SHANNON·TR1PLEll -Gr~orv o.. u~d•. es a is e m range ....... unty mee ing, 1n is op1111on. was
ll ot 111s1 A11an•"'· Tu1!in •nd BOOOY·SMITH -D••n A .. 11 or 22« next year. legal and that his office was developers are required to Sh•ron o .. n ot 1cw1s s111.,, Foun-Pomona. cos!I Me•• '"" M•rv c .. n d provide four acres of park 1e1n V•ll•v COWJty Road Commissioner rea y to appear Aug. 12 tn OERNELlE·CAVENOER -•nt~<>llY 111 lilt Weotm!f!s!er Avo., Cosla land per }.000 fV\l\U\ation, Or
'
Me••· • Ted McConville has told coun· i·ustify the ruling. '"" o .. ,. ot 1•1 61""' S!reel, Cosl• STAN-NELSON -0e"1Tlond M .• 23 ct pay a fee of $2$5 a lot to the M~11 aM C•rn~t M .. "6 01 96-82 61•1 war~r Av•. Hunllnllloo lle•<.11 ty supervisors that negotia· Reinhardt appeared at the Hft•ard, san11 A,11a. 1 50 t" la t f the county. One and one-haH acre.~ ElllCKSON·KRIMM _ J•n,ov B .. ,, 0, !:~ .. J~~n':t.g~~ ~~.~~-4 1 warner ions are under way with Los s r o meeting to request of the four may be school
11111 aoisa cnrca Roan. Hunt•n~ton llR15COE-GALARZA -Ron11d s .. 2• .,, Angeles By-Products Co. to McCourt's ruling. He said he B••(fl tnn Kain,.n I<., :ID o1 ~H 19\9 Manie A,vo .• Co•!a M••• and bl h t d"d d · f h grounds.
boating and fishing lakes,
shuffle board courts, archery
ranges and equestrian cen·
ters.
Ex-employe
Sues Store
sn1wnu Ro11<1, We.,min"tr, N•H~ e . ,, o1 1911 M•PI• Ave,, esta is the program at a I I so on a vice o is at-
SMITH-NELSON -Pau1 M .. 51 of 1<100 c0<11 M•••· county disposal slations. torney e.nd when the ruling Developers have argued that SANTA ANA -A Redondo Sou11> 011 Vi1to, Son c1emon1e ~nn JOHNSON ·EllANS _ Jome1 E,, \s of · · f ·rr · ~:;:1~\:...!~tt..d 01 Mil c111. Pu•nl•, 810 suui,.an sttHI. S•M• Ano 1,.,, Paper products would not be went against his being expansive private N:I i 1e3 in Beach man who claims he was
MANAll·OAVIES _ o~nni1 M .. 11 0, ~:,:,~~;~,, Jy•,1\~y~' 1}839 Seddl• Cou<1, Included because there is no reinstated to the commission large iiubdivisions served the falsely accused by fellow May
311\ oieenner S1r•e1, seo1 Geach ond CIJMMINS·HAM1LlON _ oovld L, 10 market for them z.t this time, he did not debate the issue.· same Pu r PO s e. Areas Company employes of stealing
Sl\Elt>v o .. 19 ol 11011 Str1t011a Orlvt. "' '7.M2 Hv•~nl• Port, Hunilngron Th t' b f particularly hit by the parks h ( h (' ' Lo• Al1m1tos. eeacn """ Ch•rvr A .• 11 01 Hun· the r oad commissioner said. e mee 1ng was rie as at-8 watc rom t e 1rm s Costa
Jvtv 1 11ng1on 11e1c11 Betcn. But, he added. if 8 market tempts by Santa Ana and requirement are Mission Vie· Mesa store has filed a. $1 i.1BEA;·DORAN -Robert J .. 21, 10•1 s1ow-M1rsuNCH1 -Mi~• "'" 30 of rl h" d Tu t· l th 1 500 1'o Uni···er••"ty Park Laguna ·11· · · t th Ronald Rd., Hun11n0Ton Beien, '"" 1s9~J Mount MAltor~o•n, Fountoin su aces, mac ines use to s 1n o annex e , -acre · • ~ , mi ion suit agains e com-
Flor•nc• M., ;o, Hew!llorno. Vtllev ond (leverle• s .. 24 "' 1110 t lb t d ta! s t A M . "-A" Hills, and Laguna Niguel. d th I . MALOUF -HO FFMAN -Ml(hael J .. ;i, soutn Figuer0<1, sonra Ani. separa e e g ass an me an a na arine IAlfPS 1r pany an ree empoyes ln !~~ 5~:.0~e't.~l~~ l,,':.':.7!:~n voiiev. Marr!a~ llc~n..,, w~re i.,uen 1n ine could be used for paper. Facility were denied. Approved for credit as park Orahge County Superior Court.
HUMPttR1Es.sCt1Ne1oe11. -Michael 1oiiowing •lot Juiv 1' McConville made the an· Col. Kenneth Dykes of the lands were: Former sales supervisor R .. lj, and Noncv A,, 11. t>o!h ol llARRACK·WAlSON -Thomtl J, Jr,, 11111 Golden wn1 ~1 .. HunHngion ?j, cu1vor Cit\', •"" Ann c .. 11, .t0J1 nouncement during county Marine Corps verified that the -Open turfed are a s Frank I. Stein, hired by the Bolch Ondine Clr<le, Hunllngt0t1 B(h, h N n-M&cLEOO-TRAHAN -Jo~n H, 20, MURPHY·BRvsoN Richard 1<, ,,, budget earings Tuesday. He avy ~pe.rtment opposed designe1 and intended to be company PuJy 7, states his
t'111,,~1'..'.'.~r:1D~1(.~·m~n~· M•••· and ~u't~.~.r.<1H~:.'1~~::.,c80~~· '12'2 Sie•I· has rquesled $1.7 million for both annexations ''at this used for multiple ectivitics employment ended July 14
u~e.~~~~.Ho~~,,5,1 .;10~rec1B~lr't~.2• ~~~ ENGERBRETSEN·LORENzo -J0t1 new equipment and $500Jl00 as time." such as throwing games and when employes Charles Mer·
car1>erint "'·• 10. Canoga P~rk K .. 19• Studio Cllv, and L<><1ls J., "· a down payment on a new land Denial means that neither kite !lying. ritt, J ay Allen and John Doe GRISWOLO-COOPEll -Glon C, 15, of 1361 Ruller>d, New<><1rl Bell. Pas1den1. 11nd Allee J. 20, 11s11 At.10E11soN·MILLE11 -Algot H., s1, fill station north of San Juan city can reapply for an· -Swirr:ming pools. Jiminez accused him of the sifO~'lJ'P~KLtH1~~~·"~°j.~e:,0hc , ~. eo, w~e:; •nd, B•rb•r,• ," .. 50• mu Capistrano. nexation for at l""~t one year. ...._Tennis courts. theft ol a watch. ~;~~ f,~:~~~~~t ~:~~~"dra, 21, !Ol[---~-'-"_wv_ .• _,_,_"_"'--'-·-------'-------------'-------------..C------------------------------
~QWA,RO-WHllE -Mlch1ol 0 . 15, ~200 Edinoer A•e., Hunllng!on Beach, end Pamele .n, Lono Beach LAWHEAQ.(ULLllY -Jol!rtv l.. 16,
6200 Edln~er A~e., Hnu!lno•on Beaht,
And Denl~e A., 21, Whilrler PORTER·l<ONOWIECKI -Carl!on E. Jr ., ?l, \1052 Green St., Hun11ng!on Beech, 11nd Glt11, )I, L•~•WOOd !LEAU-GREENE -Edweta W, 20, l!ellflo~r. 1nd Sr.lrlev J .. II, 11691 Al&loo Avt. Foun!1in Vallov THOMPSON-CARETTO -Kennet~ J, J• .. 20, 1019? LI H1c lend1, Fou.,t&ln V1t1ey ann Pairlcia S., 20, Whlt!ier MONTCOMEllV·CROWE -Tra• L, :n. US Nft••· and Lvnd• L .. 25. 1191 Mu11•ter Or,, Hun1inolon Boach f'ERRV -6ARRY -Thoml• 0. Jl, 119/ Lo<,ran 5! .. Co•l• Mos1, inn A"flf11e 0 . JI, LAWndale !ROWN-ASHMEAO -Robor! '!'. Jr .. 3?. 5361 El Oor1do Dt., H11n•ino10" fl.each, •nd Ma•;e E,, ,6, Wt•fmin>!er SHE":LDON·MASSEY -Robecl )1 , ..0, lnnu.irv (,,,., •nd Lo•one E., JI , 811 Genav1, Hun!lr.g!on Btach
Death l\'otire•
f'REGl!AU Mtrv E Freq••u. A.Qe J'I, ol 1120' S1n11 Luci• Clrclt, Founl•ln V•ll•~. OflTt of nealh, J11lv ll. 1911. Survoven bV h"•band. Oonald; two •on"' Oon•ld Jr . and Stephen; d1uohler, Ja<oUoline Kuohner; brolher. Af!~ur L&f!dry. Ser-ICOI w•re ~Id at Pee~ Family Colo~l•I Fune•al H""'e. ln,.rmen1 In Connoclkul, P~i< Family Colonial Funeral Heme. Directors, GEN ESE• Fr&nk lnom•• Gene•tr. R!!lden! of Hun· flng!Of' 8e•ct1. Oe1t of dee1h, July 11,
1911. Survl•ed l>v la!he•. P~llll1> E. GenPSer: mo1hor, Matln• E. G•ne••r ; btolher •nd •i>ler•in·l•w. Mr_ •nd M•<, Ptillllo E. Genos•t Jr : b•oll1er, J•me$ W Gen•••" nlect. Edl!h C. en•••'; 'i{,:u4~~°M'!S.~~,;~':,~, "j'u'1'v slo7' 1~~~';,:; SS Simi>'\ •nd June C•Thollc Church. C••ve1l<1e Mrvlces. Sa turd••· Julv ll, •1 COO<l Snoon.,d Ceme!t•._ Oild•v Brothen MOl'lu•rv, 1•1-7111 H~'(o!or..
Ern••l•ne M•rth• Hiii. A~ 77. Forme•lv ~h1~0f;:l B~";!f:w. ~t1r"vi~!n d~~t~~n~11~111~8.;
~-. 's~7'r:".1."t,~:.;•:.."i,0~ J~~y~::,t ~1":.:1~~ """"" orandchlld•en : irvtntHn ore&!· srr•ndthll~ron. G<•vni ne 1e•vlre•. S•!ur· d•v. July l1. 1J AM. Morber ll••t Mtmotl•I a.,~. Biii• Co•'• Mu• Mor1u1rv, Directors. lAGE10H Ar1hur J. Lage..,n. Ago Jl. ol lli''~ I':. 161h St, Cos•& Mesa. D~I• of dO•lh, JulY
21), 1971 Survive<! bv wife, Olea: rwo •on•. A•len, er v"t"' Cn•de• Laooson. Foun1eon Valley ; !wo 1i•le<$, M". Carla Drew. Michiaon; M,., Leola H••Tmann, Con· ntc!ku l, four arar1dthlldten. Sorvice. Ffi.
<!&•, 10 lO AM, Bell B•o.>d.v•v (hlDe!. with Rev Jam•• e1a1n M!lclallna. F•mHv •uaa•>1' !ho•e wi,~l no lo m•i<• memorial contribulion•. ol•Ose tO""'eu!• lo GI tjeon'• !ntornatlon al. ~In Bell lltt>•dw&v l.lorlu1•v Beil 6•o•dw•v Morlu•rv. Olroc•or• NEWMAN C•rrle J Newm•n ll3P.I Fa;rlf•I~ Lane.5oel B~A(h Onl• of dealh, July ll, 1011 5orv lc•• n~n<!•"O a! f'ec 1Hc V1rw Mof!uarv. REDMON Vale R@dmon 503 l•lh SI, Newparl B••c~. Oat• o• <!~•th, Julv ?I. 1~71 .Service• ot~dlno nl PtCl!•t Vl•w Mor!u••v,
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.. ........ ~ .\7'3·3110
COYrNA
t.Of•a"<•"'-"""""'.t .... ..... _ -96(,.ft ll
1.JNll>-'----
AMERICA'S LAROEST·P'-AMILY CLOTHING CHA IN
' I
STUNNING
NEW
O,.IH
,,30 i
'Tll 1J
'~Jo
WASHABLE
CREPE-TUNIC
BLOUSE ...
Regularly
6.99 88
A beauty that's long in
length, big in fl attery, small
in price! AceH1te and nylon
crt•pe smartly detailed with
fall's long sleeves, button
c11ffs, a row of buttons on
the placket front, deeply
pointed collar and a self-belt
to wear or not. And the rich
solid colors are new-season
favorites. At only 4.88, ifs a
great buy! W ashable too ,,,
sizes 30 to 38. m CLOSED
. SUNDAY ' \ -------·
COSTA MESA, 1601 Newport Blvd.
GARDEN GROVE, 12373 G1rdon Grovo Blvd •
• .. ·.a. . .a---.· --___ ,.,.._
I
I '
•
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J4 DAILY PILOT
ALSO AVAILABLE: MANY FLOOR SAMPLES -DISCONTINUED CLOSEOUTS -SOME QUANTITIES LIMITED -NOT ALL LISTED BELOW
'
STEREO
Save '40! Reg. 339.951 3-pc. stereo system '
FM / AM /fM, 4 -sp. phono, 8-tr. tape .. $299 f' ·"' 130 off! Reg. '249 pecan-veneer stereo credenza
FM/ AM/FM, 4 -sp. phono, 8 -tr. tape .. $219 ~
Special! 36-inch solid state AM/FM stereo!
Built-i n changer; modern cabinet •.... $129 ,.,..
Solid state portable drop down
stereo phono, 2 separate speakers
Solid stale chassis for instont-
on, no warm up needed! Auto -
m otic ch anger with dual
needles. Great sound!
TELEVISION .
Save 1101Reg.69.95 , 9" diag. portable TV
UHF /VHF antennas, earphone jack .... $59
'30 off! Reg. 229.95, 22" console TV
UHF/VHF antennas, 2 speakers ...... $199
'70 off! Reg . 439 .95 , 23 " diag . color TV
AFC sharp image; detachable le gs ... $369
170 off! Reg. 609.95 giant color TV!
25" d iag.; Colo r-magic control ...... $539
141 off! Reg. 329.95 portable color TV
18" diag. screen; great color. ...... $'.288
110 off! Reg . 109.95 AC/DC TV set!
9" dia g.; battery ba•e optiona l ..•.. 99.88
RANGES
Save '301Reg.189.95 , 30-in . gas range!'
Smokel ess broiler, timer . , .•.•... : •. $159 ·. -. ·-r.1 ... """""' ~-120 off! Reg.199.95, 30-ln. electric range
Auto oven, lift-up cooktop ..••...••. $179
130 off! Reg. 299 .95, 2-oven gas range
Sep. broi ler, clock, timer ., •.... , •.. $269
$30 off! Reg. 1349 electronic oven!
Meals in minutes! Uses llOV ... · .. $319.88
WASHERS -DRYERS
Special! Giant 18-lb. 2-speed washeri \=-
Re gular a nd gentle speeds ......... $159
Special! Auto-timed clothes dryer! 1 8 cu. ft. drum reduces wr ink les. ...... $99 ..
Fa mily-size 3-cycle dishwashe r speci al!·'
3 level washing action ............ , $149
'40 off! Reg . 269.95 frostfree refrigerato r
15 cu. ft.; 152-lb. cop. freezer. ..... $229
135 off! Reg. 324.95 all fro stless refrigerator
16.6 cu . ft.; 155-l b. freezer cap ...... $289
Save 120! Reg. 169.95, 9 cu. ft. refrigerator
Freezer compartment, in-door shelves .. $149 •
'41 off! Reg. 429.95 refrigerator w/ice maker
20 cu . ft. ; side-by-side model ....... $388
120 off! Reg.169.95, 9 cu. ft. upright freeze r
332-lb. capacity, 24-i nch width ...... $149 "
'SO off! Reg. 249.95, 23 cu. ft. upright freezer
805-lb. capacity; cold control adjust• .. $199
Save '201Reg.179.95 , 10 cu . ft. chest freeze r
385-lb. capacity; foam insulated ..... $159 •
152 off! Reg . 259.95 , 23 cu. ft. chest freezer
805 -lb. capa city; defrost drain ...... $207
"NOT .AVAl\.All( IN lA ClfNfGA, CANOGA,,_.!(, ,,_NOAA.MA CITY
COOLERS
Save'201 Reg.179.95 mobile home cooler
2-speed; 4200 CFM; grille adjusts .... $159
120 off! Reg . 159.95 evap. window cooler
2-speed; 4300 CFM; 6-pos. switch,,, .$139
··~-110 off! Reg. 84.95 portable evap. cooler.
Solid sta te, belt-type fil ter .......... $74
INSTALtAT10N AVA ILABLE (EXTRA)
Save s1931Reg.932.90, 38,000 BTU
central A/( system plus FREE furnace!
Includes prechorged tubing, $739
heat-cool thermostat. PLUS
8 0 ,000 BTU hi-boy f urn ace.
BUILDING MATERIALS
140 off! Reg. 179. 95, 20x10 ' patio cover
All aluminum; baked enamel fini•h .. 139.88
Save 1401Reg.139.95, 1Sx8' patio cover
All a luminum; easy to erect .... , , ... $99
Save '161 Reg. 104.50 camper awning 8xl0'
Durable, heavy weight canvas .... ; .. $88
Save 66 '1 Reg . 3.99, 4x4' Lauan panels
Beautiful f inish ...••............. 3.33
I SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 'TIL 9 PM ••• SHOP SUNDAY 12 PM TO 5 'M
LA CIENEGA
lo (i•n~o ot 18tti 11.
phon1 836.7922
TORRANCE NORWALK
cl.I omo fothiori sflor• Imperial ot norwolk blvd.
p/'lon• 542-69 one 868-0911
' .. --==-'''Jo.: ·-1o9 -'' l _,_ --'ll »'--
FULLERTON ,.. hc11b<ir ot orong•1horp.
hone 71.4·879·2.500
HUNrlNGTON BEACH
•dm:.•• or beod1 boul•vord
oti• 71 .t -892-6611
-. '·"'---· ~--~"\. .• '
SANTA ANA PANORAMA CITY ROSEMEAD
brutal ot 1~v~l••nl"i tobio1 ot '°'coe totlN'n•od bl¥d. al ~n M rnartfino
phon• 5.tl -68.tl hone 89.t.8211 tre•wo -p!lon• .57.3 .J\10
V£NrURA CANOGA PARK COVINA .SOO t0ulh mil!t rood lopanr. f.'"" bof'TOflCO OI WM bM-dino
485-.S.t21 6'2-7.54 1 • 8 -1000 fl-HWI -hone 966-7411
--------~
B randing
Fish New
Process
OLn.1PIA, WASH. IUPI ) -
The State Department or
Fi.!iheritz ha5 borrowed from
the old west and the space agt
in developing b r a n d i n g
program5 to help keep track
or lhe more than 120 million
hatchery salmon re i e a s e d
each year.
In stead of the hot iron th:i.it
cowboys slapped on the flank
or a bawling dogir, fisherie!I
biologists are using a sca!ed-
down iron fr O'ten in liquid
nitrogen or a laser beam lO
mark Lhe young fish.
Dick Noble, assistant chief
of lhe hatcheries division of
the Fisheries Department,
said the ultimate goal i! to
brand all of the salmon reared
by the state, but that the short
lerm aim is for branding only
a ~mall percentage.
Washington is the national
leader in hatchery salmon
production, and Noble said the
cost of branding all of the fish
would be prohibitive for the
time being.
He said that both the laser
beam a n d freeze-bra nding:
techniques arr being test~ by
Drs . Thomas G. Bell and R.
Keith Farrell at Wa shington
State University.
Noble said the freeze bran-
ding progrtt m ha5 produced
drawbacks because of the ex-
treme temperature co ntrol
needed. Jf the temperature
becomes too low or the bran·
ding iron i.s left on the side o(
a small salmon It causes
permanent damages, he said,
Noble said the best re~ult!
so far have been produced by
using temperatures from .tO lit
60 degrees below zero and a
stamp lasling two t1r three
seconds.
He said the laser proce.s.i; In-
volve~ a small template or
stencil which is pl::iced on the
side of the fish before a beam
tif concen trated light is flash·
ed.
Noble said that by con-
trolling the frequency nf thll!
la5er beam, it can be adjusled
lo a point where it destroys
only lhe pigment cells and
leaves a lig ht colored brand on
lhe fish.
A big drawba ck in both tif
the branding proce.qses cur-
rently is the ract that the rish
have to be knocked nul with
an l'tne.~1.hetic berore bein g
slttmped by hand.
However, Noble l5 ai d
researchers are looking inltt
the possibility of us ing a fish
pump 1o line up the littht
s11Jmon single file in a plastie
tube and triggering .11 laser
lx!am electronically.
He said that if technical
difficulties can be overcome,
"the ability to mark large
numbers of salmon cheaply,
easily and with an infinit e
number of axles will be
invaluable lo Ii sher i e'
management."
Noble said the present fin
c.lipping and tagging opera-
l1ons used to mark salmon
have some very s e r i o u 1
limitations
First. there is nn/y one
~m~ll fin ~ the adipose _
behind the dorsal fin nn ll
f1 sh·s ba ck that can he clippl'd
off \.•:ithnut dan;age to !he fish.
"Whenever 1.1o·e try a com-
b1ne'.1on Of fin Cli ps. lhA
survival r::ite oncp !he fl&h
leaves fresh water ~oe~ do1.1o·n
b.v as much as 45 or 50 per-
cent." Nobl e !'iil1d.
.He said. lhal tag~ and briJ:"ht
w1rP.~ which also are u.o;rd 11
mark fish prrsent problems
because they al!racl nther fish
which feed on the small
.!ialmon.
Noble said indications Are
that o!ht1:r fish do not bother
the branded fish.
.He said a large-scale bran-
ding program would b ft
especially helpful beca usl' it
would allow an i n r i n i I e
n~~ber nf marking patterns.
. We could then distinguish
fish 11~ lo feeding programi
a.nd hatcheries. for instance
to ~ which have the besi
survival rat~." hr said.
As ii stands now, nnC'e lhe
salmon from any particular
hatchery mix at sea with nther
salmon lhere is 00 practica.1
wa y of telling them apart
1vhen they are cauiht.
"Now we have-to rely on
what am~nts 10 11 shot-gun
o11pproach. Noble said. "By
sarnpling returni; we can m;;ix.
fmize the catch Jn severlll
areas among several specic:5."
However, he said a br11nding
process would al low a con·
ctnlr1led effort to develop a
str~in of _super i;almtin by
seeing which ty~ survivt
btsl at sea. .. w, could do more in one
<four-year) cyclt wi1h alt
inten~ive brandin.11 camp;;iign
than we can now do in four or
five cycles." Noblr ~aid.
Grtffiti is
A Jo~t ..• R .. lly
·,"""
Don 't Die
Befor e
Time's Up
y Peter J . Stelnrrohn, M.ll.
~ar Dr. Steincrohn : How
o you "make" a book! I've
ust finished reading your
k, "How To Stop Killing
ourself , ' ' which was
bllshed back in 1950. It is
OW out or print. but I found a
y in our pub Ile library.
J've wondered just what
makes yoo "make" one. It
mu!!t t?.ke a great deal of
~·nrk, bu! r certainly ap-
pr~iated reading 1l. Perhaps
it can save my husba nd from
killing himself. I lhink he's
smoking and drinking himself
lo death at the age of 39. -.W
M" 0 l COl\11\ft-.:NT. To "n1ake'' 11 r-, j
i·~:~i~eil\i i •
pregnated with an idea. There
is a sort of ecstacy in lL Then
you "carry" it for about nine
month! or more, writing it
down . Comes the d?.y when lhe
publisher "delivers" it.
Your cre11.tive concept is
born like a baby for the .,.,.orld
to look al. You hope it is a
healthy baby. and that it will
grow up lo help people. (As I
hope it will help your husband
if you can gel him lo read iL )
About a year or so ago, l
btcame impregnated w i I h
another idea for a book, Mrs.
0 . I said to myscir, ''It's ?bout
time I wrole an up-to-dale
Sequel to "How To Stop Kill ing
Yourself' becalL'>e too many
people still go around ki!ling
themsel ves pren1aturely."
So I set out lo "'rile (or, as
you say "make'') a new book .
Its main purpose is to save the
lives of people who ere
actually throwing them awp.y,
therefore I called it simply
and to the point. "Don't Die
Before Your Tin1e ."
It has just been brought ou1
by Nash Publishing of Los
Angeles . In it are antidotes
against premature extinction.
There are four n1ain section~:
! 11 How Not To Commit Slov.·
Suicide. t21 What To t-.:.~pect
From Yourself As A Patient.
(31 Whal To Expect From
Your Doctor. ( 41 J'ractical
Ti~ On Staying Alive.
The book is nothing 1nore
lh!n a rommonsense way to
bl>t!er health and longer Jiff'.
On the jacket the publisheri;
v.-rite : "Reading OON'T DlF:
BEFORE YOUR 1'1ME is like
having a six-hour visit wilh
ynur physician for only $5.9~."
I appreciate the spirit and
intent of their rernark, but [
hope you will agrC'e with rne.
~lrs. 0 . if )'Ou gC't hold or 11
cop,11, thal rn y lime is y,·orth
much more than $1 an hour.
f\1EDICAL.ETIES (Replies lo
Readers I
Dear Dr. Sleincrohn: Is it
possible ror a doctor to tell 1r a
person h2.s cirrhosis of the
lil·er just by pressing his hand
a,eainst tile body? -Mr. N.
COMME~'T : By "palpating"
fFeeling Y!'ith the hand) he can
sometimes detect a knobbv
liver v.•hich makes h i m
1'USpicious of 1·irrhnsis. Aul
mo.~t doctors like to ~ubst11n·
l1ate the diaRnO!iiS by 1l'lkinR a
c11rt"fu) history ;:ind by the U~f> or several "liver function
tr~l!i" -"'·hich hrl p 1n
e~tablishing ihe pre$cnre or
absence of cirrho!ii.~ .
•
De;ir 11r. Steincroh n: My
m<llher i., 60 year.~ old. She
h~ a physical yearly, hut It
does not include a Pap smear
test In detect cancer or the
uterus. She h11.s been go1n~ lo
the !{ame doctor for 33 years.
He does a pelvic ex11m but
8ays that "everyt hing looks
okay, so a Pap smear Ls not
nttdfil."
l am an RN and know t.he
Importance of a Pap smeN"
tes!. but my mother says the
doctor knows besl. Perhaps
you can say something on ttie
subject. -Mrs. H.
COMMENT : I make it 8
pnint never-lo ad vise a patient
lo change doclor.'i. The
dtcision Is the pstient'.'I to
mak~. But w i thou l eq·
uivocation. I do advise con-
!Ultation at times. My feeling
L' ttiat your mother'!! el-
amlnalion is not complete
without a. Pap smear test. • • •
540 off! Contemporary sleep-sofa
opens at a touch to full-size bed!
Reg. 179.95 sleeper feolures
wood·cop arm accents, smart
houndstooth fabric cover. II s139
Save 150! Reg . 239 .9S flair arm sleep-sofa
Opens lo full si1 e bed ............. $189
Save '60! Reg . 299 .9S queen size sleep -sofa
Vinyl or fabric cover. , ............ $239 ;
180 off! Reg . 279 .9S luxury queen sleep-sofa
Beautiful fabric; cushions reverse ...... $199
540 off! King-size 3-way recliner
with rugged Naugahyde ® cover!
Reg. 159.95 recliner hos lux-
ury pillow-bock design. Choose
black, brown or olive vinyl. "' $119
Save '20! Reg. 69 .9S smart vinyl recliner
Choice of block or avocado .. , .... • ... $49
'30 off! Reg. 119.95 Herculon®rocker-recliner
Choice of green or gold olefin .. " ..... $89
Save '40! Reg. 129.9S vinyl swivel rocker!
Luxury ''soft'' vinyl cover ............ $89
DINETTES -BEDDING
Save 'SO! Reg. 169.9S, S-pc. dinette set
Modern pedestal base .............. $119
• Save 'SO! Reg. 149.9S, 7-pc. dinette set '
36 x 60 x 72" table, 6 chairs ....... , . $99
Save 120! Reg. 89.9S , S-pc. dinette set
Choice of avocado or bronze tone ..... $69
'SO off! Reg .189 .9S luxury S-piece set!
Self.edge table, swivel chairs ......... $139
Save 1811Reg.239. 9S king-size sleep set
Firm support, solid comfort ....... _ ... $158
Save 171! Reg. 189.9S queen -size sleep set
Luxury quil ted floral cover ............ $118
Save 'SlI Reg. 139.9S lull or twin sets!
Mattress and matching box-spring .... , . $88
'10 off! Reg. 49.9S , 39" rollaway bed
With innerspring mattress ............ $39
Save 2. 95! Reg . 9. 95 adjustable bedlrame
All sleel, fits !w in, full. Casters ..... , .... $7
LIVING ROOM -BEDROOM
130 off! Reg . 129 .9S modern apt. size sofa!
Pedestal base; cushions reverse ........ $99
Save '40! Reg. 239 .9S beautiful tuxedo sofa
8 ' long; He rculon • olefin fabric ....... $199
'90 off! Reg . 609.9S , 4-pc . Spanish group
Sofa, loveseat, choir,, ottoman ........ $519
Save '70! Reg. 269.9S luxury velvet sofa
Beo uliful gold velvel fabric ........... $199
180 off! Reg. 279.9S, 3-pc. modern bedroom
Triple dresser, mirror, heodboard .. , . , . $199
Save '601 Reg. 309 . 9 S, 3-pc. Spanish bedroom
Triple dresser, mirror, headboard ...... $249
190 off! Reg. 489.95, 3-pc. Spanish bedroom
Triple dresser, 2 mirro rs , headboard .... $399
'115 off! Reg. 514 .95, 6-pc. Span. dining set
Table , 4 chairs, buff el .............. $399
.
Thul'Mlay, July 29, l1J71 OAILV PILOT If ·:_
. Special sale! S carpeting styles
in durable nylon or polyester!
Choose shags, shag·plush, hi·lo 3ss
or scul ptured designs in tweeds
or rich solid tones. 'I" • SQ, YD. ... REFURNISHING? USE OUR "CHARG-ALL
PLUS" TIME PAYMENT PLAN!
10' off! Reg. 39' ea . olefin carpet tile!
Foam bocked; 12 x12" size ....... , .29¢ ea.
Rugged 12x12" vinyl asbe stos floor til e
lasting beauty-economy price ...... 15¢ ea.
" t ( ! , ·-·-. -;::--.-_ -.:::-
. ,
" '·-~ . . " ~ '' .• , .. . .
12 o/o off! Shag carpet tile with ·
adhesive backing installs easily!
' "
" ' ' ' ' ... -. ,, .. ,
,' 'l
All nylon carpet tiles with com· 69¢
forf.step waffle back. Choice of
d ecoralor colors. Reg. 79¢ ea. (A.\
YOUR BUYING INCREASES WITH WARDS
CONVENIENT CHARG-ALL CREDIT PLAN!
1.11 off! 3. 99 pkg. easy-stick vinyl tile
12 x12" easy·slick; 9 per pkg ...... 2.88 pkg.
'/J offl Reg. 1.SO m, ft . vinyl runner
Rugged; clear, gold, a vocado .... 99( m. ft.
Modern medicine m14kell i1
pos.'lible rnr women di11turbed
by menopause to be htlptd
through this period Sl'I Yll Or.
Sttincrohn In his book1el ,
''What To Do F« Q\::lnge. Of
Life." For a cop)' write him in
care of thi.!I newspaper e.nclos·
inR l.'i cent!! in coin find a
ST AM PED . SELF-AD·
DRESSED ENVEIAJPf..
1"'· SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 'TIL 9 PM ••• SHOP SUNDAY 12 PM TO S PM
Sally Bananas
RH lly 1 •...
Ba nanas, That Is
• lltll!l!l'+••I "" ~·1 ~.,,, " •
TORRANCE
dtil Ol!'IO fo1hi(l!'I 1quo ..
p'10f!e 5•2-6971
LA CIENEGA
lo c••n•go ot 18th 11.
Ollt 836-7922
NORWALK
l"'1'9riol ot n0fw1lk blvd.
hOtl• 868-0911
.71 -
" -
FULLERTON
harbor ot 01009•tkorptt
hone 71.A-879-2.500
HUNTINGTON BEACH <td inq1r ol b.och boulfY01d
phor.1 71 A.t!l92.6"11
SANTA ANA
brl1tol ol 1ev.nlttoith
phone 5A7-68 AI
VENTURA .SOO .outh mill• rood
4!1.5-5421 6A2 -75A1
----~-··-~----._..., ...._. ____ .
PANORAMA CITY
tobio• ot 101coe
one 89A-8211
CANOGA PARK
-
topa1190 plo1.o
ph0fl1 88l·IOOO
-,..-.. -~ . ... :-,.. ---
ROSEMEAD
rotemtod blYd. ot Jon b•1nordino
ff e•wo -phone 573-3110
COVINA
beno,,c1 ol "°" b•roio1ditlo
fre•wo -on• 966-7411
•
" --l ....
•
J
.
~
.
I
I
J
JI OAI\.Y Pll.OT Tl'lursd11. July 2CI, ll'J71
All i11 Family
1'1:ickey Mouse extends good luck \ltishes to the
Monte Kunz family of Laguna Beach as they visited
Disneyland today ~July 23) before leaving for Flori-
da where they \\/ill represent California in the 1971
All·American f'amily Pageant, sponsored by the
U.S. Treasury Department and several nationwide
companjes and organizations.
Arab Natio11s Now
•
Deeply Divided
U>ndon clJPI) After
several summiLs, ambitious '
political realignments a n d
solemn pledges of eternal
brothertiood the A.rab nations
stand more deeply divided to-
day than they have been since
the lo.st six-day war against
Israel.
The rec ·•1t Sudw crisis,
with its political coups and
Ideological conflicts, h a !
i;potlighted the divisions more
acutely and sel off new
tensions of grave and far
reaching implications.
The immediate conclusion
reached by expert diplomats is
that there is no United Arab
Front at present to deal with
the festering Arab-Israeli con-
fl ict at a. lime when Middle
East peace t.alks are teetering
on the brink or collapse.
The latest divisions mu st ~
<'ausing some hard thinking
also in the Kremlin . whose
leadership stands h e a v i I y
committed to an area v.·hcre
some of its clien1.<; -close
alli es or ~lo.~cow-bac ked Egypt
-are mercilessly cru shing
Communisin.
New dimension.~ have la1cly
been 2.clded to the inner-Arab
conflict, in Uie pa st con-
veniently described as one
between the pr n g re s s i v e
regimes of Cairo and its All ies
and the »<:ailed reactionary
monarchies of Saudi Arabia
and Jordan.
The past few wttks have
revealed a mult il u!de of rift~,
reflecting a multitude of
divergent intere sts and con-
flicling ambi!ions in the Ar<'ob
~·orld .
Jordan has tT ushcd the
Palestinian guerillas on its
territory without any other
Arab nation coming !.o its aid
despite past solemn pledges of
all-0ut support.
Cairo has told Jordan it has
put itself outside the Arab
anti-Israel front , which
changes the set-up in the
Arab-lsr2.eli confrontation.
Iraq and Syria, themselves
sharply divided, have all but
broken with Jordan . But Iraq's
ties with Libya have been
severly impaired I hr o ugh
Libya's violently nationalistic.
fiercely ambitious Col . Maun1-
mer Ghadafi and his pro-
Sudan poli cy, SudM also is al
loggerheads with lra'ft' for its
alleged impli cation in the re-
cent Communist coop.
Libya"s hand appeared to
have been aclive in the
abortive plot against King
Hassan of Morocco th a t
alerted Algeria's suspicious
Middle E?.slern .o\rab designs.
Libya. Syria and Egypt have
agreed on a federation, to be
finalized later this year, adn
to which Sudan now also
intends lo adhere . <..:airo ha s
somewhat he :>. v y com·
mitmenls to Moscow and ~'ill
thus find it self in a union v.·ith
a n Ii -Co m mun ist Sudan ,
Baathist Syria and rich Libya
which under (ihadaffi aims at ~
a Musl im-nationalist struc-
ture.
King Hussein of .lordan is
off to J~da for talks with
King Feisal in M a ppa rent
attempt to strengthen the ties
or the tv.·o monarchies against
thrir "Socialist" oppo nents .
In the hea t of lhe se inler-
Arab Stres!'es and strai ns lhr
Arab-Israeli conrlirt seems al
ti mes lo have been almost
forgotten.
De111ocratic Strugg1e
Holds Threat to Unity
WASHI NGTON (U PI ) -A
struggle between purisl.S and
pragmatist! in the Democralic
Party is creating tensions that
can cause •it acutP pa in
through-and even beyond-its
1972 naUona\ convention.
The conflicta are a threal to
the party unity regarded by
traditionalisls as essential in a
campaign to dislodge an in-
cumbent from the White
House. Despite its many
divisions, l he Democrats ha ve
t.'Ompiled 1 strong 'ft•inning
record over the past ~D years
but many of them must
..,onder if they can alv.•ays
compose their differences.
Some or these disputes are
1ired in the current isliue of
"the New Democrat." a
'PtJblicat.lon launched last yrar
a!I a voice of "'the Uber.al left"
within the party.
National Ch1irman
Lawrence F. O'Brim is g1 l'cn
rough treatment
Eicerpl" are published from
an ezcha.nge of J e t I e r ~
between O'Brien ind Howe rtf
Samllflll, I leading New York
Dtmocratic liberal. a memlx-r
of the recenlly formed
Democratic finance council
and an as.~istant commerce
secretary in the Johnson
Administration.
On May 6, Samuels wrote
th.al. It seemed slrange to him
money had lo be raised In·
dtpendenUy for pr o g r a m I
-·· , ... ~ , ..
, . .
backed by the part y.
"There is a di vision between
those who are "party con-
lributors' and those who are
'issue contributors.' " he said.
"H seems to me that the
wealth available lo th e
Democratic party i.~ lessening
while that available to
moveme:nts concerning burn -
ing social issues or issue-
orienled candidates is in-
creasing.''
Samuel! said he believed the
fund-raisers were making n
mistake if they ignored people
"'ho give to issue-oriented can-
didates and to 1:ivil righL<; and
an1i -war moven1cnts and talk
in~tead of mone.v from unions
anrl the oil, spare and defense
indu stries.
On t.1ay 12. O'Br ien replied
.,.,.i!h 11 revitw of Democratic
committee 11ctivi11ls in fund-
r:iisi ng, trealment of issue.~
and operation nf two party
reform comm issions. ~le ad·
derl ·
"I h~ve gravp do11bb1 con-
cerning the wisdom of the na-
tional c omm i tree pr()-
mulgating a highly ~peci(ic set
of ideologi cal tests before they
rec~ive our assistance. The
gen ius of Amrriran pol iti cs
has atwa~·s been the capaci ty
of our lwo pllr11e.~ to e n·
compass A bm11d ranJte of opi
nlon and thereby provide th1
111tability that bronght ou
democratic sys1em thrnuJ:!h r
number of difficu lt times."
. ~ ..
Killing Baby Seals •Aid io Fisher1nen"
' JOHANNESBURG (A.P) -1S threaleoed unless the seal place aMuaily In the Bosman who reckon1 that nual stock ot pups, h e kill them wi th ooe hard blow
At lea.st 80,000 baby llCS.b will herds are controlled. Govern-July-September period when 200,000 seal pups are born estimates. to the head between eyes and.1 be killed in the annual hunt ment experts wert "culling" the pups are about aeven or each 1 ea a: on, 1ay1 1 Private contract.ors do lhe nose. The seal i.'l then stabbed
no~ under way o(f South is necessary to keep down the eight months old and only '"D1ousands die before they killing under supervision of with a stiletto.
AfrK!.a and Sooth-West Africa. heeds, estimated t.o total one pe.rlly weaned. The pelt i.! in reach maturity either by the govemment'.11 Divi!ion of An efficient tearn or ael'Jersj
~ in Canada and Norway, million. prime condition al this time. iharka or simply being unable Guano Wands. can kill 200--JOO animals •1
where similar hunts are TJW year's South African It may bring $14 on the United to stand up t.o the cood.itions oC Sealer1 land on islands car-da y. They use razor-sharp
conducted, animal love rs operatioo i5 expected to net States, British or German fW' nature." rylng l!ltrong wooden clubs. knives to slit the animal',s\
deplore the operation. But about $1 .4 million in foreign market. Culling therefore aceoµnta They walk among young seals !root and Ulen peel oU the
f\.shennen say their livelihood eichange. The hunt takes Government expert C.-L. for only '° percent of the an-perched on nx:ks and try to pelt.
] )1114 lfl!/1 41
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* NrN LINING S INSTALL£D ON 4 WH[llS * REllJILD All WME£t CYLINDERS" * TUllt l lfSUlfACE All 4 lllUMS * llPACK FRONT WKlEl IUllM$$ * ILEED All LINES, ADO IRAK£ flUID * INSPECT MASTEi CYLINO[I & llAK[ HOSlS * AIC $llND llAKE SHOES * 1MSl'ECT $1USE SEALS * FIEE AOJUSTMUflS FOi Uf[ or L1111MC * IOAD TIST fOl Ufffi 'll'oN llttr Clll"on lrll1 ll 11 tt. Mfi!IMI!
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3005 HARBOR BLVD., COST A MESA
CORNER of BAKER and HARBOR -PHONE 557-8000
•
Servlnr Costa Mesa-Newpart Bea"h Ar"a
GARDEN GROVE
14040 Brookhurst--.530-3200 I ANAHEIM-BUENA PARK
. 6962 Lincoln Blvd.-826-5550
j ,t7 .. _ -.~
I FULLERTON
1321 Euclld-87o.-0100
'
,,.,.. __ _ -
Patients Wel·come · Water Worl.d
•
'!~~·; ! '}
II' ''~':. .. ':'\~' ~· ' ..• '•
--'9:-' '.
Paralyzed from the waist
down, a young patient takes
a water tour via Anita
Paige, psychiatric techni-
cia n I above). High •chool
volunteer Loni Burns
tea:c ho1 kicking f orm.
Po'IL Y l'ILOT l'l\fhl ~J LH l'IJftl
~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Th11rM11. '~'' n, '"1
Riek Barthols,
recreation there·
pist (center), IHds
patients in excer·
cise. The boys won
medals in tho 1971
Special Olympics.
..... ''
By JACQUELINE COMBS
OI llM Deity f'tllt Miff
• • to ntlle funds for a pool ~
"Operatlng •xpetU<S woold. IOe cul
Most people don't remember atid the pool could be ~ yeaf'o
thelr first Ume in water. rOuocrll It were t.oLlDy enclosed, ..
The sensation of buoyancy, the )re notes. ' . coMtant pressure encompassinj: I Security .,,; could be improved
the body Ls different and exciting. becauee the building could then be
Sometinlea It 's a little frightening. ~. t'ow, they cover the pool
For patients al Fairview Stat.ti / whenev_. it's not in use. "That
Hospital, Costa Mesa , lt 'a a wfiOte meana after each session, eacb
new world. A world or water where night or whenever We doo 't have a
for eech action, however slight llfeguard on duty."
there ls • reaclioo. A total en-Alt enclo!ure would alleviate a lot
vtronment in which any misguided
or spastic movement brings a
1pray of wata-, a welcome sp!a!h.
"Swimming is a great exerdse
for e~ryone," s.ays Rick Barthel!,
recreaUon therapist and swimming
pool supervisor. "For many of our
pat.ierits, it could be I.he best and
most rewarding exercise they get."
It could be but it isn't, beczm;e
the swimming pool therapy at
Fairview State Hospi tal ill sorely
limited. Limited by man power,
man-hours and money.
'That le a Ile• t la e
wo r d alaor t laande d'
Man power because lt takes equal
number of stair members as pa-
tients to visit the pool. "That leaves
the ward short-handed and on a
busy de.y, they don 't go ror il,"
adds Barthels.
''Most of lJur therapy is on a one-
to-OOe basis with the nonam-
bulatory and the infirm patients."
Mah hours because there just
aren't enough hours in the day or
the week. Many patients could
benefit from water exercise on a
regular bz.sis but there's no way it
can be accomplished with the cur-
rent staff size.
"Some staff members make a
concentrated effort to use Ille pool
a couple of times a week but it
lakes a lot of time and it's difficult
to fit It into the schedule."
Finally, the proverbial problem of
money exists. The pool is not fund·
eel as part of tile slate's rehabilita-
tion program. A swimming pool
committee raised the necessary
$65,IKMI to build the facility through
donatioM ~Fairview Family and
Friends A.Mociation donated the
pool cover. Completed ln August,
1970, the pool is in u.se when
weather permits.
"We are limited by the weather
because we're open lo lhe elemenl.!I
here. The wind sweeps off the fields
and chills the patients as soon as
they get out of the pool," explains
Barthe1s.
Plans art Wldcr way for a drive
'Stead11 prog..., .....
coJUtant progre•••
of the cleaning problems. The sur·
rounding field sweeps piles of dirt
Into tbe pool da.ily, forcing constant
maintenance.
'"Year-round use of the pool
wnuld mean conlinuous exercise
programs. A steady program would
mean constant progress for the pa·
licnts," maintains Barthels.
Man power and man hour pr~
blems could be alleviated by more
voluhteers while the enclosure wilt
depend upon the fund -raising drive.
Despite these handicaps therapists
e.t Fairview are meeting with some
success with the. patienl.!I' water
program.
Mrs. Dorothy Walker, a former
school teacher and a psychiatric
technician at Fairview for 10 year!!
says, "I try to bring some patients
over five times a week. It takes one
person for each patient with the in·
firm . We hope to get help from
volunteers ...
fo.1rs. Walker believes it is relax·
ing for the patients, many of whom
suffer from muscle contractures.
They are motivated to splash and
make some swimming motions, she
adds.
Pointing to two girls. at ease in
the water and s~iling while
'A ll l he11 n eed la
naore exercise'
assisted by a volunteer and a staff
member, Mrs. Walker notes.
"Although those girls are
nooambulatory, they can both put
their feet on the bottom of the pool.
They get a sensation of standing."
Since entering the pool three
weeks ago. one o( the girls has
begun to wheel herself around in
her chair. "She ~·as in the hall
before I knew it," interjected a
staff member. "Since beginning to
1;wim, all of my patients have had
improved body functions. All they
need is more exercise."
(See WATER, Page 19)
•.
'Shrink' s' Service Useless on Mind That's No Sponge
DEAR ANN LANDERS: T admired
7our raw courage when you blasted the
chiropractors. And now, my dear, when
are you goiPig to unmask t h e
psychiatrists? You know good and well
that most of them are charhnans, in·
teresled Ol)IY in a lucrative practiCf:.
Have you ever heard of a mentally sick
pt1"90n who was se t right permanently by
psychiatry? I have no.1.
No amount of therapy can cure a pro-
blem caused by heredity. Hours of talk-
ing cannot alter defective genes. Surely
you know that depressions are cyclical
•nd most people who believe psychiatry
helped them would have gotten better
without IL No one will ever sell me the
Ide• tha t mental lllne!'!s yields lo
ptntiasi<>n. Why don't you give up1
WITH YOU ON MOST THINGS
DEAR WITH: I wocddo't try to tell you
anythlng. Your mll!da it not only cloled-
it is nailed 1but.
Cbadatans can be follDd ln every Ueki
and psychiatry 11 no uception. In •d·
dlUon to tht quacks, there also art tn-
compctent psycblalri11t1 and downright
nutty ones who went Into the 1pe£i11ty In
search of solutions in their own problems.
While emotional lllnt11 may aeem lo
run In famlllea, It iR not inherited In the
-::-~-. •••••
same w1y th1t a IJPldlltk mother puaet
on die dlsea:te to Mr offlprlq. Oat co:::·
tral nervous t)'ttem IS IMerlted,
however, 1-.I tbb ls a face. wblcll cao-
not be-l<d.
I llave tble4 rtptliedly tkat 1 1kk
penon wbo 1ttb Jitydtaerit lltlp llat: oD-.
ly • so.so chanct of 1ett1nc well. ot tbote
wbo do 1et well, IOme cndJt their doc·
tors wltb re1culn1 I.Item from a prilOll ol
bate aml bitten.tu. anable to work,
unable to love and unable to accept
·-
themselves.
TMle., ltlklnl cannot alter defective
1eoet. but II CAN dl11lpete IMIUlfty and
anger which ls like polto• le Utt body od
mind. Talking alto can brln1 lrtmtndou
relief to people whole re1I leellqt have
been hldd~ even lrom dle1lllelve1.
Moreover, talklng can acover aa
enonnou1 amowit of utaraed pllt,
which 11 a m1jor ca11e for iterVOll
breakdown1.
You 1ay you've never beard of 1 men-
tally UI person who Wll Ht rtpt by
psychiatry? WtU, I have. Fttrtbermore, I
receive letter• or 11ppreclaUoa ahnotl
every day from people wbo say lhtrapy
saved lhelr llve1 and Ibey tllank ~e for
argln1 them to 1et preft111lonaJ belp.
DEAR ANN LANE>ERS: I've been look·
~ .,~ -·~ ··~~...--
lng at this piece of paper far half 1n hour
trying to put thla delicately. But then'•
no way -so here It goe11.
Last weekend we had guest... (Close
relatives). One of the: gueW came out of
the bathroom with a very aheepish ex-
pression on his face. Finally he said, "I
broke the toilet aeat." Everyone roared.
He was embarrassed and 1 felt sorry
for him. Later that evening ht asked me
to buy a new 1eat and aend him the bill. I
informed him that It wasn't neeeuary -
lhat the seat had been cracked for Mme
time and it could have happened to
anyone. His re11ponse was, "You are ju.!lt
trying to make me feel better. I do11't
believe It."
Yesterday we received a blank check
w!Ul 1 note 11aying, "Please buy a new
-.... _
seat to replace the one I broke. I won't be
comfortable until you do." I would feel
like a fraud acrepl.ing hls money , That
doggone thing was ready to go any
minute. My husband aaya we ahou.ld ae>
cept the check, buy a new seat and forget
It.
What do you aay! -A HOUSE
DIVIDED
DEAR HOU5E ' ACC!!pl lho -~. Bq
a itew aeat ud forret tL
When romantic glances tum to wann
embraces 13 it love or chemistry? Send
for the booklet "I.Ave or Sex and How lO
Tell the Difference," by Ann Landenf
Encla!e a long. stamped, seU-addresset
t.nvelope and 35 cents in coin with yoi!
request in Ci.rt of the DAILY PILOT.
---. \ JJJ<:r:.:.o ___ .,..
t •
DAILV PILOT
Party-goers Jo _i·n • 'Circus'
R1m1r, 1 trained
90rlll1, chats with
youngsters (above) 11
host Len W1yn1 st1rts
• magic trick.
By CAROL MOORE
Of ti!• DtUJ' l"l~I Sllfl
As parties go, the lour-room
circus was a hostess' delight
wilh all tbe guests entertain·
ing each other.
The 3·year-o!d that impish-
ly grabbed for some chips
and dips oo the coffee table
wasn't a neighborhood young-
ster but Hamar, baby gorilla,
temporarily distracted from
trainer Jack Badal'.!i com-
mands to wa!k on stil~ and
do htadsta.nds.
Tiw! blockhead chatting ln
the comer wasn't the party
boor but Mike, ··soul brother"
dummy of ventriloquist Mel
Bateman, having a hard time
with hica!ps as he tried a
chorus of "Oh, Give Me a
Home.''
1'he drawina room set wasn't
discuss.ing the latest best-sell·
er or foreign policy but was
amused by caricalures dash-
ed off by Charles Pezennas.
Even the host, Len \Vayne
and his wife. Jo Lyn, got into
the act during this virtual
sideshow in their West New-
port Beach home.
He performed n1agic Lricks,
Including lighting cigarettes
with a flash that almost singed
eyelashes. and she used her
professional graphology ta!·
ents 1o analyze gu~ts' hand-
writing.
The Wayn~ had bid their
frierids to "an endurance par-
ty" from 8 p.m. to 8 a.m.-
necessilated Mostly by Lhe
intermittent and late arriv-
als of, entertainers who drop-
ped in after proftl5.'lional en·
gagemenl$ along t:l'le Orange
Coast.
About 100 partygoers at·
tended the at-ho::ne revue into
tne wee hours. Adults enjoy.
ed their "second childhood"
Jong after youngsters bad been
sent home to bed.
Party introductions, usually
limited to the "Like-you-to-
meet'' variety, were more fTe-
quently prefaced by "La-a.dies
and gentlemen, as our next
attraction ... " And for good
reason as non -stop amuse-
ment continued through the
house.
Even the sedentary types,
lounging under the big top of
crepe paper streamers in the
living room, were entertained
by .Jayne Rosso, palm reader
and Maxine Bell, clairvoyant.
A tempting buffet of hors
d'oeuvres and sandwiches was
virtually untouched midway
through the party. but must
have fortified the more detcr-
n1ined guesL~ in the early
moming hours.
After all. a fuzzy gorilla that I
impersonates Ed Sullivan and I
Jack Benny is a tough act to
follow.
Translation Uncovers Truth
By ERi\fA BOMBECK help from the local fX)!ice . J lay was Tlfonday and tomor-
I don'l trust anyone under
30. I didn't trust anyone under
30 when I \\'as under 30.
AT
WIT'S
END
I could write a book on the row is \Vednesday."
Particularly, r don't trust
children. It isn't that they
mean to lie, it's just that by
omission or fancy mouth\\·ork
they spin some of the most in-
credible stories since "Alice in
Wonderland."
incredible stories my children He corked his head to one
pass on to me as gospel. One side and asked. "Are you
told me about a boy he met at sur~:>"
camp who was closely related I'm over 30. all righl.
to Howard Hughes. However,1---:;;;;;;;;::---
I ht: re comes the zinger) since I
One friend of n1ine wa s ask-
ed by her son one day whether
he could go on a chartered bus
to New York to see a baskeL-
batl game.
The request s e e m e d
"May I go to 8 party Satur-Hughes had disappeared he
day night?" she will ask. didn't get his allowance and for 25 cents he would swallow
''Who is giving it?" asks the .11 fly. My son bel ieved him .
parent. On another occasion he told
"One of lhe girls." (Your me of a classmate {seventh
own daughter) grade) who flew his own
"Al a house?" airplane and was hijacked lo
•·Yes." (yours ~) t.1inneapolis one weekend. My
"Are the parents going tr be son believed him.
there?'' He approached me in the
j
@o~!r!.t~.M~!N(J
Wome11• App11r1I !.'(
• Norman Wiatt e Ble)'le
Al•o Goll w .. r
2111 Iott Coost Hwy.
C11ro110 del Mor
61l-4740
reasonable. She asked al! the
usual questions, '"\\';:is it
chaperoned? Were there otl1·
ers going? Was it a school
function:'"
She didn't rind out until
about 5.$ irate parents called
her that her 16-year-old.
newly-licensed son wa.s driving
the bus into New York City ,
He failed to mention lhiit
small detail.
"Probably." (Providing the kitchen one day and asked,
parents can drive fr 0 m "What day is It?"
Miami, Fla., to Cleveland, 0 .. f.;;"Tu~e~sd~a~y~.'~' ~I ~,~,i~d~. ~"Y~e~s~le~r~· ---~~~=:~--.. 11 in three hours.) II
"Y.'ho else?"
With teenagers. particularly,
you have to touch ell bases.
You have to leam to speak
and translate obscurity.
"Just some of the kids from
school." !There are five
schools in the entire district.)
"How m8Jly?"
''Twenty or thirty.''
(cooples)
"I assume it will break up
early."
"Definitely." (with a little
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•
Your Horoscope Tom orrow
Gemini: Patience Pays Off
FRIDAY
JULY 30
Legal adviur may bring up setback due to rebound to your adverUslng enter picture ...
fine poinl Involving &ptclaJ benefit. You add tn personal Gains sho1-1-n through written
agrttment. Study Ar I t • posse&!l!Oll!. Guard valuables. word. One who cowue.ls M
message. There Is no need to SCORPIO iOcl. 23-Nov. 2I J.· MJ.<h lmp-ve -lau·o"" with spirllual level will aid. Give · •u ''" '"' You appeal to more persons in associates, co-corker11 . Ex-more places in favorable man-full play to intuitive intellect.
By SYDNEY OMARR
Thou who speclaliu in
cooking with astrology claim
Scorpio and Aries individuals
prefer their food highly spiced.
The Scorpio native. in fact,
will often request that onions
be added to a recipe. Vlrgo
persons can be finicky about
food: these individuals far out.
number other signs when it
come.. to patronizing health·
food stores. Leo enjoy 1
cooking with fire -many
memben1 of this zodiacal sign
are experta when it comes to
barbecue:
pres.s gratitude for unusual ner. Roadblock•-achievement Perceptivl!. approach is a fa vor. w is removed. Arks individual necessity.
CANCER (June 21.July 22): figures prominently. Accept l r;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;~
Involvement with member ol invitaUons; wtJcome change
oppo11ite ae1 is lnttnsi1led. Get and challenge.
across your views without SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22.
being arbitrary. Being a good Dec. 21 ): Establish contact
listener now can brio g with one knowledgeable about
numerous benefit.s. Plans are travel. Doors previously clos-
subject to revision. ed are due to open; greater
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22l : Your chance for success, happLness
feeling about family member Is present. Keep confidential
proves correct. Don't hesitate matters confidential.
to act on beliefs . What you do CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
now can have far-reaching ef-19): Family member se:?;ks aid
ARIES (March 2I·April 19): feet oil home life. Accent in entertaining relatives. Be
Family financial requirements diplomacy. Make intelligent cooperative. Social obligations
take precedence over other a!· concession. may multiply. Accent simple,
fairs. Live up to domestie VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22 ): natural ways. Older individual o~ligations. You will be hap-Being too certain now can be is on rigttt track. Respond ac·
pier as a result. Special agree-opposite of wisdom. Allow cortlingly.
ment with cantankerous In· room -and time -tor cor-AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
dlvidual 1s a necessity. rections. Check appointments, 18): Professional opportunities
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ); reservation!!. You can get abound; be selective. Protect
M.ore peoJlJ~ than previously where you're going without fl· honor, reputation. Get-rich-
Wtll ·hear and see you . Be cess speed. Avoid traffic quick scheme cou!d collapse.
aware ·of public relations. In tangle. Avoid involvement with one
attending social affairs, main-LIBRA (Sept. 2.1-0ct. 22 ): who lacks substance. Saglt.
lain balance, stick to diet. Financial manipulation will Wian supplies v I t a I in·
'Throwing caution to wind favor your effom. Threat of fonnation.
would be an error. money withdrawal pr G v e 1 PISCES (Feb. 19-March 21J):
GEMINI (May 21.June 20): f r=•=m::p::t::y.=A=v=o=id='=p=aru=· c=·=A='pO:pa=re=n=t =P=lan='==ah=•=•d==w:;h:;":;'=tr="='~l •• I (
Timing
Essential
A new electronic instrument
has been introduced for use by
physical fitness buffs.
Il is a small, lightweight,
battery operated unit that
clips onto belt or waistband
and has a cable that leads to
an earphone.
The ln!!lrument, the
manufacturer says, assures
proper timing in reducing, jog-
ging and conditioning pro-
grams. User sclect.s from five
metronome rate switches on
the cadence device for the
desired rate of speed for his
exercises.
A timer se~ the time for
any exercise and an alafm
sounds when time Is u
love 'n 1tuff
d 11nim1 a nd eord1
for the 9111
b111~.,11tric•1cl e "'''t•r ch•NJ•
7 f•1hio11 i1l111d, neW'porl c1nl1r 41•4.5070
THE N-E·W
L9QK
rfJa/Ae~
MID-SUMMER
SALE
-ENDS AUG. 4TH
WIGS
:o'::~ .'.N:.~~-~ ........ 9ts
~::~~.~~'.~ ........ 19''
SAVE 20°/o·
50%
ON ALL
HAIR GOODS!
YIYl.ANE WOODAllO
COSMnlCS
ma!A"~
WIG & BEAUTY
SALON
548-3446
l50·D E'oif 11th StrMt
HILLGREN SQUARE
COSTA Ml5A
SUPER SUMMER
•Swim Suits
• Hot Pants
e Shifts
• Capris
• Summe r Suits
• Dresses · Jr. & Missie
•Coats
• at Home Wear
• Pant Suits
• Lingerie
up to
Mon. thru S•t. 9:30 to 5:30
Sund•y -11 :00 to 4:00
I ,1 ,~,.' t~ 17--,-~;JI! ....... --~.!·~~~;~ -:-i.-~ .. 1• j)_~!!P.';.·~b..---• . '~-' 1
Female Fighter
Not Bra-waver
'
CAMBRIDGE. Mass. (UPI)
-The night Anais Nin decided
to publish her diaries, she had
a terrible dream: "I dreamt
there wa~ 11 knock at my doo r
and wht·n I answered it, I
received mortal radiation."
The 68·year-0ld "d iarist,
novelist and psychologist," a s
the writer labels hers e I f ,
shared her earJY fears of
being published ·i n an in-
terview with five yo u n g
mernbers of Bos ton female
liberation wt10 h11d invited the
renowned literary flgure to
speak at Harvard University.
The subject · \Y omen.
t.·l iss Nin's not an activist in
the \'.'Ornen's liberation rnove-
n1enl as it relates to marches.
demonstrations, pickelinc and
bra.waving.
I , DAILY Plll!r ]I) Thu,sday, July 2q, iq71
Fashion Looks Back "We mu.~t do the lnnf'r
journey first," she said. A
woman, in short, should im-
prove her own quality and
then work for the com111on
goals of womanhood.
private sessions with her
psychoanalyst, Dr. Otto Rank.
Later she took over his prac·
lice in New York (she bas
become a U.S. cit~n and
lives In New York and Los
Angeles ). But she said her
career in psychology ended
when "it interfered with my
writing."
flood of mail from women
ar~ Ule world, the plans to
publlsb a fourth °""t Ill~ J.od
sbe keeps writing ol her
persona) Ult. "When we share
wilh others what we really
are," she said, "what happens
is really love".
Fashion for fall lndude1
clothes 1Mplred by other
lima, other places, aocordlng
to a review of t h e
Moot&orn«Y Ward cata)<J8.
lnfluencea, Spenllh ~ f,
gilt trim.o suggesttng the Foc: ·
She said shtt felt her own
growth was 'a ''private revr.lu-
tion, an assertion of my own
beliefs."
As for that frightening
dream, Miss Nin, who was
reared in Paris, said 1n her
still French-accented voice,
"It was my fear of judgment,
of unmasking, of belo;g e:i:-
posed and not bejng loved."
Her three publ ished diaries
detail intimate Lalks in !he
1930s and 1940s with v.·riters,
revolutionaries and s t r a y
astrologists.
'Ille diaries also expose her
' ' ', -----., .
Her diaries had remained a
secret for years -"otherwise
they would not have been writ-
ten." Her early career as a
published author had her
"domned" by her family; she
wrote about D. H. Lawrence
whose books then '>''ere being
burned in Europe.
For years Miss Nin believed
that her diaries recording "my
inner journey" were "selfish."
But with their success and the
----
She feels that her wrllings
have been popular beeause
"there are so few histories of
the organic growth of a
woman."
Editing the diaries and
preparing an anthology or
women writers tstill in the ~l"
works) takes time. But Miss ,
Nin finds opportunities to
meet with women around
the country.
She urges them lo use their
anger "creatively" and to
work individually and togelher.
The look back, with new
refinements and ln-
terpretaUons, include• peasant
Eut, and '
print.! -all converging Gil
scene at once. Inltlcaw,:·'
broldery, coaorM Ip,
designs a n d crdti
prints abound.
DTERT
Don't Miss Our Sale!·
&CLEARAnce
Shop Monday through Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Further Reductions Throughout The Store
BLOUSES PLUS
Ladies shirts & blouses .... , •. 4.99 & 6.9<}
FASHION GALLERY
HANDBAGS & SMALL LEATHER
GOODS
As5t. handba~s, lcdther & vinyl reduced 1/3
lo 1/2
St .50 "My Fdvorite Recipe" Box, grn, or~
anp.f', or yellow, holds 3x5" cards ••• , 75c:
$1 Pl,1stic coo.11erf play ing cards, double deck
in set • , . , . , ...• __ .......•• , • , 2/1.99
. . ;~
·. ,. ::
~. ~ Designer dres~e•, coslun1es anrl ;it ho1111•
wear ... _ . . . . . . . . . . reduced 1 /2
White polyester coal~ , ..•• , • , , ... 3r).iJo
HOSIERY
$tJ Ribbed pc.isan! bodysuit •.... , , • 7.99
MILLINERY & WIGS
TOYS & BOOKS
"Peggy Pen Pal", She writes and draws wha·
tcveryourlo ..... , •.• , ...•..•..• 6.99
Creative Chitty Chi tty , see-through Cdr 1.44
,. ..
I
' f
Twin Preview
' '
...
Designer l,ouis Feraud offers a colorful shn\ving for the coming \Vinler seas~n.
At left is a chasuble dress that is worn over a \vhite blouse and features a \\'tde
stripped_tie and a dotted belt. At right is a black \Vool coat with red and \\'hite
accessories.
From Page 17
• • • Water Therapy
"Once :1110 n1ake I he n1n·n1<-1l swim pr·ugr<Jlll. "ll'o.
children fee! al ease an d simply a matter of adapting
secure, they begin to enjoy the !heir capabilities to a sw im-ming stroke ."' water." ~dd~ Mr s. \Valker. "Bv the end n[ sunllner 1~·e ex-Rar1hels considers patience
peCt 111 sec greater un-the difference b e 1 1v e en
proven1ent in all the patients.·• leaching '"so-called 'normal'
kids and these patients. It.
p:1l~y victim as a success
story. Scmi-an1bulatory. he
walked with the aid of walls
;ind tables. Working in the
pnol he progre&Sed so he could
11;dk v.1th a kickboard.
"They JUSL told me that he"s
walking 1n !he w·ard. All
a!on r ' Donna Gendre;iux, w h " takes thl'm longrr to c<itch fln
holds a BA degree in rcrrea-rlue tori lack of coordination"
lion fron1 California State Many blind and deaf patients
Colle,e;P at Long Beach. sl<irted have learned to swim. "The
as a volunteer and now serVl'S deaf children have a lot or r.-------..;;;;;;;;;;~I
as lifeguard "You can re;il\y ,<;avy. Just show them the mo·
see a big 1n1provcmen1 in the lion and they pick it up," ex·
children as when they get into plains l:larthcls. "The blind1 the water. Lasl week we had .are a supervisory problem on l
foor girls learn 'how to swim.' deck. You just h;ive to keep
All ii tonk was man po11·cr.
n1an hollrs, money and a great
dea l of pat ience.
1t's so exciting... your eye on them.''
Ba rthels ht1d four or his To insure safety . epileptics
FREE ;;;.<.. ~---. -, _______ _ -··-
OllGAN
Cl,ASSES
sv,,i1nme;s take gold. silver and patients wilh heart con-
and bronze nieda!s in the 19?I ditions wear colored bath caps l p.m. Ne 0•9~" Nec•n ••Y
Special Olyrnpics. which took 50 the therapists are av.•are of compt•r• 8"'"""" cou•••
EACH THURSDAY
place last month al UCLA . their problems and pa y HAMMOND ORGAN
"They '>''ere an1ong high p;ir!icu!ar attention to the pa-SAN CLEMENTE . I ,. I r 11• 5. El c .... 1 .... Rt•I potent1a pa ien s -a group O tienlS. ecrou 1rom Gre'f'l>owlHI
IO -that I taught to sw im in °ii~B~'~'l~h~e~ls,.:.ci~le~s~o~oc~c~e~ce~b~ca~l~::ii:i::ii:i::ii:i::ii:i~"~'·~·~·::ii:i::ii:i::ii:iiii::i~J a normal Re<i Cross program.11 They can breathe underwater
to some ext.ent and swim the
fron t two lengths of the pool "
The CSCLB graduate treats
ambulatory patients with a
Red Legs
Out Front
In Autumn
Brigh1. clear colors take the
spotlight ln I.he nE"W fall
hosiery. desi gned lt'l go with
hot pants. shortie skirts and
culottes.
One of the slrong new colors
Is red onion. a blackened red
that goes with all the dark
reds in shoes and coslumes.
Another front runner is hot
red lo go wi1h the brip:ht
ahsdes of ready-to-wear, and l
in lhe same ranuly are the
SHOl,
$10.00
J1/J TO 6
I TO IEI
14 FASHION ISLAND e NIWPOltT CINTElt
Opp. l rtadwcry e 6~4 ·422J
\\•ine tones. l'---------------------11
. .
1 I ~ ~·--·• _;_,r -~1.J.~ ~ ... ,.~~l-i;'.#" _...._,,1 ,,·:,;_)-_-~ ..
FURS
I ur<. of n1J11y kinds at reduced rrice~
LADY BULLOCK
Custon1-~i Le drc~ses 8< costumes reduced 1 /2
MATERNITY
/\~.JIC'r11 ity1vC'ar & lingerie reduced 1/3 to l /'l
MISS BULLOCK SHOP
$btl In $80 Young dt·,1~nC'r dre~~e~rcduced
1/2
SHERWYN CASUALS
U,u,11 rlr£''\l'' .. , .... rl'duced 1/3 lo l /'1.
Ivan 1-rederic" polye,lrr dress, envelope '~1r(
27.99
SHERWYN COATS & SUITS
Coats, ~uits, & rlrf'ssrs . _. reduced lo clear
SHERWYN SPORTSWEAR
Spor!<;\VCilrpan1~sep.ir,1IC'~ ... reduced 1/2
TOWN & TRAVEL COATS & SUITS
Wac;h,1blf' Bl,1zer~ ..... , , , ...... 2q,9q
TOWN & TRAVEL KNITS & SEPA-
RATES
ln1po rl cd &· dome<.!ic knitsreduced 1/2 &
more
W;1she1lJIC' pan1 su1t~ &· ~ep,ira !C'•reduced 1/2
&more
TOWN & TRAVEL SPORTSWEAR &
THE COUNTRY STORE
(-n11ntry < lothf'~ add1!i1inal r<'dutl1on~ f'.inl<.
& 1np~. ni;iny paitern~ , .. , .... 4.9 9-20.9q
COLLEGIENNE COATS & SUITS
!111nor1f'rl "llCdc & hut ks\..in prin!(o,ll~ 61.')0
COLLEGIENNE DRESSES
Pr111t ler,py Di('''"'• \1/r\ "i-1 i , .... 12.9<J
COLLEGIENNE LINGERIE
Nylnn 'lf'rp1\r'.1r _ ......... 4 .~'J-11.'l')
Non-cl1rig ~lip~ S.· h..il1-'llll.,, .i~'I. {Olur'T .H'l-
2.99
CO LLEGIENNE SHOES
$14 !O ~ \0 f"~n1n11~ n1,1krr ( ,l~IJ,d~, rfrr• ~
~lioc•s, & ~.111ddl~ ....• reduced 1 /2 & more
COLLEGIENNE SPORTSWEAR
Tnp-<ilih hrd 1101 r.1111 ~cl~, .1~~1. cnlnr:. 8.CJIJ
Knit ,1( ryl1c hnlp.1111~. 1 norclin.-1t1ng
< olor~ .................... -7.99
DAYTIME & NIGHTIME LINGERIE
$7 10S10 V<lnity f"ilir ~lip~, aver.igc & long
leni;:lh~ , _. , • _ ............. 5.49 & 5.99
$4 to ~b V,1nity l·ii ir ~Luff, discontinued styles
2.9ll
S 12 V.-1ni ty !-air robe , .. , ...... , •.• 8.99
FOUNDATIONS
F.imous maker brd s, girdles ;ind r.1nly girdle~
reduced 1/2
ROBES & NEGILGEES
S 18 Lon g terry robe .. 1 J.99
BETTER SHOES
S3l Erir.i plain pun1p , .......... , 24 .99
FASHION ACCESSORIES
F<1shion lcJthcr belts . _, .. ,. reduced 1/2
FASHION JEWELRY
Fa5hion bel!~ & ropes , .•.. , ... , •. 2/3.00
GLOVES
Nlink 1--lals, rnale skins , . , ..... , , . 59.00
SHERWYN SHOES
RecJCross&Socialiteshoes ....•.. 13.99
BABY & TODDLER SHOP
Slrolle r, d.:iffodil or honey pr int cover 23.9'}
I Ii-chair daffodil or honey print cover 23.99
GIRLS & BOYS 3-6X SHOP
Roy~ diirl" , . , . , •.•. , , , , _. 1.99 lo 2.4'1
Boys ~1v1n1 ~els . _. __ ..... _.,, .... :l.67
BOY'S SHOP
Kn11 Shirt~ •. , • , .. _ ... ,., 2.59 or 2/S.00
Sport ~Ii ins . , . , . , , .......• , , , .•. 2,9q
GI RLS' SHOP
I nrig sleCVf', rurtle nec k, 5kinny rib pu ll-nn
~we.:ttPr 111 oilon 4 color" . _ ...... _ . 4,9q
leans in dune buggy fdllnc, ne1'/ fall color' 7-
14 .. ' •... -.. ----...... -... -• -J.69
YOUNG JUNIOR S-PRE-TEEN-BOB-
BIE BROOKS
$20 !o $22 Polyc~!er drcs~es, 5-13, a~sf. rnl-
nr~ --········-··--··········· 1 2.9q
Bobbie Brooks Shnp
As~L Sports1vear, 5-13 . _ .... reduced 1/2
Bobbie Brooks Shop
A"~L hot pants, S-13 .......... 3.99-5.91J
Further Rcduc!lons on Sport~wcar, Dressec;,
P.·int~. Orig. $7 to S2fi _. Now 1.99 lo 4_rJ9
YOUNG SHOES
,.,12-$18 Childrc11's and lc<'n ~hof'~-Sl r 1de
R1le, Webers, C~1peLio and Cover Gir l, hr<1-
krri ~ileS ....... , ............. '. 7.9',
FORERUNNER SHOP
11,ircd (('.Jl1S .... _ .. , . , , ••. , reduced I /2
f..111! ,J11r1~ , ........• , ... , . , ..... J.')9
MEN 'S CLOTH ING & MEN 'S
SPORTSWEAR
f)nublr knit 'ilil 100"'~ pnly<''·
\<'r, h<'it<'d hd( \.., pd!th packers
n1<'1.il hu11nn' .......•..... 129.00
\hnrt ,lpevc 'hirh , , • , , , , , , .•••. _. 6.')'}
f..111! ~hirl~ ........... , . , , .•. , , • , 6 ,')')
$1 1 J nng Sleeve Spnrl :ihir1s , • , , , , _. 4,<}9
$JO Knil Norfolk )drket , . , . , _. _ .. 20.99
MEN'S FURNISHINGS
\'i to $12.50 White dres~ shirt s 5.29 o r
2/9.50
$I .. 'iO Our own underwe.ir V, T, and A ~hin",
briefs & boxer~ ... , . , , , .... _.,,. 6/7.00
MEN 'S SHOES
$2S·S10 Frf'f'man shoe~. discontinued ~ty lf'",
lin1itedquantitles . , , , ..•... _ .... 19.99
$42 -$57 St.1cy Adams shoes, some discon-
l1nued ~tyles, li111ited quantities 33.90-47.90
WYNBRIER SHOP
$1 2 toS14Dressshirts ............ 5.99
~ui t s & sportcoats _ •. _ . reduced 1 /3 to 1/2
Coordinaling tics , , . , ...• , •••• , . , J.99
COSMETICS
Men 's & Wo men's sunglasses, originally
priced up !O $8 • , . , • , , , , ..... , , , 2/4,50
Farnous name fragrances , greatly reduced
FABRICS & YARNS
A~s1. fabrics ........... , . , • reduced 'h
looks.like-wool acrylic kni t • _,.,,,, J.49
NOTIONS
Dish or cup keepers ...... . .. J .99
Orig. SIO to ~1 2 Cashn1ere & angora tinr"ri STATIONERY
gloves •..•..•. _ ...•••••.•... ,. 7.1J9 S6 Hoyle Automatic Card Shuffle r ••• 4.49
Ask obouf our low cost Termwoy Pion for major purchases for the home.
Ll•ltM •••llfltlt•, .... lttt, ltnk•• tl1t1, •bctll•-•· •• '"-"'" t•cN"fH wC..O.D:o.
llt •tll H tt'••• tr4•"1. lll lt-t 1••lffl It prlff Hit. Prlctt ••t1H ttr tl .. l• It-•'''"' _.ll-ltt Mlttl.
•
BATH SHOP
S 15 Roudoir bench .. , ..• , ••.••• 11 .99
$ 15 Matching tO\Vel ~land •.•••••• 1 t .99
BEDROOM ACCESSORIES
$6.50-$1 3.50 F ir~! Quality,
No-Iron 5hf'e1S in "Canter-
bury" or "Country Flower''
l'rint . , ........ , ... -.• 3.99·8.99
$1')T1vincon1forte r~ ......•.•••• 13.99
$23 Elcc!ri<.. bl,u1~et ...•••.•••• , • 19.99
DECORATIVE ACCESSORIES
1'11lyOpticlight ·····-··----·-·· 17.00
DINING ACCESSORIES
[dsy care vinyl pldcc mdts, asst. colors79c ••• Assort111ent of napkins, prints & solids 79c e.a.
DRAPERIES & CURTAINS
fl ed~preads, asst. prints, $35 King ..• 19.99
$29.50 T1vin , ....... , , . , .••.• , 15.99
FLOOR COVE RINGS
~ 1 Ii. '15 Doni in ion, our decora!ors
t.ivorite, extra heavv 3 olv acrilan
hroadloor11 carprt,.
Price includes pad & instJllation 11.99
)Lelandic ~hec p ,1 rca rug approx. 2'6"x3'
24.95
i42'1 tlandwnven woo! ruRS from India 9xl 2
369.00 (>the rs di con1pnrable savings
FURNITURE
l)1r'~el/l l('rt1J~(' ~ .. ii(', ~dVe up to 20% 011
L .. 11r'r.111l!J, Vi!IC'ro, M.1drig<1I dnd 13.lrdcini
HOUSEWARES
l 1hlJt'y i;::l.1~~W.lrf', n1lc"hf'r<i, juiCf>
df'{ .1n1e rs, 4-p;irk ~l,1sse5 your
l hoicf' _. . . . , .••••.• _ . • 88c
24 pc. i;::IJS~\\l,HI'.! ~ct .. ' -'. -.•.• 4.97
Prr<.111 4 (_)1. Prl''~Urf' .......... , , , 4.99
RC'g,115 nc. st.11nle's .,tcel cookl'·:Jre •• 9.99
SLEEP SHOP
S 189.'1 5 Airelnon1 i\11-Amf"rican 400 twin
'rt. lO-year non-pror,1IP!lguardntee 139.00
SI 'i I 4-piece-hed Pn,emblC', includes mat-
llC''~' box spring, bed frdrne, and headboard
99.00
SUN SHOP
S6':l.'.JS Bean Ba~~ ...... _ .... ,,. 49.00
13iqro ~et. JO" Rough gldSS table,· 2 chairs,
yellow vinyl scJt ... , . __ ., _ .• _., 59.00
TV, APPLIANCES, RADIOS & RE·
CORDS
$15'),95 Concord ~tereo radio -record play-
rr & cassette rf"corder and playback G.irrard
turnt.ib!e, \Valnul finish ... , , , .• , 299.88
$229.95 Concord stereo radio-record play.
er & Cdssctle recorder and playback Garrard
turntable, walnut finish ....• , ..• 16,,00
ON MINT ITEMS. INTERMEOllTE MARKDOWNS HAYE BEEN Tl!EN. ORIGINILLT MEANS THE FIRST PRICE 11 WHICH IN ITEM WIS MIRllD IN DUR STORE,
Shop Bullock's Santa Ana .... Monday through f1iday 9:30 to 9:30, Saturday 9:30 to 6:00, 1 Fashion Square. Santa Ana , phone 547-7211
. '
• • • • • • • . • • .
. .. . ' . . ' '
' ' . . ~ • • ' •
• • . . .
.. !
~ Donuts Dunked
To financ e ex change students attending Estancia
High School, the American Field Service ch apter
has been selling punch and doughnuts to students
attending summer school. .Supporting the endeaver
are (left to right) Mrs. Joseph_ J. Innes. Dave
Ganoung and Shawn Innes. . .
Twin Preview
Secrecy Cloaks
Saudi Fashions
By ELIAS ANT AR
JIDDA, Saudi Arabia <AP)
-High fashion in Saudi
• Arabia lJ a cloak-and-veil
; business.
• Because of str:ict Islamic
: customs, Saudi women appear
~ in public concealed from head
. to toes un~r a black tent-like
• ghroud. Only their hands and
r the tipi! of their shoes peep
: cut.
~ Underneath, a Saudi women
: who has had even minima!
; contact with We.stern culture
: may be wearing a Paris·made
: maxidress or a miniskirt.
: She takes off the cloak only
in the privacy of her home.
• The tradition of mystery ex·
. tends even lo I.he half..doien or
so higb-fashioo boutiques tilat
• have 1prung up· Kl the com·
: merei1l center anli port city.
; "Miss Arabia," the oldest
: i nd biggest fa.shion emporium,
; is housed in a private villa
·: gu1rded by high walls in the
: secluded embassy district
'. Goats graze in a narrow dusty
: alleyway oul.8ide the villa.
: Inside. the person In charge
·;ls a pretty Lebanese brunette
; who insisl.!I she be identified
• Mly as S. K. ''This is a very
'u naitive town," Mrs. K. says
;enigmatically, probably keep-
, Ing in mind the b&ck seat role
; of women in Saudi . society.
· Who owns the boutique? "He
· fs a wel!~ucated ll n d
'.cuJt.ured Saudi me re ha n t,
; that's all I can say."
women wishing to buy clothes
would never dream of allowing
themselves to be served by
men .
Hence the private villa s. "A
man's home is his castle in
Saudi Arabia," explains Mrs.
K. "A woman can work as a
salesgirl in a private home."
Despite a!I the: furtiveness,
high fashion is profitable here.
Mrs. K reports. Her first year
s11les were about $120.000. Now
they are about half that.
"Our Saudi customers are
mainly the w i v e;. flf
businessmen. government of-
ficials and princes." she says.
"Women from the foreign
communlty also come and
buy."
Dresses, shoes, accessories
.and lingerie are imported
from Britai n, France , Ital y
and Austria.
HOT PANTS
"Right now we are doing
well with maxi.!I, pant.'i suits
and even hot pants ," says
Mrs . K. Hot pants are usually
worn only in the seclusion of
the home, she adds. holding up
11 fiery velvet number costing
$9.
Westtrn women liv ing in
Jidda have gone for the maxi
in a blg way. reports 1vlrs. K.
"At !~st they can be
fashi onable and , because the
dress covers up most of the
figure. they do not shock I.he
natives. ll was very difficult
when the miniskirt was riding
high." Before the maxi. most
Western wol'TM!:n wore loose
slack~ remini5Cent of the 1940s
or below the knee skirt ,c; ~
e~'en lhen a minor assault on
Saudi sensibilitie.~.
Men are not' allowed inside
;the vllla. not t'.ven husbands
accompanying. their wives on
·~a shopping trip. They must
. "'·ait in an air-conditiont:d
, room Jesl they disturb other :: customers. But this is the sum ·ll;========~ I ·mer 51ack season and a quick I
. look is possible.
: RED VELVET
• Despitt: its modest exterior. ~ "Mb111 Arabia" is plush. The
·wa lls are lined with red
~ velvet, the thick carpeling ls
•wall to wall ·under crystal
; chand eliers. Servants serve
• aoft drinks ar coffee and the
: telephone occasionally give.s a.
:: discreet bun.
~ Ot.btr fashion houses, with
, namea like "My· Fair' Lady,"
"Hi" or "Chanel," a r •
: aimllatly furnished. says Mrs.
: K.. and JikewW!: secluded.
! ~a:;tb c ao :;1~~i~~~ no!
: womien. Saudi Arabia bu a
: rllJPd taboo on 11lu1lrls. But
oy
to the
World
• IS
COOL CLOTHES ••• HOT WEATHER
J•'I' 19 ""' W•rld '1ttii.n1
Jiii E. COAST HWY.
COIONA DIL MAI "'"'""' ·~ ....
' . ' ' ' ~
• ' , , ,
,1 ,.~~ . . . ",__... .. '
IWIM SUITS
-SUNDAYS-11 ta 4
BARROWS
1404 VJA LIDO, NEWl'ORT IEACH
Benefit
Staged
. The curtain will go up an a
benefit performance of "Once
Upon a Mattress" at 8:30 p.m
FrJ d ay, Aug. 27, in
Wes tm.inaier'a Sevent.etnth
Slreet School.
Receiving the box office
r~ipts from the Westminster
Community Theater'.11 pro-
duction will be the Albert Sil·
ton Chlldren'1 Home , Orange.
Included in the cast is Mrs .
ructiard Taylor, pre11ident of
the Albert Sitton Children's
Guild,
The gu.lld offers ffrvice to
the dependent children In the
home and youth! detained in
Juvenile Hall. Volunteers con-
duct classes in nutrition, art!'l,
crafts, sewing and grooming,
and give birthday and holiday
parties.
Accepting reservations for
the production are Mr ll .
Taylor and Mt!. Burt Har·
rington. Tickets are priced at
'3.50 and $5.
THIS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY
JULY 29 .
SAYE
17<
LI.
PRUNE
PLUMS
c
lb
STANDARD
NO LIMIT
THIS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY
AUGUST 2
WONDER
BREAD
SAYE
16< c LOAF
PLUS
LARGE. 10°/o
l4 oz.
LOA F
Fun in
Ushers •
the Sun
Season 11'.l .
Sunning and swimming will be the order
of the day when the Laguna Be~ch Opera
League stages a beach party and barbecue
Sunday, Aug. I.
Activities will begin at 3 p.m. in the Mon·
arch Bay Beach Club and continue with a
mini meeting at 5 p.m. followed by a social
hour and barbecue served at 6 p.m.
President Mrs. Stanley Eichstaedt will
present the new slate of officers and volun·
teer chairmen. The work agenda in pre:para·
tion of the Lyric Ope:ra season which begin!
in September will be discussed.
The party ushers in the busy work sched·
ule that commences ln August, prior Lo the
production of '"The Musi c Man", 'fhe hospital·
ity committee, headed by Mrs. John C.
Nichols, includes the Mmes. Jay Pyle, Craig
B. Ketcham. Ri chard Henninger, ruchard
Drexe:lius, \Vales Wallace and E. R. Tamblyn.
THIS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY
IULY JO
BEST FOODS
MAYONNAISE
QUART
SIZE
ADUlT5 OHLY
c
LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON
LIMIT 1 COUPON
CLOSED
ON
SUNDAYS
AND
PLUS
1 o•/e
WEDNESDAYS
OPEN 10 A.M. TO 7 P.M.
Pa tchwo rk Pret ti es
LJNCOLN, Neb. 1UPl1 -
Patchwork can provide a
drama.tic and fresh look in in-
terior design and h o m e
decorating, says Magdalene
Pfister, Extension H nm e
Fumishingi; Sp e cl a I [st,
University of Nebraska.
The patChwork look is ef-
fec civt whe:re a dramatic or
s~ial effect is dl!:s.irab!e 11ueh
as in the family rrom, dining
room, or kitchen.
Miss Pfister say1 l h e
paLchwork articles give 1 good
balance of hand-made to the
machine-made fumiture in a
home.
HAWAIIAN SHO .. S
WALTAH SAY: 'Grt•f thin 91
to 90 n•tive in'
'.14 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER
Mond•t thru Frid •t 10 1.m. to 9:10-Sund •v ll lo'
THIS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY
JULY 31
EXTRA LARG~
AA EGGS
SAYE
10<
DOZ.
c
PLUS to•;,
THIS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY
AUGUST J
FRYER
PARTS
SAYE
20< c LB.
lb PLUS
Thigh• 101/e
O•
Or um1tlck1
\ THE OTHER FIVE DAYS
\. J NO LIMIT
NO LIMIT
WAREHOUSE PRICES Plus 10%
SHOP IN A WAREHOUSE OF FINE QUALITY FOODS IN COSTA MESA AT 19th AND HARBOR BOULEVARD
IT DOESN'T TAKE A LOT OF NERVE TO BE THE ONLY STORE IN TOWN THAT DISCOUNTS THE DISCOUNTERS
WHAT IT TAKES IS THOUSANDS OF LOWER PRICES
How We Sell FOR . LESS & SAVE You Up To 20°/o Everythin9 is Marked WAREHOUSE PRICES
The n The Checker Adds J ust I 0°/0 To Arrive At What
You Pa y. So If You Wou nd Up Wi t h$ I 0.00 Worth , You'd
Simpl y Pa y That, Plu1 I 0°/0 Or $11.00
NO GAMES LOW RENT
NO STAMPS LOW OPERA TING COST
CLOSED-SUNDAYS NO GIMM ICKS AND WEDNESDAYS
WE ARE IN THE GROCERY BUSINESS NOT GAMES
THIS GOES FOR EVfRYTHING EXCEPT THE FEW ITEMS
LEGALLY CONTROLLED LIKE MILK AND LIQUOR
WHICH IS MORE IMPORTANT TO YOU?
BEST SERVICE-OR-LOWEST PRICES
NO MARKET CAN GIVE YOU BOTH-WE GIVE PRICE
THE "FIRST" COST PLUS SUPERMARKET IN CALIFORNIA
we welcome
-FOOD UlllV STAMP
SHOPPERS
SlOlt HOUIS
10 AM TO 7 PM
S DAYS A Wltl
535 W, 19~.h St., at Harbor, , Costa Mesa
WE R!SEllVE THE RIGHT TO CH AMC~ PRICES
AS WHOLESALE 'PRICES CHANG~
l'il I 1] ~i(111!: i 11: I I •lEU•Iil a I j itSZl I 1l~i(111!a 11: 111] EU•llJ: i Ii itl':J I •1EU•11!: i I u 11 tlEU•ll!: i I i:tli'l I 1] Ei<•ll!
•••
• --J.P..:.-_ -~-~ ., •
-• ! •
'
---·
JULY 31st & AUGUST 1st
COME AND VISIT DANA POINT
UPCHURCH INTERIORS
IN DANA POINT 11 YEARS
COMPLETE INTERIOR
DESIGN SERVICE
• RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL • YACHTS
34091 COAST HWY., DANA POINT
FLOWERS BY SUMMER
"COMMERCIAL ARRANGEMENTS
TO BRIGHTEN YOUR OFF ICE" $1000 A WEEK
GIVE YOUR
PLACE OF BUSINESS
A BRIGHT NEW LOOK
496-9163 499-2390
LARGE INVENTORY
NEW OR USED x 14'oR 16'
HOBIE CAT EASY TERMS
HOBIE SPORTS CENTER
34195 COAST HWY .
DANA POINT-496-1251
DUSTY'S Where It's At
"Store wi th Clothes in f.,~hion"
Ca1·11ab y St. West
• PANTS • SHIRTS o BELTS
LI,£ STYLE SPORTSWEAR NEWEST THING
YOU CAN REALLY GET INTO IUSH SHORTS ANO LON .. S
Al•o Flowm foe A""''"'"Y-Child Bicth-Bicthd •y-P•rliu-SWIM WEAR SALE FOR DANA DAYS
Wedd lng~-You n<lme it. MEN'S SWIM TRUNKS $2.50 -$3 .SO -$4 .00
34161 'C' COAST HWY., DANA POINT 436-5696 34202 COAST HWY . AT SILVER LANTERN-496..3782
Teena'sCl1ilcI1~e11'sShop CONNER'S DEPT. STORE
OF DANA POINT
ALL BACK TO SCHOOL CLOTHES 10~ SPORT COATS 'V: PRICE FOR BOYS & GIRLS NOW IN STOCK 00ff 2
Up To 28" Waist Pants fo, Boy• LARGE SF.LECTION Re9. to $50
ALL NAME BRANDS On Any ~Yr~h~• of SlG or Mor•
34155 COAST HWY •
Across From Mac 's Coffee Break • 34091 LA PLAZA
DANA POINT I .. K>""• master charge
:i~·· Drag. Pic1ur"
2$" ACCUCOLOR
Now Only
$49950
496-1452
T.V. llEN T•LS ~~.~~=1 ~.°,.
fllEEOELIVEllf ''~''"'"'°"""' MO DEPOSIT 3413S COAST HWY ., DAMA POINT • ~"~.~.::'7.:.':" ........ 00.......... •••·>•10 137-2310 •'·••·1744 ...... "'"Cl•-··
-We MY• I 0-hlKlllll ft; Hl·FI li. .. o C....•-~11 & (:Ol'loo1•1 ... '
•-•-R ... 101, T111• RKofd .. o. Cloe~ R ... 111. Wl,.1111 l~l<lr"''"'· T1t110 (--I
--PllJ•• ~ o r~~ & C• .. ttt . Wll~lo-T1 1~!t1 • C1o•d Clr<:oll TV ·~
MDTBEI NITDIE' S M41KET.
Natural Faad •:i Juice Bar
BIGGER & BETTER
SA NOWICH BAR
• FOOD SUPPLEMENTS
Smoothies
Fruit Juice
• DRIED FRUITS & NUTS
• FRESH CARROT JUICE
24633 Del Prido--496-6368-Dana Poi nt
DETAILS
D•"• 'offot will •IM ll!<Mrll .. ...,., DIN hill'tlJ -l•llHll'( ..... <IHo<ll• • Ut m<lf .. ~· .. ll•r ..... , •. , .. r, "•l'H• 1 .. -11,..e ctlftrlllMI 11111 wHIN.
,, .. 111..,1111 (-'9< !tl'btft fll11d1 "Ill Mid ~ ltJI l'I ffUfll l'I flf"lll<~ ttl\Hvlff .. 111-tll•
cert....,.I .. , ""kl\ "Ill ••illc:lclt wllll 1111 d••-_.,·com"'"< .. , __ .,. °""• D•y•
C1mlw•ll. -clfte"1• IM ti•...,_,. dWk•l5-I Ctl'lfl'lffl~ "Ill lot 1<11...,Vlr<I.
Tllo l'llkoll d1r1111f lllM fer .... lltdkll .... r'lfff II I '·"'· S1!vnl1y.
Tn1 ·-wn• I•-· ~· ... °'' °"'""' lll:•H !Ifft "" ftllr•M• ,. Dll\tfty 11111 ,.rll IHCll.
Th• 1•--.r Vtlvtl IC~IW!lh .. I'll wlll "'1tt1n •rMI I '"'"' l'I 511 1~•19•tr klllh "!II ,......., ll!t
ltlotl ., "'' 1 .. ttw1111-.
-C1mlv1I 11 lllo 1'1.W. ........... ,,_ It 1.lft. lo ' •·"'• S•IVnllY '"" SwnclOJ. D01eo11 l'I -1111 ••t
•t•nnH, 11!11 r1M1. •-•· cetff,rlty """""'~ •rwl Mrt..r ,..,,. •rt KllHut.cl.
-OVI""" rK• WI"' ch1 ......... sl>., """" ml,.,~fn' lJ <I""'• t!lr11"1 II lltlllll 111<1\ •! •:» l .m,
•IHI 1rr.wl"t 11 .,.. flnkh 1;,.,1 lfl D.,.. Mo.-.., .i •-11 • m ••-c!w .. 1\11! ''"" Nt•,ert IH<ll, L•~•
l11cll olHI D•011 '-'"!. ,
-C•m••WOl!ly llnnor Sul\INIY •w•nlnt 11 111• C:•pUln'1 ""•"••••• lltot1wr1n!, tl•rll"' t i , .• • m, (0<.k!•l11 1n<1 "''•rt•lnm..,! will bt lncl\llltll..
-•1.1be.
•~t JM1l~ .. ~· c••
496-SSSS i
LAGUNA NIGUEL
CHARMER
Iinmaculate 3 Bedroom 2
bath hoine, Dana Point Spe-
cial, $31,900. Excellent Terms.
?i1ust see to apprecia~e.
POINT REALn
34156 COAST HWY.
DANA POINT
496-5323
ROARING FORK
SKI & TENNIS SHOP I TENNIS BALLS
Also Head Rackets & Adidas Leather T ennls Shoes
34141 COAST HWY .
DANA POINT
496-4921 •
-~·---·--... i..-
.. :;.. .. ::: :~ ..
'
, I
•
. . . . ~ . ' " -. . . ..
Top Rea Students Receive Honors ''Artistry in Moving" for the
BEST MOVE
of
YOOR Ll~E
Call:
w.nt'I 11.,...1 rtlllll'llA• •-"'nm lA<ol hWt WU Howefl
0"a llll MDftp.lY MITl!S -
CLOSEO IAf .
-W• try .... d "' mtrlt
W'Ollf c;Onlkl....,•" _,. .,......y ,.,,.., •11. 111Hr Vim)
C.ptllr-111<11 4ff.Ull
t.•. AA!t. Lew. l li.t Mtifr,
......... Jtel-,,_. NICl'4'"
A""llM Onlll. UM Ottll.. .............. ,,_ •wi... l.M ScNtl, J-s.r•-Cvnthltl .,...,...., MMti. 1-N ....,,,,., ..... Y_I,
CleNTM O•ADI 11°'*1 .......... l.111111• .... ,,. O.le
l etlll'f', 0. ............ '-""'Cari-. CaMY C.wo!MWh. 0-..lel curi.1. 0r.U D-wllk. C-Y ,_..,,
L11e.I .. l"lldi.t", T-1 G<..,,.,.., S....... Hirt,
NldMll11 HodtM. w,,,.,. t.euvi.r, ·-Id 1. .... 11. RMle(.u Md1rllr.d, Llllto MCVl<k.,, ,,..,,I ,.......,.,,,., oori. Oul•lftf, lrll<IY
•-• -~rllv• •oo:1r1..-. n. f<Mlow!ftf 11'tldHl!t -• Ill""".,.
tM "°"°" All tlr hWlrif .,.... ,.int
·---,,..,.,, ... "' i.t : t •V•NTM eu.o• .....,..," ,,....,,., Tl,.. A.,.._,.,
Oltiot""' AN..... (JNfllle Art!•Uo.
J.,.,n~111.
IN1tY ••• .--1. 019flt ·-w.,..,. 111ftlln. Ar1'tlvr l.m111ne,
Ao\ld-.el Colon. IC1¥ln Curr.,., &1v1-011C111rm,
ev1 en .... , L.Mlr1 Flekh. Orvlll1, F'-lna, • ...., ......... Lrl GrMllY, 0111 H1r·
"" o.nlM tttrNnl111. Julie Hoio.t•, o.w. Htiplc!N. ,.,_19 Jonlt,
M ldwll9 K•i.r, TMlml 1Ctna1lt.
T-y lA'"4L
.:,..Jn U.•11•, Cl...,._ U Gendre.
·~ L-. Cllr!tl!.,. ,.,.,.,.,,. WHll•lft
IMPACT
HTh• Su pplam•nt With A Punch"
Over 70 Netural Body Buildar•
~~OILm ·······-·----·------$7.95
WELSH'S NATURAL FOODS
26J FOREST AYE, LAGUNA llACH 494-3512
Mtrrn"°'
,,.,...,,,.. """''"' •obfft Mot1111, 110b9rf l'elletl9r Jr,, C•r"""' ••ttl, J""" ..,,, .... ••"11 •-11i.. Hiier. •11wibrodc. 1"1""11 ltulh. ROt'l'llll kMIGel, JKll
lllleldt,
C ... rvl '"'Ill!, Mii<• St>Yd•r, Robfrl
s-..-. ktrMrl111 $y...co,. J • c t.
T..i!tM,
Lll'M l1rtor, 1(.,1 Tl>OmPOfl, o.brt Tr\lltt, lloDert• Ur.._. •l'ld $11wn
WUll1m11. l lOHTH ••ADI
l.obtile Arc1'ull!L O-.. Al'w«>d, Oebor1h l onl!oc.. Mllehelf l oweo,
"•Ill l uihv••-· J•lm• CtrwfftlH, $u••"nt (1rven!ft, D!t "' Ch•uvln, Coll•" eoo1.. IC......ih Can111r,
l(""IH!l C•le!lo,. Ml... f lleclte,
Af11111r Gl1¥1n,
LI... Gn.1'11'111, ktlfl,..,,.. Gordon.
TtrlM GuU!11"r, V!•1inl1 Gurr, Jt1nnt .... ,,.....
$'"""'"''Her.In', e r....:i. HUI. 0.,,1.1
Hoi;lt, C1rl1 kl"'P, L11Ke lA11rle,
Jotn M•,...ul1, Tlmol!Oy Mltchell,
Sllelly "•rl<er, O."!el P1raon1, J1,....
Petit•"""· Fr1r>eft 11.l\ld'I, Lt•llCl•o 11:_,o,
J.,..ittr Sh1Man. Rotl9!1 Sll'lllllft9, •••ti.•. $lrnootll\ • SMrrlll St.ttl, l.<w\nlt $1,........,.,
$ti:>O•t 11111, Dotlnl TtYle>r, Cheryl --· S1m11tl W1rd, Tt.on-.1 W1um1n11,I "•mtll Wlnlll• .. Wiiii.,,. Wlltort I nd
Do\1'1111 Wr1"11.
494-1025
580 Broadway
NOW IN PBDGBESS ... _
·3~. ~~-tt\rtH~ ufxJC
SUlllB ~~~~NG
ULllRINDI ~~~~? e:
CIRCUS ---, ELEiiART
~--· .. WJ:THOU:R
CEB
• HAYTHORNS
CHARGE
FURNITURE
Wabd or spanlsh oak bookenes
The two most wan led styles, sizes.
and never-mar finishes, 40'' tall,
impressfve in pairs or Just alone.
Our -doolgn pedestal -Two roomy pedestal desks, never•
1r1ar walnut finished front and
back·for flexible arrangements.
lOS lNCRES: r;12t Wilshire Blvd. Miracle Mile: 110.W W. Pico Blvd.; 8&40 S. Western Ave. ANAHEIM: 1672 W. l lnco1n BAKERSFIELD: 3010 Ming Ave.
CHULA VISTA: 476 Broadway CLAREMONT /POMONA: 232 E. Foothill COVINA: 945 N. Azusa DOWNEY: 9435 E. Firestone GLENDALE: 333 N. Central Ave.
CU.NADA MILLS: 10100 Balboa Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH: 19431 Beach Blvd. LA HABRA: 1720 W. Whittier LONG BEACH: 2189 l akewood Blvd.
9TEREY PARK: 415 S. Atlantic Blvd. PASADENA: 85 S. Rosemead RIVERSIDE: 10,000 Magnolia SANTA ANAn USTIN: 1703 £. 17th St. SAN BERNARDINO: 999 S. 'T' !t
SOUTH BAY: 15533 S. Crenshaw Blvd. THOUSAND OAKS: 244 Thousand Oaks Blvd. VENTURA: 3409 Telegraph Rd, WOODLAND HILLS: 22223 Ventura Blvd.
t:JO TO I MON •• SAT. fltlDAY 'TIL t P.M. IHOI' 7 IM.Y$A W[D( • W£!KDAYl l0 UNTIL g •SATURDAY 10 UNTIL 6 •SUNDAY 12:30 UNTIL 6 • FREt ,.ARKING• FRU: DECORATOR SERVICE· FREE DELIVERY • CONVENIENT BANK TIRMS ~~~==========·:!1:A:Y:l:NU:l:O:IL:M:A:k. SAN CLIMINTl-49:2:·•:U:O::!i~============================================!!.
ONE ARGUMENT CAN HAVE 20 SIDES
For proof, check the DAILY PILOT'S "Mailbox" Editorial Page feature. There are
more than two sides to a story and the DAILY PILOT receives from 5 to 20 "let·
ters to the editor" a day with a wide diversity of opinion. On really hot issues
the mail can be even heavier.
What is more, the DAILY PILOT welcomes letters from readers and publishes al·
most all of them.
Our Policy
Leite" sho uld normally convey their message in 300 words or
less. The right to condense letters lo fit spece is reserved.
All lette rs mus t include signature and m" i Ii n g address, but
nemes me y be withheld on request if sufficient reason is appar-
e nt ( em berraumenl or harassment to writer, for exemple).
Poetry will not be published in a ny fo rm, good or bad.
Exce ption
leiters in poor taste, libelous or unsigned a re t he exception t o
the rule that th e DAILY PILOT publishes el most every letter it re-
ceives • .They will not be published.
lf·you feel strongly about an issue send your "side" to "Mailbox". It's one of the
best read features in the DAILY PILOT.
--:-' \.!'"~. '.....:. . t..'
MAILBOX
o ·range Coast DAILY PILOT
P.O. Box 1560
Costa M•sa, Ca. 92626
-·~-~--
. . . . . -. . . -. ~ . . ..
Corona Del Mar School 1-m:;;;==== =..::.
Adopts Peruvian Girl
Ttle members of the Student
Body ol Corona de! Mar lligh
School have adopled a Peru-
vian child through Foster
Parents Plan, Inc., announced
Joseph Dominic, Director of
Student Activities.
Under the supervision of
student, Karl Killefer, the p-oj-
ect provides Julia Vera tile
13-ycar-old daughter i~ 8
seven-member family, with 8
monthly cash grant toward
her education.
Through the students' $16 a
month contributions from stu-
~ent body funds, her family
r~ives medical and denlal
care e well a. h)'geoic 51.lp-
plies.
Killefer, who handled au
cooununicaLioo with the Peru-
vian gtrl, graduated in June
and will attend Harvard in the
fall. It will be up to lhe In-
coming executive council of
students to decide whether or
not tlley will continue to be
foster parents, says Dominic.
The Foster Parents Plan has
thug far aided more than
110,000 children in South
American and Asia, according
to a spokesman.
SIDEWALK SALE
SPORTSWARE $19?.
Trend-0-Fashion
Phone: 962-2540
Adams at Brookhurst
,,.,.,. """ 11\1' ,., .....
WIUI~ ol "°"" oll• moncl wlfll • t1V1h.ll,
""' Mft! .... Out OI• ~ •-11 '"' .... let 'o'OIH" • ..., to mM• It loll i. .... r.
20'Y•.?: .......... our E.tll'I SIKll
MAD FASHIONS
9ddloa
,Satl).
DRESSES
. AS LOW AS
~! ~&o TO 70% OFF STANDARD
BEAUTY SUPPLY
.............
CASCADES 995 R!G.
14.95
ITNTHETIC STRETCH
WIGS 500/o ~b OFf
WIGLETS
REG. 595
9.50
ROUX-FANCI
FULL RINSE
$1.05
BIKINI
SWIM SUITS I
VALUES
TO $25 $6.00
BLOUSES AND TOPS I
60°/o to 70°/o OFF 1·
llfnny Trenaendous Values
Thro119hout The Stot'e
We specialiie in Hair Styling
Wigle ts-Coscodes-Folls ond Wigs. MAD FASHIONS
Adams at Brookhvrst
Graffiti is
A Joke . , . Reolly
MARIA'S
rtistry
• In
OILS
ORIGINAL
PAINTINGS
ART
NSTRUCTION
l~1POHTED
FHAMES
1005 Adams at Brookhurst
DRAPERY DRY ,~'~:~~i~
CLEANING
SPECIAL 79crnrANEL
c LEAN Eo~FAN111 FOL WD•~ sllcc..,,,panl..i With Thi I C"POft ARTISTIC -IZED-LINED OR UNLINED
CLEANERS Brookhurst & Adams Center
{Next to Vons) 962·65J6
PIZZA
PALACE
Adams Gt Brookhunt
Dilly 11 a.m.·12 Mldnlti
Fri.·S1t. 'Til 2 a.m.
on Any Medium or
Large Pi11a of your
Choice.
7 Ouo1lity Cheeses
on Every Pina.
DRAUGHT BEER SELECTED
ITEMS
REDUCED
FOR
SIDEWALK
SALE II~~~~~~~~~;;;~~~~~~~~~~
ADAMS •t BROOKHURST Ill
T1l1phone: 961·0240
OUTH CORS'f l•c.u"• 8:~.'.!''~;,. ,1,,
Opet1 Nltlttly At 6:45 P.M.
51fflday At 1 :45 I". M.
JOHN WAYNE
RICHARD BOONE
"Big Jake"
COLOR-RATED GP
Opn Nltlttty At 6:45 P.M.
Seftday At 1145 r.M.
GENE WILDER
JACK ALBERTSON
"Willy Wonka
AND THE CHOCOLATE
Factory"
COLOR-RATIO a
,
'I' 'y .......... -.. ~---__ , ~ .,,.,,.. -r·ir ~
STRAW
BAGS
~00
REG. $4.81
REG. $1.96
ZORIES
10~ ..
REG. 25c
EBE
Adams at Brookhurst, Huntington Beach
Print lfhcthoe Tiih ,,..,. 0111Y PHONE -962-9171
-.
f\ae
S\otes
10
$tf1t
10U
!
. ., -
FRIDAY JULY
30-31 AND
SATURDAY
.
~SS~~~~~~~ "-!.~
• Wells Fargo
Stage Coach
•Buck Board
• Covered Wagon
----
~UTHENTIC
EXHIBITS·
.FRIDAY
&
SATURDAY
JULY 30-31
• Western Store
Front
• Blacksmith Shop
•Corral
FREE PONY RIDES·
111 A.M.-5 P.M. DAIL YJ
..
. . . . .
..... -... _..,. . ' .. ----------.......... __ . ,.__.... __ ,. -...... ··-~·· . . . . . .. .. . ·~
' 'y , -
SPECIAL
OF THE
WEEK!
What Good is
a Bar ain ... Mrs. Nancy A. Landelius was in the check-out lino
at one of the LUCKY DISCOUNT SUPERMARKETS
in Montclair when we asked her if she would
buy the exact same items or comparable brands
~~~SS ROAST
BONELESS 89(
LUCKY TOP QUAllTY
BOND(D 8f(F LB.
{)• ---·~ !·---..
' SKIPPY DOG FOOD
15·0UNCE
<AN 10'
DAIRY PRODUCTS
.,... MARGARINE
HlllClll1Ullll'l lOfT 1•01 P~~.. . ...... 47<
ORANGE JUICE ::~~~!~~~.--.. ~·-···· ... 85 <
1 ICE CREAM ~:~:.1~111 .......................... 65 '
CANNED FOODS
SE A & SKI
DARK TANNING.Oil
~p•<ial inur1di11111 h1tp 69 ,
'remtlt • clo1k1r ton and 'r
pr1v1nl hurnilllJ. 7 OZ.
~
at any other market of her own ~hoosing
Many meat advertisements sound too good to be true .•. and they are!
Have you found that the bargain you want is always "SOLO OUT" or
the SELECTION IS SO DISAPPOINTING ... the qual ity so poo r ••. that
you we re forced to buy a more expensive cut and sacrifice the savings
you were seeking?
SHE SHOPPED & COMPARED
HER OWN SHOPPING LIST AT
ANOTHER MARKET OF HER
OWN CHOOSING
She spenl $18.95 at LUCKY ••• The
same items at ttie other market cost
her $21 .54 , , • THEN YOU HAVEN'T BEEN SHOPPING AT LUCKY!
You'll ALWAYS find the quality AND quantity you want at LUCKY, where
our LOW EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICE means savings AND selection •..
There's a greater choice of EVERY cut, and trimmed to save you more.
SHE'S CONVINCED Of THE SAVINGS !
CHUCK ROAST
BLADE CUT 49 ( lUCMY TOP QUAUT1
BOHOEO Blff LB.
ROUND STEAK
CENTER CUT 89 ( lUCKY TOP QUALITY
BONOfO BfEf LB.
~~~1~1~~ !~~! .. ~~·~;!::.~~~~.~~-~-~~· S 8 ~.. !u~~.~! £9.~o~l~~o~1~f., SS ~ ..
7Sc J.~l~l~~!.~!!1~~1r .. ,_ .. ., ........... ,..M $1~~ ~!.~.~!Pi,~~~1 ~.~~~~.~E
~IG~l~0~~~~.~1!~ .. ~~.~.~.!. ......... 88~ .. ~~.~(~~lU~l~~JoTouH ................ .. S9~.
()• .... Kiy°&t!
APPLE JUICE
Yll( TOI"
64-0UNC( Ill. 65c
CANNED FOODS
FROZEN FOODS
O"" VEGETABLES :~·ovl~::~c ........... 17 <
( Ul co•11, Pf •1. o• p IA! ' <•••OT\
ORE·IDA FRIES ~~1101111',., ................. 41 c
PUNCH =~~·~~·.-.~·~~-~-"'' ................. 23 <
ORANGE JUICE :~~~~~:~·0
........ 79c
STRAWBERRIES ~~·::.~~,,~NOLI .. 57'
PIES lOHNITOl.CMOC:ot•TI IC1•11.c"ocot•11 78'
VltVIT DI UMOl ICl•ll JI Ol ...... ·-.. ,.
CHUNK TUNA ~~~-:.~::i'11'.11' ......... 36' JENO'S PIZZA ~~·~~.'::: .................. 89•
0-PICKLES :~~~~.\~~~11~111 ..... 43• FISH & CHIPS ~!10':·.'::!M ................ 79c
~ JAM ~~N:z~!~~'.~.'.~.~.w.11~··.~.:~~.~'. ... 29• SHRIMP CREOLE ~~·;; '::!M ............. 91 c
DEL MONTE PEAS :~:~: .... ., ...... 25" CHICKEN :~lr~;~':.'.11.~~-1.0 ..................... 45<
~ PUDDINGS :~:,~~:::,~~::.~.~~.·:.31c r.,' •·· ·~&r!·--......
NIBLET'S CORN uou" ............. 2S' V
.,... PEANUTS :~'o",'\";:'".'.'~~~~-. 62' · FOLGER'S COFFEE
GREEN BEANS:~~'~:~:~: .......... \ ...... 22• 41.ouNcE $229
~ PAM :~~~:::.~~~~~-~'.~ ................ 88< CAN
... Guaranteed TO BE THE FINEST DUALITY AVAILABLE
and at Low. Low Everyday Discount Prices!
38'
FRESH FRYERS
USDA GRADE A 29(
WHOl( BODY CHICllENS 21 •. J llS.AVG.WT. l 8.
LIAN GROUND BEEF
(MUC~OtlUllY ....... .
CUT-UP FRYERS
"UM• J. ltllll I MICUlll
78~ ..
34~ ..
HAM SLICES
11111 FL l ~OIPUl ClllTll C¥tf .,., .................. ..
YOUNG TOM TURKEYS
uso•,••DI 1 ........................................ ..
YOUNG HEN TURKEYS
U$0• 51ADI I, 1 .. 12 ll1. 1¥5 •t,, ......... w, .. ..
LADY LEE BACON
lllCID, 1 lt .•15 ......
STANDING RIB ROAST
1.Mlll 1110, lU(lf IOMOID 1111 .....
fresh Roasting CHICKENS
•I lll,, ll <ll lllllD ............................ .
THIN SLICED BACON
DICll .. IUl, ll.Ol.•1' ........................... .
SLICED BACON
111", W!llO"OI NOIMll 1 LI ,., """ """'
OSCAR MA YER BACON
FARMER JOHN BACON
Ul(ID, I LI . •~5 ........
SKINLESS LINK SAUSAGE
l llMll JON•, 1-01, •IG .............................. .
$1~9
39 ~.
4S~ ..
49c
$1~t
S7.~
68c
S9c
69c
S7c
28<
$1~; ~~~~.~~~~.~.~~.~ ... -................. $J47 PORTERHOUSE STEAK
I• It llMOYID, IUCIT I ONDIO II IP .,
FROZEN FOODS PACKAGED GOODS
CHI IOtOlllT c LI & BEANS '"·"' . . .......... 27 ~ HI-HO CRACKERS ~~~1.~~·~r .. 41 '
BEEF STEAKS ~~~~~~'•'L'~,'~~~.'.~ .......... 73 ' BUNS :~!.":!~.D.~T••M•v•~•~•.• .. 11~1 •~&. 29•
()• -· Kir&tf·---.
WAGNER'S DRINKS
OllA NGE AND GllAl'(fRUIT
811lAICfAST
54-0UNC( BYl. 49'
COOKIES iUMlltlNIPll•Ul l~fll~ 4S' ~ OllU&ll "•'ll ll Dl .. ,
DINNER ROLLS ~::.~~':,D~~:-'.~.~.' .. '.~ .. 33 •
SLENOER {AllAllOMIMU l•l lllT 71' ~ fOOD. I'• DI.Pl, ........ .
GRAHAM CRACKERS :~·!~•.D:o •.... 31 • ·
o-KRAn DINNER , •• , P•• ........ 49"
OllUU llUCllOllt l.CMllll
'c & H SUGAR ~::~'.~:0.~.··.~.w· ... 37 •
~ KIBBLED FIVES :t:1~;L•.1.~.~~'.'.'l'• er' PANCAKE MIX ~:';r'.~~~~~· 43 •
llllY OUllM, llONIT r. • A'. o. k:itt g,,1.
PET FOODS
CAT FOOD "''" ....................... 2S ' V -
LITIER GREEN ::::·~:': ................. '1" INSTANT BREAKFAST
BEVERAGE• BEER• SPIRITS
BEVERAGE ~:::~1c'1~~~ ...................... 10'
BEER ~r'o~':c~~~::.1~-~~1
.• ~~.~·.1 .................. '2''
LUCKY· GIN :~::~~~nu . ...... .. .. '4l3
w ~Van de Kamp's 111
AN OUTSTANDING VARIITT
OF FRESH BAKERY GOODS
WAv1.l1blc II o.,r J!<>••• W••h V•" de "<•mp• UIJ
.
U.l .D.l FOOD ITIMP
COUPONS
Gladly Accepted
PlllSBURY
J.J/SOZ.IOX 49'
POTATO CHIPS ~·.u,~~!~~~~.~~-.......... 48<
I (Ill 0111011111,
or' J FFY MIX , ... OJ. I OI ............ 13'
tJ"""'ll FLOUR ~:::.~~~u ......... '1 '•
(1""'11 TEA BAGS !:~~·:~111.'. Ill~.· ......... 61 • CJ• -··Kir°&t~'--
DEL MONTE PINEAPPLE
27' IN JUI((
1 J''• OUN(( CAN
••. !he le• •le"'' l"••<:I O" th" po9• <on•t••v••
jv1! a ,....,11 1omplon9 of Iii• thou1and1 el to,.,
P••<e•a•• O"count~d EH l!pl "~
loH•lrad•d and Go••'""'enl
. °"' ''"" •·-•·•• '"'"' ''"'""'••• '""" r• .,,. IMr .1r.,., • ''"~ w •• , ........ ,.1, ,. ••••.••• ~ 1 ...... , ...... J·•· !tl l, ...
t •<d'•" o! .... '"'''"'"'
fresh Oelicote,sen llems!
FARMER JOHN FRANKS 65c
lll 11111 I 'tl!AI PrQ; .... , .................. ,.,.,,..,.,., ,
~c~l~!~~i.'!e~ ..................... 1•. 11 tu $J09
ROGUE GOLD MILD CHEDDAR $189
II lllltl(ITI JI.Cl t•ll11., ........... -..... -l ll. '"·
LED 'S HAM
lllCll, COO•!O ............................ 4 II t •C
HEBREW NATIONAL
uoc~•u1s1 01 •OlM!I ia1~0 ........... 11 11 "c,
PILLSBURY BISCUITS
fUl'lllll~I P: -I 1Tlll 1 11 T~I(
62 <
$11~
9<
WILSON CERTIFIED HAM S $4 6;
t.IMMIO .................. .. . ...... ) ll ti~ •
~l~ll~~l~l~ ~~1!1~~!~c~1.~.~.~~I~~~(, 7 3 ~
LADY LEE CHEESE ~LICU
,~UI ll[llU~. n 11f"IO O'I S~l l~ ..... 111 f•I. 48~ . ~~.2Dj~'~ ~eMILY PAC·~'i u r•c. 72c
() • .. .. Kiy "&ti.....,..., ..........
M.D. TISSUE
ro•LET 35c 1 4/375 CT. R0ll5 . ...__ ____ ..,.,;,
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
.,..... SOLO CUPS P(l llll.I OUlll l 7•· 100(! ··~ ....... 7
TOP JOB ~~og;~.':~.'"11
........ 73c
o-SARAN WRAP ~~~~11.col1 ........ 33'
.,..--TISSUE ~~1~:.~~~<.'.•l ................. 25 '
o" MIRACLE WHITE .,,..,,.,. 'I "
llOM 101.lUTIOll OITllGINT
SAFEGUARD ~:~l~,.~~~r ...................... 72'
O"""' IVORY SOAP :::t~::~~:~.~~ ..... 3oe CJ• _ .. Kiy°&t!'-~
BLACK PEPPER
MAltW'EST DAY
GROUND
4-0UNC( CAN 35'
IVORY SOAP FLAKES '"' ........ 88'
CHEER :~~1:.~';; ................................ '1'1
DREFT :!~','~.';,' _ ........................ _ sac
BRIQUETS ~:~~·:!~ ............. _. 79c
(1vtr twice IM t rH witill
These Items Are Aral/able Only at Those
LUCKY DISCOUNT CENTERS LISTED BELOW ...
this tw i11 "'illkltr. fit1. 7 7 (
1l11t11N11r4 ht11, t.Hvy
e: TANNING LOTIONS
\ COPPERTONE * Q.T.
/~ ;~:i 1 s~ .~~;,( l 96
tHVth II "11ty f"'tl'"
.. •• ., , ... 1.,1, 313
1t t"4 bHfh If
petlMclt.
\ Q Choice of rotultir Ctpptrl9'1t t1ni.i,. • T. 111101111 0. T. 011uk Tonni111 thot
t1n1 yov wilh If wt!lttvl s11Ni1ht..
GERMAIN'S
IWISTEMS •• I!'
PLASTIC CLOTHESLINE
Wi1111 d H11, will hthl 4 4 ~
ltk tf weifht,
lu9g1cl IM11clwt~ l111t11 with
~el1r l11l 11nv1s •liflt. ftlth Het
IVIRA IN
OSCILLATING SPRINKLER
A4ju1t1fwllO•1w1.,, 337
,.m.l ri1ht '' 11~.
:· CJ. -~:/::;;·"
: ANTl-PERIPIRANT 1"
AluniilMlnt Ctwtr
GLASS COOKIE JAR
Gl111 "ce!Wlly -11111" cttlii1 itr h1lch 199
11•n1r1u11.u,,.ly tf 1"4i11.
READY TO WEAR FASHIONS 1/2-IN. X 25 FT. VINYL HOSE
litlttwtithl, "''It honilt; r11i111
hr1li"1, 1hly1 ll••iall1 wlttn ctld. 127 I: '"'' l•y N•l.,>11101.
~~ fRUIT flAVORED I: PRO AOULI OR CHllD"I
~ \.~ ~o l, TOOTHBRUSHES
t PIO 331 PIO 27 ( I W~ ADUlT CHllD'S
l'r1f11W..I ~lily; 9'ult1' with I(• . w htri If 111tiiuf11 ~ri1tl11; dliW1111'1 I ....,, .. ,.," with .,wi, tr.., .. H.
f;. •• ' •
DENTURE
ADHESIVE
ORAFIX
1'111 67' oz.
lt"l·l.1tillt ''"'"''
-Atlivt "''' ,.,,~
llt Mfy 11 ""'·
SUPER CHROMIUM
SCHICK
S DOUlll IDGl
74'
11.;,, ,. ,-.., t!My
-~· 1tr.vi .. I plM1wrt.
MIDOL
119
J Ol.
-· .,..
.'I GILLETTE ADJUSTABLE BAND llhltl t•+I U lf 1" luk 1111k11
·--
f1!1tt•·•IJlt r~l1U ~tll ltf Ult•lll"I ftt•llk1\1t 111111 Mtrt 1""91 t•1I
l!f 111111tller. t!tllf 11' N rt ttMlttta•lt lt•'l "1 Otr\.,. ll f" 11•••+1 ,,,.,. '" ,,. '''·
--~=~-~--
1'' llMI DEODORANT
11.n t ,.,. ·111 99 ' •h• .. l•l&rt• ..
~· . ~'1f.L" . ' ~ .....
LADIES' BLOUSES
OUR 300 lOW PRICE d an u11
Do1 1ns 11otlrtlli••1tJl11 111111 ... hi1h I• 1hMul
Pull·MI, b1i11t1n-11p1, pffM111t11.W tMllY 111111.
AH ywr t.v11 it1s f., wM•, fer 4r111-4Pp 1M kt
pity. fabri11 ff11n1 sliMi11 I•"""" l'rus. Sd:11
31 It JI NI the 1'"'11· SM, H rly , , • pick Ml t
lull see1M's 11.r11ply el 1ht11bewti111ttvrf
llS FT. GREIN GARDEN IWIN£ .... ~4 '
1 ......
' .
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
M'( GOOONoSS!
VOU LOOK AWFU LLY
t>esroNOeNT, L<71SA
LUCK! WHAT:S me IMifER?
•
MUTI AND JEFF
..
I HAVEN'T SE'EN
YOU'ROUND
BEFORE!
FIGMENTS
PLAIN JANE
OH, I'vE SEEN
ROUNDFOR _
YEARS! ;o_
'Mtn1 NCW LOClklNG
F<lR TM! c:.oNNEc.TING
UWK &inwetW ™!
QUARRY ~ TMI!
UMU!!RV.
HOW CAN
Yell TALK
WITHOUT
MOVING
YOUR CHIN?
Wl!AT'S
fHAT?
By Chnfff' Goulcl
Wl'va '°'1NO l'T!
By Tom K. Ryan
MY COOL.1
!lROWIJ llO~Y.
By Al Smith
'?
... ...... 1·)., -~ ......
10 Ll\oc:F: "'TO OF"SiN ,.t..N
ENGA<;:t,....,ENT R IN6
CONCESSlc;.t.i HE~~
By Dale Hale
By Frank Baginski
TUNNEL OF
LOVE
Ll'L ABNER
SALLY BANANAS
5\aMI' ouT
S~Nse LQ.~S
V10LeNc e
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
µQtJOV, Be: l'EASOOl.51£
-HE' c:AA •r Hl:AR <I()()
\ll!1tl ~ HeADSEr Oil-
DAILY PILOT J?J
By Al Capp
AH ~D"fa'
A CIVIL.
QUESTIO~!!
AH ~ECTEt>
A CIVIL. ~ i07. ANSWM!!
By Cherles Barsattl
By Gus Arriola
By Ferd Johnson
I1LL SAY! ,ANO BOY, 00
l GET BUSHED DOING\ '-----~IT FOi': •
Hlf<I .•
By Roger BoUen
!'DAIL y CROSSWORD ••. by ' A. PQW[R I
PEANUTS >.CROSS 45 K!lclie11
lr11pl~m!'!1l
.1 8rin9,dow~111t 4!. Dtnrrn:ltrl
foot lore 1bl y 4R s1iAdt ol gr,i)'
' HtrtdilM1 ~'I Sto~t
. 50(1al i;iroup compar\m•,l\S
11 Fritr1d. Fr. !r11 hral•ll!J
14 EvA ··-SArn:
Ar11r~~
15 CA m
1,b Un•t or wot1!
""''9"\ 11 9,,~,r~~t
ol!JPC!S
SO Loo~ o~tr
!n~' I
sz ~· ~ "
Sb Faslt'n wilh
~ rnr"
57 P't.t~r l>10:
Z .i Mn~
1\tm 2 l*ltrdli
lq N11m,•1t ~I
IJ'Pl1>
.20 SmAll p••' •\
21 L1vt ly,
mer•y rl~ I
t.i"l !j ,~11 m?~rit~i~
bl Esr ~nt
rit':,r\1 ~•1
/12 1,,1,p, 11·~
bJ S•l•~t1·;e
SP•~l(.f
; iz Wt<1.in us
t~11btrA~I
t•prtss10•1
'24 CompM~twe
•• Wf\r~
S~strm />ntir.
b4 T•ac1 r11tct
n!l 1r 1~1
• 21> F~mily bS B ird~
"1~mhtr
-~1 Orlrl iflt'i~ lJO G11sts or 111 :J
32 Bird l Pn lhot •d
33 C1ttrnl)lt ~lm05P~frt
• 34 Plumt'lln!; 2 W1d•ly
001. ~J
~ llx\ure cul111•altd
~. 3J City of ltOP1tal pl~nl
\ht USSR J Brdou1n
.o!J! Stasldt 4 ly11t poet
! ~ SPl!t d con\t51 5 W1nni pr9 's
40 For every n itkn~mr
41 F~bfit made Ii El-, I by wtavin9 C:~l•forn 1<l
, 42 Can 1td 7 Comoound
43 Br~ssotrr us~d ~~ .1n
.' p!lf\S ~Ur111q•"l ·: ,...:.-r,-,.;-r;,-,-,,,..,.,, , . ·
ihrj-t-++-1 ·'
-'
E Ft'ltinlnt
Q~""ft11
(j Tit-·-· to,
10 ~·~•11ngless
11.\
11 In !11r (oima-
1.ve slAges:
J worrl~
12 R 1>m~rkahly
stm11d perion
13 Mt nt~lly
7 7q il
3~ Membt r of th!
nn!l· I ii I
JP. /1 1\it•d
39 K111rl or
~t1lomobdt
~! 011-fi lltd cu"
11\tri as l
tll'Cll
~2 lna:l'1l1's Big -
44 A mrlal
dfftt••n\ 4) M11s•tal 9r0t,1p
pf•5~11 •& R ol~l iCWls
18 T"fl1ng po111ts of C'Jti~s
23 S~l l! 47 Sins
25 Fuss y old 48 Mort rational
woman: Slang SO Filmy l~y~1 r/.
21i Gone by irnpixt rn~\ltr
27 Prod11t P of Ofl a li1tu1d
lht 91011od Stl'IKt
28 Torlo1 ~t's ~1 BOOy of law
opponent SJ S11Htrin1J
29 Sl~ys too 54 Fabltd man·
l~tr in bed t atu19 monstrr
30 Urruly th1ldrtn SS Hardy no~r! :n Opidt ot llf'rome
33 Jail: ln!or!l'al 58 High jJ"i r~t
JS Sk111 do ~e~~t 5q Pronoun
g 9 12 1)
...
JUDGE PARKER
'r'O~ l=EELIN(,
OK .lo.'r' NOW,
M ISTEI??
MISS PEACH
! Q<ECKED 1'i OOT WC™ OJR COJNSEL~.A>ID Sl<E SAID JIJ'il'
'i) !WI '1.l1E WE'RE 111<'.K 8'I NINI"
·~
Wµ'V MASN'T Tl-IE. CAMP NE........SP.-,PEFl. I"" ~ACT,
ltlln'MU!lr BEl:N PV6US1-fED T~IS W'EEKi'
PERKINS
~"t;.:! ==-J . 19),ta.
,_~,
..
IT'S &EEN A
VER:Y QUIET
Nl!'WS WE~1(', M". Gri;r:tMMIS ...
-·.
HAS SEEN OUT
!="OR DA'YS,
Tft.'llNG TD HUNi" I.JP
SOME NEWS.
ANY NEWS •
! APPRECIATE '<OOR TAKING
ME wrm 'ftl<J, 51R .~
!A 1: ~f lU ,· ............... .J _,. "'I IY' ' ~-: ,,, _3 _ .
1-~ ... ·--·--1..;.;._[!
By Harold Le Doux --------------
J.<,t.VE 'IOU .llJ'r' WE: MAl/f ~O DET.llLS '
10€.lo. W\.l .lo.T MAI"· WE'RE: W.l1Ttlf6 ~Oil
P£NED TO MARIE, TM E COll:ONER'!t lEPOllf'
~Eli:GE,t.IJT ? I WOUL ~ llKE SQM£·
{"JFF)
(PUFF)
l-IERE'S
YOW<
OWE TO IDENTIF'r'
n.IE: &ODV'
By MeQ
l-iEADLJN£,
CHIEF :
"~ING
MAPPiNS
ALL w•eic .•
ly John Miles
·-· ,,,,.~
;
l
"Well. nl cour~e. nothing "'e said at nur meeting made tu•
-If we alopptd In think each time we 5pnke, we wollldn'l
Ctl to 11y anything."
-.. --·--
I
12 OAJLV PtLOT ThLW'Sday, July~. l9n
• _;:Leaving Hawaii
Boone Has Had It -Will Travel
.·, HOLLYWOOD (AP\ -''I
., l ot what I was ~elung 111
'"Hawaii. Now it'll time to mo1'e
t en."
p1act I've kept my boutt on
1he Kona coast on the Jsland
l)f Hawaii, and J'll return
\\'he-never l <"an."
Richard Boont was telling
why be is pulling up stakes Jn
• HawaH after sevtn years of
residence. H@ has sold tus
home on Oahu , and he and his
wife ClaiN! are mulling wht're
to live next.
"I still love Hawaii, ;1nd rll
always go back there," he
remarked. "I went !here first
in 1943 .and fell in love with the
Thursday
Evening
JULY 29
1:00 II tl1 Ntw1 Jeuy Ounph1. rn AK ,. ... llMSOl\8f /Smith
0 lNIC hws Tom Snydu,
0 ""1!•11 CirMIM Sllow
fJ Sh O'Qocl Mrtit: (90) MA 111·
tiR !ft ltlt S•" Com;l111io~ (dru111)'
'61-sldney f'lllt11r. Cl1udi1 Mt
Pl•il, JWll'y Ot1, Di1n1 S1nds. ~
pn'.!Ud black l1rn!ly kl Chic1ro rt
c.iws 1 $10,000 life lnwruite 1111
111HI, ...tiidl 11a1rly Nnds ltit houst
tiold 11wnckr. m TM Flill'bttlttt.
Ii) stlf ''" ffi Art Sllldio, Toe III-" al ..... Vtllty D1rs
Q) II-. Jlt11 H1wthofrlt.
l:JO (Il "'" Bill Hucldy.
(!) 11.tti 111 Con..ci•~
{])CBS H1ws W•l!er CrtWiki!e.
(@ PllC Nrn David Brinkley, m Thi ,,,.-na: Jhtn
fE Hoc11tfl0d1t L.d11
m n.. Dnlrt •"°"
EID El ~ "'· Aid.lo
Q)ABC hlft
7:00 IJ CIS ,._ Willer Cronkite.
0 m PllC Ntwt David Brinkley
10 W!et lml11 TIMltrt: (90)
"bl!l.'1 0.1(hUr1.."
(l)T1TllllliltTrwth
Boone was visittng in hi! old
honielown of Hollywood, but
only briefly. He was bac-k in
lt•lrvision beeause of a role he
c-nuldn"t resist -that of .an
at·tor turned blind -for an
AUl' Movie of the \\'eek. "In
Broad Daylight " As soon a.s
he r1n1shed the filrn he was off
for Rome to 1nttl his touring
0 (])@ (@ ltwltchd (R) "Tht
Good flil'J Strl'ke1 A11in." Mll'J !ht
Good flil'J dtcil!es to ll~t 1 v1c1tion
i nd traps S1mu11h1 Into makinf
htr ni1hl!J rounds.
@ OIJ!llplc Bodnc Mac fostu i nd
81111 Joiner meet in 1 10 1ound
~e1Yy•nifht coote~t.
fD N£T l"tayllouM fll) "TN Prodl·
111" lick llich1r1bon's pr111 •in·
n1n1 diam1 bastd 1111 the 1ncltnt
Gree~ legend ol Ores tes, p10Yidn
th1r tale ot the hum1n quest tor
purt justice with 1 20t h-c1ntury
int11J1rttll•on, ll1m Hunl&r. Alleen
M1cM1hon, Pelet G1lm1n 1t1r.
t:OO 6 (I) CIS 1'11rl111y Mwlr.. (C}
(2~r) "11'1 Cool Olln" (rnusictl)
"67-lloddJ Md)ow1 ll. Otbbit W.t·
son, Gil Pettr'°"· Phil H11rls. Slo!}
ol 1 rounr sin(in1 idol wOO tries 11;1
ma~e • COl"llllbar:t allu becoming
1 h11-bffn ove rni1hl
O @(I)(l)M•U "-"' '"llddadctJ (II) "lht Gr11t1st [1r
1n lhe 8urln11&," D1nn1 lakts t
phone c1J! for Lind a but nealllCts to
ask the name ol lhe caller.
CE Roi&$ parl Vtr111iu
9:io o @ m Ad.111·12 (R) ·vil"J! v.,.
ia:· M111or D¥trlool!s r.newina his
l1cenlt ind h•l to INVI lh• ddvln r
10 llffd.
0 (})(I) m 0.11 -'Ill int (Ill lhe
Mui Ti~et." Del. LI. Au1 ust tinM
t"W1denc1 tti1t IM death In 1h• rlnr
of 1 young conlender Im Ille rnid·
dl,we11ht bo~inr crown was murdtr.
Guests include D1r+e Cl11k. Olin
Shoud ind Sil"l\Oll 01kl1nd.
0 l1.ri11 W11I Jhws
a:! L1 CNl tit M11ial Cnic• 0 Wlllt'1 MJ Li11t!
®) Dk:k v •• ~· m I l'" l•q
ii) (j) Dr11nfl
fill DEBUT lrwlnnmtn1: Tod1r anr
TOlltntw A !our part ~fllll'$ on en
witonflH!nlll inues. The lirst p10
1r1m. "Tomo1ro.-h M11be."' h 2
vosual 1u1r Oft c.onstf'lal1~n ·~~
li-.fi111 •Hll n11urt.
'J:OGQ !'ml (DU... Mlrtin (Ill Sum·
mtr ho!! Vic Damone welwmt1 Don
C!111r,. Clarr & McMallon, tnd The
Ct ntslrelli f1mily.
O He•t lle~in S1nder1.
0 Mowi1: (2ht) "T .. nty 1'1111 T""
(drama) '61-David )lnu1n. )tann1
C11in m Htws Putn1m/fi1hm1n.
It wa! Peter who motivated
the move lo Jl.awaii, Boone
related.
"The kid wss 10 years old,
and I didn"I even know him ,"
zau1 the actor, ~·ho had been
lh roogh nine years of starring .
1n television series. One serif'.~
was ··Have Cun, Will Travel.''
which n1ade hirn a tnilllonairc.
"Anot her thing -I ~·as
~hocked to realize that Pctf'r
had nt'ver gone to school with
a black <W a Mexican. I didn't
think that was any way fo1
him to !earn about this coun·
try.
''Moving to
seen1 practical
llawaii.''
Boones sold their Bel-Air
home and bought another in
Honolulu. Originally he had
hoped to establish a movie in-
dustry in the 51.tth state. It
never materialized. 1===========1
AT 90"Jlot
Cl,..DOMt;: Tl«AT
Ad11lh SJ.SO Jn. Sl.50 Child 75¢
Ortng• Coun!y't
Bloc~l>UU•r s~ .. ll•IU•
"KLUTE" (R)
"VANIS HING
POCNT"
Mlk• Nicholl'
"CARNAL
KNOWLEDGE" IR)
tlf<nnt
Jae~ Nlc~ol.on
BALBO•
673-4048
OPEN
6:45
7tt r. a.n...
lalbo.m P1r1lr1tula
e NOW SHOWING e
'
0rnotll1r" that •••r dawlwd
her ow• Pfll•lon pta11!
--···--
Tiie beouty of '"Romeo a nd
J11ll•1" cornbln1d with th1
lmpoc11of '"Low• Slory'"
W\rtlteriqg
Heig~ts
ANNA <!D>
CALDER MARSHALL
llMOTHY
€E1 ""Ctlltils Pl111r11
(l) MO'tit '''"
DALTON ED Sptt~\alion (R) "A Convt111tio n
W11h Phili p Slaler," author at "'Th• 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~11_~@.l:G: ____ ~C~Ol~O~!~.R=Jll Pur1uit of lonelinesJ"
J:JD I) l]J F1111llJ Affah (R) Burty Ind fID Bot ,.,01euion1t
Jody try lo hlft frenr:h 11~1 the
de1nin1 •om1n (Phney Wilker) to 10!30 \j) Di11nrt
htf 10n'1 1r1duaho n ball. O MIWl1: "f~ l1np1~ (mus!·
0 @I m NIC Actiow 1'11ytMiwu tl l) '42-fred MacMurray, P1uf1tt1
(II) "Turnco1t " Dr1m1 I)! 1 llor11n Goddard. Su)lln Hayward.
Wtr ;1 wM dtltcls lo ttie eriemy l6J Manh1I Dlllt11
G110r21 H~mllton, M111u et O'B1ien, 0 Ci) Thit h "few Ult .lost ft·
Ctrrn!I 0 Connor •nd Jtck W@sll)fl
1111. ti(i1no is the MlfPriwd 1u11\. m N1ws Bill k>hn s.
11n1 Senorlt1 0 CI) Cl) m All•• S.iUi i nd
Miiii (Rl '1h1 AOCll o1 11 All." al El Di1ria "
Heyn and C~11y btcom1 ln.-olved Dtctnte
111 1 uareh l_or lost_ Clvtl W1r 11'1 11 ;00 I) ([) E?) Nfll't
roll. 1nd1nl'l""I tllt11 hope1 fl;lr am O """ n;i 1t
nnty. Gutst' lnclud1 Judy Clrnt \Ull ~ "'
and Tom [•ell. {i) Ot1t~ V1ll1y tb)'I
0 Miiiion S MIWl1: (2~r) .,, Htp· 0 rn t@ """
ptllld OM Su11111.t' (comedy) '(~ m D1Yid frost. Show Gu11t1 are
-JNnfll Cf11n. Olna Md11.-s. Diel sin1ctr Billy fcishne; 1cto1 [lliol
Ha)TllH Slory ~ lht 1dventuru n1 Gould, !rim director Jin l'i1d11 1nd
1n low1 furn t.m11, •l'.o 1ptnc 1a11s1 ~1ul1 P11lthard Ila< ot Mi.
1 hll!;.11t -~ 11 the St1te Fah. l'i1d1r's ftf.l!nt l1lm. "Adr\lf"; i nd m Trvtti " Coftwqut nci 1 comic Ltnny Sctlultz. m It T1tM 1 Thl.i @ Be.t It'll Clock
Bi) ,.r1111i..-1 l!l~tt flD W1sfltnp n W•ff I" ll hlf'«
1:00 0 (j) lannir (II) Johnny pretends 11 :lO 1J li) Mn Crtttln
to io1n fo.rcn •rlh 1n un1C1~Dulous Q (Jg) m Mitlniry C..nen
r1ttl1m1n, pl1ytd br Nlhur Hill, but 0 (])(I) Q) Did twatt
is :IWtJed 1o Ille man"s pornt o! ~1tw
by h11 d1uaMe1 {Susan O"Conneil) m Mo.it: (C) (2hr) "Tiie t1lne
Mlltinf' (dr1m1) ·~4 -t1umohre1
801::11t • .Ion rurer. Vin John!>On I
llobtrt Frarw;1s. Mil W1nn. frtd
0 Mlll'i1: (C) "S1111 Cruy~ (dr1m1)
"5Q.-Pe1a twmmins . .lohn Dtll m Mo~t: "'Doublt Jtopardy" (drl·
m1} ·~~Rod C.tmeron, Jatk Kelly,
Gale Robbins.
M111;Mu111y IZ:OO m Mowit: "T1lt 11i:wili1ht11" (will ·
fill Wul!i•t10• Wttt. In Rwit• 1111) "50 -G111ory Ptck, Helen
a!) Nl111 Wet1oott. * N~w Gri pe Tang Brings
You APOLLO XV LU NAR
LANDING·Fri/2:45/Ch , 7
l :lO 0 ag;l m lt1t1ilt!1 (Ill "Tht Rid
dlt II\ Room s .... h11111idt SU~Pl'Ch
• jury '"Iii .. by 1 11n1stt1 defend
il\I.
0""' Aliff SW..
1:00 6 Movit: (C} "Coli "ftunpr, l tn·
ti11~t11" (weslern) ·~trtnk LO\'t-
jov, Abby Oalton.
CV OO(IJ®J Nm
1:15 0 TM '•lltry
l:lO m AH·Niflil Sitar. ''tlptration Mad
1111," "llobh1111n Cnllflt If Mrtt"1
lslMCI," "DrtlOltllJ Sql!IC!fff."
-------------·-
Friday
DAYTIME MOVIES
l :llDID "P'lll"IMI" ( .. s!trn) "(7-Tere
SI Wrl11rt. Robert Mitdium.
t:M U "Ii-• w.r" 1corn1dr) '44
-Sonnr Tiith, '1111ett1 !Ooddt rd.
U fC) .,,.., II .., 11.r Conc:lw·
-('911tiul) 'S4 -.loM FtrTll,
M.n.OMtwt.
Cl(t)'1 ..... T ....... (lll'tll·
trll) • 'Jl-Mr111t St•trt. RidiMd
Wld!ntrt Shlrltr .lotin. Mdy Dt·
viM, lillll Crhtll.
10:00 m ~ .. Sc!vt';" (wts111n) '5l
-Audit Murp~y. Joan fv1ns.
I :00 m (t) "Hall h ln z,,.~ (drama)
'5(--'11n Ladd, .loin TetJtl
2:00 0 (C) "1.ttlt Cr(' (dr1m1) '~!>
Vin Htt!in, Aldo A1y. M11111 fin·
min.
J:OO (J) '1\c hvil 11 4 O'Clod;" Coil·
dinlon (dr1ma) '61-Spennir Trw.y,
frenll: Si1ulra.
4;JOl)"'Cly Wttr {drama) .,7-8ar·
b111 St11'1WJ'Ck, £11ol f lynn.
@ S.MI 11 IMM Mllli111.
5;00 0 "Crr ., a.tt1t• (dfl !N) '63--
Vtn Htllin, 11111 MOl'l!IO, Jam11 Mte-
"'""'·
FOR ADVERTISING IN THE
WEEKENDER
PHONE 642-4321
All Aboard for Catalina Island
t A.M. DAIL T FROM '"IALBOA PAYILION• 400 MAIN, I.ALICA
140 Pmsenger
LUXURY CRUISER
"Island Holiday"
'-4 Trip -S8.50 u.., 1 J -54.J5
FOi Rlll1YITIOH I AHO C!IFORMITIOH PCIONI mu '13·524!
THE MUSIC HALL
WHERE MUSIC COMES FIRST
"BLUE"
by Joni Mit chell
LIST ... NOW
3.49
Alto o! d iocounl. tht (O<T1pl1t1 ,,~,;,, ••!~109 11f Go•dofl
L·glltfoot. fr•~k Sinalro, Ntd '1'oun9 , J1..,mv W.bb. •nd Ftfl-
ny, Oth•r Jon1 Mol(h•I/ Albumt . Clo~d• .• ~d l•dio1 a l
lh1 C1nyon, 11 dior cunl 11 th. l1>w •1I t•cord ohc" '" town,
Sl'ECIALS AT ALL THllEf LOCATIO,.S:
SUNSET STRIP:
CENTURY CITY:
1111 SUNSE T l lVD
0"1'0S!llE THI: WHISNfl'
OH llH! WEST M•ll •T T>o(
COR NEii 0,,-CEHT l.l ll!l' CHY
LUCG•GE
. :... ,.,, ____ ------
A,..,fll·U 1f J1"1 11.H OlllO•"' '""
JOhft W•Y'le "1 10 JAICI:" tOPI
·~ '~AVAOE WILD"
T ~•l!tlflll t•..e II!• lldventurt
1-1•1 Niii• M•ll,,_Stl., h Jt '·""·
A1" P•C•~•C ""' FOUNTAIN YALLl!Y
Ol'llVl·IN
DON'T MI SS 11 !
~It Ol~fCTO~ll ~ enow tO~ st Ht DULfS
PACIFIC WALK·INS
•
IOX OFFICE OPENS
Mon. 1111"\1 Fri. I _ to ~-""· Sal. t. Sun.: 12 ;00 p.m.
... It Color ~~o•
Ernul Borg"lnf"-B•llv 0•~11
"l\JNHY O"H ... RE"' IG"!
Plu• • P•ul N•"''"""
• G""'ro• !C""n~dy
"COOL H ... ,.D Ll.I KI"
John W•vn• • M•u•e•n O'Hara
'"llG J•KE" [GP~
Plu• • John "~llhP L•w
'"\ION RlC HTOFEH
t. llJIOWN" (C P I
... II ~oior Fft~111y fo•o•l•"'m*"'
W~lt Oosn•v·•
"MILLION DOLLAR. OUCIC"
'"' P•u• Jo• f lynn
"BAREFOOT EXECIJTIVE"
I("
,I.It CnK" P""''''"
EM~ll""P••I
.. n .. uE WATER·
WHITF. OEo!.TH"
"ltl ~TAllOH JEBRA Iii)
All CclOr Pr•moero
Eng~q•ment!
''WILLY WONN• I THI!
CHOCOLATE f".lCTORY "' (01
Pl"' "1101' Of" TWO WOILOS"' (Cl ........... .. ~ ..... ~ ....
"THI HElLSlllOM
CHIONICL E" COi
"lu• • 1r>t! F•m!lv "•~lure "THE CONOUl!IOll.
WOll:M" (GI ==-
·---· ......... .. , ... ,
S2.~.!.!!S_All~O
... I+ Colo• Sl>ow!
M•v• McCu•..,
•"Ill( l (IVl:I S .. 101')
f'h>< • P•ul N•wmo~ • r;...,,.,. O(""nodv
•·cooL HA,.0 LUNI. ..
1. -.··
Major Studio Sneak Preview
FROM CINfRAMA RELEASINC>
FRIDAY ONLY-JULY 30
PREVIEW SHOWS ONCE AT 8:45 P.M.
MAJOR PRODUCTION * * MAJOR CAST
FASHION ISLAND * NEWPORT CENTER •• •••••••• • ••••••••••••• ... . . -. •• • • • •
PREVIEW RAT ED
I Rl
FRCDAY SCHEDULE
ONLY
"A New Leaf ' 7:00
Previ ew 8:45
Plaza Suite 10 :4 5
This is the one movie you
should not see alone.
""AA"'""!."~Vv1llAR0 .. , BRU CE DAVISON · SONDRA LOCKE· ELSA LANCHESTER
. ,,_,,., '·""''"'"" ''""""'t!"I ''""'""'.di<" '"d ERNEST BORGNIN E "Marlin '"""'RAls'°" ·::::;;:z~;.; · ·'" ·ALcxNo~'" cHARusu•m -.~"Mclin" Bt!ISll!N A 8CP PROOOCllON, ,, .... ~c...a.-.,, ... :., IN COLOR .. ~,...,OANl[LMANN ~
NOW PLAYING'!
,_y .... -n1...-
PACIFIC"S EOWAAD"S FOUNTAIN VALLEY
OFllYE-1N HUNTINGTON CINElii f,
f-OU NTAtN VA l lfY -961·141 I
CO·Hl7 "HOUSf IHA7 DRll'PfO 8tOOD" /CPI
M ... tllnl Tinn. "Wi"•'" 1t 1·1~ I. !2;00 Mid•!fhl
C""'Pkte •ho"' 1tt. lo!~<» ID. l~ PM
HIJNHNGTON BEACH
1154J Moin Street
·~7.9608
C0Nl1NOOUS 0"'1l Y IPQM I 00 PM
SP((IJ.l MIDNIGHT 5H0W 01'1 l~t & 5 .. T. Fri. sit: s:.: '"#bii•ii i.1S L"ii-iliiM;.lif:-1 PLUS "WHEN EIGHT BELLS TOLL" c -111.e-too ""°'".., i.... 01 12 OO Mod,,;!Jhl
:Znd
I op A ttr.1( I i1111
M1,hnetc., .. ,,.
On1or Sh{J,.f 111
"BLUE WATER,
WHITE DEATH"
The hunt for""' C...WhileShark
+,<MW CBf1"DI fl..llS WW ._.,....,..,....... ·-"THE LAST VALLEY'/c, _......_,.,_
MATINEES DAILY DIRECT FROM ITS Joral NOW FOR THE
1no AT HARBOR TWIN ,,
1 SENSATIONAL :rciral 1ST TI M[ Al
ROADSHOW !II! I POPULAR
ENGAGEMENT! ~.ora •.. 2QPRICES1
• "VANISHING POINT " IGP I
.~ ·, ., }.' . .._ •... . .... -·-"' •·. l ' ........................ .
.. ' ··c • .,1. ,....,., & •~· un11.,...110• c,,~ .. IGI,, ..... -.. ;;:; ..
~T AR TS WfD. 1/4 "TORA I TORA t TORA !"
.. ._ .••• -.... I~
" .,. ... v ,,,. ....
[, .. ..., ... .'.·~.:.'"''I ( ,, ~N ·1 , ........ ,,,,!., ""' . \ . ···--·--
POSITIVUY ENOS
TUES., AUG. 3 , Roernr wi~f PROOUCT'0' , .~'"'"'"'"" J
~Nl>ROM:DA STRAIN
A UNIVERSAL PICIURl. TECHNICOLOR" rANAv1:1o~r ~ <li:lt
lDWARDS
CINEMA VllJO
MIS110N 'lllJO
IJ0-6tto
STEVE McQUEEN IN "LEMANS"
•
·' 1i1 ·~~ -t i
1 .. tl I"> ~ ••~ flOtllol •'> • JOH~INY C•'.tl
ti "& 'INFIGl4t (G,l
, --=--\.
:·
·= ·• ~
'
•
•
• •
' >
. . . :: .•
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY
MATINEES DAILY 1 P.M.
PETER~BIT
lALES 0F BEATRIX P0TIER
' PD/el.MED flY ai\NCEll! et
1HE R0YAL BALLET
:-.~ r;:;J A Juhn Brabourhr · Rich•rd GnPJ .. in Production "' • l!::!J from E~I I film l'md. Ltd.• Trchnicolor 'RI) ~ • ' • ""'---~~~~~~~~~~~-"""
: ~ CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES . ;. : ~ AT 1:00 -3:00 -5:00 ·• 7:00 -9:00 P.M. . -: "· : :: FOR GROUP SALES CALL ED PRUES
: ;: 213·657-6800 ..
• ,• · . . · i •' ... i •," 1::• ..
; -,•
EXCLUSIVE IN ORANGE COUNTY Deily Ma tin••• l:JO
(G)
"htl" 1 00 & io,:io "D•-" I ... ~
3rd ond FINAt WEEK!
"THE l>ESERTER"
FREE PAR~ING (OP)
:
. '
-
. "'
TI1ursd.1)', Jul~ 211, 1471 DAil Y PILOT f;J
lftdo
Wild West Show Revived at Buffalo Bill Site
llllWP(ltf lfA.Ctl -· •• 1~ ... -
'-l• .... I••• II'• lolo •• 0 1. l·l tM
4TH BIG WEEK
lw•. 1'111111 'T\1n. I P.M.
Fri. alMf Sot.-1:)0
Motl-W-4., 1 P.M.
S.rvrday-1 :JG and 5:00
S••day-1 P·"'· 1111<11 alHI '4:JO
c ...........
''"'"' ·~. • O...., OI ,....,.,,<oi
ot0tvt•O'<
JAMES
'AllEI
"AMAi
<AWDSUDll"
'It OfllCO, Ol:°l !low..uf! •
(RJ-~.=~·J 1!1J
HOLLYWOOD I AP) -The
fine old American tradition of
I.he Wild West show i!! being
'revived by the State o(
Nebraska and !Mlme Western
investors. llO years after Buf.
falo Bill Cody folded hi.! famed
ulravag&nta.
The new show bears the
same title as Cody's : Bufra\o
Bill's Wild West and Congress
of Rough Riders of the World .
Many of the spec1:irles will be
the same -the lndian raid on
the pklneer 's wagon train: the
attack on the stagecoach ; the
chuck wag on ra t e; etc. The
performers will be about the
same number -711 cowboys,
Indian 11 , sharpshooters,
cavalrymen, etc.
The man behind the revival
Is f\.ionlie Montana Jr., son of
·the Western st.ar. At 36, young
Montie is a 33-year veteran of
rodeos and frontier en-
tert.a inment. He has staged
Western shows for the U.S.
Department of Commerce to
send overseas, and the Stale
of Nebraska engaged him to
restage Cody's show as a
EXCLDSIYE ENGAGEMENT
John Wayne
Richard Boone
"Big Jake" "BIG JAKE"
J'l mmensely entertaining I Filled with incredible energy •.
fistfights and gunfights by the score I John Wayne in top form I"
Co-Hit at Pacific Drive-Ins
"VON RICHTHOFEN AND BROWN"
801 Office opens 7'J5 P.M.
1t;1
-
. ·.
Show Starts at Dusk
sr-..:.::: ..... ..._
llMJS.Ol•loOH
'
110:'.hotd CwU.elly, Hf'rold f•omi"e-t
Co-Hit
'~THE McKENZIE BREAK"
Continuous Daily
from 2:00 P.M. ,_
. .
-.
tourL~t attraction and tribult'
to ooe of the state's m06t
famous ciliun!. • •
The show opens I.Oday at
North Platte, the site of Cody's
created a trend lowsrd arena
entert.11inmenl. The publlc has
become accustomed to seeing
spectacles In pleasant sur-
roundings -good parking,
.s-0ft 1eal.S.
"Al!IO there t~ ~ trend toward
nostalgia and n growing !!).
terest in the heritage of lM
American Indians. We 'll hlV1
authentic lndi11ns in I.he ablw
-not the Hollywood kind .
ranch. lfe assemblt'd his first I c::::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:;;::; show there in 1883. The rantb ;::.
is now a state monument. and l
a $250.000 stadium was built to l
house !he sh-Ow.
The Cody show played an
over the world from 1113.1 lo
1911, then the Wild We!!l kind
of attraction went into decline.
Why does f\.tonlana think ii
will succeed now~
This Week
"During the past l~ years .:,;;
two-thirds or the country's in-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I
Treat the Family to Dinner
In One of Orange County's
Fine Restaurants,
door arenas have been built,''
hfl explained. "This has.
'"BLUE WATER, WHITE DEATH~
INCLUDES SOME OF THE MOST
SMASHING MAN-AGAINST·
BEAST FOOTAGE EVER FllMED I
"ABSOLUTELY
BREATH-TAKING,
GASP·PRODUCING!"
---!Udt1h C11s1, ~BC lo<'U~ S/'lo1f
"BLUE WATER, WHITE DEATH "
The hunt fOf the Great White Shark
'-CIN£tM CIHTI .. r'l.ltlS -S(NUITO'I .
l'rodlo<..,b•l'f!(llOIMG£l. o;...:: .... i.,~T(ll f--JAILrf.I~
TlC""*COlooi-A ... 1IO!Uil Gf.Hl:llA.l .-.CTl.Jll(S ll(lft.511' !!:!!•
,.. "ICI STATIOJll
ZlllA"
'ltr. Office 0,•1 7;1S p.M.
SNOW St•rt.11t lhuk ·--· .. ........ ...,.,
.,. •070
ontinuous Showing Daily
,, • ...,. .. -~co-"w'• -"•""' ...... _ ..... _..,,_., ___ _
'·
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
SHOWING NOW!!
MOlORCYO.E
WOW! FANTASTIC -J-......... _
BETTER THAN ~ENDLESS SUMMER'
-· .. ~ J ••••• 1 ......
RT AND THE MEN WHO RIDE
Oii AllY SUllDAY • ~ PLUS Steve McQueen 1::'t
s "The Reivers" 'ltt
•
Box Off ice
__ .._Opens 7:1 S p.m.
=::::.:. Show Starts
·-k UMnt at Dus
.. .
MITINEES DAil!
FROM 1,Jt P.l.
.. 'f: . '· ; . . -.. FINAL STOCKS! ' -. \ ....
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DAILY PILOT-The ''Today'' Newspap.~r
NOW INCLUDES
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Zf DAll.Y·1'1UlT T""1doy, J,1y 29, 1971
IS SR_algllt ·A•s NO PE,RMIT
NO SHOW
Sierra Club Chief Cites Losses
.TeWinkle Horwr s VALLE '10 tAP I earliest baltle:s, which it loal, the Sierra Nevada, put& in 40 the club and to lead lta grow·
.SAN P'RANClSCO !UPI ) -The new pr-i .. Ant of the In-to sa"'e th' e He'·h Hetchy hou k nl I . . the . th our clUldttn, and t v t n
ourselves, will oot survive to
mjoy them," he point.! out.
'"'UC" • ""' 1'$ • wee ltll se. or Judge ng acU\11ly in coorla m e •
313 Top Students
Ticket sales for a veter1n11 of nuential Sierra Club warns Valley, very much like the of Solano '""''"'IY Superior interests ot its central.,., ........... that while the ronservationisl ....,...., _. r-""
foreign v.•ars benefit variety movement it making substan· Majestic Valley to I.he SOllth in Court at Fairfield. ~ie'1 a -conserv.lition .
show has been halted by the lial progress in saving the en-the 1910.s seaMlned explorer or the One example he cites is the
police charity control bureau. vironrnent, every defeal can The city of San Francisco wilderness t.he1 Sierra Clu b club's joining with a Mexican·
He notes that It was tht club
whi<il first published "Th•
Population Bomb," by St.an.
ford University's Dr. Paul
Erhlich and considt.red one of
the most influential book! on
the subject. He says the club
has developed a five.year pie.,.
that combines public educa-
tion control measures.
TeWlnkle Middlt School in
Caeta Mesit hu named 31~
11eVenlft and etgbih grade
atudmlb lo its sdi>lar9hip and
honor rolls-including I~
studeN.a who maintained pET-
fect, straight-A averages dur-
ing the secood aeinester.
The seventh grade student.~
wiili straight-A averages are;
Betty Ceccarinl, Tracy Hatch,
Jan Heying, Stacy Kin -
del, Marilyn Macy, Sus.an
McCamont, Becky Peyton and
Suzanne Seidel.
The eighth grade students
with straight-A averages are·
Lynn Adams, R i c h a rd
Belyea, Cathy Connelly, Janet-
te Emory, Jana Goar, Karen
Robertson and Paula Tomei.
Stlldents named lo the
scholar!llip roll have earned
averages ranging from 3.S to
4.0 grade points. They are:
EIGHTH GRADE: ~u••n Atl'.\h•r,
l lne11o Ame<•l. S"'t1 Ancl•n0<1,
Vire!n!t 9nle•. OtY• Bernh.,d!.
Sine B••M•r<ll, Br-• llDHn. L1,,..-li1 t1r1nd,,..,.et, K1thy Brei!,
DitM •rlr.Kller, Ad1 Brawn. 0.M flunn.n. l:lruc•
c--.. NM>CY 01vls, l.oult O•Ve ...
llobir<'I Fon, 8r..:ll•v Green, Po!ricl• (;.<!~•..,.,, Apr II H•m!lron. L•u•le
Hon<on, Seo!! H•41ton, si...-.1 H•mo•rniut.
(_ynlhl• H.,.,IT, S.:o!t Hunr~r. Soni• l•n·
nellL Mory J•cot>>Or'I, Jill ICIHI, Willlam
L .... o.bot•ll MloMltl!I, Al•n M•••ol,
Oeldrt M•I-.. 11111 McO•nlel, J •v
McK .. lu•, C•n ......,.,.,, LH Meyer.
G•lll Moldl. Gt rv MufPl'IV , Jullt
Mvrlc•, M..,.1,nrM Ne!1r1111>er9, Su••n
P•trrkk, W•vne Pencil-rt>'. Oou91•l Pe!ul,
Mo.rvlltrll P-11, M<ork R•lll. Vlc•1 ·-· ~e<11ln R•JllV, Mollll•W RICll•r<I>,
LvnrM ROP<n, Alt>erto San!• Marl•, MOiiy Se1rt.
C•ml• SMnn, Etli•betn lniooom,
SuYn S/rot•, J1,,..1 S~ltn1r, ClndY
$o1De•G.
J. Squire, J"'r Slac~. Oo•ld
ll•clcbou•r. Pot.r Slon•. S!e<>1>en Well.
J•n W•rwld<. M&rg1ro1 Wohon,
Cnrltrl,,. W11wr. Oovld Wen•l•v•
Oeborall wn.1ev •nd Gr...orv ZelMlorl.
SEVENTH GRACE: ll•lndf M•ker.
.&mv llorreclo<.l911, Jovc1 lle<k•r, Joell• l!l<ko!I, Re~ Bosen.
Jon•t 11.,...,..,, JettrQ" llroktr. T •m· my C•rey, M1 rk 0-von, Joilnno Fontolfl,
Joo Foeorw, ilhldyord G""lnup, Eric
HtnMH\, Andr" lnfonle, $ u 1 • t I e
Club Names
New Slate
Dr. Arthur \\'allon has been
elected president. of the Blut
Flame ToasUnaslers Club No.
2717 o! Costa Mma.
Other newly elected officers
are Chuck DOOan, educational
vtce presk:lent ; Den Haymond,
administrative vice president;
Mack W e s n e r , secretary:
Martin Brux, treasure-: and
Floyd Harryman. scrgeant·at-
anns.
The Blue Flame Toaslmas-
t~s are dedicated lo improv-
Jng listening and speaking
11btlilie1.
result in permanent dan1ai;:e. sooght to dom up the val ley seeks to preserve. Two years American group in Hayward
JKk-The show by VFW Pos t 1116 "The olher side can lose and as a reservoir for i ts ago he was part of a moW1tain in an effort to stop a freeway
"'""' J ..... 1 ...... c... Jtli"~· J•.on Is called "europorama" and still achieve a turnaround,'' munici pal waler supply. climbing group .thal tackled frorn being put through an ~':!.~"" Jtfl,..., K""'""'
10
'· Ju1i, was scheduled for Aug . ...,,7 in says Solano County Superior "When the club was in its Himllayan peaks in Nepal. area of lowcost housing and
cor..i L•nte, LI ............... no. Ancr.. Court Judge Raymond J . teens, it lost the battle to save More recently, he ~ his the Only two parks in I.he city.
,Y.u!@f, Fro!* M111" J•net N""'""""''· Kezar Pavilion. Sherwin. l1etch Hetchv," said the ,·,dge attractive wife, Janet, Wffe · ShtfrWin has taken over lhe Erk o l'tttl, Jul!t Obtra. Andtew I ,,,_,L ~~/ ioecororo. Jel!••v Inspector Al Arnaud said the "If we lose, it's gone." in an interview. dropped by a bush pilot In the.. club at a time when its in-11~~r' s.,.., .. £d Sc1>won i. Stev.., post had no charitable solicita-The S&.year-old judge ··Even if the dams were isolated Brooks Range across terest.s are expanding into
s~•t11r. D••id Slt l••. J.,.n S1<1ena•, tion permit for lhe show and became president last May of removed today, it would still Northern Alaska where they related areas of population
Ju" So11>ert. w1111•m s'"''"'""'· the 130 000 member ct b take a long time to restore the spent a week in an area in-control. pollution control and .Suurww .s1rooc1111, ""•rt V•nHorn. has not yet filed a complet.e ' u · !lec~v W•ll•r. which is growing at the rate of beauty of Hetch Hetchy. habitaled only by wolves and environfJlenta! planning.
On pollution, Sherwin note!:
that smog has been assigned
links with canett. bronchitis
and other diseases and that he
considers it a thdeat to man's
survival.
,;:;~;-1 v.~!1::0~m~;111 1~""'''wo:O financial report on a similar 3,000 net members a month. Sherwin, who was born in other wild animals. "There is no purpose in pro-
H""''' z111•r01tv. event held last year. He cites one of the club's Bishop on the eastern side of Still, he finds time to head tecling parks and wilderness If Slll<ltn• t•rnlno orl<I• pain+ 1wer•VH _______ :.._ ____________________ --'--------------------------=-'-----------------------from l.O T• l.~ ••~ ll•lld on rr.e -
"Ml 8f .. -. ll>l!Y •r• SEVENTM GRAOE: C ~rl ot ln •
ilm•••I. S••nl..., .&!>de.._ Marl< Al>lltl. I
Li>• Arm1lron<1, Corolvn ll•kor,
Juli• llolO'f'•~· J•mt• !ll1ck!•, Jeflorv
ll•onc;, Konne!h 111•11•rma", MeKln•
!lowfn. K•tMrvne llren...i ... l.1ur1 l'lrown,
M•r• 11•-n, L•M llllCh•n•n. 51el>t1tn (o!lero.
Etnllv CotnpbeU. LYIWI Carl'lor!, Torri
cno11, LIM C00"6otl, °'*"'• Corv.
DAit O•nlel•. C••ol•n De•nborh,
Klmbtrl• Oue1ler. J .., Edw•rdl.
C1Klll1 F11 ... o•n,
Ethabo1n Ftlf'o•. Ol•~n• G1lr, Kvle
Govnrr. M•rlor "' GIDb>. Mlc111el
GOO<lt . IC •ren Greer, Lullt Grlllln, L.,ry
Hill, ll"l n Hei", EIOlne tllr110ll,
ll•41<11ty H-. (ll•rltl tilJ!ll,...,
Cnrl1lln1 l1nnt lll, CtiorYI .JOl'ln-..
su:~c~.;',:"'~~tien. Su••n 11;,,..., Rol<>ll I
l(envon. Oebro L1nc••"" Mori< i
L111rlt1..,, L•~•le Ll!tner11, L\nd• La••tt, Anne
Lvn•s. GtrY McL~n" Greoerv Melc11!,
J•Ck Merer. l(jrk Miiier, Dorothea
Mu .. "h, N•l'ICY Myrle•. E I In a.
NM<lh•m.
BOY'S & GIR.L'S STURDY BROOMS
Ravmond Nf'Wl(lr'I, 510<\alcl Ol<•d•,
R-rl O'Toole, Alic• Parrl1ll, Kelly
Petenen, Sl>erl Pinckney, l h• R •wt I n•,
Morl•nftf R•v , llol>l>Y R~ed. G•tv
R-r!Mlf'I,
Gl enn "-""°"' E•k Rul>r. Oi•ne Rr.on, K"ln MM-iln, Suhr> S<hurornon,
V•IO<I• Sch-II•~•. M•rUvn Scan , J•e<1u.i1 ... Saf\lnr, Frtdlrl<k Slln>.,,,,lrd,
SttPl'lfn Slcl<ltt, C1t•V Slt11lrltd, Arl'1u• Slaa!O,
Cam"'"" Slocum. M•ri'; SprakOf, Tr1cv
Sl41Ck.
Mark SlePutio, !.uonM Sl~•dtvan1 ,
Mark T•vlor, S1"'"" Tue~•" Lori V•n
"""''-"· J 1n>e Von Ooton. S1llv V•nHorn.
SutMI Wtlll, l(al~lfffl W•lw1Ck. WtOCIY
Wor<I,
Le•. W•rner, Dovld Whiddon, CO!'t Y
Wh!!1, K•nnOlh Wl!li•m1, Seo!! Wil'>Ofl, Slltrvl Winter, LHllt Ztllrow and Donal
Ziemer
EIGHlH GRilDE : .&llti• A•'""•
C•ral Al1!t111er, Mien.It 8••"""· Catt n 8ea•l>cJwer, Kimbfrlr llec:1>..-, 8r•<llev
Iii.et. c nrlsl°""'' Blank, Ml~• 8<>1>ln.
Vftlerl• llowon. E1l11Wlh ll•adlt•.
P"gy Braasriaw, llno:ll Brie;s,
Sllar"" !luche!!, Liu Chorlton, Jane
(ol!ln•.
Ktl>dla Colll•Clll. Kavla C1>rnwfll,
Con1l•nt• O•vit, Jottrov ~Malo,
Mork ~~en, Konl Olvtllll$1, Chtrvl l)cllerty,
R!Cllard Feiler, Oonnl Glit, O•vl<I
Gll>bo. Rolltr1 Gll1•1T•, Klmt>orlv Gray,
P<lci• Heo;el, S111•nno Hen<trlckt.
RICK Ho<hot1.
Gr•llO"Y HQt;H, Jo-..n<rt• Jet!r! .. ,
Jan• Jol'lntol\, Micn•ll• Jol'lnson, Ml!Ton
Jotintori,
Wl-11 J.,,...., Lori Koch. lri\ll'y
Kuder, Rtnt l . Holr. W•Y"' Loml>,
ll•IH-rn Lone. L•"V LHntrl1. Ol•"ne
Lewll. Korln LoVd•n. Alon Ll<ldl•,
Pr lK lll• Macio1, Donna M1d1en.
Mork Mallnktn, Polor M1rlll, Qgrl
M•r!1n. Re!>ecc• M1vn1rd, 5co1t M(:Farlot>d.
Otnnl1 Mevor1, L11ll1 Mu•l•11Vll, JO'ln
Nl1blr, Lv,,,,. Nullt r, Erln o ' !I r I • n .
Corr.tri,,. OlcM11, T•mr1 Oliver, 1!1ml>I
0 1 .....
P•tll Poltntr. Jo,,_ P•..-, Midlff!
P"""''· Cr•IG Pape, 51ov•n R1moev,
Wiiiiam Rorie~. 01erloltt 5odr, Gary
Sewvtr, R•vmona Sc""l•r••· er101ev
SCl\w•lf1er.
J.,>fl Sll•Nr<I, il lan $1fo!rlod. 5helltY
Smlrn, Trocy Souln•ll. Sh111n Stark,
Jim•• S!htns, ll.lvmand S!PW1rt,
J oon"' Slontman, Sl•P111n Trom.
El1ino Vl><lo. Cell•• Ullo" Jiii V•n ilmorong..,.
Clldsll"' W1ill,t, 8r!An Wf'llb, Mi~al
W~llt,
~ ... wo.,., Stiaron Wli/'>mlt1, ll091r
Wor<lt af!d Rlchar<I Z-.
Similar To Illustration
BIKES
Reg.
$44" I SAVE $1 S,99 I
Boy's Green Draggin -Girl's Molly L'ou
WOVEN BEDSPREAD
SALE $ 77
Polyester
' " KURL
KNIT
FABRICS
SALE
$ 64
&MOPS
SALE
ea.
Reg .. $1''
• Rayon mitt-type dust mop
• Plastic broom
• Squee:r:• sponge mop
• Wlr•-bound corn broom
/ ... "' QUALITY ··'""*'~:.~ HNlJJJNG ·
SALE
Reg. 109
·wolSTED
Color Kraft
c
4 Dl
Skein
llGHT GUARD
SPll Y DEODORANT
Twin 4.96
Full S.96
Hlt'nd of fl .~':(, cotton/ 17'?h rayon.
i\1ach1ne "'·ashahle. prc·shrunk, no
iron. T"·in or full. Colors. !SAVE 32'l
•
Reg. I"
Easy To Use Pull-Skeins
Fashionable Colors
. I
.. :_""'LS··--~--·-
Sale66~4 ••
• PlPA~ant tcent
•Full protection
l lMll: 2 ca111 per cu1tOfl'l•r
Miss Clairol ®
Creme Formula
Sale66(:
Limit: 1 Per Custom er
Joi•-& John1on
lahy Oil"
Sale66~ ..
Lanoll• Enriched; Gentle
'Limit: 2 Per Customer
.. -
10 Pc. Deluxe 10-Gallon
AQUARIUM STARTER SET
SALE
88
Reg.
s13'4
Includes : .Jar1e 11t•inle11s
tank, r eflector, d ip tube,
plastic tubing, glass wool,
heatar, breeding trap, filter,
thermometer, pump, anti·
chlorine, charcoal and com-
. plate inatructiona.
We Rts,rv• Tht l ltht To limit Quantities. No111 Solcf To Dealtra
.
' 11. .,
•
Women's & Girl's
SNEAKERS
SALE
l:r:clu1iv1l lab·te!lted (or durability and abra·
1ionl Cotton duck o r denim uppcra, sh«:k re-
~istant insolt, sure-footrd rubber soles; 5?.ito 10.
--~-
HUNTINGTON BEACH, GRANT . PLAZA
BROOKHURST & ADAMS 962-3387
Hours: Daily 9:30 to 9,
•
-•
Sunday 10 to 6
' ; -.,;i";. --~-:. ')"
~.
' ' ·-. ,.,
=
• + r
~. < ,
. ··~· .. ·-· ,,_ .
thundly, July~. 1971 DAILY l'!LOT 15
I
• -
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F ..,.,...... .. _. \. ~·:-""•~·-\,.~..:. .. ,J , ,.'111'.l»"""""':tb..,,.,,..
' ' <-
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H DML y l'ILOT
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¥erchants Jettison Summer Cargo ANY GARMENT PROFESSIONALLY
DRY CLEANED (as listed below) For iliost in lhe. \nokoul for
terrific buys on notsam and
jetsam. We!tcliH Plaza w1l! be
the place lo be betw~ 10 and
fl Saturday. Jn other word11,
the We.stc!iff Plai.a merchant.s
11re conducting their 8th an·
nual Sidewalk Sale by heaving
their KWTimer "cargo" onto
tables and rack6 outside their
stores, at great tacr ifices.
As usual, to add to I.ht en·
joyment of this big e vent , ii is
given a theme. This yf"ar it ill
nautical, with wrec ked ships.
anehors, chain!, rope, net, and
other sea faring Pf'OPfl adding
to ttle 11tmosphere. T he
aleo
DISCOVER ssssss
SAVE
up to
70% OFF
We marked clown our mark downa.
SIDEWAUC S·ALE SATURDAY, JULY 31
l/UMPrY DUMPrY
•
CHILORENS SHOP
1058 Irvine -Westcliff Plaza
Newport Beach
SIDEWALK SALE
SATURDAY, JULY 31, ONLY
V1 PllCI
-
employ• will be attired in deep &r.a and Beuba di vers,
va r i o u 1 harbor 1arb. and octier mates while shop.
CUltomel'$ may erpeet to ping the thousands a valuM to
mingle with 1allors, pirates, be found at drastic reductioos. e SWEATERS fplal•J Re9. ll c e WOOL SHIRTS Reg, 9 7c
Wesrclif f Plaza Shops
Easily Reached, Varied
e MEN'S TROUSERS R1!uJ. 97c
e SL.ACKS/CAPRIS Reg. 97c
e SKIRTS lplolnJ R.19 . 97c
Minor Repairs Fr•• of Charqel
All roads truly lead to
West.cliff Plata. For tho8e
fortunate to live permanently
in this wonderful part of the
country, or to tbole just pass-
ing through, We!!tcliff Plata,
convt.niently located in the
hub of lM Harbor arl!!a at the
cor111!!r of Irvine A venul!! 1J1d
Westcllff Drive, Ls within easi·
ly reacMd driving di!:lance.
From either direction off
Coa!t Highway up Dover
Drivl!!, from the West at the
ea.d of 17th Street, or from the
North, down Irvine Avenue.
The tnd et the joul'ftl)' is
most 1'flf'ardln1. lpaalMJs
parking, 1 plea.11nt It·
mosphtire, Cd 24 diltlnetlYtly
different ahopl, c1ttrlnl to all
need< of lhl l1mily""' -· with out..tandlng 1e1HUM11 of
quality m1rdlandlH 1 n d
1ervicee. Shops in well-balanc·
ed Westcllff Plaza art: _ .•
selection available, h 11 11
become headquarters for the
ti.I-i l specialist. When it's an
item ln the electrical , plum·
b I n g , painting, decorating,
building , repairing, cookware,
gillware, or other lines, genial
clerks assist in ma k i n g
pesonal service more than a
motto.
DICK VERNON -A most
fril!!i1dly shop where you will
find r. helpful attitude catering
to the young of hi!!art wht.n
shopping for .your Sporl.!wear
need!. Dick, wifl!! Betty, one of
ttlt lovely d•ught.er1, or
"fi'J1nd," wlll d11!1ht In ahow-
ln1 1tlectloM ct L&nr, Mllll
Pit, Tanti, P11tty W~w1rd,
Lt Roy, 01rlA11d, C.Ole, or
other famOU1 Un11.
V~A'I INTIMATE AP·
P AREL -Etclusively for
women, t.hi1 11hGp futures
FREE
WASH
J111r prese11t riil1 •d ot
our L01111dromot 1111d
r.c:.el•• ONE WASH
FREE
NO LIMIT ON QUANTITY
Drapery Special
UNLINED
95~ PANEL
CLEANED & FAN FOLDED
We C •nnot G uarante&
Against Suri Rot
MONTGOMERY
CLEANERS & LAUNDRY
17ht & Irvin• -Newport Beach -64~2392
Open Dilly 8 A.M .• 9 P.M. -Sat. 8 A.M. -6 P.M.
BANK OF AMERICA -Of-:,j~IC.~oti~n~u~ed~o~n~N~e~•t~P~a~ge~)~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ f~j~g faur IN•ie J11r.10t11l
"""'" clt .. IMJ DIW, 1nd four bc11e 1M'i1l11 •ooount
pilftl f or indlvldu11lud
attvl«. ftNtllt 1dditJon en lhl
North 1ide 11 a convtnl1nt
outaJde window to prOVI,_ Cd•
did 1erv Ice.
SA VE-ON DRUG -Qui ck
eerv iot, cleanlinl!!Sll, and
frlendlint11s are among the
many factors jwtifying the
popularity of SAV-ON in
Southem California, 1nd in
particular, the Wt1kliff Plata
Jtorf. Other rn*8 f o r
llulklilll """ m1lnt1lnl•t ii. envl1bl1 reput1Uon are ltl.e top
qlllllty m1rah1ndl11 f&r 11!
f1mlly n1tdt prompt •c·
..,,i.1y flllOd )11'11<rlpUon1,
aM emtYlftltnl dtlly houri .
lllON H.4.llDlf .4.111 -In 1n
ara1 dev&ttd t.& bulldlr11 ind
lmprnvln1 new and older
Mma1, a~tl'lll, • n d
law!U, RION , wllJI M Ind Ui
quantity ol merchandae and
DAY· ONLY
SATURDAY, JULY 31 ONLY
OPIN 9 A.M.·6 P .M.
TREMENDOUS SAVINGS • • • ALL DEPARTMENTS
CLOSE-OUT ••• POWER TOOLS -i
ILACK la DICKIR
ONI IACH-U·JJ6 ......• 61/1" PltOJlllllONAL H. D. IAW-1 5/8 H.P.
ONI IACH-U·ZJO ... , . , , .. , •. , , , ..... 71 /4" DILUXI IAW-1 H.P .
ONI IACH-7021 .... , , ..•... , . , .... 1 /4" VAltlAILI IPllD DRILL KIT
ONI IACH-U-240 .........•..... DILUXI IAN.Dllt -DUAL ACTION
L•wn la O•rllen
COTTIR GRASS SllD
4 LI. IA.6-11•. lf11 .... 251
TREE PRUNER ~;;!""" ·~· llG. Sl 2.9f SALi $C} ,99
TllAIUll TONll PAINT
CLOSE-OUT E~T~~~ ~~E
SUl'IR Jl'OlY·ESTER
l'RIMllt ..... st.so -·--···.
ILOOM GLOW-l•ml 01011
ln1'ft1l-WhU1. R1f. SI.ID .
PLUS ITAINI, VARNISHES, ENAM!L
Sl'RAY P'AINT. Ret. Stotk
15 C1lor1. R91. It< ... 49¢
H•rllware
llLJI NAILIN• JIAJnNERS
l JOIST CU, CHISELERS so•;. OPF
CABINET KNOBS AND
HARDWARE
50°/o OFF
SHEPPARD CASTERS-
Disc Styles & Backer Sets
50°/o OFF
ACCURIDE DRAWER SLIDES
Assorted Sizes
50°/o OFF
DISAPPEARING CLOTHES
LINE I 1 only l
Roq. $22.9! • SALE s9"
20 FT. SINGLE SICTION ••••••••••.....••.•• REG. S-19,91 $14.99
SLIPS, full & half up ,. s11.oo v.1... NOW 'J.
I ONLT ALUMINUM LADDERS
I ONLY ALUMINUM LADDERS 16 ili'T. llNGLI SICTION ............... , ••.• ll(G. Sl9.9S $9.99
HINSON/KICKllNICK
BUY 3 AT 1 TIME DIVIDEND
ALL SALES
FINAL-NO
EXCHANGES
OR RIFUNDS
PANTIE SALE
Veta's
111\'"'ATl APPAIEL ...................
'
Phene 642·1197
I Automotive Close Out
::~XIS, CLlANllS. 50% 0 ,.
BIKE TIRE
REPAIR KITS •• a. .• ,, 29c SALi
TRANSPARENT TAPE 19' 'h s 100" llG. 271 SALi
GIFT WARES
50%·80% OFF
! NO GIFT WRAP I'll.I.SI I
PRESTO COFFEE POT
SUBMUSIBLE $ 8
REG. $23.88 .. .. SALE 14. 8
PRESTO VERTICAL BROILER
:!~i 5
.
24
:
88 $19.99
PLUS MANY SALE ITEMS NOT ADVERTISED
All T•rms --
Subject To
Stock On
Hind
No Exchen91s
er llt:efunds On
S•il• lt1m1.
HOURS ,
Monday· Frld•y
9 A.M. · 9 P.M.
Seturd1y
9 A.M. • 6 P.M.
Sunday
10 A.M. • 4 P.M.
• 4 .. -
;:JI"-· t~ .. -· l -# , .;'Jllo-I. --=--·~, ... ·---, ....--"l:"-........... --·
• • . • •
.
' •
•
' ' ' ' ' '
\
• ' ' • ·. . ' .,
• . . •
WESTCLIFF PLAZA AT HUB OF HARBOR
(Cont. from Prttedlng Page)
lingerie, robes, loungewear,
brasslere3 and girdles 'J'tie
lingerie and robes are styled
by the finest designers -bras
and girldes include !he best on
the market In well known
brands. Vela's also features
courteous and he I p f u I
s a J es w om e n w b o haYe
e.!ilablished and enviable
reputation
JEAN DAHL -With a
dress shop in West.cliff Plaza
and a boutiQue at t he
THINK SALE
HURRY!
Newporler Inn. he re is a nam e
that is known fo r fine selection
of sportswear sep:.rates, nol
to mention imported knits,
patlt suits. dresses and ac-
HURRY!
HURRY!
cessories by famous designers
v.'hose sophistication 1nakes
their name synonymous with
fashion everywhere .
LA GALLERIA -Unique
elegance in rashion is the
glogan of this exQuisite shop
providing outstandi ng
v.·ardrobes Lo the ladies in the
Harbor and , Orange County
~ocietv circles. F'rom thf' time
nne e"nters their magnificent
doors the reason Is apparent.
CHARLES H. B A R R
JEWELERS Long
established on Balboa \slMd
and in \Vestcli ff Plaza. Barr"s
is renowned ror cu s 1 o m
designed jewelry, a wide
selection of gein s t fl n e s ,
diamonds, high gradP \\'ai<;hes
and gold jewelry of an kihds.
plus the finest in jewelry
repairing. A place for making
decisions when treasured gifts
or keepsakes are the ch<lice.
WE:STCLIFF SHOES
Where shopping is a real
•
Southern California.
HUMPTY DUMPTY -This
attractive children's shop car-
ries quality merchandise-for
the yoWlger generation from
layette to size 12. Nationally
advertised brands such as
Wm. Carter, \Vonderalls. Dan-
ny & Debbie Dare, Catalina,
Playmore Kn its, Van Huesen,
Billy the Kid, Rob Roy, Her
Majesty, Youngland, Turtle,
Bay, Polly Flinders, Pando<1,1
and others have attracted a
Jong list of con ten ted
customers.
HICKORY FARMS
America ·s leading cheese
store features 121i kinds of
domestic and imported cheese
to please the pal8.le. The old
fashioned country store deeor
or Hickory f·arms ties in wilh j
the merchandisi ng. concept of 1 providing foods which taste l
and smell as good as they did
in grandma·s time. Specially
foods with excellent taste ap-
peal may be sampled as you
browse about this unique shop.
the finest in ht.Ir cutting and
styling. One 11ppO\ntment will
prove they can stylt your halr
the way you like it.
M01''1'G0/\1ERY CLEAN.
ERS AND LAUNDERERS -
Offering profes!iorull cleaning
service, this business has 21
years of experience behind
HOT PANTS
TO $11
NOW $2
SUN
GLASSES
TO $4
NOW $2
DRESSES
TO $40
NOW $5
SH!f.TS
TO $20
NOW $5
them. A seJr-serv1('e J11undry
with all new 'Jtiaylag washers
and ezcluslve shirt laundering
com pletes I.he full cycle of
s«Vice.
DARRt<;L'S DEDRICK TUX
SHOP -Rents and .sells cor-
rect formal wear fo r all oc-
casions. The staff is well
prepared to meet all thtae las t
minute dre511 nttds. 1'he shop
featl.ll'es th e latest styles in
jacket cut, color, varioUB
shirt-1 and all the necessary
acct!ssorLes. Darrel's have two
other st.ores : fashion Sq. in
(Continued on Nex t Paa:e)
BATHING SUITS
TO $20
NOW $5
TO $15
NOW $2
GRAB BAGS
50c
CAPRIS
TO $20
NOW $4
SWEATERS
TO $20
NOW $5
TOPS
TO $15
NOW $3
JACKETS SKIRTS
TO $30 TO $11
JUMP THE FENCE
CLIMB THE WALL!
WE 'VE GOT THE
GREATEST BAR·
GAINS OF !THEM}
ALL!
pleasure, this store w 2. s w <· g TC L
established in 1964 as I.he only "' r Ff' PLAZA
NOW $5 NOW $4
complete family shoe store in ;;;HiAi8i8iEi.8'iSi-iiTihii5i5i0i0pioififei"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Newp:iri Beach. Perfect filling r
LAST CALL! and fashion from their ex-
tensive inventory of (IU\stan·
ding brands like F'lnrsheim,
Cobblef"s, Bass Wee ju m s .
Evans, Bernardo. Sp err y
Topsider, U.S. Kcds, Life
Stride, Buster Brol4'n, Hanes,
&~quire Adidas, and many
others, has continued the
growth until today, with their
WESTCLfFF PLAZA STORE ONLY
17th & fRVfNE ·NEWPORT BEACH
outslanding group of tr ained
shoemen. they have become
recognized as the most sue·
cessful s1ore of its kind in
•
•
• • •
• •
c
R
Sidewalk Specials!
SATURDAY ONLY
-SELECTED-
WEDDING BANDS
FASHION JEWELRY
GOLD FILLED CHARMS
STERLING CHARMS
LIGHTERS
WALLETS
SILVERPLATED HOLLOWARE
WHCLIFF PLAZA STORE
Open Mond •y •nd Thur1day Til ii P.M.
CHARLES H. BARR
211 Mt:tinl A\ttll'lue,
Jhn-Jsmwl, C.hf.
OUR GREATEST EVER
lOO's of Pairs
• • •
from our regular stock
Fantastic Prices
Saturday, July 31 ONLY •..
Ladies
. . .
PANT, CASUAL
•••
DRESS SHOES
R•9. to $25.00
SATURDAY ONLY
TO
• • •
Rorsheim Uf• Stride
Naturalizers Cobblers
Bernardo
5
H
0
E
5
MEN
Reqular $35.00
NOW ... . . .
Florsheim
Weyenber9
Bass
Hush Puppies
Clarks
I PLEASE, ALL SALES FINAL-NO EXCHANGES OR RERJNDS I
•
1052 IRVINE
Wf:STCLIFF PLAZA
NEWPORT BEACH
548-8684
!
i
j
i
!
'
.
: ;
.. . . • ,
I '
• .
' . ' •
. • . . • • . . . .
• . • . . . . . . . . -
. •• .. 1· •• l.: . ' ~ .,
~ f: •,
i~
~;
• ..
~...
" ..
~ ....................................................................................... w
~-·· ..,. ·"" ..... .... , • . 'fl-• • =-· '\ J. ,,,,.._.'I :1sl! ..... ·~ -. L ------~-·' • • • I -·-..• ,.~-....... ~-.
•
}
---· .~ ................. ..... , ..... _ ....... -............. . ............... ~ ............. -·-,.. ......... , ·-· .. ·-.. -............................ ..
~ DAILY l'ILOT Thursday, Juty iq 1971
·~~°-~~£:,5,;, ;,;.._, .oo ~ndernea
i5anta W aod !o,ahion Squatt Pl.A YBOY HAIR ST\'USTS
In La ltibfa. -The beautiful decor ol the
PLAVBOY salon provides • ~ l MARKET BASK.ET -A setting ol comfort a n d fi: i point of· Interest belldei the elegance for having your hair
I discount prices avallable at . this fine market I! the done In the latest styles.
: ootstahdlng meat department Man11ger Charlene Clark and
• featuring USDA prime and her st2Jf will do their utmost
; US!JA d\oice meAts .guaran-to please you. Mis,, Monette ls f
t teemg 100 percent aaltsfacUon available for manicures and -
THINK SALE
I
'
pedicures.
DR. LOU ROY ELDER -
Westcliff Plaza's Optometrist.
specializes in contact lenses
along with refracting,
prescribing and eyewear styl-
ing . His office features lhe
latest technical equipmer.t in
providing accurate analysis.
Dr. Elder also hu; 10 offer an
exceptionall wide St'lection of
styles and colors in glass
fran1es.
'··,:: ..... • ·:.; $:
·-
People who make it all go at \Vestclif( Plaza are these members of the West-
cliff Plaza Merchants Association Board of Directors. Veta Behr (cen ter, fore-
ground), Vela's Intimate Apparel, is pres ident for second consecutive year.
Olher ofricers (Jeft to righl) are Dave Maison, Bank o r America, treasurer; Bob
HALUDAY'S-Specializing Inman, man.-:ger or Village Cenlers for Irvine Co., executive secretary; Mary
in the finesl tradition a I Barr, co-owner of Charles H . Barr Jewelers, director; Bill Beck, owner of the f)
jtoJn [nh.Q
W•stcliff Pla:ui Only
clothing, the businessman, stu-Storekeeper. di~ector: Clint Hoose, Rion Clardware, vice president. Directors
dent, yachtsman, will know not present were Dick Marowitz and Bill Halliday. that their natural shoulder __ _;_ ________________ __:_ ____________ I
bridge accessories. Also added
feature lnclude n um er o us
SIDEWALK
SALE!
SEE OUR
SURPRISE
TABLE
SATURDAY, JULY 31, ONLY!
COBBLERS BENCH
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
17tM & Irvin• -N•wport BeacM
selections are styled properly
by a courteou.s experienced
staff. Featured at Halllday's
a.re traditionally Greif suits
2nd sportcoats, Corbi n
trousers, Cactus Casual and
Harris alacks, Izod knit.s,
tailor-made shoes. Sperry Top
Siders, Gant, and Sero shirts.
ANTHONYS -Twent y-
three years of shoe service in
the Harbor area with one of
their leading shops i n
We!>1clif[ Plaza. Com pl e le
services include: shoe repair,
dying and re-styling, lugg2.ge
repair, handbag repair, clean-
ing end dying. Anthony's i3
also regional repair service
for Sperry Topsiders deck
shoes on the West Coast.
decorative accessories, gift \
items and party supplies. I~;;;~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TH E STOREKEEPER -Ii
Specializing in an extensive
variety of leisure wear for
men and boys this popular
opened door shop has gained a
reputation of being head-
quarters for the likewise
popular Levi and Hang. Ten
lines. Bill Beck, the e<>ngenial
storekeeper. has also stocked
Harris slacks, Gant shirts, 2.nd
Thane knits in a tremendous
selection of color and sizes.
The convenient hours of 10 to
9, Monday thru Friday, and 10
to 6 on Saturdays. leaves am-
ple time for browsing in this
incomparable shop.
'
We've
got to hand
it to you.
Westcliff Plaza
Merchants
BANKm
OF AMERICA
Westcliff Plaza
-•-•ot•uo0-~_.,,.,, .. _,.,_,~-·°'""'"M°'< .. _.,.,.,,,..,__.,._
PAPER UNL™ITEO -
The store features a variety of
popular lines covering all
seasons and occasions
throughout the year. True to
the store's name, there is 2.ri
unlimited supply of unusual,
colorful, fun party favors,
versatile assortments of rib-
bons, papers, stationery and
Citizens ' Gr oup Finds
Most TV Unfit for Kids
WASHINGTON \UPI~
Saturday morning isn't the on-
ly time childrr:n w a t ch
television.
c1'an1med with commercials,
the report said.
With the report went a peti-
tion signed by 8,300 lndividuals
and organizations said to
represent more than 32 million
persons.
FREE
CONDITIONER
With Shampoo & Set
SIDEWALK SALE DAY
ONLY -
SATURDAY, JULY 31
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
WESTCLIFF PLAZA -17th &
NEWPORT BEACH
PHONEo 548-0460
But try to find a children's
program any other lime. "Not
one of the c om m erci al
television networks presents
any children's t e I e v is i o n
program on weekday af-
ternoons," says a citizens'
group to improve broad-
casting.
If the report is nol a searing
indictme nt of Amer I ca nl
television·s concern f or
~hildren. the petition certainly I
is. lt sa~y~';' =====~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In a report lo the Federal
Communications Commission
(FCC). the group s a I d
"Ame rican children ha Ye
almost no choice but lo view
adult programming at an ear·
ly age."'
The report, issued by the
National Citi1.cns Committee
for Broadcasting. takes a dif-
ferent tack than other studies.
It compares I e I e v is ion
programming for children in
the United Stales v.·ith that of
15 other countries and find s
the American child sadl y
shortr:hanged.
Not only is there a shortage
of programs. but what fev.·
there are tend to be cartoons
*
·' .'11 • clec1f'V •carfnf ® s~tu~~;y '(I ( # 'S oF oHro On~
SIDEWALK
'
: t ...
•
. "
•
' . •
' .
'
' .
' • • • .
' . ' ' l
' ' ' ' •
I
j
' l
For S11rn1ner Snacks or Parties
FREE -BOX OF
OLD FASHIONED CRACKERS
WitM Pu rcMas•
Cf A
SPECIAL
BLEND
CHEESE
BALL
Thele fl•vorful, bit •-~ii•, Old-Felhion•d Cr•ck•rs
•r• •n ide•I compenion for th• Hickory Fermi
Cheele Bell-a 5n•ck or party tr•et m•d• from •
lpeciel blend of eq•d che•1•1. cov•r•d with 9round,
1elect•d nutl, end topped with • bright red ch•rry.
Thi1 perfect combin•tion will deli9ht your 9u•1+1-
end f•mily a1 well.
SJ.SJ YALUI
are 125 ex ciling
cheese recipe~ in an in·
le restin~. "·ell-illuslr11ed
c::ookbook . \V1th i1, }OU c1n
prep11r • \er1 ed chee1a
dishe1 to delight fam ily
and fr ie.,.nds . $1.49
SPECIAL
1 DAY
HALF PRICE
75'
• ... $1 .~•
SPICE DELIGHT DIPS ............. .
~~~~ ~6~~~;:MFA~~~. ~.~~~~E .STI~.:::::
$1.00 SPECIAL
I DAY .59 ONLY
.55$1 64
$2.14 ~
flitkdt'1 t•!~f.
WESTCLIFf. PLAZA
17tti & IRVINE NEWPORT BEACH
••
' -1-: .. ,,~ -· ~.)Jn-..~ ::..-. , ~ .. r &])f~t .
Am eric a's Leading
Cheese Stores
17th & Irvine Ave.
Newpeirt Beach
-··-·
STARTS SATURDAY, 10 A.M .
Westclill Pine
Phone; 1>45-0792
lrvln•
·-
High Court Had
Lot Mo1·e to Say
WASHINGTON !UPI) -
The justices of the Supreme
Court talked a Jot more in the
term ended June 30 than they
did the previous term. They
wrote 291 opinons in 126 cases.
Official statistics show 151
cases were argued from
October to June. Twenty-two
were decided by brief, unsign·
ed opinions. Three will be
reargued next term. In the
1969--70 term the court heard
144 cases and handled them in
only 227 opionions.
Justice William O. Do1Jglas,
always a proliric opinion
'1rTilcr, wrote 52 in the term
ju.rt ended. The fact that 28
were dissents -up from 23
last term -indicated the new
conservative trend of the
court.
Douglas wrote 14 opinions
for the court, 8 concurrin~
opinions and two "separate'
opinions, wh.ich merely gave
his views with no official !able.
Otief Justice Warren E.
Burger, v.·ho has heavy
administrative duties both in-
side and outside the court,
wrote the fewest -20. He
spoke for the court in 17 cases
but confined his dissent and
c<lncurrences to three each.
lie wrote one "separate.''
Justice John M. Harlan
fotlov;ed Douglas with .tl
opinions. compared with 36
last term; an<l. Justice William
J. Brennan Jr. was next with
38, compared with 26 last
term.
Justices llugo L. Black and
Potter Stewart each wrote 32,
Justice Bryon R. White., 29,
Justice Harry A. Blackmun,
25, and Justice Thurgood
Marshall, 22.
Solly Bananas
Really Is ...
Bananas, That Is
CHRISTMAS
CARDS
Imprinting FREE
on 100 cords or
more of same design
Many to choose from
Also
Se lected P aper Napkins,
Towels and Gifts
Some Wall Hangings.
SATURDAY ONLY!
PAPER UNLIMITED
WESTCL IFF PLAZA -17th &
NEWPORT BEACH
548·1921
IRVINE
Space Kids
The three daughters of ApoUo 15 astronaut James
Irwin raise the Flag at their home near the Manned
Spacecraft Center in honor of their father's moon-
bound space flight. From left are Jan, 6; Jill 10;
Joy, 11.
Cult Gives Comniunes
Bad Name--Expert
RI VER S I DE , ( A P )-''They see the media as the
Charlt-S l\1anson has given conditioning vehicle of the
communes a bad name, says a rlominant culture," says
doctor who has studied the Smith. "Haight-Ashbury is
commWle movement in Cali-their examiple. The media ex-
fornia . plaited Lhem."
Dr. David E. Smith says the Smith worked in the Haight~
trend toward group living was Ashbury district in tlle heyday
thriving until lhe bizarre life of hippie flower children,
style of Manson's hippie-type before its drug-dazed demise
clan was thrust into publicity's into a crime-ridden slum.
glare with the Sharon Tate There, in 1967, he mel
murder trial. Manson and his tribe of
"The Manson commune was slavish young follcrwers, who
very atypical," says Smith. fascinated him sufficiently to
"But until l\1anson was ar-inspire a study of the group's
rested, most people had ne ver life style.
heard of communes. In Taos. J\'.M., a commune was burned "Tiley were parlicipating ln th a cultural void." he recalls. to e grotlild by the "He IM ) th townspeople because of what . anson wa s e
they read in the newspapers." m~ah. He had a~lute
Smith, medical direclor of P?wer. Wha~ever h~ ~id w~
the Haight-Ashbury Clinic in right. The ~iris ~c1pated 1n
San Francisco and 8 v~ual deviance without. ques-
lect.urer this &1mmer at . Absolute ~ont~ol IS n~~
University of Caiifomia at g . He was quite disturbed.
Riverside, says the J\1anson Manson and his "family" of
case has turtjed most com-young women event u a I l_y
mune members against the traveled §OU!h a~d settled 1!1
!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~n':ew~s~m'."c~d":i''.:_·_____ Southern Cahfomia. Last April the clan leader and three
won1en follower s were
SALE
all time reductions
Stripe Flair Jeans Reg. 8.00
Flair Pants Reg. 13.00
Cuff Pants Reg. to 14.00
28 thru 32 waist only
Spart Shirts Re g. to 14.0()
Knit Shirts Re g. to 13.00
Jackets Reg. to 70.00
Now 2.95
Now 4.95
Now
Now 4.95
Now 5.95
Now 29.95
GOOD FOR 2 DAYS & 2 NITES
TONITE, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
!SIDEWALK SALE SATURDAY)
M ... tfir• Fri. 10:00·9:00, Scttl,..cry 10: ... :00
1028 lrvJne, Newport Beach1 California 92660, Phonaj 42-7061
·-.. ... _ ..
sentenced to death for
murdering Miss Tate and six
others.
Smith, ,mo has been
teaching a class in human sex-
uality. has categorized current
communes into three types -
the crash commune which ls
nothing more than a place for
foo!loose youngsters to sleep
and then drift on; the family
commune in which members
share everything but are sex-
ually monogamous. and the
group marriage commune in
which members perticipale in
sex \\.'ith all other group
members bul have no single
partner.
The last which Smilh calls
the n1ost destructive system,
was practired by the Manoon
''family," he"'flotes. Its major
problem arises when children
are born and the mother
doe5Tl 't know wtio fathered it.
"When the child is born, it
has an excessive identity with
the mot.her," he says.
"There's a potential for a
psychtl-dynemically disturbed
child. But this is an untapped
research area."
'Tbe commune membeni aey
the group is the child's father,
he notes, and many tenn their
file sly le a "group marriage.''
But he adds: "Destructive
marriages tend to end In
crisis. The Manson girls would
have never left Manson unJes,.,
they were arrested. Often the
crisis emanates form the male
rather than the female."
Thur~r. July 2q, 1971 DAILY PILOT ~
E. Pakistan Destruction
Nature, Man Cov er Scars
DACCA, East P a k I st a n at other e:s:aminaUon centers. feel as though they have a
(UPI) -Lwh greener Y No official explanation wa3 chance ."
brought by the nlOfl!IOOll rains ollered for the i..-.,~ Bengali Am th lhi h and repajr work by the •a; .1 ong e ngs t e
government are c o v er I n g ab6«iteei3rn. Many of the Bengalis fear are arrests
some of the visible marks left students doubtless ned with without warning every rew
by civil war on E a 5 t thcir families following the weeks of promlnent Bengalis,
Pakistan's capital, but other first few days ol army terror some cl. v..-bom were not con-
scaf'8 remain. in Dacca, and &ame may have nected with automomy leader
A lasting one became ap-been k.illed. But of those who Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and
parent with the ·st.art of remained, many decided to his now-forbidden A wami J~ tn'. ·ha Pakistan's equivalent of col· stay home and missed the ex-league. No reasons are given
lege entrance tests for high ams. for the arrests, no charges are
school students. Government •·The Bengalls are ex-made and nG trials are held. Westcltff Pl•u Only
officials advertised the tests: treme\y discouraged and de-Pe?ttaps 75 percent of lhe'I~~~~~~~~~~~ as a sign of normalcy, but jected," said one western shops have now reopened inli
their words echoed in ex· diplomat who has watched Dacca, and obsen'ers here
amination rooms that in many what has happened since lhe estimate that about 70 perrent
cases were alm<llrt empty. army cracked down In Dacca. of the fonner population of
Graffiti is
A Joke ••• Really
At one school 514 boys had "There has been nothing since more than one million is
applied and paid fees for the: rM~a~rch~~25~lh~a~l~m~a~k~es~th~em~~p~r...,~n~I~. :~:~::~~~~~~~~~~~~ tests last December: 124ri
6howed up to be admitted by
the poUce guards who sur-
rounded the school building.
The atta"Jdance rat.e was 22
percent. -OFF
DESIGNER COLLECTION OF NECK TIES
TUX &-CRUISE COATS
At a girl's examination cen-
ter a few blocks away, past the
charred remains of some
peasant shacks that were
burned by Ille army in the
start of the civil war on March
25, the atl.endance rate was
somewhat higher -37 per-
cent.
At both centers most of the
U r d u -speaking candidates
whose parents are from West
Pakistan showed up, but
roughly three-fourths of the
Bengali candidates who are
natives or East Pakistan did
not. 1be situation was similar
I TUXEDO SHIRTS•: ~~n:i~ • • • •
SALE SATURDAY, JULY 31 , ONLY!
THE BEST
Readership pol ls prove
"Peanuts" is one of the
\l:ortd's most popular comic
strips. Read It daily tn the
DAILY PlLOT.
DARRELL'S DEDRICK TUX SHOP
WESTCLIFF PLAZA ONLY
17tlt I lltYINI -NIWPOltT llACH
SATURDAY. JULY 31st ONLV:
PRICES
SLASHED
'
APPLIANCES-SOFT GOODS -TOYS -
HUNDREDS OF MISC. ITEMS ON THE OUT·
SIDE PRICED FOR CLEARANCE -ALSO IN
CELEBRATION Ofl THE OPENING OF OUR
NEW TORRANCE STORE -HUNDREDS Ofl
OTHER VALUES INSIDE OUR STORE'.
HURRY! SPECI AL SALE
SATURD AY ONLY
DRUG STORE
WESTCLIFfl PLAZA STORE ONLY
1020 IRVINE -NEWPORT BEACH
Westcliff Pima
Saturday
<>s48-8365
........ '
I • -'ft'I:·"""'--...--
• •
\,
•
1t DAILY l'ILOT s
°)'•111' Money's Worth
Economic Misery
Worst in Years
87 SYLVIA PORTER
Your economic mlStry ln
thi& mid summer 1971 1s rhe
worst 1t bu bet.n in a genera
ti-On
Tbe ' discomfort 1ndeJ1: Jrt
•~fed by Arthur ].1 Okun
formerly Presuknt John.son ~
cltld economb.t and now at
I.he Brookings Institute has
&hot up to a slartJ1ng 13 4 -
the }ughest on my reco rds
back lo the \\orld War Ii era
Thi~ rndei: consists or tht' tv.o
key f1gure5 which n:.easure our
~ell being the rate 0 r
unemployn1ent and lhe rise in
the Consumer Pr ce Index
LA TEST FIGURES show
consumer prices soaring at an
annual rate of 7 2 percent and
unemployment sllcklng at a
&l.eep 6 2 percent E 11 e n
assuming both figures drop 1n
I.he months ahead -whieh I
assume -1971 1s checking in
.as another nightmare year on
top of the nightmare of 1970
and the n1ghlmare of 1969
The Nixon Adnunistration
did not plan 11 this wa y In
good faith and v.ith I.be ap
proval of v rtually tvery
economist r know -hberal
conservative and in between
-the White House and the
Federal Reserve System set
out 1n 1969 to force a business
&lowdown n order to curb the
rate of inflation
But the del l ber at t>I V
eng ineered business ~lowdown
Intensified into the econom1c
rece5s1on of 1969 70 At the
aame time the annual rate of
inflation ROSE lo 6 I percent
in 1969 stuck a! :; :; percent 1n
1970 and now 1l s questionable
whether 1! will be much under
& percent (if under 5) by the
end of 1971
Despite the 1 mp r e s s 1 v e
credentials and the grandiose.
expectations of the planners
neithe r the bluepr1nts nor the
proJecUons have come out
right
WHAT S 1'10RE that 6 2
percent rate is an overall
figure Behind ll are much
higher intolerably higher tax
es for veterans blacks the
young ol der "'orkers Tt s
nothing short of criminal to
ma.ke these groups e f
Vf AR
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IM1vl
OISCOM~(l~T tjQI )(
" '". " " "' " "' " " " " ..
" ' " " '
3 New Firn1s Due Soon
At New Beach Facility
Thrt~ new firms \\hose
plants will occ upy six acreo:
are expecll:d lo announcP
moves ~ lo the Huntmgton
Beach Industrial Park
WE HAVE WHAT rT
TAKES
by TERRY GRANT R Ph
TR UST -Our fncnrls and
r ll!lom,.rs h 11 ' ,, ll'arn,.d
that th t y r11.n r"IY no us !O
,.>.~rll) rakr r&rr rif 111!
thf' r ph11rm11c.i. hr11 Ith
Jlf'l'd'
ACCIJ RACY -It 1s 11 phAr
m11cy )U\" lhRI ,.,,.ry pr,.
scipllon mll~I h" rh,.rkrd a !
Ira.st r .... 1r" hf'fnrP r IPa1Po:
th.-ph11rrn11r.i. !r a'nid any
chanrP nf <'rrnr
KNO\,. L.EDC E -lhP 111•
CPSS&.ry )I'll " nr ( nl lf'~f' sUJd v 11,nd 1hr pa •~ n~ nf I
c'nsinii: txams "fl 1lrl'd fr r
f'1e-rv pharm11r o:t
EXPERIENCE -Lo: t hr 11 1'>
IO)U\I' 1'!!~1'01 111.I In lH'h l"I 1 0~
J;UCCj'U hi an ... r l'lrl \\" ar,
r.r1Jud nf \\ha! "~ hllvl'
Ntrnt'd' u.h1Jr nf'l'r;it1noi nur
ph1rrn11cy t h,.',, m11ny ,..,.,., .
SERVICE -\'vP 'rtr •m'"
th' nppnrl11n\11 11 prn1 r In
you that ~l'f\:lf'I' ls our mnttn
YOU on YOUR JXlCT()R CAN PHONE US when you
n~ a delivery We will de-
liver promptly v.llhout 'x
tr11 <'ht rt"'" A irre11 t manv ~ple r"IY on us for thrlr
health ne«h \V, v.elrl'.lm'
t?q_u~!,. rnr drlrvrry servic•
and charge Accounts
PAlltK LIDO PHAlltMACY
U1 Hotplt•I llth4
..._,.,., IQch '42·1SIO
,,... 0.llY•ry
Chamber of Com rne r re
manag er Ralph K1srr repflrt l'd
nn prn,i:ress of the p;1rk
operated b\ John [') Lusk In
northwest Jfunt1ngton Beach
at a mei':t1ng of chamber
director~
lie said thiil ~tiiyor Gcnr~e
McCracken and c h a m h e r
president A 1 Khngensm1 1h
recently toured the park to \ ,,w construcln)n progres~
K ser sa id Enga rd Cnating<1
I~ In full operat ion in an R 000
square fool facihtv on Com
merce Street snulh of ~fcfad
den A en ut ;ind thar Stand11rrl
Chemical ha' near\\ c0m
plf'ted a i;imi lar plant nrxt
door
A 12 nno 'Gt arr fnn! hui!rl1n~
I~ JU~! cnmple!ed 111 he o:amf'
area 11rd 11 is for lea~e fl'r s11le
b\ Lud.; 1t can br leased 1n
11ho!e or d1\ldf'd
The park \vh 1ch NII er' 11
Iola! llTf'11 of 320 at'rj"o: v.:i~
opened about a }Cttr ttj!n The
f1rsr 1nt'remcnt involl rs 71)
11cres about JS arrcs nf "hich
h:n r ~trcets and u t 1 I 1 t v
ser\ ices
Announc1n9
INVESTMENT PROPERTY ANALYSIS
IT
REAL TRON COMPUTER
All•lyae Your Equity In Any lnY••+ment Property
Introductory Seno1c• lnclucf1, a Look At Pr•1•nt Pro
p•rtv St1tu1 A1 Comp•red to P•1+ Perlorm•nt• A1
W•lf •• a lont rang• Forec•1t
• NO OIUIAT10N-CALL "°l A,POINTMIHT
642 .. JSl
Pm IARRm REALTY
=
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OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List
•..-i..,.,., .. , ...... ,,., .... """" ................ ' .......... kt.ID. "•k9 .. Ml IMl!ioM MIH If IMrt., .. 11111'11"-11 Utn"'lt.-
NA$0 L11ting1 for Wedne1d•y, July 21, 1971
lnco1ne
For S111ith
2 CJementc
Men Lauded
Dividends Set
If yot .,. 11et "''"' A1t1werl119
S...k• Ye• .,. "' teftl"' •II •f ••• , ... h.
TILIPHONI
ANSWIRING IUIU.U
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Wednesday's Clo sing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
N.Y. ll'intiers and Losers
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--
OAJLY PILOT
Wall Street
Chatter
Steps. (.o\l,arri f I s c a I
stimulation and evidence nf
future profit recoot>ry may bP.
rqu1red to mnve the market
off 11~ present plateau SpeB r
and Staff s11y~ :\tuc.h nf !he
markets current restraint
611"ms from specuta!Jon a!i tn
what !he fP<!Pral r~et\8
boar<l wdl rl(l next A turn off
of the money 1'fll,l!Ol.fi c:nuld
tum Off prnspecl1ve 15~ur11y
buyers the f1nn believes
The bull market ha~ rome tn
a pause which could 12-;t for
awhile as it abS(lrbs rerent
developmenlll says Standartt
& Pnor s Corp Groundwork
for another albl:!1t selective
leg should be la1<1 tn Lhe period
just ahead ri.1eanw h1Je com~
mltmen'-'i in carefuUy c.Msen
stocks are timely, S & P sayll
!_,_ .. -• .. 1.
' l
I
I
\
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•I
I
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•
OAnlV! PltOT I Thursday, July iq, 1~71
COLLEGE G1RLS EMPLOY THEMSELVES
Artisan1 Wallace (left), Montgomery
Two Coeds. Creating
Classy Cable Tables
Looking for lhal Whacky
10mething to really "make"
your living room? Or how
about a dining table? (Round
is romantic -you can sqeeze
1 lot of people around it.)
Sandy ~1ontgomery o f
Newport Beach and fellow
Mills College coed, Nancy
Wallace of Palo Alto, have
been manufacturing "cable
tables,'' made from discarded
spools once wound with elec-
bical cable.
The two girls, both sccond-
semestcr freshmen at Mills,
are currently living with San·
dy's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert L. · Montgomery, 900
Citrus Place.
They were forced to become
entrepreneurs "'hen t he
scarcity of summer jobs made
the $4,400 a year tuition look
like ii could prohibit their
return to the Bay Area cam·
pus in September.
The girls sand and varnish
the spools. but allow them to
retain their rustic look. Some
are decorated with colorful
hex symbols. The spool-like
shape remains, complete with
a hole in the middle, suitable
to support a patio umbrella.
Some tables stand as high as
three-and-a-half feel. Others
are low enough to be coffee
tables.
The coeds sell their finished
products for $35 to $75, depen-
ding on size and amount of
creative energy they figure
went into them.
Outwits Florida
New Hampshire's First
Hurdle to White House
CONCORD, N. JI. !UPI) -
New Hampshire, aided by a bit
of legislative nimbleness and
20 years of tradition, is still
the first high hurdle in the
long run to the presidency.
Sorry, Florida.
primary date lo coincide wilh
Florida sel a March 14
New Hampshire's. But New
Hampshire, whose legislature
adjourned later, quickly ad-
vanced its primary lo March
7.
"It's nice to be number
Me," said one leglslator. "but
rome anyy.·ay. The Florida
pop.i.lalion simply is not as
representative as New Hamp-
lihire 's."
Most state political leaders
feel the same, although
Republican former G o v •
Sherman Adams. who created
the original New Hampshire
primary in 1952 a.nd
masterminded the slate cam-
paign of D w i g h l D.
Eisenhower, says its value has
been overrated and blunted by
lavish spending campaigns.
No fewer than six 1972
Democratic hopefuls, headed
by Sen.s. Edmund Muskie of
Maine and George S •
McGovern or South Dakota,
already have toured the New
Hampshire landscape.
McGovern, the only an-
n o u n c e d Democratic can-
didate, promised to end the
Vielnam War "within weeks,''
then approached r u r a I
resi~ts in a whirlwind se-
cond visit with attack! on
welfare ills.. defehse spending
and memploymenl.
Muskie, still unannounced,
a:mflned hb: three visi~ to big·
ger aoulhern cities, but has
the support of 40 top state
Democrats, including the
backers la.i;t time of former
Sen. Eugene McCarthy of Min·
neoota.
I.DI A n g e I e s ' third·lerm
mayor Sam Yorty has enter!d
ttie at.ate twice behind big ad-
vance publicity.
Sens. Birch Bayh (0-lnd.),
William Proxmire (0.Wis.),
and Rep . William R. Anderson
(D-Tenn.) former com-
manding officer of the nuclear
IUbmarine USS NautflU$, baYe
Honor Roll
Ann E. Goodwin. 92&9 Daisy
Ave., Fountain Valley, has
been named to the honor roU
for academic excellence dur·
Jng the spring semester at the
Lewrence campus of Lhe
pitvnlty ol Kansaa.. y
made visits but have not com-
mitted themselves.
Democratic State Chairman
Harry P. Makris said the state
committee will not endorse
any one candidate, to ;avoid
tlic disastrous 1968 campaign
rift when the commiltee gaYe
Lyndon B. J ohnson its back·
ing.
McCarthy won the bulk of
delegate votes lo the 1968
Democratic Nat ion a I Con-
vention in a primary victory
that rewrote polilic2.I primers.
But Makris said there is not
enough of a gap to exploit
between President Nixon and
those who seek the presidency.
"The y.•ar. the way it is going
today. v.·ill not even be an
issue in 1972," he said.
"Don't look for another
childrens' crusade in 1972,"
Chairman Robert E. Whelan.
"There are no riots, burning
or bombing. The mood has
changed. and this is to Nixon's
advantage. !-Jc is always
popular in New 11;impshire."
Although the primary ba.llol
hfls been extended to 40,000 in
New Hampshire under age 21,
Whelan said neither party has
had any success in registering
them.
"The youth vote. will not be
;:i factod." he said. Let's face
it, only a small percentage in
the 21-26 age group even
bother to register."
A 43-year-0ld ex-Marine,
Rep. Paul N. McCloskey {R-
ea.Ii!.), contends the President
will continue the war until
November, 1972, and said he
intends to challenge Nixon in
the New Hampshire primary.
With a minimum of fanfare,
and no visible support from
state p o 1 i t i c a I chie!lains,
McCloskey has talked in-
formally with groups of
students.
California Gov. Ron a Id
Reagan and New York Mayor
John V. Lindsay, both
Republicans, each has made
one appearance in N e w
Ha~hire.
The American Party, which
polled Jl,173 votes in lhe 1968
election in New Hampshire as
the George C. Wallace party.
Ls eligible to tield candidates
next March.
Under new lcg.istatlon. all
candidates must produce 500
signatures from each of the
two Congressional districts
and a $500 filing fee. The state
hopes "crank candidates" will
be fewer.
Republicans will send 14
delegates -each with one
vote -to the Republican Na-
tional Convention. The number
of Democratic delegates ha s
not yet been decided .
------1 ,i.~ .. .... ~.
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"
DAJL V PILOT JI
Barriers Are No Barrier to San Clemente Gal • •
R.v Pllll. ltOSS
Of "" l>ellY 1'1191 II&"
Three years ago, Patli Johnson placed
11 non-medal winning fourth in the Olym·
pie Gam es' JOO.mete r hurdles finals at
Meiico City .
Only 18 at lhe lime, the current San
Clemente resident figures she was
fortunate just lo have been in the finals.
But that's not wha t bothered PattJ
about her sojourn at the Olympiad.
"I barely missed out on the bronze
medal," she says . "But what really bugs
me is that I was su pposed to receive a
nice certificale for my finish. However, I
never got it .''
In spite of this otherwise minor in·
cidence or snubt:ting her, Patti Johnson i~
on the way up again. •
She has high hopes of representing the
LJ_S. in the 1972 Olympics at Munich .
Germany. and she's determined to go all
the way this ti rne.
The bespectacled 21-year-0ld wi fe of a
l\1arine oorporal at Camp Pendleton lives
in the Orar.ge. Coast area but competes
for the Angels Track Club in her
hometown of Renlon , Wash.
She's presently with her American
teammate.!! for the Pan American
Games, which are slated.for C.11, Colom·
bla, (She'll compete Uti5 Friday and
Saturday).
And the American record holder in the
women 's JOO.meter barrie rs at 13.3 won't
be. fooling around al the "Western
Hemisphere Olympics" either.
Patti determinedly notes. "whatever
happens between now and the "Tl O\ym.
pies, I o!lly have one goa l -I'm aiming
for Mun ich.
"My chief competitors in Cali will be
my club teammate, Pat Donnelly, and
PeMy May from Vancouver, British
Columbia."''
The principal tbom In P8tll'1 side as of
~ate -31·year..ald veteran Mamie Ralllna
ot Chicago -woo't he racing In lbe P•n
Am classic since she's on European tour
with an American spike delegation (M.iss
Rallins ran a dlsput~ 13.1 last June and
it's pending as an American record in the
100.met~ barriers). -
?atti &ays or Mamie, "I've beaten her
fi ve out of six times this year. But the
one time she beat was the race when she
ran lhe 13.1.
"I thlnk t was about six years old when
Mamie began competing b.ct about
1966."
The State of W11hlngton female
phenom figures that the comparatively
wanner (warmer than Rent.on, that is)
climes of San Clemente have been
beneficial in her t~ainln .
"It doesn't reall y ~ getUng warm
until late May in gton ,'' she says.
"But down here you ~eally don't have to
worry much about pulling a mu scle and
things like: that because: ol the warmer
. .
weather. "' •
"Bob R>dlord (San Clement. Jl!ih.
track coach) ha• let ma borrow ~
and use the achool'1 track for rq:y
workouts. tr1 beeo really rUce cl'hf ,ahd
the people there because aome:~
some schools can be rully nasty about
those thinp," she says..
A hou~ewtfe w·hen 1he isn't runAing,
l'atti started taking running suioudy in.
1965, when 1he was JS. 4
Ev identl y Patti got the good !'Or.d
because she's bef.n going whole boc-as a
competitOI'" ever aince. •
Conigliaros' Mother Tells Anguish
GOLD MEDAL FAVORITE AT CALI -PATTI JOHN SON
Calls Rules Silly
Girl Hurdler Speal{s Out
On Injustices to Spikers
Special to Thr: DAIL V PILOT
Uke many other 21-year-olds, Pa!li
Johnson of San Clemente is fairl y
artic ul al!, outspoken and not afraid !o
Jash oul at whal she regards as in-
justices.
The current Am erican record-holder 1n
the won1en's JOO-meter hurdles 1s
e~pcciall.v leery of things when discussinJ(
the subjf'Cl of the penple who run trark
and field -the sometimes archaic
federations and athletic untons .
"You occasionaH v hear Hbout a male
track athlete gettii1g in trouble for ac-
cephng ~·hal 1s t'Onsidered an unac-
('ept.able rew<ird or prize." PaU1 says.
"Well, the gi rl.~ don't have to Wflrry a'.'I
muc h as the. guy~ because sometimes
One of Those
Rare Games:
May Get Runs
CLEVELAND (AP ) -The Californ ia
Angels got Rudy May some runs -five
nf 'em -and the crafLy left-hander
wasn 'l about to blow the opportunity.
May threw a si1'·hitter to even his
Jul\',.
July Jl
Angel Slate
AM ~-_. tCMl'C Intl
... 111111• ll (i..>.i .....
Al'lfell •I Dtlroll
S:olct P."I.
11 :10 ,,m.
retard at 6-..s as the Angel l! clipped the
Cltveland lndians, 4·1. It was the first
time lince May I that his teammale3
have scored more than four runs In a
aa:me he had started.
v.•e're almost con~ideted like excess bag-
gage or serond·class citizens. So, the
prizes "'e get are usually jus t
wristwatches.''
Patti claims she has accumulated
enough wristwatches to keep exacl track,
simultaneously. ur what hour Jl IS in a
numbe r of different time zones.
"A lot uf us in "·ornen·.., tra ck v.·ollld
like to see more equal recognition
becau~r our group is growing al! the
time." savs Palli,
"For ifistance, I don't ttunk tho~
rid1c11\011s se x tests are as neces.'iar'.1 as
they used to be, J t hasn't happened that
much sinte the early 60~. Bur I'd be pret-
1.Y Upset if thr-y took a sex test on 1ne at
.<;Qmcth1ng li ke the Olympics and tpey
decided l didn't n1eet their standards of
being a won1an."
Another problem scraping al Pattr's in·
sides is !he treatment on trrps of the
female alheletes.
"The guys can literally chose where
they want to go and lo which meel.s. But
'A·e compete only through the AAU
I Amateur Athletic Union) and that
restricts us . The old people with the old
ideas should jusl move out of the way in
progress's sak e," she says.
"Also, they always want to lump us
(single and married girls) all together °"
tr.Jps just to keep an eye on u:;.
"I can tell you that if you 've disciplined
yourself enough \a get as far a! so me of
the. bigge r meets that the.re are certainly
still same rules which you have to adhere
to.
"But you kind of figure th41 t you won't
blow it ir you 've made it that far anyhow.
The si lly rules just don't make sense.
"If we say one wrong or unacceptable
thing, we get Jetter!! saying that we didn't
act like ladies by questioning some of the
11illy rules.
"If the guys could get pregnant, it
would probably be the other way
around," Patti finh1hes.
NEW YORK (UPI) -"I used to love
baseball. We all did. But no more."
A mot her's anguish and disappointment
were woven into Mrs. Teresa Conigliaro'•
VOil'e.
"Two of n'y sons have been ballplayers
but we ltil}d of discourage lhe thi rd one,
Richie, f'"<>m baseball . Not the way it is
today. It 's too much business now.
Business ancl politics. These are hard
words, I know they are, but they're from
the. he<ir t."
Teresa Conigliaro is like. all mothers.
The th ing she wishes her sons most is
happiness.
Lately though, her oldest son, Tony,
who is 26. and her second oldest, Billy,
Blue Seeking
20th Victory;
Lamonica Inks
BALTIMORF: -Vida Blue. Oakland's
«ensationa l southpaw. goes arter hi~ 20th
victory or the season tonight as the
Athletics try to salvage the final game of
a four.ga me series against Baltimore.
Blue, who celebrated his 22nd birthday
on Wednesday, has beaten the Orioles
twice this season by l--0 and 2-1 scores.
e J_,an1011icu Ba~k.
SANTA ROSA -Quarterback Da ryle
1.,amonica reported lo the Oakl and
Raiders training camp Wednesday,
saying he has agreed to terms for a new
multi-yea r ronlract.
e Net llfi11t1er•
COLU MBUS, Ohio -Jim Osbornfl
stunningly upset third-seeded Clark
Graebner, 7-fi, 6-4, Wednesday to advance
in lo the quarterfinals of the Buckeye lel'I·
nis champi ol'lships.
Also victorious were the top two seeds
-Zeljket Franulovlc of Yugoslavia .and
Tom Gorman. The latter was a 6·:'1, 6-1
victor over Yugoslavia's Boro Jovan ovic
wh ite Franulovic stopped Jeff Borowiak
by 3-6, 6-4 .a nd 7-6 counl.s.
e i\1e 10 Harri
The Lot Angel e! Rams nxived tQ beef
Up th eir ailing ru nning attack Wednffiiday
by signing former Ram Vil nis Eze rins as
a free agent.
Eurins. drafted No. 8 by the Rams In
1966. didn't make the active roster until
1968 wh en he serveri on special t~am!I
primarily. He was released on waive rs in
1969.
e Slffrr OK
ROCHESTER, Minn -Quarlerback
Bart Starr was reported in satuifactory
C'Ondition after uodergolng surgery on his
nghl a.rn1 Wednesday.
l nflamm;ilion in his passing arm had
plagued Starr for the pa st U1ree years,
sidelining him during the lasl part or thfJ
1970 season.
A doctor sairl 11 woulrl be. at least l'Z
\11reks before Sta rr could throw again
"with full authority." That would mean
Starr would miss the first four games nr
the regula r season an d the. entire
preseason training period.
e Holub Hurl
LIB ERTY, Mo. -Center E. J . Holub
of the Kan sas City Chiefs re.injured his
left knee in practice Wednesday and
returned lo his home in Tei.:all.
Holub. in his 1 llh year of pro foolb;1,1\,
planned medica l consultation with his
personal physician in Lubbock.
During his pro eare:er, Holub has had
eig ht kn ee operations and one hamstring
operation. e Seals Stolen
I.OS ANGELES -Rodger Ward, twice
the winner of the lndlanapol\a S<»-mUe
auto race, found this week he couldn 't
drive hill own car -someone had •tolen
the front seats.
"I'm not Wiit Ch11mberlaln ao I just
couldn 't drive from the back seat," com-
1nented the stocky Ward, who now Is
director of public relations for the
Ontario Motor .Speedwtiy.
v,.llo is 2.1, have been unhappy.
Tooy be g a n the ~eason w i t h the
Caiifomia Angels. At five in the morning
on July 10 he called a news conference
and announced he was quitting baseball.
Unhappy about what happened to Tony,
Billy ructed tharply !allowing hls older
brothtr's ntireme:nl announcement. He.
got Into ~ flap with Carl Yastrzemski and
Reggie Smith, two of his teammate! with
the Boston Red Sox, and had it going
pretty good there for awhile before the
whole thing was smoothed over.
"Biily was '° frustrated," his mother
said at the family home In Nahant, Ma,lls.
"What happened to Tony hlrt tsm so
much, but he still shouldn 't have. said
what he. did. Bill y ts a young boy, 1 fine
boy, he was upset. He's sorry he sakt
what he did . It wa s the wrong thing, and
he's 1iurfe1·ing for it now.''
Tony's troubles are more serious. He's
getting his things together in California
right now and trying to find himselr.
··All niy husband and I wan t now is for
him to find the kind or work he 'll ~ hap-
py in," his mother says. "People say wh y
didn't he tell anybody about his eye
before this? He couldn 't.
"They just don't understand. He has a
pin-point of a blind spot In his eye, they
call it 1 ma cular, and as It healed the
PELE !RIGHT) RACES ANTONIO SERRANO FOR THE BALL.
Coach Tells Why Pele.
ls Valued So, Highly
LOS ANGELES -Momen ts earlier the
.R;reale~t socr:er player .... ~ ever Jived had
ju~t played whaL will probably go down
as his final game in l.os Angeles.
Now he wa~ in the dressing quarters
fsuch as they are! of Memorial Coliseum.
sipping a Coke and putting on jersey No.
l instead or his customary No. 10 -
el•WW '#MIT•
----WHITE
WASH ·-------
presumably a tlisgulse to get him pall t
~~e mob of .autograph Sttkers walling
nutllide.
Some 9,150 fang had turned out
Wednesday night lo watch Pele -tht
Black Pearl of soe«r -as he and h~
Santos mates disposed o( Jalisco, 2-1,
thanks to a couple of gift goals.
As Pr.le showered, I chatted with San·
tos coaC'h Ma uro Ramos -a former
Bra1.ilian national teammate of Pele's
and a guy who hBS lost only two of the 6.1
games Santos has played 11lnce he took
over u coach.
Speaking in a mixture of Spanish and
Portugueu, Ramo1 gave 1n exclusive In·
tervlew.
Who will take Pele's place when such
lime comes? I asked .
"We have many standout players In.
Bra1.i! who can play Pele's position. But
no one will take his place." Ramos says.
And what makes Pele so valuable thal he
commands a salary of $2,000 per day (\ax
fret'l?
Ramos' answer co1nes fluidly. "It \.•
that Pele can play .any position and do so
extraordinarily . He's fas!, quick, can
change pace swiftly, He'~ a complete
player and he's t.otally unselfish . , . on
and• off the field."
The affable young San tos tutor admiti!
that his players look upon garnes such all
the Wednesday night duel as "juegos
amistosos" -friendly contest!I.
''We like to win them and we try to win
them. But we don'I take those e:s:tra
chances that might risk injury such all
we might do If playing in a cup game or
if we are represenling the national· team
in an Important match.
"You must remember that we have a
game today -another this weekend -
another ne.ii:t week , etc., so we must play
acco rdingly."
Ramoll also says it'll more diffi~ult ror
h.im to get a coach than a player because
the" latter can rel ase: his ernottons through
spent energy while a coRch's only escape
l! by ye111ng or paclrtg'lhe sidelines.
Pele made some 1lutrp passes and a
number of steals before being pulled
from the g.ame with seven minutes left.
.car ti ssue became larger on the 1.re.a
surrounding it. He' menUoned' to us oc-
casionally he couJdn't pk:k up.the spfn ort
the ball. You have no Idea what he-waa
going through."
Richie Cooigliaro, Tony and Billy's
youngest hrother, is 19 now. He plays the
outf ield and shortstop equally well and
some feel he 's the best prospect in lht
family.
But Teresa Coni&llaro doesn't want him
to go the same route his older brothers
did . Too much heartache.
" ... I couldn 't take having anothel'
boy in baseball. Not after what has hap-
pened," she says.
Bucs Walk-er
Past Dodgers
With Ease, 4-0
LOS ANG ELES (AP ) -Luke Walker
claim~ he doesn't ha ve anything against
the Los Angeles Dodgers. But the
DOO gers aren't quite coAvinced the
Pittsbu rgh right-hander is telling lhfl
truth.
Two weeks ago Walker, pitching for tbe
first time in 19 days, hud ed a one-hitter
against the Dodgers, barely missing a nD-
hitter.
And Wednesday nighl, in his first itarl
1ince l·he onc-hitfer, Welker threw a f()U(.
hit shu tout, blanking the Dodgers, 4-0, for
hill second whitewash of the season -
and first since April 8.
''No, I don 't ha ve anything ageinst the
Dodgers," he replied to the openi11g ques-
t ion .
"I've just had good stuff and good ain-
trol. I'm really amazed at how good m:f
control has been since I ha ven't pitched
that much."
So are. Uie Dodgers.
It was the first time the Dodgers hava
been shut ou t at home and only tht (jfth
time all season.
Walker gave up two hits in the se<:ORd
Inning and then reeled through ·11
Dod gers in e row before pinch-hitt,,r
Manny Mota led off the ninth with an·fn·
field si ngle.
By then the Pirates had wrapped thinp
up against Bi ll Singer, handing the Ln8
Angele!! righ t-hander hi s 13th loss in IS
decisions.
Pitching the concludi ng game of I.he set
and !he season series tonight wil l be.
Claude Osteen . 11-fi, for Los Angeles Md
Steve Blass, I 1·4.
"lf1SI U!tGH LOS .lNOll.lt
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Laver, Emo
Keep Rolling
QUEBEC (AP) Eight 1lngle1
matches were played Wednesday in the
third day of competiti on at the Wtek-long,
$50,000 Quebec lnlemaUon1l ·.Tennll
Tourney.
Ken Rostwall of Australia and No. tt
Andres Glmeno of Spain were ellnilil1ted.
bringing to fivt. ttie number or top.raflked
players at the open who will watch the
rest of the aC'tion from the afdelNa. ·
Unseeded Australian Ray Rurtels C•U5-
ed a slight surprise v.·hen be downed
Rosewall. 1-4, M , bN:aklng his opponenl't
aerve twice In each ~t. May, who beat the Jnd lllns 3-1 on a
four-ll.itter 10 days ago, believes the in-
jury to his left elbow early in the season
hu htl~ him pitch better. He was on
tht ti-day disabled list In May for the
elbow lnjury and a broktn right wrist.
"It turned oot to be good bec&u,. the
elbow is better ·now than It was before,"
tald May: "APP'rtfJtly J lhoolc: t0melhlng
IOOH ln there."
Robinson's Human--Has 3 Errors
Gimeno faced No.7 Roy Emerton ot
Newport Beach 'fnd bowtd 7-1. 7.f ln lwo
exciting: sets which could h•ve rone
either way.
In the Glmeno-Emerson duel , lhe latter
claimed the first tJe bre1ter 14-11 ·.oo
came back tn win the aecond u :
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BALTTMORE (AP) -Frank Robinson
had smrtekecl game-winning home rtlN
before, but no one could rtcall Brooki
Robinson ever making three errors in one
inning. Not even Brooks.
But that's how Baltimore'11 i;lick-
fieklin& third baseman shocked the home
f~ns Wednesday night before Frank drill·
td • three-run blast ln tht ninth Inning
for a 3-1 victory over the Oakla nd
Athletic.a. '
Brooks, rated <1ne of the. best ttelde;rs In
the history of ba.5tball, was ch,rged wll.h
lhl'tf' mb:cuts On two COMf!:CUUvt baUert
Jn • hittorlc fifth lnnlna:.
First, be plclc:ed up 1 tW().Out bunt
11lngle by Campy Cl.mpanerl'I and
overthrew fir1l bl5e. Next, he bobbled a
grounder by George Hendrick and then
made another bad tOS! for • double error
a~ two n1ni1 acored.
When he nexl came to bat In the
seventh Inning. Brooks was given an OV•·
Uon by the crowd In Memorial St1dlum
-and then rapped into his second doubl•
play o( the game.
''It jwit wasn't my n11~t," Brooks 11id.
"'When the ball took a b.ad hop 1100 hit
'lbortlltop Mark &:\ ger in the face lo
the teventh, I wt over and told him, 'I
think that ball w meant for me.' "
• who h.ave opened up '
five-aame le In lhe American League
Inning thrte straight from
Oakla ' Weatem Division leade.r1,
rail! dramaUcally in the ninth.
Frink, In an ~for·15 J lump, lined the
flrtt pit.ch into the left field bleacher• tor
hl 11 16th homer .•
"II'• about trme )'OIJ were doing
oomethlng," 8~ yelled to Frlllk In -.,,
the locl<er roont. "We've been catrylng
you for • Jong time."
Brooks, who has betn voted the
le.ague 's best fielding th ird bt1semln for
the past 11 years, had m•de only six
prevlom errors this seaso n and once went
.t9 conucuUve games without a ml -'<:ue.
1•1 didn't fee l too bad for my11elf," he
said, "but f was 9lad to see the homer
for Mlkt Cuellar'1 aake. Hfl Md been
ro11gt*d up a cou~t of limes rtcently,
and he pitched well enou5(h to win thi1
time."
In other singles play, lo~seedcd Arthur
Ashe of the United Stites <llrtl1sted ~
mark's Torben Ulrich S-2, U , 6-1 , t11tl
Drysd ale of South Africa defeated O\tft
Davidson oC All..'ltraUa 8-1. 7 ... Rod l..t•tl
of Corona def Mar beat Australian Allu
Stone, 7·5, ~2. Bob Lutz of Los Angeli•
overpowered South Africa's f r e W
McMiilan 5-1, 74, Tom Oklter of the
Nt:thrrlends outran Yu1oslavl1'1 Nlkkl
Pllic 7-5, 6-4 and Che.r\e!I PaMrell qi
Puerto Rico edged Bob ft8rmichad .Or .. _ ...... , .... ~ Austr"lt 7~ 7.f. . • ~
---1 ft.1 ... ~
..
Thursdiy, July l9, 1971
••
• ~'":SURF 'S UP -Looking fof\l'ard to the upco1ning
li:iummer surf championships are (from left) Mary·
lou l-lampton, Jill Ba uer, J oi Bau er and Jan Gafney.
" " $wlm1nlng Colellas
~ " ;;Nifty Brother-S~ter Act . '· ~Makes Pan Am Games • ·-~·
:·:SEATTLE IAPI -A sister·brothcr act
bat found fl sound way lo keep HseH off
Cjt streets -swimming toward gold
~als at the Pan-Amcric11n c;ames in
Cl;li, Columbia in Augu st, w11h their eyes
Orl:the 1972 Olyn1pics. : ?l'he swimming youths are Lynn and
iu.~k Colella, each an outstanding
~ineering student, ~·ho has been ;1blc lo
~ in enough time at swi1nn1ing despite
l~iving for st•holastic al·hicvc1ncnt In be
eihsidered a strong contendrr for Pan-
A?nerican and Olympic rnedal s.
::\-ynn. 21. :in cll'Ctrical rngineering stu-
aei,1 at the University or \Vashinglon wh11
~l won a national scholarship from the
~.iety or Wo111cn Engineers, hnlds the
~erican record in the 200-yard butlt'rfly
~ the 200-ya rd breaststroke.
•::l;he has mfl intaiQed a t71 grade point
;tera ge out of a possible 4 0. Rnd has
managed to win three gold n1edals for the
~ited Stales in \Vor!d Studl'nt f.ame3
i:ompetition. ~ "Rick. a 19-ye11r-0ld s11ph11n1ore in
iitronautiral enginf'ering at \Vashingt on,
J.: no slouch in either studies or S"'i m·
Ji,in,
' ~ e11 s Seekin g -.
Probatio11 End •
, QAKl~<\i\"D 1\J PJ 1 l';i>:-<·;.itt·l11·1' l\nr-
;ren \Vel is nf the O;ikland R<11dt'r'i wanl;
;another jucl~e (n hold l1Parings ne~!
'tnonth concernin.i; poss1hle rel"ocatinn of
:his probat1 nn.
; His l'lttornry. Stt1nh>y J• r.old1·. 1vant ~ 40 rlisqualif.v Alamrd;:i l°(\l.lnly :-\1fl('nor
;Jud~e J.ronard D1Pden for allegedl.1 men-
:tionin~ he plannrrl tn send \\'ells \n 111i1
:t>t-rore anv r1 1denrr h;is bN'n presrn1(·d
• "\re h.i1c !t•arned 1ha1 Judge !)1rd1'11
.has prejudged 1he ease brfore actuAlly
hearing the evidence," :<:<'lid Golde. "Thi.'
;judge apparcnlly has said that \Varren is
_going to jail.··
• "'ells, 29, is scheduled lo gu ))l•rnrl.'
:Dieden for a hranng Au~ 6 on possible
: revocarion or his probation.
Dierlen con\"1rt<'rl V.'ells of a1IC'n1p1 1·1f
.tape in 1969. He ll'lter w;is arrested for
:dru nk dr1 vin,ll and A hit-run acriclrnf.
.Dieden then pla ced \\1ells on prohat1on
onrlrr the guidance of nr .. J . n. Jon('!'.,
professor of psychology at Texas
Sn11thCrn rniversit\'.
. On May 16, Wells was sl;ihhed hy A
y,oung woman 1n a Beaunionl, Te>ias bar.
'l,'erms of \.Velis prob11 t1on forbid him to
Clter placC's where liquor is sold.
: Goldie cla1n1ed the j1utge prcjudJ.?,ed 1he
:case by telling flr. Kendall Small, the
;llaiders team physician, he had no
-1ternative after the Beaumont incident
~t to send Wells to jail
His ~rade point average is sh~ht!y
above 3.0. He won a gold medal at the
Student 1.amrs in the 200 hreaststrnke
and a sil\er in the 400-y;i rd ind1vidu;il
1nedlcy, and he ha s set records in both
c\·ents over the short course 1yards
rather than meters 1.
They started S\\'in11ning years ago
heC'ause their parents belonged to a t•lub
that had a pool. They kccp going, bolh
agree, because the fun of meeting new
pC'Ople in ne1y placcs ad the chances for
glory uutwcigh the saf'rifires -such ;is 6
a ni. workouts and the pain involved in
forcing at liing muscles lo provide that
extra pull or push thn t shaves a tcnlh of
a second off one·s l1m('.
"\V11rk n1tts 11re no fun ," says l.ynn.
'·Yuu ha\·e to forl'e yourself \11 gn when
~f·U don "! \1'H11t to, 11 hc11 lhrit alarm gorl'
off at 5:30 a.111."
"\'ou get into the habit of kr111w1n~.''
s;i~-s L\nn. ··1hal -\1rll . yn11'd b('l!('r j:!('l
that hon11•11·ork donl' hl'1·ause you'\'e 1•01 a
11 nrko11 t 1n th e 1norniru: ...
Bt'dtnne. :>;i,1·s hrr hrnthl'r. i" 9 p 111
'You g1•t 1101111• fro1111 s111n1r1111u.~. !ht•n ,ll}U
(';it :ind dn ynur studl'lllJ! 1f .1·nu h<11<' tr.
\\'r cl11 ulht•r th111~<; 1111h ulh•'r .~1\lllllllf'I'<;
tnn~t!I" h4·raus1· thry ha1·e lhr si\mc
srhl•dulr 11£· d•1 '
111 ~pl!(' uf 1ht• tighl Si·li1•dul1' :tnd thr-
sn~;111I ~:-icri!l<'l'S, !he C1d('l1.1s ront1nuc tn
he rxf'1!rd by tt1r 11p1,..1rtun111es c11m-
pr11111·e s11i111nling prr~rn1.:.
Hoth 11f'til In !\01111' ft>r lhe \!Jill ~t11df'nt
(;an1c,'i ;in<l took p;irl p;irl1rr !his yc;ir in
an 11111ta111111:-11 tn•·1·i 1n l,011(\()n
··fill bcca11 ~{' nf ~111mrn1ng. l i!OI tn l,!11
lo Europe four l1n1cs !llsl )l'ilr," sa~s
L~·nn.
··1Jur p;lrl•nts hlll'r nc\·rr bC'f'n thcrr."
R1 tk says, "iind thf'y n1ay nel'er ~rt
rhrrc. ll"s unhPl1rl'ahlr to them that v.·e
~et thrsc O/lportun1l1C.'i ··
'fhrir parents :ire pretty spe{'ial prople
to L~·nn and Rick
""Thrv 1·on1plain snn1rllmes," s;.i1·"
R1rk, "but thrn thc~· s;iy that i\"s bet!rr
rhan ha1111g )OU ouL son1ewhere on the
s!rf'cts."'
llr sa\'s thrir parents tell them. "If ~·nu
dnn t "'anl to sv•im , don't keep fill
11·a.:.tu1g ~ou r time and our time. Rut if
~·nu ·re 11 ii ling in "'Ork, thrn they're "1!1-
in~ to sa<·rif11'r ··
I.1·110 <·itc~ he rself <'IS 1111 rxr1n1ple : "21
;ind l11·inl\ at horne -not earning A pcn-
11 \' " 0 "0lhrr parent<;:' Hic k sa.vs, "can't
understand why \.II! don 't i;i;o nut and get a
joh nr something."
··Th<1! ·s why a Jut nf kids don"t kerp
nn." says Lynn, "ber;iuse tht>ir pArenls
don "t want to ~ive up -vac;itlons . for in-
st;inrc "
She finds a lnt of parrn1s "t1ren'! will-
ing ll\ sacnfltC' lhC'lr own soc ial h1·rs In
drt\'t"' kirl.~ to ii swim mrC't or he timers
and starters when ynu nrC"d thrm. ·•
i~haff ey Whip s Eag1es, I 0-5 ..
··:Estancia High"s Eagles tlmpped a 10-5
Wmmer ltague water po{o dKls1on lo
,Chaffey Wtdnesd11y nil":ht in AA/\ aetlt'ln
~'t the EaR les' pool. -i The invaders from the Citrus Rl'll lnnp
1umped out to A thrre-gnal ad vantage
after the firlll qoarf('r anrl prn\'ed loo
1 tough tn lia~le for 1-:~1l'lnrla
'.Tom Sma llwood ltd E5tanl'1<1'11 srnring
... ,lth • p8ir or gOJll.~ wh ile s1np;le \11llle1
•·ere registered by Larry Blatle.rman, , .
Rober! \\'rh:;trr and A1ll 1..rl'
In {l\hcr action Va1enl'lil knocked 01·c.r
R11rna P;irk. 8 3. Foothill bu r 1 r (!
An;1hr in1. 19-1, 11nd l,onR Rc;irh \Vilsn n
took 11 4 .i dC<'1s1nn for ~11lhkan in !he fi fth
O\'l'rllfllr
~:~t<1nf1a·s ln~s 11;1<; il~ th 1rrl of lhe
(';1111p;:ii~n <iflrr w1nr11nJ;t lhe p::i s1 two
<1ull11i!,<: ai:;a1n~1 Long Rc:1ch \\'llsnn en<i
Anahr1n1
Da ve Snrlurn ._,a~
Foothi!l ~·Ith .~ix.
h1Rh 1xJ1nt rnan ror
Oil City Plans
Special Meet
For Surf Fans
This year the re is no reason to be dn"'"
v.·hen the surf is up.
The City of Huntington Beach is pl;in-
ning lo offer another C'Ontest for are;i
surfers "'ho "'ere not invited lo
partieipate in the U.S. Surfboard Ch;im-
pionshi ps this Seplrmbcr.
The new contest is called the Surnn1er
Surfing Championship and will be run off
Aug. 21 and 22 al the eng or Golden \\'est
Stre<!I.
Jlecreation supervisor !lip Ribble says
there will nol only be beautiful trophies
ror the top finishers, but also the
possibility of Qualifying for thc big one.
"This championship is for local bo}·s
and girls who did not accumulate enoujth
points with the \Vcslcrn Surfing Associa-
fiori to get nn invitation," he s;iys.
"lf they do 1~·r!I in August , thcy·11 be ln
Ille U.S. contest this Scpten1her. ll".s a
gnldcn upporlunity fnr the local surlC'rS In
gain rntrar11·e.''
Brrl hs in thr US. c·ontcst \\'ill he
assignt•d arenrding lo finishing pos1!!nn~
in 1hr six r;itrgonrs of the Summer Surf-
u1g Chan1pionship.
(lnll' the first place fini o;;hcrs in !hr
scniurs d1\'isinn l n1en 35 and otdrr 1 and
ma.c:h·rs division \mrn 25 through 34 1 11·11!
hr tran~fl'rrrd.
Ir\ th1• 1nr11'\ di\'i<:inn flll 2·1\ anrl 1hr
j1111111r~ ,1 11 tsion ! 15·1il thc 1·hant't'S ;ire a
lilt !>' hrt!i·r "1th thr \np threr ~pnt\ in
1•.1rh d111c:1nn tr;in sfcrrinj!. First ;inrl se-
11111d pl~u·1· \.\Ill tr11n sfrr 1n !hr Bn.\·s
ll111 c:1nn t 11 and below 1 and 1n thr
11 0111!'!1~ rt11·1~1nn (1111~· agr 1,
1·:111 fl f1•r !.~ S.1 {lf'r l)('r~n and lllU~l h('
pn1ri :11 lh•• llrc-rr;itinn Drp;1rtrntnl. !71h
:ind Or;incr Slrrrt. h.v Aug 11 Vnr111~
arr :11 a1l;.ihlC' <ii thr llrcrca11nn Crntrr,
lhr llar·hn1·s and flrarhes ])('p.irlnll·nl,
an daL 0 . L' al"rrr surf shops.
G WC Blisters
Vil{es , 107-75,
111 Hoop Pla y
\\"HITIIF.Tl -(inlrirn \\'1•st Collegr·~
rr11C""k outfit rn;:irrd tn its se\'cnrh Rio
llnodn surnmrr haske-lball lrajtue 1·irtor)'
of the scasnn \\'erinesria~ n1~ht \1•1!h 11
<'n11\"inf'1ng \07-i5 rnut nf the l..nn~ Reach
Cit.\' Co11e~r Vik111gs.
The. Hus1lrrs rxplodf.'d in lhc scr:ond
half \1'1lh 27 fif'lri i!'.o;ils tn turn an
{l!hrrv.·ist' closf' 47.37 issue at the hfllf into
8 liluj\her_
/I.lark !)rkkrr and I-:slancia High·s G;iry
Ori,:111 8Upphed most of the firepnv.·er ns
!he learn "·rnt 1hrough its n1ost im-
prrss11·c nutin~ or the ~·car.
The ilusllrrs n11rhusllrd the lu~rrs in
!ht• sef'fMld h;iH \1'1th Orgill rjrf)pping bark
!'.everal lin1rs to take thC' Jong pass
arid put in the easy shot.
f)(okkc.r maintained onif'r undrr the
Long Beach basket in the reho11nd1ng
riepartmcnt and Jim Anderson and .Joe
C'rOllm v.·cre responsible. fnr several
111.vups wilh their nirty paSst'S.
Curl Brov.·n had 13 po in ts "'hile otht>rs
Ill dnublr. ri~11rcs inrl uri!'d Anderson and
Jeff Ru!t with 11 doze n each.
f.nldrn \Vt>~t rctum11 to act1nn nrxt
\Vedne,.da y 171 11i;:111nst £<'1st l,o~ Ange.le:;
in the !oop ltnBlr
('.o .... 9,, ••
W•oo••
""~0~• ... ., .. .,,.
C..l~fll W .. t jTOll
'' II JI'! ·~ 10 ' I l1 Q•ol'I ~ ) 11 ('!XI"'
0 , ' ""11~··0" 0 • • B•o•·o T~1111
(,WC 4), l~(C. ~I
\
lq " .. ' ' . • • •• ...
~· I~ . " . ' . " ...
IJ IOI
~--·_,."" --. . ·-~~. -•'i T~
Baseball Loop
Huntington Wins, 5-4;
Clinches First Place
lluntin~ton Beach capturC'd Lhe cha m-
p1onsh1 p 111 the llunt1ngton Beach-Costa
fl.tesa Hctreat1on !.u111mer baseball league
'\'('dncs1lay night wi th a co1ne-from-
b('h 1n1! ~-4 rl1.•r1s1un Ol'er 1 l~111ng Fountain
\'alley.
'rhe 1·1ct11ry, t'U upkd v.11h Costa fl1esa's
4-3 t•onqul'~l 11f n1r111t>rup Estancia al
Costa t.1e.sJ Paik la ~t night, rnables thr
Oilers to roll 1nln Fn<lay nighl"s fln.al
round of i;arnes "1thout a 1\01-r~.
Gary Rorabaugh's i;1ngle scored Str\e
Brook~ with the \l'lnn1ng run 111 tht' hot-
tonl uf the sevcntl1 111111ng for ll un t1ngtnn
Beach. tnus g1\ 111g the Oil<•rs an in-
surn1uuntable 12-4 I 1nark
In ulhl'r altcrnoon pl;1y l\'cll'pnrt
Harbor rolled lo HS riftll l'flll'>Cl"U!ll<' 1ic-
!ory :in1f st'r·11nd ~\r;1igbl shut ouL CJS r\P1l
Burt !11111trd hu~t 1-:disnn tn a pair of tuts.
Burt \Vas ;ilso \OL1gh al !he plale. tripl-
ing. s111gl111g t111c1•. knn(•kinA in a run flnrl
st·(wi11g t\\O of llis n1<1\('ii runs in the
Snilors' 7-0 ronltJt•r.
On the r1\11und he s!rurk nut a dozen
balll'rs :ind i~~tH·d no walks in a <"Om-
plete 1~r rorn11u1('P.
l\ilalc L11rry llald,•1111an got Nr11pnrt nlf
011 the right foot 1~·i1h a lc:i•torr hon1e run
in the first inn1ni.i.
llunting!!•n·s {'IUHh 111•111·as highlighted
hv 1hc !'nrnlnnctl p1trh1ng of Brooks and
Brian Slagle. T/lf' l:11ter p1ck<'d ur the 11·1n
aftcr the t"o allowed Fountain Vallf'y
{our runs un nne Jut.
Costa 11-tesa's tr1t11nph 11·as capfl{'d in
the fifth inning 11hcn r.1 1ke ('::ildwcl1 w;1lk-
ed ;ind eventually scorc1t on Ch uck
f;[;ispie's single. 1>11ring the game 18
bas('runncrs rca(hrd first 1111 \.l'alks.
'011nto;n V1ll•V (jl
•b • n rbl
tiunlinq!On 9••cn IJI
dbr~rbl
1., .. ~,, ..
t'"'"'''· in ~~l•n•. ct~
R•rnno"'11 lb
lonr,, II
Av"'"• c ~'n~>••, I~
H•ddQN, rl
Mo•••~, Pc•
J ~ I 0 Von1'"1••1lor1,
lo no " J O O I f•~"e<lv. 11 n o o ~11t•D•11~n It ~ 0 0 l)r•T•'· <
n o n W'"'" 10-
1 0 0 "''""'" " non ~I•~'· rln 1 0 0 11 ....... ,. 0 ,,
Trn •el, ,Jo
c '"' ~~. ln H~"""", lb
l ei•" ll • I ! IM•I\
~CO• 1 by lnn>n~•
' ~nuo1•1n V•llr~ ... ~ • • Hun""~lan e.~,h •• '" ' -'
' ' '
<
' • ' " • • " Newport H•rt•Cn ' " Ed<i<in (Ol
• • • • " • • • • • • • • • " • " • • ' • • • " • ' • • • • " • • ' ,. ' • • ' .. • " "' •b ' ~ •bl
l•o•nr• ..,.~, ,. • • • • I ~p~1 " l • • • r·"~t .. • ' • ... ..... ~~·Qt•, " ' • • W••~•• '" l • • ... .. l • " • .... "0~fd .. • • "'nr· ' ' • • • w~"" "' • • 1 """"P'I"" .. ' • • • H•u•• .. • • • ' 1or •u• " , • ' ' c;.u .. • • " lj ~··.~~ .. , • • • w .. rb••'« " • • • • 1 ••"·c• '" • • • • ., r .... ~ .. , " ' • run••• n " • ' • • r c""'" .. • • • • , .. ,~ ... < • • • • 6.:" • , ' l • ] ,•"•' " • • ' • 1nt•I• " ' • , Int•'• " • , • ~···· ~y '""'""' • • • """"l>"'I " '" . -' • ' Ed'"" .. ~ . -. ' '
(H!I MUI (I) 1!0!1n~i1 Ill .. ' ~ rbl •'r~r•I c;1 .... " \ Go•oj/ lb • (.n,., rn~n, lb ' Sc~rUOP, p II • (olo,.oll. 11 • Fo", .. ' F r<!<;o,., • • ~•Ymo, t ' ~n•rr " • G••,o •. " • °""' .. • F••r<co", .. • I~•• ' "
Co111 Mn•
E.:1nc1a
" •
• " • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' " • • • '
• • ' • • • ' • • • • • '
~cn.,111, " ' • • Gron• . .. ' • • !1011301, n • • • ""'''' ' ' • ' Jo On••"• < .. ' • lhfnl'<t " • • • Ron<111,.lo, .. ' • • LO!J>\IOO. .. • • ' .l.'rC '"'V, " ' • • ,, .... 11. " ' • • V•l11•1, " • • •
1o•ol• " ' '
' ' . 10! 110-• J 7
111 000 -J I 1
A11ahei1n Nine
Bo111bards FV
In Tom·na1nent
• • • • • • • • • • •
I
Fountain Valley's American Legion
!J<1sPball tram returned to lhe 1rars this
afternoon in the loser's bracket of the
291.h District tournament at La Palma
St<1diu1n following its 11·5 loss to
Anaheim Heff ron \\'('dn('sday night.
The Fountain Valley crew, 17-5 for lhe
season, incl the Fullerton Dodgers with
the pros1icct or exiling the tourney should
it lose again.
Anahe1n1 1nade use of a couple of Foun.
la in \'alley errors in the eighth inning
\\'C'rinesday night and parlayed four base
l11ts into six runs to put the game away.
The losers threatened on several oc-
casions, hut \.\'ere unable to get n1ore
t11an a run per Inning .
Ste1·e Fritz and 1'.11kc ShimaJJ each had
a pair of singles u1 the Fountain Valley
annck and Paul Eblen had lhe lone extra
base blow -a douhle -for Fountain
\"alley . .
',,{
. ·,,,..( ·(.(
lb • ~ rl!I
<n ..... ~,7~ 070 l/•••oy, " • • • U •tcn•I, lb J ~ I 1 E~ltn, " • • •
V~rn•1. lb j ft 0 0 [r-••• • ' • • r .. tf, It p ~ 7 C~rrDI!. II • ' • •
II < " 0 0 L~u!!-~•c•, .. • • •
Ou• lt'lt. l 1 l 0 Tnt•I• " ' ' '
• • • ,n•o·• V•· '' o•o ltrO 111 I I .1
A••~•,., ><•""'" OI)/ !II Oo\~ II 17 J
Yankee Coa ch
Pleased With
His Defe11se
By ROG ER CA Rl...SON
Of tr.. 0111, 1'•11! S1111
There have been scvC"ral rc11sons put
forth annually as to why !he North seem!I
to have the edge year In and year out
when it comes to the North-Snuth Orange
county All-Star football g;imr .
Motivation. 1ogethernPss, the break!,
elc have all beC'n bandied about from t i~e to time conC'rrn1ni:: the Yankees'
impress ive 9-2 edge 1n U1e sera·s
And then again perhaps it begins with
the defensc. If that's !he key then
perhaps coach frank Hicks of Sonora is
on the righ! track.
The North mentor put his charges
through a controlled scnm_mag~ Tues-
day and il appears his team 1s fa irly well
set concerning the who"s who picture on
the defensive side.
His team meets the South Aug. 12 at
Orange Coas! College in the 12th renewal
of the classic.
Jn his absence, assistant \Vayne Payne
153ys, "We'll be going wl!h a fnur man
front with three linebackers anrl righ t
now it appears we have our people fairly
well placed.''
Up front fli cks ha.~ Steve Bustannby i6-
l 1'z. 205! of Sunny Hills and ~11ke /\1uelle r
(5-10, 200~ of \Vestern sta!inn<'d on one
side while ~1ike Sumpter (6·2. J!l01 of
Kenncdy and ei!her Larr~· Rich or Savan·
na !6-2, 230) or Stu fledges {6-1, 190J ol
Troy on lhe other flank .
Backing up this aggregation is Ser~ite"s
Bill Zimmerman tl-9, 190) at the middl e
linebacking posilion.
Flanking Serl'ite's tnughie is A~ahei~'s
Jim ~1cCu/tey 16-0. 200 1 on one s1de v.·h1le
a battle is shapin,I\ up between Dave
Dallon of Loara and 011! Baggott t6-4 ,
2001 of Servite.
One r1f lhe ke vs to the !96R crusher 1n
which the Nnrih hun11li;itrd its Snuth
counterpart. 49-8, 11•<1s the ability of the
defensive backfield to con I r o I the
enerny·s passing gaine.
Harvrv 'Vinn retu rnerl an inlrrccptinn
102 yl'lrd.s for a touchdown to up the count
lo 14-0 early in the gan1e ;ind the South
proceeded downhill rapidlv.
And it"s that dept1rtn1rnt tl111t has the
North coaches in good hurnnr. ··our four
deep backs have been very impressive,''
SAYS Payne .
The cornerhack spo!~ ha1·e been n1an-
ned bv La Habra·s Ken t Pearce C'i-10,
176\ a
0
nd Orange"s Paul Sandford ta-I!,
180 1.
The !win safeties arc R1rk Emde !6-2,
1001 or \Vcsiern and Anaheim's Norm
AndcrFen 16-2. lfi51 .
And a fcllow by the nan1e of Ed Hllvdey
of Anaheim rcu rren!lv bu~\' in the Shrine
game at Los Ange!eS) wtll be a1·aitab!e
next "·eek.
' ' •
EARLY TIMES FIFTHS
s5~ TheTru~ Old-Style Kentucky Bourbon •
-~ . . -··"--
"\
Vilcing s
Defea t
Lan ce1·s
LONG BEA C'l l -r..1arin11
l!igh's undcfeat<.'d Vikings
roared into the finals of the
Lon~ Be;1ch City College prep
sumrner ba.;kelb:tl! I e f', g u e
\\'ednesJay r11ghl ;1.1th a 56-~7
Lnumph ovt'r L.ikewood's Lan-
cers.
l\01:'Sl n11nsler, h o 11· e v e r.
wasn't qu1tC' u.~ fortuna1r as
the Lions, s<'cond pt a c e
f1nisht-r" to ,\fnrin<i 111 schf'dul-
ed t•nmpt'IJl!on, lust a 65.Q:!
decision to Long Be<1t'h Poly
Thus i\·l:ir1011 11'!11 incet l'oJy
for thf' tournarnt•nt charn-
pionshi1> Frida.v night 11 it h
tipoff slated for fl o't•lork
l\'cstn11nstcr "1 11 h•· opposl.'d
h~ l.<'.kl'wood in the 7 o'chx·k
1~ncol1ntcr to ~r..\l!c third place
ir1 the tuurn1·v .
i\1arina h:i;I 110 trnuble .~rt
lling \.l'ith Lak1.•\l.OOd as Dc;in
Bogdan !H-5J dorn1natcd both
ends of the court 1n !he re-
bounding departnient and Jrd
his mates in t/1e scuring c.>I·
umn.
The Viking center scored 18
points on sc1•cn field go;J!s and
fnur free throws wilh mosl of
his shot.s from the field in Lhe
12-foot range.
\Ve s t m 1 n s ! er 's r~rry
J\1eiscnhcin1er led all scorers
for the night with <1 25-point
effort.
The Lion !(Cn111r 1111 lhJ; fillll
r«tlled the 11cts for JO field
go<1L~ and hit five eh;•.•·11y
l osses as lhe Lions 01•rn:;1n1e
a 16-9 Pol} lL'itd 111 !he fir·L
qu.1rtt>r.
Tile l'qL1:1l11.1n~ sl:1n1;i 1vr!s
thr st'l'lllld r f: r i o d as
,\'h:1senllP11n1•r and rn a I c· s
l;lenn Lanta!f and Gordvn
l31<ikl'lcy g11t hu1
Their f•[forl~ ga1e 1he Lions
R 31-29 le.id : .. 1 the half. hut
some costl; turru11·er" ui 1ta·
third quartCr turned i! <1n11111il
ag;1in
R!akelcy ti111 ~h1·d till' 1111~!11
111lh 11 point~ 11·hi1(' La11:.11f
had 10 c·uuntrr~
pl ro We'1m•n>lft !•1!
l• " '" . , Me•l<"~eom('r
Jonn•o~
l~nP~IJ
,., .. • W~l•n
Bla•ele~ ,.,.
To!al•
, , ' , . ' 7t ;'()
Start bt Ouar!.•n
0 " . ,
!) 67
W•-'''""'"' 9 ~' !1 ?<' " "
M II~•
l'IMA'"'
A1Hm•
F o•~
' \] t• 1.
M•11na (UI
!! n ol 1p
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• 1 > II
) Q Q •
; I \~ " M~• •A JO. \.O • > N0!'<1 11
Kni~h ls T ic
Wi th NB
---
r MAY
]XJ // ToUG H LUCK
"(_ IT.. (QUIEY 81\T6
~ 1 AND FEliJ -ANGELS
'RUNS)DOGGED
-HIM LAS?~ Y61ll? ;,, -11
.#JD [)URfN(;. ..-,i·~·
711€ er/ RST .
HAL•-
• ,.-"' ·--... ~ .......--·• ~-
1 ~?~e: ";~'!~%~G
• >l!INN€R ... '
P irc1les !'jpa 11k UC I
111 Overli1 1ie,1 01-100
()range Coast Co 11 e g c 's
Piru1 cs nipped thr i\11lc;1trrs
nf l'C lr\111r. HJl llllJ , \\l'd-
11esduy night iri o>Prl1111t.' to
e;q1lu re the OCC 1011rn:1111cnt
rh:1111p1onsh1p
Tht• l'1r<it1·-.: 11h11 h,1rl 11·011
;111 .~I'.: rc~ular ~··a"Oll g.11111·,,
;1pp1.::rrcd to ]1,11 r I ill' g,intt·
II r:1pprd lllf II 1th l·I ~!'t'11nd.~
h·ft :'.ft('r l{nh Y1·rk1•y ll;id
~1·11t"c·d 111 g1\i' the 1111111,.r~ :-i
tllr1•1· p11111I 111.1ri,:111 11 1111 II
.,1·1·1111rl' li·it 111 lh1· 01rrt111H·
AU!l'.d( r Tun Cc1llf(ll' \\<IS
c!cl1bc111t('l,V f0ulcc! 111th 111st
l v.·o S(•eonds to i.;u ;1 nd he
ni:1df' nnl' of two -.:lro!~ 111 nar-
rt)11 thl' gap lo \wn
Tht·n thr l_;C lr1 inc ("rt•11 got
ti r br<'ak 11 rl'qu1rcd ln g:i1n ~
l!l' ;ind :inothrr 01crt1111r
pl'fllld
And , W1!llams hc!d his ov.·n
a)'.::1111!'.t B:-.ker 111 the ba!llc uf
rl•hoL1nds
S1eVr ~1cLendon, a
.~ophci111orc in lhe !<111. arlrl<'d
1•1 points 11hile Conroy ! l~I
:inti ;>;r11"por1 Harbor's ,Jhhn
K.t11111'r 1"h1ppl'd In 111th a
d1•/.•'ll t'l!Utl!i.'1"~.
Tlie i\11lr;rli·rs' s e or in g
lhn1~[ ll'ilS huilL ;irnund J)OSt
111:111 l\;ikf'r 1'.!~1 <1nrl lhf' rrb;p
~h,,n!111g of furv.·ard Jerry
,\l;1ras.
~l11r:-1~ !t'<l all s<.·11rt.'rs v.·1111 27
r c11nts on 1n f1€ld go;ils and
~rvcn frrl' throws. 11,10.~t nf h1.~
shots frn111 tile fteld were frorn
!he rornc1·
. ".-
p,,.,., (10!) ,, ..
\".,I, •m• )
~~"~'"I~ 0
'•"VIT''·"' II 1
~.,, ' 0 l
fl•~"' I ~
"'"'" n C•N" o
~ "" r• n
111 Ip ,.
0 , . " ' , ,
• 11 I)
It's $5,290
For Double
At Del Mar
DEL !l.IA!l -1'he 1<1 rgcst
daily double in Del l\1nr
llacctrack history -$5.290.20
-v.·as rct·(lrdctl \\'cdncsrlay on
opening d;1.~. The fonnl'f
record' of $:!.5'15 40 11a.~ srt 111
1$2.
/'ar ty Sui!, p;1y1ng S43.ll2,
v.·nn lhr first race ;incl con1-
b1ncd with the second rRt:e
11 inner, Bold Thrust, v. hi ch
returnrd $84 80.
Fourll'en S.2 l1t:k!'ts 11ere
sold on the \\ 1nrun;: 3·12 t:Om-
b1nation. '/'he dc.ily double pool
was $87.540.
The opening d.1y (T011rl was
14.140.
Alam ito s
Racing
Entries
THUlll O,._Y
July tt, 1n1
'"' d•v ti ••• & !t t!. l'lrot -• 1:•1 om 'J nl•hfly doublt °" lot & e nd r•c••·
II E•1<l1 .,. 61ft & "" Tl<U
l'lltlT RACE 0) '"'"' J •r•r
11111, & ~P Cl•lmone. Pu"r $1000.
(l•om•no ptl<• t l.00,
Sun Ko!!rn IA<laor) 111
W•l<I> (ur! G<> ll,l>l'•ml ~II
OoAI r •• 1 IPAQ•) 111
l oll1>0" {K•'"'I 111
ll<>Pln11 BA" oD••••rl 111
M.0t1<1<n !•ta•!\ 1a
lomt>ar l onl<> !Smothl 117
Cu• B•d IP.,nrt l I+•
~E(OHO ll AC E -HO •A•O• '._,.,
"'"' Cl•""'no. Pv,.• 11900 Cl••m1nt
""'• \1.\00
lloA"n!I R<><c~rl IW.r•ofll 111
l•mr lo F.r• IP•11rl 111
Dav•• J•nr tL1""1"'I JI/
PftUU"' 51>1 (Pet"'"' Ill
llltlr S11n C8allloo> 111
fl ,._,tlr ((r.,.bv! Ill
G•tw<tlno !Nnlatl J I~ Off~ lonto ccarao1a) 111
Mf O&vld 151••u•>i 11)
P•n<l•ou& (Ad&,rJ Ill
THlll:O ltACE -J~ v•r~>. 1 vea<
11ld m•ldrn>. Pu"r 11900.
{MCI Mid•• IBanl.>I 11/
Spue N111. CC•ntn1•I 110
M,rl r•o (h••!IM {WA .. <>n) 110
l• C1n0<1 1u.,,,1mt JI/
S•v,onn•" POW (Mol<~r(ll fl/
Run""' Otvll (A!l,.onl 1111
51'•'<11 APQlnr IA<l•lr) 1"10
FOUllTH 11,._CE -,l~O VA•<I• l voftr
ola, .!. u1> C la,mlng, Pu"e l?loo. Clolml"q 1><1<• UOOO
Du>'•' BM Boy !f•d•ir) 170
PP<dn Flor !C•rdo1•i 111
Z1 1>1>Y H•"k (Sml1tt) 11(1
R iw:~~I lnwn llmnoml TH
flunn»o e .. 1 !O,.•e•l 1:00
Mr Min< IH••I) 111
Cfto<l•aoo,., llCftnl•l 110
FIFTH RACE J~ V•rO• l Y•~r
oln' (olll. ll•eO. 0110 .. onc•1. Pu"•
l /100
M0tm An ll•<k (Co•dOIA)
P•ll•n Fo" !Bcaol<>I
O~ndy' JeP !Cr~•~Yl M• ""'"m•M IEl•n~•! v11lnr1•ni• IHottl
l'VA+cn C••U (L11>h•ml
1 •"'~>' flunnv (Alh'""'
Dun•' Dolly IA<1•in
'" '" "" '"
"' :~1
l llCll{ ltACE 810 Y••~• } Y•~r
OIO• ' "" Cl•'"""Q Pv,.. ')SOil (lftf'nlnq 1>"<P \)~
Mr l'•non•lny (Pprnr•I
Cul r-or II<•• IAO•l•I
IO• »un I M•T(ne•1 1 M""" > 1'.•n Jov (Sn>••~l M•<lwo• IOfTI !Bon•>)
Mr _rt...,uate (Rori!
G•no•• Som lO:an")
Mr. Qu1rl1 Hill !~'""""'!
'" . " "" ". " , "' '" "' SEVENTH !IA.Cf -•Ill ·~'n' ] y•~'
111<1\ & UP Ffo••• & m•to• A\lowonc••
Pu•\~ '3000
"' '"
L.ody Bomi'1l IL;ohorn)
Al8f11 otO• Su"• (Coron,.) Rvov Ann Gold 1Wo1'n1>I
Pacotlc cnor9or !AO~I')
furnw c .. 1 T0<> !Porn"/
0~~ MWn! (C•o•bOI
"'I "' '" 119 I I f lGHTll R,._CE llO >•1d\ l -.~or
olo• ' un .. •low~nc•s Pun• 11000 The
~•n G•f\,.~I ll•ll•v lav"o A"oc••lioo
{,old (UOY ((<O>l>OI 1111 ~.,1,0 fl oe~•' 1P-.ned 1n
\/~n•ovo !Ad•"' !IB
Roc~r• Solut• IVou1>f\nl ll"J
C.e<oiolmo M•vor IB•n••• IJ1J
K•W>"•n B•r l<><> !Dro•e• I I 19
t•oOI•"'• 1H•<1! 119
W•+t~ Cf\l< (llcham l !J"1
NINTH RACE -HO V4fd! J V••t
OI<" (1~,m.nw, Pur>• 11900. (1•"'""9 ""<• UIOO I Al MA• ICordo1•l Ill
P•llPO·s Bor lKon") 111
11ra A14'r! J r cs1~ra) Ill
Jo•"• Siar IW••Ol HI
Or•w Pio• (PPro••' \10 B•v w., (hie lti<>n•ml 111
G•n••I Ho>I I AnA"' 111 '""'Kio (Alh>Ofll 111
on D•dd• (Hori] 111
P ros Clash
.Jorki•y Rill S hue rn a k e r
prloted 1he Favori1e, Slrcrt
Dancer, to a unr-lcngth ~·1c
tory in the f1rsl $!4 .200 run-
ning of the spill Paloni<1r 1-l;:in-
dic<ip for fillies ;incl rnarcs. Th11 San D1rgo Char,i;:Prs 1vill
,/err.v J,;iniht'l"I guidrd Open· srrirnrna~c one rnore 1ln1P
111g Bid under the 11·1re [Jrst 10 h<'for<' lhe1r Aug, 7 prcsc<ison
lht• SCt'ond division opcnrr ;ig;unsl lhe Wa~h1ngton
Slrcct o 11nccr. t"arrying 118 Hcdskins in S;in Diego v.·hen
Tri11•~d~y J11lv 7q lq7t OA!l V PILOT .'J$ -------
Alaniitos l~esi1lts Irish Report
W1dn.,d•• Julv If, 1'11 Cl••• & Fur
,11t~l •ALE o00 ••'0• M•IO~n 1 ¥e•r 01c1 (111mJno Put>• 11'1\ll•
IC ••<1ru11 J60 ~"J 1•0
M1uB•IB., lll•11g~"l Jll!J :w
W•r "'"""''' ,, n•I•'" , "" 11.,,e -1!••
Also ll•n rr . .-o t"~-"" DI, '"~ ...... .,, M"""''" (ll•rt•~Awr.. "O••· B1>Col1 lll>Ollro.on
5rtat<"r<I S·•••• o;-~••·rt I.< " A
Dec,, MOt11'ro• MOCol•. ~·~•~• i, '""' l Cn•mie
SECONO llACE l!I! V•"rl l ~' .r
ol<l• •no up CM'"'"'"' P~· " I '" On l~• U~om IK•n<>I /)0 ••O l .'D L• r oo1le (L1n11 ... n1 10 •0 0 •o
Ma"'' LOI>'("' lW01<1) e -0 l imo It J IO
Al•o """ la l'<.••o II~ " .. tl•q BO\'. Gold O••I, r.,. n. ' '"' II. oue1t, O.....iu•n B0<1 +•<>, ~ " 1 , '~ S<••l<ft•d •ll•nT, l•I '""''·~ Prl•. 0on I fl•t "-"1• ' ,1,
THIRD llACE ))(I Y'"i' I •'·'
<!Ill' •no up (lo"n nQ. Pc•,,, ~' "'' Po•ler Bo~ 1~m11111 lJ 1u '•u •ltol J•H•r• (Allho... II;~ ,,, ~<01! M•cl•~n I P~a~\ J 6J llm• I! l ID
Al'o R•t< W•c r.,, ''"" Q, -~ ~,~!<•, l•l~le C f•o•,, L·<1I o
S<r•l<nod -Fl•Ul»'t I
FOU•TH ltA.(f -"~ •••n 1 11 ~1
<>!OS All•»••nr•• "'"" '/1'}(1
l •ohln•"" B·<l H "'''""'' • 'J 1 "" ? ~ Wo>e Woll•e !P~'"''' J•O Jw en ... , ... s~• •C•o•~• I 1
tlmo II O•I Al<o lhn M'" 1,ny W•'·" rl .• ,. C•ll. Oo.o~lt Pt,,nl ll•M ·'•"' l'>• \J.i 5o•l<hoa R~· ""' 11.u 11 .. ,
FIFlll llA.CE
n<a• ""d ~I' (!.>;"''''" M< A•QO l( lnh~•n
i<&•I"" Roc>•I ""'' lrut khn M•n (~<n •~J
''"'" :'II ' I~
+>v•·~ UI'~· & ;n ~u
' ,.,
'90
A.!"' R•o '""''~, ~· , , C&tlto•n·~ ~moo. L•t f\,,Q,_
No S<oolt~e'
ti JC TH lt.lCE -=--;,a ''"''' l 1·e"' 0•<1• c1~,m.nQ Pu<>• 1.'.Jilol O'Olo> lf'•q~\ 1n,o l~O •OO
'
•
I
--
I on Oii • W'>o~'•
• A t< Gfl•<I L••ioG• e ~o! •II (~m1 & Aa1u<t••~
Slo'"''' •I~''""" l(.,•1D•J l!Jlr 7 ~11 L"""• '-'•<<t<J !\m<1f'I, • .O J ,~., 1a 1 10
-,, Ron "''"1 (QI!<! ho• f '"''U ~~,'~·:~.~,.!~•;, rta~'.,,1J:." .~;:: ~ '~~!\,
~u.1n ... <1 Mr Co• B"' P•"I'-\ p,,. > M..o<""'"' J m 0..hQM~a
Sl','[o,;tu RA.Ct l~ •••J , •• '""' .,,,,.~...;~, p,,.,~ sn"'>
f•""ff•••ot IC1rtl<:tlo! lllli )6" 210
IH!l'U•ho•t f~.IQ •~J , .. , ' .. ' .... "'I)
Oo• I <U•• .. I~· ,flon-1) l oO
I 1t"• II 1 10 "~ ·~· '·-' !I<' I :,.,,n1 , .• , h.1 ••Y
[!(.f<TM llA(E J'" y.,•<1• • ,..,,.
ll •I J"<' '' < f> ,/,t<1 All~"'·''' I r I"
0 "'' • '""~C (•1>1!") l IO ) ot) : >if
·A ''""' •\it\,<Q ~. ' I~ : ..0 ' .. ,.
I .,.~ ''' "'· ·~ ~/O''\J ~' ''"'" fl<>I~ ""'""' 1 II !(] 11 h(T lf •Q
I ··~" 'Id •~'''"I' ••• ,,,,
1,, ' "' " '""" ' 11 10 I I'"~ lo I 1n
,~1, •••I ~·''"'" , .. , •.. '""'''\ ' • '""''•I Co1u .. -.• ~1<>11~• ~'O~.
I l AllGIO SflE.Cl ION
1971 CAPRI
.. "' "'''" 1 •• , .. 1000'1•
"/11111111 I ! "11r iii !11 11 Year
eiffi?-p
IMMEDl•TE OfllVERY
GARDEN GROVE
LINCOLN-MERCURY
GM<hm C-•o•~ ~t ll•ou••uf\I P~. 6)11110
I
Hl,JHl llOGlON lf ... (H ff •Ml" Ii
•l<D °""· I "-' <;u/, 1,01) l;loft-J, ~ DIUOO
t?I '""'ko•e+, l.O)S •II(> cod
~AH OIEOQ IMvnl<l••l ,. ••• ) 1.11• •"Q"" t.•~t ••Dato•• NEWPORI 8£ ... CH IO••••'t ~o<~•rl
Ill •no'"' 11 •lb•<O•O. l Dot•• ••~uU•, 11 '""~ cod, l,OJJ ti.tu. 1J
1....., • .., l h•h!>.(t A.11'• Una•nf ) -101
• ·~·t'> ~ •·t>•~o•e, i ll l>i,., .. roe•
·~· ~EAL llEAC H -I• onqlno· 1.llO
11 ...... •l bdll••~<l<I JO "''" coo. l lot., .. ,, B"'<!• Ill ~nglt•t I b41t. r•<·vot~, )() l><l'\do, 1j """· XI m1c~erel.
)<\N 1'1:0110 C1lnd §1,.._I L•n01"9t
,, "''"~' 0 I d<'>•··~r~ i b•HOCU<I~.
IOJ (•lt<O b4 .. , 15'1 orut ""•·· JO roc:ll
·~ SA NfA. MONICA. ~ 01 on9lr11 110 I>•"· I OO•·••u B&"I• "Ill Anglero. 12 """ •OO il>O<~•·t• I n•Hlu! IMPElllAL 8El(H -61 •nq•t•o: lU
bo •·• u<lo Ill 11~ ... j/ ••o~co•t PA•A01$f (OUE -~ 1noltfl: 411
< •••<<> ""'" oil ,,.,,. 1 l\ol•b~!
LEASING
SALES
SERVICE
lmmedi,,te Delive1y
PlEA:Sl CALL ~40-9100
~RS ~
0.'.)l!HA MES.A
4 For
...
""' ...... ' . . . " . ., ... ' ,., ...
----
H Vll"U'•< l~'I"'"
• l"oAd '"" You• C.J<
•FREE
•FREE
ANY
SIZE
IN STOCK
MOUNT/NG
FRONT END
ALIGNMEN T
------·
·----------------Foothill !ligh mo~d into <i
!1r fnr f1r:-;l place in Lh\:'
Foothill sun1mcr b<i"krthall
!c:igue \\'!'dn('~d:iy n 1 g ht
fril \ol\lllg lh1• l\111gl1t:i' ili·fo'.\
vrrrlu·t n1•1·r 1 11111'r~il\'
.\11-C ll't'r )):11P H:1kt·r lr11n1
\\ arr<'n High ll':1s froidl'd 1n illf'
cn<;u1ng s c r fl m bl c fnr
po.o:..~r~~1on ;iflcr Con r o ~·' 5
m1~"t'rl ~hnt ,1nrl 11·:i!'i roulrc! :it
1tJ!• hu11er
!\;1~1·r 11.irt a 1,nr il1Ul •111r
.~1lu;1(1on ;1t lhr L!f:11 1~ ~1111•~'
M ! ~··Vin I
Yr.••v n
lo•>"< ti II
An!,•\'" (1001
. " ' " , .
17 101
pounds, raced thr 7', furlong~ lh(·y !aekle 1he D a I I as
nn1urf1nl2915;inrlreturn. ('011hoys Saturd;iy at Cal nuALITY TI RES 4 f s3200 Single
e<I 15 40. $.1 '° ""' 1.1 zo, '"''h""' College '" Thou"<rnd RTETR EAD ~ i';: fnlluwrd b~· Shi· If T:1lkcr. $Ii 20 Ooik<;
Tht• 111 11. <'111111lc1I 1\1lh Cn.<;t.1 Iii· ll1.H1P lilt• f1r~t tr1 11, pull
h1 ~ n1a11·~ to 111th111 1111c· !1111
Tlll~~rd lht' "'i'Olld ~h1•1 ;ttHI
1hr l'1r;t11·~ v.•'t r· h1u111• fri·•
I ""' ,,. 0 ..
I• n of 111 . , .
"1 1 ,. •
1"'°·''''d''"'"'"'''"·14 a" '""'""""''''°""""'""'"'· 2860 HAR BO R BLVD.-COSTA M ESA Op1•n1ng Bid 1n;ll<:hcU Sln·r1 Cn1\b11y~ 1.<; 2 3[) p rn v.•tlh tl1c
~11 .. ~a·~ llli 47 slnugh1rr r1f
\r111"10rl ll.1rh111· g i ,. r ~
\r111"10r1 :>JH1 F1~1lh1ll ulrn1u;-;1 l
!l-.1 n1<irk ~ 1111h 1110 n1chrs 11f
~rt1nn llfl nn !he ;igrnd;i nc\I
11rrk.
•: • •r• ••
~· '' ,,.r•
0 • • •
7 \ ·~ in ?'
n anccr s hur<li•n ;ind rrtuf111•d •• ..:":":' ~1~.,~1 ~he~·r:"~"~'~"~"':":"~'~l:":':':''~d~~=======P=H=O:N:E::54=n=·~O=l =70~"~=0~p=•~-"=M==o=n=·=·S:•:'=·=·=·=•=•==S=":":· ='=·=S=====~~ S8 r,o_ Sfi 20 ;uul s~ RO bv nnrth nf the \'rntura Frer11•ay l
h<';1!1n)t D11 mpl 1 <; I.ad~, $!'2
.lulin Sr'\ innur 1 '2.1' c1nd Slop
\\1111,1111<; 12111 l"d l11r l'1r:11r'
i11 dnuhlr f1e:urf'-.
, . . anrt $1 l , In ha lf a k•n~!h 1n
tO 1n !~ lrl(t 1 ~'I 4 .:; Iii Q w:i~ third al I 11.,0"·•< rrA'"
""~'"'! ·.~ iS •
''· ~"lr•lr" o(I $:l 20.
B a.seball Standing·s
A:\IER ICA:\' LEAGUE
Raltimort·
Bostiln
llc.1ro1t
New "\'ork
rle\•el;ind
\Vashingtnn
Oaklanrl
Kansas C1t,v
Aogel~
Chicago
r..tinncso1:i
r.liJv.·aukee
East llivision
W L
6.1 :la
~ 43
'J 4R
a1 S:t
42 /i()
41 S!l
\\'r~t nivi~ion
1\1 :lR
!\2 47
50 55
4i 5·1
4fi 55
42 ~
W1dn••<l•Y 'I Rt1un1
W••~<nq!oo 7, Ml""~•o•• )
M•'w•uk..,. l. 80510" n
Chlc&QO s. N•w Yo•k •
0PProl! I, IC•nl~I (l!v 1
A•,•!l ,, (fryel•"" J
B8111mou J. O&lil•.-.O l
lMIY'l G•-•
Prt.
.ti2 4
.!ii 4 .,. .,).:!
. 4!l0
.·H2
.4!0
.fi24
.!'i'.!!i
4iti
41i!i
.455
4:!(1
GB
' " 1 ~1i
21'~
21 1'.I
'" " " t7
:!II',
W~•lllnqrt>n tll•ompson ().)! ~! """n•<~•• ICo•-
b•ri 1·11. rioon•
80\tOfl 1Jl4n! 'l•I •' M11 ... •u••• !P~"'" 111!
New Yo•k 11Cp~ocl\ .1-•I 01 C•lc•oo oBro<lr.• I. ,l, ~,qM
IC•n1•~ Cl lV Ulu!ltt 1 ?l ,1 D•!to•I /Cnif..,&fl
I 1·6! ,1qM
A,,.,1, IMu•11•• 6-!lj •i Cl•~•l•'ICI rl't1>1 I ~I. ••o"' O•klO'ICI !!lu• 1-.J) •' B1l!lm01"e IP•lm•r li-
t ), n<11~t
NATIONAL LEAf;UE
E:i sl llivision
\\1 L P<'l. GB
P1ttsburi:h
Chir;i,;o
St. Lotn~
/\c1\' York
Ph1ladrlrh1a
:0.·1ontrc<1I
" 55 " 47
56 48
52 411
45 60
41 r.3
\Vest Division
~an Fr;inrt~('l'I fi.1 42
llod,l!cr~ 5 I !iO
,,1t:in:..1 !ii !i'.t
llnus!nn 51 !ii
Ctrll'1 nn11l1 41) ;,7
S,rn 1)1('~0 :!7 611
Wodn~•d•v'• Rnul!l
" l"lll< ~ N•w Yn'" l S•" ~•anr•11:1' 1 h!t•~t~ 1
'" •• ,.., 1n, Mnnt•••I 1
"""''"" ~ Pt ll'drloll•A J p,,. ,,.,.,qr 1 Dl>tlq~" n
5•" D"'llQ • t ·~· '"""'' ?
TO<l•Y'\ G•m••
.64t
.53!1 101 ~
.5.'\8
,:;2{1
.42!1
.3!14
'""" .5 19
.505~
.505
.4f\2
352
a•,
tn
In
14 11
26
~' ~OI ·• !~""'' 9 101 M N•w ..,..,.. !llYO'I ~ Jl,
r.'''""'q~ 1ill•" JI •\ .r Ood91•1 10"''" !I 61, !>IQ>\!
(ln"n••ll !~·'"~'"" ? ll ot ~on OIPOO (l>ol!r•h 1 11 1. l>tu••
All•"'" 111 • ..,, \n Ii Al 5An FtAT'C.,<O 18r-vom
t·tl
Dnl~ e•mt• 1C""""ltd
-------------------------lSTH ANN IVERSARY SALE// BIGGEST & BEST YET/
DEAN LEWIS
1966 HARBOR BLVD ., COSTA MESA
Modern & Complete Ser'Vi(:e & P~rls Dept.
Mod ern Bod y Shop for All Cars
646-9303
540-9468
Orange County's L~rgc!'it and ~1ost 1'.todcrn Toyota and Volvo Dralcr
OVERSEAS DELIVER Y SPECI ALISTS --
----
AN NIVERSARY SPE CIALS
~ SEE THE ALL NEW
TOYOTA CELIC A S,.T, CP'f.
IMMEDIATf: DELIYEllY
~
VOLVO
1971 DEMO
$4098
164 SEDAN
A u lom•I<~. Rulio, H•tlt• #]]71
USlD CAI S,ICIAL l
$995
1t61 TOY01A COIONA H.T.
~.a.a. He•lft . •~Pl'•" (lllf' 01)1
Tennis Rackets 4.95 to 50.00
Paddle Ball Paddles
Racket Ball Rackets
Paddle Tennis Paddles
Table Tennis Paddles
Squash Rackets
Badminton Rackets
Tennis Dresses 12.95 up
ladies Tennis Shoes 7.95 & 14.95
Ladies Tennis Hats & Sox
Mens Tennis Shirts 4.95 to 8.00
Mens Tennis Shorts 5.95 to 12.95
MensTennis Shoes 8.50 to 14.95
Mens Tennis Sox 1.25 to 2.25
OPEN 9 to 6 • CLOSED SUNDAY
-· ~'·----... --• --•
Masks -fins -Snorkles
Duck Feet Fin s -8.95
Cressi Fins -Clos e-out -5.88
Sleeping Bags -14.95 to 100.00
Back Packs & Bags
Dried Food
Basketballs
Footballs
Volleyballs
Tetherballs
Baseballs
Softballs
Soccer Balls
Tennis Balls
Ping Pong Balls
53 8 CENTER COSTA MESA 646-1919
• ---1 ' 1~ ' -~-
I
~ ,,,
"-H DlllV PILOT
WHAT'S IN-
OUTDOORS? " -·.
By JIA-1 Nl!:MJEC
•' : •!'Veteran 11ll water 1n1lers
are already calling thi1 year's
• albacore season one of the
best ever, and It's hardly a
... month old. Outs ta n d Ing
"eatehes for both party boat.;;
-'8Tld priv ate yachts art the
•rah•, as passengers expect to
catch no less than S longf1ns
,er trip
The albies are concentrated
In lv.·o areas. Boats fro1n
Newport Harbor are running
out lo the 43 fathom spot,
gome ~miles out of the Jetty,
while boats from down south
ar~ !<1>'orking the 213 spot some
70 miles off the Point.
.-Catches like 850 longfins for
nine passengers on a three-day
, l'tiJ) aboard the sportfisher ~Gallfornian make old tln1ers
'.".Shake their head in disbt'lief.
·' The bile is "full on" and
• ·Uitre is no end in sight, at
, J~ir;t for the next two or three
·months. Phil Tozer. boss al
::f:)~y·s Locker, is more op-
timistic ;iOOut conditions this
year than he has ever heen in
the pesl. Art Gronsky over al
Art's Landing Is reflecting lhe
same feelinss eboul I he
greatest year ever.
* * * '•'"'ore 11nd morfl marlin are
boats and 228 anglers entered
in the annual evenL The host
club was the So. California
Tuna Club, which presented
10µ honors to the I. o s
Pescadores Club Sunday night
al the Newporter Inn.
Top boat of 1he tournament
w11s the boat "Cierbo"' skip-
pered by Clement Hir~ch of
Newport.
Other anglers aboard the
boat were Howard Ashby,
John Vitalch and Trevor
Da \•1s, all of the harbor area.
The tournament imposes a
10-fish limit per angler per
day. and the total catch fo r
the winning boat was 9~
albacore, for two days fishing .
* * * ft.1ost every lake in Southern
Calilornia i1 reporting good
fishing for calflsb. The
popular lake~ of Vail , Irvine,
Hen1hnw, Wohlford a n d
Sherwoocl are li1ted as lhe top
producers. The cats running lo
12:~ po unds art hitting Dest on
cul mackerel and cbt:e!e haft.
Deer Hunt Open League
Outlook Laem11ile Beats
Excellent winter range, a
lale arriving summer, good
fawn drop Rnrl ample water
probably wo n't he enough to
offset the extreme heat on
opening day of lhe coastal
deer s~ason .
Woody's, 64-60
The prospect" for opening
day, Aug . 7, are very poor , ex·
cept for some isol11ted private
ranches in the Morro Ba y.San
J..uis Obispo area.
Deer ~·ill all be in prime
cond1t1on . but most of tht1 dttr
spotted by hunters will be with
doe or fawn.~. Big buck.3 will
be hiding in the heavy cover
and bedding down very early
to beat the summer heat.
Laemmle cruise.d l.o a nine.
point halftime lead, then held
on to post a M-60 win over
\Voody's in Costa Mesa Open
summer I ea i u e basketball
warfare at Southern California.
College Wedne sday night.
The loss kept Woody's
• ' ..
Nu1th••1 • WllS<>n .,
Lo"• Se•~~ ' G•tn•'o " ' ~" O!•;o , "' ,.. ' ' ,.,
Lo Foll<!• , ' '" l •ommlt ' ' " ' W'"""Y'I • '" . ... Legel bucks, for ked hom or
better. will not be runn ing
with the doe yet and this w1ll
make it f'ven more difficult to winless record Intact after lO spot them.
Hunters are reminded to games while Laemmle's mark
look over hunting regulalioll."I was upped to 3-7.
very cr.•eful!y this !eeson The companion feature fa~!·
ed Lo grt off the ground a!! before n1aklng plans on any S.P.M. railed to field a team hunting area. This year there "'
will be NO coastal deer season against Long Beach. NIFTY CATCH -Richard Goehring of Ne\11port Ken \.\'r.1ker put the finishinA for the counties of Orange,
Riverside and S.an Dieg o, as Beach shows off part o f. the call'h of J 5 al ba eore he louche.s on Wood y's wilh 15
hlls been lhe case lhe past few caught last week on his charter boat the "l~i!tle seconds left when ·he strode lo ... the free throw line with a one-years. Richard" running out of Ne\vrort llarbor. Goehring and-one situation.
The ga~e departmenl ha! as well as the rest o f the anglers filihing out of the His m:ites were up by only
drawn a line at the .Ventura-harbor are finding Jongf ins very cooperative this l\1•o points over \Voody·li
Los Angeles County hnes. The season "'ilh excellent catches being recorded by thanks to the comeback effort
Greg Kind had led Woody·s
in the second half with five
field goals and three free
throws acoounti11g for 13 of his
game high of 24 counters.
And John Alexander had
been instrumental in the game
of catchup with II of his 17
points accumulated in the final
half
But Wz.tker tut the llrst of
his two 3hot.s to give his mates
a three-point bu lge , then con-
nected again to put the game
virtually out of reach.
Se r g 1 o Echevarri; a n d
Robert Laemrnle led the vie·
trrs' 1\'Cll balanced att.ack wilh
14 and 13 points.
l •tmmlt jU )
It !! •! I•
11,. ......
&nnod! • /~··"" ,
Wllll1 • Lo•m"'ll " W•l~tr
E(~•••rrle " P 10.\fu
Pul mon • To1.i• " " " " WoodY'I [6~!
" " " " 1"1nu " Gt•"'
11:1"0 " • " N•Jl>olt • , • ,t.l1ro~1•• • , " T"!lh " " " ~
LB Whips
Estancia;
Eyes Title
Laguna Bea ch H i i h' !
basketbt'.\I continge nt moved
into the Laguna Beach sum·
mer league tournament ch11 m·
pionship game tonight against
Mission Viejo following the
Ar!ists' 51-50 conquest of
Estancia Wednesday night.
Laguna meets Mission Viejo
at 6:30 for the tourney title.
The Artists broke loose in
lhe third quarler Wedne.scl11y
night 11.·hcn their defense jelled
around rebounders J oh n
Harbcld, Vince Whitnah Md
Dave Kiesselbach.
The surge turned around 11
2R-23 haUtime lead by Esten·
cJa and the winners led
throughout the final stanza
1.t•~nl leech (II!
" " " " (O•Wt11 • ' '" M(Ct ll• ' ' ' • Hor1>01(f ' , • W~l!o•~ ' " NelMln ' ' ' • Kle.111r~~c~ , • , '" Tolol• " • " " Et11n<l1 !Hll .. " ,, •• _,, • ' •• " l"ord , • • • 0 . Con•1• ' • ' " >l••• ' ' ' • • (oo'f' • • ' • (nneo, • ' ' ' Tott ll " " " »
Scer1 111 Qu1ttu•
l•~un• !l••rl• " " m ' -J1 being seen addin1 lo lhe e1-
-citement nf the l'tea,on, but as
of yrt no booli:up11 have been
_ repnrttd. The 1plllebill8 are in
1lie 'water, but condilion1 will
•11.are to chan1e before they
Big Bear Lake i1 kicking out
some nice rainbows ind a few
large bass. Beat aclion on !ht:
fighting bows i1 from the deep
wattr Ju5! off tht: points. Bass
are 1tr lking Smithwick1 rinse
In !ht weeds. but the fish are
not listed as llt:e~rs.
Bass, crappie and bluegil
are Deing added to lhe catfish
stringer~ are Vail Lake, "'"hile
a few miles down the road
Henshaw lists small bass as
,·ery active fin dttp running
plug8 and Wflrm~.
only areas o~n to coas_t•I most every boat and landing. by the latter. deer hunters 1s that portion·~~~~~-·~~~~~~~'-~~~~--~~~~~~~--''-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
lying nocth of tl'ti~ li ne
>lUll•m• L•..,.,mlt n. Woodv'J " E111nc!• '" " " ·-.
.... , hittln1.
. * * * Freshly caught albacore can
'.bt exchanged for canned
a lbacore at Davey's Locker
.end the Ba!l>oa Pavil ion. Of·
'netals at the two landings will
!alee both catches marle on
·pri vate boats or bo:iL~ running
out of Davey's Ulckcr.
Art"s Landini: has provisions
"t.O exchange fi sh for cans, bu!
'.'on!y for passengers on the
'tiUMiing's boats.
"'' ·Canning is probably !he best
• .means of utilizing your longf1n
• C6'tches. as storinjl fresh
froze n albies can take up In!~
.o1 room in rhe freeter Cans
-~~t·a IOnJ! lime and make e1 -
ceDent gif!s. ... * * * CMstal li8hing i~ icwid
.rle1pite the red tide 11~ landing
~Jal~ reporl no drop in the
~all1 fish count8. f'>OOO catches
"of reliC'a bas~ head the action,
._.lrile some log barr11cud11 11nd
;lloQ'l\.e arr. adding lo lhe ar-
"''"· Th~ yellow• h11ve made 11 . :t~·. exit from our l1>cal
-W1&irs, and the aigns for 11n .J'*..ll' re1ur11 are not en·
couraging.
HUl'llington Beach angler"
·.t>tvt Weimar 11nd To m .:F'~ enjoyed • good fi1hlng
~l;O earlier lhi~ week aboard
.the• sportfisher ''Indian" and
#':4ii.ghl home alb11core 11nd ""!JT•.e Sp11nish mackerel. The
... pair aald lonll:rin~ are 1Ull
* * * Anglers fishing r o a d s i de
streams aod lakes of the High
Sierra are rreeling limits nf
smal! planted rainbows, ~·il h
an nccasional lunker being
caught at the larger lake~.
Fi~h1ng up and down the en·
lire stretch of llwy 395 1s
good.
The back country lakes are
the best bet for anglers who
h11ve !hf' tune In spend a ff'W
days in the wilderness. f\1n~·
qu1!ns havf' pas.~ed their 1'1eak
se11son, and li5hin.11 for brook.
golden anrl nunbnw trout is
good al rnosr every hike in
lake.
Worn1~. <'J!~S nr fl ies will do
11 good Jnh in enablini;: anJi ler~
!n take limits of lhe 5mall
native rrnu1 .
Wardens will be out in force
in Orange County, partlcularly
In the Cle veland National
Forest, to issue ci tations for
illegally shot deer. These.
area.~ will be In the late or
genera! deer season this year.
This should mt.Ice prospect"
for the later hunt excellent in
all partli of the Southland.
Hunters who bag. deer will
hAve lo ha ve the t a ;t ~
validated by a u I ho r i 7. e d
personnel. as the selr·valida·
lion program i., no longer in
effect after a trial period f\\'O
seasons ago.
Hunters ve nturing into the
field should carefully pl en
their hunts and scout the are11
rn be hunted at least a \vee~
prior In !he opener Bucks arr
crealurt s of habit and will nl"lt
change their dail.v trips rn o11nd
from feeding and >A"altri ng
hnlcs unt il after !he opening
\l·eekend
Lotal rancher~ report seeing
lolli or big deer lhi~ .ve ar
a!rc<vJy. and say they 1 the
rlerr 1 are stickin g lo the lower * * * n1c11n1;iin slopes and deep can-
Fishing nloni: lhf' Colorado I""'· H 'lrn.~ 11 re stlll in velve1
Rh·er. bofh in lhl" J>llpular and lhcy should rem11in tha!
Lake~ 1if ,\1e1HI, MoJa\'e 11 nd \\"a~· for 11t l ra.~t the firsl 1wo
H11vasu and 1n the rrver pot (lr lhrl'e u•eek.~ of the $ellson .
hole.~ is imprnvlng. Oran,rtl"'-r------------.I county angler H11nk Nl"\'erka
~·orktd the lower portion or'
lhe rh'er with 11 fly rfld using
Ba~s Pni5on pop~rs to bag
limils or balls to four pounds. !
'.'leverka fished early in 1he
11dy and late in thr t\'enlnR:
nf'ar lht lules. a5 he enticf'd
lhto broniebark~ to come lo
the ~urf11re .
LEASE A
1971 CADILLAC
"SUMMER
SPECIALS"
PLl,t.S( C.,t.ll ~•0-1100
.;a\!(raging le"s than 13 pound" r-----------~
per fi sh, and lh:.it condiltons
Mlside are excellent.
•• l'
GOLFERS
Wllll Low-~•n~l<•t>"
l"rlt1lC t ~I T~•
NABERS
* * * The 241h Annual 11'1!er Club
Alb-acnre Tournament w11"
.fltftl ];is l \l"tf'kend \\"t1h 76
NEWPORTER INN
PAR 3 GOLF COURSE
$1.00 with thl1 •d w••k d11y1
~
,NlWllORT IEACH -PAO TfNNIS SHOP MID SUMMER
SPORTS
SAVINGS
-·
2601 f . Bluff Dr.,
N1wport l11th
"SHOP WITH THE PROSlll"
AlTENTION HUNTERS!!
EARLY OEflt SE ASO N
ST•rls Au9 u5t 7!h
IUSHMllL-SCOP'E l tNOCULAlt
SNOW SKI SALE
TREMENDOUS SAVINGS
SALi HEAD SKIS
~f,.mo1n JJ.O' Y•<••"I' UO•f
'l..,ulor S~9 SO SAi i Ul,fl
fj •• w~ ..... ,1
'•1110CWlAtt !!1"n"I 1So>r!"•"'\
);..,1., 1•4.'i'S , IAll 111,fl
.lol-1 11"9.0 .... l l 'J
M-1 rreo•
•••. llll
M14el trllOI
l ot . IUO
lilMlll rMIT ll JT
1...,1., 1:1'9.,5 1All 114.H O•hor Sl-l• •"d 5~i tlom1 -1\! ""!Alf
WATER SPORTS SALE
.. II.ls ,,.,," """ $3 95 '"' ci..... ..... •
WALDfN !WRP IOARDI
H""'"' Ho! ... nl Df••t") ''' 1 11f;.~$9J,OO, .::::~;;
IM WITT (O.K ... tlftuff '111'>•1• l ltf "°'~) I " l'r. (oltrt IJ-Jo ''"'") l"'I. 117 f"~ IAlf I.I.ff
MLLJ IMIM. 1..,,.1., ,,.,,5 . 117.ff
~l WATll 11111 11' fw'l'
fO"" l~<V M<ft) /Mith IKI AlfW•I· ~If '" l lf'd!"t) ltt. , .. "' $34 $0 ... ,. ,.... . . 1111 •
.,.
~ FISHING (ALBACORE· HOT)
ROD-RHlS-lURES
SAl! PRICED-CUSTOM
CRAFTED AlBACORE JIGS
only
SJ,95
ALL S'ORTS HIADQUARTIRS
•••••••••••••••••••••• . Jtl . :p~-~
e i..,,., ""'"" 11u1•1 ,, .. ~.,. ,,.,
•'I luu ••" o Q"fll" oi "'" ,,
f'I'"' "l><'""•~Q IJHlr!• ftlPP•n1nqt.
''""'' "' ... lh• ...... •n t Ill (lou •1 !orm1no lo• ~•ti•·
"'" •n• tno ..... ,l•nod 0..o
''""'"' """ t'<ft ..-.. k !tr ..,, "'""'" 10•11 or !nv• +o• onl, J! 00.
llit h•\I nu•lo•r ,.,,,,"""""' •Anonf,nn MUlltlll fu l1 Off•
Su ·.on """ ••>O•l>+ llh wo •••• • 1ppl"""""' •or T~• 1011 '"'"'I , An•p•o~o huM All• ,.,,1.~10. 91>0 •
, .,,., hvnhn9 "9"'"'""' ond ,,1. , • "'"" d"' mop• SPo~•tl "°" ~11"1 • , .,..o, ~··• ,,, ... n. , , I S••u•d•v. Auo 7••. \llf'O•v. A•"I· ,
' 81h •• hovo nut up< ond &o""'· e
• lulr ond '""'"''""!' IOCI • CltMll"$ fun VDIJ! 9u1S•. AA<. II 11e,t P<l<t , Yo••"'•'• ......,.t••nt1 •· e i"G !t<h•ol Pi.<>, ldyllwild 1,ft,. e
7.3~ OM (II<""' "1otl"1 I.I, le• '
<Ql h '"" ,............. • • i~u;~;i· :,'::,'~,.~"~; • :~·:·:~ ! ,,...1,,_ •ho •u•l.'>t Hlo•r ,.,.,.1. •
·-bl M1 Joft" PK~ & Mt. S""' e Wtlllon IWoldon 1urft>6o ,. In<: I. •
l t,,,., I 10 l ">1 'lo<O, 111~110 •
lolonf , H•"Por! hot~. How. S.Url• •
llfl' • e 111t•d•v. ~119"" 111~. 7:00 ,M, • • IACl,ICUH' · (ll ... 1111 ""Yoo< •
• HHI'• ""' ""' , .... on• ,11....., •• , •
• t•U ... t hl.,ol llO"•· Ht WM'1 k/I. •
• fo••I!! t •W tl H•ol'1 $ff<n !t< to .•
: 10'"'"''~" ••d •• !hf tlf, IMf'I • • .. 1, ,~ ••• ,1 •• 1,,. • ....................• :
-.
Cool. Comfortable Tur1 Terrace Dining Under
the Stars. Reservations: (213) 431 ·0922 (714) 527·44 71.
Two Time Wor1d Champion
Ksweah Bar
~~
Ladie! Night Every Tuesday
(Onl y 5~ Admission)
rot tfie nigfitime of Yout life!
Nine Races of Explosive
Excitement Monday Thru Saturday.
First Post: 7:45 pm.
10' AlAmlTOI'
West ol Disneyland on Kate!la
N!ghtly Double: 111t and 2nd Races. Exactas:
6th e.nd 9th Races,
July 27 through September 8, the only horse
racing in the Greater Los Angeles Area.
-. _ ... ;-,... --
e
Ch11g•r Bv
Winning th•·
.$90,000 DerJ>r
, 971
-
OAIL'I' P ILOT 51111 P~o1o
Bt1si1iess Brisl'
Laguna
Seminar
Proposed
In his new role as a member
or the Chamber or Commerce,
Laguna Beach writer Arnold
Hano Tuesday i n v it e d
..... ~ . ' . -
OAIL Y l'llOT 37
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE l.EGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
f)e •
, 11711 NOllCI IN¥rTING 1101 I' ll1V (I' 1 ...
PICUTlOUS •UllN•ll NOTICE IS Hfltll!•Y Gl\'f.H "'-1 !~1 ,ICTITIOVI IUlrltlllS PICTITIOl.ll eUllH•lt
l!IAMI liTAT•MANT l..,.nll et Trvo ... 1 of 11\t (NII Com· NA'°'I IT.\Tll<IMT NAM.I ITATIMINT
fht !Ollowlnt "'""' ••• t.in1 m1,111!1V Colleot Ol1ltlC1 Of Or 1n110 Co..nlv, Th• 1a1i.,..itro. '"''°"' l 't Ooln1 Tht !Ollowl,,. ptl'IOll If Olllltf Dl,lfl
11111lntu 10: c1u1.,,n11, ... 111 •te•I•• 111lt<J ""'' u11 lo 11u11no10 '" •1: , "". l . GUY ROOF'tN(; (0., 1111 lrvl"' 11 :00 1.l!l, T~Hd1y, Au11vll 11, 1'11 tt Lf: COLl..A.Cil . tit .-1,.. A•t , .. POLLO Er.GINEl!l!i"IG, lllf9 Av1., ,. __ , •••ch lfl• P11tcr.t 1lnt1 O.ol ol 11\d .moo1 ll•lbo1 1111na W•lllllM!Otl.. '°"nllln Vt tlt\f
Tommlt G. Go!Clt! ...... tJil trvlnt A•I , ahlfl" !OC1t.a 11 l)lO Adl'PI Aver\u•. A. J, C01111't""· ti "! .. Al!o C•~t!, SHH lnltf'trlta, Inc., ICa lll, Cor
NtWPO¥! '••Ch. c ••• -·· c1111vr1111. ti Wl'llCh lime l-flu(n lt llf Mt. W1tn1....-. '"'in'•'"' Vtl Gtll A. !lo!i11. ~ MH<low l!O,. ••Id Oldl ,..Ill Ot publicly welled •nd rolO StltUt J\rt-n, It • Ninth ,.lau, 'Tnl• ou1IM1r Ir k !nt COfl<IU(ltd b ,
Oc>wntv. IOI': TEL£Vl!ION 8110 .. 0Cll!T 1" l-8t•Ch cor-•llon,
lh11 l>v llft•il h 0t!111 ~~"" bY • Q u ... 0 Ru p Lex v I 0 E 0 T ... ,. E Thi• bu•ln•u It bllne tef""~Cll'd t>v I 1100..-! G, Slcltb0!111m PIU ... rll!IP. llEC~OERll!IPROOUCERS, COLOR. GantJ'tl P1rt1W.ttlllo. Ttll.1 tit! ...... IUN ·•llM -CIU
G111 A, llOlltl All Oldo ,, .. lo bt 1n •c«>rdfr><t .. It~ Sn1!l1 Jur9-1n11n C!trlo of Ott nOt C01Jnl'p _,; Jvlv U. 1
Thlt ll•lemtnl flltd Wiii\ 11'1t (OUnlY -1n1t•..c•lon1 Ind C-111-t lld Thi• 1111.mtftl llltd Wiit\ "'" (OUM~ Iv 8-IY J. M.aa. o-tl ;'lf'~ Cltr~ of 0••~•• c...,~,. on; J~"' XI, ltll, "°"'111c.111on1 wt1lch .,, ....w "" fll• ,..., Cl••~ o1 O•tl'lft Countv on: J11nt XI, ltJJ, (l<fli<. , ..
8• ~~ve"y J, Mtde!oa, 0.PtJIY CCKln!V m•• l>t .. curt<! In fh• ottlc• ot !ht By fl!vt•1" J. M1adc•. Oei>uly Count>' (l'uCfhlltd Ol-•n..-c-• D•I"' I • Cl•r~. P11tdl11ln• Av•nl ol ••la itl>OOI ahtr1,1. Cler~. Jul\I n -Auuuii 1. 12, It. 1'11 ..,,._II f'UDllm•d Ortnot Coan D•llv iOllO!. E•<h blda.,. mu" 1ul:rnll wl•n hi• Old • Publllhl<I Ortntt Co.it Dilly iOllot,
J1111 I, U, :n, 2', 1'11 17»:1 c•lhlu'• Cito.:•. c••llllta <h~ . ..-Oki· July I. Ii, ZI, 1t, lf11 llJ0.11 LEGAL NOTICE
"'"' bOnCI mid• ,.•••bl• to ltlt 01a1r o:i1[----------------l ___ ....'.=.:CC:::..:....'.:..:.:.:.:. __ _
LE AL NOTICE lflt Cot •l Communlrv Collflle O!<rtlct
che.mber director! to consider G '""''a Of T•u11 ... , in '" '"'"""' nol In• [----------------l1n1n live l>l<e..il (i'!i.I of tl!t 111m bid ••1----------------
LEGAL NOTICE .,_
~lCTtTIOUi •IJllNlll NAMI 'T,O,TIMINT
IOll\)wlflt .... IOfl ii dolnt having the c ity play host to a " ltln • 11u•t•m•• lh•! tho blaaer w\11 1n1or Into NOT1ca 1111v1T1111• •101 F1CTl tlOU5 •UUNI\' 11\t t>tOPOlfd (Oftlrt CI I! the itm• lo NOiiet 11 htrri>v t lv on lhtl lllt •o.r• rl
UC Irvine winter seminar for ,. ... Ma ITATEMl"lf •w••a111 1., ntm, 1n th• t••"' Of ••llur• 10 T'"""""'"' rh• Coati commu1111v cou"e Tho 1011owln1 oer"°"' t•t lloln1 b11Slnt u •nler Into '"'~ <-•acl, 1ht procomn Of 0111•1<1 of Or1n91 C01Jnty, Ctlllornl1 will
•i: Thi Cho<~ will bl rorrtll..,, or In !ht c••t •11<tl•e "'•le<I 0101 v• 10 11 ·oo 1.m., Frl·
CONCE PTI UNLIMITED, 11J Ci<tll"' 1 t>otl<I, lh• ftJll •vm Jheroo! will be d1y, AuOu•I 1), 1tn. tl !ht Pvtcn•llnt f'I., Co•I• Mn•. 1orl1i1td le uld sC!>oo1 alolrlct. OePI, ol ••Id 1cllool dlotrlcl l<K1!e<I ol Cont ~ Cn1r!11 T<ot1111. )IJ C•<il Pf., No bidder mat ... 11n<1,tw ~11 ~\d for 1 1ll'O Adt mt Avenu1. Co•'• Mtlt,
CO•'• M•••-i>etld<I Cl IO<IV·llvt l4Sl dOVI 1!t•• lllt Ct lllornlo, II wt.k n""'• .. Id bid• Wiii be
Tnlo l>tJ1lneu 1, bllnt c .. nchK11d ov ... dft!e •• , IOt lh• QIH!tllnt '~""''-PllCll<I• <><>•nrd Ind •••d '°" TOWEL
writers.
for the ri!lh year, Hano told
the directors, he ·will be
assisting with preparations for
the seminar on busines s
aspects ot the writing art,
sponsored by UCI, where he is
!t1dlvldual. Tht 80&rd cl Truo!t•• '"'""''< l!le RENTAL AT O.C .C. incl G.W,C, FOR Donald C. Jrono11 oflvlltoe ol relectlnG t~v ana •ll C•O> ,,, PERIOD 5EPTEM8Elil I. )'11 THR0UGt1 Thl1 ll•lemonl !lied .. 1111 1ht County to walvo 1nv IHHul1rltlt1 or In• AUGUST ll. 11'7, Cler~ 01 O•onv• C01Jntv Of\" Jun• )I), ltll torm1111,., lft on• bid or In th• Old<llllG "II bid• "'" lo bo In •<Co1d1nce wlln 8y fl•venv J, M..a<IO•. Otl>UI• Caunlv S!ontD : NO~MAN £. W.OT~ON the 1n,1ruc!10<11 •ftd (OlldlllOll• •ftd (Irr~. S..::ly_, 80.rd Of Ttvl!.,.1 5Pt"llcall0n1 wh!Cll a•• """" on lllt 111<1 P"blll!ltd Ortnvr Co•ll Otllv Pilel!, o ... 11:Autu•l ll.lfll -ll:00 1 m, mtv ~ >IH:Yrfd In Jh1 o!nco ot !he
,,.
••: CllEA11VI!' DIS,LAYS. 1011 W, 11!11.
II .. Co.!1 Me.1, (el. n.21
Lton Normtn Htlf11n, U4 St. Cot•
tiwv., L••1Jnt flt•ch. Ct l.
Thlt bv1lntM II ... 11>11 (ondUCltd W llt
lndlvklu•I, Loon Norm1n Htnlln
Tiil• elllem•nr llled ... 11n mt C~{Ttv Clerk el Otll>ft C01Jnly on' J~lv )1, ,.11 ,
lh eevcrlf J. M16ao~. Ottvlv Countv Cle!'I<. P1rttll1n..i 0.-•n•• Co-11 Df)IY P.!lot.
Julv 1' •"° "'u•u11 J. n. If, 1'11 :lt»'·ll
J~IY t , ll, 21. 7', It /I llU·ll Pvbll•hed Of•nOe C0t•I 01l1v P11.,1, Purcho1in1 At•nt '11 ••la "hool dll!rlcl. LEGAL N<YJ1CE
1----------------IJulY 1t •nd Avg1111 s. 1Y11 :1:1116-11 E•<h tllddtr mijll 1u1>m11 wl!n n11 blO 'l-----'----------l----------------it•1nler·1 chttk. ctrlllled chec-• ..-bla-P revious seminars, he said, LEGAL NOTICE d•"• bOll<l m•d• 01,.~1• 10 lh• order of HOTICI! TD c1101To11
a lecturer.
LEGAL NOTIC E lht (Ni t community Collet• 01.irlct IUPll!lOI! COUl!T 0, TM•
have been attended by about MUNICtP,O,L COUAT 0, C-ALl,Ol!NIA ao .. d of Try•leei In on tm01Jnf nor l•u JT ... TI 01" Cl.ll,DlltNIA '011
'
THl COUNTY 0' O•A"IOI . CO\JNTV 0, OlltANlll SU,ElllOR COUllT 0, THI: tn111 ll•t pt•ctnt {!%) Of tn• IUM D a ., Nt. A-'"IJ 75 writers from lhe Soulhern Or•h•• C1tt1nly •TATE OF CALtFOl!N!A ,011 • 9Ut ••nlH 1h•l lhe bldd .. will •nltt lnlo E•l•I• " JOHN F. Wl!!8)Tf'I!
C.lilorn.,. •re• who g•ther I H1r11or Ju11ci.1 0111r1ct T"I: COU"ITY OP OR,O,"IGI. inc prooo1e<1 con1r•cr 11 Tho ••mo •• <.,.,...,_ ...
0 " ""· " 0 C•IE HUMlllt 1•.n "lo, ,o,.Jtlll ow1rde<1 ro hlrn, In l~c n"'I o1 faolu'• to ••'MMO•• 0 o • o o -· .,.. oo NOTICE 11 HEllEflY GIVEN le lhr h t lk ' hod " l\IOTICI 01' HlAlllNG 0, ,l'TITION enttr n 0 IUCn Con rec ' """ Pr~e,.,,, ear a Son various met S cu111.w1u1 Ot111-1 l'Olt P•o•ATI: 0 ,-WILL ,.NO FDlt lhe tlle<k wo!l t..o 1or1 .. 1ea, or 111 !he <••e c•.dltot• ct th• •bov• n•m..ct d1<:-n•
.I bandl·•·g ,., b us,. n es s P11ln!iU; ROY COLI.IN$, INC .• VI. llTTEl.S TESTAMlNTARY OI • bond. !ht rvll oum th•rtOI Wiii l>t .~ •• ! ·~~ ..... -•• • ..... ·.l~ .. ~:~m:_ ·~.·.•m.• ~
" 11 Deltndanl : GEORGE (Hl!AMCOW. E•lele of fLOlt!OA M, (llAIG, totlti!t<j to ttld 1cnoo! d!otrlcl_ "' ...., ~w .., "' -·" aspects of their profession. To lhe Oe!ondt nt; G">•V• Charmtow oece•n<I , No bldde• mov withdraw Mt 01<1 tor 1 with lfl.I 1111<enttY voucher., I" -gfflc•
A civil comol1lnl hit tit"' lllld b~ lht NOTICE I$ tlERE&Y GIVEN 11111 Lov period Qf 1..-1v-llvt !•~I dtYI '"'' lfl1 ol tlot (ltfl of 1111 •bovt •~111\td f;<lllrt, Olf'
The meeting.'! have been Pl•lntlll av11nil vw. "YOIJ wl•h to delend Myrl crilg r••• !Ilea heroin • pell!lon '°' Oii• •e<I '"' Int oo•nlno lhtrt<>f_ ra prHtnl "'""· ... 1111 Ill• M<iln•••
he d th thlt lew1u11, Ya\/ m~rl flit In thh cwrt • probll• 01 will •nd 10, ln 1Jince ol ltlttro The 8l>ltd ()! Tru11ee1 ruervu the voucntr1, lt Int 11ndtr1lt nt<1 ti 11\t otllU J OR e_ UC! Campus and wrlllen ple1dln01 In r•1pon1e lo the com-Teotomentorv 1., PeU4lon•r, r•!oronct re prlvll11;ie of rt lttlln9 tnv ind 111 bldl or <>I HARWOOD, SOOEN & '°'Ol(INSOff. !»
.L large •otel • II H ho Pl•lnl for • wrlll..i or ~r•I Olt•dlno, 11 • which 11 m•C• IOI" lutthtt Pltllcul•" i nd to w•lva """ ltrttul1r>tl•• .,. In· N...,..Potl Ctnltr Orlvt, Suite 1).1, NIWl>Orl ll S Hl le ar r Ju•UC& (O<Jrl) Wllf'>)n TMllEI: d&YI t lltt !h•T IJ\I !Im• •11<1 olace o! h•1tln~ 11\t '1otm11itlr1 In tnv bid or Jn l~t Olddlnt , INch, C1ill«nlt, -lt!'J II !nt Pltct fl
a rea, he said. lhl1 ~ummon1 11 lt•vl'll on •PU. 11..., htl botn •!t 10, A~iUll 19, l911, u ~lone<!: NORMAN E. WATSO N 011o!nn1 of Int uncltrt lll<ltd In •II "'•"'" "S' I II Oth1rwl1e, VOii!' a1r1 ul! wn1 bt entPr~ on t ·)ll . th '°"" _,, 1 Sectv,, llotrd Of Tni•ltt1 ttrttlnl!lll to ll>t 11t•I• of H id OKtdllnl. lnCe We are I CU tura Y 1ppllc1!1on by l~t Pl•ln!lll •nd !h• courl Ql'!'•rl~·;::i' N.,'." l .,1 •,•Id COIJ~! 11 7~ Ooen: Aue, 13, 1'11, 1 l:Oll t.m, wl!llln lour m""!hl 1Uer "'" llrtl p.vbll,1•
t>rie.nted communltv and since m•y enrer • lvcgmeftl 1•11nu vOIJ '°' !ht civic cen1or Orl•e wn1, 1" 1~.' Cliv 01 Publl1ht'<I °"'""" Coto1t O•ll Y Pllol, lion o1 !1111 norlc1 . . 1. . · ' "'ont v or o:>1~tt rtllt! t•Qutstfd In ltot Sa~!t An• (&ll!ornlo J~rv 12, ~-1'11 1'6-11 D.lltO JulV 16, 1tn WTI Ing IS one of the r.rts that c .. mp!alnr. Oeled J 'iv 21 1911 ' w. STEPttEN $MITH Ill
h l h d I . If Ya\/ wl•h to It~ !ht td~lct ol 111 ti· u • as no a 00 much a ttention ltl•ntv in ihl• mui ... v..., •N>uld 00 ,., w.E 51 JOt-tN LEGAL NOTICE Exotu•o• 01 lh• w111 ~ 11'1• ,. __ " ·d H 'f th. k • '' 0 0 ., 00 C01JntY Cl1<k Ab<lvt n•mHl deaden! Ila e, sa1 ano • Jn ll P•Ofl'>P v *" '"" YOIJC p ··~ "'· t nv, Wl lllt t, •r-• ..... Cr.in (Dl(W) HAllWOOO, SODEN & AO•INIOl'f
• uld be ood .d I miy be llit<I "" llmt. Ill Oovtr on .... Sult• NUl'Tlhr ll, NOTICI 0' TllUSTll'I IAL• ,..,, Ofl'lt• ••• lHJ WO a g J ea 0 con-Ooll'd J\rne II. 1111 NtW...,,., ltlCh C•lllor•I• m• Nt. lHl "-"" ... en, C•. f'.l:NJ
eider having the seminar at ~· tt1mlln Toi: Cll4) .,...0111 o n '"'""""' '· l91!. 11 lD:OO ,..,M., T..t: ('1I) Ul-lllJ r h I I h P .. 1orl( Allomiv• tor P•tl119M• WESTERN ESCA_OW COMPANY It <IUIY Alllrllt\'t fw aitctollUI
One 0 OUr 0 e S Or t e OrUm J <>111 Clt m11 Pvbtl!ht'<I Or&noH CN•f D•llY Piiot, oppclnr~ Tru1!e1 \rnd" I nd 111>nu1nt to p '-U·-_. 0 t ngt CO-•I Dally Pllo!,
Pl h 0.Purv Oetd of lrusl d&!rd J 1nu•rv 7J, 1•10 ti· "" "'"" ' Or ay OUse:' WITTMAN A"IO ICHMI OT Julv ?I. 11 and AuPVU •.Lt /I 1Qtt-'1 K uled by TtlOM,O,S fl , FITCH 1r>d July 1t •na Au1u1t J, Jl, lf, 1'11 toJ!-ll
The sem inar, he said. ·would Ri•~••d s. Flo•• THERESA R. cOLl!'MAN 1nd •ocoraed k .~
l W S•fl M!1uti Oriv• L EGAL NO'I1CE Ftb•V•rv IJ. lt)O, I> lnllr. ND. 1159, \ft LEGAL NQ11CE fall during Lagw1a's Winter J ult• JM l>OOI\ t11s, P•G• 1~. 01 on1c111Rec.,.a1 1n"·---------------
Festival. which v.·ould mt1ke j\ New~ort c1nl•r -u .. ~111co 01 tne couniv R•co•dtr gl , 1311'7' Hew .. rl 1 .. cn. Ctllllrftl1 UUf ,lllU Ortn"" Coun!v. Ct ll!ornlo, Will SE LL ,l(TlTIOUS 1Ull"ll51 intere sting for the vis itors . A11J<"navl lot Pl•l"llll ,ICflllOUI IUSINISI H ... MI AT PlilLIC AliCTION TO HIGHEST "IAMI ITATIMt:NT ••
Je\\'Cisy seen1s to be a big fa vorite at the Sa\vdu st t'estival in Laguna Beach.
l·lcr e f!'eckled-bark beauty looks on as visitors survey the handmade \Vares. The
festival in l~aguna Canyon, noted for its free and easy atmosphere, is open daily
t hrough Aug. 29.
P bli l>ld O C t D 11 ,II! J ~T,O,TEME"IT lliOOER FOR CASH (a•Ytble •I tlmt o! "Tiit I d Int b1,1t;l"F" Chamber president R 0 y 1., ~' 1~, n. ';~v~,1 1,.., 1 Y iid-~i Tn t lollowlnt pe"on I< ao1n, bu1ln1u ,11• In ltw!ul monev .,1 th• United stotoil '" lc.ilowlnt """.,., 1 " ,
Marcom agreed th& such al----------------1'" •I th• 1ourh {Iron!) •n!•onc• to tno old r. R. wliltGtlT ASSOCIATlS. 9'1~ l "'GAL NOTICE ldto!l-KI! Cemoanv. JJOt.> N-..o•I Orone• CoYnh Cou•thO<J••· S&nll ,O,n1, N~rt!.,u•. c 0r.,n1 .,., Mar, Ca. f'l'tt gathering, would be a welc ome ....:.. •lvd .. f'l'tw1>11r1 Bu~h .. Collrornlo nuo ca111.,..n11. 111 r1gn1, 1111e tnd 1nror••I con· T'-"•• I!. WrlfllJ, :JO<I Na~lt!W,
•ddo.Lt.on to wo·nler a c to'••o'L.•es -------eanoor-Pvnio Ol>•rotiono, In<·• N..., ~•v•d to ""a naw held b• 11 un<ler ••Id Caronld81 M•t. C•. 1'161S " • '·11141 York Co•por8llon, 1 C.retnwl<~ Pl11e. OH<I ot l'"'' in lh• orocor!v 111u1!~, In Thlt buolnei• 11 btlnt cofl<lutlf1f bv •f't and Said it \\"OUld be COn· ,ICTITIOUS •USINESl GrtMwlc.h, Conn. 06l3ll 11ld (QUft!Y and S!11e de•crib•d ••· lncllvldu•I.
d N,0,ME STATEMENT Thi• b1J"n .... I• (000\JC!Od by • •or· " L••lthOld E1tolt In Lot 11l ol T. It. Wrl•M
(!;idcre along With the Winter Tl!t Tolto .. 1n11 PfflOn 11 doin1 Outlntu PO«l!IQn T,8,1 11'1 1n '"" (l!y 01 NeWl>l!<I Tnli ll•temenl !lied w11n lh• Coo.in ...
Festival program. ""'MET At ,O,RT siuoio, 51.,010 • _ John J M.rtln, 801cn, Counlv "t O••"vr, Stile of Clerk ot Oran•• county II"' JuTY ,7, 1rn.
Ells]Je1·g Says He's Sor1·y F ti. I f A'"' '>'lll•O• "'''· liJ Leount C•nvon Rota, SonUt•Y "' fl•nte•· C1lllornl•. •• o•• mtP .. corded In floo~ BY 8t~•rlv J. Mt<ldO>t, Oflllltv Cou.IY es va O '1.S r e presen· Pun11 Ooero!loo" ln.c lll, P•t•• 1 to 14 ln,lu•!ve or Cl•rlt
lat;,, Glenn Vedder noted thal Lo;un• 8 ""cn, C•llt, m 5l. Thi• 1!11•m•nt W81 lllea wnn in~ Coun· Ml"e111neov1 Moo•. tn mo ~Hie• ~I'"" Pub11tntc1 or1ne• co.st D•llv Pilot, Ju• ChO•l"1 E Goosmen, 1tQI MOIJnloln 1V (lt<K ol OrtnDt Counh on July )I, Covnly Rece•dor o! u ld CO<Jntv, tv 'l1 tnd "VOUll S, 11, 1,, 1171 ,!Ol't-n the Festival, for the first time Vit w Orhit, L•'""" Beien. C•llf. ~1151. i•ti. common 1>.dar111: 160!> "'n!!GI>• Wtv, Thll llu•lneH 11 being (OndU,lld b~ tn this year: bad included writing 1nalvidue1 . J•,.,•• J, "'""' Ntw<>0r1 ae.ch, C•lllo•11l1. LF:GAL NOTICE c , E. G0<>irnen CNCkff l'llu, S•ld ••I• .. 111 bt mid<. but wimov11 ____ =.:_:. ________ ~-
scholarshlps in its annual TM• •l•temtnt lllfd wllh Ill• Covntv S•n "r•n<l•<o co••n•nl or w~rrontv, e•Prtn "r Implied, ,. 17001
Pape1·s Dich1't P1·i11t Mo1·e
T.i: 1441S) "'·ll\O r1011a1no 1111e, po.,~1.,on. <>• en. grants to Out.standing $\UdentS Cltrk ol Or 1n111 Counlv on: July '· 1,1\_ •>o» <~mbron'"'' lo o•• lhe ftmi lnlng pdn. ,ICTITlOUS •IJllN,SI &v &9Vt t1Y J. Mtado•. DePutv C01Jnfy "IAMl iT,0,T5MINT Of the art.'5, Clerk, P11b1l1'1rd Oronoe COl•t 011iy Pil.,1, <IPll IVm o! lht no'lt Htu•ed bY u ta .
Publiil>ed C•anot Cool! Oelly I'll"'• July 2' •nd Au•Y•I s, 12. u, n11 706t·11 0..0 of T'"''' IP.wit \11 .000.00. 1<ollh I"-11 T~t lo•lowlnt POrtono ••• 40•011 .,,, ''· ''· -'"' '"'"'' >. '"' 11.-1, :_.:_:_:_ -----------jl••••I tr"m F1br111rv 11. 1910, ••In 11la v•~•H 11: , .. 0 e 0 o••t • , " >¥' no!o proyldHl, tdVlnCI!, II 1nv, und" !~• FR ITZLER "
term• o! •tld Ooed cl Trust. t•••• char~tl J"NITORl"'l SUPPLIES, am Ct1tlll1 .. l ,ECAL NO'I1CE
\Vt\SH!N"GTO.\' 1L!PI\
D<inieJ Ellsberg. 1he 1nan v.'hG
leaked the o.ecret Pentagon
papers to rhe press. says he
v.·1shes the r1ewspa)X'rs 1vhlclt
used the secret \Var study had
printed n1ore of 11.
Ellsbcrg con1mrnled on the
war study \\led11esday during
an appearance before a con-
ference sponsored by 17 liberal
House Democrats who are stu-
dying the 47-volume history of
U.S. involvement in Indochina.
"I regret the Journalistic
11 rn1l un s pace," E!lsberg said.
Trouble Bloo111s
Cor11 Patch Pla11ted
l1i Middle of City
SAN DIEGO IUPl\ -City
go .. ernrncnt is facing ii dllcin·
111<1 o\·er \\'hat to dn ;J.hout a
f'On1n11uH'~ corn patch al!Jng a
frnnl s1tle\\'illk 1n I he
fil~h1onablc La Jol!<i beach
~N'tlon.
'!'he C<u'n ''does not c:onforrn
to the uniform !';!rert tree
pl:in(ing esL:1blish1·d by the
~·1 !y" <ind 1.1·i1J h~nc !O be
rr111111crL .'\ S C<J t1a110. a
p:1do. s 11pl'r\1.sor with lhr t·11y,
told lhc con111111ne by lettrr
"l\'1"rc lh1nk111g of h:iv1ng a
corn ft'fls !. lnr .'Ill o u r
OPlglibor$," ~;11tl I r v 1 n g
Nrwn11Jn, 2!!. a hr a rd c d
111rrnhrr of 1111• rnrnm11nr.
l.<·orgC' Stnrrv, c 1 t 1 z en r.' 11~s-ill1:1n! 1n lhl: cily manager's
offi<'t', :-;unirned 1t up·
"If \>r r1'1110\e the corn.
\\·e're g11111g 10 be accused hy
snn1e people of being in·
sensitive ;ind unthinking a11d
so forth. If we don·!. where
are we going to dr:iw 1he llnf"?
Tl's nnr of thnse th ings v.·herc
"'e·re dammed if v.·e d o, and
we're darnmed if we do11'L
Nev.•man, four other young
m en, five young women and
lwn children rnovcd into the
bcachfronl house to establish
1he cornmune last Chris1n1<is
Day, The lease was held by
\\'dlia111 \Vi!de. a for1ner
associate µ r of es so r of
soci<ilogy at the University of
California al San Diego _
.._ "The grounds \.\'ere 'f'!',V
poorly t:iken care of when we
arrived," Nev.•man s;ucL "\Ve
bought and p lanted sonH' fru11
trees and vegetables as ~fl<•n
as J)\)ss1ble -for ((l()d and fnr
srunf"thlnlil lo dn -and ~L~ or
f'i~hl weeks agn v.·e pli1n1ed
lhe corn "
I le said mos t neighbors sup·
1>0rled the coinmune on the
issue.
"One little old lady. abot1! 80
Y"flrs old, comes pt1st every
day with her cane," he said.
'·She v.·as delightf'd . She i;aid it
reminded her of her ('hildhood
in Ohio. We Ravr her some
broccoli from lhe garden.
Graha111 Says Devil
Worship Spreading
OAKLANO r U P I l
F:vangelisl Billy Graham says
"s alan \1-'0rs hip is s p1'!ad1ng
rast" in this country and could
be responsible for sexual im·
m or alily anrl dnJg use an1ong
)'oung persons.
"CrJHornia ,Jesus people are
everywhe re and they often
we a r the historic symbols of
Chri.~tianity, such :ls lhe Bible
or the <'ross." c:raht1111 told a
cro wd of 27.500 Wednesday
nigh! on the sixth day of his
Northern Califom ia c rusade.
"But everywhere also are
the sa t::in worshipers. Some
~·ear horns. Wfl r l ock s,
<1strologica.l signs 11nd protec t
their im 2.ges of demon.~." he
&aid.
f:rah11 m quoted 11 San l~ran·
cisco Bay Area s tudent leader
11s saying. "The legends of
d('n1ous "hiC'h h t1d previously
concen!r:+t<>r:I on other culturr '
·where pagan, he.:ithen people
\i\'cd, are tndav making a
v•holesalc ?.nd concerted in-
vasion of the /\n1erican )'outh
scene."
"'The current craze for nudi-
ty could be the influence o f the
devil," Graham said. ··Sex,
clrogs and witchcraft o ften go
together .''
Graham said parapsydloJo--
gy, an almost unheard of
science 25 years ago, Is a
m ajor courSe today in 1nany
universities, often taken the
form of seances.
"It seems we have ruled
r.oo out. or the c lassroom s a nd
t~ d evil has moved in under
variou.q ~ophi!!ticaled ter1ns,"
he said.
The evangelist said Sa tan
wiU continue to be a conflict
with Christian~ who want to he
spiritual and ever yon P.
"outs ide or Chri~t" is in
danger or demon possess!fln_
The cru.~adf' ends Sunday 1n
tt1e 42 .000-seat Oak 1 a n d
Colis eum.
•
''It's obvious they (th t
newspapers) had them (the
Pentagon study) a v ailable.''
''I w o uld have !iked to have
seen lhe entire S\\'eep of in-
telligence estimates printed,"
he added. "The New York
1·imes apparently m ad e a
dec1s1on not to print anv of
thal but the rnns! iznpoftant
a spect lhal I read (in perusing
the war studv) was ho\V ac ·
curate the CIA and s tate
<!epartn1e n t analysts
e.~!i1nates have been.''
He said he withheld Cf!rtain
parts or the w ar study because
they dealt "'ith "negotiating
channels" that might still be
useful. But he said his mt1in
motivation in sn acting was to
cleprive t he Nixon
Ad111inistra tioo o r an excuse
not to use tho~e channels once
they had been m ade public.
··I had no intention of pro-
viding them with tht1 l ra·
tiunale," said Ellsbetg, 401 a
senior researc h assistant at
~fa~sachusetts Jns tllute 0 r
Technology v.·ho i.~ under in~
rlictment for h is a ctions.
I If' urged lhe lt1,.,·m<1k ers I~
re<1d as much of the P e ntagon
pap<'rs as they could
"T'J1(>y're ver y dull.'' he
\1·arned. ··boring. n111nbin g
But there 1s no substitute for
readinl{ large port.ions of
thcn1
r~!lsbcrg ;ilso sai<l:
$48,000
Congress
Pensions?
Dean's List
Honors Pair
LEGAL NOTICE •"" ••l>I!"'" "' tn• r ruiret • ..., of !he o r!vt. Nun!in•ton fle1ct>, c1111 . .,...,, ---------------· [ ·---------------lru•U crtaled bv 1tld Ottd el T<v". IC.,,,,.,h L. Ftifllt r, lloll C•llll'l•n
f< 11114 ,.ICTITl:ul''!1ustNl!'il Th• ben•Jl(!t rY under •tla OeeO o! Dt ,, Huntlna!Ol'I f111ch. t14'14.
l'ICTITIOUt l \JUHl!Ji T•ull, by r•••on e! • b•••'h 0 , aer1ull fn JO.eph v. F!d1nte, 1191)1 811! >Cir<!•. "IAM,1! ITATl:MENT II I h r ~ y Huntln-1 .. u., C•llf. f1o!I). HAMI! lTATliMIHT Tht to110,.lnv ptrr<>n 11 dolnv b111intn !hr ob 1111 on• iecurld 1 • • • Thia buolneoo 11 beint (ond\Jcttd bY a foll.,wlnv .,.rscn 11 dolnf ou1lntn 11, h•11to1ort t••cu!...i 1nd d~!lvered lo 111• ,,rt.,.rohlP. '"' .,,
lntern1ti.,.,•I Cociu, 4:l01 fllt~h Ntw<>orl leach, C1ll!otnl1, f l., JENSEN MARINE ;u Flicnt r underol1ned • w1l!!•n Otc!1rt1l0<1 ol JoHoh V. Fldt nc•
Avenue. Cmil M•"· C~lllotnl t '16)1. ~11~~110:nb~t~~;:'~~~ I: !1~1d1C:.~ow~~~!~ Tn11 t!•l•,,_,t lllt<I ,..1111 lfl• Cov.\~
T N t B h P&<•llC lnttrn•!lonol Cerp IYO ewpor ea C C•1lrernlt CO•P.J, IJOJ fllr~n '. ii ..
81nvor·Pun1e Oi>et1!10<>>. inc .• • N.,.. lh• und•,,ltn•d 10 ••ti H ld property 10 Clerk ot Or1ng1 County"'" Jul~ 16. t~n . Yor~ Co1PO•~lo~, l G .. enwl(h Pl1u. ••ll•lv Jtld obll••llon• •nd lhtr•ft!le•. on fly 8ivu 1v J. Mtddo~ Otll'Jlv Cou~I"
stude nts have been named to N1w""n B••<n. c.111or"1' 11uo. Grt•nwlcn, c .. nn, 061l0. nd ' 1 • td •Id Clerk •
Tl!l1 butlr.n1 11 ccnduc!td ti>' A ~;;~11 ';,,.1'~';,:~~ ".,,;'~"!~.~1:~ lo 1 H l"ublllhed Or ant i Co-11 D•llY Pl!Olr. J(1· Thlo bu•lnou I• bolnv cor>dvct1d the dean's list ;1L Colby College co•port11""
in \\'aterville, Maine. in Ed L, a .. a.ttotu
Cor"""•~:~ J. Ma•!ln, •ecordt<I In boolt 9Jff. 1>•1to 10, 01 u kl 01. IV 1' I nd Au•v1r J. I~, It, 1'11 *'•11
So<rtlfttY ol &1ngo1 P"nla 11<1•1 R•Coro1. Troa1'""' recognition for outstanding Thi• 1t11emon1 1ned w•'" tn• coun•,.
academic performance during ci.,, of oron~• co""" on Jun• JO. in1 bv 11,ver1v J, M•dao¥, Oeputv Countv
the second seme$r. ci.,~.
Ootrall""I In< OtTt . JulV I. \tll ,
lll•• .i81emt nt .;.., i11ea wlttt 11\t (ou•· WESTE RN ESCll:OW COMPllNY
tv Clerk cl Of•nvo coun!• on Julv n. •• u ld lru•le•. I'll. Bv f>~lllo H, H•rrio
Jl.Mfl J. GARlll:TT Allorn•v for T1111ltt
MOltlt!SO"I, l'OlllJTl!'lt, IPI l1JJI CLAltl( l>ublo1htd NtwPOt! H8tDOt Ntw• "'''° They are Mis<. M •lo.nd"' Puo1<.ntd Or•n~ .. co••' D111, p11o1, "· " Julv I, 11, l7. 7'. 1911 ltJ).11
Selby, the daughter of 11r. and11-----
Mrs. Thomas R. Selby, 1925 LEGAL NOTICE
~:~~::Y;L~'i~"ITON I. ~omblned with 1111 Oollv Pllol, N-1
Windward Lane; and
Larimore 0. Trippt>t II, the
son of Mrs . Oscar A. Trippel,
2147 Via Estrada, "
Miss Selby i~ a graduate of
Corona del M t1 r High: Trippe!,
who received h is b11c helor's
degree zn mathematics in
June. attended Cale
Preparatory School.
l\f csan Given
Top
.....
ITATIMIHT 0' A•ANOONMINT 0, USI 0 ' ,l,TITIOUI
•UstHEll HAME
SAN ,l!A"ICISCO, (,O,l '41~ '"'"· (1lllotnl1, July u, 11. 1'. 1'n
Ttl•llllM (60J) fft.1Jlt ttof.11
41).lf
'lrbll,hed Or1not (011! Dttly Pilot,
JUIY 2t t nd AUt<ltt J, 11, Ir, 1911 ~11 LEGAL NOTICE
T~• !OllOWln~ pe1son h•1 1b1ndoned 1!11 'OTIC 1<(0T IC£ INVITING llOS us~ of r~• 11<1111...,1 1>uilne" ni me
1
____ L_E_G_AL __ N ____ E ____ 1 No11,e I• ~uetno 91~1n lfltt •~• flotrd .,1
KOll:!<ER·LA G\.I NA ~ ~ N0<11> Coal! Ttuote•1 o! fh• Co-1t Cotnmunl!y c.,11e11t
HlthWAV, lttun• Bta(n, C•llfotnlt. "·101U Ol•lrl<T OI Oronv• Coun!Y, C•lllornl•, Wiii
Th• llC!lflou• 1>115lneu nome r•ler<td lo 'ICTITIOUJ IUSINEJS r11<elvt ••oled bid• UP lo 11 '00 1,m, •l>o•• Wt• ltltd In (OIJMl' 01! M'"" 11 NAME ST,O,TEMENT Ftld•V· "'"'"" 6. 1~11, ot •ne P11rcn .. lnt 1~71 ••r JlO DtPI. o! ••Id 1d>oo1 al11r1,t loo;:.itn 1 r
Edw•ro;! 3 SIArnt " l-00 Norin CC.ii Tht fO!IOwlnt pt r1on 11 dolnt bu•ln111 ll10 ,O,dom1 AVf'flut, Coll• Mill, Hltnw8 v, latun8 Beac~, (t llto•nl• •1· Ctll!otn<a, ot which r1m1 1ald bid1 will bt
Tn i1 b11•ln1n wt\ condu<l•d "" Edw1•d 0,0,VE'S CAME RA EXCHA NGE. 411 oubllc!v optn•d and rt•d for: Ill USED
S. ·Slorn.,, I! ll!h S!rotl, Co1lo Mttt, Call!Ol'nl• COl lATOR, Ul COLD TYPE COM· Edward $. S!ornn '1011 POSI TION SY5TEM, 0) PHY$1CAI. T~" ""'"'"'"'woo tlltd ,.,1n !ho CO<Jn· LETT.WESTERN INC .• U• E_ 11th EOUCAllON EQUIPMENT, (I ) COM· tv Clt•I< ol O'•ntt Coun!y "n July ,, 51,•eJ, Co•1• Mu~. C•+lro1nl• '26)1 MERCIAL WASHER~ AN O DRYE R.
!tl1. Thi• 1>u11ntu I• b•ln• con<luc!td bY 1 All bid• t •e 10 lie In •c~"rdan't ,..un
Publlon..., o 11noe co." 0111y Pl+ol. co•Porotlon IC•lllornl1l lnt ln1!nicll""• 1nd C<>r><:illlori1 •nd
Jul• )}, n. l"I •na Aviiu•I J, l911 lJ<O•ll Slon•d~ O"'VIO fl. ROeERTJ. SPt,ll1'1!ion• w~ic~ i re rKIW ori Ille tnD Pr•oldenl m~• l>4' ottut<•d 1n !ne "l!lct "' !he Tn i1 •!•l~m~n! lil•d w•!h the Counly Purc~~•lno Ao.,nl Qf ••Id o.cnool dlnrict.
LEGAL N011CE Clo•k ol Otfn9t CO<Jntv on Jyn1 JO, !91! E•cl> b;dd" must svbmlt wltn hi• l>lcl •
----------------lby 8t• .. IY J, M•Dde•, [)epyly COIJnlY c11nlot'• U•O<:k. COflllled chK-. or ttld·
, !IJH Clerk def'I bend m•D• P•••blt to Ill• ord1r ol
"<TITIOUJ •USl"ll!JI lllCMA ltO M, 11.Al(l. '"· me Co,nt Community ·callOill Dl1trlc! ,O,rt.,.nty II Llw Br;>arD o! Tru•lee• In on 1mwnl n<>I l•n Ill.AME ITATIME"IT lOJ E•il MorlJa•t t+.an llvo ioerctnr !!%) of tht 1um bid 11 Tno !0•1ow.n1 P•.,on1 ore Doing bM•m•" S•n Cl•m•nh . Cllllotnlt t l'1J 1 ou••~nltt 1n11 Ill• bl<1<11r w!ll tnl•r Into
LEGAL NOTICE
-------------~~ "IOTICI! 0' INTl:"ITlOH TO •14CJ.t.c;;j:
IH THI IALI 0' ALCOltdtl'C
••VlllAOll l• • :.
Ju1v n. V7l
TO WHOM tT MAY CONC El!"I: '
Subltct ro rnu1nc1 ol Ill• llc11ti:•,-.,.
t>lled l'llr, nollct II ,,trtllY 1lv..,, lf141 J!'lf
undttll1ned """'°'" IO 1•11 •ltel!Mle btv•r•s•• •I th• ~rtml•"· d"('!"" '" lollowl : ,
1Dt Pl1t tntl1 Ave., Co.II M~lf'.•
,. .... u.nt lo •ud1 ln~nllon, ltM ur·
de,.ltn.a 11 tPPlvlnt to lhe Oep1r1ni1h1
"' AICohDllc 8tYtr•tt ConlrOI !or IM1>1nct
ttu tr8n.i..-o1 -t lcct.oilt l>tY..--c 11,an1• <or llctnM•) for "'••• prtrnlsn It
•cltowo: · , •
ON SALE 8 EE lt I. WINE
IBOIW Fld• ,Ultl/( E1llnt 'IWI)
,O,n•one d~•lrln, to oro!ut th• llJVlll'll
ol •uth l"en11(1J m•Y fll• a v•tilltd or"" !et! tl t n>' clfl't ol fl>• OIP•rtm4'nr•b1
Atcono11, etv•.,tt Conl1ol, °' by m1JJ.1•
"'• Dfl>t,.m..,I d Ata>hollc fleVffll'Qt Con!ol, \lll 0 llr«r. S3Cremlfllb,
C&lllornlt '5.!H, M> •I to ~ ~· • wl!~I"· 30 a1y1 of mt dolt lht If
cr .... 1 .. , w••• llnl Po•trd, • !ITll tr01Jn<" JO<' <11nl1I •• provided -.v lllW.
Tht praml1e1 •r• """' llcen!td lor •• 1•1~ of •l<ohollc bevor111h, Th~ f<><:rn, Cl
v.,.lflcatlot! ..._., bt obltlntd lrom •nY ~
flct cl "'' 0..,1,!ment. ''· Moatnll•n. Vt<h • 8.
l"u~!l1hed Oron11t Co-11 0 •1"" ,.~,,
Ju1v "· 1t71 10nn
LEGAL NOTICE
A <lay-long swim party and
picnic w ill be featured Aug. 29
when the Costa ivlesa High
School class or !966 flt1s a ·~·A·! PAll KING lOT MA•"ITENANCE Ttl.: 010 1n.J...-me pr~o1ed Con!roct II !hi ltmt It
I. SERVICf •. 5•1 P•ult•lne \l , (O<ll P11bl1>h'-'<1 OrM•v• Co11! 01llV Pll.,., 1w1rd.C lo nlm, In Tiit ...,.onl o! !tllurt lol--------------~-
M... Julv t , is. 21. 1', 1•n 1116-n eM" Into 1uth c""1t1<t, t~t Pt«Nd• ol '"'405 reunion on the Mustang cam-
pus.
The noon to 8 pm. e vent w ill
---_ !ht c~ock will ~ !..-!tl!t([, o• In !ht '''' (lllTll'IC-KTI 0, OIJ(ONT1NUAMC9 Bljh~ Lt~vt John..,n, 101• Oc•8" LEGAL NOTICE of 1 bond. lht Pvlt 1um lhtr...rl w!ll De 0' \JS E AN0/01! A•ANOONMINT 01' Avo • No 0. Soal Boot~ !orlol!Hl lo 11ld Kl><Kll dl1trlcl. l'ICTtTIOUI 1\1,0,MI
f hi< bv .. nou II l>flno <endutll'd bv 1n No bldd1 t m°" ,..lltldt•w hi1 b!d tor t TH l UlllOERSIGNEO do htrtl!T ~
•ndlVldut l (IH Nt. P·•llU ~erlod "' lorlV·!lv1 115) dav1 111 .. "'" fh~I, tllKllVI Junt 7', 1911, lh..,. ttl-include Use or the poo l, g ym Bllllt l. John1on CEllTll't(Afl!' 0, ll USINftS ~·!• u! ror th• .,i>entnv 11\ltoo!. to do bu1lnn1 undu 1t11 llclll~,11 ..
a nd cafeteria. according !O c1!~~1 oi"t~~~:;I C;~I~• =~l~u':.' )0~0~:1't ,l(T!TIO~:.';,~M NAMI "'~=1~ ... :"::"rtl~ll~~!ln-:' • .,;,":1;~d1 I~~ ::m~.:: F~1~!.~ALLl~~R~~~~ z~~
organizer Warren C ornelius, of sv fl••••lv J. M111<1 .... o.,,111y (01Jnt~ Th o 11Monlun•d det1 ~•t•b• ctrtl!• lo war.• ••w lrt•tvl1ril1n o• In-c111torn11, wMth bu1•nn1 ,..,, fo•m•°i&
W t · t Cl t rk, lh1! ht lo cond11c!ln1 • 1>v1ln1u •• In In· l0<m1ll!I•• In 1n• ttld or In Ill• blddlnt. compaoed a! !~t lollowl"Q ptrMn1, wi.,.. es m !ns er. • Pvblh~~ Or1ng1 Co11! Dtllv Pllo!, dlvldv•I ti l!IU A~1m1 s ...... Mldwev NO RMAN E. WATSON ntm<rt In II.ill •nd pltct lllf rn!dtn<;t l•l-
Details may be Obtained b y JulV H, ZI, 1'1 tnd AU11u1! l, 1,11 1'1+11 (l!Y, (1il!()f'nl1 ll'l~JS. unde• Ille rtelillou1 Stth. loll-t. '9·Wll: •·
llin h , • f ---------ltirm n1m• o1 MIOW'°'Y SPEED (fiNTElil fl°"'d of Ttuslt•J J•l'nn A. frlct:ton. *4 M~ Lo;..
ca · g llTI at 89.4·3688 a ter 6 ---L EGAL NOTICE and rhu ••Id orrn 1, cotnPO$~ ot Ill• (»en: AuGu•I 1. 1911 • 11,00 •.m. Cll'll• M1111, C•llf, ~t.
ffi Or tel-J1ontng the sthool fol1owln11 pt r•on wt>~•t n1mt In II.ill Ind Publl thed OranOt (OOH 0.lly Pl!~!. 1(1rlt"' J, £rlcloMlf!, 1Uif 1'11"1 p. ., "l"' -~ pit,. cl tUldonct II •• lollow1, IO·WI!: JUIY ZI, :it, 1971 l'llll-71 L•nt. Coxlt ,,., .... C•!ll, ~--<luring the day time. l\J,lltlOlt COOllT 0' TH• EOWAl'ID D. MILLS. 5771 "'"'•h•m Ctrllllc•!t ,.,. "'"'•~llOll ol bu" SfATE OF (,O,Lll'Olt"ltA '011 Avonu •, WtJtmlnUtr, C1lljotnl1 '1"1) unclor tht •bcwl ffdtU-ntrnt, I lilt•
LEGAL NOTICE THI CO\J"ITY 0, Ol!A"IGI 01!td J1in1 1l. !911 LEGAL NOTICE rldt u" OI publlc.tll0<1 tntrtOI, ••• ~ ...
NO. A·IOOll ~I EDWARO 0 . MI LLS ---------------1 1~ !hf "ffict ol rne Ca11nty Cit :~ NOllCI 0, HEAltlNf; 0 , ,lflTION STllTI! OF CALIFOllNIA I "nu Ort not County, Ulldlf "'• P•0¥111 'itf
, 101tt l'Olt PllOlllTE 01' WILL ANO ,Oil COUNTY OF ORANGE I u . ,ICTITIOUI •UllHIJS S•cllon , ... ol th• Civil Codt . ,~ 'ICTITIOU' 1\JtlNISS LITTl:llS 0, A O~INllTl!,O,T ION On Junt '8, Ull, bef.,rt mt, 1 Not1rv NAMa STAT•M•NT WITNESS ...it n•M lfllt ttll! ..,; ,,
N"Ml ITATIME"IT W!TH·THl·WILL A"l"IE.1110. pybll<, In f nD 19r w ld Counlv •!Id Sflrt, Tiit !<ill<>WIM "°''°"' 1r• 4olng Ju .. , tt11, ', lollawln11 oorton II OO!!>f bu1in111 E1••I• of ,,.ICHAEL f , O'CONNOP Hrtont llY IPl>elfed EOINARO 0 . MILLS 1>111111111 • ., June• ..... EfiCk1o.i .,. :
•J: Ot,•tud. 11-n IO me lo bl ll>e otrson who•• WMEELHOUSI! (OMP.t.SS, 7101 W K~rltnt J, Erlcloo"" '' GWfN'S, 7300 tl1 tbcit Blvd .• Co•U NOTICE IS HERE!8Y GIVEN m1t 8•n· nt mr II lvbr,rlbed 10 lh• within In-Coist Hlahwi v. HtWP«t fl .. ch, Ct lll. Pullllohfd Or1ntio (o,ut f>t!~_!IJ •
Mt11, l•ml" G. H•WI<" IWlt llltd htrt+n • i trument •nd •Clt-ledo~ 10 ..,. th•! '1UO Jvty I, U, 1:1, "· lm • .._
'"
Gw•n Willl1m1, ~I Counirv Clvt> Prl•ll0<1 lor ~rot>o1t ol ... 111 incl to. 11· 111 t ltocu'ttd lht ••m•. llOO.rt Bt!nb•lfft , 11).d Joo;:on l Av•, WASHINGTON (UPI) Ot., C°'!t Mt•• •v•nce Of l tll•" ol ,O,amlnlnr•ll""' wllh-WITNESS mv houd •nd 1011, Vl!lll P•rk, C.lll. '1U1
C , J . h . h Tl'>I• bu1ineu i1 i..nno c-uct"" bv '" fh•·wlll 1nnrJttd rtlr"nct 10 """kl'I h tOFFIClAL SEAL) JoseP1> Gl•ublr, 1n1 I.. Cktln 81vd .. LEGAL NOTICE~~~+'. '.
o ngress 1ona pensions. \\' JC t"dl•klve1. mt<I• •or 1ur1l'>1• ... r11cu11ts. •"<f '""t •1Jf)hn w. McOw~n 1.11>o1, c.111, nu1 ,U,.lltlOI! cou•T 0 , TN&
can nQW reach a maximum Of Gwon Wlll li mi rht !lmt •nd PllCe at hte•lno IJ\I IU"" NotttY P11bllc In •nd l~nn Cul!..-, ttl tCnoitvlllt, H11nlln1t011 tTAT• 01" CALll'Ol!NIA l'Olt )~
13. 000 • Y Could go ·s c~~· .:'~~~~:: (~~1~. :;:hJu1~: Xl~~:r:. h•• "f'fl 111 for A119111t i . 1911, " t :ll 1..-lt ld Covn!y ..... &!tit . 8 .. (h, C•lll, THI COUNTY O(i' OIUfltOI I 1: , ear, ., •.m .. In II'>• tovtlrorm ol Ofl>lr!mtnt M(OWIN, ORllN & SYLVIA Edw•rd Ent!tr, 1•11 Wo l~•r LH Or., Ht • .-,.19117 0 '• I • By llevtrly J, M•dao• 0.0lll• (Ol/nty .. ' -'' 0 0 -<o 0 < "' 000 no 11gh as $48,000 for lawmakers ""· ,,, 11 cou• • • ·-v c '" Art.mer• .1.1 Law Lo• '"''""'n°', er . t0 HDTtc• o" "•••1N11 Oii' "•Tl
h I I L bel Cl~'.,"b11thl'd Ottn•1 Cet ll Dt ltv Pllo!, Ju. Orlvt W•1I, In lht (lty ot S•lll• ,l.n•, Ht I . Ch••••lln ,O,vtnvt Thll bllllntu 11 l>tlnt (Ol>dvc:t~ bv ,0. PlllOIATI 0,. WILL AND
\II 0 VO Untari y QUI Ore Collf.,rnlo, """••-. '•lllornl1 .,... I P1rlnertl'>I~. •o-o•• TllTAMINTAl!T , I• t. 1!. 11, 1'. 1'11 1141·11 .... 0 , ,,,1 "' .-"' " 1973 ooo>de r • bo.\I •pproved by .-.•fd Ju v · T.i.: 1n1) tU-SlH tl , Lvnn Cvntr WAIVIO) ,.
• "' " '>I , E. St JOHN Publlohe~ °'t""1• C0-11 DlllY PllOI, Thlt lltl.,,..nl !lied ,..Oh Int Counly Erlalt of M•tlt D«o'llnltk, f>tct•te4:
a House subc<immittee. LEGAL NOTICF. '· '· ,,','"•n~!••'.",','••• '· '''" ,~. JulY •· 15, n. 19, 1•11 1111.n Cit•~ 01 O••"ll• ccuniv on, M•v ",· 1•11 NOTICE 1s HllltE'IV GIVEN t111i"';; Th d .... .... I• 81 .. ••lr J, M.lddir.c, DtlOUIY Ollnly lrtndtt hll lllld n. .. r .... H1!1..,;,.~ e measure, a p p r o v e , 111-11 "'"' Y •. M(ALL1ST'E1t c1e1k ,, ,,.~ probof~ .,. w111 • ...., ror 111111nc:1 tf t:•~
\\lednesday. would reward on. ,ICTITIOUl •us1 Hlll •11 W•ot "l"h 11ru 1 LEGAL NOTICE Puo11111011 O••nff Co••' o. v '''" T••l•m•nl•rv i. 'tl!ttontr 11~
I r he NA'°'I ITATIM•HT lit Anttlet, Ctllfttnlt HtU Jvl't I . U, 77, )t lllJ.11 WtlvtdJ, rtltr9tlel to Wl'llOt 11 ll'lfldt
y members 0 I current Tht folh>w lntl 0•"0<1 11 OOlnt by1 lntss Ttl: UIU ,,.41U "IOT ICI TO CltaOITOl!I fllrtl'>tr t t r!lc1111r.. •nc:l th•t tt1ll '!fll'e
Congress who quit OD their '" Alt•......,•'" '""1111 ... " 1u,11110• cou•r o, T"• LEGAL NOTICE •••(• tf 1111r1ne 1t1t &11mt "'' tiMt'I
b Id I , TELECAfll'E CON~Tl!UCTORS, lO'J Pit -Ml ITATlf 01" (ALll'Ol!NIA (1'011t lor Al/9\ltf tt, 1971, at t:Jf 1.f!t.,'!11 own ut wou pen a I z e l r•OW•v, Cool• M111. Clllf. f'llll P1rhil1htd c .. no. (OM! Dtllv Pilot, THI (OU"ITV 01' OltANOlf .... »" tooi•'-et D-rtmtl'll N11. ,_
members as well as long time Tl""'thy w1111.rn si.1c1•"· lo i Jui~ 13• 1•· "· "11 10»1J N•. A4tqr 1u,,••to• cou1tT o, TNI '°"'''· •• 10D c1 ... 1c Ctntw Ott.. Yt!ff,1_ l 8rO•dWtY. c ... t .......... c~111. •.it'1 1----------------1 E1!•h cl LA URA LEI! HAGEltMAH ITATlf 01' CALl,O•NIA ,01! lht (lfy el llnlt A .... C.l!,.,n!•. " federal judges, who stay 0 1 in f h11 l!v1IM11 1, ~,"" (Ondutttd bv '" LEGAL NOTICE •••· lAl.lllA HAGERMAH, •k•. L>.!JR"' TH• COUHTV Oft o•AN•• 011tc1 Ju~ ,1, 1m ~
office past age 70, lndlvldu~I. L. HAGEtllMAN Dt(•••ed. Nt, A•l'Mll w. t . '' JO"llf. l Y. W, 3nl~l•v T71Ht NOTICE ll HEllE8V GIVEN lo Int: NOTtC• 0' "llAltlNO 01" P•TITION Counl'!' Cltrk '\.
R ep. M orris K. Udall (Q. Thl1 ll8Ttme111 lnf;f with Int COllll!Y JU,llllOlt (OUllT 0, TNI t•l'llltoro of !ht above nemed dKtdtnl POlt Plt09ATI 01' WILL AND 1'011 ,"',n'-w•'·---.-... ,.._ • •"°'' l~ Ariz ) 8UP'"'r or the m e asure Cltr• '11 Orinto COllntV en: Jul• l e, lt1l, JT,O,TI 0' CALll'OltNtl. POii ,,,fl •II llt•tont htvlne <l•lmt thlnot 1111 Llnll!S T•ITAM•NTAll'I' -.,..,_
" ' '"J ' 8v fll vt•I• J, M•<!Oo•. OtOll!v CounlV TH• COUNTY OP OR.-111!11 told d..;tdtnl t rt rl<lulr.a ro lilt lhorm, Eil•lt ol RA"ISLE R J, IAl(l!I!, ••• 1-'Y Hiiia. C-tltfwltle "211
said Its prim:iry aim is to en· c 1 .. M. He ... 1MJ2 with 11\e MUIJl•Y VCK1Qltr1, In !ht ofl'!(t "'"'"'!LEI; •AKEi!, •k• II . J. IAl(ER, Tth (!Iii In-MU l~l . \.
e r JU"ties an J111v 11. 1' •nd AllVUll $, 11. U•l 201•11 ,011 PllOl,O,TI 0' Will ANO '01! '" ...... "' """'' wllh ll>e neuutrv NOTl(E 11 HERE•V GtVE"I 11111 PVblltlltd Ot• ... (Ottt Dtlty
courage eld ly . ••• d P1rb!lol',Hl Ot1nt• Co-II Dtllv Piiot, HOTICI OP Nl,O,fl_INO 0, P•TITION of"'~ Clfrlo at th• •bov• '""'ltd <Ollrl, or Otc:tt l"'ll. Al...,_..,, ftr P't!llM-·Ai'
congressmen to quit and make ll!TTllll TllTAMINTAllV VOl/(h•n. to Ill• 1rll<der111-i 1! !ht otl!ce LYLE flAK£1l Ind l f TTY Jl,O,N•1 :':""::."'=~W::_:•:'":..:':":":":..:•:..:•~·=·'-...:"·'.i~
room ror younger ~pie. LEGAL NOTICE E•l•!ot ti HAR~Y ENOCH WEISSfl ERG, of htr tltornty. Rol>trt J, John1IOl'I, 0 0 flALZE• h•~· !!ltd ntr•ln . ,.tlll0<1 '°'I .-~u O.C111ed. I.Inion ll•nk Pl•11, 701 Swlh Ltkt ~obalt of will •nd lvr ltlUIM• d L.ilt•I LEGAL NO'IlCE , ; ,
A l present, depending on , 111'1 "IOTICE ts HE ltfiflV GIVEN "'"'Al A~tn ...... P11tdt111, Ct11fornl• t110I, wtlkll Tnl.m•n!lrv 19 ,.1111-... rrltr•nc:t "';'-------;:-:=:------1·~ ti ' I h ' f'ICTITIOUJ llJSll<(l\I SOCHE R, •nd (Al!L MINTO"I, ~ It"'' •Itel of 11u11 ..... f/f"" Undlll'tlanld Wl'llch It"''" tor f\lrlfltr .. ,u,~1 ... , •nc:l1 ll?lr engt 0 s e ?' v l c e N,O,M• ITATIM•"IT RU5~ELl ICN OTi ~VI 11\td n..-11n. Ptll• In t ll "''"'"' ,..,.,.1n11111.., ,,.,. ntalt"' lhtl 1111 11 ..... •'Id p!tct ol httllflf "" p Mnl •
Congressmen Can get .,.TISiOilS T~1 lollowlnt Htl-•r• 1111""1 !Ion For PrQ(l.ol• ol Wiii t!ld kw l ett ... 1 lfld dtc:edtM, Within lour ll'OOl'lltll •lltr Mfft• hit 11ttn Ml lot AUt\111 U, 1tn, II l'ICTITIOUI IUllNlll '
r-bvolntU •1: Tt1t1mt11l1rv rtftrmc:t lo which It '"•<I• !ht fltlt ~blk.9Uon tit lhl1 ncillc.. 9,)0 ,,,,,,, In ll>t <01Jtltoorn OI DtH•I· NAM• ITAT•MINT '•' '~. tolaJJing Up to 80 per cent or 9 &. H INTEllPllll$ES. 1&.0 O•hv I'!., lor lutlhfr ••rlT¢ult •t, tnd 111•1 t1>t lhnt 0.ttd Jvnt J ... 1'11 mtftl NO. 3 01 tlld covrl, ti 100 Civic TJ\l#llOwlnt H.--trtdlfl,....,....;
the 8Verag Of the. thr Cotti M•••· •ncf ~l•Ct of httrlno Ill• w mt htl bltn EtbHI T, Het1trm•n, 1111, c ... 11r Drive W•tl, In rllt (llV el S1nl1 All ~· e If' et Wllll1m ,, Grturlc<I, -1•'5 O•li<I I'!., tel lot A"'uat J, ti t :!llJ o.m .. tn lhl I!', T, llt•t•mtn "'"'· Ct lllornl•, 'A•K \.100 f1A1"-ITV\.fr. highest years Of pay. Tht (ot!I MtW COVrlr°""' of 0.Ptrl"""t No. I of t•ld EKtclllor Otrld July lJ, lt71 l't<>Ullt l fl_d., Htwil'Ott 8..cll, Cl 11f '
Ud&ll bill s ays congressmen How•ro 0. Lovtltn. 2'1 t f u•l><l•. t01Jt1, 11 ~ Cl•lc Ctnttr orlv. w nt, In of lht wt11 o1 w E st JOH N t.1w11c11 w. G•r~ 11041"' '
(1)111 ......... rh1 Cl!v OI $1nl• ,0,nA, C•lllornl•. n11 •Dov• n•fftecl dttecl1nl (OllMY Cit•~ "'--· lttcn, (1111, ' I who vo luntarily retire, but not Thi• bVllntll 11 Mlftt (-ll<lff ..... I Drltd Julv Jl, 1•11 ltOl•llT J, JON"ISTON OUllV•A, CAlt(l'INTlfll & •AltHll Thlt IWtlntU I• .. , ... Cflld!Jeltod !W:-f:
tho~L> who are defeated for re-,.tlntr•MO. w. '· ,, JOHN 4\f Uflltft ...... 'l•r• ." lfl!NIST J. ICH•G, JI!. lndlvlfvtl. ~· ~ .,., w. '· Grf\/•k<I (O\llllY Cl•"' 2'1 Jllirll Uokt Avt.,.,I •nS M•l.Art""r •tvlt VI.. Ltwlkl• G•"'-. ' electio n, by Lhe end of this Thi• '"'"''"nl 111•<1 wlth Ill• (flllftlV MINTON & MINTON "•&11 ..... , (fllfOl'llll fllll , o •••• ,,.. Tl!l1 .i111m•nl 111td ... 1!fl IM c
C (!tt~ of Oltfltlt (OIJMY on: J UM JO, lf1l, '°' Wlhlll,.. l lvd. l•l1 UUJ ns-Sfl, ..-fll)) follotUt N-...-f IM<~, Ctllf, '2M.I Cltlk ttl 01tntt (Ollft!v 1111 Juno JO, ongrt'.'ss can count the 1973 1, ~•vtrl• J. M.coo~ D•lllltt' ceo.1111v L11 ""••Ill. c1111t."11 ,.,, Atm,,.,. hr •~Ktltr T11~-· f1U) HJ·,,.. flv ••v.,.IY J. ~ ~"'
pay level 11s their three-y c1t11c. "'"",,.,.' tor: Pttni.""" "".+1"; ""'"""' ,., Pt111......, c1 .. ~ ear ,Ul)llll!N OrtnM Coul Ot il'I' f'I~. 'ubl!llltd Ort ntt CNtl rltllv 'II!)!, Pvt>ll11>t<i 0<•-C!lolt! O.ifl' 'Ho!, P111!1!'11td Ortn• COlll O.tly ,1101, Pul:t1'1tled Ort ntt (Otll O.llY hi~h t1verage. Jur, 1, 11. ''· "· 11i1 !11().11 Jillv u. l•, 1t, 1tlL 10l•·'I Ju11 2:lo ,, •nd Aut v•l't.""11. ~ 10ll·l1 Ju1f 19, i• •"<'l "vou•' J, 11J1 ton 11 Ju11 1, 11, n. tt, u11 11
• . ...........
l!·Jrtw.C" .... ----. . ) ··-"· .. ---· ~, ... ~
_, -
--. -, -. ' ' . .
DAILY PILOT
Everyone Hes
\ Something Thet DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell fl,
Find It, T rede It
With 11 Want Ad Someone Else Wa nts ·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
UP GOES THE CURTAIN
On Our House Of The Week
3 Rooiny bedrooms, 20' x 30' sol ariun1 , 3
baths, 2 fireplaces, huge covered patio. Don't
mtss out on seeing this UPPER BACK BAY
BEAUTY. You 'll love it a l .......... $59,500.
ONE MILE FROM BEACH
16 Units • All 2 bedroom, 1 'fi bath. Lovely
units! Situated on a generous 180'xl32' lot. ~II
electric kitchens, ceiling radiant heat, in-
dividual hot water heaters, garbage disposal.
Priced right at . . . . . . .. ......... $250,000.
ITLL STEAL YOUR HEART
A delight to show this almost new split level
-4 bedrooms, 3 baths, huge game room, family
room, 3 car garage, 3-ton refrigeration, ankle
deep shag thruout, custom draperies, fabu-
lous drop lights. Professional landscaping &
sprinklers. Assume 7% VA Joan. Owner anx-
ious! , ................ , . . ......... $42,650.
PSST
3 Deluxe units, 1-3 bedroom, 1-2 bedroom. 1-1
bedroon1. This is what you've been v.1a iting
for. OWNER'S PLUSJl 3 bedroom , 2 baths,
bltin kitchen. fireplace, heavy shag. Other 2
units unusually roomy, sharp and loaded v.:ith
appeal. Don't hesitate on Ulis one .. _ $55,500.
CIRCLE ME
I need you. I'm a 2-story, vacant. ready and
anxious for your family to e njoy m y 5 super
bedrooms , 21h baths. fa mil y room, forn1al
dining room, 2 fireplaces. l'U go for a lo\v,
low down . Sacrifice sa le at ...... $43,950.
TAX SHELTER
52 BRAND NEW ga ruen-type apa rtments.
Check on the 200% depreciation. A-LA-D E·
LUXE UNITS fe a turing indoor-o utdoor kit-
chens, private patios. btuJt-in range and oven.
dish-washer, recreation hall, heated and
filtered POOL. Bar-B-Q un its, billia rd table,
shufae 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 this iflvest ment
Priced right at .................... $827,000.
FORl.\l E 01.\0\
"' 11£A lrOPS
OPEN 7 DAYS A \VEEK
1 ACRE RANCH
COLONIAL
4 +DEN + 4 BA
"HORSES"
WALK TO LAKE
BACK BAY
AREA
Unbelievable! Quiet h 't'e
lined St. to U1is gorge·
ous "old \1·orld charrn-
cr," 4 znassive bed room• + h uge pancled fao1ily
roon1! ~5· picture \\']n.
do1v i"I Jiving roorn Y>'it h
unique fir('place. Large
250 sq. ft dr{'Rm kitch-en. \Vn ll of glass OJK'hS
t.o elevetOO pa tio 'vilh
spr c l'acular vic1v. Zoned
for horsrs. Truly e. show-
place. Cre11t arl'a for
children. l\llust sell quick.
DIAL 645-0303
"SPANISH"
Reduced to Sell
QUICK
l N F ORECLOSURE I !
V,\CANT!! Bank \\'anls
a fast sell. 3 big bed-
rooms. Extra large fam·
ily rOorn. Shn111 and
r lPan 3 y<'ar old honie.
Carpt•ts uud drapf's in-
ocludcd. Complclrly land-
seaped. l [11gc -huge all
fC'nl'~'d in yar!I. Existing
6'}i ' :, lonn can be as-
suinl'd 1vi1 h Jo1v do1vn.
Also -cxcrllrnt rcfi-
nancin& available. Don't
Delay
DIAL 645-0303
f ORISI" E Ol.SO~ '" R£A £r OA S
2299 Harbor. Cosf.a Mesa
"lncsc!Vcrbe'.J?cafty,,
-SWIMMERS-
one of t hes~ should be just right for you r
farnil v o( swimnters. l<!t us show th em to
you this \Veekend . 1662 Palau Place, 3 br.,
d in., & poo l, e nd of cul-de-sac. _ .. _ $35 ,850.
3 Bedroom, beautifully carpeted and has
water·Softener. Area for boat. Pool has auto-
n1atic sweep. One of our nicest. $36,500.
2935 Java nd .. 3 br .. ram. rm .. cabana & lge.
pool. This hoine is for entertaining. Close to
the golf course. \Vas $61,750/now ~59,950.
Mesa det J\.1ar -3 Bedroom, Anthony pool.
2784 Cibola, Swimming pool , water softener,
new carpets to be installed. $33,950.
"Lncs-Ncr6e:Rea~
2850 Mesa Verde Or. • Cost• Mesa
e Phone 546-5990
General General
clJnJa Jjfe
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
3 Linda Isle Drive
Quality construct., new 5 BR., 4'h ba. home
w/wa terfronl !i v. rm. & din. rm. Oak pa nel·
ed fa mil y rm, w/frplc. Mstr. BR. w/sitting
a rea & frplc. . . . . . . . . . $179,500
For Complete Information
On All Homes & Lots, Please Call:
BILL GRUND Y, REALTOR
NEW LOCATION
Instant Cash
Instant Sale
NO LONG ISCROW
l•hind in p•vmenh
OK. W1 P•Y 111 c.01h.
Ju•I your f1ir equify in
c.1111 -24 hn .
Call 847-8507
! formerly l r1•h11r
R11l1.,1
~ftQ ~
OCEAN VIEW
Gracious Laguna Home
adjac."ent to Emerald Bay
with swreping ocean view
on quiet cul-de-sac
l Bedrooms & 3 Bath:s
Li ving room with
"flute rnarble fireplace
r·ormal dining room
Bcau1iful grounds
$92,500
Gen•r•I
* * * * * * ' TAYLOR CO.
LINDA ISLE -$145,000
Charming and bea utllul ! Best waterfront
buy! 5 BR, fam. rm. & formal dining. All
electric kitchen, \Vet bar in FR. Italian tile
entry. Frpl. in mstr. BR. Pier/slip.
··our 26th Y•er"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
General General
Waterfront -
Corona del Mar
Last large fee parcel on Newport Harbor.
Approx. l acre -170 fl. on water, with 3300
sq. ft. beach home and dock. Will sell all or
part. Priced under comparable waterfront
properties.
Phone: 642-2171 er see your broker
3 BDRM,
$29,500
Ne\\'J)Jrt Heigh!!i/Clittha\'en,
ncarCliH Dr. Kitchen bhm,
Gen•ral
Estate Size Lot
In Newpart
JlEALTORS bath v.·/tile fir, carpeung, Right dU\\'n the street trom 11
big community park and
swim club. 111is beautiful
l1on1e is located on a quiel
cul·de·sac strcr t. Lots o!
custom brick in a pr<r
fcssionally landsc11pcd tront
yard. J bedrooms, 2 baths,
fan1ily room, Jormal dining
room & gourmet k itchen
\Yilh self-cleaning oven ,
\\'hat rnore could you ask
for $42,800. Call 673-8550.
SINCE 19'14 H\V f!rs. Back yard big
673-4400 t>nough for adrlitional unit
"'"""""""""""""" ... "'I QJ' swimming pool. Mededith Gordens 3 Bdcm$~.~o':,m . Rm.
Large bedroom and bath on Near Newport Heigl1t~ o n "
l irs1 floor. 3 bedrooms and cul de sae street 3 BR &
2 baths on 1>cco nd f!OOT. family nn, l ~. 2 !ire-
Pa nelled fan1ily roo1n, for· p;aces, kitchen bltns v.·~th
m ll.l d ining rooin, 3-car gar-O\V. Ra mbling ranch style
8.S!C a nd a rornC'r lot. Own-\\'Ith shake rool. Priced righ'l
er lransfeTTI."11 to 1h(' mid-t'l sell.
~v;~~ii;.nced at $45,500. Call CALA.~ 646-2414
r.EAl'.~ N11r Newport PDlll Offlr1
\R:THEREAL '{ ~§!J\TE~
VETS ROBINHOOD PLACE At entrance to Linda 111• ATIENTION Quiet thrN'-l1nC'd cul-<:le-sat 341 '"~''" F.ASTSIDE cu;·rA Bay•;de Dc., su;te l, N.B. 675-6161 VA-NO. DOWN BUILDERS! HERE IT IS!
l\lt.:SA. Your childr('n ma)' f•e;~.~n~.,~.~1:"""""""""""""'1~""~""""""""""""'""' [or assume ex1s11ng 6% loan . _ .
play ~frly and i1•cdk to e'I:· General on thls xtra sharp 3 bed-Choice tore,,.er Vlt"W tot 111
ccllt>nt schools. You \Yil! flP-room, large family room, th(' hills of 1'11esa Vcrdr .
4 Bcdrm, .1 bath9, in Costa
i\lesa. No cloY.'n to you. A~k
lng S25,950. St-'{' 11 a.nd hurry
-Call 5-W-1151 (Open ev~.) pn~l;i!t' 1hl" fine ?11 ODE: L * OCEAN VIEW * 1% hath home. \\'alk to all Le\'el.' WC'll graded, ready
HOt.tt: t~in<litton: almost schools & shopping a~ 10 to build upon in alt'l'~dy de-·~!" ~~~JT"'A'G"!
brand nr,1 . Qual11y shag From very atlractive Irvine Cove hon1c. 3 fTl\·y, N'.Costa 1\1~. Asking i·e\oped cusrom neighhor-• "' _ <'~1r111.'ls :ind di·a1)t'ncs by Bdrins. & 2 baths. Fan1ily rm. Den. 3 Car SZ7,900 on ull 1erms. Call h<l?d· One 0 1 a kind le r1 at 1..:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
A PRIVATE DOVER SHORES KI NGDOM
Gt\ltRF.T'r fllHN ISlll.'lGS. {•arage plus a \\'Orkshop. J{uge \VOoden deck 54f.-58ll0 IOpen Eves J this\oy.• pnce 01 S21.9"JO. CfllJ t> ' • 5-c!G-2313 tor R11 appoint ment
R(•l(IX in your l·J!!i x 19 ran1-area for your patio fu rniture on view side r~ii~jji;~:Rii~~I
ii .... rnorn. r~ns)' '~'Ir(' land· of home. llesidents of this exclusive area en-~-· !1'1 ~~~~•G•E to sef'.
:;•·;1J1ing -sprinkh·rs. Cnn1e j oy their own priv. sandy beac h v,r/life guard ~ ........
:-i'C' ond he ('harml'r!. 11111"' protection & gate guard at peak traffic .. For
Ll!'<lronnis, 1;\~ baths, Onl)' App't. to see. ca ll the num ber bel O\V or your
S3J,500. O\\'ncr will hrlp O\Vn broker. Priced to sell at $99 ,950. fina ncr.
REDUCED I 111
\Viii SC'l! llnder F'HA apprais-
al! New ca.f)eting, l:u-ge
cornt"r lot, 3 BR, 2 BA. \Valk
to shopping! Asking ~27,950.
Cal: 5"1;,..8'12-4 (open eves)
General
THIS HOUSE IS
A HOME!
All of !he featurPs and com·
furl moc.• peoplr de«ire are
m this bt-autlflll, Repubhc
split·levri home in MeM
Vertie_ 11 has 4 bedrooms.
3 baths, form!\! dining room,
~ family room with
brick tireplaCf" and Wet bar.
Lovely <k'cor,uor wall paper,
t;hUnen;. sht.'lvinl(, book-
caSl's and other extras
throughout. To ap{ll'CC'1ate, I
you n1ust see this home.
'Price $46,9'".JO. Pho~ 546-2313 f
~-C,· THE REAL
\"'-ESTATERS ''' ·. •'" ..
1210 Star board, View
SPACIOUS 4 bdrm., dining
rm .. & family r n1., with 2~;,
baths. Choice corner with 3
<'al" garage. VACANT. Loan
can be assumed at G%, 'iii
$74,500.
SJl-0700 644-2430
SANDPOINTE
Dramatic 4-bedroom, 211' bath
two story stucco home 1n
Orange County's most ron·
venient location, Only one
year old but fully a nd
beauti!ully land scaped, near(
schools, parks & p I a 1
grounds, 3 1nl11ules to 3 lrce-
v.•ays, South Coast Plaza..
Shag carpeting, fireplace,
$3;,900. Owner selling prin-
cipals only. 557-3W.
FHA -VA 1ERMS
No dov.'Tl to a Ve1 or aH term:\ 1 to suit. This horne ha<> 31
Bdr, JamLly room & 2 baths
plU;; a charming kitchen!
1vith plenty of ('upbo;1rds. !
1'tw> yard has sprinklers I'
lront & rear plus several
lovely usl'd brick plante!'ll'. i
I lurry on this one! PriCC'd
at just SJ0,500, Call 546-7313.
5 Bedrooms
View ot hay f rom 11pfl"r
story: bltns.: 2~~ bath~.
Beautifully turn. SG:l.9'50.
Call: 673-3663 675-8/!116 Eves.
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
2025 W Balboa 673.J66]
J'1.*~'"-'..:••••••llJ!:.. CHILT ROBINETT, REALTOR 645-0128 r~' ···-·~'' ..============
Only $30,00J. Lrg 3 Bdrm. 4 BR . -4. B~TH~
2 Ba. beautJflll covert"d Al S~,SOCI !his. Is a 'Bes!
patio w/liwpi!! Lots ot cup-Buy . ~oon. v1~ws !1'0m 5
boo.rds 111 garage, So many rooms. Span1~h 1nt.er 1or, tile
\outh ,, {~ oast $25,950
REALTORS 8
644-7270
:r.::...J General General ---------Trees-Trees -Trees CHARM!
Nine beautiful 1N'f's RI'! the
pn:lUl'C':.QUe \'iC'll' iron1 thr
iiv1n~ ;irl\J fanuly 11"'!1 or
f'l<!ra s ,Yl'.IU l\.l lJST SEE!! .r... ~·rought iron m formal iOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiO
Ca!J '.'J"l;).1142·1 (open f'\'f"S), dinmg rm. 3 Car garage. DELUXE TRIPLEX
~
4 BDRM. + FAMILY RM.
Beautilu! homt", dr~am kit·
<'ht'n, llllill-ins, essun1e s~ .. r~
loan. apr. payml'nts of S143
a n10n1h, ;,l(}.1720,
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. • .,.F..,.v.,'.,"'."~"-c.•l,.1 .,>."•·'.,"'.''.-•I ih1s :-pnrkli11g l OC>d11~un 2
b1Jth hOJ111e. An IHilOn1at1c
1-1·a1er i.urirnr1·, hu11t-1n sew-$26,950
, •. pi.'r.<;llnal11y & ron1ro1'1
11·('1i' uppt•nnll!.I in r111nr!
11·he11 1h1s l'allc-h-typr hon1e
11ith 1111111 :1 BH, 2 ba's,
~· fa1n1ly rni, , . al•\1, lo\·r-
J~· l),\110 & yan1 " Jul~ ur
pt'l\e<'y. //K·u!t'd u1 Bay-
t'r<'5l, <1t nnly S.1'.l,9;'10.
Cold\wll,Banker
~
2266 MINER, C.M.
2-2 BR, 1-l BR, ne1v carpe1A,
xlnt t'Ond, S:l2,500, 10''(, dn.
Open Sun 1-~.
2955 Harbor TARBELL
$27,950
VIEW LOT
WESTSIDE BLUFFS
(0ce-Rn & ?llou nta1n~) Quirl
cul-de-sac 51l'l'et. SJ£.~.
w/tt!rms.
MESA VERDE l -5tory
4 Bdrm & de n, 2~ balh,
Iirepl, bltin&, cov'd patio,
shllkt> rQOf, hid & n trd
• PCXl L e . auto R"all\gt:'
door ope nt"f, t\'.K'm for hoal
OI" campr1' or rn11ler $47,000.
Roy McCo1rdle Realtor
1310 Ne.,.,'POrt Blvd., C.l\1.
548-n29
SUMMERTIME
And the living is easy ~'hf-n
you blx'omf' t~ proud ~'Tl
f'r of this l encl 2 bedroom
dUpiex. Spaciou1, immacu-
late 111 Nature's O\l'n s<'t-
ting. -you will have a
bNu':ilu.1 home and 11 goo<!
tncome tor lifr. tn.ooo. Call
toc:h1y 613-8560.
-0 THE REAL
"'-ESTAT ERS
BUILD SIX UNITS 1 On large 103' :x l 'l5' mme.r
)0(. All utUttirH -.-w~ m
a'h"t'et. ~ lo RD &t
SJJ.950 . wkti pomritie trrm~.
General
REDUCED AGAIN!
Rfl('k bottorn pri<.'f' "n ~his 4
!Jf'rh'\)()ni POOL H0/"111'.: ln
:'llc-i;a Verdt'. VAC,\NT ~nrl
n•ady 10 n1(J\'e 11110. Quirk
[IOS'Sl'S~l! Pos!;1hJt l('Hl>('
l'.'l!h opl1on 10 buy. Pritf'
now $30.!t:i(J!
COATS
& . WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-1141-
(0p•n Evenings)
4 BEDROOMS
Mes• Verd• Special
Colllfl!" Park 11rr11 l bedroom.
'J b,1!h, C'•'l'tlC'r 101 ho1ne \\ith
h1i,:-asslln1atile Jr~in ai 6';1
1ut•'rcst. P;i.)'n11·111 ~ Ol'f' Just
$lil/n10. 11wl . 111,r.; & 1n-
1<u1·.111,..,'. 011 ll(T JU!>I mnvrd
ro 11r1-1' hon1•' arnJ ynlt t·R.n
11101(' n~tll 111:
Newport
••
Fairview
646-8811
111;i f'Cnlt'r ur\d dl'Sks, dish·
v.•11sher a nrl •'X«t•llo•ru rar·-
pc!s \\lll n111kc 11\'lf\£ <'il~Y
for lhP \l'lfr. On ii Ofll\~ C.ii!
a1wl so•e tut Y•ll!r~clr -No
nhl1g;i11.i11. l'r1ce S27.9.il.
r,u;.231:::.
Macnab-Irvine
H1•ally Con1pany
(anytime) Sparkling Spanish
....,,..,..--..,-... -.1 Baycrest
675-3000
Call !or "llnnir"
For l,.11·111°"" i\t11~n11ne
IN111101vdly DIS1!'1huh>dj
BAY• BEACJ.t
REALTY 1t1r
MESA VERDE
GET STARTED!
~lnp n 'rl!lng -save monry!
Tiu~ pndl' of Oll'ncrsh1p 2
h•'•lroo111, 2 b.'!th l'n!l{lo:nin·
1Lu11 11•11h d11111~ fU'\'a lll1<! a
833-0700 644-2430
Newport Heights
Will lrase or lca~e-op..
!Ion ;.. bdrm homf', ~1..,·at pullo for f'ntt>rlain111~. v I Ll Ii , Jn11ned1alt' OCl'Upancy. aeu7ih011~: ~~ :i~~ a~ ~o~
1
ALSO 3 bdrm hon1cclor ,._,
. l'RSe Ont.1co. d1spusxl. Coulrl br for you AG~Nr &-l-l-J2:)5
$21.950 C11!1 6-16-7171. 1---' --------. A Uttle Mansion
-$27 ,500 Ne11'ly !isled 1"11csa Vcr<le 3
How 1nany hoines do you bedroom, 2 ba1h hcau1y lo-
suppose 1!1ere ore in i\lC'sa 1 -~==-~~~~=c1 cared on e. q uit>! cul-de--sae
Vrrde iirl<ler $2~.:.oo? "'r 2 ON A LOT gtreet. Excellent shag car-
1•oun1 3 anrl 1he 1ucrst ol lht:' pets newly draped and just
3 by tar 1s tliis Jltlle $23,000 -Owner rece'ntly painted inside 11nd
sharpie. 3 Be<troo~. 2 will help finance om. A delay may n1ean di~-
bath11. Jormal rl lni"", pool a ppointmen: -see ttiis un. .. ,. Another sharp 3 bednKJm ~ sized yard and 10"",n Down. usuaJ offe r today, $30,.....,, "·ith huge-fam ily room on
f'or details -673-8Xi0. Easts!de Costa .r.1e-sa. All Call 5'J6.231l.
Te nns availab\r.
''llk&cl\ir6c:Rca(t~
546·5990
5 BDRM. + FAMI LY RM. "'""""'""""'""""'""'"""'"'I F'arr11!y rn1. \\1lh r1rf'['llarf', f'nlry hall, fl11111111, rn1 .. nat·
liral \1-oorl patt{']lng, hu1ll·
ins.;.. &Inns, en. :.010-1720.
2955 Harbor TARBELL
BIG CORONA BEACH
11nrl the "Poin1" are only
S!CJ)!! all'Ry fron1 the !)('Y,'('St,
n!N~I \1•arin & spaclou~ 3
BH. & !an1ily rrn. 1n ti..•;.ur.
"Olrl Corona." Now n •d uced
~" $79,:iOO.
Homeshow Realtors
''Annrhalr llou~ehun!ing••
3J35 E. Coasi Hwy., Cd~I
675-7225 __ _
$31,000
Back Bay
BACK BAY BEAUTY
Lo\'l'ly {"(o\Jr1try hn111f' on rzt11Pt
cu· de :1ai• sTrf'l'l. L\l:'llEN.~E
hack y:1r"t .l hrlrn1.~. 2 1>.11hs,
f111111ly n.xun. Undrr nu1rkt'I
pr1('(' at $.16.00J. \'ORrJ Cn
HRaltors, • 10. 21'.1:>2 N'e .... ·pori
Bl\'d, c.~1. ~1s.9:w;.
4 BDRM.+ FAMILY RM. S.lbo• hland
Large-rooms thruoot, d ining I '"'.*O--:S:-:O"°.-"B.,,-AY"F'°R-O-:-N-T--*1
nr.., natural Ust'd bnck tire-
plaC'f', en1ry hall. oveniized UTILE ISLAND
living rm, 540._17'2Q, 3 B R, 3 ba, older beach
2955 Harbor TARBELL hou!;(': frplc. & virw PLL:S A real buy .,.,·ho v•a nt-; a
nio.· home in good ll('zghbor-
hood. CIOSt> to schools &
shopping. Utrge !amity
plu11 living room, doubll!
fireplace, i;hak(' roof. fcnct'd
tmdc yard, great tor en1er-
tnining, AU 'tt';rms a vailable.
\1'.>' THE REAL
\"'-ESTATERS ". '• ' ' ..
S • H 1 j Au1tirn1ic old Spa111:sh ch11nn. ummer IS ere •• J)ouble door Spanish 1iled
Ari!! youiJ {'11joy i1 more In entry, Sunken t1ving room,
this -I lx><troo1n home with 11plendid formal dining
a b111: lamily room and sep-room, richly paneled family
aratt:' dining room. There's room, Spanish 1'1yle brickN-1
a patio end niet'iy land· courtyard. Only 4 years old,
scall('d yard tor outdoor r n-i. no1v to sr-e.
tt'r!ainlng. t'or Dnd, a gar. •
age v.·ith lots or extra slor-~CIH!t;!f;ITT!!j' 1 ~~~~~~==~~
age N1b1ncts. S33.i..x>, Call 642..a235 675-3210 *ON GOLF COURSE*
Walker & Lee
2().13 \Vcstclif! Orivl'
646-rrl l Open 'tll 9 P~1 $22,950
l -BR. l ba. turn. renrAJ ovrr $150 TOTAL DOWN dbl. gu PLUS '"' • dock
6-\6-7171. Watch the dancing city lights
CdM OCEAN VIEW 11·hilp dining .In fonnal din.
r m. Sunken living rm, ~
1an1\ly rm, huge masier BR.
11'/\\'flJk-in c-losct J"'LUS 3
ot))('r bd rms. Kilch!'n has
llt'lr-dea ning oven. Ho1ne
only l yrs old. Asking
$57.~iO.
Lachenmyer
Re.1 lto1
Open House t"rilSatJSun
Poolsiz1'tl yard. Great play ll --"'=========01 area. ;'\ B il. & den ~or 4
-~-:.+JO Priv. lJ(.ach fl~ss.
BAYSHORES 520 DeAnza,
c.Ji 64&-3928 E,.., 8'l-0068 C0«ma Highlands
VETS Charming, large 2 bedroom Home Show Reeltors
beRcil a;>ttage. Open beam "Armchair Hou:osehwrtin~" NO DOWN ttili~. cozy .,.,'OOCI bumlrig ljJ5 E. Coa11 Jfwy., CdM
To You fireplucr. Squ~k)' cl~n. 67.>-7225
O....·l'IC'r ~·ill hn~n<:'l'. Coll"S-1---.....:::..:.:.::=:.----1
STl.500 tuU prict. Bli.-:, beau!· v.'Or1hy rxclus1v~ ..• $35.000, ON THE WATER
lllll 3 bedrm ranch ,;tylf', belier 8l!p tt 10tlay TillS GR.ACJOUS MEDIT-
shBke roof,!~, hu~ covd ~&co.I TERRANEAN VILI..A • .,.,'1t h
pr!io, walk ro rlJ1 SC'hh. m-i':'"~ Pitt and lll ip 111 custom de.
llWT)' -Call 540-ll51. {Open I c====:....:= 11''"' aigned And hulll to lhe h1gh-
•Y<"l 1 ACRE VACANT ... ""'11'>· " .... m•ny "."· U!!URI feafUrt't for the dis-
cnm1Mting buyer,
Call 545-8424 {OJJ('n ('V'C'S.)
\outh ~ (-oast --.
Lido Isl• Estate
On 3 be«utilully lndscpd. lo11
at L1do'1 Easl end, 'WI! nl!r r
a 7 bdrm., 6 bath, ~ i;q.
II. homir with pcs;M, priced a!
$180,()(11).
BLUFFS VIEW 3 BDRM. & DEN
Best lrom row 10<.'&Uon In Nry.·ly decorA1ed. FA try hall.
originlli Bluffs flf'Xt tG wirle ron\·enien1 floor plan, \\'1111 lo
l:"!'ef'nbeh. End unit 3 B R., .,.·all carPellng. Park like
2~1 ba1h condo. Huge encl. vanl. ~l().1 T20.
15xJ7 tr. patio. Rare oppor-i9SS Harbor TARBELL
tun!1y a1 $53,rJl'Xl. HELEN B. DOWD TURTLE ROCK REALTOR 644-013~
!ip11nish 3 bedroom town-
house. Oioice ~·oon1ain
VaUey locatign. $23,900.
Broker 542-2535
REPOSSESSIONS
Spark! ing clean homes, some
Finest ll'IC'. & evn!I, fu-st
time at $140.000. Pr1nc1pa11
only. Bkr. 642-0ln,
BY O\VNF;Rc---1
Liltlt> ls!and. t:x{·ep!lon11.l
qua.lily hnmr 111 ganlcn
~!ting. All e-1('('. 2 BR, 2
newly painted Ir C&rpf'led. 2 * fi3-i0fi0 *
3, 4 & 5 bdrms, Some with I =--,-,----'-''-"=-=----I
()(Ylis. Fl-IA-VA oonv. terms. Balbo• Peninsul•
BA.
from $20,CIOO to $40,0CKI, 1,-=-,--,-C.:.::C.:.. __ I
Brnadmoor beauty. 3 bl!d-COLLINS Ir. WAITS INC. 4 BR, rlen, 3 b11. Nr. R<icq11rt
roon1s. 2 baths. Beller than 8843 Adiuns Avf'. 96l-5523 Club & boat ramp. SY.l,:,cxl -INCOME -PROPERTY
S.'100. mo"'''11 you in
to quul1 f1t"d buyer.
new & only $42,500! BAYFRONT APTS. :OlnrslWI ~ealty 67'":>4fi(X] CORBIN-Vista Del Lido. f'ier I Slip Coll~• P•r k
avail. From Pt.500. Sell or 4 BR. 2 BA, fan1il)' rm. <'I~.
SHERWOOD REALTY MA R·TIN lcG~rg• Williamson kit. v.·/Pf!.ntry. Din1rlit nn CALL ~tudy. New c 11 rpe l•
S40.855S REAL TORS 644-7662 673-4350 64S-lS64 eves lirepl11~. r111kl dttk i. * * .,, * 1'l----------·I Re•ltor sprinkler.'!. $32.900 v.·f lO'iO LUXURIOUS BEACH BARGAIN • 2 BR. JI< BA rondo . 2, do. >19-""5 '°' •pp'L
: TIRED of D\at old hll'nttureT
~ ir. tt&ll1 no( thal hArd
Try l yr, Pf'l'Pl\id in!t.l"t'st •
5 yrs intt!rest only, ,.skirli
S·l:iJXXI 7.ozK' RZ.
PERRON REALTY Co.
PETE BARRETT
REALTY ~
f;.12.JTII ANYT!l\t E .. 642·5200 ~~Banker
lkaut. 3 BR .. tamffy rm.. gar, SZI.~ * 3 BR, 1 1~ -.::::.::::.::::.::::::::_~'..::.--:
4 R<'dmom B11ycl"t'S1 home bltns, 2 car gar, ALI tttl& loc BA, l'l yd, nc-w crpt11: S.12.~ ''WEED Jt & ttap", .cleM
w"h fornHtl din\ni: rm. & only $29,500, * Sharp 4 BR • SJ6.7".(I * out the trea~u~s & tra11h -
lovt:'ly f14rnr\,v rm • .,.,.;th v.-el CAYWOOD REALTY 4 BR, l c g11r $'16,5<Xl. turn into ('Rsh thni" Daily l Jo replaot. Ju .. watch the
fundtu:rw A mlsetll1nea.11
atlumnll Ir• tM 0.U.w..d -.
' ~'·1 ~ .. -1.~
' l
bar. A 1h·li~hT 1'9 !'il10\\'! 6,'lOG W. Coos! Hwy., N.B. *Po1tti Wo1l ker Rlty.* 'trader 's Par11rl i~r 1'<>1\llnn l!I Arnold & Freud ~1290 11111 Bc.nch, H.B . 842-1418 for you! 5 Line~. :i !)11ys tor S5_ CaJI today •.. 612--5678.
The faslt'tl draw in t~ \\'ei1I ·
• , 11. Q3ily Pilot Classified Daily Pilot \\111nt Ad.• have l'a.~I re11dll fl"' ju~t a phone
-'d. 64J.-~78 1 _b_._'~"-'-"'~"-'-"~_. ____ ,,_,~·-"-'-"-'"'.::...-· _ .. _,._56_78;_ __ •. ~8~3}0<..:~700:.:.. ___ ~64.:.:.4-~2~4::30 l8CI F.. 17111, C.i\1. 646-TT."UIOAILY Pll.01' fcrr ectk>n! We'll help you sell! 642-5673
__ .. __ ..
-' J )..~ ...... ..,,._ -• -···~
.. . ....... .. -.-
Classified INDEX Advertising ·
[~~-H-ou_•_•_•_fo_r_s_a1_•~~J l 11!i]
All 11ncl"" clllilll,,lkin •• 1•
45~.cllY ,,.... .,,..,.. h!fw)
1•1110• CtY•
l111)oa 1thn•
1•1114• Pt nln111lt ••v 1111n11
lfV~tll
l~Yll>OtH
lltton ••Y
co11, .. "''"'
caoron• 1111 M.ir
Co•l1o Mt ..
Dant Polnl
DO•tr ShtrU
E11I l lUtl
El To••
l'oun!tin Vallr'
Otrdtn GttYt
k unllnt•on •••<n
Hunlinti.n H1•1>t1,1r
Harm Hl..,t1ncb
1rv1o11 Torra<•
Lt,unt •••th
L19Uh• ttl!I•
~1un. NltUtl
Lido 1111
Mo~ dtl Mtr
Me1t Vt rd1
MldWtY CilY
Ml•lfon Yi•lo
N .... PCH"I 8t;t(~
NewPOt! Ht lthh
Nl'WIOOrl lhOttl
St nl• An•
Sun,.1 111(11
Uni•oul!y P11lc
WHtmln1t1r
Real Estate, l•I Gener.a l
'"-------~
Acrt111 IOI' 11!1 , ·····-·····ISO
Apt l'lmtnh tor 11i. ............ 1st
Bu1in•H Proprrty ,, .••.••...•. Ut
Ctmt!1rr Loh/Crypfl •• ,, ..• , .. 154
Comm1rcl1t PropU'fY , •....••..• ISi
Condomln!um1 tor 1110 •••••... 1 ..
Duplt •H /Un!h lt lt ,,., .... , ... 11!
Hou••• lo l>t moved ............ lit
1ncom1 Prootrn .. '''
lndu1tritl l'nlPt rlW • . ... , ..•. , UI
LOI$ tor S•I• .,._,_ .. .,,.1,.
Mo1>!11 Momf/Tr1iltr P•rk• Ht
Mownt1ln, Dfttrf, Ro;or! .... ll•
Or•ntt C•. Prootrtv .. , 11,
Out DI S!•T• ProPerlY ·•••· ••• H I
R1ncht1, f irm•. Gro•1I ........ 111
Rt ll E1t111 E•<h•nt 1 ......... 111
otul E&l1t1 Wt n!H ., ....... U4
Service• and Repairs l5J
J.U ltftOI< c11ultlctll011 , , • , ..... 60f
(SPtelt, _,, lrtrn bolo•!
A<eou11lln1
Antwll'l"t Son>I«
A1>11lltn<t RtPtlf & ,1rl\
B•b111n1n1
lu,ln•H ~1rvk•
C1l~t!"1
C1lll•1•
Ctmenl, Concrtl1
Child C'al"I
Can1roct1W
Dr1rtint
D••P ... lff
Drl•t wl¥1
Eleclrk1I
f1nc1n, , ...
f urnltur1
Gord1nln1
Httllh (lubl
Hou1td ttnln1
1ncorn1 ,.,.
ln1ur1nt1
Janl!o•f11
Lond1c1pino
M .. ld s..-vl••
M1!n!t n1nc1
Mov!n1
P1!nlint a '•1Hrn1n1ln•
Pl11!1r, Pl lcll, lll Pllr
P1umbi n1
Pool serv:c1 a. ln11111111tn
Remodtl .. RIPt lr
J h1•Ptnin1
Tllilorin•
Tile
'fop ~oil
'fret St r•lct
WlndGw Cl11•1111
L_~JITT11· .i _Employment . l!!J
JOI> W1nltd, Mt ll .... -..... ,. JDO
Job w1nt10, Ftmllt ........... JD'
Jobt W~nltd, M & I" ........... IOI
HtlP Wonlld, M & I' ... , .... 11 0
1ronln1
'---~'~ L_Merch_andlse_]~ -Financial . _ . ~
Anliqun ·•·--.. , ... ,. ..... _ IOO
BullnUf ODPO<lunilt .•.• ~
lluslntn W•ntod ......... 111
Jnvt•lment OPPO<lunil• ,, •••••• '10
lnvtl!moM W1n1to .. llO
Money It lo~n _,, __ 111
Mon•• W•n!ed .•.••. u~ Mort91111, Ttuol Ot1d1 , •••••. 211
Houses for Rent l i'l!i I
'------'
HOUIH IUrnls~•d loo
Hous@s un!urn. ----30l
HOY'f• lurn, 1r unrurn. lll
condominium• lurn. •• 11~
condoml•Hum1 unturn. J20
Condo. lurn. or unlurn. Jli
Town~ouu !urn. . llO
Towntiou<1 unrurn. llS
To.,.nhouso, lurn. or unfl;rn ••• 140
Duplt••• fl;rn. J4~
DuP!•••• un•urn. JJO
CIYPI•~··· !urn ••• ""'"'"· •• ' us
Apart me n!S for Rent [ trf' I
··"· '"'"· ~ot. untvrn.
Aph .. l urll. er UMlv•n. '" "' .. lll
I'--_Ren-Jal• ~I~
ll!oom• •OO
Room & &o•t d •• _ 405
Moir". Mol1h .... _ 110
Gunt Mom1 _ .. , ••• 4a
Summ1r 11tn1t1J -...... , , , UI
V•t•llon R1n!1ls ........ ,.,.,.,IH
Rfn!llt to Shl <t .• ,._,,,,, .•. Of
G1ra111 •or R ... 1 ...... -...... I JS
O!ll<t 1t1nlll ............... 110
Bu•i""'' R'"t1I ,. •• • u~
lnduUr!IJ Rtnftl -··••-• .•..• I ll
SIMlll -•'·-""'""" . I.Si
1t 1nio11 W••lt<f ., ..... ·-110
M IKtll111111ui Rtnt1I' -•• ,, 4U
Announcementl I 'iiii4 I
L-----'-
An<1011ntt 111•nh ····-J0t
Cord •I T ... n-t/111 Mtmorlum •• 511$
L•91I Nt!l<H •• .• .. .. , JU
~--P_•_r_so_n_•_l• ___ I I ~ l
Ault '""'"ru ti... ............ n 1
1"1.,.,n111 ........ , ........... U•
Socl•! CIUlkl .................. SH
AOPll•ncu •• . ........ , •in
ll Udlon ,. .... IOI
l uildln• M1torl1I• _ ...••...•.• W
C1m1r•• .. E•lllPl!llnl " ...... w
l"urnil11•• ,, ... -......... 111
G1t1Qt S1l1 •--····-···"'"' I ll
Mou .. llold GOCMll .............. I H
M·1~lllntr' ·•·••·•••••·-11•
Mhc1ll1nto111 ,, _. ••••• I ll
Mi1ct ll1MOUI Wtnltll ....... ' l l't
Mullul ln1tr11m.,..h tn
Of!itt Furnilutt/f.Qul,, •••••.. 114
P!•nol/Ort1nt ........... "'
s~'"' M~cMMt ............... tll
Sportln1 Good• ... IJD
~tore. Rt1Uur1nt, l lr ,., ...... It?
Sw1p1 ,, ., •
TV. lt•dlo, MIFI. !11fH "' "'
Pets and Supplies [ ~]
'--------'
Ct 11 .............. . "' "' Oou ,., ""'"'" .,,...... H I
Mo"•' ....... -•• ........ rn
LIVtllOCk , ... -................ 1~1
Boa!S and [ • * ] Marine Equipment 1'.. ._______,
Gtntr.I ••. "" ~
Ball, M1lnl,/~••Vi(t ••• , ... _,_'OJ
80"ttl/M1 rlnt lf•ulJ • .,,,,,,,, ••• !'H
•••11, Pow.tr ' ............ '°"
1 0111, Rt nr/Cll1rt1r ......... 901
aoatt, S•ll . , ........... , •• '°'
101h, Ulp1/Dock1 ........... ., Ill
Bot lJ. IPMd • lkl .,,,.,,,_,. ,11
aoa11, 1t1r1 ..................... •it
~ -------Transportation
Aircr•n . ,,,
c1mHt1, S1l1/Rlnl ..... , m
CYc!ff, l lklJ. Sca.ot1<1 ........ f1J
t:le(lf\( Ct r1 .................... •lt
Mobile Htm" ............ -•••.. nt
Motor Mo m•• ............... ., '41
Trl!lt ro, Trt Vtl •• •• .,.,,., • .,, '4S
Tt•l1•"° Ulll!fY , • • .... , •• , ,..,
Ayra l •fl'l(t a l"t rt1 • , . . . • •tt
L _jlnll .___ A_utosfo-rSale~I~
. lost and Found . L:iJ · --. l!!J
01.,..tl .... ·-.......... t H
,tund (lrH ••II . JH Ant1<1vt,/Cllt$1(1 ••.•••.•..•••• tn
LMI ....... ,. .. , •• UJ 0 ""1 I Yfff" -.......... ., •.. flt
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I'---_instru_ction _J~ Tl'\Kkl ••••••••• _,,,., ..... Ht
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'"••l•l<•I , '" ·• .......... • AUIOJ, Uttll .,,,.,, ... ,_,,, ••.• "'
.. ..,........ ... -•..
Coron• del Mar
WATERFRONT
Beautl1ully redeconat~. 3
h1rge bed1'001ns, 3~1 baths,
UV1ng room, fomlil.I during
rooru, breiJcttut room a
large sunny kitL'hen on the
bay, plus a prupet study
11·1th fireplace Jc wetbar. AU
thls ::oupled with otf s~t
guC'SI parking, space for a
siwimming pool and a large
private patio, make this trye
most exciting offer ot the
year fur only $164.000. can
67:l-8""i.'-Xl fur details.
\?ZTHEREAL ' ~§'t'~T.~.~
B a c helor's P arad ixe
Home + Income
Owner s<iys sell, moving back
to Texas. He'll throw in the
40 tt. lot, neat I-BR. incoml'
unit. pool, patio &. jacuzzi
for $:'if,500
University Realty
3001 B. Cst, lh"'Y· £73.ffilO
IRVINE TERRACE
Cozy &. clean, high above the
Bay -Free from noise and
cooled by 1/1e ocean breeze
-Dbl.-dl'tathl'd garage -
61 x 158 lot -Room for
boat & 1railt'r. J ust $49,500.
Phone 673-85.10.
CORONA DEL MAR
HOME & APT.
3 to choose from. Lrg 4 BR
tri.Jevel home + 1 BR apt.
10':~ dn. $63,500.
PERRON REALTY CO.
642-1771
CLEAN DUPLEX
rr .. ,-o separate units -l
bedroon1, 1 bath and 2
bt'dMOm, l bath. Walking
distance lo all Corona del
J\lar. \Vel1 maintained, low
n1aintenance. $42,500 -Call
673-8:150 to see.
IMAGINE!
CORNER DUPLEX
SOUTH OF HWY.
$40,500
Universi ty Re a lty
3001 E. Cs!. llwy, 673.65]0
13ROAD,\100R llarbor vie>.1'
,I<. oc vu lrom Dana l~t. to
Pt, F<>rm1n. 4 Br. tam 21·,
ba. \Va.~ model. 2 815
}{luev.•ttler Dr. ti 4 2 -5 J 8 0
Owner, prin. only.
* SAVE.Call owner . .1
ba. R-2'. CdM , So of
673-2.399.
Co5fa Mesa
CLE AN & NR
SCHOOLS
br, 2
hwy.
3 bdrni, hath & %, Jge \\'ailed
ya1·d. 2l&J Raleigl1 St. Ideal
hurne for kids ,(. pets.
S2'J.~. fo'lexib!e 1ern1s. By
011·ner-hroker, 535-!Gl& or
5b.'3·1917 artcr 4:30.
* MESA VERDE *
4 BR, 2 BA. Top cond. in
l'Op JO<'a11on. CorJ'll'r lot w/
n1atur'P. trees. 011•ner anx-
ious. \\/jlJ sell beJo,v apprai-
sal. 1\sktng $29,900 \11/10'1:,
do11·n. 5-1:..-5946 or 545-4951.
S ELL OR TRADE
.1 1~rv2 BA home ~ fOT 4
unHs or 2.J'x60' mobUe hon1e,
H.B. or r .v , * 2 UR on
R·2 lot, :S23,500.
DON'T DELAYlll
WON'T LAS'I'! NLWLY DEC:
l ~ I
Huntington Be•ch
SELLING
Thur!>da.y, July 2fJ, 197 1
-tot-l~I _tot ..
Newport Beadt
BIG VIEW * VIEW *
DAILY PILOT ~
C1m1tery
Lots/Crypts 15'
3 BR, tam rm. + spac den! YOUR HOME?
Newly crptd! Prk-ed right! Fiee apprniuJ • \Ve buy
Xlnt ron.d •. 3 lidnna:., 2 ba.'s. Pttched on a bluff OVttlook-HARBOR Re9t Cmlfltery Lot
' -""'"" rm w/'-l" for &ale, UXl. Writ• P. 0.
HAFF DAL REALTY tquitie!, Persona.I attention. Dini""'!'~: · ul' '-· Ing ~ bay, yGu'U fall in
ng ~ brk'fi;t area&. ~-love at first 11ght with this ~~· Plne Grove, CalU..
Oen P<ltlO '1f1 Of ~ eqwp-luxunous 3 lx!tm 3 ba ~ 8tl-Wt5 Ev~: s.u_.24413 2;) yrs, experience. ped kttchen. Beautifl1lly t~-sci. tt. hoine. s89.soo '. In· '•..,.wr"''s_,,1,,..,e01,c,,-,Sp"°ruce=:-:,..:::-.I COL LINS & WATTS California Living "''""" E'"· 642--0427 scpd_ Ma11y extrax. Asking eludes land. UQn at Harbor R•ll t
$32,950. RICH IRWIN MemorlaJ Park, $175 ucb. 3 ""room, 1\i ""'h rown-HEADLINER llOUse. Buyer's choi<:e of I ~ Realtor 675-6060 LI 8-3075.
L"Dlor carpets. Under $23,000. Exeeutive OOme cooled by
Good ~~ounta1n Valley Ioca· ocean breeze-s. Dramatic
-06 ~ FANTASTIC POOL l-IARBO~Rc-=R<-,7t°"M'°'""""'..,,-,:c. 7-;P"k,·I
:W~ C::. and 5(X) sq. ft, Reci·ea. $150 ea inc. endowment car
ticon. Broker 842-2535 cathedrdl ceiling ln livirtR __ ...._.c::--tion--f{umpus Room with w/intere.st 1ttlll t er m 1 .
Huntington Bea ch ~~lll!I "4 bedrooms. Call * 499-2800 * !luge, bui11-in wM bar and 2ll-4Zl-4137. * TRI-LEV EL * pool table, make !his a Commerciel
4 BEDRM + 2 BA. 3 BR. 2 ba/ Dining balcony. home for real family en· Property
Un1qut' u1(frio1". J\10vt>-1n joyn1ent. Add 4 bedroom1>, ISi
$21,000 condition 2 baths, hrand new "shag"
"Sparkling" clean. quality I 'Q"c"A"L'1"n"·C:'roc,c,o,m=p-3~&C<tacm::-.
carpets, "all tht' buiJ1.\ns," by 01vner. Sl3,700 d11•n 10
in\mal·u·late!y landsi:al)('d! assun1e 5~• % loon or your
It'!!: VACANT! Owner n1ust futan<:1? at $39,200. ~1
sell now • , , submit all Point Lonia, 8-12-8714.
Asking $42,5()() \V /\V rarpeting and ex·
PLACE REALTY 49-1-97().l i~llng GI Loan anyone can
2!m S. Coast H\\'y., L.B. a..o;.sume subject to 7~~%
a11null.1 percen!age rate. 1;:~7~ti~~v;r~i=~~~~ Better see this one 'today.
l\1 in, ol $3,000 00\vn rt'" Shown by appt 49-1-9667.
INVESTMENTS
\\'I'Ili "MAJOR"
TENANTS·LEASE8AQ(S
OFFICE
OOMMERCIAL
&: APT BLD'GS terms. I c8oyo-0-w-,-,-,,-3~B~R"°'i"iuc,c,c1,c,o,0cc,
Call S47-1221 Continental condo 1vfsink
quired. L_•o""'"u•~· --Ni--ou•,,_1 ~-,Walker & Lee W. R. DUBOIS, INC.
SEYMOU R R EAL TY l'f'nlPr_ $1600 dwn, T.O.P.
17.141 Beach ·n1vd., Htgn Bch !l6S-9G4l. MONARCH SAY
(R.E. Brokers) 833-Mf.5
3.8;, NET comm. acres.
Opt'n '!il 9 P!\1 J BR. "'Ith view $69,500 ~ l-farOOr Blvd. at Adal)lS '\\l~~~~===~~= I Irvine -t BR. & den, 4 ha $189,500 5.JS.O.Ui5 Open 'til 9 Pi\I
Tustin Ave, Orange
SZ-10,000 Terms
i I -~;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;; WATERFRONT 4 B<irn;,. & SAPIDITY!
dl'n, 5 ba's. $230.IXXI . .
J UMP IN Laguna Niguel Realty This cust?m ~me in on.e of
$21,000.
Call \Vheeler, Sangster, R.E.
Phone 53l-2al0
3 Be-dnn 2 BA condo, Exist·
ing 5lM -;-;, F1 [A IOiarJ, 7 yrs
new, 2 ('Offimunity pools.
Elect bl'Jn RIO, crprs.
drps, pe.110, \l/alk to shop-
ping. $650. dO\Vll to }~HA
2'11-02.
l' 1llage Real Estate
'62-4471 ( ::::.) 546-8103
Tho ·water's tine! Bring the 830-5050 496-5791 Ne~l'l s choice-st locations.
kids to the 4 pools; ( BR., ~~~~-------3 b1g: bedroon1s, a large
d1nuig nn., 2 irplcs., family Lido Isle family rootn and a delight-
rm .. 21.., ba's, Lge. tn<'d. tuJ kitcht'n \1'ith eating al'ea.
yard, $39,950. ·1 BR. 3 ba. 60x90 '·· .$77.500 Lush ne'" shag carpeting
:I BR. 3\¥ ba. 45x83 .. $94,500 and custom drapes through.
4 ~,i;~ ~e::t~v·~~5c~ out. $~.900. Call 646-Tin.
1177 Via Lido 673-7300 (ired hill
J{EALTY COZY 2 Br, drn1 1 ha. Small
Duplexes/Units
sale 162
ADULT CONDO Univ, Park Center. Irvine ~ms, 2 wa_lled court yards.l;e"A~Y~C~R°"E'°sT"-'B~y=;O~~=,~,.-;,Im='·
2 BR,)\~ BA, frp!.c, $18,200 Call Anytin1e 833-0820 Big potential. $44 ,00 0 . mac. 4 Br (l br a studio)
• * * GA RY CONARD
771112 POINSETTIA
CORONA DEL MAR
YCIU are the winner ot
l tickets to the
Southland
Home & Garden
Show
Huntington Bay. BY O\VN-Owner 67>.:ID13. £.\-es I 21<,i Ba, fam rm, din rm, 11ep
ER. Eves & wkcnds 962-7204 4 BR, 2!~ ba, frplc, cstin dps; .,..,lmd~. b r k f st rn1, liv r n1
at the
ANAHEIM
·" 830 51~.,. shag cpt, pa1io, fellcr'd yd, M /h. d or c<ui. ir :.iv, rec fae prlv. l~li yrs old. esa Verde w 1-bc&m ceil, ecor drps,
CONVENTION
CENTER OWN YOUR OWN $3.'l.400. 83;i..3392. slab for boat, lvly yd.
'
Pl Do · · b' BY O\VNER: 3 br-2 ba, tam Windward. Ln. si;~r;., a.ssum July 31}-Aug. 8
-~x, n I sit on a tg 4 BR 211. b I nh USl' 2 400 2 bl equity, get your lazy me.icy I • ·~ a ow 0 _ • • rrn, trplc, Ins, new loan. $61,500. 646-2027. Please call &12-5678, ext !14
ber.ween 9 and 1 pm t'O
claim your ticlret.5, (North
Couniy toll.free number i&
wt1rking. Call for details 5~ ft, Irg lam rm, hv ~ & c Pt / d P s · lncd yrd. BEAUTIFlJL Nev.'PQrl Beach
abootour unit.s ! din r1n, lndscp. $40,150. Assumable 5\~'7o Loan. home, 3 br, 2 ba, fani rm. Real Estate b Ov:rJl'r. Sll-1337. $29,900. 673-5809. ulll rn1, bltns, 2 lrptcs Y Laguna Beach Mission Viejo cov'd patio, copper plum-
~Q.lZlO)
M VAY bing, underground utiL Nr ( FOR SALE SACH.I~'JCE! r.tust sell -shop'g, schls, park, lib rary
FOR TRAUE property sctUeinent, 3 br 2 & tennis rourts. By ownt'r,
* * * 3BR.2ba&2BR.Obl
garagl", fenced yards. Take
over 6~'o Gr Joru1, Call
owner 847-8983. I 0 ba. $29,500. 26501 Al1cnntt", 2-893-R:1.1J 54G-04:l8 .OR LEASE/OPT! N J\Jisslon Vie-837-7677. $46·500· 64 2686·
Su1)('rb, archHccturaliy de-JO, WATERFRONT P LAY GOLF signC1:l honie, 1Jlended into Newport Beadt
fine hom11 \\'Jt'h custo1n !ca. the Ecological. v.·onderinent ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;laiarming Condominium on
Income Property 166
rturcs very near gol f cow·se, of STA1'ELY 'TllLJ::S, SAN· SPECULATORS the bay. DelightluJ. view -• COSTA MESA
\\·ater sof!ener, ne\v extt'r· DY BEACHES Ai~D A pool, picr & slip. Bamboo Village 12-2 BR
ior paint, 3 BR, 11M BA, i n NEVER J::NDlNG VIE\V o~· BARGAIN $79,'j()Q Garden HoUSl'S all \\•/alt.
xln1 cond .. Beaut. ldscpg. Tll8 ocr:A·N & CA.l'ALINA HUNTERS TE:D HUB ERT & ASSOC. garages & patios. On
$37.fOO. JSW\NlJ. l>elailed. all wood 3~71 Via Lido, 675-8500 valuable 172.~2{14. 1 blk Bank
LEADERSHIP R . E. extrnoi·, located on Lhe Unbelievable Beach Hou~ * l 'HE BLUFFS * ol Amer lca, 2 mi. ocean.
842-4466 962-2017 Eves. OCJ::AN SIDI:: OF' 1111!: bargains. \Valk to ocean. 3 3 BR, 2•;, ba, family rm. Incoinc ll.940/mo. Good
HIVY., W11h 1~ATHIVAY BH, 2 BA & dining, f1f'('.pl, View, convenient to park, tenns. Gail Page owner. 545 ''Countryside''
Gorgeous counll'y style li('ltn"
on a huge lot. Like the gl'f'11l
out-of-doors but ci!y co11-
\·eniences? See tlus one.
Bkr. 842-25..15.
$28,950.
4 BEDRMS & 2 BATHS
Heal nice ho1ne in Dutch Ha-
ven Marina nroa. Has used
b1·1ck tt'rr around fron1 lawn
.~ entry. Pricl'd to sell -
Call 'tOO;iy for sho11"ing.
MARINER REALTY
842-::&IJ 24 hr. 11ns. 8Cl'V.
ON LY $24,500
Exira nice 3 hedroo1n l1ome
on big lot Ve1s get in for
$·100. do.,vn, P11.yrnents less
than rent. Hurry 10 •
Real Estate by
McVAY
893-8533
Spanish Beauty!
LEAlJJNG l'U 111£ BEACJ-I. b](ins. dbl gar. Full pr1c; shopping & schools. By Bernard St, C.M. 646-4430.
Unique 3-bdrni Iloor plan $26.500. .Just limed, \\'OTI 1 owner. li+l-:l275 a[ler 6. I c*"L-A"G"°U"N""A0B0E~A~C"'°H°"*C I
has r11st1c l1v. rn1. \1•ilh l&sr Jong~ Ca1J S40.llSl IOpen'lo;v;,-,;cc:.c.c;cc--;-;;c::-7-;::-8 UNITS $89,500 eves.I NPT llc1ghts -4 Br. 2 ha, walls o/ eork & 11att1ral V.'Ood 1 J -" 134 000 Income over $1.000 l"olo, Close
panelling, JO tJ. HIGll r~ .. ~~-~~-~~"'~1 ;.~~e:;n5'.it:~n.n-.u, ' . in, .,..,aJk to shopg & beach. Ct:ILINGS OF OPEN Tl1\ol· nu1o11111 Net-ds a little 1\·ork.
8Ell..'i, e-\Tens1ve use of col-1 _ llM ISYAft Newport Heights PLACE REALTY 494.9704
ored CL.A.SS Sl<\'LJl;JlT!':i .• .;;;;:;::;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;; HER E IT ISi! 2'.)69 S. Coast H>.1')'., L.B.
!11assivt' BRICK FIRE-$16;f!OO V.A. Lovely, spaclous 3 & family --*-;-'N"Eow"'-.'u"N""D~E~R•-1 PLACf~ \V/ORNATE HOOD. Anyone qua.lilied subject to r1n plus bonus re{'reation CONSTRUCTION -
C<'nter slair>1'tll has antique VA Loan 1v11h 6·;~ «nnual rn1: Copprr plu1nhing. Slale 10 UNIT APTS.
CATJ!l<:DH.AL \VJNOO\V OF perccnlage ra11". To!al J»<Y· t'nlry: frpl c. l\'/Hea!ola.tor: 10 Dclux 2 BR/2 BA. 2332
STAINED GLASS & CRYS· inenl $1~8 per mon1l1. encl. patio. P..n1 for boat & E.den Ave, c.r-.t. Must see
TAL. Approx. 100 YRS. Sh&tp J bedroom ho111e lrlr. BeMer huiry • )'OU to appreciate~ Sl7S,OOO.
OW, A ll'uly Gol1r1net kit-IJARD\VOOD FLOORS. 2 \11ir1't he!ie\'e thr prict! Ownt."r. Eves &JG.5302
{'hrn w/l!:Lt:C. RANGE & lLJxt11•1011s baThs, lll(lficrn MO RGAN REALT Y ~
SELF·CLEAN OVEN, DSH· built-in ki!chen. Ready 10 673-6642 675-6459 (3} 2 BR/I BA HOMES
\VSJJR., CUIS!NI:: CEN'r£H. COMPLETELY occupy irn111ediatcly. GI 2 ON LOT REDONE Lower le\'cl teaiul'es 3 buyers welcon1e. CAl.l.' MUST GOJ
bdrtns., & 2 baths, J\Isrr. Walker & Lee O•o•, 3 b•· "·m· + •• ,.I 1-.:cw crpls, new drps, new bdrn1, sultc &. dress. rm. ~ " '"' , ·~ • tile, new floor, new paint.
has Van Luu \\'all coverlnb~· hr honie on N. f'-'c11'f)ort H11ge lot. 2336 Elden A~ .•
t-.11\SSrVE OLD AOOBF: 2790 llarhctr Blvd. at Arlams Blvd., ru· \Veslmins!r·r. C1\!. $60,000, Owner. Eves
FffiE:PLACr::. ELEGANT 5-154165 O~n 'ti! 9 Pi\1 Lln·gc 101, Cl zone. Offer 6-16-5302
BATH HAS HUGI:: SUNKEN SZG.:>OJ. CaJJ 213 66l·3'JOO 11 l + bl'k-'tocc-b<-,-,ch-, ,~. ~,m_,ho,.-,-..,·I
TUB, dbl pulln1ans all !av. Elegant ain-l pni or arr 6 pni, Bitr. 12BRJ lront, 2 apts re&J". All
a1 .. ry & ii,.ih 1.run °ar" ,,;-;. Mediterranean BY iJ\Y~~lt Nc11!y d('t:· 3 legal rental 1n1its on 2-R-2
TIQUED BR,\SS. Perfect Step clown llving room, for· orulrd, i n1 mac u I a 1 e 2 lots. 3 garages, Owner,
hlend1ngo!casuateleganc!', nial dinini;: roon1. 3 large BR-lrg fiun r111. Lrg: lei!. 407-4[)9 Poppy , CcL.VI
for: bedroonis and farniJ.v room Shown hy appr. &i;;...2~82 67.1--7774,
$74,500 in naycr'('st. $78,000. CnlJ f'rrn<·ipnl!' only_ $29.500, -cC".'M.-. c1~27l-4-'""P'°L'E"X"'E"S~1
MI SS ION REAL TY &16-7171. Dover Shores Lrg delux units, ?1-lesa Verde.
BC"en look1n~ for 1hat Mt'(J.
.70;-cc;c--,c:--,:-:ccc-c-cc I Hf'rranean 111otlf hu1 rouldr't FO!t s11!r. by 011·ni'r-4 br
hnnir nr sehools & ~hp1;. Rflord \\'ha1 you ."1\11''!° S2\!'19Q
$2S.000. As.,umah\e F'HA Is the prl!'C" on lh1s one, Call
Broker 642-4816 9~5 So. Coast !hry. Laguna Nr shopping, Fwy·s. e1<:. Phone 17141 49.0731 2 BR. 2 BA. De n. F,..,lc. . , ..... ·,. Assume loan, prmc1pal on· Patios. Pool pnvil, Rt."f's .1 ~..,.,~ ""' ?QS2 Jy. $14.J,950. 5.J7-2876, FAMILY SIZE l'f'll ~ • .;1•u;i. 1.H.0-., or ~O"'O::'C''='O'?"'~=:='~I ';:.13-7361. Sprawling ra11C"h l'l)le home 2 STORY LOVER? 557-l·IS7. Loan al :;1~'~. 1185 Dorset us. BkT, M2-25J5
l.!lne, C . .\l. Phone, 545-2471.
BY OWNER
4 DR, 2 13A, lge lan1 rm,
landsca!X'd. fenct>d & spklrs. I ~F"'R"E'°E="'FO'A:CM""1"'L"°Y~ReiO'°'O~MC:-I
Gr.o.i f1nancing avail. PRICESLASHED $1600
S:l9.fXlO. 5'19·318'3, 3 BR. 2 BA, plus l6'xl6' add·
2 Br, large gar, fcnc«l yd, ed lamlly rn1. Corner lot.
close to schools ,v.._ shopping. Good !11arina Hi area. GrP'>l
$16,000. 272 Costa Mesa St. potential. }furry al S24,!0'I.
6-16--9136. KATE LLA RE A LT Y
e CUTE 3 br, 2 ba, patio, Mf..6061.
Jge yard. Sm dO\\'n or
a...<:'SUnle $189/mo. pymrrts,
$24.000. By O\\'ller &16-~139.
Cameo Shores luxury 2 hr &.
den homl'. bf'1t11I garden.
\Vil! 5acTifice at $69.500 for
quick sale. Onr, 675-569.S .
BY owner-\\lt'stide Bluff 3
hr. lr;;c . atio, lrg fe~d yd.
SZl.~. 646-3432.
East Bluff
e EXCLUSIVE AGENTS e
SALES • LEASES
;(tr... c:: ( "\) 111 .. 10 (.Ji.St "';! .a!'!!
i' t.'~ really "-"v.r
2·114 Vi5!A Del Om
Newport Besch 6'W·ll33
Fountain Valley
RED TILE ROOF
Tum unul'!e<! Hems in!G quick
cash, call 642-5678
\v1th ~assy pl.1y yarrl & pa-SE E IT TODAY _ l•s~.~n-J"uc•~n:c-;C~o~p~i~.~tr~•cnocc--
uo with hrtck BBQ. Built-on
kuchen \\'ifh dishwasher & LOV E IT FOREVER I HILLTOP ACRE
double ovens, opcris to large 3 Huge hedrms and !amlly 3 Bdrms., 2 baths. F'amily
f11 m1ly room. Spacious liv· game rm. Comer lot, \\'alk nn .• r.ep. ulil. rm. S\lf!M.
in~ !"OOfll wilh fil't'f)lact'. to all schools k churches. J\lING POOL. All loca!ed on
Dining room. 4 Bdrrns/, 2 Choict' atetl lfl N.B Priced l .20 acre hilltop wlth great ba~h11; _ separate masicr tri i;ell at only · $44,500. valley view. 11 ors t s
s~ite. Only $39.950. Call • Tenns. welcome. A!king $42,500.
COLLINS & \\'ATTS JNC. Call 493-1124, Realtor ~,,,.,O 1,,,., ~ 962-~'iZl EW11: 642-0427 Santa An• .,,.,/F 0 e,.~I «-' TI-IE BLUfFS. hy owner, 3 REAL ESTATE "' 2 n.. Li~J, Modd. HOUSE FOR SALE
Corner Gt'f'en Belt. &l-t-1233. BY OWNE R ·1190 Glenneyre St. ~~~-=~~=~= 3 Br. 2 Ba. family-dining rm. 494-9473 549-03161 Pilot Classified ad. 642-5678 ('arpet/drapes, $ 2 3 , 9 5 o
639-3143 2325 W. Lori Ln.
Santa Ana
Open hooS(' Sat & S1m
2'·5 pm
Un iversity Park
,I Br townhouse. 2~i bft, 2
lrplcs. Model home. _nany
extras. Xlnt l ocation,
$36,500. 10% dn. 18102
Leatht'rwood. Call 459-3311
fm' appt.
"'., r..t.,.. I.al G1r11r.11I
1~~
Acreage for sal• 150
Very, very Spani!h 3 b(>d.
t'QOfll 10\\'t\hou~. choice
F'ot111!n1n Valley location all
for $22,500. Vararr:, Must
sell. 011',ktt 842-2535
1 • r::w.~~~~"s 1
1 r r t r r I' I' 1 :e ~~i'..~~.~=w 1 I I I I I I I I
CHOTGE 160 ACRES
Neer Billion $ Dev. Hold or
subdivide & mak~ big
profH! NAME YOUR O\YN
TEA.MS! Sacrif\C't'., leaving
for Switzerland. 114-729-Us:;
rltiy or eve.
10 AC. ranch sitP., NO
DOWN. Respon fan1ily just
take over $25 ptr JJW.
pyn1n!s. 968-0047
DAILY PILOT DIME -A
-LINES cost you just ~n-
11ies • day.
•
SCRAM -LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700
,.,..,.,. ............ .. ',,,. . ' .
11 ~'~~ ..... ~
20 AC-112 fiat, 1,t !Imber.
\\'/sprln.ir. W. Ev11ns Creek
Rd. Ore.. $18.()(X). ~t
P RIM E R-4 C.M .
Jn \V. Bay St, Can bulld
14 units lot 5.lx446, present
income $2,880. Principal on-
ly, S.17,900, 54~7361, 557-2876.
New 27 Adult Apt
$422,0CXI
\Vehb Broker (642-400.'i)
The
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
Marketplace
•
,,.,._
·"-• ~·
.~ r .
'H
--·---
lliwiday, July 2CJ, 1971
l ..... __ ... _._.',_':_~_ .. _'_~I ~ I
-1.1~1'8
$SET UP FOR
I ~[ _ ... _ I~ :-I -;;;;;"'-~l~~J;.1 ---··;;;-~l~~I [ -.. ...... J[t] I ~ .. ., ..... « .... 1~1~! ...,_liiiiiiiiiiiiii ... _iiiiliiii[YJ:i'I:: ... :::''""":::"'""'"'::::ll!
305 Houses Unfurn. 305 Houses Unfur n. 305 Apts. F urn. 360 Apts. F ur n . J60 \pt. Unfurr.. JU A.pt. Unfum. MoMy to Loan l40 Houses u ·nfur n. _.....;. ____ _
l"RORt $
._ SlZ:MO. eq~ In
prime \:\<IJ'Phouse .and '1Tlt.'H
I.-. Veaaa OD 1.4 •C'Z'H -
PolntiaJ incmne $31,:JOO.
wll exdmlp flCr Bl'N. from
Hwrtington Bch to San
~. l..ocid Ledy 01''rl-
.,. carmt manaye. 646-nn
D THE··~EAL
I"\. ESTATERS -0 tr I',' I • l•M
.. .. .
ROBERT PUCKETT
5532 WINFIELD
HUNTINGTON BEACH
~00 aft fbe winner ol
2 t:idcei.1 1o the
Southland
Home &. Gard.n
Show .. ""' ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
J Wy Jl>.Aug.. !
1-----~====c 1 Please call 642-5678, t>X'L 314
G•ne ra f
FREE ll
Landlord ... Ownert
\.\'e wtll tt(t!f' tt-1\&.nd.a to )'OU
FREE ot chari'e-•. Many
6t6J.rable tenama on our
waibJJg list.
A LA R•ntals e 64S.3900
a DARLING Oump-2 Br,
encl gar, kid/pt'ls ok. Avl
rodAy $125.
ALA Rent.als • &45-3900
Corona d•I Mar Laguna H ills Be lboa Island Sant a Ana Costa M••• Costa M•s•
SHORECLIF F COMPLETELY mod. VERY Attr. I BR. apt;
l B~:'OOm, bath & l,i:, dining Air-<:0nd 3 BR, 2 DA, 2 <":ar l'e!letvatiom for winter '7l.
room, fa.nu1y room. 12 to 18 kar, htd pool, Jdscpd 1 yr Call 61~1503.
months lease. }l50 ~r lease. Mature adlts. Ph aft ~a~.~lbo~o~P~ .. -1~0-,-u~l.--
n'IOnth incluchng gardent>r. 6pm 1n4J 830-0787.
AUS'fIN-SMITH GORMAN •
and amociates REALTORS Laguna N1gu1I
2828 East Coe.st Hlghwa,>.; 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts, drps, pav.
Corona dE'I Mar. 644-7270. ed s!orage "'P<'Ce r or
e $35 \VK & UP -On Ocean
Lovely BacheloNl 1 BR.
r.raid service. Pool. Util pd. e Call 675-8740 e
1 YR lease -C ameo trailer-boo!, garage, 3 m Corona del Mar
Highlands. 3 br, !am rni ol1t. Xlnt cond. $ 2 8 5.
huge 11v rm & master hr 49'i-4244.
Jrg pnvate patio, 3 privat~1·M~;,-,~;Of1-~V~;~,~jo ____ _
Royal Suites M ot•I DELUXE
S-1~ Pi'..~ WK. UP APARTMENTS
C"mplcre kitchen, Jintns, ph. NOW AVAILABLE
1erv, hid pool; 'l'V & maid Air Cond • Frplc·s • 3 Switn·
erv opl. ming Pools • Health Spa -
STUDIO & 1 BR. 'tennls Crtg -Game &. Bil·
(6 mili>s to Npt Sch, !I miles liard Room.
to Disl!f"yllil\d f l li 2 BEDROOM * 531-3930 • FROM $140
001 So. H"b'"· s.A. MEDITERRANEAN
Ap). Unlucn. 365 VILLA GE
Ge nera l
EL CORDOV~--,
Apts.
l'E\\I I & 2 Bit LuXlli·y Aptg.,
Dshwhrs, Xlra elosrrs t. rtip-
boa.rtls, luxury shag erp:'·~.
beaut. rec J<U.·tJ & rocrt.:
Adults • No pets .
W17 Charle St. &12-4470
wesliBllU z1 Lota fo,. Sal• 170 between 9 and 1 pm 10
daim your oclretli, (Nortf1
CJunty Mil-tree number U;
e OJZY Cottage-2 Br. f/yn:l,
cnc1 gar, kids/pe13 , $130. beaches. 4720 Co r t I a n d ----------Drive, Cdi\1. 675-4133. 3 BR. 2 ba heaut, crp!'d &:
LRG Baehelor, 2 blks Big
Corona, $15.'i/mo. Y r I y ,
Ga.rage Avail. 1 Ad 1 t.
642-8520.
2400 Harbor Blvd., C.!'>I.
~71~) 557-80:.ro
RENTAL OFFICE
OPEN 10 Ai\! TO 6 P~f
:-.'ew BeautJ!ul Garden Api11'l--.
menus. Private Patios, Pool,
SPJ, Garage-. Lu:illrlOll!
l11nclscap111g. Adulti;, no pen;,
ZB!l.SJR-0. 3BR.;.?.::6.
CHOICE lot. R-2. lOOx.135,
Paved ~. 348 E .
Rochester SJ .• COl51.a }.1esa,
Clor.e to 17th St. shopping
area. $22.CKlO. 673-9509.
510-1Z20J • • •
Cash Fast!
ALA Rentals • 645-3900
e F'lNE LDC! 2 Br, encl
gar, flyd, kids/pet,;. $l'j().
ALA Rentals e 645-3900
SPACIOUS 2 BR 2 baths & drp'd, Crntral 111r/cont1, 1 2°"B_c,_lcp~I~. ~b-,l~oo-n-,-.-,,.-,-y-,-,-1,-.1
borm~ rm. l1om~. Con1pJe1e 11028<'~11 '"""c· 11G~~'~ ~1;,n er• tst & last. $220. 3 2 2
"'/lrplc. &. b11ns. No pets. :irno. a '">V"'""" · lil'!iolrop t . Avl 9/J ,
no children. $27:> illo. on an· N•wport Beach 67;,..3&15,
nual le-o.se, lleallor * 2 BR furn. Frplc. Yrarly,
So. of Hwy. Adult, only, no
pets .. $180/mo. 673-5822.
YEN DOME
l ~li\1ACULATE APTS!
ADULT anll
FA.\·IJLY Set·11on
Close to shopping, Park
,:,, Spe('IOUS J BH's, 2 ba
FAIRWAY
VILLA APTS .. l '>l E . 21 St., C.l\l. 646~
ParS<-L ik• Sur rounding
QUIET -DELUXE:
LAGUNA Beach, 'mall
All ulil. S6.000.
lot .' • F'RESH & clean-2 Br, hU
epts, Jrg yd, encl gar,
kids/pets, n 10.
6T.>-'.llXXI 673-4841 EvPs BEAUT , nlod. to1vnhouse .. 3
o;;~-,,,,-----~~-~I Br, zr~ Ra, fl'plc, palio,
TI4-Z153
Mountain, Desert,
Resort 174
TfRED OF CAMP'G IN
CROWDS?
Buy your O\\'n rerreat1on,
retin>mf'nl land ln beautt!ul
No. CaJtf. Tre€s, Vie\\', nr 2
lakf'!i, OC{'an JO ac only
STJOO. lo down. A g t ,
&16-8226.
ID ACRES $1595 FP
Nr nt>W freeway & offramp.
Riverside County, dirt
roads, acct'ssible. Bet\\'n
lake & ctty, 10% dwn, EZ
terms, For future invest-
rnen1. 714/537·TI33.
HAJ\111,TAIR. La ke Ar-
rov:head, Jot "rithin 2'..ll' of
lake & boat hk for ir.ale or
trade. $?.l.500. 675-81!'1.:I or
213/246-4374.
Excltilli Tahoe recreational
property. Utilities incl. For
info, call 642-6959.
Out of State Prop. 178
3 AC \1'/ne,1v redwood 2 Br
hse, tncd, dnUed well, nr
cnty rd. Oreg. $14,SCXl
6'0-6663.
Real Estate Wanted 184 * CASH BUYER *
Don't list :t'Olll' home,
!iell ii to us.
Save time, save money,
imme<l. firm oUer. Broker
• LEADERSHIP
INVESTMENTS •
842-4466 & 540-5136
\VE need a 3 br house with
bellmed ct'ilings East s1rie,
Costa l\lesa or Back Bay
\.\'llh room for large camper
Jx.side dhl garage. No
tra~. Up tn $36,00J cash.
Vogel Cl) Realtors, 2(152
Ne11.'J)Ort Blvd .. Cr>sta Mesa.
548-9346 .
\\'Ai\'T TO BUY 5 or 6
bedroom home In Hun-
tington Beal'h f.rom owner.
Phone 642--0~iO.
I~
1st & 2nd Trust DHCl1
FREE APPRAISALS
Costa M esa lnv•stment
5~n1 I anytim•
Mortgages,.
Trust DHds 260
NEED CASH
$1000 OR MORE
5t'lf! Avco 'Thrift 1or a Real
Estate loan. Upon approval
use the money however you
like. Also ask about our
unsecured penional loans.
CHOICE $72,000 TD Emerg.
Must Sell quickly. Pays
$2.291 mo. 93 . 714-729-11.55
day or t>ve.
PVT pty wishes 2nd for 4 br,
3 ba/Lido Isle home. 10%
at 10 pts. 675--2697.
FIRST T. D. approx $13,000,
discount 1or cairn.
67'-32'7
Houa•s for Rtw1t I~ '------~
Houses Furnished 300
Gener al
$100-Near To,,.,·n. Cozy
Bache-lor w/full kitch. Sml
yard. Avail Now.
BEACON * 645-0111
ALA Rentals e 645-J9DO
• STEPS to heh! really nlr.e
2 Br, CID, baby & smJ
pet ok. n75.
ALA Rentals • 645-3900
• 4 BR + Den, nr bch.
B~tns. CID , huge yd. Kid!i/
pets. $200.
ALA Renral, • 64j,3900
e PRI BCH, CdM. 2 Br/2
Ba, f/yd. C'lilld & pet. i250.
Al.A Renlals • 645-3900
e YOUR Own Pool-3 Br +
den, 2 Ba, frplc, chdrn ok.
Pool. gerv provided. $275.
ALA Rerrt.als e 645-3900
1999 Harbor Blvd, C~I
f'ree to Landlord.
645·0111
411 W. lttli, COSTA MlS.l
$150 -STEPS to ocean -
Coiy. 1 Br. Cot!age. Stv/ref.
Child ok. 6-15--01 11
$130-E/SIDE/t B,. Sep.
home-, Nici yar for toL &
pet. Gar.\ge. -0111, ( .
$175-l>ELIJXE )lz.._2 B•
SLlldio (v/trplc. "'firi Pit~ &
pool. Vacant. 645-0lll. -.....
$189.50-KIDS & pets fine~ 3
Br. 2 Br. Fncd yard & gal'.
6-l5-0W.
2 BR, 6itt1 ng room. 2 Ba. On I ., II bl! pvo. ~ car gar. a ns,
corner lot, encl patio. lnclds crpls, c!rapes. LE'a.o,e $l93.
cpts, new cl.rps sprinklers &· (11 52.)-4710 or 846-5991 eves
gan!enl.'r. Child & pet l)etwn 8-10 or \\'knds.
\.\'elCQme. Yr lease, $Z91l.l---~=~~---~l.'>-6JS8. BEACH
• NICE epl Cor rent. 1/2
blk to ocean. lllil pd. $16) &
u11. 2500 Seaview, Cc\M.
Costa M esa
.TOWNHOUSE ,,,., ~~fu\IIN~ 2$28._r cottage, ONLY sm YRLY LSE. CASA d e ORO
rp c, _>"3 1 · la mo. 5!7 Has everything you wan: CASUAL Calif. Liviiig Jn a.
Carnation. 404-8400. inc l wood burning fiN'place~ warm ?.1edilerranean atmos-
3 BR, 2 BA, C ameo 548-&i32 phere. Spacious color co-
JIJghland&. Private beaches.1 "u_N_l_Q_U_E~·-,-B-,-,-B-,--poo-I ordinaled apt:s -desig11ed &
$-JOO. Unlque R.E. 675-6000. beach, trplc.' No.' l 4 4 furnished ior style & con1.
Costa Mesa Bayside Village. Adu!ts, no fort • lleated poo! e Kitch-'.".CCC'.,..-o-------1 Pf"lS. Yrly or!Ty, S2fi0 (213) c.i w/ indirect lighting e
AVAIL. $(.'pl lst. 3 BR, E-7J8-1161 or sec rni:;r. Deluxe R/O. Adults. No pets,
Side, crp1s & drps, frplc, Jge 3 BDR. 2 ba. J'vlany E.~tras. ·1 BR.·$175 furn.
* Sw1n1 PflOl, pu!/grpe11 2 & 3 BR's * Ftril, lndiv'Lndry f:ic'ls Private patio. pool • lnd1v.
1845 Anaheim Ave.· laundry tac.
COST/\ 1'1ESA 642-2824 'Near Orange Co. Airport &
\":~:'::""""~"""""""'I ucr. Adult!. 01tl,v. 2 BDRi\L apt., 1'~ hi!, blt-20122 Santa Ana Ave.
ins, tp!, drapes, ,-.11cJo~ed tlli;r. Mrs. Joachim, Apt 3-A
gar., :ltl :Jrll St ., H.B. S.16-6215
5:}6.-6321. ORLEANS APTS. Balboa Island
l.£E 2 Bt•. 2 Ba. Stv, re/rig , ADULTS ONLY
cptsldrps .. ~la!urr <1dulls on-2 & 3 BR. Ava.1!. Pr1va1c p.a-
ly no pels. $21;,, fi7~~. tio, pool ... indiv. laundry Jae.
Corona del Mar
(Na. Orange Co. Airpor t: Tus-
tin at 17th St; nr. Westcliib.
In~d yd , dbl car gar. 2 Rent Oprn. UTILITIES INCLUDED 1741 Tus1in, Costa il-lesa
Mgr. MNl. Th?n1pson 642·46'1 children schl age. No peL~. fZ13l &1l -J.138 311~ \V. Wi lson 6-12-19TI ...,~~ -.
Call eves alt 7 pm. 548-9737.1~~-~~-~---I *$35 WEEK & UP* -.
NEAT & CLEAN 3 BR home, University Park St udio & I BR apts, SPACIOUS 1 & 2 Br. apts,
with fine crpts & drps. It's LEASE or Sale-4 Br, 2~ Ba. SUNNY ACRES ON TEN ACRES htd pool, cpts, d rp.~,
the best at $235/mo. Corner home. Univ. Pk. Irvine-. MO 1 & 2 BR, Furn, & Unfum , d s \Vs h" r a 11 b It n s . ~ogti. ~~!8~41&. bl!lns, Call Xlnt cond. 499-:1525, 644-6406. TEL Fireplaces / priv. patios. ~150-$170/ino all u1il inr..
.,.... 1 bll<" soulh ot Fairgrounds Pools Tennis Conlnt'I Bldst. 307 Avocado Apt 9, C:lf.
3 GR, 2 Ba, ~265. Vacant Houses Furn. or 2376 Ne\vpor! Blvd. 900 Sea Latte, CdM 644-26U 645--0984.
4 Br, 2 Ba, $273 Avl 8/25 Unfum. 310 5-l!f-97:;5 (MacArthur nr Coast Hwy}i..~~R=E~G~E=N~C~Y~-~.-
Inuna.c. homes, 1:Pts/drps, Costa Mesa NE\'lLY wallpapel"t'd 2 BR . IMMAC. 2 BR, 1 Ba. Shag
frplc s. bltns, patio MESA Jurn apt wit h crpt & drps. NE\V·A .great pl~ce _r.o hve crpt'g, sell clean. gas oven,
VERDE ~6-5386 aft 6 pm. 3 BR, 2 ba home, S225 mo. Nr shopg & 1 1 ~ m1 bum the ~ear round. \\a!k 10 dshwhr encl i::ar patio S77
1-2 k 3 BR APTS
Also F'Urn. Bachi>lor
Prv patios * ~hd PooJ1.
Nr sf!Op'g * Adu!ts onl1'
Martinique Apts~
lin Santa Ana Ave., C:lf
l\lgr. Apt 113 646:..~
E ast Bluff
NEWPORT BEAClf
Villa Granada Apts .'
Four bedrooms with balctin.
ie, above & lelow. GraclCJ0.3
living & quiet aw.rro11nding
ror family with ehildrt>n,
Near Corona del Mar fligb
School, Fireplace Wet bar.&
hullt-in kitchen aPpliancei,
835 A~fJGOS \VAY 644.2991
Cokhvell Banker & Cb.''""
tlfanaging Agent 54~
NE\\'L Y decorated 2 Br..2 ba
upstairs apt. Bltins, cr pls,
drps, 2 carports, pool. 1
Child or p<'t OK. $250 mo;>.
PHONE:: 675-60,"iO •
Huntington Beach 5 BR, 3 BA. $275/mo. Cpts, Lease: _B_es_t area, partly heach. 523 B,-.rnard St. shops, 11alk 10 beach. 2 Br, 2 \V. Wil~n. ·
drps, d5h\\·hr; nr. schls & luro. ;}-l;>-5l!JI. 6-IB-0728. B11. Frplc. Pnv pa1·10. Kil, Call 518-Jfi-Oj * FRESH AIR
shop'g. AvalJ Aug 1. Santa Ana 171 'CB~R~.'C~p~.,~.~d~'f"~.-.~b~l!-n-.,-,-\.a~lck blu1s, C:lo.~r 111 gar. Tasl('f11J SPAC 2 & l B " det"or 3.'Xl·A l\!ariruerite · r apf, $140 Up. ll'alk 3 b!ks to Beach! .r15-6?.l4. in l'!OS('IS, frplc. 1 arlll, Sl.1•1, 67~ ·~1,.. /ltd "'"'I. Play y(I. ~ .... L ' CORONA DEL MAR .,....." """' ~" ~ rg " BR apt, ni'11·1y decor. AVAIL. Aug lJlh. $225. 3 BR, HI nio :ti·ly. Open Hse, 336 E. l oc-=-.~~~-~-~·I drps, bltns, patio. Kids ok. Dl.>J attached gar, frp!c, i~~
2 BA, fenced y·d, cover·Qd ,. , Xlth. 642-8520. :i BR, '.: tia, hl1uis: :i yr o.!d, 1%4 Maple No. 3 "'~ '"'13 B Bl .. 3 BR 1 · BA '\ pd 17 <>"'..-.,,0 a. Ins, 1·.~cept r<'·fr1g. palio frplr crpts & drps · 11 · all'r · REAL Value~ Cpts, r!rps, 00 Jr lower duplex i1nit. 221•1 College ,'\o, 6 6-16-2287 $2'25. i'Jo sngJs. no peU) ..
CaU 5.f5-88z0 or S.IS-8139. Lint $195. furn f.?10. &l2-18S6. dshwhr, POOL, 2 BR's. Walk ro. bcRch, shopping, SHA DY GARDENS-POO .
T h F 3 30 S 5 schooL Gas, 1vater. g~•"''cn-~ L 536-l71L
EAST !ii<le 2 br, garagC', l1::e own ous• urn. 11 .. Mature adults only, no ing. Cpls/drps inct~vYr. l & 2 BR .. , !urn. & unturn. * KIDS WELCOM
fnc<l yard. Children & pets * * * pel.s, Quiet. 2295 P<1cila': Lease. S300/n10. 509 Acacia. From ~130. NASSAU MOVE IN 1'0DAY. A!lrac-
ok. Sli5 mo. 1st & last DON KREMERS Avc.548-6.:i78or6·12-t4T.l. 67,r-4~5G Al It •f't PAL.i\fS.2<'h1ldrenok. t.Jve 2 tlR AP'f. $l4S.$J..59 S;.'leleaningdcp.54&.Jj,~J. 34001 VIOLET * REDEC. Lrg 1 BR. cen-. "'. {U spri <-177E.22ndSt. 642-3645 ALLF''
t I I I * 3 Br. Ney.•\y dt>corated. 1 . ~-~TR.AS. POOL. Pris
3 BR & Den, 2 ba, dbl gar, LANTERN ra oc, poo • carpor!. Blk 10 bea<'h $?95 f .1 REDECORA fED, lrg 2 br, ok. 17362-A Keelson .1..n.
lncd, 2394 College Dr. $295 DANA POINT ad!Js/no pets. $135/mo. 560 prl'.'f£>rrrd 673-o:zo5 · ami Y new cpts, dps, bllns, child 8~2-6233 or 968-7510.
1nolse. 83J-8&1S. You ,,, ... ,,B \\'ino·,•l \V, 1-familton. 646 -41 6'0, . • or.:, $15(], 766 Shalimar $60-ROO:>i~IATE \\·anted to $1..io • .,..·/POQL 2 Br, ~tud10. .. ,_ " " 515-0760. 642-731;,. 2 BR. unf apl, 3 blks Jrom
Bl ,_ K.d ~ BDRl\I, crpts, fenced yd. 2 tir.ke1s to the Costa Mesa bch. 1v/w shag cpt, blln share brand new 2 Br. lu.x tns, cpts, , ... .,s. 1 s & pet 1200 m·. Sou lhla nd I /., 2 BR Trailei•. •.<O & Up. 1-:-~B====~~~=-
'
I I 'l I k "'""llf v "' -* EAUTJFUL 1 & 2 BR. stove. \\'Sh/dry, gar, utt.! 11.p · 1\· poo · ,.. ae or o · <>"'J-<J • H Elderly pref'd. 133 E. lG!:h Tll C Female. &1~-3i50 ome & Ga rd•n t'T, C)i. 612~126~. E BF.ST COSTS LESS onten1pvrary Ga rden Apl s, pd. $16.J/mo. 5~9;i91 -0r
BEACON * 64>.0l 11 s200.5 BR. Farnily tlonie. :i Br, 2 Ba, cpls, drps, ii·alk Show tmug1nc: wer l)ar, Jin::place, Patioi;, Ir p I es, pool. i'l6-R8R7.
S hi & h · I' .,, II;~ e I 9· 2 Bf{ 1'-111"·•1 l'ool bean1 ct•illn°s, 1·011<>h-l1•y.m $15().$165. Call 546-51.63. LGE' ., b 101·e, cpt:s, garai::(>. Fncd se s · s op g 1•1 (1K. $23.'r. " ' "' · "' Ln. • ,., ., " 4 -r. 2 ha iitudio e.nt
LOS ALTOS for kids & pets. 645-0111. 3028 Garfield. ~~>-62!1-l. A NAHEIM r rple. Patio. FMm $139. l4:i panel ing, big privale patio, DELUXE 2 Br/1 1 Ba epts \1/palio & ~·ard, all bIJ.i~
P rid• of Owner ship L CONVENTION E. Jllth. 6-11-4603. 2Brt-:.1 BATH. f'lllhhouse, drps, stove, dJ>~whr,' <>ar: Jndry Jaeil. Vir \V~,·~~r
H ARGE l Br red('t , lrpl(·, -~~~~ I V 0$\Jl s11; "' " .. ~. ome BEACON * 645-01 11 Yri, patio. Sl:\O nio. rtrlial)le CENTER SPACIOUS, Jo1·r!y 1 & 1 Br. poo · • .;, ln~·ld:<> g-a,c; Sm! <'htld nk, Avl 811. $1~. Beal'h B!vd. Sl;l(J, 8·12-~ ~~J \\'it~ ~eenafe7 _ok. EASTJ'~S~D~Ec-cC~o~,71•->~1~<.-,,-J <1rlu!ts. ;'>18-6986. JLdy 30-Aug. 8 Pool. rce r111, $160 to $18~1. l ,'I,, iv1r. 387 \V Ray lit. o1hrr 612-7958 BEACHBLUF F APfS.
room ath, u1 t ln~. bdrm. 2 balh home-. f''noshly -~-=~-~-----[Ple11se rall &12·::i678, ex!. 31 4 Br. unf $140. 64:'>-5530. 2,,.Blpl;~, . .'.rorn lI6;1. AU adults,l 'N~l~C~E~-",~,,-,,,-.,,-,~~.-,,-,-pl. 2 & .1 BR, 2 BA, ~1. '"''• carpetl11g, drapes, lease $2~5 '"BR, Lgf' lenccd y11rd, !wt11cc11 9 end 1 pn1 10 v •· • """" per mo. P!1<.1ne Long Beach painte<f, al.~o new gr'!en S•!(l Goveroor, s185, 1 . • BUSINESS n1('ns s p e <' i fl J B:\ y ,\1r:ADO\\IS APTS. POOL. Cl~e to shop'~-$14:1. rlw. Nr shopping. 8'17-3957.
Zl3 _ 429_955,_ shag carprts thruout. Dhl. l ~~*~*~'~l_l1_2'<cc._·~96=56:..-•_*c_-I ~~Yy~~;~.:eceke~:m~~r~~ wkly rates now offered to * Call 646-0073 * ~~~2. 11th Pl. j\;Q, B. • 2 BR, closed gar . Child le
garai;:t", rorner lot with eve1•yone. Lo as $~6 \Vk, sml pr! ok. ll40/mo, CaU
Balboa P•ninsula fenced yard. Rent at ~105 2 BR, 1 Ba. Swerlish Frp!r, :H0-12'20i Sf'a!ark Mote.I, 230t Npl * * * J BR, 2'~ ba sludiu, cpt'g, 842-836b. '
'
. "I k •• h 3 BR 2 BA per month or option to buy. \v/w crpts, Sl~. We. 163~2 * * * Blvd 646--7445. ct ,, u oc to =ac Broadway. 171-0 78J ... :t.li-!l. L IKE LIVING IN rps, blLns . l190/nio. No BACHELOR unit-walk '!o
Aug. dates 11v;iil. \vkly.1 7c~a~ll=B~ro_k~'~'-"'~5-_94_. -'~1.~--l ''1"E~S~A--,,v~,,~.d~,,-~,~-.~,-.I Tow nt-iou1e Unfurn. 335 SHARP 2 BR-$1 SS YOUR OWN HOME • • • pels. _ 998 E. C a ml no. beach & 10,1,n. u!t.I pa id.
Davis Realty 642-7000. ~ BDRfl.1, 2 ba1hs, nice !enc-rrpls/hltns. ~2.15 nll). lsr & Cos ta Me sa FURN. llrd Pool. Adi ls/no 2 Br, 1!~ ll;. un!w·n. Cpts, !)46..-0.l;iJ,-·~-..--~~-$8!J/mo. * .iJG-1107 "c~.-,~,.~M~.-,.'------1 ed yard for kids. New paint la~I nto. advantr, :'J.l.>.-2786 pets 22i2 r.taple St, or drrs, enrl. pal1(1, 3 BR, 2 Ba, (lcluxe. Bllns.i 'JC-Bo,~.~2;-;:cb,=.=,=,~,,=.~1~,~,-,,,-,,~pl'e-x.1
Business and grec>n shag carpels "'"'°-.-cc---~----·,1LOVELY 2 sly townhse. 4 I ~6~'~"~'~"-'-"· ---~~--W ILSON G AR DE NS Sh11g v.· w 1·p1, rh"{ls. lrpie, Cuslon de<:, 2 chldrn ok, 111'.1 Opportunity 200 ELEGANT 3 Br. den, 2 sty. thruout. Su1gle gara~e. Ren! 2 BR, l ha,. 11e11•ly carpeted, Br, 2 Ra in .fl.1onti(.'e!lo. ./ AVL now _ 1 & 2 BR !Lini. Apts patio, gar. Like n ew ,
1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;1 AnUque de!·or. S3:'l0 mo. incl at $225.00 pPr n10 Ca.II rlps, g~l'. nice yd. $1 73. Call Sll'i1nm1ng rool & clubhouse Pool, rec rm, gd localion, Ph. &t2-68Jl alt 1 pm. 962.-4180. pets. SI90. S47-i907.
TO BUY OR gardelll'r. 5~7...0-11 J. Broker 545--0465. ' Drck t raa~s. 646-.1928. privg~, $25ll. mo. aft 5, No children or p",, =~~:::;:=~~=i::i:i~~1 lE~A~ST'."S~~·~il}~~~ .. li>". C: 12 BDR!l1S., nr. shoppirit, iue ' re rig., Ney.·iy decor. $110 Per m". 1 SELL A BUSINESS N rt 8 h GOV'T REPOSSESSION. low :l Br + F11n1 rm. r~ncd yd . ~;:1-:.?:n!l. 6-16-S..~24. stove, crpts, drps, garage, "
HOLLAND BUS. SALES ewpo e ac do. Assume lo1v int loan Cpts, drps, S2t5/mo. a vail Huntington Beach cV~ER=v---N-i<-.,-1---B-,-d-pC-,-. _Q_"_"_L * Spanish Elegance 1ented yd. /llature adul~. RE'alonomi«s Bkr. 67~700
"The Broker v.ith Empathy" BA \'.SHORES -4 hr, 3 ba, Easy </ualifying. Bk r, 1101v, 2103 Federal. 545-94:;1.l----------I Sep by ga.rages. Adults o~·er $145. 642-;,531 X!nt foe. 2 BR 7851 Slater Ave. Sl;).'i
1716 Orange Ave., C.)l. \\"1n1er ren1a1. $32:'1 s nio. 612-4245 anytlm~. Fountain Va lley ~rOR 11• e <1 s e: b2I Br. 30, 00 pets. 54g..102r. Quiet Adult L iving :SPACIOUS 2-br;-2-ba-----q; 0P<"r n1?~ ~'T){I', M7-0!f36
6-15-4.170; 5-l0-0008 anytim~ 1 _c_~_1_&_1_2-_;_21_1_____ NU d 3 B -' ., 11' 11 \ f' \I s !' • t n s ' Shag CPI • drps • !ii ln• • , p, • I 0 " k , rl ,· , • ' __ "_'w_'-_''~-~·,_.•"-----I : E'l"Or-. r, rpts, .. rp~. CC'.:'.:':C-c-:------1 1 B" 1135 Pool Lau-'"'.-.. · " ' • \" d -·• I .. "ll~llC'J/i!ryrr. J \\•l mm'g "· · • ""•J Be• tilUI p 1 e Al U ·1 Pd '2 BR •¥e nee ..... es pcope cov'd pa1io, fncd yd, S210. HUGI':, deluxe homr, fully u °"' l ti Harbor/Bekrr area Sl40/rno. close to
NJce Lltt!r Business
H ouus U nfurn. 305 67:'>-lS'fl nr 673-6267. n1;11nt. 5 BR/ 3 BA, din'g, fl'Vll Sti:>/nio. Call 1714 • rooni. 2 BR. $170 5j7-5-159. · Rea1·h. N" prls. • ... 2%--0~·!2. ~1111 Dtc~o. * * 6-12-2181 * • A! I I ,
Art gallery, frames, 1::it1 ~. General 3 br DOL!.HOUSI-:. Full shai;: hot1r & l"ai-nprr Pr k 'i; ·l=-~-~~--"--=c I ~,--'7C-,---~~~---f u ls on y.no pt>!_, BACHELOR A t 3 b J * Cil!I :k•.f..-:'l'}l2 •
h--' n ... 111 _ lease . "P'· l 3-. o "'"· D uplexe• Unfurn . 350 Huntington Bea ch 241 Avocado !'t. 6'16-0979 P · !'i l'oom
good used furnlture. Vrry ----------3 RR. 2 ha. u11I . hon1c \\'/ a1tractive 1-lol'r. lcrw r"nt, ~ood Jt>e~f' $.YIOO req'd incl POOi Al $JOO month. Collegr
inven1ory .~-D;i!s'l n s1a!ioo Park, Co£ta r>lrs.1, 2 Rll. h11u.~,. 1n1f, S:!2;>. A1·ai! •vgn_ 6~1-6391 C'r 6!f....t538. ri.,.j Alig. N'pt Bch
CAFE, equipJ)!'d . IdE>ill fnr Call: 6i3-366.1 6-12·2"153 Eves.
nrg!lflic food~ or c11tcring.
r1 c. Rea~. 642-Zl49
Money to Loan 240
1st TD Loan
77o INTEREST
2nd TD Loan
Term1 bai;ed on el'f1llty.
642-2171 545-0611
Servin& Harbor area 21 yr&.
Sattler Mortgage Co.
3.'16 E, 11th Street
associated
BROKEA5-AEAL TORS
2025 W Bolboo 61J.J66J
3 Bedroom, 2 bath, se-paral•
Fan1ily room wltlt fireplace,
Ja.ri;:e bonus l"OQm abo.ve dbl
car g-ara..,., $275 per month.
Call ;,46-2313. Ask lor Terry
'
If{ THE REAL
'\.: ~P,'[.{\!E~S
-
nia;s & 111\\'d floors. Oecl!p v 111 "'!!!'"'.~-... ~.-.... ,.,,!!'!I apt. 1 hr(lroom house. 333 • 2 Bit ~ara_g(', IJ]dr,v JYltltl'I,
A l~o 71 ~J 2 g 1'12-ll.l6.1. .;; I 1 'I! k 1 · · ::"~<~l'~'~· ~~~·_::' ~"~··P~· ~·~1~7~·-1-oimo . Costa M esa IM1'111\CUL1\TE 1 DR, i'pls, E. 21st S1 ~ nvP, cii 1 Cl". no pP ~-
-. B[•l''I ., ""'Ill -----------La ou·1nta Hermosa .$!3;11 1110, Ill :i"'i -~ .. 1·11. B k B "' \, · ~ '"' · ;icr'1!'o" ·-drps. hl!n~. Quiet 4-[Jlex. Nr 2 & 3 BR, Cn>t,~. Drps, S\35, 'c--~""I ac ay ll'nn1 ek1n"!IT~l'y srhon!, l BR. \'/'" ~!/rl'r .. gar 1111-!1")'11 ~. l\o Pf"!s. fl.l1;r, 2868 $1:'.0. 16.J Slial lni<u", 5.il-6943 L1guna Beach
Lease, Lease Opt1nn l\-;df. 1u .~hnp;: & !11.:h larhl sinl parin.] !jrl]t, Sn1l Spanish Country Estate Liv· 1.as1111r. Apl 1. CZ\1. a/1 4 pin.
4 BR. ronvert rlen, 21 ~ EA, si'hon! ~:..'l,1/n111. Ca 11 f'll•lrl nk Sl2S, 1>·12..SJ:xl. ing & Spacious Apls, Ter-5'1[!-:;;,~.I. .:.,.--~·-~~~-~~ NEAR REACH-N"'" 1 ,\.
Rl2 'illfi ====,.----12 Ur, J1, Ila .1>lud10. Enel BR.r 1'; h11, fl<"''· J\rl1ilt!C ~~l~~~a~0~;·k~\;~2~~~: -H-·u-.--·,,-.0-9'-1-00-i)-,,-,-h---1 2:~~.P~~ii;~;'.; ~;.t1;~?'.:;: ~~~J:~;Ies~~~gg:sg:i~ T!IF. c;,\BLI~S pat!\). I::nd ol (·ul-dc-sac. NC' 1ic1~. L~f'. 2175 s Cna.
1 a, unf $l 5"fu•n $l 75 L!'R :Z Br, 1'1 Be y.·/~11r. 3;19 Cabnllo. &l2-J933. Hwy. •19-.1-WSI (It :'i2.ll..fl74~: !
Corona def M ar JSth Pl. SlJO mo, :~i~:l6G6. u-$J j;i_ Ar!uh~. Cpis, rlrps, • CORSICAN L1'do Isle
--:...--------I PLEASANT 2 hr, drps, rJm;. Newport Beach 2 Br unf $175 fur n $210 bllris fn •d 1 1 -od '"''P ll45, ~S-8392 ''' --"--------A" UTIL INCLUDED ' ~ yari W patroC. De-lii.~c 1. 2, J BR's, nr South [ .,-,-=------~·~~.[ 2 BR. Stove, N"f, Adults. No 1" ......_, • 2·137 Orange A\'e. No. Co SPACIOUS l<:i ! 2 d f1 • pets. Car, i;pace-. 'Yarrl. 514 213/693..S!J.l,J. ;2);;i mo. yrly. Upper 4 BR, 2 Special Bonus; a silver-636-4l2t'l · _ ast Plaza. !"}45--1321.__ ·' ir Y n Cl'I
Orchid A\'e., CdM. 4 RR~l~,,,~.-m-,---I B 1\. 'N r 1v c p Is & plated candle &nuffer is ;:;-;="':;-======ILGE deluxe 2 Br, 2 Ba nt'w ~pht 3 br, 2 ba, hlln e No Slngh•s e redecorated. 'i hlk ocE'en. your1 U yoll bring this ad NEWL Y D E CORATED cpts/drps, p<1t i-0. J i65 , _,s ~hr & r('frt,1:, Ci·prr 2 BR, l~ii ha, cpt. dp.'l, l"l"l'.rig, A I A "II \tl B,, d b · · -•I Charn1111~ 1 Br duplex. New .... ~...,.,... 0 , 642_1611 . ,...t'pd, 2-r<ir i::aragr. S.17;1 ,, ocean view, !Sf' $250 mo. Ca.II alt J2: 9112-76.~2 va1 ug. • . --.,,.r . \\' en you VlSlt our muue s. .,..,,..~~= 1 ~h ~~--------1 $:36-57'.lS or fi.1~1;,.10. 4 b!kg S, of San Diego Frwy C'fJt~. 1lrps & pa1n1 l..ivrly ll'''ADUL~s 1 . 2 5'1'.20 · own by a PP I; 67'rHil45 -646-2290. lrvina park l1kP surm1111rlir""" ~ ·• on .Y. quicit · .... ·15. 'PT I I 1 f 1 on Btllch, l blk \V. on Holt -,,v· B l' B GE k' , "-;::-:CC>;---;-----~ 2 BR, crp!s, drps,
PatJo, Adults, no
644-86!'1.:I.
Bltns,
pets.
DAILY PlLOT tor 11ction!
--
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:;;;;11" se 11·rrn ""p1rr to 16211 Parkside Lane. Q111r 1 111111urc Ad J1 ·1 r, j a. II,~ cs.r Mesa Verde • float. 3 Br/2 Ba, !rpl, Sl30, ·5 1~920 u s ony. gar. 2·10 E.16lh J~I ~i&-6432.
2 BR, 2 ba ths •..•••.... $26;1 sundeck. s:;.75 ~·r!y l:se. (714) 8!7-5+11 DLX 2 & 3 BR
2 BR, 2 baths, dE>n ...... $300 fi7:...7i;72 HARBOR GREENS * . I Br. S13j incld's util. , 2 Ba, enc
3 BR. 2 ba's., e1rium •• $:i:F.>I=--·~-·-------] Br. Jurri. s l 3 j I m 0 . AdulJ.q, no fK'IS. SX! Center gl\r, $150 & up. Reo\Al 011-..
3 BR., 2'li ha'g. fan1. rn1 $325 Dupl•xes, OverlookinR beaut gan-lrn GARDEN & STUDIO APTS SL, C:I!. Call &12-~~!S. :109.'i ~l11tt Ave. 546-103'1.
3 BR., 2 ba's, b011us rm S3:JO Furn. or Unfurn. 3SS palio St. h1rl ponl, Adults. Onch. 1, 2, 3 BR's. from SllO. * * t;:\l'RA 11.:r '2. Br, ~ Ba. 2 & 3 DR Unlrs now <1va1Jahl~
4 BR,, 21 ~ ha., fain . rm S.'·l~1 Avail Allg I. 103:1 12th SL ;:~n~7P0eteraon Way. C.M, rpls. drps. $13.l/mo. 9i6 Newport Beach
·' RR., den, 21.~ ha's •. $'.!65 Newport Beach across !mm Lake Pnrk. !;-"-~Ri',---;<;;-~;o.;<.;..,-:,1-";· ~"~';.;';"~"~'~&1~6-8~1~29~ .. =~~ '
4 BR .. 'l baths, family room BAY VfE\V _ 2 Br. 1 Ba. 5J&.-26~2. 2 BR. C o 1n p I et e I y ,/ 2 BR, 2 BA Sl1JDIO $l5ll. :/! BRANO NEW * : :
1n Turtle Rock ••.•.• $35() \\li..nteror y('llrly. I C~o=z~.Y~'~J~B=R~b-,-ch~,-,,~!.~C~.0-0~1 111 rertrcnr;i!rd. New\.\'/\\' cpts Cpts clrps patio POOL j $'~.i"·01 BR . Frplc, indoor/011 f '.
\VE l!AVE OTHERS * Call 675-~129 * rurn. Ulil incl. B!k froni & drps S140 mo. Adulls onJy, child, ok. 6·.ffi..-04flti. • 1qc en. heatcrl pool. !Aero~·'
11nh 11rllil,
---'l\Pul!nr '--"'-"_'-_"_._._~_'_'"_'_;! 19 l
"SINCE 1946'' Apts. Furn. 360
l#t Western Bank Bldg.
University Park
Days 833-0101 Nights Rent Btautltul Furniturt
for as lltUe 1111
• UNIVERSITY PARK *ONE MONTH 3 SR. 2 ba. townhse .... $.'\2.i
.1 BR. 2 ba~ .......... $3,15 complet• with
3 BR. 2~ 00.tha ........ $.15() your 100-;,
4 BR 2 ba. house ...... $365 Purcha&e Option
i)redhill
REALTY•
Jnrl, j!em selectioo.
24 Hour D•ly.
CUSTOM
Furnitur• Rental
517 W. 19th, C.M. 548·3·181
Univ. Park Centet". lrviM Anahrlm 714°2800
Call Anytime &3.'\-0820 La.Habra 6.<H-3i08
Fur that l!em un<te-r
try fhf! Penny Pincher
G11.rnge clutte~r Sell yQ11r
Jj(J, "Elephantl"' fast. .call Dal·
l,y Pilot Ousll:I~ now!
"
no J>('t~. 241 Co~te illesa St. rum :".,\, Country Clu b\; ocean. Suitable .I lady, $13.5. e 2 BR d o__ ,o s Ji o \\' n '\I!' d-Thurs-FrL . cpl~. rps, bll os, .,.~.at ..,,.1~2 ~.:inla Ana Avr
mo. 5.'\&-20'iO. 213·7!16·2.1~7 t'vt'5, 1>ncl J!:ar. 1\dulls, no pets. OI' cl\tl 5:17-0ZIL
LRG 1 BR. Nicely furn. , Call "'ft 6:30 pm & \~'knd!. e NOW OP Pool. patio. Nr 81'11.(:h Blvd VERY NICF~ 2 Br .. Duplex. ; ... 'i7-7407. EN •
& Ailams. Adlts. ~140. S\jJ,50-$169.50. f 1·plc., heAn11-:-o-=c-:=:::--,,,,,--..,.-120-1:!2 ~ant<t An;i Ave-. S~ ~71 7. ceil, patio, Adull11 C>rily, no * 2 BR, upper. blLns, cpts, ~oi~s 2 81{, 2 EA ·w/frple1
pe!s. Ri>f'.11 23.".W Santa Ana : drps, no pe!s. $13.l mo. 568 pr1. pa 110. Loads of closets
N•wport Beach 11.lt 6 ea.II ;,.1." 1i;,;9, \'I Wit.son. 54.'H.1760. ll!d J>OOI. !Ar:ross from 5.A .. : --e \\'E HAVE RENTALS! e
\Vinfer and Yearly
ABBEY REAL TY 642~50
Newport Heights
CLEAN 1 or 2 BR. Adults, no
pets. Lg kit. s:iz,.$1!JO. 2421
E. 161h St, NB. ~1801.
HOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
e QUIEfll e * 1 BR. Siovt", refni?. cpts, CountryClubl ,$1~.~7-02.ll;
2 Br, drP!I. new crpi·g. Baker d_!.'ps, patio $115. No pets. S~:ACLIFF' illanor Apl.!I, J ·&;:
& Harbor ihop'i;. Lockl"d 557-236!L '2 BR. Cfl"'°', rtr~s. hl!n11, gll. :
gar, Adults. no Pf'l~. $145/ $100 inc. util. B11<·helor 11.p!. rli~pl, J '1 &. llv\. p111in. !.~ii '
n1-0. 6'1:l-:l515 or &M-0753. 11·/i'{'fl'i~ 11nd Ml.llfit', 1.v w PIA~n!ia Al'P i\.~k abou1 ;
BEAUTIFUL .2. Br l~~ Ba ~109A Adults. our d1sr<H1nt. ~~2'ill2.
!-itl,Jdio, new crp1$ ' & paint. 2 BDRM studio 2 ba, C'tlC los-\\'ESTC l.!FF 11.r,.a. 2 Br' Drp~. bllos, ca rport . m garagj), rri. p 11. l 1 0 • h;i, frplc. l't'frig, AduHs :i..
Slf.O/mo. No pe.13-1 child 548-2822. ly, Freshly fl e 1 n t " d .
k 998
'
'I C · rn ""1 $200/mo. 675-1~J62. 0 . . • !'nllll(), ................ 3 BR 2 B d 1 ,,""~"""'c;;;~""-;-,--L , fl, new l"J'll. cpts, 1 B \ yrn..-....,.,. * 2 BR, I BA. GARDEN bllns, p;\Uo. S 16 j Im 0 , ' r nvi• t AP'I'S. 2 & 3 br. Unir~. Shag i:rptJO<. drps, fi4~7 or S.'IA-(l.l24 crpts. draf)t's & ll'f, $285. & '
11.,...Pr, p1111n, Mani crillng~. up. Ail. 646--0732.
irplc. i;:11r %,"l(] f:lrlrn. DF:"LU:'\'1:: '2 Br, l', Bl\. w/il' ~Rn, 11111., l!:Ar;t,t::r
~.11-:11r,1 Sl6.l/l'llO. rot. rlrp'>, ,ll'Ar. Arlult~. 23'*6 . $22.'i ,\lonni _ Y(>i!rly . : -c;~rt;;;~l~""'>""~"~'~'~~'.."'~'''._lC~l~l.'---" 2 BR riupl!.'x..r1·p1~. r!rpl, '~""'fl01'1 R"Arh Rily fii:>-!f,~2 ;
l>l!n~. frf1l r, ,ll'Ara~r· SlYI 2 BR, c pts/drps $125 D ·1 a1 Y P ilot \Vant Ads havt ·: 732 \Veelo Dr, 646-2613. &42-2920 b8rg&.ins f:'Alort · , .. --" -~1L
I
'
.. ....... ·-~ ·-. .
Thu..Wy, July 29, lm
!~ ~' _ ... _""_!~;;.I ;;;;;""';;;;"" ;;::l~.;,,,.1~1 .... ;;; ... ;;;':...~l[S]~1 1 ·-.,.-1[5J I-· .. -l[5J 1-~-1~
Ap1. Unfurn. 365 Aph., '® Office R•ntal 440 R•ntal1 Wtnt.d 460 found (f,... acla} .S.SO Auto W1xlng Rooms
..-:'--:-::---:----Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Electrlcal ~a intlnt &
~"'.'.'."'==----! P•perllanglng
ELECTRICIAN. llc.'t'nstrt, -----"'"-----bonded. Small job&, nwnt. PAINTING, llc'd tna. FrM
por t S.ach 1----------fl5 PER wk u11 w/klt. $30 DESK -i>aoe 1vallable $50 WANTED to rent or Jeue :i SMAU.. brown puppy with • * *
_Mc.;.A;_R_l_N_E_R_S_Q_U_A_R_E_G ·-°"-•-r•_I______ ~·:e,.•97::,_P_· aptJ;. MOTEL * mo. Will provide furniture yrs or more: 3 br. 2 ba. min, curled tall and black fa~. GEORGE LOBAUGH
.... "" &t $5 mo. AMwertna terviC"e 1 to 3 ml from bffch. Qulet Found at Daily Pilot front l40 BAYSIDE
A PARTMENTS I HR. <'lost to beach & shops. _R_OO_>_f_f'O_R_a<_n-tl-.,-,,-,-.,-1;,-· avUlable. 222 Fott!I A~. loc. Adulu w/lmpeccabJe ott!~. CM. Hu -t!ea coUAr VI LLAGE
fp1· ;1t!ul1s drsirina: 1u l.ive quiet a.!'ea. A-1ature: pe.rsona Montevista, ~I.a Mesa. £A.1una Beach. 494-9466 rel& u ltuorJ trom RoUinr & b!k lu~r collar, NEWPORT BEACH Gardening
.l repa..tn. 54~. eatim. Quality mat'I, depen-
dab!t. U hN. 847""""8.
.Adn11rts1 t:.eauty by the sea only. No pets. please. 6"6-096 DELUXE OFF1CES, modern Hills F;atatei. $300 mu.,="~'-'~321~·-~~-~--You are the winner of --~...,.:..-----I Plaat•r, Patch, Re;>tlr-\0 the p1·cst1a:iou~ 'A'e~tcl!U .J'.M-1402 9 11m.7 pm 9 1; 2 GEN. YARD . 1 ~~~~-~-~--PR!. room In home w/ent. & prof buildlnz. crpta:fdrpa 557-~ ot 213/378-07'6 Mr. FND: 1 mo. old Irilh Setter, t1ckrt1 to the CLEAN-UP • PATCH PLASTERING ~ea.. FROM $230 Huntington Beach pr!, bath. $2S. wk. ~7285 air cond, ample parking, Geof'it.' m.alt w/coU&r & fie& co1. Southland T~a. shrubs, ivy, Shaped, AU type&. Free etthnate&
eves. Huntington Harbour area. 2 SfEADY employed female lat\ Vic; Beach Blvd & Home & G•rden rtthaped or removed. New Call 5f.G-M2S !lfr Buekley. l1J3n11grr ' . •12.J.I Irvine Ave. N.B. .,._ Call 64;,.cJ252
PARK NEWPORT -
:;; APARTMENTS
ON BEACH I, ~R~oo-m-~&~Bo~.-,~d~-~4~0~5 I Unilll 750 sq. ft. Da,y or needs 1 BR hou• or apt, Slater area. PUue identity, Show J1.wns, sprinklen in.stalled. Plumbing
eves; 7141839-3411. C.M. or N.8. a.re1.. Would 847-!&J. at the Rototillina:, bed we-edlng .1 ----------·I
NEW APTS COsrA i\IESA, $.l:A> mo. DESK space avallable $50 like amall yard or patio.l y-~O~U-N=G.:::-,,-m-al-,--.... ---I ANAHEIM Ccmpoio;t, dirt. iraveJ de-TAKAS k Sons. Plumblrtt
J er Fronl s.m r-.1aru1'f' "'on1an, quiet place mo. Will provide tu.rnihU"e Max. $90 mo. Good refs whitish. many blk 1nark-CONVENTION live~. 64s.:H33. Jlc'd, bonded, r ep Ip•
2 BR Front $:.!42 for rrs1 \\ rit"' Classified Ad at ~mo. Answerinit servle@ &Vail. Please call 540-8308 ings. so me ta.ii, vie. Santa CENTER AL S iTmodel new co111t. FrH
Be,chelor, 1 or :.! Bedroom$, 3 BR From S37:i No , 173 cfo the Dally Pilot , available. 17875 Beach B.lvd. Isabel, C.M. Pbe pick-up at July-JG.A~. 8 ' GARDENING esr. ~3340
Mlf Townhotisrs. Spa, poolio., I po Box 1561l Co 1 M Huntington Beach. 6"2-021 177 "• u Pl C 64 .,... PIN~ call 642-567!f, ext. 314 tor prdenfni: &: •ma I JI -~===~== .l:'urnJtL1re Available __ ._._ · s a esa ]~ .....:c .. .M. &-:..62. 1an6scap'·· .,-•-,, ··•] PLUMBING REPAIR , ltflnis. r·rom S17S. Ac1'oss 8 · R t 1 ,., A ~ betwttn 9 and 1 pm oo .... •v• ... -= ......, Carpers-drapes-dishwashrr Guest Home 415 u11nes1 •n • _., nnounc--.t1 FOUND -cute Y"i _,_ .. • 54~5198. Servin" N~rt. No }ob too small h11111 Fl'!shion Islru1d 111 J11m. •' • "' C'."!aim your ti ckf't.5. fNorth • -·-.--
bnrf'e ,r., Sw1 4oaquin HJlls hea1ed pool-~aunas·,+'ll!lls * PRIVATE ROOM I Sr-.fALL SHOP w I l iving white cat vie Labrador &. County toU·fr« number ii CdM, O:>al.& ~feu., Dover • &l:2-3128 •
[h1arts. 1714 \ &14-1900. rer room-otean \dl"\~S quarters suirable for antique Samoa. f>lesa Verde. Call 5"10·12201 Shores, Westcllff. COLE PLUMBING
.BR'i:!ATHTAf<IN{; V 1 !: \\' palios-ample parking fQrh t>ldrrl:_, lady. Bridg.ht • i;hop, oUice. etc, Partly Auto transport•tion 525 0_..,:.:,:,~=·~· ------* * * Profeuional Gardener 24 hr. se1Vict. 645-U61
Srcurityguards. c eeryga,uensLJrroun ings. lurn. 2656 Newpcirt Bl d . fND: Little Beagle puppy 2 ~~--~-~::__ __ Tree. work, P TUni.ng , Sewin"/Alteratlont . .,... HUNTINGTON NutnrJous m!"als. Avail Aug C.M .. 548-2134 v ·· PERSON to he.Ip drive with collars. Brn wht b,lk Skeeters Wash N Wax sprmkJen, clean up JObs,i---·-------~~70. Hugr 2 SR apt . 1!1&h 0n 1. Cal[ 548·47.'>.1. lady to Sun Va.Uey. Idaho. t 1 v· . ' Fl · Compacts $7.25 Standards I and 1 ca p in&'. Ceorge DRESSMAKING _ HEMS
Back Bay Blufls "''/2 pv1 PACIFIC ATI'RAC store & Oftice July 3lJ or 31. 675-0737. ema e. ic. re Station, $9.25 Quick Serv. Camper'\ . 1 1 h I Summer Rentals 420 spaces $30 & up. OwnLwn _ 19th St, C.M. 642-8826. ~5893. Alterations -Fa.!f: M!IVi.~ h.,lcon1r!. rp c. Pa. IP r! 711 OCEAN AVE .. H.B. I & Mobile ~rv. aV!.11. Your Joanie * 645--0708
r*:Jl . loads ol r·losers , 7·1J ~714) 5,16.1487 HILLSIDE home, 3 secl. San Juan Capistrano, nr MALE collie -11t shaven. hOme or p[(k up. Reas. SPENCER'S lawn Service
[)omini;o Dr. fC.D.'.'>!.H.S 1 Ole open lD am.ti pm Daily acres. vje.,,-, 3 TVs, patio, I mission. 493-l)jJ, I Pen onirs 11 41.ttl looks like lion. V ic. Clean-up 4t: !"ti. main!. fl'ff est. Lawn c a T t. Alterations -642.5845
(W. 6~:i.121J0. l\'JLLIAM \VALTERS co. barbq, d-\OJasher i.lps a-6 SHOWROO!'ll mfg. & office . Eastblult. Call 644-0352. -;-&!~'~"""=·:;:,· ~-----cleanups. Re a s o n ab I e . f\'ea.t, accurate, 20 Y&an eXp. * VIEW * 1
2 n1i b<'h S2';() Aui:· 12-24 space. aose to Laguna loc. WEIMARANER. vie. new B•byilttlng ;"'00"','-213J,· Pa;;<<c,;;;;;;;;:[T~~i~l•~--------1 fl.'J:..\V 2 BE[)f\.,\J., 2 RATH 1 Parklike Bf'i'c n L1v1ng !or lnngert. S. L 11 g . $93 1·0 $3.'>0 Mo, 494-4653. Grant's 1!ore on E1trella _....; _ _.:...:., _____ EXP, Japanese Gardener. ~11• rlin . 1 nl , pool , rpt for AduHs 49!1--1186. II ARBOR Blvd. f r 0 n 1 age Per1onal1 530 SC/Capo Bch. 4%-9179. COSTA MESA Know hoy,•, up-keep. plant CERAMIC tile new k
I. sr-p \J C t • I S I p h h 2 PRE SCHOOL pest, trimmlns, clean-up. remodel. Frte est. Snull ·n11n -1.1 rr .·011th asa ~e 0 RIVATE brae on ay. -1380 sq ft. arr cond, cn.td. CHEVY OWNERS: PARK BOSl'ON Bull & Te-ie· m;v • ~ • .,.. " ' '"" ~ ·ai s p 968-3186. jobs "''e!come. ~2426. :-f'r· '.'>It'. B111·11e~ 1111-7-123 .~ z BR·lurn/iuif p..,1 pa· br, furn. collage $75 wk. 112 $325mo. Ph 642-8060. \'OUR CAR, VAN OR dOf, vie Sante. Ana Ave & ._peci ummer i'Ogram ~ · 7f,) Ai\l!COS \VAY * Uo, frplc in 2 BR. <"levalor!>. \V. Pacific Coast I-IY.'Y, DS, Industrial R•ntal C50 PICK.UP FREE AT THE Santa Isabell, CM . 549--0779. lS.:J-8-.11,fonrovla, ~ day +
L::'--:-ALMOST-READY-d~hv"shrs, crrts, drps. Pets ~~7£ss~\'inter ralt". $90. ~R ANGE C 0 UN TY GREEN Parakeet, vi e ianta Jull day sessions. Planned
AL'S Landscaping. Tree re-
moval Yard remodeling. I[ 1•1
1 ,J"f.. Sl :iff.-2 BR $185 Priv ac(·rptf'd. From SJ.\j. * COSTA MESA * 1" AIRGROUNDS ANY FRI· Ana & CoUeen Pl. C.P\1 r:~·6 ~ Ju:hes. Ages
-pa1 1U, bi lliard rn1, htd prxil 2lliiil Brookhur~t St, HB. STUDIO garage apt-clou to '$95. & $167 per month. DAY NIGHT FOR THE 646-2612 ' . $.li wk-CO~P~!·~2~
Trash hauling, lot cleanup. E1'1111oymtnt f'
Repair aprinklen. 673-1166. '-------~
"'·/ja.c111.z1. 20102 Birch St. * (714! 962·66.Jl * NHYC & bay beach. Sleeps Industrial units, ready for S PEED\VAY MOTORCY-1~=~~·~-~-~~-
l!'B• 64!.-12fll I 2 or J. Avail Aug JO thru occupancy. 110.220 PO"-'t!r CLE RACES IN COSTA FND: fttale poodle, black, 1 CHILD Catt, infant to 4 yrs.
JACK & Son law n
sef'\•ice--MowiJli, e d g in a: Job Wanted, Mal• 700
vacuuming le c I ea n-up :.I --===...,..-=--· I . : .. . Newport Beach La lxi r Day. SlOO \vk or $350 * C. NA'M'RESS RLTR * !llESA STARTING AT g yr, Joni' tail. Cypress St., Larp hon1e & yard. Have 3
S3H!n10 ,y rly. Ocean Vie1v • P ..... 1. SIGNED, HARRY Santa Ana Ht!. 633-97&!. year old chi 1 d, El Free est. 968-9929. SKlPPER OR CREW Rpf. 3 Br. 2 Ba lrg sundeck, RESORT LIVING for 4 wks . 673-0fl20. 230 Efi4~.111:85 C.M, OXL EY, PS: nl!S OF. MALE Siamese vie Bolsa Torn/MiMion Viejo area.
v;er.t clean. 64:J.-187/!. Luxury apt living 1•i/ $1 mil-* BALBOA ISLAND FER JS ALSO VALID FOR Chica k Edinger, H.B. 213 830-4370.
EXPERIENCED Ja job MuC'h experience. 21 & . panese can trs.vel. Denr.ls (213)
I · HOTEL. Apts-Rooms. By M-l 12gJ ~... ft new bldg -='--'-------Sant. a Ana ion rf'creRt1on ... s11·1mn11ng, .,.,. · FORD. PLY MO u TH , 59&-&124. :::
b.11. d Day/\\'eek or Mon th. 1\'/oll1ce, lge rear door, J7B7 , ~c'-:.:,:,-~-----BABYSITilNG lny home.
Gardener, Maintenance & 44&-2)311
clean up. 5.37-8874. ·
'CAN'T BE BEAT
SINGLE STOnY
Sol.lth Sea l\tmosphere
2 BR . -2 BATII
Carpets & drp~
Air Condit1onrd
:· Pri\'ale Patios
l-!EATED POOL
Plenty (If lflwn
Dlrport J, Storage
f!JDOE:>I VILLAGE
2."illl South Sal!11
Sa nf'11. Ana • :i.16·1525 '
.3 Hea te<l pooh
Lar~r Clubhouse er<·. BBQ
Child C11rP. Ce nlf'r
Grt ;.il new 1, 2 & 3 Brlrn1s
SOUTH COAST
VILLAS
trnnis, J Hlr ~. sand vol· DODG_E, M ER cu R y ·"FND·. L;IU• whl. -'-poo ,_ ln·d yd, hot m•"·, d•y l b 'I I b 67cr3613 \\'hillier Sl, CM. Also 1240 • '-"'-"" •• ._ ....., cv a,, lieallh cu s. saunas, • . . BUICK. PONTIAC. VW, pup. friendly, I 0 v ab I e . & nite. 642-5299. c!ubhousr. party room, N'S· LAGUN A. slerpg 4. \Vecks Logan St, CM. lj()(} sq. It, DATSUN, TOYOTA, LIN· $48-9738. ,.::_c::_::::_::.:::_::::::. ___ _
ide tennis pro & pro shop a\'flil -July 31st , Aug . 14th S195/mo. Days, 646-5033, COLN, CADILL.AC, BM\\', ' . . EXPER. & Reh, pla,ynn,
& much n1orr. Singles, 1 &: & 21st. CaH f714J 83S-5'14-0. eves 646--0681 . PORSCHE, MAZDA. HUP· FND: Kittens, klttens, kit· lncd yd, Mon·Fri. Vic.
2 HR •. Furn/ t:nlurn. Rents z Br nr Bay & Clubhouse. f'OR LEASE 4800 sq fl . MOBILE PINTO VEGA lt"ru;. All colors. PIJJ call 0range/Z2nd, CM. 548-9513.
Jrom $1 35. , .No lease re-Lido Isl(". S 15 of wk. Carpeted oles, air c:t1nd, tile AUBURN AND ' CO R 01_54_ .. _9_7_38_._______ WILL BABYSIT
'1Ulred, Models Open Daily S48:J/mo. CaJl 673-7183. Llonrs. Iluorescent hteit, kit. 2 OWNERS. FNO: One parakeet. Vic: r.1y HOME. IRVINE-NB
10 to 8. sets ot baths. &aut. bldg * FULLY LICENS"D * L_ido t!le 675-0490 to iden-• 64!.-3029 •
. 0 !or lite m!g. 1555 Placentia Reoova1ed H;•d" Sp'·lt"·'i·t Illy. Carpet Service
I
BALBOA lslanrt, attr 2 hr, i:.
SOUTH BAY CLUB li ne~()('; nice patio. wner; A NB 645-0770 u• " " ... 11.100 1 --'---------~1 ._;..,.. _______ _
(,IL!S( /or sing], ~Pl•l 67J-1:il3. ve · · · Ad vice on all matters. l'NG male tabby ca t found 0 ,.-. I R I 425 NE\V industrial bldg, pnme Love, Marriage. Business \'ic 22nd St, N.B. 642-4025. J HN 'S Carpet & Upholstery
I'\e1vport Beach Vacation enta s cr.1 !oc. 1253 Logan Ave. Readings gi\'en 7 day& & C!e11ners. Extra Drl
fj..,·!ne & 16th. £43·05,;0 BiGSEAR LA!\E. 3 bdrm. 1 1~ lo 2000 sq . ft. un1t1, See y,·eek, 10 a.m. io 10 p.m. FND: Little blk & wht pup-S!-an1poo fro!e Scotchguard
OAKWOOD GARDEN
APARTMENTS
(resort living for 11rlults)
Nrwport Beach
lfilh & Irvine fi.lZ.SI70
e NICE .--
The most beautiful view of
!he bay & ocean in the
l!Rbnr area. 2 BR. 2 BA
flpt~, for IPa~e. 642-2202
ha, every!hJng furn bu! lln· Mr Thonia~ on job site or JU N. El Camino Real, py. Artorablr.. 548·9738· t Soi I R ' t ar d a nt 1 ) •
II '7'1'17 FND· H•wk 642--4~ D'!grea&tn k all c:t1lo r Pns, ;<;]Prp,7, $100 v.•k for 4. ca eves .r .. · San Clemente · · """' hrighteners & 1(1 minute 1)44--0WO. RENT M·l, 1125 i>q ft, $133 492-9136, 492..0070 Lost 555 bleach for white c&rpets.
Rentals to Shar• 430 mo. Avail Aug 1st. llaJ EXPERIENCED Save your money by u.vin&:
Logan. No. 7, C.!'1-1. Houae·sitte.n avail * * * me extra tripi. Will de.rn
SHARE apt w/girl art stu. 675-5116. Protect your home & prop. GLENN MARTIN livini:' rm dining rm & hall
rlt"nt tn CdM. Ve ry plt>a.sant STORAGE unit avail Aug Current locaJ N!fs 4807 CORTLAND DR. $15, Any rm $7,5(), couch
& pvl.;; :\fin. in UC I. 5 min 1 o. h s= tlor ~-~ nJ I CORON• DEL "•R -N e11.·port oo::ae , ""'' UV<U u o Y "" fTil'I $HJ, C'bair $5.15 yr~. e)'(p. is
!O NB. S!OO per mo. Ready 646-1724 545-3315 You a~ the winner or what counts, noi method . I
h.' A"i· 15th . 644-46&6. 2 l;"k•t• to th• ----1 455 "GHOST Writer" needed. '" rlo work myself. C.ood ret.
COMPLETE lay,·n & iarllen· Job Wanted, F•m•le 702
J.ng aervice. .
Jim 548·040S
L AND S CAPING-Pruning-
Clean-up. S prin klers
repaired. Free est. 557-0070.
Exper. Japanese. Gardener
Complete y~ &ervice. Neat
& Rel ia. Free est. 642-4389
* * * THOMAS BEDFORD
18663 REDWOOD
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
You are the win.nu ol
2 tickets to the
Southland
Hom• & Garden
Complete Gardenirli Show
Service at the
Free. Estimates 673-1166 ANAHEIM
LA\VN Malnt. Hauling, new CONVENTION
lawns, clean.u p, prunin&, CENTER
Free est. CaU 546-7379. July 3(}.Aug. 8
DICK'S GARDENING Please call 642-5678, ext. 314
Residential.Commercial between 9 And 1 pm to
& Clean.Up, Pb &12.0473 claim your tickets. (North
· · County roll-~ number is
EXPER. Hawaiian Ga.rde~r 540-12'20)
Complete Gardening Ser-.._ • •
vi~. Kama.Ian!, 6<16-4S7fi. -ATTENTION SAN JUAN
Hauling CAPISTRANO AND SAN
.
J.101 !llacAr1h11r All·d.
545-8~2.'I
; Sa nta A na
Sl\li 2;. a p1rCf' 2 Br 11• 'pnol _s_••_r_•_g_•_______ Paper researched. y 'l u Southland 531-0101.
f11rn. ull r<l. !'Ila lure woman BOAT & TRAILER v.-ritP, I pay. Call MA-4816 Home & Gard•n I ~D~,-.,-n~o-nd~C~.,-,.-1~c~1,-,-,-,,-, YARD, garage, cleanuf)6. r>IEN -Are you lookini
CLEl'vIENTE BUS INESS.
Apts.,
.~urn . '
In sh11rl! \\' nurse. Ev('s -STORAGF.: bt.,,'11 12 p.m. & 4 p.m. Ask Show Avg size room S8 Removf' trees, dirt. ivy, for a capable, qualiiied sec·
o r Unfurn, 370 VILLA MARSEILLES _1_·""-'"_; ~-" -Fl'I. 645-5918 HUfl!1ngton Bell A!'Ca fnr Ro11 &L th,. Repalring & !mlallationi1 ~4~~~~a de r' backhoe. retary: Moving to s.JC. Wish
BRANO NEW \\'!SH to .i;harP lovely large ,,;47-3620 af! ~pm APCARE ANAHEIM Free Esl. 645-1317 1--'---------1 en1ployment in area. Cdn-
SPACIOUS Ba rk Bay home with _R_o_n_t_a_l_s _W_a_n_te_d ___ 4_6_0 V11.l11"ctomy. Abortion, Adop. COCNEVNETNETRION Carp•nter TRASH & Caraa:e clean-up, •tact /l·l!"!!. Ca1e. 2016 Wal-
& 2 Bd • t hu~inr:ss Ji:idy. 6~f.-<l.1l!i. tlon. Info &: C'Ollnseli"". 7 days. SlO a load. Frtt est. lace. Apt. F, Costa. Mesa,
r m. l"'p $. "6 July 3~Aug. 8 CARPENTRY Anytime. 548-~31. 92627.
Adult Living \\'ill shiu·e /urn 2 hr i:ipt , * .. * ,"~'-"="~·~-~~~~-]Please call 642-5678, ext. 31.f
Furn. & Unfurn. $77.50 mo. Call all 5 p,m.. CHARLES BUEL SINGLES. Don 't be between 9 and l pm to MINOR REPAIRS. No Job MOVING.garageclean-up&LADY wants hou&ecl@anil'I&' Di~hwashrr. color coordtnat. 0_1_:.-_2_1:_,~1_. -------P.O. BOX 684 lonely-dance Je11sons. no claim -.u~ .... ,,,,, tNo"th Too Small. Cabinet fn gar. llte hauling. Rea sonable exper o1vn trans $.1 SO pe~ -HUNTINGTON BEACH ,,~ • "" • qes & other cablnelll. Free estimates. 645-1602. hr. M'i-~"~1 .• ,,,·,· p.·m. ed aripH11n ces • plush shag SHARE Lovely hornP near cono·acts, 534-2221 arr. 6 County tolJ.fre.e number is """' <1.1
t!.arpet • choice o! :l c:olor ha.v, Lido Island. Cl'ii!drPn 'l'ou are the winner ot pm . 540-1220) 545·8175 U no !~.!,wer leave/ TRASH Haul ing, Ga.Nlge & AIDES for Co nvalescence
sf'hemes • 2 batti.s . stall \\'rlcome. Call 67:1-718..1. 2 !icker1 to the ffiSi. at ~~·•· H. O. '.·ard Clean-up. Reis. Small elderly care or family---.'
b I-d ~ SoutLland NEED use or car for 2 mo's, * * • Anderson b 1 5-18-8578 ........... s ow ers • m , •vre wa1u-Garag•s fo r Rent 435 n d \VIII n nl ytiur spare c11.r. \"HITE G , JO s y,·e come, , Homemaker1, 547-66Bl.
robe doors • Indirect Jight· ----------Home & Gar en P.eliable. Call 8~160 dflYf, : erman Shepherd In • LET PAul do 1 I . CLEANUP, earai'e & yard,
G·eMe ral
-PALM MESA APTS.
Bachelnr linl 11r11 .. , ... $1.lJ
Bitehelor furn ........ Sl~J.
1.sa unfurn .......... S140.
I-BR furn ........ fmn1 Sl.'i.'I.
2·B.R. unlurn .......... $160.
2·BR furn ........ from $173.
Ing Jn lcitcht"n • breakfllsl LOCKED DBL GARAGE -S~ow 536-.&Y.t It 6 ll .,.,,knd ic. of Santa Ana Hght&. Carpentry, renclni'. concrete Lite haulina: & rardenin&:. Help Wanted, M & F 710
•SAU1\A bllf. huge priv ate fenced suitable tor ~n1ail boat, aL1ht ;i a pm s. Home addre1 s 10101 &._ pa i nting . WoTk **Call 543-9735 **
• JAC!.ZZ I patio _ plusb Jandscaplnr . l'an1prr or personal prop· ANAHEIM PHOTOCiRAPH a beautiful Cypr~s.&. San/a Ana Hg11. guaranteed . Z8 yra t'XP. LI Adm in!stra.tive Tra.inu
e POOL
156J l\·lrsa Dr. Santa An11 brick Bar-B.Q's _ lar&e heat. ert)'. 177 E. 22nd St C!'lf. CONVENTION model. Sonia's Stodlo 1725 Approx 100 lbt . Hai choker 8-3247, Houa•cleanln9 AD l\fAN APPRENTICE
ed pools & lanai. I G ----· --CENTER. \V. Chapn1an, Orana:e. 1-7 chain with Hu n!lngton Bch ---"'--------Part Time
A'"Zl'G ,\d,•lt L••••ng l lOI S B . t I St I ARA_GE !or rP nt. pl-:a~11nt pm. 673-1166. ta,g, An~\vers lo ":'-m". EXPER. re.modelinR:, Bay&BeachJanitorial 5118 ,.,..rv.·eek Ex-r•·tp'" ·""' ' ' , o. r1s O • f<K:at10n rradv RCCI!~~. $10 ,July ]').Au~.~ '"' cabinets, repairs, malnt. No Crpl.!, windows, tlooni t>tc. ,..~ ' ,,... '""' 1""-•
BC'a:11. I .t Z BR ful'n O<' Un! {t,;. [If), N. of So. Coast Plau) nvi 6 ~34j(} • Pleay. call 642.3(i78. ext 3I4 t'LCOHOLICS Anonymou~. Rl'.ward. 540--0821 Mike or job 100 small. Rea&. . but not necessary . .!¢~· :•elf <'lean ov~n~. I Santa Ana 1-0ff--:--R "t' ~1---~44700 I bctwt"en 9 anrl 1 pn1 ro -~P~ho~n~,~54~2-~7~21~7"".o~r~•~T~i-1•[;6~7:\-4~~>313~~D7io-n~•~•7l-16~fo-r7bo_th_ [ i~....,.iitJ~22~4i'.i'R'vJ;;-;-n;;:;;;~ D=~s~ ·~r~o::::1~·d'1"'14091. t 835-5701 personnel ,D 11' l1n 2 Rrl d 1spl~. shag PHONE: 557·8200 ice •n a rlaim your ticketi. tNorth P.O. Box 1223 Costa J.fesa. num trs. 1 rom ' 0 AID ES, exp'd, Ba p t i 1 t . < CARPENTRY by Durkan 4 SlS per day All areas rpt&, drp~. J8rUZ7.I · ~a11na PROFESSIONAL Bldg. 4-5c Counly ~oil-free number 1s MASSAGE ,. rela.xing ~X· CHILDREN SAD, LO ST ,Jnne!! Custom \~work. . . . CX.nvalescenf Ho!pitaJ 661 ~Th~. Hug,.. pool Thr Ja ~1e~1 dr.!w 1n !hi' \\·est "Q It . Atr-•ond, crpt<, drp•. 5-10-1221'11 ""'rienr.I! 163$5 0 Bolta S~lALL WHT FUZZY POO-_s_;"jt;.{,S;;i>l;;'~· Jo;;;;;;;i!,,-D.';;:---f-~C~e~nt~';'~'~'·;C;-~M~·.,.,-,,_-·-~,
M · W od I " " " '" Formica. etc. Rezid , comm. H 1 · 8 D err1mac o s .. a D111l.11 Pllot Cla ssified ~rl rrnrktni::, Xlnt Inc 3.)() E. ~~~·--·---*---ChicA Rd, H.B. M&-;i'l22. OLE TYPE, FE ?.l A LE 646-5l6.!. ou sec eMing Y ay. A re~ponsible v.·oman to
42·),\l,..n·inillr \IA~. C ,\t, ,\rl fi.l2-~'6i~ J7t11 S1 C.i\T. PETE BAR· COUPLf; wl 3 chldrn desire Social Clubs 53S ~~A R[gLt..f~.LLAVRJC~ ·c-.-m-1-n-t,_C_o_n_c-re_t_o___ Q\\'ncJr~~;tion manage !Pnnis shop. Xln t
Apts ., i\pT,,, RETT I'.!.TY frl2-43J~ tn man11g .. apr 11nits. 2 yrs ---------------'--"-'----1 npr1y. 1927 Harbor, C.1--l.
Furn. or Unfurn. 370 1 Furn. or Un fur n. 370 DESK liPAce available $5() exp. R('f1, Call anytime. S\\'1nging Couples NWPRT HTS. 7 I 2 l · PATIO Specia.li&ts. Add !11esa. Cleaning Service 645-314110 to 6.
mo. \Viii provide furniture _li4_2_-7_9_;,_._______ \\!IDE WORLD REWARD, PLEAS£ CALL distinction to your home C:11.rp~ts, \Vindows: r.IC'Or etc . ATTRACT. WAITRESS
N•wport B•ach Newport Bea ch
·tornple11!y ow1f1\ltd aym • 8olli1rri1 room • l1rge 1r;tivi·
·1lfi room fnr O~nc•nR, C.11d Playing, "•rtltt • Olympic
\ile pool • One ~nd 1wo bedroom 1p1r1men11, with
1 '~ft1ger11or, b1.11ll·ln r~nRe, ov en, •nd di,hw•1htr •
·,P11vAie·v1ew p~i.o~ 1nd ba lco nies 1djo1n each 1p.1rlment
~.Ca rports ric~t to "'very ap•r1menr.• from SI.SS
"Vista clel Me68 Apartlll6flt&
' FOR BEAUTIF UL PEOPLE
••
I ' I
'""'• l
1691 Mesi Drive
Newpcrt Besch
(71-4) S4S..,.95S
Ask for Mr. and M~.
Wi1t11m Nay~, M 101gtil'1
M1n111M hy
Sou!htm Couri!let
Ma111gemcnt ComPfOY
at S~ mo_ An~\\·ering service f'nr thal itPm und('r $:..0 _ _:.11~4~"1~8-:=:::_· ~S7~l~~7~1=":__i,,0,'"'="'=· -'~].="""==-:-;--;;~ \\'lth a custom patio de!ii!'J· Resid. &. Commcl. 5-18-4lll E1;pt'r. Not under 21. NO
11va.il Ah!e. ,;n5 No. El try the Ptnny Pincher ' DAJLY PILOT for 11c1ion! 2 do&:t. yount: re males. J-Blk rrl esrecia!Jy for your homt , Iron ing PHON E CALLS. Apply in
Cam i nn Rra•J , San I.ab. 1-mixed Germ. Sh'"?· Quality. Experie n c e . s rf & s ! · 5930
Cleml'nte. 4~2-4·120 f., L!ib. Vic 19th & Harbor. rRONfNG dr:ine in my home per.;.-1n u • ir oin, Satisfaction. Ea~on & Sons $l.Z' ,~ L-W Coast Hwy. NB.
V Ew OFFIC E S * * * * * * S~ Re111.w:J ror either. ~I~ c tru 11 !'i48--0769 " "'" BAY I Ap! A Ek'mard, C '.\-l .:c=°'='=-:='~'="=·~·::::.c.:.:=·'--** fi45--08l6 ** BABYSfITER, my hf)m e. 2 ~luxP Alr.Co11d1llonf'rl TRD. concrete \\'l'k for 88 5Q children, C.1\1. 5 d•y wk. :J.ll)...5630, Ch.a..rhe Gotri, 8-6 M l Lido ArPa • :10f' Sq F1, yrls of whi!I" <'al'fl"'fing PO ov ng CaU aft ;, pm. &16-5105.
Rr11lonnn11rs Rkr 67.1-6700 T d ' p d • p.m. Bnx 2353, Laiuna Htl!s, 1110VJNG _ For your local or BAR MAID wanled: Apply
"-0 E--,,. . ra er S ara 1se !LOST; Blond Afghan. black 92"'3 ST< rR ~ nr 11 1rf'. l"'e .. vporl & mask, 8 mo'a. Vic: Anaheim _ (}.} · --------1 Joni dil;ianct movinr , call day~. VIKKI'S Lounge,
BRy Ccnl('r. 21'1.'>2 NPwport QUALITY Cen1cn1 Work. Let OK Van & Storaa:e. ~ur 1791 \1 Newport Blvd, C.M.
Rlvd , C~t. 525' Uri! pd. 1. St · · C . l\r · Ow NE R George do it. Lic'd. bonded. local alll('d agent. Palletiz!'d ~S-9242 ,., 1 nes HEARTBROKEN, PLEASE ~~~~-,-~~~-l -~'.'.!:.!c~~~.~~~1 .. KE'R:-"~"'i-;-;u.;-;;-:: fi.46-l .1 . Rt:TU RN . 548-56 13 , _645-1695. &toragealsoavail,831--0400.BAKER. e.xperienced,
SUB LETTING Wt slr-Htf Ofr. fi4&-72XI. RESJD. Concrete Speclaliati;. Painting & perm 11 n e n t. Trotter' a
4 Nie,. u room!I !720 sq rn t • F•ther & Son Te & m. p h B ktry 234 Fort t Lacuna Ne .... •ly painted. Call 5-45--8447 I mes LOST : Gray Schnauzer. Vic. 539-945e snytlme. aper angtng a ' I '
!Qr dPtAils . We~tclil! Siiopnr ctr • ..:::::..::.::;:..;:_c:..::::c:_ __ ~ Beach.
Florirta. tag. Answers 10 PATIOS. walks. drive, install PAfNTER, now 1 Cho 0 I BARMAIDS-Exp'd. Apply in
1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM dollars Truffles. Reward. 1215 new Jay,•n1, 1aw, breAA, teacher:. Ex~r/lnter., person btwn 1-3 pm.
From JOO sq/rt. 35c sq. ft. Pembroke Lo. 646-9134. rc1nove. 548-8668 for e&I. aecoua. C@ihnp, •Ir 1 es s Mon-f"rl fl t the G~n
675-241;4 or 541-5032 \._ __________________ )jV:nMiu:!\MiliTE'doiC'Jiihi equip. Work cuarn. Rea.1. Lantern, 1930 Placentia, 7/'fl MALAMUTE dog l!ght CEMENT WORK. no iOb loo 646-4Slg,
• XL.t.lT OFTTCE SPACE nurty le mile "Foxy .. &h small, reuon11ble. Free -=-=-==i;;:-\ii;;;i;;;;;;---[o'C~.M~. =-=,----,--,--,.--,,,-[
nnw svai!. Lido Bldi;:. 3355 4 OR l! Unit~. Xln! income.. Jaruar XK 120-C: t}'J)e tixed area r e war d . 536-4202 J::stim. H. Stu.Dick, !WS-8615. f\o Waalinr BEAUTY Opt e xp~ r .
/111 t1do. N.B. 673--4501. Trade cq u1ly for 1 BR. 2 BA head c-oupe, rebuilt ena;. 629-8642 e • CONCRETE, f'loon, * WALLPAPER * f/time, Take o~er clientele
GROUND floor exec11rive of· moblll' hn111e. nr 3 BR nins ~oort . clean ~Y· c\g.JL0,..:.:51'""~.~L~,-,-m-al_•_S<_~_po_in_t patios. drives, ildewalla. When )'OU ca1J "Mac,, In busy H.B. salon. Prt~nt
fiee space for rent..Coast home. \VIII 1ske 2nd TO to 11.rer1e mllch. w/clg 1. Value Siamese vtc N. Laguna Bch. Llc'd Reu. Don 642-8514. 5'8-l4« 64&-tru opr, moving out of •ti.le.
H"''Y in N.B. ~9647. adJ. r qry. 962-4219. Sl<:$5 for TO or '! 531.5033 REWARD. 4ru.-023J. PATIOS & WALKS PROF. p&intini ext/int, neat 968-3080, 542-<M32, Evt1. * NE\\'PORT BEACH H11ve. 40 acrr& recreatiOn \Vant $10,t:XX> boat or Rolli SMALL blk &. brown fem.tie free tttim. &I~ v.'Ork. ACC0\.11 c e i 11 n g a ' MS-3440. -·~ ~ 1, •=-land nr Rertrting. Jakes. riv-R H 1 ••• bid __ .:.:,::;_.:.::=c.:.::..:=-airless_ spraying. Ref 1 .1-8~ECO::.,.~ME-"=-,-D~I=STR==ra~•=~~.1 ,..,,,...-•. ,,.~, · •""· oycr -ave ea~ gs 5hepherd, vi(' of 15th & 847 u avn
Pb. l\lr. Ervin, 67:).-1601 er&. Want TD's. other trade 1,,, lot 144' x ~· at 1120 OrAnz~. CM. Ma-1749. Contr•ctor -1358. Income Xlnt af!f,r tn.inlnJ:
SQ ~-1 6 .-1 nr any terms for S4500 eq, Harbor Charle• Quintard INT le Exte:r. Painting. completed. Unmatched op-e JOO · r • · '' m 0 • St M :)46...~ 549-1366 R It -.. , 2992 MALE Cock--&·Hel, ]01t vie. ADDITIONS to Co m ' l . s-.&758 Crpl'rt. drp'd. Co1ta Mesa. lln eyer e& or . . 19th & lrvlne. Rewud. Ccmplete Service, pla111, Lic'd, im. Free esl. 30 yrs portunity, Phone 54 .
Call 64~21311 HAVE 10 HOUSES, L.A. &: Horne. shop <Mech·Elec.1 64fr2977, eaUma.1•11. Joe Rowe. Gen. ex..Plfr. Chuck, JOC.ll ttfa. BOAT CARPENTERS
0t'Aflil' County incl Bev. 1----------Contr. 642-M97/666--920J. 645--0809. Wil'h #.Xptlr. buildlna: l&rp
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
--------:-
Hiiis, Hollywood. Newport, IUd io. TV kt:•·hA ~ester, RE\VARD. G1'Ay ltvi~ with [~~~~':::"'!'~~~c__ [ iv~INiNiYLif.'-;;p~&~P~'~'~hha;-;;n~r~l~o~g[ custom yachts. Wll1a.rd Boat
CdM. Owne~ wa nt land, par"'" wor • P r w11.re waJI~ I. ke)'I or Dan Field& MY \Vay, quality home 1peclall1t, work ;uarantttd, Workl, 1300 Lop.ft Ave, C.M.
unit&, bo.ilt .:ir '! Bkr. 67:J...1144 l11'ms. Want 1970 Honda I70. Shaw's C.Ove 833-•291 ' rtmod. Wtll1, ttilint, ftoora free eat, D&n Schwa.rul----------1
.\'iO. ~·983:l LOST blk ma;~ kltt•n wltl•• etc. No job too am&IJ. 547..s846 or ~2182. Will trade 10 levt'I, irrigat· 547...(X).'W! U hr f'ri •Crea w!J l"tntals in HAVE $1 4,(')((l eq. in Mt. collar, Lido vie. nam~ . • IN, urv. PROFESSIONAL Jlll !.ntlni _
Ht'tnet tor Oranite C.O in· cabin at Runnln1t Springs. EZTt, 673-0451. Addition& * Rt'mOdellnc t nt•rior/exterior. Quality
come Pl'flperty, \Vant bulldtbl• land or unila Gerwick Al Son Lie k & rlAJ 561 74~
Call TI4 /962·2561 in Orll'l&:• ONnty. B73-604l * ' ~TO P;F'ES:~~AL. Pai~tins0
i ·1111""' Re11lty 546®• i i r~I LOVELY 3 hr, 1% b.11., bl.&t • . lntlrudfelt tnter/exter. Hon«1t work.
BOOKKEEPING
MACHINE
OPERATOR ment. 1ruccn, prime N. TRADE LOW MJLEAGEJ ';mmmmm~;;;: I TIME FOlt Lie. Ir lns. 548-71$9, 645-5300.
Glendll.le rt. f<1r quiet CdM MO~ff:. like ntw. f'OR ll ING H t I
'b + · 1213 "'7 .,., SMALL R·2 LOT. PR'~ Schoolt I. e P AT NT ; one a , Pr9fffably w th ~~
• ' '"'· • j ~ ·•u • or •<on 9u1 K CASH ruaraote<d work. Llc'd. on the Bu'"""" E.<OOfl
222 Spen<:rr St. Glend11l<. EAST COSTA MESA. ln1tructlon1 J75 Any &Ut job. Call 8~741). l)'lt$m. Includn poftlna Of
1969 mm 4 Dr. euttom 5'i9-lt7J PVT piano lf'tt!IONI, i is mo, THROUGH A PA I NTJNG/p.ai>'rln,c, 18 tceount&rtctlv11.ble.1enetal
p/1, p/b, am/tm rt1.dlo. ex· \Vhll.t do you have-to tra.de? ~ hr ta. Wt!l'k. Yrt. ln llarbcir area. Lie It ledtf:r , payroll etc. rtne
t-eptionally clean. Tra.de tor Ust It herp. -In Oranre * 64l-9294 #.Vtt • DAILY PILOT bonded. R.et'1 turn. 642-2356. ""°rk1na «>nditionl. pod P'Y
Int, f'q. 1n hOugt_ or v.·hat Count)'& l•l'l'••t read trld· & attractive trinfe benefit&.
have ,)IOU 1 962-&539 tnr po&t. 642-NiTS IT'S Seaeh houM timf, Bic· WANT AD Why 1tor• n tn lbe a ttic Cati Mn, GlftnmM at the
a:e1t .eltctSon evm-! .st. ttlf! when you can rum 1t Into DAILY Punt, 642..U2l, eirt. * DAILY PILOT Cl&oaUl<d 642.5678 mon<y lhrourh o DAILY 271. Medon TIO'\'I'! PILOT Wsnt M. * * * * * -------· ----· "' --~ --....
4J DAIL V PILOT *
SEE IT FREE
Everything For Your Home
Only ~Jajor Flower Show in
Southern California This Year!
J[I] '~~-"""'-·~l[I]
Find Your Name
If your name is l11t.d In a 1pecial ad -It could appear un~er any
clas1ification, 10 look at them •II -phone 642°5678, E wten1ion
314. between 9 a .m . •nd 1 p.m . to make arrangements to p ick up
your ticketJ at any convenient DAILY PILOT offic•.
Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT
~""'""""'_·__,J[§)I I~
810 Misc•llaneou1 8l8Mi1ceil•neous 818 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Want.d, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710
BKKPFL One who has work-
ed w/CPA ofc. Exper. In
posting to journals & gen'!
ledger, payroll. Se 11 d
nsume tn P .0. Box 2203,
NB.
DRAPERY v.•ork room girl, •
exp onty. COIT DRAPERY
SERVICE, 1702 Nl'\Yp6rl
Blvd. C.1\1. "
JONES TIRE SERVICE
ls f:Xpanding in Orange
County and requ1re1
~CONVONTION
T\ ITICENTER
DOORS OPEN
We•kendJ -17 Noon
Weekdays • S p.m .
SACRIFICE-BY
OWNER
Desperate must ise!J? Be-.tul
nr ne•v Ear'11t"r American ** AUCTION ** EXP ERIENCED * DRIVERS* * Cornmercia.l Sal~men
• Ttre Servicemen 800 Weit Katella, Anaheim, California sofa & love .!!eat, a· rortC'i' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! table, ~q. & tiex<1gon coin·
FRIDAY 7 P .M., JULY JOTH
Estate of Camille Aloi, Actre1~ & Dancer
Mesan Baby Grand piano & bench, 11-pc.
dining roon1 se t. Bdrnl set. Old & unusual
pieces. Tables, Se\\•in g rnact11ne s, Radius,
Lan1ps & so !orlh. Son1e boxes & perso na l
items, Colored TV's, Lale n1odel organs.
Antique pianos. Bdrrn sets. C'hests. tvlattress-
es, Divans. Dinettes. 1 lot of storage ANO
MUCH MOREi
n1ode. QtJeen size Salen1 BOYS lB-14
to del!ver papers in the San
Clemente, San Juan Cap is-
tnno and Capistrano Beach
ana.
Na Experience
Necessary!
* Front End Mechan1c1 * Brake ~1eclian\cs
Salary plus bonus
~tust have clean Calif. drJv. Opportunity to !ldVall(.,. l[Il] I IITTl I Jl:"il maple l-~a rly Arn<'r bdrm
L--'-""_.,_-_, _ _J if. Emplo~mentll!J EfT¥1[oymeottl!J ~-et. .P~y. S.18:4918.~
~;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;1F INE furn -Moving sinallt'r ing record. N0t under 25. Company paid benefits
DAILY PILOT
492-4420
YELLOW CAB CO. Apply; W-49 t-farbor Blvd.
186 E. 16th St., C.M. Costa J\lf:sa
~ home quick : d e s k 1
Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & f 710 Help Wanted, M &. F 710 w/etia11~. \Yall mirror, :::c::::-c:--------J Vanity bnrh, rolf tbl, rorrlf'r ~'IVE \Vomen NPeded to !bl, t<1ble lrnp, & more-le;ik,
Learn & teach prolessioo.I "•lnl a11[(/ whr. Ser :1734
n1akc-up. 1-'/t1n1I.', p/llme. Cardinal Dr. CM. 546--7144.
.Exe_c. position avail. Call CD"flVEo 7· sofa, perf<'t't
V1v1anc \Vooelard Cos1nelk'ti. cond, IJ~h! bcigr, green If.·
.}44-!464. blue pattern, $125; <-omplctc
GRANT BOYS
SALESMAN
DR IVE\\'A '{ salesmen, ex· MAINTENANCE man-Bapti!rt NE\VPORTER Inn nc<'ds
p e r. w /I u be ex ll er . Convalescent Hospital, 661 middle aged or older 1nilll'
Overtime <It Orne & 1,. Center St, C.r.1. garderier fur perman<>nt
Boyd's Arco, 490 E. 17th Sl, i\IAJD, exp'd or will train. position. No ph ealls pis,
C:\l. Chalmers Apts. ApJ)ly in p('rson. ask for i'-lr.
EXPER. Career minded to 494-9U4 EU1s (Head Ga1·dcner! 1107
WANTED v.·ork mlo asst. mgr o! finel iii~~~~-=-=~:':':'::'" I ;J~o~m~bo~·~··~•0R:gd:·.:·;N~.~B':·_~~
ladies clothing chain. Please MANAGEMENT PAL..\1 SPRINGS -~ales
apply in person, Backstreet, X·MILITARY OFFICERS rJl.'rk f1)r !enn1.~ & golf shop.
For Sporting Goods No. 25 F'ashlon Island, N.B. 615-34•11 10 to 6. BE1WEEN AGES 25-30-
& Camping Department. EXP'D bookkeeper for N.B. IF YOU HAVE RECENT-PBX TRAINEE
Exper. preferred.
This Could Be A
Career Opportunity.
Apply in person
Between 1:30 & 3:30 PM
The Grant Boy•
1750 NEWPORT BLVD.,
C'OSTA MESA
Equal opportunity employer
sporting goods store. Good LY RETURNED FROM
starting salary. Pre !er VIETNAM \VE Ii.AVE A
person aC'quainted w/retail JOB Tif.AT YOUR LEAD-
salcs. Permanent position. ERSHIP QUALITY WILL
Xlnt \\'Orking cond in ron-F1T RIGHT INTO. YOU
genial surround i nga. \VILL ACT AS A RECRUIT-
847-5006. ER FO R A LARGE LAND ~E0x=P=E=ru=E=N=CE=o-~ba'b-y-,,'11-,-r1 INVESTMENT 00. INTER-
for 3 mo old baby, 3 morn. VIEW PEOPLE \\'li.0 RE·
wk. J\-ln;. Stanly, 54&--8153. SPOND TO OUR ADS.
CAN'T BE Af'RATD TO
MEET OBJECTIONS, EXP'D, Waitress-Attractive,
21-30 yrs. See C h u c k
Yeager, at The White Hor5e CH ILD ~ wanted for girl, lnn 3295 Nev.•port Blvd "Salary + Bonu5 Plan
g & boy, 5, nr Cordillera N.B. ' • Pllllh Oltices -----------1• Fringe Benefit& Elem. School, 1'.1i!sion Vie-EXPER R. E. Salesman for e Start Immedia1ely
jo. &D-<Wl2> aft 8pm. f ast gl'O'NlnG Co. 0. C. S!rout
CLERK: This Is the chance Realty, 34000 Coast Hwy,
for the 1halli beginner to Dana Point, 496-1811.
start a career in die fir.an-f /C Bkkpr $550
cial Y.'Orld. A lot of public Thro Trial Ba.lance
relations. Start $345. CaJt Loraine
CALL NOW
M,,
547-6771
Ask for
Kent Adams
New plush sui!e o! ofcs open-
ing now needs alert. sharp,
attract. person. No ex:>er.
necess. ~-
Call Manon i<.lann. S.1.1--2700
DENN IS & l)l::NNIS
Prrsonnel Agency
2082 i\1ichclwn Or.
Irvine, Cahr.
PERSONNEL
DIRECTOR
IX>t;ree, Ex/J('rienced
Call Mn;. Scknudt
\VC"stc!1fr
:-'crronnel A~ency
2().13 \\'estcliN Dr., NB
&15-2770
PHONE SOLICITORS -Your
home. your hours, \Ve pro-
vide leads. Local calls only
Ez $40 day. Apply, tl5 Stair
Collt>l.:f' Blvd, Anaheim or
6»-44~1(1. Call J ean Brown, 540-0055 \VeS'lclift
COASTAL AGENCY 2>13 \VestchH Dr .. NB
77!!0 Harbor Bl at Adams Perronnf'l Agency 1~~~~~-!-!-!-l:~~~=:.1 PRE -SC HOO L Dirt>r·
COOK-RELIEF SHIFT &i>mo
BEAUTIFUL NEW PORT FISHING TACKLE
Management
SALES
MANAGEMENT
MEN
EX·:'lllLITARY
\\'Qi\.1EN
VILLA 2 Da,Y5 7 am-3:30 Sales & service. Good oppor-
pm, l days 10:30 am-7 pm, tunny for aggressive yng
2 da)'!! off. Some knowledge 11111n \V/f:l'O'l-'lng company.
of rewtrlcted ditt helpful. G ood kno11•!cidgc of sal! 11'11-
All new kitchen & f'quip. Tcr fishing &. mech ablhly
Can hl!-twn 8 arn-5 pm Jor req"<I. Send restJme & salitr)'
app1. 642-~. N.B. requircmc11t to Classifi~ GREAT OPPORTUNITY
COOK, fry exper. Apply AL •19S, Daily P i101, P.O. FOR SALES ORIENTl::D
Chow Bell, 2574 Nrv.·port 1560, t:.i\1. 92626. INDIVIDUAL TO AD-
Blvd, C.'-1:. ~.-~oo'°"o~&c-c=oc"kc,,.c"o-c.wc,c;1',-.,-5I VANC~ rN lf1ANAGEi\11'.:NT
lcoo·=='K-. -,-x-p'·d~.~Ba~p'i;',-1-c,,=,-_ I f''l!><'r, P/!in1c. Co u l <i POSITIONS, NO DEGREE
v&.lescent Hospital, 6 61 develop inlo f/time. Day Oft l::XPER. NECESSARY
Center St. C.r.1. shill. Rancho San Joaquin Jr YOU'RE AN ENER·
COOK, quick order try cook. Golf Course, 18021 Cul\•er Gl'..l!C, & A RELIABLE
Steady employment, Mesa Rd. Irvine. Near U.C.J. Ask rNDIVlDUAL \VANTING TO
for \Vayne, 8.'!3--0112. LEARN & \VORK HARD. Lanes, 1700 Superior, C:"-1.
COSMETICIAN D r ug
Cle-rk. Fully l"XIl only.
Downtown H . B • CaU
'3&-2'101
COUNSELING
Want.d at
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
'l'o.-n Professional
r>femorial CounseHon.
• Incentive Programs
• Company BPnef11s
FULL charge bkpr throtJgh .
T.8. New ro. F.V. Salllry • Cadillac Cir Pl~n
rHnge Wl0-$700. Call ti-Ir. • ~ompa~y Tra1n1ng l\l~ar1. 714 !>4()-7412. e t ul'I Fnng.-Benefit!
GENERAL OFFICE e Start lmm~hately
Good Typing skills
Call Loraine
\1/estchU
Pt>~rmel Agt>ncy
20-13 V.1f'ste11rt Dr., NB
&15-1T70
GE:NERAL hous<'11'ork &
(."O(lk1n~ i\.lu:i-t have ref's.
l.1vr-1n. 673-,1;2i:i.
GENERAL Ofr. Telrphrine
rw'rsonality. \\'1lt tr 111 n
GI 1-0065 br111·n 4 30 p rn & 7
p tlt.
YOUR F IRST YEAR
E ARNINGS CAN BE $40,000
-$75,00') THROUGtl COl\1-
illlSSrONS k SERVICE
FEES. TO HELP tl1Ah:E
THIS Al.I. POSSIBLF:
YOU'LL RECEIVE TIIF.
AID & SUPPORT F'ROM t"l-
NANCJ/\L I NVF.STMl-:NT
ANA!. Y~T R F:, BROKER.
PROFES.o;;ioNAL SALES.
~lA:-< -D,\VJD R. LOOK-I
INGLAND.
for/T eacher , p/llrnr.
S2~$350 per 1no, Conta("l
~·1rst Chr lsllan Pre-S!.'hool,
792 V1rtoria, Costa !llrsa.
;,.1,~-477!1
PROl''ESSIONAL p ho t1 e
sol1cuor • Dana Poinr. San
Clemente, Capistrano arc11.,
\\'ork in your own home.
Be5t deal in af1.'a. Pkone
835-1465 bet\\·ecn 9;00 a .m.
and noon.
PROFILF: Opf'rat0r, M1l hn1.:
fl.lach1ne l\·lrn. l.a!hP :'l·lcn,
Bench J\.1en. Apply Morrison
Eng1nttr1ng Co. I 7 f; 4 l
Arn1s1roni:: r\vc, San1a Ana.
No-..· working 50 hr& wk.
RECEPTIONIST
Newport Beach firm 5E'l'ks
rec:C"ptinnist >1•1 th nu11imun1
ol 2 yn experience. Plr as-
ll.Ilt personallry & ability to
handle busy <lesk, -..·h1rh in-
cludes use of d1rtaphone &
heavy typing. Xlnt l'.:ork1ng
ronditions & Co. benel1t!I".
Call: &M-3Z-"8 Bl\\. 8 am &
noon.
RE.~CE=PT~. ~T°'RA=IN~E~E~
t-:n }o pp
F.n.)Oy dAy toni( prrs11i:~ ,r,,
hP11vy p11bl1r t·nn1ael lll
plush lillrtn11nd111i;:~ 1\/!hls
p~rrpl, nrganua11nn. ilf<'n\
r;a1.~.-~. + thP 111;·rst hn<:~.
Call L111rla l>~y . .i;:iJ-2"/00
• lligh Eama<igs 111~0 J· r·e Jnhs
GlllL Frida~· fl("'rdc<l. \\'()rk 6 CALL r>;O\V TO START Dl::Nr\IS & IJE:-;~1s
hr~ rlally, illon-t"ri. I i:trl A;I EXCITING PROF'ES· Pi>rwnn~l A~'rn-y Call Peggy
To Arrang• Appt.
644-0212
r V nfftrP. Payroll f'>;p ~!ONf\t. CARF:E'R \\'IT/I ~ fllichrl~:m DJ',
hrlpf11 I. NJ11ry c omm -DJGNfTY & PRESfJGE, lr·vinf'. Cfllll
\l./rxp & talrnt. Cal i === -----c-!162_24.u Jor app't. Rt~CF.P'TIOr\IST: Big ~mll('.
Hr\RD\\'ARE Sales. rerm 558 ·0444 & 1ypH11i: <·an land This po!;l· 11on w/old f'Stah. l1nn, 'l'his J,...,~,....,~..,..,,...,..,. I :'11ust have ahtl1ty to n1ret t.·
OOuNTER.Ktrl needed for sen.'<' rustomrr.s Hanhvare, Ask for Mr. Mason co. pays ll'"1 Si<tl"I $-1::..0, f~t fQod ~rvi~. Apply in elrctrira.l. plumhing expc r. __ ____ Other t".-e Jo~ /\Vail_ Call
person, fl t 310 E . 17th St., cteslrrrl. But -..11! train. Gd r.tARRIED couplt' or widow Jea(..o~~;,~L ~~ir
C.M. ~lartlllj,! ~,11 la r y rom-to ke ep hou~ 11..nrl rook for
CPL TO m~e 18 U morel mcnsurate w/ability. Apply retired man 1n ext:hange for ~ llarhor Bl at Arl<1m(t,
In c.M ·-1 In perwn, JI. \\l. \Vtight Co., room In prlva lc home. Ref'a RETAIL SALES ., ~ mo. + BR. _ _. r--11 "" -~ 126 Rnchcs1rr SL 0.1. requin_,,. .._ "'io-oow. CINDERELLA ~ furn apt. .l util 557--12-12. C!NDEREL' /I!
ELJCA HOMEMAK~Rf~pl~ MECHANIC I ._. D TESSEN Boy or Like bt'autiful clothf's &
GI I ,. 2 p ·u· home \lo'oman capable nf T, ,_,,OT OVeT, OSI OIU 0c V ' -pfr~ 1\rt' )"OU RltraCll~'C
• '
·1 i-I & car\n' for l chtldl'!'n + •an ••w 1·~v VB • vnm--pm ' S h I k QU\"0111"~ H !his «la~s 4 • s···t •t ~ A k home. !-.lo1hcr ill. All r\IJllP~. c 00 Di1trict .. .. .. ~ pm.....,pm. ..... • ""· -~ slipper oppor. Ills )·ou, a
fo H·~d 1 J\-lust drive & do n111J"keting. r cu"' or "r r Y. dehghrful swini;::inii: bou11que "' T'-• •~ E lllh SI 548--.il5-1 or 548--1544. $3.517 hr. .n.i-"" • ...,.,, • • v.·1lt train. Nn f'~per. neet<:1s,
C.M. No Phone Calls. HSKPRS Emplyr paya ff'e . P3 . 4 k Call S11si:1n !;la1lr, S.\1--2700
DENTAL ASSISTANT George Allen Byland AJl:en-rt tlm• ! rl) •vl'5. Auto-DENN IS & DENNIS
Exp'd. F ull time. Rec('~ cy 106-B E 161h SA motive maint, work. Two l'f'rson!'ll"1 All:enr.v
tlonbt-Aliai&IAn!. Over :tl. ~7...{).195 . ' , . Yt'5 f'!CPf'T, Coinpletion °1 Slh 2082 :l.1ichclioon Or. · · gradt. App1 ica11011& must he
Ca1J 646-~. flied, Personnel CommiSl'rio n lrvuw, Calif.
DENTAL RECEPT. Ofc, 19n W11rncr Ave., HB, --$-ACTNOW'-.$c--
Oesk only. Denial exper. By Augusi 9th. Bc-au!iftd, attractJve Jernal~.
neCfSl. Some Sats. Saluy MEDICAL Asslstllnt w/2 yn 6 to 60 for commerc111.Js,
opcttl, ~ benefit.. lf.B. exp. for OB-GYN. Back of-rilm:1 & cont<'Stan~. 12131
area. Pb, 846-3540 SAM~PM tiao & lab duliei. 2>-30 yrs 461-3051.
DISHWASHER (If AJ:e. Call 638-1220, SALES girl for bou tique. ~hop
Must be dean & neat, over i'ol EN, clean laciory v.·ork. N, B. Arca. Perm. posi11on.
2L Apply ln Pft"llOn, Surf & cutllnii: &. 1 s,. m b It n g Age 21-30. :rtftJ&I hr
Sirloin. 59:.J W. Cout Hwy, !°''""'-TC PERSONNEL , . ......_.,_ thoroughly fxprr, )';end "Yu 'tl:. .. ,...,.,,.n ~rt.~. S!art $2.25 hr.
NB. SER\'ICES•Arc:rr...v-v 4-0 hr \\'k. HeiNW!, 1977 resume'. Classil1ed 11d No.
STJUB1!I'ORS ted II '"'VLI 'f'-..1 Plartnlla, CM. 193, D1uly Pi.lo!, P. 0 . Box PI wan ' IC t·~ 4: t"l"e. r n,ltitln =~~~-·I 1:i60, Coi;ra fl.11.'sa , Calif
-VI.__,_ H.., .. -...,11Proteln ..... Sec'y Recepl .,71 + MOTEL r>!AIDS ..... Part time. 92626_
.... ...._ ~ • '" l{ood ~Y. 6 f!a~/\\'CCk. I~~=--------J:0o=""",...::::'-cwa:::Cm:.-.:--~ .. ~.=.~dCy I Front otc ap~e. Sdt LAgun11 Bch. 4!M-75J5. SALES
SUlntT. Besut. ore-. rec n<'&· --------\\'INE C0~1PANY
p/tlmit job ? ~~na Secr•tary $S50 MOTHER'~ twlper 17 or ovrr No exper. n~rss. X1n"t ~ f1pe rom Buxy \n1c~in£ job v.'Ork1ng hti!p w/chllrlrtn Ar kou.!lr-hld U-111nlni::. protrcted trrr,
hocM. No teUlna:. 64Ul85. w/sa1rsme C 1 rhQrt'J R;alboa Pen1 nsul;1 un-("Ongenia l ro-workrMi S7200
ft'om. 9am·U noon for appt. Sec'y/Le;n~I 0· JWIY• sSs"o 111 Aui:: 14th. L I v e . I n + car + rxprnstll _
DONtTl' Gb'l ,,.nt.d. m ex-Ca.Ill. gen' PT?lctJC'P e.xprr. prrlcrahly. C11.ll 67l-8275. mmni. Hurry\
pw,i ~. Ni1e .tillt. Mr. Lite Sh. Co. JWI )'~ l<'~. Fo RESULTS ymi can De-C11ll John Bonrl, !l,t\-2700
SALt<:.'>
PHARMACEUTICALS
SiSOO + CAR + EXI~
Fct" Piud
l\lajor !1rm awaits all alf'rt
an1b111ous ind1v. for once 1n
a l1fcLin1e career oppor.
Prol1t sharing. br St'!, yellow .$1 ,000
ne1v -now $350. Call 11~1 T
64
W4-INHOO. ' 1.:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;;· -~1 beds \l.'/bolstcrs. S20. Pt>rsormel Agency I' Chest of drawers, $20. Hi
2082 Michelson Dr. AntiqueJ 800 chr S4. Ladies bike $10.
CaU .John Bond, 1133--2700
Also t'f'C Johs
DENNIS & DENNIS
!rvinf'. Calif. -o:--::c-::::-._------1 Roll-a-way bed $5. Han1pcT SCRAM LETS S2. Captains chr S 15. SALES -Meo • 64Z-3325.
STOP!!! ANSWERS "'"tU"'5"!''°""~-. ~,,-,~;,-1,-,-,-m-&_d_eo
LOOKING & ACT furn incl. velvet sofa &
_ _. . . loveseat, lbls, I a mp 1 Sales mindni IJ('rson, see for Guilty -Gum~~ Ha.ndy-herculon set. gamt-!bl '
,youfS('lf, .a real Cfil'C'er op. Policy. -.COUGJIJNG. Xlnt <--ond . 645-0036. ' etr.
portunlly. Xlnt future fo r A disc JOekey insisls that . ,
right n1an. l'~arnings conl· ever sinCt> the cigaret ads sPANISH rl1_n g rn1 !bl w/6
n1rnL~ 1mn1rd1a1e!y should IO."ere taken off the a ir hi:i-(·h_n; & China <:ahlflf't. Pd
be ui P.~('CSs of $250. per \l.'k, trlcvision set has 1>toPi)C(j ~·1500 will sell _for S650. Dix
No can\·asslnl:" or soliciting. COUGll!NG ,rnmnre S('11'111g mac h.
ltHPl"\llrWs hy appo111tn1cnt E · v.•/r.1ctli! Cllb S!50. 1147-5140 i\1PIRE:.: sofa. Custom ma.de only 9-.1 ,,·eekdays. 8.1:>-2711. i-oflee I able lroni anliqtJP i\1UST 01ove--tlf'ar new
WINDY 'S AUCTION
COME BHOWSE ARO UND
20751/1 Newport Blvd,
Behind Tony'1 Bldg. Materials
Costa Mesa * 646-8686
OPEN DAILY 9 TO 4
Garage Sele 812 1 Mi1cellaneous
PATIO SALE
T•bl< l•mp•, 2 1 w I , JOHN'S BIKES
818
hedspreads, Bahatna chairs, -NEW-
2 bowling halls, rw111 head-
board. Book<:a'Oe & Boys and
ladies clothes. 9Ai\1-l1Ai<.1
i-"rk!ay, J uly 30, J91 1, 2131
Duke Pl. ~&-.l:l9:1.
fl10VING Garagr S a J e :
/'.1a ple tables, rugs, sofa,
lamps, barstro!s, ma n y
rnise. llcn1'!. Good buys. fl
day only ! Sat. 9un1-4 pn1.
22\~ Aral1a SI., 1t.:astbluff1
N.B.
Hou1ehold Good1 814
Columbia * Premiu~
Steyr * Romana
10 spds S8-l.SO-S287.00
:i speeds $6-j-$115
l spds, n1en & wome n
$53.50-$70
-REPAIRS-
i\'p do e,Xl>f'rl r•'ii.1 1r on
all n1;1kcs .~ 111orlf'ls
2340 NF:\~"PORT BLVD, O 't
NEW HOURS SALES lllanagrr w/prov;;; lranlP. V.'alnut enrl tablr. 7.6 matcl11nii: w ra & love seat.
<loor-to-door rxper to hrad cushion sofa. Madcria b,111~ king Slzf' bed, corr.Cf! & end
up Oran$;e Cnty liales force, qu('l clnrh, napkins, Anli-1ablC's, ~nn1e M'I. Cd:\11 area.
$20,000 yr & up. Apply 2:z:i qued '"'h~'Y· chest. i\li lk Private ()flrty. 67~S8. 60 YARDS sculp!un•rt carpi.
!:io. Slale College Blvd, gla.~s 1..-nllection !or 8 . l!OUSEf'ULL of furn incl. ting, newly cleaned, .2 yrs
2prn 10 lOprn Nlon-Fri
.':ial-Sun 9arn To 6pra
&15--1720
Anahr1n1. 642-SSl!I. stl'reo cquip, brand nrw ~d $65. 837-2532
~----SECRETARY ___ Appliances 802 sewing n1achint'. Must sell, OX9 BLUE & grren thick
Good skills, xln't co. For n1nre inJo call 543-5981. shag n 1g. Cos! S900. new.
Ciill Loraine •. , . , VERY, V1"1")' rcasonablr. S30. or bc~I orr. 6i3-4&19. Kf.Ni<.IOllE auto washer S65 -.==~Oo-~-'-.:C
\Vestclil! Norge 11uro washrr Si'l. Boll; ~~UHNTTUFlF., house h o I (f Machinery 8f6
\\'111 T<1kt> ·rrarle-Tn.~
;-AUCTION-;
HOUSE
Prtsonnel 1\J:"f'n~·v items fro r.... 2!1-13 V•1'.-:i;1.,:l1rt Dr .•. NB xlni ('Ond, la te models. i,:unr ~I . . in n1y .. ,.,1•rr i<.10DF-:L II l''armall trac!or Au~tlonl'I eve1-y Fri, 7 r m
&15-2770 ,f,, rlcl1v<'rrrl. 5 ,IG-8672 . lQff'S home. Liv rm, dn 11•/ 8' tan<lem <11:-.c ~ !:)' 3 t urn. App.11. Antlryllrs
"l·SI 1:, ' rn1. br rn1s. kit Ali l1nr I 3015 \\' \\, 1 s , ----.,., S('t"11QO •oo•h h' , .• ,,,.. • • . H"llPr, .. 11, S l-:C "Y-Ot'FICEC!Rl.,---pcs.Pvlp~·fi<!!i-1:-.IVI ' ~loll II FnlGJDf\IP,f: 11•asher P~-------5-IS-71:.4 . I ow sf';u·r 1 1~1\ll
Design flrn1 IV/ 1 Y p Ir al <'t>llcn! C'O <I sb· \vl ! l>lAPLE dining room t<1ble .f,, --. -!).19-~'J~l e ~,.17-i7l1
d('Sign pt'rsonnel need~ girl p<ir labl r ~~-..·i ng ·'~al·hi'r::' 4 c·ha1r1!, $70: 2 M-aple "nd M1sc•llaneous 818 )WVJNG!"iius~wll~ IWiQ
\\/(o(lmn1011 :s('nse & exper. s~. El<'r !1PciJ:,t' ll'lrntn»r: 1nbles_ -~ ('IJ!/re t11h!f', s:J() ht>ds, roinpl~·l r. box Sf)ririizs 642-l'n~t. 3-$ prn. new, Sl2. 440 D11hl1a. Cf!1'.t. ~Pt. ~'17-l :ii\4 t'OH. s11.le collecl ~ni of l:l ,!£ n1<11tn•s.~. 'J »e1•!1on., of
SE-'!tETARY lnr rng111ef'flni gu!o washer 1 3-0 , CO'.'llPLETr; h 011 5 e of hPautJrul violin~. 1·wo cu fr n1Pl<1l .~h<'lvini: 7 xr, 1-20
.,.. 1 ·~"ph , h I•· •·1 GE •· 11 f'l<>r. rrfr1g. I nl\lkshakr " I h '"· ..,,,. tr a1 g I lo.v ,,... p-V.'estinghous• elec <i 1um1t11rl'. I .l91h St, .,a . aquarium s (/\\' tank &
ftJI. lrvine. 5-1:1-7113. An S30. Bolh good·-•··', • .,.'.",r; ~'-''f)()rt Beal·~· _fl_i.)...12'.?.9___ inixrr, 2 p1rture lrarnes, t IY/I''-~ ,.f fil!f'r~. 1-10 ga.1 'I' I -1 I '-" iu ,., " "' -----sn1;ill pol'! :i;r·1\111J( n1at"h1nf' , k •· 11 I 7 r i11. np,,.,r unuy "mp oyt•r. <l<'livrrrrl. 546--867<!, M7-S!l~i. FURNrrunE for 1 BR 11pt, 1111 •v 1 trr, -<il'a>1'Pr S•·•1v1-C'~S ---oo-I ,.,_ 8.· mli<r 3.'*' 1'la~nnl1a, C.1\1, rh('s!, 1 full ~r1r hnx SP"'' . c.r· c. , tar1on AITerM1an1s XL"'lT COND-O'Keefe •. no app 111nce~ . .,.·st nf!Pr ;:.i)hlt1()8
'II 'h'(•· •pply '"18 • ,., v , "'ll •• 11 • · · ~· 111attr ... ,~ . .\1ah)· other
-, • ''" " "HI ?.lrrr1tt, g11s stO\'P, chron1r ,,,) I(' Ona. 1..1 ••0 · BOX ih'lllS, 7X7 .<:..,-,u r1 c ,11. Campu:i-Dr, N.B. ~pru1g:s, mal1rl's~c.s,
-- -!()fl '-''/stor & 11n1er, $j~. G S I 11'1>rk t>f'ni·li, v1~,,. CJ'1.-,,,., ... ;:;L.,-,, I 11--b --~-SF.HVJ C:E Sia. Attcndan1. 4--~}IS-4·1 72. a rage a e 812 1•r~ iu uni rov.·n v.·ig f,,
10 prn r1•p shill & wknd~. tablf':o,, 11·1;:-s, guita r, prtt.il ~-n>stc(! 11 1g, be~t offer
,.. 1.... .... REFRIGERATORS, \\-ashrr~CD>"f."E bl reenrrl C'hanger, 1·11 ~1m Airot"ul;ir~ S4-0: lle(·o<rl c.~])l'r. Prt' "· .rl:>-1619. •1. G ,.. ! wmught1ron _, ~ •• 1 & up. uaranTeed. Di~ ' ina •• e rnrl f'ha1 1• !l62-19'J1, 111.l)Pr S20: r•hl n111 t trr~~ .!.·
rnL11H H "fl'h ,~ ~'''Y · lf'gs, 2 nfi-(Jt>~ks, l typist~ 20238 M••"•-1 ••. 11 .ll. I · •• SEftV. Sia. Atlend. Exper,
malur,.., bondablc. Shell Sla-
tion. l91h .t Pla('E'n!la, Ci\L
' ' I 10 '' 2 ,. "' >t+:>. i-prlll<:S nt.>W S7;i; 1~1aplr Char-f{ons 646--7820 . rir~. · cup ro ,.,. pol, -----!ormrc•a 1op fn1r11ng thl~. IMITATION Lt•op11rrl kinit 1·11n .. P lablP $:15; ;\laplC' 1 "•~>71,c\\c.,,TCAOG~,.-1-.,-,.-m-,-,~,,-,.·s l hooks, lots of odds !. Pllds. s1u• hrrl ~prP11d •\/1n~r r•"Wkf'r S20. Shol'! "11~e port
SEWING marh oprra!or, "''asher x!nt (..'One!. <lf'lv wi OO 2.1!162 }:J .Mirai.;f'. Laguna ch111ii: ('hair throw .~ l l;ircr r1nl10 S.l-:1: 3 J)anish s1ac k
hourly rate. i;;OC'<l pay for day ;;liar. $50. 5.IJ-ll6.l7 Niguel, 4~.lli7:, or 4~;....o!)f).\ pillow~. NP-..· S75. l\ll~!· l;1h]P.!I $10. fi73~7:J.):I lift 6
neat exp oprrator. 675-7952. -1,1n s ,,,,,,.,, G-OOO_B_ ---\VASJIEH~t'ng1d11.~. deluxr GARAGf:°:--;a1e Fri-& 5.<it. 9 -~.,....... ,),,.,. ' . uy? Roy 's blkf', S sp
S HIPPINGCLER_K_ jrtaclion.2yrt<olrl,e"<cel a .m. 10 9 pm. r.liM" FOR SALf> wa a h1ni,: r>1 un·ay Stiri~ray. toad<'d
Slarl $2.65rhr. \\'1!! train. l'Ond . S:>;, or orfrr. ;1;*'-74'.lti. housrhold. books, reconl.~. n1achine S2;i, 1lr;,rr $7~. -..·1th sissy h11r. l111nr1 br11kr.~
540-.161. -----1 1 ""''"'/m,,-,/&"•IA ~f'11rr11.1or 11,::-ht, .. rr. ,.,_: GAS PRVER l\<'nmnno, llkP s1 vrr, r r;• appliancv.~. ' "' " .-......,.. ..
SOILS TECH rlo1hln"'. !G-111 ···oi"e" c,1A s111nr1, Sl:1, dt>sk Slll, m1111~· 1 11"'1· ll1dden sraringly t>~ • nr11· SlOfl, 1\ulo -..asht>r SZ.i "' '-' " " ' I I E: •• \prr. w1rompac!1on tr~t ) !Q--11.'lf;l Ln. l!B I nther i!Pm~. 1\f1 12 non11, I YHllll'(" hn.v 1n t"nnr.<
earth fills in lif'lrl Offic·ea --_ --:-:xi~l Rl\'PrsltlP Dr. (",\1 >-hor~. S.'ill r ornplr1e. P honr
\\'\l\'.)(!111 111! Hills &. lrv1nr. I Furniture 810 'F.L~.C typP11-r1tf'r, r11rh;i,I ~-.-1 . I -,.~O 1>11--·l:\'l;, .1fi f\ r+m
I
s;iw. lf'lr""P''. laii·n rrh.;"r, • <On Pmprira1y rnu1·1, ". _ _ ~~-!~]Ji .lhi--056~.. h-h i:un. rir. 4(1~ lf>th Pl;,~·r .1·-.0 r1v.1 !1•lri;:rnr>r :S.~~ C!IAJ!1~. -.ol11. kf'<I, Jaqip~
S\1ALL inrlusl;;;i-p1~1 STI".'\1'-:l1'\t ,, ""n,r.n1pn1 J11.v 1111 Tu~tin 111 ,., C'o~ia Ja11n mn11,.r, SM: l!Parth 11.qu11r l 11n1~. p l 11rio ,
nre<i.~ ~lf'r! r•/1lm¥ i,::~I 10 do l11rn I\ 1111;: \111 , (YIUrh .\.-"l!r'~ t r i Sil t-~iin I ~:arlhrn-..Arr, S:il. \\"rnin:hi hook('a~rs, <ir~ks, f l r
i.:rn'l ore ,I;, Jah \1·01·k, Jl.lu'l I lli.~lching '' ll11"'"ft! ,f,, ot -. , , . · ---I 11·011 d1nn1J:" roorn sr1. he.~1 r~1-0-.,9~:1.
be ,r1 1yp1s1. Call ;'l!r:i-1 .. rn.in, lal·l~ '~ ~ il1rr. 11 ""' l.AH.fll ,~ Nile -Cl1rr fir '~ o{f,..r. f'all ~7-16:111 Afl 5 M-· _ii ______ _
chain ()j S !i; ct)I'( 111 <,;,111ta Ana Al jl))( La .J,.IJ11 I 1sce aneous Tullv. ~16-415.'>. · • ' c. " ~ 1 11 / 1 _, P m Wanted 320 ------i,:l;i~.•. plasl1r t.: 11 h 1 Ir vr. ••P I ~. 11u1 >0an.1
SU.'11'.llER El\1PLOY:.IENT lf'alllt>r, hlk t, 111111 r niT.:i 1nolori'! 1nl'I . ~t-~1011. 11}...4, WATERBEDS ':;;iiiii;iiii:;;iiiii;iiii:ii;I
CollPge ~Ud('n!s-are yon rut;"s Thayrr f'n,e1ir1 blk ,I/,-~i\ r & SUNiol0:.-Mi~r. An s1i:f'll: SLl95. J'arka;:-c •
lmklng ror par! tinie or ri1!1 \\'h ll P 1-..ll"'kta1I 1;ihlP, ~· hnr--a-hri!, l"ltnP rurn111n,... neat. parhlrd nau;::l\h.vrlr time 110rk? A1lvPrtis1n,g Co. CASH PAID FOR squarP :rt1usl li•Crl l lc f' 1100 C;imhr1rlg~ Ln lramP, $49.Cf.; \Valf'r chnu~ ha.~ 5 n111.nagemr111 po~1!1on.~ fii7i--4~% Nrivp(>rl Rl""h $7.~J. 1138-:ii81. 11t1P h1rr11111Tf'. 11.rrh;in<-c.~. npen. i\lust he nf'at in 11 p-
pel:ll'<Hlrf', de n1" n Ii t ra I<'
learlC'rsh1p abth!y, Up lo
3600. 1110. Apply 22.) &!,
Stair College B 1 v d.,
L~::AVl\C .Slaff'' i\I~ DINEITE lablr, 4 r-h;i1r;,
Sih'TlhC1'~ Jlouse/ul o[ tl('tlr SIC'rcn/1\,\f-F":'ll , n11o;r 1tf'rns
nr1v :\1ed1 1crrane11. n ~-n ,'it Sa!, 2S:-02 ~~ldt>n, No
flu·1111ure, forn1a l d t n j n g (', ('"M . 612 -71!16.
ANTIQ°U f:-yarn1>r-S.~ 0\1 1 ;innqul'•. On.. p1r<"' "' pnlng~ by t'eflO\\•ncl arll~!s hoU~f'ful. Cail ~a.v ~r nu:hL
S50-SJ 2,'i. l!fl.frl !up lr1r Fia t ;;49-12-11 or .}17-17.1.l
~plrler $101). 830-l!Y.12
An11ht>tm. room &Ct wilh l~r£" 1·h1na, 3 SAL.r. _ c0·1o-17h-,.-.-lo-,-.,-. -,,,-,,-.1 TABLE NW 10'\Dav1~ &
bl-droorn srts, 9 sofa & lnvP furn . Pf('_ ~9!11. 7010 w \Y~ll~. 1 h p. mo1or, SlOO.
e \\'A NT J-; l>-to htJV
Governor \Vinlhrop rlr~k. ·
• Cell ~-·1"17 !. •
Musical Instrumen ts 822
T AX.-A~cc=o~U~N~i'T~A~N~T=-
r nr bu.~y CPA olc. in co.as111.I
city. H<'ll.\IY Jnctlv1d1111I, c<1r-
p or 1 tr, partnrrs h1 p
preparation. Also, t 11 x
rt>srarch. Call 5.17-iOfit for
aprr. Cir send rei;un1e to
P.O. Box ~19, Orange, C11.
!<Pal. corfee lahli> & enrl 0t'f'anfront Thurs-S{lt. 557--Ul8S.
ron1rnodei;, &lerf"O, p11t10 -t, I~=~~=~~~ -I c.=-::--c:-c=--=-~
Janips picturrs, etc. Priv N~-;AT. CHEAP STUf"f" 1971 Smith Corona (Corone t)
Pty. 213-~J2-I J.17 •WED THRlf SUN • rlec portablr IYJ!C""l'iter $S~.
G 44::. Lt'nwood Dr, C.M. 673-2425. • t'E~Dl·.·R lro -, .• ,., ••np', IANT houseful or nrar new '· Jl.1edit liirn, Pxamplc· g· blk REf"RJGERATOR. Wa$hrr. 1-fOUSE flunt.ing ? Watch the t2f 12·· jhl"s.
naui,; Mfa & lnve~cat. nevrr Tahlf's & 1·h:11~. bed.!!, OPEN HOUSE column. Re11.sona klr' Call &1•1-l ll.'i
92f.69.
Tax Man """' $700
usrd S!j(), Elt"g;ant Spa nishli!'i"'i'i"'ii~i.i.,ii2-i56iilliiii;;iiiiiiAiinit~iqiueiili;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii8iDOii~Aiiniliiqiu~eii1i;iiiiiiii 800 kmg-5z b<irn1 ~ct, Jl1dt•-
a-hro, ~· cot!<•f" 11ihlr, '2 Pnd
ron1mnrlrs. Vrry rraso11
11hlr TI4,~~4918,
Extt. Sec:'y
Sr-c'y/Mkt nit
Lc1<:al $(-c"y
S.-C"y fOln!<tr
Bkkpr/Tax
Clt>rk 1'y)'Yi:i;I
BIO i\1ediCl'll
GO/Loon Exprr,
PBX/Cen'l Ole
S5.'i0 •"" """ S47:.
S-125
1400
S·M111
s3-;;,
EARLY An1erirnn rlisfN'sserl
niaptr. 3 con1pll.'!t' rooms,
liv, hcdnn. din. rm, alt nr
b)' piN't". 646-2TI2. Can Ill!'
~ef'n 2227 RPpublir. CM .
USED School 0 r ~ k Ii ,
rurn1h1rf' & m11'C'. iti>ms.
f'"or hs! nf \l('ms call !7141
fi<l!'"}-1100. ex! JO.
NEWPORT
Personnel Agency
833 Dover Or., N.B.
642-3170 DINING srt, dmple11 f thl, 4
""""!!!!~~~~~""!!!"'I rhairs, n1alch1ni::: ch e ~ t ,
VIETNAM ~hd lln1ed Ollk Sacr1hC'l'
VETERANS $7~1. ;,is..,ioo2
\Vr h11vr companir9 in our SOLID oak <lining roon1 set
an>a That AN! 11.nxiou~ lfl >1•/buflrt, \'<'!")' n1re : ('all 11ft
put ~u to work 11.s d\v'y ' ,. k I -.. ~1 .. "" '-' I II)'~, "''<1'""£"" . driver, machinist lr!'irtee or
11ot..'llll !rainf't', Thty will DR!.. box ~prinR k 1natt SJ ~
tr!'1n you. $2.50. OhJ OOx !'prlng I: matt
Can Bill l!a ...... r. ~0-6055 wffr11 m" !20. 5ol:i-4Jij .. -.~~----COASTA i~ AGF":NCY !;l'ANISll b11.r, 2 hi kark
27!1(1 1·111.rbor RI 11t Adamt< stools. best offer. Xlnt cnnd.
~l>-J~.
CLIFT'S ANTIQUES ! QUITS
4-DAY LIQUIDATION AUCTION
II ••
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE:
ever offered at public
Largest antique inventa,Y
auction in Southern Calif.
DYER 3000 ITEMS -APPROX. $200,000 EVALUATION
14,000 SQ. FT. OF FINE ANTIQUES MUST BE SOLD
NOTE: Office equip. & fixtu res
ca nnot be removed until sale is comrtet ect
SALE CONDUCTED ON PREMISES BY
WESTERN LIQUIDATORS AND ASSOC.
SITE -CLIFT'S ANTIQUES -10802 BEACH BLVD., STANTON
DATE -THURSDAY'
July 29,
1,00 P.M.
FRIDAY I July 30,
1,00 P.M.
SATUROAY I
July 31 ,
1,00 P.M.
SUNDAY
Aug. 1st
1,00 P.M.
Donat, l;!' E. lTfh St, CM . pend on. Call the Super-DENNIS !. D~~NNIS
Stll ftW old nfr -488 E. 17th (AT Irvine) C.M. :>a I 11 m & n .. Dally Pilot T'tt&onncl A~ncy Tum unu!ll!(j ltema ln to qutc.~ The fastest dl"l!.w in lhl!' w,.~,
Bltt tl)e DIW 9tUtt 642-1470 Clas•trled Ml-5671 -plaai I 20fl2 Mk'hl>l!IOn Dr. cuh, C.llll 642--5678 [ .. 11 Daily Pilot ClusWed
TERMS -2s•1. D•posit at time of ule -Verifi•d
INSPECTION -l day1 prior to ule 9 to 5 -
ch•ck1 acce p ted".
AUCTIONEER: G. L. Gardner fl
'
C&lJ go...58711; Saw: ·--------.,...,.o12""~"c'~'~d~•"-"'~-~~'c'~":_-~ lrv1nr CaJH Arl . MZ...!il>78 I ----'-~---•---------, .""'L~--"""---~----..1..1. • • ---
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1 ~t ;;;-~J[§J~~ [ ""w-J[BI ~ -~"'l~;;;:"-~J~~I [ M.-=\"..,.. 1~1;;;1 ,_, ....... _,dl,.;;::J[i]:;rli l [:;;I ;;""°';;"'w.~] .-.~J;[;;•;;"""';;"'"~j §J~j ~[~·~""'"~"'·~I~~~~[~[ ;;;"";;;"'";;;"'' ~j~~I
~osici11 lnstrumental22 1 Peta, General 850 Bo.ts, Power 906 Boatt, SpMd & Ski 911 Mobil• Hom•• 915 Auto• Want..:1 9'I Autos, Import.a 970 Autos, Imported 970 Au1ot, Import~ 970
f.IR~ON ES335 Humbur kina TALKING t-.1ynah Bird >A1th 27' CUSTOM Roe.mer f1y1ng SKI or fishing boat + trlt. CONTEMPO WE PAY TOP DATSUN LOTUS MGB
;J•irO:ups. RQ61''.l.·ood n.-ck. cqe, 5125. Bndie Cnil11t:r. Built 1~. gl1M on wood hule, ~ar CASH f1!~1 5-IG-Z740 *" 64>2927 * Steel hull, ii• radlll, Yery ~w Chrlysler '55 Hsp. • ,71 DATSUN 4 OR LOTUS '10 MGB, xlnt co nd.
bffice Furniture/ Cati 852 rnmlort.able. A11X1ou1 Io Runs hke a dtt.am • ~. LAGUNA HILLS • Atn·HORIZED A'.'.1 /f"M , o~rdri\?, m1i
• Equip 124 1 ~ll S:>l.9.l. Call •·ollecl 5.!i7..J68J. SALES & SERVICE: "·his. $2300. ~106, Costa
: · A'"'L't',CTIO"A~' b 1,. k onyl,m•, (71 41 493-4988 ----------1 for •.• _ ... Cl.l"I I trucks, •·-SEDAN M cc ,, 'L L C!ASSIC Malqany 16' t-.len:: 23301 RIDGE ROtrrE DR. ......,. ,....., ' e~. ~l!PU:.IJ:: Pitney Bo\\l'S I 1naJe 1hort haired ca1 1 yr 18" SOUTH CO AST utility, inbot.rd. "64 ch r y s I er !Cor~er or Moulton P call Ill for trfl9 e-1tlmaleL 1965 !\1GB, rebuilt trans, new ~re11St1gr1tph r.quipmen!. 0 w n er• n1ov i r. K to bait tank, SIS radio, good Marine G. Sre ro e,ppreciate. Prestigt-·adttlt community, GRQJH CHEVRQL£J Ulw mileaie, filct. warnlnty lop, bra~!. wire \\·heels.
N <>Vt>r \p11.5e pAyml"n! 01 f\laryland, 592-54-12 °1il 9 rtn!f. Trar111faTl'd. 1nu111ell. Sett -oiler over 51,000. adjacent to Le l1ure 4 spd, dlr. R&H. \\"il.!o S2186. $650 67:...74:,9 e ... e,. ~ -;-;, pf'r 1110. C11!1 67~50. I p.m. ls! 5800 take11 !213\ 666-4948. 968--4691. Wo11d. Beautiful surround-As k for Sales Mana.a:er now S1886 16J9CA:X). Snta.ll 1969 '.\1GB--O'dnvrt, chrm
p iaJ!os/Organs 826 1 REX, CFA rea: kitteN, 2-4 24' CHRIS Cr11tl Cab!" in&~. all lu.>cury appoint· l8Ul Beach Blvd. cto .. vn or !o~1gn r11r 11•111 3100 \V. Coa.!it Hwy. '.!.·his, lo ml. f'":vl/AM r1d10.
I ho' •~1150 l8Sh V8 · ment1. Thel'ftpeutlc pool, H "·-... b " C 11 •.• Newport Beach _.. cu" .,~= 5t'-I/lil.ER CI. t~ A R AN CF: nios 11 s ~,~· .-~,, . Crui!l!r p mM!ne Ji] un ...... ,..on c. 1-1/l. pvt. ply a "'en Fantastic CO•••· ""'1""0JUV
" L "''..-.:.i eng Top runnina: corxl. Tr1ntporl1tlon r.i!. Saunas, Exerc1~ gym, 4 847-6087 KI 9-3331 546-8736. 49-1-AA'll MERCEDES BENZ OPEL ;o.A t: -=--------~=I 1 ~48 .. bllha.rd tabl,s, much, n1u ch 1 -=======~~· l-=~===co--===-
, ;;;,,, ,,.;,_.,,, B•ldwio. Dogs 154 M•k• 0 " · mo"'' ANNIVERSARY •50 '67 DATSUN PICKUP
II 1u•i1tzer, Kimball. Low~y. I _ ! 17' 1969 CHRYSLER 155 Hp Se~ tw>aul. turn modf'ls tn
l'"nn. A!Jl'n, Etc. 5:9.i & up. 1 ~DLl'.S AKC "'h i le 110. m!'l rine rllrllO, luU Ci1mpers, Sale/ Rent 920 park-hke setting.
rr:---T,\I}\. PLAYt:r.s. 1;t1111c1, 6 mos: "''hUe 1-0.vs 2 mvl'r. Xlnt coM. 52895. CAU.. 830.J'.KIO or 830•7900
F1:»ndl.\' li'!ephone infnr. + nins . .!ieU or lPasP. Stud 673-2319. HAD ENOUGH
·I spd. dlr. R&H 1 OWflf'r.
Take fnn>1gn rar ("Ir sm;i!I
down iZCJSi5J l'ilJ 546·8736
-494-681 1. PINTO V.'/AUTO. f!f:J.o·s PI,\NO CO . I 5f'rv_ic-I' all colors & i.IZPS BOSTON WHALER 13 '30->'78 OF OAMPNESS? l~?.:\ Ne..,,·port Blvcl. _. _ "•Jl,, E\•1nrud' Slc1 twin, $795. Tran~. $5 d11y, Sc mile.
(',,•!a i'olr<;a 714/~~3250 Jn '"K ohf AKC &-Agll' pup--838-3210 nr 673-8.125.
-WOULD YOU p1P"': n1alP k !I'm. 527>-$45. B R t/Ch t ' 908 Also 2 yr old ltm 530. oats, en ar r
BE LI EVE li.:>J:-lj2G
FREE ORGAN Li'.:SSONS ---------Cal lS + Catlin• 27
Guaf"ll.n!Pf! th!! lowest rates in
So. Ca.hf "Catlina cruis-
ing club''.. Local ion Ne>A•port
H;irbor. 714 /968-4840 for info. I
36' FLYBRTDGE Cruiser,
Si ps 6. f ully f'qprl Inc ,;kip.
$135/day , 5 700/wk .I
&l&-9000.
~~ long as ~·ou like! No ~g-
1~iration. No ohl1ga11on. Just
CClml', l\lonrlays 7:3{\ pm
COAST MUSIC
~I A,\lt\IOND, S 1 e 1 n way,
Y;i11111ha. New & USl'd
p1 ~n\W' o! 1nnsl makes. Bi's[
h11 1~ in So. Calif. at Schmidt
.~!us1c Co., 1907 N. !\fain,
!'11n111 An;i.
2 !RISH Se tt f'rs ,
m11Jtffem11.l'. a mos & 9
nios.
)1JDWAY KENNELS
Gennan Shepherds. Pel k
~hnw s!ock. Board a I l
breed.~. 893-5549.
909 BF:AGLt-.::;. ChAmpion blood Boats, Sail
linl' n1illP~ t.· females. 1---'-------* * * 8.17-2431 *"**" 14' Fiberglass
Runabout ~p.,orting Goods 830 !RISH SeTll'r pups, AKC. Excellent condil1on:
... ~·.-> K1llagay l1ml'. Sh o I ii & Jne!udf's Jjhp. i'o1err.u ry lj(}.
SUTIFBOARD. 6' R '• , e:c-v.·ornitd. 96!l-13!KI. Tr;iill'r, life cushionlli, fire
1·1'tl('nf rnnd. l":Ol'ld shllfW'. PUPPIES for &air \Ve1mar-,xtinguishrr, tarp. S700 or
\{US1 s;irrlfirP, Sl:l. 673-9515 11n<'r & Grf'al Dilne. $15. Best off Pr' 646-8018
~Kl!S l\1r 111le. Reel St11r t>ach. 673."191!>. 1 ---~~~~--~ I "BALBOA 20" w/trailer & i\nl'l~srl , 11111rkE"r bindings AFGHANS lnr 4 rlays only, exiension. H"11.rl, 4 HP
r1111 646--037.l. I $150 Pl\. 4 rlogs. AKC. Ex-t.1Prrury OltlboaM ,, many
TV, Radio, HiFi, rE"pt1onal pedigree 962-980;,. Pxtra~. Call 11fter 6 pm.
Stereo 836 IRISH SPttf'r fPm11le pup, 968-81117.
AKC, Champ hne.. Shot!,
STEREO, 1!171 unclaimed SIOO. !130-\6:\0.
LI DO 14 ..,,./trailf'r. 1111! no.
1701 ln xlnt cond, ha~ Ileen
krpt 1n Indoor ~ToragP,
RPady to &11 11, $!f.i0. !">19--0507.
1~.v • away, 1.;irratd
turntablr, A'.11/F~t 5lerPo,
rad io t.. \11pe player. Air
Ii flea k e r~ 11·/rro~s--0Yer
~.1.ilcn1 . St11I hr11nr1 new,
.<:old fnr S."\19 \V/11•;irr;in1y.
P11y nlf h;ilanl'P. of $121) nr
Fnlilll pa_yn1ents. Cr e. d I t
rlrp!, i;;9.i--O~J!11.
POODLF.S AKC, Tearup -
Tnys. Pups/Arllllls, all col-
~07c~'·_S0'-"~'-'-'~~· -'~93-_,7_17'-o l SACR lf!CF.! 16' llberglass
TOY flahan Gn>yhound -5 OUTRIGGl'.:R, like flPW.
ml), fl'millP . $85. 1900 Slln-Ask1n11: 5395. 4 9 4-7 8 6 5,
t1agn Dr. N.R. 494-9~1·1.
J6' O'DA Y rl11y ~11 1l~r inrl ~
h p. Srll~u!! o.h. C.oor1
l!hape. mu~! ~r\1 quick! Call
Rud 111 67~13fl3.
VWCamper
Rentals $75 11 weel-5c e mire
Move to SIERRA DA\\';./,
Al'.1.a~·s dry, h11!my. rlpar.
Nn 11mog or foii. lrleal fo r
ar1hrtt!r' or bronchial prob·
]ems. At SIERRA DAV.'N
THEOOORE
ROBINS FORO
2060 HARBOR BLVD.
CO!JTI t.IESA StZ-0010
ANNIVERSARY •50 ynu own your own mohilf'· AUTOS WANTED
hflnlf' Jot. fu>nts kt>e p ~1ng
up. \l'hy pay rent? rnr fr'f'e "fop dolla r for clean IJ5ed Cl'rs. See Andy Brown, brochu~. 11T1!P. Depl. .).
FERRARI
FERRARI
AUTIIORIZE O
SALES & SERVICE
Mac HowaR1'>
AUTO l TRUCK LEASIN;
124 No. H11rborat Bo lsa
Santa Ani -531·0607
SIERRA DA\VN, Hemet, Ca THEODORE
9234'. ROBINS FORD 3100 W, Coa.I H•>. CLEA~Nc--cA~IR~.-~Cc:'CL~ .. ~. ,~\~N. I 2060 HARBOR BLVD. Newport Beach
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
\\'ATER, THE GOOD 1.1rt: cCO~Sl~'A':.,}.>~lE~.S~A~~,;: .. ~2~.())~!0~1----~IAT ___ _ \VIL!. !Tade equity in 196.ll -FIAT Ford ~. tnn pick·up & on a li:>w hur1i;:I'! 2 BR.'..! b;i , \Vf': PAY TOP DOLLAR
101,~· ~rlf-containe<I camper. moh1lp hnmf's on th" h;iy In Jo'OR TOP USED CARS
~lOOJ mi. jacks. bounce· Ne11·por! Rf'arh. Pnv. h,.11rh J! yuur car ts extra clean,
&. all rt'Crl'atlnn;il facil 1tiP~. ., ... LI• I1rst. ewlly!, hnots. for c-a m p ~-.
rra1]E"r or good clean i:ilr, Arlull~ only. Nn J>t'!.~. Cnrnc BAUER BUICK
look. Bays1dr V1lla&e, :lOO E 2.3-t E. lllh St . 119.J-2671. =~=~~--~--1 C00~"-'-"~·~··~'·~·-N_.B_. __ ~o: Costa f.les;i 54S-7765 '69 FORD Rangt>r &;, 1on -=-
ii fii ir &: 11' cah ovtr Motor Homes 940 1ri1PORTS \\'ANTED
c11mper R.t>circ toilf'I. eye Ora.nge Countil's
IPVE"I oven. All Ja1:k11 & CONDOR TOP:; BUYER
f'quip. you nf'Mi . XJn! cond. BILL MAXEY TOYOTA
e Complete Stock ol mama
Think S..
"FRIEDLANDER"
13750 IEACH ILVD.
!Hwy. l'I
893-7566 • 537-61124 S4T;iO. 547-6091 d 11 y 11;, Thf' )'!!Chi lhal'g not 11. hoat. 18881 Beach BIYd.
673-1901 !'VP!!. BILL CORWlN FORD H. Beach. Ph. 847-85.55 FIAT gj() SpyrlE"r 1970, Xlnt
•59 Dodge ''• Ton PU Oran. ge County'11 Condo. r Dis. Autos Imported 970 cond. Lo mi 's. A'.11 /Fi'ol ' b "" s •1 s ' -r.1d 10, $1~i0. 310 Balboa 1,i ton, 811 ft, overhead camp-tn utor, L.>11 • "a1n t.,
er, slteps ~ w/range ice <:>range. Cla.~e to titre; me. Lar9e Selection B!vrl, Nn 6.
box, O\"Pn. \\'Ired, etc., · ... e1; Jfll" b'el'\\'a)'S. 639-18::.0 Or of Fully !!!GS FIAT 8.iO cc 1'p1rll'r. 1m·
clean.C;iJl 5a7-9792. 0K='~'·~M~4=4-·~.,--~--~ m;icul11.ll', new r 11.d l als ,
FACTORY d I rf' cf c11.'11lf'r, l!lfi9 23 ~l. f.lo!.or h<lme. 6f'll Reconditioned $1,2.:<t 548--8S.i.1
t-.lajor;\'av & Hal! Pint froJ, ronta1f\tc1. ~lp.~ 6. For sale . Used Y·W's 1961! r-1AT 124 Spr1r1 Coupe-
S795. Rfi<J \v. l!lth s1. c :~f . ' 57,500. !197-86R9. Porschet-x Jn t con d . E x 1ra1 .
T ·1 T I 945 ~ Sacrif1ct, 645-2373 DANA 36" SheU top, lull ra1 ers, rave
boo S .. 2-Campers & Vans ·10 Fiat J24 Spyder A!\1/FM, l. -' ·1· l.'i' SCOTS'.l.1AN Tr111 ll'r
2131!>92-2517 Cl11•n11r11\ Po r111 Pot. 12 Nilt 100~ 30 D11y nr 1000 Mllf's $2.800.
Guarantc" * * R3l-103R • • Cycles, Bikes, anrl lHl lighl~. Rr~I offer. 1:171 ZF:NITJI & Arlmiral
.i!·ln~-nl11 llialf'. Lo\l•f'st
pnet>.<:. 3 yr plrture rube, l
1 r 1 ... ,~~ & serv1ct. Antl'nn11
1risr11lll'rl 11·/;ill ronsolt~.
ARC rnlor TV, 9021 ArJ;inta,
H.B 96!1-332fl
GflEAT D11ne pup~ beautiful.
Golclf'n !11'.l.'n, alro "Vl'lv't.
Rl11ck Gi11n! rf'a.~ :i?i7-74RO,
AKC RI"£ Af~h;in puppies
( tllnm & D11.r1 shnw dogs I,
All colors. 54t",..:J.'JR9
Scooters 925 54R-!\11'.l7> -nr ~31-2164 . P;irtx & l..;ibnr • Engine • 2-r F13GLS Slonp, heacl. ~al· Tr8n!. e Fronl & Re;ir Axle
Irv, txlril Mils, 0 /8 SIS. AlRSTREAi\l '69 rllx 29'. A~Pn1bli""' e Bri!.kf' Sys-.-,,-. _X_(!<_E--4-.-,-,-1-,-,-,-..
JAGUAR
T,\Pt: cll'C"k!ii, H11mmnnrl ~
fnr 11urn ...,..17 ~pkr~ Sf{).
TEAC !'IPrrn. prnl. nmc1P1
\l /pr<'·t1mp~, f"Mrrl !..· play
lJ<l,.k Like ne"'· 5 2 j 0 .
:l.11-S:1.il
-------DLIAL HS....1-1 mndl'I slPrPn
rf.eorrl pl11.\"Pr ..,,·irh 2
m11tch1ng spl'11ker ~. Ex -
('P]lrn1 conc11t1nn 5 100
f'.1fi.-2!l!IR
Nf;\VF"QllNDl..AND 1R mos.
AKC rP2 . 5150 or bes! offer.
· L k w ,_,, THINI A/C + xtra~. t.hnt conrl. e ~ s ~·~:tr;i,:. 1 e ne · '" tem r.!ectrical ystem Michelln.s 52.095. em/Im
673-494!1. HONDA UsPrl 6 mn Rra~-1HS4685l C 0....'ner !T14i 493-4012. ~ 496-30411 34966 a mt no S;ilf' or trade. lslandl!r ~· Capistrano.
A KC, sailhnAt, inl)011rrl motor, -NIMROD hrd1p ltnt tr11i\~r. ~ ~1--'--~===~--
\\."ESTIE Tr1T1PN=, £ood shape. &12-51 06. •'fRIEDLAND'fR"t Oltl·6, tatilr. stove. Ice box I ~ JENSEN ~~~-P ~:~23~ale & !em. 1.100 14 No. 413. Xlnt ronct. ,.,. eu.a. IMW'I'· .,, S7!r.1. l9.rt Pl)': ~I~ ' 50 JENSEN
~-------~,·so6 Tr11 ilrr. sl 1n~. hnal CO\'f"r. 537-6824 • 893-7566 1969 SHASTA 13' tr11i]Pr. xlnt o: Atrnl.ORIZED
Horses 5800. C11\I; ~\&-81~9. •THE BIKE SHACK• mnrl, ~lePp~ 5. Lots or PX· e .. ,J~P SALES:. SERVICE
64~119.
3 YR OLD Rrg QuartPr l l!l69 J4' INTERNATIONAL NEW BICYCLES tr;i~~ 64:-r.27;i.i. ,.,
n1<1rP, ~rPn hrokrn. S400 ii 420. X\n\ ('(lnr1. >A"\th •pin· PARTS e ACCESSORIES Auto Service, Pi1rt1 949
Taf'k $175. 545-f.685 n;ikPr. $~~-!\4&-1001. M!J-3031 Exl. 66 or 67 EXPERT REPAIRS '63 CORVArR, 4 sp<i 1970 HARBOR BLVD,
l RLUE W'Y gtlrling . txper *" t"LTPPF.R Sil:'!* ON ALL MAKES tr11n~axlr, rnmp!P1e with COSTA MESA
r1c1Pr, $200. 545-9777 allik lor C.ood con<l. S2j()fhr~t of(Pr. Rr;inni:: & \\'r1rlin.e: r-lutc-h 57:1. Rf'11r S\llliPf'MIOn.
L1orl;i jl!u~! SPll. 6i.1-:Y.r..>2. 1093 C BAKER, CM s11me rar 515. ~~ * *
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 \V. Coast wy,
Newpor t Beil.ch
O r,1 n".Jl" County's
Largeost Sele,11011
N•!W & u~ed
Me r ced0 s Be nz
Jim Sle mons Imps.
Warner & f.,'\ai n St.
Santa An.J 546-4114
MERCEDES BENZ
DEALER OFFICE e '69 280 SL e '68 250 SL e 'j.'} 2~rl S Class11: con vi . e ·10 :r.:.<1 C CPI'. '7rl 280
~E e 'SR 2'".i(l S e "6-l 220
S '.llA.'>;Y l\10RE! Fi:>r mfo
ca ll
HDUS~: or j1\fPORTS
111 523-7750
e CLASSIC ·35 1~ SL
harrl!op. Gnnrl cond. Bes!
nf!Pr f;73· 1066.
"62 220-~. Air, F'.11, radial
I.Ires. Sllj() •+ ;,~~·1617 **
1966 :'>IERCEDES Bf'nz D
Al\f/f')I. Rlr. :Xlnt .!ihape,
$1600. 546-1630.
MG
~·~----~---MG
Al.rruORtZED
SALES t.. SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 \V. Coast Hwy.
Newport Be;ict .
•
THINK
''MG''
Ill
"FRIEDLANDER"
1ilSO lll!A(H IKWT. :19)
893-7566 • 537.o81A
2 MG's, ';,g k '60, Rl':blt
eni::"s, New 111-es, Good
conrl. $900 cash !or both.
67;)..J931.
67 Opel Kadette
:-.'eerl:s e11g1ne work.
'!11.ke Oller! 64fi-541S
'70 GT, low m!lea~. xlnt
ronrl $2525. Call 557-3692
bt,vn ~ & 1 pm.
PORSCHE
WE BUY USED
Porsches
DON BURNS
PRESTIGE
PORSCHE, AUDI
l."!631 Harbor BlYd ., G.G.
(Just S. of G.G. f('Y.'Y.)
636-2333
MERCEDES BENZ
DEALER OFFICE
• "70 Porsche 914 e '66
Porsche 912 • 'fiO Forsch'
1600 e '69 V\V Dix Bus e
'71 V\V Bug • '64 vw Bug
s:harp. FOR il!ORE INFO.
''" HOUSJ::: or Ir-TPORT!
11) 523-7~
PORSCHE Cl11.!iSiC '57
Speefl51er. strong 1800 CC
912 Eng. Very C'lf'an. Asking
$2.iOO nr trade'..' ~94-7865,
4!11-9~1·1.
'71 POflSCHE 914. I..e5s than
5.000 mi. Nicest in town.
&1&-2365 or 835-16.'ll. u k for
Ear!,
~~-~--~~-1 "60 Porschf', Xlnt L'Ond, Must
F('P. Sl'.fll or best otter.
fii:>-0122.
\!l~i SPEEDSTER . :x I l'l t
rorl<l. ~!l() Pn~. New tires
!27::in. &14-1359. * '70 POR. 911 T.
Ph. 544-1913
TOYOTA
'70 Toyota Corona
1!16.1 !\1(; UOO .!iedan.
!f'l1. $2115.
fil&-1.142 af1rr fi pn1
'.ltus! Automatic., Xtra Clean, 12,octl I mdes, t98JASP !.
$1795
'63 MG MIDGE,,_-
$J2j. Cali :>18-.1\f.i.l
The fastest dr;iw in the \Vest
.. a Daily Pilot Classibf'd
Ad. 642-51i18
MacHoward
839-96<XI or 531--0608
Comer 1st & }fa.rbor
Santa Ana
STERF:n cnn~nll', C:n1nrll>:.,
A :"It Ir l\f F h 0 rt \\" R \' p •
rurnt11hl,., Rf'11 ut r11hlnet.
S:lRfl 644-112.\ &16-~~fi!i.
Livestock 858 Schock-bit Endeavor N!!ilr F"a1rvirw • 546-4130 BRAND new vw ti~ Jni;I * * * 26'. •40. Xlnt c-o nrl 54200. '69 YAillAHA 150 Fn:luro. rim, Still hAlli guarani~.
JOHN R . HAMIL TON
31887 9th AVE. Autos, New 980 Auto•, New 980 Autos, New 980
2)" Cnlor 1·v, ~Arririr-e S!l:l.
U1" rr>rl;ihlP $2.i. 21" t11bl"
niorltl S20 All Ari! In xln1
ronrl, :l.i7-S0~2
:.i:i·· 7.rn1lh rrmot" ('1)ntml
h\11rk &. 11·hlte TV. $75
f\.12-~'.l7i.
~A-o~m-,-,,~1-c="~l"-,-=TV""-
nro
• f;~fi-4291 •
MIKE MIKIEWICZ ~1-R.'M <t;iylli: 1173-~,,.'!03 t>Vf'io. 21" t1rP!H'nmpres.~i(ln re· S20. 645.-342:1.
25895 AVE. \VANTF:D: KITE s;illho11t, In ~l~'~"~'~·Jl,~'>;·c:cl~Jc~o~l~c~o=oo~._14:7'~.1~~~~~=~~~~;1 MARIPOSA ~ rnnrl. Must be under 6.1.3-2902 nr 642-5769. II~ 1
SAN JUAN S·lOO. 673-3.174. WANTED I AutotforSN .
CAPISTRANO VEr-.'TURF.:-21, fully equip, Honrl;i 2j()-305 S('r;imb!Pr.I '~;;;;;;;;;;;;~
You llN> lhl' winll('t' ol $2.000 or hi'~! orfPr. Runn1ni:: nr not "'ill bllyjl
2 nckeis 10 1he !!62-63!'!1 P11rh;. 5.J7.9.1ffi. Antiques/Classic• 953
Southli1nd !I OLJDAY 2-1" y11wl. 5 sa.illli, .\fA~"S 3 Sfl('Prl f;nghsh $25. 3 l!l25 Lincoln 4-don r s~n
Home & Garden lnhrd "ng.1'1P~ 4 Sun·t~·ed . girls Stini;:-rav.~. J-S 25 . .
Show r-.1 d 499-2066 2-$15 I rl , • 24" "-h ' • Ong. mint conrl. 56.C:OO ml. 1 int con : · "" Y ~ """ 11tnn E..'xl'f'llenl runninl:' cond. al thr
ANAHEIM
CQNVENTION
CENTER
LIDO 14 St. tr;iilrr. xlnt rnnrl. $12 .. lO ~12-4111 ('u "~ SJ""" Call stom U'/\•Y· . ....,.,,
Sail i'n. 21!j.I. s~.iO. 1213) I "A\\"ASAKf ~. lalf'c 1!170 fi.'16-23AA Aft. fi pm
.\21-2041 . I. R RPrl. &>ttPr than nr~··-niany 1~28 :.lodPI A _ l'flUPf", Early
HflBIF 14 ll n10 nlrl . frPP e>ctral'I. S6~. 646-~JN. 720 niorlrl nnrP~tl'rf'rl fln1":. rnnrl
SOUTH LAGUNA
1"011 AJ'I' the winll('r ot
2 t wkt>t.~ 1n the
Southland
Home & Garden
Show
II\ !he
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
July :10-Aui;. 8
PlNse call &42-5678, ex1. 314
bl!!>A'een 9 and l pm to
"laim )nur f'lrkelE., {!\°Orth
Coun1y toll·free number is
540-1 ?'lfh • • * ~'"-=-"' y=-'" --:I~
J Lines, £"T ime~. $2.00
July 3'1-AU1": g Bal 1~1 .. mnnnng !or mn o! CPnlrr St. C. \! Borl,v 111 m1n1 l""nnd Si;;fl Plp;i~ cell 642-567!1. ex1. l14 -.. , o Aug S!l:.O fii.~i 1 i;,, YA!\!AlfA 2;.(l("r. s trf'rt F.:v;.2:i~0 all Ii pm -ME-RC EDES BENZ bl'fl1·epn !I a n<i 1 pru 10 .,.....,
t"la1m yvur 11rkl"ts. (.'\orlh At.CORT Sunfish ~ailholl t &ramblPr. Rt;il Cl"ll n : 19·7 Nn'.'ltAO, ThPr" 1~ no DEALER OFFICE
<'ounty 1nll-free number is rl'rl l1hPi;::la~~. r1ir rnof <;non ronrli!ion. S 3 ~ n ~·11r11nE"r: All on£"inal &
2 YF.AR nlrl B r n 11· n 1 ~ h S.11'l-\Z2fl) <'il~1Pr. S3i'i. 5.17-5389. .li,l~ 1 ll12 ~tll('k . Sl 7j() ;,;,1-'162:1.
[""1'11P fou nrl nPar Z2nrl & • * * SHOCK rArl' sabot, hlue, No. ,\1U.c;'f S!"ll' '71 YamAha 2:.0 ,\ rart rirvl 'M Chrysler:
;\e"·pnr1, ~r1H unrla1mrrl, ~~~~~~~~~~! 5G:i? ("lf!l)d ronrl. Ul1 Enduro Bnu£hl 1n ;\l;iy ~ hl ark 2 rlr .~Prilln r.d rr.inc1.
ri11J<1 f111r1 ~r.orl h nn1f' ~ ** 64,l-fi2iJ **" ~~rrfPrt 642-;t.:l \!l S!PV.'.'..:_ ~IOO ":,,.;i,& . ..,lifi,),l .~.li-1.lf\'.l_,,_-~----c M¥~J',!~~nl [•:if ] INTERNATIONAL 14 'GA fi.iO TR/UtlfPH C"!1nppPr. 0 8 .
i..::[TTF::--hl11 rk nr;ingP I le. US:29.'>. S\5(1. ~~-fi!l.14 ;::_. '",~.l.:.,~n! rnnrl. AftPr ;i 11n1, une uggres
-\1 h1l•• .~~ hn1nPI ~~~ lnme & 1 ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ! ~.~ '·' 64 INT SCOUT P U
'
'' mM" ii;i r"''"· I Boofl, Slip1/Do<ko 910
1
, , , . I I 900 '7() 11l!Ui'o1PH :-.)"I -t·~1 &12-.l~l!I Genera ~;· SLIP 11v~1J nn\\, l111na CLLAN * i\ll'ST SELL 2 V.'D, dlr. Gnrwl ninll("r
FREE'" 1!""'1(1 hon1r. 4 inn'~ CAPTAIN Pn1ni i\lar1n11 . Ttmpnr11ry 5.16-!'.1472 AFT 6P:0.1 ~rnna he111't, t11kP ~rn;i.JI
l..;::ih m1·': nl~1": All ~hnl~ g, Unhm1!rd !1{'Pnse -an.v ittn~!< mnn1hl.v b11li1~. Ev I'' : c.,~,-c,~. A~,~,A~l=lA.,--~J~25~E~o-d~u-ro-.1 dnwn. CAI! .tll 10:00 ~736
1IC'f'l1~1' ~1s-.!''li --1 tons. 30 Yf'al'S eJq>e.rienl"f! I fij;,....;tfl:)I lmm11r s.~9;. -.j!).J.filll l J\VB.!R791.
1~r.f:Y 11 ~rr al1Prrrl m11I,. r111 1 ~~ti & pn11Pr. Prnrtss1nn;1J PRTVATE mnonni:: fnr salf', #i73-1350~~~-·I Trucks 962
956
e ·;11 [);ir.~11n ?mil Rd~trr e
'fil'l TR 2."il e 'fill t"1at S.i()
S.pyrlPr • ·~ '.'l!C ;v • '6~
MGC GT e '69 ~·JGB GT
air e '711 ~1BG f;T (21 e
·;,11:, "60 .\· 'f;2 190 SL wit &
11rd1ops • 'AA All~t1n Htalty
SprHI' • 'fi7 Ghia CpP •
'fi.1 Hea!Py ~fn'l Rrl!!Pr • 'f>ll
F ui1 124 Spl Cf)!', Air '.ltANY
MORt:• For 1rlfn rail . , ,
HOL:SE or l\1PORTS
I 1 ) 523-7Z,O
ALFA ROMEO ,desprrll tr~y .n~"rls ~~on1P _ tiy I sport l1sh1ng fo:lllrle; M('x1r<1n
1
4Th "' .luly Oivl'. 11·12, 11r. 1970 HONDA 331 SL. 11•/rov-i----------· I ~11nd11~ fi 1~·.1!'1.'il'; lii.>-423,) &. Crntral Ametira & P11rif· mmnrlnl~~ 4y 7H/:Yl-~3jili. rr. under 4500 n;i. xlnt ,70 Ranchero '67 SPYDER RM convert,
TO i\ H;ippy Hnml". m ixerl ·I 1r Co;1&1 ""attr~ • Jrn;tn.J<'-BOAT !'lip 11,,11.il, July !gt, for ~hlJlf'. &tst of!Pr, 49'24!320 Xlnl "nnd, Lo mi"~. Best ol·
hlk/'.1.hl Spanirl, frm. 9 t1on 1n. hniil handling, SPa· 60,_70,_ Wirle slip. . . factory \Varra.nty, V..S, Auto ff'cr. Leaving country. Days:
1110 ~ C;itJ ~8-;r.16-1 . mansh1p. DR & CE'~tsnal 67:µ;t;Oli 197n 'r Ai\1AHA 2f&c '"'1n, ""· Tranli lac terry Air Conrl, 632-6650, EvPs & >A•lcnd1:
' 011 vigation. PICK UP & -~=~=·'°"_.-"-';-;;---c.'1 eond. All e:lec. S50. S150. Rac110' H~"rrr 11nreri Gln!5. 968-0443
2. S:O.IAl.I. hrt'l'd !Pm PU I>' DFLJVER'' .4.N\'WHERF.. SLIP SPACF. AVAIL &12-4.ll{)l Hil r. . 1~Color, 2'2.oro ---=.~E~N=T~L~E=y=--·1 ptr~. 21 1 mn·~. Arlnrahle t'l'l~TAin a v111labl, fnr t::C· 2j"-3fl' SAILROATS 'il St.;ZUKI TS.185. Llke "'"" 1nl! owner, "'lust :i.t~'.4.i'l tf'n<led cnii!!lng. Ext"nsiv" • fl7;i....f,6fWi *" ~ mi. r.tu~t ie!I, b!'g t of· JP{' llll.437E1 52694. l!JSl Bentley Very i ood
f'R~;F'. l'IITEN:; "'r y 11dmin1.~trat1ve "x-perience 911 fPr. 675·1 AA1 Bill Ganll . u10\'e Lincoln · "O"d . R""' ,nor:!. $6000 or ••• ,.,"I• m··lli-('fllortd, male ,,.,, ...,,11. Boats, Speed & Ski -~~~==~---1 M G G , " · .,. "' " .,.,...£~ *" 69 HONDA 3.iO + ' trcury, arrll'n rovl! be&! of/er, 5:1&-3778 wlqida ~..& lrn111l" .\'J.li-\.1$1.i. 35· ELCO CLASSIC Cruie'r * * *" SUPER CLF.AN : Like nt\\'! Bl\"rl R! Brookhur1 I . onJy.
. ~nADOR fl'm 61., n10 inc-lud ing H11 rbor moorini. MITCH GREENBERG $4!!0 * 646-90721_6J6_."'1J __ . _______ 1 ..:...::c._~~~c----I
: • ...i:i Vrry frirnd!y. 'T'n gd All xtra$. Jmrnac eonrl. New P .O. BOX 4299 BMW '"v· F e '70 PE~"TON, Top ~ond, • ; h!ln1r. ~·UW1AA.1• P!11Z. Slip 11Y11 il. IRVINE, CALI • Kanis. 5575, An:ci n u ~. IH.
:, F"REE: tn l:'rl hotnf', 9 mo $4500. ~18-6772 You B~ lhr "'·innf'r of 673-3048 Automotive Excellenc.
male Bii~~t1. papti-,. fi FT. clln(hy, 3 HP Johnson 2 t\ckrol! 10 the 0
CaU 962-8020 Complete $125. w ill .ell Southl•nd l969 HONDA 90, $150 International HarvelfPr
I ~· """'B Hom• & Garden 540-3258 -RECREATION CE"TER ~ FREF: KTITENS, 11U se per11 1e y . .,..,_,,"""' eYe!!. ,.
!''°'· Boet1/M.,1ne Show Mobile Homes 935 ROY CARVER, Inc.
' ,,,._,,,, Equip. 904 AN'i:~hEIM 292s ""'"°' •1,d. ROY CARVER, Inc.
: ~T SIAl-IESE KITTENS. CONVENTION IMMED, ~up11.ncy CT1gtom CoRta t.ie1a 546-4444 2925 Harbor Blvd. ~ 7 ""ks old . TRADE 4 HP ootbMrd for 2 CENTER madf: Xlll~ • 2 Br Iron!! & MUST SELL Cotita Meiia 546-'444 '==~C=•::llc..Wr-0:;::,_:.:".c'_,,::::~ I HP. "-JI mal"hed P'ir CB'~ I re11 r pore t.!i, carpnr1 . rg 'f\5 Chevy V8 util ~ ~ CORTINA J: ~ '" July »Aug. cooler Arlulla. Sp fi , ' '
: ffiEE to _,.,f ho!TM!. ltnrl'd lhoml! bAM" .ti &e.a-golns::) "'''" call 642-56711, tr!. 314 E I' I I Pk 13741 Cl ~n. New J)llint. Eng & tires •'"' 1 199 me.r11" '" , 1n. I•~ -nd ••~.,. "-t • '.·rl. lnVf'Jlbll' m11le rnllit'. w Ir r Y x I• • bf'twetn 9 11 nrl 1 pm to ton GG ~ 1 162 " IP""" '"" ~ """ • • ~t'I! l'l'TI · ff 549-2425 '68 CORTINA GT, $1493 • ~hob.. R97-451 4. 542-7096. 714/644-21211. rl11.1m your tickf!tii. !North 531-4006. 0 ""· · ' Ablolut,ly clillidc. conditioo:
· BLACK Dut<'h r.11hblt. ftmll.!1! Boats, Power 906 County toll-tree number ii l f~O;;,R.:::J,~.-1~11c0~.500~-,-.-,-,-,.-li·652<siiruwoiiE'-B~A"KE"'°Ro~p~1.~1ru;;;;:p Red w/chrom' ""htf'I• _on-
1\ /r;\;cr Gnori J>PI 646-850'1. 540-!Zll) own 1 2fl'll5.i' mot'J1!1' h<lme v.R. autnmallc S2aO nr hfogl ty 21 ,000 ml._ 4 speed. Pvt.
' 2 F'LiJfFY IMiit ~l~ MUST ""ll. 25· O>A•trui E'll· *" * * on ,mr courg.e 111 The beQrh. ofter. 732 W. lSth St, C.~1. party. Call eves. only
1hlk.&:1 >A'hL ~0014 pr!"~ O'uial'r. i\°)()t1 eoM. lf GLASPAR. CO hpJohn~n HA~ lal"ied ~crr"'1f'fl ror>m 100A~p~•~A==-c-----, 646-7891.
one:r. Eve. 64l-8062. + trailer, xl11 't oonc1 . S800. & fl'1'1Ct"d p11tio. P11rk hit~ ·57 GMc"'ilh tnn van truck l ---'~D~A~T~S=U0N~--·I
17' STA.RLtNE.. 55 IW -""""'=~=· ~-~-~-c All fAcil1f1M ~.~719, >A'/hyrlm !11LI g1lf', rebulll
Evin niM .\ rowr. Good lfl&P !Kl bn$t IS' Inboard ·59 FLAMINGO cl, I u x, en.i;:. 55,j() or best oftl'r, Call I----.... ..,..-_._,,,.,..,,.. I
ronr1. $895. 675-4~2. Y.'/trlr, 1750. mnhlle hnm~. N ' w 1 y :..m-7n.i nr 968-57fi0 to''~· '67 DATSUN SEDAN
JI' CHRTS CRAIT=-,.~,~;,· 1 * 67~3fll + fu rni~hl'1!, 111r '°nnrl, p11rin 1955 !'ORO PICK·UP SlOO
rnil~Pr, T. W. Hl'Art It '70 Brnotnn \Vheler w/40 hp r'l'lv'cl. \1nt Nlnc1. S3(l00, C11ll nttd~ trAn11 work. R.Ji rr J .\prl , 1t1r. R. ExcPllent
1r:alll'~'. f'lc. R37~957, eng. Br~! oner nver 51000 for appl, ~!l-;,608. :r40·01~.l cond1t1on 1hn1 oui. Old c;ir Pets, Generi1I ISO
: ... ~ PARAKEF:TS 41 ' CHR.TS lt'i-ellhin. lltf'l>S. ~"~4-~11~95--.~---c---'ffi Gn>11l L#lkl'~ :mx~·. f11mi· '6.1 CHEV%. Inn . X1nt ronrl or 1maJJ rlown can fin.
FREE
lilAJl Hf
J.i.11'1. f •l'lftt. Fl (TO•Y ill
CONOITll'.*ING. -• •--W.. p11-(f •1<I b-o~.., ,..
d'io.heo"'~!IJ,,1 $895
'68 AMERICAN
~--'*""· n.. [<.,...,,...,. (yl. ~to..011!"1 T1on1m1uloN
~Wt 071
'70 CHEVY
n t.lMtltO
Y-1, -· "'"-~ olt e~poww •,_._..
6605•(
•3395
'67 COUGAR
•11s.oo
VALUE
SUNROOF
BRAND NEW
'71 HORNET
$2199
# 153059
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
BRAND NEW
'71 MATADOR
4 DOOR5TATION WAGON
Meny many e11!roa iflcluding
power t1 eering, luggage roe!.:..
tinled glou., ww tires, etc.. Ser.#
308517
'69 Ambassador DPI ITA. WAfOll
y .•• -· '"""-""""'Y fir
(Ol'Mio!.,..•'1(1, -110.r....
~O••r btQ ~ 11, O~ly 10,000
inilH ll(G,49
'69 RAMBLER
AMl•l<A• t DI.
A~•o. !raM .• ~06•~. ~"1•
9Mvtofut cor YOl.603
'69 BUICK • ... 1•• he""" •• •DNl•i«>n:i. t.A
jl(lwtr, '°""""' roeri, lM/l'M
'''"'· 1111 1••111"11 ... ~ •••• um•?
$ 795
'69 DODGE
Slll'h tll
V•I, '"'"· "'"'·• j>OWV 1,_,.,,_.Wt14
Just l'llJ1 ol the ned . SJ.95.
'i.\7-~3~1
8. ~ h.p. Auto pilot. 529,95(), Sell Idle 11~m• 00\Y! ly p11rk. s~.200. Call a!t l l s~r.; Dlmper $90. Must M!ll. pvt. pty, Plf'I M •rt • am cr..."fll'r.f'~130. CAii 64l-..'167ll" S1.w_1 __ 11 m , R47~5..,7.
7
646--0668 ___ ,_,._•_•_._•_·k_~_,.,_,_._l_,..,.._,,1~,-•_94_.U_U_. ___ 1 __________________ :-________ ...,.._ --···--::-:. ) ~ ~;,
'
' -... ,~,,,,.
'' LJ ·
.,..., -·f>-----·
~ .
I
I
'
DAl.J.V PILOT Thul1d11, J11l~ ~9. 191'l ~-~ .. ~-~l§l~l~-~ ... -~l§l~~I ~-•~~ .. _,M~ .. ,.~l~§l:_I ~ ... ~ .. ~ .. ~-~1~§1~1 ~1 ~., .. ~.tMS.~I• ~l §J~111~._j· ~Aul .. ~lw~S.l•-=l@~~~I~, ~ ..... ~ .. ~-~l~§J ll ~ I ~Am~'"""~'' ;;;i,ij§]~l ;;'----1 _ ... _ .. _ .. __ .. ,.-;;:l@~".lt•
'. Autos,. Imported 970 Autos, lmport.d 970 Autos,. Imported 970Autos, lmporf9d 970 Autos, Imported • 970 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used i
t
\
TOYOTA . VO ... SWAGEN ~VO".:""."':U<".°':S""W""A:--:G'""E"'N,-l---'C-A_D..,IL_LA_C.......;,.:. CONTINENTAL FORD • ~EJICURY ~
DEAN LEWIS
TOYOTA
im Toyma
Deroo #5991
$1777
No Do\\·n Payment
$65.31 mo.*
TRIUMPH
VOU<SWAGEN
'65 VW Bug
RUM Pmt'Ct, N-Paint. <f
Speed, RadJO, Will M11kto 11
beautiful second car, ! PGH-
493 J $777. Garden Grove
Lincoln -Metetll')', Garden
Grove Blvd, at Brookhurs1.
6.16-29BO.
THINKING
OF A NEW OR USED VW?
Let Har bo ur Vol kS\l,'agen Pro ve To
You That We Appreciate You r Business
OVER ISO NEW & USED VW'S TO CHOOSE
FROM. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. BRING
YOUR TRADE.
OPEN SUNDAY
SPECIALIZING
IN QUALITY
JUST 5 REMAINING 1971
DEMONSTRATORS LEFT!!
• All J!AVE REMAINING FACTORY
WARRANTIES & FULLY EQUIPPED. •
ELECTRA * BUICK SPORT WAGON *
RIVIERA * LE SABRE * * OPEL WAGON *
'70 BUICK LE SABRE
Cus+om coup11. At.1tom•lic , r•dio, h••ter,
power st eerin g, pow11r br•k•s, f•c.tory e ir
cond it ioning , vinyl roof, WSW, t intwd 9 la1s.
Fodo•y w'"$31598
'70 RIVIERA
Full power eq uipment plu1 f•c:tory •ir con-
ditioning, AM-FM ster•o radio, vinyl roof.
This one is iust beaufift.11. l720AE8 l
'70 BUICK WAGON
9 passenger. Factory a ir condition-
ing, power sf••ring, pow•r windowt, pow•r
st•ering, power seats, roof reek. Must -•••·
IOOoAH I
BAUER
'69 BUICK LE SABRE
Cu,tom 2 Door h•rdtop. VS, .,uto matic:, ra-
d io, heater, power ~feer ing , power brakes,
factory •ir conditioning. Factory warr11n ty
too. JZSV5J4 J $2883
'68 BUICK RIVIERA
Full power equipped includ ing factory a ir
condit ion ing, AM-FM radio, vinyl roof. Yot.1
will hev• to see this on• e nd teke it for •
+•sf driv•. IVSF308 i $2795
'66 BUICK ELECTRA
C t.1ttom 4 Door. Automatic, power
pow•r brak•s, pow•r window' &
own1r, low mileag• 9em,
.
BUICK in COSTA MESA ' .
234 E. 17th St~ COSTA MESA
548-7765
•
• I -.._,_
'69 VW Bug
4 Speed, Radll'.l, owned rll'\\1
by 11, lady 111KI only 3~>.000
m1lf'l! on this lovely bug,
(ZKZ57S1 S1388. Gardtin
Grove Lincvln -J\.fercury,
Gar'df'n Grove Blvd, at
Brookhurst. 636-2980. ·c_ __ ,
LARGEST 1970 MARK 111
SELECTION OF Perfeo._·t~ Ft.11! & tvmpletely
CAOILL~CS IN lu>.ury o><Jt11p/IO"t1 hl(·ally ~r+-
ORANGE COUN TY «. & hru; been M>rvK-ed by
SALES-LEASING authorLZed Lutt._'Oln dl'iiler.
AUTI-IORJZED ~.000 \Vrll n1a1nra1ncd
• SERVICE ~ iniles. TI11s lu.~ury car is
Nabers Cadillac flaw!~ & must be seen & driven !o be appn:•ciated. lt
196..i V\V bug, 1 owrl('r, good 2600 1-IARBOR BL., is p1~1..-ed for 8 quick sale
cnrn1, ne-.· piunt. New t'ng. COSfA MESA al SfilF.JO. Phone 67:l-88U. 117
clu1rh, murflcr 111.stallrct by 54D-9100 Open Sunday Via Koroo, Lirlo ls!e.
"""' ~~~;;'-1"' '71 COUPE DE VlllE-:~===c=o:R:v:A~IR===
----------11..o;i.-Jed, only ~.Oiil mi!f':>. '63ffiRVA1R VAN
DEAN LEWIS Corpor,ition prc~idcnls' * $1.'!0 * 6-l~ """12
VOLVO ;1•1/es' 111·1vale car. Like new 1----'-'~~::c:.__ __ _
in f'Very respect. Call 1..:cnt CORVEnE
DEMO SALE Allco 8'24435 '°' d•mooo-1--------
i;-!ration appointment. • '69 CORVITfE 427. \\1111 l·.~'7~C~ .. ~,-,11~,-,-c··,.-,.-1~-rl-,'--y-,1-1,-_I sa<'nf1re !or $3000 !inn, Call
Nrarly pl'!'f('("I , $27.1 IPsS;(-"-•7_-_20~70~·-------
th11n 11•hlsl. fi.16-2365 l)f DODGE
l(:l.>-1631, ask for Earl.
$2998
1971 Volvo 144 Srtl.
De1no # 7.160
At Highland Motors
CrPdi1. No Prnhlr rn
...
'69 FORD Wagon ~usr .!!ell, <'legant 1f
Country Squirt 9 Pas.s Fae-M!'rtury f\1arquis, Lo mi,:t,
tory Air Cond1tion.111£'. V-8, fully ('UUlp'd, Bank btMlo
Auto, Power Steering, Pow-book J4~1(L Make oH'"
c-r Brakes, Luggage Rack, 64&-8186. "> ·
Low ~1J.let;, (SKG412)
$AVE
Harbor American
646-1)261
196? HARBOR COSTA MESA
1970 FORD Cortina, 2 Dr.
Stiel<. Body, 1 ires. brakes -
great shape! $1(.00. 536-6993.
JEEP
MUSTANG ,. .. ·:
'69 Mustang ~·
V-1<, Po1•<'r S!l"f'ring, Po~
Brakrs, Factory Air Coz>o,
Xtra Clean , IZl)S701J,
$229S
MacHowarci
83:).9600 oo· '1 I ·0608 '65 (.'uslOrn Jeep \\':1guO('er, L'llrnC'r 1st & 1-!a.rbox
a1llorr1 1rans, powf"r i;trg, San1a Ana
b1·ks, pos1traction, new ovl'.'r-c.6~,~.,~IU~S~'TANG, p\••er dill:.
Sl7-I'.' 11res, 59.000 mi. $1675. ~94-t.W./. 0Vrake1 s, J\ C,p DcLuxe lit.I·
MERCURY
1ny lop. erfrc! en~.
$l195 or hesl oiler. 547-91$1
or 673-ll18.
1968 J\1US~TA~N"'G,,.-cc3!l0~, ~V"-$'=°,
R&ll, fa('~OI)' air. V1ny! tOsi.
X!n1 rond. 968--0JZ'l. •
'!iii .\1usian~. R H.,
o\\ n1·1" .1--~rd. $790 . • * 644-1932 * *
Orig
OLDSMo=B=IL~E -.,'
'66 Olds 442 :
4 SpeNJ, 'Radio, Hral('r, ~k
Vui~·l 1'o[l. Tach, N<"w Paitf,
Worth $1300 -Sacrifice
S975. Call 542-1981
'6'! OLDS 442 convt-Xlnt
cond. :i1ust Sl'l! immed.
$1700 01' bf'St Offer. (.'all
;,;i?-6972 aft ;,. ---.~~~~-1 ·.'fl Olds 88. $.iJ, Mechanics
Bargain. J\lanv parts new
6·14·1.iC)(l 11ft 'n ~r eve. • 2 Dr llard:op, 418 V-R Aulo
Trans, Dt>n10. facto~y Air 'liRCUTLASSConvt.Xl~t
Cond. Po\\'er Disc Bi·akl's, co1u!, Air, f'/~. P/b, mags,
Radio, Wh11cwalb, tinted l(l ml, Orfrr. 962-to92. '
Glass, "'heel covers, Plus '6S Visla Cru1St'r 9 pass ~-
111any othl'r e.~lras -Pasll'l Gd conr1, 1w1v brakes, lld
Blue f1ni~h, Extrndrd Fae-11rf'.~ S77.i. $48-.3297.
/ory \\"ana111y, \\"1ndww 1--·-____ ___;.
S11l'kcr s:,1~.00 <1ur Special PONTIAC ·
Pnce $<1170.96 (53ti1:,9, Gar-
rlcn Grove L1ncoln-.l\-tercury,
Garden Grove Blvd, at
Brookhurs1, 636-2980.
'69 Monterey
'li7 Lr i\lans, 4 !iprl, air, PIS,
,t, P/B. Ulndeau lop. xint
l'On.-J J:J'.)9, 492--67!-l6. --------~~~-1 CATALfN,\ Con .. ·t. '61 Xbi t
ml'eh <."Ond , • * 673-511~ * ..
1!169 Firebu·rJ, vinyl top, air ,
3~..0 r"/i, a1110, low mi. Best
orrrr. 54$-~122 11!1 5.
1967 Ponl iflc Trn11K's!, 2 dr
hi, air ennrl. excel con~t
$91;,. Call any11me 1!42-51801
VALIANT .· "
Hardrop, l Ye;ir Wii.rranty,
V-8, Aulo Tnans. Factory
Ait Cond, Po\\'er SICi:'ring,
Power Disc BrakPS, Stereo
Hat11n, Hraier, \Vhi1cwaHs,
Vinyl rtoof, Tinled Glass.
\flu·('] ('Qver~. Co1nparc any-
\\'hC'J'C /or JH'ICC' & Qunl!ly
1 Y PZS971 $:1()()3, C11 f'fl"n
Gro1·e Lincoln -J\lcl'cury,
l,;<inh•n Grnve Blvd. at
H1~10khtl~t. 6.'\&29RO . '64 VALIANT 4-dr. atr roncl,
'GR Mere Montclair 4-flr, R&t!. ! O\\•nrr C'ar. Drive.n
hnllp, \"iny! tor. air, xln! only 33,000 mi. Body !ntack.
Colony P•rll
VS. 1u10., T~ll owr., •Ir. I~
pl ... (GGP142)
$399 aulo, ;,1r.I;:"~'~";'"::.;:"";'~'~' ----co11'1 , $13::.0. 67.'l--Ol:lfi.
1
tirrs new. CaU 646--0106.
flll'r 1~·ii.-tw.~. str·g, hrk~: Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990
F/;<.!, go.)(ld e0nrl . SI 12j
~~M-Q:W:I ---'i.iG o\f:tl 1hu \\'h1tr /hlur 1n-
!('r hud,rrs n1111 1 R.~l! I
X ln I n11u1111g ronrL l..<111 I
!~l(lk ~10Jll :'>lR-:11~:), I
'fi6 Cll~:vy SS 1111pHl11, .vrl-1
1011 , I n11·11rr. Sl.O':J:i .. Privfl1r 1
fl HJ'I \', li7~>-~22S . --------' ·,-,7 llEL nr:y 2-dr. $1:.0 nr
hP;.I nffrr. Huns .:cor!.
:'ilS-21\~S
CHRYSLER-
711 T s.-r· \\ \r;n'
l\1r, I ii.I~)() n11·~ I
hr. l11t: n1• k
77f~.~,,.;!1(1 d.1'. ~,11
COMET
!i·p>1ss,
rl 1s,• I
, j l·I 1
il ! (Q\1 ET C:1l1rn1r, ·1-~rr!.
\--~, I· T. ll l·IC'. "\l l':·i'l'j
~.\t' 1!1•~ "k11d. "\lake Gfh•r
,\llor 1; pin :,~,7-~.~1!1
fi:1 ('()\.Jt. J" I; I'\ l-.--.]-,-.,~-1
(;oorl <'0 1111 Ul .~· Olli r;I,,
l~l~-:l!\l!l ---l•l!iO Cnn\<'I , nr 11 hattrr"y,
nrrds 1 r:1n~ \1ork. ~norl
t:re~. ;YIO-R~lSl
COUGAR
1145 Ha1bor Blvd. '68 Cou9ar XR-7 1
645-5404 . I =~~ _ ll;ird111p 1 )p;ir 11nrr;in1v.
MERCEDES BENZ v.i::. AIJ;O lfflll~ F.~('lflTV A'1r 1
DEALER OFFICE f"on1!. _ 1'"11,,;. S1t't:n11~.1
e '7) T11r1110 RJY\11i.:h11n1 • Po11·pr 1)1."l' fl11ikPs, l{Rd1 ...
'70 t'h('I'~ C<1pf1<'1' • 'G7 llr.1!('r wli11t·1111 lls \"1111·1
Cutla!.""S suprf'lll<' l"pr • '611 !~oof, \1nl•·d 1.:l<1i<~: \l'lir~I
Lton111ris Cpc e 'ti.~ liTl) C'p+', n)\'!'1·~. P1·11·t• C1\111pHr<' ilnv. I
Ji ii' • 'fi!i Amh<i ss!lrl(lt' \\'iii::· 11·11rrr nnlv-Stf;~ 1111.1S76l
on. nir e 'f$t Frrrhird Cnnv1. 1;,.11!r11 (;.mve L1nml11-:Vlf'r-I
air • "6!1 Spo1 t Fury ('nn1·1. cur.1·, l :arrl,..n Ct-.1\'r• Rlvd.
tac 11·1HT .. \!ANY :'IHlt{l:~ n1 Rr!''l(}khLll~I fi.lfi.~l.~O.
For info c11!I. -----
HOUSE Of' l.\11'0111' CONTINENTAL ____ 111 f123-IZ'"::__ __
1
__________ _
BUICK 1969 MARK Ill , --1· -----P.)11t1ri· Blur \l'llh 1l111·k blt1e .'69 BU CK RIVI ERA 111 11,rinr rind J.i1nd11n. i\11
fflelor'Y air. full J'IO\\'rr, 11111 :u·i·rs.'. X1r;1 nu·r, r·a1·rory
fm stflrco, Iii! stf'C'rin!'(, lan-\\';:irranl\ r h' (ZAXOl7) I
di.u roof. UXY:'6'1. · s,5495 $.l79:1
Harbor American
6•~·0261
196~ HAR!OR. COSTA MESA
MacHoward1
839-~ r>r &.1 1-060R i
C0rner lsl & ll11rbor
CADILLAC '""" ''"'---'67 Continental
'
CLOSE-OUT
OF ALL REMAINING
'71 MERCURYS
BRAND
NEW 1971
COUGAR
S.lecl \~;ft, whiff ..... 11,, l)tl'•"e' 11~•r•~<;. teMote <O~lrol (eft
h•~d motto•, A M t•din, ti~ted ql ~n. di ~ w~I. cnvefl.
!IF'1 1HSS37991
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 • • •
•
-( --._ -=