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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-05-31 - Orange Coast Pilott t t ' t • • r t s t • 7 • Cle1nente Law1nan ---- After Fatal Crash WEDNESD~Y AFTERNOON, MAY 3f, 1972 VOL. 6S. NO. 1Sl. J SECTIONI, ~ PAGll The Heat's 01;1 Ul'I TtltphO!tl Wearing a, $1,000 mink bikini, Sharon Harvey, 24, the girl in the 'j'anya suntan oil billboard ads, plays in the surf at Santa Momca -one of millions who fled to beaches in sizzling heat. • Employes Oppose Battin In Unpre~edented Action By JACK BRODA~: Of tM Dtllr rli.t 11111 de£eated in his bid far a sec d term on the board, I The Orange County Employes Associa· tion, representing more tban a,000 C!hJllty workers, today issued a special bulletin to members urging that First Di.!trict in· eumbent Supervisor Robert Battin be "For the first time the history or the OCEA, we feel we inust oppose the reelection of an incumbent membe r o( the Board cf Supervisors," the Jetter to members read. t Oruge . . Weatlter Warm temperatures 'Will agath visit the Southland Thursday wtth highs at the h<aciies fl. rriiliijj· to 80 inland. Lows in ')le 60's. • INSIDE TODA 1.' A Treasurv ave1f~ theorized that a: lta.kV QM UM wai re- spamlble jqr lh• e:tj/joa,iOJ' Jhol ripptd through a i>Olnb 1htlttf at ·the home of a Valdese, N.C., te:itile e.iecutivt, . ..tUUno five children. - • I Headlined: Special June 6 (primary election date) Election Bulletin, the letter urges strongly that association members "vote against Battin's bid for re-elec- tion." "A vote against Battin Is a vote for good government," the letter c0ncludes. Listed are 15 'reasons why the board of directors of the OCEA feel that Battin -should~nol-be. reelected...l'bey include: -Battin alone voted against adoption of salary, fringe benefits ant! conditions of employment in an agreement reached by the OCEA with the county personnel depaftment. -He voled for ~lacing county depart· meat beads on a mo.nth-to-month pro- bation status.' -He voted against implementation of _th• Eqier~ncy Employment Act, com- mobly knoWn I! t1le PEP-program. This federal proj~t has provldecJ_ more than 1,000 new county jobs far unemployea persona. -Battin attempted to replace planning comml.asion members with his own perBOoal appointees for his own personal reuon,,. 'lb<! lett<r al'° atates that Ballin voted 1galnst new claMifications of employe jobl, and ncta.ssiflcatlon of positions ''thlt a!lttt <OUnly employea 1unW l'ebnlary o! th1I y.ar." I • • Fatal Crash Is Probed In Clemente By JOHN VAL TERZA Of tl'le O.Ur l"l"J Stiff The District Attorney's office today began cor1sidering the filing of complaints stemming from last weekend's crash of a San Clemente police patrol car and a small pickup truck in which one youth was fatally injured and four othe r persons were hurt. California Highway Patrol officers said this morning that two main factors assertedly contributed to the tragedy al El CaminD Real and Calle Dolores late Friday afternoon. Spokesmen for the CHP said the prime fa ctor in the mishap was the asse rted high speed of the police unit being driven by Patrolman Gary Adams, who was responding to a call involving a car being driven erratically. The secondary factor, CHP aides ad· ded, was the asserted failure to yield the right of way by 16-year-old Daniel Alan Cross of Long Beach, who was assertedly at the wheel of the small pickup truck. The high-speed, rear-end collision claimed' the life of Joseph Britt, 16, of Long Beach, who suffered fatal head and internal inju.res when he was thrown from the bed of the truck after the im- pact. The estimated speed of the patrol car was between 65 and 70 miles per hour, said CHP reports, quoting several v;itnesses. The one' prime consideration added, the spakesmen, was that the patrol vehicle 's red light:s and siren were not operating at the time of the tragedy, The posted speed limil is 30 miles per hour. Ad'ams, hmself, suffered minor injuries in the mishap and was released after munity HO!pital. The other two passengers and the driver of the small pickup suffered pain· tSee CO~!PLAINTS, Page %) LA Bus Drivers May Walk ~Out LQS ANGELES (/.P) -Some 2,500 union bus drivers will go on strike against the Southern C.llfomia Trans it District at midnight tmless a contract settlement is reached, union officials said today. Earl ll Oark, general chairman or the Unlted Transport>tion Union, said the strike would be forestalled if Gov. Ronald Reagan appolntJ a lact·finding com- m!Jslon. - ) • Ill ------------.. ~· Mesa Mari11e Bero ' . ~ . 1Retires After 30 Years-No Roses • ' DAILY '!LOT 1&91f ,Nf9 CODE AlJTHOR PRICE REFLECTS ON 30-YEAR CAREER They Didn't Promise Him a RoH G1rdtn· ind It W11n't No Rose Garden Mesart Retires From Marine Life By ARTlllJI\ R. VINSEL 01 1119 P11ty 'Utt lt11f Nobody promised Willson Price a l'OlJe garden 30 years ago last week, when tie joined the U.S. Marine Corps and left Winliow Rock, Ariz., for a world tom by war. Nobody promised Price the glamor and glory that history bestows when you're on the right wide and you win. Nobody promised the young Navajo In- dian anything but action. Now 50, Price was principal developer of a raaio -communlCatkln system based on the -avajo language. one of 200 tribesmen Japanese soldiers in the South Pacific craved to capture. . Nooe of the Navajos -classed as top secret personnel -were ever taken prisoner but casualties were heavy. Price, of 171 Victoria St .• C:O.la ~1ua. won hls own particuJar Purple Heart on Guadalcanal in 1943, but told the medics to take care o! the badly wounded first "I Just had 1101DO lbrapoel and a bwted leg," says the man who ls et Cam p Pendleton today, tying up last loose ends or a 3(}..year career from which be formally retired· FriOay as a-master sergeant. · "I spent three month! strapped to a hospital bed in New 1.ealand," says the television repair shop owner to whom nobody ever promised a rose garden. A Marine Corpe recruiting poster In his home garage repair shop shows a USMC drill instructor screaming the slogan at a wide-eyed young trainee: "We-don't promise you a rose garden." Price says he didn't plan for a Marine Corps career, but found educational op- portunities ' Navajo youth couldn 't ex· pect otherwise. He didn 't join It out of personal bravado; there wu 1 world war in prog- ress and the corps' recruiter got to him first. The Navajo cod• he helped develop (Ste MARINE, P11e I) 3,000Dead In Fighting, Reports Say _ ' SAIGON (UPI) -At least 100 North Vietnamese soldi.caught up in the bae, tie for Kontum have offered to surrender to government troops inside the citf. front dispatch_es reported today. , The dispatches said the Communistl lost more than 3,000 dead in the battle f~ Kon tum. It was the first known mass surrender offer of the war by North Vietnamese although some Viet C.Ong units SU& rendered in the past, the dispatches saic\, Heavy fi ghting continued in some ar:ea~ of Kontum and waves of 852.s bombe9 Communist positions near the city la what spokesmen called the heavie~ strikes since the Communist offensiv' began on ~iarch 30. But the front dispatches indicated those Inside the city apparently had .. had enough. John Paul Vann, the senior U.S. ad- viser ln the Central Highlands, told newsmen of the surrender offer and said negotiations went on all day. He said the Communists broke in on South Vietnamese radio frequencies with the surrender offer and that at one point four Communist troops, haftds in the Wr and· without weapons. began walking toward govenunent lines. However, they disappeared behind a small knoll and dl not appear again. Vann said South Vietnamese troopi were ordered not to lire into the sur- render area of the city and th at the Com- munists were not firing there, either. He would not identify tbe North Viet- namese unit Involved because that might je<>pardize the negotiations. 1'Things are going well In Kontwn" (See SURRENDER, Page %) ~ Bob >y Baker To Be Freed WASHINGTON (AP) -Bobby Baker, the quiet country boy who btcame a confidant of Stnate powerbrokcrs and aained a degree Clf power hlmself, will be released Thursday from the federal prison camp ~at Allenwood, Pa. The 43-yeaM!ld Baker, onetime Jecretary to Senate Democrats. will have served 16 months and 17 days for attempted tax evasion. vand JftrCfny I tfaTilportatlon Of stolen money, fraud and con- spiracy. Without p:irole, he could not havt been freed before next May I. , ·- .J! DAILY PILOT s w~. MJll' 31, 1972 . ' lrata .Blcsts ·' ' t , • 1 Bombings Mar Nixon's Leaving ''TEHRAN 1UPf)-President Nixon en-- lied ll one-day vsit to Iran th at \Vas lharred by ter rorislS bomb attacks tocl<iy ad flew to P oland. 'One dynamite bomb exploded near a monument 45 minutes before Nl:ton's :iChedulcd arrival for a ceremony. Nixon went ahead with the v.•reath- laylng-rite. -delaying hhr appearance--45 minute.s while American security agents swarmed over the site searching for other bombs. He rode to the ceremony In a bullet- Jlroe>f limousine under tight securily, but there were no further Incidents. Frotn Page 1 MARINE ... ' tit.er specialized Indian studies confused tnd confounded the Japanese, who aenerally performed with poUsh when imitating Americalt"Bccenl! on the air. l, ''The Japanese had Engliah-11peak.lng men that listened to our radio and tJlephone conversation and aome could ~en get into the conversation by Im· itating Brooklyn or Deep South accents," •explains. One monitor brazenly began a strategy ~l with Fleet Admiral C h e s t c r tJimitz. ' "Excuse me, Admiral, but that's not a buddy you're talking to," said P,rlce, in4 temiptlng th< talk. Indian dialect ia what jinxed the .}apaneae. "To my knowledge, t,he codt: was never cracked by the enemy," he explains, noting every explanatory book WU bUmed at .war's tnd. Research lnto biJ own llerttage ailao revealed· an historical Indian hoax, says sg't. Prlce, who notes most tribes. used runners to deliver messages before Nava· ·-- ;.~ had radio. • "l was surprised to learn that 1moke iignals and tom.tom mestages were itricUy Hollywood." he explaiJ'J1. • ~ So are some of Sgt. Price's Pacillc combat recollections . 1 He tell1 of one tribesman's capture by what -In earlier wars -would have been the enemy, but on Iwo Jima was his Own side. Given pennlsslon, the Navajo radioman .lteaded for a nearby camp to get a llalrcut, but was waylaid by a suspicious Caucasian lieutenant. "He thougllt be was a Jap ... put a .45 autotpatl~ right to his head -be was teal dark -and. Whooeee!," Price declares . "'Mle kidS's commanding officer )lad to come down to identify him and get him out of tbe stockade. , From Page l SURRENDER ••• • aespite the continued heavy fighting, Yann said. "'The North Vietnamese in the f:ity have a sborta!e of supplies. They have no replacemen s and units that have taken heavy losses have been denied permission to pull out of the city." Meanwhile, a U.S. spokesman reported Jhe heaviest American air raids around ~he major North Vietnamese port of Vinh 11lnce the Communist -Offensive began. He said the Americans were firing te/evlaion-gulded bombs that "just can't 'Jniss" and that major ground in- :~allatlons were. destroyed . -A command spokesman 11ald U.S. · arplanes new 240 raids int-0 North Vlet4 am. They smashed a big fuel depot and eslroyed or damaged several rail and )'oad bridges outside Vinh, the country's f?Uthernmost port 130 miles south -0f 'lnnoi. 1 The 1,000.p<>und "Walleye" bomb car· Jries a TV camera in the nose, a Navy kpokesman said, and the pilot monitors a ~Jevislon set in the cockpit. He tunes in what the bomb '"stts" and when the , rgel appears. locks in on it. ~ "You just can 't miss," the spokesman , airl . OIANGi COAST ST DAILY PILOT Th• Orlf'Ot CNI! O.l.1LY l'iurr. wllPI Mild\ ii comlllntd tt.. N-.Praa, ft puti!llhcd 11'1 11\t' Or•"'Ot (Of11 Publls~lftl CO!ftp911"f, ,.,,.. tit• 9dllioft1 1r• P\lbllllll'd, M-IY ""°"'" Frld1y, tw Co.11 Mti1, HtwPtrt a11cll, Hun!lf'Okln lt1ch/F011nt1in V•llf'f, l.iflllll lliffttl, lt'Vlnt1516dltblC~ end $111 (i.m.,ltf S111 Jvtn C111l1tr1no, A 1111911 '"'lontl edl!lon b publ'llltd 51l11rd1y1 enf SWld•r&. Tnt princioel pllllll,hl"G 1111nt ts •t DO Wttl Sty SlrN1, COi.it M'11, Ctlltof'l'llt, ,,.,._ Rob1rl N. W 11d P'rt \idtnt 1..:1 l'von~ll4t J ttlr R. C111l1v V"' l'rn kl1n1 encl t<l'l>tr11 M•n.v-r Tho11111 K•11'il Ealtw Thofl'll_I A. Mvr111klt11 M~..-glllf h !IOr Chttles H. loot Ritht rd ' Nill Aa•llltnl Mene;ine EGJ~1 • OHk.I Cotlt M"I! »O Wtt l It'( 11 ..... Htwiiorl &11dl: JJ1J Htwptrt '-il ..... NI L-vune a .. ct1: m F.,111 """""' Hll!lllf'OIOll aef(fl: 17'1S INCll ltoNw,., S.11 Ci.n.tllt l ao1 Hortll 11 Cll!l\oll •NI , .. .,.... (7141 6<42--4111 C'-lftM A4,.1th ... '41 .. 611 Pmw CM*'9t Af'Wt ._. If ........ ._ 491~1 ,,.. ...,. ~~ea, • ..._ -11• c.trltflf, lf1'L ~ CM.I . l"Wlltfl"" CMlt!Mt', No ,...... t!Otlel, l•l1111r1t!Olll, ....... 111 _,.., .,. -=-'· '"""" :'~~.,'=--..... lllltllJ ... ................... c..Mttt, c.~ .,.. ,,,..,.., • umt1' a.u ......... • .. ••• ." _... t2.1f "'*"""'' fl'llllltrt .... _. McGovern Makes Phone Agreement SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Sen. George McGovern'• California campaign com- mittee aaya it reached a compromise agreement with Paclflc Telephone Co. over the company's threat to shut oil the committee's 1,oo:l telephones if 1 deposit isn't paid. The Bgrffment wu reached Tuesday, with the camPllgn committee agreeing to pay "less than '20,000" of the $100,000 deposit -0rlglnaily asked by the company, said commlttee attorney Gerald N. Hlll. Hill said the company hued the figure on a policy of collecting an estimated phone bill tw-0 months in advance, but the campaign has only a week to go before tbe June I primary. Fairview State Items ~issing Inventory or various wards and facllltle.s at Costa Meaa's Fairview State Hospital has turned up a total of $1,250 in pHfered or misplaced 11upplies. Hospital official Merwin E. Long turned in the list to pollce Tuesday, ex· plaining the items disappeared over a period of time throughout the facility for the mentally retarded. Losses Include a 16 millimeter camera and.matching lens, a Polaroid camera, a large industria1·type floor buffer, three buffer pads and eight hypodennic neec11 ... Officer Bob Arnold ,.Id the list would be forwarded to C.lliornla StatF Police ln Sacramento, who also investfiate crime on .state property. Another Nader: Girl, 11, Raps Saturday TV Ads · WASIDNGTON (AP) -A Florida sch90I g!rl told congress today that tome Saturday morning telev.ilion commercials aimed at kids are deceptive and might even be dangerous. Dau11 Ann Kurth, 11, of Melbourne's 1.1eadowlane El~ School, said "( don't think children realize what the com- mercials are doing." As the children grow oldt:r, to aiu 10 and 11, they tend to be skeptical of the commercials, she tid the Senate con- 1umer 11ubcommlttet:. "They 1tart bellev~ ing teachers and other adults." (See earlier story, Page 4). As to the connection between disbelief of the tilmmerciah: and the adultr bthlnd them , Sen. Frink Mou (l).Ullh). old ''We have a word for that, alienation." Throughout the h<!arlnf, the 1<hool girl In 11l1id, banp;"and ar .. n-laifrlOCu, was compoltd and thoughtful. She Hid 1he 1tudled Saturd1y mornin& children's television "' part of a school )8'0Ject for above-averqe 1tudtntt:. °For the fint time, I really began to tliliil about what tbt commerclala ,..,.. aayinc," she uld. "I have alwa)'l lllttn.. ecf befort Ind lnllt)' Um6 uked fD1 mother to buy cvtaln productJ I bad ucn advertlud. But 110w I wu lllteninf • and really thinking ab-Out what was being .said." Jn a one-h-Our period she said she counted 70 commercials on the three networks. Mi!s Kurth said she felt that ce.r· taln commercla1s for c a n d y 4 c o a t e d vjtamlns might even be dangerous. "If my molher v.·ere to buy those vitamins and my little sister got into the bottles I'm sure she would eat them just as If they were candy," she said. Sh~ submitted a questionnaire an11wered by· some 1,500 third·through sixth-graders : -11203 1ald they 11kt:d their mother to buy the products seen on TV; 330 said they did not. -1,120 Hid they uked (or a product to 1et the free bonUJ 1Ut; 4t3 said they did not. ~said they were satisfied with the product ; 873 aaid they were not. -1,111 said that they believed cti!laln product! teen In the commerclal1 made them happlor .. d tbat tJtey ~~uld have man friends; 420 said' they clld not ,btJleve tbet. -411 aald they fell their mother wu '"""" ......... wouldn't buy tbt f."01>-uct tbty wanted; CO said ahe wun t. • •• GEM TALK TODAY GRADUATION WA-TCHES by The watch, for generations tbt traditional college graduation gut. is today appreciated also by child- ren at grade and high school level. Choice of a watch for graduates at any level was formerly a simple matter of selection by price and style. A wat.cb was a watch, iu al- most casual purchase usually re- sulting in genuine appreciation. Today, modem technology and styling have combined with special- ized uses to make satisfactory 1~ lection infinitely more difficult. There are. however, steps you can take to make sure your graduate will wear this gllt with pride and pleasure. You should be aware of your graduate's activities and of the kinds and styles of watches worn by bis friends. You should then ••• a reliable local jeweler and discuss your problem. Wenave watches !pr an-ages, from rugged timepieces for· active children to tho most sophisticated and spoclallzed watches avallabl1. And if, In spite of all your can, your graduate wanu 1omethlng di!· ferent, we'll gladly exchange for ezactly what he wanu. ) Pair Get- $250,000, Arrested Your graduate. Give lhom on Omega.A qual ily g;lt that distinguishes iiself for styling, accuracy and tlle as1uronce of over o century of quality craft1maft1Jii~ Give yo\fr graducitt.o timepiece to \fly dn ••• OrnegoJ ~. -'-''*'., .. hi 0,-lc 'tlilri .... , ... ~-..... ......... ...-..n1 .... ,... __ ._.. __ .. .., ...... ,,,..... 1.,1111 ...... "'" ........ llflt ... _. .11o1~-..: -~---t• JL.W ' J.C. .JJump~rie6 Jew~/er6 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONYENIENl TflMS IANICAMEllCAlO-MASTEi CHAl&E 25 YfAllS IN SAME LOCATION PHONE 141·1401 I • I t I • .. • ' Wfdntsday, MIJ 31, 1'12 s ~AILV PILOT I Laguna Beacl1's New General Plan ·Packs Bite By JACK CHAPPELL Of fJlt CU.II• l"llott ll•ff As lbe City of Laguna Beach begin.. plecemeal adoption of a new General Plan a few folks with 20-20 hlndsigbt recall the old General Plan of 1957. lf It had been enacted way back then, some of the more notable flaps .in city history probably would have amounted to mere flutters, according to Carl E. Johnson, chairman of the Planning Com· mission . • Many of the goals of the old and new general plans are the same, he noted. Floodplain Zoning Gets Board's 01{ George Osborne, Orange County Flood Control District.~~ier engineer, got Coun· ty Board of Supervisors backing Tuesday for acei!lerated action by county planners on floodplain zoning. Such zoning must be completed by Dec. 31 , 1972, or the county could lose its eligibility for low.cost federal flood in· surance. To date, Osborne, reported, all of the unincorporated areas of the county and six cities have been declared eligible for the special insurance. Zt'ning to preclude development of flood -prone areas is necessary under the Nationa l Fl ood Insurance Act or 1969. Although critical areas have been _ ___c<mrfd,.publil:. heatingLJ)JLlhe, COlilllJC Planning Commission are mandatory to keep the program going. The main difference between them is that the old plan lacked t,.th, while the ne1' one bas a full set o( chop~s. Among ~ Items calle(I for but not eo- forced by tTie old plan were: -An expanded Lagwia Beach library at its present site with parking facWties under~ound. Tbqt, oI course, is j u s t what.happened with the llbrary, but oply . after it flitted about · the city ror· years · looking for a borne. · -Very lirilited developnieilt ol t.he-.Vch Beach Heights. The area i! presently plagued with problems · surrounding a.saessment distrlct sewers and a bulld.ln&: m<ratorlum, all wrought by tbe dense devel~meot of about 18 units per acre. -,A Laguna Canyoo greenbelt with Very low density. Presently the area ls zoned for just under four units per acre, too d~ for the greenbelt concepl . The old General Plan was "something the cily COl!llcil !rBJDed and hung ID their chamkrs, but never adopted," com· meoted JoSeph O'Sullivan, f'o r ~'er. LaguDJ Beacb vice mayor, at a recent Civic League. meeting. 'l'he plan-being considered now by the . . . . .. -, ... city at the not-so-gentle u r )in g ol California State must deal wuh' certain elements includlng open apace, seismic safety, · land use conservation, traffic circulation, noise, housing and aircraft traffic. "In days gone by, we could afford to develop willy-nilly," Johnson said. He noted that planning per se is a recent development and it is now coming Of age. "The new General Plan will be more than just a laughing matter,'' be said. State law.. provides that city governments just proceed according to their general plans. Citizens may force compliance with the plans by court action without proving damages as is the case now, he explained. The first of the se\teraI elements, the land use element, comprising the Laguna Plan has been adopted, and the stc0nd, <>pep space element, is now threading its way through the governmental mill. Cur~ retft. !late-set deadline for that phase is June 30. Deadline for the entire package is Jan. 1, 1973. The state requiremtnt for cltiel to create general plans and then lllct to them may be delayed slbthlly u ll d er leglsl•Uon oow pending in ibe <apltoL It was feared by lawmakert ll:Nn8 c!Ues would rush pell-mell and enact JIOf!M' planning schemes. But delay may serve no putpoee In. Laguna. John Brand, former Clvio, League president said. "Laguna can ncl longer depend on geography and natm'e. to protect it from man's destructive Jm. pulses." Supervisors Support \ Federal Job Program Orange County supervisors Tuesday unanimously backed Supervisor David Baker's proposal that the county agree to partic ipate in a federal program to create more jobs. Baker proposed two weeks ago that funds under the Public Works and Economic Development Act be sought to bolster the county's chronic unemploy- ment. He explained that Io c a J governments may develop projects under the act on a 50-50 matching basis with Washington. The program differs from normal federal granl projects in that government works with private enterprise to create such facilities as industrial parks, public tourism areas, flood control prtljects and vocational schools. Backing Baker's program were representatives of unions, industry, chambers of commerce and sanitation districts. the county municipal water district. The electrical union's Brame told boar4 members that no new industrial plant construction is now planned in the county for the lrtter hall of 1972 and that uncmploy1ne1't in the building trade$ could well increase if something was not done. 'fruhill said the county chan1ber win participa te in the program to the run ex~ tent of Its resources "to provide jobs for thousands of people \l:ho desperately need them.'' Roger Slates, l-lunt ington Be a ch chamber president, and David Rowlands, city administrator, and Dennis McLain munici pal water district gene ra I manager, added their suppOrt. He Asks to Keep· upe•visor oled-lo-nofily_lhe..lJ.S .. _ All ·U d R f Department' of Commerce of the county's fi er-00;t-.:,-,- intent to parUcip~te in the program and to instruct the·coubty adminfstl'ative ·of-. w·r Mi rice to immedia1e1y start ronnauon or I e, Stress Two such"tiearings have been held, both in the Laguna Beach area, Osborne said, but no conclusions were reached on a unified zoning program to include county and city areas in Laguna Canyon. DAILY l"/LOT Sl•ff l"ltolt' ' STUDENTS AT LA PAZ USE.IND IAL TECHNIQUES TO PRODUCE CHOS1'N ITEMS government and industry c:ommfflees to develop federally mandated economic LEAMINGTON SPA. England (AP) -,, Ray Stanley has llSked local authorities to help him get a bigger Muse so he, hi$ children, his wife and mistress can all live together conveniently -and at less cost. Butch Bigham an Carrillo Saw Parts on Beverage Rack Assembly line plans. • Studies have been approved for federal Insurance eligibility for Seal Beach, Hun· tington Beach and Costa Mesa, the engineer told supervisors. Other areas subjec t to the planning program not yet activated are along San Juan, Oso and Aliso creeks in the southern section o( the county. La Paz Boys On the Line The latter are required to make the various county government entlUes, cities, special districts, achoo! districts, eligible for the federal program. The county's continuing hig1:i unemploy· ment rate Is the key to eligibility for the federal funds . "It has become too much of a strain trying to divide my time and money between two families," said Stanley. "lt would be better all round if we could all live under one roof." • ' Vatican Relaxes Annulment Laws Woodwork Classes Learn Capitalism, Craftiness Backing Baker were ClHton Brame, bu.!iness manager of the IntemaUonal Brotherhood of Electrical WorktrS, AFLo CIO; Lucien Truhill, P""ident and general manager of the Orange County Chamber of Commerce; Wayne Sylvester of the 0 r a n Ce CoWlty Sanitation Dl!trfcts, the city' of Hunlfflgton Beach, the Garden Grove School District, and Stanley, 46, earns $65 a week as .ii garbage collectOr for Leamington spa municipality, the aUthor:lty ·he hopes will allow him a subsidized new home. VATICAN CITY (UPI ) -The Valican tqday announced new rules that will make it slightly easier for Roman Catholics to obtain annulment of norr consummated marriages. There are about 1,200 such cases a year. Accordin~ to a Vatican official, a b o u t 00 percent or them concern psychological fri gidity in women. The new rules enable local bishops to start annulment proceedings without first asking for Vatican pennission. But once they have completed in- vestigation and obtained m e d i c a l evidence if necessary, the results must still be sent to the Vatican for approval. Campaign Party Set for Tomehak The Tomehak for Congress committee will sp:insor a pre-primary party Friday at 8 p.m. in the Village IM, 696 S. Coast Hl::::hway, La~una Be:1ch, to introduce Joseph Tomehak, Democratic candidate for the U.S. Congress from the new 42nd District. Tickets for the fund-raising event •. which will include refreshments and door prizes, are available at the Tomehak for Congress Headquarters, 1550 S. Coast Hi.qhway. Further Information may be Obtained by calling the headquarters, 4~70. By CANDACE PEARSON Of Ille 01Uy l"llel Sl1H Boys working on mass production assembly lines at La Paz Intermediate School in Mission Viejo are leaf!Ung to combine capitalism with a little craft· iness . Industrial arts teacher Dave Sousa isn't putting his students in sweatshops, but is teaching them how industry really makes a product. His woodworking students and those in Richard Niebel's metal class are as- signed individual repetitive tasks on class projects like jobs on factory a.- sembly lines. For instance, Sou.sa's classes are now producing sk3teboar.ds and cut tin g boards. One boy may do nothing on those but sanding, another may be trimming edges. Students ·who want to buy the products for gifts sign up. Usually 10 percent over that number is produced for sale in the school. The wood class votes as a group for the products It wants to mess produce after a series of commiltee meetings and mock "sales presentations" of suggested prod* ucts. The same proceS! is used to determine what custom or individually.produced products should be made. ·This semester beverage racks are the most common in· . clividual project. Nie.bel 's class is mass producing wrought iron patio tables and book" shelves. An individual ' project was a small sheet metal barbecue. Tbe tables sell for $7 .50 each, or about Gift Fi-om President $1 profit, Niebel said . Last year, the class sold 15 of them. Skateboards and cutting boards are bigger: sellers · because they go for $1 each. . Sousa and Niebel emphasize quality control and real industrial jobs. Niebel also teaches power mechanics. Sousa also applies the scientific method of problem solving to his classes by hav- ing them go through the long process of produ·ct choice." Rites Conducted For Capistrano's Mrs. Melugin, 57 ~al services were conducted early this afternoon in Newport Beach for Mrs. Jessie P. Melugin, 57, a resident o( the Beach Road Colony in Capistrano Beach. Mrs. Melugin died Sunday. Mrs. Melugin of 35751 Beach Road , ·]eaves her husband, Simeon; two sons, Douglas Melugin of Anaheim and Dennis Melugin of Santa Ana ; her mother, Mrs. Elsie Tell of 1.-0ng Beach; three brothers, Clifford and Ronald McFarlane of Lynwood and Glen McFarlane of Phoenix ; and tWo sisters, Ruth O'Barr or Lynwood and Deanna Schumacher of TurlocJ<. . The funeral rites and burial were con- ducted in Pacific View Memorial Park in Newport Beoch. UPI l tlotiJMll President Nixon has presented a porcelain chess •e~ the board and several pieces of which are shown here, as a special gill lo the people ol the Soviet Uni n. Each of the 32 sculptures In the handmade set stands six lo seven inches in heigh~ Is lndlvidu· ally fashioned in semi·medicval garb, color6d In burgundy and turquoise, and ornamented in 18 carat gol d. . • I Although he realizes the students feeJ more pride with the custom projects, Sousa said that the mass produced ones "at this level are or a higher quality." StudentJ also draw the desigrui for the projects, and if interested, can go on to courses in drafting. The products will be ready for !ale in the near future. YOUTHS DIG CRAZY WEEDS DENVER (UPI) -"A lot of kids keep jumping over the fence at night and pulling the weeds up," Linda Welp told police. Ofticers checked out Mrs. Welp's backyard and uprooted a n estimated l,000 marijuana plants. Marijuana Eggs -A Fowl Plot CARACAS (UPI) -Eggs at $136 a dozen is pretty still, but Maria Parada, 24, was doing a sell-out business at a Caracas jail until police discovered the eggs were stuffed with marijuana. Mrs. Parada, mother of four, showed up regularly every visiting day for the past few weeks with cartons of eggs for the prisoners. Mrs. Parada apparently cut open the bottom of the shells, emptied the yolks and white, stuffed them with marijuana and glued the shell back together. He Jives ln a on~room apartment wit!t his ml!tress, Pat Higgins, and Uielr two children -Shella, 4, and Christopher,'; He pays the equivalent of $11.70 a week in reilt. · 1 Across town Uvel h1a wife Lllllan, 44, and her four children, ages 12 to 22. Stanley gives his wife, from 1'hom he parted five years ago, $241 a week for rent and food. "The arrangement wou1d suit me,'' said Mrs. Stanley. "We are getting a divorce and we could all live together U one big happy family. I know what & slruggle It Is for Ray to keep up boll/ homes." Miss HigginJ agreed: 0 1 am all for UI gelling logelber and making the best of it." Councilor Robert C.OOmbes, chainnari of Leamington Spa Housing Committee, promised the reque.st will be treated oa its merits. '10~f;oft~'tl}frg 4 DAYS ONLY (T~~:·s:~~:') SAVE $78.00 ON THIS 5 Pc. TABLE SET . ~· TAMPICO :2~::·~":.~"'169 ~.~. $247 Ml•l1~11t CHAISE LOUNGE LIST ""• $103 569 NU DILlnlY IN OlAN•I COUNTY CNAR·IRO/l 0 GAS COOKERS fffllty " i. ................ ts .,.._ wffl pt wltti Y•1t C~I .. •rtll. lllf91 .... •""""-, ...... -. •• ... fl- .. 119. . MOBILE BASE All•WI Y•• f• roll yo11t trill •wl •f lh• "''Y "'h•n not 111 lltt. POST MOUNT s1.,. ,.""•n•11tl., ,. th• f,.11llcl. SO" lont pot! I• t11d ,roof..f, tht11 1t•llf9'. PATIO MOUNT Dtii911M lot ll11t1r11· 11011 •11 txi1ti119 p•fio•, Tip·pro,.f. • f DAILY PILOT wlila Te• ldne · dwesterners lug It Out RICKY TICKY POLll'IX: A couple of western boys, one who u.aed to push escrlptiOnl u a druggist and the other ho pughed for the Lord u a mlnisttr, nt at each other 1g1ln Via the t leviaion tube last night. The stakes today, however, are a little gher than a good collection plate or the lee of IOme migraine headache edy. This ooe Is for the Presidency of t United States. & tt w11 that Senator Hubert H. llumphrey, the Democrat from Min- nesota had another vld«l confrontation with Senator George S. McGovern, the Democrat from South Dakota . Actua.11)', thil TV appearance for the pair wu a Jot calmer than the first one. In the first one, Humphrey yelled aomt at McGovern and assertedly called him • fool." . TIME AROUND, Humphrey 't p:t to yell at M~vern on account 1>e 1ot interrupted by a commerclAI. llonally, Humphrey apologlud U, be , It had been thought he'd called vem a fool. , e'd ooly meant lo aay anybody wbe d aupport McGovern '1 "con- 1tory" lax program was a fool. •blY Mr. McGovern supports it, ner,~>,o_ t· da.D.'.t...know -•4er-4 Yea the foollahnesr. • · yway, the televlakln confrontation another effort by the two feadlng ocratlc presidential hopefu!J to cap- e 'California'• delegaUon to the n:t- al convention. ter one bour o! being questioned by a ery of new1men on their varloua no- ' it's no wonder they're having dif. tty 'twaylng the voters. After alf of it kes down, they're rtally pretty much e. jil(>TJI BUMPllREY and McGovern are tty liberal. Both of them want the wai r, ta1e1 cut, jobs increased and all ae other good thlns1. .r:-·· you look 11 their background!, '\Go.came from hmnble begiMfnls. z, ern wu in the Air Force. phrey wu an instructor in the Air ce. McGovern represents So u th kota. Humpbrey w11 born in South kota. Wallace; South Dakota, tO be iae. . ich brings us to another point. OTll ~.GREED they n!llly don'l want t be on the same ticket with AJ._abama . George Wallace. Both alao 1areed t .. t with Gov. Wallace, the fttling would lilely be very mutual. ere were some curious points In the sentations, too. Humphrey, who in 11 assistant Senate majority leader , credited with fllllhln1 to adoption most mass ive Civil Rights program slke Recon.structlon, spent cm1lderable tltne uplaJnlng why ht would go .slow on abioot buslng for racial balance. WcGovern, on the other hand, who has J>ten cozying up to the liberal camp of i Kennedys and the ouper-llberal )'Olllh vements, spent considerable time ex· inlng why he i.ln't so liberal as to be cllled a ra dical. ~N THE END, I'd call the TV con-r~ntation another draw. some folks think llimphrey won the first one while McGOvern was the victor Jut nipt. Neither of them aeem loo pleased t<> day with the whole a!!alr. .McGovern, however, apparently took no chances. 'He had a very long biography of hl.t life 01 the air jU8l 11 soon as the televilion confrontation wa1 over. \Veil. at least Hwnphrty couldn't in. terrupt that. Hearing Postponed LOS ANG EL ES (UPI) -A !ins! pretrial hearing in the Pentagon Papers case involving Daniel Ell.Iberg and Anthony J. Rum has been put over until Monday. Court attaches 11id Tuesday the ~lay was granted to give altorney1 ad· dttlonal time to prepere the case. • • Meir -Vows Retaliation for lVlassacre TEL AVIV (UPl 1 -Primt ~iinister Golda lao1eir hinted today at Israeli rttribullon aaainst the Arab 1uerrillas wbo ...U three neatly dreued Japanne to Lydda Airport where they massacred men, women and children Tue5day night. Sbt called It murder by mesaenaer. and rel~. But it listed eight perlODI in critical &ndition. blameleu. Atn. Meir, lirtd and drawn, tald 1n 1 oallomride bnlodcast from the Knesset (P__,l) BuildJna In Jerusalem that Lebanon had barborea the gumillaa. But she wu especW!y aillcaJ of Air France on groundl it had not taken normal aecurity precautions when it new the three Japanese iD with a group1 of. tourtJll. Suddenly the terminal -small by com- parison with huge American airline termillals -expolded with the oound of hand grenades and the submacblnesuns. Women aod. children screamed and dashed for cover, but many were blown to blts u they 11011gbt aalety. with blood and littered with broken bodies. Some victims were so mangled that authoritle!ll had difficuJty aaytna e1. actly bow many persons were kllled. A police spokesman said t~ ofrlcla1 death toll .... 2:Z pt ....... kllled •nd 70 wounded ln the violence in which the Japaoese toot aubmacbl.ne a:uns and hand grenades from their suitcases and Of)entd fire on a crowd of 300 penons, many of them Pu~rto Ricans on a pllgrimase to lhe Holy Land. However, the National Radio later came out with a report that 25 perton3 were killed and about 80 wowlded, many or tbtm IO lliahUy that they were treated The death toll did not loclude the Japanese whose suicide mluion tnded wbtn one blew himstll up with a grenade and •oother was shot and killed by a companion. The third man was capturtd. Arab broadcasts said the Japanese were avenglnc the dtatb or two ~as shot and kllled by !JraeU aoldltn dwillg an abortive hijack at Lydda airport early this month. A spokesman for the Populat Fnmt for the Llberalion of Palestint, a Man:i.J\ group infamOU5 for past hijactinp, aaid in Beirut that swilt Israeli retribution wu expected. A spokesman said the Inell repr!Jal woold be directed aglinlt Lebanon but that !bot cotmlty waa U,I TM_,. CLEANUP BEGINS AT ISRAEL'S INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT 25 Peraona Died In Terror Attack by Three J1p1nea Halt of 'Manipulating' Kiddie TV Alb Pushed WASH!N(i'l'ON (UPI) -A parenls' group today asked Congress to halt the ~'manipulation of children" by ad· vertisers who overload kiddie television shows with commericals for sweets and toys. The plea came in testimony prepared for a Senate consumer subcommittee from a Massachu...ettJ.based organization called Action for Children 's Televi sion (ACT). For years the group has been urging the government to keep a closer eye on programs that are beamed to youngsters. Since children "simply do not have the erperience and maturity to make rational conaumer decisions," said ACT board member Carol Liebman , all those under the age of 10 "should be protected from all TV advertising." She .said adve rtisers deliberately pla/ on the innocence, gullibility and im· agination or children to peddle the ir yrod· ucts, particularly "vitamins, ·toys or edibles " of questionable worth. "Because advertisers are awa're that children are different from adutts they prepare ads aimed specifically at children," Mrs. Liebman said. "We think this manipulation ol children mwt stop "ACT has been worJtlng through the federal regulatory agenclu to secure an end to the advertisers' exploitation of our children. What is needed now is a clenr declaration from Congress that children are never appropriate targets of ad· vertlslng campaigm." The committee is considei'ing both a truth in advertising bill and another one to set up a National Institute of Advertis· ing, Marketing and Society to study behavioral sciences. To underscore her testimony, Mrs. Liebman brought along a IS.minute film blending segments of children's cartoon shows, high-pressure commercials and views of professors and doctors on the ef- fecta of TV on youngsters. She said it was a "sad fact" that the broadcasting code permits only 10 minutes of commercial time... for adutC prime-time shows while allowing 16 minutes of ads per hour of kiddie pro- gramrillng. "We do not expect children to purchase the family 's foods, decide when he is old enough for a complex chemistry set or pre~rlbe his own medicine," Mrs. Lieb- man said. "Yet we allow the TV ad· vertlser to bombard our children with subtle and carefully researched ads at the average rate of one every 2.1 minutes which appeal to him to exercise euctly this aort or decision malting." Mrs. Liebman said medical evidence showed that candy vitamins touted on TV can actually be harmful to youngsters and that many or the cereals, candy and cake1 they are urged to eat are "nutri- tionally worth.less." The maasacre hogan shortly alter 10:!0 p.m. (1 :30 p.m. PDT Tuesday) whenlthe three Japanese disembarked from tbe,Atr France plane with 112 other passengen. They claimed their baggage and ~ cemoved their weapons -hand IJ'tDadts and AK47 Chinese-made aut o mat I c weapons and opened fire wit.bout warn- ing. 1be airport was a shambleJ, spluhed Tom Golden, IO, of New York City, who was Waltlng with his mother for the ar· rival of their sister from New York, said "il started with what sounded like a cou- ple of pops." "I suddenly looked lo my Jell and about 15 feet away I aaw the Japanese standing there firing hi.; machlnegun toward the bl.page area," Goklen said. "He was ata.ndiol t.berf: blasting away - it WU unreal. •. " His mother, Clare Golden, 60, was wounded in the shooting. Scream• 'Real' The J apanese identified themselves u members of a group called "The Army of the Red Star." Japa!je>e police said no such organi%8flon existed, but the Japanese Kyodo News Aa:ency &aid It was an ultraleftist radical organization of Japanese youth.. who tortured and killed 13 of their own membenl earUer tllll yur in a purge of dissldents. ..! The newspaper Yedioth Aharonoth aaid the Jone captive told his lnterrogaton he had received training at an Arab eue"" rilla camp in an Wlidentlfied Arab CQUJto trf. It q"uoted-hinl 'as saying many·other Japanese had undergone such training as part of 1 world revolutloo. Jet Hijacker Kills Self At Airpor~ . , .. -. " SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI) -A hi· jaclter aeiud j, B_r'amlian airliner . Tues- day night, ~ and received $254,- 000 and lllrtt ·parachutes, th... kllled ." bimse~ . as army troops stormed . the Roller Coaster Plunges Off Rails, IGlling Three # plane. Tbrtt host.ages escaped by jwnping out the cockpit wlndowa just before the so!dier1 rushed .the plane: Brig. Gen. Delio Jardim Matos, com- mander-of the Brazilian -4th Air Zone. Identified the ·hijacker as Nelaon Mu- LONDON °(UPI) -It waa the moment when everyone is ezpected to acream - at the very ~ of. the roller coater about to hurtle down. But the fear in the xreams at Lon- don's Batteneo fun lair tuno«I cb1111ngly real Tuesday as three can plunged back- wards and miasbed on a bend. Two boys and a girl died. S!Iteen other cllildren were injured. quita, wbo boarded the Varig Airlines I I Electra propjet at Rio de Janefro. IN SHORT "He shot himself before the plane was . ·• • • taken by aecurity forces ," Matos said. Mesquita pulled a pistol from a pictwe aDNm-tllat-hod-bten hoHowed out-and --A-?JraJrernaJr"was-riding between-tbe- forced the pilot, Celso Caldeira, to return second end third can of the ''Big Dip- to Sao Paulo's Congonhas Airport aner it per'' roller coaster train being~ by ble began Tuesday when the six Inmates -anned with homemade weapons--over- powered three unanned guards, grabbed their keys and freed about 100 other pri&- OM:rS from their cells. Davenport said the released inmates did not lake part in the disturl>ance. The six rebels surrendered about feur hours later when jail officiaJs agreed to discuss their grievaD<."ff. Wick• • ... had taken off far Curitiba, Capital of the cable uP to the· 60 foot starting pesk. It sout hern . state of Parana. carried 22 perSOJ1$, mostly .c)Jildren ou~ ~· The hijacker demanded $254,000 and for a day's fun durin~ their mi<J-tetm thr~e parachutes and when they were vacation. • · ' delivered on the orders or President Emilio Garrrastazu Medici the gunman released the 88 pass.engers and all crewmembe rs except the pilot, copilot and mechanic. Release ef the p:wengers hours o.l negotiations over radio from the and part of the crew came after seven plane to the control tower at Congonhas as the plane sat in the runway. By then the plane had been surrounded by troops. Caldeira said he and the other crewmembers sli pp&i into the cabin, lacked the door and jumped out the win. dows ol the flight cabin then potice and troops rushed the aircraft. "'This was my first adventure or this nature and I hope it will be my Jaat," Caldeira said. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Drllvery of thr Dally Piiot Is guarantrrd Mllfl"•r·Frlday: II 'f'OU do not l'i•v• yaur p&plr by .$:)0 p.m., ~II encl )'Wr (OP'f will bot brvu(rhl '-yGU. "'" ,,.. ''''"" Ul'llll 1:JO p.m. S.h.Wdt'f tnd Sund1y: II 'fOll do not rteflve your copy by t e.m. S.lurd1y, or I e.m. S11nd1y, <Ill end I copy •Ill bti btougllt to V01,I. Ce ll i 1r1 t•klll unlit 10 t.m. Telrphonts Most Or•1111e CDU11ty Art•• ........ IM2..Q21 Nor1~we:et Huntlnalat! 1 .. c11 •nd Wnlll'lln111r ...••.....•••••••• Mf.U:lt San Cle"""" C1plltr1no IHd!, $.111 Juen C.11l•tr1no, Dtne ,olrrt. $CIVIi'! L.aouna, UcJun1 N ifutl •. , • 4'2...U e Bret11er Plea UPPER MARUIORO, Md. (APl -Ar- thur Herman Bremer pleaded innocent Tuesday to state charges stemming from the May 15 shooting of Gov. George C. Wallace and three others. The 21-year-old unemployed Milwau- kee, Wis., bus boy entered the plea at a JS-minute anaignment in a heavily guarded Prince Georges County Circuit Court. The plea -was recorded by Judge Ralph Powers after an informal discussion about whether or not Bremer's federally appointed attorney would a!Jo represent the defendant on the state charges. ~ question WI! expected to be ruolved tater this wttk. ·• 'Ele.,ated' Shoes WASHING'l'ON (AP) -Shoe pri"" are going up, but not. as much a! first feared . The Price Commission Tuesday ruled that shoe companies could only pass on to consumen a dollar-roc-OoUar increase in the price of leather. The companies had asked f~ up to 9.7 p&ECent price increases. -• lnmote• Surrender PATERSON, N.J. (AP) -Six rebel· lious inmates protesting conditions at the Passaic County Jail b a v e surrendered foltowing a four-hour rebellioo in which .six guards were injured. Sheri!! Frank Davenport said the trou- Bomb Shelter Blows Up l\.illing Five Youngsters VALDESE, N.C. (UPI) -A backyard bomb shelter built during the Cuban missile crisis 10 years ago exploded Tues- day evening, killing five c,hlldren who were playing on its steps. A .sixth child was injured tn the blast which authorities speculate may have been caused by leaking gas froll) 1 butane tank or fumes from Jarge quan- tiUes of gasoline stored in the shelter. The powerful explosion blew the body or one chUd 300 feet onto a road and big pieces of lhe foot-thick, steeJ.reinforced concrete shelter were scattered over a wide area. . bomb shelters tn Valdese. "I think thtre's three more right in this neighborhood,'' h~ said. Mrs. Florence Garrou, sister-in-law of the textile executive, said the bomb shelter is: "an authentic thing. It's been checked periodically and under control and usable since." \.tfcks 'Too skinny, too fat, too plain .. : Democrats Force !lunof f Election For McClellan LITl'LE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -Arkansao Democrats have refused to give vettzan Sen. John McClellan a majority en- dorsement for nomination to a sixth term, !o~jng a poUllcllly risky runoff with Rep. David Pryor. McClellan led the ticket as expected in Tue3<1iiy's primary, but hia: vote total was well beJow tbe majority in the four. man race that would have allowed him to escape the rWlOff. The handsome Pryor, 37, recognizing that Arkansas incumbents traditionaHy have .fOlD'l.dered in runoffs, predicted vlc- tory m .. the June 13 rematch, (l'orrW!ing the voters "one of tbe most exciting races ever run in Arkansas ." McClellan, 76, whose age figurtd as 1 major issue, said he had demonstrated during the campaJgn that his q:e waa not a handicap. and that he was ready to wage a vigorous runoff campa ign if • necessary. He baa been in lhe Senate for ;:30 years. Although his vote total hovered at about 45 percent through the nia:bt McClellan would not -that be WI~ forced into a runoff but admitted that he was a "little Wsappointed" at his a:bow· ing. With 2,«2 of 2,111 precincts reported McClellan bad 205,49:1 votes to Pryor'; 191,021. Las Vegas Hits 101 High The cbildren, police said, ...,. playing "kid's games" on the steps leading down' Into the 15-by·:ZS foot sheller le.tile H• ecuUve Ed Garrou had sunk into the tide of a steep hill about 70 feet to one Side ol his !40,000 brick home. Barrou, during the shelter-building frenzy In the 1962 mlulle crisis, bid stocked the shelter with large quantitiel of euoline for an electric pnerator and also Installed a butane lank. " ... AIN filifil1Now ,,..,, ~ '" ""3'"°'*'.'tl ., ftOW Coat.i Weatllet' Mcllttr 1-tr toctty, LIO!lt v1'11bl1 wfndf •t ltld mor111no '*'" bttom-1.., *ltl'lwftt to we•t 1 to 1s knol1 m ., .. """"-..,.r .,._ T...,,,...,. Mith '*'• 10 nMf bMclll) IM *II ln .. llCI. Cot.ill ,..,....,Nrf, r111tt from 6G ,, '" lrMnd """""'"""'• '"*' ,,..,.. 63 19 17. W11tr .....,.,,,_ k S1111, M-, J'lllea - WIOMllMY • S.C.. II~ .......... , '1hM1l>111o S.J lecOfll ... • •• '... •• • . • •: '' "'"" S.1 ......... 'Int -., ............ , ..... "" ...., ""'lltw ....... , .. ,,., f t)f ... M ...... -............ •1'i """' u ......... 1 ........... 1!:U llo"" "' Swt ·-1:4 ...... ,.. 11•"""' MOM .... tl!#Mt. ... l l»a- I Keith Seigall, II, a member ol )ha Valdese Reactle Squad, said the esploslon shoot h11 trailer home thr<e quarters of a mile away, and "when I got here, I smelled the guoline !Innes roal llroq." 1be dead Included Gamu•a daughter, Jean Anita, II; Donald Rol>lnaon, U; bJa sister Jl<glna, IO ; Gloria Bimmond, 12, Ind Mil:e Poftll, 10. Tbe aol)' aurv!Y<I' among the nelfhborb>od cblJdren plaJinc at the abelter wu Bea Picou, the Gamiu cl!lld'a ~. wbo llm nut door. The !oroe'"<lt1M"nploatoa went mootlT downblll, lhroqbtlte door. Tbe movy roof caved In, burying tht bodlet ol llJr:* of the vlctllnl under IUCh a pile ol- lbat autborttlu bod lo brias ltr .....,. equipment lo unco...-lhem. Authorlll•• said there ...,. very few such ahellen Jn Vlldeae, and Gamu'1 wu uponsln lo CO!lllruct. Famlly !rtenda Aid , be "1'!1>1 It up" and fre. =' ..;r::.--i. Illa water and, !ood However, Deputy Fire Manha! Sherrill Brittain Aid there wm "a good many" ... , ..... ltESCUE WOltKlltS, NEIGHIOltS DIG THROUGH DEBRIS 'Ive Yo.,,,....,. Klllod In lomb Shtltwr Blast • • f Riles Bill For Early Education ,/ . SACRAMENTO (AP) - State schools chief Wilson Riles pushed today for a '"1 million early childbocxt tdUCI· tion package that would alkiw children as young as three years and nine months to begin school. The program would overhaul kindergarten through th ird grade in Callfornia'a jiubliC schools over the next five years to provide for parent volun tet!rs in t h e classroom, possible elimina· tion of letter grades end retrainifls of t e a c he r s specially handling younger children. Trial Nears End Jackson's Father Will ·Not Testify SAN JOSE (AP) T .. umony bas ended In lhe Angela Davil trial with refusal by the final wltneu -the fathu of C.Orge and Jonathan Jackson -to take lhe stand. Final argumenla were to begin today. The refusal of L e 1 t e r Jackson to be a prosecuUon rebuttal witness a I m o 1 t- ,overabadowed the end of testimony Tueaday as both sides retted after lS weeb of the trial. Jackson, a Pasadena potlal employe, noted that boUI his sons are dead and told lbe court that be would not answer any queslio111 "for the J)re!ervaUon of my mental health." IJPI TelttMI• "'Man Booked l...... In Slaying . •• t . .. • 'T~i:f Jl College' • Provost Slays On SAN DIEGO (AP) -Dr. lower than elsewhere tn UC's Joseph Watson withdrew his system. Subjects of special ln- reslgaatioo today as provost of terest to minorities a r e University of California's con-taugh t. troversUll Third College, de-Wat son, a former chemistry claring he feels now he has professor, ha s been provost •u~rt. since the school was opened '""'0 .vears ago. tson. a 32-year~ld Negro. adVised Cbanctllor William o. lu his letter, Watson said he McElroy last Thursday that he spent ' ' s e v e r a I days \o\'&.5 stepping out to avo id reconsidering my resignatio n permanent harm to the and now very n1uch wish to mlnorJtles-oriented s c h o o I withdraw it. becau.se of a power struggle. "I submitted my resignalion But, in a new letter to with immense regret 'and 0 R 0 v 1 LL E (AP) McElroy, Watson said, "The sadness ~·hich became con· confidence and support that siderably more intense as the Minyard Owen Rutherford has you have expressed for me" ad min Is tr at Ion a n d been ifl!iicted by a Butte Coun-made him reconsider. departments made explicitl y ly grand jury in the courtroom The faculty of 33 and 360 clear their suppo rt for Third slaying of an attorney and the students have been divided College as n.t'I educational in- wounding of two other persons over Watson, some claiming stitulion," he went on. he thwarted the purposes of "In addition, the confidence DAILY PILOT tJ IP• .. ,.....kll MWrt~I TO ALL REPUBLICANS • Remember: CLAIR BURGENER VOTED FOR AB 724 (Now state law , effective March 4th) AB 724 means bus in g to achieve ethnic balance in schools, costing California taxpaye., 11 BILLION DOLLARS . BURGENER'S VOTE MEANS BUSING GAGE HAS FOUGHT BUSING Ele ct FRED GAGE . YOUR CONGRESSMAN in the 42nd Burgener's Not Your Man! COMMITTEE TO E.lECT FRED GAGE CONGRE SS MAN 605 1/i Mi11io11 Avt . e Oc1•nid1 e 714-712-t4t/6 UNAN IMOU1LV ENDOR SED av CAL l~DllNIA tll!l'U•Ll(AN AllliMllLY A legisla tive package to put the plan into effect has been introduced by Sens. Mervyn Dymally (D-Los Angeles) and Peter Behr {R-Tiburon) and Assemblymet'I Jerry Lewi! (~ Highland) and Ken Cory {D- Garden Grove). Riles, · Lewis, Behr and Dymally did not say specifically where the money would come from during tbeir Ca"pitol news conference. Superior · Court J u d g e Richard E. Amason then found him in contempt and fined him 1100. He could have been sent to jail for five days -or until the end of thj:! trial WON'T TESTIFY Le1t1r Jackson 1970 escape try at the Marin by a spray of gunfire la.st the school and should resign. and support that you have ex· week. Watson has maintained veto pressed for me in the face of The 57-year~ld Oroville man power over admissklns and considerable counter-pressure was indicted on one count of faculty ap(Xlintments at the played a 1najor part In my murder and two counls of school, which admits minority decision to withd raw my \~le~lo~ru~ou~s~a~s~sa~w~l.:-_::::::::_..:::._i•~tu~de~n~b~a£t~a~ca~d~em~ic~le~ve~ls~~res~ig~na~l~ion~req~ue~s~I.::.::..:__::::.~========:::::::::::::::::=:=:=:::::::::~ " -unless he agreed to testify. The Jackson brothers were k e y flgur'" In the proo- ecuUon'a murder·kldnap-con- splracy case against Ml!s Davi.I, a black militant and an avowed Communist. Jonathan, 17, wu one of four per.sons killed in the Aug. 7, Ski Resort :Siles estimated the plan would need $44 million in its first year to get :!!tarted, and $351 over five years. He said 15 percent of the state's youngsters under five years oC age would be. affected during the first year, if the program wins approval from the legislature and Gov. Ronald Reagan. R d N" d 0yma11y said the program Oa JXe _ _.. __ _mlgbLllLl>ald_fOJ:. out q!___ -~ . surplus ·state funds cre3"tediiy By Assembly greater-than-expected revenue from payroll withholding of • state income taxel!I. SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Partlcipatiot'I by children un-measure knocking out a 14- der five years would be o~ mile section of state highway tionel. leading up a narrow valley to The program is aimed at the proposed Walt Disney making sure that a child can Productions' Mineral King ski read and do basic arithmetic resort was approved on a 42-18 by the time he reaches the vote In the Assembly Tuesday. fourth grade, Riles said. Its author, Democratic The bills are based 'on a Assemblyman Edwin Z'berg, State Department of Educa-said it would "guarantee the tion task force report on early people they won't be In the childhood education that cited position of subsidWng the studies givtng evidence that Disney operation to the tune of children can learn much $40 million." earlier than had been thought. Originally, Walt D ts n e y County Courthouse th a t nsulted in a shootou t. George was killed a year later, on Aug. 21 , 1971, during an alleg- ed breakout attempt from San Quentin Prison. Jackson, after being asked a que.aUon by Prosecutor Albert Harria Jr., replied : .. I had on- ly two SONI and I just don 't want to take part in these pro- ceedings for the preservation of my mental health." Jackson WB! accompanied by 1.-0Ji Angeles attorney Jack Tenner, who termed the pros- ecutionts-attempt·-t&-pui....:his _ client· ori the stand ''legally impermissible and· mor.3lly outrageous." Outside court, Jackson told newsmen that Arnaso n's decision to flne him haa restored his faith in people. "It's been a trying day ... The court was very fair to me," Jackson aaid. * * * Davis Trial Costs Set At $884,677 His early cbUdhood educa· Productions wanted the state tion proposals could eliminate to pa y for the secUon of costly remedial work now Tulare County highway from needed for many chlldrtn In Oak Grove to Mineral King, SAN JOSE (AP) -The later grades, Riles said. where a narrow, twiating road Anaela Davis trial so far has now runs. Z'berg nki initial o Committee's Voters Gone On Pot Bill estimates l''ere that it would cost Santa Clara County cost about $22 million in 1967, $844,877, mOlflly for P o I i ~ e but the cost of the highway to-security, the county executive day would be closer to '40 reported Tuesday. million. Executive Howard Campen D i 1 n e y ProductioM an-told the board of supervisors nounctd earlier this i:nonth the figure includes security that it was altering its plans measures and extra personnel and wouJd nm a railroad up hired by the sheriff's depart- the valley to the re!Ort rather ment for Miss Davis' murder, SACRAMENTO (AP ) - A than a highway. The earlier kidnap &nd conspiracy trial, bill to reduce penalties for plan had come under heaV)' now in tis 14th week. po15session o( marijuana has fire from the Sierra Club and Security includes a 12-foot been shelved by a Senate com-other conservationists. high chain link fence around mittee because not enough Conservation groups also the e n t r a n c e to the senators showed up to take a critic!ized the U.S. Forest courthouse, a closed.--clrcuit vote on the proposal. Service for approving plans television network and met.al A battery of witnesses led calling for 14,000 persons a detectors. Numerous sheriff's by former Gov. Edmund G. day using the valley. Disney deputies stand guard at each "Pat" Brown Tuesday urged officials said the railroad trial session. the Senate Judiciary Com~ would limit daily use to 4,000 Extensive remodeling aJ90 mittee to outlaw jail terms for persons. was done on a nearby jail first offenses, saying that a With only one vote to spare, where Miss Davis was to be jall tenn was far worae for a 1 -,ithe~biiiil;i;I wii;ai;is;;ise;i;n;iit;i;toi;;tlliiOi;e ,.Se,.n,.•t,.e._ho_u_sed_. ------~I person than marijuana. Ir But when the two-hour hear- ing was over , only s i x members of tht 13·man com· mittee were still present. It takes at least seven votes to pess a measure in the com- fashion FABRICS mittee. Sen. Arlen Gregorio, (D-Sen Mateo) 8.!ked the commJttee to take the bill under .s~ mission, allowing him to bring it up later for a vote. but Gregorio declined comment<lln whether the bill eventually woold paM the committee. The bill "is not dead," he said. Gregorki'a plan-would make a first conviction for use or possession of marijuana punishable only -by a fine of $500 or less. A second conviction could be punl.shed as a first conviction ls mw, either as a felony or misdemeanor, with penaltlts ranging up to 10 ytars In •tat• prison. · Gregorio said his bill was a compromise with those who want to abolish all jall terms for marijuana. Gregorio said the damage from use of marijuana is "at most questionable" and that "imprisonment is more detriment.al than use or, in other won!J. the curt Is far worse .than the disease." Corl Anderoon, lolJbylJt for the C.llfomla Peace Officers As!OClation a n d California Di!trlrt Attorntys ANOOiation, led oppooltlon, sayin( the Greiorlo plan 11can have no <fleet bul lo lncreaH lbe "" ol. marijuana. .. At thll point, any reducUoD In lhe penaltlea for marijuana would be premature,'' And<non aald/'JVhal thla b1ll don In rullly I• lo rnlnlmf1e In the public eye tile dangm DATES: June 1, 2 and 3 HOURS: 1'1111"'"' · Prldoy, 0 11 :00 ".° 6:00 • 11.00 to 1.00 fa sh Io n wuTHAVIN PLAZA 16111.......,_ F A I R I c 5 .... ..i. Ytihy of marljuano." ,._ ______________ ... ACRYLIC SCREEN PRINTS GREAT .FOR PATIO PARTIES Now$1~! 45" WIDE .REG. $2.97 YD. COTION KNITS · Now$197 YD. 60" WID.E REG. $4.00 '(D'. POLYESTER DOUBLE :KNIT DESIGNER CUTS NOWs111 .· . YD. 60" WI.DE REG. $5.00 ·YD, ACRYLIC · ~~~MQNTK-QF JUNE 1iQSTANT SKIRTS 511 PER .. NOW . I' 00 INCH REG. 20¢ PER INCH ..... UNBLEACHED MUSLIN 45" WIDE REG. 59¢ YD. -: . : ·:[!aero~ or Cott~ SALE 88c SALE SEERSUCKER 45" W REG. $1.97 COTION PRINTS 45" W. REG. $1.69 JERS~Y KNITS . . ... LINING . OR BLOUSE -'l=ABRICS ~ ' ' ~ . WHITE 45" W · REG. $2.00 TRICOT 108". & 54" W REG. $1.98 . BAGS OF RIBBON 2 FOR 88c • POLYESTER DOUBLE . PUCKER ~NITS . .... . . FOR BODY SHIRTS KNIT FANCIES .$197 NOW . YD. s391 ·· NOW · YD REG. $4.50 YD. REG. $5.97 YD. Embossed WHITE 7 . s100 NOW 3 YDS. 36" Wide R19. $1 .49 yd. DECORATOR PRINTS NYLON NET NOW S1 4 ?D. NOW 8 YDS~l 00 ' 54" Wide R19. $2.97 yd. R19. 2Jc Yd. Q6 NOW 77¢YD. 54",60" Wide Reg; $1.69 Yd. .. NOTIONS 5 FOR 2YDS: $1 NOW FOR 45 '.' Wide Reg. $2. 97 yd. COMMERCIAL ELASTIC • PATTERN PAPER s100 4 Yd•. F?•Sl OO 5 Ydi.F.,$100 SHIRTINGS 1 GROUP 66¢YD. 1 GROUP 44¢;D. 45" Wide Reg: to $2.00 Yd. TERRY CLOTH SOLIDS NOW $1 3 ?D. 45" Wide Rog. $1.77 Yd. .. COTTON KNIT Designer Cut 60" Wide Reg. $2.67 yd. SUMMER SHEERS POLYESTER NOW 77¢ 45"Wide R09. $1.77 Yd. WOVEN POLYESTER DRESS WEIGHT NOW s29?D. 45" WIDE REG. $4.00 YD. fRBRICS Phone 531..0103 16185 Brookhurst Westhaven Plaza Fountain Valley M..,. thrv Fri. Sat. 'tll 6 ' .. • First Choic.e: Wenke U there b one thing Orange County doesn't need, It's four more yesrs Of Robert Battin on lbe Board of Supervllora. His record, to be •Utt. i.s memorable. Among olber things, Battin has: -Blatantly woven party politics lbrougb county government despite the presumed non-partisanship of hb olllc:e. -Been responsible for appointment of some per- IOlll of doubtful qualifica tions onto c.o':ffitY comml.sslons. -'Misjudged senior county officials and tried - unsuccessfully, to the county's good fortune -to create a comple~ upheaval in administrative practices. -As chairmah'bf the board, permitted Its conduct at tlmes to reach bizarre proportions. -Generally played a key role in undermining citi· zen confidence in Orange County government. Ballin represents the First Supervisorial District, which revolves around the key section of Santa Ana and takes in most of Fountain Valley, about half of Garden Grove and Westminster ,and part of Tustin. But the importance of the election goes far beyond the boundaries of the First District because of the dis.-ruplive influence Battin has had on all of Orange County, a.od the discredit he has brought on county government. U not Battin, then who? Four years ·ago , the question was tough, bec!.ause of a weak field. This time, it is not. More than one qual· ified candidate is campaigning for the First District seat. At least four of them show all promise of being a far better representative than Battin. Jn that field, one of those candidates has outstand· Ing qualUications. His name is William Wenke, an attorney with an impressive and non-phony list of civic contributions, with substantial support from Santa Ana's business and civic community - and even' an endorsement from the AFL-CIO's Committee on Political Education (COPE). Moreover, Wenke bas displayed a strong grasp of Orange County's unique problems, its possibilities and a feel for how its ~overnment can contribute to improv· ing both the business and environment aspects of the county. Wenke has campaigned hard, stuck to the issues and nailed Battin on a number of polltical falsehoods spread via an expensive compuler!Ied·l ettu campaign. (For Instance, Ibo always-unavailable Battin would have you believe he spent mo.r or his time communicating with Orange County citizens when actually he has spent the better part of four yean doing the opposire.) Oran ge County has had enough of Bob Bsttin's type of governmental representation. Bill Wenke would be a fine replacement. Success at the Summit The summit meeting in Moscow ls being judged by most knowledgeable observers or the u.s .. nussian sltua· tlon around the worJd as a historic breakthrough with literally world-wide benefits. These achievements offer an exaoij>le that can be applied to other contending nations: -The first arms control agreements which im- pose quantitative limits on offensive and defensive mis· sites. · -A joint declaration of principles to guide future relations between the two nations. Both sides pledged to prevent nuclear war, avoid military confrontations, settle disputes peacefully and use restraint in their re- lations. -The arms race will now shift to weapons quality. There is hope, however, that future SALT negotiations can deal with this as part of a move toward future dis· armament. Vietnam was not mentioned by name, and the Rus- sians said nothing about the blockade. Although prior commitments to other nations are not affected by the joint declaration, the circumstances seem to point to a backroom understanding of some kind -with the hope it will mean an early end to the Vietnam tragedy. Russia 'has broken many agreements in the past. There is evidence now, however, that detente is in Rus- sia's best long term interest. U so a more peacelul world looms as never before. No Concession to Western Ideas Mafia Bores Into Food --Suviet-ijine-Is Stitt -Hard--. -. . -·-· ~-.:__ - MOSOOW, RUSSIA -Western ways penetrate the Soviet Union but Western thought Is still barred at the door. Presi- dent Ni.ion and his negotiators had to bear constantly ln mind their inability and unwillingness to ' ,.-...... see the world as the Russians see It. In the streets of Moscow, the ways of C, c;:- the West can be of>. ~ ~ served in the dress of the people, in the shop windows, and lo the motor cars eonfklently expected to arise to one million in a few years. But where thoughts are formed and ideologies are made and the reasons for human existence are sought, the ways of the West find hard going. JN THE GRAND PALACE or the Kremlin, in Pravda and other organs of the political hierarchy, a positive ap- proach is taken toward coexisience with the capitalist system of the United States. Coexistence, that is, without the slightest concession to the ideas which underlie Western free society. A jolting rtmlnder of the hard line which stlll underpins the Soviet system was provided by Ekaterina Furtseva, the minister of culture, to divert and inform Western news correspondents while they awaited the word from the Kremlin on Russia's detente with the United States. This keen-minded woman, the em· bodlment it might be said of the new Soviet woman, left no doubt of the hard ideological line which will continue to ( Ri~ WILSON .) I divide and unsettle relations tietween the East and the West. FURTSEVA SPOKE with biting con- tempt or Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the Soviet Nobel prize WiMer, whose works are published all over the world , but no longer in the Soviet Union. The world famous author, she said, ha s transcended the bounds of literature and become an opponent of Soviet reality.· UnJike Count Alexie Tolstoy of the old regime, the Nobel prize winner cannot accept the revolution. He bas opposed the entire society and raised his hand against the dignity o( the Soviet people. Why then, asked Furtseva, should the people's money be used to publ i!;h the works of an author who is against the people? Others, like John Paul Sartre of France, recognized the Nobel award as a political, rather than a literary, recogni· lion and mustered enough courage to re- ject it, says Furtseva. ~mREFtrrABLE Commun isf logic spreads across the spectrum of art, literature, philosophy and po I it i ca 1 thought. Art is not for art's sake, but for the sake of the state and the same ap- plies to the entire realm of man's creative and intellectual pursuits. They must exist only for the advancement of the welfare of the state and the people, as the only worthwhile reality of m o d e r n governments and ways of life. Furtseva seemed to re<":ognize that the ttitical and moving fiction o f Solzhenitsyn represents the rebellion of the inner man, even in Soviet Russia, against the hard-handed limitations of hi.s freedom of movement, thought and political action. SCIENCE AND technology have burst such bonds in the Soviet Union because the laws of physics, chemistry and biology cannot be repealed by govern· ment action. Man's sou1 is protected by no such Jaws and still suffers in the O>mmunist con- finement which Furt.seva'.s. shan>boned logic so bald1y defined. \Vhat Furtseva said of the creative world might well be repeated for the benefit of Nixon and his negotiators in the political world. The idea of adjustment and relaxation of tensions is not in itself a desirable goal. It must be a relaxation which serves the Soviet state. DETENTE, NOT FOR detente's sake, but for the sake of the state. Coexistence is not an abstract principle based on human compassion, but a means to ad· vance the interests of the Communist state. Much is said and written of the soft· ening of the Russian revolutionary spirit in this soth anniversary year of the Great Revolution, and of the bowing of modem day C.Ommunist leaders to the objective realities of international relations in the nuclear age. Furtseva reminds us that the revolu-- tionary spirit is far from dead. 'All Sides Unite Against It' To the Editor: Although we are often on opposing rides, we are joining in denounci~ Proposition 9, the pollution In itiative on the June 6 ballot. It is a destructive measurt which will increase unemployment in a state already suffering from more than 600,000 jobless workers. This is one instance in which business and labor can certainly present a united front. Revenue losses resulting from pas.sage of Proposition 9 are estimated in the billions of dollars. This is only one of many reasons for all responsible Califor· nians to join in seei ng that Proposition 9 is soundly defeated. THE PLAIN FACTS are t h a t Callfornla's economy would suffer a devastating blow with no benefits to the environment. On the contrary, the l:n· vironment would suffer and pollution would increase. Ol:ANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrt N. Wttd, Publi.sher Thomas Ktnii~ Editor Albtrt W. Batu Editorial Page. Editor 1114' editorial ~ or the Dally Pilot .et.k1 to lnfonn and 11ti1nu· late lffdM by llN$Cntlng thl11 118'1PllJ>C'!''• oplnlona: and com- mentary on t.o11lcs of lntr.rttt 11nd Atnific&IK'C. by provktlnr a forum for UMt ~ of our ttftdr.rs' -OPlnlonl, Md by prt~ntlng th~ tlhtette vlewpolnU ol btformtd ol). ~ and spokelmtn on lopb ol lllt dq, Wedoad_,, x_, 31, i972 ( ) opposing the environment initiative are virtually all the major newspapers, many MAILBOX large companies etc. However, realizing that the citizens don 't quite trust them, they have concocted a committee called "-----------J ''Californians against the Po 11 qt i on Ltllen ff'tlll rtfftnl 1111 w.k-.. H-•llY Writ.rt ihff" Cl'llW' tlltlr -.... I Ill .. wwi'I •r 1111. Tiit 111111 fl nM11111 ltttln fl flt 1111<1 tr tllmhlat. HWI Is "'"'""· All ltttwl 111111! I• clvdt 11tnaiw. ,,... 11111111111 Mllmt. IMit ,..,,.., IM'I' M wlrl'llllM "' '"""' If tuffklt11! ,..._ 11 IHtrlllt. f"Mfty •HI lltf M tlllillll....._ When you see such diverse groups as the California Labor Federation, AFL- CIO, the California Chamber of Com· merce and the Teamsters Union joining witll responsible conservation groups such as the California Wildlife Federation and the Audubon Society to fight a so- called Clean Environment Initiative, you know it has to be a bad measure. JOSEPH J, DIVJNY First Vice President International Brotherhood or Teamsters TOM KNlGHT Execut.lvt Vice President califomia Manufacturers Association Be's tor It To the Editor: We have been hearing how dangerous and irrational Proposition 9 ls and how It was "badJy thrown together in haste." These opinions are completely unfounded. Flrst of aJJ, it took two yea.rs of hard research and another hall a year to aet the requirtd petitions gathered to get It on the ballot, which was n<it hard as many more people than the oil companies wouJd like to admit are for a clean t.n- vtronment. THE OPPOm'ION tncludet all al the major oil oompanles who would like to proceed uninhibited with tbetr ,....,.. making ach<m .. rather than beUer !ht envlrarimeot, clooplto the .._.ia U.., apluh throu&boul the media. Allo lnitiative''. A STANDARD OIL memo which I am quoting from Page 59 of Newsweek (May 29 ) " ... was written by a Standard Oil al· torney, James Wandvig, to the finn's chairman of the board, Otto A-tiller. In it Wandvig suggested that the public rela· tions finn of Whitaker & Baxter be re- tained to mount a campaign against the proposal and that a "front group" of distinguished cjtizens be recruited to con- demn Proposition 9 publicly. Industry, Wandvig cautioned, would be well ·ad- vised to keep a tow profile. DO YOU SEE WHAT we are against? They say that the proposa would stop progress and curtail jobs, which Is a lie. It will, rather, force the companies to action. Don't be foolish, vote yes on 9. . LENARD DAVIS Dear Gloomy Gus Highway d•aths set new rte0rdL. last weekend. Reminded me ot the axt(\111, '"lllinking drivers ~·t drbll<J Drinking drfvm cloo'I lblokl" ....P.11.C. ' , Industry JACK ANDERSON WASHINGTON -Mafia-nm companies with aMual sales of $400 million are foisting off their products on the Am.erican housewife through some of the nation's best·known supermarket chains. So entangled is the Mafia with the prod- ducts, that their brand nam~ should read "Cosa Nostra Cleaner" or "Crime Syndicalo Suds." In lac~ they bear the label.s of more than a dozen widely sold /items. I What has happened is that the Mafia hoodlums h a v e gained Control of the companies making the ·products through intennediaries called "straws" or broker· age deals. The Mafia may a 1 s o maintain strategically-plaeed employees witbin the companies. ONCE THE MAFIA is: in corporate control, its muscle men let the supermarkets know that the price of peace is to stock the mob's products prominently on the shelves. The supermarkets, in a few cases, have resisted the threab of labor strife, arson · and even murder which con&itute the Mafia's favorite sales pitches. More often, the retailers have caved in, giving the housewife products whose higher prices include the crime syo-- dicate's cut. TO COMBAT MAFIA influence in the grocery busines.s, Senate Commerce Chairman Warren Magnuson, D-Wash., will hold new hearings in June on some of the supennarket product:.. He has already produ~ public evidence that A and P was unsuccessfully pressured by the Mafia to carry a syndicate-controlled detergent. In preparation for the new hearings. Magnuson's sleuth.s have worked in- cognito roast-to-coast. We have not named the supermarkets or products to avoid giving the hoodlums a chance to acurry for cover before Magnuson irummons them to testify. Footoote: Working with Magnuson to expose the Cose Nostra commerciaJ J~ tere.rts Is Sen. Marlow Cook, R-Ky., an ex-judge. WITH Dl\AFI' CALLS slackening orf, National Guard has fallen back on rociilili' 11!.i contests to keep up its ranks. Not only Ive failed, but II •J> pears to violate fed law. · Tbe lt3th Toctlcal bier Wing In Washington, for uamp rt ported · ally in ib newsle that the gu smen are still Jeav· faster than they' coming in. , Actu the Nat.lo Guard may want to recon,,i it.s pro s of cash and • Puerto Rican vaca far the winning r«MJl!er·guar . Tille 10 of ~ Federal Code c rly states that "no bounty may be Id to Induce any person to enllst in ed Forces." When 'ft'e queri Gu.W, they imlsted the only • to ·u-coming in -not U-them in. Talmud Remarks -~ -.. -.---·--~-., ·--··· ___ ,,, -- • On Death Penalty Thoaght1 At Large: Punitive people are fond of falling back on "the Bible" as .sanction for capital punishment; what they don't know about Biblical history is that the Talmud remarks that a Sanhedrin (Supreme Court ) which executed one person in 70 years was considered a "destructive Court. II • • • One of the mo.st splendid putdo9¥ns in literary aMals was given by William Dean Ho.wells when a bor:ing author was trying to elicit a oompliment f r o m him: "You know," said the a uthor, "I don't seem to write as we 11 as I used to;" "Oh indeed you do," replied Howell s. "You write as well as you ever did -but your tastt is improving. • • • Nothing is truer than that, as we get older, if we fail t.o grow, we shrink, both intellectually and spiritually. • • • Of all people I feel .sorry for , I fee.1 sor· riest for those who dislike going home. • • • The trouble with most novels is that the writers who know how to tell a story well have nothing worth saying, while those who have something worth saying rarely know how to tell a story well. • • • Most minorities are eager for the op- portunity to become just as bad as the majorities they resent. • • • One of the ironies of good Jooks was ex- pressed by Baudelaire, when he observed that "Stupidity always preserves beauty, it keeps away the wrinkles, it i.s tht supreme cosmetic ... " • • • Humanism alone cannot compete v.·ith lnhumanism, just as the reasonable man cannot successfully argue with the fanatic ; only when humanism is infused with a divine spark -just as fanaticism is infu sed with a demonic one -can it hope to overcome its adversary. • • • The only conservative worth listening to is one whose philosophy is not simply a rationalization for hi.s greed, just as the only radical worth listening to is one whose philosophy is not a rationalization of his envy: and both these exemplars are exceedingly rare within their own ranks. • • • One indication of how truly evil-minded the Victorians were is a passage from a book on "Etiquelte" by Lady Gough (the Emily Post of only a century ago ), which instructs : "The perfect hostess will see to it that the works of male and female authors be properly separated on Jier bookshelve~, Their proximity, unless they happen t.o be married, should not be tolerated." • • • A "do-gooder" is not one who does good (which is commendable), but one who does it with an air of self·righteous superiority, which is a violation of the substance by the spirit. Productive Lunar 'Junk' CaJlfornia Feature Service ln an environmental age it is not surprising that reports or Apollo missions to the moon should, more or less light- heartedly, refer to the multi-million dollars' worth o( "junk" left on our satellite. An interesting analysis of this junk, and its dollar factor, ha.s been made in a let· ter to the editor of a san Francisco newspaper written by John D . MacGregor of San Francisco. MacGregor cites one report putting an $83 million price tag on the things left behind by Apollo 16. It break> down lo 125 million for the scientific Instrument package, $S million for the lunar buggy, $30 million for the descent haU of the lan· der and BMOrted other pieces of equip. ment, and $20 million for the third stage or the Satwn rocket. MISLEADING, suggest! the writer. He GUEST REPORT estimates that the cost of the raw materials that went Into all this "junk"• couldn't have been more than a few thousand dollars. Even those dollars, he says, Went to earUtling.s. The balance of the $83 million price tag '1all went Into the U.S. economy - salaries and wages for research and developroent, experimentation, fabrics · tion, and support services. Education and . scientifJc knowledge were enhanced (and will continue to be during the life of the science station ). Employment was tteated. Not a single dollar was left on the moon.11 Now U all junk could be as prcr ductive ..• B11 George ---------, Dear George: luslrylng the basic, u It were, el· I hive been rudlng your eolamn feet -or as Jt II earlier ailed. for 10 years llld I sill! don't_un-cause. Rtmem""4-too, what Ibid derstand Sideways Tbinklng. I said. Now, quit nagging me with mean, 1 follow this system, of those dopey whines for explanation. _O)W'ae, as you are my guru • ...But 1--o- don't understand It. Could you 1ty Den George: just one more uplanaUon7 ' Would . you -nude for I LO'( A!-NUT -uine or would you be loo In- hibited! Dear Loyal: Certainly. Slmp!Jnocl, Sideways Tb1nl<hl8 LI merely never quite g<t-tinJ to the beart or a, not always defined u IQCb, problem,, whlh!, u tt wen; semm,. to IOlve by ~ Fl Fl Dear Fl Fl : Jhhiblkd! I'm tho Ol\ly lop!... columnlst in the entire adm racket now! • • e L. M. Bo,Jd Top Swimme1·? It's Polar Bea1· It was in 1836 that the lo~ cabin presidential candldale William Henry Harrison hand~ out Uttle green liquor bot-- Ues shaped like log cabins with chimneys for spouts. Each was Inscribed "E. C. Booz's ()Id Cabin W.hiskey." And it was from th is mischiel we got the word "booze" meaning "whiskey." Oh, you knew that? ' AT AGE 7, Wilt Chambetlain looked age 12. said the Philadelphia mU~f" who hired him then to tos1 arowid the big wooden dairy crates at 5 o'clock in the morning. What were you doing at age 7, mister? I was listing to the left under a sackful of Liberty magazines, seem to reca ll. IF YOU'RE about to buy a used car, look at the brake pedal. It can't tell you how far the car has traveled, but it will indicate whether the pre- vious owner was a gentle driver or a hotfoot highballer. Greater the wear on that pedal, higher the repair bills, usually. Such is the claim of a mechanical expert. QUERIES -Q. "How m~y Americans live in Eng- land now:" A. Can only tell you the U.S. Emabssy in London passes out pension checks to about 12,500. Must be a lot more. Q. HWffAT'S a busker?" A. That's an entertainer -singer, dancer, musician, whatever -who plays to the ticket lines outside the thea- ters in London. Free. We don't have any buskers in this country, why I don't know. WRITES Sandra Monette: "Doubt a spoonful of ordi· nary table sugar is the best cure for hiccups. I'm con- vinced the eating of an ordinary banana works better, al- ways." MIDDLEAGE -\Vhen 's middleage? Dan Bennett said it's when a man returns a wink \Vith a blink. Robert Ryan said It's when a fellow burns the midnight oil at about 9 p.m. Sidney Brody says it's when the old boy who tells you to slow down is a doctor in stead of a cop. THE POLAR BEAR swims far better than any other rottr-footed -marnma-1. \Vha~.s-.peculiar_abo.ut this. is._the_ polar bear uses only is forepaws in swimming. Never its hind pbws. Just drags them along. . 1 IN LOS ANGELES" a wily entrepreneur admits he has made a success of his ladies' dress and shoe shop merely by marking all articles therein two sizes smalleit: CUMing, cunning. ASK YOUR preferred waitress how o£ten the boss re- prints the lunchroom menus. Surprisingly. a recent survey shows the average restaurant menu only lasts three and a half months. Address mail to L. ft.t. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, New· port Beach, Calif. 92660. Decision A Matter Of Taste WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court, stepping into the middle of a heated gourmet controversy, h a s agreed that shrimp tastes bet- ter if the vein is removed. Some food authoriUes, citing the eating habits of many Asians, argue that it makes no difference if the vein or in- testine is consumed. They add that cutting out the veins is needless work for the chef. But Justice Byron R. White, writing Tuesday for the ma- jority in a case involving a pa- tent dispute over shrimp de- veining machines, cited an opinion by the U.S. District Court for Eastern Louisiana which said: "Shrimp, whether boiled -broiled;-barbecued or--fl'ied;- are a gustatory delight. If the vein is removed, _shrimp become more pleasing to the fastidious as well as more palatable.'' "Such gustatory observa· tions are rare even in piscatorially favored federal courts blissfully situated on the nation's Gulf Coast," White commented, "But they are properly recited in this case." When it comes to Penney diamonds, $200 goes a long way. 14 karat white gold bridal set with .20 carat mar- quise cut dlamond.$200 14 karat gold bridal set wilh four diamonds. ' •200 14 karat gold bridal set wit h live diamonds. s200 Men's ring, 27.50 14 karat white gold bridal set with 8 diamonds, .24 carat total weight. $200 14 karat gold bridal set with .27 carat round cut diamond. 1200 Men's ting, 27.50 14 karat gold bridal trio: engagement ring set with live diamonds and match- ing Men's ring. $200 Why a diamond from PenneYs? Penneys Independent Diamond Consultant exam ines and approves every Penney diamond twice, once before mounting and again after, lo .assure compliance with high quality standards established by our Merchandise Testing Center. You can have confidence in every Penney diamond for good color and clarity, precision cuning and accurate carat weight. Penneys Diamond Certificate is given to every diamond purchaser. Penney lifetime 'Diamond Trade-in Pol icy' gives you the opportunity to own a bigger diamond. l!lus1 ra1ions l"nlargcd to show dii1ail. JCPenney fine jewelry rhe values are here every day. - Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following !!l~re_s_; Av1if1ble ot: NEWPORT BEA.CH, Foshion fsl1nd . HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center. Use Penneys time p•yment plan. ,. Sale! 20% off our entire stock of boys' knit sport shirts. Every last one. Sala prices eHectlve lhrough Sunday. Sale 199 Reg. 2.49. Wheel pattern cotton knit shirts in assorted colors. Sizes 6-18. Sale 2 39 Reg. 2.98. Polyester/cotton knit shirt. Lined self-collar with ring zipper. In assorted solids, sizes 6-18. Sale 4 79 Reg. 5.98. Velour shirts in handsome stripes. For sizes 8-18. Sale 280 Reg. 3.50. T-shirts with screen print pockets in assorted colors and patterns. Sizes 6-18. Sale 2 39 Reg. 2.98. Bold striped cotton terry has cr~w neck, hemmed bottom and sleeve. Sizes fl.18. Sale 199 Reg. 2.49. Wallace Beery style knit shirts f6r pre-school boys, sizes 2/3, 4/5, 6/7. Sale 2 39 Reg. 2.98cWallaca Beery style· cotton knit shirts in assorted colors. Sizes 6-18: Sale 159 Reg. 1.98. Wheel pattem short sleeve shlrts.100% cotton for pre·school boys. Sizes 2/3, 4/5, 6/7. ·- JC Penney The values are here every day .. CHARG& THESE VAl.IJES AT YClUR l..QCAI. PENNEY STORE I . DAILY PILOT 7 ·- l ' . ' I I I I !1 DAILY PILOT ~:c :c: £ 'False Seeurity' How to Ha11dle Diesel Blazes By ALMON tOCKABEY 0•11~ ,.u., •Mll1"1 illllffr When the proud old ketch Novia dcl f\1ar burned to the waterline and sank on a trip from Cabo San Lucas to San Diego early this year It brought up the question: How safe la diesel fuel? Novla was equipped with diesel power. By the time the crew discovered the fire it was impossible to ex- tlngui!h. An article in the f\lay issue of The Ensign, national publicaUon of the United St<.ilcs Power Squadrons, Past commander J. B. Johnson of the Coral Ride Squadron commented at length on the hazards of diesel fuel. Without mentioning Novia, the article explained.in part what happened to cause the slubborn rire aboard John Scripps' famous yacht. Under the title : "But Diesel Isn't All That Safe," Johnson writes: "~fany diesel-powered boat owners are lu,lled into a false sense of security because diesel fuel is not explosive. nor are Us flames. "BUT DIESEL FUEL will burn. Diesel engines can "run away" -and the engines themselves can explode unless proper preparalion, procedure and diligent care are used. Fire danger: Should a fuel line break and spray fuel on a hot spot or the manifold an intense fire could resu1t. To try to extinguish it with a hand fire extinguisher would i~vlte instant confla'iation by exposing the fire to open air. An automatic C0-2 system in the engine room would put out the flre. The engine room could then be aired, the fuel line repaired or. if twin engines, the undamaged engine could then be started. ''A runaway engine : Should a fuel line break and spray fu el directly into the air intake. the fuel would go directly into the cylinders. thus bypassing the throttle controls. the governor and the fuel cut off valves. "WITH NO BRAKE on the amount of fuel reaching It the engine would simply continu.e to increase speed until it literally exploded "The only way to stop it now is to cut off il, air supply. While most diesels have emergency air cut-offs near the air intake on the engine, who is going' into the engine room to activate it when ao engine is running awa~? , The safe and quick way is to have air cut-off exten- sions installed at the helm , to be used only in emergencies (because these ;iir cut-offs have to be reset at the engine before It can be restarted). Engine explosion : Should there be a significant amount of water in one cylinder, and should another cylinder fire while you are trying to start the engine. the tremendous compression working against the incompressible and non- ignlt.eblc water will cause the rods to bend or break, other damage, and the engine might even explode. "This can be averted by the following starting pro- cedure: "I. Turn on the ignition but also activate the fuel stops -so the ef18lne cannot get fuel. "2. Then, with the fuel cut ott. activate the starter. 1( the engine turns over (you can see the tachs regis!er 100 rpm or so) these is no water in the cylinder. so simply release the fuel cut-off and the engine will start. The entire procedure takes only a few seconds. "BUT, IF TllE l+~NGINE does not turn over (no rpm register) cease trying to start it immediately. Do not try to start it again until the trouble has been {pund and cor- rected. "Use t'his procedure cvc11y lime you start a diesel engine, even if ii has just stalled. This Is the only sure way to avoid that one·in·a-million chance ot there being a dangerous amount of water in a cylinder." Cambria Garners Racing Laurels Cambria, a 40-foot ketch skippered by William R. Larson of Palos Verdes Yacht Club, was the winner in the Split Rig Division or Pacific 1'-fariner's Outer Islands race to Newport Beach over the ?-.1en"l0rial Day weekend. The event is co-sponsored by Balboa Yacht Clull. Winners in the o t her divisions: JOR -(I) Kari II, Richard Kelton, CBYC: (21 ri.1amie. 1-filt Smith. eve. 1'10RF -! I t Retrent ll, Bob Smith, PMYC: 12l ri.1ayko JI, Gordon Murphy, PVYC ; (3 I The Spirit, Gordon lAlrson, SI BYC. PflRF -(J) Jim Pat II. John Ellenwood, PVYC: (2) Chindit, John Needham , SMYC: (3) Sea Manx. David Fox. PMYC: I~) Lumarran, Bill Rohrs, VYC. Bociti1ig Also Pg. 21 WEDNESDAY NJCHT·rs TACONJCHT CETSIX FOR.SI.SO! ,. 2111 Brillo! !P1ll...i.) NNr Campus Drlw Newport hach • • Washer and dryer sale. Save 37.90 on our best selling laundry team. le s199 Reg. 219.95. Programmed washer. Features 6 washing programs for all popular fabrics including permanent press. 3 water level settings, soak setting, l1qu1d bleach dispenser. AH over porcelain enamel finish. Whtie, coppertone, a'Yocado or harvest gold. $9 a month• Sale s103- • "'t., .· -~ ,...._.,.----_,,,.,,. - Reg. 179.95. Gas dryer. 4 tempe rature settings tor all fabrics including fluff-dry. Signal sentry sounds off when drying is completed. White. coppertone, avocado or harvest gold. 7.50 per month• 4 temperature electric dryer, Reg. 149.95 ..• Sale $133 Sale prices effective through Sunday·;· -------~--- ····-- More compact prices on compact appliances. Compact spin·dry washer. Requires no special instatlalion. Works on regular house current. Fits in a closet. Rolls on casiers. Comes in white. avocado or narvest gold. 7.00a month• 11995 Compact electric dryer. Operates on regular house current. Small enough to store in.closet. No special venting required. Rolls on casters. White, avocado or harvest Q.old. 6.00 a month• ' '· ·' ;' r· ' Washer/dryer stand made ot hepvy-guage, chrome 1 pfatpd steel. A great space sav~r. 29.95 ·This amount represents the required monthly payment under Penneys T_ime Payment Plan for the purchase of the related i\em. No Finance Charge will be incurred If the balance of lh'e account in the first billing is paid in full by the closing date of the next billing period. When incurred Finance Charges will be determined by applying periodic rales of 1,2% (Annual Percentage Rate i4'.4'1t) on the firiS~$500and 1% It's all part of the value. (Annual Percentage Rate 12"'} on the ponif?n over $500 of the pre'iious balance without deducting payments or credits. JCPen.ney The values are here every day. L tShop Sunday noon to 5 PM at the following store~: t:l\WeltT !EACH, Fa1hlon Island. HUNTINGtON BEACH, Huntington Center. For The Record Dissolutions Of Marriage Elllfl'H M•'I' 16 t amberl, M4trle end k•rl1n D. Plc~r11, Cllrl511M 81v1rly •nd Jack Leroy Greeri. Pein1v Jeao and J-.clr. Merle Cor1>, O.nnls M. ind Btalrlct H. · easier, c11 .. r1e1 ltt and Edl111 Ann Padlllt, eeny J. end Edward Political Notes Schmitz Firiance Backers Listed By O.C. HUSTINGS Of rM O.llr Pllef 111ff TUSTIN -Who's backing Rep. John Schmitz in bis .bid for r~lection? For openers, a group of Orange County businessmen, according to Bill Hulsy or Mission Viejo, Schmitz' cam- paign director. "These businessmen raise funds and spearhead various . committees which keep the re- election campaign r o 11 in g financially," says Hulsy. He adds that these finance com- mitjee members either live or mclntain businesses in the 39th Congressional District . Republican C e n l r a I Com- mittee. nallev, 11r1en1 I. and Ch'dt A. k lrd1mano, Robtrt 0111 Ind J011nlle The executive council of the Schmitt finance committee is co-directed by Lee J. Hasen- jaeger of ·Tl!st!lr and Adolf Schoepe of Fullerton. Hasen- jaeger ls regional vice presi- dent of United California Bank. Schoepe is president of Fluidmaster, Inc., and the finance chairman of the North Orange County Boy Scout Council. He is also the former owner of Kwiltset Lock Corporation in Anaheim. Other committee members include Willis J. Clemons, an attorney and vice chairman of the Orange County Republican Central Committee : George E. Delahanty, president of Trans Continental Credit Corporation and chairman of the Calilornia Collection Agency Advisory Board; George W. Brokate, in- dependent Newport Beach in- ves tor and former member of the Orange County Republican Central C.Ommittee. A I s o Michael T. Collins, a Santa Ana attorney and trustee of the Saddleback Junior College District; Patrick W. Carter, chairman of Carter Corpora- tion and a director of Big Brothers ·of Orange County ; Bradford H. Miller, president of B. H. Miller C.Onstruction Company and director of the Bank of Newport Beach ; Ed- mond B. Buster, vice presi- dent of Townsend C.Orporation -Cherry Rivet Division ; Willard Voit, retired chairman of the board of Voit Rubber Company, and Ralph E . Graham, a physician and owner of the Chapman General Hospital and the San Clemente General Hosoital. Irene Mavnard, Robert V. tnd Ci1y S. Se1kln1, G1rv C.rllon 1nd Krl1llne LDUIM' Suvor. Charlene L. •nd T01un S•nd1, 01rvl Robert and M1r1111 Jo Stllan!l, l,larbiora J. alld Rlctword l . Atkhuon.~ol>f•I• Ann Ind Donald J. Mul!l11,., c11t1111.,. M1rl1 and Mkflael Denn ii Slocum. Barberi J. Ind Addition B., Ill Le Cl1lr1, Marthe G1rlrUO. and Antllony Tonv, Sr. 1 Jeendell. Flora B. and JOl'lfl F. Mu•l>hv. S11zanM Jtan •nd Mlthael Jellrev Mcllva111, Te<idy Ind Caroly11 Jean l Pnnlson, Sharon Olan.e West and L1rrr 0 . Toout, June L. and Wiiliam R. Pllarl1, 81rll4lr1 O. '""Johll R. [)ele110rl1. LI VerrM Cll1rlo!f 1...i RIV· morid Euo;11ne Lovtn, Derek Hugh Ind C•rol l~ MortlLVer1111 l. 11nd Donald Charles O'Am1ro, K1lhryn A. and Thom111 C. Keller, Royce Edmond and Bever!r Winona 8"rbt!r, JOA<"lnt 111'1<1 Tr11cr Richard S"vol,,, Pamela A<"ln Ind ltsllt Dorie E 111011, Edith Lorr1lne and L61il1 P1trlck E11t1r1d MIY 17 Hoe>wood. John A. 1nd Ooro!hY M1rltyn Eade, Marlorle R. 1nd Ron11ld M. Tucker, J1ner Ann 11\d Rober! J1v Oomln110, AllCI E. 1nd Daniel J, Cos1'tYJ R111>11 o. 11ricl Cn1rlene Frttl1, l homll E . Ind Alk l L. Oyer, RUSHll E. Ind l!'a R. Schulm1n, S1mllel Ind 110$.n'll rf Allee Saker, Halent 1nd Vlr11t P11ul Wiison. Ch1rlorr1 Ann 1nd Ate•andlr l r.om1s, 81rti.r1 M, and Larrv W. Oe Forrest. Shlrl1y A. 1nd TtioM11 J. 6 ome1. Ev1 LucUte 1nc1 Esteo1n Gon11lez Sl>f!llCI. V!vl111 l. . ..,..., Fr1...;0s Hellman, Rlch1rd Delbtrt 11\d JOVCI ~·•ldlne Ebbl!rl, R1vmond Arlllur Ind P•trlci11 Jewel R11Tm1n, Jitl'll M1rve •rid J1fl'Hl'l Ru11111. Jr. Glaus, 8tvrr!v 0. '"" Rlcnard Lte Ltt. Jtln Mlr!t end J1m11 Herry Gorsucn, Jolln W<ivne Ind J111e Louise Ream. 8ettv S. <ind J1mt s P. Smilev. Suellen L. 1nd David L. ICots!t•, Edwltd We1it¥ Ind G!'OfHflt ' Scott, And•e11 and Of1n I. Mallovr, Jov'e Levon end Cl'lrl•to~er Jo1e-ph 6111•1. lhere1a end Norm1n e, Ellt1. 6et1Y J1fll" 1nd Lton1rd Oliver V1llnskl, Sally A . .,Id Slanley J. eeckelman, Ronald L1nev end Yvonnt Susan llarnell, Su11n J. and Thom11 Dalt Od•n, L lnd<I LH and Willllm Ar!llur Kennan, Gtor9e1nn1 F. and O•nn1 I(, Ori, Mildred Nt1U1 and Jo/In C. Met19,r. Je1n Ann and Robt1'1 W!lli1m Aamire1, Emllv C. and Jolln II. Thomes. Vernon Cllnlon and M1 rcell1 "' lo lten, IC1rry Lvnn ind Jame• Aevmund Hun!. MtlYln Lton and P1mtl<l E1!P>er Oornlneu•1. Anna M1rl1 •nd walla.c:e Btni<imln llamlrez, Eml!v M. al'MI -'110n10 R. Pr;ce, Lvnd1 Javnt 11'1d T1rrv wavne T ott, Jamts Wllll1m Ind Lorin Anll1 M111, Jr., Rober! arid Lindi Marie 1Cel10, Sharon A, <ind JICk 1. tl.J!Htld, Chr!1Hne IClrtn arid HuOtrl David Deatla Notices 6AL Tl BERGERON FUNERAL UOME Corona dcl Mar 673-KSO Costa Mesa 146 ZU4 • BELL BROADWAY MOR1'UARY 110 Broadway, Costa l\lesa u 8-3433 • M<CORMJCK LAGUNA BEACH ..IORTUARY 1795 Laguna Caayon Rd. 494-tlll • PACIFIC VIEl1 lllEll!ORIAL PARK Cemetery l\tortuary Cliap<I -Padllc Vlow DriTe Newport Btadl, Callfor.ta -PEEK f.wn.y COLONIAL FUNERAL 110!\IE '.'811 Jlolsa A.._ Wea:tm.lukr MLIPS SMmlS' &tim1ARY ' 1117 M• 81. ffllllll"SIDO 8eoe11 ·- Other finance committee members include T. Kirk Hill, owner of the Kirk Hill Rubber Company in Brea: J. Simon Fluor. chairman or the board of Fluor Corporation, a worldwide construction firm : Richard F. Evans, retired ran- cher and chairman of the board of the First National Bank of Orange Countv: Mrs. Bert Coffey of NewPort Beach: Vincent P. Carroll, a . practicing medical doctor and a member of the execuHve board of South Coas t Com- munity Hospital. and John Prescott, director of Far West Financial Service, the owne rs of State Mutual Savings and Loan Association, and a member or the Orange County Others include Ray N. Gibbs , president of Ra.v Gibbs and ASsociates in Newport Beach, and member of the "Million Dollar Round Table Club" of insurance salesmen ; Ralph R. Yeaman, retired marine. general and executive wi!h Hughes Aircraft i n Fullerton; Carl Ka r c h er . -president of Karcher Enterprises in Anaheim : John Ko~ha, Partner in the Orange based York Construction Com- pany, and Larry O'Doherty, retired industrialist active in the Red Cross at Leisure World. Banquet to Honor 13 UCI Pioneers Chancellor D a n i e 1 G. Aldrich. Jr., and 12 other "pioneers" of UC Irvine will be honored at the annual UCI Parents Organization Blue and Gold Scholarship Award Ban- quet at the Airportet Inn Thursday. The honored list \11ill ioclude administrators. faculty and staff members of UCI who . helped in establishin~ the campus in 1962, according to Jim Cooper, parents organiza- tion president. Chancellor Aldrich w i 11 speak on "The Next 10 Years at UCL" The UCI Parents Organiza- tion banquet \\i ll be the final event in a month-long series of observances honoring the toth aMiversary of the UCI cam- pus. Social hour will be at 6:30 p.m. and dinner at 7:30: Ten UCI students will be awarded $200 scholarships by the parents or~anization . THE UCI "Pioneers" being honored include Chancellor A Id r i ch : John Smith, librarian : Dean Clayton Gar- rison, school of fine arts; Dr. Ralph Gerard, profess or emeMtus of biolo gica l sciences; Dean Richard N. Baisden, University Ex- tens ion; Dr. Samuel McCulloch and Dr. Arthur Marder. school of humanities: L. E. Cox. vice chancellor- business and finance ; Helen T. Greening, residence h a I 1 manager; William K i b b 1 e . custodian supervisor: Eloise Kloke , executive assistant to the chancellor: Theodore Otto . mechanica l engineer, a nd Anton Erccgovich , sto_rekeeper. Student s re ce iving scholarships are Diane l\fiesen of Carden' Grove. and Richard Schoepp of Anah ei m , freshmen; Esther" Ervin or Banning, Margaret Ryan of Manhattan Beach and Thomas Yamada or Long Beach. sophomores: Theresa Haslett of Bakersfield. G e o r g e Kusziyk of Montebello and Allen \Yilliams of Long Beach, juniors. and Jacquelyn Lindt or Balboa Island and Salvador Sarmiento of Santa ¥a, seniors. New UCI Parents Organiza. tion officers to be installed are Robert Shaw of Santa Ana, presi dent ; M r s. Eleanor Dorsey of Santa Ana. vice president : Mrs. G r a c e Carnahan of San Clemente. secretary; Gerald McClellan of Corona de! Mar, treasurer, and Jan Jenkins of Tustin , ad- ministrative secretary. New board members are Lester Mintzer, Althea Brown, Ken Kumerfeld, John Echternocb and L I o n e I Isenberg. The 1,000.member UC I Parents Organization Is com- pleting its first yea r as a sup- part group at UC Irvine. Introducing Royal Vikin g lint, the newest ships to s1il the seven seas. Where every voyeger receives fir1t0 class comfort, service and cuisine on the widest choice of world cruises offered. Nortll Cope/14 days July ind Aug ., 1972 from Copenh•gtn -liul0-Europe/2l days Aug., 1972 from Copen. hagen Modl1r. .. nr .. •1t1•.,•••/l5 clays Sept., 1972 from N.Y. c:..lbboae-Mulco/21 days Oct., 1972 from N.Y., Ft. L. Cotlfomia Comr /4 days Dec., 1972 from S.F • Holldoy hi Moxlco/16 doy1 Dec., 1972 from S.F., L.A. s-11 s-/46 ....,, Jin., 1973 from L.A., S.F. Circle Pedflc/U .,. Feb., 1971 from LA., S.F. MoxJco.<:--1/JZ Corillh• Eor1p1/l7 doys days Apr. ind M1y, 1973 No•., 1972 from L.A., SI'. from S.F .• L.A ., Ft. L. DINERS FUGAZY TRAVEL 2075 San Joaquin Hiiis Road NEWPORT BEACH" 17141 '44 4IOO .. •cca,.T ALL M.UOll Cll•Dtl CA•O\ DAILY Ill.OT 11 Sale! Save s44 on this 3 piece bedroom suite. -'It Sale prll:ee effective thru Saturday. I Penneys furniture pnces include delivery within local delivery area '\ Reg. $259, Sale $215. Our 3 piece Mediterranean style bedroom set includes a triple drawer dresser. full size headboard and mirror It features an amber p"eean finish over select hardwoods, brass plated hardware, and scratch/stain resistant finish on case tops. Pieces are also sold. separately at sale prices. $9.50 a month• Addltlonal Pieces also avallabll. Chest. Reg. $120, Sale $.104 Pr. of night stands, Reg. $100, Solo ~82 King size headboard, Rog. S72, Sola $63 Twin size headboard, Reg. $40, Sale.S35 Sale! Save s70 on this 5 pc. dining set • " •t ·• .-...-.~ .... -~----....... -.~--- . .. Saves10 Reg. $329, Sala $259. Spanish style dining 1able and 4 side chairs. All pieces have oak finish over select hardwoods. Features Scot chgard® velvet seat covers and laminated table top that resists scratches. Pieces are also sold separately at sale prices. $11 per month* Addltlonol pletu •Ito anllabla. China, Reg. $269, Sola $229 Mm c hair. Reg. $59, Sala $47 . ~ . . -... . ., ·-. ·-·---... ~ ... ,.-.,..;,,,..,.,,....v....,·,.,,_j ~~- - 'Th•s amount represent~ \he 1equ1red mon thly payment under Penneys T 1me P:iy1n1;?nl Plan tor lhe purchase of lhe rel:tl<:J llem No F1nanct Charge will be incurred 11 lhe balance ot the account 1n the tlrst bllling Is paid 1n lull by lhe closing date of lhe nexl billing penod When incurred Finance Charges will be determined by applying periodic rates of 1 2'. (Annual Percentage Rate 14.4") on the first $500 and 1tft {Annual Percent.age Rate 12%) on lhe Portion over SSOO of the previous bat a nee withou t deducting payments or credits. JC Penney Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the following stores: ' Av1n1ble •I: NEWPORT BEACH , Foshion Island. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Centor Use Penneys time poymenl pion -----~ 10 DAILY PILOT WtdntSday, May Sl 1 1972 'War Room' Idle · San Diego Project Aba1idoned SAN DIEC 1 (AP) -San Diego's massive "war room" is empty except for the multiml\lion-Oollar computers which don't whirl. After six years or planning, the venture a pparently is abandoned. cWle J)rObltms including a diaaster, combining the know· how of citv officials in the tapes and inemory banks ol computers. But a switch in priorities to social and environmental con- ctrns took place. C i t Y Manager Kimball ~t o o r e ordered paymmts on the proj· ect ended in March. The project d J re c t or Willia m Simons, resigned o· request but by then abou t $1.f million in city money had betn spent in equipment and costs in£luding $300\000 from a ~1971 ,000 fede ral grant for the new building. 'nle emergency command post set up in a new downtown city operations ctoter wa! designed to deaJ quickly with Meetings have been under way with National Cash Register and A u t om a I ed Systems Corp. to determine \\'hat is still <>wed or what mi~ht be refunded . QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi Mayor Pett Wilson said he thinks the computers should be returned and San Diego given its money back. He said he hopes to avoid a lawsuit. · ~ "This is apparenUy a ques- tion es to whether <>r not the system that was proposed and which we were invol\led in contractual r e 1 a t i o n s is necessary," Wi!S<>n said. The mayor was ele<:ted last November. Moore took over last year. u I FALSE1TEETH f That Loosen Need Not Emborrass Don't keep worrylnt about :your falM teeth drop111nc at the ll'l'ODI time. A denture adhesl'l'e ean hel p, }'ASTEETH111 a:ives dentufft a )onc- er, firmer, lleadier hold. Mak• eat.- ln1 more enjoyable. For more aecurity and comfort. I.Ille FASTEETH Deo- t urt Adhesive Pow der. Dentlire1 that flt are eseential to healtb. See 1oui denti1t reru.larly. STARS Sydney Omarr is ooe ot the world's great astrolo- gcNl. His colum n ls one of the DAILY PILOTS i:l'ffl fea tures. ------------· COMING SOON TO SANTAANA ~:0:~·:·:·:·:•:>:•:·:0»>:«.;.-.1.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:.;-:·:·:·:·XO:•!!:::::::::·.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::::;:; v ~ t California's Favorite :: ~:I DO-IT-YOURSELF BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER i ~[:,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,, ,,,;~,~~,~.:,:.~'.,~~.,:.~~,.~,~'.,.~,~.:.~~'.~.,':~:,.~~,~~ .. ~~.~.~~:.:. , .... ,.,.,.,.,., ... ,}! THE GIEA TEST IAIGAlNS ON EAITH Our beaotiful new 100,000 square foot outlet in Santa Ana, will be one of the largest and most modern building supply centers in the nation and will offer the world's largest selection of building materials under one roof -over 100,000 builder and do·it·your· self items! ''Angels Sells for less" because of its tremendous pur .. chasing power, control of its own distribution facilities, its own 'import division, and its own wholesale marketing division sup· plying many other retail organizations, Yes, you can buy for less at ANGELS, because you ore vitually buying at wholesale. But, if you ore a dealer, We must insist that you bring your resole permit. WOILD'S LARGEST In AIL OUTLn fOI .. •LUMBER •HARDWARE •PLUMBING •PAINT •ELECTRICAL• NURSERY •SMALL APPLIANCES •HOUSEWARES •COMPLETE BUILDING SUPPLIES OVER 100,000 DO-IT -YOURSELF ITEMS A Division or Daylin. Inc. 3309 SOUTH BRISTOL, SANTA ANA NEAR BRISTOL •nd MacARTHUR C'·~.k R•"'"ltr Wte-k.nd Spctltlt 1t: GARDEN GROVE I HUNTINGTON BEACH 12662 CHAPMAN 7800 EDINGER 1 DO Y ft. Eut of Horloor 11..i. One lllock W•I of llNch lllvd. • It's barbeque time. • Let . us help you count the ways. At Penneys. -·- . Stee·1 ba.r09q_u_e wig on has f ire-Cfr·aw·e·r t~ai · "· - opens easily and completely for fire building and tending. 131/2'' x 23" cooking surface, 6- position fire pan lift and two chrome plated wire grids. --_-... And don't ~miss these outdoor cooking valaes. 799 Ca st Iron double Hibachi has 2 ch rome plate d grid s, 2 bottom draf t controls, insulated handles ~nd base. 199 3-piece barbeque set. Includes chrome tongs, turner and fork. 2999~ The dasbachi gas 'outdoor cooking unit is efficient, clean and pgrtable. Permanent lava rocks cl istribute heat evenly w ithout c harcoal mess. Fea .. tures a rust resistant cast alu- minum body and side hole port for fig ht ing. 1999 ) 1699 244 Best Foremost hooded brazier with UL listed motor and warming oven, chrome spit rod. Has heavy gauga steel bowl and aluminum legs. Avocado & preen. • Better Foremost hooded brazier wilh UL listed motor, heavy gauge steel bowl. Orange and gold. JCPenoe_y . . ' Foremost olectrlc fire starter UL listed heating elament. Fully Insulated plutlc handle. ..:.hop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following atort.. '" _ .. _ . . ------------------------'Anilable •t: NEWPORT BEACH, Faihion Island. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center • I Use Penneys time payment pl•n. ' 1 . -- WtdnrsdilJ, M•1 31, 1972 DAfLV PILOT J J •Loneso1ne End' a Tea~her By MAl£01M N. CARTER WEsr POIN')', N. Y, (AP) - The U.S. Military Academy's first "lonesome e.nd" sUU doesn't like waiting around for the actk>n. He'd rather be scrambling. "I don't like to do anything you have to atand in line to do," says Maj. William s . Carpenter, who helped the Anny football teem to an undereated season in 1958 and became an AU -American player in 1959. Still a taut 212 pounds on his 6--foot·2 frame, C a r p e n t e r returned in June 1970 to West Point, where he is a senior in- fantry instructor. "I would much prefer to be with the troops somewhere," He went to preparatory l!Ohool !or a yeor and enta.d w..i Point iD 195S, .,,.Vinced a military career wu !or him. He joined the football tum, and Coach Earl "Red" Blallt adopted the ·~lonesome end" formation w b J c b left Car· penter on the line while his teammates huddled. He kntw what ploys they planned by Carpenter .... ·-the Dlstlngul&hed Sa-lice °""" 10< his tactJc, which kepi the ene~ quiet Jong tlllXlftb for him to rqroup de! ..... and save his men. "I Ju•t called !or an air strike," he remembers. uu I bad known it was napalm, I wouldn't have l!ked fer it." s..tdes the nation'• .-id • "I would muclt prefer to '1e wltlt the troops somewhere •.• " watching band signah. Army was ranked third in the nation that year. "It was nothing more than a standar'!f wing·T formation," Carpenter says now. hlgb..t military h o n o r , Carpenter has been awarded a Purple Heart and 8 Silver SUr. The natiooal Football FounCtition gave him its Distinguished A m e r i c a n Award in 1963. day working with tile football tum Ill -He t.epo trim by playinc handball. . An lldvantqe ol his current duty, be say1, h t h • · "considerable inDuence" he bas on the cadets, who Clarpenter -.,. 1 ... com- mitted to mJlltary Ille than were the cadets ol his dey. He alJo flncb them more queo- llonlng • he said. "I don't really like the He also played lacro.ue. Jn academic atmosphere. I don't his senior year he was named like to teach. You do the same · All-American in that short as thing four days in a row. You welL Oaipenter says he ba8 oot played football since 1962, but sperxb about three hours a Chaffey Sets Reunion Fete The 1952 graduating clw of Cba!ley High School in Ontario will bold a reunion dinner June 17 at the Ontario Motor Speedway ·restaW'allt begin· ning at 6:30 p.m. do the same thing next year "What else did he do? 1·1 that you did this year. It's graduated." kind of boring." Degree Gained BORN IN WOODBURY, N.J., in 1937, Carpenter grew up in the Philadelphia area and was graduated from n<arby Sp<inglield H i g h Schoo l. Family Circus THE FOOTBALL HERO, who twice volunteered for Vietnam duty, became a military hero in 1966. when he called for an air strike on his company in danger of being overrun by the enemy. by Bil Keane Karen Lynn Bailey of Costa Mesa has been awarded a bachelor of science degree in chemistry d u r I n g com- mencement exercises a t Southern Methodist University in Dal~!. enjoy a beautiful Members of the class may make reservatioM for the din· ner at $20 per couple by writing to the reunion com· mittee at P.O. Box 1472, Ontario 91762 Spray away ugly lawn weeds now with one of our compJession sprayers. Ifs the fast. easy. aur1 wayl • • • • • • t-~~-=-• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Hudson Wffd Shoolet' • • Sor aver Hud1on Buplser• SP'IJlr Hudson r1vorll1•Spr1y1t 510" '13" '15" ht· SIJ.00 lot. Slt.11 lot. SJJ.SI H1...Sr Iii ·1111u t1lnni1tlt lit 3-11110.. lllnJr.. fomnet fl19Clr 2·tilla~ 11lt. l.9nf • tan~. (11y lo curr. 71nk t m• h p for tUJ 1111. S.U. aioN, Mi••tff.N .ult bowl! "for Wetd1 Onlr.. 611 t11au (H;lllllJ, 11ttl9u "au'"'" "Daddy's cook in' is SUPER , Mommy! We have hod chicken, pizza, hamburgers, ond tonight we're hov;n• CHINE SE food !" FLOWER STREET GARDEN NURSERY Ho"" l•I Delly AlplMi lot9 C...... 5"tti ut1111 SOUTH COAST Hl•HWAY 499-4250 (Mfl1fl Ctf'Mr el CMlff) -Up tM kll froM Albe 1.-clt- Mi511R c • TODAY, WEDNESDAY, MAY 31 ALL MERCHANDISE FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK J NEWPORT IEACH 600 Coast Hl9hway 642-8074 ALL REDUCTIONS TO 1 /2 OFF PANTS -TOPS -LOW RISE JEANS JACKETS -LONG & SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS BY FAMOUS MAKERS: MALE -SHELBY -HARRIS -PEBBLE BEACH - LEE -LOVE 'N STUFF -KENNINGTON -IMPULSE ffECIAL IEATURE ALL PANTS IN WAIST SIZE 38 1/2 PRICE Mi511R ilC STORE HOURS: 10 ·9 DAILY NOON • 5 SUNDAYS HUNTINGTON BEACH GRANT ' PLAZA Brookhurst & """"" 963-1550 Challenge the News· Quiz • • • on Saturday's Family Page All Dad's camera dreams come true . for under $200! Flrsttlme ever, JCPenneys offers the Bell & Howell Slide Cube(TM) Proiector with automatic focus and remote control for only .•• , __ ----- • • Electronic focusing Remote control • 5/3.5 len with elevation dial •Forward/Recall switch • Handsome styling cartridge •Deluxe top • Uses 40 slide cartridge 88 . Special Val"'e Slide cube library. Contains 16 cubes or storage for 640 slides 88 Aeg.$8 5. Thurs., Fri. and S.L i:>nlyl Factory representatives Will ba in the stores to answer your ques- tions on 35mm equlpment • Complete 35mm camera outfit for only ... 79 88 Stt our complete line of Vlvlta r® l1n11nG fl11~ 1cC111orl11. Koachrome Ii 20 exposures· 35mm lllm. • Full-frame 35mm cam- . era with automatic expo- sure control and flash control • Electronic shutter for continuous speeds from 4to1 /800 sec. • .... Extremely compact, lightweight styling fits In pocket or purse. • Vivitar® 91 Flash Unit provides over 400 flaih- es from single set of AA batteries 99 C Processing Speclell processing only · Kodachrome® 20 exposures, slide tr1ns~ parencies, or 8mm film. JCPenney Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M at the following stores: NEWPORT BEACH, F11hion Island. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center. Use P•nneys time payment pion. . -• r • J,2 ' DAILY PILOT Wild II d'f, Mir ~. 1972 PILOT -ADVERTISER r. ' HAVE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE: "UNTINGTON IEACH-,llJt ... (fl .,..." All..... COSTA Ml!IA-:m!I H•tflO< IMI ••• WlltOn 51· U.NTA ANA-1<40t W lclfllloQW •rid Briu ot ~1. COS TA ME,A-2:1.J I!. 11th St. 30222 CROWN VALLEY PARKWA Y AND HILLHURST IN LAGUNA NIGUEL ;~~~~~~·:.'..t:~-~;:;:-;;:;:.:.: "::."::'.~:::.. :~:;::~;: :::~::::.;::":.~.:.:.- •L TOlt0-11 T0to •I Rot•lotlll ltOld C W S -·-fOUN.AIN VAU.£Y-16UI HfrtlOI' l ift, 6 ldlllOllf HUNTIN!llON ll!A H-•rM• • 0t .,. No Liquor at the Wtstminster, Vill19e Center, Be1ch Blvd, 1t Atlanta, W{;ner 1t Springdale, Ad1m1 1t Brookhurst Storea. 'ri"tltw l brnm lr 1Atr'1 Ht~c-i· • List '5" Reg. $J688Powerf ul twenty Inch Fan f ! "5 Top Selling Albums Da...td Croaby & • Crosby and Nash G.aho'" No•h • Roberta flack & Donny Hathaway ' • And That's The Trudi L;Jy TomUn • fo'lott•• s .... 1 an• Uasung ffer .. I John Koy· • Thick a1 a Irick l••h.o r.11 -----.....-$ -~your clloke---- • Waltham • Helbro • Buren by Hamilton 17 Jewel Watches Con tac Cold Capsales ·-~I~ ~~!c Cop1ul••· for men & wom•n $4'' ~~!., Natural Vitamin E ..--~ Bottlo of JOO Wilkinson Ra1or Blades 11!1! S Det1 ~I• E41• ML Slei11l111 Steel s1aa ~&!3:s1 Deluxe Lightweight Portable 1 rott.ro-. for l lrthdoy; A.11nl¥•rM1ry, 97 C 'Wedding, Show•r & O•n•rol Otco- 1IOf', All 011 q1H1 llty 3.S.lb. paper. 120 aq, ft. •I psper In oll. '500 & '600 Values Sale of Giftware s3ss f~quitil• piec•• to co111pl•M•nl o..y deco•. flg11rlne1, Sponl1h Slyl• Con• die Holden, C•nl•r ,,K .. ond l!K'lre in tfli1 deUghtful collection. I ... '24" & '29 95 Swag Lamps 17es MediNrraneon coge dyte wilh om· ber 9lau finiJlL& polithed flemi•h frgme h• lonr.,.111hape. Wicker 1tyl e ,..;th hond10,,.. 6" def!Atlr globto. $988 Values Wine Servers s5sa El-;ontly 11)'1'4 wi110 ••rv•" in throe chr .. ic pl••· Chill 'ft '°"'• 'To.foton' ~nror or 'Torltton' Bot!I• in !lucktt. Scope Life Shampoo Men's Shavers r':;~Mouthwash With i emon .•• ~ID1lru11111ml .-. ,Nfllllll Reg. $1 00 $2 00 ' 1~ Gleamers • Nortlco Trlple-htadtr 35-T 68 C $ 134 Speed Shaver • Remington Ltktro Blade 26 --•"•""•M·-· ....... , ~~~~~~· ... O:;,•·.:;••;,;ttl••i( Your Choice 21a7 One·A·Day Alberto :::.::~-....... M ltl I YI I I I • $24.SO Vol••I Schick Fltxoiwatlc $19.H u P 1 P~':',! ::it Hair Confitro~: • $29.sO VolHI Schick Dilox• s I 99 ~ 99c :;·::·;~-i~~~··9·;:··;:; .. ••ttl• .. 1JO Dep for Me• Dry Styling Hair Control uo •. 99c s, ... , kt. 1.,11ler er s.,., 'let• l il•', 'lre11c• 500', 'Chepp•r' tor ~tytl" cOMpl"9 wttti ctt,_ platod parts, ...... i.1.n .. 1. Barrettes & Hair Buckles Fa1hion hoir barr•H•s & buckle SB os10rtment includes novelty 1tyle1, twin borreHn o nd enameled fini1hed barrette1. Boys' 2 Piece Shol'f Sets l•lt.,. Weft• f•kic1 $198 Cool coftOtll .... .,.fth .ft«t al-thltta. $11'i,._t Cit" IOlld lopl .trlt •lld colaf Niom, 2"' Hll U. $1•:.1 ... 1 Imported English Virgin Wool Knitting Worsted 4-01.4-Ply sac Pull Skein 100% virgin wool knitting wonted. Hai fa mous Wool-mark which i1 your auurance of o quality tested p~dud of pu,.. wool. In ~~ -~· newe1t colors. Birthday Sale Special Reg. $1288 ~~ Appliances · ---...St1am-&-Dry-lron-Mod11"#F6'- • Hand Mixer Model #M20 ;; -:an Opener ·Model" #"C:Z-4 · Summer Savings from Thrifty! I $999 Value! Paclclecl Patio Chair s597 IMl!om9 choir with 1tro11g 1~ ,. ...... high ttre119th ahi1Mi• -tubing condl'\H;tion witlt ~ gaugo 11l1i1111inu111 unn1. Ho• floral potto"'ed ah.-d· ..... poly foa• pod. !!fi, . 2'' Deluxe Interwoven Multicolor Cafe Curtain or 24" Vala11c1 $19'5 Value! Spanish Style Record Cabinet Chob flf ._,vffful s I o.rt s,..w.i. 0a1i ............ n,;..... 2a1 Hal c-IWCI locMi doon. Dl-....PricM '39" Value! 6 FHI Spanish $tyle 4 Shelf Llltrary Ualts ' Sponbh Oak fi11lth with odjwt,. $29,5 a l.le di.'-a11d ao,.,..loot d_... 73" tlfgh, 21" ...... 12• ..., d .. p. •ft a .... er S11pw Mt1• Solarcalne Spray Pepsodent Scotts Gle -Scot -fj -- Qua! lotr'!"f slrJ s138 •resel ' N1turtl Brlstlo T oathbrushes M8'111tn 66' w Hard ' . I ......... • $ ... .,_w.....,....,. ......... ~-~ 441 'GRADUATES'-"This ls a dream come true," said Mrs. Mamie Eisen· bower at first Eisen· bower College com· mencement in Seneca Falls, N. Y. • -She ac· cepted certificate of membership in class of '72. Nebraslia To Honor 'Miss Kitty' Fnm Wire Services Amanda Blake, who in her ro1e as "Miss Kitty" resides over the Long Branch Saloon bl the CBS television western, .. Gunsmoke," will be the first woman to receive Nebraska 's -Bullel<rllil~ll'tll"d~llt­ lng Nebraskaland days neJ1:t m6nlh. .. . .. . • "nle award has been given aMually since 1965 f o r I PEOPLE "outstanding contributions to quality family entertainment in the Cody tradJtlon." MW Blake will be in North Platte for the opening perfonnance of the Buffalo Bill Rodeo June 21 to accept the award and be grand marshal of the Nebraskaland potade. * * * ,,,,. mayor of Tokyo and hil fOiiJier secretary were mar· rlfd and immediately returned to ~ desks to work. Gov. Ryoldchl Mlnobe, 68, the ManlJt mayor of Tokyo, and Miss Toklko Inoue, 44, were married w i t h o 1J: t cetemony by registering as man and wife at Shibuya Ward of lice. "I have no lime for an elaborate wedding ceremony.,!!. Mlnobe told Japanese newsmen before he took his bride to the ward office. "! am confronted with an eJ· tnmely busy schedule sueh as garbag e d i sposa l, photochemical smog a n d numeroWI other problems." * * * . Nuarene Badloll, 81 who came to the United States from Jtaly 75 years ago, !ruled Sen. Hubert H . Humphrey to some homemade wine at Fresno. Bad.ioll lives in a little ranch house -all he has left of a 22- acre farm . He told Humphrey, who was trom ping the vlnyard country for votes , that he has been selling his land lo live because smaU farm ers caMot survive hi gh land taxes and the com- petition from big farms. Then Blldioli gave H,ilm· phrey a sWig from a cask of his homemade wine. "That's great,'' Humphrey said, so Badioli gave him a bottle to take with him . * * * Jorge Muter. conductor of the Louisville Orchestra and Paula SJebel, a colora tura soprano, will be married June 14 on a mountain or in ·a meadow near Aspen. C.olo. Mester, 'n, and Miss Siebel met last summer at Aspen where he Is music director of the Aspen Mu.sic School and Festiva1. * * * N. J. Mnlak marched down the aisle of St. Bonaventure CalboUc Church four times at ColuU>bm, Neb., each lime giving the hand ol another daughter in marriage. , ••it was the most nciUng day of my life, to say the least," Mnlak mused at a tec<l!l!Qn_ follQ.'!_lng the final ......,.,. In which daujliiOrs PIUIJttle, 111, ml Betty, 2S, .... raorTled. Tn •n earlier, less formal cemnony, daughters Maxine, llll, ond Carol, !I, look weddlni ....... Mort then 300 pmi)DI ·~ lended the reception --111-of champejfte ml "more food t1'n I cculd aUmate," awaited them, llnlak said. GREATEST SELECTION AT LOWEST PRICES---THE GRANT BOYS FIND YOUR SPOT IN THE SUN ••• TENT ~~~=-~J~I~. W&SWU IAI finish 1ln 33x7S Y•lue $11.31 •15 .. SAU 3 I~. Dtocroe HIKEi IAI MUMMY IAG Nylin lnsidt/outal6t. . SALE! ' -- . ' COLEMAN 9x12 AMERICAN HERITAGE New deluxe jumbo model for the large f1m- ilyl All of the rugged Coleman features ind construction al • VERY low price! •• , .. $21.95 $, 511 ! •A•• i NOVf! • ... llHtl 2 ·~· .,. .. MUMMY IAI flnlth 1b1 34"xl4" •• , .. $39.95 •29•• SAU COUMAN Moon 220 TWO lWITll WITTIN SAU PRICE $11 88 hi-<l!!l1--... BACK PACK 1 I I IClla,JJCU I EQUIPMDT CllMGf "jf 1111 CAMPING. SUPPLIESs Wooden Camp Stool 98c Ooals Conteen 4 Qt, ..•..•. $3.79 lnsultlle Pad 48" long .... $2.98 Johnson & Johnaon #4 PACK AND FUME VALUE $21.95 -! ••Mn IOJS Snoke lllte Kit ... $2.49 NIW POI '72-COUMAN SALi I $18 88 I MIRRO CAMP SET i·~·i:·1·:·.1·::;·::·i--l ,..o,.A".t~~:i:Oo aru Now b tf11 time te 1t1rt thiftkll'lt •'°ut th1t Grill Glh frem tfle Gr1nt loya;I lifl•t 'lft Witt "fiirMI "'' 1.cb' Sp1t1• fllltll Ilk• ,._. " " ... , ,,., ...,. "'"" f COMPLEn SERVICE I FOR 4 !, ~~~~~~'. ~~'.s ~~.~~.· .. J 4,000 to 10,000 1llllu1t1bl1, thl1 mod1r" 1i1nlt combine• """di· •11, 11f11 f11m1l111 h11t with th1 Coftv1nl1nc1 of pro,1nt futl op1r1tlon. VALUI $46.fS SAU FAMOUS BRANDS AT BIG SAVINGS! SUMMER SJ\LE Wlt11 1 spring-lnto-summor w1rdrobol • ! From the Gr1nf Boys! You're set for 1 1ucce1slon of sunny d1ys 1nd 1f1r~it nights In f11hlons from our ntwly-1rr1yed col- lection· of c1su1I ind dressy looks th1t span the sunny month s 1he1d. Grant's Ms everything for g1l1. You'll find them 111 in our enlarged G1f'1 DtJ11rtmentl Every Size • Every Color • Every Style! ~ Levn· for Gals LlVl'S• for 9111 hive 111 tti1 tr1dltion1I LtYi' .. quality ind 1tyHn1 , .. ind Gr11Jt'1 h11 th1 1r11t11t 11ltcUon you've t'llf' 111n l All of the 1tyl1s ... 111 of tt.1 c0Jor1 . , • 111 of the 11J11-AND All AT GRANT'S! -~ UVl'S® FOR GALS <.;.. I .• DOUBLE KNITS . - ~~ Rib Knits. Burgundy la Navy .. $17.00 Dlpplty Dot Knit Pint N1vy, Brown, Red ........ $18.00 \ LO.Cut Corduroy, Sizes S-1S .. $10.00 lrown, Navy, Burgundy, Rutt, Uven- '-• '--..._ dar, Green and on ind on and on. * IYllY COLOI * IYUY snu ... SIZE LEVI'S® FOR GALS HOT PANTS ltYi's• Hot Ptnh-lo-cut inti WHlll'll cut lft ""'µ/ ytllow1 r1il tftd n•Y'f· l11troduci1t1 Ltvl'a• !told. ,, IH• In ho! """· . -AIM;-1AYV.-.111.1rt1 for s,rfftf- °''""·... s6oo "''"""•· .. saoo the I-et( j TOPS! New baby-doll fresh fruit shril tops IS shown in $1 -00 Seventeen M•gazine ... Bi by-doll $11 00 salt 'n ptpptr tops ... ' l•nk tops with le• cream s900 " cone embroidery ..... . B1dy-doll $11 00 puff-sleeve p11r tops . A1p1r1gus Ind saoo strawberry tank tops .............. . f.11 Ill 111,oft.clr .. ftf c11t..,, ••• fn1~ fnlt c1i..1: \*"'"'• .,,.,., II-, 11-, "Ir, 1,,11 lft. ,1_ •If~ Cfff.IR1llR1 lltl,.•h le lhn1 1...:1111tylu ,11111. ,.11•-,.c•11. •~• '"""' 11,. FOR THI lllRDS fetturll'lf th1 lnrH1c1ftt looll in •••Y·fo·c•r•for cotto" ~oo, neck, c1, 1l11v1 1hrlnk 1or with h1nd-p1lnt1d "rc1l1in IKlttont • $quar1 neck ,1.11 1l11v11 t•P • Sc:oo, neck wfth pock1t ti••••• top • Scoop "V" neck whh puff 11""'' top • koo" neck with ltolt ift th1 1111•• 1tyt1 • Anti t1nk to,1 •· •11 '""'' s7oe s9so ,1u1 white to 1rtd MY'f for LOVEABLE AND HANG-UPS Shrink sweater vest 1nd crop tops in 111 colors. Don't miss lovable'• new m1nhm1Uow topsl Swe~ttr t1p1 in· pttcL worli ind r1lnbow •tripos. s1 oso to $1500 10'x13' DELUXE "HOLIDAY" OllUll MOMf ftf llM ltrtt l1"'ll't ._.,. 11 1 1,.cltl fC-k•I 1Wkt. f11!1t111 fffll1 ••1t• .... .., ••• , "'" ... 4 ••• , .... 111111 .... VALUl $It.ts COLEMAN PUP TENT 5x7' [olemon a 8x10 COMPACT OLYMPIC f-lly ..... ,ic wl!ll 114-111 lill1•t, MIMI ... 11..,i .. '"'I "111h. Opt1N1I rlllfl tly. VAlUI NICI fl•·•ll Ad Effective thru Saturday,_ June 3rd I I ' • J DAILY PILOT Wtdntsday, May Jl, 1972 • His ti11JO to results in "'·•. ~it .~~* l ~~ '' i,.~ .. ,-$ •·"'"'"'. - Andrew Hin shaw knows it. You know it, too. Orange Coun ty is the most dynamic, ch allengi ng, and progressive area in the entire U.S. That's why we' re here. That's why we all want to continue to live here. Hinshaw also knows just what must be done to help, protect, and improve our way of life here . He probably has more kn owledge abou t what mdkes Orange County tic k th an any oth er elected official on the scen e today. Hins haw knows what must be done about our presen t vexing problems -jobs , a healthy business and industry climate, tax re form . spir~ling gove rnm ent costs, welfare. Hins haw has proved he gets the job done . He fulfilled his pledge for tax reform in this County. Hinshaw knows the solu tions to many of our problems can only be decided in Washington. Hinshaw believes those decisions ca n have constructive meaning for Orange County with his he lp. Th at's why he wants to be your man on Capitol Hil l. Hinshaw knows the hard , const ructive work that must be done to help you is not being done , and hasn 't been done by th e freshman incumbent. A leading County newspaper, Daily Pilot, in an editorial headlined "County Badly Served" explained why th is is so: " ... Schmitz came home to campaign on a ree>rd of • ~ " • ·.J~. Ii;. nothing but failure in his first term in Cong ress. "He has been a representative from Orange Co unty but not of its people, especially the'l?epublicans who sent him to Washington. "Although he seeks to convey the impression that Nixon 's moves in Indochina make him a Nixon man now, the truth is that Schmitz -· · "Is the only Republican Congressman actively supporting John Ashbrook of the radical right in his candidacy against Nixon. "Has opposed over 2l! months nearly two· thirds of Nixon's proposed legis lation . In the current session he has opposed his own Part)"s position 56 % of the time.,an.d Nixon's position 85% of the time . "Has carried the torch of the radical right to the point he could say ol Nixon's trip to Peking that he is only worried the President 'will come back from there.' " ... Assessor Andrew Hinshaw (R·Mission Viejo) campaigning to take the GOP nomination from Schmitz June 6 underscores a telling point abo ut Schmitz's record in Washington. "Hinshaw has said that in his visits to Washington he has ingfull . , A.,\, ~~~ ·~ found th at 'Schmitz has no rapport with government officials ' and this would hurt the County's chances of rece iving government contracts, projects or services. " ... Schmitz talked glibly about the many things over which he has no influence -the war, th e President's policies toward Russia and China, the U:N. But he had little to say about his voting record or what he 's done for Orange ~ounty, because that would have proved highly embarrassing to him. "Congressmen skilled in give-and· take of politics can get /he job done for their districts. Bu t Orange County has lacked this re presentation . . . · • "It's time Orange County Republicans awakened to the fac t they simply are not represented in Was hington. And tha.t, to the contrary, their representative supports neither tlie Party program nor its leader in the White House." That editorial says it all. And it suggests st rongly you make a change because Schmitz's performance hasn 't measured up. Thi s is Ille time tor new leadership, ideas, and enthusiasm to serve your interests and the County's interests on Capitol Hill. Make the change to Hinshaw in the Republican primary., on June 6. Your vote for Hinshaw and President Nixon will mean better days ahead for you and Orange County. l I • ·- • ' 1 PILOT·AOVERTISER Playhouse Project Of Many ... By ~flCHAEL GOODRICH 01 tM 0.111 Plltl Siii! Wtdntsday, M01 31, 1972 WtdotsdO)', M11 31, 1972 DAILY PILOT J5 Breakdowns Spelled Out By DR. STEINCROHN The (lrrt was • fine young passed was the unfortunate Dear Dr. Stel.ncrohn : Just man "'ho was rising fart in a young man admitted to a what ii 1 nervous breakdown? large manufacturing plant. Jn hospital u a psychotic patient. fact, the president of the con-Hb so-ealled n e r v o u s l 1uppo!e I am Ignorant lo ask • breakdown has now lasted s~~~ :~~)·~~ u:::~l!~i(f].~11:1 :1't..!~~r1.':dr::!1~~ is between havlng a p!)'chosls and being simply worn out emotionally by o v e r w o r k • There are hundreds ot veria· lions ol nervous breakdown . mains a mystery . rT! I'! r im 1' The Other WU a business manager Jn his 40s whose Although he is not a For example, I have two ftssistant had come down with po!Jceman in the classical business associates who are cem had. hopes that the hard-a coronary attack. While he All lt means is that -due to physical or mental oventraln -e person becomes Wtable to function nonnally as 1 worktt. a family man, or as a IOCial human being. AJ you tee. some cases may be serious: others are completely healed by a few wee:ks of rest and relaxation . sense, Sam Rodri1uez ·has out of cltculatlon becam of kl I •-111 f 11 was con v a I es c Ing• the 0 h wor ng, n1.e aent e o w ..,.,.n handing out a few Im-nervous breakdowns. ne as • h k 2 .....,,. Y:outd one day be the ex-manager ad to wor 1 to 15 aglnary tlekets for tricycle been in an institution for over 1. 1 'd 1 •-.. -8 day at hi'gh tension. he h ecu 1ve v ce pres1 en . 1ll,l\U""3 speeding at the Colonia Juarez a year, now. The ot r as As the weekJ went by, his Aft.er a few weeks of thl.s, he Pre.School. been out of the office for aOOut I II 1· beg "crac•-•." He ~·Id not take he h e ow exceu 1ves an lo .._, ....... Rodriguez, who is the head three weeks -and 1 ar e notlce a change in h Is it anymore. Lack of Jove and urt- or the bl-lingual pre-school, will be back with us within a personaJity. Instead of the His boss insisted that he go derstandlng between man and • • has caught a few or his young few days. -Mr. A. quiet. efficient and popular on a sea trip to get over hLs \1•ifc is a leading cause of students speeding through a COMJ.lfENT: Generalizations fellow he had been, he became "nervous breakdo1vn. ·• lie chronic anxiety \\Tiles Dr. unique new building on his always are troublesome. Tbey dirflcult lo work with -order-· returned. fresh and rested -Stf'irkrohn in his booklet, campus. may mean one thing to some ing everyone around. He completely v.•e\I. No\v his "\Vhat To Do For Chronic The structure, a multi-col-people and some thing entirely developed what one termed a assistant was back and the Anxiety." For a copy write ored, 7 x 14 foot playhouse, r...:.,.;,..,-..;;Mdll different to others. Let rne "Napoleonic complex." pressure \~•as off. him at this newspaper enclos~ ,vas recently opened for fast· DAILY 1"1Lor 11111 P11t1t give you t\li·o examples, that At the time no one realized These two instances, r..tr. A., ing 25 cents in coin and a moving tricycles as a result o! TRICYCLIST SPEEDS DOWN RAMP OF PRE-SCHOOL'S NEW PLAYHOUSE may or may not apply to your how close to the' fiUlh that are the extremes of nervous ST A t<.1 p ED. SE LF·A~ the efforts of several people High School Students Built Structure; Citizens Also Lent • Hend two friends. was. Not until a few months breakdown. The v.•ide chasm is DHESSED ENVELOPE · and groups in Fountain Valley.1 ___ _.':'~'...:'::'.'."'~~~~'.'..'.'.'.:.:...:'.'.'...::::::..:::_:::::.:::::_:_::::::=:===================:::::::;::;:::;::;:;::;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;::;::;::=========:- "Founlain Valley H i g h School, the city and many other peo~le contributed to making the playhouse a reality,'' said Rodriguez. Also used as a storage bin for the tr icycles, the playhouse has two doors that fold down from the roof or the building co form ramps for the youngsters to ride through ii like a tunnel. "We didn't have any place to store the tricycles when it rained. ''said Rodriguez, and we needed a playhouse for the kids so we decided to combln the two into one project." After doing a preliminary design and having an estimate done on the playhouse ., Rodriguez found that it would cost aboul $880. "We didn't -ave anfniOrify Hfour ·5udget to cover the cost," said Rodriguez. Rodriguez then got together with Te~ },llackman, an in· dustrlal arts teacher at Foun- tain Valley High School. who suggested that his morning vocational class build the playhouse. "We decided the playhouse tould give the boys a good tralrUng course in all the pro- Cedures needed ( 0 r COO· structing a building," said Blackmi'n. Blackman set up a con- struction team for the building of the playhouse and appointed one of the members as foreman of the project. "We even had t~ go to tbe city to get a building per- mit for the playhome. so they ?i'OUld learn about that. pro- cedure." said Blackman. Construction was begun· In ~November and by February the playhouse was ready to be moved to the pre-school for painting and other finishing touches. ' "I called the ?.1arlnes and Army to see if thev would move it with a helicopter." Bald Rodriguez. "But they were hesitant so the city finally found a rental service to move it with a forklift," he added. The construction class Is stllll finishinlt the last details of the building. CI as 11 members come to the school at 7:30 a.m. every mornin~ to paint, fix hinges or whatever else has to be done. "When they v.·ere painlinR". some or the boYJ showed un at 8:30 In the morning with their girl friends to help them ," 1 aiad Rodrl1tue:-:. Adds Rodriguez, "I think its rially a-reat that young adults are willing to give their time to build something for someone elae." Unit Names President Mrs. Rhonda Will I ams, Fairview State H o s p I t a I regis tered record ad· mlnistrator since 1966, has been named president elect of the Calirornia Medical Record Association. Mrs. \Villiams will serve on th e association e x e c u t i v e hoard until she is installed as president during the annual convention next year. PRESIDENT Mrs. Wllll1m1 • .. ·.· fMAv-~wAREHOUS " KODEL TRI-COLOR SHAG DEEP PILE ' . . ···ioo%KOi>Et POLYESi'rlrPILf.RICi!, DEEPI --. ·99· LUXURIOUSLY THIC.K PILE. MANY NEW HI· NOW STYLE DECORATOR THREE COLOR SHAG TO SALE SELECT FROM. RESIST DIRT AND SO IL PRICED STAINS. COMPARAILI llTAIL ................ $1.99 ... ''· SAYI JUI CL1AN1•· "'""'(TRI-COLOR SHAG TMl TISTID MA.Ml HI fllllS 100% FORTREL POL VESTER. LUSH, DEEP, NOW LONG-WEARING AND HARD TO SOIL STAYS SALE BEAUTIFUL WITH A MINIMUM OF CARE. VERY RESILIEN.T. BEAUTIFUL DECORATOR PRICED THREE COLOR SHAG. COMPARAILI llTAIL ...... $1.99 c.i.-• rem.• ;, • ...._,. •' •~ ,.,........_ 1-. 99 ... ... SAVI JUI OUR WAREHOUSE AND STORES ARE OVERLOADED! MUST MOVE NOW! 100% DACRON POLYESTER PILE. 8£AUTIFUL NEW, D~EP SHM. EASY TO MAINTAIN, MANY NEW DECORATOR COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. NOW SALE PRICED MORE ARRIVING DAILY COMPARABLE RETAIL •••..••• $8.99 CARPET TILES·SA YE $ feels like YllHl-oulwurs other DO·IT·TOURSflF urpet -euy ta Jnslall l2"x12" 9 •Stain-Resistant SAVE 2 C •100°/o Nylon Pile S9c NOW SALE PRICED ••.••••• EA. NYLON Hl•LOW 100% conlinuous filament nylon pile. 2 99 Popular nylon hi-low Iha! combines beauly '"d durability. Many colors lo choose from. . 'f1Jf· NOW SAU PRICED........ $2.00 COMPARABLE RETAIL .............. $4.99 DUPONT TRI-COLOR SHAG 100% DuPont nylon pile. Deep, rich durable shag. Beautiful new three-color designs. SO. YO, SAV( ·J99 NO.W SALE PRICED \l.OO I . COMPARABLE RETAIL ................... $5.99 KODEL PLUSH 100% Kodel polyester pi le. Rich, 499 luxuriously thick pile. New decor.1tor colors. so. Yo. SAVI NOW SAU PRICID........ u.oo I COMPARABLE RITAIL ............ $7.99 DACRON SHAG 100% dacron polyesler pile. Beautiful new deep shag with a .full deep pile. Many new decora lor colors Jo choose from. 4!?. SAVI NOW SALi PRICED... not COMPARABLE RETAIL ............... $7.99 KODEL SCULPTURED 100% Kodel polyesler pile. 3 pile height 5 99 pallern in graceful design. Rugged durabilily. Beautiful colors. so. '"· SIVI NOW SALE PRICED........ Sl.00 COMPARABLE RETAIL •••••••••••••• $1.99 Encron Random Sheared 100% Encron polyester pile. Extra 5 99 heavy, thick random sheared pallern. Rugged, durable-easy to mainlain. Very resi lient Beautiful decorator colo rs. '~;Jf" NOW SALE PRIC'ED u.oo COMPARABLE RETAIL ••••••••••••••• $8.99 ENC RON POLYESTER Pile of 100% Encron polyesler. Deep, 999 thick, luxurious carpel. Oplimum performance ••. long wear . . • .. ,0 res ilient Many cOlors to choose from. sav1 • NOW SA.LI PRICID,................... $6.00 100% AVLIN® Poly .. ter Pile. Exira huvy, thick patlerned desifn. Rugged, durable and easy to maintain, made with ft£W continuoUs fil1rnent AVLIN® polyester. NOW SALE PRICED. , •... COMPARABLE RETAIL •••••• $8.99 5?.! SAVI .... • IST QUALITY NAME BRAND CARPETS AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES • SELECT FROM THE LARGEST CARPET INVENTORY IN THE WEST • EVERY ROLL OF CARPET IS MARKED i PRICED FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE •ALL LABOR UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED 100% Avl in Polyester Pile. Beautiful Deep, Lush Sh1g. New Colors To Choose From. NOW SALi PRICID •••••••• AVLIN® Is 1 TM of FMC Corp, JG.YD. SAVI J2.00 COMPARABLE RETAIL •••••••••••••• $6.9') • • ~·..,;, ..... i,;;.L;.,. CONTRACTORS! APARTMENT OWNERS! HOME OWNERS! 1. BATHROOM CARPET ••• Waterproof and Foam-Backed 2. INDOOR'OUTDOOR ••• Periect for Patios and Pool Area ~. 3. FOAM BACKED CARPETING ., •• Excellent for All Areas., CUT AND CARRY SAVE . $$$ LIMITED - QUANTITIES! NOW SALE PRICED 99 · • 30-10·10 OATS NO INTIR!ST • CONVENIENT CREDIT PLAHS lHD llNK TUMS lYAIL.llL! • CALL fll8 fl!! SHOP·AT· HOM! S!IVICE • VISIT OUR CUSTOM Dlll'lll DIP!. WEST LOS ANGELES 11141 Wibhlre lld. 477·5525 5o" D;.qo ,,__., to Willhirt llll'11 off. 6 blocks We11 en Wd.. Vilr1. CANOGA PARK 21D31 Shormao W1y 347·2334 Vtntuto lrw-oy t•Conoqo Aw. Horlh lo Shtrmat1 Woy thtn ri9hl. WEST COVINA ANAHEIM 2526 I. WorklftOo Au. 64911. lucli4 SI. 96M471 635·7'74 $an ltmordino 'rwv. to CilM 7 b!oc•i North of Sonfa Ano''"' $1. ? blix:l1 No. Oii (1IM to WOf•· woy Oii fwlld Acl'01• frOl'fl (ol1f. mon. fff HOLLYWOOD 1115 N. V1Nft1ot An. 666-7455 t Mee•• lllltfti ,,,..u,..... ,,,., .. v.,....1 PASADENA 2660 (. Coloni4o llvd. 577°1900 [. ( olorodo llvd. et Soll Gobritl l tvd. SAN FRANCISCO MILLBRAE 320 II C.Rll•t ... 1 6'2·2SSS TORRANCE 4236 ArtHil lld. S42·6696 I llock (011 ol Howthetnt IJvd. on ArttJio. VENTURA 2501 E. Ma lo St. 641·5041 3 bjoi:l1 Wt$1 ti f11tt ~Mt on Mo111 LONG BEACH 3001 lellllowor ild. 421 .. 934 Son Difqo frwwoy lo l111flor.rr l lvd. T11111offNonh011hllflowtf. COSTA MESA 1714 N1w,ort 11•4. 645-3020 · HfWl)Orl llvd. or I 71ti $1, OPEN SUNDAYS AND EVENINGS WHITTIER 159111. Whittler lid. 943·0161 J Jf DAILY PILOT Wednesday, May 31, 19n PILOT·AOVERTlSER JJ Coast Area Men in Service Need He eeking Jobs?. By JOYCE KENNEDY dowo the phone hook llsllngs balls In a country club pond in and call all organlzatk>ns lo one day, then sold the salvag. Airman First Class K.ttht .. 1 Command"• Lackland AFB. Salsbury, 5231 Hiram Ave.. Allea, aon of Mr. Hershel M. Deor Joye<: caa yw Id! me ~k H they sponsor youth job ed balls to tbe pro shop.) Stock boy or Jirl, or order filler (in warehouse ). C. Schmoldt, daughter of ~Jn. Tex. She has been assigned.to Jrvtne, has arrived for duty at .A\leo of 6062 Ro&emont Drive, wbere to ctt 1 •u..mmtT Job! services. Bakery store sales clerk. Allan Rodgers of Jtm Nevada Lowry AFB, Colo., for training Hill AFB, Utah. Huntington Beach, is aboard -E.W., Nasllville, TeDJL Sports arena vendor. Ice: Dr! 11 In h PAY POSSmn.rru:s cream vendor working ve, · unt gton Beac , has in the supply field. Ceptain S a l 1 b u r y , an the amphibious attack cargo Late starters in the summer : neighborhood streets i n bee:n named Outstandine aircraft maintenance o(flcer, shlp USS Charleston, now off job sweepstakes wW find sllm Hou sework;. baby-si tting. motorized truck, pushcart or Airman In her unlt at Elmen-The Army Comrnendal)on b assi'"'..,.. to a unit of the the North Carolina coast talc-pickings. but who Imo-_ dorf AFB I k ~·~"' .... bicycle truck. Pet shop at· , A as a. Medal 'for meritoriowi Service Military Airlift Com m • n d ing pert in '"Exotic Dancer you may luck out. You have tendant, dog kennel assistant, Airman Schmoldt, an nlr has been awarded to Cap. wlltch provides global alrlift Five," a multi-serv ice am· nolhlng to lose by trying. c traffic controller, was ~lected John Robert Vblcem, a former for U.S. military forces. He phibious operation involving are er veterinarian's helper. Gardener1s helper. Parking lot attendant. Dairy, iee cream store, food take-out sq-vice COWlter clerk. Car · h•o p. Waiter, waitress, bus boy or girl. Greeting card store clerk. for her exemplary conduct and resident of Laguna Beach. prtviow:ly served at Cam America's Navy, Coast Guard, YOUfR JOB SERVICES: Door-lo-door sales or nelirly YOUR OWN BUSINESS : duty performance. 1be airm3n Vincent, an instrUctor with ¥ Bay AB, Vietnam. lliarine!, Army and Air Force. Civic groups (such as c any product Cwant-acb are You could work solo· as a ls a member of the Air Force the ROTC group at the Chamber of Commerce, 0 r Iler your best lead for these jobs: house sitter (for vac•tk>nlng Commu nications Service University of Neb1'i1ska, Ls the · Marine Pfc. George R. Airman Andrew Thomas, Rotary, Kiwanis, Jew is h use extreme caution in en-families who don't want to wb.ich provide!: global com· 80Jl of Mr. aod Mrs. John · J. Parker, son of Marine son of h.tr. and Mrs. Phillip H. weltare or gan I z al Ions) tering strange home s) · leave their house to the mercy municatlons and air traffic Foster. 2444 Riviera Drive, J~ieutenant Colonel aod Mrs. Thomas of 24731 San Andres sometimes sponsor summer Advertising flyer or product of prowlers), or operate a control for the USAF. Laguna Beach. George-B. Parker or 3407 Lane, Mission V)ejo. has com-job services for teens. Private mother's helper, ironing. (In sample home deliverer (ask backyard nursery school for Seabreeze Lane, Corona del pleted his U.S. Air Force basic employment agencies may addition lo answering want-for hourly wage, and deal only neighborhood childreQ. You Navy Petty Off icer Third l\fartln J. Adami, son . of Mar, has completed the A via· training at the Air Training have a no-fee student bulletin ads, and personal canvassing with n!putable companies - might operate a used clothing Class Jack D. Wlngle, husband Lieutenant Colonel C. L. t k>n Eltctrollics Technician Command's Lackland AFB, board. Youthpower is a non-of your neighborhood, you or get your pay in advance ). bargain sale (get clothes from of the former MW: Janet L. Adams or 285 Slerks, Costa Scflool at Memphis. Tex. He has been assigned to profit clearinghouse operated could put notices in yo1,1r Llbrary shelver or library rri ends, price, advertise the Wyman of J034 Llnd'n Place, Mesa, has recently graduated Lowry AFB, Colo., for training in many cities by Manpower, a church bulletin, on a store check-OUt clerk. Laundr y sale and split profits 50-50 with Costa Mesa, is on deployment from the rotary wing aviator Navy Petty Officer Third in the munitions and weapons temporary office help firm, Jn "community" bulletin board, cladifier (sorts dirty laundry sellers of used clothing; make with Naval Mobile Construe· course at the Anny Aviation • Class Slephen E. Ramsdell, maintenance field . a number of cities, a group of in laundromats or in pedialri-into proper washing groups) sure that neighbors don't ob- ti on Batt a Ji on One, School, Ft. Rucker, Alabama .. son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. civic-.minded ind iv id u a I s cian's offices.) or laundry washer (operates jec t to hordes of customers homeported at Davisville, R. He will attend the Aviation . Ramsdfll of 8601 St. Augustine Army private Forrest L. sponsor YES (Youth Employ· Shoe shining (at established big washers, Jugs beavy wet descending on neighborhood). T., to the Indian Ocean atoll of Maintenance Officer Course at Drive, ·HunUngton Beach, is Doud, son of Mr. and J.1rs. ment Service) offices, also a stands) in hotels, barbershops, clothes). Lawtdry fa c i Ii t y Or, you could organiz.e a Diego Garcia. He will soon be Ft. Eustis, Va., before going en route lo Southeast Asian Forrest B. Doud, 3012 .J3va free clearinghouse for yout h airports. Hotel bellman or r eceiving clerk (deals with work force to do yard work concluding an ei~ht month to Vietnam. waters aboard the destroyer Road, Costa Mesa, is assigned jobs. Your elate employment chambermaid. Resort cabana public). Coin-op cleaning and (mowing, watering, Weeding ), deployment at the Indian escort USS Harold E. Holt, to Ft. Ord. where he is service office should be able to boy or girl, or locker room al· laundromat attendant. Fruit clea ning swimming p oo l 1, ocean eite, where Na v 9 U.S. Air Force Captain homeported at Long Beach. training under the modern clue You in on what youth job-lendant. Caddy, or golfball and vegetable pick er. carwashing and waxing, paint· S<!:l'bees are oonstructin.c a RJcbard W. Sabbury, son or volunteer Army r i e Id u:-finding services are available salvage (one young man used. Hospital tray helper. Ticket ing houses or washing win· U.S. Naval Communications Mr. end Mrs. Richard W. Navy Seaman Patrick J. periment. in your local_e, or you can go scuba gear to retrieve 150 taker or usher. dows. Facility. --=...:_:.:c.....:__..::.......:_ __ .:_==...:_----"'----------'--...:_...:__:.:..::_=.:o:..-=.=~=...:::....:::.::::.:....::::__::=_::_:=:::.:_ ____ _::::::_ _____ _ Anny Specialist Four Frank A. Sears, son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis L. Sears, 2974 Country Club Drive, Costa Mesa, Is participating -yiJb o t h e r members of the' 81nd Airborne Division in exercise 'Exotic Dancer V' in the Camp LeJeune area of Nor th Carolina. Spec. Sears ls assigned to Company C, 2nd Batt811on of the division's ~th Jnf'antry at Fl. Bragg, N.C. The specialist is a 1970 graduate of Estancia High ---.sebool, Co&ta-Mesa. ---- Navy Dentalman Frank ~I. Dean, son or Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Dean of 1215 Key West Drive, Corona del Mar. Is aboard the ettack aircraft carrier USS Midway presenUy oil the coast ol Vietnam . Airman First Clas.!l Rick A. Dloa, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Dion of 6531 Alex- andria, Huntington Beach, has graduated from the technical training course at Sheppard AFB, Tex .• for U.S. Air Force teclmlcal instructors. Airman Dion, now qualified to plan and teach lessons in tecbnical courses, i 1 re- rnalning at Sheppard !or duty with a Wilt of the Air Training -Army Private Mark J. Fer· reri, son or Mrs. Ovla w. Peterson. 9421 Krepp, lluol· lnglon Beech, ls asslgned to Fl. Ord. where he la tralnlng u!lder the modern volunteer army field •IP<riment Airman Dorothy Richmond, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 'lbom.. Richmond or 5392 Hendricksen Dr i ve, Hunt- ington Beach, has completed her U.S. Air Force basic training at the Air Training MASTER'S DEGREE Frederick Cunningham Master's Degree Attained Frederick R. CUnningham, 600 or i\1r. and Mrs. Frederick C. Cunn ing ham, 31503 Shrev•sbury Drive, S o u t h Laguna , has been awarded a i\taster's Dt_gree in in- ter1U1tional ntanagement by the Thunderb ird G r a d u a t e &hool or International Man- agement at Glendale, Arizona. Jle is a graduate of Miami University. Founded In 1946. I h e 'lbunderbird Graduate school Is the only institution ln the United srate -c1<Votec1 -.r- cluslvely lo training men and women f o r lnlemllional ......,.. llvoogh a trtpariite CUrTiCUlmn or world bo!ln..., """"'11 lllllUalcs ,and ln- r.matlonal -n bu1nbd 1,000 -lnMn m coUiges a n d 1111.....W. lll Ille U.S. and JOI ....... two flllrda "' -__ .. ....,. ...... ll!jf 1n1 .. -..floml _..11on1. ' . . llCOND BIO WllK llEllOBllL DI! ~si\rilos PICK UP YOUR FRIE SALi BOOKLET AT YOUR LOCAL 8.1. STORE BOLIRO MEDITERRANEAN SHELF UNITS Westinghouse _20~' 9REllE BU FAN 8'x20" PLASHER POOL--. lit H•IH -------- Distressed walnut woodgrain shelves · with antique black posts and finials. 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Black & Decker 318'' DRILL ~ . J A bargain in on extra capacity drill. Double reduction gears for full torque. e 9'' IUILDERS Best- IMPACT HEAD Solid brass with firigertip adjustments for full or part circle pattern. 349 STATION WAGON UTILITY PAD 1 ''x42''x72'' . ,...-----~ Heavy duty.pad. Practical for station Y'!Ogons, vans, etc. Cleans off in seconds and folds flot for eosy storage. 2'' 7°PIECE PATIO LIGHT SET Add a festive· flair to your patio fun. A swirl of silken color that enhances any outdoor setting. Beautiful color by day and a shower of light by night. UL approved, • 2~! #5675 2'' POnlD VEGETABLES TOMATOES ~O.RPEPPERS 2·1NCH POTS Grow your own juicy tomatoes and tasty bell peppers. Fight the hi gh cost of living. YOUR CHOICE 9! America's Greatest Hardvv-are Stores li&IW 1111 ........ wu1•r1s1aa •ntwarr 11r•an. HlllAP.Aallt ... YA&Jn'YDll. •.eca ...... ,,n. Af._WlfflL ILTHO 24ltJ IOClnlla -Af._..AYL ATllfOIOB. ....... lJU L UTalA Af&. L&PAll .. m••·lA~:~•n. l'VLl.DTOP l46S LOIAMU Aft. lltL lmtlT. AfnlTWAfL • AfllAQI n. lf11'AftatUHKft. COSTAMISA ATSA•TAANAAYL • ANN • eCOVIN • V ~S RIVERSIDE 4 14CRUCENT4 •THOUSA.HD OAAS•SIMl•IANC4STIR•CHATSWORTll•T4RZANA•UPLAND •SAUGUS e GOlfTA.•VIWf4 •VICTOMU£•GllANAD4 HIUS !' SA.N lflHA.IDINO • CAIMl!UO e 94kElSflElO e HACIENDA HEIGHTS e SA.NTA ClARA e CORONA e E~ONDtDO • SPalNG VA.UEY • IAOEllA HEIGHTS• US£DA e EAST LOS ANGELES • j I der ) . k. lot am lee p. or rk. ... ). • ork g), I '• 'nl· in- WILLIE DAVIS SCORES AS THE GIANTS' DAVE RADER AWAITS AN OUTFIELD THROW. Crime Probe Revelation 5 of 9 Trotting Races Are Fixed, Says Sleuth \VASHINGTON '(AP)·-The chief in- vestigator for the U.S. Trotting Associa- tion told a House committee Tuesday ht had found fixed races in· four states but had no evidence that organized crime was involved. Raymond Traynor told the House Select Committee on Crime his security staff had investigated nine races in the nine years he had been with the trotting association. Five of the races were fixed, he said. Traynor. a former FBI agent. was one of four \Vilnesses who testified during the hearing Tuesday. Also appearing were Robert Masoni, Carl J. Spifel and John hiasoni. all of whom were connected with Jefferson Downs racetrack near New Orleans . · Traynor identified the fixed races as the eighth race at Scioto Downs in Ohio on Aui;:. 7. 1963 ; the ninth race at Hinsdale, N.H., on July 30, 1966, the fifth race at Hinsdale on June 25. 1966, the 10th race at Louisville Downs, Ky .. on Aug. 12, 1!171 and the seventh race at Wheeling Downs in \Vest Virginia on Dec. 17, 1971. A driver involved in the Hinsdale in- cident drew the longest suspension, Traynor said. But he said the driver. although still suspended indefinitely in New Hampshire, currently is driving in Maine. Rep. Jerome \Valdie (0.Calif.), asked Traynor why drivers who were found to have participated in a fixed race we.re not suspended for lite. Traynor said most state racing commissions felt their authority extended only from year to year since they rene~·ed licenses each year. King Traynor said it was possible other races coukl have been fixed and not have come to his attention. He denied that his investigations were hampered by in- adequate manpower. John Masoni, who said he had been racing for 30 years, told the committee about a stock transaction between himself, the Emprise Corp., or Buffalo, N.Y., and his two nephews, Robert ~tasoni and Carl Zipfel. P.~asoni said he sold 800,000 shares of his stock in Jefferson Downs to Emprise in 1970 for $400,000. One year later, Emprise sold the stock to the two nephews for $274,000. John Masoni later transferred. his shares to Zipfel after the Louisiana Rac- ing Commission inquired about past criminal convictions. The elder Masoni said the stock transactions were simply a device by which he attempted to transfer some of his holdings to his only heirs before his death. He denied there was anything il- legal about hls plan, which he said was only an attempt to evade a huge in- heritance tax. Masoni said Emprise, when it agreed to purchase and resell the stock to his nephews, was given an option to purchase all his stock and to repurchase the stock it sold to the nephews for $1.50 a share upon event of his death . i-le said this would allow Emprise to pick up $1 ,200,000 shares of Jefferson Downs stock while giving his two nephews an inheritance without inheritance tax. Masoni said he loaned both nephews money to purchase the stock. .... JI' ) ., . .. On .. ., Area Resident Talks About Slump r., ~I ~ Bill Melton has had his troubles with the bat in the early part of the 1972 major league baseball sea.son - but lbe Mission Viejo resident is con- fident things will change. l\1elton, the American League home run champion last Ra.SOR witb 33, bas hit just three homers for the Chicago White Sox in the first 38 games. And he's batting a rather anemic .213. Tuesday night in a 6-4 loss to the Angels, the 26-year~ld l\iississippi native. banged out a single in four trips to the plate. But one of his outs was a deep drive to left field that I 1 Halos outfielder Vada Pinson caught I while leaping against the fence. "The reason t haven't been hitting,'' says A_{elton, "isn't because I haven't been making contact. I started slowly last year and I've actually made bet. ter contact this year. ~ "The statistics make it Took like if rve felt the pressure of de!ending the home run title, but I don't feel that way." • He admits he hasn 't felt comfort-1'1 able at the plate. "It was only about seven days ago that I started fighting myself." he confesses. "Up until that time I had at least been swinging good." Melton slugged a three-run home run in the first game or a double- header Monday night to beat the Angels, 5-4. "That was a good sign," says \Vhite Sox manager Chuck Tanner. ''We've been getting the big hit from other fellows. In fact I had a chat with Bill before Monday 's game and told him to stop pressing and to relax. "I told him it was going to be his tum soon and damed if he didn't make me a prophet," says Tanner. And the ex-Duarte High and Citrus College star is confident he'll come out of the slump. "I know I'll come out of lt. I've felt absolutely no pressure, except the pressure I've applied to myself," he concludes. _., ~-..... ILi~, ... ,..,.,.. ... ~ .. -~. Dodgers Lead By Half Game • After 5-3 Win SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Los Angel es. D.'.ldgers manager Walt Al ston insists Frank Robinson "can beat you in so many wats." • The 36-year-o!d Robinson proved his boss correct Tuesday night, cracking a game-winning, two-run homer in the eighth and nailing a runner at the plate in the bottom of the inning during a 5--3 vic- tory over the San Francisco Giants. The win, the ninth straight for the Dodgers at Candlestick park since May 15, 1971, boosted Los Angeles into firs t place by one half game over the Houston Astros in the National League's \Vestem Division. ~ "I haven't been around this team Jong enough to have the Giants-Dodgers J.,nt l Jurit 1 June l Ju~ ~ Dodgers Slale 1:SS p.m, l :ll p.m, •:n p.m. l:J5 p,m, rivalry get my adrenalin going," says Robinson, "but it was an important game because it got us into first. "It's been our ambition to get into first place and now we want to stay there ," adds Robinson, who tops the Dodgers with seven homers and 26 runs batted in. He also has three game-wirming hits. Ken Henderson's triple and Bobby Bonds' two--0ut single pulled the Giants into a-3-3 tie off winner C1aude Osteen, 6- 2, in the bottom of the seventh. \Villie Davis led off the eighth with a single -the first hit off Sam McDowell, 6-2, since the second -and Robinson hit his homer. Davi s' triple and Robinson's sacrifice ny helped the Dodgers score twice in the first. A bizarre bottom of the eighth epitomized the Giants' frustration, as the team ct11lected three singles and had a hit batsman but failed to score. Tito Fuentes led off with a single and _ Pete Mikkelsen replaced Osteen. Rookie Ed Goodson singled Fuentes to second and was removed for pinch-runner Damaso Blanco . Dave Kingman, who slammed his 12th homer in the second, then squared away to bunt and Fuentes broke for third. Kingman missed the ball and Fuentes was trapped. In the ensuing rundown, Blanco reached second and Fuentes also went back to that base -the umpire calling Blanco out. Kingman was hit by a pitch and Chris Speier singled to right, but Fuentes was out at the plate on a disputed play, ttobinson throwing to catcher Duke Sims. lit Mt•lft (S) SH ''IMIKe Ul ~llrllrlll Vfl..,llM, ,_ I l I I &o!'dl, rf Rusten. ss • O I o Fuenl", "' W.O.vis, cf 5 2 J 1 Good&On, ltl F.RoblnWlll, rf • I 1 l 81fnco, Pl" Mo1a, If ' 0 0 0 G1M111111r, :Jib w.Parker. 111 • o I o IC l119m111, lb Ger~ey, lb J 1 1 o Soeler. 11 Oi11l. c 1 0 O 0 M~•. II ~1m1, c o o o o HtNl•rt.on, ti Os!Hfl, p l 0 I e RM!tr. c Mlkke1s1n, , o o O O McOowen. p TOlllt e1rr, p ~~•!II, pl! n s 1 , To1t1• 111 r II,.. 2 I 1 2 s 0 2 0 • 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 , , 2 l • 0 1 0 • 0 0 0 I 2 ) 0 • 0 l 0 , 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ,.. J 12 J LOI All!ltle. ,10 0G0 02ll -J Siii Fr1n<IKO 010 010 100 -J LOI -LOl A ..... I~ t , Slfl f'rMCIKO I. 71!1 -F~le~. l(l119m111. W. P1rk1r. Jll -W. O.vb, Hfl"tdl'ICW.. HR -Klnomtn nn. F, Robin-(11. ~ -Oil ...... SF -F. RoblMO<!, V11111tlne, llonOt. Ost"" (W,t.1) Mlltktl11n 1.AcOCweH IL.•21 ilifr IPHltlllll50 1 tJl 13 tlOO l l 11/JI S I' 17fl 1 0 0 1 ~IVI -Mllo:ktlll~ {Jl. Hl)P -by M!k~tlltll (Klno!"fl1t1), Tlmt -l : U. A!lf1"4111<1 -IOMI, ~ Wrdnf<day. May ll. 1972 DAILY PILOT ~ 19-foot Vault Possihli • •• • • :· Say·s Olympic Cham By PHI!. ROSS 01 Ille OtllY Plitt Slell If Bob Seagren IS" right , the sky is the limit in regard to global standards in his event ... the pole vault. Along with Swede Kjelr lsaksson . Southern Californian Seagren recenUy set a pending world pole vault record of 18- 4 ~~ in a special vaulting competition at El Paso. A former Po1nona High and USC spike star and the gold medalist in the 1968 Olympic Games at P.·Iexico City. the 6-0, 175--pound Seagren was in Newport Beach Tuesday to n1ake a joint press con!erence appearance with sidelined miler ~1arty Liquori. Says the 25-year~ld Seagren. ''ho\f high the pole vault record will go is unlimited. Of course, you always have barriers you go through -17 feet , 18 feet and on over that mark. ;,,Vhoever becomes the first one to hit- 19 feet will more than likely do it after the record is bettered a few inches at a time. For instance. someone will prob- ably go 18-5 and then maybe 18-7 or 8 and then maybe 18-10 or 19-0.'' Can Seagren be the one \l'ho knocks first on the 19-foot door or \\'ill sruneone else surpass him or lsaksson'r "Well, I'll tell you, right "°"' we're more than a fool hig:her than many of the other top vaulters and the 18-414 ob- viously destroyed the confidence of many of them ,'' Seagren says. By "many" Seagren refers to the some 17 astronauts "'ho've nlready SUC'Ccedtd at the 17·foot challenge. He continues, , "j11n1ping against lsa~on brings out the best in n1e and l'n1 sorry 10 see he's going""ho1ne to Sweden to continue his tra ining ." tThe Flying Sy.•ede has been training in the Southland the past year er so.) At present, the ex-USC Trojan reels he Is the United States' best hope in claim- ing a geld m1..>dal in the vault at the 111unich Oly1npiad this sun1n1er . But Seagren figures his pr1n1e dotn<'slic competition may come from current Cal State (Long Beachl athlete Steve Smith, who has soared 17-7 . "Steve is probably 1ny 1nos1 scrinu:;i threat righl no\~ but he 's been both~·rC'Ct off and on by a pullrd groin." Sl.•ngrcn says. "But he pushes himself so hart! th:1t he <:ould seriously jeopardize his clir111("l':'I of competing in the Oly1npies if he ;.1g- gravates his groin . "Other guys who may give n1e trou!Jlr are Jan Johnson (of the University of Kansas) and Dave Roberts (ex-Rice University vaulter 110\V competing in the Anny), in addition to all those other guys who have gone over 17." Seagren, who will junip Sunday at the Los Angeles Coliseum in a comp.anion pole vault feature to the National AAU Decathlon championships, ndmits this may be his last year -for good. ''I know I also sai d that after \\'inning at Mexico City in '68. But there's no bet- ter time to quit than \vhen you're on top. ,· •·t just took n couldn't-care-lesS at· tltude ror a\\'hile and the last couple ~~' years wcrcn 't that good !or me. But. thell again, I didn't ('nre much, even when 1 saw Chris P:lpiu1it'Olaou tG reek vaulter from &in Jo~t-State who was the f~ tnan to clear 18--0 l. .. ! • "llO\\'ever, It tx>gnn to bother me~ I SfHV lsaksson .!lhlrllng to do ii, too and. \\'ilh surgt'ry on my right knee suc- 1:essf ully ('{)nll:lletcd . I figured I'd better ch:lnf:l' my •ind and st;1rt va ulting seriously again ." (It must be pointed out 1ht1l Stngrtn tfl.. jurcd himself last year \\"hl'n he fell off a spirited qunrlerhorse In !he r<i1oja'le I>esert . I '"One doctor·s office which handles lhr i11jur1cs of n lot of f11n1ous Athletes hi\d tolcl lllt' prior to surgery that I 1:ouldn't eon1pcte :lHY n1ore and to stay off my knl'l'. Hut !hey came 1111 with thts \'irtuu\ly ~·ithout diagnosis, so 1 thought [ should take n1y business elSC'\\'hC"re." This hint of rl'jection u1nong sorne or !ht' n1ost noted authorities on alhlelic iu· iuries thrust Seagren back onto thr path or glory 1\•hi<·h all track :lnd held cum- pelilors thirst for -that nf eventunlly 1·l;iin1ing son1e Olympit: gold. So, even though he's tM-cn therf' befort', it ·s that golden trail v.·hi('h has lured Bob Seagren out of the dohtrun1s of a blun knee and semi-anonym ily and back inlo the forefront of lht: \\Orld vaulting pie· turc . UPITe......e •, OLYMPIC CHAMP 808 SEAGREN SAYS THE SKY IS THE LIMIT IN THE POLE VAULT. Angels Showing Sigf!,s Of Relieving Woes By CRAIG SHEFF 01 tlll Delly Pile! S!11f A couple or weeks ago Del Rice started drinking milk, hoping to curb the agon y or an ulcer. At the time the California Angels were in the throes of a rather disappointing American League West start. Injuries were popping up here and there and the hitting and pitching Jacked consi!tency. And although the Halos manager is still drinking milk , the pain has subsided somewhat -due primarily to the faet that the Angels are showing signs of com· ing out of their doldrums. Tuesday night , behind fireballer Nolan Ryan and teammate Bob Oliver, the llalos won their fifth tilt in the last six, blitzing the Chicago White Sox, 6--0. Ryan, who has had problems with a groin injury and has been wild ln many of his outings, went the distance on the mound -scattering seven hits, strik.ing out 10 and walking just four. And Oliver drove in four runs, three of them with his home run in the tlrst fr:lme. __ The Angels are still nine. anmes back or league-leading Oakland, but Rice feels his club Is a long way from being out of it- espccially with the way Ryan Is pitching. ''That's the Ryan I like to see. He threw one of his bt:ttcr games tonight and I'll tell you this he's going to get a lot better, ye!," Rice says. "And he deserves it. He's really a hard worker. He knows he has to improve and he's really working at it," says the Angels skipper. Ryan says the short layofI because of the injury might have set him back a lit. tie. c "When J came bnek after the injury I was favoring the groin. lt's just been a case of rinding myself again," says the 25-year-old Texan who ran his season record to 4-4. "One thing J have to do Is run more than most pitchers. Because of the way I pitch, my legs have to be in good shape. That's why I do a lot or extra running. "I probably spend 40 minutes a day &hagging fungos and ruMlng wind sprints. And 1 even run a little bit on the day I'm supposed to pitch." Ryan related that .his curve ball was 1 li1Ue_more.&ba.rper than usual-alihoup_ he relied on. hi> f81t ball for lh• rnoet part. Smith, King Move Higher '• .. •• :- PARIS !AP) -Stan Smith powered hls way Into the quarter finals o! the Freneh Open tennis tournament Tuesday, and Billie Jean Klng swept into the sem\- finals !or both men 's and wo1nen's singlet titles. Smith, the top ranked U.S. plnyer. of Sea Pines. S.C., unleashed his powerful service and stinging drives and volleys to eliminate f' r a n t I 11 e k Pala of Czechoslovakia, 8-4, 6--0. 6-3, on a side court at Roland Carros Stadium. Mrs. King, ranked No. 2 among lht American women. mad e short work ot Virginia Wade or Britain, 8-1, 6-3. on tht center court where a chilly wind brought swirls of red clay dust. Mrs. King, the only surviving American. woman. seeded No. 3, will meet Helga Masthof! of West Germany. seeded No. '1 in the semifinals. Mrs. Masthoff defeatecJ. Katja Ebblnghnus of West Germany, 6-S, 8-6, in another quarter finals match Tuta- day. ln the men'~ quarter·flnnl!J, Smith wlll face Andres Glmeno. 34 -y ear·old Spanlard who has rl!tlred from the cm. tract professional tour. Gimeno made a late rally Tuesday and outlrusted Clark Graebner of New York, 3·&, 6-3, ~7. 6-2, ft. t. Smith b !ttded No. 3 nnd-Gimeno No. 6. Twins, Twins, Everywhere Twins "P.fy curve was really working in the middle inni llJ{S. And that really helped me tonight . Usually il~s-not that sharp." Tonight the Angels wind up the home •lond. sending Rick Clark CH I against Chicago's Tom Bradley (~2}. OllUfe ,., , ......... 11 t'I RIGBY, SEAG REN TALK AT BIG A AUSTIN . Minn. (AP) -The ~flMesota Twint mlgh! tak• 1ptclal notice about the baseball program In this southern Mln- U910ta community of almost 25,000 pcl"IOlll. "There are four sets of tdenlleal twtn brothers Involved in baseball. M.yk .aqd OtriJ Tod.\ are third MRman and pitcher for C<)llfmnct cbampbt MsUn Jllib team. Du and Dool& Walters ore catcher and pilclltHNrd buemall for the Allstln Pacelli prep ream that played In lost v.·eekend's State Independent Touma· ment. John and Pete Skaar are outfielders for Austin State Junior College. And Jerry and Jack Miller are coaches for Austin'& "8" prep team. While the parents might not baYlO any problem1 with ldent~lcalion. 110me pl the twins' coadteS cortalnly do. '"!be only way I can tell Mark and Olria apart," .. id Austbt coach Dick Seltz, 1'ls by marking Mark 's hat with two chalk marks. They did pull a trick recently. Both play in ·the band and onc:e they exchanged horns. No one knew lhe dUferenct tor quite a while." 'Unfortunately, Chrla was hH ln the face by a line drive in a recent game but mllstd only a week. Mark Todd has abolJt a .333 batllna aver•ge, Olrls al· moot .290. John Sl<lfen. the Pacelli coach. sai• about the Walt.rs brolhers: "If lhef're alone. each by him.self, t can't tell which Is which, Even some of their teammates can't tell theni apart." Doug hit .295. Dan .237. Coach Earl Perkins just yells when he wanta one: of the Sk.aars. Perkins docs have It a Utile easier, ooting "one is lefthanded and the other right handed." Under the 'dlrection of the Millen, fonnor Mankato Stsk players, the Alatbt B-leam locged a IS.0 reeord, Wheo the te1m celebrated the unbeaten season, the playen Just said congratulations twice. It ' II "'4 11'.l(tl!Y, rf I 0 I 0 AIO!Tl8r, '9 Al'ldrl*l, "' I 0 I O llllvlf\, (I ()t,_, ~ ) 0 0 0 Piii*', II C-"'•Y. If • 0 0 0 R.ou......-. Ill O.Alltn, lb I t 0 I lptl!Clr, 10 Mtltlll'I, :Ill • 0 I e M<Mti!ltl'I. Jb Jaflnll-. cl ~ I I O S!fnton, rl HtrrlN""' t I 0 I 0 (lnlft"lll, H Mort!", M I f I e llfphtntft\, C. l1lln"'1, p 1 I 0 0 N.lll,•11, p w.w1111,.,.., p11 1 o o o D.Jonn...,, ' o I o o Lytt1e, -" I I 1 I oeoon.o 0001 lt•l''"'ttl!, lfl , • • 0 •• , 11 ..... • ' 2 • • l 2 • I I I 0 , 7 , • l I I e ) 0 0 e • 0 1 e I I t I , 0 2 0 .. 0 0 • "TOIOI\ JI 0 1 t lotllt » I t 0 Cllk.Qo 000 000 OI» -I C-tlllOl"llll Jiii 200 OOll -• I -Arlllr11n, Orte. DP -Ollc.tto I, C..I._ ~i. I. LO. -Oiceeto 11, (elllwnle 6. 11 - 111......-.. Nit -fl. on ...... C41. Al"'*"« -"""- Two Olympians will be tht feoturtel speakers Thurlday al the Wi.tkly puUKC sports ~uncheon in the Stadium Club ' Anaheim Stadium . Pole vaulter Bob Seagren and gym~ cathy Rigby will ~ on hand to diacoif the upcoming Olympic Games at t.1unkbt Germany. New Cal Slat• (Fullerton) lootbll coach Pete Yoder will aliO be in ·>'· tendance lo talk about prospects for ~ season. • A n~hosl cocktail bar will open 1 iJ a.m. wllh the 13 price Including tu, • . . OAJLV PILOT Wf'dnesa1y M•Y Jl, 1972 Gal Hurdler Overcomes Hip Problem CRAIG WAY . ill Craig Edison's ay to Title? ~ By ROGER CARLSON ~ CW 1M Delly 'lltt Stiff +essllke might be the he•I single tenj; aptly applied to the current pro- ce+a• at Edison Hig h where the Chalii;er1 are gotna: through their spring footjill workout.. ~ the, same t<nn mlgh! be the best de&Wipt.ion of the Chargers' No. 1 can· didie., Craig Way, to take over the rei3' 1t quarterback for coach Vince AsaJ.!>'.s Irvine League contenders. Ffa squads of l t took methodical t'ra. at a defense in practice with the empbul1 on a simple crack over one side, then the other. by the-rullback. But a player or two broke the syslem with a remark or two In the huddle, prompting Way to crack: "l've gotta tell you every time, now knock it ·off." His tone reflected the Chargers' determined attitude to regain the prestige lOl!lt last year with three league setbacks. "Craig 11 really looking good al this point," aays Asaro. "but of course a lot will depend on how soon Dave White will fully recover from his knee operation. "Craig has been a take charge guy and he's a natural team leader. He's got a lot of self~nfidence and he's willing to work. He's quick. has excellent physical dexterity and he's intelligent." His short.comings, U any. are in the deep pass. But Asaro h.u been pleased with his control in the short aerial game. "We may have him playing some defense at corner again, but normally we don't Uke to play our quarterbacks on defense. "We'd rather have our quarterbacks on the sidelines tAlklng to them about the opponent's defense. Way packs 180 pounds on a 5-8 Ire.me and he'll be a senior in the fall. He started at defensive corner for Edison last year and was the team's No. 3 signal caller. OJrrently in the thick of t h e quarterback plans at present with Way is freshman Nathan Ching. Thus it would appear that Way and White will be the major contenders for the starling berth in the fall . While quarterback the sophomore team to an 8-1 mark in 1971 and Is considered an excellent prospect as a junior. Telling Clash By LAURIE BECKLUND Ot ""4 0.111 ,. ... , iltl\ There are several reasons why no one ever thought Cosia Mesa High SchoQl's new ASB secrelary would have a good chance to set a national record In the 80- vard hurdles. · Th e fir st reason is that until Aprll, Janice Lester had nol tried hurdling. She flrst ran the event ln a school meet t.ovrard the end of tile month. Another reason ls tha t she was born with a congenital hip prolllem. "r.1y mother can't believe that "''hat used to be her pigeon-toed , bow-legged daughter is running track," the auburn- haired 17·year-old says. Janice has gotten used to the idea of sprinting, but the fact that she broke a • Southern Pacific AAU record in the hurdles with a tune just .2 off the na- tional record, ha! yet to reg.Isler with her. She ran the 81)..yard event in 10.2 in San Diego two weeks ag o. But she ca me in second. Natlonal record-holder Bobbette Krug of the La Jolla Track Club ran against her, tying her own lifetime best ()f 10.0. "J wa.s just so psyched up that I was running in the lane ne:tt to the national champion at the San Diego meet.'' Janice recalls. ' "Now I just hope r can get the national girls' record before I'm 18 and have to start competing in the women 's division," 11~ 11ay11. Janice believes runrung the event in a Mat Coach Named Vanguards Add I'rack, Wrestling~ Program Au expanded coaching 1laff at Southern California C:Ollege of Costa Mesa 11 In the offing -and with justification. Paul Peak. the school's athletic direc· tor and basketball coach, hat been seek- ing undergraduate majors In physical education and recreation. "We got both of them through for the next school year and I think it will be a big help to our fulure ," Paul says in the understatement of the year. How about the new soccer .stadium, track and baseball fields? • sec team and will be working at sec ()D a part-time basis to 11tart the program. Lynn Taylor, baseball coach and men· tor of the cage aquad the past season, LI expected to move to sec an a full -time basis. He will continue to direct the baseball squad and assist Peak with the <:a:ger1, The Vanguards are also toying with the . ' • ''They-arnmming-ato'"n~g~venrvy well. We have the trench!! dug for the water lines and delivery of materials for putting , tn ... the sprinkler· system is due any time. All HOWARD , l HANDY '~ of these facilities should be ready for use _with start of the fall .semester." The coaching staff? Jack Robinson, former wrestllng men- tor at Tustln High, will take over the reins of the Vanguard mat squad in the fall when that sport ls added to the agen- da. Robin.son has already recruited several outstanding prep stars for the Tritons, Oilers Gain Golf Final REDLANDS -A pair or Orange Co111t area prep golf teams quaJUied for the CJF team finals Monday at Chino's Western Country Club in the aemlfinals at Redlands Country Club's tough, 7,000- yard par 70 course Tuesday. Coach Ray Beaver'!! San Clemenle Tritons, in the tourney after succes11fully petitioning the C1F to enter the playoffs qualified second among the four quali- fying team.s with the combination of Sctltt Johnson (76), Steve Ringer (77), Marty Morganllll (78 ), Duane Hilborn (76) and Richard Bernard (79 ) providing a 386 total, sect1nd only to Foothill High 's total or 318. . The latter's Dave Williams was in- dividual medalist with 70. Coach Steve Setterlund's Huntington Beach Oilers. co-<:hampions in the Sunset League . easily qualified with a 391 , six strokes better than a non-qualifying fifth. ' Huntington's total consisted of Bart DeBoe 's 78. Kell.v Gifford's 78. Rawn \Vanamsker'a 81, Phil Clark's 76 and Pat Gal vin's 79. Idea of hiring a full-tltne track and field coach and the name bandied about is that ()f J im Crumpton. Crumpton is from the state of Oregon and would B!!ume other duties in addition to his coaching assign· ment, if hired. Things are looking up at Southern California C:Ollege and the aggressive Paul Peak is making them happen. The Vanguards have also increased the number of sports on campus to mut re- quirements of a group seeking to form a new NAIA conference. The circuit would tentatively include Biola, Azusa-Pacific, California Baptist, Los Angeles Baptist. Southern caJUornia College and one or' two others but seven sports are a minimum requirement for entry. Duke Snider, the all-time home ran leader for the Dodgers, returned bome to Fallbrook recenUy to attend his oldest ion's wedding. Tbe Duke Is currently managing Alex· andria, La., a farm team of the saa Diego Padres. Kevin, tbe eldest Snider offspring, attended Palomar JunJor College aDd plans to conUnue hi11 college education at California BapU1t College In Riverside in the fall. Inclde.ntally, as a player the Duke did e,·erythlng but bat right-banded but be wa1 strictly a southpaw 1win.cer at tbe plate. It Was Just Another Hit His 1econd son, Kurt, now a 10th grader at f'allbrook High, doe 1 e\'erytblng but bat left-banded. You aue111ed It, he swings from the right 1lde tf the plate. Look for UCl 's Jeff Malinoff to be named to the first team all-regional baseball team with Dan Coronado and Terry Stupy garnering second team berths. For Sea l{ings' Grower By HOWARD L. HANDY Of Ille D1llr 1"1191 Sltff His coach describes it as one of the best hits he has seen in the last three years of coaching football . The player involved doesn't rer_nember a thing about the hit and shrµgs 1t off as just another part ()f the game . The coach is Dave Holland of the Cnrnna de\ Mar Sea Kings football team and the player involved is defen sive halfback John Grower. The play occ urred in the third qu1.rttr ()f thr Cd~t game wit h Los Alamitt,s last fall when Grower came up tr. meet headon ~·ith halfba ck Mike Schwerdt· feger of the Griffins. . . It was a telling clash. Ont 1n which Grower's head connected w It h Schwerdtfeger's knee and the Su King haUback was knocked unconscious. "I OOn't remember the play at all." Grower says. "They (!As All had been running sweeps the whole game around this same end. They tell me he fwnbled when J hit him butt don't know . .. , woke up about a minute hit.er aod was taken to the hospital for some ~tlt.ches around my eye." Asked how many. he says he doesn't recall. Grower will return for hls senior se11son at CdM in the fall. hb third 1traight yea r 1s a defensive start.er. This ttme 1round he may 1ilo add oHenl1.., duties 1t wide rec:t.lver. "I hive to rull7 concentrate on c1ldtlng the ball when I play end but I think I con do ll," he odd1. "fft Cln ploy Wida -Iver," llollond ldcl1. "Ile'• mor1 or • 1llent IYPt bot 1 lblnk he bu 1-.hlp pot<nU1J. "He'1 not very bi« (IA, 11111 pound1) bul .... -of ti. "'°ll>etl Idell .. ba ... " Bellllld lo puttJiii the lrVIM League -· - JOHN GROWER delendmg champs through their •pring paces. col\Cf'ntrating on the passing game. offensive play patterru and defense:. ''\Ile really can't hit in the spring with no pads b4t the kids can pick up the fun- damentals thal are so essential ." \Vhatever the future holds for CdM football or for John Grower, the )'OUOi Sea King defensive halfback will let lhat phase or his lire take care or lt .. u. He sports a B average in the 11cademlc cla'uroom ind hopes to play college loo~ ball, perbap& stanlng 11 Or1nge Coasl College. Ht 11&0 spends hla spore tllne back-pacllfnl In ll1e Slum alon1 with weiaht lnhiln1. kar11< and other l1<tlo or fooiball physical preparedoas. • Gary Wheelock and Dave Lyons might also be mentioned on the two squads or in tbe honorable mention ranks. Mt. San· Antonio College bas a new $&00,0GO swimming comp\e:s: tbat lncludu a 30 :s: !8 water polo course 1eve.n feet or more In depth. The swim 1tadium alao ba1 a seadq: capaclly for Z,000 and nJabt llghtlne. Sports Banquets Slated Tonight A barrage of spring sports awards ban- quets are on tap tonight with seven Orange Coast area schools involved. At Costa Mesa -The Mustangs will fete the tennis teams at the Horn of PJen. ly Restaurant beginning at 7 o'clock . Al Laguna Beach -The Art is ts "'iii host the s"·immrng, tennis and golf le arns in the school cafeteria beginning at 7. At 1\1arina -The Vikings will toast the baseball and track teams. The baseball team will meet at the Huntington Beach Yscht Club at 7:30. The guest speaker is Jack Paepke of the Ca lifornia Angels. The track athletes will be hosttd at tht school cafeteria beginning at 7, At l\flsslon Vltjo -The track and ten - nis squ11.ds will be feted in the school cafeteria be.ginning at 7. At Newport Harbor -The Sallon' track and neld team will he honored In the school cafeteria begiMing et &:JO. At Westmiuter -The Lions' 1wim team will he feted at Rio Hondo Country Club Ind the trock t<am will meet In the oc:hool Clfetttil, both Startin( II 7. Al UlliYer1i11 -The Trojana tip their halo to II)) 0Ye spring 1porlo II 7 In the mulll·purpooe roam. .,.. 10.0 will he "' problem il lhe can 1peed up her at.am. "I'm always the last one out of the starting blocks," Janice says. "My hurdles coach Bob Cape Says I ll>Se .2 just in the start. I guess I just don't think about the starting gun. I just run.'' Her coach at the C:Omets, Ken Karnes. has hig h hopes for his newe.st hurdler. "What 1he 's doing rig ht now ls just ()n natural talent and speed . Think what she can do alter she has time to really learn everything." he says. "Bobbette Krug 's times were 10.8 and 10.9 when she first started competing. "Janice is a real competitor and always strives even harder when she's be ing pushed as she was in the meet with Bobbette," he continues. • Janice Is jus L a1 en thusiastic about church and 1Chool actlvitiea and her school track team, coached by Joan Allen, as she i.s about AAU competition. The team, coached by Joan Allen and anchored by Janice and her little sister Diane, placed second at the all-Orange County Invitational at Santa Ana VaUey this year. During the school track seasoo Janice was running the 100 and 220 and set the 1chool long jump record with a 16-0lh leap. She left the hurdling to Diane. Diane, 1 sophomore shared top county hurdling honors with Laguna Beach's Angie Ser- ra no. The girls ran the event ln 12.4. "When I 1tarted hurdling, Diane was upset. She lald, 'Oh, you ha.ve l.4 take aD my records,' ·• Janice uy1, but adds, "We get alon, really well anyway ." Right now Janice's hopes are focusing on Canton, Ohio, where t.he women's and girls' nationals will be held the last week in J411e. She clocked a 10.8 the first time she ran the event In competllion at Costa Mesa -well under the 11.4 qualifying standards for the nationals. If the financial end of the trip to Ohio can be arranged , the Costa Mesa junior may have a chance at a national record . After all, by the end of June 11he will ha ve-three: whole months of hurdling behind her and may be three times al good as she was when she set the SPA rte0rd in May. New Format For Oil City Cage League The 1972 Huntington Beach 1ummer basketball league schedule ha5 been re- leased under a new format. "'ith nine rounds of competition capped by a thrte- night tourney. Action gets under way June 20 with Orange CoasL area teams Huntington Beach, Marina, Edison, Fountain Valley and C:Orona del Mar involved. Upo n completion of the regula r season, the top four teams will vie in round robin play v.ith each other. The second fo ur v.·Hl do the same and all victories v.•ill be added to_the regular 1eason records to establish a single --chsmpion. --- COSTA MESA HURDLE 51'NSATION JANICE LESTER Spring Banquets Area Athletes Lauded Spring sports banquets were the order ()f the evening Tuesday at Costa Mesa, Mission Viejo and Fountain Valley high achools. Most valuable honors went to C:Osta Mesa 's Mark Christman (baseball), Fountain Valley's Bob Schenk (track) and John Ovitt (tennill ). Also Mission Viejo's Mike Grimes (baseball), Bill Hobbs (swimm ing) and Tom Martin (golf) were accorded most valuable laurels. C0.1' MfN 91Mlllll • \111'$lTV -M\I: ~rk L~rlllll',.n; (1pl•ln, J1rrv Goldtn; Mllll ln1plr1!1cn.i: J erry Goldtn; Most lmorovtd: lt1ndY Fa.1. Junior v1rsl!y -Co.f1011hu: 0.nnls Of!l&riey 111d Don Trvon; MV,.: Dot! irve+'I; Mos! lmolr1!1on11: Sl«va Hlckm1n1 Moll lrnprovld: Mike Gl1~py, FrQlll-5oe>~ -Capttfn: T • M1l'lln11. MVP: &t1v1 T1r~l1; MO$! lmprovld: Ktvll' Moulln1P1 M01t lnUtlrtllOnll: Slev1 11"1(1 O.v1 8ern~a •lll. ""' Va•ill't -Ct~llln· G•ei;i ~clarro1t1 : Mllll V1lu!11le Tom M1rlln; Mo1t Improved· 8Dtl Hunl. Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pt'!. GB 211 II .125 New York Pittsburgh <;hlcago Montreal Philadelphia St. LOili• 24 14 .632 4 20 11 .541 711 17 22 .436 1111 18 24 .400 13 15 25 .375 14 Weit Dlvb}on Dodgers 25 16 Houston 24 16 Cincinnati 22 13 AUanta 17 22 San Diego 16 -25 San Francisco 15 30 THMt•r'I R1w1ts N...., York 7, P~lt1drl~tlf1 0 Clnc!nn,.11 '· Hou1ton J I lt1 "'"''"' J, Sin Fr1nclMO J 51. LOUii 11 Ctllctff, COid 1•11 DI~ 1! At1en11, r•l11 ,.llf1bul'lh 11 Montrr~l. r11,., WHn1'41r'1 0111'•1 .610 .61JO .550 :436 .390 .333 II 2'1 7 9 12 St Lou+1 !Glbso11 l·J) 11 Ch!tato !Je11~1,.,1 ~41 l•I ... ,.., •• tDo .. nlM 2 21 II Sin Frtnc.llc.o l!•r,.n! 2·Jl Pfttiburtn !8rllt~ 31) ~t Mcnlre1I !M(A111!1r O.JI, nlelll P~\ladtll'lllll IC~• .... okln .).}) I I N-Yott! ISrt,•r J.1), nlthl Sen Dlf'llO (NOl"m•ll 4.l) ti All1n1t (ll:ttd 2.f or Ntme •o, nlttlt Cll'!(ln11•ll (Nolin 6-1! er ttov1ton (ll!obtrt1 2.,1, nl1tll Tll9"'•J"1 0.-t $1. L011l• '' Ctilc•tt ll1 Al\Mltt •• $1n ''l"'l•co, 11!1M llhUl'dtlPh!I 11 NI"' Yori!, nlthl Cll'!(lnt'11ll 11 HOlll!On, nltoi'll Oflty 1•rnn sthfdulfd AMERICAN LEAGUE Ea11t Dlvtskln W L Pct. 20 16 .556 20 16 .556 GB Baltimore Detroit Cleveland New York Boston ~1ilwaukee 18 16 .5211 I 16 20 .444 4 15 10 .441 4 12 2l .364 611 Oakland Minnesota Chi cago Angeli Texas Kansas City West Division 24 12 22 12 22 15 17 23 11 23 13 23 TliltllllY'I •11111!t. Boston I, 1•111~ 0 Tt!-IJ :I, 01klll"ld 2 MlhYtUkM ], N•w York I Mln~e'IOt8 J, IC1n11J CllY t (1llltr11l1 4. (hl(lfO 0 Otttrolt 11 Cl•v1l11"1d. r1ln Wldnt'llll11'1 Ou,,et .661 .641 .595 .425 .425 .361 1 211 9 9 II !0"1t11n (!lr~t l-21 '' l1Utmtr1 (McN11tr f.-)!, " .... ' Or!tOit !(Oltmen 7-J) 11 CltWll<ld (G. ,.,,,.., l·l L n10111 Ntw YC'rir t~t~'~ t•J) t i MllQVltff il~I 2-•0, n!oM K1ns11 Cl!r tlifllllil•r 2·1) 11 MIMflOl1 (91VltYffl •ll. nl<fhl 01•l•nd !Hu,.,tt r 4·ll •t T1••1 f&olJ't'lln ,_,,, n!wrtt C~!CQO (!lradlt r 1•2) 11 Clllflrnll (Clllt. I-'), n!fltl TlttlnffY'I Ot!Mt ao.to~ 11 !l1!tlmor1, f'l lt hl O~nilt II c•-l•NI. nlthl Nfl"' Ytr~ •I Ml!wll\llff k111t1t CllY 11 MlnMIOlt DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA Strvlct 1...t Partt for All Imported C•rs Modern Body Shop fM All C1rs 646-9]0] Orange County's Largest and Most Modora To,..u and Vol"' n...Jer CIYllllllAS DllLIVlllY -·~llllft . . ' The schedule ; Karate Meet Set The Pavilion ot the Rising Sun at Buena Park's Japanese Village and Deer Park will host a karate tou rnament June 10. Box office opens at 7 o'clock ()n tht night of the event with the tournament following immediately thereafter. Eliminations are slated for 10 a.m.-1 p.m. . DEAN LEWIS 1972 TOYOTA CARINA WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING s7200 PH MONTH SM.70 Total Down -Sr2.00 Total Monthly Payment. a21s20 fflr Forty llght Mos. Def1rrod -SSISb.00/Cath -S27M.70 APR 11.76 en approved credit. 1972 VOLVO 142 SEDAN WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING s9900 PH MONTH 1117.4' Total Dowr1 -Oefen.I $605'7 M. ~..Ph ,,_Ice 54246.27 hKI. T' & L/ A?ft 1 S.J.I on .,,. cr-'lt l 1972 TOYOTA MK II STATION WAGON WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING sn300 ,... '7 MONTH • ing and .. k •he sta ·ng hio ior d. will ing .. PA er re- in• ... itll on ley n, in nd lar le I r • I t -I ., . Legion Baseball Roundup St""··t Your Ene;ines! Mesa Stars Get Honors Doug MacLean and Jon Marcbiorlatti ah.are Mustang of the Year honors at Costa San Clemenw Downs Two Foes ' Mesa High School follow ing a American Legion baseball Westminster is at Buena Park San .Clemente picked up a s~ial awards banq\)et honor· play resumes Saturday with (both at 2 ~. pair of wins, w h Ip pl n g ing Mesa lettermen. five Orange Coast area nines Westminster proved to be Newport, 5--0, Sonday, then Mac Le an 's major in ~tiOn following 1 8 5 1 the heaviest hitting team Sun-g I · • • tr' h h-•-•--1 d~ n-weekend's opening salvo. a ning an _, 1ump over ac 1evemenu un.: U ~ ru day and Monday as it piled up Santa Ana . ning a 4: 12.6 mile and 9:08.6· In the National League It'll two mllf, Jn track wh.ile be Tustin at San Clemente in a 21 runs in gaining a split. Fountain Valley also showed Marchior atti was an all-round 7:30 p.nt. clash while Newport P 1 ace n ti a u p e n de d firepower , but lost an 11·9 INDIANAPOLIS -Everybody recognizes the impact or the athlete, starring in football , meets host Garden Grove and Westminster, 14-13, ·Sunday, slugfest with host Saddleback Indianapolis 500 on the sport of auto racing, but few understand basketball and track. Fountain Valley is at Anaheim then Mission Viejo fell to Sunday. MIUIOll VMle 141 .. HIN:lr!t~lOfl, )b 4 l•1t1. lb , Htf\Cock, le 1 ~, .. n, lb • Tolbe,I, cl i II P•r9911d. p 1 RClf'\m.I!. p 2 ll lc~•raM)t', n RIV110lll1, If ichmldt. '' 'N, P•r•t..a, c J SwtlneY. 11 1 Whl!1, 1111 I By Deke Hou/gate Jo1111 JJ 11! r•I ' ' ' ! ! ii 0 I 1 I ~ ~ :1 . , ' O O OI ' . . ' . . • • • . ' ' the importance of contributions made behind the scenes by peo-John and Tom Olswang were Ruede, both 2 p.m. c<>ntests. \Vestmi nster ~1onday . 8-1. Newport also lost to La pie· like speedway superintendent Clarence Cagle. recipients of the physician·· American League activity Bo b Nodland's thret-run Qu inta ti.1onday as the hosts sc .... ~v t11R•"•• • M R This week , with next year's race 51 weeks away, Cagle goes athlete award, a scholarship involving area nines include ho m er 111as WesLminster's collected an 11·6 win. Anaheim M•~ .. on vi.ia 0,0 101 DOG-~ 1 a back to work on one of his favorite projects, an experimental presented by Don Julian and the ·Fullerton Angels at biggest blow of the two Schutte ripped visiting ~1lsslon 1.~ •. Sc~Y"• n1 no 10•-ll • o crash wall that he hopes will save lives at tracks all over the, _:_:R_::•l::ph::_.::F_;_rc_•nkl_:_:::_i":_· ______ M_i:_•:_•:_i:_•:_"::_____v_i_•_:i_• __ •_n_d _ _:g_am_es_. _________ v_;_,J:_·o_. _13_-_•-_________ l:_Se_e_LEGION, Pagr !01 world. 1· "I've been working on a new guard rail four times stronger than the metal guard rail they are recommending out on the highway," Cagle said. Race track builders and operators are pretty much restricted in tbelr technology to highway engineering . except for what a few men like Cagle are doing to improve their own tracks. "The highway people have only got so many dollars," ~gle said, "and they try to spr~ad this out and give as much protec- tion as the)' can. That's the only rea.!Oll I can give you they don't do more than they do. "But race people, we have to"dG our own. There 's no money allotted for thi s. There's no one who concentrates and lives with this like the people in racing." eagle's project is the te st of a new shaped concrete wall, round en top, crisscrossed within by a heavy gauge of steel rei~· forcement that plunges five feet deep in the earth. The test wi ll consist of three 100 mph runs at va rious angles from 25 to 40 degrees into the wall, two with 4,000 lb. stock cars and ene with a.n Indianapolis car . Speedway to Pay Costs Casie eltlmates that •u will cost $15.eot to $25,00CI, all of which will be paid by the 1pttdway despite the fact that stock can don't race here. "I'm doing It," be said, "11 • general project lo llelp ln racing. I feel 11 general project wUI also help bel'f; at the 1peed- way. When I ntfll it I've got something to ce to. I'm maybe an odd characte r, but I like to have somethin g in my llaDCI that J can al ways pull out and use when I need It." ---lMoli-g..ard raila. are-.1tttL.wbdber....oL.str.tet_..Q[..~ £adt-l--- doesn't like them for racing, and he hints they are not the best rest rai ning barrier1 for rreeway1 either. Particularly for open cockpit race carJ, tM lops of steel rails act "like a razor" when cras hing cars get up on lop or them, Cagle said. Highway engineers prebably co uld learn some t.bln1s about road 1afety from the racing fraternity, maybe 1101 about wall design er anythint specific, but by trying to emulate tile attl· tudeJ of racer• themselve1, Cagle believes. "I think we are cantinuously trying to correct and not wtll- inc to accept something that elves us trouble," H aaid. "Tllil Is race people. They're a very aggressive lf'O'Dp. • 1 "One year Ibey Ci>m t along and they dan 't do too well with a new car. But yo u can bet by the mkldle of the seaAGa they've upgraded this car to. wh ere It'll work. "We talk abaut lh:bt ca rs. and we ha ve • 1,JSl.pouad weight minimum llere. I tell you tkat every car welgb1 t,481 pounds. This again Is raclnc competence. We want a llUle more tllan we know we need." That 11 why Cagle, in his qotet way. doesn't accept tlte IC· colades for 1l1glng one of the safest 506-mllen in lllstory, but plunces Immediately into a costly experiment to Improve tll e trac k even more. Grable ltlalle Comebae!k After Injury You ofte n wonde r what it is like for a race driver to return to acti on after recoveri ng from a severe in jury. • • • • • DAILY "1LOT Jt Engineering Desitn - & Development Sm•ll Sy1t•m• & Equipm•n+ optic:•l. mec:h•nic:el ~ •l1c:tromechenicel !"t· •lectronic ... • Ormsby Cornell Corp. 1833 E11t 17th Stroot S1nt1 An1 17141 835-7215 . ' Some do qu ite well. like Mike Mosley, who led at Phoenix, Trenton and Indianapolis in his first championship races since returning to USAC competitio n after bei ng hurt here last y~ar. Some never return to active C<lmpetition , like Stirling MO!:ii. One who has made a comeback" and is not afraid to discuss the trials, pain and uncertainty i:ii Ron Grable, a top driver on the -aM Continental grand prix circuit. I ice. Last August he broke two leg:ii at Dinnybrooke. Minn., and spent two months in the hospital. He still li mps noticeably and will for some time. "In qualifying I was running quite slow." Grable said . "be- cause we had just made some changes and were evaluating them. Apparently I ran over something, either a rock or a piece of metal. and I cut a tire. I lost control and hit a dirt bank. "Since I began recuperation about the first of Cktober. I have been in therapy. I ride a bicycle a lot and do certain se- lect exercises from the doctor. lt's not so much the break as to strengthen the muscles that deteriorate while the leg is in the cast. "The right one was a lot more serious th.Iii the left. which lYas a simple break. I broke .the rij:!:ht heel. and I find it very difficult to push on the brake pedal." Suggested sale price at participating stations for fou r SheH Belte d Seventy Eigh t':. whitewall s. In sizes: C?B-1 3 (plus $1.90, fedeial excis e tax per tire)!an~; E?B-14 (plus $2.34, federal excise tax pe r tire)'.. - •' First Tln1e Bae!k In Rae!e Car Grable 1peaks frankly about the first lime be climbed back ln a race car. .. ~ "At flr1t J was very anxious," be said. "I was bypercrltlcat of myself , I was aware of things off the 1lde of the track, like dirt banks and walls and Ores and thin gs I wouldn't nor mally be aWaJ'f; 4'1f, "I drove the first time back in the fall. when I 1tlll had 1 cast on my rig ht leg. I drove a formul11 Ford that bel nnged kt my friend, ap al Vacaville. All by myself, nobody on the track or anything. "It was a real 1pooky lhinJ?;, until I 1ot my head more or te11 together. I've done 1ome ru nning all winter long In formal a Fords and other car1. but 1 wa1 very apprehensive going back to t4l mpetltkln. "I sUll think of thing5 out there like dirt banks and wa11s. f think, wow. ihl1 could happen kt me all over a~aln . I never thought about that before. J'm just slowly rettinr It back ~ aether ag ain, where I'm not so aware of things off the track. Rae!ing'• Oe!C!upnllonal Ha:rard "You have to face the fact that in racing cars, an. occuea· tlonal hazard is going around and bashing into thi ngs. I couldn't possibly see Jetting It end my career. l'pl not physically Im- paired .. I can still do everything I could do before." Grable drove his first race at Laguna Seca in early May, but he traveled more than 12,000 miles in an unsuccessful debut earlier this year. Rustlerettes Ousted From Tourney, 2-1 Pasadena City C o I 1 e g e nudged Galden West out of a consolation finals victory in the Southern California junior college women's so rt b a I I chamPlonships at Ml. San Antonio College last weekend . The Rustlerettes lost the game, 2·1. in the bottom of the last inning as Pasadena scored a final run on a fielding error by Gold<n We.•I. The Joss putJ Golden West. fourth among junior college women's teams in Southern California. The team , coached by Judi Garman, wound up 5-3 in league play and 94 for the season. 0.llM w .. 1 Ill It) ft1 •MeN CC lllJ'l't. lb '"_,."'· " C1111wn, e LtM!t!'I, .., T"*•'-'· ilb ltClllOr. ti '''"'" ' e 1 • ' 1 ' ' i t 1 I , .. ' 3 ••• J t I 0 1 I I I J I I I Check your Shell dealer for sale prices on-other tires, too. Participating Shell deale rs are stocked -up ... and ready to deal! The $99 SPECIAL is just one example of the great buys you can make . But hurry! This sale ends June 30; 1972. Size Suggested Sale Price • Plus Federal Excise Tax for 4 Tire s for 4 Tires C78-13 $ 99 $ 7.60 E 78-14 $ 99 $ 9.36 F 78-14 $123 $10.08 TIRES G78-14 $1 34 $10 .76 H78-14 $147 $11 .72 F 78-15 $125 $10.32 G78-15 $138 $11 .12 H78-15 . $150 $12.04 -. •• Shorlllop Kath_y Stephe., ran home on 1 flit by Mary AM Conway In the fifth Inning for lltt lluBtlerett,., only nm. Mr,.,., .. Con. rf Ch"'· cl tottll ,; ; : : *Prices may vary at participatin g stations . ' kMI., ,...... ., •t '°"!II'™ a ot1 1-1 I 1 . 00~ W•ll 000 010 t-1 ' t '-------------------------------,--------------.----------------------•\ r .• ,:. ,_, • NILV l'lLOT LEGION • • • 10.lllMd r .... Pqe 111 (<I ...,,... lt l .. ' • ... < ..... ~ • • ' I A °"""""'-d • I I • ,.~-·" • I • I .-.. .. • ' • ' "''t':""'· .. • I • • ,.,, 111 • I I I Gt,...., It ' • ' ' •·l'::"' .. • ' I • ' ...... ' I • • • ''UliMll ........ • • • • -..... ult. rl • • • • Tot1!1 " • • • fur. .,, l••lllti I M I ·-· ., .. ..,._,,. l 1 Qui"'• 1jt JOI OD -11 10 3 w ........ 1111 Srt4111Y• 11-M Wfril!llev, .. GrtNl'll, cf alMfl, II H6111t!WI. lM'f tltl ... Y, .... . ••ttw-. 111 ._ .. f:"'"'"''· rl "''"· c yj-·· e1 .. ,,, " •••• .... 1 .. 111, • T"tll .. , .. ~ I 1 t 1 2 , • 0 2 fl 0 0 2 • 0 • • 2 3 t J 0 0 0 t 1 1 • I 1 0 fl 2 2 l I • ' ' 1 I I I fl 4 t I t I 0 1 2 J 1 2 ' • • • • q ,, 11 12 .... (W IMI• IN. '''"""'*' Jell Idle 0.0 _,, 11 • IUl'lttt no toi OOll 1-14 ' I Mll .. A11 \'tlln lf l .. ' y rfll J ..... _. .... Jb ' • ' I fc1C1rev. 11 • • ' • ~IJl,N ' ' • I I(.,.,,.,., • • • ' ' °°""' .... ' ' ' ' :£:"'· .. • • • ' I • • • Wr../it ·~ ' • • • .... ,,,..,,Ill ' • ' • '''"'"' c ' I • • .... ._,., ' • ' • ~II.ill ' I ' • II ' ' I • Ttt..,, ..... ,., ' • ' • Gl.lfftl'I, ,., I • • ' N'°""''' llll I • ' ' Tolt 1t ~ • ' • w......,,c,, .. ' , ... (lt rlt ... • • • ' Gtl"dff, II ' • ' • l t111brt. "' • • • • KUINilkl · c • • • • Y11t, lb ' • • • G.,mt 11. cl • • I • .. ""'"" Ill ' rl ' • • • ~.,, .. ~ ,. ' • • • Lucic. • ' • • • l trodJlefl, • ' • • • TOlt ll " • ' • ·-· .............. • " I .... (;ttmlfltl ... .. ..,_, l • ........... , ... ......... I ' Pancake Feed A pancake bre.akfast I& slated for Saturday morning at Laguna Beach H i g h School's cafeteri1 with pro- c~s ticketed for the Artists' athletic program . AU the cal ories one can pos!ibly c o n 1 u m e are available for t i under the auspjces ot the LaJYna Beach HJgh boosters club. C) Tbe event netted '900 for the athletic program last year. It starts at 3 and will last through 11 :30 a.m. Two Orallit ,Cout area -O.seball players gleaned flr1t team All-Orange L e a g u e honors 11 selected by the loop's coaches . Laguna Beach's Bob Fee was a first team choice at first baSe ~whJle Univen1ty·•1 Rick Pereiud was named to the starting unit at utility. All-Oraqe x. .. 111• Flnt Team Deep Sea Fish Report DANA WMAR,-U "11i.r1; )1 t1Uco btu. 1 11111but.' "'•tke•tl. SAN DllOO IMu11lclN I Pl9'l-1N 1111l1r1; ti Ytllowl1ll, JOI blrfl tUo$1, » ..... Ill lMNP· 2•1 t.ttlco blu . 1'• ""''~ IM,I RIAL alACH-21 1ntltr1. ' N rr1tud1. n bonHo, '1 11:110 bltl. s y1llDW11U. 1 hallbul. lb "'1<k1r1I. NIW,ORT (Da .... r•1 l.K-ar!-lS a,..1..,1: \IJO rl)(-eod. •1 b1u. 11 "'ICk~rPI. IArt'1 LIMl11•l-lt 1111ltrs: 26 1111C1 IMou. 1 b!1t• te1N11, 1l rock cOI!. 1 11111t1ut, ! "'•c.IC••rl SAN "liDltO lltnd SI. L1fllll111)-4 1119l1r1; 1 ,....n, 111 bl11. ' berr1cuo.. 2 YPllowt1ll. 1511 ttllCo btU. (Siii "l'llrt S"'111•111ntl-M t'IOltr1: t 'l'tllew!t ll. ' twotr1cuda. 300 c11>co Nn. ' ll•!lbul, 4.! •oclr CN! •IDONDO--.flt 1111l1r1: I y1l!OW11!t, .H tll~o blU• 1611 1111tk1r1I, 3711 rock cod. ,,,..._.,, ,.,,,.,.: t! m1tktr1I. '-JO r&Cll cod. LONG llACM fltlmtlll "ltrl-H 1111l@r1 : U Clll<O bt tt, I llt llbul. 3!0 NXlr "'9. ltr ..... IJ l flfltrl : 1' Miid b1$1 . 1111nt1u1, ID "'•ckertl !"1-lrrt L•l!dlllt)-31 111111ra: 1tl calico be1i. J lllt!bul. 51.lL lllC~ 1111ltr1: lJa rock cOI!, I 1111ibut, 15 beu, 2 c.,,.. cod. 11,..._n '"'"r1:IO blrr1cud1, 22 k1IP btu, "° 11111out. Pot. Player School Yr: P-Peterson, Sonora Jr. P-llertsen, Valencia Sr . C-Ballus , Sonora Jr. 18-Fee, Laguna Sr . 28-Fieldlng, Sonora Sr . 38-Marmalejo, Valencia Sr. SS-M1dau, El Dorado Sr. OF-rucks, Valencia Jr. OF -Burke. Sonora So. OF-Hart, Sonora So. OF-Peralta, V1lencla Jr. U-Peregud , University Sr. Player or the year Peterson, Sonora Second Team P-Fraz.ier, Sonora Jr. P-Leyton, Brea Jr. P-Farra, El Dorado Sr. C-MacDonald, Brea Sr . IB-Mercer, Slddleback Sr. 28-Caplan, El Dorado Sr. 38--Richard, Brea Jr. SS--Gra y. Sonora Jr. OF-Crow, Brea Jr . OF-Patterson, University Sr. OF-Mathiesen. El Dorado Sr. U-Gillespie, Laguna Sr . '" ' ,,1. [, .. ,,." " ~ i• ~·· ' '. ,. CONTRACTING & \UH CONTRACTING TRAINING ' ' ' '' .,., Phon•· '"' f,,.,. lold•·• • ANTHONY ICHOOLS HA.1101 CINTll UOO Hl l'Mr Ct11t9r Ctt11 Mttt, can1t,,.r1 .... (714• t79·2JIJ 171, I. ll'Mkfl11nit fl, A11allelm, Clf. ,_. "· f714) 776·UOO 1971 WINNERS OF 5 DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIPS N1wpoft·M-Jr. Al·"-1~ Poothl AueclotlM FOOTBALL SIGN-UPS TONIGHT REGISTRATION FOR THE 1972 NEWPORT·MESA JR. ALL AMERICAN FOOTBALL SEASON Will ' BE HELO T 0N16 HT, MAY 31st, AT 7 :00 P .M. Ill TWO HARBOR AREA LOCATIONS. R11b tntlool 11 open t. all loeyo ... I lo 13. l'or lloys 111 tho Cotto Mou ....i lttoncl1 Hlth School Dla- trlcll, r..Wrotlon wlll loo holtl 'If tho Moudo t , DIYI• Mldtll1 54h.i, 1050 Arll ...... A.,._, c..t1 Miao . a.p ...wi,. In tho N~ NI Mor Hlth School Dl1trlct wlll N1l1tar ot Ne•pert Htrbor High School . Irvine •-loeyo rnoy ,..111er If elthtr i.c.ti.... Thi"-IMIM In S wolaht tllvlllon1 camprl...i el l>oyo. .... I lo 13 Clo ef A""'°' 11 ....i ...... l"I ...._ SS ond 121 ....................... •llllt ether~ c-ty , ...... e CMllPI e CONDORS e CARDINALS e CHARGIRS e COIU'MANDOI e COUGARS e COL'TS e COYOTIS e COllOMAS e COWIOYS e· CORSAIRS e CAIALLOS e COMMANCHIS Rancho Title to Melanson · Marina Gals 'Win Awards • a large group o1 SC alumni in the 1 o'clock shotgun start. Nelt big club event is the 18th annual Gifford H. Teeple member-member tournament on June 10-11. It 11 a 36-bole, be1ter ball or partner event with handicap spread max· imum at eight. On June 18, Falher'5 Day. a acolch ball Pinehurst tourna- ment will be held with no han· dicaps required for the father- aon or father-daughter com- bos. Mission Viejo A three-way tie resulted for first place in the eclectic tournament at Mission Viejo County Club over the weekend. Jim Lewter, Chuck Osborne and Jude Poynter alt finished with 62 foll()Wed by Ron Brady and Gordon Rinehart with 63. Jn an etletlic tournament, players play two rounds, tak· Pro Grid Star Speaks Our fiber glass tire closeout guarantees you a great price . Now1996 plus 1.90 fed. tax artd old tire . C78·13 (rep\aces 700-13) bl1clM'1 l1 tubeless. Orig. ?4.95. El Tlgre 11 ROlyester cord fiber gla11 belted tire. Great traction on ell road 1urf1ce1. 8leckw1ll tube'-•• Tlr• 1lz• Ortg. Fed. t11 Now F78-14 (775-14) 30.95 2.52 24.76 078-1 4 (825-14) 32.95 269 26.36 560-15 26.95 1.59 21.58 G78 -15 f82S-15) 33.95 2.78 27.11 H78-15 (855·15) 35.95 3.01 21.71 AboYe llru with whltenl11, only 2.40 mo,. per Ure. Wtthout ~n. •ckl 92 more 11•' ltre. ptua ,., ••· Whll.wall lubelffl Tire 1iz1 C78-14 (695--14) E78-14 (735-14) H78-1 4 (865-14) J78-14 (1~85-14) 900-15 Orig. 2995 31 .95 37.95 39.95 40.95 Ftd.tn Now 2.10 23.96 2.34 25.56 2.93 30.36 3.04 31 .tS 2.90 32.H Sue Wllliam1, a swlnuner and dlver ol Marino Hlg~ School was honored at the ac•l's aMual GAA awards banquet at Knott's Steak House Tuesday night. Miss Williams, who aleo ts involved in several .. team sports, was a:lven the hJ1h point award based on f()ur years of parUclpatlon In Iha athletic association. 5 YEAR/50,000 MILE Wauuanty At No E xtrA Charge P~d, & l•~" oc , ' • Po"'" f ,. • And 36 months with a great tire . ........ 11-......... , ........ ,""'....__ ,..,_......,..... 0-• .... Your Foremo11 tire proltctlOl'I gtlel'antee c°"9f'I ell Forf'fl'IOl1 Dff~ tlrn ft•oeol our !l(l9C11! t ppliUtion t1rM with teptr1tegu1rtnl'"l -Olit'!tt ell road l'lal1rd'or de!ICI leilutat. You "• ptOtlctl'd tor IN.,.,.,, 1t1ted monlhf; of QU1••nt11. If )"OU!' tlf'l lllg during .... QUll'tnlN PWIOO. ,.lum it to U1' 11\d -wiH. 11 01.1t ootiOn. ,..,., you<'~. 01 rnfllkl en 1llowt l'Ct ~sed on tlleorigif'ill pUrel\aM Pl'ICI . ••cludil\Q 1pplictl)lt ftcltrt l ElCiM Tb , lowwd !tie DUl'C ....... of. -ltrl. WI Wiii •llow l!JO'li> of the Otlo-' OU!'ctltM l'l'ICt . .,.ch.ld""Q •oohceblt Fldt•l1 E•c1H T ••. Ounl\Q tl'le IOO'llt 11loweroc. l)ill'iOCI. l'Mrufl1t<. -will 11low SO'lio or 25111.ot 11'19 oOgllioll ourc11 .. f!llel. 11c1Udil\Q epplicebl• f91Mrel E•c•H T11, t<wr•rd ttw1purcNMol1 ,,.., ,,,.. !See ct1111 O.low) Fem:r11 E•c111 T1• ldrutlfTltnl t llowW'OOl WIH be rn•M on tile b1111 ol IN percent ol the original treed ,_ning. ,.._,., ....... ,g_lfl .. IClwt-..... '1HowY-Qua..MMWCNtte:. ·---__ ,._ -::s::---·-·--........ ,_ ...... _ IOOllll. .. 1•11'10e,....._. 1·11WIM .,......., ____ ·~·· .. -·---.. .2$-:N_.. T,_. Liit '""9c ..... W.bulld inlo _,,, f0'9mCll lire N11 trKllOl'I ~. Thily t.gntl wt.en VOJf '"' sf'lolrid M '90!told. "'f(Jl.tr l•re _,.OU! (II~ forineotTKt t lignlflel\t) -~ l'fll k! WI el~ t.ecl Ofl ltieorigif\ll 91Urch-D!'ICI . llChJdH"Q t ppllelbll Fldert l E.w:ci" Tu .10wtrd the ourche11 ol •,_lift' W. '#111 lllow113~ IN firlt 1'1111or111 during1111MConcl1\111 of It'll tletld montt· .. ol QU1111n!H. Ftcltrel E1c1M Tu~""""""' 1lk!W1rtee Mii bit rnldt Of! (1)1 bellt of IN Pt"'Cent ol l!'le origin1! I reed 1111'1'\t inrng. T1!1t guarlntN 11 "°' traMllnlblt.11 •t ~ lor om.trt 01111 19f1 cars or P91911"99' ltatton wagons. 7ts· Whffl alignment. Htrt't what tft do: Complete front end check. 1d1ust torsion bar height. adjust ca'stor and camber. center steering wheel position, adjust toe-in and roa test. 111 Most Cl rs AFIX11 helmet. Hi gh Impact construe· tlon. Z-90. t approved. 12.tt Pei irie)'9 he9derl. For smooth e•Nust flow. Prevents back-pres.sure build -up. Heavy duty steel. Complete witt'I gaskets 1nd mounting hardwa,., For '55 to ·57 Chevys. • Automatic Transmlaslon Service 14 88• 21 88 (With FHt•r> Here Is what we do: 1. Road Test Car 2. Remo ve P81"1 and Inspect 3. Check Linkage '·€lean Screen or Replace Filte r 5. Gheck Vacuum Modulato r 6. ReplKe New Pan Gaska! 1, Add Requi red Fluid '8. Road Test Car Again 2~R" AF!X steel dish wheels with lug nuts and dust cover. High!Y polished, chrome plat~ heavy dutysteef resist! pitting. 15"x6" rim •lzt. J'CPenney Special .1888 plus 2.•• ted. tax 670-tS/6 blackwan tube type. Cargomastere LT. The brawny nylon cord small truck tire. A l ine value tor pick-ups, panels, and vans. Ttre1tz1 700-15/6 650-16/6 7~1616 7~1618 lj>oclal Fod.tn -2.84 21.11 2.61 21.11 3.00 21.11 3.69 29.11 Shop Sunday noon t 5 P .M. at the following Auto Cen~ers . -NEWPORT BEACH, Fashion bloncl. \ HUNTINGTON IEACH, Huntington Center. 1 I ... • s ds er Hia~ t the ards Steak Is le.am hlJh four !ht LIVEL WINNER -Roy Cundifi's Cal-27 Finale from Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club, overall winner of recent Little Whitney Series, capped that victory by· winning Half Ton Class in San Diego Yacht Club's level racing regatta for San Diego . Cup. Cal· 21 was designed by Bill Lapworth and built by Jen· sen Marine of Costa .Mesa. Skippers Tooby, . . ' . Brom"ley Triumph -_!fwo.-Harbor-Area·-skippel"! Vt'ere tro phy v.·inne rs in San Diego Yacht Club's San Diego Cup Regatta for level class racing over the Memorial Day weekend. It was the first major level class competition on the West Coast and drew 54 boats with skippers from such areas as San Francisco, Oakland and Seattle. Most of the boots winning trophies were from local designers and/or builders. Local skippers in the trophy circle wert John Bromley Jr. of Bahia COrinthian Yacht Club in the PT-30 Luc ky Chance. and George Tooby of Newport Harbor Yacht Club in the Ranger 33 American Jane. Lucky Chance was second in . the three-quarter ton category and the American Jane was third in the one-ton class. Jn level racing, yachts within a narrow rating range race on a boat-for-boat basis without regard to handicap or time allowance. Following are ihe trophy winners in each category : QUARTER-TON -( I ) 1'-1agic (San Juan--24), Bob Clark, Seattle YC ; (2) Two Bits (Ca\-T-4 ) W. M. Carter, Metropolitan Oakland YC : (S) Story (Cal-T-4.) Harr Is Hartman, MBYC. Sabot Title HALF TON -(I) Finale (Cal-21 ) Roy Cundiff, CBYC; (2 ) Quicksilver (Cal·21) Mor· rjs Landon, SDYC; (3) So Long (Ranger-26 ), Gary Swenson, Anacapa YC. THREE-QUARTER TON - (I) Sun Maid (Chance-30) Gene Solen & Tom Tunberg, NBDRA; 12) Lucky Chance (P'l'·JO ) John Bromley Jr., BCYC ; (3) Auspic i ous CMorgan-atr' Rob Hatcher, SWYC. ONE TON (1) Bushwacker (Ranger-33} Har- ry Smith, PMYC; . (2) Marla (Ericson-35) Tom Blackaller, St. FYC; (S) America Jane (Ranger-33) George Tooby, MlYC. Allione Sweeps Regatta Honors tfnt Allione or Lido Isle Screaming Yellow, Cr a I g '\':-'.:'.°'t Club won the senior ~ Barto, LtYC . r -'··t fleet champiomhlp in RHODES-33 -(1) Maru1a, Balboa Yacht Club's Memorial Bob Kettenholen, BYC: (2) Day Regatta. Mistress, Linda Taylor, BY~. The series also served as the RHO~ES-IB -(l ) COnfiict, • t -"-' ti I 'tbe na Bob Wtegand, SSSC. ·~ee ~'""" on or • SOLING-(!) Gold Digger, lional ch~mpkmshlp for the Roger Welsh. l\'HYC; (2) class. . Jenso, Mike Hirsh, BYC. Foll~wing are trophy win-SHIELDS-(l) Theresa, Bob nen 1n other classes in the Searles, BYC; (2) Patience, Memorial Day Regatta: Pau1 Yost, NHYC;' ( 3) PHRF-(1) Niki 11, John Prudenc<, Larry Baum, BYC. Kinkel, VYC; Bandit, Corey !NTERNATIONAL-14 :r Ill Myer, BYC. Fox, Tim Murlson, VYc ; (2) ~!ORF -(1 ) Sail IA: Vie, Orange Crate, Charles Slack, Wold & Dubose, VYC. .;P~V_;S;A;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"\I EX C ALIBUR-(1) Com-,l motion, B o b Alecumbrae, NHYC; t2) Husky. Fi.int smith. BYC; (3 ) Syn Sy1, Howard Stevens, VYC. TliJSTLE:-Wlld Wind, Wiii Templeton, BCYC; (2) Lively Lady, John Brown, CBYC. UKE SAILING? DISLll l -tli p ,.,.1. hith 111· t•r••t r•t•1, t•••1, 4•pr•tl•tio11, !11uira11,•1 Pllnl -•• ,.,, •• 11ili111. 110 Mai1t•11•n'• at 11 fr1ectio11 of tho to1t of owno rd1ip7 TIY OUI CLUJ PLAN MERCURY-(!) Blue Mist, Roger Roessler, SBYC; 12) Duet, Lloyd Greeno , CBYC ; (I) Th< Spider, Park Otnsmore, CBYC. Cal 25'1 LUDEftS.11-(t) K 11 de t , •low• Ben Hromadka, LYC; 121 Stlbul, BW Long, MlYC; (3) '1400 CAt'rP1w, lteitff'"Dliiimore, BYC. SANTANA-22 -(I) Count· -· Lionel Booth. sssc. BOB!E CAT-11 -(1) Boaling Now,...i Slillftl c!W MM"' 0,-... Mez,..t M. Abo Page 8 11 '--1-14 .... 1'7-s-11_00-~ I DAILY PILOT :!I New Racing -Sloop Built Costa Mesa ·{ • Ill BY AUION LOClillEY ...., ""' ...... ..... Rangtr y ocbts or Coata Mtsa bas announced pro- duction of a ~ :t7·foot sloop designed especially for One Ton competition in the in- creaalng popular level racing concept The boat was designed by Gary Mull specifically as a racing machine but with a number of comfort and con- venience amenities that would a p p e a I to the cruising yachtsman . The hull design incorporates medium displacement , fine ends and a :slighlly greater than normal beam to achleve a Jong waterline and 1 large sail plan with One Ton llmita- tlons. Buster Hammond , general manager of Ranger Yachts, says the tall sloop is struc- tu~ for good wind\vard performance because of a high aspect ratio which affords large heads'ls and spinnakers. but promises good off-the-wind performance. The ••bubble deck" gives the boat a low, clean profil e. Hammond said the design con- siderations for this feature were to oiler fuJI head room Forward are two hanging The Ranaer One Ton i1 tht mtnt 15,200; ballaat lead 7,300 below and the effect of a nush lockers. 1 sideboy w I t h result ol tan k tull et St t \'t'ns and snll area m ft. : deck tor sail Noodling. dr d M.,.. Institute ~ was dtslgned for The boat ls powered b1: 1 awers an • large enclo~ competitive pe.rforinanL-e. Un iversal Aton1 Four. ,Yet The layout below decks Is head. The forepeak has betn Vltn.I statistics art: l..ength cnJ)lclty Is 25 gallom and traditional in approach for glvt'n over to the: Sil.ii in· overall 37 feet. dl•slgned watt r u gallons. : those who wish to go to sea ventory with aluminum pipe waterline 28 ft. 4 in.: benm 11 Estimated rating under tht in a boat designed for com-berth and sail ratk! for ln·port ft . 4 In.: draft fi ft.; dis plact>· JOit ~1ark Ill ru le Is 27.5 feiL fortable life aboard under sa il· sleeptng accommodations. .----'------'-----------~- ing conditions. Unusual features include the The main cabin ft r t <' man-overboard pole stowage features two pilot berths with in tubes ln the transom and 1 settees inboard. chart 1able deep bin just forward of the and a large area for naviga-transom for stov,.age of two tiona l instrun1ents, a "quren horseshoe life rings. This sized'' quarter berth 1·with keeps emergency ge a r bundling board for use at sea I positively stowed and pro- a port side galley and quarter tected yet ava ilable for in1n1 e- Nearly Everyone Liste11s to Landers I ' berth. iiiiiiidiiaii1i'i"'iei.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiijiijjiiiijiijiijiijiijiijiij~iijiijiijiijiiji SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY! Se habla Espanol WESTMINSTER SANTA ANA FULLERTON 15221 IWll llJI ..... S9J.3544 MONDAY 'lltRU FRIDAY •• l:OO .t.M.· 9 P.M. SATURDAY ............. 8:00 A.M.· 6 P.M. SUNDAY .......... : ...... t:OO A.M. • 4 P .M. - •·1:·1 .. , . ' . .'' ' ' I .,. 1 ••• ~ ~~1···:· ' ' '''l•.l:'J ,' j I' 120 E. FllST ST. AT CYl'l8S • PllOllE 547·74n 1530 S. llARBOR BlVD. •PHONE 870-l700 MONDAY lliRU FRIDAY •• l:OO A.11.•9 P.M. MONDAY Tl1RU FRIDAY •• 8:00 A.M •• 9 P.M. SATURDAY •••••••••••• 1.1>0 A.M.• I P.M. SATURDAY ••••••••••• , 8:00 A.M •• 6 P.M. SUNDAY •••••••••••••• 9:00A.M. ·4 P.M. SUNDAY •••••••••••• I . 9:00 A.M •• " P.M. 94 775 /670x15 MACIC WltO Tnl Pluo h</, foe. l•Jt•fll,,1 -·· ~-....... ~·· -... -, .. ,.-..,,, 1244 ••• ''l't.t"l3" t.•• ··~ 11 t.•• 'll!lt" Hu I.I . U ·~ J_lr •OAOHAZMOOUA&AHTR• THf Pl,. iOYS GUAIAMTlf COlMln.'TltES fOt: A SPKI· r 1tD NUMl(l or MONTHS AOAIMST All tOAD HAU.RDS IN NO!UUJ. PA.ISlNGf:l CAI U$f, OAMAOlD Jilt WUl M t l,lACIOWITH PIO·~ATED MONTHLY ADJUSTMfNT Ot>.lOI IA.llD OH 11001.AI JllUNG Plitt Al TIMI Of J'Ul(KAS[. MADI wmc mo• IAYOH COlD • NO MT sromHO Ol - 40 MONTH GUARANTEE• OLD TI FREE $6.98WHUL AUGllMENT wnM PUKHAN. Of rwo oa MOU PAlllNOll fltll (MOit AMWC&H CMS) BIG SA~INGS ON TIRES FOR VW's TOYOTA'S, MG'S, OP£LS AND MANT OTH• fOlllGN CAU 4 PLY NYLON CORD TVllLUI IU.CXWM.11 110 THUMP TIRES 4PlYIYllACOl"UYDICOU COlllll ' -"" l ·. ·• ' ~ ' l : ' ' '· ~ ' • ' l ' • • • I • • • • ' • • • • • • • • . • • • ! I • • • -! . . . . . U DAILY PILOT Access to Som.e Beaches Defeated ALL·DAY CLASSES HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS SACRAMENTO (AP I - 'lbe Alltlllbly hu killed a blll that would have granled the ~ • public the right to recreational : : use .ol certain private land receiving open apace tax ;.. breaks. • The lower house voted 34-29 4 on the meuure -seven abort of the tally needed for passage . -after lengthy debate over whether the measure would ' b u r t landownen prtltlltly benefiting under the 1915 Wllllamron Act. THE ACJ', ITS proponents II)' was lntended to preserve open apace lands in the state by giving proptrty ownua a tax break in e1change for their assurance they would not sell their land to developen. Tho bill, by Democratic AJ5emblyman John Dunlap ol Napa, would b a v e allowed county suptrVbora to rt.quire landowners receiving auch a tu cut to open 10me of their land for public recreation purpou, such as a traJI to the beach. "When the board signed a Wllllam!On Act contract wllh a landowner, it could require the landowner to make some part of his land available for pubUc recrealion-flahing, a hiking trail, whatever,'' Dunlap uplalned in an inter· view. T H E BOARD COULDN'T set any conditlon.1 other than tho3e relating to p u b I i c recre.atlon, Dunlap added, al'Ki landowner would be relm· bursed If the public damaeed Better-than-evpr buys on finest organic vitamins and fo_ods 76,,. PROTEIN POWDER r~!=~~~=~~:: .. andnRmclebuilding. s319 Low In fat and carbohydrates, stirs easll)I and comes In vacuum packed can with reoealable plasUc lop. Pure natural $7 95 c;a; '01nochaflavor, Compval/WI Valae • DAILY VITE MULTI-VITAMINS 349 60 t1blell COntalnsVltaml119A,B-1,k,U,B·12,C,0,Eplusmany $ . necessaryminer81& compare our remarkably low, low price. ~va1ae$6.95 A $15.00 Value-buy both for only Desiccated Liver with B-12 100 tablets Anex.cellentsourceof11al111lllpt'Dlllln end quick energy. CollipalllllN v-. $1AS Lecithln 19 gr.-100 capaulel Extraclad1to111nulrlent«ll10Ybeanl. High In polyunaatural8s. Co111pm11N Va/W $1.85 Vitamin C 300 Mg.-100 tablets Orangellavolacl,chftablehlghpotency Vitamin C tablets. Compa1111f1 ValH $2.95 Vitamin B-12 250 mcg.-60 tablell TakeadYlnlageolourlow prlceon this e~rgy giving vitamin. Compel'lllN Va/uo $2AS Pantothenic Acid 100 tablall A great help In aaslmllatlng proteins tor Increased body stamina. COmpant our price and save. Compant/ra Va/1111 $2.10 Natural Vitamin E cl-alpha tocopharol 200 1.u.-100 cap1111es Hlghpotency,11neatqua111yna1ura1 . Vitamin E capsules at a remarkably low price. Cotn,,.mlN Vllllll $5.60 99· as~ 119 199 199 119 Naluraf Brewer's Yeut plus Iron 7Y.o gr. Yaut.1.88mg, llon 1DOllblela complele prolelna, B vllallllns ,,. Aemarl<able p!Cduct, rich In 59 Granola C3 1 lb. Comeslnthreefl8YOIO,plaln, 0 cinnamon&cnmchyc:umnt- Serveellhorhotorcold. · 9 end minerals. Y COmparlfln Valllll $1.20 Cotn~Ura Va/W 59c Dr. Bronner Com & Sesame Chips &oz. 'Ille load~illHttltr!-~ f or kids of all ages. Tangerine Shampoo 11oz.c:onconll'llle 9& A blo-degiadable,. pmtelnlzod ohampoo ldeel for ComJ1111Ure V•lllll 45c au types of hair, compar1Ura Va/1111 $1.98 Tiger's Milk Cookies . "Let's Cook It Right" 99 ~~.fi~ous anoektreatforyoung ·550 l>JAdallaDIYIS 0 end old load ed with natural 500 AdetMcloul nulrlenl·pockod nu~lents. recipes. Colllpanlfra Valve 69c ,-Compmln Value $1.50. so;,;;.,.,..""""' ___ ...,11,.u.1,za.c.a.a. mz. -lbn,10...,,lotp& ~IDL11.ID7p& ~==2212So.llllllor ~ COllA IUA :IOl8 lri8tiOI ... --· .. __ ... ,,;...iii' __ _,_ .. ) AOl¥11iM ., ... S.S.« ... ,. , ..... ,. Kinderpten lflru 8th Grade •T..Ull(tU 41'swllll P~Olks • Dttr·tHloor las Smlco • lllflrt •d Afllt SclloDI Cart • Rusntlllt Tllltlt1 IN '0UNTAIN \/Alll!'I' 1"1i 8f'OllllthurU SfrHI (714) 962-3312 K•p your chlklrwi tn tood f\MWL AW. obout our Oll'f ~ and Summer &hoof. Try Saturday~s News Quiz JUNI 11t, 2•11, aN • THUU,,. fll,. SAT. Ya•'N l•fe W/1111 Ya• l•va At K 111art La:.!'ct:~d Discounts ~· Io 1 •• I-PT. INSECTICIDE ~:.;r 217 Control• inoect pesll through trlplo syoto-1~ adion. Ono ap· . Pllcatlon lasts 6 wee.a. !·Pint. -1 Patli Hom lltt lnl~llt ti c, • ...,, ONE GALLON PLANT .SALE 1oars 77c Only I Choose from Golclen Arborvile, Prilit or Boxwood. Use your Kmart credit card. · flVE GALLON PLANT SAlE -----·-----~ 297 Drogona Fan King Palms. Beautify. youryard atthls price, 16'! RfDWOOD TUB 3Dqr 2 $5 Only I POI ldoal redwood plain plantor for house or patio. Get several at this low, low price. · Klllll'f LIQUID FERTILIZER 1G1llon aac 3Dayr QuaHty 10·5·5 formula with liq· uid fish base. largo 1 gal. plastic bottle for easier carrying • • • . ROSE, FLOWER CARE 3D.,rO•frl 5POUNDCAN . 88 ,.,. p1oot1 •"' inh 1..i.1 ... 1...... ' ......... l)'9t1•1tk octf-. Appllcailon -•-b. 5 IIo,. £ • Crickets Recalled For Defect DETROIT (AP) -Chry1Jer C.Orp. announced it is recalling all subcompact PI y mo u th Cricket! S<lld in the United States since the model was ifl.. troduced in January 1971. The recall affects ap- pro1lmately 42,000 of the cars, which are built in Great Brit· aln by Chrysler U.K. Ltd . A C1Jrysler apokesman said cwners of the cars are being asked to take them to dealers for modification of the steer- ilC gear a.ssernbly. Chrysler Hid field reporla indicate that under 3evere conditions, !Uch u hitting a deep chuckhole wtth the brakes on, could cause the steering rack to bend , resultlng in ex- ceptionally high steering er- !ort. The spokesman said Chrysler has received 10 -----~ot-ratluus;-une--of which may have resulted in an accident although no personaJ 1Djuries y,•ere reported. The Cricket, !Old b y Plymouth dealers in the Unlted States, is similar to the Hillman Avenger sold in Brit- ain and Europe. But Chrysler aaid only North American versions of the car are ef· lect.d by the recall. • Area Firm Sales Up Plant Industries Inc. of Anaheim i.nnou need con- IOlldated results of operations tor the first quarter ended March 31. ren~ting increases In sales, income and earnings ptr share over the first quarter of 1971. Net income from operations for the current period Ur c:rea!led by 46 percent to '381.000 from 1127,000 In the eomparable year ago period, on a salt• increase of 12 per. rent to •tt,791 ,000 from 110,311,000. ltfoney'• Worth Look to Careers In Oceanography By SYLVIA PORTER With the summer swimming seaaon almOdlt upon those of ua who live in New York City, I cannot h e I p rtmembering when ..• wben as a YOUl'llSltr, l .,.·ent ocean-swirllMing .at any one of dozem of nearby beaches ..• when New Yorkers were the envy o[ "Middletown U.S.A." because an easy 5c subway ride would take us to the ocean for a swim ... when almost .u cheap a tcain ride would take us to the magnili· cent beaches af New Jersey, Long Island or Connecticut. •• Now, though, we wouldn't even dare to swim in wtiat has been dubbed "the world's big- gest sewer," Now we cannot duck the fact that larRe por· tions of our oceans are so bad- ly polluted they no longer can ·• ~ :1 sustain life, Now we must not ig- nore the warnings of auch re- nowned tx· p\orers as Jacques Cousteau and ioo•T•• Dr. Thor Heyerdahl that unles.s the OCf;an pollution process is halted, all life on earth is in (or marine' biology ): Study of plant and animal life from plankton to dolphins. PHYSlCALoceano&rapby (or geophysics): Study or phy1tcel properties of the ocean, such as Its temperatutt, dens ity, ability to transmit llgbt and sound, currents, the ocean vs. the atmosphere. GEOLOGICAL oceanogra- phy: Study or the com- J*ltlon of • n d chemical reactions In ocean f I o a r sediments and al80 of the earth's magnetic field. ?ti A RINE meteorology : St1; dy ar how weather over the ocean is created by interaction of the ocean and atmosphere above it. CHEMICAL oceaoography: Study of chemical substances In t.he ocean -including chemical pollutants b e I n g discharged into the ocean.! - and also study of desalination techniques. OCEANOGRAPIUC in!tru- mentatlon: Des l g n, test and refinement of a wide range of equipment used in oceanographic studies. danger. OCEANOGRAPIDC englneer- But maybe even in this Ing: Design and building of tragedy there b an economic devices, instruments: a n ~ plus for mounting numbers of systems to explore and exploit Americans -for surely these the ocean -alJo &upervtSing terrif)inie..redJctions signal a underwater construction and bUsy u e TorDrlghTyoiiiig---nytnrm1..,. Americans headed into the There are growing numbers many fields of ocee.nography. of opportunltits too for techni· Surely. we will need more cians within this specialty: for than the estimated 5,800 novv instance, u n d e r w a t e r working in oceanography to (or marine) technicians and find ways to clean up our marine Ufe technicians. The polluted waters, to prevent fir st rig pipelines in oil fields, further contamination. test u n d e r w a t e r com- • Just by 1980, it's es--municatlons systems, work on timated the number in underwater camera and TV e- o:-eanography will upand to quipment. The second develop 40,000 at least -and the total new ways of harvesting food could be considerably greater and drugs [rom the ocean. if the federal government help discover new minerals should decide to intensify Its beneath the sea and work on efforts and investment in the conserving the ocean's natural field. Most workers art in -resources. research end development, Then there a~ growing spend a large part of their numbers pf job opportwtlties time aboard research VesJels, for specialists in ocean law work for the Federal aovem-(who owns what ln the oc.'MD), ment or colleges a n d in underwater recnation, in universities. underwater )>botograJily, in • The average yearly pay iceberg forecasting, in mt- for a beginner with only a derwater archaeology {ex· bachelor's degrff is $8,300 to ploring ancient s u n k e n $10,000; with a master's warships and submerged degree, $10,300 to $11,500; with islands, sunken cities, un- a PhD, $13,100 to $14,200. derwater trea9W'es af many Here's a rundown on the key varieties), in aquaculture branches of atudy and job op-(better known as fish fann· portunities in oceanography ing), and in the development now. Gf ways to use I.he ocuna u an economical new sourot o( BIOLOGICAL oceanography energy. 011.Jy Coast~ Souflie111. Qffers • · 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday ~ervice ·The Insiders Club Ar1 llnklellet Tht Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card permits you 10 buy nearly every· thing you ne ed from the finest closed«>or show· rooms at substantial sav· ings -appliances, furnl· ture, stereo equ ipment, sporting goods, draptries and much, much more: You an even buy cars at tho "'fleer• price and moblle homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav~ logs. The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificcite $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% Two to Five Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss of interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity on an-ce'rtificcite accounts. also provides big d is~ counts on tickets to sport· ing and entertainment events ••• plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or .. ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership require· ment for savers -$2,500 minimum belance. Coast borrowers naw receive as. soclate memberships en-- titling them to •II outside referral services. Ask aboul Joining at any Coast office. f MAIN omcc: WI&. HUI, Los Anpln • 6.a-1351 Othet" Offices WlllHl!tt: tot tllAMMPtCT ruct: 3933 WUshltt llt'((I~ LA.• 3111-1265 u.. crvtc C[KnJto 2nd .. 8roedWay. '2&-1102 HUNT1NGTON •t:ACHs 9l Huntln&1on Clntar • (71•) 897·1047 SANTA MONICA: 718 Wllal'!lre 81Yd. • 39.l0746 SAN l'l:OftO: lOlh f. Paofflc • &l1"2Ml MIT COVINA: Eastl1nd Shopplna Qr.• 331-2201 PANOltAMA cmi 8616 Van NU)'t Bl'id,. 892·1171 TAIUANk 111751 Ventura Blvd.• 345-1144 LONG •UC:H: 3rd & l.ocUlt • 437·7411 t:AST LOI ANG~ 11111 f. SOto • ~10 CllAMONO aAJt: 328 OIJomond .., l!Yd •• (714) 59!>-7625 Dolly H .... -IAM to4Pll Open s.111.....,.-, AM to l PM (OQtpt CMc c.mcer1 I :1 DAllY 1'11.fT p UGAL NOnCB LEGAL NOTICE "°'IU °" Hlf11MHO 'l(TIT'IUt Jut--18CW1Tt twHR•tT a M1M NAMI: ITATQUUtT ,, llVLtl: 'ft.ANPI•) Pt(TITI9Ut IUllNlll NOlKI OP TitUlTl•'I IMa TM ttli.wlM ,_,.,. .. 4tlM NOTIC• IJi HllllY Gl'ffN TO THI MAMI ITAffMSNT ~ .... 111·1'1\ Dumping Of Goods ""°tl""tl •1: C It ID I 'T 0•1 0 fl .. It IM I I l I tht frrtl ..... I,,, ,.,_ tf't fOIPll T.I. Jilt.,,_,, f'ollWr-QllT PltOP'IRTlll, ,_ W,AOH($1VIS, INC .. kr-. NI .... Mlflllt .. : DAYTON INYllTMINT COit• Cw11 ......... , Svli. ""· t, -.,.,.._.. -· ....... ll!il.iNn lllNr-11 1t11 KAI.MIA.CM. l>M\AltCO, IUIAl'I' .. l"ORATIOH .. _,,, .......... TfWIM It~ C•llfWl'lt '1WO. . P'l« ... lt A..._,., i. ... Cltr et Cell• CHILllNGYIOltTH, Ut N-.ort c..nt ... uMtr ttw fol~ ...al ....... ffll ltlche"' A. Mfotltfl', • UIW 1...-, ~ Clllftfy el DA...-, ltm _, ~tv.. WI" M. Ht-«1 Bt9d\. lrvtl WILL llLL AT 'Vil.IC AUCTIOf\I H..,.,. 11..oi. C..llfWflle nMl. CAlllwNt, WMI alt tt ....,_ ...,..,.... CtUIWNa nwe TO THI HIGHllT ltOOllt !'Oii CAIH ~ ~. OI IMt ltlll l"-t, 11111* 9fllll ...,..._ \ltM WlfMtil ..,.. TM ho! ...... II 1 l\lt .i 11W .-.rt/ INY .... 111 tlrM el Nit Ill '9wfl.ll _., Disguise? ..... htdl. Cal""'""' ,,.., ....,,, ... , ........... II lllltW'I tt ... _.._. ~ .,,.., ~r .. f'+tldtftu .. ,.,. UllltMt ..... , ... """· •tie ..... '"'"' ... ..,....,, Jr .. '" ,.,.,.,.,, ~ P1r1V .... ,,,.,,,1 .. ""'*1-. ........ ., .... ......,.. Mn-VII• l1'11t,..•I (~ ... ,., -...... _,,. n N..--9 tMctl, C.I .... ,_, IM .. lftl l"ltC*'llltl A,,.,..,,., C..t• ,,,.,..., Ir.-n II:•~ o.Mwft, ICNH & ltlflftr ••14 D9"I et Tt11tl 11'1 '911 """"" WI,,,., I", '°'"*'• 1,. 11•1 OcNtl Ctftfott1Le "611, I• ...... I .. JNli.• I IM.lllt Olllll~lll: lllr•IN"'' fffCli. ... : flf'11111, ........ C1ll'9nll1, lf-Jt.r '°I' tt111!1 ... • MCUf'lty 1111.,._. to 1-MrWI W, l(tolm..U., IMt Sil'ltllfO 'fi1;UST'Oa1 Dhee Cel~ • •• WASHINGTON f'1cec\ Tiii• 1M.11IMN I• Mll'lll ~~ W • IMl"llttAt.. aAlrOC .. S.C111W1 '"''''' wlltw Drl.,.., N....,.,,,, ••1<11. c1n..,n1,..,..,. IM1rlw C•IHR;.;.HwMM 11'1111 Wit. l"irtMrallli. ...,,1_ Mdf1u 11 nm k w11ltrt1 '••l'lk n.,...r<o. Jt., 2'1' ''~"'•"' ll'Mflcl.ry1 f'INll'1 lll'lk. • Wlth the blQt$l trade defich !tl<MAI .. "'4ttftr A-. 11'1 tht (tty .. L .. """'"·(OU!\< "°"' a.tvcll• (flV, C1tlfotl'llli •1111Do1 C1lll9'11l1 ( ... -1111111 Tiii• •11'-Mnl ...... llll'llll "" ~ IY flf U. Aftff141, 11•1• Ill C1lllor11l1, 111 iti.rwood (, (lllllll'llwortl'I, Ill.I s... !tK., ... M1rdl J. 1.., • 1"'11· Ne. 9' in history this year; the Nli:on ci.r1r.., 0,.,.., c_.., ~: IN'r 11. 1rn, tM to11orww11111 Mc••• .-rt1n11 ~ M1r1.,. ,.,..,.""'., ''" M1~1,.., c111,.,ro1. 111 .,. .... ,." n1 ., ornt1M •-•• dmini tratlon I Ing -•th IY 1....,J, J. M.-.. Dffouly CWl'ltV flf ,.,,_,., t.-wlt1 ,1109 • Ill IN el'flc• tff 1t1e ...... et Orll'llM a s I mov "' Cltrll. All lllllutH ...... ..,tl""'nl •nd •II In· H•••I• .... ,. , ... S.nd•l--.:1 LIM, (Ol,ll'll'/ ... l ....... ltlrll 419crl"8t .... t ·-~ "d In " p '"" INllllMH. tlC•I .. II 1t7S l"IK.nH• A'lt., N""'"" •• .u.. c.u ..... 11 nMt tollowll!f ~htl MW V gor &glu1111• ump I l"Wll..,_ Ot~.. (Mlt Ollll'f .. lit', In ttw Cll'I' flf C.11 "'"-• C111111Y flf AiPt""t e ewi.. • l"lntftuttl 1.-. l.ol SI .r Tr•ct '"-X11t, Ill '919 CltY" of fortlgn a<JOda in the Unitfd Mar ,,, ,., J1, .,,. JuM 1, 1'71 ,,,,..,, Ot'1ntt. ,,,,, " C1Hfoffll1, •"4 .... , tM .............. ffCll. C1H,.,nl• ,.,... N __ , •M411. •• ""-"" ....... .. • 1-'"---'-----------)Wttol"' ""1111: l'•lllfff win ... COit> .... , M. OIMn, '°'' C1rt1Wtoo11 111«.rlf noc:IN'Md '" bl!lll n. ..... '·It St.ate. at below-coat prtcu. "'"'""!# ...... .,,.., .... "" dlY of Ju.... D,l ... , AtcffM, C•lllotlll• t1006 •lld 11, Mlw•ll•-M .... ,...,. ... ort,.n-UC r• •re ~ .... , ... L IANll: ., nm k. WHl.,11 P,\yt, c--dtl M••· ,.~,.,.1. t1•U ttU A1111lvtrNr'1' LI""' ..,, And I " tra'· ~ • Wll"!AL NOTICE ltn 11 .,,. Mt111 •••I'd! tf tM IM· lltoWrt H. ,,..,.,1-. 3IOO oc .. n 11"11 111e1 or•nt• c1111111Y. beginning tO COmp aln that the PICTITI_,, 1'""1•111 • ..,..,.,.., 11'1 IN Cll'f Ill L .. ...,,... .. , CM.ifl.< 1;1<111.. C. Gr"'*"4'1, JJ)t \Ill ... (1\, C1Ufotnl1 Ur • 11tMt ...,._., "'"' '"" ly ff LM AllPl11, SI•,. If C11llornlL l•S.1¥1, l"lltol Vtf'dn I 1 I 1 t • J , "°"'......., e1tt11111tlt<\ 11 .,_,. dot¥e. .. moves amount t 0 pn>-•AMI ITATIMlllT DllM MIV 1J. ltn, C1llfot11lto tOH~ 'Wlrt•"tv 11 ,1..,,,. .. "'l!t ""',..._. tectionism in di..n•ise Tl'lt ftlln'IM "'-Ml .. ,,. N I-• f'1'111Mtllltl ACHISIVlS. INC. Thorn11 o. l"tdi;-lllfl, 1!11 Qlmle-... corrttitottJI. --. ..: 1t•rt A, 11 ... 1. f't•t. .. , Drlvt, Cortn1 dtl M•r. C1lllon1l1 Tlw ti.,.fkl•rl' v"""" ttld DIM _, 1be Treasury Dept1rtment ii DULA AISOCIATll. 17UI Sll'I' ... ,. _..,_ Alall •• w.i.n. )."'5 ... ,., Ctl'tt, Tr11tl • .., ... ..,. "I "''"" ti*'""" ... tightening its regulations as to circi., '·0 · •u °'· ,,...i..., '1111· .,... EM\' si..-1, s.c:. a111e11ot<1tr, c1n10r1111 11606 lfl• ot111u11-MCYrM 111 • r • •' • f'Mll lntlfMM Ill~ ICll7....,., • .,,_., l•ttY I , 1lirtll. 1:11 N, M111tll•ld. lM lllf•tlllerl ••Kvt.d •nd ... ~..,... ...... w ha l constitutes dumr. l,..,, "'"'•Atoe. c111t, nn1 1mper111 111111. A11Hlt1, C•'"•"'' tOO.li6 11nc1o1r11onte1 • -111M o.ci..r•ttM .t l b -·, ,..,_ I• "'" ~ IJr en •-,_ T•• ""' 1 lo< --.. ... -••• -always a deba a • '"' _ _,,.. .. .. .... MU I CONl\lt ... ~ ........ 0.111111 Ind Dtn!IM .... S11t, Wfn-...... l ... lv! ...... 1. CIM1t.r A. ,tJltft •II P1t1111rllllfl, l'lotlc• ot bt•ldt 1nd ot •~ltil> .. c-deflnition, Dumping usually it Jl>OUl I, RASMUlllM Vic• l"tHldtnt Hllolcl •••• 1, IM ~nMrlltMll .. Hll tt1411 ......,,,. .. nsld--• t Ill Tiii• 11.tlfMnt llM!d wllll IN CwlltY IM,.•IAL IAMK 1 ""'''1 P•rfNr 1111,.., 1111 MlllH ll«"· •nd ,.,., • .,.... ""' 00 11;:.1-~ 0 mean Ile rt8 Cltrtl Ill Or•llld C-ly ~: """ U. 1'11 11m S., W•..,. ... ,,... Tllll 1llllmtnl w11 Iii.Cl wl!h lllt Coo.Ill· w.-r1ltMd c1111M ~111 Mltc:I 9' brlldl product.s in the U.S. at l~ '!. Artllur £. ll:rt..,., CtllVIY' c .... nt'r L ............ , C•, tlMf IY Clwll ot Ort .... CClll"IY .,, ...-,., U. •nd ot ti.c:llon "' bt ltKonHd fltollr\Hlnr than "fair VAiue,'' mean!n11r C rll, ''"" »(IC lf7L U. 1f11 •t lflllr. N .. lHO In .... Mlll • ..,. .. " lht4 Ot c I 0.111 f'llot """n.,,.., °""'" c: ... , Diiiy l"llef, ICAlMIACM. ~•to. KHAPf' .... m . If Mlf ()fttcl•I RKorcll, Jess than the nrlce It wb!cb 11 II ll'IN 09I 1r-1•-~ Ma't )1, ltl1 l41S.n & CHILllNIWORTH $1\d ,I .. w111 H mMko, "'1t -"""" r M•' M. 31. Ind JUM 1, 14, •• --· flt Ntwwt ('11fff Ori¥ .. 1111..... (O'ltM"' ... w•rran1,, ••Pf"'"' l""'Md, they are .!IOld In the home LEGAL NOTICE "...,...., ae.c~. <L nwe 'It '"',.l"t 1111,, "-•Ion. ., -country or tn third market.I LEG•• NOT!,,. T......,_ 1n11 6'M-1111 tv,,..,bo'•"<••· 10 ,. • ., rn. '""•1n1,.,. .,1n- • A&, \.o.r. fllMn (loll '""" tlf "" riolt!•I ..wrlld W ttW I llJH l"ublllMd Or•nt• Cot1t O.ll~ Piiot, o..ci ol l •vtt. wltll 1111w•1t n 111 "" NOW TREASURY say it f'ICTIT\OUI IUllNl11 HOTIC• TO CRIOITO•I MIV JI. •ltd June,, 14, JI. 1'11 1 ~11 -Jl noi. .... OVI~. tdvenC••· II ....... "',,.... Ill• I NAMI ITATIMINT 01' IUl• T•AlllPla l••mt ot 11~ Offd ot Tr~t!, , .. ._ dlttMll will con.sider goods sold below 'Tn• %11•wlnt PtfWHI I• ctol11t ~1\nt11 ''"''· flt1,.1tr u.cc.1 •1'111 ••Pf"''' of rn. Tru11 .. •!'Id "' tti• prod ti t I th 11 • Not lu 11 nerebY tl\1111 to ""-Crtllllton LEGAL NOTICE !•ulll tr••i.d .-, tlld n...., Tr1,1il. UC on C05 as eu an . ACl 5Pll1Nl(LiR co .. :m 1Zftf St., ., Rkh.,lf l(a ... r, Trl"l!ttor. Wl\Mt • Stld ..... will IN Miii on T!llrl'MIY. JV"• fair value. This will get at Coat• M•s• 11111111111 16'1•111 It U.S 'l"••k ••· A#I. i.s. ,., 1tn ~111 ,0I> o'dock A.M. 11 ~ tfflc• -....1 JKk Wirrtn Wl/04 23' 2lnd St., Cot!I Co1t1 M•n. Ct1111ht llf Of'1nt1. llllt ol IUl"IRIOR COUJIT OP TMI! of T O S.rvl(• (flmPlftY .... 1111 f1f goods which are manufactu1~ M111. ' C11!POt11l1, lt!•I. bulk It•""''' 11 ...... ,. STAT•°' CALl,OIMIA POR Amt r'k• Tow.,, o ... (Uy ICIU~Vtrlf w .. 1, with some g 0 v er nm en t Thlt bullllttl I• Mint (:tondlltl., .., 11'1 ... rnacll lo l4w1N l!IMrlck •nd Hvetl TMI COUNTY Of' Oii.AN•• •~h• 1110. °''""· C11\tor11I•,,.... IMIY!d!.111 Holll"'1-1ll, Tr1ni,.,...1, wll•I• .... A•1nl2 0.11 Ml' tt 1t72 .subsidy, either open <Ir hidden, JA.CI( YI. WOOO 11\rllMSI •cldtnl 11 1741 T11Jll11 A'l'HM.ll. HOTICI Of' l41AllNO Of' ... TITION 'DAYTOM 1"V11TM•MT and aloo at "I-• leader" prod Thi• ''''"'"~"" wllfl ,.,. c-ty A.i. lt•O, COlll ......... CeunlY .. °''""'' f'O't 1"11:09ATI 01" WILL AHO "O• COIU•Ol;ATIOH -• Cit ,,."°''"' "' .... Mir 1..._ ''"· ... ,. Gf C•llftrnlt. LITTlll:I TllTAMIHTARY .... 111 Tru11ft, ucts sold by exporten who •r •••• , MUdu TM .. ,_,.., fo .,. ,,.., ... ,,.. 11 l!tl•lt .. JIAMONA SUTTON, •\• (ly T 0. 1111.VIC I COM,AM"f, •· r --'ucl Otp ry C ltfll. l«.JI... 11 Jtll•ll Ntw_, A~. ltAMQMA G. SUTTON, Ot<tl-.d A .. Ju.Ve a range (I ....... s . II .. ,.,.. N-'°" •••di. c-ht of Ort!'IM. 1111• NO'flCI! IS HEJll!IY GIV!l'I ,,,,, a:9M1rlt I Mlll•r Determining fair VllUe Ol1 I l"ubllllMld Or1~tt CM1t Diii\' l"li.!, flf Ctll,.,111•. ..,nlc• LtMl'I' hit 11 ... Mttl" I petll:o" AultleM ,1i..ftttrv' productlo--~ •-·la Is Ilk J Mto' ta. 31 •nd JuM 1 ''-1tn 1J4l..71 Stld ,,_," Is fll<rlllM In 9'tMl'll lor ,., .. ,. pf Wiit 111d ,.,. L•ll•'• STA·ttt ~VD~ lHUI f y ' ' .. : All •'-Ck 111 ,,_,., flatu'"' ""'''"'""" Tftlllnlnllry i. l"lllllentr, ,~,._. i.. .... O I I •-d'rfi J •~-•~-lftd toM wlll et !Ml ...,. IMlr 11u1IM1• wllkll 11 mldlo tot fll•!Nf p•nla."'••· • .,,, l"v.,Ulll'lld ,,_ C~tt Cl IY I" lol. to UC more I cut u1an UlllC LEGAL NOTICE ·-II •• MARtNlilll ...... llcl l-' •I 1'11· "''' IN 111'1• •nd .,.,, pf M1rl11t ~ Mir )I, llld Jw .. ,, lt, 1tn un.71 normal yardatick. ., NtwWI .,,._, H-..rt ••Mti, -l'I•• •n .. , ,., JllN 10, ,,,,, 11 Treasury also announced PICTITI0\11 IUllN•l1 (....,.,,.., tf <*.,..., S11l1" C•llfenl1•. t :JO 1.m., In IN nurtr-., Dff••• LEGAL NOTICB HAMt nATSMll'CT Tiii bvllr. lr1111t.r wlfl M QOl'llllll'llTll'-d ......... No, I tf ltlcl c-1. ti 1'llO Clvk recently that it would speed up Th• t.11crw1111 P«Mn 1, dOI• ~!Mu WI .,.. •"tr ,... '"" ,.,, ., J1111e. 1tr2. 11 c1n11r 0r1 ... w.11, 1n ,,,. en., " s1n11, 1-------------'ts t' •-b'-I In ... 10;00 A.No •• , l"JIOllEISIONAL e:sc•ow ""'· C1llftlr11l•. tUl"llUOlll COURT Of' CALl .... NIA, l IJneWI 1C' or proctas g . w L w CON1T•UCTION 714 IC--lllltVICES. um lr~IM lllvd., SUll• IE, Dtllld MIY i,, ltn COUNTY OP ..... .... complaints al:x>ut dumping. In w111f sir..T, H11n11,,.,... 1 .. th. 'tu111n, cwt11r ti or1n111, '"" ti w. IE. st. JOHN, "'C"k c ...... Ol't'lt....., ·-k bo W1lltt L Woolll. 714 ic ..... ui.. Hwn-c.ui.rn11, (Wiii' Cl•nt ..... AM, C1flttnH "* the past it tlal ta en a ut ""'"" •••Ch. k ,., •• lr.ntwn ...... Tr1111l1r•tt. •II IURTON. ••ULOUf, TMOMIOH AlllD CAii NUMll!t 0...... three months after • com-Thi• bull""I II Mine fflldl.lc:tld .., •n llu1\lltl1 "'""" Ind McltlUH """ ., NIUON SUMMONS (MA ....... , to lndlwlll111L Trllllltt'OI' fw 1111 llW .. "9rt lt1I llef, A""""" II I.Aw Olll AM8NDID .. 8TITION pdlal.~t_ islo.fll~ .. ~o~ ... 'f!'t~ ... ~-~ lrt: NOH;..,,-...,i --·· ,... '-;!ct=.•"' . -~~-£~ .. ~ ... *'~1=r-: -<Clw::_ __.v~a-... Cltn:: " °'""" (°"""'"' oil: Ml' lJ1 17'1. ldw1r• •-1tll •nd T .. 1 111n ..... , ....cl .-~11 IH•I 1u• !Ometima two or three yetrl ., ""''"' ,;. M.odcnc Dffllt't C.....nh' Hlltll HolllnetWIN'lll ArtwMy1 111'1 '"'tltMr T• lhl ·~= IHIZ IVllHITTW •-• ct' ta•· ,,..._ l''"'~'"' ,.ul>lllMd Ot'111t• CMtt C1llr f'llOI, no. f91ltlolltr Nt fl!M 1 """-' -~1<1re Mtt--.!....!!?!l..JVIS ~~ . ___.._um Plt:D'-1 Sl9MAA..JH•n: lll'illll: Mil.JI •n.tl!t!!!J, 7,jfil -1110.7, Clf'lll• \'Ollt_me,,leee...~ tNY-fllL• The intention now la t.o m-fldlltMd °''* Clttl Dlll'I' ,,Lat, ... o .... .., wrlntl'I ,...,_. wltllln tlllr!'Y °""' .... pond to complaints WI.,.,_ a Ma' 11, 24. 11, tnd Junt 7, lt11 l:lltl-71 lntt IMM arwi .. s.tl9 • LEGAL NO'nCE d1tt 11111 llllt """"*"' I• Ml"'"1"' ....u. WW• -"'-"-'-'--'-----'-----JTUITlll. CAL.IPORNIA " weu fat! to •II• I 1"1'1ttWI ,.....,.,. month and take actlon within LEGAL NO'nCE ' 111.-Nt, 12441,.1 1 ,1cTtTIOUI •llllHISa w1111111 1!.ld'I 11,.,., "°"'r ..,...,11 ''"' lie six months. ..llltllllhtd °''"" Cell! D•!lr "1101• NAM• ITATRM•MT '"''' ... '"' !hi cou,, "''' .nltr. '"""' f'ICTITIOUI IUllNl1S Mt, 11, lt72 un.n T~• 1-llowlne "'-It• "'"' "'1tl· m1111 Ullllllnllll lnlunctl ...... etller ........ NAM• ITATIM.INT M11 ,,. -"'1"" 41wltltn flf ,,...,,.,., ....,,_, THE EFfORT Is part of a .,... tei1c1wi ... "'..n 11 ,..1,.,. Ml,,... LEGAL NOTICE CAN'.AM ,l.llT s111v1c1NG COM·:'~~:_~ ~j~~c11.:::,_ :';.1~ broad adrninlltratlon move to••: A.11;.T. COMl"AN Y. 18" VllMle Cir· IAR ""' :~y•.!!~~ 1'111 11" ll.llftl Qm ..... ··"m;:. i:.:·.:1::::::::. .... ~ appease American lndmtry tn ci.. C...11 Mfft, C1llf, t'Ml7 PICTtTIOU1 IUllHlll eri.n 1(11111 C11'11'1, 1* P•'1t ~ .. ~ ........ _..., ............ .. JIDU. 'led way• and !eke so-of LI-L ... lfa v.u ... crrclt, Cwt• "' HAMii ITAT•, ...... , "'' '""'' ""'· Clllltmi. ,,......., • """YWt'.Wftltlll,...... w ""' "'"-• Ctllf. TM ltwtflll !*'Mii t Ill MU Rld'llrf Pr-11 Jll'lfllflll, 211t lllfl tllY ..., ...... • .... the steam out of the drive for Thi• tt.111-i. 1111,,. ~ w .,. 11: 11., ""· om MMMtt l•Kll. Clft•. ~-MIY 1 ,,,., 1• 11\f!vllfutl. VIOIO ILICTaONICI, 11411 f'ltll. Tlllt llutl"'u II kll'lt Cll'lfllcMf Mo WIL' W,, I IT -· c-f u I 1-s c a I e protectionUlm. L•-LM • .,,..,. o ....... c111t. ,.... , a.ntr11 '"'""'""11. .. • ..~ • -... Tl hte t'd ln .._..1 •• Tiii• •l•lttMftt fl1M wllll ""' CIUnly TNlrln •• ltl!ltllll, ltlll ... ,1(, llltlAN K. DANN .... Mvr Hllrlllnt. °"""" g r an 1 ump g ....... Cl•ll. ., Otl"" Ctllnl'I' di\: Mt1' •• ltn. G1'4M C·-· C1111. ,,... 'fllll1 lllltmW\f llltd wllll IN Ct!Jl'lty !Dl'fl1CIAt.. •••t..I tiona goe.s hand in hand with '' '"''" J. MIH6.i, OWvtY ceu"" Tiii• IMIM•• 11 Mll'lf <tftfUcllflll W A c11rk '' 0t1neo covntv .,. ,,.,., :u, 1111. r::t"'i!!.. °1=:'"'::Z. voluntary agreements Umll· CMrk. , ttmlllld ,..11ntn~1,. •v ltvm, "· MeOclol. ~ c .... n,., 111-• Cllflntle .:,. 1'11111 THOMAS I . "HILLlf'S Cltrll. ....... ~ 111 I ing imports of 3 t e e 1, tfl· l"u•ntMd Ori... CM•! O•lll' l"UOI, TJll• .,.,_1 lllld Wllll """ Ct11!1fy 111..U A""""" ;.,. .... m.-' tiJ.,, and Shoes _ the -....4_ Moy ... 11, U. 11, 1'72 11"'"11 Clltt ti Ori"" C111ntv «i: Mrw lt, ltl't. l"ubHllllld Or•1191 CMtl Dilly "'lot, '°"""..... Ortllff C•" Dell'I l"llel. ,......... '' """""' II!. K,....,, °""""' Ct11111Y M•r ll 1nd J"'" 1. 14, ~1. 1tn 144-n Mn M.11...,. "-1 1., 1m 1-.n ucta m011t sharply undercut ,__ c1tttc. • . ~-l st I by ,_ LEGAL Nvan.~ McOWI .. ••••• a IYLYIA LEGAL N~ ".,.AL NOTl-m UK:' a fW year• llll" fllCTiriius 1u1n11i11 An'ORlllY1 AT LAW Vll'-'111 ..-u . - ports. M.\IY ITATIMaMT ::.:.... ~ .:.:.. tTAft ... CAL ....... &A Other propoeed rt(UlitioNI Ttld tdlleWltll ...noll 1• odoN Ml"8A Teh 'IN'tl eSPARTMlffT OP Ml1'TA&. fllYllDI are almed at restrictlnc im-M: ALTAVlllA. LTD .. IMl1 ...... ........,. Nn.Mf Or ..... c..., 011: ;,': ·~~~."~~l ports by multinatkmal com-Cir., Hll'lllMIWI hid!, Clllf. f'JW """M, )1, .... J-1, 11, im 1Ut-n IEAI ""0SALS W1U .. rte ....... " ""' PAllllVllW ttATI HOll'rT'AL. -·•' f ts _, f Cel o..n... lG-r11 P1rtflolot), 2'0tl Ull 1 lvd., c...i. "'-• C.llfWrlll Wltll Ill• A.M,, --•• .,... .. es <1 componen u-.a or .. ...,. ... " ctr.. H11nt1ne1.,. ltldl, LEGAL N0'11CE 1t7z •• 1 •• ~ time .,,. ltlkt lhflY w1" M "'9llclr ...,_... .,. rf1i4 "' .. manufacturing the finiabed Clllf. lfl1t1t11non 11 AllOmtftt '"''"''"' ,,..,.."' 11m Product ID, "-United ••·to Tiii• _,.1 .... i. tlllne _..~ "' i In ,.,_,,, ll'llt ,,•l«I ctn11t11 ol'! "'"11111ni " iN ......,. It ~ .,_.,... 1.11'.:: '1\.111 •• Llmltld l"•rttrll'li.. • ... ,.. 14.lllllll'IO, l.ll,lndry IUUll~ ll'ld llllwM encl ......... c.11111 '""" Nfllllill • Treasury would begin' Ulln" Cl! o .... , "ICTITIOUI IUSINISI Lellndry l11llct1nt1, .u .. tltl'tll'lllltr lllklllN Tlllt 1t1tll"lldftf ..... W1111 Ille COlll'!ly llAMI ITAT•M•NT Cotiltt M 111«lflc.lltnt 1nd blll 111'9110WI t0n.. ire ..... IMlllle II Ille PM ;: "any reasonable method" of c1tnr. tot or1nw c""n" t111: M.., a. 1t11. Tllll t.11ow1t11 ""* Mi ,...,. 9Ml""'• tlol'I• Ofllu , F••rvlfW 111i. .... ,1111, ,.1 Hi,_ '"" c:.tl• MN Ct • d t t Ing I 1-J--'l ltwrl' J. ,...,..., DllJut\' GlunlY •t: • lollOne 11~4.S-fUI Ix! Sit " ' " e enn n pr ct ~wt• c n. l"ANCO, L TOY .ttl w. c..e1 Hlltrwrf, laldlo '""'' ii. ..A:.m1i111o:1 ·ldr "'• Wirt ~ ._,...,.. tlllrllft Dl!folltllN '!be government bu com-..,,... ,,._, .._,., <•llWl'll• '*°· ~"' end 111kHlc111oi1, wur '*' be COl'll~ w """ .,. ~ tw ,,1,..'::: l"~bll..... Orll!M Gelet Dtlll' l"llot, '•"" Mtn'1 f'TCldllch. IM., •It W, flf •kill. • mented on the fact that prod-,..,., 10.11. u.11, 1m 1111.n c ... , H1911w..,, NIWHM •••chi 'fri. w1c1 s1 ... AMMr ,...,.,""" 11e11119 rtl«tINl't'.,111 •1i11. ucts from Japan, Germany C•n1on111 .,,...., '" 1eCW11•1t(• wft11 Ille ....... 111ottt or 1«11111 1rn 1t "" L...,. c... ,.,. ,..,. and O,._ -untri'•• ha ' • -•• NOTI-Tiii• ""11""11 11 Ml"' ancludtlf " 1 ,,.,. ~' •w•nllntl m11 tw1trK1 1111 ,K.,,.IMlll 1111o1 ii. ..,..,111., • ,,...,.111111 1.11'1;1 ... v .... ve not .,._.,... "-'31 C•lltrnl• ,.,_,11.... r1t1 "' ..,.... •H>lk.lllH ,. "" wortc ,. 111 ..,.. 11 .. """"""' been marked up in price u GENE f'ANlUSO. • ... ...,., "= IW much as Jut December'• "':I:Jr4/:.::S,,1."::' 11111 :i~= ftltd wt!"' 1111 ~_,., OtflwT,.,. •••k••te .._..... .,......,.. "' rtve.luaUon of c u r r 1 n c i e 1 , 'tM 1ouow1ne ,.,_ I• 9olllf M1ntt1 ~:"'.~7. =., -~~ 1 c.!.~~ ;11;:: .. "':' ,.11,:: """ .... ,. Y.utlM ,_... .......,""" ... .. -would have ca ... a.1 railing •: c11r\ {lhlllll "" ,,, ,,., ~ It I. C AVIATION, 2SU Ytle Pi.ct, COHiN, ITOIOtl 6 OWIM · .J5 'Tna-Dtllllttt.M suspicion that unfair muns Co••a '"'$•· c1111. ~ A,,.,_. "' u. J P Int Nlf may ~ u-~ lo ... ___ -t AICherd c. Dlfll\I, Ull Ytlt rioa. 1111 ... '"""''' .... Ill ~,. 1" I ~.. ... Tl-. - --UIC .XU ~I' y• .ces Cotll Mt11. C.111. """ , .... AM. C•1""1N ft7'tl ,, • ., .. ·'4 .:ie .. ... down. No romplaintl heve T1111 1111.1,,.u 11 llllM CMductrell w '" T•h ... ,. u~ ._,,,, _ ... T,!. ,~_ __,... lndlvlfl/11. " l1"1 .SS -1.11 .... __... been lodged by U.S. producers •!CHARO o . OAHILL 1"111>11..,.. Ot.., .. ~ ~,, '"''°'· Miilllltl'lll ,tll'lttf ~ -Ult ll'ltlll'ntni -19 Nlf yet, but the government pvt Tiii• "'..,..,1111 Iii.Cl ""'"" ll'lf '*""' Mtr u. J1, 1nd NM 1. l'-tm ,,....12 Mmll'lt11r1u.,. -'• . .1· ci.11t ., °''"" C"""'1' ~1 Me'"' im1-----~-"'°"=---it will move quickly an any '' 1111v1r1, J. M161fQ, Ctp.ity c..,,..., , vi!._, NOTICE Al'I 1 Irk llttll ..:JIPl'1t111ctt111" '" -.ti that are flied. ci.'11• flla.t ..._.~ o~~,:· -•,:n,: 1M11 -:,..-.;:...•:1110':11,~·Wi.··~~·r.IR···· .,... PICTITtout IUllNl11 kfllrUYL ........,. Mil MllilllYt -Mt ltM lhWI ~ ltlot ........ ,..., ""-'"'ll1htd Of11'11• Clftl Dlllt l"llM, ,..,... ftroi llMIMye """ •ldl Wdl ,., .. wn ....... IN/I ... Iii ...... ,. A DELEGATION fr 0 m ""'ii. 1!>11 J11ro1 1. 14, fl, 1tn 1nr.n NAM• STATIMllCT 'IUflllUl!i "' 11111 C911«tl'tt .. ,..lnllll lfftffNnt .,..let..,. ,. "" ,.,ncvlW TM fDU~IMI 1trNM tr• lllol1'9 (,..,.., e .... lflcetiM"' .,.,. .. "9!11fNll emollytlll • -.... 1tct. Japan recently made • trip to 111111,,... ••· Tiie c:entrMw w1u M ,..._,,,.. "' ~ lltt' ,.ymlf!t tot ~,,_ " flll W• ... '·•ton to oom~aln that LEGAL NOTICE ioo1T•L,1N1TA~-~ .. 111 ... 1s1 N,o·,.!4-m 91,...., .. In ~·~ w1111 ... """"",.,,. " LI'* eon lfclkift ..._ _...'6 IHI 17111 lr9tl, '--'' It, I "' Trtwf anllll '*l1lwie. ..,.,,....la INll H llllf 111 t11C11 -'o:INn ,,..,... W _... the anUdumping WI are PICTITIOlll •UllHUI Albtrt •. JKkHn. WU ~ lllt ""'· .. Wdl ttwet 11'1111 "*" .. ._ "'""""" .... •fflMlll In """ ·~··· •-·1ng tJ•"--·' In a W& Iha NAMI ITAT8MIWT LIM, Mltt!111 Viole. C11ll, Aii.c:tlvo ..,..ln'"9 ..,..,,.la fllllf In ~,_, wllll UllW C... lllllM utl 5-111.o;I~ y t Tiit %11owl "'"" I .. ,.. """'""' Sll~ltl' e . Met".'" Jun!"1'• Prtvt, 1nu. discriminates against Japan. II' "' I c .. i.. ........ C.Uf. r:uzt. ,,...,,., lnftftturW lllflftl'lllcM '""' ... lfflllltrllll Iii "" ,, .. Kutltll " "" ...... The b' 'llACH SERVICE CENTl!t. IUOI flf.26. Tl'ld'J "11111 .. M ~...,... .-, "'' cantfKfltr ., '*-lrklor """'lfll wtrt"'" 11gest antidumplng ac. ••Ith ll!llf Wftlmlnrttr C• Tiil• Mlntlll ,, Mlfle CIMlllCIM .., • lft MY """"'""""' utrt If ., ......... I (ttft ., lrldt fl'ltnnlned to ..... tion to date has betn against Jll\fl ,...kk,ow no N.w.frt 1111c1 '1'"""'"'1P· •W .. KciM•1e """""llM lfl ~ W1111 "'* Ml r19111111ont fll'llCrllltd IW •-~-TV Mis. c1111 ,..,. .. C1 ' N Al'-" 1· J•ckMl!I !II• """'"'i<'llllt Clla'lcll, '-Lal '"""''°" la lflf'lcltlll "' t1111 -'IM tlf L.a.r -...... ~ T I .. I • , · .... <'ltllllu<tld "' Tl'll• ""-' n ... w1111 IN C.Uftht co.. lec:llM 1m .. wllkll rtOlllt'M IKll • Ctl'lltKttr ., tllbcW/ltlder ,. ... ,II "'. I Mtt ' '"' Clt1k of °'"'" CtuftlY on: M•' '· 1m. '""" ""'Jt.lrrf Altllrlmklll'lt, C-lltet lldl'ftlMttl'lnO 1119 •Wtnlknll. ''""*"" Several European ~ lnolvl•j'o..N M Kl;_, '' l1V1r1r J, Mldda, Dllllli'f c...."" of tM er1ft .. w... 1n ,.,. ,, .. or "" •Ill tlf ..,. (lll'lfrKt -11, 1 cert111ut1o tries have comnlalned about « "" c1n. 1"""''"' .,. et11trkfw ., ~w'*' ttr "" -•~1 ,,,. lf111'111'11 " r Tiii• 9!11tm.ni """' WI!"' tM (OUl\t\I .. ,. '""""''°" ... Mdt ...... u. lt'lt luuence If "" (tr111lc•I•, ""' _,,Ktllt ., recent Imposition 0 f an-Cllrlt .. Ol'I"'' (tllnlv ~. Mty :II. 1'71. 1"11blilhM Ofl"" CMtl C•lly l"llaf, ... trecw ................. """-"' "' l«:IMll 1mJ .. ""' L.-c.M, tlllll t t du rn p I n g duties on '" '""'"' J, Mt1H1x. °""'" c111nl'f Mtr 10, 11, it, a1, 111' 121t·n .,...,.., Ille -*' t1 IPPl'illllkH ., t11t re1i. " llltll'Mtlcll to ~ the .. Iha '""-··-Ill Ille ClflHlctt .. If ._. It Ill tl'le .,.. ti 11111 •Ill ti IN -.11 I II.Ind ., f'\1!'111 transformen. 1bey nott I LEQAL NOTICE " t1SMWetw ,... ~ .... .,.....mk1111i, 11r11nm "' 111Y ""'""'''"°'"" mtr th.,. ·-cu•lom-buUt J'--htlltlflllf °''"'" c.e.et c.u, 1"1111, ., .,.., .. •Id! ... ., ""'* ....., ,.,.,,tctw1 "' ..... ,... .,,. w "" -..... 1.C11U1 ""' J1, ,,,. J11111 ,, ,., 21, 1m ,,...n lf'lc1lf' " ..-.i1r1ttw " 11t1 -1r1av11tt1. "" C9ft!Nctor ..,... ...,..,....,. •• on which comparative prka: ~tTtOU• •u11••1• ~ ,. ttlll ,... w fl.nfl "' ...... "" 1-.wit ., """ ...... -..... 111111 are difficult to establiah and LEGAL NOTICE TM ~ IT~~='"!,, eo1n1 ~";;. ~~ ':":: ~~911~l;...u;'~1,:.:~~w::' ~":; J: =• W:.: that anyway tnlns:fonntr im-"""cn:o~:l l(ITCHIH, SI~ • .. ,,.. =~1.:"':.k =--"'--..... '*''°" "' •la "*'"" ,,_ "" .... ll'lo '""" portl amount to only ~t ·~,.:::~A~~·:::· lltwl., lf'N, Ct lll. N• ""' Wiii M (111'11...., ~lttl II It m.O. 11'1 1 l-111• term llnllhtod ll'y f'AllltVllW Of ... us mar'•! us .... ,,,_ .. ---I• ....... ...,1!-Mtlvln Miii ,..,, Outll. f Htw STATE' HOll"ITA\. '"' 11 n\ld• '" ·~ Wllll .... ,,.,w-...... ,,..,...1 un:: · ' 11. • • u : ,... °'"'91 II., ltt A""'lt1, C•MI. It t1C1Ulr1t1nlll'll• flld condlllon1 wt forltl Wld• !hi ..-CHIC*litM. llUI llOGw '""'' Gavemment repUea that lt ill OM,AHV, 1UI •. 1(11'1 Yut o.ie. fdVI ... _ II., .. lklll'lllCI •ltd lllO prlq\lt1111td •1 IMUll.,'" .... considering potential inj to I!:;,.; ~~'!JLI I t.. Mlill•t. (.Jii i, "°" ,Alll:Vll'# ITATI, HOll"ITAI. ury "*". J Ulfte Jr ~ ... wt41 Th ft Mlntt• 11 (lll'ld\I( "r #) Hiil Httlltr &tlli.¥1'4 American manufacturers &1 " .. Mt! ·• •rtMr•"''' · ..,,.,.1. -c:tit11 Mhe, c.nfot111t well as actual injury. n~"w.1 ...... ,. "'"' Cllllduct• .., •11 ~"';!':O,... °"'11 ~~ ~~~ '"""'""•' J LITT'l 1111t tllltmlnt w11 llltlf wllll llM C-fi'Wllllled Or• ... (Mii C.Uy f'llel, M1y JI .... J-7, 'Im 1•14-12 • • .. ty °"*et°''"" Cellllollr tfl ,..., •• ltn..1-c...c.:.:.c::::=c::,,:;,:.:.,;:c..:.,c..:"-'C::.:-"-'-''-'=,::.:..,:_'.":'.::-".=-.,;..__; GOVERNMENT IOurctt lllnJ c~" J1~='c!:, ~ ,._.""; -~ 111« ""* LEGAL NqnCE LEGAL N«mCS th.at some 40 antldump I '' •-1, J, Mldfol(, o-" C.UnlY f'ui,11..,.. °''"" c ... t 011.., l"not.'1--------'-.,...,,-=----::-=---------'-'-• In -~1. led (ltrk. llOTICI INYITIN• llDS C8.9e! are ........ v~~ .. • 111•1t Ml' 11, 11, u. fl, lt11 111 .. n NOTICE ts Hllt:llV GIVIN !loll lht ... ,. tf """'" .... "o,.,.. C"""Vo now, about twic1 as many u '""'n""'" °''"" c-11 c.11.,. ,.llot, 1 -... •• C111for1111, w111 rtc11w ....... Md• vP,. 1:tt •'tied! l".M. a11 MMM,,""' 1t111 .. .,. at any time ~lore ... NIIon Ma' 11, tnd Jlll'lt 7, ,., Jl, 1m 1 ... 11 LUiAL NOTICE ., Junt, lf12, In tht olllu .,. ,,.. C!tl'll .t IN ... ,, •I lu.ervllll'L 1111 fllitr, ~ -)-------------J---===.,.-,cc==---1~'' Alffnlnltlr111on llullfll\ll, iu N•. Svcemort s1 .. 1•1111 A111, c..11..,,..._ 11 administration. Some IUbiUD-PfCTITIOl.ll IUllHllS wllk.11 II'"' .. 1111 ..... wm IM l\lbll(ly tcitned INI ~ i.r Jiit fltllr#ir.t LEGAL NOTJCB MAMI tTATIMINT U•UNA MIOIJIL ......... , •• IC tial ca1e1 Involving Canada · n,e touow1,. MrtM •• dell,. 11n11111, .. ,.. ... H•. 1en.-.11• ~rt-"y ar• tn ,._,. ""-H : An" 11Jd....,." .. ...,i.r,,,.,, .,. ~Mt w11t1 ""'"' .... •11«lflmt'tlflt. 4 --cw ... .., or..... fllCTlTIOUI lutlNlll MAOOI COll'1 D I c 0. A T I N G wflltll .,. -Oii flit In "" lflkl ., .... C-IY ci.n.. Ill .... ~ Mlllllllll"llltn A Commerce Department •AM• ITATIMln WOAICtHOl"S. ...,, SI.,......,.,, lffc ... •111Jdln;, JU Ho. S\ICt-t, .... ,.A ... , C.Jllfon'lll. o!rl Jal I "" that ... us. TM 1111\owll'lfl ,.,._ 11 llloli,. M lntt• C•lll. nwt, Miii•-~ '"" ,., "'i. mite! "•"· ... "'-'"''nlld .., nw """' "' c Oreoto.. I.II'!; ' Ml "''"' c-. '""""'"" ..... c•1 .... I •"'""'1 .... .., ·-!l/tkill .....,,, • ~ • .t!kll It '" Iii. 111 lhl llffk• .. ""' trade: def\clt for Im probably THE G•llNHOUl l. mo w. (Mrt Holl~ 91Wlf., LM...,....... C•Ut ...., CMl•k ., trot IHrd 91 '"""''-will ~ blgg-than Jul year'a Hitftwt,, N""'1 lltM1!. cam. ""'°· T1111 lllnlntu 11 ,.,..uc1., ., ~ •~ lldd.,1' •IMntleol i. uo11111 "' ._,...,. 11rt.1m.1 ., ""' t...M c ... ,"""tdl ~ ui:: '"' Crill W'llllt,. l""t 117 •lff lty 111rldlll l '"'1lr1 .,.."' lf •wire.I lfll COJ1tr1n .. Pt' lltt Ill• llllfl Miii ...,,,, -......... $2 billion def1cit, which was the flnftl, •••• 1111,,.. • c111f. t"'2. ;...."' c-. ,,,. " "'"" Mt ....,,, .. 1u ........, """""""" .,... flltd'llftlu ......,.... "" fi~ ti .. _ u s 1 u~ to TM• 11u1rn1 .. " Mini c.Hllil(IM .., .,. 1""""'"~ ..... c.c.t "" ··~*" ...... '""°"" -.1rM1 •. h" . me "'~ ' . a ~ lndl~I. Tllll ,,.,_.,.1 .... ftlH wllll IN Cw.t-°"" .... _....1:' '""'" "" ll'Plllliftl ,,,. ....... ~II bt ... 1111 ""' """'"" run a IUTJlkil. Thia ii oc-Crllt' WTftl"' lhl1t "' Cllrk ., °''"" ClllfllY .., ,,.., IS. """ '" ••t•ll ....... '*"" Ill ."' -UllMtt .. , '""' lot S. ...... Vt. ..... ..,.., CUITl·ng .ta...l•a ,~. na.....m•·r TNt •'•""'*"' flNof "'"' ,.,. CMol!ltr ltn, •nd ••I .,., ... .,,. wi11t1 """"""•• nm.ti. ,.,. ..,, """ •19111 '-'• """ ,., ""* ......... w; WC ~--.. UC o.rt " or.,... '-"' di\ Mty :II. 1m UlllTIO CALl,ORllllA IAlllC , ... '"'" ... 111111 fr.ctllll'I .. "" ,......,. ,.,. 1111 ... _..,. " ....... ""'' devaJuatlon ol the dollar, ,., ""'"1y "· M--. °"""" """"' 2111 .,... cMtt 111,..._., • '1:.:. •Wtr _, ~ """' "'' Mil , .. "''linlrT dlecll ""''"" Mo • ,.. which amounted to oearly 12 om. ..._, ,....., c11H, "'911•1111• a.n11; ., MMtr t '*"" .,..... ,...,. ... ,. ""' .,..., ., ""' c-tr ., ~ 1 ....... 1-.. ,..,. ~ ill 11'1 '"""""' ,,.. .... """' ,.,,. "'"'""' .. lll!e -................. tfltl ""' perctnt •lainrt major v• -... hbll.,... o...,.. c.n Diiiy ""'· ' tnu ......, w11 .,,.,. ..,,. """ "'...,... '""""'' H .... .._ 11 ,_,..., "'""' in • currencies. """' 11, .,.. J-1. ,., n. "" 141wi ...... 1..-On"" c.1 0.11, ,,let, ._, ., 111""• .. "",., ~ 111(1'1 c-•act. "" ~ .. 11w did wi• .,. ...,_ 'nle Bdrninistr•tion bu uld LEOAL NO'nGE ,..., i1, '" "· • ..,,. J11111,,1tt1 1m.n :11:.:;..'" c.•M., • ....,,., ttl'I tv11 "''"' """""'wltl" ..,,.,. • •• c.itr 111 •lone that the effects of LEGAL NanCE . ~:~.!::.':: 11':.:' !.~:':' ,':~"~!"ni:l, ::'1~J .~~ ........ devaJuatJon would not btntflt "••'•""•• \~ .. ~"'.':r'::':.~VA:: ft1CT1T1e"' 1us1•••• -..,..., ..,. w111c11 111111 ...... , llM i.w ....... """'"'"""" 11111 t11t11 .. t•• ba) r nt Jc "'"' NAMI tTATl1"1111T fer 1°""' of tllf M'ltvnl tot llW C.lred, 11'1 _ .... ,.. Wiii! t.cflen QM tf '919 I/Ill' ance-o ·payme ' p • TN l•ft9Wlllol """"~ ............ "" ""' ftlloWLne I .. "" Ml °""""'mtnl (off, .... -,,,...,., .,..... Ill llM llMUlll "' ,...,. " "'' '°""W (Uro quJckJy hut that b int ti lhl fld'lllllll Minni 11-OAY " _...,. ' f'ftM t11tr•nf"111C1 1t1e lllll'llvl ttrle•Mtf'IC• If llM Ctnlr'kll ••Ill ..... It M n"t .;_ • 1 LIASINO COMil'A.NY, " "" •• N teu1ll I •tell" ILLIOTT IAILMAll:llt, ~ ........ .,. ti!• c....n,., Coul'lllr .... l11111r•M• Mmlftll"IW " Ot•no• ,...,...", Yelr'I end the trade baJlnct l 1111'We1111, S111te AN, C.ftlWnl•, . ftll If Ht---' IMdl TIM ... rd ., ·~ tft.trvH 11!t rllllt M rtl«1 WI\' .. 111 ._ Mif ,.. should be 1ho-t .... Jil'n• of Jm. ..!:: ncn':"..!. ':~1 "'C:n~~ RIV..::Cnd 1. •lli.11 iu, Jit Twnn --~11" KC-.t "" ...,.t •~ llllf, 1n11 • ••lw '"' w.r-11,., .,; 111., ..,. "M'6 .. -....... lllN A N__.. hid\. t'l<tl¥el, provemeot. 14 =· ..... It. o..,, _, ... ,. Atte. o-T~;· Ml-11 ... ,.. undul:ltif"' .. =~-~~:1• Of!: THIE toAltD °" SUjltlltYllOltl Of' O•AlfOI COllNTY, CALJ. ~ty AalJtant SecttlaT)' ,..·nt, C.tlllWl!lf llllfl\l'WWI, O.tee Mir 14. mt Of Co--~'ward Al'· JOlll'I D. Ytnett ..,, ......_ .... (111111, itAYMOHO 1. ILL10t1 111 111~1 ""'-'""' ~ ..:n C:llH, Tllll 1111-..W n ... with tlll ( ......... forecub • rtCOf'd ... bilJ}on Tfllt WllMdt ... ,..,..... "' e Oett; If Of..,.. C-,., WI Mt, M, ltn. ~~'fo!:" .... ..;..... nwta 111• • ............ ,... • _. .w-t """"""".. .., ~' J. ,.,........ l>twty """"' .. 11\41 .. ,,. ........... .. -......,... -Llllll --..-• .. -.::11 JOHN O, VANCI CMrt. . 0rtl'!tl ce.fV, ~ more thlJI 1'71 but lllll no\ ,....._.. 0r..... c... ...., 'P: ,..... Ol"IMt c... ere"' ':C t.=' .._....,_ enoo&h ~ fttnk the deftclt. Mn JI, _, NM 1, U,. ft. zt7J 1111-n Mrt Jl, W .Ml 1, U. 11, Im MINI ~ ....... C.. Dllr Piii, "'7 M n J1. lf7J I I DAllV PILO~ s Wtdntsd1ty, ,,,., ll, 1972 • • .. ~ .. '" " + " " +·1. " _ .. t:: ... . ~ ...... " • ~ -'Blue Chips' Lose After Early Gain ' . 1101 . , 1m I M•rkett'retul 7r ""'"~ w ao11nft(M .... ..•.. •• .. m O.C I-........ t.)11 UllCtle..... .,,. ,.,. ff:: r,;. W '""" ....... T.,_I • ,, .,,1 ).1 II~ -AM.all: MAllflll' TlllllD AN'°"" " ........ ~-:I" ,,...,,l °'9(111141 ....... m ... UftC1'•..... • ....... ,Ji: t,... . ..... 1)11 I flUlfllN tv C...,..11 -· ..... •• lllfl.l 10111 L .. C:IM1 CJ19, lWlffl"Co .611 If " " " -" WI NI("' .!Ii ... ., ... ~· M"-"' W1Clrl... ''" "" ,. OU +I W1Cm.r 1~ • "" " tJ•.-1 ... w ....... c. • .... ... 1111 • • Wt •N'L O.» "' ... .... ti••+ .. w ........ ,w ' I• • . ... ..~ W11llG1 ••• " -... "" W1111 5M •• " , ... ... 1,,_ '• W••~ w •• .. .... "" tt••+ '• Wltl!fl\ ''" " .. ... .. . '• W111nt G ,,, .. n•, 11 !o 11 'o w ovnof ... ' '" ... 1111 + ,, Wt•nVn '" ' ... .. ,,, .. '• Wttll Un • ' .. , ~ . .,, . '. W11t~r '" l • lJ'o ,,. \).., .. \o W1~0ll ,, ., ·~· ... lO\• t-11 Kii l!t ,14 W•lllgj 1.ao WltYac. 1.05 Wt'fW \.JI Wt Vl fflt ,to w .... r.t '"' w..,.,r,t ~ W'l'll~.,. ·* wtiol1(9111 5!1 Wl'lfrl•I I •J Wllffl Ceo wl Wll CCltl • .0. WlllrC •tC-) WM:rCIU .... Whlft M•lcor WMIU~r Cit Wl<-•I Cit I Wl1t 101 .Ut WI! llt•ll u W1tll1m 1 Cl W11! C11 wt1 Wll!Co.I .IO WlnnO• 1 '' W\1111-oe 1 WtllMtL .)0 ~ ~ .. ~·· ,.. .. ;.. .. ""f'" I j.4 Wl1 ii>! •,~ Wl1 lot I.. Wlo~PS I t.i Wit(~ t11 .9' wa•~ww l6 Wcimltl 41> Woot1C1 'I Wootwl\ I 10 Wwl ot 110 WOtlll Al tw Wr)oi9y( )41 Wu•!lttr .~ Wt llMl! " " W.l~llt 1.Sf " W1ll1 IF ' WUM 'I .11d " W•llt ... " W"et'lt1 " " Wlll"Tr ,to& ' w,, ,. .., 41, ... w,.,. •• . JOd '" W•"•'t1 '" " Wtltl'I(: '·" "' Wt! l"ec ""' l~ WU11len •• Wts!Uf'I 111 I • ,, •• ,, .. ,,,, ,,., ,.,, "" ti•, ,., ... "" 11·, .., tl'. " '" "" "" "" '" n:-: " " J1't 11•. " -· " '" ni..-•• tJ .... ~ .. iAj,.O It ,., .. " .,,., n••+ o.. • -" )I'~'• ,,...,_ . ., 111't--., '!•o•Co .u II lt.t. !II(. Vo~r .)1)11 10111 c'1 '°"'' ol !:\~~, ~ :;r.i. 'r.~ '1-t tJ -,+ ~t '"" lnr .?t i1•,, ' DAILY l'ILllT .... .. ,,..,_, "Ifill ~ c• • t lJ.l ID I• -lit l 1111& 1$11' 1Jrtt.-J" ,.. ~ .t:>'I .,.__ '• f,. .. \.. ,.,,, .ftL'ri - ... 1•14 14 t• -,,, • Q -,,.,._ ... ltl ll .... ,.~ n 111 11111t 11..._ -. * ""' si.. ""'-+ 'ii "1 l\t ,.. 1'6--'" J,.I J)\'i 1'111 17'11-'• 11 ll•llo 111 111 -.... ) ,. •• ,., ........ l.o " J4\1 ~ nt1+. I.to 1 ~ ,,..... JI-+ O.. 111 Jn. ,, .. ,, ....... •I 22'4. 12111 Hit>-" ""' \e\1 *-.. _ I& .. ••, ~ ... ')IT+ 11' ,, " .~ ,,.,_ "' » .. ,. -... 11 ... 1·, 13'1 Jl"O 11"' ll"-1'' 110 ~-. Ht, 1A--1•o I JOii ~ 1114-I .. 11 M SI" n.. . »t " tf\li fOl'-1 :~ 1ij~ ill" :1t~1. , ,,,. ,m ttt: · '"' ·~· '"'t '• ,,~ 14\i f'l~l '• .:i P."' 'ir· ,f::i,J. ,~ 1 \lo ,,... Sol\fo + ., lh l ~. 1~+ \1 ' ,... 1•j .... h J\.'t--'.li 10 u" 1 ,,, 11,,._ •• -XYZ- •• 1.. tro:.i 1-.1.I )lltll ltw C\M.t Cltf. - • • DAILY PILOT Wtdotf41r, Ma1 31, 1972 TONIGHT'S tv IDGHLIGHTS KTLA e 7 p.m. Mov ie. "Edgt of uoom." Dana Aac!rews. f.arley Granger and Mala Powers star In l!l'o'hour dr1m1. CBS 8 8 p.m. Carol Burnett. The 1how regulars P;esent their !ull·length spoof o! 1 musical, "The Dolly Slaters." NBC D 8 p.m. Adam·l2. "The Tip." Bandiu u1tng tear gas and a unique escape route rob an armored truck and a savings and loan bank. KCE'r lllt 9 p.m. "Remembtring P.D.Q. Bach." A humorous look at Peter Schickele'1 imaginary character as a take-off on baroque mu.sic, filmed 11 : :·~;mC•~:·:i~ "The Trojan Horse ," 1tar· l rin1 Steve Reeves, John Drew Barrymore. i • • • •• •••• • ••• •••••••••••••••••• • • •CACH •LVO. AT CLL1a • • •e T. C:O'"''' "-·••AM Dt••o • ..,.,, 8•'P·••O• •HUNTINGTON •• ,.,CH I lCLL~IV! l.NGAGP.M'HT "A VERY FUNNY FkM" VINCfNT CAM9Y NF.W \'OAK TIMES ~TA'!v wooov ,._ AtlfN ... -"" ...... _ .. lllA'r ll ,\£,41 ... SA.~ .. ~ . '"l1IE ............ ~ ... -.----···-· ... ··· -•••-, .. _.,.,-.. IPG) • DAIL'f PILOT 11•11 l"tle• 'HOLD THAT POSE ' -Joanne Wolcott sketches the toga-clad Larry Eldon while Noel Fillastre affixes a tipsy gaze in this scene from the Irvine Com· munity Theater comedy "You Can't Take It \V ith You/' opening Friday at 8 o'clock in the UC Irvine Humanities Hall Playhouse. Wednesday Evening wilit lhtlr Jlometown of "1l11d1lphl1 1fttr • 2S·ytlf abstllet. m ..... 1r1tt111 .... Iii! Ill nlo - Theater Notes MAY 31 l:JI 8 GEORGE McGOVERN * The Man ' The lnun , t:GD 8 Cl) llWPI C..!lr (II) Wllilt lrNtint 111 1mbitious youn1 tXtt· 11tlwi (8r16ford Dillm1n) ffll ltd· dtnl lnjurlu, Ga11no11 lt1m1 hls pa· tltnt l\ai 1 aerioll1 mtriht probl1m 1M won't Mlmit ht nttdl llt lp. 8 llllr lrtM• er.Mt D (l)(l)GDl•rtJ r11;1111 C.IMiJ M~ 81rb1r1 ftldo n, T'htlm1 Houston, S!likt Milli11n tnd Jackie Y1rnon llllSL 'Can't Take It With You,' '"' 1 I e. e 111111-111111 ..... .., • (IJ ""' "" ..... ··-e111e.oi- 1 MIL.II IOUTII .Mii DlfCOO rwf. (X(LU~IVI Ul:;AGEMOO 'Absence of Cello' Open ., ....... fBl t]IYiWltilM NRtmtmblrlna MCIC~·U--W f.D.Q. 81ch" A hlll!IOl'OUS look 1l .... ::--~~ ......... ffltr Sc'hliblt'• lmtJln1ry ch1r1c· ,..;;.,. ~ They say it-lawyer who ltr 111 t1kt·off on b1roqu1 m111lc, GRE.AT mct1""'1' defends himself has a fool for filmld •t !ht Ktflntd1 C.nttl. ATTRACTKIN • l :JO'A ---· Wn ..... CHI Tiii Ylrpr11 01••11 h ynGltl• a client. and whelher or not u ,_, "" ,.,., "HOW SWIET iT II" h t d I 1· L.Nyr Co11et ccom) '60 -Tony mi NMll i:=;:;::;:;:;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:=~ t a a age a so app 1es to Curtit DM11 M1rtln J1nlt ltl..., directors who act in their owo • · •"· t:JO o (J) CIJ m T11e hnuall111 ·111e IN HAR•o• SHOPPING cENTElt Jim .. WhfllllOft, 11~11 Nlchola. Goodbyt" (R) Dtnn, and Brttt !Ind productions, the Irvi ne Com· WIMn c:lltmlttry 'rol'lllOr b cauahl 1 cr1sh1d pl1ne with lht 1ktltlon 1!.DWARDS munity theater-and this col· wltll 1 prlffJ alrl 1ludtnl, ht ind • of tn invtnlot who ~iuppttrtd 12 HARBOR c1~~. 2 frltnd pl'lttnd It WH ,.rt of !IMlr ,. •• b<fOft. llJllOI 11.Wll IT 'll'IUOll IT, umnist-will find out lhis •• ~ f ... fll ·~ COIT• Mfl A l•f-OS7l u .... 1rcowr ..... or , IJ II Jftn weekend. CllCll ,.... &IAnlrt•t J 1111.11 "01wiD11ao 1wv Yours truly is tak ing the (II MM: (C) .,., • ., 1111 tit MIJ. &1 llldlll f-Htn,wo.d r1rt A JOURNEY SE'f'ONO IMAGINATION ._We .. (com) '61 -Dtbbl1 Wtt· unlikely role of Grandpa llll Z."1 ·-...... :--e .. .,..,.,. .,, - l!t T1 II AllllfftClli ·-- By TOM TITUS 01 tlll O•llY l'lltt 11111 son, D111W1r Pylt. IO:OOIJ (I) M1111l1 (Ill ''"' f1lr II -11ICnt' Vanderhor as welt as directing ID Mlf llllltll IMw kidrupped by two mt11 who 1tnt • n~-!CT od · •"'•lllfflMltM "'"'*'' 110l1 w1111ln1 Mtnnb: that ontr ht • .,. .. _-JI the pr uct1on of "You IJlfkllfU. c:1n11Ythar. ·----Can't Take It With You," Playi ng major roles in the Irvine comedy will be Joanne Wolcott . John · Philli)fs, Charlotte Mitchell, B u d Knapp, Sharon Heusinkveld, Walter Orange. Walter Dudek, Larry Eldon !:Ind Alan Levy , Completing the company are Zetta Patterson. Jo s e p h Jackson Jr., Ela ine Shannon, Jack Ogbo rn . Beth Titus. Noel Fitlastre. Mark Rickels and Da vid Wilson. Eight performances a r e scheduled. Fridays a n d Saturdays al 8 o'clock through June 24 at the campus pl ayhouse. Rese rvations $47-nJJ. continue tonight t h r o u g h Saturday. -Ken Kornweibel, Ji m Slaughter, Nancy Bond and Cheryl Boyd head the cast at the playhouse. 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Lagune Beach. Reser va tions 494-0743. * Completing their en - gagements this week are a splashy musical at UC Irvine, "Kiss Me Kate." and a com- edy re vival by the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. "My Sister Eileen." "Kate" res u mes tonight and plays through Saturday, while "Eileen" performs Friday and Saturday -1 ... sww'ttem'7 ,.-. C.•tt11••wt llNw •• s.t. _. S.1. *'•• J , .•• PllCIS UNTIL 4 r.M. - .t.DULH M4 Jlt 11 .Jt You don't assign him to murder cases. You just tu rn him toose. Qint Eastwood Dirty Harry . t -rlJ.· PANAV13h.:·r1• • TE.:HNICCI OP.•· Wa1n11r S;O!, A Kinney Como&"V Alw J1m•1 Gafner in "SKIN GAME"' • • •• .. THE LUI' 'iF1t••1•UR£ SHDW AFMIS.,. -rnR BOGllANOVICll • ..... .ACAllD(\ AWARD WllUUCil • • • • !; : . . • ... . . • • :~ . . . ... lllT=•=·---· .. """""' ... l'ES1' =·=·---: 1 CUJAISU~ co...-...: .... ·-·--.ic.·--u. •• .., ...... _ ......... ,.~:-·--IC"°"' 1 A " -.:.O< t I<"• ..-S•<• • ti• JCOM<'°" I Q.(IJlll. 1f<ICHW>OI==@ =--.., .. -.;--.... ,,.~,,,, ........... ,.-........... _ .. ,!. . _ ... _ ... l_ .... _ ... ll _____ .. : w;-o!.'l•'•-.,J•t-•• ·-- IOor!'-"'--o&(;• -<-""-1 .. ;. DQM'T MISI TMIS MUCH TAlKID 1t10UT rJCnaB NOW SHOWING! .: : IXC\USIVllT ltT •. TMISI SlllCTH . ID Wrl ll'IMI (JI) D !JI Cl lllpt lllltry ii) A11 old ., .. co"'"a-opening Friday for f o u r e T,...,. 111111 Ind hit 111/ICINn ttftrly d (ltt11t1 ~ •••It tha comlni., 1111 M•ulih 111 1..d HO . MMl'~COllUIN weeken s-but it wasn't really * only. -. Clayton Garrison heads thed ~====================:·t· ~~ ·' GD~ ;.11 C:.•llMI~ "TM Masai•~ 011 Mott StrHI,~ sttr· 1-:=:'':•:• •:,.:::":':'":'':':1 ===~I planned that way. When an ac- I VldlM .11-.. tin1 Echt•rd C. ltolllnSIHI 111d RickJ' I· tor in a major role walk! out - "'llot Ml. ' II • • ".'I • IN TH• Wl!STJllllllN•T•ft Cl!NTl!llt br ''Tht l'tlnttd Mitl'Of," which stirs ••••••••• ••••••••• iu • owt ; 111 • Mt own .. • Pt ••••• I with two weeks to go, you 1:15 8,..,., l4elM11 Zu Zu Ctbof, Arthur O'CllilntU 1114 ••• ' · ••• don 't try to bring someone in : • I ~ J:ao I (]J ee hwt R0Hm111 Dt tamp. •, : cold-you do it yourself. MM: (21tr) "'Up 1f ..... 8 m NM "·········••••············ The reviva l of the Kaufman· ("') '50 -Dini Alldrtw• f1rl11 D Mnlt: (C) (lhr) "'Tht TNitl W•&TMINST•" aT C'.101.0t!H w•sr H l d I " •-• I" ) '62 • R & ar come y c assic is one of Gr1n11r, Miii hwtrs. _..,. v -.. im lt\111, IETWEf" ,::00~:.~·~~:. 192·4493 (J) Trvtll ., CH11t111111C1t Johft Drew 81rryrnor1. four new productions on the (IJ - ti Slfart It Alftlltutt local boards this weeit as the 191 A Hal Wallis r""' ... 1 .... O 'nit• MJ UMJ lW' 111111 curtain begins to descend on • • LM Ltc:J G M•,,i.a n.tN -TM ""' \ "'''" c1 • ....i. GI 1...._11 .._11111 ....., '1ht CrippJt .. (R) Rcd.~ra\ c · Jack~on the 1971-72 season. Starting the IDtfatlllNI IEIT• .. All"'4IMlll week off was the Lido Isle tll UM Pllt•ril 111 11 C..111111 8) LI l111IMll• 41 a.lt11et Players third show of the 8 FMll: "rlPt _.. 10:30 (II n. CtllldlUM year, "The Absence of a r:Ja.l.llnhtl John fots)'llM 111nilts Ulttrat '11itu•'• Ttlll·lad "1 ~~;:~~~'.11~:~~:1'.'i'," Cello," which opened Tuesday iii n. ....,. fldiNJ Guest kWllMI (I) s,.r. attlltnp ..:.--night and will run continuously ,WorltJ celt~rilu WO!lltfl't 111:1 0 nb Is Y• UI• Clift Robolrtsofl through Saturday. thrOllth tonl 1PMI 4tnce. ii th• iurpristd 1utsl. N w...,,_. i-., ........._ Two other attractions which Cl) T1 Tll tltt Trvtll 8 IHI ClliJ 111119 ANO also open this weekend are the (Jl I -~ ,...... 111 i. ....... "BUCK THE PREACHER" San c). men I. Community 0 Iii ... $ liltM: (C) (lllr) .,... ft FliM: "'Ull ti ltll l 11«.1nHrs• 1-:=========~I Theater's "emergency" prO- lqe• (lfv) '51-Alin lldd Ros· ID 42 P'lut I' d · f "De L. " u 'nt PodlsUI, Lloyd Nolin.' Clllll &I C...tilldl w,.1:11t uctlon o ar 1ar, debu ting Thursday, a n d Wills. story "' tel'llll!Urts 111 th• 11:0011 DD ti> mm"... another look at the popular l1111tl11.t Cllhl. t]) ()) 9 "... musical "Fiddler -0n t h e ID Hip•'• ... ,... 8 One SW,"'* R f " ind. h Lo Cl CJ) tnptt (j) 111,,.1 DHI•• oo . w 1ng up t e ng t1JLW¥: rn,111t1H1 CDTMll., t.tn11qU1Mtt Beach Civic Light Opera GI TN fret!Cl Clllf "Summer Sil· m DnN frtrl n.. seascin with a Friday nig ht •ft" Ill (ljJ EIKllM 72 opening. fD ft It W,.._ I!) HllCIU., (II) A JOURNfY MYOffO IMAGINATION The new errival:S boost the ElJ J111lwllll Miiiie field of current stage offerings m """' (21l<J ........... (ldv) lt:t5 Ill, ..... "'""" .,,,,.. -111cnt lo It. one of the heaviest com· '41 -AllttlCN!J Qillllll, Arthur Ken· 11:XI II CJ) ca Liit Mwl~ (C) -W. (UftNng• plements of the seaS-On. Also in 11tdJ. Ylrrlnlt Fltld. i1f 11 lhl W'llld" (•••) '53 -Rob· • __ ,..,_ production thi s week are South &:oo•Cll ear.t llfNtl (R) Tht •how trt T1ylor, Julit London. "-""·Ill• Coast Repertory. UC Irvine, 11111/1n ,rts.nt tlltlr !UH·ltn,U. D llJ m ,,., NllH't Tri, .. 1------...lo the Costa Mesa c i v i c .. ~OltVll!l!HO apoof of • 111uslc.I, "Th• DDlJr Sis· sew GWlOM CH.,ttj -1".. Playhouse, the Huntington ten." D Ml'l'lt: "'Hu1rr ((Offf) ·u -/:;;::;:;;;;;;:;;:::;:;:;:;::;;:::::;/ Beach Playhouse, the Laguna Gm.W.•·12 ''Thi Tip" (JI) Mtcdo"1ld C.r.,., P1ul1tt1 Goddtrd. IN MISSION Vll!JO Moulton Playhouse. the Bandits uslnt INt 111111d I unlqut 0 (l}(I) m Did: C.....lt Fullerton Footlighters and the *'Pl mllft ltb 111 1rrnor14 !Nell m T1 Ttll Ult Tltttl Long Beach C o m m u n i t y •ncl • uvinp tnd 1Gt11 btn~. D (I) (j) Ill TH..,_ o1 u 11:00 D l!j f!!l "'"" ..., Playhouse. •·• fak "Th• l11¥tlto(" (II) Torn G """-: '\ltt u,.w. Oen" (•rtl "Yoo Can't Take It With •M NMn•• llMSI 111 111 ofl Wiii on '65 -c11ar11s Otl'lnt1, Ann• G11lor. v_, .. .......,.,1.,.. i..k-You" moves into th e • tip from . Wllltr (Htl CooPlt). m Mtftt: (t) "Ab• ..... (ldv) '6' ~~.~~= ::,0:•N Humanities Hall playhouse on (fl lllr lreM• Clllrtlttl CmM• -K1njl S,w1r1, A~tm• Kltl. I =~-·~""~'°'~'~"~'~~:!;:"!!:!:=~I the UC! campus with a cast of CDAll,,.lliffltllShn 1: ts characters recreating (and OJ hnJ U... ll:lO 11J Count17 MWiie: EDWARDS CINEMA embellishing ) the p u I i tier --~., 71 "lm•I' M1kln1 In "'''°' ll-. Al ADAMI '.~, •. ". r:iir;:;;. 1:00(J)Q8CIJdl fftwt M&-3102 ·"" Prize.winning story of an un- -lKM Ultrl Wrislllni C) ,.. " flll k!ZA•TH 11na1 . tlCHAto IUtllON .. conventiona l f ami\y "relax-..., l:lCI II Mnlt: ( " •• "' "NAMMllSMITM IS OUTH II) ing" in the midst of the Im) EllldN C.""' l11111t'" (••O '59--Audl t Murphf, Depression. l:JO o ia e "'c .,,.,, TMlh-a~ htrt1 l .. l•;;•;;•;;-;::•~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·:::·~·~·~·:;:::;::::=:::;;;;::::::::;:;;::::::;;;;:;:;;::::;-1 llcCIMll "Firth Min lft 1 strin1 m A~NI »ow: ''Ni~bl Q"'rtri" 1•1 Modom "°'""' '" "' · '" '" NOW SHOWING -WED. THRU -SUN. C.dl," "SllJ hi IM AJ," '1trbW· 1 old wartd tits wupi In 111urdtt, tm1 •• llrHt" MeOEIN TllUTIE AT ITS FINEST: 11 ilt11s1 '""111 sllry su11. H1Y1111 811nd ind 1t1r Dt11· 1f an '9 crisis set 111i1st ta1 ~11ll1r UckrrtlH 1t 11-~IS Wt1vtr'1 .," Jlic:k ruest. J:JO e Merit: .. ,,. , .. , NinNftl' dur t.U.. ii .._ catm ,, .. ,... ,.utical .....,., D CJ) (I) U) 1" S•lttl f11111Jr (d11) ·43 -hu~ttt ~d1rd, Ml· "HolllKOl!lln(' (JI) Ch1d 11111 le dl1ll Wil4inf. "Sii-"-flrl·fH'9,,..lllt, ..,,.....,."""" ... ~,,, ........... .., .... -·· lfl'l"9rtllll Alll«k111 llMY Iii "'-ltt! M•«ll ...... , ••• ,'" Dally Pli.I Bill Fucik has stepped in to replace the ailing Rut b McCulley as director o f "Absence of a Cello" for the Lido Isle Pla yers. Jackson \\'ilcox heads the cast as an individualistic scientist at- tempting to bend h i s personality to fit the corporate image. Others in the Lldo cast are Elsie Painter. Annette Bell. Nancy Geerling, W 11 y n e Gibson. Jonathan Charles and Nat Michaud. "Absence of a Cello" con- tinues tonight through Satur- day at 8:30 at the Lido Isle Clubhouse. 701 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beach. Reservations 673-6tl2. * "Dear Li a r. '' originally staged by the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. moves to the San Clemente Community Theater Thursday n i g h t , replacing the canceled pro- duction of "The Front Page." Hap Graham is directi ng the autobiographical drama with David Paul playing George Bernard Shaw and Betsy Pau l enacting Mrs. P a t r i c k Campbell. Performances will be given Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:30 in the Cabrillo Plavhouse. 2 O 2 Avenida Cabrillo; San Clemente. Reservations 492- 0465. * Two ambitious but dissimilar productions con- tinue their lengthy runs along lhe Orange Coast a.s South Coast Repertory heads into its third week with the drama "Pueblo" and the Laguna '."1oulton Playhouse con tinues its summer musical "Dear Ernest." "Pueblo,,, I d r a m at i c documentation of the 1968 shiJ>"Seizing incident is the finest piece of theater m~unted In Orange County this season. Martin Benson di~ects the epic pr-Oductjon with Don Tuche heading a huge cast as Commander Lloyd Bucher. directorial staff for the Cole!· Porter musical at UCI. with Donna Fuller and Bill Miller cast in the lea'ding rolet. Sands Hall and Cameron Mason end top support . "Kiss Me. Kate." inspired by Shakespeare's "Taming of the Shrew," will be staged al 8:30 in the UCI Village Theater. Reservations 833· 6617. Diana Spencer and Debra Ensign head up the cast of "Eileen" for Costa Mes.B director Pali Tambellini, with Ron Gibb topping a supporting cast that includes G e n e Benedict, Alan Hart, Barbara Garlich and Jack Murray. Performances are given at the Community C e n t e r Auditorium on the Orange County Fairgrounds at 8:30. Reservations 834-5303. * A trio of continuing com- edies completes the bill of fart for · local theatergoers, with the Hunt i ngto n Beach Playh-Ouse staging "Catch Me If You Can," the Fullerton Footlighter1 presenting "Don't Drink the Water" and the Long Beach Community Playhouse premiering "The Savage Dilemma." All are being performed Fridays and Saturdays. John Loughman, Mart I n Fuchs and Merrell Ann Had- dan star in Alex Koba's pro- duction of "Catch Me" at Hun· WINNER OF *THREE* ACADEMY 1 AWARDS "Jiddler on the ~ ...,. .,, 12.00 Noon • tit 9:00 r .M. llu10N Hats Iii• IMliablt .. Mwlllal, Lblr- ,.,, ~ _, Wolictt's #»- sic City. r:.,. 1PKl•I Arr1no-11 P:or Grouoa of 1$ If' MO!'e c.11 m .m1 h •••lv ~·•Y· MATINIU WM.• Sot.· I••· tington Beach. Curtain time i.s,i ------------------"---- 8:30 at the playhouse, 2110 Main St. Reservations ~ 8861. Mitchell Sanford d ire c t s "Don't Drink the Water" for the Footlightcrs with Sidney Ellison, Muriel White and Michael Hanlon heading the cast. Curtain is 8:30 at the Muckenthaler Center, t 19 Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton. Reservations 528-1973. "The Savage Dilemma," a · w or I d premiere, continues under Bert a m Tanswell's direction at the Community Playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim SI.. Long Beach. curtain is 8:30; reservations (213) 438- 05.16. Thursday P e r f o r m ances resume tonight and continue through .,.,.=-~-======1 Sunday al I o'clock at the Third Step Theater, 1827 NewPort Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservations 646-1363. ~YTIME MOVIES " . Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers l . · JiJuth Cuaot Rept-rtory Co ~tn Me'a • 646-1363 or Mutuol Age nc ies Kids Like to Ask Andy "Dear Ernest" Is a lighter o(fering, a musical version of "The Importance of Being Earnest," directed by Frances Raffert)' Baker. Performances • ---~ • "POUIUION OP JOIL DIU.MIT'" '" ,__.... , .. "IOHM.Un IAIT" ,.,I ,.. .... ~'."'·-4.,., ...... f WHITS HOl'I" "FRENCH CONNECTION " 1---AllO "lnt1Me f.l.IMT"' DWAlll CINl .. A "•'"' •1 ""'"'" • ~· .... ....,,ft SMOWTIMl:S ~........ ............ .. , .. ,~ tlf. .. ................ ,.,..., ... 11 ,.. .... . ................ ,.. ... ........... .................. "_ O.ll'f l~UJ SM ...... h•P'<M. 1114 '1ATV•1 JAMUCOMJIN "THE HONKERS" " •• " '.• • ·, ·~ f \ .. • • :":. •• • .. • • · .. • .. . . . . ... • • .. ... . . . •. .. . ·" • _,, M., l::l·c:l:.:'7::2 _______ .::.D.::.iJc:l Yc..c..:1'1.:..ltlc_..._ Overdone 1'1usical ·Ki&' T·V · Sh .ows Revised Laguna Dullsville NEW YORK (AP) -Tbt thrff commercial television networks Y.'111 attempt once a11in next season to •~ complish v.·hat Sttms to be the Impossible: satisfy or a! leas~ quiet down the adult critics of tht>lr pro & r a mm i n a for children. ' t.an~led "~1r . W\urd" 111nd or P,'\inted the gue,f! rOom. '-iilmt h111s t.ut.1ts tnlhuslastlcally t.:t· !'Art of the IM'rl'rlll \ uplUt Af· 11 p\oilfd "Take a Giant Stl'p.. fN·ting thr netv.1orks \\'Os trom an hour to 30 lllinultS. SlllllUllllrd by 1he lllet:f'SS or ABC will stick with Its IY.'O tn· •·S<>same Stre<'l" on the 1111· 1r1es in tht' pre~tige stakes, ti(lll's Nluc1tional lltat lon~. •·etirio.'lity Shop" and "fl1ake a This v.·11s coupled with \Vish" for 1no1hrr season. devasllng crltlcisni by bt>ttcr·J With 'Dear Ernest' AU of thPn\ a1Tl11t!d on broadcasUna an(I pa r r n I s· network SCht.-dules last Sep-groups and rcflectl'd I nl ternber in the wake or \\'ashington. I espe<;ially rorrrful critlclsn1 of Rtsulis of tht blg efrori h~vt the qualily of lhP y.·eckrnd been ratht'r dlscouraglnK. Tht•1 niornln~ schedules -nld <'firtoon block!\ now nrr IOlldPd thr11 tr1ral cRrloons, situ<illon ,, 11 h non-l'iolent. frol il'k 1ng By TOM TITUS 01 Ille D111, ,llet Sltll The noted journalist M. L. ~1encken once said, "Anything too silly to be spoken usually is sung," and the Laguna Moulton Playhouse will be , pre.ving him right from now • .. • • .. ' i J•ne Fonda ,, "KLUTE" 'hn "SUMMER OF '42" IOTH COLOI TWO KINCI f(llOH HITSI "111.llT IUllJUMG" (fl ,lUS/COlOI "AllOIOMIDA STIAIMH l'I ·-~ ,,..... .. -·-M1·Mll 1....,,f.,TWl ... r' I "lmtll lnArr' Ill l"liiitAllWi .. .., U1C1P 17 MUST ll WllMfa• {RI through mid.July with its 11 o s s y, featherweight pro. duction of the musical "Deir Ernest." Watching this overproduced, o v er directed, overstylized burxlle of fluff. one is remind· ed of the producer in the play "Critic 's Choice" who puts on "O•AI EllNEST" A rn111k 1t •dtPlttiori ot OKt • W•ld1"i ''Tiit lmDOrl~I ol Btlnt E1rllft!.~ writ!.,. ltY '" W•l•ht. -~ tl'ld ~ric1 bY IUf ,;;r c.oao1ro. ol•K1..:1 bv L~:~1~1.~.1111:;~~1c:1••0'1~icr;:1•~ygh.~~ Anc1e .. 1n, 1>•t !l!fl1!'d lu1t<1••• 1hrouon S.iurdlYI 1! l ·JO •~•Ou•h Ji..lv J 11 l~I LtQU<lt Moullon P11yhouu, "°' Lt · 0""' C1nvon Ro10, L1gun1 llttch R11erv1!l0<>• "-.a1~J. THI CAST Jnhn Woflninv Jim Sl1uvM•• Algt•non Moncrlt ll K1nn1!h Kcrnwelbtl (K llY C1rd1w CP\lryl loyd Gwer>dolvn F1ld 1• •..•. N1ncv Bond Ltdv 8r1d1nell Olive RI-ht• Dr Chtu•ublt . . . Jot Wll1on Miss Pr!lm . @ll1ncht Mlck•l1on Lo•d Br1c~nelt M ... TreadWIY·SmYlllt M•!. LiVh!fCIOI •• The DuChf!I ....... Lene ,. Sally Oorl1 Shltldl P1ul l~Khkt Jun• Bulo•d Myr!h M1l~hy Ktrtn StYton Te"• H1ml1tnn loet Ro11mund Cecily and Gwendolyn (and has anybody else noticed that these also are the names or the Pigeon sister.:. in "The Odd Couple"?). Miss Boyd enacts the g id d y . diary-keeping Opryland sehoolglrl I• ,,.,recli•n. whil• Pleasant, Miss Bond presents an a\m05t bN1ssy, co111pletely a w a r e yoong lady. Their l i rs t meeting and subsequent vocal B l d duel is among the few musical •' a a.nee ' . hlgh spols of the shov.•. / , Olive Riches walks off with By CY1''THIAILO\\'RY the supporting honors in a richly characterized role as NE\V ''ORK (AP l ~1iss Bono·s guardian. while "Opryland. U.S.A.," an NBC Joe \V ilson es the clergyman sprcial Tuesday night . was not makes a strong. hun1orous iin· quite as t·uuntry-s1yle as the pact. Blanche Mickelson is an tl!le or the rnusical hour sug· effecti11e if too voluptuous gested -.:ilrnost, but 11ut l\.1iss Pris1n , while ? au I qui!e. Actuall y. il is the na1ne Teschke is virtually \vasted in of a new 11rnusc1Tient con1plcx the r11ther thankless role of near Nash\'ille, Tenn. Miss Riclies' ro\'in~ husband. 1'he tenter now joins the To bolster the show in the Disneyll'lnds. Cypress (;ardcns comedy department, y.·here and ri.1 arinelands v.•hich have such assistance is badly need· landed television sho\VS on the ed. there is a "ladies' garden, premises and thus entered the musical versions of novels like poetry, dance and crocheting consciousness of vacation-min· "AnthonY Adverse." The in-guild " right out of "The Music ded Americans . spiration for the Laguna shoiv Man " ,.,. h i c h unfortunately The "'c'1non down'' message is Oscar Wilde's mannered performs after int.ennission u•as not shouted, however. The English co m e d Y '"The ,1• hen the audience has backgrounds v.•ere permitted Im Port an c e of Being dw indled noticeably. to speak for thcn1sclves in !he All three networks art revis· Ing their Saturday and Sunday mornlng-blocks of children's shows. and cartoon shows still •are the bu ilding blocks most o!ten ·used , CBS will quietly drop Walter Cronkite's "You Are There" series abQut great moments in history. NBC has co~edy reru~:<i and o!hrr llhort 1111inu1lg 11 ho spe11k ~ngl\sh . ()f 1L-.;.-~,;;;;;;;;;;; ___ _: subjects desi gned to ktl'p the l':lrt1'<1turi':\ or pop :<11 ng111g kids quiet \1 hllc the adults ..:ruup~ an1I of ron1rd111n:(. :- slepl late. r('t1lcd thr kitchen -- "THE !EAR'S Ftft!T RULLI SATISfYING.116 COMMERCIAL AMERICAN FILM. ONE OF THE MOST BRUTAL ANO MOVING CHRONICLES Of AMERICAN LIFE EVER DESIGNED WITHIN THE LlllllTS OF POPULAR ENTERTAINMENT." ' -Vincent C<1nby Nt>w Yo1k T1111t•s '"THE GODFATHER ' IS A SPECTACULAR lllOVIE. ONE Of THE FINEST SANGSTER MOVIES EVER MADEi" '-~Gene Shal1t. NBC· TV • SKYJJCICED Earnest," an equally unlikely The primary fa iling of the replica of the ri.1ississippi genesis for a musical. Laguna production is its pace. ri,·erboat. the old Sou thern ,.. Haibor eoul .... •d-Mcf~ Whal director Frances Raf· Were the sho1v swifter afoot. plantation house, the vi llage· • COAST HwY. AT\iAc~iilliuR llvD • Sant-Ar111• 531.1211 ferly Baker seems lo be at· e11en its overslylizi ng could be type band.~tand . Jn front ofli!;";'w;•;o;R~T~B;E;•;c~H~·;•;•;•~·0~7;6;o;;;~~~~~~~~~~!~~~=======~==========~~ tempting here is a parody on forgiven. ~1iss Baker should the n1 w<1s an assortment _ _ __ _ \V ilde's "'ork rather than an ha ve caught a performance t1f of n1usir·;il Jlerformrrs-John- ada tation, somethin& on th'e "Char~v·s Ay_n.L._aJ _ .SQuth._. ny Cash, Tennessee Ernie or er o · iltfe Mar y cOast cpertory last summer Ford. the Carter Family, Roy Sunshine.'' Howe11er. to Spoof btfore plunging into "'Dear Acuff and some r o us I ng something you must ovcrex-Ernest" si ng ing groups. aggerate it. and thill sweeping Performances of '·De a r Lest some 11iewers round It 011eremphasis of moves and Ernest'' are sch e du I e d all too rural, they balanced off gestures m 1 k e 1 "Ernest" Tuesdays through Saturdays the comedy style of Minnie ty.•ice as ted iou s as "Earnest'' from now until July 8. th us . Pearl with the more urhane ever was. making the show the longest comedy of Danny Thon1as who While Wilde's play was a ya wn of the season. It would has suddenl y sprouted silvery small comedy for a small not be surprising, ho~ver. if sidebu rns and imported Leslie stage. the musical version is the curtain dropped before Uggams and Carol Lawrence merely a small show tryi ng to that date. to add more city-slickers. th.ink big on a big stage. Thus.fl.======================;1ll apart from the full-choru s pro-NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES d1,1clion numbers, about BOIL.~----------------------. I perce nt of the show is cen-w•d"Y' _ 6:00·l :IS-10:2S tered on a hand(ul o f characters who are moved 5at. • S1u1. • Holldcrys - with sweeping abandon rrom 1:JO.J:4S·6:00·8:15·10:20 p.111. one side of the immense stage to the other at random until the playgoer begins to get dizzy. All this would be forgi vable if the music weren't quite so forgettable. But, with the ex· ception of e few imaginati11e numbers ("My Diary'' in the first act and the uproariously superfluous l<Qde to Mother Earth" in the ~cond l, the a~· dilion of music only lengthens an already 011erlong e11ening. The deadly dullness of the production is doubly regret-1=~~~iiiiii~~~~~-~---~~11 table in the light of the overall excellence of the Laguna cast. There is no real weak link ,in a lustrous lineup of a c t o r a. singers and dancers, but the vehicle which propels them is too heavy on style and lacking in substance. Heading the company as the double-dealing lads anxious to shed their second facade ar Jim Slaughter and Kenneth Kornweibel. Slaughter is the strongest of the cast, pla ying Wilde.'I fretful hero to perfec· lion, ' wh.ile Kornweibel ill never far behind in his Im- maculate portrayal of the smoother operator. A pair or splend idly con- trasting performances b y Cheryl Boyd and Nancy Bond magnify the characters of ~~.~!~·~~ ~ CffOHA OIL MAil MICRO SKlrni AND .... , • .,1 .. "FURY ON WHEELS" ....... ,, .. ,. .. ...., ........ tt.rtl"t J:N P·•· . --CtNIDDMI 21 · \.~::"."-~ _._. -=n STADIUM , I '1' '.-:""-'~ ----..... ~. STADIUM '7 Iii " ~'":JC!I'= ·--=ll• STADIUM ·3 · .. · '_._ .. _ ... _,.~ • "'WAit llTWllH MIN a WOMIH" ''''''"' J1dt Ltml'Mn 11111 "SklH OJ.Ml,. l •thi11lv1 Orlft'll CMnty 1194rveoil Ifft 1111 .. tmtnl HtmlntlW ,., I Aca4t1T1y Awtr"ftl "FIDDll!ll DH THI!' 1100'" "llLEHT llUNHIHO" • "ANOllOMEDA ITllAIH" "KLUTE" • "SUMMElt 0, '42" ''THI!' UST l'ICTUlll IHOW" • "THI AHOElllOH TAl"ll" . "SOMETIMES A Gllt:AT NOTION" ... "PLAY MISTY li'Olt ME" ---~. . • II you bought a stereo last week without shopping the DAILY PILOT you lost money and time S.vorol DAILY PILOT odo loot wMI< govo you llpo on whero to find uoclly tho kind of oloroo oqulpm"'t you iW•r• looking for, •• •nd 1t IMrgafn prlc11. DAILY PILOT 1d1 also told buyers whtrt to find pr•r• cor.itd~•P"• 1t1reo record1, turnt1blff ind other compon1nt1, not to mention ta,.e rtcord1r1, c11Mttft, rld'I01, t1l1vl1ion 11t1 1nd p0rt1bl1 rcMrd pl1y1r1. Tht sound11t move you could makt I• to chtck DAILY PILOT 1d1 for birg1ln1 b.fort you 1hop. Homa dtllv1ry co1t1 you 62 c1nt1 for the wholt w11k (Mvtn d1y1 now) and c1n uv1 you m1ny tlm11 that with ont purchtH. 81for1 you shop the 1tor11, shop tht 1d1 DAILY . PILOT .. . -• ·D DAILY .PILOT .. 10 CHOOSE RlOM! 69, FORD GAlAXIE 500 formol 2 door honhp. VI, DtJIO. 1ron1., !0<lory air, radio, htal1r. {WAZ855) 13 7 '67 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN. v.e, ou1o. 1t11111.. rodic & heoler. (T'fTOll) '64 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL. f0<tary oir, lull powtr (1tlW323) '68 Falcon Station Wagon. ' cyr. auto. mollc lr8nsmiui0n, rl!dlO, ~Nltr, power steering. (SAU '31). $1395 '66 MUSTANG CONVERT. VI. oo!Dmlltic 1tonvnis· 1ion, power 1Nltrinv, rodic, htGI· er.{RR5559) '69 GALAX IE 71 71 DATSUN PINTO PICKUP Olld CAN.PD: 4 spe.r, TO• Automatic tron, •• rodio, hto ter. lfto, heotllt. (3600IU) 5288SY 197 $199 '69 ~oATSUN ~ vw ~o 2 dr. hordtop. V8, oo!omofit s 10 ST.l llOH WAGON.' 1pt1d, SUHOIAl CAMPER Rtodv to go. Iron!., ll'O*fr l!Hring, r(Hjio, htol· 1Ddio, lwat•. (XNl.153) Mu1! sn !O opprtciatt. (0ttKOl9) $3 77 $·1~3 77 $1 195 s995 . . 1 . ' . . • . . .• ... • ·. t'x.ts ........ 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OJIOmlllic trans.. 3f4TONSTAKlBE0 411Pffd,rD(fie : r577 $J77 ;-377 $995 ii1 , FORD • •• Nutrition Stars ·June is Dairy Month and ~ produ& are busting oot all over ii' "nutrition breaks" that make snack t~ a positive oont~ibution to a bot summer day's food requirements. • Clever meal planners rely on milk in its many forms-butter' sour cream, whipped chream couage cheese, i c e c re a m yogurt, buttermilk and cheeses -to sup- PlY calcium , protein, rlbqflavin, vitamin A, thi amine and niacin Jn meals and tre<1ts. Milk products are designat~ plentiful foods for the month by pie U.S. Agriculture Department b e c a u s e ~·production of milk and dairy products continues to increase about as usual for the season and both should be at or near thei r peaks in June." ~ The now familiar-"every!y needs milk" campaign applies growing youngsters as well as cal le-conscious adults, all of whom can look for ward to delicious variety as they fulfil:' their daily milk quota. For extra energy try Peanut-But .. terscotch Smoothie as an a f t e r .. S'Chool snack or after-work pick-me-up. Put l cup mil k, one 3y, ounce package in- stant butt erscotch pudding and I(, cup peanut but ter in blender. Whir at hi.gh speed until smoot h. Add 11h cups milk and blend. Chill and serve in tall frosty glasses . J Or take a tip from southerners and cool off with a Milk Julep. Blend 4 tab'espoons or mint jelly with lf.i cup milk. Gradually blend iq 1% cups milk and 1 or 2 drops green fodd coloring. To serve, pour 1h cup ol mint-milk mix• ture into a 12-ounce glass, add 31h ounces of gingerale and mix well. Top wit~ a __ scoop of chocolate ice cream and garrush with a sprig or-mint. , These are "in-betwe;-ers" for a day that starts with butter~ toast, creamed eggs, cheese omelette ofl milk oo fruit or cereal and ends with butlered or creamed vegetables, macaroni mid cheese, cottage cheese salads or yogurt parfaits .. These recipes provide even more varia! tlon: n.....I: P,EPPERMI''! FLUFF . . 2 , tablespoons finely crushed pep- permint candy 1 pint peppermint Jee cream , sor~ened 4 cups milk 1 cup whipping cream Peppermint ice crea m Crushed peppennlnt candy In large mixing bowl, beat two tables- poons crushed candy and one pint ~ce cream; gradually blend in milk and w~p­ ping cream. Beat until froth y. Pour mto chilled glaues: top elch with additional Ice cream, garnish with crushed candy. Yields 61> cups. YOGURT PARFAIT 3 pints yogurt, assorted flavors. . % cup fresh (or frozen, thawed) fnu t Alternate flavors of yogurt with layers of fresh fruit in chi\)ed parfait glau. Refrigerate for 15 to 120 minUtes, _until firm . Suggested flavor comblnaliona: Strawberry y o gu rt honey-sweetened pl::iin yogurt, fresh strawberries or orange and lemon yogurt with fresh o~"nee slices or prune and peach yogurt with 'fresh peaches. CHANTILLY CREAM 1,J: cup whipping cream ¥.r: cup sour cream . 3 tablespoons sifted confectioners sugar ¥.r: teaspoon vanilla In a chilled bowl, w!Up cream until stiff: fold in sour cream, 1th en sugar and vanilla. Serve over fresh fruit. Yield! 11'1 cuos and will keep a day ip refrigerator. Grand finales with festite flair can be prepared ahead of time +n ice cre3!'1 and whipping cream are among the m- gredients. Spoonfuls or thest coolly bl~d­ ed flavors are happy endings for co~ pany dinners or hot summer days: CLOUD TOPPED CONFETTI CAK~ % gallon spumoni ice creall\ 3 egg whites 1 141 teaspoon cream of tartar ~ teaspoon aalt 1 % cup sugar o/, cup diced candied fruit Pack spumoni ice crea m ,Into 9-incb spring form pan. Freeze untU1fmn. To make meringues, beat egg whi tes until foamy. (Egg whites should be at room temperature). Add creiim of tartar and salt. Beat until soft peaks form. Add sugar 2 tablespoons at a time. Beat about 2 mint.Mes after each addition. Cut heavy brown paper to fit a baking sheet. Place meringue in decorating tube and swirl oul about 15 small meringue puffs (about 2'1) inches in diameter). Bake in 250 degree OVl!n 1 hour 15 rn'nutes. Cool and remove from paper. To serve, leave ice cream on metal pan base loosen edges with knife dipped in hot ~ater, then remove ring from spr~ng form pan. Place ice cream on servmg pl~tter. G>ver top or ice cream with small mer- ingues (some wlll extend slightly over edge). Press ca ndied fntit around sides of ice cream. Serve immediately in 10 or lZ portions. f RUM TOl\'roNI 1 tablespoon butter 1 2 lablespoons chop~ almond.a in cup vanilla wale( crumbs (about 18 wafers) , y, teupoon almond :extract 1 cup whipping cream, whipped 2 tablespoons con~1 tloners sugar 2 tablespoons light m 3 maraschino che • cut lo half In a small Aauce melt butter; uute almondl until light· browned. R<move fl'MI heat. Stir in crumbs ~ ellract. Reserve 2 tablespooos for toppmg. ~old sugar and rum Int! whipped ~m. fold In crumb mixture. Line • nlldlin' pan with 8 paper baking ~po. 5poon tortoni mixture Into cups. SpPlnkle w1:h reserved crumbll. Top each wltb a churl' hall. ' treeu unUI firm; cover. Ut lortonl C\IOI 1tand at room temperature to tofttn aUghtly before ~ng. Makes I 9tl'V!ngs. I • -~"· ~ • Mi For a pause that's dress up with fresh fruit ay nutritious, these summertime coolers milk, creams, yogurt and ice cream or flavorings for colorful attractions. 1 ~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor w .. l'lffll•v. M•~ J1, 1t12 ,,.. • ~me News Scheming Brings Goodnes.s Bv DORO'J'IJY \V ENCK O~•n1• c-ry Homt Advlaar A n1('al that has everylhing -good looks, i;ood smell , good taste, good nutri· lion plu s reaS-Onablc cos t In time anrl money -is not easy to con1e by. And it certainly doesn't happen by chance. A homemaker who provides th.ls kind of meal for her famUy is a schemer and a planner as well as an artist, scientist, and economist. She's probably a good cook too! As an artist, she designs a meal with attrac tive color and flavor combinations. She ranks food acceptability .ahead of nutrition because she knows that food of· fcrs no nutr ition at all unless lt'1 eattn. As a scientist, she puts together com~ binations of foods wh ich provide rom- plementary nutrients that work together to provide good health for her family. She seeks a variety of foods which will give a good balance ot proteln, fat, carbohydrate, minerals , and vitamins. COOK'S. CHOICES As an economist, she chooses. foods which will give the highest return in nutrients for the least cost. But ahe also weighs the factor or time versu.s money and may in some cases choose a more costly convenience food because of the time it saves her. It is with all these fa ctors in mind that she proceeds to plan meals for her famlly -choosing among the vast array of foods available to her in th t supermarket. Perhaps she begins w!lh the main disb -meat or some other protein food -u~ tng the advertised speclaJs of the week. To com plement the protein food ahe adds something .starchy Uke potatoes or rice or pasta or bread, something colorful auch as a green or yellow or orange vegetable, something crunchy like lettuce or-cabbage, or something tart like fruit. A typical meal with color and flavor appeal generally baa a &ood ballDCe ol nutrients too. TOGE'l'HERNESS And ii may be that lhls balance of nu trients ls contained in one dish -sucb as pizza or tacos. The pizza has the starchy crust, the tomato sauce, the meat and/or cheese. The taco bu the etarchy .. t.Drtllla, the meat ruung, the crunchy green lettuce, the tomato and/or chili sauce, and cheese. A hearty casserole or soup mf.ght be equally well balanced. For example, bean soup might contain starchy-protein bean.t. bits or ham, bright orange carrott. greeq celery, potato. A glass o( milk could com-- plete the meal. Why this emphasis on a variety or foods in a meal? Because nutrient.I work more effectively when they are •ten together. Iron, for e:1ample, ls .more readily absorbed when .tt'-1 eaten Uonc with vitamin C. And If one food Is lacking 1n eome nutrients, other foods in the meal can furnish what's missing. For example, fish and poultry, ~hile good sources of pro- tein , are not very rich sources ot iron compared to red meats. So when fi!h ot poultry are the maJn dish, other iron-rich foods such as peaa or apricots or dark green vegetablts eou1d be included in the menu. Dairy products add extra frills When plant proteins -which lack aome essential amino acids -are the main source ot protein In a menu, other plant foods, such as cereals, or small amountl of complete animal protein, such al cheese or milk, coold be•~hlded.ln the same meal so that t1l the nec'elsary · :amino acids would be present 1t the same time. to dessert course of spumoni cake (above) or rum tortoni for parties. QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED: Q. Why are green peppers so expensive lately? A. It's the old story of supply and d• mand. During Ma y there wa s a lull in the production of green peppers. Harvest 111 some production areas was completed. while other major producing areas were not ready for harvest1 The rC!ult, few peppers and high demand which re:iulted ln record-high prices. Q. I've been read ing about the growth of plants such as tomatoes ln W~!trt rather than soil, If this growing mell'IOG shJuld become popular, will the fruits and vegetables be as nutritious and al flavorful as those grown naturally tn .soil? Or will they be like the typical .. blah'' bolthouse tomatoes? A. Growing planll In water rather lhan soil is known as "hydroponica." The plants are not necessarily growing tn tubs of water, they may be "planted'' ln porous materials llke und or er1ve1. Fertilizers can suppl y all the Dttded ri.utrlcnts for growth. The plants can be healthy and produce nutritious focxh. The f!:ivnr, as with soil grown foods, will de- pend on the variety or plant that'1 grown ar.1 the timing or h:irvest. ~lany hothouse toma tOtJ are grow• from varieties that have little flavor ant ,, they are harvested before they are ''¥Into ripe", and th.ls Is the reason tor tbe1!' poor Oavor and color. . - If DAILY PILOT sw I -omens • Questions Answered at UCI Meet BJ LAURIE KASPER ot rtit o.wr ~•• •••ff atatia1.ics we r e clttd to Jll'O'Yt that w o m • n are 4ilcriminaled qallll\ I n employment, particularly ln relation to aalartts. They were advised to keep ~'!'their m_aiden name as a mid- ,t)e name when they gel mar- 1rrled , if only to keep acbool and •.flegal records straight. ~·· A young woman told cf Joos- "' inc a boy!riend when she -· became dependent on t>erself. .., Several told of lhe barrier sex t,Create1 in their appllcatiom to s;raduate and medical school. 'Mle discuss ions. put • together as An Invitation to ;•Women, evolved Into an af. • temoon of facts and feelings •'for some women at UCI. Cathy Stanley, one of a tri o of students who organized !he conference , said It was he ld to •heJ.ghten the awareness of the r student who ls not invol\•ed in women's liberation but Is deal- ln1 wllh !he !!.sues !he move- Dance Revue ment is involved with. "A lot of people camt hf rt thlnk.ing I'm not the only one thinking about these lhlngs after all." abe said. QUESTIONS ANSWERED "I'm really encouraged," said Pam Burton, one of lhe three who met In 3. peer counseling class. A I t h o u g h some expressed a fear that their affair wou]d turn into a gripe session, she btl1evts some •·real questions'' were answered . "Ignorance is not all that bli1sful." said Charlene Chew. the third organizer, noting that women make up 53 per- cent of the Population. At the opening of the con- fere nce 1he assured participants, "We have the power to control what we do." While a discussion on Political Women and New Careers began in other cor- ners of the room, another grou p guided by Pat Schwab, assistant dean of atudent ac· A French Revue, complete with floor show, variety acts, can-can dancers, co~edian and a Golddiggers' number, \viii be presented by the Mission Viejo Women's Club Saturday, June 3, in the l\fission Viejo Swim and Racquet CJub. Festivities \Viii begin· at 8:30 p.m. Practicing for their act are (lefl to right) the Mmes. Bob Kerr, Pat Florentine and Jim OsbOrne. Peering Around VACATIONING for 17 days in the carlbbean were Mr. end l\frs. Emit Roth of Newport Beach . The cruise departed from Loi Angeles end stopped at Acapulco , Curacao, St. Q-olx •nd Ft. Laudtrdale. Alao on the crutae was Marty Koepsell of Costa Mc,.. NEWPORT Beach resident Nlcholu F, Ktoury rttelved a mailer of engineering de1r<e al !he UnlveraJly of Redlands l3nl IMual commencement aordlea. - Gl#ICZll L711d1 Glean of tho Oolta Mesa Polle. llepar~ ment attended the 4Sth annual conference of the \Vomen Peace Officers Association of California at the Disneyland Hotel. "ADVENTURES on I he Wind'' by l\trs. Joan Piccard or Newport Beach has won the National Press Award to be presented next month In Seat- tle. The childrtn's book about ballooning w a s previously cited by California Press Women. TJle manuscript plus lllu.ilrations are on dl!play In Ille Ubrary al Orange C:O.sl CODece whe"' Mrs. Piccard 1radu1ted last year. • .l ti vities. considered Female Awareness. lafost of lhe women in th1t group -already 1 e e m e d "aware." A couple said they were trying to escape from the "ucurlty bag" and stand on their 0"'" two feet. One older staff member has dilcovered in her av.·areness that "he now hall a different rtlationship with her daughters. DISCOVER SELP "l wanted to come out and see what I could find oul .:i.bout myself." commented another. And one other explained, "I'm a v.·oman . . • I want to be liberated." They talked of such things as one young woman's belief lhat ·•we have to learn to do what we want to do" ralfler lhan give up things for men. But two other women opined th.at I! both parties are giving thihgs up, It would be a valuable experience. And, they talked o f 1nolher'1 belief that t h e references of ''young l1dy," "&lrl" or "gal" are belittling. She and others would like lo be called "women" which has a more responsible deflnillon. In a second worUhop titled Do Employers R e a I J y Discriminate Against Women, Met Kato, ass.istant professor in the graduate school of B u s J n e s s Administration, showed with statistics how there is a "definite income dif· ferential between men and woman." In 1969, the woman's median wage was just 80 perctnt of the man's. But, she said, "We did much better in '55." Dur~ ing that year, figures abowed the woman was earning 64 percent of the man's median wage. NEED MONEY Even when comparing within o cc u pat Ion 1 and similiar years of experience, "you still find quite a d1JCrepancy," she said. And contrary 10 !he belief that women don't need the money, she showed from U.S. J.lepartmeal of Labor figures that 67 percent of the women worJidng are .self-supporting or economically in need . With sUJJ more figures, she showed that ;•women tennlnated Jobs much Jess often than men." Al to what a woman is physiologically capable of, she said "I think this is a cullurally defined thing." Jn Southeast Asia, where she was born and raised, construction work is in the v.·omen's realm. "I guess in this culture there are still ll"'.asculine jobs and femlnine jobs," she added. One of the other women ad. ded that discrimination can also "come about in small ways." She cited a f~male parking officer on campus who had to purchase and p-rnvide for the cleaning of her jacket Oldest f.lostess Retires while the male afflcen did DOI. Possible dl><lmination, Ml!.s Kato said, will-be invutlgated by lbe Fair Employment Practiet.S Commlssion, which has an office 1n Los Angeles. According to several women in the next workshop, The Profe"ional Woman-Graduate School!, discrimination al.lo exists in graduate schools. NO ROLE ·MODEUI One problem of the graduate woman student Ls that since there art so few female faculty members, she bas no "role models." There is, said Shirley Schaefer, an instructOr of extension courses, "a great deal in any profession that is not taught in the courses" and this can be learned through an associate on an informal level. One problem women face before they can even be ac- cepted in a gra6iate school. according to a teacher of anthropology, is the "code phrases ••• very subtle ways men hare of getting cues about women" in their letters of. recommendation. Appearance too is more im- portant for a womt"n than a man. And, or course. in- terviewers always question a woman of her seriousne" ... plans for marriage a n d children. "It doesn't hurt to sbow you though{ about it," said another · faculty member suggesting the woman have specific goals in mind and a plan of how she wili accomplish them. In the finaJ discussion of the afternoon, w o m e n con- templating divorce v.·ere told. "You have to be careful becaUJe the field is getting to be wide open." ONCE A RAVEN A fem ale attorney told the group that California used to be considered a "haven" for women. Although the man will still be responsible for child support, she said a woman might get one to three years • alimony or evto none if she bas no chlldren. ;"The feeling 11 you must prepare yourse:l! t o con- tribute," she explained. AJtbougb legally a man's consent ii not required for' an abortion, she said 1n a n y hospitals do require it to pro- tect themselves from the possibility or a: suit. On the subject of lhe woman's right lo retain her own name. the group was told that no civil law requires her to take her bush.and'• name. Common law, however, cllls for her to merge with her hus- band so "she has lost her Iden· tity for all intents and pqrpos ... " ~e told of a judge who married before her re-election attempt. Because she was re· quired to put her le~al mar- ried name on the ballot, 1h1 became a "new person" in the eyes of the voters and lost the value of her years of ex- perience. Former Stew's Memories _ Take Wing SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The world's oldest airline stewardess: eyed the sky wistfully today after her man-- datory retirement froin flying -a career spanning 3S years and 10 million air miles. "I'm in good ~alth and l'd ny unt!l 65 U they'd let me," Miss Ida Sta ggers s a l d Wednesday after her last fli ght for Trans World Airline (TWA ). The airline expl'sined that their contract with the Airline Stewards and Stewardesses Association compelled retire- ment at 60. Hee last flight was from Horolulu to Ttavi.s Air Force Base, 45 miles ao'1h of San Francisco, on a· charter usignment for lbe Mililary Airlift Command. When she arrived back at San Francisco International Airport there were popping champagne corks, hugs, kisses and congratulations f r o m pilots, fellow stewardesses, ground-~end TWA of- ficials. Because she enjoyed the du- ty, though by .seniority could have had any TWA flight available, Miss S l a g g er s elected to fly military charters RE LUCT~NT FAREWELL -fda Staggers (center), the world s oldest airline stewardess, retired after a 36-year career that· started aboard a DC-2 in the to and from Vletnam for more DC2s. London and the Middle East. than four years. In 1942, wilh much more Her home is in New York City. "These boys gave me such a modern equipment to fly in, Asked if she had any special warm feeling," she said • she was promoted to T\VA's adventures, i\.fi ss Staggers "They're so polite, mannerly chief hostess. said, "No . . . everything .nd kind -!hey di·d so much seemed exciting to me." But she decided office v.·ork for me. J hardly di·d anylhlng She added that she had wasn't for her so she took to be h. · ked for them." never en 11ac or in a ' ,I TlltpMft days \vhen flying. v.•as a.n adventure. Miss Staggers, 60, checks her final flight schedule with Joe La· mantia, crew scheduler, and Chris Jordan, a hosteas. Jy one -I'm disappointed that J have to stop." l\Iiss Staggers isn't stopping completely, however. T\VA is keeping her on as a women's department consultant. She will v.·ork with fledgling stewardesses at Breech Academy. TWA's hostess training center at Kansas Ci- ty, Mo. On June 21 , c orpor ate recognitk>n of her Jong career will take place in San Fran- cisco along with a schedu led meeting of TWA's directors. the air again in 1946, flying crash or ditching at sea. The senior stewardess, who regularly to Rome, Paris, "No regrets," she said. "On·r·~jjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiidiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilji also is a registered nurse, Ii observed her 60th birthday·-=====================.! May 9. She started wllh TWA'' in July 1936 when the line was flying s ma 11, 14-pa.s.senger malt.e~ SPRING ·cLOSE-OUT Reg. $40 to $45 CONVENTIONAL CAP ELURA WIGS NOW ONLY $30 to $35 e WHlll THIY LAST e .._ __ ,.... ------ l'ALLS co~~~s $15 OFF!! R,•;·Ji.~:5 NOW $9,95 to $34.95 All DYNEl & KANEKAlON WIGS Sht91, 9yp1ie1, Dutch loy1, Afro.Frt fforn Wl11, lo"t• Short, Curly Ctt11tl • , • Rag. $24.95 to $45.00 ALL REDUCED ! NOW $4,95 ,0 $29.95 ASK ABOUT OUR NEW -COOL f<S R SUMMER CAPLESS WIG S IN ELURA FIBER WIG i nd BEAUTY SALON !Port r9 'Bill PASADENA 3400 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT BEACH INTRODUCING ••• UNIQUE NEEDLECRAFTS e UNUSUAL YARNS e NEEDLEPOINT e STITCHERIES e TAPESTRIES e RUGS-DESIGNS e ACCESSORIES e INSTRUCTIONS e COME AND JOIN US FOR FRESHLY BREWED COFFEE 28 3 EAST 17th ST., COSTA MESA !NUT TO IU iLDIU IMPORIUMI 17141 642·9190 ' I • • • t • • • • • • • HUMAN DYNAM6S-Tbe Volunteer Bureau office soon will be running smoother than clock~ork as Rose Marie Saadi (left) and Edith Bewley bring the records and files up to date. The retired pair are putting their combined 60·plus years of exper~nce to work in the office, carrying out their team~ork approach to life. , ' ' WtdntSdar. May 31, lm ·l DAILY PILOT SJ Her Roots Checked by Clods DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please print thlJ letter for all dart-aklnntd. Americans who are uked regularly by clods, "What ARE \TOU?" ln the l.ut few year1 I have been ·asked U I am Puerto Rican, Polyneslllll. ~ewiab, Mexican, Italian, G~k. Syrlari, Cajun, American, Leban- ese, Negro or alloeae. Actually my molher wu Fn:och and my lather was lriah. I am just DARK. When I 1ive this reapome the reaction is strange. 1bey aay, "Ob, no. You must be something else, too." Why do people care what I am, or what ANYBODY is? can it he Ibey cannot relate to a person unlll they get lheir prejudices sorted out? Please tell me ho~ to respond to these jackaMes? -DARK-EYED SUSAN IN NEW BRUNSWICK DEAR SUSAN, A rude question should be answered wrm: a que11ioa: Sample: Now WHY ln tbe world you be asking me a thlnr Uke that ? What posslble d.Jf. ftrence could Jt mall:e to you? If they penlst, repeat your question. You do not owe these clods an .answu. Installations, Festivities - ' '4•~4#4eu ... DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am not much of a writer but I have a slory to tell all the young Women out there who think a wedding ring and a marriage license aren't Important. [ egrei!d to live with a man 26 years ago before it Y.'D9 considered the "modem" thing to do. J\.1y love had suffered through one very bad marriage and he said he'd have lo wS:it a year or t"'O before the pain of the dirorce wore off. \Vheneve r l mentloned marriage he said he •·wasn't ready" and to please stop nagging . He 'd Jet me know. Finally, l gave up. We lived toget her until six months ago when he died. Ever since that time I've been trying to colleet the social securit y, pension r ights and insurance a wife usually gets. lt has been the most hor· rible experience of my life. The ques tions l have been asked made my gray hair stand on end. ' , . ... , Unless the laws are changed or society's attitude toward the unmarried wUe Is drastically altered, women like n1e will be humiliated and cut down at every turn. Even In statts where the t:omnion-l:iw wife has legal rf&btl she must prove it -and that's not easy. I say to every girl who reads thb, if your man really loves you be •lll not ask you to share his lire without etvlng YOU the legal proteclion that marriaae pro- vides. It's the woman who maktS tht fina l decision as to whether or not ahe'll setlle for a no--ring arrangement. If she makes the wrong decision, as I did, she will pay the pric<. -SHORT END OF THE STICK DEAR S.E.0.T.S.: I can add llOtllin1 lo your letlf:r e1cept my than.kt for writing It . A good tllle for thJ1 ttotY mltbt be: .. Free Love Can Be Very EJ"penalve." Coastal Clubs Closipg Season Saadi Plus Bewley Equals Fun lnstallalions and festivities signal the end of the year for many coastal organizations. Arts, Crafts An Arts and Crafts Round Up will be sponsored by the Ranch Homeowners Associa· tion trom 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, June 4, in the park area between CUiver Drive and Jeffrey Road in Irvine. A bake sale "'·ill be included. Charles Test, seeretaries, and A. Miller, treasurer : John Robert Hull, treasurer. li1cGuire, publicity chairman, Others are the l\t me s. and G e o r g e Cunningh:ln1, James Trittipo. registrar; parli:lrnentarian. Christopher Leason, hi storian; Green Valley Gerald Breshaw, librarian, and Albin Weihe and William The Green Valley Women's Clu b has installed M r I • Stephen Smith as pre.!.ldent. Serving on her board will be the l\fmes. Donald Voyer, Anthony Trow and David ·Sheldon, v I c e prealdents: By JO OLSON Of tllf Dall' l'li.f Sllff Rose Marie Saatii and Edith Bewley ·~decided that when they reUred , they'd like to do some volunteer work. When they turned in their last time cards at Southern California Edison Co. (Rose Piofarie eight years ago and Edith five), the y found their lives so full there just wasn't time for volunteering. Now that they've traveled, sat in their rocking chairs for awhile and moved into an apartment with no yard to take care of, they're on the 'volunteer scene at last. Or rather, they've exploded onto the volunleer scene. Three months ago they dropped in at the Volunteer Bureau of Southef'Jll Orange County and said tOey'd like to work in the ofrice one day a week, "doing things no one else wanted to do.'' Now, they're putting their combined 62 years of office experienei! to work reorganiz. ing the Volunteer Bureau of· fiei!. TRIP BACK Rose Marie, who was born .. In Egypt but ra ised in Damascus, speaks with a combined Syrian.New York accent. She came with her family to the United tates when she was 9 and became a U.S. citizen several years later. after making a trip back to her homeland to make sure she was doing the right thing. She lived in New York for 10 years then came to Los Angeles, where she joined the Edison Co. which was to be her employ er for the next 32 years. At the company she was in charge of the files in the com. mercial department, installing an up-to-date system th<it was copied by many o t h e r departments In the company. SNACK TIME Files are her specialty and she's reorganizin g the Volunteer Bureau records in her methodical way. "The messier the files, the more a~ preciation you get," she laughed. Edith, who came to Califor· nia from Illinois at the age of 3, <XJnsiders herself almost a native of the Golden Stale. She started as a secretary in Edison's right of way depart· ment and this was where she met Rose Marie . One of Rose Marie's fr iends occupied a desk. near Edith and when Rose· Marie· found that Edlllf kept raisins flnd, nuts in her draWer, her Syrian appetite brought her to Edith's desk for snacks now and then. The pair camped in '"'O lOxJO tents at Crystal Cove for several summers ::ifter they fir st met, and decided to room together when they found they could put up with t>ach other in such small quarters. For 18 years now they have lived together happily. "We started keeping our earnings separate, then put them all in one pot," Edith said. "We were able to buy a house together in Corona del l\1ar, then sold it a'nd moved to Park Newport in September." The.L. claim they can work togetHrr so well because they are so opposite. Edith drives and writes the checks and Rose Marie carries the money and signs the checks. Edith cooks, Rose M::irie does mending and they shgre the housework. BOTH TRAVEL They both like to travel and just "meander arounci the country to see what's different and what the food js like" in various locales_ Rose Marie has visited her family and tra veled through Europe and Panama, and bC1th journeyed to Austra lia and New Zealand for five weeks last November. They have no plans for another major excursion, but are considering, at Rose Marie's suggestion , a cruise to Hawaii around Christma!. One other thing that Edith has yet to accomplish, Rose Marie revealed, is to "pull up a chair and watch fretnvay construction.'' "l haven't had time yet." Edith laughed. The two like to volunteer because it keeps them busy and gives them the satlsfar:- tion of "doing something you're not being paid for." "Come winter," confided Rose f\.farie, "we'll proilahly put in one more day a week at the bureau ." What's the Volunteer Bureau to do? The office will .. be so organized no one will be able to find a thing. With two human dynamos at work. it 's bound to ha 9pen. Coeds Gather BPW Club A "bring your own steak" dinner meeting is planned by the Huntington Beach Business a n d Profe.ssional Women's Club for Monday, Jufle 5, in the Costa Mesa home of Mrs. Dorothy Dallas. Miss Jan Webb, scholarship winner, will be guest of honor. Beta Sigma Phi Welcome Aboard will theme the council meeting a n d potluck dinner set for 7 p.m. Monday, June 5, at Klllybrooke School, Co s t a Mesa, by the Newport Harbor Area Council of Beta Sigma Phi. Mrs. Ron Fox will open her home for a meeting of Beta Alpha Pi Chapter at 8 p.m. Tuesday, June 6. A Ritual of Jewels will be C<Jnducted for Mrs. Peggy Doyle, and a June 10 miniature golf social will be planned. Carrillo, directors. 'Club will convene at. 8 p.m. Monday, June 5, in the Grttn. Secretaries Valley Famil y Clubhouse for , N(!W officers \Vere in~!alled inslallation of officers 11nd by the Orange County llarbor entertain1nenl by the Cox Area Legal Sec re l a r i e s School madrigals. Association during ceremonies New officers are the Mmes. in the Newporter Inn. ~1ellie Lade, president; John New president is Mrs. John Fig la r and Kennet It McKeon, and board members MacDonald, vice presiden ts; are the Mmes. Gilbert ~fueller Donald Smith, treasurer, and and Marilyn Grogan , \'ice 'l'homas Quinn and Samuel presidents; Thomas Andrews, Liddell, secretaries. executive secretary : A I a n N•ture Center Weir, treasurer and John ,.. Salyer, governor. A board of directors has been named for the Juniors Environmental Nature Center, Ben Brown's restaurant, according to Mrs. James Laguna Beach was the setting Aturar, president or the Junior for the Laguna Beach Junior Ebell Club of Newport Beach, Woman's Club's installation of a sponsoring organizalion. officers. They are the Mmes. Merrill Accepting the gavel was Brown, Jill Durkee, Eugene Mrs. Joseph Sarlo, and seated Kovach and Nancy Leland, with her were the 1Ames. J1ar-along with Harvey Clemens, ry Bithell, Paul Zehner nnd John Echternauch, Charles Patrick Sp an g I er , vice Godshall, Robert }louse, John presidents: John McGooy and Johnson, Fred Lang. Mike Thomas Green, recretaries; Manahan, Murar and Dr. Kenneth Erikson, treasurer, Norman Loates. and Richard W. Wood, Build a Construction now i'.'I under Better Community director. wa y on the center near Th A h B Newport Harbor High School, ree re ay which will ioclude a 280-foot DAR Outgoing officers of the stream, two ponds and a live-- Three Arch Bay Women's foot waterfall. New officers will be in· Association will host a Knffee stalled by the Sanla Ana Cha?' Klaich at It a.m. Thursday, Hilltop Robert DIDomenico • n d William Bolland, secretark!a; Clayton Turner, treasurer; Michael Mound, editor, ,i.nd O. Charles Adams, coordinator, and Mrs. Peter Vi o t to, pnrliamentarian. 1 Chainnen include the Mmea. Viotlo, Dav id Gibson, Ronald Stenge and Donald Shobe and Miss Carol Sa nders. Sea Coad t.1rs. Charles Daley has been Installed as president of the Sea Coart. Juniors for the com- ing year. On her board are the 1tJmtt. Theodore Hirth, C a m e r o n Karg, John Veytla, Michael McAllister, Norman Clow and John Gregory. Sweet Adeline1 Ml!Slon Viejo Ch1pter ol Sweet Adelines lnatalled new offlcers with Mrs. Clarence Olson as president. Other officers are t h t Mmes. Thomas McKerlle, vlce- presldent; William Recht ; corresponding a e c re tar y; Richard Lodyga, recordin& secretary, and Keith 0110n, treasurer. Beautification Efforts An organizational meeting for a Saddleback College chapter of Association for Women's Active Return to Education is scheduled for 11 a.m. Friday, June 2, in building Q·J on campus. ter of Daughters of the Amer-June 1, in the community Charles Heller Park in Costa ican Revolution during a clQbhouse for installation <Jf ~1esa will be the site of the an· luncheon in the Revere House, new officers. nual family picnic of Hilltop Tustin , f\.fonday, June 5. Heading the slate will be Nursery School Sunday, June l\1rs. William A. Brozowsky Mrs . Gilbert Young, and serv-4, beginning at 11 :30 a.m. Come Into Full Bloom Representalives from the South Coast Chapter o f A W A R E , led by Dorothy Huber, president, will describe the group's aims of educa· t i o n a I programs, tutoring, counseling, scholarships and peer contacts for mature women returning to school. will be seated as regent. ing with her will be the Mmes. Featured will be a potluck Orange Coast residents on her Weldon Dorris, Thomas Reilly , lunch games, relays and a board will be Mrs. Grant V. Floyd Berryhill and Alexandra sing.in . Rymal. first vice regent, and Hoag, vice presidents; Gordon Mrs. Edgar C. Wilson, Dahlquist and Richard T. CM Jun iors 27J7E.C•••tHlthw•y .iBeautificatlon should ~ be from house to house, street to 1treet, nei ghborhood to neighborhood, rather than in· dividuals vying with ea ch other for attention . Beautification projects of several Newport industries and persons were honored at the luncheon, which featured flora l dress and decorations of tiny potted marigolds and banks of daisies. Residences noted were the Donald Washburn and John Martin Krehz residences in Corona del Mar and the Donald R. Donaldson home in Mrs. Pease, lzzy "Trees" Pease, y,·as presented a plaque in recognition of her many beautification projects. Fu nds given the Women's Division as a Disneyland Service Award were earmark· ed for the Youth Employment Se rvice and beautification projects to be det ermined at a tater date. Any woman over 21 return· ing to school after time out for marriage and motherhood or to improve job OPPortunities is welcome at the meeting. librarian. Boswell, secretaries; Donald Costa Mesa Junior Women's Coro"• t1.1 M•t--Ph, 67J.1t10 Patience Wright Chapter • ••"k•"'9rk•N • .... .., a..,.. will install new officers during miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:.'.iiii:iiiiu~YiiNiinii•iiis.-LM•t .. " a luncheon meeting Tuesday, 11 June 6, in Hotel Laguna . Included will be a tribute to !he Unit«:,d States flags. Mrs . Harold P. Willits will head the new slate, which in· eludes the Mmes. Beatrice Crist and Lowry Gallinger, vice regents; Edgar Axtell, chaplain; Fred Ross and DEPAftTM&NT aTOfta ' "A community effort, doing things together is the most ef fective way of maintaining year.round beauty," landscape architect Fred Lang told members of the Women's Division, Newport B e a c h Chamber of Commerce. Newport Beach, which receiv·,-===i;============================== ed a special Dolphin ,J,ward. Ir FISH FRY SALE Speaking at the annual beautification awards lunch· eon, named in honor of 1'-frs. Isabel Pease, Lang added th at "beauty in a sim~e form, beauty and simpllcit.y and good taste, should be the goal of those who want to beauti!y the city." Businesses honored included the Irvine Company f o r preserving trees on Corona de! Mar hill near the reservoir; WestcllU Plaza and adjacent Coco's restaurant for planting <Jf screening trees and shrubs and bright spots of color al all seasons. vm6INIA'S SNIP 'N STITCH SHOPPE 3334 East Coa1t Hwy. e Corona de! Mir Phone 673-,050 Graduation! Acti•ititl 9tlort for 1t11d1"t1 •nd proud p1 r1111t th11t llt~t twt Wttkt •1 ,,,.+htr tchool v••r tl r•w1 to • clo1t. Still fimt lo rntkt I q11ic• I •••¥ dr•tt for I th 9r•tlt 9r•d· 11tlt: thoo1t 11 9i"9h1lfl with •v•l•t trim, tlott•d 1wi11 or •mbroltltrtd piqu•. Thtl• would bt 1uil•bl• f~bric1 for th• 1•11ior brtt•f•1I dre11, 11 w•ll• Ot1i911 '" ori9i111I p111huit for "'· 11nion big o;,n.-,,ltrid ptrly, 1u99•ilttl ltbr!c1 wo11ld b• polv•1!1 r •"if, cotto" l1 ct or polv11!11 l cotfo" piq11• with p••••nl br•ld film. S•• vo11 toon! JACKIE . P.S. For motht fl, '""" •rtd 9r•"tlmotht" of 9r•tlu•l•1, loolr: yo11r b11I 111 • 111w crt•,io11 from prl"l•d polyt1lir, hl9h f11 hlo11 wo•tll cotto"' er 110¥tlly polv••lt r tlo11bl1lr:11ilt. e IANICAMlllCAll e MASTll CHAlOI Keep your sanity at Maggi's while saving money too! ,_.) • Call Today 673-1722 AREA CODE-714 Ten Hour Besic Oesi9n instructio t'I includes Meggi Cobb's Key to Interior Oe1i9n kit and supplies introductory pri ce only $29.95. Morning 1nd Afternoon Su1lon1 Tu•~ day thru Frlde'f t :)O to 11:30 •.m ... end 1 :JO to J:io '·"'· l•tnlng Instruc-tion by .,eclel ap~lntment. 420·31 st ST, Newport Beach (on Lido Panln1ul1) Available, in the Workshop-the latest exclusive decorator fabrics , fttr nishings and finishi11 g touches Store Hours : 9 to 5 Mon. thru Fri. our design specialists wiH toach you everything from colors lo candlelight, • WOMEN'S SEPARATES: COORDINATING> 'G>ROUPS OF PANTS, SKIRTS, JACKETS, TOPS, DRESSES, PANT SUITS, 30% 50% OFF {SOMITtMQ) MORI SHOP our BARGAIN TABLES -VALUES 2" -1" -99'' ~~,~.~,~~~!?~! ....... --40oto OFF DltlSS IHlltTl-Lont & 1'*1 SIHW" --/C ILACKS-lleree •M ltral1"t Ltt 1 99 t 12 99 l .. ular ''"''" on4 Dov~to Kntto --------• 0 o MA.JOI ,6 CUDIT CAIDI IN. COSTA MESA IT'S 6inerls DEPAftTMENT aTOft• 1116 HIWPOlT It.YO. • CINTUlLT LOCATED AT NIWPOIT AND HA.1101 ILYDt. • ONN "t1L l 1ot P.M. ,111>.YI DAILY ftJN CLO!IO SUM. & MIMOlJAL DAY-lnH • , DAILY PILOT Wtdntldiy, Mu ll, 1972 Fun, Fund-raising Wonderland of Talent Discovered Tu~ked • 1n " (Editor's Nole: A column devoted lo Newport Beach. Costa M,.., f.aguna Beach and Mlulon Viejo parenl· teaeber organizations will appear in the DAILY PILOT each w e e t _ Information must be received by the women'• department or Mrs. Gared Smtih, 1711 Cent.Ila Place, Newport Beach by 5 p.m. Thursday for publica· lion Wednesday.) Harbor Council Mrs. David Reader President REPORTS· Hi st or I ans' workshop was hosted today by Mrs. Earl DeWolfe ... 1 Board endorsed suJJPOrt of I propositions on :; c h o o I finance reform. Adam s PTA Mn. Clifford Downs President COMING UP' Board will honor school stalf at a Juncheon Friday, June 2, at 11 :30 a.m. in the home of Mrs. Robert Rieden . . , lncoming and outgoing boards will meet at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, June 6, in the home of Mrs. Wendell \Villiams. Bea r St . PFO Mrs. Fred E. Rartbc President ' . .. With Final ~ Alice's \Vonderland will be open to the pub Ii c Thursday, June 1, when College Park PTA sponsors a talent show at 7:30 p.m. in the multipurpose room . Setting the stage for the show, tiUed Come to Won· derland Wilh Alice, are (left to right) Charles Fur- row, Carrie Martin and Pam Stauch. COMING UP : PFO vJ i 11 sponsor a skating pa rt y Thursday, June 8. 1n the Har bor Roller Rink for students in Level III ... Faculty lunch will be hosted by board members Friday, June 9, in the school. REPORTS : Ne\V officers are the Mmes. Robert Balling~r: • president; D. L. Bradshaw, vice president ; C. A Kircher and F. J. Heller. secretaries, and C. W. Shirley, treasurer. Your Horoscop e I oin orrow Scorpio: Build TH URSDAY JUNE I By SYDNEY OMARR TAURUS (April 20-May 201' Recognize relevance of criticism proffered by pro- fessional aS!KIClate. One at top does want to make room for yo u. Key is desire for self-im- provement. Show that you have program which can work. GE!'l11Nl (May 21-June 20 ): c:ood lunar aspect now coin· cides with journey, added knowledge, an abillty to rise above petty obst acle s. Aquarius p I a y s prominent role. Hunch pays dividends. • ' on Solid Base area . Key now Is to be prac- tical, to clear aside basi c tasks. Chores allowed to "Jiang on"ocan become major problems. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 1: Be recept ive to Io v r . Overcome tendency lo br. overly skeptical. Open way to happiness. Purchase Kif t • Rtmember s p e c i a I an- niversary. Permit romant ic side or nnturc to surge to forefront. You gain. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 1' Accent on home, dealings with fa1nlly members. Strive for greater security. Build on solid base. Study fine print. Insist on factual information. Discard hearsay. Pisces in- div idual plsys paramount role. the immediate. Perce I v e potential. Others now are drawn to you with their prob- lems. AQUARIUS ( J an . 20- Feb.18): Lunar cycle is high and your judg1nent is apt to be on target . F'ollo\v throu gh on hunch. Take chance on innate abilities. Welcome contacts, chBllenges. Wear bright col- ors. Personal magnetism soars. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 201' Subtle meanlngs are clarified. You had better chance of understanding position. Work behind the scenes in quiet. unobtrusive manner. Clan· • destine meeting may be on agenda . Ke ep confidential matters under wraps. Calif. PTA Mr1. Boyd McCullough President COMING UP : Ice cream social and student art show will be tomorrow and Jo"riday in the multipurpose room. Chairmen are Mrs. \Valier Hahne end Mrs. William Clapel. Cany on PTA ~trs. Steve Crisafulli President COMING UP: Annual . spring dance "festable " and PTA · meeting will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday, June 13. REPORTS: Cinco de Mayo fiesta netted $290 which will be used to purchase school equipment . Estanci a PTSA ~1rs. Robert Klees President Course Charted for Fun Sea King seniors wil.1 set s~il for an ~vening of fun at Magic 1i-1ountain Thurs· ~ay, June 15, ~ollow1ng the~r gra~uat~on from Corona de l ltlar High School. Try- ing to get a glimpse of their dest1nat1on are Merrill Butlar and Maria Ricca. COJ\11NG UP: Card Capers and Fashion Frills will be presented at 7 p.m. Thurs- day, June 8, in the com- mons. Tickets are $1 .25. REPORTS : Offirers were in- stalled during a luncheon in Lhe home Qf Mrs. Ralph Boegel. Lincoln PTA Mrs. Deane Boltorf President REPORTS: New officers are the Mmes. Deane Boltorf. president; Jack 1.1.ickelson. Nigel Bailey and Thomas P.1cCorkell, vice ,presidents: Otto T. Christemen and Allan Love , secretaries; Leonard Baltzer, treasurer: Douglas Elgar. historian: Joseph Hart , parliamen tarian, and K a I m a n Spe\leLich. press chairman. \Villiam Ritter is ach1isor, Olive wood PT A Joseph Adams President COMING UP' Tr .. h for Cash Bonanza is· planned by Olivewood PTA and student council at 4:30 p.m. Friday, June 2, on the school park- ing lot. Reclamation cast· offs will be collected; art 1vorks will be on display and auctioned and food booths will be open. Paula ri no PTA l\frs. Paul Dumaill President COJ\flNG UP : Ice cream social will begin at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in th • multipurpost room. Cak, decorating contest al so is planned. Victoria PT A J\.1rs. Douglas Bo"'ler President COMING UP' Folk 1 r t festival will be at 1 p.n1. Wednesday, June 7. Each class \\'ill perfonn: tee cream \Viii be sold af· ter\\·ard ... Family fun night "'iii be from 4-3 p.m. Friday. Ju~ t. M11ll rrom renders serves as 1 stlmulnnt, provides a guide and, ror nic, often Is the music that applause is to a member of the performing arts. In this regard, I feel extremely fortunate. For example, Pearl Thiessen, a Capricorn from Madison, Wis.: It has never occurred before that I have wr itten a letter In re!lponse to the astrological comments in a dally ncw!lpaper. Generally , such zodiacal forecasts had not held my interest because or their rare relivance and orten vague approach. But your forccnsts are defin itely the exception. I appreciate your talent. Your interpreta- tions have bolstered my self- confldencc anti because yo ur forecasts help me to un- derstand myself a blt better, my understanding of others has been better, too." CANCER (June 21.July 221' Give full play to intellectual curiosity. Ans\vers are ob- tained -if you ask. Reject the superficial . Dig beneath surface indications. Spotlight is on specia l policies. lease . money connected with legal documents. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22), Lie low. Do more listening then talking. Let others assert themselves. You do best no1v by observing, ph1nnlng and meditating. Accent is on mate, partner. public re I a lion s . SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): You are on the go. Stress development of idea s. Deal with relatives in area of financial security. Av o id shortchanging yoursel f. You have plenty to offer. Know it and act like you kno1v it. Ex- ude confidence. . o~ Units Honor Volunteer Workers ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19 ): Accent now is on 'vhat you "'anl and how to get ii. 1'~ricntls help and another Aries pl ays important role. VTHGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): Communicate ideas e b o u t work methods. Get authorit;1fivc ad vice in health .Good Frie nds of the Library CAPlliCORN (Dec. 22-Ja n. 19): Accent is on n1oney. personal possessions, basir values. Finish rather than in· itiate projects. Look beyond UC! Friends ot tbe Ubrary presented ntarble bookends lo (left lo rlghl) Mrs. Charl <S Ferguson of trvine. Mrs. John Chum! of Tustin and DI ck Gavotto or Costa Mesa as special service awards. Also honored were Mrs. £. S. Adams and Mr. and Mrs. James E. Sayers, all or Irvine. (£ditor·s· Note : A colum11 devoted to Fountain Val - ley, Hr;oton Be a ch, Ocean iew and S e a I Beach ool District par· ent-teacht organizati0'11s will Dppear in the DAILY PILOT each week. In/OT· mation must be receivtd by Mrs. Gilbert Turnbull, 5671 lr!anorum Drive, Hunt- i11gtqn Beach by 5 p.m. Thursday for publication Wtdp.,day.) Cox PTO l\1rl. GleDda Dickerson Presiden t REPORTS: Recipients of Parent Volunteer-of-the-year awards at the Fountain Valley School bistrict blue ribbon . luncheon v.·ere fi1rs . Harry Mendelsohn and Mrs. Robert Nichols. M r 1 , Mendelsohn, unit laboratory 11ide chairman, received an engraved silver bowl for her work in the curriculum materials Ct'.!nter. Mrs , Nichols. room mother chairman, received a n engraved silver tray in recogni tion of her work in the arts. Harper PTA Mn. Kennetlll Keller President COMING UP: New of&on wm be installed ml special awmll wl!1 be ,._.l<d foilowin& a ,luncbeon ~t IJ:JO a.m. Friday, Jih I, in the Mile ScJliar< Goll Coum. Fountain V11lo7. Prioe of lhe iuncMori ii ., ... Mn. Lo)"d COiien, niom molhen chairman, wULbonor her co- worl<era and loam!,. center aicitJ al 1 zu..-In her home al bOCm Moaday, June $. Liirk ·View PTO Mn. Ano Milcllell ' School Bell Rings for Un it Officers • Pointing the way to a successlul 1972-73 school year is Mrs. James Ackley while Mrs. Ronald Murphy (center) and Mrs. Roger Belgen take note. They are planning a Superintendent-parent Council workshop President COMING UP : Public is in- vited to allend unit meeting tomorrow night at 7:30 In Lark View TMR School, Entertainment \fill be pro- Vldod by lhe Hilb H ... a mulical ~P which Ills tmned al Hope School in Allahelm and Ills app.,.rtd before audiences throughout Orance Coonty. Admission b ,_ Robinwood PFO Atrs. Danlel Ateade Prealdent COMING UP: New officers wtll Iii inatalled at 1-.-al meeUna w~. Junt 7, 11 7:JO p.m. 'llley..... Mr. llld Mrs. Sam Kaplan, co- pmldollis: the Mme 1. WUUam &llll•an. vice presi- dent : J e r r y Bellsmlth. IOCl'Olary, and Raymond at 9 a.m. \Vednesday, June 7, in the Fountain Val- ley Civic Center lor all new Pr-unit oUicers and chairmen. Smith, treasurer. Volunteer teachers' aides will be honored at lhe meeting. REPORTS: carnival proceeds lotaied $600 and will be used to purchase carpeting for lhe ICbool libruy and audio- •1'ual aids "' oqulpmtnl. Sun View PFO Atn. Mark Kooas Prufdent COMING up, Dog Palch Days at the County Fair will tal>:e place on the school grounds Salurday, June 3, from U 11.m. to t p.m. Fair will include game booths a livestock ahow, PDll1 rtdei, a oounlr)' 11ore, a mqlclan and fortuneteller. Refreshmenu wtll Iii aotd. Tidlell are priced at lwo lot t.I C<!nts. Public b invlled le all<od. r .. - ' fl .,1l 0 f-~~l/[RTl$[R S • Wtdnescta1 May 31 1 lfn D4ll V PILOT Cornbread and Catfish Star I • Old Ern Cooks 'Down Home' Pee-picking Hy JOll~A HLll\''I :\.\:i!IV!LU: -"Wll<JI I fi1s1 st;1rttt.1 in lhis busineS. I ;~g\11td people like to bt caUcd ~on1tlhf11g. so I just tllough' or ·µea OJL·ker~'·, lOr nice and bro~·n1. IU!move at once from fat ; drain on absorbent paper. Serve hot \\•Ith fried fish. i\lakes 20. BETTY FORD'S SEA FOOD GUMBO puree I quart water 2 bay lea1·e~ Slllt, pepper lo taste ~i teaspoon crushed fre sh basil t': pounds shriinp, ~helled, de veined '~ pound crab meat (fron1 legs preferably) 1 lobster tails. meat cut in and garll<: In bacor: drippings unlil Yegtlablts are limp. Tennessee Ernie F~rd prefers - rib-sticking ··,\c\·er 111 1nv 1~1 I l de 6 t 6 slices lean bacon 2 teaspoons mlnccd fresh parsley bite siie pieces 11: teaspoons tile Coo~ rice Add w11te.r. bay leaves. salt pepper. basil, pars 1 e y. tom;itoes, and han1. Bring to boil, cover, simmer 11: hours, Ooe-b.'llf· hour before serving. add okra. shrimp. crab meat and lobster. cook o,·er low heat. Just before s;er\'ing, add filt". laslt" to correct • ~ drean1s did I think it \\'OOld I onion. sliced IJl.ke on like it did And now, 1i green pepper. thinly 1 pound 12-0ldlCes c a n to ma tees Slowly bro1vn bacon until crisp in heavy stock pol : ren1ove bacon, set aside. Pour off some or the bacon fat. Saur'e onion, pepper. telery Southern food . ever.\'o™' in An1erica is a poo sliced picker," Tennessee Ernie 2 stalks celery. cut in bite· 1 slice cooked ham . diced Ford said. explaining bis size pieces ran1ous salutation. Old Em ,ya!'" 1 • tefl~T\(Y}n minced garlic 1 package, frozen okra (chopped) ings. Serve. O\'er mou rice. Serves fi. ren1iniscing abou t his boyhood -- spent down in lhe country near Bristol . Tenn "I used to go coon hurf:ing as a boy . Thats good eafing. ~but lhe possun1 .\'OU asked ::1boul. you've gotta reNler th at fella for quite a little 11hite. Coon's a mu<·h more gallant animal than a PCl-"SUm." \\lhilc dispensing recipes. ad\"ice on hunting ani:i fi shing, 1ri1h a fe1v philosophical ti d· bits thro11·11 in. Ernie r:.nt in a golf cart. parked near the Cnnti11a. one of t tie en- tcrtuinment centers especiall y t·onstructed for "Ofryland . .U.S.A... Nashville's new 1nusical cntertain1ne111 park. lie 11·as here to film pn loca- tion. "'ith Johnnv Casb. the TV 1·0pryland. U.S.A." special to be seen on NBC· TV . hlay 30. - . "f'1 e ne\ler con1pletely left Tennessee. I don't think you e\'er lea\·e hon1e completely.'' he soid. . Ernie. who plans to go to the O;:arks and fl o11t 1dov;n the B11 ff:ilo Ril·er an<t fish for cal- fi'\h and trout 1rhr:1 he fini.~hcs up here. consider"s himself a plain cook. but hi·'s married to ''11 fantastic cook ." llc's fnn1ous for his corn bread. "I rnukc (treat corn ~bread. lt's old fa shionf'd kind 1 got f1'Qm my rather. Now. you take comn1e3J." he said. rat- tling off the recioe. "and one rooster bu\Jct. thats an egg. honey' ... " Me prefers his cornrneat coarse ground . "It's funn~·. but do11-n in Georgia a n d ~·lississiopi. they like their cornn1ctll ground real fine . The1' 1nake 11·h:i1 they cal! ·hot "'al er cornbread.' u s i n g nothing else hut cornrneal. hot 11"ater and salt. lt"s just stirrer1 ·thin . poured into a greased skillet to mAke those litt!r bitty hoecakes.·· Tennessee Ernie's a channel catfish man from 11·av back. even does some catrishing in California. li e and hi>-11·ifr Belly li\'e In Portola Val!r~·. iust 10 minutes fron1 Stanford Unil'ersitv. "Listf'n. bah\'. rat- ! i<o.h is a 'poor nian·~ rainhn11' Thel''re el'en raising thr1n no1~·. like ch.icken". All a man has to do is takr a bulldozer. dig 11 pond. line 11 1\lilh plastic. put In some nil't' cle<1n 1Yater and stocl. it with catfi~h. lle's a duck hunter . loo. and belongs In a rlub up in lhe Sacran1ento 1·alle\'. near the rice ranch l'Ollnlry. ''All of them arl' it·r~· go n d sportsn1e11. bu\ 11e don · I poach. \\'e stick v.·ith tl'le lin1it. "l don't cnre to hun! anything I c3n'l en!. like I hal"e nn desire to kill a li-::er or an elephant or a lion. But. I hunt for elk. deer. rabbit. and squirrel. All of those are great eati_ng. you kno11". and I lo1·e \'en1son. "\\'hen my boys and 1 started lo hunt. my wife 11·ent lo 11·ork and learner! to co"k gan1c. She's ni:irl'rlous al ii. She ·n take a 1 enison roast and marinate it for 36 hours :ind cook it until it'~ as tender \s a mother!s kiss." One ol the major reasons Ernie left regular ~ some years ;lgo \\'as to spend more lime with hi s \\'ire and l'>'"O sons. Both bo~·~ are now ~rO\\'Tl. The youngest. Bri ~., live:i; in Nashl"ille 1nd \\'Orks for a food con11mn~~ TENNESSEE ERNtE FORD'S f"Ai\10US COHN'! BRF.AD 1 cup \"ello1Y cor~ meal 2-3 tablespoons rit>ur 1 teaspoon bakin_I! po"·der I pinch baking sodn 1 scant tcaspOOn salt 1 ct:g. beaten 213 cup buttcrn\Hk' I tablespoon '"atcr I tablespoon 1nelled fat I • . "' TEMPORARY REDUCED PRICE PLUStBUY i..<'NU~ACTUR[ AS SPf.CIAt ALLOl"l,l.l.1,..1 WL P.a.Ss THf SAVINGS ON TO YOU' , '· GELATIN DESSERT JEL.LO .20 6-oz. pkg. HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS FedtestTablell Denture Cleanser .~:~ .69 Arrid Eatra Dry Powder Deaclorant Hea d & Should•rs SHAMPOO Styl• Bel1am ·• Hair Conditioner Bright Side SHAMPOO Pepsodent-Medium or Hard Adult Toothbrush Colgal• 100 MOUTHWASH Clairol long & Sllky Conditioning Lotion •.• ,, 88 C•n • ,,, .• ,, 79 tub• • •.• ,, 88 bollte • 1'·•·· 111 bollle • Eoeh .39 ...... 99 bottle • •.• , 1 67 bottle • ---~------------ phs as hundreds of -PLUS/B S every day! Ralphs j:s Knov•n !Or lo"· cvcr.vday price:-: nil qu a lit.y 1)rod11i.:1..: ... hut l'h1 .-l~u's 1.111 1·11·11 ... ;1\·c you more. \Vhcn \VC g~l a lt'lllJX.lrHry m ;.1nu 1'~1cturcr':-: :-Jpt_·t·i~ll :.1 1lu\\':tn1·1• ,111 :->i•t11~·1h111~: 111· I'·''"' 1111·:-.1· .. :1\ 111~~ on to _'.\'(iu. 'l'hcsc arC' ~lph s J1lu:-:/Buy1' and ~ 11u 'll l'i11d liunlh·eds 111' 1111•111 1·11·r.\· 111 111· '1111 :-.l uip. 'l'IH· h1 · .. t p11 1·l ahnut a Plus/Buy i:-: thOlt '''C don't cu1 th(' price· un vn1• 1l1·n1 thPn r.-11 :-.11 th1· p11 \·1· nn ;11h 1tli1·1 1'1 111.1k1· up lot 11. l{alph:-i 1:0111bin:1111111 nf Plu~/l~u.' =";ind (•1·1·1-,vd:-iy lo\\· p1·it·1· .. i..: I hC' hl':-.t \\ ,,, 11 , .. ,110\\ t" k1 ·1•p .vuur' loud bill du11·n RALPHS CATERING All, ...... -ICE CREAM '"···~ 69 FROZEN FOO D Fresh Paci GRADE A PEAS Minute Ma id LEMONADE A11nt Jeinim• FRENCH TOAST -' Kellogg's Beel & Mushroom PARTY TRAYS Fresh Paci Sllced STRAWBERRIES Johnston's Assorted Flavors BOKAE YOGURT Ore-Ida POTATO O'BRIEN Van De Kamps CHICKEN PIES 20·••· 33 pkg .• •.• ,, 14 can • •.• ,, 55 pllg .• t •OZ. 89 pkg .• ,..... 26 pkg .• •.• ,, 23 pkg .• .... ,, 39 pkg .• 1'>·••· 37 pkg .• -------·----- LUX BAR SOAP BATH SIZE '"".13 PANTRY FILLERS Al1 Grinds FOLGERS COFFEE •·lb . 76 c11n • Ghir•rdelli CHOCOLATE CHIPS 12·or. 45 ,Pkg . • French's Sated MUSTARD ,..,,, 39 J•t • Kil K'1n M.P.S.-P•t Slew -Chunk Beer ' 2·5 DOG FOOD "·••· "" • Cont•dina. TOMATO PASTE C1rn1llon Non-Fet INSTANT MILK A1lphs Ground BLACK PEPPER Gold•n Grain Dinn•r Macaroni & Cheese , ..... 15 tin • l ·quarl 99 pkg .• •·••· 37 Cln • ,..... 19 pkg •• ------------ FRESH PACT """" ........ ,. Peas & Carrots .15 HOUSEHOLD NEEDS R•hlls -~·ounce Sill • DIXIE CUPS Wizard -A•rOSOI Can AIR FRESHENER Johnson·• Klear FLOOR WAX Vinyl Leliher like PHOTO ALBUMS Kleen King COPPER POLISH Gl•d Pleslic-Gallon Si1e Food Storage Bags Gala F1mily Peck PAPER NAPKINS Rain 81rrel Concentrat•d FABRIC SOFTENER .... 88 •• 100 • ,, .... 97 tlln • u ch 1,89 ...... 35 C•n • .... 89 Of 76 • Pkg. 29 01160. ••·••· 75 boUl1 • Ralphs combination of PLUS/BUYS and EVERYDAY LOW PRICE~ is the best way we know to keep y_our grocery bill down. USDA GRADE A-SOUTHERN FRYING Average 29 2·2Y1 lb. CHICKENS lb .• REGULAR °"HOT EVERl'OAY LOW I'R/CES MEAT MASTER MEATS B••I-Blade Cut CHUCK STEAK Boneless Roa1t SHOULDER CLOD Boneless Steak Sirloin Tip Steak Tender Rib Cut SPENCER STEAK Beel Tenderloin-Whole or sliced FILET MIGNON Oscar Merer-12·oz. pkg. SMOKIEUNKS Fermtr John-l·oz. pkg. LINK SAUSAGE Ced•r F•rms from Rath SLICED BACON 1st Qualily -1-l b. pkg. LUl;R BACON Sweet Smoked-1-lb. pkg. JONES BACON lb .• 89 lb. 1.19 lb. 1.49 lb. 2.29 "' 2.98 ea .• 89 ... 33 ..... 67 pkg .• ... 79 ... 98 CENTER CUT CHUCK BONELESS 99 BEEF ROAST 1~· MEAT MASTER BEEF CLUB STEAK ~:~.1.49 EVERl'DA>' LUIV PN ICf.S CAUFORMA GROWN FaR Fr•sher-Gt1tle A YERS Whole-3·3'r lb You ng-Grade A TURKEY BREAST Meaty-Y'o11 ng TURKEY THIGHS At1 Dark M•at-Yo1111g Turkey Drumsticks You11g-Ten<1er TURKEY WINGS Nutritious GROUND TURKEY Whole or Sliced PORK TENDERLOIN Al•skan-Frozen HALIBUT "' ••• •"" Rocklish or Tru-Cod FRESH FILLETS Karo -H&at "n Eat BREAQED PERCH lb .35 lb, .981 lb .49 ••.. 37 lb .• 33 lb .• 79 ... 1.49 lb .89 lb, 1.09 lb .• 79 HOUSEHOLD VALUES Glrls-Slzts 13 thru 3 R•d-Whlle-Blu• SUMMER SANDALS .... 1.21 Women's-Siz1sSYlthrut Palr1.77 freez•tt• (71c Valu1) ICE CUBE TRAYS Y'out Chotc•-llv1, Ollv• or Tawnr 13·oz. •iz•-Apollo DELICATESSEN DEPARTMENT Relphs 4Yt''x4i'.2 ' lmport•d Sllc1d COOKED HAM •·••· .49 Cole Slew-Macaroni or Ralphs Potato Salad ....... 39 R1lph1 Freshly Mad• Pk CORN TORTILLAS .,r, .17 Miss Wisconsin LONGHORN CHEESE,, .• , • 73 Schirmer Germen S1lemi or Thuringer Chubs ...... 1.67 Buttermllk or Country Styl• I PILLSBURY BISCUITS ~::: .10 Frigo Sliced Provolone Cheese •·••· .58 '<'.raft Mlracl• Whipped Margarine Krall VELVEETA CHEESE ...... 35 •·lb. 1.21 DAIRY DEPARTMENT AU Flevors RALPHS YOGURTS Bordin ... All Flevors FROSTED SHAKES ouort .59 '"···· .19 LIQUOR DEPARTMENT SANDRA VODKA EVERYOAY LOW PRICE Ou•rl 3.59 Lakeshire GINs ... '" S1ndr. Mee Alll1ter DllUI td In Scotland SCOTCH Sovo 3oc Relphs Ow11 SelecOon Ll1blromllch, Nleretelntr Domlel, Johonnlsberger Rl•sllng, Mo1elttlumchtf'I o .. rt 3.89 """ 4.29 PRODUCE New crop, California lb. -t·5 CANTALOUPES .1 California Large Navel ORANGES lb .• 15 large, Ripe APRICOTS Top• R•moved-1-lb. C•llo bag FRESH CARROTS We1hlngton-Go1den DELICIOUS APPLES Sw••I, Mild . BROWN ONIONS .... 25 .... 12 .... 25 lb •• 12 Premium Ouellty. Beklng Site-Ru•••! lO POTATOES "·. Fln••l Ou1llly Marguerite Daisies Brighi and Colorful, Ftesh MIXED BOUQUETS l•m<h .89 booth .79 BA KERY DEPARTMENT Official Dodger 2 BB BASEBALL CAKE l·ln. I ltmon 'In Whaef M•PI• Paca11 Denlsh Ralphs Coffee cakes FRESH FRUIT0PlES ,..,, .65 Beverage Tumblers ::::=:':::::::=-:::::::-:=-:-~-:::~~~~~~~~;;;::-~--:-~-:-:-:--::-:-:-:--::-::-:-:.:~~~~---~~~~-~~- Price1 •lt•ctlve from Jun• 1 lhru 7. 1972 en /:' v J:"R ): I ),4). /_,() u I J> R JC'/~.<; y, G•llon Slz, {tk Value)-Fr•11e1te 89 JUICE DECANTERS · "'" • 'Pk ,99 GERMAN WINES "•lph1 O.n Corn-Bren FRESH MUFFINS """ 1.59 •·'"· a88 l ·pk .• 39 HEAL7H & BEAUTY .A.IDS ....... -c ...... FACIAL. CLEANSER c .... oo1~ ANTI PERSPIRANT --·-l .... SHEER STRIPS C:!oo-Oll:I COUGH SYRUP ~--BREATH DROPS l ·•--l?'kk ... oJh<•> BREATH SPRAY '" :;, 1.0I '.~ 1.2t :i ... .~:.1.29 :.47 ~.e3 FR OZEN roo o ·····~"I"'""' ORANGE JUICE ........... BRIDGFORD'S IREAO jOHNkTON' PIES ,..,._,...... .. _ LEMONADE ·--ONION RINGS -··-FISH STICKS ·.:. .21 "',:: .23 -.M" ~:.1 2 ·~.34 ",:; .17 PAN 1R Y f/LL[RS •::.1.01 ··-FOL.GERS COFFEE . -..... HOT DOG SAUCE " : •• 25 --·Uot·• , .... KRA" DINNEJt •• ;_ .21 <Ml..,,,,_ ,;. ... Sp1ghettt I Meat lelle ••• ..al ,,_,, . INSTANTTEA ":!1.11 ~-FOLGERS COFFEE "::. 1.49 llOUSEHOLD NL [OS o,, ........... . DETERGE NT , ... -c ..... PAPER TOWELS "_ .... PLASTIC WRAP .. _ DETERGENT t ....... ,... PAPER NAl"KINS t _ ..... LIQUID DETERGENT ··.:~.1 .41 ··:.: .32 -.!i.11 ·=:.12 !1-.12 ~.:.: .12 f ANfRY fJLL ERS ~ ...... o ... c ..... SANDWICH COOKIES ·-'-·· BOUILLON CUlll -·-··~IUYPUKH liO;-''°°D ..._ FOLOIRI COFFIE eo.... ....... -... l WHIT£ TUNA ·::; .41 .::1 .H ...~ ..... ... :.ot, ':A2A3 P~N /RY I ILLCFIS ............ CANNED PO!t ··-LIME JUICE .....,.. __ h .. BEAN &Al.AO -~ PEANUT 1unr11 ·-SHORTINING -fNCHILAOA SAUCE ........ 11 ~.27 ~-­-:. ... '!i.N ... .:~ .1• Sifl together dry ingredients ln bo11•I. :i;tir in e~. but· tennilk. \\'tHer and melted fat until dry lnp.redients are barfl- ly moistened. Pour lnto ~ell­ greased bakin2 pnn for sk1llrl orcomstick 'irnnp.i n~t. ~'l( ( l l (-"I' Il l ., //' Bal<e in prehe"rd 4 5 o ::?l 11l1 1l11 1l1l1l1l1 1n'w¥'1.1l1nJ1 \I1l1l1l,l1([!:: ~1(,(,(,(.l.1 1l1(,(,l ,l,~1(1l1l1(1(.l.i1(,(.(.{,(k dc~ree t~. O\'Cn about ~~ -....C ~ ..:C. C mintHe' fsl i<:hll \' lonj?Pr if fl ~ Seve 27< ~ ---=:-Sev• 11< • ~ broW'ntr. crisper corn brend is ~ COf FEf MAJE ;:: ~ PUNCH . ~ demred. less llrne ;r b•l ;n~ in· :::§ 1'-oL 5 I ~ ::; 4 I ~ d 'vidual corn sticks). Serve at -e INStANJ CREAM -· ~ n£Tl'.DPDrl :s;o once wilh bull<r or side dish ::; I ;:: .,,. KIUlllUlll 41·••· I i£ to go with friNt chicken . coun-~ llmh On•-Ontr 1 Co11po11 p•tCvttGIHI' i ~ llfnM Oll•-Onlf 1 C«Mlpon ,., C11•to1Mt ~ ~rv~iuSllh::p;;ESKJ<cns ~?~fJ'm°7m~-;;;;;,;;~;;~l~J~ Low prices are Ralphs prices ~i·i~~)~;~;~;;;,;;j\)I~ Prepare balltr as give., STORES above addin& one srnnll gr&le<' RALPHS ARE LOCATED AT: 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH; 15471 s. ·BROOKHURST, WESTMINSTER __;STORE HOURS: 9· 10 DAILY, 9.9 S""DAY onion lo ball.tr. Drop by un 5noonf11l' In slullnit derp r~t · 1 1726 • ·< q•.,rk' c' '"I I • .... 1 171h ST.. TUSTIN 401 N. LQIRA, A~~H£1M . I I .. CHUCK ROUND ROAST 111a1 ST A TIR •OS. CIRTIREO IHf • BU.DE QJT s103 POUND IONE0 IN FRESH • LEAN • DELICIOUS GROUND IN OUR STORES 57~. RUMP BONELESS ....... LB. $1. 1.5 SLAB ITATlllUOI. MOllR •ACK GUA•AllTH Oii OUALln MIATI IYllY NCI Of MIA T tS UNCONDtTIOHAU. Y GUAIANTllD TO NAU YOU •.. OI YOUI MOHIY WIU II CHlllNUY llfUNDID ~- CM,11 OWN• PUil • fll»i 49 C PORK IAUIAGE ... 1.11 .................. a... UO'SSUCID•s7 59' COOKED HAM ....................... oz. PKG. OSCAR MAYER , .... ,_ · 69' II.ICED BOLOGNA ALL MIAT WIENERS....... ............ .... ALL BEEF THICK 12 OZ.79c ROAST BACON STATER •OS. CERTIFIED MORRB.L PRIDE BEEF• BONE-IN ANY SIZE PIECE 99~ 49~ . LB. 1.ST(THIUS-THlll ... U .Sl.Ot 99c STAT•llOS.QITlflfDNIF 99c RIB ROAST ._111~1-111• ...................... i.e. RIB STEAKS1111a1W1nm ................. a... STATllUOS.aitnNO•• 75c C.V.STUKS, · .. Ll.11 .Jt s 129 ROUND BONE ROAST ................. STEAKs-..... oi111111 .................. a... iii:Lii»""RoAst _ ........... • 1 °3 l:&iNiiiiAis .............................. s I 53 Ai'L'iiAT WIENERS ............ n.oz. 55' :tLLMBEEEAFT•,12ou-0Niicii"Ec£ .. ::: .• PP.KKGG. Ts~' -OOGORN•llJF•-N 49' o • .......... ' C CHal BURRITOS-• ......... u•hoz. ALL MEAT• a-OUNCE ........ PKo.ssc HOllMRCAMPUS...aAl s 199 NOT ... S•WILUI""'"' s I St ' CANNED HAMS .......................... 1'h a... PORTERHOUSE STEAK .. .. a... JWTHIATAM>IAT 59c OSCAIMAYll. / . ftftc _DPPI CORN DOGS ............. 1oy,oz. .VARIETY PAK 11.oz. .,,.,, MOlltfU. YOKSl-llf 1-U .IEG.Oll-LI. mOc . 69c STAnlltOS.Clt1'lfllD•F • s 1 •1 SLICED BACON ................. _ ........... a... . TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ................. a... .. ZEE ASSORTED $ · mEF TAMA US lll'Pl•ANO 7~L2 IC PAPER . TOWELS .......................... GIANT ROLLS .&KU:s ASSORTED COlORS Z.U STYU MTT• ZEEBATH 4 ( .!.27' WHTE · KINH'D' .,.._ .. , ~'1'{96' TISSUE ........................... ~~~ GLAD PLUS BOTTLE DEPOSIT SANDWICH BAGS........ . ...... 80~~:.T ( .:.~.~"'~:!~ ~ JOHNSTON PIES .... ·-·· •. ,NCH 72' TOPPiNGnREAL WHIP •-OZ. 39' COCA COLA 6 Kl N Ci SIZE .......... ~.~-~~~: .. . 24-0UNCE BOX ASSORTED COLORS DIAL BATH '"'-Cltl.Gl 0~ t 6ilk. OM·I OY Oftc TOWNHOUSESUNOAES _ '1. PEPPERONI PIZZA _,..,g;i CREME PIES ---"""' CHEESE PIZZA __ ,. .• , INSTANT MJB RICE ......................... . . SOAP ....................................... ~~:~ ( MOlllTON ASSOIHEO 27C OH·IOY 49' M'Ac4ito'Ni'icHEESE ··-42c airlilSEYEPUDDINGS _43' ,llLF.)( 55c IEEf.l!.AH 55c TAMAlE&CHILI . _,,., AlEXBURRITOS ,. .• , VAHDl1t'AM'511ff•a.ew '\..A. ENCHILADAS ........ . . 1·•·0" ~ 7' LOMA UlmA .,,, 19' GllAYY QUIK ....... ..o. ENCHILADA SAUCE ?~1:J;',._ 19' ORTEGA TACO SAUCE . .. --7 O< 27' SOY SAUCE CHUNKING '5 ~~"f~·1 SIJNKIST. 12-0UNCE ... i1c 26c SAAA lEE • 8"' ORANGEJUICE ·--'"" POUND CAKE __ ,,. .• , v MINUTE llllU.'lfASI -7gc V"lUE '"'~ ll(F 0111 VEAl 59' JONES SAUSAGE _ ,.., BUTTERED PATTIES __ '"· WESTP"'C 33c ASSOAT£0fl_.,llOJIS 10 s1 VEGETABLES ASST.·-'"· TIPTOP DRINKS -· •• , EARS u.•GI FANCY DISIU SWEET 8 B~G 69C GRAPEFRUIT ... ... ······· SMAUFANCYWASHINGTON 4 'I APPLES ::..-· Lbs LONG·n-C•ISPGIHN 2 i29C cucu••• . WILSHIRE UCUMBER HIPS ......... . ....................... SMALL SHELL OR SALAD ANTHONY MACARONI .... ~-~~: S.O.S. 35-0UNCE PACKAGE ISHWASHER DETERGENT ................ . $ 15-0Z. JARS . :! ~eatd,& ~ /l(M. BRICK ; lli1 SH'lf:.':o DRISTAN :: ,; ~r.:.:u:r,~~~~:~1 109 TAB$1LE1T95 ' $1.lo.j r'"I ........ TUI£ PKG &:2 ~o'J'.b°:' .. ~,,..oi. 11.17 OF!( • Vl.:~IS ~ lllPIODINT Alt .. X.D•Y -c•--• CONl'ltOL ·! TOOT•llUIH . DIOllOltAllT DOVllLI IDGI '"'""'a .; 3 -aa· -=·-s1u 7"' $1 3' $1 19 ·: DIET llll •. en . ..,-,-•·OL •• , v 1r, • • !iiijjipp!!i) CLING PEACHES DEUGHT ·······•· .. 303 28' ULTRA BAii YO.S HAI• MAI• HAIR ·• ' CORNED BEEF ~~~.~"6'.00D •.• •10oz. 49' ALLSWEEJ MARGARINE ........... LB. 3-1' ' CHICKEN SPREAD ~~~~~g~~--. 49' FRUIT COCKTAIL g~~i""'···-········ '°' 34' CASHEW NUTS ~~~~ .................... a, 65• CLING FREE ~~ii~., .................. uoz. 11.43 PEANUTS "'""SCUDDER 75' GLAD STRAWS '"'"" 25' 0~ ll'OASTlllRGINIA ........... 13-0Z. PLASTIC .... _,_,. ___ 40'1 , STRAWIERRY OUIK NESflE ........ l~. 93' CAKE :::l.\~~~~g~~~:"J':, -:._ ""'' 53' " MNUTE RICE M!XES .. :.-........ 1-0< 33' · LOMA LINDA SOY FLOUR • ••oz. 63' -.· SALAD SUPREME l'i~'l'ill~l .. _ ... 49' -,-, •oUTt Dm11911G4 111f01v31•5 •IBAL •s1sreRs CORN CRE•M • 21• ·-• .·:.~. • ;=. • 111ua ·. iii" OR REGULA" ... _ .... 303 . . MORSELS NESfLE MOL< 52' IHAMPOO ; oR eunERs corcH .. , .... ·"·-12-oz. BRICK 1.5 .. 01 7 .. or. 1 s .. oz. 4-0UNCI NU-PINEDISINFECTANT .... ,.o,57' SHAMPOO 53 .. 83, $I'' 6"' $, CLING FREE ~~'WI~ .. -.. ·-1·0< 93' OllY• OILY. NOIMAI. . ~ . '7' t4'HS. . .......,..A'fltt W•11 ...... 707 W• N'-t--' ltNet, c: .... Mw "61...,., ....... " ...... .... aaosw..s.) ... ,, ... ..,..,...,.,_ .... a ...... ,......,..,... 1161 ........... ,, ... t.f'tM9 l PRICES £FFEC. THURS. thru WED., JUNE 1st-7th 1 ...... c.llllA~= IWWllll f 11'--.,W~* HJtW• ...... Aw.A1161• Ull .... ,,,_,_Mo · 1PtaW' 'I ,, .......... ,,.. • ' tmw .. ......,,,.,,,...,. " .. " .......... -.. .. 1171 .., SMet. c ...... . 14171 ............ , ..... ,.,,._, __ . • • . . • .. ,.. ' • • • ! • • ' I I ~ • ' • ' I ' ' s Wuf••tdlf. May Sl, 1972 DAILY "LOT AURORA s TOILET TISSUE SINGLE FLEA COLLARS IN 2-ROll PACK , 4-TWO ROLL PKS ................. ROLLS VET'S • DOG TOMATO s 01 TAU, Sl lG IAITS, FOi IOGS, CATS • • , . • ,. FOOD BEEF. LAMB, LIVER AND HORSEMEAT FLAVORS-151/z.Ol. JUICE 46-0Z. CAN SAC RAMEN TO ..... . SLICED PINEAPPLE HAWAI IAN STAR 14 1/4 0 Z. CAN .. FOR ' s FOR :FRESH Nd:~~~.N Sb si APPLETIME ~~~ 6 bs1 A POP BOTTLE S .. . R APPLESAUCE ........ • .. :· • HUNT'S CATSUP :::~-::l~E l LB PKG s~ 51 ~=~:~ J~~~~ 3 ~5 1 KRAn MACARONI Sb s1 AND CHEESE 7\\-0 Z.·....... R 14-0Z. BOTTLE ............. . ' ;. RED PAK N0.2\0CAN S' si TOMA TOES ~~~1~ ~ • ' -£ YUBAN COFFEE ,.,, CAN .as· i maulii · FROZEN FOODS -: OR NGE JUICE -' , I • , . ' .' ,. MA YFRESH 6-0Z. CANS $ . FOR MAYFRESH FROZEN VEGETABLES 10.0L PEAS, PEAS AHO CARROTS, 6 •XED YEGS., SPllACH, WllOLE • llERIAL CORll, i0-0z. "EEi IEAIS •oz •••• I A -d ~ DAIRY SPECIALS ARDEN YOGURT . AU FLAVORS, HALF PINT $ FOR ; POPSICLES, ASSORTED navois ."' ........ 4 ,,. s1 • ~ . ORANGE JUICE BLEND VITA PAK,QUARr ........... 49' ' " HOFFMAN'S · SMOKED PICNICS . . ~ s109 CENTER CUT CHUCK ............ ...................... . .. . . · lb • BONELESS CHUCK ROAST B~~~g~E~A~~IE~~9r~. . 5111! BREA KFAST SPECIALS REAL McCOY BEEF BACON 12-0z. .... • ... ,.,. 79 REAL McCOY BEEF ROLL SAUSACiE '·"· ............. 49 REAL McCOY BEEF LINKIES •·· ......... _ ............... ,..,. 33' WILSON SLICED BACON COflNCOUNTRY ............. lb. 79 . WILSON POLISH SAUSACiE . _ ................ ~. 98' SHOU.LDER PO,,RK ROAST PICNI C STYLE ............................ . LEAN PORK STEAKS WELL TRIMMED .......... : ................................ .. CHUCK STEAKS BLADE CUTS ......................... .. ........ .. LEAN BEEF . SHORT RIBS IDEAL TO BRA ISE ............................ . FRYER LEGS WHOLE LEGS . WITH PELVIC BONE CALI F. GROWN, FOSTER FARMS ................. . ,, .. •249 . MAXWELL HOUSE ~L~c~!~E. 7 8< ~~::: ~~~:~:T COFFEE .: ·-·'"•<:::~: -I ' RUSSETS POTATOES U.S. NO. 1 .. Ill CILLO IA5 VOLUME B IS HERE 16VOlUMESIN '1'' I UY A FUllCOlOll, VOlS. 2·16 ...... I.I, IOOK A Wffl( : CT: HEAL TH & BEAUTY AIDS 1'· SCHICK PLUS PLATINUM INJECTOR BLADES, PICG. of 15 • $ 49 ~£~!~o~•~w~~~!E~B~~E~~19!" ..... 12c \i.~ !~~~~~!N __ !~~~~TS RIGHT GUARD FOOT GUARD ........... 6-oz.$1" MACLEANS TOOTHPASTE ~.~~'~'"'"''""'") 81 • BRYLCL~EM son HAIR CREAM ..... 7-0Z. $1°' ADYm'lllO NICll lfflCTM 7 ML DA YI THUIHJAY JUNl 1 thruWID.JUHl7 175 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA • ' Van de Kamp's ~t tastes so good, it's hard to l>elieve its so good for you. SPECIALS -May 31 -June 4 French 39c Bread ........... "or. R11.45o Walnut Swirl 4gc Coffee Cakes . ..,..11.Rtiu, Chocolall ;old $1 39 Cake .... 21., ... Jo oL, R•1.11.ct Van de Kamp's. ( ' ' . ,If DAILY PILOT Wrdntsdar, May 31 , 1q12 Dull Food s Flourish • By GLORI FICKLING 1,1 teaspoon vanilla cacao, blend and a dd scoop or vanilla ice cream in Juice or one lemon In large salad • bow! rub • 'lbere are no less than four 'h stick cinnamon !Strawberries. large compote. Serves one. Salt and pepper to taste clove of garlic, then mash rest8uranl.a and three bars in 1" ourr.e light rum heated Pour in quickly, prestrves, JOHN'S TANGY I teaspoon dry mustard down with back of spoon. Pour plc&uresQue, aprawllr.g Del J li ounce brandy heated 'syrup, vanilla, cinnamon stick. LUNCHEON SAl.AD 1 tablespoon diced bell pe~ in oil, vinegar, lemon juiet, lll" Webb's Newporter Inn, under ~strips lemon rind stirring gently so as not to Assorted mixed greens per mustard, salt and pepper. IUpervision of deb on a i r ~ rresh orange bruise berries. Add remaining J clo ve garlic 2 small cooked potatoes, Beat together, then addk Douglas Ross. Heat chafing dish and pour creme de cocoa. rum. brandy, 1 tablespoon chopped onion diced onion, bell pepper, tomato. Dining rooms range from in sugar stirring constantly lemon rind and juice of 1 fresh tomato, diced J sliced prime rib, trimmed potatoes, prime rib, egg and ,,. the colorful bl!t.ro and charm-until melt ed and dark brown. orange. ~ cup oil of fat and dlced greens. Toss well and serve in Visits Newporter Inn Ing Cafe de la Paix where Add one tablespoon creme de Quickly fl ame and pour over % cup vinegar 1 chopped hard cooked egg tub cbilled bowls. travelera may breakfast u l----'-----'--'------'--''------'-------'---.:;_-------'-'------='----------------------------- • early as 6:30 a.m. or enjoy :t'. late snacka until midnight, to the very sophlsUcated Wine • Cellar where one spect.a<.'Ular .• gourmet dinner is served each At night on an advance reserva- -tion baalJ. ' -.o Few people, however, are familiar with an exciting facet of the elegant Marine Room, .,-the main dining area where both lunch and dinner menus offer a wide variety. Overlooking a Oower·laden garden highlighted with curv· ... Ing walls , Grecian urns and t" graceful statuary, this room ·. takes on special charm when a beautiful wedding or cocktail party livens the patio outside. It iB here that genial maltre • -d' hotel John Vogado often stages an epicurean happening for grourmands in·the.know - flaming presentations of a tangy Shrimj) Diablo ap. petlzer, a lobfter or crab a la John entree, a salad tossed with anchovies, capers and assorted herbs. John is a creative gourmet who even takes desserts from the norm with a flourish of Ji. queurs, spices, fruit preserves, berries and ice cream which he artfully flames. H e graciously supplies some of hisc herished original recipes or laced with cold prime rib, potato and egg. SHRIMP DIABLO 5 pats butter 3 medil)'1:1 mushrooms, chop-ped-' 1 shallot. chopped ~'ii clip scallions ~-cup fresh chives l clove garlic. minced teaspoon dijon mustard 2 ounces sauce diable 2 ounces bottled meat sauce l oWlce Worcestershire 5 large raw shrimp Squeeze of fresh lemon juice I splash Madeira wine, heated 1 dash hot sauce 2 tablespoons fresh chopped parsley Jn chafing dish, melt 3 pats butter. Add next five in· gredients, then 2 more pats butter, minced garlic and saute gently for one minute. Stir in mustard, sauce diable, meat sauce. Worcestershire to simmer point. Add shriml' and cook a minute or two on each side until no longer translucent (do not overcook or shrimp will toughen). Add a generous squeeze lf lemon, l\1adeira and hot sauce. Flame quickly. Sprinkle with chopped parsley and serve on warmel ramekin gamlshed with parsley springs. Makes one appetizer serving. STRAWBERRIES VOGADO I large scOop ice cream 4 teaspoons sugar 2 tablespoons creme de cacao (about) 1"1 cup fresh strawberries ~8 cup strawberry preserves ~'ii cup blackberry syrup I Exotic Travels To Home I No netd to travel East to eat exotlc food s. You can cook good oriental dishes in your own kitchen. SHRIMP INDONESIA., 1/4 cup corn oil in cup chopped onion 2 tablespoons chopped green onion 3 cups cubed tomatoes % cup gl'ffD pepper, cut in strips · in cup halved blanched almonds i,~ teaspoon wblte pepper v, teaspoon dried basil leaves ~• teaspoon ground thyme 1 ~pound cleaned frozen • shrimp; thawed 2 tablespoons oorn starch 1 recipe Coconut f\.filk Heat oil in skillet over medium heat. Add onion and green onion. Saute, stirring frequenUy, until tender. Add tomatoes. green pepper, almonds, pepper, basil and thyme. Bring to boil. Add shrimp. Boll 2 minutes. Mix corn starcll with 2 tablespoons coconut mil.It. Add to remaining ~nut milk. Stir Into shrimp mixture. Bring to 1 boil, stirring con- slanUy. Boll I minute. Serve over i'ioe. Makes a servings. Note : To make coconut mlllc, ml• togetbet I 131>- cunce) can naked coconut with lol/I cupo m 11 k In 11ucep111. ffflt over low heat lllllll mllturt lolml, lbovt 2 111lnuto1. Pour Into 1leve and pma out llquld. I .. --= QT. JAR -Cliff CHAR CHARCOAL 20-LB. J..119 !~ BRIQUETS BAG T m SAUCER-B-QUE l:i~z 33* j! PICCADILL y CIRTCLES 4 9* ·"~ • MARKET BASKET • .:&. . MEL·O·SOFT ~"'± WHOLE SUN FROZEN CONCENTRATE ORANGE JUICE * -HEINZ !~KETCHUP 14-0Z.25* STL E~35~ - All VARIETIES FROZEN BANQUET !,E! DINNERS (EXCEPT BEE~ BREAD ··~~ 20~ -GREEN GIANT J2:oz. CAN ii! MAYONNAISE Jo:R 83* !J.! NIBLETS cou 11* -GELATIN DESSERT i . ...: \). I .,. ... · \u\\\tC ~ . . I 16-0Z. LOAVES -RED -PliNEAPPLE JulciN 29* m JELL-O : oz. PKG. ·~ \\Y- o \~""' " HILLCREST PLAIN OR IODIZED SALT 26-0Z. PKG. 10~ S1 HOARTENIN!iG ~-~~5 9* KRAFT MACARONI iii -714-0Z. DINNER PKG. 'F' "1'ill":~"" 4 ~· "'''""·~· 19~ ,.,,.,,.,., ~.t~· ,<~·"'BREWED WITH. WONDERFUL • I> WI SCONSIN WATER -LIPTON !.~TEA BAGS GOLD LABEL AllUW Ultl.U'*"' --1111S.Allhl•9", JIJS.&dM ltrf I, Siii• tllt11 ~. ""'" tU•ll~IL llUllMt tt1ns.111t1MmM. ~ .... -\ BEER ' 79 CASE OF 12 • 12-0Z. CAN -UHl•Clm Mtl.S.lttur•u. 12111 bttlht. tlltfttm 11)11 , .. , ....... #21 Ultf Cu11r lllCIHIN IJEllm n SlCllllt 2141 S. lttitlltl l'ff. 111 1,IMI IPmtCTlttUI u~ tllln'Ull NUIT ::\?::'-' ltf'I ... 1MMIHtlt'. iatll1tl 1•141 . ....,. .... -181,ts : •• :111 w ..... T , .... ""'"""" 1•1tllMltllntM 1111l ....... t•-""'"""' ...... ....., .... lUllnN1An. Ulll •• W. JIMl.litNltf. , ........... lllm!Mlm. Ln-..n 1Bn"9tMSl '"'=·· -· .. .... 1•111 ....... .,,_ ... -,. ......... 1tl?l .......... -WESTWOOD RED . 4ti.r. 5 9*-ICE CREAM V>·GAL 59* CTN. Pllllllm ,.,~. "'" . JUS Tfllllkl·llClll•~ .... ..... 11111. hlnlt ....... •1r.,.-~. 11Mr.1.-i-1t , ............. ::':' ....... -FROZEN TOPPING !E.! PET WHIP -BEECH-NUT STRAINED IQ BABY FOOD 10-0Z. PKG. 41/2·0Z. JAR -CAMPBELL'S 11 Jo m TOMATO SOUP1~~Noz. y -FLEISCHMANN'S DIET . !Q! MARGARINE 1-18. CTN. 39* Bl1ND£0 WHISID LORD OF KENTUCKY -· 1 ......... _,..., 1•1 ........... IMISlll Jtll Cllitatt It lkl• llll.S rsun~ "'-="" -.... m 11MW..M SllfMll0 ' ?' , ........... 1 1/.2 GA L ~ BTL. T IMICLrlOITI: • • l}Jl "' C..MIA ... -Ml IMlll I•"" St. _ ... IJll'.ll!'St. n11s:1111111st sanan"'*s .... =' .. .... ' 11111..alnN 9.9 ~== ... -· .. _ ... ..,.un l lllc.ittnt ft .. ......... at·Dllliltllll 11 r•oau '"· -·-· •U.CilllW. --r· ·-· llMIL ..... H. 11111~ J•it-.-.... Ullllent·· --·-1!1 ~lllllll M .. • • _IY!d!!!!g!==lll;:;•:...M:;;;lll;:.,;c).;.:l•...:l.::9n__:_ ______ DAILY PILOT :Jj Elderly Persons Lack Bread to Buy Bread NEW YORK (UPI) -Many elderly persons those days suf- fer from a shortage of bread -the kind you •pend to buy the kind you eat. Ironically, the money prob- lem has grown more acute at a time when .more supermarkets are responding to older shoppers' requests for packaging and qua n tit I es geared to the needs of small families and small appetites. A recent stud) by Chain Store Age Magazine showed iocreasing n u m b er s of merc~nt.s are making a LOOK FOR THE RED-X · · THE SYMBOL OF LOW PRICE special effort to serve senlor citizens. The survey found that many older persons are frequent shoppers. Some visit the same store two to four times dally, not just because they can't carry heavy bags. Those wbe are lonely enjoy shopping as a aoclaJ outlet, acoordlni to the survey. Loneliness also can un· dermlne health by creating poor eating bablts, says Dr. W. H. Se1'llll Jr., professor emeritus Of nutrition a t Columbia University. In a lelepbene Interview, Dr. Sebrell said there are two kinds or old people with., food problems : the ones who eat too much and get too fat, and the ones who eat too little and suffer from semi·starvation or various deficiencies. He sald the latter frequently live alone and ftnd it too much trouble to coot for themselves. "They feel rejected, Isolated and depressed. Their teeth often are bad," he said. "They may have ill·fitting dentures or none at all ." Others may have digestive troubles or be .so crippled by advanced arthritis. that even holding a knife and fork ls dll!lcult or impo3'ible. A limited Income or welfare status adds o i. b e r com- plications: more e1penslve protein foods, rr.,h fruits and vegetables otten are beyond their means . C.Ommunity and national ) • Steak Sale '~-··'-k•~ •• ·~:fl'r~~mOFflCIAl ~ ·•·"-"' ' U S D A ' :f " • • • • \ ' U.S.D.A. CHOICE.BE!!' RUMP U.S.D.A.CHOICEBE!F FOOD STAMP ROUND 11-•TIOISTOll U.S.D.A. CHOICE BE!F J.149 PORTllllOUSI USDA STEAK "'"' U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEE' USDA 8 9 9 IOlllllSS CMOIC£ SWISS STEAK LB. U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF CLUB STEAK BONE· IN J1:)9 U.S.O •. CHOICE BEE' 1723 NEW ORK ~ STEAK CMDICI ROAST U.S.D.A. CHOICE BfEf 9 U.SD.A.CHOICEBEEF ~J •10s = -DETERGENT 49.oz.79~ -lllSS SlllOIN USDA '1 ' WHOLE IONILIH CIOICI !E! TIDE ~ . TIP ROAST '""" ROUND STEAK LB. . · LB. PKG. U.S.D.A. CHOfCE BEEF 'f 29 U.S.D.A. CHOICE llHF + 1 ' -ILUS Siii.Gi• USDA IORLUS IOTTOM llTIP = • HILLCREST 57v TIP STEAK '""' ROUND STEAK LB. LB. !@!SUGAR 3. ' 'P.ftE: HlllCRESl l~BLEAC n ~AL 33* ~ • ' GTL ~Ji.D.A.CHOICEWATERMELON +121 ~~f~j,CHOICEBOHE\fSS Lll., 121 -HILLCREST 8¥a" WHITE 100-CT. PKG. 5 8 J. RUMP ROAST LB. RUMP ROAST RED PAPER PLATES 'I' ~~e:.c,::~eoNELESs J.109 Wll.SONTENDERMADE J.139 -. ROUND ROAST ~-HAMSS Ll. T ·-RED .,. FRUIT DRINKS Hl-C 2. 9 ~ QUARm! PORK LOIN SLICED INTO 7 ·9 WILSON'S TENDERMADE '299 PORK CANNED \~z. CHOPS LB. HAM ~!~ fWJ PORKtOIN SUC~'.: .. J PORK OllPS lJ. 771 -HILLCREST Oll'KERN'S B-OZ. c, .. !,ED TOMA TO SAUCI' 8* -ftD CHIFFON PRINTED --TOWELS l.J-CT.30* ROIL =-IMPERIAL !,ED MARGARINE ~39* FR~SH BROCCOLI lft!m ORIO COFFEE TASTER'S ·cHOICE ~:-.+1 12 =:r-.......... -....... --· sru._,-&,·1'4l-''' ==-..... -- :: -.. ,..,_ .. ..... .... -... .. nc ''·" 4 IU.Y(llS nut DK /Cl. ::ii-"' .. "' --.... ··-,.. ---"" ""'"""' ····-,,. m IUll illlSH 1t11G ... --..._ .... ---.... WILSON'S CERTIFllD LB.79* 1-IB. 839 CUT-UP MIXED CUT-UP FRYING FROZEN SLICED RAlllTS BACON PKG. · RYER o.n:m flMll ,un COKTAINSo j.IMlQIJAllBS W!11! hUS. J.FOllOUMIUS. W!Tll 14US, •ntGS,3-~ QUARTERED FRYERS CENTER CUT SMOKED PART Fortq11•rf•rt '• Hillllqu•rl•r• ~ COOERCUT HAM SLICES FRESH PICNIC PORK ROAST LEAN TENDER PORK CUT LOS JIMMY DEAN ROLL SAUSAGE Lf:129 FAMRYPACU-ll.0 .. AAGDPK~ 8 9* FRYER BREAST (Wiil! .. CAGQ LB. . . LB.559 fAMltYPACU·ll.otWGDm. 8 99 FRYER DRUMSTICKS LB. LB.999 fAMRYPACl:J.ll.otlARGlllPK~ 8 9* PORK STEAK LB. t-LB. FRYER THIGHS OR 89~ IAMRYPACU-ll.ORIARGIRPK~ 85~ PKG, WHOLE LE'S LB. . (WITH BACX PORTX>frO VINE-RIPENED PORK CHOPS LB.39* LB.99* l-ll.99~ CANTALOUPE WILSON CERTIFIED POLISH SAUSAGE PKG. -1·0* w B, ,{ 13< ....... ·~ 3/SI __ _,, ........ ..... Mt MU.l O$CAl MAYll REG. 11.or. 17' osww.m 1::,t 97c All M(Af iUM. .. 69' .. (IK.MAf,._ "" Ile Ill.GINA '°' Cini SAUJll ., ..... "'"'"' "' 40 -·--.... •Gr.Pd. 2tc All MUfOSC.U MA'IU 1'!ICI lt-OL 971 WISON OfJMKCAMAD AArHAllMD ... 85• '""" MlotllA ru. IACH ll • 1 •• IOlHllA Mc ---·-H OSCAYMA'tlltlG. 11',oz. 99c WISOHCOblD It. • 1 •. ~ fl&Sll U·OL t llSkll'I tltllMtOt 11111 .... . IUP lllMIA nt. Niii ... '1" Uc -~lie ....., ... OSCAI MAYR THU 1'41.19' WISONl&f OU 79' ;:m. .. 69• .,. _ ... _ ':t $1.tJ ----,., wtillbC ... tNZ.N-ttAI • organizations, Including Ulc American Red Cro.ss, are trying to solve these probl ems In various ways. The ARC and the Food and Nutrition Service of the U.S. Department ut Agriculture are working \Vi!i1 volunteers in a pUot progr.1 n1 to deliver USDA-donated fOOd to senior citizens who can't pick it up in person. The joint program operates In San Bernardino, Wil1n- ington. Del., Bowling Gretn, Ky., Fulton, Mo., and McKin- ney. Tex. The USDA alou~ works with volunteers in 1\[. tleboro, Mass., to provide th(• same service . SHUT-INS A similar program c:iill'Ll 1-feals on Wheels operat.•s 111 many other com.rnunilil'S ro deliver hot and cold n1enl.s to eJderly shut-ins, often und1·r sponsorship of local organiza. tions. Help also is available fron1 two food guide booklets, onr published by the USDA. and the other, by Jhe American Association of Retired Person s and the National retirl'd Teachers Association, whiC'h have a combined membership of 3.5 million persons 55 year s of age or over . Their advice on low-(ost food shopping includes: -\Vatch newspaper ads for best buys. If you have the energy, shop in several stores to get the best price s. Remember that supermarket competition generally leads to lower prices than you get in smaller markets which take phone orders and m a k e deliveries. -Be wary of money-back offers on food packages,. You can end up spehding too much on postage and tot a I purchases. , . -Cook enough meat at one time for two or three meals. This saves both fuel and your energy. You also can save fuel by baking potatoes and dessert along with a roast or other baked main dish. BUY LIITLE -Buy only as much food as you can use easily. A large package of a low-priced pro- du<:t Isn't cheap Jf it spoils or grows stale before you can eat it au. -Use leftover meat, fish. poultry, seafood and even cooked vegetables In aalads, omelets or cream sauces made f~m canned soups But don 't add so much oe\\" f~ to these dishes that you have leftover leftoven. Nuts Added With the current interest In nutrition and natural foods creative cooks are finding ways to increase the nutritive values of favorite recipes. Here, for example, ta a PoUnd cake that calls for ground almonds and whole wheat nour in the batter and crisp slivered almonds in its crust. If you prefer, use sliced almonds to coat the pan. The delicate flavbr of this rme-textured cake will develop on standing, so plan to bake it a day before serving. This i9 an excellent cake for people ~ who don't like sweet-sweet desserts. ALMOND-WHOLE WHEAT POUNDCAKE 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons soft margarine 1 cup slivered almonds 1 'h cups brown suger (p•"ked) 1ii l 1ranu1ated sugar 4 egM:s J teaspoon almond extract 1 'h cups whole wheat flour l 'h cups all-purpose white flour, unbleached if available 113 cup soya fiollr or whole wheat flour 1 cup ground almond~ 3 teaspoons baking powder l teaspoon salt llf.t cups milk Spread 2 tablespoons margarine against bottom and sides of 9-or IG-inch tw.;part a~gel food cake pan ; press slivered a I m o n d s into margarine so they are scat· tered evenly against pan. Cream 1 cup margarine with the sugars; beat in eggs, one at a time, and the ex· I ract. ~1 ix flours with ground almonds. baking powder and salt : beat into creamed mix· ture alternately with milk. Pour batter into prepared pan. Bake at 350 degrees ror about l hour 10 minutes or un· UI the top Is golden brown and 1 pick Inserted into center -;omes oul dry. Cool 10 minutes In pan, then 'oosen sides and rt.m0ve. Invert: loosen bottom aod remov•. Cool before culttni • Makes u servincs . .. • H DAILY PILOT . , . . . . IN FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES ' Our buyers never compromise on quali ty ... All our frui ts and vegetables are the VERY BEST AVAILABLE -EXTRA-FANCY GRADE or U.S. GRADE No. 1 ... Both grades ar e the best. and always AT EVERYDAY LOW DISCOUNT PRICES I"ll ICf_I Alll I OISCOUNTIO I XCI PT ON FAlll·TllAOI 0 ANO GO'lallHMINf CONTllOLLllDITIMS .- FROZEN FOOOS P.D.Q. SHRIMP •••. e1 ~,~~-::99 • COOL WHIP •.•• :1·.~~~~~ 35• JOHNSTON PIES ••• '.~.·.:1 76' A••1I O• S!l&l'itOIT IHUld• • GlllM GIAllT 2.1c CIUMmu, WMOLI llllNIL 17.0UNCf , .. • CANNED FOODS <("CHIU BEANS ... :~/~ 16 ' <("FANCY PEAS ••••• ~,~ 20 ' TACQUITOS •.•••• ,,,~;:.:: 71 ' ORANGE JUICE •... ':':I';:: 28 ' FISH FILLETS ... ~.i:~:·~r~;~~ 85 ' .,-.CHINESE FOOD .. .'::;,-,.;g 65' W IW Oii Otl(W. CHOW ....... l'ORK (>fo,INJJllG ~ll'lll &!iOl.ll 79 < .,-.CHINESE DINNER .'!:~,~9.9 ' • .,-.NO.ODUS •• ::·~·:·.\~,'!'..':33 ' "4'-f BANANAS rt"' , ~ ,, , •·• • .UOl "1G, . SPAM .....•.•. 1~llf~1~ 59 . :~ ·~ ... , FINEST QUALITY .. . lltJI ~ ! '" RED SALMON •..• •.Orn• 1.13 ') CHIQUITA BRAND <("TOMATO.SAUCE .. '"7',~: 17 ' • ) j 12 ( .,-. FRIED RICE •... .':.-;,·~ 37 ' . PU"CH-. "'""'ll""Yll''"'' 45 . ,, • • • • , • • • , • 110lC&N WHITE VINEGAR •• '.u.':i.'..'.~: 69 ' . IOYllMllllT 69A ~APPLE SAUCE ••• 1!~~~~ 18 • 1 · · LI HAIVIST DAY f" 32-0UMCI , .. .,-.COCKTAIL •••• :-:;;~:~: 26 . U.S. ID. 1 GRADE RUSSET .,-.UMON JUICE ••• ,.,,.,.49 • POTATOES JUICE .._lVISl o.lY ~INIUflll 28 '" ~ •••••••• • • t110l C.il • • HOUSEHOLD ITEMS oASOFTWEVE ..•. '0~io~rr::t 23' rDEODEORIZER . .':''.".~~ 52 ' l lLJr.C. o\Mll•O~ ll.t.l.lrY ct tAl~OOM . .,-.SPREADABUS .• ~".i::O: 63 ' .,-.REFRIED BEANS .• "~~!t::: 19 ' KEY BUY GREEI BEAIS ~GLADE .... IC.t4NDIDI~~~ 45 · Glflll~ANT~3A ff"TtsSU E. . .... ~ ~S:W. :oi1 34 • lrTCMIM sucto, ~ ~tuow -11. ",. Oii Gll.111 nntcH SlKlD . ,i.i_~Jdl.lAO"l ur 23 • 16·0UMCI ~·FOIL ...•. 17'"""fll ·isso,n.lOll CAM cf" AJAX •...•••.• 1!'g':; 67' • • • · .,-.DETERGENT .•. ,.,:~:I.OB .,-.INSTANT .TEA ..... ~;~ 1.23 tf"BOlAX ... ":~l~1~~~~~C::6S ' ~SOY SAUCE ..... 1~~i.~23 · ...ATIDE "''""" 1 39~--...,.SYRUP.. .. . .,,..~,""""-'~2•·· 'IT •••••• • • .-ol lCI• • f3" • , • o , ••• o HDl Oll .. ...-wooLITE • '.":"'."'."~~':':~ 1.83 -YUBAN COFFEL . ::::99 • tf'4 TY D BOL to'l'ILQU.NI• 65 • u GUw . 0111, o• 111c1 MAric · · • · · · · ""'" · YUBAN COFFEE .• ~:: 2.55 HHYIST OAT4~· A .J 2.0UNCI f" PACIAGf DAIRY PRODUCTS MllK {11.+.lUNGfHOllfA! f'OWDl•ED 1 19 •••••••••• n oril'l!G • ~COFFEE MATE c~=~r.~~'.: 79 • MILK C..ll\H.lTION .. !T.lll'TNOll l.lT 1 01 r:f"4' •.••• rowouro101,(G • ICE CREAM ...... .-':,'c~: 65 ' MARGARINE •..... ,!:,\'~: 21 ' Mill .... ~.~"."~~0.~= 37 ' ~IGU!<U Oii HICT MUI( YU BAN COFFEE .• ~;:; 1.39 CHILI SAUCE ••• ,~,:: 41 ' PEAR HAl VES ". • ~·~:: 49' JUICE ll OTlHN.llllll! 49 ' ••••••• 1:•1,HIUIT -.OlCIN TOMATO JUICE ....• ~'.:: 31 ' OTHER ITEMS BEVERAGES 111•\lfSIDllC.lH (IVIJI 110 ' • • • , • , • 12 DZ !;All n -~ ' GIVE HOPE e SUNDAY;:; Cl JUNE 4 ~ 10 ~~~D 39c PACKAGED GOODS -'PEPPER <,(J<1u1t1Gu•1M<o11.t.CK 39 ' Q'"". • • • • • • • • •OlCI~ .qA BREAKFAST • 1&.':1i''i~:)~~1~~ 43 ' __..CRACKERS ''"'"~"'"u" 24 ' Q" •••••• 110110( RICE .... >111'-'1\Ql<GGU IN 48 o ~ • • , • • • , , • • 1~0/BIC. .,-.QUICK RICE .,. ... ":':~,":;': 47·· "BREAKFAST '4Ul•ll GINF•llMllll 77 ' • • • • !'VU fl20l,_-G FLOUR ll O•lll .lll 'tllll'OS! 83 ' • • • • • • , •••• I01t ll G BISCUIT"MIX ... : :·:·;,;,;;-:,-;-so · PET FOODS CAT FOOD ........ ,.:,,tr.:11 · (~l(AIN &. (IOH(Y O• (~10!~ &. l•VU o-'4KAL KAN •.•• ,111;'.1·mz'm 25 < .,-.DR. ROSS ..•..•. :':':,"!:: 14 ' Mlll Oii Ot•ClUI <("llTTU FRISKIES'.'~":"';:J:::1 a9 ' LOW EVERYDAY PRICE GOLDEI CROWi BEER 14 12 OUNCE 2gg CAMS <11 ~Van de,,Kamp's oc· AN OUTSTANDING VARIITT OF FRISH BAKIRY GOODS heryday Discount Prices On Heallh And Beauly Aids -<->~~;JI CJ,~~~~~:~, u'~ ARRID EXTRA-DRY "\llA•4ol.blp 1! ovr $IOI~' "''th V.~ d. IC1tt•11'> w CO~Y•IGKT c n n Lwtlly SIW .. ,i"'· ': 5 7 C For all types .. • of hoir. 16 OZ. j ~· kA(°lk;I ·v l.a¥oR1s -< 1' MOUTH WASH AND GA RGLE f ' . Used by more dentist• tho t'l any other. I'~ 111!!1 32 0 L BOTT LI \-=--.. s129 CEPACOL ANTl·IAC TERIA L MOUTHWASH GARGLE Help• rel ieve minor sore throot, awfftens breath, 20 0L IOTTLI JOHNSON & J OHNSON RED CROSS 1..,___ COTIOI BALLS 100'% sterile: 43 safe to use on C CU1S, etc •• , •• ANTl·PERSPIRANT Protects against odor and wetness. 99c Reg. or Unsc. 6-0L SPRAY ,. ••.. 4.a,.1 \J' MENNIN'S PROTEIN 21 CONDITIONH 40L IOTILI , ~ IO~iNG I' C\I([· I • w ,• "''"" -• IJ ......... , fiJ LOYIJllG CARE HAIR COLOR Cloirol"s sho""1M>Q · ~n hoir coloring . ONI APPLICATION s144 ROUIDS ~ Fost-octing on!ocld tob· $ J 57 le t1 . 1 S0'1 COPPEllTOIE l OTION Oii O IL 4 OL $J 34 DESEIEI $1'' AH O SOL FOOT ~WDIR t-TTUllll LOTION •.oa. s21• lLLEllEST 2•'• $ J l" 90T1U , l lNUS DECONOUT&NT All •ltl'lb ll•IK'f'H AUNllM • 110 S.. St9te Cllle11 It.ti. AUlftlM . 720 W. lll ,._ A'•· AIWSA • 27J I. Glt•t-SttMf WOWIN PAi l • 1Jt40 le111•M II••· CANOGA PAii • 7224 Mti••11 A••· W. COVINA · l •tlelllil Shop,11t1 C111, DOWMI' • IJll flr1•te111 11,11. CAIDIN GlOYf • ll07S f11CIW 51. 'GIJNDALI • 1155 W. Git~ l h4. GU•l ll • 1000 s.. Ce!!tf91 A••· fttC*AW PAH • Ill W, ''•1111• 4S ..,,.TIMCTON IUCN • tOJl Atl•tll '''· lAGUNl NlllS • s .. Die ff lty. •f l1 P•1 LA MlllDA • le Mireff Ml•"iltt Chi. lAl lWOOD • le•ew•M 511_,,;.., Ct11. lAWNDILI -14411 S•. h-.flllf'lll 11.,, LHUIOJ • lOIOI Ptlllirie A,,, LYNWOOD • 11121 l ttellric A''· LOMG I LKll • 12JJ f. s,ri111 St. I. lOS A#GUIS • MIS I, lffe~p A•1 • MOtrllOYIA • 4J2 W. """""''" Drtwe MONnilUO • IJS Ne. If-*'• NOIWlll • ttlm AIMft lh4. OIMClf • 2120 I. C•e,_11 A". PAJ.lDINI • 411 I, VIiie Stn•I SAfll l ll lUIOJNO • JS74J """" S1. 1."SAll GllllR • tU 1. letT-• '"''- WI PIDlO • II» • JJ" St. UMfA MOWIC & • U:l7 U.Ctllt l"'L SCMITll GITI • Jfl I .... ,, .... lttL " l lOONDO llACM • 1115 .,_,, ... 11,11. TOllA..Cf • :r7st Pedfit CMtl ll•J. TOllMKI • lMO S.,.iNff lhtl. 1\IJUNGI • 1241 JetfYI 1 .... 4. T\ISTll • 11271 N._,trt l\'I. et lt t SI. WUKllUTll • 1711 U.C.11 lhL WISTM•nfl • 1»71 .... le It. nm11 • 1sosJ s."' ,, "''· W."111 . 117JO •• Wliltt4" .... . WUMINGfOll • 1 n2 N" _., .. .. WOODU.ltCI KIUS • 2at0 Ykttf'Y lhL ••• ~Ot*\.91: .. ,..,,, ... .,.. ... ,.,.,..,,. .v .. FRESH FRYERS CHUCK ROAST ~::~~;~~,ifr:~Y A29 c •ONDIO LI l'•·l &.•I BLADE CUT UNCONDITIO"IALLY 63 c •ONDEOFOll QUALITY A"ID LI '&.A.VOii GROUND BEEF ........ "''.""""":·:.~~:;:: 6 7 c CROSS RIB ROAST""'."""'"".:~::~·:: 9 5 c T-BONE STEAK ..... "''."""""";:~::·:. 5 157 CUT-UP FRYERS ............... ·~~.:::,":':. 34 c TOM TURKEY ........... ~A~~E~T ::~~;~~:~:~T~:~EL•.4 7 c. . HEN TUR·KEYS Y0"' 0 ·"'"•" 0 "53' ., ••••.•. H.O•~E S1DAY .SllL '•l1TUtC LS FULLY COOKED HAM ........ :.~~':;~~~::~: 6 7 c HAM SLICES ............... '.'.~~~~~~~~:~~:5 1 59 ROUND STEAK CENTER CUT ...... s 1 os VKCONl>ITIONALL Y ao1o1010 1'0• QUALITY LI A"ID ,.LA.VO• .fuclut~ DIS COU NT CENT ER S ARE DIFFE RENT! Bigger thon o Supermarket! More than ci Var iety store t On -lhe·5pot shopping for o pon or a pantsuit I .. A rug or o rake ! , . A blanket o r Cl bike! And much, much more .. at money saving low discount prices ! ·zoRIES .. T~is symbol denotes those items civoilobl e ONLY ol DISCOUNT CENTERS. HAIDY PISTOL JllOZZEL . Machi ned tip delivers o fine spray to a fu ll Heavy-quality pl astic trash cans won't rust or clatter: snop·light lids for maraud- ing animals , lo(g• size. SUMMER-COOL FOOTWEAI -:::;;;ii_..._,. CHILDREN'S 27 C strecim at a touch. EC?.~:;~:., 97 c PllCI! ~SAi.a.QUE 79c ~MATCHES · s341 / DISH Jn..,lotod d;ak ....____ 15 C In Ossf'd colors. WISS HEDGE SHEARS ~· Modlum wolgk1, $319 8-in. blades. f ... H &RISS WELCOME llT ~r:.',~1 ~,,~·ri-:.1 s4· 21 ditcorotlona. MEI'S WALK SHORTS Men's Permo Press Wolk skor!S In long· $34l • wearing cotton/poly· .ater blends. Solids, AND ' patterns: 29 to 40. • Mochin9·wosh·n-dry. 1o10T llVl.ILAtl lE AT IA/tlA ,,.O"llCA IROI SKILLET St.ak1tze comp . aklllot wltk r;bbod s 14• botlom. Cost Iron. CllPllll &RIDDLE Fish size. Ribbed bottom.68' ~ wire "'""" lld 99c pt...-.ntl •potter. 'OUI PllCl NOftCTICM IQJC( GUAAANnlS TG P'RIClS TO ll DIKTIVE ''°"' WfDNESOlY, MAY 31, TMIOUCiti lUBDAt JIM l. 1t7r. 1 • ' . SALADS SALUTE SPRING W~. M"f ll, 1972 OAJLV PILOt U Dessert Bannered • Boston 1n ., Thi! favorile dessert comes ~ .. broken in hair boiler sUr together the sugar and nour; gradually stir in 11·~ cups of the milk, keeping smooth. 1n a 11mall mixing bowl beat egg yolks with re- maining \t cup milk an<l add to sugar ·mixture; add choc» late. 1hickened. Remove from but. Stir in S teaspoons of tht vanilla and Che butter. from a Boston hostess. . MRS. BANNER'S DIOO\>LATE PIE 1 cup sugar ~I cup unsifted nour 1 cups milk s egg yolks S SQUIJ\tS (each 1 ounce) u n sweetened chocolate, GIANT SIZE CASCADE 65~ 4 teaspoons pure vanilla ex· tract 9-lnch baked pastry ihell I tablespoon butter 1 contaJner (I ounc~) heavy cream 2. tablespoons confectioners sugar In the '\op part of 1 double COok over simmering wat er stirring-constantly. u ~ t i I Cool slight!y. Pour \(n10 paSlry she 11. Retrlgero1e overolght to allow fllling 11'1 set. Just before serving. whip CfellllJ W i t b cooftclklnen:' sua:ar and remaining I lf'R· se_oo~ vanilla : spread over pir. .0 ••• ~~~-~ ·~~:T~O~ -. . . ---· ·'·:--·-·· 608 EAST BALBOA BLVD., BALBOA REFRIGERATED DELIVERY SERVICE: PHONE 673·8310 SP'ICIALS THUISDA.Y, PllDAY, IATUIDAY, JUHi 1. l. J , CERTIFIED FRESH SPRINGFIELD SLICED CRISP ·BACON CELERY 69~ 15~ WI IUllYI THI llaHT TO LIMIT 9UANTITIES Artistry Aimed at Palate Many delicious foods -drained apricots, maraschino tangy blend 01£ sour cream ,1----------~!!!!!!!!!!""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'~ varieties of lettuce, Spinach cherries, pineapple chunks and mayonnaise and ze s t y and other greens, cheese, fresh stra1vberr ies speared on American blue cheese. The pi- meat and colorful vegetables skewers. The kebobs are then ....,.. make up a salad. Here a'e stuck into a peeled avocado ,quant flavor of the bluc- several s u g g e s t i o n s to half that has been sprinkled marbled cheese ls a natural -stimulate your imagination in \.l/ith lemon juice: companion to the sweet fruits. makin8 springtime salads with A· hollowed-out pineapple Swan Salad is canned pear fruit. ' holds the delectable dressi 0 n.g,,. __.~ves "cemented" together Fruit Kebobs simply are The dressing is ~a sweet -:;;~~~~ii~~~~;;;~~~~;;;~~;;~ with tinted cream cheese. Her . . :.Bros:flecff i :r:J:'.' ~:~v~y:ro~ : st~~~: ,.(f _'4, ~ , i~,-. • · · .' _,..' ... ·~~ Daisy Salad is made quite quickly from apple slices cut with a daisy cutter, then BAKED FISH PIMIENTO brushed w1tn lemon juice to 1 1101/2••1.J Cd tomote 101p • f 3 C Cllftlh, or •titer white dl11Nf wl111 I C shrMded P'oceu phne11t• chffte 2 T clwlpped pontey 1 smoll •11io1t. 111i11ced 4 llallb1t steoks CamlllN 10\lp, wine Ind chttst l" laucep~n. $11r ~vtr IQw .,HI until clleest melt\ 11\d Is !Jletldt'd. Add pflro!ey ~nCI onion. Arr1ng1 fish 1Mek1 in 1hellaw twi~l<lfl JMn. PO\lr a.,.r uuc1. 8iok.1 315 degrfel tar 25 min., ar until lish fle~ts will! IOf'I!;. StrYt l '· • _l'lt•)H NO•THl•fll HALIBUT . • • . • . • $2.25 lb. D•l1n1v l ra1. u1,911t Ch•rl•1 Kru9 Ch•rdann1y with th i1 d+ih. Atl '""4 Tllrv M1y Jl-W• Wiii •• OiMll MemerOll Dly prevent the apple~ f r o m darkening. The~gay centers are colored miniature marshmallows. Green pepper makes the stems and leaves. 3' ~600 SWEEK •we can f law discount ·P'ices and they iiHtreaUy low -really! · U.S.D.A. fNSPECTEO NEW ZEALAND ·~· ~ FROZEN 4.6,lBS~ WHOU llGs..:..SHOIT $ttM'llt '' C . !~ ..!! LEG' 0' LAM·B 0 '"""'' "'"' 0 . . . . . • • • • • • • • • LL . . . . f.!i!:\ SUHNYVALLEY FtESH 3 3 C ~~LARGE'AA'EGGS DOI. · ~ LANDO' LAKES.WISCONSIN MONTEaEY '9 C ~ ~JACK CHEE5t:;....... LI. r::M:\ U.S. NO. 1 WHllE ROSf 10 49c ~~POTATOES ...... :~.~~<; GOLD BOND STEER BEEF 9sc ~~RIB STEAK............ . LI. trl1 ·-n .. COSTA MllA • 11m llOOIMURST. •ARDIN ••OYI , ... W, ·D1Mll. SAllTA AllA e 1111 WAINU. HUWTIH'.TOH HACH • • 1m 1 ll TORO. n TORO ' ' -----.-----·----- , BJ:pE. SEAL BAKE~Y INTRODUCES ' ' .. ~ . ' .LOSANGELES;CAUFORNIA • ' . QUALITY -BREADS " " ' ( ;. '\ . . ·:rnc FitJef t B&~dCOoifs 'this sklc of the MiS!i~sip~i" r • . , I , . .. ... J97 I ' f -. -.-.. ~ .. -.-. . ; .. I ' 40 DAIL V PILOT RAMBLI~ ROVND WITH SALLIE THF. TUNE OF JUNF. IS BHfllES AND GllADS PROMS AND DAO Service, service, service . . save the mad dash .. The Richard's good folks are cool and serene .. Their lagniappe cup runncth <lVer with tender. loving care. The wedding Mene is serene , . gals and moms. hrini.: samples of dresses for tolor ..• look al pictures . • Don't run, rnake this ~·asy-and fun. Got ldcact. 'fhe Lido }'lower shop will make them real. Tht~i r desig ners are Utcrallv drio- ping \\•ith all kinds of taste and protocol ... the prooer width of the ri~bon to nut on 1he cake server ... How to carry wheat and daisies charmingly ..• Many splcndored wed- dini:!'. all orchids a n d .~lephanoUs ... green And c a r t h y garden wedding . Las Vt>gas weddin~ , . ()h yes. th cv'vc done th:>t too. packed flowers for th!': 6 hour trek in the trunk or a 1·ar , , They come to your home, look your ya rd ove r . , plant instant wild nnwers at the tenth and a half hou r to make everything naturey and natural , • Add i 11:azebo. THE HAPPINESS OF ~·ooo , . Litlle open faced $3ndwiches, p f n k charn- na~ne .. the nuts. the calre. lhc mints •. A fes! ive board of cheese, wine. bread and fr u i t . , Two Delis on the receptiora . ru n .• Perhaos a breaktnst huffet with elegant cha finJ! clis hes. sublime tonsty rolls and pickle platters of Cher- rydi lls and Dill y Beans. Intimate !amllv affair .. with dinner for 4. 6. or 8. Sit down. Rest. The Dell will bring ii .. Chnteau brlan d or creamed chicken, and all the little bro1rned potal~ mystery rice and grttn beans nlmadin e to go wit h it. For you Ra is who lean toward doin~ your own thin!{ .. the fixln11: of one or two dishes will add a coupl e or hours to your day ' • Bring-your ~ -e11~les, vour special jel\o moulds .. The dell will fill lhem fuU of turkey tettrazinis flr tamalf! pie. Apple Sparkle o r blueberry whip~ cream PEOPLE WE LOVE ..• ESPECIALLY WEDDING MAMAS Phones are all mixed Ult You can talk to the Lfdn Flower Shop, I h e n be> switched to the Harbor View Deli, then back 11\ the J,ido Dakerv. \Vho knows. ~·taybc you've got special ™'ople nt both stnres you \Vant tn be :i. part nf all this v.·cddcd bliss. c:ift Shfln hangs In there tno. Ask In be transferred . There arfl cocktail nnpkins lo he ordered \vith names. \Yerl - rl'inJ? cake gift boxes, wed- rl ing JlUest books .. Even the \\"eddinl? invilations fin Cr:ine's Fint' PR.pe r s . nrinted soriallv lorrect by S!Rndard of 13Prkclcv. For the br!-le \vho ha,,. nothing. the Gift Shon C<lmes hl~hly rccommrndcd ... The new g<l'"for 11eats ·in I~'! kitchen :ire harrrls with caUcn nowPr«f p11ddP.tt tops , • , Otap:iri happy folkware J)Cl\1ler. izin11hnm .. r.~rbrr leffenrlArv hh1rltt. The girls in !ht-Gift Shn,.. k«'n a !Ah on rifts fnr IOC""l hrirles. \Vhrri \'OU C'flTT'C In 1vlth "1""4111t'll T Jtel cnnrrrn" iu!ll a~k 11·h"I h11~ ntrrar'v ))N>n srl('t·tt't'I for so Anrl !" 11nd vou're rff :lnrl rvf'ln\11 ... DetiVerv Bnd bt11utiou s )?lft \\'rAppir\g loo ... If you \\18nl to see a Richa"rcrs wer'rli111? t'nke. "nfllC Into thr bnkrrv. eit hrr ' \do or Jlartxir \'i"w o'l A Fridnv or ~ntu~11y ... 'Vatch them do I h «! .•,,~rntlnP 011t fn fl'flr1t .. 'lich trAditinnA1 whlfe .. Persona l chorolate .. Somebodv Is alu11vs P"etl!n"' mnrril'd ro11 .a '"Pelritnd. Rirhal'f'l's, the Pf' o D 1 r Stnreo;. \\•here accordinc '" Clark f\ennNlv, m11na,er r' !he Flower SMo. mo.-e wH'· tlinll:!I lake place In October lhnn June. • fofs of folks sell Croceries ... ' So tN1ny services to make shopping easier •nd more fun -like HOME DELIVE'RY of groceries, Richard's CHARGE ACCOUNTS, a bakery in oach of our stores, you got JUST BAKED BREADS and PASTRIES, a complete menu of HOT FOODS -from salad to dessert • What else do we do? -Wen, we keep .everything super clean and well arranged -and we stock just about every brand in a full range of sizes ond varieties. AD this plus more smiling people eager to SERVE YOU! RICHARD 'S -WHERE SERVLCE TO YOU IS OUR PLEASURE! Hen Turkeys ... ,.-.. 49~ Boned Trout ..... .._ ...... ~ 98' Gr•at eating at a tiny price. Anybody for INrbecued turkey, turkey salad or turk•~ tetraulnl? If you aren't a fisherman -fry these up for brNkf11tl Brown RiceM.J.B.QulcklOOL 2~49c Corn Tender, Golden Jubllff A dtl19htful 1tufflnv for your borbtcuod turkey. LI. 29' PapaJaS 1-9• Sbt a 49' Red Potatoes 5 LI~ 29' Green Beans Improved Kentucky Wonder s~"''" Butter Ard .. AA 1 •• 83' 'iffy Cake Mix' OL 2 F0• 25' Yiiban Coffee 1 LI. 83' "2 lb. Yuban Coffee 3 lb. Yu ban Coffee Bath Tissue·"'°'° Z-Pk.4 Nabisco Korkers Corn Twht S11ac• I OZ. Jiffy Frosting Mix AU f1 1..,ora 71/i oz. Nucoa Soft Margarine f LI. ~ 17 01. Fruit Coc.ktail I 01. ·Delmonte 39c 2 tor 25c 33c 4 for $1 10 for $1 FOODS Tomato Sauce Catsup 14 oz. 19c 16 Ol. Sliced Beets 4 for .$1 Fruit Cups, Gel Cups or Pudding Cups • •K. 49c Pineapple-Grapefruit Drink •• oz. 3 for $1 Pineapple.Pink Grapefruit Drink ., oz. 3 for $1 Cut Green Beans " oz. 4 for $1 Cream Style Corn . 17 oz. 5 for $1 Early Garden Peas 17 oz. 4 for $1 Stewed Tomatoes " oz. 4 for $1 100% Who!e Wheat Bread 43c Apple Danish Pastry Potato Rolls German Chocolate Cake 2 for 3lc 6 for 34c 2.69 We trim each ear and remove part of tht hu1k -you see what you get! All +he U.S.O.A. Choice Beef •t Richard 's is Black An9us and White F•ce Hereford from the DeAnr• Ranch in El Centro, speciali1in9 in premium beef for 35 years! This is pampertd beef -it isn't the cheapest -but it i1 th• finest! • Prime Rib Roa!t 1.49 LB. 1st 3 Rib Roast 1.69 LI. Serve with honeradis~•uce •nd browned potatoes. Every bit of excess f•t •nd bone is trimmed off be- fore you t•ke it home! You don't pay for waste! '!h~:" 1.09 LB. Legs of Pork '-:.-ted' 1.09 LB. Legs of Lamb Swi~s Premium, the best. Cornish Game Hens 22 01'. Checkerboerd Farms. Cese of 12 Hens ......... , ........ -9.3 5 bo x c)%~8 eac~ce fillet of Sole . 1.79 lb. Serve with .. 9teen 9r1pe1 for Sole Veronique. f innan Haddie 1rom Nov• scotia 98c lb. ~tli'611Jlm Bar-M All Meat Wieners lb. Erlre good flevor -btc•use they're finer qu•lity. TRY THIS TRIO-DEMO. FRI. & SAT. Bar M All Meat Bologna Chubs Bar M liver Saus2ge Bar M All Beef Salami Richard's Monterey Jack Cheese Canadian Stoned Wheat Thins Reese Chutney p,,.h " " ..... 1. 12 oz. 12 oz. 12 oz. 10 oz. 10 oz. 79c 79c 69c 89c 89 c lb. 49c 59G 67J.6J60 HOME DELIVERY IN OUR AREA. PRICE EFFECTM JUNE 1-4 Fresh Spareribs small ,;,. 98c lb. RICHARD'S SPECIALTIES Yz Stuffed Game Hen 59c ea. Fl•me with brandy-for • fine! fillip! Stuffed Roasting Chicken 69c lb., ~;m~~" Popsicles AB Flavon ' Pk. 4 FOR s1 Salisbury Steak 14 OL 69' From Hollowey Hou1• Stuffed Cabbage Rolls Hono • ., Ho ... Stuffed Green Peppers Hollo • ., H'"" Individual Pies M • ., Hoh••• ,. Apple, Boysenberry, Cherry or Pee ch l-4 0 Z. 14 oz. Green Beans with Butter Sauce IO OZ. 3 for $1 Green Giant, French Style Green Giant Cream Style Corn " oz. 3 for $1 Mixed Vegetables with Butter Sau ce "oz 3 for $1 From Green 6i1nt Peas and Carrot Points " oz. 3 for $1 with Creem Sauce, From Green Gi•nt. ~~ RED ROSES LUSCIOUS, BEAUTIFUL, VELVETY 1, 98 DOZEN /(). . ,, 4=-~ HARBOR VIEW 1660 Mac Arthur, Newport Beacf1 673·2155 . . ,, ~ LIDO CENTER 3433 Via Udo, Newport Beach • 673-6360 OPEN DAILY 9 -7, SUN. 9 - 6 OPEN DAILY9 -81 SUN. 9-6 ' - :J PI LOf.AOV!:ifnSER Wf<lntSday, Mu 31, 1972 DAILY PILOT 4 J It's time again for El Rancho's famous annual sale of Stouffer's _!.op quality frazen foods!. Come in ... Stock u_.__! ... Spinach or Com ... lieht, colorful and full of flavor, made with milk, whole eggs and fine 1euoningsl CHEESE SOUFfl( ... 19' . fi ChippBd 81td. .. : ..... ll1 What's special about it? Specially processed strips of round, pl\la Stouffer's famous cream sauce! Add your touch for glamour! Sioufftlrll Chow ll1in ..... ··········•' See what it's~e to enjoy Chow Mein with plenty of chicken, tender and tasty ... with crisp vegetables and delicious aauce! Sioufftlri lasagna ................... 1l/ IJ ·seer or chicken, quality meats, tasty vegetables, light crust! 10 oz. Made for you with flavorful ground meat, ripe tomatoes. two kinds of cheese and a sauce that's seasoned just right! Vegetables au Gratin Tuna & Noodles ..... Breast of Chicken I I I Broccoli, Cauliflower or Potatoes .. -with an aged cheddar sauce! A casserole that glorifies tuna .•• with mushrooms, celery and seasonings! Two whole breasts! Tender white meat with a creamy southern style gravy! Macaroni & Beef . . . . 59c Noodles Romanoff .... 39c Swiss Steak ...... ; . . . s2 19 With tomatoes ... ripe and juicy ... seasoned to make a great main dish! A delicious sauce blended with egg noodles, topped with grated parmesan! Two Swiss Steaks -matched for size and shape in a del11ctable ·sauce! Macaroni & Cheese I I Made with aged cheddar and topped with grated ·cheese! _39c Welsh Rarebit • • • • I e a Alaskan King Crab I I I s12s. Smooth, creamy ... with the rich li vely flavor of selected aged cheddar! A regal dish ... King crab in a rich creamy Newburg sauce! .-----------More Stouffer Value s!-----------. Beef Stew . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. . 79c Chicken & Noodles Oven braised beef, tender vegetables! Old time goodness and rich chicke·n flavor! •••••••••• Super Fresh Produce! Salisbury Steak ...... ·~ ...... s12s Two steaks, topped with onion beef gravy! Chicken & Dumplings . . . . . . . S} 39 Smooth skins . . . clean ·. ·. . and priced for your enjoyment! With creamy gravy and tender dumplings! . Roast Beef Hash .. . . .. . . . . . . . 9gc Hearty beef with potatoes and rich· gravy! Chicken Divan . .. .. .. . .. . . . . . g9c Tender chicken, broccoli 1pears, wine sauce! ·Seedless Grapes 49c lb. Plump-and bursting with flavor! Red Onions . . . . . 1oc, •. Sweet, yet flavor with authority! . Cucumbers ..... 1oc... Reel Radishes . 2,,, 19c Beef Short Ribs . . . . . . . . . . . .. . s 191 Creamed Chicken . . . . . . . . . . . . 69c Lean and meaty, braised to perfection! Simple ~ipe, with Stouffer's special touch! Long and green, and so solid! Snappy crisp with 1nappy flavor! Lobster Newburg · ............ s1 39 Turkey .Tetrazzini ............ 79c Elegant sauce of cream, butter (l.nd sherry! Made with aged cheddar and topped with grated cheese! Romaine ...... 2, .. 29c Green Onions . 2 ,., 19c Generous leafy bunches .•• tender, taaty! Add color . and zeat. to 1alad1! -Grocery-Department Savings! Super-Meat Spec ials! --Miracle Whip ..................... 59' ' -~ ,...... ''·"" ' ., Kraft's famous salad dressing ... with so many imitators, yet no peers! Quart- R o ya I e Tissue .; ........ 4FO•s1 The two roll packs ... so soft and gentle and priced for value at El Rancho! Kai Kan Dog Food . 4,., s1 Tomato Juice •••••••• MPS Chunks, Stew or Beef'Chunks •....... 15 pz. Springfield •.. 46 ounce can! Electrasol ............ 49c Brown'n' Bags ....... 49c For automatic dishwashers! 33 oz. Reyno1ds new cooking marvel! 10 ct. Instant Coffee ........ S}49 Folgers Coffee ...... 79c,b Hearty brew in seconds ... Folger's 10 oz. Mountain grown! (3 lb. can ... $2 .23) Delicatessen Specials! ~ 7-~-····· .. ····331 . --· Choose All Beef or All Meat (1 slice free in the All Meat!) ... 6 oz. pkg. Rath '• Pepperoni Stix 59c Horseradish . . 39c Fisherman's Wharf Sauce-... 8 oz. Rath's "V P1' ••• 5 oz. size Kraft American s1 39 ShrimpCocktail 3,,.s1 Economy 11/2 lb. twin pack! Lassco ... 4 ounce re -usable gl&.81! Liquor Dep 't. Values CUTTY SARK Save2.24 $16 75 'The f1moua Sootch ... in the economy priced half-callon ! El Rancho Gin $811 Champagne 11FTH ·s291 Ninety pn>0fl Save 61'· Ya gal. LeDomaine Ory, Pink, Cold Duck. Pork loin So lean .•• with that Mid·We1tem flavor that comea from finer grain.fed pork when it's at it.a freahest ! 1..-0in End .. 3 to 4 lb. Awc. llllcht. (WHOLE OR RIB HALF ... 79c lb.) Pork Loin Roast .. ~~~~~~.~~~ .. 99~ Roast one to a golden doneness this weekend, and watch it disappear! F h B ' • LEAN! $ 09 res eel Brisket ........... 1 ·· Boneless, for more value ... lean, for more good eating! Whole or half. Turke.y Breasts .......... 89! . El Rancho's sweet, tender white meat! (With rib caa:e and wing portion) Beef Rouladen $}19 Beef Roast BONELESS $}19 .. . lb. • •••••• Ill . Oven ready! Old world goodnw! Heart of Sirloin! U.S.D.A. Choice Beef Bracciole s11: Chuck Steaks • 69i • • • • ••• 1n the Italian manner! Oven Ready! Center cut, from U.S.D.A. Choice beeP. Spare Rib$ ........ 69,~. Ground Beef ••••• 99~ Lean and ao meaty ... farmer atyle! Extra Lean, bulk or patties! Sliced Bacon • • • • • 79&. Red Snapper • . ' 99{ El Rancho'• thicker ranch 1tyle! Freoh fillete for your pleuure! StraightWhiskeys411 Weibel. Vermouth SJ. 29 Priceo in efl"ect Thur. ~h Sun. Pork Sausage I I I I 69i Louisiana Catfish s1oz June 1, 2, 3, 4. Noaalea to eaters. Fmhl Skin!-with h11do nmoved ! El Rancho'• old fuhioned kind! Straiaht from DaviOll County! Qt. Extra dry, for fine martinis! Qt. Open cWly9 to9 ..• Sundey 10 to 7 ARCADIA : Sun;et a: 1 Hunl1ng1on Or IW1I· PASAD ENA : IW1I· SOUTH PASADENA : r1'M· HUNTINGTON BEACH : 1wir. NEWPORT BEACH : 1111 N e •~Oll B l •~ .1nrl E1 Rancho Center1 ·· 320 ~r : Col'.lr ad o Blvd .,_. F oer··o~: arrt H.in:1ng ton Dr · Warner ~nd A1P,OnQu1n !Board walk Cente r :•.1 2)5) Ea\tlilllfl Dr £.i .'~'ut t ¥ill)ff' r.enter J ... l • l • l I Plentiful Foods ' '11 ,. ~ -------~ . " ' ' ' ' .. , '"" JUNE 1972 i DOUBLE BLUE ••. I ~ SPRINGFIELD I SECRET ROLL ON I I CHIP STAMPS ' I •. GRANULATED I DEODERANT I I WITH '"" couPON I ~us uG. •AAGR S 9' 1 1 .~~.:~.~~~ 5 9' 1 1 FEATURES MILK AND DAIRY Other Plent1ful s I VOID .AFTER SUNDAY, JUNE 4 I .. ., .. Reg. Stot •t tomt 1tor••· NO MINIMU M PUACHASE-NO MAXI MUM PURCHA ~E Willi thi1 coupon, 110 mi11im11m pu r,h11• req11ir•d. Limit I With this cou po11, 110 fft lnlmulll purch•1• roq 11lred. Li"'l! I Wilk lhi1 coupon, 110 mi11imum purchoto roct11itecl. l lmit I ONE ORDE R ONLY AN'I' AM OUNT I t b19 P•' coupon -0110 coupon per c.01lomer. Voicl t bottle per coupon _ 011 cowpon per c1ulo1•1t•. Vold I corlon ptr coupol't -Ollt cowpon per cutlomer. Volcl PRODUCTS offer Su11d1y, Juno ... 1'71. efttr Sund iy, June 4, 1911, tfltr Su11doy, Juno <I, 1971, EGGS 1 GOOD ONLY AT IAlGAIN IASICn 1 GOOD ONLY AT U.IG-AIN IASllT I GOOD ONLT Al IAl.AIN IASllT GOOD ONLY AT IAICiAIN IASICIT I BR~~~~:·::::RS 1 ~ = =-- --------=---=----------=--=--=--=--=-- - -----=--'----111f1fiijjf.11@1r -= = """'~,'',,';.',~~u~%~~'"'"' ii PRELL SHAMPOO I · ' SPRINGFIELD I """" FOLGERS I MAGIC SI.ZING I S .... ,, ....... ,.,~. h: ~:~ $.~!~'." 89': ': MA YON4Al9S~ : COFFEE I !.::g:o~o c~z~ 29' ~ pan is 1 . 11 FL OL •onLE . . . 1 . . d QT. JAR 1 · 1LB.CAN69'\ R.,. "' 1 I Wllh tl111 <oupon, no m•n•mum purch111 r1qu,,1d. L1m1I I With lh11 coupon, no m1n1mum purch111 r1quir1d. Limil I With thii cowpon, no 1nlnlmu11t purchii• ,1q11ir1d. L1m1t Wllh thi1 coupon, no minimw111 purc~111 r1quir1d, l imit I d I bottle per coupon -on coupon per c111lomer. Void l i•r per coupon -one coup~on per cu1lomer. Vo id t cen per cot.tpoll -one coupo11 per cu1tomer, Void I I c1n per coupon -one coupon per cu1tom1r. Vei4 C t ,.her Sund1y, Jun• 'I, 1971. el!er Sund•v, June <4 , 1971. eher Sund1y, Ju111 '4, 1971. 1fter Sund1y, Jun• <4, 1972. I us a r ~--GOOD ONLY AT IAIGAIN IASICET --' --~D ONLY~IAIGAIN IASkET - -~O~N~ ~·~A~ --- -~D ~Y~l~l~S~ - - ---flt1if4 :ill1tdi.!IL-- - --@llQ:!!l1Jl)4.J1• ---=--- - -GllD:i!i(·llll·lll-- -Appea I ,' coFFEEMATE INSJAN• l WHEATFEiiiliEAD D ', ;"""9:~ F~:!t: PAPER .· LOCALLY GROWN 1 1 -.o COFFEE TOWELS C E L E R Y ::•::~~.::~:iT,~::1;:~: ! ~~~~~ER 3 9( : Bi!~~:~~ ?:~:f 2 9c : . :' 4 R~~s $1 r::~ EXTR~R~=NCY 1 O~uHCH : of vitality, a tendency toward J -·• J I -I ~ 1 I Indifference ;pJd withdrawal Wi~h th is coupon, no minimum pur<h11e ••qt.tired. Limit With thi1 coupon, no mi11imum purth11• requir ed. Limit With ttii1 coupon, no minimu m purch•1e 1tquir1d. Limit Wlth-thii coupon, no mi11imurn purch11e r1quir1d. l imit from friends and neighbors -1 1 11' per <oupon -one coupon P•• cuilom1r. Void I lo1f p••· co11pon -one coupon p•r cullomt r, Voi4 4 rolls ptr coupon -on1 coupon plr cu1lom11. Void I I bunch ptr coupon -on• coupon ptr cu1torn1r. Vold · eft1r Su11d1y, Jun• 4, 1972. I 1fl•r Su11dey, Jun1 4, 197 2. I 1ft•r Sund•'(• Jwnt 4, 1971. 1fter Sundty, Junt 4, 1972. I s y mp t 0 m s s 0 me times GOOD ONLY AT IAlGAIN IASKn GOOD ONLY AT IAIGAIN IASKn' GOOD ONLY AT ···~AIN IASKET GOOD ONLY AT IAIGAIN IA.SKIT mistakenJy accepted as a --- ---- - --- - - - - - - --·-- --- - --- -- -- --- - - - - natural part of aging. Frequently older persons are undernourisbed because of a lack of interest in food. This can be the result of a iessencd ability to taste and smell, den- tal problems. difficulties in eating certain foods or a dislike for ea'ling ~one. One e1cellent way to com- pensate for the reduced ability to Wte and smell is to make certain that the food has visual a p p e a I . Convenient, ready-to.serve jams and jellies provide an easy, excellent way to add bright. inviting color, delicious natural pure fruit flavor and quick energy. HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS CREST TOOTHPASTE • FAMILY SIZE 6'1• OZ. TUBE &9¢ TlssuE JOHNSON'S BABY SHAMPOO 3'12 FLUID OZ. 41s1 TRIAL OFFER REG 79c VALUE Pr•marked Special-29c SPRINGFIELD ASPIRIN TISSUE 2 ROLL PACKS LADY SCOTT FACIAL ~$ BOX OF 200 fl PLY R BOTTLE OF 250 S GRAIN TABLETS 39¢ IB tNNSTANT 10 iREAKFAST 99¢ The ·folloiwng recipe il- lustrates the easy, effortless way fruit preserves can give new interest. and e x t r a nourishment . tb an o I d favorite, custard p u d d Ing . Current jelly is heated with sherry, orange r ind a n d orange juice, then served over 11....-. .... ~~;;:=~;;:~:;;;::::;::;:;;:::;;:--.....,-..J ;ggt ~~~fu~ngers floating on a I -I~ [fl }I{ e J :•I]~ i.11 I -~-• BIG 16 OZ. BOTTLES 6 F 69¢ RC COLA ~ SPANISH CUSTARD WITH JELLY SAUCE '4 eggs, well beaten """2-cup"SUgar MATTERHORN 6/79 ~.EJ R~ !)Z._CAff$._ ¢ + IOTTLli C•l"OllT FOLGERS INSTANT COFFEE 10101. JA• '1 •• MJB BROWN RICE 2/49c Yt teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons vanilla extract 3 cups milk 8 lady fingers. split Sauce; 1 cup red currant jelly .Yt cup sherry Grated rind and juice or 1 orange 2 teaspoons cornstarch Combine eggs, sugar, salt and vanilla in the top part of a double boiler. Gradually beat in milk. Cook musture over simmering water, ~t i r r i n g constantly, until mixture coats a spoon and thickens slightl y. Remove from water and cool. For sauce, combine je\ly sherry and orange rind in a saudlpan. Cook over low heat, BARGAIN BASKET SCOTCH ~~~:~~:: ~~ i~~~~~ CORNED Return tG low heat and cook. stirring constantly. until sauce B E E F bubbles and thickens. Cool and then chill. Makes 8 servings. Proteins Supplied \\1hal"s "lunchbox lack?11 Jt's a nutritionist's term for lunchboxes that suffer a lack of protein food. Your lunch- boxes "•ill never la ck pro- tein if there's chicken inside. s~w~~gh~f ~lie~ d~~~:~ s PENCE R with mayonnaise and a leafy FIFTH 10 OJ:. SUNSHINE OATMEAL,;.PEANUT COOKIES "oz. ,ssc ~~~~~~~~~-------------- WHITE KING "D" DETERGENT .~!:•t 59c OUR OWN CURED BRISKET ,. C'SMOKED lb I H·AMS SHANK HALF BAR M BUTT PART HAM BARM HICKORY SMOKED U.S.D.A.1-------------- ~:E:: CHUCKE STEAKS . 79~· BONELESS LEAN 09 STEWING BEEF 98~ ~• ~ il fi: l:Jjf·l ·l•r31~ APRICOTS First of the 4 ~ s1 Extra Fancy Tops Off BANANAS 11~ CUCUMBERS LONG GREEN 3~29¢ .ONIONS NEW CROP 3 ~ 25¢ ......-li;t·>1~:•t· .. COUNTRY COUSIN SHOESTRING POTATOES JENO'S PlllA ROLLS COUNTRY COUSIN HASH BROWN POTATOES Prices Effedlve: Thursday thru Sunday , JUNE 1, 2, 3, 4 Prices subJect to stock Oft ltcntd. WE GLADLY ACCEPT U.5.D.A. FOOD COUPONS 6s~· I ~~~.~;ors:i~1l::sh-~~~~ STEA KS hu favorite bread. A vacuum container of homemade chicken salad is a . GROUND BEEF lusclo<U, high·prolein luncheon 1 ~----- .urpri!e. Add inttre>ting con-ALASKAN LB. FRESH LEAN pieces by including some SLICED trait to the tender chicken $139 :; ~; ~~o~~ SALMON LI. GFRERSHOLEUANND TURKEY touch -try adding sllvered1 --------------------r:anned water cbeatnuts to cbicteo salad. SWIFT -12 oz. 5its~£~!~?. ALL MEAT 59,c 1 FNDIRLTHLEERNT of TURBOT ==~J::WIENERS ..._ Ill all popullr meats. • I • 79~ 1 WI GIV! ILUI CHIP STAMPS COSTA MESA PLACENTIA WI GIVI ILUI CHIP STAMPS 19th and Plantla 710 w. Challlian ' . l ' ' l l • • • DAILY ~!LOT .f3 • 1n Burgundy or Bouillon Sauce True Tenderloin Tips Bask DEAR NAN1 l lllfl ••JoJod In lll110ll town rt.Slauranll lt boneless roaat wilh title waste, but lt ls not .as teodtr as slrloln steak. Better grades may be oven roasted , but lesser ones will need pot roasting. r • • r recipes for 1evenl If olten aerved never noddles or yun. Now I w t a 1 d llke rice with quite a bit of gravy to 1ill1 r • wlU1 you my for a relatively inexpensive "beallh p o p c or n ball." and filling meal. ll may or Ya, l'Y• evea &urDed lhat one may not contain diced carrots la&o • llealtk food, ttO,~ or a smattering of other love tL Tbe recipe 11 otla(ul.-vegetables. YOI Med I turlt of popped " To gel things slralghl, eon to becta with. la • tenderloin tip starts oul as a 1aucepu eombloe % eup1 Here is one way to do tenderloin tips as cooked at better restaurants. Jlave 11,~ pounds beef tenderloin cut nto 111gar, ~cap light corn syrup, l ~• c a p 1 bollla1 water, •,!i teaspoon ult and I tea- spoon wlllte vinegar. Cook to Ill< hrd hall staae. ~ffr la teaspoo1 vanilla. Whlle the synip ls cooklag add to the popped corn 1 cup LETS ASK THE COOK "' Nin Wiley pecan meals, lf-l cup ral1ln1, Vll cup· coconut, ~~ cup hulled 111aflower 1eed1, ~ e up sunnower meal. Pour syrup o1'er all, mix well. Butter h•n.l• UchUy) 1hope blto holl1. Mues 11 I• II holl1. LucUll< Wiiey, Tutu. DEAR NAN: Do you b1ve a recipe for &eDderlola tlpt? 'l'Hy aren't doot In a '4'ine aaure u I have eaten tbtm at varlou1 pla.:e1 but, If they are, the flavor ill •ery faint. Ruth K. Gerrie, Burbank, Ill. Brai!ed tenderloin tips can be quite an elegant dish all wel.! u 1 popular menu of- feri~ at small .J a w n restaurants all acrosll the country, where I am !W't no wine at all is uaed. Eating Record Raised By DON KENDALL Al',._ Wrllw WASHINGTON (AP) -The Agriculture Department says per<apita food consumption thil year probably will equal the record high level or 1971 but that menus will include sllghtly less red meat end more cereal, fresh vegetables and fruit. Poultry con11umption also is eipected rise: again , offlci1ls say In a report on the national food situation. • In all. per-capita food con· sumption tn 1972 is expected to be up 3.4 percent from 1967, the year currently used as a comparison. That would be the sa me percentage rise as for 1971. acconiing to d eparlme n t records. The 1970 Index was 2.7 pw:enl higher than lhe 1967 hue; 1969 up 1.5 percent; and 1968 up 1.2 percent. The per-capita food con- sumption statistics indicate, for example, how consumers are demanding more of some products and less of others. They also serve as guides on which farm products are far- ing best in the market place and illustrate why others are in price trouble. One of tbe best examples in recent years is red meat. particu1arly beef and pork. The two items showed, to some degree, opposite ex· tremes in 1971. Last year, according to the report, Americans avera ged 191.1 pounds or red meat apiece. That quantity t s carcass weight, before the slaughtered steer or bog is carved up into neat retail packages. During much or 1971 hog prices were down, reflecting the large supply going to market. Thus, per-capita pork con- sumption rose to 72.t pounds Jut year, lhe higho!I In two decades. cattle production. on the other hand, rose only sli&])tly in It'll. And prices paid to pro- ducen were strong, rising last -to tlie bightol peaka since the Korean War. Thus, with re\aUvely tight ouppilel, J*'<'lpila bed con- sumptloo octuaUy declined 1llg)ltly in 1971 to 113.1 poundl carcaM ftlght, down about 1 percent from 113.7 bl 1970. Veal. lamb and mutton al90 abowed per-<0plto recluct1om. Poultry ....-p1lon, In- cluding eggs, chickeNJ and turkeys, rose 1lighlly last year nllectlQfl larlt. output , ll01ll<ularly for fCll whldl """ -In price lrwble .. Ille flm\ for ...., months. Bui CCJllSIUll« cleml!lld for -food JnCfucll does not meldl that for m e a I , DELMONTE CORN -Golden WW. It.,,,./ 17-0L e< 0-$'1fe CAN FOLGER'S COFFEE . TOMATO JUICE LIBBY'S PEACHES TOILET TISSUE LUI LIQUID DOER GENT Pink lotion """'''" ---32 m. 5'Alt:ltof0 OllHD m. . Prell 99 ' • thin strips 2 or 3 inches long. 'lbat takes 1 good sharp knife. so you may want your meat counter man to do ~I. ~felt about 2 tablespoons butter in a large heavy skillet. Butter does give the best flavor, but you can substitute the shortening of your choice. Since butter is more ex- pensive. l reserve it ·for where it counts. Brown about 1/3 or the strips at a tlme, adding more shortening as you go. When all the meat bas been cooked (keep it warm in another covered pan), add another 1 tablespoons butter and saute l chopped onion and I chopped green pepper until Ump, but not browned. When peppers are on the extensive slde l skip them. Now stir In l cu p canned bee! gravy or some leftover if you have it~ Even the be.'lt restaurants use canned gravy OO\\', Seas6n to taste \\'ilh salt and pepper. The nezt step l5 to blend 2 tablespoons cornstarch and about % cup of good burgundy In a small bowl. 11 you don't care to use wine. substitute the same amount of beef bouil lon, perhaps a little more. Stir into the sauce, cook until 1nedium thick and smooth, sti rring constantly. Then 1tir In the heel slrlpr, cover and simmer until hetted through . Add more liquid Jf necessary. lf you like, Md a package or frozen carrots. cooked, or carrots 1nd peM. This is su pposed to serve air, but I don 't gua:ranttt that. Any leftover Js even better th• next day. CL~ •I 49 CHUCK "c::' 6t. STEAKS "' STEAKS • CHUCK cc:;-~& GROUND ,. ROAST z v~ BEEF !£' r. J ..... Steab .:!"..::" ... *Ill ...,..._ Sttaks = •1rz .... s ..... -· ---........... = 1., 111111 s...u -.:-r •u: s.r_.Phry St•+• =:. 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111 : foll-the . - l~nge1$ ~ 01!.,!!!f£.!10~~ : l're-Gcr• •rul ,..,_ = 0.IN Shws l,..,tttf -. te ,_ ., VOHSI : 11111111111111111111111111 111111111111 s ~~-BOURBOI -. • :. .. $449 -·"'"' ................... . l d ( I t '"·· s499 or a ver "" PABST .... .- BEER ''tiir.,_ ,n 0. .... lout ... -o:s-95~ '°"''"' llUb :':': .:= •1 !.! .... ltut -=..::::: ·1~ Fam1r.W.S111.1 ... "":.itP , ... s111111 .:n.-:. m Jl-y Dim I•••• ::. 7P Redeem These Coupons for Extra Savings! SLENDER JMPERIA LIQUID DIET FOOD MARGARINE .., •.... 29c fltO..Fnt/ ~ 8otll for D c.::.. D __ .,.,.~ ·---'--· ·;.,c;· 29c I 16< 10~0 re..i:i:.~ -· ·• , ii~ ·: APRICOTS 2t .. JUNE IS DAIRY MONTH ••• UISIN MUFFINS ... ._v_...., 33 .... ~................. c C...•7.0... 6-hdi: Uc CAD IOllUH swm IOW --·--2'1f l'llltMry llbnlts .. ..... ~ VOtl .... ..._ ' 751 .... "•·· .,. ... Donota Coabcl lbn OI UCl'I. 4-. rn, ........... 65r EVE RF RESH FRENCH FRIES :,:~. 1• Cllllll llml ~ • v Sn1 with Vons Sii• ,,,,.,, FRESH BREAD ~..::;. 2' AA BUI IER ~ II' ICE MIK -=-----· W DmRGINT :!"'-51' NAVR ORANGES .c 8~91' ----Wel..•1-1' . .... ,,...,.., .. ~ ................... .. 1*1ieallrly bllf, which h•• 11111 1-t riling 1•n•rolly =:.of retail prices •"" 34051 Adams An., at Braakllurst, Huntington Beacll OOOeny Park Drive, Capistrano Beach 5922 Edlnpr Ave., at Sprill!ltale, .Huntington laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro · ·~ 21082 ~ Blvd., Huntinpn Ila 17950 Mapob, FOliltain Ya! • . I I ' • '. • • . ( DAILY PILOI Special l-------------..,....-------- 1 Dessert X-rated 81 BARBARA GIBBONS Are you ready ror this? ''X"..,ated dt!sserts -featur- ing unforbldden fruits ! "X" for extra low-calorie, yet HO sinfully apirlted they 1eem wora than fattening! Too often fresh fruit ends up burled ln wgar and piled on one of those ubiquitous Pll;kaaed powder-pull sponge Clkn devoid of any flavor but Jckysweet. ("Ickysweet" is a uniquely American navor developed by the baking Industry . ap- parently to 1allsfy a vast market of four-year~lds kick· Ing In aupermarkct basket3. l You don't have to resort to sponge cake and fnlit for a speedy dessert. Jn France the homemaker-in-a-hurry hna her own manner for rnaking a bui.y-day des.sert. · PECHES AUX VIN ROUGt: Jnalead or 111Jclng fresh peaches onto a sponge cnke. as we might, she slices them Into a shallow bowl of chilled red wine, ju9t before dinner. By dessert time the slices have achieved ju~t the right degree of "spirited' chill. Allow one large pench per person. and se rve yo u r Peaches In Red Wine In stem- med glasses. The calories will be about 70 a serving. (On those dnys when skin· nlng a peach seems unreasonably laboriou s use \Yell-drained diet-pack or juice- packed peach halves.} SLIM GOURMET "BLUSHING PEARS' l cupa canned peRr halves (low-calorie or juice-pack· edl 1 1 cup orange juice pinch of po\\·dered clove ~nch or cinnamon piitch Of-grated lemon or orange rind 3 tablespoons sugar Drain the fruit and reserve the juice. Arrange the pears in 1 pretty crystal bowl. or in four Individual s t e m m e d glasses. ~feuure out one-ha lf of the reserved juice from the can And pour it into a saucepan. Add all remaining ingredients 111nd bring to a boil . Simmer, covered for to minutes. Allow to cool enough so you don't shall er your serving di sh. then pour the '''Rnn \vln1• mi);lure over the pears. Chill thorough!~· before serving : makes four. 95 calorie serv- !Rjls. Sugarless version - Substitute one teaspoon com- !'ltarch for the sugar. An.er wine has 11immered, stir In the sweetener to equal three tablespoons of sugar <nine quarter-grain tablets. F o r other types. c:heek label ). Six· ty-two calories perserving. S L I M ST R A WBERR!ES ROMANOFF Al "faxim's in Paris this is served smotbered in heavy •hipped c:ream . wil h a hair eggshell ot cognac in the mid· die. It's ignited and carried to the table In 1 blaze or glory. The alcohol calories go up tn name.a but not the \\·hipped cream. so try ii th is \\·ay : ! cups fresh slrn"·bcrries S tablespoons sugar (or equlv1lt'nt in sug ar sub.1tihlte 1 4 tablespoons orange liqueur '·2 cdp prepared lo'l\·-c:alorie 'lthJpped topping Wash and hull t he stia~ and pot them in a dilcenU\"e glass sen;ng dish. StJr \\'Ith j u ice , sweetener and liql>t'ur. Olill ror one hour or more. At dulert tin1e ~ p o a n rtn.v.'berriel into r o o 1 , d chlmpopo ...... and top with two tllilelpoons ol .. hip- ped 1op!i1nr per penon. S.n-.s lour, I. calWles Neb. fW!th ....,. -le, IOI calories per ""•ill.I (Be on ent.UiqiRI ho.<1w with "docoloriaed" d I p ' • (lndoldllW ti moke-J'OON>lm .. Sour crMm'' with only h111f Ulo Clloriu. Send • stomf'l'd. ot114lltlt-.I enmope and 25 -s.v'°. SLIM GOURMF.T DIPS, In ure o1 the • ' PU.Or, so w .. 1 Sh<n 1J .. lf.J. OiWIJ. t Alpha Beta's Man in Blue lllTRODUCES: ED CAMPBELL PRODUCE DEPARMENT HEAD 63 SO. 4th ST. BANNING -STORE HO URS- MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9 :00 P.M. SATURDAY & SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 7 :00 P.M. FEATURING 96 DOUBLE DISCOUNTS IMPERIAL VALLEY CANTALOUPES RED. RIPE WATERMELON s WHOLE c FOR LARGE SIU SWEET RIPE ROYAL APRICOTS RED RADISHES or GREEN ONIONS FOR HAWAIIAN GROWN PAPAYAS FOR EA. SWEET. MILD . RED ONIONS • c LB. LB. .LARGE SIZE FRESH LIMES ·c GARDEN FRESH ASPARAGUS EA. THESE PRODUCE PRIC.,ES EFFECTIVE JUNE 1-7, THURSOA Y THRU WEONlsoA Y ................. 1 FAN!ASllC DISCOUNTS !V!RY OAY Al,.PKA 8ll.l OISCOUNl I'll I Cl D .s.01, w.,,., ~Mint 611M ..... D.:::::. Usterln1 Spray 7 b .. °""'" 60111., • ~"'""''"•' PILLSBURY SWEET 10 881 D....... 100 c~r • Poc:kot• 83. C D ... ~: SWEET 'll LOW FANIA STIC OISCOUNIS !V!RY DAY ~IJ-COl.lflt BOil CO·ETS 80-CoUl'lt Bo,.. @sriYFiiEE > Miii PADS M~n·1 °' wom.n•1 AlPMA ll!A DISCOVl'll l'ltlCl 261 - ROYCE U 111011 ID SPEED BICYCLE 67'5 FAN!ASllC DISCOUNTS !V!RY DAY 2V;i -Clunao IOt 11~1 AU'HA lfTA OISCOU!tT "~' CLAIROL HAPPINESS HAIRCOLOR 200 13-0unu Mrot0I AQUA llET HAIR SPRAY Sf! 1 Ot. Ctin • ~tubbofn • Ory 6' Noh.rot COMMAllDA. HAIR SPRa1 )J I 111\1:..: _ .. --,. ,·w. ......... ·• • LOVING CARE COLOR FOAM Poot. Mu~'"'r1c ~-Ounc• Sit'-• Deodorant 2_, ric10 COMMAllD 2 20 10~1.21 T llllTIAll LJME 791 1 ~ho0e$ • Con•olf'tt Ktt TOlll lllllOCEllT COLOR 1" 571 '·'' <§ iiR'i&i"iioDY fi~ SHAMPOO 112 -• == --!!If @llE'iisoDiii~· 391 ,.:· -TOOTHBRUSH ~~ ~ ~~;~~hlt~i~· ... ,9 ... 1 ---------- ~TOOTHPASTE 1-0urlc• M r09DI •"'"'·or Un5c.,.11>1:1 ,-' FDS C~Klt .IOHllSOl'S I~' FIRST AID llT ~ 175 SOoOUTll OIL 1 '' ;QuliEIT TAILlTS 79c ' s '°"""' '°""' ROLA IDS 95 1 t.lt I. ' J..-. - UllDERARM DEODORANT 127 ---------- irn1MA GIC . LOTIOll 16-0ur>cit '°" .. --------- 1 ~ ·°'-""'• lott!e MEllllEI 781 SKiii BRACER C.lelfof • Con\pletit Kot • W/AP1Plicotor SUMMER BLOND 1~ • 5 Shades I Mo.cOfQ I MAYBELLlllE )40 ,GREAT LASH --------- PARIE~ .I OTTER PEii ' · 11• -----------~ ~aoe • Dcubl'I Moir SCNICI IOc BLADU --------- 10-Ctullt ..... 0-... ldft SClllCI ,_ ILADU °'"'""'"" )51 ~fii~I WASHINGTON • EXIRA FANCY GOLDEN DELICIOUS APPLES c LB. LARGE CRISP 'CELERY FANIASTIC DISC OUNTS !V<RY DAY ~ z Pound Bo11 • fro..,, ~ Ore·lda Has-Browns • c •lPH.l BllA DISCOUNT l'!llCE 39 1 ®I \It:-. 22.ouNCE BOTILE • '~\· ;,IVO '"' IVORY LIQUID DETERGENT 53 1 •• I :.J ------------- D ..... . D ......... , 22-0UNCE BOTTLE JOY LIQUID 531 DETERGENT ---------- 6A.QUNCE BOTTLE • KING DOWNY FABRIC 135 SOFTENER fs.ouNCE BOX BIZ 751 PRESOAIC -----------' 22.QUNCE BOTTLE r::i:::'\ DOVE ~ LIQUID . DISH 39c DETERGENT ----------, l 9 1/2 -0UNCE •LARGE IVORY BAR SOAP 201 14-0UNCE CAN • Regular COMET . 18' CLEAllSE.R ~B-OUNCE BOTTLE • G.ont MR. CLEAN LIQUID CLEAllER 73' 52' 191 1" • I • IN THIS AD. I I 2-0UNCE BOX WHITE KlllG WATER 89C SOFTENER .. 9.0UNCE BOX• GIANT WHITE KlllG D 54c DETERGENT ~ ~ 49-0UNCt BOX •GIANT CHEER 82c DETERGENT '19-0UNCE BOX• GIANT GAlll 87' DETERGEllT Wtdnt5d11 , May Sl. 1m GIVE § HOPE o SUNDAY~ 0 ~ JUNE 4 "TENDER AGED BEEF'.'. F11E'£ m~nri 1W1 RECIPE: TERIYAKI STEAK BUTCHCR'S PBJDC "GREAT ·ON THE 1 GRILL'' WE WELCOME FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS IN AlfTPl0$ AftC[l[11.llll.~ltSIOl Oii Olt.fJI;( COUllTY ~ llT4 BUTCHER'S PRIDE !-FRESH • ECONO PAK I LU, DR OVER ARMOUR• 1-LB. PKG. BONELESS RIB STEAK GROUND BEEF CAMPFIRE BACON c LB. YOUfl Al.J'Klt-fl(lkftElllllllllll&ee~ ~·Wtt:,;:.«to~~~ftt,--·--·.....c:-. •-..-.:.; EUTCHEn's PnIDE MEATS MIATS YOU'LL 11 PAOUO TO SIRVI 12-0UNCE PACKAG E NORTH ATLANTIC •MIN.SIZE10-0Z. MAINE • WHOLE 119 LOBSTER •• ~'="'" EA. • , , fDI' a 1'90I treat aJJ lf.ak ••• BOllELESS CLUB OR BOllELESS SPENCER STEAK FRESH FROZEN• 1-L!I. PKG. KARO'S FISH STICKS 111~nn IWt 19~ 64~ "'"' em IQICDCl'I rt!Rt BEEF rROM COLORADO C •QUAUTl.A"D SAlllrACTION IUAR'"!E!D. DISCOU"IJllCED ARMOUR STAR . 64 BONELESS 119 MIRA-CURE BACON FAMILY STEAKS LB. fAJ11t1111JOHN BONELESS .:::~~T CHUCK ROAST 114 SMOKED LB. POLISH SAUSAGE CHUCK ROAST IUD! DUT 6l~ FArtHIRJOHN • l·OZ, PKO. , SKlllLESS Lllll SAUSAGE .. OZIN l'OCIDI swim• 1-0UHCI •tea. 78~B. 32 1 T-BONE STEAK 16~.-BROWN 'N SERVE LINKS 63 1 581 ZIPPEI • IO l/1°0UHCI PKG. CORN DOGS THES£ MlAT PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 1-7, THURSDAY THRU WEDNESDAY ------- •• 41'4-0UNCE BOX• GIANT DRE" 87' DETERGEllT 50-0UNCE BOX• FAMILY CASCADE AUTOMATIC DISH 95c DETERGEllT 32-0UNCE BOX • GIANT IVORY 87' FLAKES <116-0UNCE BOX SALVO DETERGEllT TABLETS 79' -------- 84-0UNCE BOX• KING BOLD 141 DETERGEllT '19-0UNCE BOX • GIANT DISH 82' DETElllEIT fANTASTIC DISCOU"TS EvtRY DAY ALPHA IETA lllSCOUlff ntCE i.[Tss'i.'1~i:"D-r.iuiS « "'' 351 . om'tliM1iiRT'Eo HAM 6 21 16-0w>ce Pod!.~ WILSON POLl)H SAUSAGE Wrr ROKACHrutor S..OU..U JOlf • Olivto 6r Plll'llM!o or Pi~ltior KRAFT PIMIENTO CHEESE 16·C>.#le• TIG PRECIOUS RICOTTA CHEESE Pr1tdouo • 12-0untit MOZZARELLA CHEESE BALL 8orcS.n'1 • 8-0J:. Can Parmisan ' Romano Cheesi OUALITl BAKERY AT DISCOUNT PRI CE\ 111 381 331 71 1 751 91 1 ~ l l,MI l[Tl • 8-Pod ~APPLEBUNS 391 •ounct ,°" -:i Sondwkti· 16-0L 25c ALPHA BETA Fluffy Bread 6 C-t Poclt.ogt 4 9 c \ALPHA BETA Butterflies iLtMI IETA • I lb. 12.0:... PkG. CHOCOLATE FUDGE J 25 ICED COCOA CAKE ALPHA BETA • 1 u . J-01. P1t;. 741 GRANOLA COOKIES 5~-0UNCE BOX • GIANT CLElllEll SPIC l SPiii ....... 931 . ...... , ... ~-~·-.-:-:-~ fAHfASllC DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY . (§HAUNPUNCH ~ l·GcllOt1 Plastlc Battle ~ ALPHA BETA BLEACH ~ 28-°""'8 Bottle • Uciuid ~AJAX CLEANER ~ 1 0-Lb. Cube e1 Olrwwr ~ FRISKIE DOG FOOD ~ "·"'·""'. ~-""' , ... ~ KEN·L·RATION Allt!A I CTA DISCOUNT HIC[ 431 181 361 371 651 ]JO 261 121 12-0..irw;, 3nc BRACHS CIRCUS PEANUTS 7 16-0unce 'oekcve • ~ BORDEN MARGARINE 421 ~ .. ..,, ..... FUISCHMAN'S SOFT MARGARINE 471 ~nmcHMiiS MARGARlllE 441 c&iium• 901 FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY @!i[YliOtbs'WRrP' ~ 200 Foot ltott • Jumbo ~HANDI WRAP ~ 50 Count !B~•! ~BAGGIES FuODWRAP Al.l'lfA l!TA OISCOUNf HIC[ 621 431 591 ~ 10Couo< .... ,,... 47c ~Reynold's Brown n' Ba& © B0i.MBAKED BEANS 4 J I © 8';."M&ilowN BREAD 301 ~ swAiisoit00 " ~ CHICKEN/TURKEY 15-0unce Can CHEF BOY-AR·DEE • SPAGHETTI W/MEAT BALLS 15~ Con • 8ttloror>1 I 5-0z. COo•Reg. « Hot•No Beano HORMEL CHILI ~ C°HB Con • W/B.-. ~ CHILI CON CARNE rE:i s'oLDiN GRAIN ~ MAC N' CHEDDAR <§ KRArr MACARONI D--D ..... ~, 7-0r Boll •' Vari•';" MINUTE RICE MIXES 451 381 .,, 521 691 S~HlWNG~SEASONALL 41 1 © wflso'tfseiis o' Bacon 831 © FRENCtt''S'MUSTARD 39' 9..0U.-Jar • W/On-lie <§ w~h~il:;';IN~"S'auce 47' <§ T'Eiiiffii SAUtE°''" 5 7' C§ &RraicHilistLSA 231 PiTuBilirliscuns" -1 01 fANlASTIC OISC OU"TS EVERY DAY ~ 8 -0IM!ce • ~ SW.tllul• ~ SWEET N' LOW o\lPllA llTA DISCOUNT P~IC[ 741 @ ~1i1rt'~;~·~~ ... '"'291 CHUNK0LiGHT0TU~A°'· 421 ?Yh~~ L~-B'Ys"Ptts· &"cA'RRors Conodo Ofy • 12 -01. eo .... s Vor. LOW CALORIE BEVERAGES © M'ue'oifr"iioor 8££R © 10-0r. Cont • AMI, flo¥ort SEGO LIQUID ~ K·Rffi iooo rsu·Nir DRESSING I G Ovoc.e Bott le © r •alt • 11-0uote BOll1e ITALIAN DRESSING D-~ KtaH • 1-0l#><t lonle D""•v~• CATALINA DRESSING IC.-Ounc.e 8oHle ... , .. 171 11 1 691 201 351 ... 351 34' ... D ....... D .... v~• A11L~H·R'*r~Ao.SAU0 01L 86c © J 1 ..a....nt• foll1• CHB SYRUP 47' D 10-0unc.a 81u 11.::::. TOAST·EM'S 36' ~ ""°""'' '«'iili KELLOGG'S J MBO 781 ~ CEREAL ASSORTMEllT © ~11;·• •I.Os SOlr GO·R UNO-FUDGE 291 @ iirsfLE~sOuic'k 461 @coFFUMATE 781 ' 'I 'r ,I I ' 1: ' ' DAJLV PILOT Elegant Cake Layered By CECILY BllOWNSTONE Here Is the 111oat t:legant French·type lnyer i::1li:e I know how to mnkl'. Although the <.'like and fro.sling recl~s art not spanking ne1v, I did evolvt this wny of 11s11en1bllng them \!.'Ith a flltln;.: or apricot presflrvrs und coi;:;nuc. GAn~AU CECU.Y I cup plus 2 tablespoons slf100 <·tt ke rlour I tt•uspoon hnklni; powdrr ~:: ~ti() 111llk l 1 cup hutttr 6 t'J.:lo: yolk11 I (.'Up SLIJtilt ~:1 ll':ll'poon vnnltl11 :\ 1 t•up nprtco t prcser\'e,• ' 1 t'ttl> COIJl1U(' Vnnllln Buttc1· Cre11n1. sr1· heln1v 1 ;1 rllJ> sllvc1·ed t o as lt d blan<:ht.J nhnonds <:reuse nn<l flour thrre 3- inch round layer~nke pnns. Or ir your pnns tend lo stlrk, lin e lhc l>ultOnl or the pAnS wit h wax ))llper: grea11e and nour the s:lde11 ol the pans und U\e pnper. fln wnx paper sift together nnur und bnklng powder. In a srnall .11autcpan heat n1ilk u 11 t 11 bubbh•s 11ppr.11r nround the ed~e ; set 1n1h.le to l'ool slll(hlly. Inn snu~ll Mklllot 111l•lt huller; set uaide to cool • sliJ.l!lllv. rn otc<rrum in1it7fi-ooWl~th-·--= -= ~ • rle<'trtc beAter at high l!lpeed. hc:tt. lOJCt'lher egg yolks and sugur uni ii thick nnd Ivory col~ or <:rndunlly bcnt'ln milk ond vnnilln. At lo\v ll))(!ed llrndunlly bent In fl ou r mixture making ,,urs oil nour Is molst~ed. rold lu butter. Turn Into prt'parc<l pans . Dake in a prehentcd J50 degree oven until cnkc le!tlcr Inserted In center con1c~ out clean -about 15 minute1. Place pans on wire racks to cool ror IO minutes. Wit h a 1 amall spa tula cut around edges of layen utlng an up und down mot.Ion to pr• vent tearing edge1 of c1ke. Turn cake• out of pan• onto wire racU to cool completely. ThorousJ!Jy mix to1e1her preserve• and cognac, bUtJng to break up any lara:e apricot pieces; set a.side and prepare Vnnllla Butter Cream. Pince one cake J1yer on cnke plnte; 1pre.11d With V. of the nprlco t preserve mJxture. Add ano ther cake layer: :i pren d with rem a I n I n g preserve mJx.turc. Add third layer. Cover top and slde1 of cake with V11nllls Butter C:rc<im and refrigerate . At serving time, sprinkle top o( cake wllh almonds, prtaslng down firm ly; Mrve at once. Return any leftover cake to refrlgeralor. VANILLA BU1TEJt Cl\EAM I cup wgar · r tab!.._, llahl com •YTIIP l/t cup water 2 el(g white. I t.nblespoon vanilla % cup butt er, sofh .. oned allghtly Jn a 1 IAI quart saucepan over moderate heat, 11tlr together sugar, corn 1yrup and water until mtgar dl!laolve11 and nllx· ture come1 lo " holl. Boll 1enUy, wllhool 11lrrlng, to 240 deg:ree1 on a c1ndv thermometer or untll a innall amount of 1yrup dropped Into cold water form1 a eoft ball that natl.ens on removeil from water. Remove Crom hetilt and stt a.aide. Jn a medium mlx.lnR bowl with electric henter beat tKlt whlh~11 until th ey form 11tUf 1tralg ht peak.I ; beat In vanilla. GrAdually beat in hot syrup; cool. In another medium mixlnllC bowl. without wuhln1 bt•ter, thoroughly bt1I the bull.er; ~nt In the egK·Whlte mixture, a few tablespoons at a time. Waffles Sweetened A swttt-and-uvory topphic for watnea. PINEAPPU~ BACON WAFYLES 12 slices b;1con I cup maple-blended syrup C pineapple 11ict1 I pa~k.age f9 wncn1 froun w1:1ffle111 Fry becon until <Tllp ; drll• on abllorbent paper. Htat syrup and pineapple 1llcet, Pr~part w11fOes In toa1t.er or oven ac<or<llng to pocliage dlrectk>n:s. To ass.tmble eM:n setYln~ cruii;1cn)ff 2 blM..'On aUce1 over 2 w•Ule i<dlons. Top w1th I pineapple 1lic:e Hind A1rroun4 with 1yrup. Yakel I..,. ..... ' • • DAILY PILOT ORANGE JUICE . •. TRAC II RAZORS 1111............ $199 for Closer And Smoother Shovts. llC~ * .. ~· s .. ""I t I 12-oz. . Cans 46-oz. Cans SAFEWAY MOTOR OIL S11d Quilty At A Snill Pritl $ (Regular) Quarts for SAFEWAY BAKERY BUYS! V\Nt-RIPl full-flavored! Pineapples ".:::!" SeHloss Gflllies U.S.Mio.1 ~39• 8 i! 98• lb. Crisp c.rots t.geCelery = Hot House Cvcum lien ·-----·--····· ···------------~------- @u"l DAISIES 6'""oO!l TUBS PllCIS lmtnVI 111- l05 ANGELE5 & ORANGE COUNTY llXCIPT CATA&lu) t s s I .. ' • ·PANTY HOSE • Stock Up Now DI Tiiis SrnU1l11! ' . Pair$ Pkg. For DAIRY & DELI. BUYSI s ~ .. s FACELLE ROYALE • Facial Tissue ,.:::::., • iathl'OOll nssue ~!.': • ·Paper Towels ~ $ FOR N .... s 'l' \ \ Top,s l!_FIHor, Tops II Y1l11! 1-lb. ~ Ctns. SAVE AT SAFEWAY DISCOUNT . Cetllllon Coterlnt Extra Smooth-Exira Rich-Tops In Qoolity! lel41r Mla:ttl Y.,.to•l11 Peas, Cut Corn or Peas & Carrots-Your Choice "?'~.>' Cottage Cheese "' ..... ., "· 3 7c Hi911 In Prottin -Also (ta. !lends """" Into Salads. Lucerne Yogurt ~.:!:. 5 '::'1 Ch ... ...,_....., .,. 99< eese Chtddor,Jodlotlonghn Wt. .. USDA Grado 'A' Poppy Brand Plump, Tender And Meaty. Undor6-l~o. · Diocount Prictl lb. Illustrated World Ellcyclopedia • To lo-.IYH la 29C VOtUlll tMt.llHt,.... 7 v ..... 1 fer Mly... Oii SAUi $1.ff USDA Chelct Grado B11f Bladt Cot DISCOUNT, PRICED I A JAM or JELLY Jill Welch's Pure ll·•L 59c Coocord Grope w USDA lo-"41 FerW••l•to .... 11 tdeol For 'Burgers', Meat loaves, Etc. Aoy S111·Pock. Dl-t Prictl lb. Fresh leg of lam• s.:1::.~ 11. 99c lunch Meats 0-Bone Steaks Boneless Steak Top Sirloin Steak -USDA OIOice W ..... ..._ Fiiiet Mignon Steak = 1t 89c Fnsh Pork Chops (( .. :~;~ti.191 1t 99c ll $1 19 Pork Spa.,.rllls ....a;::ri;:. 1t&9c 1t $)99 Ca•ed Ham $:! 3~$399 ll$2" lath's Canned Hams5~~$4 9• . . f11ST tHun DUIUQUE SAFEWAYSUCED MISS IOWA BACON • __ .,,_ . _ BACOL. Hl __ ,,_ _, fomw Jotin pq. tArrnoul' Mirl Cin 1~69c> IACOll 73c 1-1~. 69c :: 75' pk&. · les R ........... $]:It 8111 1 oat .... _ .. Corned 111 --LBn°s1-et Beef Cress Rills :'::'.= t. 79• DWI ll _ Jimy ....... _cw'b...."'t-.~ o. 78< JI., DUI Sa1sap l:'154 .. h Rib Cliops -~~ .. $]4t 1111i All M:ttt wi..s •:-ss• RAINBOW TROUT .99c nsH ems '-Chob 3 ~. 11loflw ... •11 til ::: .,, • ' USDA Choice Beef ttc Safeway or McC s --(flet tef1'."$T.~·-1_l ' -- Grade 'A' Fresh Ducklings Poppy Brand - -stc· Young Tendtr -And Meaty! .. Boneless· Beef Romts Rolled And Tied USDA Choice Beef Chuck .99c • 1• Baysile ~ •• ,..,,.11 lad! • 211 E. 11111 St, Costa Mesa • 24 urn 11J Pim, SI. 1ap11 • &3& l Ceast .Hwy., lain 11eac11 • 111 E. EJ cm 11111, s. a.ate • Salta Ala f l'lllaf at u hl, lssi11 lllJI • • lilm & Fann, cm llSI \ J :J PILOT·AOVERTISt;R -· MIJ '1, 1'72 DAILY PILOT If "It'• F•• t o Be l\'lee ._ P-ple" NO ONE OFFERS 1lAOREr THE-REA'· ESTAT&:RS No. 1 No. 1 No. 1 SPRINGTIME IN PARIS I · 1 · -... ...... This -exquisite home haS Ownrr mew ng o c-...... I g1ime fl.ow• the best of everything incl~dini;;Jra n private up- ers custtlony shag ce.rpe ng d ks The stairs den .. Wa!k totchr'!!i i:Js !~~ng. but ~:·~::.~~pe1~::a_l ~r:perty. Breathtaking de• tails at 646-7171. • 3 Bedrooms plus: den • 1%. Baths • Just Painted I • New Water Softener, Garbage Diaposa • Gas Built-Ins • Extensive Paneling :ia., Sprlnkll'f'I Front & Rear • Why Rent at $25.750'! • Call 546-2313 Today! MEDITERRANEAN PLEASURE Is Th.ii spacloUI !5 bedroom ho!'.lle with court~~ entry. A huge living room with vaulted ~~ng and a large adobe firc1>lace. plus an adjcpnmg dining room -21n baths - a large backyard - a great location-and all fur ONLY $48,500. See it today, call 646-TI71. OWNER WANTS ACTION! f.:'' S----A~9-w.anil.. buLhc...l!M te drJJ? _his P~~----~ Formerly on the market at $59,95U ariirl'ed . 1 , to $53 000 and he'll carry a second at that pn~ BUT HE CAN'T ·WAIT, -HE SAYS BRING Ai.~ 4 OFFER!" If you wan.t a Newport address, a pool. 4 bedrooms. etc. and yoµ have a desire for "DICKERING,'' then ,call us at 646-7171. ~?"WW<" ; GO INVEST YOUNG MAN Choice 4 bedroom duplex phlS 1 bedroom over the garage. Excellent location in Coro~ de! ?.~ar with 3 baths buill-ln kitchen and patio. Asking $65,500 E-Z 'terms. Phone 673-8550 T~y!! ) ,, THIS ADDRESS SPEAKS FOR n5ELF Located in $120,000 to $200,~ hQmeS ln China Cove -3 lovely bedrooms wt!Jt 2 ~.ths. Ora· matic circular £talrway to spe.c1ous living room with fireplace. Completely carpeted and draped. 2 gorgeous beaches with 90 feet-ocean and bay view and priced at oo1y $85,000. Loan commit- ment of 80%. Immediate possession. Call no~ to 5ee this great value. 673-8550. FORMAL SPANISH ARCHES! You must see this one!! In College Park. Format dining and living room. On tbe other aide of those beautlful arches. a large·cozy family room, plus 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, laundry· room. Many UNIQUE features in thls Dream 11ome. $33, 71». Cal~ ,6-7171. 'S!l!~!?"" NEWPORT WEST \Valk to the beach from this suptt 3 bedroom home with a large separate FR. Features tree 1tudded private pe.tio on an oveniz.ed corner Jot with storage for your boat too. Spotlessly maintained with upgraded carpeting and lush landscaping. Only $3.1,500. cau 842-2535 . Nowl WATERFRONT · $95,000 Three bedrooms (could be four) In Ma.in House w:lth One bedroom cottage In front on the chan- nel. Cottage renta tor $.100 month, new doek ac- commoditn boat up to 39 ft. Grut Patios wlt.b ach boule for watenlde llvlnJ. Call 646-717L HAVE A SPLASH IN! Buy this 4 bedroom former model with 17 x 32 heated &. filtered pool and you can have your own family splash·irL Large family are1:1. bed· rooms all csrpeted, garage completely~ finished with a separate utility area. All tenns. Call 847-6010 for more infonnatiorL ' ESTATE SIZED LOT NEWPORT BEACH 12 000 square ft Lot at end of cul-de-sac street, s19,soo. Also, 10x135 toot comer, only $21,500. Submit on terms. Call 646-7171. DOUBLE DUTY Double Beauty: This luxurious fami_ly home h~~ the comfort and stimulation of design that \\•1JI unite every member of the fam~ly -and still it 5egregates the children for their pool side ac· tivitles. Located Jn beautiful Glen Mar, only $37,900. Call 546-2313 for appointment. VACANT LOT 60x300 LAST OF THE •BIG ONES, Zoned R-2. Asking $24,500 in Collta Mesa. See it, call 646-7171. IS THIS YOUR NEXT HOME? Channing, Provincial style in lmmacu_Jatc condi~ lion throughout. Features 3 BR, family room, 2 baths, country kitchen with used brick fireplace, formal dining room. Close to bea~~· sch~ls, and shopping. Price, $39,900. For add1t1onal informa- tion and appointment, please phone 546-2313. SHARP INVESTOR WANTED For three houses on one lot with room to add four more units. Good tax sheltered investment with assumable loan. Ne<-'ds a little work. Try $48',500. llurry this one "''on•t last. can 546-2313. CREATIVENESS· VERSATILITY· SENSITIVITY All of thrse are paramount in this spacioui; family home. CUstom drapes and beautiful shag carpellng throughout. Immaculate yBJ'ds "''ith gprinklers both front and rear. Very good buy at $42,495. cau right now to see 546-2313. DISASTER STRIKES TWICE And what the vandals did, was not very nice! Holes in every wall, not a window in place. It's no fWl to show al a11. Three bedroom, 2 bath home; the price is right ••• $20,700 and you can flx it by Fall. But, it has to be sold by THURS. DAY NIGHT. Give us a call FAST. 646-7171. SPECTACULAR OCEAN VIEW Outstanding vistu of ocean and 5parkling city lights at night from this outstanding 4 bedroom, 3 bath home In choice Harbor View Hills, Im· maculate condition throughout, all newly paint- ed, functional floor plan, with wall to wa11 car· pets, and drapes. All electric built-in kitchen - asking $79,900. can for 1ho~ng, 673-8550. AS MUCH FUN AS A COUNTRY CLUB Backs right up to fa.lrn-ay of Laguna, Niguel Golr-ei>urse. Spacious roomt accented wtth thick rich carpeting 'end custom drapes, with beautiful \\'Cl bar. Built-In vacuum system. S'15i995. Call for appolnment, 546·2313. BUY OF ·A LIFETIME You must see thi1 Immaculate 2 story, 4 bed· room, 2 bath home located in Fountain Valle)'. Beautiful landscaping with sprinklers. Priced at only $32,950. call 847--6010 for more detail. CHARMING COUNTRY CLUB 2Bx40 POOL Home on -..large private lot. Professional low maintenance landscaping. Three bedrooms. step. down family room and fonnal dining. Genuine hardwood noors, stone fireplace, slx years •old: a.uume 5% % loan. $41,950. Walk to all schools and park. Cali 842-2535.. r COLLEGE PARK DOLL HOUSE Call us about this sharp we ll located 3 bedroom, 2 bath College Park area home with formal d\n. Ing, eating area in the kitchen and brand new copper plumbing. $31,950 wlth only 10% down. call 673-8550. BUILD YOUR OWN And have o~ of the best views In North Laguna Beach. Street to street lot with trees and breath- taking panoramic view of ocean. Seeing ill be· lle.ving, For more information, please call 673· 8550. GOVERNMENT APPRAISAL $35,450 Owners ready to move. 4 b<!droorn, 2 bath and family room. New pa.int inside &: out. It's spark!· ing clean. call for more information. All Terms. 546-2313. SUBURBIA PARK 5 BEDROOMS-21/2 BATHS $44,900 This· is the popular tri-level model with large family room, formal dining room, breakfast nook in kitchen and large master bedroom on separate level. Located In one of the most dairable neighborhoods In Huntington Beach; two blocks from LeBarr Elem. Sch., Park and Tennls courts. Oose to Beach and Shopping. Home is priced to sell within 30 days. so Hurry!! For additional in- formation and appointment.. please phone 546-- 2313. FORMULA FOR A CALIFORNIA CATHEDRAL Huge beams & vaulted ceilings equal 1tre11gth & spaciousness. The Area -Mesa Verde North. The newest prestige area Jn Mesa Verde! Bar kitchen + beautiful cabinetry + 4 bedroom! +f ireplace In Jiving room+ + fam ily room + d i nin g room atrium + 11unken patio equal REAL CALIFORN· IA UVING. A beauty at only $37,950. Call 546-2313 .. ONLY $1,450 DOWN NO DOWN TO G.I. Lovely comer Jot, 3 large bedroom-s, built-Ins, 1eparate utility room. fireplace ln hu1e llvinc room, 1hake roof, lots of brick work and a lovely country atmosphere, Only $29,000, Call 847-6010 for more in1ormatlon. Thinking? "I'd like to talk with you. Wore bu•Y.· Ve ry bu1y. We need 2 hon- -ost, Nger . -Mlosmon.. We offer personalized treining; • plea,.nt & .,citing office; lots of help and on opportunity to grow. Let's t•lli. Cell me, 546-1600." Randy LIKE LARGE ROOMS? Three lar11:e bedrooms plus family room. Car~t· ed throughout. New floor in the kltt·hrn i din• ing area, plus ne\v paint lnsld~. On quif't cul-de--aae oaj~_ 2 minutes walklni.:: d1stanC<' to ~chools. Only $Z1,!500 -Al.J... tcrmi. Call 842-2535. and we wi ll throw ln this lovl'ly 4 bedroom. family room home. Enormous .~m!t to hous~ the large1t or families, plus a rei;tulatlon-sl~~ football field for a backyard. Qlll today, 1t • priced to sell. 842-2535. I $5,000 REDUCTION Out of area owner &ay1 SEU.!! JUMBO Duplex in Corona del Mar, each unit with 4 bedroom and 21iii baths and Great Incom~ Potential. NOW ONLY $75,!500 with terms. Call 673-8550. 5 BEDROOMS $34,500 . You 1bould 1tt this beautiful 5 bedroom, 2 bath home. 2,000 sq. fl of good living for the family. Shag carpets thruout with Intercom&. fire ahann systems. It's great for a large family and thcr,e'1 a large yard tor the kldl. Call 847-6010 Now. MEREDITH GARDENS $45,950 One ot the belt location• and nei ghborhoods in Beach area. Features 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, for· mal dining room, separate walnut paneled faml• ly room. Csarmlng yard &: patio, sprinkler •Y5· tem i: water softener. Situated tor extra pri· vacy very close to elementary school, park, tennis courts, shoppfng and beach. For appoint-· ment to see and additional information, please phone 546-2313. NEWPORT VIEW A custom 3 bedroom home with a view of Back· Bay, large country kitchen and beautifully maln·- talned yard for only $47,850. Please call 546-~313 to see this one! ' WANTED!! TENDER LOVING CARE from a family who deslrea to live in a &ood neighborhood, excellent scboola, convenient .to markets and freeway, cul-de-sac, close to Mesa Verde Country Club -3 Bedrooms + family room, 2 baths, covered patio. Priced at only $30,999. Call 546-2313 WHAT A BARGAIN!!! Buy thls 3 bl'droom home below market and finish the bonus room yourself, This home ha• over 2,300 sq. ft. The formal dining room ls great tor all types of entertainment Priced at only $34,950. C&ll Now ••• 842-2535. "VACANT" J.fove ·ln today and the ownen will help finance the purchase of this 3 bedroom, family room home. Add a heavy shake roof, a covered patio and a private cul-de-sac and It totals Into a "REAL BUY." Call 842-2¥'· FOUR-2 BEDROOM HOMES On choice 110 foot Jot -Immaculate -Condi· Uoned. Sepe.rate enclOlf?d palioa -Attached garage1. Complete privacy in each unit Well land5caped yards. Convenient locatldn -walk to ahopplng center. Owner h.11.s priced for quick sale. $62, 750 or wW split to duplexes. can 673-8550. -GRACIOUS SPANISH DECOR .. Just look at this bell.utlful Spanish •b'le home and It win be yount 3 bedrooms, 1 ~ baths, 1unken living room, formal dinln1 room and a large tiled family room. Many extru -cov• .ered p&Uo, 1prinkler1 In llil yard!, tinted wln-o dow.1 and upgradtd carpets and draptl. The tile root will rem.Ind you of old r.te::dto. You must see for only $41.900. Call 847..fOlO Nowt "It'• Fun to IJe l\'lee t• People" l• IJ!Vlco --- -........ _ .. tr....., ..... ,..,.. ht 6 itfflc• .. fellew HIN. I• Mnrt11lftf-(omplett c .... ., ... '"" 4ey. In lllM In tM H•,.._ .,...._,,.., ,_1ttwp. 11111 la ....,.""l'IM Actt. IL" -~ PANORAMIC VIEW $29,950! Oner in a lifellml' opportunity to invr~! 111 5Uch a locn lion at this price. You'll love th" 1·u1111try• lik(' atn1osphcrf' or this a:ori;:rou!I :1 l"'tlr1MJ1T\ homf'. High fin a hill with a flromlnrnt '"iN' .,f the Vallt>y. EASY TERMS. Ca.JI NO\V • , , 8·1:!-2535. ... ' . l BARGAIN OF THE YEAR This 3 bedrom, 2 bath channer has bullt·lnt, Al-1/F!\1 lntcrcom. nc..v shag ai.r1~ts, hugr fl'nC'f'd yard and R covrrt'd na..:r;tone patio with BBQ. A.ssumr n loan wltl1 $203 monthly psymentJ for only $3700 down. No qualifying. l>ricc $25,700. Hush for thl! one. 8•12-2~. - "LIKE A MODEL" ·. Why go thl'ough the . expc111e a new hom( :fin Jncur. r.1ov~ into a 4 bedroom home th!Lf• );qte• fully-decorated inside and bcauU!ully landlCar, outsld~. Sport!! brick plantf'l'I and a brick~~-?­ Priced at s:12.950. All Terms. Call Now 842~ FRESH AIR COUNTRY :s1so-a n1 onth "'Ill buy this cutr 1ltl11• tour h«t• roon1 ln unr or Huntington B•·nch's """11nt ncl11:h.• borhoods. Nca1· good school~. bcnchcH, Pft.l'kl\. shoppin\{, frN>ways, ••• even a couplf' uf beaut!• ful little lakP. is within walking or blcycUn11: db:• lance. Subjrct lo 5% % Fl-lA Loan , , . thb1 home boasts heavy cedar shakl' roof, 1 %. bn.lhs. doubl• car garage, fencro yard, bull l-ins. Clf?lln Ir. ready to n1ove Into,. , cail 842-2535. l WHAT A BIG HOUSEi -. • 5 BedroolJUI • 3 Baths • Formal Dinini;: • Atrium • 2 Patlo1 • 3 car Garage • Only $46,500 • Perfect hon1c for large tam.Hy • Call 847-6010 Today! BEAUTY & STRENGTH In this quallt.y built custom home In beautlrul Dover Shores. 3 large bedrooms, 21,S bathl 'V!d a breath takini;: view of the bay and ocean. Ex• qulslte w.11.Jl-to-wal.I l.'8.rpettna and drar>e11 and.a 17 x 20 master bedroom with a Homan tub and dresslng room. All electric hullt-in kitchen w1tb dlshwuher and refrigerator. Beautifully deto~ ated with expensive wall covcrlng!I . Prlecfd to sell at $110,000. Call 673-BMO !or appointment. "LOOK" THE BEST IN MESA VERDE 3 bedroom plwi family room Paceaettrr in Met• Verde on a quiet street. New carpet1 and home In process of being painted. Pr:lced tor q\ljok" tale at $37,499. Call 546--2313. REPUBLIC HOME Juat lY.'O yean youn1t! Large Uvh1r room wl~ cathtd:r&l bramtd ceillr1g11. Fonnal dlnln1 rogro and breakfast nook ln kitchen. Sfpatate fami17 room. 3 btthL Only 144.995. Ht.11'1'")' and call ·to- day, 546-2313. THB REAL ESTATERS NEWPORT BEACH 1700 Newport Blvd. 646-7 171 I COSTA MESA 2790 Harbor Blvd. 546-2313 -• °""'Tl ' ·HUNTI NGTON BEACH 17931 Beec h Blvd. 6014 We rner Ave. .842-2535 • 847-60 I 0 CORONA DEL MAR 332 Marguerite I 673-855 0 INVESTMENTS 279 0 Harbor Blvd. Suite 2on , Cos!~ Me,. ' 546-1600 l $>' •• HO\'l'llf 1l!INGS 60111, HOAB1? ! MUTI A.ND JEFF , ' ii .• ,J ~GMENTS • ·--. Hin I ; H!:EL ! HCEL I BO\" ARE lOU Dll'AB ! DON'T \QJEYEH K~ 'r.fW' IEEL ILWSf :NANCY I THOUGHT OF ' :soME WORDS THAT :sPELL THE SAME ;THING BACKWARP ;AND FORWARD ' : . VlAM- WOWO!:R WMlat 1T *I. By Tom K. Ryan FM ncCfvlm1Yl'!:CAsr1 nre Fa.ES r-r-----.;;----7 Mf 100 RESTRICTIVE! NOTHING M NEVE'R THE SAME' Hl'M' MaoPRAMIU'IC PARTS! NO SUP!'Ol\llNG CAST! CHM'Cl' ltl mY ll( HANP AT LIGHT FMCE, L£f ALO!E SLN'SOCK! ANP --, AS IF'lltAT WEffEllT 9AP 1'.IWGH .• _ CAN YOU THINK OF' 1--.l ONE 'i' SURE PEANUTS By Al Smith . . ..... . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .. By Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller wow .. . I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by ti I. POWER I ~·Swift I G Lltt11-<: ,.,.. cllwacl« 51 Squtlthld: 2 wo1ds 5j PackllJfS 57 lowtrld In ""' ,61 Ulltr 62 Post..Ctwlst· "'" Sii• k•· IU't: 2 words '4 C1j)lblt ~ AOl!lan offlt11I of old '4 LUllCtllUS ''"" 67 FutfMd wllh .... 61 Old.flit '' Propel with ""' ,, .. 1 Mockry ottleials: lnfor1111! 2 Big ~..tit)': 2 words '-.,.; 4 l•Hitldtd' 5 Sit as~~ if 6111akrM of 1 ....... ""''"""' 7 N, Alllft!Clfl ··~ I !r-mivn llt1vltr ~"' "" Yrstffd1y's' Puztlr Sol...td: • ' Pertaining t11 ocaill rltts 10 l(lfld llf ,;~ ,_,, 11 Orlttrt•I ruse UNat&ntly ...... ~ """ 11 Twining slell 22 As-- 24 Trlnktts 26 Hlli!•IJ .. _ tmplO)'ff """ 28 Post Offlct "'" 30 Pull 1111 fabric 31 rm--: ,_,, 32 Ov1n11fd "°""""'' " ... , '" lddlhon ,, Vatltnt · 40 TM1td 4J Stltc\td for an offict 4S Ctrta ln 7 • ' -. I I I MISS PEACH ALL T~E fjl~D5EED YOU C.AN EAT, ALL ~""\:i ir.I · SEASON LONG-. f _,\'./;,) PERKINS 5·!1 1m."" ""'*' ... tilhM .,_. J ,., ..... ,,,,1,l!J,,l\\ GASOLINE ALLEY r - Haw ljOU nofeelinq, ~ufus? We're trapped in thi~ hole! We can't qo home! SALLY BANANAS MOON MULLINS ain't ,;o much better'n here! 1 don't eve n · (~bl have an~ water to wa>h m~ htlnd6! By Charles Barsotti r;A-w"'. -,.;;~\,e-=--~ _v-, c;,~ 0 "' ._' F.itt.Gt,~ ~. ~-/~... !ABm. th~ ~· t-=_,.-. J t=:;i:=:=:=:::::::;:--~<~~ ~oot>s~OW! HELLO; EJ>.Sf ST~! <iOOl>-IJY, WO!tlC! ~ ANIMAL CRACKERS By Charles M. Schub THAT5 IT! EN THE WAV, J: AM ALSO A Fl'IEND OF THE WO!t.M5. WE'LL CALL HIM "Roo.N'1 'llERLW' v~m.r- 600D 6RIEf! By MeD l J l.IST 'f.HfW T><IS GUY WAS SELLIN~ SOM~Ti'INGo. , , f" ,\:Ny : .. .. By John Miies By Roger Bollen THE GIRLS • 1·51 "It'• getttuc so you feel out of place If you're complettly ready when you go out." DENNIS T-HE MENACE .. .. PILOT-ADVERTISER Wednesdi)', May 31 , l9n Wtdntsaay, HTay )1 , lffi DAJL't' ftllOT ,, Everyone Has .Something That Som eone Else Wanh DAILY PILOT CLASSlFIED ADS . •' Yo u Ca n Se ll It, "l Find It, Trad e It -~·: . Wi th 11 Wa nt Ad ·rhe Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results _,., .. _,., .. Gen1r1I 0 General l--:-*~*:---:-*--:*-*-:---:-*-l--A-BA-NDD-NE-0 - TAYLOR co. 3 + FAMILY ONLY $13,900 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Magnificent view of bay & blue Pacific! 3 Bedroom, 3 bath contemporary with luxur- ious carpeting & drapes. See today! $100,000. "Our 27th Year" Realtors General WONDERFUL WORLD • • • OLE COUJ\'TRY GEM!! Nestled bene11.th 60 fl shade trees; STAINED GLASS BAY WINDOWS he av v BEAMED CEILINGS, r ich walnut paneling & walls of cork galore. Enchanting 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road enclosed LANAI plus adobe ···of Ne':VPort Beach. You've go t the whole ~N.:.E::.W.;c.;cP..:O:cR.:.T:.....:C:..:E::.N.:.T.:..::E.:.R:.c'..:N.::·c::B::. ____ 6:.4:..:4..:4.:.9:.:10:__1 brick patio, 2 Cl\R garage. vie'v in th is former "Lusk" ~lode! Home. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., General Generel Complete with block wall Ready for imnlediate sale. 4 BR. plus dining ---------1 fencing. 5 ?.1tN. TO BEACH rm. plus den \V/frplc. An upgraded home at VACANT Bluffs Beauties ~~!~g~~~ving _ca11 now. a realistic price, including the land. $92,950 OWNER MOVED-subm;t all LIDO ISLE otters on thil lovely BEST LOCATIONS Hawaiian Isle of Paradise 3 BR 2., b 40 11 · Dramatic 2·sty. home. superior quality . Lge. .. ">a a., · priv. I t B t'f I I home! 3 large bdrms. 2 patio, on gorgoous green-corner o . eau l u poo . For executive en- bath!I PLUS a large rumpus belt. Upgraded. $55,500. tertaining & fine family living. VI' ell \\'Orth mom . $150,000 · GINNY MORRISON 2 LGE. BR., 2 ba .. sep. din-1~ , 557.4130 REALTOR 540-2286 ing rm. Bay view. $45,950 Jo0iii0iiOii0ii0ii0iiOii0ii0JConvenient parking~asy to be A oood want all ;. a oood HELEN B. DOWD COMMODORE a "DROP·lN" at Bay & Beach Realty 675-3000 General ••••••••••••••••••• I HIGHLY DESIRABLE In Irvine Terrace Let us show you this enchanting home. Atrium entry, spacious living room v"ith fire· place. 3 Large bedrooms 2 baths. LOVELY DINING ROOM + room to store your trailer or boat ...................... , . $62,500. SPECTACULAR VIEW l•:_e_•.:._·_:_:_nt ______ ~_:_~_e_-:°_.i_R ____ ... _·O_l_M I o;;r!~~~!~I.u~~ ~~;~%~B~~·~=~·~~'~=~~~l~·~~~-~~l~~-~·~·~~~~1. [ J Jy and dining area. Bonus of General General Eastbluff - A truly lovely Back Bay vie\v home. 4 Bed· rooms, 2 baths, FA!Vl lLY ROOM . fireplt1 ce, builtin kitchen \Vith breakfast area. Custo1n carpets and drapes, beautiful patio for you r entertaining pleasures. . . . . . . . . . $55,900. lliliiiiiiliilt•ililiWilili-. e. sparkling pool and low maintenance 75"xl10' yard. -----------------· All the usuaJ Baycrest ~ .., CHARMING. DELIGHTFUL 3 BR. bayfront beauty w /paneled den. Hard to beat Bay view & price, $165,000. Jim Muller features. Full price $64,950 ~ -I and e.n assumable loan of approximately $50.000. Just listed -hurry. Call us at 540--1151 (Or>en Evc!!:l ,s ~-.,. HERITAGE • • REALTORS 4 Ulttll()U: 1-iOOf WATERFRONT View 38' WATERFRONT and a POOLTcYO '. Pier & slip available. NEW DRAPES & CARPETS, 2 bedroom s. 2'h baths. MARBLE FIRE- PLA CE. builtin kitchen with WET BAR, patio over~ooking the water. You must see to ap· prectale . .. .. .. . .. . .. . . .. .. $85,000. CORONA DEL MAR Two Triplexes Gener.ti rlCTURl THl HA lllOR AltlA'S llST LISTI NGS - • , . THEY'RE KNOWN AS UNIQUI HOM,IS : GO~D INV ESTMENT and a nice place to ; live . Ne,\'port Beach condo1ninium on fee• land! O\vner has taken in on trade and wants to. sell f<;ist. It's a 2 bdr111., 2 bath in Dover V'\llage Just off Weslcliff in beautiful down· tov.•n Ncv.'port Beach. :\sking $30.950 but also· ~ asking for offers . PHO NE UNIQUE HOME~'.·: NEWPORT BEACH. 645-6600. · ;·' ---"'"" -:=·:' ~·.-. "• •• CORNER LOT in a shade tree neighborhood::. and the ya r~ is be~u tifu l_ ! 4 bedroom lwo stor.Y"! floor plan. with quiet. pride of ownership Mesa Verde. }''ormal dining room and paneled': family roo m. Prese nted at $43,9,IO. PHON~ . UNIQUE HOMES. MESA VERDE. 546-5900 .• : U~l ()U~ ()ff ICl'.S CORONA DEL MAR· 675-6000 2443 East Coau H19hw<1y. Co1ona Del Mar CAMEO SHORES VIEW ESTATE Nearly 1J2 Ac. view site. Perf. for entertain· ing; 4 BR .. 51h baths. Pool • lge. rooms • cabana .. fabulous bar. Call for pictures. $175,000. George Grupe * Mesa del Mar * . FRAME THIS VIEW and you can sell it lo the New York Art Museum! Trees, greens, lakes and the rolling hill s of the Mesa Verde Country Club. Gorgeous 4 bedroom hillside home. It's clean and vacant. Offered at $91.500. Built in range and oven, dis hwasher and disposal, carpets and drapes. 2 Units have 2 bedrooms, 1 bath: 1 Unit has 2 bedrooms, l lh baths w/fireplace. E~h un it has 2 car- por ts, main tenance free yard and paol privi- MESA VERDE· 546-5990 . ' ' LIDO ISLE . NEW LISTINGS t. Charm galore! Sunnv. happ:v 3 BR., beam ceil., beaut. patio. 45 ' lot. $69,950. 2. lmmac .. remod. 4 BR.; dbl. lot. !129.500. 3. Vac . Jot 40' St. $53,000. Charlene Whyte EMERALD BAY· $84,500 Attr. VIEW. 3 BR., den home: low maint.; beamed ·cathed I ceil's. Und er $100 mo. for taxes &. due rivate beach. Bob Yorke ER IS ANXIOUS Sharp Carm model Harbor View Homes, w/lots of ti:f. 3 BR.. 2 be., lam .· & din. rms. Asking ~2.900. Howard Wells ORIGINAL BALBOAN Quaint 4 BR. home w /formal dining rm. 1 Black N.H.Y. Club . between bav & ocean. For those who love tradition, $56,500. Bill Bents REALISTICALLY PRICED Well located townhouse in Univ. Park: 4 BR, fam. rm .. 21h: ba .. nice end unit: walk lo schools, pools . tennis. NOW $34,900. "Chuck'' Lewis ' 5 BEDROOMS . BAY VIEW Gourmet kitchen. Walking dist. to bay & ocean. Great summer house or year 'round, for large family. Triana Bergin LIKE NEW BAYFRONT Choice Lido Nord 4 BR. plus family rm. home. Perfect for entertaining. Pier & slip for large boat. Immaculate! Eileen Hudson IT'S GOOD BECAUSE ..••. It's Corona de! Mar ... it's 2 BR. & dining rm .. 2 full baths ... it's near beach. bay & stores ... it's fresh & neat Paul Qu ick OCEAN & BAY VIEW Truly the spot! Large gr_acious home on a quiet street in a fine area. Has a private up- stairs suite or den & bdrm. Nice yard with trees. '69,000. Bill Comstock ~ Coldwell, Banker 133-0700 644-2430 ~ 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. General a wAl l<ER & Ll l real t ors PHONl U'NIC?UI HOMlS, MlSA YlltDl, 54•·5990 REAL TOR, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE. SEE TT, YOU'LL LIKE IT Deluxe patio w/beautilul back yard. 3 lrg BR, 2 BA, sep fam rm, + liv & din area, elEic bl!ins, firepl, up- graded C.rps &. drps, shake roo~;~2L~NYTIME ~ ~ 1640-3928orEve.548-8651 -~~~~--------~-----"'~""""' General Gener ii Lachenmyer Realtor HAVE A HAPPY KITCHEN and a good value too. You can have: both with Uiis nearly new 3 &!droom, 2 Bath Home w i th A Fireplace, Bil Kitchen. Patio, Shake Roof. $33,000. Call 646--0555~ E v e n l n g s • 645-4483. COLUJ£LL PROP ERTi ES, INC. REALTORS FIXER-UPPER NEWPORT ISLAND 4 Bdrm., 1%. baths; 2-story home. Needs work, but GREAT location! Owner may consider trade for sail· boat. $45,000. Call: 673-3663 673-8086 Eves. associated BROKERS-REALTORS 2025 W Balboa 67l·l66l TRANSFERREO 3 + SEP FAM RM $27,900. 1700 sq/ ft of customized \iv· ing. 2 baths, hardwood floors.· fireplace, rich panel· ini. formal ~dining room, all pUshbutton appliances Sub- mit. Cail 847-1221. MACNAB IRVINE Fl NER HOMES TOWNHOUSE Nev.,port Beach-5 min. from Bay & Ocean. 3 BR's., 21h baths. Large LR. bit-in elect. kitchen. Breakfast area. 2 Car ~ a r a g e. Faces pool & greenbel t. Low maintenance fee . $31 ,500. Mrs. Fa y 642-8235. EXCLUSIVE BAYCREST BEAUTY Enjoy the plea sant comfort of a Lanai- Family Room overlooking a sparkling swimming pool. Spacious 3 BR • 2'h bath home, amidst delightful landscaping. TURTLE ROCK-PRES IDEN T HOME Best view in Irvine. New listing. 4 BR .. FR. super condition. Great landscaping. For ONLY $73,950 with land . Laszlo Sharkany 644-6200. LAGUNA-OCEAN VIEW LOTS Investor's dream. White water surf. ONLY $20,000 total. Call Gladys Ru ssell 642-8235. "' Irvine Macn1b·lrvln• R•1trComP•"Y ~01 Dov1rD~ve 142-1235 IU.C MacArthur loU•l200 N1WpOrt ... ch,Callfornllt2S8S leges ..................... Each $79,500. FEE LAND Turtle Rock 3 BEDROOMS, family room, 2 baths. atrium, builtins with self cleaning oven, shag carpet· ing and custom drapes. Large covered patio with su per land scaping. MUST SEE TO AP· P REC!ATE ......................... $47,900. ' ~ MID A.lSOCIATEI REALTORS 644-7270 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. ••••••••••••••••••• .G:~:~~I IG __ •_ne_,_._1 ____ _ FOUR BEDROOMS E~~~,~~0~~~'~'-s~~~" + 20' x 20· bonus room. Cus-will Financf'. 55' x 120', tom bu ilt family home wi!h Alley Acces~. Build upon 3 brdrooms, high beam ccil-now, or Jnvesl ror the f'u. ing:o., big rooms, modern turf', $11,000. Call 646-0555, buiHin kitrhen, hl'avy shakr Evenings 641-7003. roof. Detached doublro gar- e.ge with honus room over head 4 ideal for Mother-In· Law apartment.) All this in Cos!a Mesa for only $29,950. No down VA or low down COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC . REALTORS ~'HA term~. Ce.It us tor fur· .., ... ,... ............... ., thcr dc!ails. 546-5RSO fOP<'n eves.) CLl r.FHAVEN- VIEW! FIRST TIME OFFERED - .. 2850 Mesa Verde Dn;e, Costa Mesa . ' ' . NEWPORT BEACH · 646-6500 1649 Westcliff Ori1Jc, Newport Beach REAL TOR, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ._ -ral Ueneral . . ••• . .. • clinJa : ~ • • • ' . . . . PRESTIGE W ATERFRONt HOMES --.. " " . SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT .-. _. • • ':, ~ 57 Linda l1le Drive ' Custom 4 BR., 31h ha. home on Lagoon. Msti ·;: ! BR.. ha s sitting area & frplc. Waterfroni : family rm·. w/convcrsation pit around the ' frplc.; lovely garden. lge. slip. $189,500 For Complete Information On All Homes & Lot1, Pleas• Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite I, N.B. 675-6161 Ge neral DOUBLE YOUR INCOME WHh this truly fine Income property. Has 4-2 bedroom homes on Jargf' lo! -OK'd for 8 units. 2 story -each home has ira ow n yard & private patio -11ingle gar- ages for each home -cph; + drape11 -stoves. Immac· ulafe condi!lon -never a vacancy. Only $62,750 -or 2 can be purchased. Call 673-~10. General NO DOWN to veteran• and 5% down or FHA terms avail. I.Jke a model home. this 3-bedroom 2 bath beauty la one or a klrKI! New Clll'petl, frelltlly painted, all bltin11 and msriy, many extras. Low malnl«!- anr.e ye.rd & excellf!nt rfa1- dential area. Al80 may ••· 1ume 5% ';1,. lnan -$32,950. Can 54f>.8424 lO pen Evea.) ,...~..,. HERITAGE ' • REALTORS Custom 3 bedroom 2 bath ----- on the bluffs overlooking en· BAYCREST BEAUTY tire harbor. Large open !iv· REDUCED $4,500 · --5-BR~ $48,SOO ing room and dinin.s;: area. TIIE best buy on remaining Elegant, imm111'. 4 Br., 1- Nrat neighborhood. 212: Ba. By orh:::Jn;iJ owner~. $67,500. Jot~. on Brislol bcl\l.'t'Cn fsmlly rm, homl! w/larje Frpl. din. rm. Spacious! PETE BARRETT Birch & Cypres~. C-1 formal tfln. rm. $115,000. ; CHUCI'; .CAROTHt;RS s2·xnr equiil $70,000 cll-~h. BALBOA BAY PROP. REAL ESTATE -REALTY-c,tt romm<rd•l De p t. * 642-7491 * -: TREASURES 642-5200 Elmore Co. Re:il Estate Fast reauit1 are )uit • pn.e l-=---~--------------1 1831 Westclilf, N.B. 646--Sl52 "!"!!!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!.,,.!!!!!!!!!!'!P Division, BRKR 645-4010. call away. 64z.5671 .: General General General Genera l General Gen•r•I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii WALKER & LEE REAL TORS IA Y fRONT-$175,000 I $200 DOWN ... Exceptiona.Jly well d()rn" execuU1Je m.c1nslon \l.'ilh 4,000 sq.13 bedroom. 2 bath t'-1.·0·Slory home. Plush carpets &: drape~ ..... fl;_5!f_~om!t?F.t ~!'~.~u"l!...'1'· .D?u!>l~J!!i:;;~d~k. 4 bedrooms + throughou t. ~u\lt-in rarige & oven and re fri gerator. Po~l den and 5"tiath1. Ap f!f onfy. •· · · ---·· · ·a:nd · p11t!o ·w1th· lot&··of .gre~nery. Must. be so14 ~all_ n~. $19,950 IS THE PR ICI real tors 9WALKER & LH VIEW ESTATE-$147,500 .. . • .. • "POOL SHARK7 " 1Sl40 .added family room for your··pool table. 3 huge bedrooms. ttpRrate dlnln& room. ne .... · shag rua:. Va.cant. Only $23,900 with 10% down. 4400 square reet in lhis custom built traditinnal air condi· tioned home with massive decking around pool. game room for regulation size pool tablt. Fantai;tlc large formal Jiving room, ~parale formal dininit room. informal drn for Jounit- ing overlooking the coastline 11.nd v11Jley and zoned for hoNes;; too! Privacy !!occurrd on lhh1 acre + 'rsf.ii tr by clec· lronic gates. App't only. No addres8: will be givtn. / DOVER SHORES-$107,000 for this lovely 3 bedroom, 2 balh dream hollse. The loan Is high enough that you can assume. Total payments $160 prr month includes all. ~fodPrn built--in:o.. deep pile c11rpPts, also matching drapes. Double garage to boot~ Fantastic deep lol wlth JotJ; of trees. Cill ' ~ ' DOLL HOUSE ERstside Cnst~ f\.1rsA for $19,9'"".>0 full ptici:. Cl's nn l:lnwn - mi nimum dov.•n FHA. l)arllng home 1it1J11.tfd on huge R·2 , lot. Qut'en 1izt' bedroom~. grrAt counlry·slyle kllchPn, also ! ln1~ of tre~. \Vhat a plllcf'! l.A't'1 show it to you. lAta ot Mom to gro..,,. here. Call llACH COTTAGE tor fishin;:. gurflng:, cli.mmlnlil'·or wh11levtr. 3 bed· rooms \vlth bfautiful lonJ 11hag C'.A~t. Home only :l years old. Can you btt1rvt CJNLY $23,500! "IOAT GATE + ALLEY" Low cash down to euy monthly pe.yment. 3 bed· rooms + family roorn. $23.900. "IXICUTIVI PALACE" 4 bedroom 2 story msnsion on huge 75xt20 lot fea.· turing 12xl8 paneled family room, "'lepe.rate dining room; master'a suite d°"'n11talrs with '.Z bAths, one ott kitcbci:n plu~ 3 btdrooma upstairs and 1,.-bath. Shake roof. $37,000 11.JI term1. "MINI-RANCH" Qite 2 bedroom eottaae plus mothel"·ln·law qulll"- ten on bup lot. Only $18,500 with low rub down. ' Fountain Valley Office 17211 lrool<hun t 968-3371 Opon Even!"'' Over 3,200 sq. ft. of comfori, luxury; And prestil?t' in a m111g• nlflce>nt N~wport Beach 11ettlng with an unforgelable VIEW. Four spacious. hf-droom$, 4 bllths, lflrGr-femOy room 11.nd FORMAL DINING ROOM. Shown by appointment only. IAY OR OCU.N-$59,500 • TA~your 11lck -from thl~ eleg8nlly dorw br11.ch mansion with apprnxlma~ly 2000 1q, ft. of C{)mfort and luxury. Thrte huae btdrooms, 2 bflth5, 15x20 F9 Af\.IAL OJNtNG ROOM plus 2 llrtplaces -one In master aulte! On land you OWN! By aJ)l'()lntment only. ftlewport Beach Office 200 Wn tdlfl Dr. at lrvloe -646°7711 Opttt l vt•lo91 l EXECUTIVE Sl'ECIAL for this superb 3 ~droom homr-ne~tlcd among trtf'!I a nd JJhrub~. SPf'rkllng qu11llty ror finf' entert.11lnir11;:, Lush d""fl plle r.11rpetin1t with culitom matchins: dr"J"'', !!Ill l'lertric kitchen "''Ith all the tMmmlnszs, ft1nt&iitlc flrr-pl1u~t. What 11 ahow phlct' for 539.500! Seller is prt'parcd for Cl and •·HA term~. now'1 the Umr, Call ' Costa Mesa Office 2790 Harbor. Blvd., Open Evenings 545.9491 545-0465 HUGI FAMILY ROOM Plus 4 bl'droo~.i. 11.nd clf'an as !I p~n. Sensational 8h11g carpe~ and <'Ustom drapri:: lhroughout. Vtts NO DOWN or LO\V DOWN-BUT i-I URRY. tow TAXES Nt111r bfoittch end Just aea~nrd, this J bedroom. 2 ha.th beauty un he bouR:ht for ONLY $33,!SQO. CUI· tom tarptta and drapes-Cliroughout, Huntington Bea ch Office -B4 2-44SS: 7'U Mlot« o,.. .... 1.,. M0-5141: • DAILY moT . ---· w-.r, M'1 JI, 1972 ..... ,, ,.,, )1 , 1912 -.. - G.neral Corona del Mir Fountaift. VaRev Huntlntton lloodo Laguna Beadt AcNlf9 for ule * SPECIALS * WHY WAIT? GREEN Srook Jfomt, r.v. 4 +Baclroom Est•!• POOL Newport Shores -l1R111sitel Wnit 1rml pft Md quiet p11th to 1Uptrb fnncbcan tilrd , 1flllb'>'! Ci\anl IUdm Jlvln& .,;on, with ecqeQUI MIWl\le ....., tile ftrtolac< ........ .ct.cu tfl«I dinJng area. 'Gourmel k1tcbm wllh pu .. '() • s B" UTY GUESS WHAT? Th• ~ .. ,, """' l.u•k hom• t UR Sl::ASOr\. r:A . S 0 -t BR, 4 BA, I& lam rm w/ We have • nh'ty llliltd ~ In pygla.u v.·111 lM! r11a ) fpl, forml din or 11rn, # bedroom 2 beth h«M Mlil 100n, bu.I l.hl1 beauiltol 5 111,1me VA Joan. Suhm11 rAYi thov hard-to-hnd HARO. kdmom Mme l1 r,.arly l'IO\\! ~·n. Near Atacn. QulC'k \VOOD f1..oORS! 'M1.-('11.r· It ha11 MV•r h<'t>n li\f'd 1n • • * * * • prt11 a.rf': plu~n. the built1n1 f'xef'pt for t1i>·o rl11rr1 "he\ 4 BEDRM CONOO. Good ar• handy and the fireplace 1prnt tbf'tr hOneymoon lhl're . lolln auuml)llOn. Paymt• rrackln! P.fany ~lrlt In-Would you like to bf' Thi" lt!!J ·than rent. Gd 1V1nd. eluding builttn v1tcuurn ry. dears ~'ho lolkw.· lh('m! Call Bdrm., 2 Ba., family and MODEL HOME Panora mic Ocean View /lining room. Single 1tory. Drive by 6062 Ro.moot. By oy,·ner. 968--0Z«. Pttitlce area • So/WIU"Tlf'r, CUttom·built 4 bednn. HU.le 8\' OWNER, 4 BR., lo\j, BA. EI Spri n ad 1 le, Prof, =~h = °::~f~~ lam. rm. •hi.& cpts., 1800 Jndacpd. nr. schl IJ shop-tuna Beach. Built on 3 Ml. fl. S.11 ,500. 96.l-1146 or Pina", !Zill 379-6721. f Jevela, this beautiful homr. Ilif'al home In pnmf' Harbor Hia:h.lands. 4 Spacious BR., fam. rm,, 211 ~th!:, !f!'p. laundry rm. Kitchen bltl\1 .. cyt/drp3, & 1 sparldin& he1t"'1 pool. $44,<m. Country Uvln9 • PICK YOUR OWN ORANGES 4.t net anu iri Rtwnidt. Uvel with trontqe on two ~calfd roads.. SU Valen· da oranae tr'tts, Al·l mne. Available in ~ parul or Ww di vi~. Priced at ~.cm per ac~. f'or further J.nkr. mation, please C:.U Glenn Haslam ""'ith THE POINT 1 •tbna 1en•h11 bu. Wind.Ina ... U!rway to upptt level aM '"'Irina: alu brdronm11. 3 beth•. t>eoorator'• delicht! Larae bride patlo plUJI extra : ~ tttlodf'd auwll!"Ck. Pri· Ctp11, rirp11, A refrig. Small ten1, la.rJc yard 11.nd sprink· 6~7225. '1n. v. 12nd. Ava11 6-1. ltt1, IT'S IMMACULATE? • • • • • • $21.500. wtth YA tenn•. $ Instant Cash $ I COATS fnr your l!'Q"ijlty. We pey 00111. • & COLWELL PROPERTIES. INC. REALTORS ~--~-----11 hu l baths, larae Uvitla 5 Br &i l ba. Heated pool. rm. wilh beam c0eilinc, up- Frplc in ~1uter B · R . 531-5101 ( :;;:,J 531·5111 an1te dining rm, C.nerou1 S·l2,000. 968-2365 ah 6 pm. size family rm, with ti~ 4 Br + Lrg Bonus Room REPOSS SS pl•ce, book""' and mMy Cnn\•en1f!nl lo Fwys, Ill k>t. E IONS Sptti~bullt·lns. \\'111 f'llA. S.15,000 &47·3957 For lnlonnalion and location Extra 19ge, bt>autitully a~ HuntinQton h•c:h of thio:se FHA A VA home1, pointed all electric kitrhen Exrlusiv~ Balbol Penl111t1la Po\nf. Impreuive 4 BR .. 3 bat~. extra large liv. rm. A hu.p 18x40 family rm. Beam ~iling1. ~1 a 1 1 i Y e trplc., 111.rge pat><>. Sho'll-"n by app"t. $79.500. Eckhoff & Auoc., Inc. Ml·l621 ; Eve1/\Vknds C.a.11 24 iu". ""· W WALLACE 1--~~~~--* * • * * * I REALTORS * R-l * contact -~'Llh breakfast rm., pantry --:c-,..===,..--1 KASABIAN rm. tor au your"""'"" aod LARWIN'S Rt•I Estate 147•9604 a sio:y,•\ng room far the lady j ~le blac:b, pll01 , tenni11 and 1 .,...bch tnOl"9 -call quick! C4Ll ·Ci), '''·l'l' ~.~ Riven.id.. 687·1155 ·-. • j• • ..... .' ·-· " -$30,900 J "~ Id + Family Rm. ~cious happy family Mme : ~~signed fOf" acti\<e livil\i &- • "n t e Ma lnlnr. Gourmet'• : ll"idie bo iltln k i I ch en, ~ ~w11"her, f~mily room : with eletant t i r e p lac io . ~ Complio:t.ely ca r p e ! e 11 , : drapiod thruout . ~frigf'n.lnr. wuhftr aM : ~r included. Df'liJhlfuJ 1, .-F"effil pe.hn. Sprl nkltr~. . '\l'acant -move' ri&ht in? CALL Jj47·A507 -54'--4l.CI-Ni ce 2 bdrm. home. ,...-orth oJ COllllil 1-l""'Y· Spa1.:ious living College Park 4 Bedroom, 2 barh corner lot home w/11lr-ronrl., covrrr-rl patio, tepu11.tio play yard &. wall·li>wall thick M-111.g crprg. Drive by 231 7 Ru1ger1 Dr., Call to 11ee 1nJ1lcle, $32,950 Newport at (Optn Evtnings) rm. y,•fbnck frpl., bit-in hook.shelves: twin 1 1 z io Is Youn bdrms. Lge. kltch . 1 ~·feating area. Screenerl Problem Property 1.,..;. °"'· '""'" •'"' On• man's cake is another spac• ltir boAt or trailer. mAn'I poil!On! PerhaPll vce Olfered for .$44.500 h11.ve a buy,r for your in· MORGAN REAL TY come proJ>(lrly ""'ho is an-673-6'42 657-6459 xio\1~ lo tarkte tho~ lrnanr ---------- po»hlem• '"" h.,e ''""'"'" PREVIEW SHOWING as:rrl you. Prrhap1 we coul1l f'Ven arranli;r a trar1e for Shorecliffs you. Call 67S-7225. COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS 245 Evening Canyon Frld•y only 1-5 $99,500 University Realty 3001 E. Csl. H"'Y· 673·6.ilO BEST Buys ol the hoou. l..Arge outdoor GOV'T. OWNED "'""'d pallo with h-J>.qu•. * R.epo&&essed homes. Low 1 llnd an outdoor playrm, for LUSCIOUS down, Government P<IYll the man ol lhe houM'. J:\1~1ACULATE 4 BEDROOM closin lllll. Call 9&1-4441. If you have the urge to f'n~ct TO\li'NllOUSE, thick expen-a JCene from Romeo & JuJ1e1 sive 11hag carpet thruout, Crest Realty there's a large ourdoor ha.I· formal (fining room, 2Yii SOLD cony with a 11ubbalrony just baths anOwrl lnur BIG bed· All my · in . Need homes rtant tor a love scene. room11. nl!r tran~fcrrtd 10 advertise and ~II r All this plus v.•all·le>-v•all car· -y,·e've go! a "Sell it now" · . . ' or peting. draperie!ll It. curt•ins. price of $35,500. Call Jarwln ~::!e!lltonal, eUicient ser· Finil time offered. quick to ~*'nis, Call June Blair f61-Jlll BY APPOINTMENT ONLY BIG FAMILIES ~io C~~r~ Estare ~les $98.000 WANT TO HEAR A Wl!OP· 962.~EALTORS PER? How 'bout a whoppin'[;:;;;-;-;;-;;=7"-;:-,,,-,.-,.- big 3 bedroom lamily room NEAR Bearh • Beautiful Ira "Shov.·case home~" 2400 sq. 2 BR, din Rm., C'rptz, ft! Don't tell the kid11 io "gel drapes, dsh/v.·sh., enc fll!tlio, loat!" in this home. it'll tllke beau I. yrd. 1prinkler. $27.500 . Ne•r New,erl P••I Offlft EASTBLUFF EXECUTIVE ESTATE Unhf'Hevable hall acrt: w 152 trees lliurrounding the pref· tif'st yard you'll ever 1ioe. S BR, 3 BA , 2100 sq ft. What more can wio say! Buy app'I only -Call 979-1050. SACRIFICE ---&DZ FORECLOSURE 40 Acrl!'I in Northl!'m C&Jifor. nla'11 outrloor para<IW, bar· dering n11ional fores!, 2 mile11, lo Pit Rivf'r. Hnrse Cref'k, to"·n. $10.6.19 Ca.ah priet!. Simply pay $239. down & la.kl! over pll.yments of S89 a mo. Triomendowi opportunity lo 11.equltt ti> day what may not be avaJJ. a blf' lomorrow. Ed Echvards, Landw11.y. 714: 83().9840 714: 6Zl.!81S Apartm1nt1 for t•I• 152 e 1'.IOVJNG -Nearly nev.• 20:<57 5'-t up in park near oeflln. You can move 1n tomorrow. I;da~ 11.1 lncl "'·D, $1:\,500. 714/536-7348 F•irvlew VA TERMS Costa M es• you a week lo find thr-m . See Irvine this home today! Covered I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;; I .. ~ '° ""°°~· """' '"" .. -. ~1720. -REALTOR- 987 So. Coast Hiway Laguna Beach 494-RSRS Pl11ygrounrt nelU' the Pacific. 4 BR, 21,1 bathll, p:iol, ten- nil1. Comer lot, room for your boll.I. ,. or 116-38~. $4,000 Do"'n l { ' 1,:.:·:;"'"£uc.--I d .. e ~Sac.:..Charm !'.:"Apple Pie Cond." • : I,..arie landscaped lot - !1 ;ajrtnklered -90 you can , ",.,joy the pool! The hou1e !1 • !.MW" thruoul, just move. into this 3 bdrm, '"harmer. ,1 .~ to IW!JI 11t $44.~. . CORBIN-! ,7 MARTIN 1:. AL TORS 644-76'2 7-HOUSES ! '·., THESE ARE 646--1111 Sparkling 4 bedroom, family Y'OUR CHOICE patio, 3 car garage, 1exy l• Location room, JO' x lll' scrr-rnrd Roman bath in the mastl!r LOCATION aluminum l11.n11.i . flrrplarr , ~ BR 2 BA nr 4 BR 2 BA 1uile •nd more. Priced right LOCATION run bu l!tin~ inc·ludinli: di!!h· Ea.ch qulf't re~. ll.;l!ll. ye; I al $42,500. ,, lal'Vt'in. s t II ho v I•• FEET ON \\'R!lhe.r, ". ew Sto11.r5 vinyl clo!!r to 5chool11, churches & , . * UPf'r am Y me in il.111.ge ev 1 Park, your O"''" recreation I floor 1n kit&. family rm -shoppin,, int·I So. Coast NEED A 2 BEDROOM THE BAY ,.. area & your O\o\'rt recreation ultrrf'd "·1th l-1iA or no Plaza. WITH NO ~~agnilitt~t bayfront homl! down VA term11 nf roursc. NO D\VN VA-MAINTENANCE? room~ A few iteps to wide, in excl u111ve Bay11hore11 \\'llh wide greenhf'lr, Csv.'imming . . ' 'Call 540-1151 (Open J>.;vr.~.1 S~IALL D\1.'N FHA BACHELORS, PUSSY CATS p1f'r It 11hp for larxe yacht. 3 pools &.•tennis ts. 3 Brt . Spacious txtrms, p 1u1 N t OR SMALL FAMILY -l'ii Ba. plus bonus rm. Jo.lust 11ervanlll quartC'rll, formal ewpor come fall in love v.'ilh this see to appreeiale. Offered dining mom &. large Jiving •t 2 hedroom 2 bath townhouR. for $49,500. Jncluding the I It'll ··r-.1ove in" cle'an and land room. LArre 11.wn slope11 to f•lrview · · the bay. Enrlt>M'd pool "''Ith only 5 minufes from the jacu7.1.I. Fineit location! Paint & Save 646-8111 lwach and all actfvilies. $17 7501 SI 000 lell!I than "New" "fln b '1 11'1111. $516,000. I 1 • (•nytime) 1-o~t. $21,95(). at Jarwin. The fixl'r-upr>f'r of '72! See 9&8-44~ Anylime it In IM'J1eve. Grf'lll 1t8~f'r NO DOWN TO VETS cha.let, FHA buyl!'rs -"el· l BR 2 b ~· FOUR BEDROOM comf'. Needs lots of TLC. ' ·• a. "'uirt corner. "SINCE 1946" Ple111e wipe your feel on !hr 1::1 ~ac~;;:.; ~A!way & VA no dov.·n, or Sl.350, down lst Wr-stern Bink Bldg. way out! Call 66-0303, s pping. GE. M. uny! lo Pveryone, Se-Iler pay1 all University Park, Irvine '·1 1 I -- -11•11 lur REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 --· c'{lsr~. $193. per mo. Lrg Days 552-7000 Nights 1610 \V. Coa11\ Hwy., N.R. masler suite w/pvt b11.lh, REALTOR,q 642-1623 lrg closets, ~·1w crpls, drps, JORI. \'I l Ol.SO~ '" 1?£AlTOR.:. ' FJXERUPPERS l~ producl!' xlnt Income & i ·$~!!!!!!~~!""""'!'!'""~ • •• ,... 1he11or. ~2 BR • 2.1 RR 2,500 Gets You In NO FJXING-Top Cond. 4 Br, hig 11epr master sui le, hus:e liv rm, derp shag crpt all kitehllam rm romb, all NEW LISTING blr ins 11ppl's, firrpl. FA hr. 3 BR., 2'.S balhs; family~­ ovcrsizcrl dbl gar, block In !he popular planned de· wall, palio, ldSC'pd, gd nbr· velopmenl of Univer1ity hood. Park. Come & Att this ! . fiomP11 on a douhle IOI. ss1;i. No '-'ualifyinn : monthly Income. SID.000 ,.. "' ;. :....,,. A"''"• 119.500. Ph • Hu9e Pool '• ~·1771 A!lsume a 7~:, VA loan nn ; 0nru· . this aorgeou5 3 bedroom ;: .· ~-ft/ \\·il h a super large f)(Jf)I . . 'Tl21 Low maintenanCf', benntilul • ~ land11Caping, lari::c q11 \ct : .. ·. ~ I I corner Jot and privalC' frn· .. t . i ·:-LOW DOWN :., ,,.J.nd Assume VA Loin Nice 3 bcdrnom Ea.11t~ir!e ,:home with brick firepla('f', .HUGE yard, cul -de-sac lcr ,Cation. Detachf'd cffluhle 1, ,&arllie. with alley enlr11nce. ,li'rl<"ed only $26,000. Call now · for further rlela!Js. •·, ~U. 546-58RO t Opf'n Evios.) ' , .. . . . .. , . ' ... '· HERITAGE REALTORS lulld Your Dream Hom• cing. You'll feel like living in the rountry side. ilurry!? Ctill 842-2535 NO\\·! ,0 THE REAL \.'"' ESTATERS ' '.. ·, '• ' ' ! TRIPLEX Very nice:\ BR, 2 BA owner's unit + 2·2 BR 1 BA. Good location. $51 ,500. I Roy McCerdfe Re1ltor 1810 Newport Blvd., C.l\1. 548-7729 Bayfront + Pier Charming 5 Br bear h home. POOL room11. Nr-w paint, vinyl 4 BEDRM noor11, watf'r softener, new • flxlures. brick p11tio, plant· $23,900-NO DOWN er.i & bbq, S36.500. phone terms! 4 t.if'droon1s, 2 54>-7Rt!5. I' tH-4471 t:::l~IOJ sharp, rlean home tod1y. Offered for $43,500. INCLlJD. ING TIIE LAND. 11nb l \·!Iii. '-"PHrate _hath!!, h ul t 11 n -* EASTS I DE * drean1 ki!cht>n. Lo \I I' l Y i "'"l!'~'!"'~~~~l'l"~I patio. Enjoy playground11, Sharr 3 BR + family rm. COOL OFF NOWI ---'l \.r111!11 r S\iim pool, r~1720. 1:v, Ba: Parquet firs., cover-5 BR + POOL ed patio, $32,!lf>O. $J7 900 GEM •. --l.Jl!'Re home in xlnl uca. TARBELL 161 \V. Coast Jfv.·y., N.R. New "'IW shag carpetlli and "SINCE 1946" 29.'n Harbor. Costa Mesa REALTORS 642·4621 Jots of fresh pAinf, fireplace, 1st Welltt>rn Ba.nk Bldg. LlnLE RANCH 4BR&-POOL-By Owner all buillins, H&F + lo"' University Park, Irvine . Sparkling clean ReRdy to maintenance back yard. D•yt 552·7000 N ights /'!. a.ere. zoned R-2 cute lit· movf' in' $3.l 900 JO"' rln Subm it. Call 847-122'1. l•-::i!::i!:::!::i!::i!:::!::i!::::i! lie house, country 1cttlng, • · ·· · "' · Ii old fas'nionerl fro nt pnrch, 1395 Shannon Ln, lla[('crrJJt. ~ HERE IT ISi I all for f21.9:il. Take a look. ,Oprn l2-S. Info. 54R·2750· [ -That popular MARQUE'ITE RM Carpet Re 11. 11 or•. 3 BR, 1%. ba., nu cpls, drps, MODEL you've been looking Balboa lsl•nd lg cov. patio. ~ood \\'·sir:lr 17141 BeAch Blvd., H.B. for! 3 &Inns .. 2 ha. Excel· ---------·I kx-. Nr. all school~. $26,750. Jent condilion a v:cellenl A RARE BUYI 2207 Raleigh. Owner $26,950 location! ~.650. $65,000 54~9R82. Prine only. Olrler hut lllrurturally .'flund e BY ov•ner in 1'1es11. det l11r11:r family homr. 4 Brlrms, Mar -3 hr, 2 b~. 18.10 sq ft. 2 Ra.o:, pool ta!Jle·sizr fam · Shake roof. Xlnt cond. Ciln lly room, fireplarr. AnolhPr assume GT ln11.n. $34,250. uni! rRn be built on this For appt call 540-7034. R·2 lol . Good flnarn·ing, lnvC'ly J BR, 2 BA. Has xtra lrg kitch &. lam rm. Lots of shag crplg, gd sized bedrms, fncd yard, 2 car gar, Min . $1 ,400. down. Seller will p11.y buyer's Jo11n charges. Month· ly Sl..15. coverd al.I. ired hill REALTY Univ. Park Center, Irvine Ca.II Anytime, 833--08~ Office hours 8 AM to 8 PM NIGUEL CHARM 3 Bdrm .. 2 baths, 2 car g&r· agr. 1vilh ;,~, 70 x 107 if'vel lot. This imm11.culate home is priCed to sell 11.t $35.500. Un iversity Re1lty 3001 I-~. Csl. Jl"'Y. 673-6510 BACK BAY • J BR CONDO. S36,250. D!hwshr., f.rpl., Pvt. patio, 2 car gar., &wim pool, etc. 61"% inl/10'1c • ~,,,..0 J.-,, 1 .,,.."°..,.w~"·-'"'"'~·~540-~'..,."-'·~~ .,,,./T 0 lt.U-i ~ 8'cludtd ·2 br, 2 ha C.Ondo, REAL ESTATE · .. .,." ai pin". '"'· '''" U!IO Glennl!'yre St . 4.94-9473 549-0316 MYSTIC HILLS Ocean view~ 4 Bdnns., 2 ba. Ocean view living &r dining rm11, l..ge. level yard, room for pool. Xlnt neighborhood, close to SC'kooll. $49,SOO. * 499·2800 .. Laguna Niguel * Preslige 4 Bedroom Model *Shag, Drapes, Fireplal'e *Unique Deck &r Patio Area *Cuslom Features; S."\5.001 Owner; 2421l La Hermosa •495-5935 drps, pool, $29,500 oi,irnr 979--1478 l'Jlewport Heights OPEN SAT/SUN . 1-5 411 Fullerton Ave. * NEW l.ISTING * Freshly paintl"d in Ii out: 3 BR. 2 Ba., bltn~. ~w Wiier hrr. Ii dishwasher. Nr, Cliff Dr. Asking S.17,900. Walker RHlly 675-5200 3.\16 Via Lido, N'pl. Be:A.ch BY OWNER 3 BR, Spanish channtr. Re- mo de I e"d, udecor11.1ed. Beaut. lor. $36,000, 645-6193 day$': 673·1658 eves. See any· !inti!', 3 BR. Vacant. R-2 room to build. $29,900. Aaenl. 675--0144 646-7414 BY OWNER - 3 Br 2 Ba, San Clemente view lot, former ' model home, furn Ir a pp I c, WWEST PRICES IN TO\VN 11.vailable. $32,XN>, 49H3J2, 2 BR $25.950. &: 3 BR $27,850. JJ».5976. bo!h w/frplc, patio, tncd Lido lilt yd, xlnl cond. "";;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;; I * * ON % ACRE * * • 4 BR, newer, <>ct.an view, \\ I 1 (, ! ' ' Spacious 3 BR + convertible den, 3 bath home. Larre lot w/baa.t stol'Bce. Read)' for immediate ocl'upancy, 675-6900 pool, 11menitie1, $64,750. ••2 0N1 •• 2 houses on l lot. On ocean bluff. Ocean view. Walk down to beach. Stfi.750. Thomatn Realty 49'l-9550 -·-I~ COMPLETELY remodeled Ii ~~ijjiiji~~-~-.: rederrnr. traditionat'home. 3 ~obh. Homes Bdrm11., din. rm., den For Sale ¥.'/wet bar. l.Arge corner Joi, East end. $99,500. 125 bowORb lowson Jri. •ealco. 3416 Via Lirlo 67~562 CONTEMPO. GREEN RIVER <f._reat Family Park 110N'l1fl.Y SPACE RENTAL FROM $69.50! A gnat family community Cemetery Lof1/C rypt1 156 2 Cemetf'ry IOU, choice Joca. tion, SD'.1 each. Ci o o d Shl"phml Ct!metery, H 8 . 846-f.03.l • Commercl•I Property I~ First Time Olfe...t Coast Hwy, Corona de) Mar 3 Commercial & dupla 19'.ooo owe TD@71!?1 E. 17th St., Cott• MHI Tnp locatinn, low down ll.5% Spendable retum Reak>nomics, BJcr. 615--8700 Condominiums for ••la 160 Cbndo. 3 BR, 2 Ba .. Del Pi1o entry, wf"t bar. Self/clean O\'en. Mirrored wardmbl!' doors. Cenfr11J heat and a.lrlcond. Pool • recreation area. Maintained land9Cap- inr & ovtn;ize double garAge. $29,000, Try $&t'.XX) do\1.·n, $161.20 Pf!"' mo. Call 837-5611 Bkr. DuplexH/Unlte 11le 1'2 •ea•n INCOME HOMES NEW DUPLEXES $48,950 NEW TRIPLEXES S67,950 Now under construction at 151 E. Bay st., Costa Meu. Compll!tio July. 64.2-4905. $61,500 Ei1l1te Sa.le: By Owner. Prine. Only. Newport Duplx ~th St. 3 Br Up A down. Call 642-1331 or 646-0742, CUSTOM built. c r p t I • drape1, bltiru. Located on BluN11, near Dana Polnl Marin11..-S46,500. 642-4474. BY owner-Capistrano Bcb, $50,<m. or tnde for lot. 1 yr old. 536--0346. Income Propertv * 6 UNITS* IN EASTBLUFF 1" HAVE large, lrvcl, view lot , m .ooo. Ne"'JlClrl Bearh • " 'HAVE end of rul·df'·SAC pie ·atiaped lot, NB. SIS,500. \VIII consider exchan11:P: l!AVE 'R-3 country lot, Build home & xtrn unif~. Excitin1t harbor action. 2.101 Bsyaide Dr. $1&1,000. Bayfront Condo OPEN HOUSE SAT. &: SUN. 1·5 204 Coral Ave .. Balboa Ts. ISLAND REAL TY Gr11.ce W('llingham, Rltr. BY Owner • Lovely 3 BR, fp l., ('Or Inf, rm for boat, camper 28l5 Portola Dr. 54&-lOJI. East Bluff r l~L!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 531·5111 I :::.1 • aguna lloach """!'...,.~~53 .. 1 .. 51..,111 WEED IT 3 BR + fam. Ir din rm•. 45' Lot, street to 11rttt $69,500 75 Ft. lot, lge. home. Strttt to llttl!'t ............ $90,000 LIDO REALTY "With com.fort A: lwrury tor 1-....... 0 everyone, l..ocat~ 10 min. a« , .... .. east of Anaheim on new -''$ I .. .. Riverside Fwy. Take Green '!. Br, 2 Ba, pool. pier & !!lin. lkli.lfhlhil S79.~ EMERALD BAY 498 Park Ave., B.J. THE BLUFFS£ 9·~.-y-1~h-o-r-:-:-·t_ioo ____ 4 E~:~ni;. ~~~ir:·;~* ;·re~1_" rmmllCulalt 3 Br + fam rm. Oc Id ' h VI ] BR .. 2 Ba., din rm. cust. f'B n 11 t 0 wy, ew. crpt/1huttcr1 Ir: rlrps. Elec Good rond. Quick Possea- s.iOfl! $48,500. Mu11I 11ee! $149,000 i1. OWNEn muit sell 4 kit Low L.5e. liold. 675--0840. • .• ·1·,,i!<.,. TED llUBERT &. ASSOC. • l!tdroom, 2 hath homf!'. :!4i1 Via Lido 6i!Hl500 C1pl1trano Be•ch 5 • ~~\.~ , · 'lamtly room wilh lil1.'pl1u'f' (f.~f ~J 'j U : ·\-ery convenltnl for l"n· STEPS TO BEACH ~ ACRE, 4 BR, 2 BA, 2al0 ,...., ~- ,. "t 1 I · ti h , I 3 BR. 2·sty, Rccrntly decor, t hi f I l 1 • ~r 11. n111g o 1 e ''" u,-.;C' i;q. t.. cpt11, 1011, rp c, i! '~· rcn y bulllin kilchrn, rH11h"'R~hrr. near nl!w carp. Open beam ~ar. $39.500. 26S12 C111Je ~;: Nio1v plu~h c Arp I" I i n 11:. reil.,: lal'Jle pallo. $.13,900. J\lonlrrey, Owner, 714: 241 4 Visla del Om '• "toml'ltttly plll lnt,d insidf' & CAYWOOD REALTY 5.19-6860. Nl!"'Ptlrt Beien i..' ·;='~lgS~~9~.0-~~~: call day * 541-1290 * Vacancies cost money! Rent 644·113.1 ANYTIMF: Hr.re something you want lo your hou11l'!, apt.. ato~ OPEN SAT. 1-5 : P'or that Item under $SO. sel.11 011.ssitied ids do 11 bldg., etc. thru a DMly Pilot 429 VISTA FLORA :; J;lry;:;:;::""';:;:;:;;p;;,M;:;:;y;;Pl::"':h:er::::::::"":'l:I =-=':al:I :N:O:W:6:4:2-1£7==8.==C:l::":':":'ed=A=d:.:;::;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;; 1 Bt.aut. 3 BR., 3 b11.. rondo: ;1• intmftc. thruoul, All rooms spacious. GIA.l!ll encl. frplc., d. (jq -0 £\ ~ { f) -C ~ Q. 9 wtt bftr; luxurious carp. & \J~ l'"tJ i-v ~ -(.!:! J..I q• ;::I dnJJ's. Tl"1"1 wlodow•. Low, Low Down AND REAP BADLY IN NEED Of Minimum down moves you \VEEDING &: LANDSCAP· into lhis larg~ family rm ING IS THIS MODERN home. l Bdrms, 2 b.8.ths. FuU HOME. DETAILED &. lM· price only $28,500. Call now, POSING ARCHITECTURE, 3377 Vl11. Lido, N.B. 673-7300 BA YFRONT HOME Pier &: SIJp $1~9.500 KEN BRmrNGHAM REALTOR 675.-0123 Rtver off.ramp idjicent to 13 UN ITS. Immaculatt. Green River Goll Course. Eutslde, close in. Sartain. 4901 Green River Dr. Phil Sullivan, Rt a Ito r, Corona • ** 7141737·7374 S4H761. CONTEMPO. 2t Unlt-Nr Shop'9. LAGUNA HILLS 2 Al BR, 2 ~ •. 8111 Ellll it won't lasll or '"''ITE BR 1 C K, REA "0 Mes• Verde L ESTATE FAIR ORNATE IRON GRILLED Prcstijre adult community Ave, HB. $Q) M. 847·3957. adjacent to Leisure World. FOUR-PLEX 11.ll 2 Br, l Ba, (714 ) 536-2551 GATES, 6 ft . high, oom· Do you have $3,500. to put plf'tely enclo11ed front rlown? Can you a.Nord $235. courtyard entryway, per monlh? Move in loday! Spr11wllng 3 BDRM. &. DEN 3 BR, paneled den, family FLOOR PLAN, S~VICED area, 2 Illa:! BA. Owner will BY 2 BATIIROOM:S, with install carpets of your marblf' fype puJ!man. \V '.'W rhoicf'. C A }\ P E TING. extend ing Roberts & Co. 9'2·551 l thru liv, nn., halls A: tll 3 banns. Rear den with parq. hdwrl floors, in tletailed bkx·k desirn. has RomM Brlrk fireplace, opens: to OWNER anxious. Eleganl Spanish design. 4 bellroom11., huge r"mily room, Spanish 11rch"A•11.ys. Elegant entry sheltered patio MESA VERDE VALUE: Beaut surroundings, all lux· inc S.;70/mo, no dn VA. Spacious M\\' 4-btdroom, ). u.t')' appolntml!'nts. Thtra· CRV S32.000. Nr OCC. bath executive 2. s tory peuHc pool, uunu, gym, 4 , ;;;55.,·7,., .. :;;1;;51-:::,,,-=,-....,.,.,-- homl!'. Filltd y,•ith extras. blllivd tables. ~f UC H 1 BRAND new deluxe triplex. Formal living room with .. ~~! · 2293 Fordham Dr.. C.M. fireplace. Fomutl dln!na .x~ lflf' "Award • wiMlns" Bldr/owner. 54J.gJ'8 eVtl. room. Brtalrl11.st n o o k , turnh1hed model homes ON Country kitchen with large SALE nos WEEK. intlustrl•I Property 168 family room. Fourth 8.1().3900 or 8.l).79(1(1 32 N bEdroom A thin! balh CUSTM bum V•t•bond 24x60, U ITS Ideally located for use a1 !!hag cpt., custm df'JUJ, 2 Br., Over 2 acrea ol ,e:uy llvin1. ma.Id's q~~en or. ~11 2 &., den, wet har. ~trig garden aP11.11Tnentl Mar room. Ulihf)' room with A/C, quil!'t Adult prk. Santa Ana Country Club. wa11.h~ I dryer ;, o o k u p , Be11.ul. clbl'tse, htd POOil.. Schedule ahows 15% return Sprinklers. block wall fen-jacuz7.I, sauna, card rms & on 15% down. M19 ex. ;r• :· Th• Pun/• with the Built-In Chuckle Ele<. ••rage do<" 0"'~'· Everything &: n"IOre than you e~·er rireamf"tl abool Jn thi11 be11utilul u.ttlng on the ~nht>I!. h11JJ. Xtra storage 11.reas. Unlqur, modern,type.kitrhrn, Brk, $28,500, 962-1373. WITH BRKFST. BAR. BLT· OWNER lcBvlng. Swim pool JN RANGE A OVEN, wUh LUl-0-Matic po o I DIS 1{ W SH R. , HDWD. co~r. _ deli~hll.!_11 _(l_ll.JiQ__'.!n1 CABINETS, with All the ~ r Bedrooml!, fam ily iait"1t ' litP PVer-Teaturis. cing, luxurious carpeting & pool fbls. &12-4370. change, LJ.1tfd pr I e e : drapts, dishy,·uher. $38,500. $445,000, call our Investment 1971 Kirln\:ood 24xfiO k1w DlvtJ·-~1-' ' ., • . ' . '' • • ,,, • • • ' ' Ir I· "' f r.1 "I · r • I ,.\t.js;J!~is•mus '11 r I' I' I' I' r I I ~~'#l~~f lfnus I I ·1 I I I -1 SCUM-LITS SWIRS IN CWSIFIC noN 700 Call 54~3335. ·~. --· Own. lake o'paym4!nts, cor- MORGAN REALTY M.iulttLYfii.__.::_ ___ ~ '"~89l-IS93. ___ ·- '73-6642 675-6459 room. d~n. l&rge rooms Thi~ untque home even h•• ELOORA.00 2 qR, l!Ai 'BA. 'ountafn V•llev lhruoul. Brk, i 3 1, 0 0 0 , 11. bit or oct'M view. 'nie en· Jux-. cpts, cu1t.1 drps. Pvt, 842-1i61 . tire arounds are badly In "·eU-lndscpd, lo"' mntnce, 1970 l.Ancer r>xeo, low dwn., take n'p11.ymentl!, choice tot. 1193-1593. Tl n: rn:.\J. " I C'j'l\'l'J.' 'S WATERFRONT OWNER mus1 M'll . Auumt OWNER trans. 3 bedrooms, nHd of wt'ed!J\I and covrd patio It. gardtn wlllk, Dbl wide mobilt! ho,,,., adult 5""" apr lm1n, low den, dining room, r'lllluNll landacaplna A: eome or the _paved 1!deyard for boat or crt., alr cond Hunt. B. R-l Fee Jot In Newport monlhly l)Aymen!s, Jarse WOOtt i:ablnet1, picture win-mending walls nffd re_pa.lr. CAmper. $29,500. Auumabte $10.500. 847-B!JT: Short Onl S2) family room. oozy den. 4 clows, popular eoe:ntral floor For aomeone w/a Green 6%~ lol.n. Owner ... 837·U85.I ~~~~~~~~~ aii.L &rtU:'Dv bl!drooms. ~ b r I ck plan. Builtln range Ii oven. Thumb fl't an v:ctllent bu;y 4 BR, 2 BA, l•m nn. lndry / 11 Realtor •7Ml•1 trrk, $31.500, 84~1 . -Swlm PoOI . Parle like yard. at · nn., view, Sha.a cpl, $31,900. ~~tt. j rAJ 3'1 aa,aldt, Np!. &11th OWNER traos. 3 b..i.ooms A Bier, 121.900, 962-386S. ~,'50 Full Price Prto. oll\Y. &17-!&16. ;;;;;miiiiiiiiii.:.:~iiii; den. dining room, family OWNER de•Jll!'r&fe. -Sp&nillh CALL NOW TO SEE Newport S..ch With* !i:rCO=~ ~ room with hand1omie Arches, beaulifull,ydtsi«ned MISSION REALTY , location. Costa Mtta natural b r Ii: k llNlpl11ee, home, 11trp (town IJv•nr ~ So. Co.ut H...,. .. l..quna PANORAMIC VllW Ac,..... fw NM ISi C.0..bln-llardn IWtlMn Mtun.I. wood Pane 11 "n fl, room. 4 bedrooms, dr:n, Phone (714) 4f4..07ll Btaut. mtintttn~ home «> ACRES. New Mitxlco, nr. 6"-16&l or 6fH9S9 de('(lf'llll,.r walln11pt"r, PAtio, f.1mlty room. r~s prdtn BY OWNER _ 3 Br. 2 Ba, 2 Bedmonu; A 11.rae wnllY .naUon&J fomt. S&t.25 PER Brk, IZ!.900. 96:J..6566. kltd1tn. Btt<. $! 3, 7 50, •iew Joi, fotrntt model nn. Pool. IM.500. ,;.A:=ClU:::;:·,;~"'"'Mo;;,;:. . .;:•:.c:OOl;;T;,;·,_...J ~lett~':"ler.,,...-s.J.,,.le,,_ ___ .71..; DECORATOR'S 3 Br. 2 e., -· """"'· furn & •• p I c . G.o,.,e Wllll•mson 1\i ACRES AJitelope VtOey, Liquldatlrc• II R-2/R.,) 1ot1: eictru, upJradeJ, KM.a crpt, BY Owner, as1um" )o FHA. available. $32,500. 495--UU. Rttftw only '250· down. Owner Near ocean, tleu 1; l'IMlY d.,... frplc.-Pillo. By 3BR,2\!BA,l•mnn .. eloc &ltl-197! 54US7t MS-15'4 muttoeU.-. •te0 ... -1..,,,1m.i134 O•,,.r. W.000 ( 711 l bl!&, ""'" ~·· Im It's alwt.)'I !lie rtgbl t1m< ·• BY OWNER. J Br. Homt. ,_ "Cu'iltmu N-" "Malle -For l)o6. ~l. for bollltrlr. ew• alway1 the Jilhl plaee. U POOL. W&STCJ.JlT ARE.A. to outlftl'wn Ltvll ·)'OU ca.n d )'' ' •• e I• an out tM WANT A PCX>L HOMEt * 4 BR. 3 8&, 2 1tory, llbq >'OU want JtESUli111 Call M541CI ~ M ,fJO. tvn 'jtruh to c1ah" lll ' p.rqt • .J10V trull 1' CASI I Br. J St. "1>tJ. itrw-COY <rptJ, bltns, nr ochoolo 6 !G.5!11 • pj..,. Illa! od 11111 Idle --I Call DAILY l!ILOT daMl""t ad wttl a IWLr ,!!Pl-~tlo,~Qwnor~!:.:llli~l~lf!219!:,· __ !_!l>tt~!!!cb!;.· !!-!:!1151~!!;·__ l!>dafJ , MUm fNoW1 _-_..n _____ _.i __ ._a_,_u11;..ltd...;;..ld;... ---(~ • . , ' ' JI PILOT-AOVERTISER WtdntSdof. ll>J ll, 197Z OAILV PILOT [ -.:..."!:" I~ I ·-·-1~1 -.. -·1~ I I iimiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiii= 1~ I ~·-... -][ti [ ---lftl 1-... -llt] [ ;...._,~ lf•l L-··-~) Moltll• Honw/ Troller Porb 172 ~IOBILE hOnle park 1n Joshua Ttft, Calif. for sale by owntr. Under con- stn:actioo. SO unitJ. 494-2037 all •• Mountain, Oetert, Rtaort 174 2 lDts, secluded $2,450 Moonrldge cabin $15, ~ Lakeakle cabln $35,000 CalJ 866-464.1 or write; Spencer ~aJ Estate, P . O. Box 2828.. BJg Bear Lake, Calif. -F......w.o.1 Laguna~ -Ullfllm. 300 1110 -Util pd. 1 B< apt. luU)' F REE JI furn, Ntw c AD, xlnt toe •M Lendlorcfs..Owner1 $180 -l Br upper Dplx, ftp!c, \\'e will ttfer tenant. to yoo Nice Va, v::ceptionalt,y ~"t:U FREE of charge , , • Many turn, walk to heh & 'I'wn •• desirable 1Hiants on our $185 -utiJ pd, Li's Bach, walllna lilt. gorgeoas vu, full kit ·· • ••• · • ALA Rent1l1 e '4.S..3900 NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4000 ()J' '494-3248 Out on your ear! ~c. furn, Walk I n-. bach., util inc $911, to ~ Pl. private ALA R t I e ~• _ home, singles Qk. en • • _,,"""' Rent.A-House 97f..8340 1 ~ This! 1 Br. nr every- 1 Bd, OCf'M view, I blk Vic· thing, utU incl Sl.25. - toria Bch~ nicely Jurn. Le ALA Rentals e 64$.3900 361 Apt. Uftlum. Irvine NEW 3 Br. 1 Ba. patio, •nd Colla Mou bck yrd, Ooow ,swim pool. I---------.,- dbhle $310'1K. -1456. * Pt WEEK a UP * ' e Studio I: 1 BR Apes l•gune 8Nch • TV • Maki Strvke A\'lll $l10 -s Br, 2 Ba, hltns. • Pbone Se:rv~l-ltd Pool frplc, a:ar, tncd yrd. patW>, • Otlldren I: P't't 8P1Ctlon pool, chlldren I: pets Wf_l• Low A1onthly Rates oome • , , • , •• , , •••• , • , , •••• , 2376 Newport Blvd, CM $335-Lra 3 Br, 2 Ba <.'Ondo, 548-915.S or ~ f'rplc, pool iar, patio, Nice. 1bls Ad Worth ~Ob Rent NU-VIEW RENl'ALS HOLIDAY PLAZA General HIDOEN VILLAGE APTS. Hoin.-llko living Fomlllo1 Wol-1 2 BEDROOM-2 Lt.TH From $159 Carpets • Dra°""' • Air Conditioned • End..- ed patios • Heated Pool • Forced Air Heat • Carport & Storage. 2500 South S.111, Sanft Ano 546-1525 (enter 2 blks IV. of Bristol, off Warner on Linda Way, south lo IV. Central) VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. Real E1tete Wanted 114 _,,._1._i_235_._642~·-=-·---1Needs Family! 2 Br, fncd Newport Beach )'I'd, encl 1ar, kldll/pets. 613-4030 or 494-3%48 DELUXE spacious 1 BR. ONE Year Leue only. 3 BR. furn apt. 1135. 1-reatPd pool. 2 BA house, tireplace. Ampla parklne. AdUlts Ocean view. No p e t s • m pets. 1965 Pomona Aw., .tM-59n, ~C-.M~·===~==~ Fuml1hed & Unfurnished Adult living QUAUnED buyer desire& Canyon Vil hm, CdM, Shore Ollfs or Cameo Shores. Prine Only. Write Classified Ad No. 387, Daily Pllol. P.O. Box 1560, Co.sta .Mesa, Ca. 92626. WANTED apartment houses, Ora.rl:ti Co. 10 to 50 units, not more than 11 yrs. old. Quick action! Hardy 213: 378-8511 ext. 336, day or nite. * M-1 CORNER * With older house. Prime location, Costa 1\tesa Co1i>in-Martin Realtors 644-7fi62 or 642-8989 NEWPORT Bch area 3 or .t br home or townhouse In ex· change for OTC stock clear or low loan prop. pre1'd . 644-<m URGEJ\'T! Hse or duplex by ov.iiet' or priced right. Cd~t Hi district. 213/457-2614 --------·I 1140. ALA Rentals e 64$.3900 NEED THE BLUFFS E·Z °"'' 1t! 2 Br. "" cpl/ JUNE THRU SEPT. A~1:::i.l~"'e MS-3900 Clean living golf couple, no pets, no smoke. 2 or 3 BR., Singles! 3 Br, 2 Ba ,encl rar, furn., tc> $500 mo. k1ds/pets ok. NICE $170. Call: Mr. Jones ALA Rentals e 645-3900 Mos• Vento * $25 PER WEEK * A Up -Pool I: maid se:rv -* I M lot: AC U L ATE . 4 kitchens available. BEDROOM home. J..eue, MOTEL TAHm Avail. mid. June. $285 per (Cornu Harbor/Viclorial mo. Agent: ~7l27. $US/MO. Dix nlOb hm * 3 br, 2 ba, pme rm. w/ICI'ffn porch, comp! Lease UlO m<J or sell furn, htd pool. Adlts, no $34,950. Owner, 56-3182. pets. 4 Sea8011's, 2lS9 Npt Mi11ion Viejo Blvd 548-6.132 Dishwasher color coordinated applia nces Plush shag carpet· mirrored wardrobe doors- indirect lighting in kitchen · breakfast bar • huge nrivate fenced patio • plush lands('ap. ing • l..rick Bar·be-Ques • large heated pools & lanai. Air conditioninJ!. 3101 So. Brlstol St., Soni• Ano 557·1200 COLDWELL. BANKER & CO. MANAGING AGENT 644-UJJ.-Broker $1.:&U Util Pd, 1..rg Bach, full LIDO IslM BR, 2 BA, ;~ bllc kit, E-sicfe, child/pet OK. •• FOR Lease, 3 Br., 2 Ba., Apt. Unfvm. from priv beac.h/club. An-$160 _ 3 mos only Mesa crpts, drapes, patK>, fe~ • $115 * Studio Apts., l Br. $125. Older adul~. No pets 2135 Elden, ~lgr. Apt. 6. J6S · Apt. Unlurn. 365 nun! or by mo. 673-9159. Verde, Nice 2 Br, itv. retrig, yrd -walk to sch~ -No pets. Coron• del Mer t ..i~ $260 mo. 837-9174. Singles -l Bl' unit $115. + cp s, ...... ., .. , gar • ·· ·• •••··•• B ONE Bdrm. Adults, no pets. * GREAT VIEW -2 BR. * Ocean View Sl.25 ulil pd $185 -2 Br, frplc, beams, Newport ••ch Pool & utUitlE'!I included. 1'1-plc, bltns, !Undecks, pool Rent-A-House 9~30 bltns, yrd, E-slde • ........ • RIDICULOUS! -Spac Bach. $145-$1~. 645-6424. Garage $210 up. 6#-6344, 675-!535. DELUXE CMt1 Mesa Housei Unfum. 305 $245 Mesa Verde 3 Br, 1* Fum All util pd. S115. + parking & storage Costa Mesa APARTMENTS Ba, bltns, Nu cpts, Ill.rps, e 641: --. DLX 2 Br tu 1 iiiiiiiii I Air Cond • }'rplc's · 3 Swim----------· I gar, yrd, patio, Xlnt thru· ALA Rentals ~nN rn apt, poo • ming Pools • Jlealth Spa - G I _ w close to shops. Adults. no · enera out •....... , .• . . . . .. ••••..• SUBUME! '3 Br, 2 Ba, frpl, pets. From SlSO. 19 C1 Tennis Cris • Game A NU-VIEW RENTALS •le"' to beach! 1250. Yr\y. Pomona. CJ\!. HARBOR GREENS Billiard Room. 673-4030 or 494·3248 ALA Rentals e 645-3900 Furn. Bochtlor & 1 Br's 1 DEDROO!o.t ~1ESA DEL MAR 3 bedroom Furni1hed & FROJ\I $lKJ RENTAL FINDERS """•'with carpets. drape• 1400 -Back Bay, Spa< + Hpociolly nice. 2110 Unfurnl1htd MEDITERRANEAN 411W.1fllr.COSTAMIM and big covered patio. := ~;.~:~.~.~-~' .. ~.1~:1~N~•~w,.,po=rt_B~lv_d~·'-•-C_M_.~ VILLAGE Houses * Aptl. Families only. Gardener in-$42S _Harbor View 4 + tam 2 & 1 .BR apt~. Close to all From $120 to $215 mo * 645-0lll * eluded at SZ15. per month. rm, frplc, gar, yrd, pe.tic>, i;hoppmr. Adult.s. No pets. 2400 Ilf\tbor Bh•d., C.l\l. I[ •J;"_,.lfM.,F,..j.t.o JAMlori• l-=cau=o-A-C""~"'-·-.,....,...,,."-'"'·..,..~ pool privl. kid.~/pets ...... Jnq: 1'19~• Rochester, CM. Bachelors• 1 Bdrm• R~~~L556i.~~CE · EXTRA niee 3 Br., 2 baths. NU4VIEW RENTALS NICE l & 2 BR Trailers, $80 2 Bdrms e 3 Bdrms OPEN lO Al\I TO 6 PM l'l:iiiiiiiiiiiij;j;;;~;;;; Lovely patio. Bllns1 °""'&hr., 671-4030 or 494--3248 k up. Mature adults, child 1 y1 or .2 Full Baths JI $140 -2 BR, l i,t-BA, bltns, dryer. Avail. June 6th. $350 IRVINE Te!T8.""-'"""-ciously ok. No pets. ~1265. * LARGE * crpts/drps, priv patio, mil mo incl. gardener. --0 ·-?vlaster size bedrooms w / NEWLY DECORATED ..: ·o;ines1 t ok n Whit IU'-LO-..: A"-·.,,. deeorated' family home. 4 LRG nicely f~. 1 Br. Encl high beam ceilin"s. large B II I G d Opportunity 100 pe • ..,urr e " "'~ "'-. 2•,,' Ba.·. -1c, pa"-,_ gar. Quiet. Adults. No pets, b eaut u roun I _ oi-,...., uu-... living room \\'/gas or 10 Ml t n. --'""---'----$140 _ UTIL PD. F\U'TI l BR LARGE 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts, yard $550/mo. owner 2452 Elden Ave. 64&-2768. wood burning fireplacl'. nute11 o vt'l'Rll AVAILABLE some drapes, prlv yard, 675--039() Conve-nlent laundry arH C!me to bus line.\ storc•s NOW duplex, ~ncl gar,• hug~··fncd gar. All util pd $250. Orange . l BEDR.M. tum. Utilities pd. off kltch~n. Enclosed pa-Gas Heat & Stove. '\'n!~r. yrd. E/side C.M. Ave. & 16th 642--0538. 1.SE or Opt. Spac 2400 sq. ft. $12.S/mo. Adults a:nly 532 tios. 2 S\\'immlng pools, Garagl', Rec. Rm. Lllundry Large Corporation desires responsible person to dis- tribute TENCO (a Division of Coca-Cola) COFFEE PRODUCTS. Can start full or part time (S-10 hrs. per wk.) Company establishes business tor cm. tributon:. 4 BR. $425. 27.04 Donnie Rd, ''E" Center. St. MS-3076. sauna. recreation faclll-Room Inclu ded. $169 -SPACIOUS 3 Br, 2 Ba, 2 BR w/gar. $140, fncd yrd N.B. Av! 6/26. ~2681. FURN. bachE'lor 11.pt., ulil's ties. Security guard. 1 BR. $140 nr OCC. bltns, cpt/drps, w/patio. Wtr pd. 2228 3 BR Condo. $285 incl's swim pd. $95/mo. 532 "E" CentE'r 2 BR. $160, Stfi.5, $175 family/singles/pets. Placentia Ave (B). Call btwn pool, firepl., dml"'lhr., pvt. Street 54S-3076 Models Open 'til 9 pm. Hacienda de Mei• 1 & 5• 63G-4120. ti •~ ·~ ~~ 2700 P I W CM pa o. n.g•· ~· 2 BR. Util. paid. e er1on ay, 160 ,v. 'Vllson, Apt. 1, cr-.r $185 -PRIV. 2 Br Home, AVAILABLE June 15. 3 BR, ........, M I St nr Harbor Blvd & frp l, gar, fncd yrd for kids/ J\1esa Verde $215. Sharp! 5 3 BR., 1% Ba. Slepg to '"'11 epe ' New VIII• Pedro pet. BR. Bar Harbor, $325. ~ beach. $3tX> mo yearly. ' 548-5913 . Adams Families Welt'Ome Doyle Co. Eves~ 838-6341. ~~-*~6~~--·1_7_* ___ 1NEWLY remodeled Bachelor, 2 Br., 2 full Ba, shag crpt/ NE'VPORT Hgts -2 + Bar 2 BR. nu ct-pt., drps, children Condominiums utl! pd. Quiet. Gar. $135. Nu 546-5025 drps, patio, beam cell, gar. NO SEU.ING! com pl: !urn. Great for O. K. SlliO + $60 clng. Unfurn. 320 _:ciipls~.ii548=-i.825i=il;;o::r,;;;54;S.~1C.:405~. : I '!!!!!!!!!![!!!!![!!!!!!!!!!!!!!![!!!!!I!!!!!!!~ ages. Go f.ishing or spend more swinging bachelor. $275. 644-2501 dy, ~9-4225 eves. .,....--------ROOit.1Y 2 br turn. apt., A PRECIOUS FEW From $185. . 'th f ., -General ,....., ........ 1175• nlil pd. Baby 2332 Elden Ave C ~f time w1 your avon e ALSO WE J-lAYE ..... -~ NICE 2 BR, fenced yard. ---------·I ~r~uu•a 5CS-8224., , , hobby and let the machine vi~: 2BR. 2BA. 2 story, carpets, OK, no pets. 64Z...~. can enj<>y Failway Vllla adult age <am _" mo••y. CASH LANDLORDS! Do you have Prefer young couple, $95 1 livo'ng _one •I those Arnall Move In allo\vance, this nd. J~ '"" mo &JS-'""'" drapes, garage, poo . l\'lesa l BR Trailer. Adults only. ,.. REQUIRED $2498. Secured. a vacancy? 'Ve can fill it. · ...,.,,,, eves. Verde villas $200 mo. ;sa + util. elegant comJi!exes, known ** BEAUTIFUL 1 ilt 2 BR. Many desirable tenants on $275. 2 plus den-Sharp I: S45--0906. · &i&-l.BO!t 1or unmatched management Con temporary Garden Apts. LIMITED OPPORTUNITY our waiting list. Absolutely clean. Frpl, air. gardener and impeccable detail. Just PaUos, frplc., .J>OOL $155- Write now for information, NO CHARGE. ~I. Agent 956-2500. Townhou1e Unfum 3" $1£6...& Up. Nicely furn l&: 2 now there are tv.1> 3 bedroom $170. Call 546-5l6J. include phone number. BEACON RENTALS 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, new 'H'°u_n_t,.lngt--on-,Bu,.....-c"'h---1 BRTrallen, Adlt.,·no pet~. apartments available-with DELUXE 2 Bedroom apt. REDJ.BRE\V * 645-0111 * carpf!ts &: dr a pes . __________ , 132w.Ml.on,CM.&t5-45.10. all those desirable extras Also 1 Bedroom. CORPORATION FREE RENTAL BOOK $axl/month. Call: 546-5580. 3 BR. 2~ BA, 2 car gar.. HuntlftftOn Beach -pool, patio, tireplace, Mgment Opportunity 1001 Howard Avenue There are several good 2 BR._ 2295 Orange Ave. patio, 2 pools, clole. to laundry, walk-in closets, 1% 2280 Miflf'r, 642-0059 San Mateo, Ca. 94401 homes · fOl' rent for $185. mo. Avail 6/5 beach, $250 me>. 5.1&-'1382 LaQUINTA HERMOSA baths -we could go on, but SPAC. 2 & 3 Br. apt $140 up. * BARBER SHOP * approximately $200 per 64~-6643 or 678-3261. Duplexes ·unl'urft. 350 Spanish Country Estate Liv· come and see, Pool, cyt/drps, bltns, kids · bl ls fix month. St o p by a n d lng & SpaclouA Apl s, Ter-ok. \Vith 4 chairs, ca ne ' · · brow~• thru it. You might Dan• Point Corona del M9r raced pool·. sunken 1aa FAIRWAY VILLA tures & equipment. Good = 1996 Mnple' No. 1. 642-3813 lease vdth 5 year option. find what you're looking for.1"''°"'°""='°"'"°""____ 'iiR:ANo NEW-Avail. in BBQ. Unbelievable Livini: -APA'RTMENTS SML. l BR apt w/crpt• YACHTSlwtAN'S Paradise, Only .... ~ location, nr. Sr. se<:luded Spanish. Vi 11 a J une. Huge dlx <l'l\'Tll'T's 1 BR FURN $175 20122 Santa Ana Ave. 546-6215 drpA", al<lve, refrlg., gar. citizens home. Owner leav-overlooking Dana . p 0 i n t unit. 3 BR, 3 BA. Fireplact!, ALL • .:...., _!ES. PAID $140. .~dulls, no p e t s , ing area. Will sell for $4.COO. Realtors marina. New'iy dee. 3 BR. 2 bit-Ins, 1800 sq ft. + 3 "' .1.1,J.' Ule81iB.AU 20 64Z-.5583. Call : fi'lJ.-3663 91i8-2505 Eves 1 2'7ro Harbor Blvd; ~dams BA. Reb. $600 mo. 499-~ =~. &: w~=~ waf~ to ':°h (4, blks S. ot San Diego Frwy Sparkling new adult apts. * LRG Deluxe 2 BR., 2 BA. associated BROKERS-REAL TORS 2025 W Balboa 673·3663 SHOPPING CENTER FOR LEASE. Costa Mesa, . · ~untlnaton ileach & shopping. 1 yr lse. $425. on Beach, l blk W. on Holt 1 BR ................... $160. gar. aml pet ok. Nr. So. LANDLORDS! Ref• t<qUired 673-0060 to 16211 Parksld• Lane.) 2 BR, t both .••••••••••. 1185. Coast Plaza. 54>-2321. •WE htive a large selection . . . cn4) 847-5441 Also avail !Urnished * FREE Mo's Rent on yr'i We Specl~e in Newport of 3 and f bedl'Oom homes 2 BR, 2 BA, drps, w/w,1 "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Pvt 1· I h f -t I I 2 B d lrpl I Beach e Corona del Mar e that can be mo\~ into frpl ml tio Walk fo 1= • pa 10s, us o.= ae -se. r, en, -, pr , , "-·na 0 ••• Rental .. _ be ch. ' Adupalts · ._0 $145 -$165 Ung, carports, gas pd. pa.tic>, cpt/drp, redec. Aft. • M<lf'oU • .... .,.,,~ almost immediately on our ac • · no pe ...... Bachelor & 1 BR, pat\~. ll4 E ~th St CM 54° "137 5, 54• ~1 or~··. 59•5227 vice ls FREE to You! Try Ref! t. opt 10 n p 1 a n , $225/mo. Yearly. 642-8520. frplc's, prlv. &'a ra g es. ' ~ ' '• · ' c-J O-<>.JU ..,,..., ""' Nu-View! SHERWOOD REALTY Costa MeN Divided bath &. lots of Park-Like Surrounding l BR w/Derr2 Ba. NU-VIEW RENTALS S41).1555 ' --------I clo""· Rec hall. pool & QUIET· DELUXE 2 BR. Adw,,, no pot. ~ '"'" or '"'3248 LARGE 2 BR 1 1 2 & 3 BR APl'S BAY MEADOWS APl'S u,,,.....,,,... 'l'1"J-, new Y pool tables, sauna bathf.:. ..., EASTSIDE 3 Br 1~ Ba NEW Huntington Be a c h, painte:I, garb d ls p ., See for yaurse1.f! 17301 Prv. patios * Hid Pool1 387 W, Bay St., CM 646.()()73 · ' ' ' 3,00:> sq. ft. 4 Br., 3 ba., -'" /dry hoo'-· Nr sho"''g * Adult~ Only 2 BR bltns, washer & dryer. large bonus rm.. Olympic sz. wa:.uer er 11.up, gar. Keelson Ln. (1 blk \V. of . upper, dt'J)!, crpt'd 24 storet in Newport Beach. Call Division of Hig:hways, Mr. Hancock, 213:620-3514 JU.ne l sl, 2nd &: Slh. from 8 to 11 AM only. yard. 1s x 26 Tree "'"d"' pool. 1 42 5 • 21314~ il~l.35~'·~54~s.oosi·~1~. ~~~~I Beach, 1 blk N. of Slaterl. Martinique Apts. dshwhr, 1155/mo. 2 2 56 SM Sptswr His-He r s. deck w/BBQ. Fish pond, 2 eves. 842-7848 1777 Santa Ana Ave .. C.M. Miner, CM 557-1928 Present Costa Mesa Joe 1 car detaehe:I gar .. alley ac-.1----------~r -. HUNTINGTON Go.r d ens 1 Mgr. Apt. JIJ 6'16-5542 $170 • 2 ehlldrn ok. 3 BR, J% yr. Rf!u. rent., 548-4775; cess. $225 Mo. Lease. Water NOW! J Br, at Pac Sands. 1 Apartments for Rent i=;:a Apts. Hell at Bolslt Chk:a. * * $l70 * *' BA, lndry, c r pt/ d r p 11 1 ~· '770. paid. Avail &-1. 557-7768. Frplc, patio, bltns, w/w 'Y o..,,. • ...,., Co ~ dshwshr, no pets. 545-3ZL5. ....,.,....,. shag, cabana clb, Walk tc> - -'--.,...,.....,,Ml. , mpe.re -•, ~ 3 Br, 1% Ba. newly painted lcM~on-o_y_t_o_L'"oa-n---:~:-:4:-:0 $190 Month, 2 Bedroom. Ocean. Rent or Option, $199. what you re missing. Fr. Bltlns, crpt/drps, encl patio. 2 BR apt unfurn-children ok 1---"--------Newly decorated inside and 536-7511, 8341 Munster. H.B. Apt1. Fum. 360 $1»-$240. Nr schls & shop'g, Chlldren • no peta. 126 Monte Vis!& 1 t TD L out. No Fee. MZ--6691 or e LRG. 2 BR. Bungalow ok, no pets. 880 Center St., Ave. S oa ns !162"5.16G. 3 Br. 2 b.I. bltn•. d>'ps. w/w uonorol crpt, fncd, dbl garage. Nr -"iiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiil Apt. Gardens, 6 pool~. CM,'642·~0 <lr 548-2682, SPACIOUS 2 Br, nr ihops, 6%% INTEREST 2nd TD Loans Lowest rates Orange Co, "WE BUY TD'S" Sattler Mtg. Co. 642-2171 ~11 Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. 90-95°/. Conventional real estate loans. Mr. Adams, bkr. 644-7477 or 833-9303, $15,000 Private money for real estate loan. Mr. Ad11.ms, Bkr. 499-7130. or 644-7477, HolMI tor Rent I~ Corona del Mar sch! & ghop'g c e n 1 er. I Saunas. Hot Jacuzzis. Ten-"THE VICTORIAN" fwys, o.c.c .. le U.C.J. $165. $275 _ 2 Br, frplc, b~ns, nu Repaint'11. S?"IO. 962-4391, A ' $l90. 846--0259. 2 Br w/ gar-ad l l 1 , Call 979--0134. cpt,, drps, gar, yrd, patK>, 3 BR CONDO, 1% BA. pools. Bold New Concept API'. Poobide -Sp&clous cpt/drps/bltns, fncd yrd Huntington &each 2% bllcs to bch •.•....••••• patio, dbl gar, trpl, . nr Bungalow. Bvt. pafll> $150. w/patio. Wlr pd. Call btwn 1 ;:;;:;;;;:;;;:;;;;:;;:;;;;:;;,;;;;:;;::; $300 -Lrg 3 Br upper, nu ocean. 962--0986 a ft 5 pm. FURNITURE nnlTAl mo. to right adults 846--1323. 1 &. 5, 636-4120. I' shag cpl, bltns, 1 blk to 3 Br, crpts, drps,,bltns, fncd, l\Utl Newport Be•ch 667 No. I Victoria ....... n.;s ON BEACH! bch • .. ··• · •· •••·• · •••• • ••· • Jmmac. $260 Ls e f o p t. u rn.-~~ · 2 BR, 1 BA unfurn. blln $365 -2 Br, 2 Ba, 2 frplc, 993-2392 or aft 2 846-QXIL *Month to Month • wu,,i.c.R RENTAL.S • stove. SUiO + deposil, 2 huge llv rm, brick, copper * 100% Purchase Option Wett Newport Reserve now! Children OK. No peU. &: beams boat space l blk 2 BR. 1 Ba. house. Yard. Nr. * Wld~ Sele~ ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 ~S2.88. lo heh-' ' Beach & Warner, H.B. $135. Style-C.olor. 2 Br nr ocoan. f"rn, •hag ===-~---,.,=- NU·V"l'EW' RENTALS"" 645--lfli6 Aft. 6 PM. * 2t Hour Dellvl'ry s:m yrly, adults, 11() pets DELUXE townJmige. 2 BR., 1130 s · 1 1 2 • . 1~ ba .. carp, drapes. Prlv. 673·4030 or 494.3248 -1ng es or coup es 128% 46th St. 644-4340; av·now patio. Encl. gar. AdultA. HOME 2 blks heh. Adult BR home. Fenced, H.B. ~ ~ CHARMING ttn alk to S pet OK $165 5-10-7247 family. 2 BR + Den. Lots Rent·A·House 979-1340£ beach. $1 40 coMo.ge~ utll. u;~AIRS, 2 ~r, unturn, closets. L. Patio. 1.e'iae. Irvine 1244 W. Balboa Blvd. adullw only, 00 p e t 1 • Best crpts. Ne> pell. $200. 517 W. 19th, CM 541-3-W S.nt11 An• SUndl'ck, private garage. 673-1304. 3 BR., 2 ha., atrlum $325/335 2756 N. Matn SA 547..()314 De ANIA. PLAZA $1'15 mo. 545--4391. IRVINE Terrace--track>Usly 3 BR., 2ba., tam. fm. ·• $335 SPAC. 2 &: 3 Br apt $140 up. d<e0rattd family "°""'· 4 WE HAVE OTHERS 'ON THE BEACH I lPooA.21 BR F"'"-. & ,uhnf""" Pool. cpt/d>'p. bl..,, kids Br, 2~ Ba. 2 trplc, paUo-lrg • A, carport1 • o t"r ex· yard. $560/mo. Q w n er tras. Nr. S.A. le Np! F'rwy11. ~ eou-. No. 5 642-7035 FURN. A UNFURN. 2 BR. From S2i5 ADULTS ONLY Furniture Available C a r p ets-drapeMl1hwa1her heated pool-u.unu.tennls rec room«ean vlew1 patlol-ampl• parktna Secw1ty Guard1. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 7ll OCEAN AVE .. 11.B. !n<I 536-1487 32 l BR. Fun'I. &: Un!urn. From $115 up. Adults only, -I!>~ D-··,.1il'ufmliliiif~OO· 675-30 . ·~·-bo FROM ONb-Y $175 m ·pets. 1402 f"'nllt St., S.A. 1996 MllJlle No. 1 642-3813 ""'°" 3 BR, 2 BA, fam rm . .n.a1· r OCEA.i'l QUf.'EN * S4Hi61t> * SPACIOUS 2 BR, cri>t1, Ofc open 10 am~ pm Dally WILLIAM WALTERS CO. BE ONE Ot" 111E rmsr Costa Me•• $130 -Utll Pd, Bach, E-atde, lull kit, conskl mtl pet •••• $130 -l Br over carport, pvt, child/pet OJ< ••.•••••• $175 -l + f11.m rm, E-slde, lmmM: condi Yrd, patio •• NU-VIEW RENTALS 613"'30 or 494-32M! AJOne on Jot. Singles or fam· tlltt, 2 Br & Den. Ront-A-Hou10 979-MJO Founlaln Volloy -AV AIL June 15th, 4 BR. 2 BA, nice yard, lO min to be'lch. Children/pet o. 11,dtrtd l300/mo. ~. 11ie "Y tllM' Pl.pt" of clAlll!ltd ... MUm View. Extra aharp. 1% yr 1830 E. 0ce{ln Blvd. A U fu W drpl!I, retrlg. & 11tove, pntW>. old. $425/mo. Pool facil "SINCE 1946'' Long Beach !Zl3) 43a-SSCS pt. n m. Adults, no pet#. A a: t : lncl. &H-lTS9 .ves &: wknds. lit Western Bank Bldg. Mng'd by wtlllam Waltcn Co. Carone d•I Mar !J.1G.-ll5l 2 BR + Den. Has every· Unlve:nilty Park, Irvine Balboa Pentnsula L-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 2 BR. 1% BA. frplc. blt.\f'lll. thing. Bring tht! l0d1. Days 552-7000 Nlghh I• heated pool. dbl carport. Rtnl·A·HOUM 979-l4301'i=:====== e 125 WK A UP-Oo Ocean e ., -ml/mo. ~78. 4 BR, fam rm, dln nn, 2 ba.1•2 BR. 2 ...... _ nm Lovtly Bach 4 1 Br. • Rooma: ... ~ $1S.S..2 BR. util included. Harbor View Mont ...... Pool • .,. .... • ••••••• • _... Maid ,lf:rvkt-Pool·Utll Pd. .,.. •rt• 'vil S4SO m:.-3894 3 BR., 21Ai baths • , ••••• $335 e ""'Call 6'15--8740 • ~t11.ture adults. ni> k1dJ or cUNFU:,.egtlRNMo ... , .BR L ~"n. 3 i .· .. ,:j· h$3501:"ll H~~~~><: .. w: ·:i l. 1o=R.~~"-l=~~·;~';i-:,;~~·;;;: • ~ w •~ll • call NOW 642-M73. Flrfpla,.. / pr!•. palloo. $135 &. ll!ll. 642-!llW. Hnlwood !loon. fr1>le, 2 car Corona •-1 u ·r Pools Temtla 0>n1n11 Bid.It. -~ -E ~ •• ") _. ITI8 PATIO or DEN·2 Br, ..... ·M~ -'~ RUL"l'I'. -IOO Stt 1-, .:dM 644-2611 Santa Ana Aw. Dtpolit Univ. Pa.:rk Centn", Irvine COMPLETE Bach. Apt., 2 (MacArthur nr Cabt Hwy) 2 Ba, $1S(I. Adull.t. Sl8\l/mo. -· Olll Aeytlme 133-0m bib Big°""'""·> Allwt. "''l!!!!!!!!!i!J!!!!ll!!•ll!I!~!!!!!~ eau 54&-7331. 3 Bdrm., 2 Bafh pool, now Olllce bour1 I AM to I PM pell. $Ill uW pd. )Ti>· SHARP A d .. n 4 11<.droom. DELUXE 2 BR, 2 BA. Up!<:. point. qpb • ...,,.. $3riOl"""!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' 64U520 211 b.llh Wlllc la bcaeh. Dilbwubcr, <I<. $UO mo. rno. tncludfnr pool M'l'Vke. S BR.., 2% BA .• patl, c:lbble, 1..ARCE l'll'Wly decor. 1 BR Famlly prtftrrtd. ~fonth W 5J6....W A11aJI June lit. Call ~. temlil ct & comm pool. P» Pool Ir rec ll'l!a. ~: moath. 1190 pr month Call f'Mt resu.111 al'!' juJt • phone 5f!!-114t or $Q...fi'8'f. ltUI!'. Agt: s..)-U!i1. ' 110 W. Uth SL, C.\\f. Mr. S.lley, ~. eAll an,. . ~ ,, 'T'O L.JVF: IN 1111~ JUST COMPLETED e Luxury 1 br apt. e Adult e Dlshwuhf!n ' • Cholcl' of 2 oeolor 1ehl'ml's • Cu•tom carpeting • J11.cur.zl • l~f'!\led pool e n.:ad·bolt Jock• ' e Only $140 pc.>r mo. BAHIA PUERTO 2SJO 171h St ., Jl.B. !l.16-4815 SEA AIR APTS • $1Tf J.q, 2 BR. Crpt-. dr'!>', bltn1. 1 btk N, of Adami cff 8e1ch Blv. 729 No. 6 Utica. 536-111115 or 5S-7070 1..Arat. quJe:t 1 Br. nu drps, ttpts elc. Blk to heh. 22• 5th St Call lsl 673-11&1. • S6S -.,h., 1• Furn. or Unfum. ~ ~ 2 BOR.\I., shag-apts & ctrµ,.. Newport Beach ~ $150 mo. Oilldrm O.K NO I .;;;:;;;;:;;;:;;==---.11 "'"" Coll ~1'3. . FROM $135 I~ '. i 2 BR Apt .. OOM!d gar. CrplA, ~ drpa. Child 1: am. ptt ok. A LIFESTYLE 1!'3 ... ,.2941), FOR THE 1o·s·:,'' 2 BR, cfupl~x 00-.vnlO\\TI, crpts/ctrps, BtO\'t', $l.J0/1no. Are you l\l'ed or ~· 536-J507. out good money for I atune old 1k1mw rvine ments wllh even sklmpMt ---------·lracllltlf!!I and no txtru·.tt PARK WEST APARTMENTS 1 Bdrm. From $160 2 Bdrm., 2 S.. From $195 l883 Purk\tlew t.ane lro.W. (Just <lff SAn Oirro 1'"')' at Cul\'('I Rd) Lagun• Beach PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS on the bay Luxury aptirtment llvini ov· erlookln_g the water . Enjoy $750,000 heaJth spa, 7 swhn- mlng pools, 7 llghl\.'<I tel). nls rourts, pins mlle1 of bl ryclc trails, putUng, &hut· fleboord. eroquet. J unior J's frcnn $164.50 monthly: also 1 anci 2-bedroom plan9 11.nd 2-story town hcv•otes. Elee- bic kitchens, prlvnte J)Al ki4 or halronles, carpeting, drn· ~rles. Subte1Tnne11.n pnrk· ln.1: \\'ilh clevalors. Optlonl\I n111ld service. Just north of Fnsh!on Island 11\t Jambor- ee and San Joaquin 1-lills Rood. Nt-:\\'PORT BF.1\Cll . · Telephohe CTI4l 644-1900 for rental 1nfonn11Uon * NE\Y 2 BR . blk to lxo1:tf'h. Spectacular view. $250 up . 493--3.183 or 494-2119 Mesa Verde DF:LUXF: 2 & 3 Or. 211311, <'nrl gru'. S1 5:l 11p. R.C'ntnl 0 11". :JO'J5 ?.1acc Av c., 516-1034. Newport Beach BRAND NEW ALL UTILITIES PAID 1'\Jrnlshed Avallablc SM-Off lit Mo's Rent, on yearly lease, when )'OU bring ln this ad. 20102 Birch SI (nr O.C. 1til•po11. S. <l( Pnll~drs Rd!. Priv, pa_llo, billiard r111., jncuul, Nr. UC Irvin('. J\tg1·, 979-8!189 SEACLIIT ~-tnoor - l BR Studio. Pool. Crpts, clrps, bltn.'l. Sl5(1frun1urn , $165/furn. A1k about our d\K"Ount. 1525 Placentia Ave. 548-2682. 1 &: 2 BR. APTS. Jn Enstbluff, Fro1n $185. ' « . 175-6050 0 _ .. , ........ UNFURN 2 BR. 2 Ba duple!<, bl tlns, frplc, patio. step!! lo ocean, Yearly lea11e-S27.l mo. AvaU J1:1ne 1. 61>3900. 2 BR &: F/R, Twnhsc np!. 1'~ Bl\, Yrly l f'a~f' $300/mo. Horvath Realtor: 675-1972; eve 675-4073. Apt1., Furn. or Unfum. 370 Costa Mesa Summer Rentals PALM MESA APTS. MINUTES TO NPT. eat. FURN. on UNFURN. Unbelievably lnrg• 11.pt1., huge pool, Ja~I eter.t bit· lnA, _.hng crpllll, drps, sauna etc. Adults, no pctA • SINGL&q •••• , From 1133 l BEDRM ••• ,, • From $140 2 DEORM. • • • • From $160 You're right, they're under. priced! 1561 Meaa Dr. (5 blkl from Newport Blvd.) 546-9\160 e SPACIOUS Cl Well·Oedgned AptA. l A 2 BR. w/Temi.ces. From S140 • $275/mo. Sl)ar cpta, drps. aauiiu, pool, jacunl, encl. 1ar. ~ :et Adult llvlnt MERRIMAC WOODS .CS .•ierrimac Way, CM l & 2 BR Furn or Unfurn. Chijdren's 11ecti9n. Pool. $140 Up. ELM GARDENS APTS. lTI E. 22nd SI., C.M. 142-3615. HU!lllngtor BHch NEW SANDPIPER Early bird sptclnl&-1 BR from Sl25, 2 BR rrom $155 t,urnfUnfurn, cool color !~ tertors. pool, Jacun!, more. 8081 Hollan3 Drive, lfuD- !lngton Beach. 847-9595. QUICK CA~H THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 • I 11pcl\k of! 'fht•n enjoy ~, IU'c11tl'll" of t~e 70's .. iw..~t o~ono GAit~ AP'A.IITl\tENTS. Thl'tt'1 $1 rnllllon In rto. N'fttlon hl<'lurtlni: 1 a I" S f ll\\•trnmJni.: 11001. "'hlrl"9<>' bntlu:, sand 11•llt')'btlll .llJld lt•nnls rotn•U;, 11. pro s.Diop .\ 11ro ""ho off,•n. frt't' ~ru.1p lrsson1. A llf'ruillful rlu~ houu-hu 2 hi·11llh cl41--, st111nu, lnd~r i:olf dri1'inJ: rnn~f', billit1nb, Nlo~TI thHter. Act !vlllf'!I'. ~an frt.-.C Sltn&ly brunC"hrs.·M r. bt'-QUl'S, 11 \>or t !l tourne.· n1~nti1, l'tc;. Custom d~•m trd i:::Jn. i:lf'!i, 1 Ir 2 BR ':r. ~~111·nl'h•·<t nr u nr11n1l!lhe(l. 1. 111· rno,\'j'• In coi;ts ttnd 11.1 1rnsE' l'f'~ qul1'C!'d. 1'.todcls opt•n tfll.11.y 10-7. ' OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS · (Rt11nrt l..lvlng for Adullll Onl,\'). ~ NEWPORT BEACll 16th & Irvine 645-0550 or '42.JPO $ 111 Rooms ~q .. . --· .. PRIVATE llon\e • Fumfs~ roon1 w/ba.lh. w/or wto~t kitchen prlvlleit•· Wor'k larly prefem!d. !\tl.slon VI jo 111·ca, 586·291!1 ... ~, Bfo~DR00'.\1 \VI k It c h\t tirivl l. ILR. lln'll. C!11 962-7520 nlt 6 11ni or aU·d weekend. ,•, Sl.t:i:PI N<~ r111 for 1·n1plo tfl 1nan ()\'Or :U), IU' 11th f: Irvi~. C'.\I. $ & 0 I n1 oi. &16-8116. I Lovely furn . Dr. Pr!, e:nf. Ir. bA. TV, RIU", frig. Sul~p for bt.111. 111un. fi.6..43M . .;. • WOMAN \\'Ill rent a nl~ room le> t't'lircd 11'dy. llon'li! prlv. tnrl. cnr p c r tj. 1137-S4fl2. ltOOMS $15 Wk up w/klt ... "1 wk up Apt", 2376 Ne~ft Blvd, Cl\1 MW'TS3. ' l CDM fum. rm, bath. RflT• entrancf', patio, quiet,~ 1moker, $75 mo. 6~ • KrrCilEN prlvl. $60 ifn+. 2161 Miner SI., Cotta ~4 Men Onl,yl Call 893--5370. I FURN. room In Colla Me~ nice & qu iet hOme,Jr wotklr¥t mtf'ti. 6'12.:4194.~i Room & Boord 4G5 \\'ANTED : • }·~~ale collc~ student for 11ummr.r In ~­ change for dally <"are ot~ .\ ldrl a~s 11 A IJ + llll'Uy ot $70 per mo. Own rOO~ w/tclephone, ~ mnchlnf', desk 6 t~Jer. 'Valk to beach. Eve~ ~ y,•knds frtt. l\1ust heve'~n ca.r. NorrsmoUr. ~.• .· aft 6 pin. GUHi Homo !;is *PRIVATE ROOM£° for ambulatory penon." ~ food. nloe cbeer!W ....,._ lngs. , * Call 543.4753 * '' Summer Rent•I• A20 ---OCEANFRONT t '. 2 IJR, elrnn, Wl.1.1-fl.lt'J\. $200/wk. 1106~<, W. Occ$- fron1, NB. Ai;:t. GT>197l, ttvtl ,075-4073. SUMMER rental 3 BR turn homt". A<!roA" st. from B}g Corona Beach. Weekly <lr monthly. 67S-.3735 j!\ICI .Or wknds, 8.~9560 wk-<layL : BAY VIE'.V 2 bedroo1p. llceps 4 completl'ly funi · ed. Avail June to Sl'pt. I pr monlh. Adults or~y agent. w,,.4930, : BAL I.11. ~tucllo all f wfcomplcte kl!. AvAll J\11"11' • Sept. or monthly. 67!",..:5(1.lit or 675-3770. m1 w. Oce11nfronl. Li's , RR ,funr' $17~1/mn. Jtily $1!'!0/wk, Aug 117 5/w l<· IWt-5:107. ! Rentals to Share 4fa SJ IAR f. 3 BJ{ houae on 611lboA Isle w/I or 2 "-oil<- i~: Rirl1 Sun1m~r ont! 6'f5..~127 • SJIA.RE deluxe lr l·lev~I bt'at h 11:pl. R11lboa. I JK'f11bn ~lr11lt!hl under 30. $22:; nio. 675-7449. \ J-'f:l\f. to ahare JBR ap\; la FUN Joe. on bch. w/Artr. 1 child o.k., 67.HRn. ~ SHARE Lovtly 3 BR horOe. 11.a . cau 962--~ art I 'm or ..U day \'>eekr.ndL , SllARE n'nl Junt, IP1itt 00\lle ln lAl[Ul\I. blk '"'° ...... h. 1\13. 4!14-&167' l Offl.,. Re ntal '¥41 ·-BAY VIEW OFFICES l>tlwr:e, aJ.r.condlUoned I Redecorated. Udo 1tt11 RetJonomk. ... Bkr. ma1'00 White PJ~ph,lnl Oifn6.A Ou&fled ad. • • • D.Ul.Y I'll.OT PD.01' .AOYEllTISU J ., 18) 1-.... ...-.1~1-......... 1~ I ~,lioundlilimlfr;H;;ed;;•;l;~S50; Comtnl, Concrete J[Il] [ L,....,,._. ][fi] l.__-_1"·~· I~ I L • ...,.... l[fi] I ~-.·-· l[fi] i:miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ I ~R~J•p~wii!iian~u~la~1~Piii11iia Haullnt cwt comple1e pro-CE:\IENT \\'OlUC, ao job too LOCAL Movu, h a u 1 i n c • ,_.Jonal ofUce • wlrfce~ E'OUNO adonbl.e m a 1 t 1mall, ruaonabW. Fl'ff cleanup. Exp co 11 e re 'Uon.11t 1t?Vlct1. ~ crpttd, C«kapoo pup. V 1e 1n 11 Y Estim. 1r. Stufilck, ~861$. student. Lrc truck. Jk1. fllmi.lwd, ~. (19 E. GUbert St and Sl.anforti, J OHN'S p "--I. Block .,, ,.d l'lth SI-CM. fG.ftfl' dA¥S; (illtden Grove. 539·214.7 auvw 1 ~-=-~·----,---6*-3'TlJ evu. &t~r I p.m. work. A~ auoc. of Van'1 YARD, earaJCe clea.nu1>1. l..andAl't'lp1ng CM, 333-0291 Remove tre41, ,_d irt, iyy, DESK IPM:'9 ~ S50 FND male AlffitaJIJ nr. mo. WW ll'OWtdt Wnltun Marauerlt.e ParD1ay I PATIOS, wa.lka, drive, lnmll • k Ip Io ad er , backhoe. at 115 ml). Am ....... tenice Geronlmo, Mlulon Vkjo. ntw la"'·ns, saw, break, 84~7~--~~·~,.--""",---,- ava.it.ablil.1711$ Bllcb Blvd. fLaPaz homtt) ~T-4719. Tttl)()\lf". 54&-.8661 ff)r eat. YARD & Garq:e Cleanup. HIPJUQrtcn 8MdL. IG-G2J TND. May 7.Rth In Mer.a. del Child C11re i'ree est. 1 day1. Call * AJRPORT AREA * Mar, lrg male 8oxtr {f.av.•n _ anytime, 548-5031. AdJ. Airp:irta Hotel. Oeluxt" oolottd) w/choke chain. Y(llJNCSET School, llf!:es Gardening. Yard I Garage ~i.-i.s room .Wtu. LOWEST ~. 2-6, Open 7 Oaylf. 6A.'1-7:30 Clean Up, Free F.si. .RATES. ZW DuPont Dr., \\'HlTE male cat v.·/hlue, PM. S<·1mrate program g...10 Reu. Ratel. 646-3488 'room I. *3S--2NO. brown ~ neuter e rl , yl'll. Prof. teachers. $20 Hou1ecl111nlng o'fSK ~ llftllable $50 Vic. Main A Frankfort, H.B. ~-__ 37_0<~·------I·--------,. ,..*-Will '""1dt tumtture SJ6...(259. Co ntractor !\fESA Oenn!n". C:~r;, at IS mo. Amftrina ltr'Yict GER'-tAN S¥J>Mrd 3 ,'" 4 e e • e e e v.·J~\!.'lf, , I Io or Ii t'tc. ~~. -J'orut Ave, month• old. Male. Near lJO FATJIER & SONS Reind/com I. S 5 7 ·6 7 4 2, -.-~I 673-32&5 I -548-4111. · Decorating, design, carpcn· ~-c==.,--,----,-, ANTIQUE l\ow-SulL for f"ND. tan & blond dog vie. try, plumbing, wir1ng, etc. Let DUTCH clean your ~E_:.·,vl&lond, CM e~ WJlt0n & Victoria., C.~f. ! 4 generations exp •• 25th yr. carpets. Also, windows & ,. .. ..,.... • ~ 546--2525 OJ' 646-4190. In bUI, • Llc'd &: bonded. f1oon, Xlnt "-"Ork. 537-1508. ~1• FND grey cat y,•/white face 8?.S-354$ Dedlcattd Cleaning OSJ'ICE8, $59 i: 169. \VU! & tummy. Vic. F. V ·I • e • e e e * \VE DO EVERYTHING * ~le. Near 17th St., bank 962-9636. ROO:O.I Addltlo rtS, E&Umate.11, Ref11. Free e!!I. 646-2839 • lllopplJ1&'. 518-111!. f"ND. Surfboard vie. 42nd & plarui & layout. tingle or 2 BAY &: Beach Janitorial. J'CEPlCAL suite, ready lo go. River Avt., W. Newport, 1tory. L.T. O>nstructlon. CrptA/w\ndows/fioon etc. !jell at Bolaa C1lca, 11.8. Cant. Neel 67;)..095(i 847-l.51J. »•sld/Comm'I, 646-1401. $275/nio. 346-1323. -• ~ • ·~ MALE Yorkahire Terrier Addltion.11 * ft.emodellna: CLEANING Speciailll: \Vfn.. Offkt/110re 160, to $250, Apt. above $165, Ntw &-p., crpl1. 224 5th St Hunt. Bcb. 673-178' liUSlnon Rtnlol 441 IJl'ORES for leaN, 1400 or m> aq. ft. Cpt. I sign, "fliMly IO go. Major -1"1 .'~ter, San C l em~nte , ~3457. lM 4000 lq, ft., 1, 2 wor.3 Ntal! unltl. McFa~n :frru.n at Newport Beath P.Mr. ~5093. If• Stote/Otfloe, 1 J l I S r'11•play cue, Dowmown ·H.B. 2IS.5th St. 1175 per mo. &.16-6007, « OFFICE-W) sq, It. Al11<> 811 Sq. Ft. INDUSTRIAL SHOP. Colla Meu 646--2130. RE Ir offlce for renl: Bolu Ch1ca at Hell, HB. Nf.1323. STORE: & ottlct tor rent ·Jol•a Chica at Heu, H.B. -1323. ·M,J:DICAL aulle, l'ftdy to go, Nell at BolM Chica, .H.B. , ps1rno. 8"-1323. llldu1trl•I Rtn11I 450 COSTA MIS.A 1440 .. -Sq It. CABINET MAKERS-- FIBERGLASS lfr. Nwpl Flwy A S.D, Flwy 2931 Grace IA. <So. of B&ktr, E. of FaJrvlew 'ii Ml) Repre1mlaHve there t am· 12 noon. •(711) m.1431 or 179t111 NEW DELUXE M~l Unlll. 3 Ph, powtt. 1133 Monrovia D63-314S: 836-91'98 tws. * M-1, 1600 sq. ft.* 2 Fr ott .. 3·ph pwr, $200 mo. C.M. 646-766..1, &16-l:l(Jl , -'176 to ffOO Sq. Ft. 4001 Birch, N.B. 541.ro.12 '5.ta•••• 455 · JtETAJL 11hop avail. at The Factory, $175. mo, See No. 9 ' 'mt info or 18'f3..9806. l!Mtl•I• Wonted 460 ,'· w:~::c°Ntt:iLL';, l WO~ING COUPLE . one Cl1' hi'O bedroom ltouH with Jarae fenced yVd (for two VERY WEU. 'PRAINED dop) $135 moat . Vic: between 19th It Victoria -fnear W, Bay St.) COSTA MESA. 548-7881/aft 6 p.m. WANTED Young coupll'! would like lo ttnt 2 BR untumlshlld house with 1ar1.1e in CM. Up to 1150 mo. Good ref11. Both employed. 551·~5 aft• PM. PHYSICIAN, \Ylfe & 18 mo old Murhtt.r, .eek 1·2 yr. ttntal of 3-4. Br. home In Turtle Rock or (Univ. Prk.J 83&-7359. WANTED: But. man dt1!re1 hie/apt to ahare. Pl'fofer nr Pen. Ed-Eve: 675-1393. vlc. Tu1tln &: 171h St., C.M. Genvlck & Son, Lie. dows, carpel, floon, 1toves 645--3310. 673-fml * 51~Z170 & ovens. 774-0321. FND CUrrtncy In vie 219 Agate. Call 675-2544 aft 7. FND Btaut. Collie. Pleue call. to identify 646-T;i03. FOUND female Tttrler Mix? Newport Bch area. 557-0479. Lott 555 FRI, Cd!\1. TeJTler mix. Fem., w ht !~/throat, brindle back, long tall, •hrt coat, black eyes, an• to Vicky. Reward. 673-1400, 615-1930. REWARD! Lott Bl n ck Gmnnn Shepherd ( f e m w I recent irurgery-MUST lfAVE DOCTORS CARE) Vic: lfarbor le: Adama. *87$11~. FEM Irlah wetter pup. 3 mo okS. Vic: Dahlia, Cd:\/[ White marking on che.tt &: toes. 675--1178. J A C K Ta u I a ne-Repair LADY wanta howeclranlng remocl., addil. 4".J )'Tl, exp. \\'Ol'k. Experienced, own Llc'd. My Way Co. 547·0036. trans, 847-3637. Drlv1way1 Land1c•plnt •1AWLEY'S Seal Coating; \Ve11lher, gas, oil resistant. TOP SOIL -540-0097 Stay• black. 545--5195. Lawn Removal, Rototill Eledric•I Painting & Paperhanging ELECTRICAL WORK. All kinds. Big or small Llc'd &Ip ·-A-I_N_T_IN_G_l_t __ --t-I I ..,._ 1 546--02Il · . n enor-ex er. ns ... , .. e es· · or • Reasonable Prlces·20 ELECTRICIAN. licensed, y r 1. exp er lence-Free fioncled. Small jobs, malnt. estimates. 646-4986. &: repain . 548-620J. YOU Supply the Paint. Rn1s Gardaning painted $10 ea avg Also, l'X·. AL'S GARDENING terior. Re~s. 30 Yi-s. exper. ror garden\ng & 1mal11-~~'-616-· ------ lands:captni service1, call 20% ~Ix. paper & hanging, 540--5198 eve1, s er v t n g mobile store, vinyl, flock. Newport, CdM. Co1ta Mesa, 547-5846 The H a n g man Dover Shoret, \Ve11tcliff. 8~2187. * NEW LAWNS * PAINTING -Honest, e!ean, Sod • Stolons .. Seedin&. Yard guaranteed work. Uceru:ed remodelina: Slate Llc'd. & insured. 67~5740. 5344821. EXTER. Complcte 2 coats, 1 AL'S Landscaping. Tre e removal. Yard remodeling. story $240, 2 SIOI}' $300. Neat work. R-Oy. 847-1358. Babysitting TrMh hauling, lot cleanup. PROF. painting, inter/extf'I'. e DEPENDABLE e Repair sprinklers. 673-1166. Quali!y work. Reas. Lic'd 1 PROFESSIONAL tree work, ln!l. 557-7455, 543-Z759 aft 5. BABY~lITJNG Jlatbor-Bakcr area pruning,! trimming, spray· No W.unng 5 4 6. 4 l 4 S Ing, 1prlnklen. LandROap. * WALLPAPER * tng, cleanup. ("eorge 64.6-5893 \Vl)l!n you caU "Mac·• BABYSmING In my home. JAPANESE G 11. rd en e r, 548-1444 Gf6..1711 ReferTnces, Costa Men Complete Yardwork &. 30 Day Special Jnter/Exter An!B. 642-0384. Clea~up. Frett Estimates, painting. Llc'd/Irui. Local BABYSITI'ER 24 Hrs ~Z-3102. refs. 30 Yr1. exp. Free est. Fenced Bl.ck Yard PROFESSIONAL Call Chuck, 64$-0009. * Call "2·t~ * Japanese Gardening Service WALLPAPER HUNG BABYSmING, N B. area. Free E1t. * 646-0619 Carl Rebko 646-2449 cir hr!)'. Call 675.3i38. Expert Japanese G~d~er PROF. painting, also roofs, Carpet Service Complete Yard Servtci accou11. cell.. inter/exter. Free esllmale11, 64&-7624 Lic/Tn11. FrCe est. &15-5191. JOHN'S Carpet&: UpholJJtery Cl~ane r 1. Extra Drl·Shampoo f r e e Scotch· rcuard (Soll Retardants). Dcgreuen & all colar brlghtenen & 10 minute bleach for white carpetJll. SR.ve your mo!lf)' by saving me extra trip1. Will clenn living rm., dining rm. k hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, couch StO. Chair $5. 15 yrs. exp, i!I whtlt counta, not method. I tlo work mySt'lf. Good rtf. 531~101. SfEAl'd Carpet Cleanera, profe1alonnl at Io west prices. 3 avg rms complete $.19.95. 962-0612. Carpenter LARGE OR SMALL All Typell \Vork: Cut doors, panel, rtmodel, f I n i sh , fnlme, repalr1, etc. 962-1961. CUS'l'Ol\l Y.'ood\\'Ork paMI· infr. Cabinets. C'~n'l repairs. Ph. Duke OaDurka, 646-7598. F.XP. Rf."lnodel!ng, cabinets, rtpt1.ln, malnt. No job too sm. Re111. 646-4224. l\flNOR hortl(' repairs. Plum· bing . carpentry. painting . roofinf. C.ll 5'0-5500. * * C 0 M P"L ET E Lawn & INTERIOR-Exterior Quality Gardening tervlce. Haulln& \\'Ork. Reaoonably· priced. & clean.up. Jlm, 54.8-0405. Free at. 646-1308. EXP. Ha\vallan Gardener Plaiter, Patch, Repair Complete gardening scrvlce Kama.Lani, &li-4676. * PATCH PLA~RING SPRINKLER REPAIR All types. Free""mateo New Sy11tems * 546-2535 Call 544)..682S JOlINSONS' GARDENING ~lumbing Yard Ufnlntenance, Plan!tngSA ~'."VE=-.-.-.. -m-,-,.-,-,-lr-,.-Free- Cleanups 962--2035 est., plumbing, paint, Jn- *LANDSCAPING* stal1ations, hauling. Ne1o,r Ja1vns, Sprinklers, d<>cks, 839--0372. cleanup. State He'd. 536·1225, -,,~L~U~M-B~IN~G-~R~E-P_A_IR_ EXP. Ha\\'ailan Gardf'rler No job loo small Complete gardening service * 642-3128 * Kamalanl, 646-4676. COLE PLUMBING General Services 24 hr. 1ervice. 645-1161 HANDYMAN for Service. Remodel & Rapalr P lumb. Leak.11, In 11 ta11. RE.i\fODELING, addition1, Carptnfry, Painting, etc, patios, prompt M?rvice. ??'ft 542-8938. estimates, references, local BY Moose. U, elect, builder, 1·10 p.m. 968-9067. plumb, fence. ! n st Ins, 968-0964. 1~~------cnrpentry, tile. BA/MC Roofing card. 552-$19. TOTAL SERVICES C"O. e . T. Guy Roofing. Deal Plurubg Jnst.a11'5-Carpe:ntry Du~r.I do n1y own y,·ork. Elcc Repair e 64&-1809 M.>2780, 548·9590. Put a lUUJiifloot' ln your S1wing/Alftratlon1 ~,.·.~!hose baubles for D'ESTG NE R-E ~-;; buck111 . Call Classitled trRlncd, 20 yni. exp., new\in 642-5678. Jluntington Beach. 968--0739. Alt1ration1 -642·5845 * * * ent, accurate. 20 years exp. Stereo Repair ,.------------------.,!STEREO equipment repn.ln;, Trader's Paradise lob Wanted, Molt 700 Help Wanttd, MI. F 710 Htlp Wtnltd, MI. F 710 Htlp Wonted.MA F 710 l;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;::;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;f MACHINIST BUSBOY-0\·er 17. Apply att 6PM, Dillman'•, 801 E. Ba.1008 Bl, Balboa. GENE RA LOFl'ICE : SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS BeaulltuJ modem o t t i c e overkloklna tht attan. This COLl..EGE •tudcnt, full time co. offers the befit btotfilJ SUtntn(lr, pan time during in tilt" areA.. Start $435. Fff' P.forbld -GOOle -Tonlc -llChool, at Shell Station on Paid. ree Jobs Abo Call 1'"auctt-FIGURE beach in Laguna. NO long J ean Brown, 540-6.055 , A girl will marry for hair « mwt be 1!. 494-9003. money, but mo.If mtn marry . Coe.atal Agency, 2 7 9 0 ror a fancy F.IGURE. CLERK '.fYPISf: Exciting llarbor Bl. at Adams. ==='=~-,--,--,-I opportunity for sharp pl I CIRL Friday _Utt typing. JNTELUGEJ\.'1' hard-work· "''/good 1kllla. Ideal work-General office v;t1rk. To Ing young man llOrely needs lng cond!Uot11 w/rapld ad-assist one girl office. 1 blk job, tull ()r part·time, vancem<-'ntl. To $4U. Call to beach. Houn Oexiblt to a.nythlnf. 64&-5964. Unda Ray, 5 4 () • 6 0 SS. your need#. Dn!ss optio~l. Job ~•nteO, t'=emttle 702 Coastal Agency, 2 7 9 0 Penn. Newport resident. ---------·I Harbor Bl. at Adame. High sch o o 1, OCC. NEED ~elp at home? \Ve CLERK/TYPIST Housewife OK. Call have Aides e Nurses • , Jlouukprit e Compa.nlons To learn 1Lad1e1 Garment _546-_5_164_. --~--- • Hom emaktn-Upjohn ~tfMg. • I C l'f Girl Friday 5-l7-ti681. ar1ann1 o • 1 . S hrs per day, in CM 33.1 .l\larlne Ave., Bal Is. 548-4.ll.0 PART time general olfice ---=c====-- work desired on Saturday CO~ANION- and Stlnday. ExperienCl!d. HOUSEKEEPER Call 675--0835, Live-in &. cook for elderly Help W•nted, M & F 710 lady. $roct mo. 675-1937. COOK Acrounting Clerical Fee Paid Oictaph. Typist S4::i5 Good Position 'Vi~ Xln't A/Payable $475 Company . .l\fU1Lt Jlave Dinner Applicant Pays Fee I-louse Exper. Rl!'Ceptionist $450 No Phone Interviews F1exowriter $550 Call For Appt A/Receivable to S525 675-1374 Statistical Clerk_ $550 !'!!!'!!!'!!~~~!'!!!!!!""" Sectttary $520 COOK Front Otc fmedicall $400 Some exper. necess, Apply General OUice $481 in person, Love's BBQ, Girl 1'~rlday lo $450 BrookhW'!t & Adams, HB BookkCf'per . to $650 COOK, p/time for catering Free & Fee Pos1t'i..,ns service. RUTH RYAN AGENCY !>!7-5739 1793 N~port, CM 646-4854 1--------- 17931 Be h liti 847·9617 COU~LES-bolh Mgr. & ac · Assist. Mgr (ma ln t .) ACCOUNTANT·Exper. in couples needed for lrg com. . al d' 1 plex. Apt + salary open. municl p or water LS ·. ~C· Phone M 0 n-Fr 1 9-4, counting. Must have ab1bty 213 .35~ 2859 10 work independently &1--· _>-__ . ____ _ should be qualified to D A N C E Instructor• I usume responsibility for Hostesse.1 \Viii train, Singles accounting functions after Chalet 1963 Hrbr Blvd, C.~1. initial period of supervision. 646·5337. Good analytical a b i 1 I t Y •1'o~A~TIN=~G,-mo~th,_,-r-ne<d-:-, -oc-- Sal8J'¥. open, dependent on oos. babysitter. Ov.11 trans. exper. & qualifications. Vic \Vallace & Hamilton, Please apply by letter only CM. 642-8916 aft 6 pm. for an application form to DENTAL ha' id f'Ex. the Moulton Niguel \Vater c . irs e ass · 0 . 1r· t 27281 Ar C k panded duties for general is ic • . iso ~ 'p r a c t I c e Enthusiastic, Rd ., Laguna Niguel, Ca.Ii!. outgoing & 8bility to work ACCOUNTS Payable Clerk. ,v/peoole a must. 962-3319. Type 50 wpm. 1 to 2 yrs . exp. I1vine Complex. !!.ir DISHWASHER Brown 557-9900. F /limc Nltes ADVERTISING Apply ln Person Great opportunity for highly Colony Kitchen motivated, highly skilled 3211 Hartxir Bl., CM secretary to work into broad· EARLY morning ne"-'spaper er responsibilities at fast· delivery open, Wk-daya & paced Newport Beach ad· wk·nd~. Tn.ick ne eded . vert!.sing agency, Brains, After·noon run car OK, initiative, &: sh required, 962-1489. ,. ... c.a_1_1_._3~-1.'.10 ...... ;1 E_N_G_1N_E_ER_:_M_anu~~-ct-url'ng­ -or mechanical to develop ASSEMB LERS oailboat production Jin.,. Degree req'd. Top pay & GENERAL xln't future. MacGregor Yacht Co'!', 3631 Placentla, CM. Qualified applicants w l l I EXPER Salawoman needed have 2 years of electro-for ~a.uty Supply _Store mechanical product lo n (Beautician). Call 545-5180 assembly experience \v/thel_,or;o;;;.,..,_;o;;;281;o;;;6;;· ;o;;;;o;;;;o;;;;o;;;;;;;, ability !O opera!~ precision FACTORY measuring equipment & . . . complete final assembly on On the JOb training. Lite lac· varied standard production tory & assembly, 18 ~· &: instrumenl!! over, Many openings m tbe • Izvlne-Newport Beach area, We offer good starting salary & ait . excellent benefit package. For an interview, please call personnel. 1213) 441·1171 Short &: long t e r m assignments. Paid wkly. Ab s olutel y no fee. KELLY GIRL 2061 Business Clr. Dr. Irvine 83~1441 GIRLS. Rich•rd son' I Enterprl5ew1 n ow !~ tervieY.'ifl: shop girls 18-40 for high paying positions. If you are Interested in me.k· ing $200-UXJ part time, CCIU- ple nights a \\'etk or $1Cffi. $2000 \\'et.'k, full time, call 54&-9074. GIRL Friday, Mktg Conslt. Sharp. Initiative. Typing. Research, bkpg. pluscs. 30 Hr. l!o'k, SJ hr. P.O. Box 8822, Fountain Valley, 92708. HOUSEKEEPER \\'anted. to live in. There A.re just t"'O of us with a home in, lzvlne Te!Tllce, Our pre• en I rouple, 'vho have been with us for 5~ years, are return· ing to England to retire end of June. Occasio.na1 cooking, very little entertaining, just general hoU8e\\·ork &. light laundry. If you happen to have a husband who is good at gardening, y,•e'd like to talk to him too. There are comfOrtable living quarters. Adequate for a couple. Please phone 646-3963 \\-eekdays for appointment. HOUSE\VORK by day or Companion. W e 11 f'X· perienced •J>46-8706 • HOU SEKEEPER, lite wurk, Jive in, 2 elderly ladie&, Bal. area. Call 67~3284. HAIR stylist \\'/cllentele Station avail, 10%. Ask for Norman, 673-5930 NB, HELP wanted. Exp. Nunes aide. All shifts. 847·3515 :J.igure? If your math's in CJOOc1 condition, we ,'an use you. Gof>d typinlJ & in· • surance experr· ence helpful, but n o t necessary. Apply now for: • Figure Clerk Interesting openings for Jr. & Sr. skills. lfYDRAULlC test l~nklan tor assembly & ttslina Aerospace Hydraulics. ~lust have 3 yrs, min. exp Mllltary exp. ok. 55i-tl21.. ' INJECTION MOLDING OPERATORS (Or Tr•inM1) For Plutict Manufacturer, graveyard 11hllt, Must be neat Ir dependable. Female pref'd. l\1wt be-able to "-'Oril Sat. or Sun. Apply 1 Plll· 4 PM Costa Meaa. CaliL 850 \'i'eal 18th St. * Orange Coast Pia.sties * INVEST IN YOUR FUTURE Full or p/time. BE YOUR OWN BOSSI Men or Women L1111 A Yellow Toxl Cob Call for Appt 546·1311 Ask for Hmnan INSURANCE Agency Glrl. Kno\!o·ledge of Dwelling fire & Home ownen rating hf'lpful. Xlnt opp, Salary open. f\.1ust be good typist. California In surance; Irvint, Calif. C.&ll Fern Nut. ter for intrvw. Sll-9480. IRVlNE PERSONNEL SERYICES•AGENCY Free & Fee Positions Test Engr /Elec to $12K Buyer/Electronics to SUK Escro~·11/Notes/Deeds to $675 Exec. Mklgn Sec'y $675 IMllll '4 Hr Xln't opportunity for inctivid- u.al klokin& lor future w/fiM firm. Call Janet Gary ..,.,:5f:"k~ 2323 No. Broadwoy Santa Ana 135-ltll MACHINISI' to run ~naint' lathe & vertical m.lll. MUlt have' good attend au c record. Apply 1374 Lopn.. Unit "J" Co1ta Mtaa. MAN tor loeal deltwrin. MU!t be neat apptarifv. Irvine OUice SupplieJ, 1*>7 Nel!o'POrt Blvd., C.fo.f. MAINTENANCE COUPLE Exp'd in cleaning, paintinc A maint. Apt + sallll')'. Pho Mon-Fri 9-4. 213: 35&-285&. ?.IATURE lady to bab)'lit my home -own car. Tues & Thur1 9:?.0-G::l>. $10 per day. 545-4197. ?-.fECHANIC, exper. Alip ment, tuneup, brakel, . & VWs. $700 mo. • comm. A~ ply in person only, La Pai Union, La Paz Rd & San Diego Fwy. MEMORIAL COUNSELORS \Vill Train 2 1t1ature Men Over 30 Excellent Company With Fringe Benefits Above Average Earning• For \Vorkm ' 'Ve Have Counselors With Us For Over 12 Yean Acctng/Degree to $650+ For An Intervil!'W Exee. Secretary to '$650 Phone 644.-0212 Secretary to $600 ..,,...~..,."""~~!!!!""I Engr. Secretary S560 e e NEEDED Payroll Bkkpr/NCR to S5."A> 1'wo otflc• Girls Acetng Clerk to $500 IB:'tf Composer/Exper Open RecepVGen. Ofc to $505 Travel Agt/exper to $600 + 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) Of 642·1470 Must be 25 and able to drive -APPLY- 186 E. l6lh St., C.M. Niguel Personnel Agancy ls looking for KEYPUNCH 1 .: ~=:~:;~· .. Receptioni1t1 Day Shift Av•ilable Now 6 ~'lonths actual work eX))l!r. on either a keypunch, keytape or key disc device. ALSO Day shift until move to Newport In September then ow ing shift 4-H PM. School training necess. Some work exper. helpful. INTERVTE\VJNG Tues & \Ved 9am-2pm Thurs & Fr! 9am-l2pm ON SITE OF OUR NEW BUILDING PACIFIC MUTUAL FASHION ISLAND {Corner Santa Cruz & Ne"'"vport Celiter Drivel Positions offer xln't futurr. Located in San Clem·Dana Pt-Lag. Bch-So. Orange Co. areas. Pleast Call For Appt. 8.11·1477 Ft!e & Free Positions ltlale 6: Female Placements 21635 Forbes Rd. Laguna Niguel Packager $2. Hr. Excellent company benefit. & merit increue1 ire youn if you have some previous plant or assembly exp, Call 893-5011. liiP!O JOB AGENCY 6531 Westminster Avenue \Vestminster, CalU. PAINTER -fast painter tor lrg. apt. bldg. Full time. Phone Mon.-F'rl 9-4, 213: 35>-2859. PART TIME PBX Mon·Tues·Wed, 5 to 8 PM. Sat & SUn 12 noon bl 8 PM. Mr. Bartlett, 846-1361. Part Time Painter, Carpenter. Laborer. ABBOTT Scie ntific Products Division FIBERGLASS Molde'rs, skill· ed &: unskilled. All 3 shiftll. We will train. 1631 Placen- tia, Costa Meaa. * FREE daily bu s • Gen'I Clerical tran•portation for work 1n Call540-li6G<I Varied openings Include, flJ. Los Angetes until move to PIZZA Cooks &. ~wry, ing, typing & good CClffi· Newport, Sept. '12. male over 21, p/time. Ap. Equal Oppor, Employor Gen'l Ofc. $425 munkation skill•. KE . Beply 165.12 Beach Blw .. Hunt !!!!!!!!~~~~~""""!Knowledge of bookkeeping. YPUNCHERS • ach. ASSISTANT Type 40 wpm, Know 10 key Nf!E!ded Immediately. Al1 P"o"'sr=AL~"'Carr,-.,-i...,-. -De~l!v~er·I To transpose cutting tickets, add. Good handwriting. \Vil! JNTERVJE\VING shifts. must have exper. your own area. Costa Mesa, Shipping dept, etc. train for D!\-IV contracts. Tues & Wed 9am-2p~ xln't earnings. Hunt. Bch., Fntn. Vly. Marianne of Calif. Call 893·5011. Thurs & Fri 9am-12pm Call Sue Housewives pref'd. 530-0402. ECHO JOB AGENCY KELLY GIRL San Clem 496-5903 alt 3 333 Marine Ave., Bal Is. 6531 Westminster Avenue ON 133-1441 pm. ATI'RACTIVE Barmaid, no Vv'estminster. Calif. SITE OF OUR 2061 Business Center Dr. ~-P"R"o=FESSl==o~N"AL,-- exper. nee. Apply in person, GENERAL OFF1CE· W uld NEW BUILDING In>lne RESTAURANT &: HOTEL VI.kid's Lou1;1ge, 1791 '.~ lik . i . o . LEGAL .____ EMPLOYMENT AGENCY N~rt Blvd, C.M. you . e an. exc1t ng start in PACIFIC MUTUAL ~1ary: Pfrime ' the film industry? Enjoy may lead to F I t i m e • Asst. Mgn:. $600 to $700 mo. BEAUTICIANS needetl for their plush oriices in the FASHION ISLAND Young,' xlnt t yplst, die-Ma11ter Chef • , ••••• $1100 mo. busy shop. $1.65 hr or 50% Irvine Complex. To $000. '·(Comer Santa Cruz&. taphone. 644-0023, Nwpt 2ndPx>kJ: •••••••••• $25shlft comm. Pd vac. Ca I I Call Nancy May, 54(1...ro55. Newport Center Drivel Center. Fry Cook , ............ $3. hr. , ="'=S-c-99~1•.,,·=~,..--,--,c-=c 1 Coastal Agency, 2 7 9 O , , W h 1 te Elephants'' over· Trainee Cook ••••••• $2-$3 hr. BE Au Ty . Operator-N.B. HarOOr Bl at Adams. * FREE claily bus running ""ID' house? Turn Fast Food Mgr Trainet! So f II · I'd transportation lor work in ~v ,..,_·er 21 ~ mo areA. me o o"''lli pre · Like to trade? Our Trader's them into "CASJI" -sell v'" ............ ~ • Call 548-8520. Paradise column is for you! Los Angel.es until move to them thru Dally p 110 t \Vaiten ·' ·' ••••• •• .$1.SS hr. -SCAT TOUCH-UP 5 lines, 5 days f(Jf 5 bucks. Newport, Sept. ·n. Cias&lfied. 642-5678. Waitret:ses •• All shifts avail. ee1 Ired i===~~~~~;;.!.~~~~~~~~~=~=~~~:;;;;::;;: /Food & Cocktail •••. n.es hr. coat exper, requ Hostess .•.••••••••••••• $2hr. Coastal Recreation, Inc. Cashier ................ $2 br. 940 W. 17th St. &42-0542 Cuhit"l'/Deik Oerk * FULLY LICENSED * Renow~ Jllndu Splritualbt. Splrlhlal Readings rt~n / dally. 10 AM·lO PM. Advlct ct\•cn on all matttn. 1 can help you. 3J.2 N. El Camino Real •San Clemente 4SZ..Sl.li or -492-9034 lines times dollars complete facilitlea for all makes &:: models • discount rates: 8 tr11.ck tape deek, clean & adju11t SS.00. this wttk Sl.00 ort to Dally Pilot BOAT Assemblers. l'Xp'd read c rs. (Repltcemenf on1y. Apply at \V. D. Schoc.k needles Ii: cartridges 1,, oltl. Corp. 3502 S. Greenville, U S A St E I Santa Ana. STAR GA'ZE~~~ .................. 11uss1>11t ...... CLAY L Busboy1 U Ii: over ••• $1.66 hr • .Uta ... , UllA """MM.JI M y..,....,,AdMlyC..U. M 'lm.u rh FEE ~Nin -V--A.mtrJl111t.t1-eSlers • ..,.. od.n~ ROYAL SERVICE AGENCY f'lNO YOURSEl..F JN .SOi\fFA>NE-EbS&. OISCOVER DISCOVERY TH/8~ 1131387.3.193 ' PROBLEJ\I Prtgnaney. Con- lkknt, 1,fmpathetlc precan- "¥ COU5'1"1J. Abonlon 4 . Adoption .. i APCARE. -· OLICS A111>1uo110111. i1'Jiont ~72.11 or write P. 0. Boot 1!23. O>lla l f,.., Tr•wl .MO • N•7 SIT SAIL .. TAHITI 'Gnntl!R_Sc_. 0Ww A 'GOCIC. aha.re lOltl. 12111 ~lut 1966 t'otd Condor. $600'.l valur or ?l "'Ill trade fcir late modfl ~ TOn Pick Up Camper, 536-3563. HA VF: AAarp 2 btd100111, pool CdM llArhor Vlt\\• Mtt \\111.nt Tu1:tln fmlhlll11 3 tn 4 bed .. 111.l'Jt 101 Pttft'rrcd. Ail. 675-7225. C.R.!, Crttn metal slokc Flbullw dune bualY w/low bar I maey extras. Tnde tor 110 boat, 147-7921 * * , . , • flf'f!O qu P ·l ~====~~~~~I \\'nreho11M", l'T9 E. 17th St., BOOKKEEPER for i\1edlcal Crl11ta l\1cu., &15-2442. firm located ln Ne\\'J)Orl T1levl1lon Repair Bfi<'lf. P1e·1rs"t f o r\\' a rd re~1.urie in confidcnct to P.O. Box lOSSO, Santa. Ana 927ll. * BLAINE'S TV * Servicinr All Brand& '51·1 ~., T flllthra_sl dump Authorited htagnovox, <n1ont'y milker) 48·IT .short Known for honesty 54M31S flatbed, for cAmper. '52 ~T Tru Service P .tJ. Trtde for smllller ve---------- hit•lr or printing rqulp. TREE SERVICE 646-2!m. Trimming, Pnlnln1 A Clean- \Vant Cnmpt"r, IBJ\f elrct., up. 642-5196 or 842-8442. 11,,, '67 Chrysler N.Y. ss.\,. TIME FOR 000 Exec. home. Shop.'l'mllh, VACUUn\ tqulp. 23' a11.llboaL =~=:-900• 548....,...,·05.l!I_. ~1 0UICK CASH Vacane.16 <.'Olt monryl 11tnc your houl(t, .1.pt .. yunftfr"u a •-btq., "e. Utru E'ti f1! t A , Wl rJ la ~ed ~·11 Pl~t a...i. Diil Y Plr,OT * * * WANT ''AD BOOKKEEPER • Full time. Retail sporting good a busineu. Salary hued upcin (> x pc r itnce. Jlunllngton Bnrtch k>caUon. Call Ed CJl'l.rk f(ll' APflt. 962-5521. B00h.1<:EEP!:R F/C, geo'l lf.'(jgtr thru trhtl balance. .Hr-avy on rtcl11vabhrt. some f,)-p1na. Mr Brown. 557-9900. BOYS /\re 10.!4 to dtb-PtPftT1 1n !lie n... PolA~ s.. a .. mcnre lftU. DAILY PILOT -Jt'J a brHJt. M:d )'OUr ltemJ will> ..... ... Dollr . PUot Caulntd. &IUSTT. ---------- I 7• ·a.1o: To dewfcp n...age for Thul"tday, ls.27 For Restaurant Personnel nodwordawttipJidingtorvnbn ~~!!;!:~ 300t Redhill Avenue of-1'1dlooblrlluls.>. _ r-~-•·-~ IV ~~-" I Tl.Wl'll 31 ~ ll-W11 i;.~~ ... ..-wr;;_ ' .Ji.M!l~..ru.esL. 20Qn'f 32Ch 62,..... Suite ZlO 557-2800 J A llA '3Tciurfnt PROFESSIONAL pho•t "~ 3' Adib " lldrJ:N, 5 MIN' 35 WHI 6.S YO... IOUdtor ... Dana Point. San 4&. 34G.t "'6Nr4 Otmentt, Captrtrano area. 'i:-~~ :;=,. w...i. 1n your .... -. 9Dotol~ .. 3'"*""'-6'W Best deal ln aree. Pbont .. ..,.... '""''' ,. .. ·~1-~ 9 00 11 0""-.... 71'"-~ -~-· ' Lill. .:12~ All&t 72...._. ur,. and noon. 13 l.aonlrv <(3~ 7l~~ . """'' MT-,..._ -REAL "'STATE ·1-,.,.. ,,_ /ll0,1J4 .. 1 """"" ..,.._ 76-.wl --S a-1-r5u191· i 1A .oOoft't nw., y • ~ ,....,. "'mn-- •••._..._ .. GGMt 11~·1 1• Need 1 or 2 aperitncf!d ~IT ;;~ ::: ~ aa.1espeopJt'. IncenUft com- :u r. st,...... •tOt .~. mlulon llldln, IC&Je Olla. 22,..., szlo'I a'" -.. '3Tfll0flf 53N AT• ,..,, Pt't"ftlaliaed tra.inq'. bJ a 2.-~ !M Fof "w.. s..1 profet:Po!W. AUK) .m train ~::., ~;-:ir;; new UcelWM tiiJl o~ ~!'.°" ~~.:·• :·.._ pleuant wor~ cond:itiom. : , """ !""'* lfWfll Penonal intfnltw -Mk Vfr, IJ .JO • .oot too.c. for MIN#f • • ,Mo.i @.u-()~ U.S. Al'l'ILIAHD ·-n..Jt, "1.al07, --Jl'll I • ,. • PD.OT ·AOYUTUD WcdllHdq, U., Jl, 1972 Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers , • w....., . ...,'1,lm IWl.Y PILOT A I.___•_:'; _ill)~' -ri·••-·-~I~•',~' ;;;;;L;l;;;;;i ~J ~''i' ., .. ,,.,. 1[11]1 ~1 -·d-0'0;;;;;; 0 ~~~ Holp W1ntod, M & '710 Help W1......_ M & I' 710 Holp Wonl<MI, M & I' 710 Holp W-. M & I' 710 AllPI'-~ R.E, Uc. A Unllc, Earn $750 & Up PER MONTH PART TIME Sm> and up Pf'l' mo. JuJI timr, WE OFTER e FREE TRAINING I• LEADS e GROUP I INSURANCE e CLOSING I ASSISTANCE e OELUXE OFFICES e BONUS PLANS e MAX. ASSISTANCE R.E. LICENSE Get sll the details SAT .• June 3 At U 0·1·\ock A.~1- Refreshmt>nls served eon1· mencini at 10: 30 A.I\'!. Richards & Assoc,, Inc Il84 W. Lincoln, Suite A. Anabeltn Sln~ 19t7 Real Estate SAlrs PROFESSIONAL • CAREER Now hiring for expan- sion-All Departments. Some Positions Sal•ry plu1 Commissions, oth-- •rs Guaranteed Draw. High, e;. Bonus, Paid Vacation, Medical & life Insurance, If you want • Profe11ional Cereer-not ju1t a job -ond uo wllllnv to make a Succe11 Com· mltment, I want to talk to YOU I Call John Soy· mour 776-2231 , ... SEYMOUR SALESMEN . WAITRESS. ._i.,.,,. REFRIC., wry dou. ~ Nted mtn wbo a.re tta4y 10 :..=and~~ O\~f 21. Appl)t At Lo\'ft, =.I :C:i n. ~~ 1 ! ~. ltam the CV bul1hea and ..... Brookhunt • Ad&nu. Hun- are v.·Ulln& to train. M\llt pl,y ba ,_.. bttwu 1.00 tUVton Beach. _w_'"""=-~'~"'~,.,-· ---- .. ,~ IOOd penona1iti1 be UICI 12,llO ,_ at 1311 Bola ~~£;~;_,...,..--\ """"bl< D- lntttettfd tn a future, dr.., Awtaw; MJd'wt.:t CStJ. \VEJ...Cna; \\'qon hu open-~lknt rondhlon .. 'ell, aa.ltsmlnded. Btntntl: ii-et in Ne\Vp()rt Buch. $$0 * 5.n-101T Demo., iroup tna.., h!O TEST :P.hast have ear a: 1)1)twrttt'r \\'uhtr A Gu Dl')'t:r commissions. Unllmlttd Ir>-54&-:iT<&:'i. bolh for 1155 comt. Apply tn Pt:non. XLNT ()ppor. Nari Conc:t-m • ~ * U N I V E R S l T Y OWS. TECHNICIAN ha• o .. nlnti• !OJI route ?-.tOBD..E, 2850 Harb:ir Blvd., uJeilrMn in C.M. 962-tM16. UKE NI'"'! Sean wul'*1 Costa ?iltsa YOUNG MAN ovor 11 ...._ CU d:r)·t'.r, and Rtfriatrator. •v ml. 1141-1191121~ SAL.ES OPPORTUNITY! \\'1!! are aetkin& an In-A I t I I t Malnttnanct CONCERNED AOOUT divldual "'Ith 2 years elec· M•n, must .,_ ne•t. e~ Fumlture 111 ECOl.ocY tronlc uptlitnce lncludlna flclent & rellable. $1.75 SOLID Bitth bt!droon1 "' Expanding company needs S expoaure to Jftclakla t'lec-hour. C•ll 546-SOU. \Y/t\\·\n bed,, dbl~· dre..s-, saleospeople who ca r e. tronic test equipment. Poll· q, \\'OOd lran1f'<.l nllrror, nltt'I Ground noor cpportunlty. lion rtqultt• knowledge o! !iland. $1:.':i. \\'al 111~n NITA BRIDGES 830-3939 electronic fundamentals -1 -11~ ) «hloet with ur without SALES reprMentatlve for tMory and techniques as _ . V ron1pon11ntd, $3.:i to $00. local tinn in Capo Vallt>y ,\,.II u pie ability lo un-MG-97-1:>, ~rea. E:<per. hf'lptul but wlU tltrstand, operate a.nd ln-v --~L-V-t-:r~tu-ft-.,-,-.,-,-,,-~-.,.; tntin. Salary + comm Cu terpret iruitrumt'nll used Antfqu.1 IOO uM'CI, $135; n1atchinr iov. & full rompe.ny bentttti. An with a hl:;h delf"ee of f\JRNITIJJlE c 11\ll, $.I(): vi:lwt hi-bi.ck _,., opportuno·ty •mpl-r. &n:a1ytlc11.I skill. \\'orking -laM -,_ •1)..1. ""......., v~~ i\fl~c .f70 Old Nt>11-Bl t tiw.u-, _.: rocktall labl,.~. For interview call 494-1595. kno.,~1ledge ct !ogle rtquired. · · · V( • 1 ii0iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..,1ii;19\ J>rtofer t'XPf'rienct" in the Ne1vpor_1 Beh, Thurs -Fri . $.15 r11.; l\ml)ll, S)l f'11 . SECRETARIES Earn Your Pay Tho Kolly Girl Woy One Time, Part Time Or All The T ime "Just SH .Jlff'J yr/ tlrld of spectro!ICOp)'. Sat. ll·J. -'""'-~~· ""''-· ----- OVER 200 washers, dryf'r!I, MAPLE bunk or truri..llf" \Ve offer aood starting refrl.gerators from $39.9.). IM'\11, matt xlnt sao. Pair •{ !LIBll.f'Y and benefits. For 11.d-:~15--0790. MahoK•ny rom1node~ $40. dltlo I lnt t' I R \\'loclMlr ar111 l-hc\ir sr., na orma ion, Pease ent Washers/ Dryers Anti que clock sa5. 673-tfi76. call penonnel. $2. \Vk. Full main!. * 639-1202 * AVOCADO cruth~~I vt•l vrl 110f1. $150. t..m.. uat l lt)\. RF.1-~RIGERATOR, 2 Dr. T11.blet $35. LanlJIS n.1. Auto Detroit Cllain1 l$85. ~29TJ. *~* (213) 441·1171 ABBOTT ScirnlUie Products Div 7 PC Conlemp \V-' t n' Then Plck The Hours, Days, F. U Jt 0 PE A N C a r v ,. d · ... nu r Lel\ith Of Emp)Oyment -Arn'°"1r, 2 doon, 7'6" x :r Mii . Nfl"W (6 mo's) $)78. SAt'. That Fits Your Needs Equ11.t Oppor. l.:mplcyl'r ll "x l~ 8". $1l'S. Ei7>64&1. $DJ. Beforn 5 pm Friday. You'll \Vcrk For Ua TOW TRUCK DRIVER ~l dayr, ~7-0to8 e\'f'ic. On Our Payroll $100. )X'r wk + eon1mi11lon. Appliances 102 TABLE, ~/.,vhf, ' lilal'k In Our Cuatomers' Offices. Matun person. \Viii tr11.ln Ir ~ . chra, $75. Butfl'.ll·walnut \Ve'll Plan A \Vcrk clean <'.ut &: deJ)t'nclnblc. l\IAYTAG ~epairma.n ha.s \\'hile lop, $65. llanglnt: Schedule To Suit You Call 893·5011. ii·1iihen pj. 10 $lOO. Can lamp-Mf!d alyle.140. 557·8820 On Th ECHO JOB AGENC\t 1lt'H.,·er w/l yr. cuar11. •T ... ~t 11 Tballllored 6531 \Vrstminsltr Av"nur SJ!J-1778. BUNK ~hr, Solid O..k, o .. our A lty ' Wason \Ybttl <lertcn. >:ln't Your Time~ \Ve1tmin1t•r, C11.llf. F.LECTRlC washer A Ory<."r. cond, c 0 mpJf!1 • Sl$.. Your Transpor1aticn \Vhite. exeelltnl condition. SfO..Ull. Call Or Visit Travel Agt-Exp Open Prlva!e party 9~2500 or -----------------1 ---"R~EALT.Y ...___ -· Prod-~an&&et _ to.. $1.2K m.-11§ a&k tor Ca.ex.__:_ Haw IOft'led'ligl )'OU wam to INVESTM!NT ·-/~0--/7: IJ B\O'.er--Slec. . 0Pf'n Turn unUfleO 11em1 tnlo quick le!lt OwWed ada dO ;;-• I - See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD 1. Stovo 2. Guitar 3. Biby Cr'b 4. Electrlc iaw S. Camer• 6. Washer 7, Outboard Molor I , Storoo S.t 9. Couch 10, Clarinet 11. Refrigerator 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sewing Machine 14. Surfboard IS. Machin; Tools 16. DlshwHhor 17. Puppy II. C1bln CrulHr 19. Goll Cort 20. Barometer 21. Stomp Collection 22. Dln~tto Sot . 23, Ploy Pon 24, Bowling Boll 25. Wiler Skis 26. FrHHr 27. Sultc1H 21. Clock Will Sell Fast! 29. Bicycle 30. Typewriter 31. Bar Stools 32. Encyclopodi1 33. Vacuum Clean•r 34. Troplcol Fish 35. Hot Rod Equlpm't 36. Fiie C1blnot 37. Golf Clubs 38. Sterling Sllvar 39. Victorian Mirror 40. Bedroom S.t 41 . Slide Projector 42" Lawn Mower 43. Pool Tobi; 44. Tires 45. Pl1no 46. Fur Coot 47. Oropos 48. Linens 49. Hors; 50. Airplane SI, Orvan 52. Exercycle 53. Rare Books 54. Ski Boots SS, High Choir 56. Coins 57. Electric Troln 58. Kilton 59. Cl111ic Auto 60. Colfoo T1b!e 61. Motorcycle 62. Accordion 63. Skis 64. TV S.t 65. Workbench 66. Diamond Watch 67. Go-Kart 68. Ironer 69. Camping Trailer 70. Antique Fumltu'9 71. Tepe Rocordor 72. Sellbo1t 73. Sports C•r 74. Mattrou Box SPll• 75. lnboord Spoodboal 76. Shotgun n. Saddle 78. Dart G1rno 79. Punching lag 80. Baby Carrloge 11. Drums 82, RIAo · 83. Doak 84. SCUllA Goar These or any other extra things around the house can be turned into cosh with a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD . . . so .. Don't Just Sit Therer • DIRECT 642-5678 a • Re•I Estate CerMr J\11({'1 <.:Jir{. Sec.y-Marketmg S675\ii"iii'"'iciailli642-5618iiijiiiiiimlii"'iUi;i'jjcallijNjjOi;Wi;i1U-1!171.iijijjiil. New or experienced join the Sec y/Bkkpr lo $700 Company that's~ If 2061 BWLlness Center Or. Sec'y/Con1tr/Anahm $650 ., "°" do not have a lice,;,., Irvin; IJJ-1441 General 0!"" $500 •••••••••••••••••••• check on our Medical X-ray $600 $49 Secretuy NEWPORT UNION BANK Porsonnol Avoncy Hu a Unlqut! Opportunity UJ Dover Dr., N.B. Real Estate Llcenslng Course run aa.lt'll t:rahll.ng program -no cost. Manaa:ern.ent op- portunltiea, Ask ·for Mn. Jones tor tnfonnation at 842-5581, Tarbell Realton Real Estate ProfeWonal Real Estate Sale111T1en Ir broken! The opportunity is hett! You U1! needf!d immedlatel,y for our rapidly expanding R e a 1 Estate diviaion. Politlve op- portunity tor advancement, Fer appoinlment phone Rick Rot'gne~. For An Experienced . '42·3170 SECRETARY For Tht! Man11er Of Our Office She muzt have rood •h & typina" lklllt1 Ir. e n j o )' meeting people. Pleue App!)' In Pel"llOn Tuesday tJmJ Friday Tc Tett5a Walu 610 Newport Ct!'nter Dr Newport Beach Equal Oppor. Elnploy<r TYPISTS Tempor•ry Must be poised, well sroom· ed. I.aw prt:11urt jobs. Start immediately. XI n t op-Sew port.unity tor houuwiw1 tt- f!'nterin.r 1he job market or 1n betwttn job!!, Call Or Vialt KELLY GIRL * Socrotory $550 Sh 80-90,·type 60 '+ Some exp. in ena:lneerin& or technical background helpful. 2061 Buslneu Ctr. Dr. Feie Pakl/AIIO Fet! Jobs Irvine 133-1441 * TYPISTS For •n ecl In Wom•n's World Coll Mory Both 642-5'71, ul 3JQ A Shlrtclressl lare 'n' lreayl Serviet! Center A1ency 4262 C&mpw: Dr., NB ~i!.IH!Oo:.~ Suite B-4 557-2711 * Rermer Jor RECEPTIONIST SWITCHBOARD Needf!d w/pleuant personal· jty for Yachting Manul. $95 per "·k, 6 mos -1 yr exper prt'['d, 110me typing requir- ed. Send handwritten baek· grd letter to Dally Pilot ad •418, P .O. Box 1560, Costa A-1esa, Calli. 9ZS26, RECEPTIONIST: Use your ability with people on thi• Job. C.onvince_ the clients that this ii the finest com- pany in the area. Start $476. Call Nancy May, 54!Mi055, CouW Agency, 2790 Harbor Bl. at Adams. RECEPrIONISI' -Girl Fri· day. Jmmedlale po1ition with architectunl firm. N,B. P'"m -~ • Good starting salary. Front ofDee appearance rnentlal. Call Mikt' 67">-239'3· Helen Schaffer a temporary job today Secretarial Vacation Relief Intervw1: 9-12 for Advertising Dept, Take We Need All SH, typt', detail work. Ap-Ottlce Skilla prox. 6 weeks. Startin&' June Equal Oppol', Employrr 26, 1972. Male A Female Call Margaret Grttnman Western Glrl Inc. for Appointment 4667 MacArthur Blvd. OAILY PILOT NewportB .. ch 330 W. Bay St., CM 540-0325 642-4321 between 9-4 PM TYPIST SECRETARY F/tlme. Type addreue1 on Good lkllls. !..«al IBM cardr. Mori-Fri 8: 30 ii Call Lorn.Int! .Ut to 5:30 PM. Apply Pen-.,. .' ·• WESTCLIFF nyaaver, lM5 Nt'WpOrt Blvd., ~~ Penonnel A&ency C.M. f -.200,.--w-~=clltl:::mo.::Drc,.':..··~NB--l~~Pl,SJ, on Mm". ~ 't':,'\ Seamstress, f/tlme btnefJtl". Local arra. Call '~ !\, 501 29th Street, N.B. Zena, 956-llXXI, Cal Fair Em· --' SERVICE Station attendant, ploymtnt Alency, 905 No. exper. lube &: It mttharilc&1 Euclid, Suite A, Anaheim. all ahifts, incl. graveyanl: TYPIST, prime req. 1peed 4 full & part time avail. Ap-accuracy, mo1Uy st..tlaUcaJ. ply in pel"llOn cnly, La Pu Nrw plant In San Juan 7276 SIDS S-10-12 i.-14-16 t,Aa.e '8111'4 1 Urrlon, Le Pat Rd. I: S&n Cap~trano. Mr. Bo r 11 n, ~ Batt )'our mtdrlff~ under Route Driver $600 Dl•iO Frwy. "3-CS82. 9241 sun or ''""' Jn thi• flirty SERVICE StaUon attendant WANTED SIZES 10Yz.20Yz ;; lJ'~lp uq ikirt, lop and Good driving rtt0rd & know- leda:e O.C. will help get thl11 position. Previous route or salr1 exp, Call 893-5011. ECHO JOB AGENCY 2531 Westminster Avenuf' Westmintler, Calif. SALESLADY-CASHIER Wanted by relatively small food store • not a 1uper market No Sa.I. night or Sun. work. Medical & hos- pital benrfits. Un iform tu.m. $2.25 hour, Apply Lindberg Nutrition, lln rear of the Toy \Vorld Store on level So. Q:iaat ~Plna: Center, Colla liltaa.) The DAILi PILOT ORANGE I COAST'S ·leading p/tlme, evea 4 wkndl. Ex-J_ • ..,..,. • 1lfr....,, ahorlJI ln cri.rp cotton. Add per only, Neat in ap-LlcenHd "'f '''""'""" """'.,... en1y lullp appllquf!, em· penrance. Apply morning• Land Saleamen brold~ry. f'at. 727iJ: lwo l>nly, 2590 NeWJX)rt Blvd., We Oller 00 1ltE TOWN or trevt'I mollfl, printed pat I er n C:·:;:M,,. ,.,,..,.,--.,.,----I· Fully Vt!lt.t!d contract mluti' il2ca "'12·. J •1• -:: e 25% Ink> to farawway placea In a Ill" ... v. SE\VING ~lachinf! operator-comm n brlik, brl&bt lrhlrtdreu with Ma~ Iii#. w/saU -·L-1--op. Good • Onn, m. pakl: by Tru .. •tee SEVF.NT\'·...,-....___ ............ e 2!.-i Acre StJbdi 1Utching to there, then a .......... ... .... " ... mndit'°111. Top pay. vllJONi flare of pll"ata:. You 'll love for t'ath pattem -add %t Pt.'rmanent ~915 or • ";;I~ ~~·& Allor.: It. Cf!nt11 for each pattern Ilk 64&-3401 anytim~-· · ·· Prlnted Patttrn 9241 : t.'l:W Air Mall and Spedal HaJ'ldl· SUNDAY Sehl Teacbt'ra all 6JJ..7374 Jlalf Slz.e1 10%, 12''°'· 14i,,, Ins: otherwlae th~lllM denomln.11.t\on1. WAITRESSES. No np. req. 16~~. l81h, 20~. ljixe 1414 delivery will take threw Dance Tchn: fall danctt1) Top wagtll and rtp1. Mutt (bust 31) take1 3 ill )'ards wHkl or mort. Send V. Host/Jlostesl' It waltreti' ht!" neat A: well groomed. 45-lnch. Alice 8rookl lhe DAILY Sale• Rrpa 1: Yop Inatrue· Apply '11 penon. Dally. 11 IEVENTY·nvE CF.NTI PILOT, Jro, Nffdleeraft ton am Open Seumt, 24t> Weat for each patttm • add 2S Dtpt., Box 163, Old OtW. SINGLES CHALET Pacific Hwy_. Nt'wp orl centl tor each patlml for StaOon, New Yoril:, N.Y. 196.l Jlarbor Blvd, C.ltt. Bt'al'h. Air Malt and Speclal llandl-lOOU . Print Na.me. AddreN, 64(i...533l 646-3566 WAITRESS ina:; otberwtse thltd~lan ZN<•E· ':.'o"•L"' ENC • .....,.n • ,:T '--· E 21 A 1 .. l dtllVtfY wUI take three "' •~ SUPE(tVISORS, •a i I b cat xper. over · pp.,. n J>CT· wteks or more. Send to ('r'O(het, knll, f'tc. Jo1're . Supervi.eory • k 111 IOn atltt 2 PM, Dtll Shel, Marl&n Martin, the DAILY <l lrtelloM. 5'lc ~•aen. Boa.t bkll( ~•p. not t..aruna Htll1 Plau, El Toto. NF.Vi'! lHtut ~taerame. ..,..d We will t t WAJTRC"eoeo PlLO'I', ID, Patt.em Dept., -~, · r A n • ~ mulf. be exp .. 21 232 West U th St., Nt'W Bille, fancy kno tJ, pal· MacGttgor Yacllt Corp, or ovu. Apply In penon, York Ny 10011 Pr lem!. $1 . 1631 Placentia, or. 3'B2 Cami"? Caplltrar.:i, NW, .\DoaEM· w I !n~ F.a•r Art M JI• Ir p'" Swltchbo.rd Opr SJC. ZIP, fP7iE and STYLI': {'roc-htl -O\'f':r 26 dl'1ta:nt lo WANTED by CArt'tt VtUMn; NUMlt:R. make. SL Kelly Girl c:hallir.ngl~ poeltion open SEE MORE Sp r in 1 lJtAtanl f'r'odld Beol ... for o>rni>etenl, mat u r,. Fuhlona and choote ont: '""m by plC1Utt1! Pauem~ Need• )'OU k1r short lenn domutlc. uv .. in, mu I I pattern tfte from new $1. lemporary u.11inments. hive own car, care or 2 Sprins.SOmmtr CaWoc. All C:O.npil>tto 1.n•taat Gift .._ Muat have eq»r. Xln'L chlldl'Pn. Run e n t I rt' •iz.e1l Only SOc. -mtl'l'f' lhan 100 tilt.. -$L worklnr conds, Tep earn-houMMld. Good aa.lary + INSTANT SEWING BOOK 0Do1pkUi A.let..• Bouk - lnp. Wrrk1y paycheck. Ab-room, bo8rd 6: tol'llf! "". MW today, wear tomorrow. Sl. «>luteb' no ftt, ~t. f.4au.na N t 1 u ti. $1. 11 IUt)' R*I ft.d~ ... S)·. Kolly Girl '9r>{,837, INSTANT f As II I 0 N -· .. IS ,.,, .. At, .... , 00.. 2)61 Bu.11.ntu Ctr Dr WAITRESS tor coUM lhop, BOOK -lfundredl or lrvtne W-1441 OYt:I' 21. Exptr. AwlJ In fuhlon tacts. Sl. 4'dli Book. l -l& p.a1mt11. Vatandff cost Rm prnon, ?.ftu. 1.anit1, l'lm ':!.~~-t ' ..... ~ .. "P~~:.· °"Tu"'rn ~~ q.Ut llM I • DXlM11 1 &lptrior A°'"'*·• C.)f. • ........ .., ,.,_ o-..u.., ~ M rk I )'Ollr bou.11, apt., atore tbtm tnlo "'CASH" 1o1U ......... a elp ace • blda-, 11c, thnt a DoJ11 Pllol Any ""1 II the OEST DAY'° tbom thru Dotly P ll•t QoH" •• ...,..,., °'"" • OUIUJtd Ad. run an ad! Don • 1 U buutftul p&lltml. 30c. _____________ mil! _______ _,, ' -··.call_,. wa11. •••••••••••••••••••• I • ' . . . ' llAl\.Y PILOr 112 -:-oil ..... 1o11 ·-..... aid -...,,. ad ...... tabln. 111--.-.. 1'9dl0< • ....., i-ocker1, ' -·;c-. ~n. Iron • --.-. ...,... ..... "pk:turr frame a , lb:!• '"' tools. etc. l\514 lit Aw., lo. Lquna. :rrt. Ir ..... . ...... Beby>=. .. a.nc. ~. lampe, • llUC'. J.llD1 W~ Ln. H.B ...... 8'ln 11 to 5. . . • ............. ., JI, 1972 STEREOS 1 Female C&lko klnr hair. um Gmard tqlllppocl wtlh J monlhe old. Black, Red, twl size p r o t • 1 • Io a a l Brown, •hlle, Cad f4S.GU ch arwu, AM/FM/MPX attn 2 p.m. receiYft', • • • I • d air' '8'11."'. """"F,,_JN_P_PY_· ""1,---... -..,-ml-.,.x ~ ..icen. tllpe breed, H 1 b r kn , Cd deck A headphone plua tn w/chlldttn, Blk I tan. jacb. Wu Id! undalmod. 54U3'78. Brand new In box Ii: ===-c,---..,..,.,..-,,...,---, ...,.......i. CJrlgtnal]y pr1o-SPAYED lemole ab to aood ed at S2'7t.91S. Tab owr lot home. Al• Ge r m a n S90 eam or lm8D pe.)'IMnb. Shepherd lf ro aame homt, La 1aw•1 ~I =67:1-Ml6==·,....,--,,.--,.,-.,,---7t"893-4501. KITI'EJ'iS, 6 wecka old. Fret BOOKSHELVES and 2 to aood home • .._,.. col. SMALL DESKS tUltable tor on Ii: tlza. 64t).3573. atra ....... .,..,. ln JO'a' l.Ab/Shephttd Mbc p.raet:. 1212 So . Rolle St., Call: Rlven~e. Ca. Santa Ana. 54J..3120 714: 685-1«6 aft 8 pm EXTENSION and STE P 3 BEAtmrnL cockapoo LADDERS. all l&iza WOOD puppies frtt to j'Ood home. ONLY Price Nd....S loF m-068. QUICK SALE 1%12 So. Rou"WHJTE---S~lame--.. -male--ca-t~l St, Santa Ana. J42..312). yr. old Good wlth children Office l'umllVNt 567-&86. Equip. 124 BEAUnFUL kittens. 2 plll"t . . lt' Cfntury, Flth Ski or :~~~u~"t.:'°:~ HONDAS GALORE! $1t-1315. 552-9539 eve•. TEST DRIVE THE NEW HONDA Boots, R.nt/Chert'r 908 (QUPEI GUNS aettpted ln track, • Pent.ax Yashica S . L . R ., enl&rger $15, slide proJ. take1 both 35 I 2%, 7752 Belgrave Ave., G.G., Beh. It Chapman, Sat.-Mon. HAVE BO AT·WILL TRAVEL Sport fl.thine Oul1tng 646-9000 644-8211 Boots, Sell 909 HONDA SEDANS LIDO 14 No. 3159 lnc:ludlng $1639 INCL. Plll•HT trailer. Xlnt cond + frtt AND DE.AUi PllP, membenhlp to N~·1 . fULI. ~ACT. 19 Ul,,ID newest I fintst Yacht Club.1 '---.,.;o...;;;;..~._--.... -------·11 12""'. 816-<391, P.CAT No. 271. Xlnt. Trlr. UNIVERSITY Lots of atora~. North Salls, .ee to apprec! $ 32 50 , 524--0865. • OLDSMOBI LE·GMC TRUCKS-HONDA 2850 HARBOR, COSTA MESA -540.9640 O.We An N...., s.tkflff UatH YN ,.,. .. white>, l attY Ir white. Need l8M Effe. elec. typewriter, &ood home. 968-7359 aft 3. xlnt cond, prl pl)'. '350. 3 FEM. Klttena, black with 'l'::c:::;;:::--~--.li'il5 962-4l&7. while features, mother mISH 'Setter pup, male, 12 Slamep, &73-7853, 83.1-0tfiO. 14' SUper Satellite w/traller. AD glaaa I alum. Very lha,rp. $750, 545-34.filt Boots, Slips/Docks 910 Autos Wanted l:W!lLRY. bonlmlptcy, -·Kaot HIL !t).15% off, V""'7 ol in1enle.-t toe!· .-Pr<cloua-Avall -dlllftu We. 17J...7521. MM!ii1n1ry Ill y.'kl, ahota, lbow qua!. Hunl RARE mlnl•ture Ruaa1•n WANTED, wkle or side tie I T,.,.,art1tlo9' Bch fl68..8230. Blue fem kl.lien. Free to 35' lllp.l:all 675-6696 aft 6 . Planot/0,,.nt 126 eood home. 545-465!. p.m. I 'iiiiii F B by R•bb ltt CHOICE 1llps in new Marina Motor Homes GOU~C CO. '"ca: 548-<ll6l tor 25-10 It. boat•. 940 WE buy all makes of dean used sports can, pajd for or not. Please drive in for free appra.iaal. ' '• OXYGEN • Aoatyine -LARRY ROOu c AL1co Guin .. Pia ~sA~l~L~~~":"'~A~T~·s""L"'iP"'s,.... *Marvin Pearce* Prom!~-... ~--·~ 968-1852 NEWPORT IMPORTS w;oldlllr and cuttl.. outfit. fll.115. lot:. ARC -· 225 • . .,,,.. 195 827-30t0. 111 """'• ·~--N~port Beach 548-225.1 New Coon Orsano FREE KITTENS SUnday, Juoe 4, 2:30 pm * w.9169 * Boots, Spood & Ski 911 at ~ ~~f = AJ? LAB PUPPIES 14' Sk1 Boat, 65 hp Mercury, dml_,_ no papers e $1937 Xlnt rond. $700. Motor Homes Sales • Rentals 558-3222 : Unclaimed Frtta .. ""'' •557~18* '· --~ 4 _..... prizn:, fun. FOUR long-hair kl1ten1 1411 S. ViUage Way, S.A. •YAW't.)', a~ •r~"' * * * * * Six weeka old , c:iw-. •tr -Mr. lloo\I oonduet1 tr.. ...nc. e 548-&Sl e TEST DRIV E opetlcen wllh multi p le T-Jllfl) THE MIDAS MINI cro 11·ov•r networti:, ::i: ;ur ";r'C: : 3 Female Chlhuahua pupa, 7 MOTOR 'HOME 3100 W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach 642-9405 WE PAY TOP CASH AJd/TM/MPX ndkl and one ' wttkt old. Distributed by ...!; fll!!-~~ Still_~tt-' . ~~SIG-0).-_ ~16-SOl'I C ~ I R -o Ken.. cn.n Products '1 <!"l'n&llY 14111.,., l>"Y 0 lOO No. Main, S.A. Olh'Jlirt,-•• ,o •lit ,. CR EV.I ER MOTORS tor uaed can a truckl, just call u, fer free eltimatu. GROTH-CHEVROLET linall balance 01 $191'.~ or 547-0681 ** Slnce 1911 [ ll)i.:J '65 Ford 250 %. T. Truck 2l8 W. lit St., Santa Ana -.. 11.25 -·· -. .... ... -13' '171 u s A Ster90 •Equip. * ATTENTION * w/8%' Cabover Westway·1 1 .,._,,,----.~.--.,-.-.= ~ "w-~·-, 17f.·E. 17th St., ORGAN BUFFSI 1 camper unit. 4 speed. R/.H Tr•ller1 Tr•v1I 945 • ...nu~ · Xlnt cond. 54,000 mi. Sl.995. ' eo.ta Mesa, --· WAS NOW C•I• 152 $11Hl316. .-A-R-IS_T_OC_R_A_T_S __ EJec Marimba $ 395 $2751--------....., COLOR TV, SIOO. Couch $50. Elee Glock $ 290 $190 KIMALAYAN female, 1ea1 •n VW campmobile. Pop e NEWPORTS Hair drywr $10. Can opener Oreb Belli . $ 210 $ll0 point, produces top kit-top, tpee. 3-way retrig., • AU'J'O.MATES combo$!. Cock ndk> $'5. Slelfh Belli $?Mt $345 t ena. CFA registered. Alao radio, camp. gear. m-1951. ~~ttal~~ OiUd'i deak/chr tto. 2 OrJan Harp ncm '500 penla.n klttena and per-Cycles, Bikt1, 7109 w. '7th s~1 Twtnbtdl, compt $15 ea. Theattt Cona $ 950 $550 '1an 1tud aervlce. .. uno Dnuer, baby d re 1 a er, Chun:h Cona '$ 560 S275 892-2970 Scooters '25 Santa Ana (714) s:n.2595 I a mp I . p I ct Qr" I' s lMt $ '750 $3CS SIK°MESE Sealpolnt ktttf!M '65 HONDA 3()5; Auto S.rvtc1, f •rt• 949 lmlc~4cnacka, . toyt/1ame1, P 0:':.s Weekdays $10. ea. Call after 2 pm. COMPLETE REBUil.D child 1 <"~ JO'ftl' lawti NEWPORT ORGANS 646-278l. Top end, bottom and -· lllo! new !50. Baby SIAMESE ~1tt S I b l Tenda T•tfle , S5. Bowline 846 .Production Pl., N.B. · n. ens. ea car 1. new c utch. bl.llr, $5 to $10. 56-10t6; 645-1510 Point.. 8 wffka. $15 each, Runs ex~llent. $250 .Ull 1-. CM. *PIANOS*9RGANS* • 548-1088 • 64&-"'76, uk for Tom. WAS NOW Goin& Out For B....,..1 Dogs 154 1970 HONDA 175 : .Tape Dfck (2 mpd) $1.m $SQ Beat quality • prtcn . "'"'· H™ALAYAN female, seal Xlnt cond. 3,300 miles. Sl:rfft Goodyear Blems, all sl.zn, ' -I 95 Ka al Stein Baldwin t or trall bike $400. Call Linda, low prices. U.S. Indy map, 1 100 W. Amplfr ,. .. ,.. " • ""Y· • • c point, produce• top kitt~1. 546-447S. Crager American from : Dry°""madl 1115 1 50 P!eJ!er Ptenoo A Rolla CFA ~-Al10 "'95 H"··'· "'50 1 ood P'·--1150 •~• •-•-•· W B •-n 0 0 GUZI -· · "~•n ~· 1"" , W: AaDll'I' ,.._, """"l.&&S • • • I 111 • _. Penlan klttena and Penlan M T I 1970 14" Indy map for Pinto A • jlW 9 to I wttkdi.)'• Dally lQ.fi Eva/&m 12-5 1tud service. 750cc, 3,500 ml'1. Falring v--S.S. 4 ionnke _Pinto •I " WPQRT OR~ANS FIELD'S PIANOS --ddl b • u -.-·~ ., .., °"_ .. .,,., 1& e ag1, ,,.ny reu, o er. &: Vega off road tires + • 148 Pl;oducUon Pl., NB Costa Mua (n 4l 645-!250 LABRADOR Re tr e i v e r Ken, 675-6060. wheela. All brand• from • Ml-1530 HAMMOND ofgan. Pert. AKC, regla. quality puppies'. 1972 HONDA CB 450. Only $22.50. 1950 Newport, Costa * AUcnON * oond. nsoo New. Dbl. Call ~71219 aft 3 pm. H1VI!' tm miles-Brand new co~ Mesa. 64.5-3554, ! J'tne Fumitun !ePMyboe.rd. ''™'· 645--1666 Aft, shots. dltlon. 1 month old. $875. Cadillac Parts 1959 1 r ll:AppUancff "' . . -SCHNA-UZER pups, Must· Sell! 586.(1996. 'l'ranlml.sak>n • ·-~---···· ,.M p m. PRIVATE PARTY Vt'ANTS bsebroken, 1ho1J, rroom " ·n Suzuki 500 tt. Xlnt cond., Radio """"""' .... .._,,., .JI.I ' TO BUY PIANO FOR stud ~rv. avail. Tmm all orig. Ito~ 2 mo. $600. Air Conditioning Unit ~ Windy's Auction Bern CASH. 835-22711. 846-<m9. 494-3193. 12ll So. !toss St. Santa Ana ·,'. ~ N-CM 1411 11181 ·-54• "'-_,. ,..,....,_., CORRAL-Ponln or bot.e......, YORKIE Pups 3 Mos, 1hots, '70 Kawuaki 500 Mark III. ......,uu : 9eldnd TolV'• Blda Mat1 to $25. mo. No feed.Ina. AKC, 29 ch In 5 gen Trade for car or $795. 3CQll ~!!!!!!!!~~~~ : •\ii Carat Diamond ring, 541-5636. pedllfft. $100. 892--1549. ml. new. 847-7724. I 11,:;'l ~ Tiffany eett:lnr. $251), AllO 130 TINY Tea('llp Toy Poodle1 '68 Buttaro-El Bandlto 360, Autol tor Wt ~ ~ bride A irroom'• matchlna Sporting ~· AKC registered Xlnt cond, nu motor . .is1s. l ';;jiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiij~~~ t wedd:lns b&nd•. u you wllh, M-1 Garand rtne. 30.06. H&R 547--3851 * 547.gsgr 54&.1610. jl FOR TREE! I BID of A.le A mta:. Speclal wood 1tock. KEESHOND PUPPIES 1971 Suzuki 185. Dune Bugg 111 956 · ~tee Available • Set Excellent con d • $60. AKC, 3 females, l male, 6 4000 miles. $3"5. f , ~ lo· Cotta Mesa. Call 549--0283. wka. Call 833--353! evea 673-4228 CLASSIC Meyera Manx- ' ~ aft •l A wlcnds. 6, SURFBOARD show cond, all equip new, , OLDER stnpr a e w In I * Good condllton * 3/4 Lab Retmwr Pupplea 1971 HONDA CB-100, xlnt needs eng, bst ofr, att 6 maefune.Wa1iwtcon1ole $35. 557_7621 Bl.k .. Dam, AKC, Gd Com-cond. Best otter o~r $275. pm. 493-3242. J modei.. Stral&M ltltcb plua pa.nkm clop, U5. S86--<r.i93. 644-1514 after 6. T k 9 !'. attr.c~ntJ. H• m mer. TV, R•dlo, HIFI, ** OLD ENGLISH SHEEP 1!161 BSA GoldStar. rue 1 62 pkaier, ·ruttier, buttonholer, SterH 136 dog, femaJe, 4 mos. Fast&: Sanitary $700 TRUCK. Hillman (Commer) ;J hemMk:her, plnktr, "ZiJ>l)er 1972 CLOSEOUT aaJe on Call 557-4848 after & pm 114-495-4640 Van • 1962 1212 So. Ross St. ;1 toot $30. call rft9mblg• or Zenith It RCA TV's in full WELSH Coral Plnbrook-SST Mini Bike, 4 gears, 4'Ai Santa Ana 54Z-llll 11 dttlr 5: 30. ~. awLne. Lowest prlce1 of the Al<C • 1 male/3 fem . hp, Xlnt for dirt/st. Sacrf : Pool "tbl 4 yn old·mt.rble year on all '72 models, Full 546-4928. $135. 548-2426. • : , bed, 'Empi~ I model, by .elecHon If you buy now! ST. Bernard, female, 3 '67 Honda 305 Scrambler :1 Ftlhtr 8' 4" by 4' 9". ln-Priced below the dla-months old. AKC. All ahota. Excellent cond. $275 : eludn balla, 8 cue1, wall counters&: wlth 3 )T picture * 534-3017 * e 545--2100 e S racks, dble blk wroUJlit tn:in tube A l )T parta a servlct1. 15' ' overhead lamPI. Orta $875. 25.. color consoles from HorH t '69 Honda 450 SL. Mint oond. Now $450. -.1210 aft 7 pm. $425. 19" Chromocolor or B't'AUT. Purebred Ar ab $550 firm 10032 KuKui, HB. : 1:5fu!:Jt VW.,er 12 1trlng i.x.100 $399. 111" color bw Hane. Hacknt'y Pony -----·------1· acOas~ cultilr. Sll!. Guitar portables $259. ABC Color A Quarter Horse. Call far Motor HOl'ftff • ampW'fe,....UwrtorM!' wltwln TV, son Atlanta. Hun-appt. 55J..3357. ----~----1=-=--~~~~~= ; .P,~n. reo-wrb and tlnKton Beach, 968-3329. Wei~~~~~~~~~ '63 Chev. 1ni Ton, 6 cyl, $575. -: . vibrato m. Vol~ •insle n c--quOte phone prlcn. I~ '57 vw. !UJU'OOf, lg whl1, :; q aid. New. $35. 918-1534. DANISH walnut HI-Fi lncldg I ._..,. I[•~) $275. 1811 Iowa, CM . • GAS Drqier, Xlnt Cond. Garra.rd chanar, AM/FM . Mtrht.Equlpmeftt . 1'.. 545--1046. ' $65. l{eavy Dub' .SWlna: Sri, tuner, 35 watt amp: .sepl ';iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~; * '40 CHEV. PICK·UP * sas,. 1'4•1lell. Horae_ $'7. spkr In folded ho r nll Xlnt body. $400 Crft.ttw Playthlnc• Stove. ftlel0aure. Ta)» de c k Boats/M•rlne *Call: 67f>..3.331 * '10 , Ftw MllC. t t em 1 w/Robert1 p~p. All or Equip. 904 '70 DATSUN p.u. ~2&M. component g?'OUPI $35 to $00 WANTED: YAClIT JUNK 13631 Harbor, Garden Grow Air/cond. Shell camper. • M'-•·-• ,.tlque1. 5*-9745. C l Blk. So;vof .,!!~G. Frwy, Lo mileage. 979-8738 •· ~ ,..,.. • on con1lft11ment. lean out .,.......~ AJ.ic lor Sal.ea Manaa:s l82U Beacb Blvd. Hunttn&ton Beach 114'!-roB'I Kl ~ WE PAY TOP DOU.AR FOR TOP USED CARS If your car Is extra clean, see us first. BAUER BtnCK 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 979-2500 Auto•, Imported 970 ALFA ROMEO Alfa Romeo NOW ON DISPLAY SaJe• Service Parts Body Shop COAST IMPORTS 1000-1200 \V. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach 642-0t<I) AUDI AUSTIN AMERICA '68 'Austin America., radials. Xlnt oond. Call ~3743. BMW IMMEDIATE DELIVERY auto, w.;. SEE US ABOUT Overseas 0 1llv1ry CREVIER MOTORS 20e W. tsr SI .. S:mta Ana 135-3171 Visit our new home! & ROY CARVER, Inc. 2'34 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 546-4444 ---~~~~--'72 BMW 3.0 Coupe 2000 miles, Stock •'17 CREVIER MOTORS 208 W. L"t SI., Santa Ana 135-3171 CITROEN • llllhe1, etc. Fri, Sat on]y. SPEAKER.,...,.,., ablpJ>lng '°'"' aar••e or dockbox. SUNSET MOTORS 1954 Ford % ton truck. Runs -.:19C ~ L •de r • • damage to boxea 4 Plcldnl' Brina good used marine well. $200. 246~Viejo, Laguna M1dioh :vieJo. only. 6" 1-way to 15" 3-way equip A hardware to SAra'1 New . 18' Eldorado MINI Beach. Citroen Spo'rta M1ttr1tl MOVING _ muat 1tll Sony air auspe:nskm •YI t em•· Marine Salvage, .fill-30th St., MOTOR HOME. FllUy aelf Auto Leasing 964 Orange County headquarten ~deck A: Bo...u:• Mini 50~ ott reg. rt'taU. 5 Ytar N.B. 6~4. contained. e 21m1. for-k>cal A European atke A other mlac. llt.m.1. auaranttt. 892--ll91. $6995 delivery. 'Call -1. ST EREO Boots, _, '°' Compl•I• line of El Dorado ~ J im Siemon• Imports POOL llbit, .aLlf:iul 1tyle, Complete 1)'1tema.-2t to «L~ YACHTING Auodate1 Corp. c~, clian&-l1'l0Unb A ~ 2201-So. Maln.-Santa Ana td.alate .. 1325. Wlll dellvv oU ~. ttt&ll. Spnftr IYt Invite• the public to ride on 5th wheel traJler, Try our lease expertt for 557--5242 ._ Open Sun. -· -t•ma. 3l "' 50~ ott ..... the world'• lint Turbine Phone 145-113'1'1 S.vlnaa • S.tlJlactloo • SU. DATSUN ., CUlP,ET FOR SALE retail. 7804 We1tmlnsttt powtrtd pleasure boat on 1!70 Harbor Blvd., vke. ·br ~t IA)o<r. Call Ave .. w .. tm1mtrr. 892-~ June ~ J, ·4, 2506 W. Cout Co.la M.,. WE LEASE ALL POPULAR '72 BIG 510 SEDAN • ~TU • ,._. 5' Motorol1 romolt stereo Hlrhway, Nt"Wport .Beach PACE-ARROW • ' CHINOOK ~~AT COMPE'J'I. ~~~· :'si:.ttom~ :!s~~~ I~ lOllt ::.51~ Crall trl-cabl~ Al~:'°. ~i..= Call1~,:1':,~~ tor ·-..m.am. . rot.OR TV ~ 21" TV $29. ~ ~ ~~·~~ IJVERBr•cyH 'c'ITY DODGE THEODORE .• MqYI!IGl .lldl1pn.1"1' ~ !:::t =~ ~:= $39. All .. ..:~ Pl.ooi.' Prlv. pty. UI ROBINS FO RD ;~ Ltilri llove ll5. JIDlh &ood ' Zll: 41!>-2962 21l:42'1·7493 lllSl Horlxr Blvd. -a, '6-a!T · 13" portoble <0lor TV 1655$ Buch Boulevard Coole Me.. 642-00!0 , ' ' !200. Sl<ftO record Pll.\'tt 16' Wlunl w/f/J hp M'"' l Huntington s .. ch A to W ~• ... ?Toh-. Excol cond, llDO. 540-~ trall.,., Boat fr., h I y 71 U I 4n,.,. • .,. ; • -Old•trwllt. po. ' painted. MoiOr bu ttctnt ( 41 !40-'661/· IMPORTS WANTED •;' • W 1.IJ5 m·~ tu .... p. 18'0. e NEW 23' Luxury M.H. ~· ' t-1· ·•1-'---.t.....111 ~t Oranae CoanHt• t -.nvz YF.All OU> f l~ !HG-m9. "n ~ '""· ~= . _. • .., FtM tt V. rates possible. Pvt TOP J BUYER PSH A·IJllC DRAWINGS 18' CALIFORNIA 1/0 with 91.1-1397 BILI.' MAXEY TOYOTA • N> • • • --Ilda, lop, covtr. IAa th.l.n 1 1 11111 8"ch Blvd , iliC'TIUC ;A"Ni'"'"". ~ L-, 2 Tlmn, $2.00 1,.1 old. Mint t0nd. 121195. MINI Motor Homo ·lor ,. ... ff B<acb. I'll. t4l-llll ... - .. - •-546-3107 Sleeps S. sell cont. Pvt. pl)' • ..:'7'=--~,,,,.,== • • -' lM•ZlN all C pm. WILL Bey your car pold far IOllW f'l\EB Happy HealtllY Klt· 13' Boston W1>1ler, IO hp or nae. c.JJ Jlelltll Gordoo ...., 1Mlt • leme!t. We""' Johnaon, .,,....,. A Bimini S.D Iha old •lltll Dior die m..a -4tll E. (lout llw)o. "' a -54M815. • .,,,. n100. 54C-l!ll a11 ~ ..... •tull Newpait -. • 4 DR, 4 opd, dlr, low mlle .... Ra".!lo, heater C•337998) $2349 full price. Will finance pvt, ply. 546-8136 all 11 am 49<-<lSll. '70 DATSUN 5 dr. wagon. Auto., AM/FM, nr new o'alzfl tin:s. $1695. 9fi8..n45. '67 Datsun lf,()(): 4 dr Sdn Good cond. 1450/blt cir. 543-1610. • DATSUN :lttl, $4.#4. Must acll, tmmac., air cond., mag whlll., fact xtras, 492-2512. It's • bret?.e. MD )'Olli' Jttnu with e-ue. me DAn.Y Pllota..tlled.- WtdlR.,.,, .... ,!, 1972 PILOT -AIMRTISER JO • :--• • NOW!~: NEW! PILOT PENNY '< ~ .. • . PINCHER'.~ •'.> ' . .• , .. C["~SSIFIED. ~DS WITH A .. . ~: :· ·' ' " . ' ·' ·'· ·' -~ ':'> ·' ., :· · NEW-lOW-RATE :; 3 L~NES l TIMES 52.00 - '• ,. ,,. '· ·?.. . ;. ~:: •• .•• ... ::: ' • '· :· .. • . ; '· .-. :· .. :l: .. ... ANY ITEMll • $ OR LESS . i:! ~ ~ • ': '· l: i~ ,. EACH lnM MUST Bl! .PRICED e J • Comblnocl Tatel of Items Not ·To Exceod $50 e ~~: -1:,., • No Copy Chengn • No Abb ... vletlons e .: • :: .. . ..:· ;";: ~ • • No Commerclel Firms • • CALL 642-s- ' ••• ... "' ASK FOR YOUR DAILY PILOT AD-VISOR . ' ~ l AND YOU MAY CHARGE ITfi ! . ·~i • • • r • I I Wedntid.y, M11 31, 1972" .. l§J .__I ..... _ ... _:-_..!§] I. -·-I~ I -·-I~ I -..... I~ I· -·-l~I ~ --!. I ~~;;; DATSUN , '66 DATSUN' PICKUP I ~,. Looks &l\!~~,.fint! ExctUent trans~&a -cute little tNCk\'(SJ»t'19l. M&ke oUer! B~ BMrlre 1 pm, ~ ~- i! : .. ~11 240 z ~A: ...... ::~1m: ... ::, .. ~~t;70 A"'°"l...,..W '70 A...._ ~ -M Alnoo,~-90. =·-=· ~-;:u...==-~~ ... : .Aaill" Ulo4 TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN IUICK CAMARO FORD 72 TOYOTA vw uoo cc e 133 hp e 3100 S202t ml on nr:w ens. mt by Gene f speed trarui. Dlx AM ntilo. Bera. Fibtrglaaa hoods I: Heater, defrosters, tinted fend61 -Goodyear I: Map. glass. White wall tir8. Pri cwl:'lel'. Make reas. of. Pop-out rear windows. VinYI fer. 673-3512. trim. CarpetL Front dlse L!:AVING ~ ~·-. muat 8UliOC Riviua '61. Spotles9, black landau on wbltg, All power, air, UUS. M\ut sell f19..1445. '70 CAMARO 3.'iO VI, f speed, radio, heater_._ vinyl roof, bucket seats (961· AV!!). $2295. Tommy Ayres Chevn>let, 946 S. Coast Hwy., La,zuna Be a c b, 494. 77 44J546.9987. OLDSMOllLE '70 Olds T oranaclo 29,000 milts, one owrier, Full Power, i6: Vinyl 1toof, ft.&. m&Jndtr' oI lactOI')' War:rq. ty. (301BMP). 13499. brake&. Recllnln& bocktt """\ --upc .., • .~ aeata. KE »-300185. ~. '68 VW. Excel cend, ~,Jl:ld ~·~yellow plush -,.. De9.' e~ne. automatic, best ''8 BUIO< RIVIERA. full powft', air, clean 1 OWlll' .car. QXX). Pr:l·pty. 557-8963. Buk:k Speclal '66 wqon • U/pwr/l owner. $895. SACRIFICE! '68 Camara SS, R.Ebuilt 396 eng. • spd, magi, Gdyn, air . schocks,' P .B. a:aup11;, custom int. Sl5119. ""'6460. ·CREVIER MOTORS '~i-~. -~-;;_ : .. .-.; ' 'fteo11 l1...:1 otl_er. 5.16-4273. IB1'1D! --Ulft UllUI '69 VW sqbek, auto, lo ml. aacrific(!,. • •' TOYOTA Pittll~. mags. FM ateno, 11<-494-24:!8 CADILLAC '61 Ford LTD. full ,.,...., air, stereo, immac cond! $1200, One owner, 494-7081. '67 Ga1 sco 2 dr ht, IVs. p/b, tac air. 1 owner. $850. 644--0753 aft 5 or weekends. 218 w. ht St .• S..ta ..... qJ.3171 aft ·10 am 494-6811. • perf~t! $1T5 o /offer, YOUR ONLY FACTORY AUTHORIZED '68 CA MARO. air, auto. 'P/B, PIS. Ji&H, Rally Sport. 557--3089. PLYMOUTH :n 240-Z. c/r. ma.cs & rad, 1966 Hlrbor, c .M. ~9303 s.&So-7316. fac air, 1 owner. excel cond. 1967 VW. bei&e w/1WU"DOf, $4500. Sat & Sun. £M....al'53, ~ •• fftti:• radial ti.res A: modified ex-CHEVROLET v:eek day11 afl 5. ''l•W h1.u.st ~stem. Call Jim, CADILLAC JEEPS '69 Datsun Wgn. 510 lugagt alltn ~T-3737. rack, Sharp! $1100. or bst. '615 VW STA. WAG. DEALER t..areest selection of Odil· lacs in Oran1e County. SaJes-Leuin£ Look tor our full page ads every Wed. · & Friday for our apecl&ls. 1 '1i6 JEEP Wagoneer, f whl. drivP, R&-H, E'Xctll!'!nt cond., leaving town. ti-tu.st "Sell. Make otr. 644-2033. 673-3891- ofr. 646-73:11. Toyota &: Jaguar Dealer R/H. GOOD CONDITION. ~.,~,~D~,~-u-n~5J<).~Xln~t-co_nd...,..1 Authorlied Sale• & Servic.t S850 ~ $1150-Perfect Grad gift. 900 S. Coast Highway 1968 vw _ like new. Cal' aft <pM "'5-l~'. Laguna Beach 541).3100 ~ '" ;J"J.J Best otter this week • •. ~11~ •• ~Z4il~Z,..., -.~,...,,..m-... -. -:-M"u"'•t I '70 TOYOTA WAGON Alt. •• 613-3618 • Nabers MERCURY set!, bf>st otter over $4000. $1495 '6.5 VW Bug, ne.w paint. Cadillac 645-4940 642'413. SANTA ANA TOYOTA "'""'°'· $550. 1966 C.olony Park Station \Vagon_ Clean. Extras! Low mileage, 1 owner 548-3289. '67 .f dr, A/C, PIS. IP/B. etc. Xlnt cond, $ 1 9 O . 54:>-'lm 1043 Concord, C.M. MY Loss. Your Gain! '64 Valiant. Nu brks., ma.Ster cyl .. nu titts. paint, It 11eat covers. Y..1otor. iotKI $350 ca~h . 534-2160 aft 4 pm. FERRARI '69 Ferrari, 365 GT, 2 .+ 2, silver, AM/FM, air, full pwr.. new Michelin, n4: 675-6410, early morning. FIAT '69 124 Spyder, Conv. 5 Spd. AM/Fl•f, blue/blck lo ml. Xlnt. 846-3813, 540-8010 ext 259. JAGUAR NEW JagUar rwds new home. ·n XJS' or vu. Rcawn, 1 driwr, 2 cars. Both perfect cond. Mileage under 4000. 645-0550. 19n Xk£" 1:2 -C9 u pe Air/Corid. Wire wneets · AM/FM • White w/li1k in· terior. 'Excel. Con d . 644-1807. ' '53 XK1lO Classic. Fixed head coupe. runs very good. $875. Phone 531-503.3 or 893-2544. KARMANN GHIA KARMANN Ghia '70, gm conv., &rod cond, below bk, $1300/offer, leaving entry. 675-8679. MAZDA ROTARY'S lmmodlolo DoJivery RUNriNGION;IEACR ,, , I • hi 17331 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BLACH , ,,.,.~, • .-w "' Po 8 42•6666 50 USEO MERCEDES. ON DISPLAY -NOW .. Ltasl New Mlrcecle1 ' . $l18.71 Monlhly · HOUSE OF IMPORTS . 6862 Manchester, Buena Pk 523-7250 on Santa Ana Frwy. '69 MBZ 250 ~ stick, R/H., Lo mi .. immac, new engine. P/pty, $4700 even. 675-6644. MG 1968 MGB-GT Wh/blk int. O/D. Wire wheels. Xlnt condition 673-7045. PEUGEOT . * As lo\v as $2,299. (No. SMS) FR.IT': WARR EN'S • Sport Car Center e ORANGE COUNTY "S LARGEST no E. 1st st .. s.A. 5'7--0764 PORSCHE 1957 PorscHe. Top cond.ltiOn. Completely restored. t Call 67:1-3593 * '63 ~rsche Convt. reblt engine .• can Dr. Cauhty~ '648-li3 . . . '7t ~PorKho 911T Sttreo.,Mll!. Prfvato Pvty, Dayo &19-9360, aft t - 833-3155. RENAULT Roneult S.101 & S.rv1C41 1'0' ovor "' docada lb l1nnP -County • open til I p.m. . MOoclay Jim Slemont1 .l!enaull • nJ1 So. ll&in: S&nia Ana • 1 bile. north ol Worner Str\o:lee Department 5t&-4114 S&let Departmenl 557-6242 TOY~TA SeNice Dept. open * 536-0370 * 2600 HARBOR BL, 7:30 am 'ti1 9 pm COSTA MESA Chev. Mon-Fri. 540-5212. 417 w. e ''3 VW BUG e 540-9100 Open Sunday Kinaswood Estate Wag. 6 warner, Santa Ana. Good thape, white sun roof, pus., V-8. auto, ps, P"'T TRIUMPH Make otfer. 644-7183. frnt disc brks, .01/PM, air, NO Money down. T.O.P. 19n Plymouth, 8 cyl, 2 dr, Fury Ill. Chrome style road wheels. Air «ind. Bucket le'll.ts. 5'15-4518. '70 vw Michelin tires, lugg rack, MUSTANG maroon \\'/tan lthr int. lo * TRIUMPHS * mi.. must '" to appcec. '71 CLOSEOUT iu.. <91-3534 •" 6 pm o' 5.1>-4456 BEAUTIFUL! $1595 AM/FM 54&-5631 SPITFIRES AS LO\V AS S2399 l.971 VW bu&· new. ext 507, 8 to 5. Asking SU.xi. 196.5 MUSTANG 2+2. This ---ula PONTIAC GT.6 SAVE $500 839-7123 1970 Nova SS Coupe. 350 V8. car is imm.ac te, "'ith a FRITZ WARREN'S Automatic trans., factory new V·8 engine, new pa.lnt ~ GTO Blc enctne, vieyl Sport Car Center VOLVO gaug•• & TACK. Buck" Job, Cdono by • Ford d•al· top, faclofY a1r. tac Seats. Vinyl top. Power Disc er). Fully equip~ with .f-mat wheels (with locks) ORA NGE COUNTY'S _ _....,,_._-~...,..--Brak!'!s. $2075_ 531-1218. speed tran&rnission and tach 37,000 miles, Max-X. tires. 110 E. 1,,/,.A S~~E~ 547~764 1972 YQLYQ ,61 Chevy wagon with 283 air conditioned, mag whe-els. Beaut1ftil cond.' U500 or btst Looks & runs like new. Load· d It's the popular fastback otter. 826-1256. · XI •··'··' L T~~ engine: -runs good. Goo od I • l l •· tllul '64 Sp!U1re. nt rnttruuuciu e•H vu•y •t ed with eve-ry option. Priced wide oval tires. Needs head m e ana t 1 uo::au • •66 Po tia T Cu 326: cond. Clean. Must ell. Best Rates to sell {!l60CQU), Bkr. Cal! ga•k•t. G---' transportation $900 lirtn. Ex .," Cc .. e~',, uon. 5' .' 646--73:Kh p be1 ,_ vuu 638 1132 c , onn. ..o,....._, m1. $11.74 or Mo. ..._0;50 T pm ~Z or car. $85. 675-1345 oves • • pri/pty. $690. -1124. ....'.51. TR.,,L~nd. .l!.._A,.C. AM/FM, Auto,.-,1..,,,,,,..,..,·,_..-. __ ~=·-· . .wkonds.. _ --.--· -~!'l!'!!!'!!'!!'!!'!'ll'!'!'!'!'"'!l!'f ~l!lil5ii5"-bo-Mam:bi;=>iia;;;4iv~.g,;-2:n=d;oi:· m.'!!KSsr:; &n-1412 :o~t'::~~=·buylng '~d&C:";,1·c1~fs~~~~~ '-65v~~~~~~~b~~~t: '70 MUSTANG MACH ·I :~·~ $650. or best VOLl<SWAGEN '-ft l • lthr. sea.ti, FM .stereo + 646·5643: 54S-lOlO One of the Sharpest cars in '64 BONNEVlLLE, air cond - 811111 tw\6 tape, radials, special blu -*~.63~CH=Ev~.~,~l~N~O~V~A-*-Orana:e County, Ha.s every PS '67 VW Vari for sale Or trade ~Y~OLYO paint, wht top. Other xrtu. GOOD d LOW . "ail "I -. Sold I ' P/B. $4::£1. $4695. Pvt 84~3222, eon . -pnce • Av &u e option. new * 645-4712 +- down !or older car + cash. * 5.~3288 * for over SSOOO. (674A VA), Call ~1. 19&1 COUPE De Ville Conv. Milke reasonable offer! tliust RAMBLER '68 vw Bill. sunroof, lu&: 1 .U«~_H_ar~bo-'c..· ~c_.M_._646-_9~30~3 AU power. detailed, extra CONTINENTAL 11e_ll~ Bkr. Call before 7 pm rack. xlnt rond. $1695 or of-Autos, Used 990 clean. $900. finn. <213) 645-4392 or 644-2950. 1963 Rambler AmericM SU.· fJon Wagon, iCJOd conditmn. Coll M5-1038. '592-1656. ·n Continental Mark III fer. 536-3507. Uiaded, one owner, private '65 MUSTANG, V8, auto. 1968 vw Squ ba k I AMERICAN '65 C..d 8tl'.htn deVilie. Silver $495 o · · Al are c , c un, w/blk vin· yl •·p. fully equi·p, , ..cp_art_Yc.·~11~4~' ~"~9·1,...554~·~--. rigm OWllfr. ndio, ,,.w w/w titt!. $1475. w '· COUGAR 673-1674 644-4374. American Motors !';...~'.'· Mint c 0 n d. '67 MUSTANG Futbaak, low T·BIRD '65 Bus, crpted, paneled, re-1 ~~~~--~~-1968 COUGAR. 302, 2 bbl, mileage,. good cond, ntw bit, 1600 Eng_ Wide Ovals. ,...,.oremllns ,,...,Hornets '69 EL Dorado. vinyl top, tires. 842"-~2 alt 4:30. '70 THUNDERBIRD ' tt5116 ,Ju·todors .JJovolln1 leather AM/FM Sentinel auto trans., lo miles, Vinyl'-~~~'-,--,~==-Gd cond. $1125. ,~ . rr 1n11 ~ • , • 1 • ,,. '"'.' bn• Good coodltion ..... Ambo11odon Xlnt rond. $3850. ~:2854. h>p. Xlnt cond. Sl450. Call OLDSMOBILE Gold v.·ith Bluk interior. Split Seats. AM/FM Stereo. Full Power.-Air "Condition- ina. Factory Warranty CCK'.1'9131. Priced to Sell! o.> "n--. Huge stock of •n•.a &: '72'• 837-3370, alter 5 pm. 1425• • Sl>-41"· 21' p,tn-B" B' Sav' QUICK CASH 8»-:!6:!1. '68 Cutlass Suprem.e ton, CM. •9· 19 rngs DODGE '68 voLKsw•GEN, ..,oo Harbor American THROUGH A condltfon, auto. Clean. Best Home of Convenient ---------2 Dr H. Top, dlr, fact a.Ir, Bkr. CaJl BefOre 1 pm '69 MONACO lo ml, (X!P001). Take ~all 645-1.191,ot W-~. , 0""',~V: BUS 1"9 ~~";"Blvd. DAILY PILOT * 546-2656 eves. * Costa Mesa 646-0261 4 Dr, H. Top, dlr., fact air, down. W\n finance PVt pl)., ', W,b 1 te Elephant&'" ove.~ loaded, Under 26,CKXI mi. Call 546-!1736 aft 10 . am l'UMinl . jrour !tao&ef Turn Leia~ World Special CVQC-•94-61111. them info ''CASH" • sell Sell the old stuff. new atutt Buy the Nttd a. "Pad"? Place an ad! Call~ . .WANT AD 495). Take clean car or ? The "Yellow Pl#&" 'of them thnl Daily p ~ot 546-3736 aft 10 am $6811. 'clar;illied. ••. SU-5678 . OusWed. 642--6678. Autos, New 980 Aulos, N-980 .Autos, Now 980 Arutos...,.--,~...,.,..-~~~98~0'1 ~A~ulos,..-,~Ne~w-'-~~~9i0"'1 ·. • Step Up To Luxury • • • • Excellent selection.of previously owned Mark Ill's and Continentals . . 1970 MARK ill Exceptionally Clean! Medium green metallic w/dark ivy & landau roof. Luxury equipped Including full power, climate control air, individual adjusting power front seats, tift wheel, ffiack stereo (128- AKU). SALE! OUTSTANDING. GROUP OF CHOICE CARS! 1970 Cadillac IL DORADO Jmmaeulate, Emerald " mist mettllicl bla.ck IAftdlu &: matching Leather in· .... terlor. Luxury equipped. Full power Incl. 6 way sMt. tilt-t@le wheel. AM·FM 1teN"O, poo,.vtr door locks & much more. COlllAKJ) $5275 1968 Lincoln 4 DOOR UC}lt blue ttni&h with dark blue. ~yl tof. Full l)OWtr and factory air. cwn- 12'1'J. Ste and drive today. ' -$231-5--- 1969 Cadillac FLEITWOOD 4 DR. Beautiful ebony black 1inish with black leather lnteriof'' and vinyl top. A one owner car that has only gone 39.000 mi.. Priced tor $3 ?)so~o1 / 1971 Mercedes 2Mll 4 DOOR 11.000 miles. Desert beige with brown t.and1u and saddle tone interior. Lux• ury equipped Incl. Automatic, AM-FM radio, aJr cond., power 1teerln1 &: brakts. )Ylw•r wtndoWi. See and drlve. Sale Price- 1969 Lincoln CONTINENTAL 4 OR. White exterior \\'Ith black leather an4 vinyl top.'Full power, air cond; and vao- uum locking group. Near whtileu.Ie. (XYZ45$), Full price ' $3275 1970 Cougar XR7 CONVIRTllLI. . Super clean. Cool polar white. ftnl•b. Leather bucket 11eat11, console, AM·n-f atereo. air cond,, power 1tetrin& 6 brakes. (668BNNI $2915 · COME IN AND SEE OUR VAST SELECTIONS OF TOP QUALITY CARSt Ham• Of The New Car ••• ......... "-"" "Orano1 Countv'a Famau o/ Fine Cars-" ohnson & son 2929 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 640·15130 • Home O! Tiie New Car ••• - "6oWelt f'o.elt" • , ' I • . ~ • ••• ... ·:· ., .... ••• ::: . ••• ~. ... .• ::• -·· :!t :: ;.. ·:1 -~ ;~ ~ ., :~ ~ ·~ ~ ·' , .. -. ~ -: .. •, ' .. ' 3 . . • . . • . . . . • • -. , ff DAILY PILOT Wtdond<IJ, M" JI, Im • PILOT-ADVEl!TIS£R .II_ $ 00 OR MORE ' ON ANY CAR OR MOTORCYCLE DELIVERED TO OUR STORE REGARDLESS OF CONDITION, TOWARD THE PURCHASE OF ANY NEW OR USED CAR IN STOCK. '''COLT WAGON IMMIDIATI ' DILIVllY '71 VEGA 2-DOOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '71 PINTO 4 Sp11d tron1., r1- dio, htoltr, butktt MOtl. lull wif¥ intt- r ior, 126 flf, mi- ltogt 17.254 $299 DOWN $36 A MONTH FOR 36 MONTHS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $299 DOWN A MONTH FOR 31 MONTHS .,., " tot• . 11'1'"''· '" " lol•t $ ) 8 8 ... r.ITll. lllCI. 11•, llctnM 4 Ill t1rry 1111 cll•r9" 1111 1ppr, crtdlt +or U mot. Oef1rrtd pymt. prk1 •1101 , lo<I. lo• • ll<o'M· """" ... CIHTAGI AATI 10.IO'!I.. $299 DOWN $53 A MONTH ~~~::s ''"'· """· '" $1288 Interior, Hl·Btck buckf! setts. wl'l l1t w1111. ""''· cov1ri. !Ill BTZl. FULL rRICE 529' I• 1011! dn. pymr. "' Is 10111 mo. pyml. 11'1(1. 1ax, u. c1n11 & 111 c1rry!n11 charg" on 1ppr. er.OU tor 36 ITll>S . De1'1rred pymr. Prk1 11595 Incl. 11• & llc1n11. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE ltATE 12.3'%. '72 DODGE POLARA BRAND NEW '72 DART DEMON BRANDNIWI 2 DOOi HAIDTOI' Vl"yl l11ftrlor, 221 CID •119!11t, ''"ru lon 'ontrol 1v1tem, 6.95.-14 tirt1, diree· tlonal 1l9l'l•lt, 1ett btlt1, wind1hi1ld w11~ert, flt2JC2lll5987t l $299 DOWN $66 MONTH POlt '' MONTHS $299 it 'totel dn. pyml. $66 h loltl mo. pyml. incl. te•, lict1'11e I all cerryi119 cll•r9e1 en 1pp•. credit for 16 mos. Deftrrtd pyml. pric:.e 1267& il'lc. ••• & licer111 . ANNUAL PERCENTA GE R,.tlTE t0.74%, CUSTOMIZED VAN by COURTESY 1972 8·100 VAN with full c;erpeting, peneling, ipec:iel p.:int itripe, safari rec;k, outside tir e mount. Thi1 v•n i1 loeded e ~d ready for fun . 20 ,710 mllH. I H625K I -15 3188 $299 DOWN $99 MONTH llOlt J6 MONTHS $299 It loltl dn. pymt. $99 ii lot.I mo. pyml. inti. la•, lic1n1a I all carry· ln9 chart•• on appr. tradit fo r ]6 m~u. Dalarretl pymt, price SJ16l Intl. lt x I lci•n1e. ANNUAL PERCE NTAGE RATE 9.41 % • FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '70 FORD Wagon WAGON TIME ~oU:.1.o.~ .. ,~~!: .~d~~. h~~~·.r.tr:o~·: $1188 BES 72.238 milat. , '70 FORD STATION WAGON C1i1ttefll 100 Y•I, e1i1te. tt .... ,..., 1tNthtg, r~le, llffter. 404111. Mllfffe 72,JJI $1188 fULL r11c1 '299 DOWN '33 A MONTH::;.!~ •m 11 total !In pyml IJ.) I~ tota l mo. pymt. Incl !••· lie-• & tll C•rryll'l(I Cft••1"1 °" •Ill!•. crlldll lor .M mo1 Otltrred pym1. prk:I 11G1 Incl. Ill & llct•'ll ANNUAL PERCENTAGE AATE 13 ~J-.. '70 CHEV. STATION WAGON t ...... , ...... , •. h'•1t• .. ,..,., 1tMrl1t9, brek•1, whlrewellt . 711AYA. MU .. 9e 75,171. $1388 fULL ra1c1 '299 DOWN '40 A ·MONTH!:;.!~ Uft It 10t1! d11, 11¥"'1· ,.., II tpt•I "'II 11ymt, l.-cl, 11• & Uc, & 111 carry. '"' CMl"Oft "" fptlr rrMIH ..... ll ""''· [»f. H VITll. prlca 117.M ll'ltl. Mii & tic. ANN UAL "EACENT ... G[ llATE \l.J~. MllMlll Sl.O» WE APP.RECIATE YOUR - BUSINESS I, FULL PR:ICI '69 CHEVROLET fULL PllCI '68 PONTIAC !h::ie;:.,a~0;ru:·mu~h~~~ch~~:1r:'.' $688 WTF514. 69 .609 mile1. FULL PllCI '66 OLDSMOBILE ::,,s~ .. ~ ~::d ~::~~o~:~:=~'. ~1'L.' $288 004. ,• FULL r11e1 '70 MAVERICK Loaded with wlnd•hleld W•1h1r1. h'1;Jh bllck bvc.~•I seats, h11ttr, vlnyl he&dllner, outside .,.l.,or. G•5xll !lrl!:I + much mu<:h mort. o"~ s2oasoo FULL ,.,C-1 sm 11 1t1111 dn. iivmt. U1 Is 10111 -l'Yfl'!I. Incl. i.x, He . and 111 c••<Yl"9 cr11r;n en appr, credll ldr ld rno1. Deferred pymr. prke 125.31 ln<:I. tax I. llc.&llfe. ANNUAL PERCENT- AGE RATE 9.J9'!.. l"ACTOlt'I" COLO• 01" VOUI: CHOICli $299 Down $62 Month ~·:.!: BRAND NEW • OIDll YOUIS TODAY FACTORY COLOR OF YOUR CNOICll '72 DODGE TRUCK looded wilh Wirtyi beach i.o!,, h.o11t, 171•14 tirts, windsh itld wosher1, dlrechOn sigM11, luH vin~f irlt .. nuh muth mort. Ord« Yours Tockry, c~~:~~-''O:;~·.,ra~iho;o!:·'~'~1t17;;:.1 . $98 8 517ARI. 67,154 mil11. c,.tom • Doo• ,v.1, "''· '""·· $988 powt r 1le1rin9, ht•ltr, much, much mor1. ll51EM. l l ,919 mil11 . FULL PllCI '70 CHEVROLET Wagon :,,:~~~/:~t~,~u+;hi+~;:~i~. p;;~:$148 8 ~VA. 75.175 mil11 . _ . fULL PllCI FULL PllCI '71 VEGA 2-d•. "''· '""-.,d, WSW ti.n$1288 dtlurt wh1al tO¥tr1, chroma mould. in91 & fully factory eq ulpptd. Oii. CCU. ll ,115 milat. fULL r11c1 '70 DATSUN 510 4 Dr. Sedan ~ .. ~ b'"~ ...... ,_._,; •• h ...... $1-88 472ELT. ,ULL r11c1 '68 JAVELIN . . -~69 CHEVROLET Sedan . . 2 Door Hardtop. 6 Cyl., auto. tr1n1., butlrtt 11at1, rttlio, h1•+.r, delu•e whtal to¥trt. XRLSSt 64,J77 milet. I $788 v.,.,.,,,, ''"'-'"'"' ,;, • ., ... $988 full power, radio and he•t•r. YNJ. 745. Mil1191 44,720. • • ' T • .:~_ ... ' ' l • P'I LOT ·ADV!ltTISElt ... IRAND NEW '72 MAVERICK 4 , t>. 551~"' 'ti s ·.· p Over Dealer Cost 1nef. prtp, 9tt rttdy, hold btck. fr1i9ht. Well lq11lppff #1117 BRAND NEW '72 L. T .D. 2 DR. s51~Tll ri® Ovlf Dealer Cost ...---l"el. pr•p, 9et r•1dy, hold baek, f••i9hl. W~I Eq11lpped .;'041 .•... IRAND NEW '72 Gran Torino Sport · s51~"l Ovlf Dealer Cost lnel. pr•p, 9tt rt1dy, .. old li1ek, lrt i9ht. W.tl lq11fp~ -='1044 IRAND NEW '72 GALAXIE 2 DR. ' $ 00 51 +Tll ~ •• ~" •• ~."."1;!, c.:~,, ho ld b1ek, frt ight. Wei lq11lppff #1015 HARD TO FIND '6f SHELIY GTSOO 4 1pttcl , toad mil t1, ''clio, healt r. I I 70ASG ) '70 DATSUN Pic kup 4 1pttd, r1cfio, ht1lt r, good 111 ilei. !4JllRLI '70 CHEVY Nomad Wagon full f1efory ~qui pptd. R1dio, H11t1r, low Mil 11. (629BEV ! '69 VW W1gon R1d io, h1 1tt r, 4 1pe1d, 1lr eo11d ilio"in9, Good mil t 1. IZCICl7 61 '71 FORD Custom SOO 4 dr .. VI , R&H, 1ufo., P.S .. ¥in yl roof. (I J50f2) '69 FORD W1gon VI, rtdio, ~111••, 1ulom1tie. pow1r 1fttrin9, eir eond itio"i"9• 9oocl 111il e1. !Y PSlOll I • MAKE OFFER s149& s1451 s1851 PRIZES! FUN! SUPER SAVINGS! COME IN AND HELP US CELEBRATE 51 YEAltS ' OF SERVICE TO THE GREATER HARBOit AREA UNDER THE -SAME OWNERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT. WE PROMISE YOU • • • MANY HAPPY RETURNS OF THE DAY I Brand New '72 MUSTANG SAMPLE ANNIVERSARY DISCOUNT! IDLl'I COIT INCLUDES PlllllHT, PllP, Gn IU.DY AND PACT. HOLDIACI ---, 00 OVER DEALER COST -1: T&L ANNIVERSARY LEASE SAVINGS! OVER 300 CARS AND TRUCKS READY FOR IMMEDIATE LEASE DELIVERY. CALL 642-0010 J.~=~0~r~id 1. Ye 1i1 ltMd •Illy • valhl drivel'\ lke11 .. t. IM elltll•~ for thl1 t1ch1al.... Theodore lloblM prl• cltt1wht9, You Med 11tt be preMflt to wl11 \ J. J111t ce-h1, flll tut yo1u prin ticket eltd clr111 l t h1 •11r drowhit bt1. Nothh19 t. Hy. No ttih19 "'ore to do, J. If y111 wl" our l'l11to 911111d prht, e11d yeu hewe p11PChtnecl o Hw 1t7J l'h1t1 fro"' Tltff. dore •obhtt ford 011 or offer J 11111 1, 1 t72, yov "''" tok1 your prl11 or, !ff your eprlen, TheitdeN Robltt• Ferd .... 111 r1lrnb11ne ye11 t.r tM full p11rc1t... price 11 tlle l'l1tto y11 ktttltt, ,...NJ .. of fll04e4 er eci11lptNWt. fwhtlt9f 111b}Ht hi t.1• •Ml llco11 .. h1 oltllet' 1'911t), GRAND PRIZE ' NEW '72 PINTO LOADED WITH GROCERIES! 50 RUNNER·UP PRIZESI YOU NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN All Pri111 Will Bt Drawn For By S.t., Aug. 5, 1972 REGISTER TODAY ! OAJLY Plltl' New '72 F-100 PICKUPS STYLE SIDE FULL FACT. EQUIP. COURIER PICKUP WITH GEM TOP CAMPER SHELL $2360 51 111761 (050361 $2551°0 ORDER TODAY Gn THI THll"lllT PllCI ON THI THRIFTY LlnLI WOllHOUll SPECIAL PURCHASE Many To Choase From 'EXAMPLE: . . '71 FORD GALAXIE 500 HARDTOPS \I.I, 1ulo. tr1111., pow1r 1fteri119, R&H, Air Cond., with vl11yl rooh . Good Milt1, Good eolor 11ltelio"· Uc. numbtr 1074· IUO I $2851 OR BEST OFFERS '67 OLDS Vista Cru1iar Wag s1 451 R .. H., Auto. Tr1n1., Atr, P.S .. Roof R1e~. Good mif11. (VQJ21 7) '69 DODGE Vin A-I OI , \I.I, Auto. Tr1n1., R1cl io, Ht1t1r, Moel Mil11. (]167f2 ) 71 Pl YMOUTH Cricket 4 1pe1d, low 111iltt. Faelory •quipptd. 1206CXJJ I s1951 MAVERICK-PINTO SALE ' 1pMclt, I t,,eMt arMI a"'9matlc mtd .. 1. · .. mt with vlnyl rMfl. e YOUR PICK e '71 PINTO Fu lly f1 elqry t quipptd, r1 · dio, h1af1r. 4 1p1td, 9oocl 111il1. ( 764CXVJ '65 FORD G1l1x ie 500 4 door. R1cl io, ht1!1r, 1uto., P.S., Vl""air c1,;ditio"ln9. ~ocl milt1. INK'l'J571 '64 RAMBLER CIH1lc 4 Dr., 6 eyl .. Auto. Tr.1111., R1clio, H1 1!1r, Good Mil11. !FYR5 !2l '70 MAVERICK R1dio, H1et•r. A11+e. Tr1n1. Chrol!'la Trill'I, Good Mil1t. IZCKJ491 -'851 Sfi51 '68 DODGE Polar1 s1151 2 cir. H.T. R&H, 111!0., pow•r •Y•ri"9• 1lr eo11dilio11i119, VI. · Goocl 11111,,, ! UCV 11 f I , DPL A111b1111clor. v.1, l1dio • Ht1far, Powtr St11rln9, Air C.nJ., Vl11yl Roof, Low MJl11. ISYS 11 JI '66 MUSTANG Hardtop i evli"der, fully •quipptJ, 9ood milet, !STS091 ) '63 CHEVY II 4 door. R1clio, he1ltr, aulom11ic, good 111llt 1. • llHZ415 l '64 FORD F·lOO With c1,.,p1r. Goocl milei. ( 7151ZIJ '63 FORD Galaxio H1rcltop, ladlo, Ht1tt r, Auto. Tri "'·• Pewtr St1 1rin9, V-1, Goecl Milti. IFTU 111 l '64 CHEVY lmp1la HT F1 etory Eq uipp.d. Good mile1, (Wll91SI • s951 s751 s451 s951 s551 s55J DAILY P!LOl ' ....... Y-1.. Mt tr-., factory oit tonditioolng, pow• ........ AM-fM radio, vinyl roof, l.oodtd Li- ctnM S16AIU '70 FORD 6500 ....... . Y·l. Mo. truM.. f.:tory oir conditimling. pow« stMrW.. londou kip, No, 39SIPH '70FORD CUST. JOO 4 lhw Y-1. ... 1rtN.. foctory air conditioning. pow" ,,..... rodio, hecrtlr, Lie ... No.403AZR '670PELW6N '69 FORD 6500 2DllT Y-1. autt. .......__ r.1ory rtitt condi~ power l!Hring, rsdio, heottr, Landou top, llctnst YPH46S ·. '67 l)ODGE DART 512-D••rlMt,. \1-1. londolt IOp. lictnlt Ho. \ISM347 '69TOYOTA (IOWISIDAfll Al.Ito.""'~ rodio, htolw. LiclMt No. ZXV777 • .....,......,., .., Sl, 1972 •• PILOT-ADVERTISER 2-1' ;~;,~~~!-$1788 $2288 :.~~-m~.:!~!!-... $9 -8·8 .... __ =::--.-$11 -aa ~-~~~~~~c_-~ .. $·1888 vinyl intwior, Licenst XIRI 17 • Y.t.r.604 vinyl intenor, YQA4B9 $1688 171 CHJ.Y.:u,. . ·$1-&88 16~!!.~!-$2488. :~!~'!!~~f ff ,_:-::,_$1588 Radio. blattr, Licll!ISt 17308W • Autll. ................ Licmse XTl727 , ......... ~ broll;n.AMlfM Slfl'.o rodlo, Moler, . . · . , .. . , ~!OP·•int1 int~.~1Ce!l~~·~668 . . • '6S ~~n!!DTDP $1088 :.~!~!~-::~~.,_, __ $138 Y·I. ...._ tnllL. poWW 11e1nng. lktnst VU-~ poww {disc) brokn. AM/FM .... ftldio, 7St Londoutop,tictnHW1~139 '67 FORD 6500 IDllT Y·I. Mo. wans.. olr conditioning. PO'W9f stew- Ing. londou top. 'flnyl inttrior, Licwe 30SEl.A FULL PRICE BRAND NEW '72 4 Speed Transmission, 1 bOOct Engine, Bucke t seats. EmissK>n Control ORDER ::ND '72 TORINO .fULLPRICI IMMEDIAil DELIVERY • !JI I I 111111111111111111111111111111 11111111111111111111111111111 ~ :. .................... ~-= :: . ll'll•d 111w 1972 RENT·A·CAR = cou•••• PICKUP -,...., .... .,.., • .,_. WEEKEND IENTAL SPEC. = = '62'° mo. IENT A 1'72 FOID PINTO = §§ -· 24 MONIHOl'!MlllHIAlf 1""" 2 P.M. Friday to lO A.M. = ,,., Monday Coq>lete Weekentt =: ASKFOI Only$1S.9S +5cpermilt. = = Bill SPEILING 01 Finl 100 Miln Fiil ·= ~=11111111~1,~~~tf\~~~\f 111111 11111111111111111111i111111111~ ,. - BRAND NEW '72 FULL PRICE -. Fully Synchronixed · Trans., 170 CID Economy Eng ine, Emission Control, Self-Adjustin!:: Brok~$. The Simple Ma thine". Order your choice of color today. $1988 I ,. • San Cle111en1e Capistrano EDIT ION • I I I T oday's Flaal ' . ..,, ~··•. " . A ~ ...... \ ,........,. .... ,, voi:. 65, NO. '152, s SECTIONS, b4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY ll', 1972 TEN CENTS ·~ Mesa Marine Ending Bose less Career By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Hiii O.Ur Pllll Stitt Nobody promised Willson Price a rose garden 30 years ago last week, when .he joined the U.S. Marine Corps and left Window Rock, Ariz., for a world torn by war. Nobody promised Price the glamor and glory that history bestows when you're on the right side and you win. Nobody promised the young Navajo In- dian anything but action. New 50, Price wa.s principaJ developer of a radio communlcatlon system based on the Navajo language, one of 200 tribesmen Japanese soldiers in the South Pacific craved to capture. None of the Navajos -classed as top secret personnel -were ever taken prisoner but casualties were heavy. Price, of 871 Victoria St., Costa Mesa, won his own particular Purple Heart on Guadalcanal in 1943, but told the medics to take care of the badJy wounded first. "I Just had some shrapnel and a busted leg," says the man who ls at Camp Pendleton today, tying up last loose ends of a 30-year career frOm which be formally retired Friday as a ·master .sergeant. "I spent three months strapped to a hospital bed in New Zea.land," says the television repair shoP owner to whom nobody ever promised a rose garden. A Marine Corps recruiting poster in bis home garage repair shop show1 a U~tC drlll instructor screaming the slogan al a wide-e yed young trainee: "We don't promise you a rose garden." Price says he didn't plan for a ~1arine Corps career, but found educational op. portunities a Navajo youth couldn't ex- pect otherwise .. He didn't join It out o( personal bravado; there was a world war in prog· IS.. MARINE, Pa&e %) District Attorney Eyes Complaint on Patrolman -;-J-oin'F G-roup ~· ,-= To · Consid~r =-ingerJ_ea11!S __ F~~ ~~sh Master Plan San Clemente city councilmen and ad- \'isory commissioners will tackle a formidable list o( study items at a joint study .session tonight and heading the list ls a large master plan for tra((ic safety and parking for the city. The jOint meeting, called for each fJ!th Wednesday of the calendar year, will · · yield no Qfficial actions, but will allow ci- ty oUk:iall to .diloull Jn deplh Qig111an- ding items. The meeting will &tart with a 1:30 p.m.· dinner al the clubboUJe of tlie municipal goU course. The lengthy r<port by Lampman and Associates se!'Vlng u traffic consultants to the city will bead the list of items, and off-street parking in commercial areas, theory of left·tum pickets and other traf· fie-related items will be up for discussion. ·other measures on the agenda will in- clude : · -Continued talks on revisions to the ci- ty general plan. -Architectural review standards for new commercial and Industrial projects in the city. """ r· -Specific time provl!ions for proP9sals to enforce landscaping of off-str~ park~ ing areas in all areas of the city. A pro- posed wning amendment would require that all lots in the city be landscaped over a period of several years. Discussion tonight will dwell on the exact amount of time which would be required. Three years has already been suggested. The group also expects to bring up miscellaneous items including subje<:U which might be brought up by citizens at the session. Man Pleads Innocent SAN DIEGO (AP) -:-Jam" Albert Hutchings of Cerritos pleaded innocent Tuesday to a charge of murdering bis wili:, who appattntly plunged to her death from the San Diego-Coro~y Bridge. The body of Jewel Hu gs, l, was found floating in the y last Wednesday. Hutchings, 40, was arrested at hi.s home and ordered jailed without bond pending preliminary hearing Jwie 13. Weatller \Vann temperatures will again \TiSit the Southland Thursday with highs at the beaches at 65 riJing to 80 inland. Lows in the 60's. INSIDE TODA l' A Treasury dJltnt theoriztd that a ltakg gas JJne toa1 rt· rp<1111ible fOT th< uplolion that ripped through a bomb 1ht:lttr at tht homt of o Voldeu, N.C., ttztile eucutiw, killing fivt children. L.111,...,.. 1 -.. ~ . c...~ l6 °"""" .... .-.. . -.. OMlll........ ' ...... ...... ' ,...,., nl »11 -.... .... .. tiiilllfi-' .. . _.._ R _ .. ..,..." -.. ,, --.. --.. --. "• . --.. -,,. Dr ..... -ti ... ...,.... Jl4S ,...,..... . ~ »17 -. ................ .! -----. .. • Belly Da11cer Finds Henry'·s Lap _. TEHRAN (AP) -Henry A. Kissinger met a belly dancer early today and she-ended up in his lap. The raven-haired beauty, 2.8-ye'ar-old Nadina Parsa, was performing for several hundred journalists and government officials at a dinner party given by the Ministry of lnfonnation when President Nixon's bachelor aide arrived after midnight. Still in tails and white tie alter the state dinner given for President Nixon by the Shah of Iran, Kissinger immediately attracted a crowd. After he and Prime htini ster Amir Abbas Hoieyda were seated on cush- ions in the hotel ballroom, the dancer, who had been gyrating on the stage, was led over. Dressed in her shimmering costume with discs the size of silver dollars on ber breasts, she. performed a pulsating dance a few feet from KJssinger and the prime minister, kissed the prime min ister's cheek and plopped jq· Kiss- inger's lap. Thi While 1loule ninger, wbot¢.dalet with Amerlcln baulJa bavt made him the tali of Wa!hington, beamed broadly, "I will be back," he uld as be left the party, Kontum Aetlon • Mass Surrender Offer Sought by Red Troops SAIGON (UPI) -At least 100 North Vietnamese soldler11 caught up in the bat- .tie for Kontum have offered to surrender to government troops inside the city, front dispatches reported today. The dispatches said the Communists lost more than 3,000 dead in the battle for Kon tum. lt was the first .known mass surrender offer of the war by North Vietnamese although some Viet Cong units sur- rendered in the past, the dispatches said. Heavy fighting continued in some areas of Kontum and waves of B52s bombed Communist positions near the city in what spokesmen called the heaviest strikes since the Communist offensive · began on March 30, But the front dispatches indicated those inside tbe city apparently had had enough. John Paul Vann, the :~ior U.S. ad- 585 to Graduate In Ceremonies At San Oemente A record 585 studenll will be marching lr4o the San Clemente High School stadium June ·'22 to accept their long- awaitecj diplomas. The program will begin at 7 p.m. wilh the traditional march and will include a short address by Don King, of San Clemente, this year's valedictorian, and Leslie Jordan of San Clemente, this year'• salutatorian. Dale Drager, director of student ac- tivities. sajd the program will follow a traditlonal formal. Included will be band and cboral aelectlons and the presen- ta.Uon o[ glfta to foreign exchange studenta. 'l1le clw glft will abo be preseuted. Tb.is year tt will be a full-grown tree and tumlUllCling patio .,.._ The locaUon b31 not yet -determ1ned. A blglillght o1 the <V<ninl will be the ln>ditlanal arrangeinents of gladloll. llactalourute will be Sunday, June IS al S .Pln. In the_lladl11111, Deb o ... nwa14, m lnltrud4r at tho • San Clm>enta Pr""1ltrltn Cllllrch, will give I brief in- .... Uonal -· 'l'be mt ol tho.pro- """' will.lie tllUlbL \'iser In the Central H1ghland11 told newsmen of the surrender offer and aaid negotiations went on all day. He said the Communists broke in on South Vietn.amese radio frequencies with the surrender offer and that at one point four Communist troops, buds in the air and without weapons, began walking toward government lines. However, they disappeared. behind o small knoll and did not appear again. Vann said Sooth Vietnamese troops were ordered not to fire into the sur· render area of the city and that the Com- munists were not firing there, either. He would not identify the North Viet- namese unit involved because that might jeopardize the negotiations. "Thing.. are going well In Kon tum" despite the continued heavy fighting, Vann said. "The North Vietnamese in the city have a shortage of supplies. They have no replacements and uniU .that have taken heavy losses have been denied permission to pull out of the city." Meanwhile, a U.S. 1poktsman reported the heaviest American air ·raidl around lhe major North Vietnamete port of Vinh since the Communist offensive began. He said the Americans were fll'ing television-guided bombs that "just can't miss" and that major ground in- .stallations were destroyed. A command apoke.!IDan 1aid U.S. warplanes flew 240 rakh: into North Viet- nam . They smashed a big fuel depot and destroyed or damaged several rail and road bridges outside Vlnh, the country's southernmost port 130 miles south of HanoL The 1,000-pound "Walleye" bomb car- ries a TV camera in the noSt, a Navy spokesman said, and the pilot monitors a televlJlon set In the cockpit. He tunes in on what the bomb .. _ .. and when the larRet appears. locks In on tt. "You just can 't mlu," the spokerman said. l':xoQ{ficial 'I>ies SOl!l'll PASADENA (AP) -Hl!lll')' P. •4Pat" Sullivan, former aecretary of stale, died 1lfre 'l\iefday, apparenUy of nolural <:Jutes, tho ...,.,..., omc. uld. SUlllnn, $0, WU found dead In I chllt In • ·--by employ .. I« • movtnc van company. He had plamed '° move from I bouie DW'bJ', offid.tla a&kt. ' Is· Probed DAILY PILOT l t1H ,..,._ In Clemente CODE AUTHOR PRICE REFLECTS ON 30-YEAR CAREER Tht y Didn't Proml1t Him • Ro•• Gardin end It Wtan't By JOHN VALTERZA OI !M DlllY 1"1191 Sti ff The District AtlorneY's office today began considering the filing of complaints stemming from last weekend'• crash of a San Clemen"te police patrol car and a srhall pickup truck in which one youth wu fatally injured and four other Employes Oppose Battin . - -""" hurt. . ·¥1 . Unprec~dented ;Actio:P- Callfomla l!lahway Patrol of6ctn .. td this ~ I.bat. two main factor• assertid1y contributed to the tragedy at El Camino Real and Calle Dolores late Friday afternoon . Spokemien for the CllP 1ald the prime factor in the mllhap wu the asserted high speed of the police unit being driven by Patrolman Gary Adams, who was responding to a call involving a ear being driven erratically. The secondary fac tor, CHP aides ad- ded, was the asserted failure to yield the right of way by 16-fear~ld Daniel Alan CroS! or Long Beach, who was auertedly at the wheel of the mall pickup truck. The hig h-speed, rear-end colllsioo claimed the life of Joseph Britt, 16, of Long Beach, who suffered fatal head and intern,l}_I injures when he was thrown from \he bed o( the truck after the im- pact. The estimated speed of the patrol ·car was between 65 and 70 miles per hour, said CHP reports, quotln& aeveral witnesses. The Orange County Employe1 Aux:ia. tlon, repreeenting more th8J) 1,000 county workers, today l,.ued a 1poclal bulletin to member• urging that Flr1t District ln- ~robenl SUporvlaor Bober! Bottin. .be defeated in his bid fo r a aecond term on the board. "'For the llrol llm• In the hlllory of the OCEA, we feel we must oppoee -the reelection of an Incumbent member of the Board of Supervison," the letter · to members read. Headlined: Special June 8 (primary election date) Election Bulletin, the letter urges strongly that association membera ••vote agat.mt Battin'• bid for re.elec- • tion," "A vote againlt Ballin 11 a •ote for good government," the Jetter concludes. , Listed are 15 reasons why the board of director1 of the OCEA feel that BatUn 1hould not be reelected. They include: -Battin alone voted againat adoption of 1alary, fringe benefits and condltlona of employment in an agreement reached by Iha OCEA -Ibo 00UQtJ.... DJQ!llllJ..._'l .. department. -He voled for pl•9ng C01jllly ~ mtnt headJ on 1 monlh-to-montb pro. batlon atatbl. -He volod 18111111 lmp..,_n ol the Emergency EmployiMnt Ad, com. lll!>nly_ kMwn. u the PEP progam...'J'lllo- federal project haa provldtd more thaq 1,000 new county job1 ft>r unemployed per tons. -Ballin alltmpled lo replaco planntnc comminton member• with hl1--own- peraona1 appointee• for hi.I ow~raonal reason1. • The letter allO lllates that Batun vo1t4 against new claulflcatlolll of employ• jobs, and reclaal!lcatlon of potltlona "that artect county employe1 unUI February ol !hit year." "With hlJ reelection on the ballot Jn June, 19'12, why do you think he Cha Diod hll vote agalr11t county tmploye1?, '' the Jetter addl. Al a final lhrllll the OCEA bullella 1tste1, "the neWI media hu amplt revealed the machine politics and epol1i 1y1tem repruenltd by Battin. la thiJ· t.be kind of government you want?" The one prime consideration added. the spokesmen, was that the patrol vehicle'• red lights and siren were not operating at the time of the tragedy. The posted 1peed limit is 30 miles per hour. Adams, himself, suffered minor Injuries in the mishap and was released after emergency treatment at Misl!llon Com- munity Hospital. Pair Arrested in Threat .- • The other two pauengers and the driver of the small pickup suffered pain- ful , but relatively mild injuries. The case which started the ti'alic ·se- quence of events began when a citizen walked into police headquartera and To Explode Hospital E-1inh reported a late-model blue car being EUGENE , Ort, (UPI) -A couple who driven by a "crazy or drunk " driver. The allegedly threatened to blow up 1 391-bed reporting party alao furnished police with _fi_om1n Catholic lk>!pttal hive been ar- the license number of the veh icle ahowlnji reited a!f they picked up 1 pacbge con~ a San Clemente realdent u owner. JaininB S250-9QO in ranaom money and an CHP investlgator1 indicated that f lectronlc ''beeper," authorities reported Adams apparently bad the: vehicle ln hit today. 1lght as he acalerated 1Jong the nearly FBI agtnls eld Charltl R. Bobklewla, deserted highway. 34, Cottage Grove, Ore., unemployed, and As he dfove to intercept the vehicle the hta wirl, Betty Lou, SI, 1 waitress, were small pickup pulled onto the road from a taken into cuatody 1lx mnes aoulh of here side stree~, faltered for a brief moment. as they picked up the money alongtklt a then assen.edly drove in front of Adams' freeway. · car. The youth.I. all from Long Beach, were apparently headed toward " camping outing during the Memorial D a y weekend. Their camping 1ear 1nd supplies were strewn over a wide area after the Impact. LA Bus Drive rs May Walk Out LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Some %,500 union 1>111 driven win ID on llrll<e agalnat tile Southern Callfornia Trana1t DIJlrlcl 11 mklnlaht lllileu a .... tract 1<lllement IJ reaclled, union ofllclalJ uld today .. Earl R. Clark, general chalrmtn of lbe IJnll<d Tra!IOpoNUon Unloft, 111d the 1lrike would be lormalled K Gov. 1IDnald Ragan appoints a lacl-llnd1ll( _com- mluion; Navy Cler ic Has New Po st JACKSONVILLE. Fla. I AP) - Cmdr, Andrew F. JenJen, the flnt tf•">'. cf\atllaln ever to face a coi.u1 .. martial, hu been rtwlgned to Princeton Unlvenlty. J<nB<n, tcqultl<d 11 Cecil Fltld Naval Air Station ln M1rch on a ch>rge of mltconduct by tdull<ry, will ttudy toward a muter o( puton1 theofoay decree • t PrlnCllOn. "It i1 a fine aulpunent." Jtl'llC!n aakl Tuetdar ... But tt wu my HC- ood cbolco. lllJ l1l'lt chokt WU to "8y ll Ce.U Field. We hid .. m111y frieodt who IUppotled Ill -·· They were ~ Cll • federal charp of lnterferllli with ln!frlliite commm:e. Vincent E. Ruehl, wllllnt tptdal •cent In charge of·tJie Orqon FBI •file•, llld Sacred Hoar! <lfnerlli llatpilal WU IOll'Ched Ind no'bomb WU found, Ruehl tald .. bolicopl« equipped with . "homlni" devlco ta lr1Ck ~ movtmtnt of the money pocbp ilovmd ovor lho drop area u the couple arrived at the lttne. Police Chief Dale Allen 111d all p1ckag" brouaJit Into the hotplt1I had been 1earched afttt the flnt telephoned threal was made at 4: 10 p,m. He a.Id hi WU "confident" there WU no bomb bl tile hospita l. The money -In 11111all bill• u dtrntnd- el -WU left •I the pickup •lie by • policewoman po11n1 u the nun in ch1r1e of tho holpital. The caller told botpltal ofllciall ht would pick Up the money 11 IO p.m. Ind ltltphoned one hour lottr lo II•• Iha lqcaUon ol lbe -b. At rtnt, hotpltsl tdminillralon ded4- ed to 1lvt the ntortlonltt tho --· Jlowever, 111tt lalU with lht FBI 1114 police they •&reed to hide lO lledr• ·~t.,.pe:r" In the puk.qe. ~ box wu the ti,. ol a cue ol lortr. Thi ntorllonllt made. -call two houri atlel' hit !Int .......... ... l«mlnal<d It •hen be bean! • -. p>llce aid. 'lbe 1ocollon for Ote drop wa ...a. lllll "' I thlnl calL -· -• IH.1L Y f-u .. l ! SC V.'ednesdaJ , Mi r ll, 1CJ72 Iran Blasts e· .. ·Bombings Mar -.~ :··Nixon's Leaving I 'TEHRAN tUPI) -President Nixon en.. ded a one.day vslt to lran that v.•ns nutrrtd by terrorisl.J bo1nb attacb today Qd flew to Poland. One dynamite bomb eiploded near a n1onun11:nt 45 minutes before Nlxoo's 11<.·he<luled arrl\lal for a ceremony. Nixon went ahead with the wreath- laying rih!, delaying his apptarance 45 minutes while American security agents swarmed over the. slte searchlng for other bombs. lfe rode to the ceremony tn a bullet· proof limousine under light security, but there were oo fur ther lnc1dents. "lie wanted to go -the Shah wanted him to go," sai d Whlte House pre!s aide Druce Whelihan. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said t\it.Jtrlu of bomblngs that rocked the Jt21.nian capital early today were believed aa ·attempt by political opponents to em· I, ' Laguna Niguel tt ~r.Meeting ' Slated Tonight ,1 Fatbert and IOlll In tho Laguna Niguel ai'el who are interested In aoccer ac· tivlUe1 thll 1ununer are welcome to an organi.zaUonal meeUng tolrlght 1t Crown Volley School. I.a Andrew•, chalrman of the parkl 21nd recreation committee for the Capistrano Unified School Dlltrlct, said the meetlng · will .at.art at 7:30 p.m. In room ·D-5. , If enough falhera and sona 1how an in- terest, organized aoccer actlvltie1· would be aet up to take place at the school -WcekdaY'k for youngsten and weekends for adulti. Ual player• unable to attend to 1 meeting can obtain inronnatlon b Ing Andrews al 495-5721. ,. Saddlehack Unit ' Meets Thursday &.ddleback Junior College Advisory Comm ittee on Real Estate will meet at a aJn. ThuNday in the college board room. The advbory committee is composed of tef>resentatlve from the college and com· 1nUnlty &nd meets to discuss college educational program!!. Ci'omn»intty represtnt.atlvt1 a r e ~ Douglas Krauter. l.elsure World Foun- d~tlon community relations director : Don O!tn, membef Tustin Board of Realtora; Nqrmo n Rudolph, San Clemente rtaltor; 1'*' Simpkins of South Orenge County Boerd or Realtor!; and Robert Turner. p_ksldent of Laguna Beach Board of Rlelton. . · ' ' Thieves' Market • Sale Set June 9 , .barras!I the sfeh"'o~ Iran, Nixon's host. Ziegler said he did not believe the blasts were intended to injure the Presi- dent. 1 • Nixon left Tehran 2Q minute! behlnd schedule at l: 40 a.m. PDT for the flight of a little over five houri to Warsaw, Poland. Special security precautions caused the delay. A guard of honor under the watchful eyes of a doubled security force stood at attention as Nixon, smiling broadly, boarded his plane. Only oUlclal govem- ment representatives were allowed In the airport. 0Ulcla11 said there were at lea!lt seven explosions in the Tehran area early to- day. Other explosive devices were found before they went off. The bl8'Ls injured a U.S. Air Force brigadier general, damaging hls car; killed one Iranian and injured two other Iranians. and blew windows out of the U.S. Information Agency building. · Iranian government oUlclals blamed the explosions on a leftwlng organiiatlon backed by neighboring Iraq. They ordered tight ucurlty for Nixon'! visit, because Iran ha.s been plagued ln recent month! by terrorists incidents. Nixon and the shah reached agreement today on the i!lsues of Southeast A!lia, the Persian Gulf, the Middle Ea.!l and narcctlcs, accordl.ng to a joint com· munique. The shah al!IO accepted an invitation to visit the United St.ates at a "mutually convenient time," .said the communique is!lued at the end of their 11econd busineliS session. ~shah, the communique said, stressed his determination to strengthep Iran'! ability to insure tbe natlon'a secu· rity and to enable Iran to cooperate with other natlons tn the Persian Gulf area. · Both Nixon and the Shah.18ld lt•was of 0 vital importance" for secUrlty and stability to prevail among the oil-rich na· tions of the gulf area. One bomb exploded behind a wall about 100 yards from the tomb of Reza Shah the Great, the father of the current shah, in the little town of Rey about five miles south of Tehran. Officlals said there y,·ere no injuries in this explosion which came about 45 minutes before N I x o n was scheduled to arrive for the wreath-laying ceremony. • The bomb was fashioned of two sticks of dynamite attached to a clock device. CBS CoJTespondent Phil McLaughlln was standing near the wall at the time. "It almo!lt threw me off my feet, the explosion was so loud," Mcllughlin said. 'l'he blast hurled debrb over a wide area. l I I 3 Stu<lents Suspended STANFORD CAP ) -Three Stanford Unlver!llty graduate students were suspended Tuesday for disrupting a class taught by controversial Nobel !lclentlst \Vllliam Shockley. The su!lpenslons, for an indefinite period 1111ot to be ies!I than twG years. became effective when university President Richard W. Lyman upheld the recommendation of a campus panel. Bobby Baker To Be Freed WASIUNGTON (AP) -Bobby Baker, the quiet country bOy who be<ame a confidant of Senate po~ ond 1allled • d•tll'« of power hlmJelf. will be releaae.d Thursday from the federal prison camp at Allenwood , Pa. The 43-year-0ld Baker, onetime secretary to Senate Oemocrata, will have served 16 months and 17 days for attempted tax evasion, grand larceny, transportation of stolen money, fraud and con. splracy. Without parole, he could not have been freed before next May 6. Police Arrest 3 Men in Niguel Burglary Case Three Laguna Niguel men who alleged· ly stripped a nearby model home of more than $700 worth of furniture and painting! were OOoked into Orange County Jail Tuesday night on burglary charges. Sheriff's officers are today seeking court action against James DeMis Glas- gow, 27, of 28851 Aloma Ave., Douglas Craig Dodson, 25, of 25272 Calle Becerra and Jerry Alan Young, 25, of 25361 Calle Becerra all of Laguna Niguel. Deputies claim the trio broke into a model home at 28871 Calle Juca Mon- day night and carried off furnishing• and paintings valued by the Standard Pacific Co rporation, developers of the Crown Park tract, at $730. · Investigators said the trio broke the sliding glass door . at the rear of the recently C1lmpleted home. and.._ loaded , ~heir IQOt into a Volkswagen bus, Officers said the furniture and paintings have -been recovered. · • Pendleton Chief To Review Unit At San Clemente Camp Pendleton Commander Maj. Gen. Herman Poggemeyer Jr. will serve as reviewing officer Friday at the annual award! presentation and troop reView of the San Clemente High School Naval Junior RCYI'C. The 4th aMual ceremony wlll feature award! to cadets who have excelled tn Naval Science activities on the' campus through the year. Organizations sponsoring the awards include the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce, the local chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Veterans of Foreign War! Post 7142, American Legion Post 423 and the Milltary Order of the World Wars. '1be: ceremonies will begin at 6 p.m. at the !chool football field and mu!llc will be provided by the lat Marine Division Band from Camp Pendleton. f.olunteera at the Interfaith set"vlei!man's Center in San Clemente to. day Issued an appeal for general rum· e-sale donations for 21 fund-rai!ling FromPnge 1 leves' Market patio sale set for June 9 10. rs. Trudy Wurzburger, chairman of event, !laid all proceeds from the r age and junior hostess bake sales \\ II go toward financing the center ·which ci er activi ties for servicemen away f1 ni home. prinlarlly Marines from p Pendleton . nors can phone the center any week· d y between 1 arxl 4 p.m. except Monday, t arrange for pickup of donations. The n mber i!I 492 -1814. Donors also are en- raged to bring the items to the center .advance of the sale. • twtrday event will open at 10 a.m. a close at 6 p.m. each day. OIAN•I COAST JC DAILY PILOT 'TM Orlllft C..I DAIL 'f l"ILO~ •I"' wlllctl ll ton'lllllled Ille Ntwt·'•''"' 11 "11.il~ lty tllt' Or•111• c .. 11 l"vl>ll1111 ... como-111. s..... r1t• l'llUlflorltl •rl 11Vlliltll.O, MDl'ldll' lllTWVll Ftld1y, !tr (111!1 Mttl. H1.,,0•I ltttll. H\llllltlttw. •1Kl'l/1"-t1!11 V1ll1y. Ut- 8H"'' lrwlfle/ilCMlt lloKlr. •nC llll (...,.,.l'i./ '"' J11t11 C•11lttr1M. A ,1..,11 ... 1-1 911 1rlon It puOU1lltd $•h1rcl1y1 ,,,. Svndl)'t. JI•• ,....lf!('[(ltl ll"fflll11'1ln1 11!1111 h •I llO Wit! •1r $1tHI, Cotti M1.-, C•llfw"ll, ,,.,., Rob1rt N. W11d P'r11oC1111t •!'cl l"..,elllollet J 1ck II:. Cutl1y Vl(t ,r._1111n1 1nC Go.,,...•1 M•llflfl' Tho"''' Kot•ll lllllf llio"''' A. Murphift• M1n111'1f l!dilor CJ-1rl11 H. lto1 lll:i,h•ril '· Nill linltl111t M111191M Ecllfln s.. c1 ....... OMce 305 N•rth El c,,..;,,, ltoot, tJ.71 • • Ott.r Offlc• C•tt MIH: )JO Wnl If' 1tr91t NfWPl'f l1Kh: UJJ H~ 111110¥119 HV"tW..• IHCl'll 1"11 IHCll IO\Mv6tlll Ltfl,IM ~: m l'lf'ftl ... - , ....... 1714) 6tJ-4J11 Cl•••• Mwrtt ... 641·1•n -a.-e. •• ·······=""' T1 ... l i11 4tJ..t41t °""letll. cm. °"""" ,_, l"Vlitll"""' ~. Mo "'"" '"''-Ill"'"''*"" ~lWltl IN!ttf or M\lffllttf'Mlll\ ...... in ,,.., .. ,......_.,. ..,... ..... .... ..... • °'"'""' ..,_.., ~~::::L•~ .. e~"!! ~ • ~-!Nit 111,IJ f"lll"ltllY' lfltnfwr .-ii ......... !\'. • MARINE RETIRES ... res! and the corps' recruiter got to him first. The Navajo code he helped develop after specialized Indian studies confused and confounded the Japanese, who generally performed with polish when imitaUng American accents on the air. "The Japane!le had English-speaking men that listened_ to our radio and telephone conversa.tion and some could even get into the conversation by im· itatlng Brooklyn or Defp South accents," be explains . One monitor brazenly began a strategy chat wilh 1',leet Admiral Cb ester Nimi u . "Excuse me. Admiral, but that's not a buddy you're talking to," said Price, in- temipUng the talk. Ind.Ian dialect is what jinled the Japanese. "To my knowledge, the code was nt\•er cracked by the ene1ny," he explain!!, noting every explanatory book was burned at war's end. Research lnto his own lleritage al.90 revealed an historical Indian hoax, say! Sgt. Price, who notes most tribes used runners to deli ver messages before Nava· jos bad radio. ''I was surprised lo leA m that !lmoke signals and tom·tom messag e! were stricUy lloUywood." he explains. So. are some of Sgt. Price's Pacific com bat recolltttions. He tells ol one tribesman's capture by \\'hat -in earlier wars -would hive been the enemy, but on two Jlma was hls 0\1,'n side. Given pennisaion, the N1 ... ·ajo radioman hr:aded for a nearby camp to get a haircut. but WI! waylaid by 1 sllllplc lous Caucasian lieuteoanL "He thought he was a Jap . , . put a .45 automatic right to bis head -he was real dark -and, Wbooeee!,'' Price declares. '"Ille klds'1 conunandlJ1i officer had to come down to identify him aod 1et him out ol the 1tocbdt. "Tht llevlenanl had to go axpla!n to bis own C.O. and then · 1poloflze lo the 'prbow' ptl1Qlllµy." he 1dds. - A v.tenu> ol Vietnam and Kort1, aoe of ·~. Price'• bbtoria -memoriu b: W1''·'1ing the Fbi·railing atop Id•. ~ -ii on lwo Jl..,11. "We had a guy with them," says Price, who aiuld see it 11h·miles away, while hearing It described by his Navajo buddy between calls for mortar bombardment. One GI helping raise the Flag -it wa! taken down again so cameraman Joe Rosenthal could get hia hi!ltoric 1hot - was another Indian, lra Haye!!. Stories, a song and a movie portray the tragic aftennath for Hayes, who aiuldn't cope with fame and drowned Ollf postwar night in a cfesert crtek coming home from a night on the town. Nobody promised Willson Price any rose garden during or after the war, but he seems satisUed . He and his wife, Ro.w, ha''' four children, Laverne, 22, Lorraine, 21. Laura, 18, and Willson Jr., 17, all of whom art in school. LaVeme attends San Diego State College, majoring in premedicine; Lor· raine goes to Orange Coast College plan· ning a cal'ttl' in child psychology and Laura goes to Estancia High School. She wants to major in mu!llc, while \ViJl.90n Jr. is a typical 17-year-<>ld. "He doesn 't know yet ," says hi! father. 1be newly·retired master sergeant figures he'll stay in Costa Me11 at least a year, until \Villson Jr. greduate1, then head back to Arizona , 30 years after leav· ing. "We've got a lot of land there," he ex· plalnJ. saying he'll ra~e aUalfa and vegetables. "It's going to be kind Qf sad lea ving a place where you've spent a tblrd of your life," ootes lhe~x-~1Arine who purchased hU first k>ca1 home about 22 y11r1 ago. "But I've seen the world," he says of the return to \Vindow Rock, whtte he was born. Willson Price woni lalk about an !n- ('ff!rtl!llng cru!lade among young Indians a~ainst the condltlona which have ad· mttlcdly held them bock for dt<ad<s. Ho agrsed he found a btltor chance In th< Marine Corps -but, questioned on vlewa about natl"t't Amerlctns as 1 whole -Willson Price's race tunu blank ; lm- pwtve. "llt .... to cet lbal In lht plctuno," be aoya. polnlla( 1o the old Marine Corps i:acnitu111 post.r .., bJJ desk Iba! lay1 nobody P«<"lltS ~ a -gan!en. "That 11ys It all ... " he CQllC!uda • U.S. Oknys Air Remedy Dat e Delay WASHINGTON (UPI) -Relreating fro1n an earlier stand, the government t~ day granted more than 25 cities includlng Los Angeles , San Francisco a n d Sac ramento, a two year delay In im- posing traffic controls needed to reduce air pollution. The action gave the cities until mid· 1977 to meet limits on the am.o.unt of carbon monoxide or pholocheml'cal o:ic· idants in the alr. The original deadline was n1id-197S. Both pollutants come primarily Crom auto exhaust, and spokesmen confirmed that 1he delays were granted so the cities would not have to impose traffic cont rols. The CQncessions on regulating con1· muter traffic, perhaps th e m o !I t politically sensitive area of pollution control, were included in rulings by the Environmental Protection Agency on plans subm itted by SO states and five jurisdiclions to meet . air cleanup stand· ards mandated by the 1970 Clean Air Act. EPA Administrator Wllliam D . Ruckelshaus approved plans submitted by nine sta te!, plus Guam, Puerto Rico and American Samoa. Plans from the other 41 states plus the District of Colwn· bia and the Virgin Islands were app roved in part and disapproved in part. Approval \\'3S given to plans submitted by Alabama , Connecticut, FI o r id a , Mississippi, New Hamp!hlre, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon and Wt:st Virginia. Well Shut My Mouth! If the disapproved provisions are not changed to the EPA 's satisfaction, the agen cy must impose its own plans on recalcitrant states. Thomas Halt, 25, of Salem, 1.-lass., gasps as he is named winner of $1 million at the drawing of the Massachusetts lottery. llall, who makes $125 weekly at the New England Telephone Co., said, "I'm going ta·qult"my job:" Halt-aml-lris. wrre Susan-ae<epted~e.ck for $5a,OOO· and \Vill receive a similar check for $50,000 in each of the next 19 years. (The Asociated Press said a day-old court order clouded the validity of the EPA a1;tion. (That order, a major victory for en- \•ironment groups;requlred Ruclcelshaar to review the plans and grant approval only if they give complete protection to air already cleaner than required by federal standards. " High School Leaders, Pep Squads Selected (There was no imm e dia·l.,e an- nouncement whether the government would appeal, the AP said.) Birrglar Pockets Jewelry, Treat San Clemente lligh School student body officers and pep squads have been se-- le<'ted along with pep squad! for Dana Hills High School. Randy Roberts, son 0£ Mr. aod Mrs. Blaine Roberts of San Clemente, was elecled student body president for next year. The officer's father is a district circulation manager for the DAILY PILOT in San Clemente. Olher officers Include Martin Baker, vice president: Chuck Raht, treasurer; Jill Wright, secretary, and Mairl Rhoads, student senate pres.ident. Pep squad members chosen to serve San e Jemente High next year are Kelly Dowling, Sandy Johnson-'-Al ice Bills, Cris Casler, Sue Mathis and Kelly Smith, varsi ty cheerleaders: Daryl Christy, GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHRIES GRADUATION WATCHES The watch, for genertilions the traditional college graduation gift, is loday apprecialed.,.also by child· ren at grade and high school level. Choice of a watch lot graduates at any level lvas formerly a simple matter of selection by price and .-style. A watch was a wa_tch , its al· most casual purchase usually r• suiting in genuine appreciation. Today, modem technnlogy and styli ng have combined with special- ized uses to make satisfactory s• leclion infinitely more difficult, There are. however, steps you can take to make sure your graduate will wear this gill with pride and pleasure. You should be aware of your graduate's activities and of the kinds and styles of watches worn by his friends . You should then see • rellable local Jeweler and discuss your problem. We have watciles for all ages, !mm rugged timepieces for acllV11 cilildren to the most sophisticated and specialized watches available. And if, In spite of all your cue, your graduate wanu something dif· ferent, w.e'll gladly uchange for uaclly what he wlllls. • • • • Vicki Brown, Kalhy ~1artin, ~felanie Serences, Jeanne Dunham and Della McGarry, songleaders. Junior var!lity cheerleaders for San Clemente will be Darlene Campbell, Dayona Lovrnark, Debra Sue Smith, Karen Sharp and Caroline Hamm. Jennie Steffenson will be mascot. Dana Hills High School pep squad members are Ferril Krogrus, Jan Ralls, Sue Ralls, Barbara Smyth, Zora Szemenyel and Becky Wilson, varsity cheerleaders; Lora DeMarco, Leigh MacAdam, Karen Morrow, Gail Skellern , Lynn Sipe and Debi Smith, songleaders; Tracy Barrett, Sandy Blaney, Sue Counter, Deni!le Ulloa and Diane Witt, junior varsity cheerleaders. A Balboa Island burglary including loss of assorted jewelry worth nearly $5,000, plus one hall-gallon of ice cream is beln& probed today by Newport Beach police. The break-in was discovered by Mrs. Jane K. Todd, or 221 Collins Ave., who iJund someone had slit a window11creen to gain entry. Once inside the sales representative's home, the intruder ransacked I t , pocketing various jtmes of her jewelry ·including wedding and engagement rlngs. Officer Dan Crickett said the largest· valued item is a $2,600 _platlnwn ring set 'vith a two carat diamond and four smaller ones totaling a hall..earat. 'Mre ice cream· -navor unspecified - was swiped out of the freezer , police u id. Yourgraduote. Give them an Omega. A quality gi~ thal distinguishes 1tself for styling, accuraci and th1 auurance of over a century or qua Ii ty craftsmanship. Give your gfdduole a limepitce _to rely on ••• Omegoj Stlf.•1alfflf, WlW'i.olllnt MM lfl1I ~It -.!Iii _..i.,•lli.J•IM ;... -...it1 M •i.oi.111.., 41111. -·--·-<--••M• -S15S 1 .. 1., °""'""" .t.11·..ifllfl"' wltti ..... ,.,.] ... <111•1 -..... i.-ot..i - fftlrtwlt ---_,_,_..,. •. 11 ~ 182 3--NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA .MESA ·• f I .,- CONVlNfENl TllMS IANICAME•ICARO-MASTEi CHAl6E 21 YlAa:S IN 5.AMl LOCATION PHONE 141°1401 • , ' . OAJLV PILOt SC Signs Not '.!;'Doing It' ··-Wexler COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST "OVER THE COUNTER ~IW \'OIUC l\J'l~l'OI.... .... ..... fllll ..... 111 .. .,)qt .. "' ,... Ven. I t.« ~: YIM.} Nlilill u. a. a.. (Wt.I ~ w. c-. ~ I ""''""' "'"' "" c..1 °"' c-. '~ .. "' ,ti' "'+ " £ ... l!:j "' 'I '"' .,,._ " -'' 1.a g !· 1--·~" '"""°"''~ ,. s ,,, ~.,_ i.. Ml -1.J ~. '" ti... ~ '-' ._11G .a v.r-; _.. ,,__ "''""' ... " ---• Ill" • .. '" li" jj"T ,, IE"' ,... I A.Mltrll 1.11 110 '"' 1t1\ 1~ " c;11111 " 1,19 ,. 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Col~•" IA l~ ~~ J~~· \~v.-1;; F ~I 1,)0 Jl !1 U. I + .: 1J'J.: t~ 1; 'i,; nh f\~ ~= h Fees Pal'd :: lnSlowA 72·• 7'41'" M .... cO.,~ l'" i"~ ·,:~,~nN S• 2'1 '23 Nl:W ',': .i"~ i •,m<0",'-'.·~ -VI Colonlll SI I 11 XI~• XI•-. lO'• ·· G1mSpl 1.60 j 39'~ 31\lo \Ii-I K no\0$ ' 1ti I 't "4 "' cente ror ona s treet, .e says. 8 '" ,. "'" ,.. "'mt ...... 12J ~" ~Vt. Collnttt 1.'° 20 W • nr. 31't-'• G,.nn111 ·" 'l'i.. 1•1'1 "'+~• l<.r•thC • • ,.;. •l'o +'• h fflll tn 1\.0 2~ Mldfr"" T t•w Clt .qv. """° (tllo Frt l'i A.Ill 1,tUI 1 t ~ 1~...._ "1o Colt Ind .IO .cJ JUI 11 71'-'• G1rdOn l JI 9 J U.. 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SI'~ SS -1 gt,ttW•~, " !', lt'it ''"" 1 ... io IC.o.llt ,., • N tii •t han one featurin a the com· By Gas F1'rm c~ll(UI~ tA:. r~ MM,ii~c,, •, •• .E JO ltlo•t Actiee ~:::Eti)l-1.~ ........ 2"'" ~ 1 -l'f Col Gt$ 1.12 n ~ ,.~. 1''•-1• Ge.. °'" IO ttt. r-'• Kaoeo• 1 to #I ~ S..I:\ '\ ~-e 8• 1r .,, .. 4S ..,,.A ,. , 'I s >U,0 ,'" ,.l •• ~~+ \1~ Col PlcllOl't• 1DD U 11 11 1111-•o mini Cta >I 15'1~ 15 1 -'• l<or•core '1n • \ .. 1M9 ~, '-ny's name a nd m akes u s •Is s.c .. MldwG T It'll. w. n ' 1.10 m ,.,. ,~ • SOI! 1...,. :n 1~ ''l-o 'Hi..+'• Gem in ·* lj 11\• j 4 1~1o11+ 1t Krt nco l .71 llO 4r .,.._._ " yo • 1111 u A 1:~ l!l:1" llllpar 45 ll NEW YORK (UPU-T:i:: 10 -· •<· ", '•'•'•' l{'J lSolO 1t~'t lt ''VI+ n Col !11 69 .. \. •• -... GnAln L~ 1 11'• )\'t *~ I..; I(,_ ·g '"• 11 "" 11 .. 1!!:="1 .. -.... t took '" . the s how wm' dow to see ,,, u M,,, F • ,. ll.. ··-' • ' .. ~ O"C -..... G .w " 21'1t. 11V. 1"' C,.,,,b E l.d • '' •>' •I + ,, Gn AOI ' 1• .. ~. 41i... '"+'• ~·-hi•' . ! ~ !!.': -- ' ••hat's o!fered for sale. Southern Califor nia Gas C:O. It,•,\.. Mo' 'l~ ","' ~•RG~ "'," ,•r ... '.,.1 •1 _,.1 ~!...aH",59,, ... ,. c "Gn"' 1:10 x 32~ iit,t' 11~ ··· c m SOI" ~ ,. ... ·-~ nAT 01 , l ftl'I !t v. Stl'lo+ l'I .. ... 1 ll JO • ,.,,1oc1 r on "' ••1i.Gn ln$ S't t4 ?1•4......,,21 ···cmE pt•.JO .. ,,,.2,,'.7 .. c.1,,~enATr ,, 5)~'1o tW. \0-\lo riiO.r 1. 21, , ... ' ·-~ l!i'w"'i::[P 23~ 74~ Mobl i~"< ~"' 1k M1rdff Food 1~;oo-,. ,.;;" -5':J A,m HOl1 ...a ~5 1214 1H\ 111~ w. c,.,,,s1P\, ~'11 ' ll 1'1' 11 + '-en11nc 70 ~ C\'f 1• u w.or 1 " · 1:[ · Wexler drips with scorn in paid $46,108 in franchise fees ocic • 46 _.."' M1111u1 ,. 2 \\ '21'1 No ceri.1 1<1r1 '17\'I ~ -,... . ~t,,1,.n, :m '~ 1!J1: l03V.-1Vi c mwEd 2·70 112 3•'" :M\• 3''\-'• .., 8•11f•y 1'l1 ll'' l'" IJ\lo-·~ L11elec1t Id -' Ol\ "~ jpg. ,,.,,. ' • I M · om SH• y, 7' Moor• r ~ 9\lo R~nt or•n A.DR • 29 ,...,_ .,. ....... " 11~ I Vt.16.1\i-3-U ComEdpr 2 15 21 16~. ~•\,;, -\O GnC•bt1 .to n ,·., '"-1 -~,,. L•m•Ofl.Sn' l 16 t~ lt'Mo '• d escr ibing the typ1ca a1n to Costa Mesa for 1971 a~ mwTI p ji•Ao 2t~Moor1s. ~cun1 oit 1 .cio 11• ,,,.._1.11 •,mm",~,,' ~~ ~~'A .illi+\\cwEdPI 1 . .a 4S '!., ?"'" 12•,,, .... ·, GnC••· 1.10 16 211. ''~• JlV.l·~•L•n.er :!Jl ~ l! ~h -+'• · "M h t ' Aock 5"' 16'h Morrt.sn 31'\lo ll\li Penn Ofb~ a ,fOI) We tl;-'.•A ' .,,,... 1 '4 10 10 -Uo CwEdot I.to • '""" .~. •..-• Geno..v1I 11 ft 3" lJV. \'t-l't L..lrwn I t I~ .-. • • street store sign ere ans ""rding t o Ji'm De c k e r orMCa ll2i~n or•!• K ~ ~"" Ame• f..,. s.1.000 ~ JDl!!I-""',M"..,.c\....!! • ~• • " -2 fwEd 11•'• ' 11• .. }\\., 11•. ·· Gtn ovn•n• 183 :11' n·~ :ioo-•• t1t•ot11 sr 1 !'" ''" 1€ '• "! I bo t them .. v ~ • C...,.t Co 40\.'1 -IV:t olch M ·-1\i Ml'•ll Cp 4$,.00 -lOl-a,••• <C "'"'" 21l.• ?Ofil 20!-'t-""' omEd &w\ ,67 11\/o 11 '~ !P'i Gn EIK l.tO :U~ V. U•• M-.-h"t ••"llCI .IO 9• 1 'n I \ii I -'• '1'rl e n 0 v e 5 a u -. . •. Cri.;1c11 R 11 11\lr ""°IOI' g so .so>.; 81nt1m ... c, 42,100 .(2~ 43\'..-".....,. " ,,.... :~1 19?. 1'\lt 29y,.... ... omw Oii 4 @ 10~. 10'• 10...,_ ·~ Ge<t Flrtorl I .. lh U'I--\'t LHrS 111 7lto '! 3'1V. '~ + •• SC)Ve5. b a n g the novels d1Slr1Ct m a nager for the Utili-\'Pf .. I 21~ )I-s•n:lll 1'!11. t \4 World SenoLlte 11.SCO 2.N 2'1~+ ~,,,, AMIC Pl S"~ II 11\lt ,._ It -llo CwOllllf In 11 241.. 24 Jt -"• GnF'ood 1.40 11 1 • l ~ l ' -It LHKO Corb 1( 10\'t '9ll\lt1o .._.,. t •nl lnll .tQ\~~ •rraii 11 11'11i HHllh Incl -40,100 llVI l ll..-41i Am;fGNtollOr Sil !•1 I~) I'• Com11t ,it !Cl"!.,-., ... •7'-••Gn M01t C11 '6 1*o t'• t•.-l'i Lt1SC1I 2.20 ,; n ~·· ·over lhe s torefronts and call y . o1..i" M 11 ., 12~ • GsOr 12\.11 1"' , 5 1 .xi " 36\\ :1111t. ~·,,, ComP111r Stl 3tt !'" ''" 1 + •-i Gen 1n~1 · 11 sn 11\, u 21~1~ L•t•w•v ,.o n~ VI ml"' Dirt Ore 7Alo 21\4 Hal Ubl\' llJS ~ NASO Val umt todtl' t,m,.cio. m !11 .''1. I 27\t """ :22'h-114 C,.,,,11111 Solt 6J Jll< 21 21\it-<, Gffll~•r 11! l I ~·• ~ ~'It-\o t H<n•N .$0 2' JJ•... '• t hem s igns." ~ Jn a ddition the ga s utility 0111• o n •1._ •11> ~1,5P11M11 JI! .52\li Acl"llll("• Sl'2 :"'~ ·,~ 11 111.~ ji :w.-. .\fl c-Mrn1 1 11 72'" 22•t. 211......_ 1. Gin Md .10c1 10 Q"-1 'ill' •2•.r.-'• •n-. .o lt 1~o.c. 14 1 · '" f ' O•t• Gen tJ 91\lr ... 'l RI I~ tYo ~line~ ... ' • ..u HI 21l~ I 21 -~ CnnMlll .Ud 2J ,.:i,, n 21'1t+ \'o GenMHll .•• 11 1 !>O\t 4 .. ijf-'' ... t"' ,, c ~ ff 11\'I 1,m iii\ ... We~er says government 0 -'d r h " r f I'" 675 D•\'IM Ir l' 11 N 8 'I "" !' ncn•n11ed l$M m Air .70 ~ ll" 2 11 --.. Cor<•&Cl: '° 2 ' JS•. ::.t i·~-1-l'o GnMa! 1.tW 14k3 1111 ' ~ ~ •l'I V•I I l pal ranc !Se eeS 0 w , Dircor In l\11 l'!>:i Njn11 G 11\'o 7'/J •ltl ~ Ani Slncl .~~ 21'1 12~ 114--hConEO J.IO 191 "'i l~'; ~I~ GnMO!Pf Ji,:, 6 51 l·o 1 .. -1, <'llmn .t 1 11' l -'I fic!es, civic center s, schools t N ~ Be h "' 348 to "'"P AR 71 80 N N•t 11v. 1rni AmSldpf .i;t 21 H 574W ~' -"coniEd p1 6 '1 i~1. e11, 11i.-1. GenMot Pf s J 11n 1•1~ • ·r •MO~ 111 • • i. l~ !»'-•1. :·and hospitals are wors e than ° ew·po' ~ a c • _., g:j~~e1"~ li"" 11v. ~~~r;,," ll~ ~J~ Gainers & Lo•er• ~~~~1 ,:~ 2.f3<1f •2~ ~rt ~~~ ~ cfon~Efd P! J 111ilt :~ :;111 ~ +1 · 8-P:.~iJ 1::3 ~fl ~ ~ =i .\ trv f:C St: Jilll1U l~ l~+ :~ ·,· bus1"nes s fir" m s. T he architects Founta in Valley and $15,556 to Del C1nT 11~ n N.,''"", ' '• """" 4.S'h "•mmn,T ... ol • 1~7 st•. A lll 'jV.-"' on . Ill 39';il 39111 ''~! "8E Atlrl~I ll 1~, 1\1o 1\~ .. tt_w1Slr ~ .., ;m --.. Deltnl Br ~1'.~ ,_. e sm 4114 4 "1o Tl ' wt 2t1 .~. 171\' .,,i.-1: :;~d d ~::; 11 101\'t tt"4 101 I ft ll•I .61 'jig ... ._ "'\• "'"'--! ~~ _s:oron "" •• . ,..,. ~·· :· a n1 build ing planners do such Laguna Beach. g11~r ... cg 1~{\ 1l?.i. ~~~nc~ limi -Ii: .,.::: t~~~."1J,;;/~1:1~:;1~ ;1: ~=::: ~ 10 1$?~ IS~ rst·~ ~,.,, l!':elOhl 1'3 2!,_, rn· 2~~ I Gn .SJ Ill pt,J i: ''i!4 lJt"' ljtri~tt r,,g.d'', 2~ ., .t.~ . .ft'_ 1,i •. a b ad JO. b -that soon after the -"'h fr his . Dl•ltr~ _,_ :Alt onW!t-~ w. lftOIL.UO_lol ,,,. "-'--b&Md OA-f>«W'!I Amel1k--...-J6 '"" ,,,,.._ 1t~ 1111 C1111_ Liil•~ -~ ~0-,. w.· ~~i l.St M XI ,...._-""' ,. . LO~ . -. ifii.-1,L ~.-. 1 e-anc e fees are paid Dlvrs sc1 :w\4 3sv. "IOC:r NG 1 ~or d'ltnfl1 on thl 0ver·t11t<oo11ter Flllll'kl1 AMF lnCP 1 1.u Ml• .,.,.. ~-..., Con1NG,.,!·'1 61 ,. ''" 2'11\.'t-~GTE Df 11-. 11 )9•, it~ ~ ·~ L!bb" McH ill I" '! bui!:iingS are o pened, Weaiy b h ( Olxon J 11 lll'it WI En9 ~ 41'11 II <llJO!edbl'1"9 NASO. Amfec: ·'° II :t7 3'\lr 1/J ~11111ni Jl60 "6 tl~~ '3'M+ .\.:.Gen Tlr• 19 63 11\i 21 21 -1\.i l..lbrll'lfl r~ l \11 t 13 _ .. • y t e gas company for u se o 111e1 :31 ,, • 1111 NtG 11:111o 11" N•' •nd "'cem ... c111..,.. ••• 1111 AMP inc ·" 1-'t "''" tl 9'111+1 on P pt 1111 ,,, ~•· >"" ,,,.,_,,, G~""' 1.10 10 n 1, n~ ,.,~, ,t1•1MM' -·' f' t• ., .-+ •\ .. cter'·-, t each e-and -·nurses · -·~·--' · e>o...llh ll'li 3111~ ttosP cm ~ ll.. dlfle"1'1tt 1111we1n , .. 1erd1y's 1u1 bid Ami>eoP .311 5 • P-'o n\._ v. Conti Air L11 ~ ·• ~·· G 1 .oti 1 u • 111 IP-~ I"' 1y ... 1 o 1 101 101 -1· ...,, '" public s treets' and highways 0ow Joni •• 14v. NwPb s" "' ar1c1 •11411oe11w'1 lt1 bid price. A111P41• Cot 1u 11; 1:i. 1ir+"' CnC•n 1.60 '' 211• ?!I~ ,.,,,._+~ ~,,.:1~p ·ii£ n .... ~ · ... ~ '9;,;j: ,z 1..11w 1!:11 .n 31• ...... Ml't ~•"' : 'have to p aste handlettered Doyle oe lJ't. 3J Noxen c11 OA-INEllS Am,.... Corp '° w o j l 23 -1 CnC•npl I\~ r60 '6 "",, 641, Gt Ptc , · 1~ 4:1'• ,1 4~.-I• 1. n<:Ntl "°' " 11 · " - , sign s-jq ehallS, te Ing~ th ( ·i·t· &.,~~~D 1~1!~ e:1ncri, 3~i S!J'Jf. lCns1c~~rli1J,'r l"9. ~ ~P i°·,,i\m~rrpf ?'.a '·~v. 4~V• •il<=tt~~l~&Ql'Jb~! ~ ff1' ~r• _tll-'lt~G:Pw~I 1)1 r ll01C1''101\1 I01'._J bf.':~~~: 3~J 1 1:~ I ~~ lr.n +·~-, th 11. for na tural g as pipelin es and DuM El e 3v. U't. uclr . RI °"l .!• ,' f,1$CO inc ·'' '!"'av. u,• "-! !e1rs••,. 1.1a 1l Jn, I~• ~,,,.._ \\ con CollllC!r > ~. 1.. •.~ ... 0 p 111 1 J "6' .,.,., *"""' 1 L "'N' Pl J 5 'I"' em .\. I pie where IO go, 0 e r 3Cl I leS. Econ L8b '!"' 3''.4 ~·111 Llll 31 . J1 \? 4 WlftlPk Tel ·" ,.,, ll/1 Up lJ.? Am1l.cl In 7 4"1 l9\'.. 31:\:o lit -l~'o Con I\ It 1.J1d 6'I 29~ Jl\'o 2Hlo+ .,._ Gerbt!r 1.35 II 3l'o ll\• lJG_. '~ l.lttn C\' pl l 11 41', 41 • -11, Th g , ( EdllC SVJ ~ !w M 4$ 46 !1Met11!Suor . ..S fll 1 UI 11.tAm!el ln .20 I 6~ ~ (tl9--1•Canllnvtl 11 ll 21~• 21:14, 21\,.__Vi G•llY 1.1111 ~ 114' 76l< 11•.-l.lt l /llnCvfjf 2 ,'f jl'n 1l,. HM•,_,• e as compa n y s ran· El Nucel 16 16v. FtrrA. llV:t uv. • Stndtett Co•P 3i;, ~• VP l .s Antcond• m 20\.\ lt~ 201.>-,._ ConM•o;i .s:w 1n 13'n 12• .. nv.+ •, G1t1vo1 l.Jll • 11 1• *' · · L tton•n PIA 1 20 •• 20>Wi+ _ TYPICALLY' the archl"tect h ' p t t "t" nd Ellmat l Polo lloer Co 20 7jVt 7 V•ll Anocl•tl l~ l~• UP 11.0 Anc:llor MCI I 17 321/) 32'/• l2'h Conti 01! \\it ,f,11 11'• 21111 21VI+ >1 Gi1ntPI . .od II 11'• 1411 I•''>-'• Lo<kl'>lld IN~ ID!ll'o ,1~-\o• !!"-·,,· C I Se aym e n 0 Ci leS 8 IEtlxr Ind J \\ 31~ ,,,,,. 8 jlV. 2 '/, t Pini 1nn 11\C-f\\ Y,. VII 10,I Anc:oro .Olo 1,1 1~ 10~ JO'i • : : Cn SIMI ,4(1 l 1~ l~o 1a.t.-'!. Gi1lr11Fln SI 2l 22' > l?'lo ~ 'I 1..GewCfj J.0~ 1• ,, ~· and contractor d on'l think u nincorporated territory in e t P•so l:M ll!AI hi N •'.r. ""' ' 11 .. 1oe11 c~ ""-• u 11 ll·~ And £,.1~ f: f''' fl"'-14 con1 Tel "" 201 20•., 70 20 _ . Glod Ltwl• 10 1••· U~\ l•ll.-h Lonw•FI JJ :it 1•'t+ •• ·a bout lhe sign problem until ora nge County amounted to~=~ 0~ l1 l~:i. ¥2: fi,a :t~ lT ~~~"2M:tn ~~1 3~ li: 10:! 2 =·011 ·•1 1~ iltt fF.l d~ ~ ~:::B':r 0:~ ,TU ~~ ffit ll,,..:': ~ g:1:~l1 ,;l!: 1~ ~J~ !Jw. ~;~-t; t=. '~i , 1= u~ rft; .~: . 1·ust before the building is more than $1.1 million. ~~~\frc oi ii ttVt 8;~1m 11~ t~tt '1 l~=°on b~ )1 2tv. 2: li: f: ~,ore. C~ 1'1' ,,;t 1~~ ,~-"' ~::un '·I& ~ t: ~IU ~Jr• +v. ~/~•t!!1e,1.1 ;/g ~l.'t #4J #~·;~ t:=tJnd~'i ,,1 fOJ•,\ !°' 1 ?'! .,, Erle Ttc 6'~ 7\li ~er T ~ 20\lo :10'!4 1~ S..bollrct Unit l 'A U• f,l A LpfC 1.06 jO\fa 701'1 70\fa . ., . 1 2~\'J 211/1 J~\.\-'-" Glnol lncor 115 11'• utl, ~J•'o-\'o Lon SIG I .~ if!t 7'1>1 -• ~,ready to be occ u pied. 'Then ~~J!nco1: !t~. ~ 011~~· c~! 1~ 1t?! ll ~~~'m111~~ n? ~ ~: ::l ~ri1rv 1~~ ir 1l;r; 11.rn 11~:~ 1~:•1f1~g(&/' 11} ~ !~v, ;.:v,::\-, g1•:1:r.'"i~s ~ 1~1t1 ~~~; ~14--;-l~ tt:::I~' , 1;!i ~5 1'(0 2111\li :·~-~~ • they eilher do a h urry i'ob -8 ceco 1i,;, 21'11 P1b11 er f04ii ti\.\ 17 ace 1nc1i.;11rt• e•i:. 4 UP !· Arc1t1N ·" • '!~ u~ 1~,, 1 1 , '" , " , G •• , 1 ,., ,, ,,,, n•i,.1\t -rb. _.. ' 7t 1 ~ Jt C k T 11 F•I• l.ne 1~1Sf11 Ptcc•r •114.4?\lolt A M T Co r,. o6l'o v. UP .,A•c••ofC 2 l 3111 ll'lt l3 .. OCl1l• • I 6" '""' 1"'-'' le .... p • ,. L ·c' !jj ., '" l"_._.,, .t hemselves Or cal\ in a ('Qc -er e S F5!801ln:J6V.'1\4 P1Clum 3' :MValfV•t1cfYnelnc l'I' Yt U,. 7.ArcllerOntl 20 •7 •l>~.:i~~CoopTpl l'r. 11<l 21) 211-''•GltnApf1\~ 5 I S1!o Sl~Sl'o+l~r;lo't1 nc1E:°'! 111o u ...-,, • ls! Comr ll'" 31 P1Sc 8rd lf" 17\lt 20 M•lhllw11 ln1 JI'>+ \~ Up j·1 Arctic Ento )( 21~< 21V. 21\f-COPtlnct .60 1G 41 4'\'H •I + i~ GlGllel Mar 110 20'• 19~• 20 \.'t-'• ti ~ f J jjv. » t 1:t-1~ • graphics expert for a quick , t w IF .... J"' PIM OcOI 1 "' 1J ti Menrednl= '°' 41 + 3 UP J ArlJ PS I Oii lS Ill 101' ,,._,_ ..... c-11.t nq_• ]9 llV. :ov. 20\/i-1'-'o Globt!Vn ·'° 1Sl ::11~. 36 3'"1+ '• 00 .,, ... ., ,,. ,, l' . F,1colnc ,,,; ih P•11! AIV lt"'l0'4 '2F1$hl n220 '.Old 11'1!"" 1:1Arlt ruD 'st 31 St\ S"' s~~v.COPWSll 1.10 Sl 2• n 1, + hGal,,Wtl Fcl 10 171• !Wt 11,,.._,, Lte-•ruco.,. ""1:M; • 'job. In a very lar ge build ing. 411V:2C Di'vi'dend F11c1r.or 7s 2µ:,Paulrf P ·~ !lltJ EnYircctyne 121o1 1v. uo .1 Arltn RllDw 1.st lJlll ?Oin ~-i-icornG 2v.. •12s1 24 '°'241.._J Goodr!c~ 1 o 2• """ 2Y'-U. LTV Core" , lll\ In! !lil ·i'; •. Wexler sa,'d th.IS can r esult in Font Grnl 31'~ Jlln P•vtllt f!'io l 24 Olnfrl Club In ~41 14 UP 7.1 Annco Sil 1 Ill .. :tJ ll _ \'. C01Jsl111 .9Sd 21 25 l'l• 25 -:t. Gooclwr .U lSl ll>''t :w'o 30\•-'• l TV CP ,.1 5 I »'' XI 4 , Frant CP !HO y,; ""1n Ct• •lv. 41 '?! Canict•llon S 1 Vt Up •.1 Arni Pl 2.10 U J01~ 2''1 :l'O!'o-\~ Cowl11 Con• 10 10 9'o t•t--'·• GordonJ .2• 21 21~• 1~ 1''°-·~ Li.;DrlJol .«I t i """ .ti • ' t. g $lOO 000 or more on 'Ink E1 1 11~ 12 P•v N sv 11..-.. ''"' Los••s A•m• c• ·'° SJ ,.,, :11...,. llv.-,,., Co• B•d .lCI 110 42\o't •'~• 11"~-('I eou1111nc .•• ::11 J1\o JI J11t:-'• L11tkv5 ·ra 11• ''"' 1t\o\ i" .·w as 1n , Frs.cll" 111.,31 ,ffrl" 1JV.lfl'I !Camp cam"'u J"'-.,, Off 'j·'A•mCpl 2;:. 1100 56\{o sav. S6\lo+1v.CPCln11 1.10 IS l2'• Jl'O J2' ...... ~Gr1<1W 1•1 ?13 11 '''"' ~+\~ co51aw 1. j l "+'• .. bad signs. Director s of Crocker Na-Fror FdE 1:w. :Ut\ P,•Gsj, w 21 1 !! l lilrdeaFd .1• -J•,1o §JI' I .t Arm111t 1 . .0 10 !'k: "" jffil!J-,,., Cr1neco . .o 1J ~ 2J"' 231-'1-~ rt nbv .60 tu 22 11•. 21\Ci+ '• t" •1111 1 ·-, , Fuller M is~ 26\~ M>SI WI 11 I Herl1'1bt9 II•,. ~ 14 4., I'll Cal'll ,fO 4 lO~ · Cr.clll Fl ,7, l l 77V. 26l~ 11 -~ Gt•nd U .IO 10 17 l~ 1'\lt-\~ 0 ('.,,. I 9 • Outdoor signs are the wors t tional Corp parent or Crocker y 1lbrth l\'o 21"' •''' H&M ff"' 3f 'ATO Inc:,., A •V,.-I 13. Arvin Ind i 10 I 4 U • ~-·i.,,; Crock.,. l,4-6 22 3''1\ 3J;i/a ].j -\o Grtnllvllt I I ~ lO\\ lt~ ~ wk• 'Ylln I li ., Ji•rllnlf. 2J~< j•,,.. Mroltt l?l1 f"" f ~lint lnd111 J"-'4 i I~. ::i:1011 1.20 :UI 'f JIY, j l">-:-y. ~romp K .10 20 is 2•Yio 1l 'IA; G••nt w I\) 114 :w'~' lf.1.1. 314'-\~ lwll" Y• '' 1 offenders, Wexler s aid Bank decla~e~ the regular ~ :rW ,~ ,·v. ~~/n ~~ iii' :rt 1 ., non ,.....\:i.ct ' 11_1~ 1/ ~.71 AJ~'.~:! J 50 1 + v, rauw HIM tt '°''" 20v. ~ ~ G~•J: o l.'11 ,, 3s'4 lJ!Ao 3s~-1~ L\'ncl'IS~ • .t :r : "Look around any major city, quarterly d1v1dend of 41 1h. n 5ll•le f lY! '~NP•" llV. lig • -""' °"""'" 14-"' f .J A~ IV. lt 11'" ll~ ~ ' . =" ~-: l~ m: lff: E11v.+" &rrA\P 1·~~ :~ r"9 r, .• i~ ~ Mec:fh ''"' ~. m f' .. ' • II ·r such t th ti ' 1111.11 ~ ilitirtn ' UM: t Dunkltt Donut !"""'-1'A ·1 ...,. I.JO JI ii! .~ !l~" twn ZJ 1.20 S1 ""' '"' "' GrU.Dr 1.20 J ,,~~ 11i... 21\lo-4• ~ Iii ·i: ~pecla y canyon Cl ltS cen !I ·On e corpora On S ltSl'I W .d\/i ~ -Tw, 51' '" jf r--~ l'fl•r n4-~ · A.th r£t' 2j ' 1' 1f,. ,f + , ""'"'· O ._~ z200,, !!°~ !! ... GtHoltc111 lb 1 Jtw. O'AI 10\4! ... Mic. I H.>O ., 1 1 1 a s New Yor k or Chicago. You c apital s tock. ~~"e ":.-~ 2:~ ~:;: P~ M1c: ~~ lt~ 1l R~r °''.~ ~li:: N Off :. At Mt f1~ !' ll"" n~ Ts c s ""' _... ... v. 11o-" GtNHtll 1.60 m 51 !!-s• -"" MIC'I'~ -, • '.+, · • ) rlPh Cn ''"" \$1/t Pott c;,. 21'A 2:!I 1 ASG tncl\ISllr>C 12'.li-1 -Dtf ·! AH~twlE 1 . .0 1 lO 21"9 ~\.llV. ulll9tn .'9 13 llV. ll V. 111'1--"'QtWFln .l!d )l>O 26"0 2~.,. M*"•I' .:iod I 14 1"" t ... 1 see big, handsome signs, but The dividend Is payable .lu y '"h sp JH4t ,1'" Pon 1no;11 nV:t !! 14 ROY•I c 11111 5 ll!= " 8:1 . All 1101 ~. ,J " " 19 + Ci.;mmln .11 n ''"" 4-6'-"> ""'-'"' GrtWnt un 2• i1v. 1 u -v. Mid rt I .._ j~ ~ th to h h Id I rd M' ' , I'" P-Jn ,,,, -· ''''ME oc " '' ' I ! Al clllld 1 I •1'1 .~ " · Ci.;nn 0.1111 6 12lo 12\\ 12lili '• Gwu• .•In , 1Jto 1:1'it ~~i, . Mtel .M Soillo J \'ii ..... _w here a re ey? 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Univ Pub 0111 ~ V. 0 11 ' Avco CP wt1 ?.~ l'\lo l \? •t~ OlnAlver M J1 9''< t 9 -'• "··' ''1 ·,,. >• >••> ,.,. ~\lo-Vt MA~O l.IM 20 4't• ~t iFt ~ 1 · ~Inti Lfl'I '~ 46 R•wcm 111 ltO T~null4ft In' I -1' Off l·I AWCG 111 J:l!I 1S U •5 IS -~;Oen.Ca 1.:0 10 391• 3'1\~ 3'1'4+ '·~ ~tfM ,·~a J 1:n:i.r. 18'.!Z 1 14-1 Mi r OU 1.69 1.&S -~ ml! Jo I• 1 on 'he sid ewalk wheretheac --ill1w Trr 21 ttV.Rtl'mcl 331"31\lo S ShrhldC•,. C• -n Ott . """""''d --o1~ 11 's"" Miii Jsv.+i,:.o.r1111 .30D iat,1 ""• 54": 5''1i+v.2i.;11011 ·1,.., 1&5 2s•-. ui• ~+•,Mlircor . .o 1:u 11'-o ~ 7 ,!a.\, h t hard "~1 .Old 11' n i. 12\'I 121 ..... \'o O.rllncl of ' 51U SI + i . GI.oil R .. Ch 1~ 1 ~ ~-l~ Mllrcor fjf t " Silt -M'h '4111-"' ~tion i.!I you 'll ave to bun U 13 p Av,,. 111 ,,,.,. 1 *' " 4'I -2 01,co 1.u 10 '''!' 1t 1--1 1t•I)-~. 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'' '! + ~• M1 rl1YC • .o J 7Jl-'I 7'"' 1". • signs are just plain ug ly, Wex· annual meeting in BaltimOre, B•k~r 1" ·1' 60 31 3614 ~~'.o-Vo g:•Mnt 1·10 ~ fsi! ll'1> '°'"'-\'lo unon rnc111 s1 12v. H~ 11""-v. M1rr1c11 c,. 1tt ~·• !'~ ,,~~ l I . ed "E ") "t' led ' ed I f ::;;G.?~1 1:~ n ~:~ ;:\~ ~;v. -.,., 11• Ar :so t. S5 +l -M.H-Mertllf' 1.10 f lit') 1\'lo 37\>t •• • er com p a1n . ven 1 J s repor 1ncr eas sa e s or .lfil:sJii 1111G, Df 4,,. 1411 ~'"• ,.,,, 1~i.o ... Otlt9C 1n1n ~ :i:~ ,:~• .,..f'I\ . H1ckwr 1.10 1 "" w~ p,v.--"'M•rtlnAI ,.., 1 i 2v. 1ttt 1~·\• •.....,.essary to make t hem thefirst l9wee1ts o £1972. "' e1ne11 1.u s '"-~ J7,i 21'M!-.1\0tlton• c,, !? :w1ot 3''4 J:~~'\o'l~,1::r,;n'·r~ :i ~:z ~J>.i ffl'l-~MtrlMr I.la 212 2ll4t 211-'1 ,..-;_. ,,,,... . Ntw Yark IUPll Orltt T 1.61 t . .u 11•-' fl'nd 2•. •.7' Sl!ICll ~.14 lt.7• 81~-Pn 101 1~ IV. 1 •~+ Vo 2!~11"11: -~ 21 6 111.fi 161/t l&'h-4o1o H•m''-w 1 0 0 c MCI CUI[' ·'° 22 32''t i2f4 J'lo--. ' Jarge, a nd on the high way,s Sales increased 13 per cent -Fallowlnt ll 1 lltl VH h 7ol.'57•.'5 WI' Fi.;ftlf t. t .OJ SICVlllTY FDS1 8•n9rl" ,., 1 l 271{, 76 ,. -lV. o;'~"I'~ . 101 •T >4-"'I' 47't.t ~Hom•-?" .~ '" '''' '' ••>>+ >t M•K«,;fj .1• ti 6' •1'4 i!llii""4. r h r. g k ( J"""' I bld al'd 01kl'd DrK I Cot , . .&S t .74 J1nus Fd lO.OI "°·!! EC1ullw ~.U 5.13 Bnk al NY 1 1 '~\~ .tll''t Ml'~ Ot nllJt W f 1 n '' '' ~MYl v, Hom• -.. ,. ' O'" .,,_. u, Ml tonlll .1J •1' 61 6'V. .. "1 "• l h at is necessary a t toda y s or t e 1rst 1 wee s o "''" rice• on Mu1""1 O.OOC• l .2' 17.tt JMen •th t.ts 10. In""' a.11 t.OI 8nk• Tr 2.14 '°• ~: ~~.· J"',.:.=1:; o.~:1~ j " JCM 20 20111o+ ,.. Mllndllni ~61 ,. ll'll m; 32~1 MIUll' r~r I~• 1~1 IJYJ JJ.,._"" .h 'rgh s peeds, they can be m ade F o r the 52 ·eeks ended Mav Func11 •s iw•.o br ore~~ E 1'·" u .u Jo1tn11n 2'.V'9.l1 Ullr• F 11.1s 11.• ••r1>1r011 41 ........ ,... .. ~1e011 1 40 " ~ 70 ,,~ •• H,,., H n , ,,. ,,,_ 10,_ , .. Meu MI ,..., 'I 12\.11 31~ 31..,_ "Ii w .!lll NASO nc:. Dltl!:Yfl'USOll, K•YITONE: SlllECTIOl'DS: 8•rdCll:.1 J 'l"i\151,, ~"" . 110 111 111111"'+ .... M ..... c,.:)(I l•ll'Yl~ll, ..... !~Mll1UE .2111 121 21 Mllt2,+•• { to b en In o e a n cape • Ti.;adl'll, Mil' Jt, Orv! L" 1 .t 4 10.1• \ISi 92 20 10 n H OPll Fd CzJ ti J e111c ot ,..., 10 11411 11"" H.\t+ v. DI! E i' !IVi-l .o•;. JtV. ,....,_ .,, H•rC9Ur•8 1 l• 4'1\.\ .or. 41 \o'I v. Mir 05 '·'° 11~ "''' •1t1 ·~ .. • 1 d · t th I ds 13 sa les amounted to aOOut --0 ..... 1 Fd 11.u ••.tt !1111 91 1t.s120.26 "'"" s11r 10.M n .o a111c1n . .-o 11ij ~~ :J~ ,:~+.~ :~g: ;:U 1140111.2 102\\-ltt\'.+\'I M•nni l.)S 31 .sm lW. 53111 ~,,tqt1!1 .10 2n"" 2•\4 2~. •'andstillbe £ully !unctiona1." $56 billion ltn ~~.'ll"t r·r t.·:1 int 84 .:,.10:11 5pl Shr1 ll.23 1t.911t1t•~ .,051 2 1•v. 1/M\ 16'!\ 0.Klr p .2• 6J 27\'o 21 'l""-\11 Hnrnl1ftr I jl 2'2 21•VI n --M•w...-1 I.II) I ""'" .. J~\>'i · · aid A•ll ~ '" i z int K1 1.•2 t .2l !:ntlnel 10.59 11.5 • t1 P '' ,,, ... 2 ,1 _,·;.:. g1t1 F n .s1 11 16\!t 1•\\ 1 ~+ v. H•rrli ln!p srn !"' jS!\11-\t Ml1•r01 .t1 • ''" 2/ 71 -1' 4berdn 2.)1 2.ll l!lATON& i.;U K2 J.to l .4-6 ntf'I' F lt.J,1t.l.:J 811hlnd .10 "I Ol•'-' ,,,~ •6"' . .:z l•ln11 l lO 6J 36411 :11 3'"· .. Htr"'9 Cll 1 2t 21Vii ll'o 111'-~•MIYSJW .lO 3 :IQ\'t 2(1 \1' 101.'t ·u ,. DATSUN PICKUP SUPER LEA!\E $6995 ~·· 2~ Mo. Open End L111se LEASING POCAL SINCE ltll 548-1155 ORDER 1000 YOURS TODAY! Personalized • Stylish • 'eautiful Stic:k-on Order For Yourself or a Friend· Mey be used on •nvelop•• •• return address l•bel1. Also very ha ndy •s id1ntification l•b1!1 f or ma rking p erson al it1m s such a 1 books, ,..cords, )lhntos , etc. Lab•ls stick on ~lass •nd · m•y be used Jor morking home canned foc:d items. All lab1/1 tre print•d with stylish Vogue ty p• on fin • quality whit .. 9ummed p1p1r. • ADMIRALlY1 NOWAll:Dl inf $1 ?i'J l"!SHA.RINLD 89uKhl. .•1 \oo I.Jo nm"' °'3"'=l;l!Di•mSt1m '1 J I 19Y, 1t 1;.,..-l'lo ~•rl$Mx .IO :;i 71 lM » +,_Mty111 l.?U 10 ,, .. •1.0 •2"-'11' Grw!h 6.,7 '·"' 8:,!fi F-10.ll 11.31 ~int S2 l&:ft fl Comst ·'1"1~ 81•1r l ,l) ~ 11" 1 !'Nit OftSllm jlf J J 2t~~ 2t\\ 2"lt •••El 1.•i ml lil! 2'"'11 ' MC A. ft .tO 11)) 1'?1 """Jfi.'i ·~ I::~ 11:~ 1'1'.~ G,~.!. 11. 1 ~·i,' C~t S3 171t 17 .,! Entrpr 1'.J :.u 1:~1...i: ~ ll •l~ (7 •1~~ : •• Dl1Shpl I.to 8 1t4-'o !VA 1!~·~ ''" Alb I Jd ~ 4' ~O 11.l IJ lf\11 ll•• •fl-' dvl~r J,19 .•1 s'P«ii ,: 1f:fl 12:1D · Aoolle SI 1:06 1:U FH"'• b " •, ... ,, •,-",. 111 Fo 1.16 IO ·'' •S~. w·-v. OIClt Pl!n c,. 711 lO'i 1oi. l~ "' M1z1111ne IJ 1 " 11"-11 ct wt • '6\lf 11"" 2"1-' eln. 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I PILOT PRINTING ' °"' I • I( ~.., I ' '"'''f' __ t Oi • .t G"t .,n, .ft +" ::t,,, ... ·~ ' I , .... ~ \ti.~.. U1 51 ..... C'~ ~ I ' 0 "-· ' .. L _____________________ J ..... ii. l'l~," ..•• i .. • . .:\,~ ~ .,;:r•,J {.mi!!=~~ ~ft: ; m ~:m·?~;a ,jW £~~=$!-SS,!' :--·------------~ 81:' ~ 11-nl.t:fi ifli! ,ti,~ E:~" ~fi!tf r:!~ '· W=.,c~ ~ ~ r.i =::'~ :..1S2 I ,\4 J ~ = ~ =S·~u~ s:.-i • ~ ~ ,.... ~ ~ .... • • • . , • ' Crickets Recalled For Defect Look to Careers In Oceanography Dumping Of Goods Disguise? Wtd""'11Y. ll>Y 31, 197:1 DAILY PU.OT U LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CIC •TK9 9" OIT1NOI• I "'''"*' MnlMlll ••<Ultln' ,,., •••• ,, ••«1T.:u~'Tu11N••• NOTICI 0, T•UITll'I IAL.a I MAM1 ITATI .. .,. CIULIC TtdlPll ._..,. Ne. m·1•11 TM fol........ ~ tit 4.1!!f11 N(>Jlct ti Hllt•V GIVEN TO 'TH• NAM.I ITATl.MIHT TI N .. n.-n lu1lMtl tli . -Cl(Dl'TOll OP ,..IMl!'ll! ,.... ,.........,.. ,.,_ .,, dolnt CAYTON 1'w'v11TMINT m•· NtWH>AT Pl04"1•TllS, U. W. AOMIES!Vfl, IHC., ...,,_.,, !fltt ..... lluil,_. a1 : T ON flllY ....-1nM4 nV11M (Mii Hww.. $vi"' ..... t, H"""1 ,_, ........ ilulll"lttl ....... 11 ltU KJ\L.M .... (H, c.MA.lt(C, tCNA•• 6 = :1111 ..:~ -..U-lllM ... tt hMf'I, Cttltwnlt f'JUO, ~ A-. Ill M C!W 9f C..lt CHILLINGWOltTH, '60 "--"I Ctf"Hf WILL SELL AT •UILIC AUCTION •ldlar<ll A. Mtf~ ... UM Sl'Ntt, Mewl, CWldY 9f °''""' Stitt ti Of"lw, k>ltt toO, ,.....,...,. lktdl. ~011tHE HIGHt!ST IU>Dla POil C.UH .......,. hedlo ~ ....... c.111 ........ -" mil 111 ""-Ml1111-1 Ctll,.,Jlit "'90 tfm el i. I Jewft.11 ,,_,. MtfV .._.,.., 01 1••1 1111\ Sl'Nitt, -tfld ..,..,._ t,1_, wtfhlfl ,,.,., TM loO•MM .. I~ t lhf ~ tN -= !r::~~:.. S~ttttt" tll ~lthf, " .. eM .._, hKl'I. Ctll,.,.,.... nwo. ,...,, 1111 _. " II' t• 11.-to ltl.ll ..attllln •NI r rt-. Yt ,.._ -~ ..,. Mid lw It l.....t ,., ..,..,, Jr., "'' ~ S.WM r11ty 1111 ~l«t ......,.IW1, ...,._ flf 'flt --"'' NrtntrMil• ln11rt:1t con '" ,..,.. ~ ...... (tltl'Wnl• nMO. INS.. 1'1t Pltotnllt Avt-. (Ml• ,,.... •. ~ •• 1(11mNdl. o.Metu, It-• ullOtt .. Id DeM Gt :rud In ""' HWW'Y Cllrl9l'I• 1~ Mllll!ff ~ Wtlntr ....... <II .... 1)0$ l!td Duin C•dfwnl• '2Ul'. 11 ""'' .. TMll.t • ",~ Cllltllllf_ .. , "''','",'u"',,' .. ""'''iri.M C1lnW • 11 • Jlront ltlMI (tHIDll'nlt trtntltr "'1 9tt"lll'll 1 -.urtty lllltrtll lo "-""'' tCtlmbte:ll, 1056 la11ll.-oo 1 ... NI NI Wl1'o WASHINGTON Factd Thlt ""'""'"· •• Mlftl c~.., • IM,111.\l. •AHi(, kcvltll Ptrlr . .,..,.. DflWt, N fl MlllCh, C•llforlllt ~ •",!~~,'.~~·· :i~nv • ••nil. • I ''H"'•Mll• bu•lneM tddrnt It 113'2 So. Wfftffn l'r tM l rc:o. Jr .. l21• .. f'l'll'ltl'I .. ,,..,.,. · •· By SYLVIA PORTER (or mArlne biology): Study of wnh the biggest" trade: deflch 1111 icht1<11 A. f.W""' A-.111 tt.e Clf'I' °' l.M A-1u. c....,... llotll. 5'111110 c111ton111 ti-.. C•lllornt• c0t11<1'','io;'.., lflttr ,,.., • nd I Uf f Tiile lltl~t fl!M wllll fllt c:.iooil'I' ty of l.M A-IH, $tttt ol CtU!wnlt, In ~ C. ,..,_,.,, .U S." tllltc:ordM Mtr<ll • M • Wllh the 1wnmef swimming plant a anlma e rom in hilitory thls year, the Nl1on (ltfll;., 0,"'" Cflll!IV '"'Mn 1s. 1m.""' 1o11""'h" ftK•llMf ,.,_., ,,...,,Y Mtrl"° Avt111,11, stn 1r1r.o. c1111orn11 111 book .. """ ne1111::=c:1•~ "°"~.:: P\unklon to dolphin! I h '' .,....,,., J MffH11 °"""IY Countr ol Bor•owt•. to-wit: r110I In tM Offlct DI ""' r 1.,.. tllt &elllOO almctt upon those of WI • administration ii movlnc wt ciir11 · An n~""'" _, •ul1H11111• •!'Id •11 111--H1rolf ,,,,,, 1no s 11wood L.tnt. (Ol,ll'lt\ll 111<11 tlMd of '""'' ctttCr ho JI In I .i..-. , _ __. ••d I " . P !nit 11nt1blM. ~oc:1t.cl ti 1'1f •ttetnll• Av... N.......orl lttcJ'I, C•lllonl t'lW f!Jllewlnt" ~: ..... w e New York City, f PllYSJCALoceanoa:raphy(or new vgvr-aga1.111n umpn& pwulhtd orentt c..,, 0.111 •uo1.1n 111t c11Y or Cott•""'"· COl.lntv '' Al•••""' •-i..' •netiur11 Lint, Lo1aie1TrKtN .. --.1"t11tc1tV- cannot h 1 l p remembering geophysics): Study of physicel of foreign gooda In the United M.tY 17• "· 11· • ...-Ji.n. 1• 1'n im-n ::::N.''~•k" ,;~::;1·WI~:"' .:''c: H:C.t •:ri~·o~'.'°"'~.m::rolwood ~'::." ,.!:;!';. ,:·~-;;, :.:, ~~ .. ~--pro,._rtle1 of tht ocean, auch Statu at below-cost prlcts llll'lll'll•l«l •or tt11r "" •lh HY of Junt, cr1v1. Arc""••· c1u1on1I• tlOM •nd n, Mlte1111n-.11 M•ltl• rte.,. " wht.n .•• WUCTI ••• YC>UnCJler, r y I ·~AL N<n1CI ,,n ,, 1111 M.tlll ••IMll ., tt.e IM· ll°'*1 H. Mor•lton, )MO Ot••ll l lrdl Mid Or•"tt (aunl'I'. I went ocean 1wtmmtng at any u IU ttmperaturt, dtnalty, And f~lgn-tr.de partner• are ll.4IU PlltlAL eANK ., 11m s.. w.,,.,11 or1w1, c..-.i M•r. c11lf{lrft11 "'" mi An"1v., .. rv L•nt, ,...,._. f do of b .bll~t to tranomlt light and "-lnnlng to complain that the A-•· In ""city or L" ...,,.. .. 1. coun.-1t1Cl'!1r<11 c. Gr-'*•· U20 vLt 1 .. c11. c1ntor111t or•,,, .. , .. ,"'"' Ol'le D UDI ne8l' y ....,Iii 'ltflTIOUI BUSIMISS ty "' LM Mllelet. Sttlt M Ctlllornl1. ltStlYi, ••10I Vtr<lltt IE 1I1tt1, c:ernmon Otlltfltllol'I 11 IMWn ......... , I'll besches ••• when New Yorken &OU , cumnts, tht ocean vs. moves amount to pro-Tiit ,011.:,t;:',!.~•:-.:!. M l11eu D111<11 M•Y 1J. 1m INC. c1111or"'' «n1• w•rr•111Y 1, 111~11 .. 11 u1 '""'"' ..... W.r. the envy Of "Middletown the atm03phere. tectlonlsm in disguise. 'lfM1aa1 At1H11 1v11, Tlloln•• D. ,.tcll.1nN111to. 1tt1 0Utr1,. or (.(ltrtc.'ln1r'· net 141 °'" flf ... .... ~ ..... si-i. Pru. "' Df"I~•. cor-<Ml Ml'. C•U,.,nl1 TM lllMfk ••Y ... If" .. ... " I US A " •---1 L. The Treasury Department ii DUL.A AliOCIATIS. 11'41 Sky P.... torrew1r Altn a. woi"" is.u 11rrv Otlvt. Tru11, llV rMton .t • br,.., • ..., " · · · ~use n tuy """" 1. hte Ing . 1 Ito to Cl•<it. •.o. •n ot, ttvlnt, C:111t. n.... f.dcty 11"'1. SK. sr11111t (lfV, c1u1on111 ti.a.I th• •il1t11-...c u•t<ll 1" • r •., • subway ride would take ua to GEOLOGICAL ~IJlOira-1g n its regu a M as ,...,. '""'"-•••llWIHn. a11 NOl'fl'I 11.,,_,, urrv a. T11rin. 1n N. Mtnathkl. Loi. 11••1otor• •twtfd •nil •~w,, .. '' ""' the ocean ror • -Im ... when phy : Study of the com· what conslitutes dumr. Lron, ••111• A1141• C•llf, nrei 1m ... r1t1 11111t, A11tt1t1, c1111wn11 toO» un<111r1ltntd • wrltt"' 0tc:••••lltn "' "" ba b TN1 M l-II llllM c:Ol'lltuettd ll't 11'1 St<urtd ,..,,., Thll l:MlllHI 11 ~ltd ,., • Giii-Dtftull tnd Dtn'ltnd for S.11, 111111 wrllltft almost as chfap a train ride position of and chtmJcal ing -always a de t• e ll'ldlwl*ltl. Chl'ltar A. Alli" .,11 ''""''1111"' no11c:1 o1 11r1tdl •l!d o1 •IKlloll t1 ... .., .. Id •·k ,.. 1•-gnlll reactions in ocean f 1 o o r definition. Dumping usually ls •OuL I. lllASMUSSl!N Vlt• Pl"llhltnt · H•r•ld '°'''· !ht unHr111nte1 10 1111 ••14 ,.._.,..,. ,. wou ~ e us 11'11:" ma • Thi• •loltlMflf flltd w\lfl "" COUlll'I' IMPlllAL llAMK I 9IMl'll ttrtnlf" 111111'1' ''" oliil1111or11, .,..., lhtfHtl•r'"" «nt beach« of New Jersey, sediments and also ot the considered to mean selllna: Cltrk o1 01-cwnlY '"' tNr 11. 1m nm 11 w .. ttnt AY-Tiii• ,11,_, w11 flltd wi111 'flt c.,,.. un11tnl1ntc1 cwNcl w1d ""'k• .t tir•tdll DETROIT (AP) -Oirysler 1 Ang •-tand or ~nnectlcut .• , tarth's magnetic fJe ld. products in the U.S. at lesa •Y A'111W 1· Kr'"'' O.PYIY c-"' w. A,.'..1n. c •. ""' IY c1trt. " Or•t1t1 c_,,. 111 IN., a.. 1rw:1 of 111cuon 1o • •tcordtd """"',., """'"' .... '-N Cltrl!. -..oc 1'11. JJ, 1m •• ln1tt, No. llt41 In bltll !toll Corp need It I eca\llng N ho h ldn't than "fe!r valut,'' meaning ~"" •ubllllltd 0 co.it c lt'I Piiot KALM•AcM. D1MAt111co, 1t•AP• PIH,.,, o1111d 0t11c111 •1en1 . . annou • T ow, t ug • we wou •1ARINE meteorolo~·. st.. t-· "an Ille prl-at which Pvb!ll!Nd °''"" (NII Dtll1 •llDI, Mt ll ltn rtntt • ,.,,.n .. CMl\.\.IM•WO•TN S•ld .... w111 ... rn11111, llul wltllou4 au subcompact p I y m 0 u th even dare to swim ln what hi• I~ &.I ...... UI ..... M" M, "· .... Jllftt 1. 14. 1t72 1so.n ., • ... ,......,. C.lw Prl'ff. .... 1 .. ,.. (-nt I!" wtrr•nl'f. ••Pl"HI.,, 1,,.i11111, Crlc•J-10ld In t•-United been dubbed "the world11 bla:· dy or how weather over the they are aold in the home LEGAL NOTicE Ntwplff a..c11, C•. ""' rt11r11lnt1 1111t, """'111111. « -•11:119 iit:: ' t ocean Is created by interaction -·ntry or ln third marketa. ' OTICE ,......_. t11•1 .....,.111 c:u11111t•ntt1. 10 , • ., "" rttntlrilnt "1"" gest sewer.' Now we canno ......... LEGAL N P'"" <l••I sum M 1111 "'1•C•I HalrM bY .,., State1 1lnce the model was in-d k th 1 t that I rg por of the ocean and ntmosphere • 1•f'tl •ut>Jltllt<ll or•nst• cotst Dtlt'I Piiot, otte1 o1 Tru1t. wt111 t",.,'" •• In wld UC f; aC a e • J PICTITIOUS SUSINlll MOTICI TO CASCITOltl M•r ll, tlld Junt 7, 14, 2l, lt12 1411·11 nott prcrorlcltd, tdv111<C1, If tnY, Uncltr !he traduced In Jan'uary 1971. tklns of our Oceans art IO bad-above it. NOW TREASURY 11ay1 t NAMI STATIMINT o• IULK "taAN•P•• iorm• of ••Id Oel<ll "Tru11, ..... c:h•,.... ..... II r r I I II ted the I will COMider goods aold below TM ftlloWIMI (DlrlClft I• dol"' "'11lntU llKI. ,,11 .. UI u.cc.1 •NI IJlplnMI of 1111 Tr~llH .,,., ., Ill• ine rtel a e c I IP-Y po U Y no onger can CllEMICAL h 11, Nollce 11 htrtbr tlw111 to 1111 Crtdllor1 LEGAL NOTICE iruih <•••ltd tty 1110 Dlld M Trvtt. I t I 42 000 f th I ~ sustain Ufe oceanograp y: production cost as leas than ·ACE s•t111IHKl.lll co., 2)f 'ttncl s1., o1 tlllkh••d K1..-r, lr1n1l•ror, w11o11 Stld ••It will bt t111<11'" Tllur..i1v, Junt prox ma e Y • 0 e car • · Study o( chemical substanctl f lr I This Ill t t CMt• Mt11. MIMt• 1ddr111 11 w •••• 11 .• 491. "· ,,, nn 11 n ~ot o'clock A.M. 111111 ""c• hi h built ln G t Brit ND W we I a VB ue. . w a;e a JKll wirrtn WM,"' 21l'ld st., co111 c11t1 Mt11, county o1 Or•"~·· St•!• o1 su•1•10• cout111T o~ THI o1 T. o. s.rwlt• COITll'l"Y• a11111 Gt W c are rea • must not lg· in the ocean -inc: udlng goods which are manuf1ctured Mi... ctntorn11, 1h11 •bulk 1rt"111r 111110u110 st.t.T• OP cAL1,o•H1.t. 'o• Amtrlc• T-. Oft• c11Y tou11V•r<11 w .. 1. atn by Chrysler U.K. Ltd. nore the chemical pollutants be Ing with some 10 v er nm en t Tiii• t1u11ntt1 •• 11111"" coNlvcttd ~Y '" bl m.tet• 1o E«w1r<11 Eme•kk •""' Hullh THI eouNTY otr ouN•• suit• 1110, oten1,, c111'°'1111 ., .... llM!lwldutl Holll"g1-1h, Tr1"1111111, w11011 NII, A•1at2 Del•: MIY 2•, ttn. A "-·sler 1pokesman said wamln11 of dischargtd into the oceanJ -subsidy, ~ither open or hidden, J.\CK w. WOOD bu1IMM tddrCll I• 17tl Tu111" Anrwt, HOTICI OP MUllHO o~ PITITIOH DAYTON INVESTMENT .... , h and also study of desalination and also at "loaa leader" prod-Thi• •l•l•mtnl tUtd Wiii! "" Col.mty Afl, 12·D. Coll• M.tN, C01Jn11' ol Dr11111, PO't ••o•ATI 01' WILL ANO POI co••DllATION owrier• o( the cars are being Bu c re-Clerk .. Ortftff (OUl'llY (Ill; Mil' , .. 1t72. 11•1• ol C1Ufotnl1. \.ITTlllS TlnAMIMTA•T .... kl Trv••"· • • nowned fl-techniques. uct! sold by e1porten who • ., lrm1y J Mtddo.lt TM ... -IV to bt ltlftlft,rtd I• E1l•lt .. •AMOHA SUTTOlf, •k• ., T. D. SltlllVLCI COM,ANY • ...... to •·k• them to dealer• have • r•-e of prod .. ~-·--c ~ ,, _ _.. loctltd •I 2'11·13 NIW"'1 Aw111111. ltAMOHA G. SUTTON. Dtte•Md. • .... Ulltal .. plorerl u -!!\;loll ........ T "'"'• ..... • ,_. N-rt 11••<11. County ef or ....... SI•!• NOTICE 1$ HIEFIE8Y GIVIN tl\tl for modlncltlon Or the steer OCEANOGRAPIIlC •--1 Dete lnl I Ir J ..... o1 c llklt 1 hr11l<• LtM»' h11 flltd Mreln • Pfllllon ,., Mtrl• IE. Miil«, • J a c q u e I U1:1 ru--rm ng a VI ue on a Pullll....., o'"'" '"'' 0.11Y ,:,'°;j Stl~ ••~11"1 15 <lltlcrlbtd In .._,, 1or ,robttt 01 win •NI for L•tt•'' Mlllllll'lt ,\-:,~:;:r., = sear anembly. Chry111er Couste1u and mentation: De 1 lg n, test productlOD-a>lt basis ii likely 1'#1 34• 31• •nd Jul'll 7. 14• 1972 ••:AU alock 1n trtck. fl•tvr ... -'""""' T•tt•mant•rv"' '"11\11111', r ... ""nct to ,111111.,,_ 0,,"" '"" DtUy ,1101, • d flt Id --'• Indicate that -•r•• Dr. T h o r and refinement of a wide to be more d•'fficult "an the LEG" NOTICE '"" MOIL w1n ot fh•t Mitr lllr bu11""' e1<11 '' "'"'for 11111111" p1r11w11 ... •rllf ,,,..., ~' tnd Juna 7 14. itn 1»2·1' •• ,.,. -h .... WI nu k'IOW" •• MAJllNEllS •rid loctltd ., ttll· 111•1 !tit time •l'ld Pltc• ol llMtlnt '"'1.-c....c· ____ . ______ _ Under severe condltioM, sue Heyerdahl that unless the range of equipment uaed in normal yardltick.. 11 Newport Aw-. N..-"'1 h•d'! ... rM hi• """ "' tor Jvne 10, 1t1i. •' u hltti .... a deep chuckhole ocean pollution p-A>..S.! -jg oceanographic stu,dies. Tte·~·ry el.so annou-£.1 PICTIT•Ous 1u11H11s countv .i O••ntt, ''''' o1 c1111orn11. t:ao 1.111 .. In tt1t c:ourtl"OCWl'I " ONtrl· h< "'O Id '""'"' ....,,. II\.~ NAM• STAT•M•NT Thi bulk 1rtn1ltt wlll M ccmumm111d lntnt Mo. 3 of 11kl Court, ti 100 Clvk .wan the brakes on, cou halted. all life on earth is in recently that it would spe.ed up TM to11ow1nt ,.,_ 1, 11oint "'1ilnt1• on or 1tt.r 1111 1m ... ., "' Junt, 1rn, •' c1n11r 0r1v. w111, 111 ""' Ctl'I' or s1nl• l----------~-,,.- t•-,•--ring rack to OCEANOG" 'PtnC eng•·-· .... t · '-ble 1 __ 1_ 11. 1o:m A.M. 11 ,•Ol'Ess10HAL esct111ow An•. c1111°'"1t. supa1110• coullT OP CALll'OllllA. *"' ll'C' ~ danger. """ ... ~-1~ trnf""" or proct~1g '-w L w CONSTaUCTION n• tenox· SERVICES. 17UZ INlnt 111'1<11., Sul!• E, D•ltd MtY "· 1t71 COUNTY OP OIANIC bind, resulllng. 1 n ex· But ma)'be even in thla tng : Design end building of complaints about dumping. In "111~ 1,;..;, Hullllllttori 11.dt. Tu111n, C01Jn1Y o1 ortn••· s1111 11 w. E. s1. JOHH. 111 ct•k c"""" 0ttw wttt. ,,..,I naliy high steerinrr ef ed •--,_ I devices, instruments a n d n. · ha lake bo W1lltr L Wood. 714 Kl'ICllfWllit, Hvn-Ctllfor"lt. Cau"ty Cltrk ltlllt AM, CtNflnll '"" ... ...,... 0 Ill • lrag y t111;:1e II an econom c u1e past 1t s n a ut II"''°" .,.cti. So fir •• 11.l'IOWTI lo"" TrtntltrtM, Ill •UllTOH, •AULCIN, TMOM$0N AMC CASI MUMlll 046IU fort. plus for mounting number• of systel1\ll to ei:plore and exploit three months after a com-T1111 bu•lliff• I• Mine Cll'l<lluctld w 1n 1111.1,,.11 -• •nd Hdrn.Mt u11<11 bY MIUOM suMMOMS 1MA••11.•1t The 1 p o k e s m a n said Americana -for surely these the ocean -also supervising plaint is filed for Treuury to ll'ldlwldll:,!~11.,. L wlOd !~::"~ONE tor "" "'''! v-.r• 11" pttt, ~:=:,. ·~.::,:. •~ 1n ,..0"' ~·,:::~:., ... !:T':!'1111..,: Oirysler ha• received 10 terrifying predictions signal a underwater corl!truction and decide to investigate, and c~~ .:':,,.':'c:~ ::~ M"; ,f:°j,,'i ~':w~d ~!iwr1c11 ·~ ~,"~~;,~ :!.A~'!,L~~~~z :~:::;:;:· JI, report... of fallures, one of busy future for bright young laylng cables. 90metimes two or three years '" hV•IY J, M1110o1t Dl•utr cwnl'I' Hv.i. Ho111n111wor111 An-v1 ..,, •t11111nW To "" 1,,_.."1: 1HE1 •1J1tH1.TTt: LEGAL NOTICE -which may have resulted ln an Americans headed Into the There are growing numbm before any ectk>n w11 taken c•.«11.. · , 11121 P1totr1IS:~~~"i&e1ow 1111v1c11 ~~~\"!:. }~:.,:"r;',,i~" 0•1tY ,r,~':i c~1~!!~~~:11,_.'!~Y! ~~"~ ----~ccldent"lilthouih -no peraonel many -nile!lot11cf"anography;· -ot·opportunltles-too for tectinl.-nrrmtentlon: now ts bJ"'1"tF -,.·iil>t1thtll 0r1r.N t"'' o.11Y Pilot, P.o.-..x-.,,~ -wrttt11n ·r'""°"" w11t.1n 9'11rtr ~.,IN> tpJurle1 were reported; Surely, we will need more clan. within this gpeclalty: for pond to compla.lnts within a Mil' 11. i.t. 31• •nd Ju11e 7• 1'n i:.i-n ~!ffl.11:,1"; ... ~~o.~1•r 1 LEGAL NOTICE ~·1:oi,""~1~1't!"fl~' ~= ,::.=; nie Cricket, ·aold b Y than the.estimated 5,800 now Instance, underwater month and take aclioi:t within crn:CE IK,... N•. """'"' ,1cT1Tfous 1u111!111s wllh1" 1uc11 11'"'· """' °"'1111 '"'., "' Plynwuth dealers in the working In oceanography to (or marjne) technicl~ and six months. LEGAL N M:~b~;~12 °"1~"' Cotti D•llr 1:i~~ n. 1oi1o~M1 ITATIMIN~ol bu 1 =~~0:1'!1n:; 1~~1~:.,°'·~~r'C:~ United Statf:s, ls similar. to the f'1nd ways to cl .. n up our marine ure technicians. The • ,ICTITIOUS •UllNIS•· . • , w Ml 11tr10/ll ••• ' n~ ., '. -tr11lnt1 <ll!wl1lon " ·-IY . .-.1 B It NA.Ml ITAT•MIHT LEG•• NOTICE n111 1· IUPllOl"I, chlld tul!octy, c:hll<ll """'°''' ti· Hillman Avenger !Old Jn r ~ polluted waters, to prevent first rig pipelines in oil fields, mE EFFORT ia part of a TM to11.w1n11 "''°" 11 c1o1119 •u•i..... tu.I tAN·AM FLt!ET s1AviciNG COM· '°'"'Y'• fet1 , cot11. 11111 111c11 111Mr ,,u.., d E B t C""',.ler d . •ANY, 2111 t•lh St., Sul!• Qm, New-11 m•w bt 0,1111" llY"" court. aln an urope. u '""I"' further contamination. test u n er water com· broad administration move to ••: A.•.T. coMPMtY. ,.,, V•ll•lt c1r. 1A• m1 ,.,.. •11<ti. """ """',.""'""' ~., ... ,. 11ld only North American • Just by 1930, it'a ts· munications systems, work on appeue American industry in '"' Catt• Mitt. c~ JllCT1T1ous eu11NN•:• eritri K.itii o1n", "°' ,,,11. or., ..,...., "' ""' -ttw, ,... ...,.... .. .. versions of the car are al· ti.mated the number in underwater camua and TV e-limited waya and te.te tome of ~~1~~· 105) V•11•11 clrclt, c..,. n. to1i!~.:·~~~:oi119 bullntU ~:;n.~•·,~.'i!!:~!'"J!nningt, 21 10 1•111 :::"':!, .. ,. ":Z -,:::i...,...," fected by the recall. oceanography will e1pand to qulpment. The second develop the steam out ol the drive for .~~:i,:1~-I• Mint COl'ldvtltll " 111 ••: VlDt!O ILECT•OHtcs'. 10411 P•rk. ~·11 A~1:.2 ,::' !:.c.~·~ 0111c1 Mty 1. 1m. 40,000 at least -and the total new ways of harvesting food f u 11-1 ca I e protectionism. L'"""' L" G1rc11n Gr.,.., c.n,. ,.. • Gtner•1 P1rtr11r111111 WILLIAM E. ST JC>tlN, Cltrt Area Firm Sales Up Plant lndUJtrles Inc. ol Anaheim announced con-- aolidated results of operations for the first quarttr ended March 31, reflecting Increases in sales, income ,ind earnl~gs ptr share over the first qbarter of 1971. Net Income from operations for the current period ln· crtased. by 46 per<:ent to '3811,000 !rom $127 ,000 In the comparable year ago period,,. on a sales Increase of 1? per- ctnl to $11,791,000 from $10,319,000. could be considerably greater and drugs from the. ocean, T1gbter antldump1.... -·'a· Tl'tll ttilllfilllt fllld w1tll Ille Covl'llv Thonltl •. f'!llUln , 1M11 Ptl"k. BRIAN I(. OANN IMFIC~:L ~WXL~IM. Dltill1'Y .. '6 ~ ~... C1trk 9f Ort-C-1'"1' 11n: Mil' I, Uti. Gtnltn Grow, C1lll. '264> This 1111tmOl"lt nltd wllti tltt COi/iiiy TMOMAS O'SMAUeMMISIY 1r the federal governmtnt help discover new minerals tions goes hand in hand with ,., ,..,.,1y J, Mlff011, °'""'1tr c-"" Thi• bull11tn 11 t>tlllfl conc1uc1tt1 by A c11r• o1 Dr•not countv on M•Y u, ,,n. , .. ._111 s...._•w • .., should decide to. Intensify Its beneath the sea and work on voluntary agreements limit· ci.r11. ,11U1 umu1c1 fH~=~'. PH ILLi•s ~r,,:.•vtrty J. M•~ o.pv1y c-tv H-•· c..,...i..,. efforts and Investment in the: conser\i1ng the ocean's natural ing imports cf st e e I, tu-PvbHttlltl Dr•n• coe11 c111Y Pno1, n11 st11rmen1 111111 wllh "" Coullf'I' ,.,..., l~=--";:.~11 field. Most workers are in resourcts. tiles, and shots _ the p~ ,,,.., 10. 11• ,.._ 11• 1'72 lltf.n citr1t of o ... ,.. CDU~tr on : M•Y 1'· itn. Plllllltht<ll Dr•nstt co.11 D•ll'I •1101, •ubUlhtd °''"" COid e1ny •11a1 ~~,:.rlllur E. 11: ...... Ot1111IY County Mty JI •nd JUllt 1. u. 11 , 1t72 14.U·n M•r M, 31 •nd Julllf 7, 14. 1m 1-n research and developmel}t. Then there are growing ucts most sharply undercut LEGAL NOTICE Mc:OW•I. ••••N a SYLVIA spend a large part of their numbers of job opportµnitlet in the list few year1 by im-ATTO•N•Ys AT uw tlme aboard research vesatls, Jor -ialisU ii ocean law ports . ,K:TITIOUS IUSINUI .... n..-11 AYL ·~· In ' MA.Ml ITAT8M8NT cw--. Cll,, flM' STAT• O~ CALIPO•MIA work for the Federal govern-(who owns what the ocean), Other proposed regulationJ ~"!lit. hi!r-lr111 PtrlOll ,, dolrll' ..,., .... T•h i&IMIJI DlPAllTMlNT cw MINT.U. NY••••• t tl g n d I d t tlo . !med t -J~-Un Jm -, lnM PAlltVlft STATI HOSPITAL LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE men or co e ea • n un e"'11 er recrea n, m are a a l~UA' ' • ALTA VISTA. LTD .• 11001 "'""'""" '""'II"""' Dr'""' <OMt C•ll'I' •11o1, NOTIC• TO CONT•ACTOllS universJties. underwaler photography, in ports by multlnatJonal COin"' cir .. Hul'llll'ltltn Bit<~. C•11'· .,.... Mty l' 31 •nd JUllt 7 14. 1rn lJ.#·7' SEAi "'OSALS 111111 ... rtttlwld tty "'' ll'AlllVlh ITATI HOSPrTAL. 1 I ~--f · in f -• f Ct! Gt9Mr 10-11 Ptrtrltr), 21001 ' ' ' 1'01 I lvd., COl!t MIN, Cllllornlt Ulllll 11 :1111 AM., Tllln<llty, ,_ lit • The average yw Y pay c~, g orttashng, on-panies o components UKQ or ~r;r•ttwn ctr.. HunHMltoft lffCll. LEGAL NO'n.CE 1111 ,, 1. _,, 11mo •nd Pltco-lhtY win 111 pvbl1tly ........ ind ,.... .., ttit for a beginner with only a derv.·ater arehaeology (ex· manufacturing the finished ,.,, •.. ,,_ 1, "'" ~.-.. ., , •, •1•11111111 °1 AU!ilmtnt ••lntlnl P'°'''"' nnL • "~ to I · · 1 k ed " vw _..,.,.,, ~ ri t-•I, 11'111-prolt<I cwi.1111 of : Fltfltll'll!llf " tll .....,..,. tt Plllnt DMntltM bachelor's degree 1s "°'""""' p or1ng anc ent sun en product in the Unit stetes. L1tr111111 ••rt.rt111-. IAll"" 11111d1rit, L•W!Vy 11u11dll!f ,,,., 1111w1tr •nll ... ,.., of clMll ,.,_. ..uttlM 11 I 000 ·111 \ • hi nd b d Tt uJd •-in in C1I GtlMf ,tCTITIOUI BUllNISS l.tundry llulldlng, tit 11 lltrt!ntfltr llllelllld. 10, ; WI a m 8 s er s wars ps a au m. r g e . easury WO ut:g ua -""'' "''""''"' fltld •11h ,,. COIJl'llY MAM• STATIMINT Copl•• of IP«lllctllont •ncl bid l>'OJIOUI "'""'-'"" l\ftlltb ... , !tit "'"' °"' .. degree, $10,300 to $11,500: with1 L,lands, sunken cltle.s, un-"any reasonable method" o( Cl«k" 011n11 Cwntr 1n1 Mt'I •· 1m. Thi ro11ow1na ..,ton 11 <11o1n1 llv1IM1s 111111, Offlt•, F11rw1..-s1111 Hospn11, *I H•rbtr '""' Cott• M ... c.t nm. 1200 d t r d . . le f ctor •'I • ..,.,1., J . M~Olt, DtlWl1' Countr 11: ,...,. n•us.m1 Ed 311 .. • .. a PhD, $13,100 to $1 , . erwa er tr~asures o many etenn1n1ng pr e a I. c1,r11. •ANCo, L TC., Alo w. c .. 11 HllJhW1y. l lds mutt bl iUbmiittc1 ·ll!r ~ 11111,, --U.C.ibtll ""'""" O.Vt.tlllM ,,_.. Hert's a rundown on the key varieties), in aquaculture The govenunent has com· ,,,.,. NIWPOI"! hid!. C•lllornl• ""°· '''"• •net •P1Clt1u11on& wm not bl c:""'ldtrtll •1111 will o. a;.. ,.,. ,.,..,_ Publltlltd Ort-COii! 0.11'1' •ltot, Pt-Mtl'l'I Produett. h11: .. 410 W. o1 bldi. branches of study and job op-(better known as flsh farm· mented on the fact that prod· ft.•Y 10, 11, 34, 11. 1t12 1211-12 C0111 Hl1llwrf, HllWPOrt • • • c 11, Th• 1t1d Sitto Aoency '"~" lh• rlt"' 1e ,.1tct '"' ... n bldit. portunities in oceanography ing), and in the development ucts from Japan, Gennany cinlornl• ""°· -in t<c:ordtnce wllh "" 1>rov11io...a Gt s.c11011 1m M "" 1..t0or c..rt. 1111 11141 I •-and o"·r countries have not' Thi• 11u11,,.., 11 .,.1111 cond\IC!tll ,., • s1111 Aoency 1w1n11r.g lfll• contT•<I ,,11 •1etrt11n111 11111 1,,. ttntnlty ..,,.,111.,1 now. I ways to use t11C" oceans as uft: LEGAL NcrJ'ICE c1111Cf11lt torPO••t1an. ,,,,of w1o1a •PPllc•bl• 1e llMI .,,..,.. to be 11_ 111 11 1o11ow1· an economlcll new source of been m-arked up ln price as GENE PANTuso, "'-·~., ,.,.,_h,., BIOLOGICAL oe<anoguphy energy. ,ltTITIOUS IUSINISS •rtaldlfll l.'"fltYH 1'""'11'1 \ much as last December's NAMI ITAftMINT "Thi• llt'9mtnt f1\td wllh "'-County Crtll ff TrH ltlk •• ,. """"' .. revaluation Or CU r re n CI• e. Th loll 1.., ptrton II <ilolftl b\lllntll ci.rti of°''"" COUlllY on: MIY u . 1111. of W.rti1n111 ,.,, Htur W•lf•ni Vtu!IN P-• 0Ytftl-e ow llr Ar!hur E. tCrfti'r ~INIY Count., JO!ilnitvmen •11nie r· would have caused, raising fl: R a. D AVIAllCH, liS4 Y•ll Pltc:t. ~:M'i •. STOKICI .. ow•N (lrulll> "·"' suspicion that unfiilr meaM c0111 M•••· C•111• ,,.,, A"""""'., 1.1w Jovrn.ym•n P••nie r may be uaed to keep prl,.. tlllld'!ttll D. Dtlllll, 2154 Y1I• Plfflf, 1111 M. ,,....,.,, H•, 211 ISprtyJ t.tt 2' " 8 ~~s Coe!• Mell. Ctllf. ,,.,. 111111 Al'lt, Ctlllwlllt n1tl . • . down. No complaints hive Tii i• "'11""• 1' "1"' cordllcltd .., •n T•h as.1• L.lblf"•r s "'' ss "° 110 lnlll•ldllll. p 11"1 ' • • been lodged by U.S. producers ""'' :~~!!!~ :iHo::~l~"' CaulllY ~b~'.~ .~·:e,,. ~~!~ ,:;;11'1' ,rl.."':1 Acldl!IOMI P1111ttr 1tnM111-L111 1niur1nc• _ ,11 yet, but the government 11)11 C~ flf Dr•-County tn' Mfy 1' 1t72 Adm!nl11Tsltve -.OS It Will I kl Y I •··-• ' "·••·-o' ·-c' ..; AWtn!ICl'Slllp '"""' -.er ·" ... 'T""' .. -... Tline&- "'" Tllfll & ...... "'' ..... ·-· .......... """'''"" · 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club move qu c Y on an c~it .......,," • ,....._, ..... , ouri., LEGAL NOTICE ... ..,"',',11n11k11111ri om1tttt1 111rt1n -11C11 1115 "'-11 .......................... n.• that art filed. • ,,., '"' -not .... """ -... ~It (l\'o) '""" "" .... ""'· ,ICT'Tlou •• u.IMl•I St""91yw,, ,._.,. 11111 ~ -riot lilt Mltn <i1Wb1t 1111 ....... """r time •llbllll!M 0rlf'llt CM•! C•llV •11o1, rl!n. Thi llolldtys Uf1011 Wllkll Wd'I r1tl9 ilMll M 11tlll thlll Ill tll ,.,.,.....,. A DELEGATION fr 0 m Mtr JI. 111e1 J-1. 14 21. 1Jn 1419-n NAM• STATIMINT rtc:O{llllltd 111 ~ c-o111cu .... •~lnll'lt tt-• •1ct1t" .. "" ,.rt1c111v Tht foll-ln• "llOf\5 trt llolM trtlt, c:lt•1tllctt1on or IYPt M WWII'"'" tn111I0'(9d ft.e 1 I Japan recentl~ made. trip to bull~T~~ INSTANT ••Ess HO "'27' Thi Ctntrtctor w1U ... rtqUlrld .. •t<Ufl ""(Ill .. ~~. C"On"Clll'INl1M .. frtfe Washington to complain that LEGAL NOTICE E••l IJ!h str••· eo.11 ,.... ... c~u1. =:, ~..,:i::c:.;~~:'..,:r:i.;:1<11of1o '!": ~.;.':''::!.i:"' .. n«u• the antidumplng laws are PICTITIOUI BUllNllSS Atb9rt E. Jtekton, 2~ Motc11.1fro Thi W0'11, •• lucll l!'llvtl Ind ~blllllftCI llt'l'"ltnh ••• <lltllned 1n 1111 •Wlltlbl9 bel·ng lightened i'n • way "-t NAMI ITAT•M•MT Ltl\I, M!t•lon \lltko, Cilll. cOlllctllf# 1111"911nlft9 •lll"Hmlflll llltllt In MtorCStlK• Wltll Ltbor COM """" ~!Cl Tht followlnt1 PlftOn la <llolnt kltfMll S1t"llY E. McCOY, 90 Jun!Hrt Otlvt, 1nJ.I. discriminates against Japan. 11: Co•1• Mt ... ct1u. ~-,,.,1T 1n11111111rW •PO!'lll'lllca may bt tn1111oVM 111 !hi Prt11K11llon d .... ..._ ~-b' Id I IEACH SlllVICE <INTElll. 11501 nl2t. TPlt'f mu.I M '° tl'llP!oytll lly tny ctnlrtdtt' or tUbconlf•ctor itmploy\119 _.,_ i 11t: iggest ant ump ng ac--''"" llvd .. wntmlntltr, Ct. T1111 bu1IM11 11 b91111 c.orid\lcttd ,., • In tnv •PPf'Ol"lllcttbl• c:r.n .,. """'• 1.1., • crlfl or trt<ll• llt'ltrm1n«I " "' •n lion to da'~ baa ~n aga'••t John Mtckrow :na MIWPOl"t 11....:1 '•rtMrUi lp. •w111tktablt oc""'troo 1r1 ~· will\ rulll •nll r19u1111on1 ,,..crlhll b'I "' ""'""' '"'~ COllt Mui Ct ' "' Albtrl E. J1cll1.0l'I !ht -"tlrll'lllcalll' CovtK11. lf*:ltl •lltnllln t1 lllrtc:1M It -.,, poHillt If LtW Japanese TV set!. Thi• 1tutrn1li 1~ "1r111 cenclucttll ltY 111 t1111 111ttm1"1 flltd w!lh t111 Coulltr coo. Stctllrl 1m.s Wll~ rtOUI""' '""" • c•ttK1or ar iubconlrkltr ti Mitllfl Iii\ Lln .. ltlttr Tht Insiders Club: A new way to lieat inflation. Hs membership card permits you to buy !"early every· thing you need from the fin~l clos.cC'i1oor ShOiY· rciOms at 5ubstanti.!il sav-- ings -appliences, fumi· ture, stereo equipment. sporting goods, draperies and much, n1uch more. You can even buy cars at the ..,leet" price and mobile homes and motor· cycles at substantial sav· lnp, The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00o/.-5.13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% Two to Fivt Yea) Cert ilic.ites $5,000 Minimum, Up to 90 days loss of interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity on all certificate accounts. also provides big dis- counts on tickets to sp0rt- ing and entertainment events ••• plus a whole list of free services: safe dePoSit boxes, money or- ders, tra¥elers checks, nr\d nOti'ry 5erVices. ~1embership reQuire· ment for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. Coasl belrrowers now receive as-- sociate memberships en- titling them to all outSlde referral services. Ask •boutjolning 11 arty Coast office. MAIN 0"1CC: 9th&. Hiii, lot Anples • Ql.1351 Olhlr ofl'lot' WIUHlll:l .e QMMMPCT ft.Am 393J Wlllhlrw l!llVd .. LA.• 3Q.126S LA. CNIC CDfTDh 2nd .. l!lroadWly. 621--1102 HUHT1NGTON HACH: ill Huntlnetori Ctntor • IJJ.41 !97·1047 IAHTA NOfrUCA: 7la Wllll"llr9 BMI. • !93-074' SAN l"D>JtO: lOln., Paellie • 131~1 wtl'T COY1NAI CA511ar1d S~lfll Qr.• 331'2201 PANDMMA CfTT: 8616 von Nll.)'S e1vi;1. • 892-11n TARZANA: 1!751 Vtnturt Blvd.• 345-1614 LONG IUCH: 3rd & Lot1,1$l • 437·7411 OST lDI ANQD.Q: ,,,, .. S<lto . ~10 Se I E lndlvldutl ci.r• of o,1n1• Cwnl'I' tn: MIY l , '""· '""" tlll Jo1nt Appr .. 11<..,.,. C-llltt ldnllntl.,r,. "" •WtnllctthllJ ........... Vera uropean COWi--JciHM M tCllllOW '' e .... ,,1'1 J. M•cklu, Ot..ul'I' COUl'llY •I tlll crtrt or trt<lt 111 "" •r" o1 1111 11i. ., 1111 conlrtct --.i. 1 cwllflct'-tries have C(lmplalned about K c11r11.. •w..,.11'11 ""' cori1r1<1w .,. 11111etntr1e1or 1or 1111 tmlllo'tfl'llnl •nil tnln r"' tf Tiii• lltll!Mftf 111td Wllll ,.,. Cou"ty ......, P17QI ""'*"llen ln tucll .,.. Ujlllll "" luutM• ol "" t•Hlflctll "" COlltF'KIOr • recent imposition of an-Cltrt.., o,.,_ cwnty .,,; M.ty )I. 1m. •~ or'"" co11t 0111'1 ~11o1, ~trldor, Ullltti ini""'1t 1111til.lfl'll .. s.c11ori 1m.s _. itif Labor <*. llltll ti dumping duties on '' ••w«IY J, MlddoA. ~ Coul'll'I' M1y 10. 11. ~'· J1, 1n2 1111-n """"" "" _.,.,.., '*'"'1e" ., "" r1t1o ., '""'"'11c" 111 ~ flltll ••--·Jorm·-. --y note "-t c1tr11. ,,. 111 ''"' c1nM1ct11. 11 "*' 11 111 .,,. .,... ., ""' 1111 91 "" ~ 1 1111111 .... ,.,,,... UaJl;) ~"' tlft: "'.. LEGAL Nones ,. tllmlnlltlf •NI~ tl'lt ·····•llclllli, ,,...,..'"Ill tft'I' .,.,, .. nc.b .. cnn ........ bull It •ubUtlllll Drtllil'I C"d D•llT •11o1, °' ""' " ""'di l\ll'ld or fllflft 11111r c-ontrtnw• 111 "111 ,,.. ,,.. llvt tt.e an-u~ art custom· t ems Mty JI, •rid Jul'lt '· 1t, 21. 1tn IM-72 trl<IOI'" ~ s\lbCGl'ltnctw h. "" cenlrlbvllnl. 1111 unln<tor •nd "'°'*'•ftK,., llltll on which comparative prices PICTITICUI IUSIMISS COl'!h1bvtl .. 11111 flllld .,. f'lllllll 11'1 lht Hrnt tll'IOUl'll • llpllll II\• .. _ ..... ""' dllfi It to t bush nd HAMI ITATaMINf Ill 1111 -rntnntl" ti lllllf" CCll'llrK!On c1o.. Ftr wlllfVI ftllt.lrr le COft'IOI'( wllfl are ICU ff a a LEGAL NOTICE Thi 1onvwin11 "'"911 "' Rlllf sec:11on 1m..s II 1111 Labor COd• "" Ct:ll'll•1ctw 1111111 be <11 ... 11c1 "" rtollt to i.1111 that anyway U.nsformtr im-"'1~:'G~:1 l(ITCHIN, ,, ..... L ,,... -;,.:,~.le-~ COl'ltrKI for ~ Pl'tod ... •bi: ll'IOll!h$ ''"" ,.,. ..... "" <lllkr· ~-t .. i 7 t PltTITIOUS •USINllS II • c ''' •' -po.'-l arnoun on y perctn NAMI ITATIMINT VII.. rM. • • N.• bkl wlll bt contlclfftll unl111 II k fl'ltd1'". ""* itrm l'Wm"'*I.., ~AlltVIN of the U.S. m•·ket. The U.S. lllt lellowl"• Mrttn I• <ilolM bullnttl Mtlvln Min ,..,,, OU•"· MV. Ntw STATE IK>S,11"AL _, It mtOt Ill lccorlltl'U w1111\ ... llf"O\'kltnl",.,. Pf'IPINI .. ••: o..ot $1 .• Los """'"'· c1n1. toCl11 reqvl•l'mtnll ... """lllOnl •II fOrlh ll!ldtr ~ totc:Nlctlllnt. Etcft blddtr """' Government replies "that it ls A. J, LITTLI! COMPANY, 1ue 1, Kim Yu• 0tn11, t.tl\'o "ew °'"' 11 .. M 111:en1«1tftd11.0 P'tc11-11Htlld 11 niqulrM,., i.w. CO""'ide.ring potential injury to Ed lllltl'", 5•nt• AM Lot A1'191111. C•llf. t0012 l'AlltVIEW STATE HOSPITAi. ....,. Fl»tH JiM \.lml Jr .. lllS' "llOIWlll Thia "'1ill'lttt 11 <tllllUClld • 'I 2Sl1 Htrtllr ..,.....tr<ll American manufacturers as ~1p • ,_.,. c.111 MtM, c.1"""" A\fl., LOl'lt Inell Mtlwln M. P, 0Utn FLDVD 0. HOWA.110 well as actual injury. Tlll• ""''""' tt Ml1111 ~ w 1n Ktm y..,. Dtn• o.1H., •rant °"'4111M lnlll't'lov.I. "Thlt slt!ftnenl •ts flltll .. ,., ""' COUii-hbUlhld Or•nt1 C-1 DtllY ,.llol, Mty '' Ind J-7 1m JI. J. LITTLE ,., Clwk "' Dr•• c_..,. '" Mtr •• 1t11 • GOVERNMENT 30Ul'Ctl say Tlllt •1"-1 rl!M wllll 1tlt """"' Ill« LEGAL NOnCE LEGAL N0!1CB " kJ Clltti; .. Or111"' C-IY trn IM"1' ,., 1'11. ,176N Luat some 40 ant um~ •,U""'"' J. Mt11111oZ, Dtpt,tl'I' CtunlY l"WfJtlltll Dr•IWI c .... DtllY ,.11,.,1-------------------------~ be• • ti• t ..,.._ MOTIC'S IMVITIMe l lDS Cl&Se! are 1ng inves '68 • ,,.,, Mll'I , .. IJ, 14, )1, 1m 111•·12 HOTICE IS HlltflY GIV!N t!Yt"" ... ,,. .,, ..,,........,. .. °""" ewntv. now, about twice as many u Pvbl!ll'Ptd er.,.. a.st 0111y Plltl, •Ti,.•• N-CE t111tom11, •Ill r.«!.,.. "'"" ltlds"" to 11to•'c1oc1t PM.'" M°""V· !hi 1mi o.y t ., __ belor ~-NIJ Mtr JI, •1111 J"'"' 7, 14 11, 1tn 1•12 ~ u.1.• "' J11nt, 1m "' the oftta "' 1111 c"rti of !ht ... ,,. "' SUHn-llOf"t, 1111 ti.r, a any ui1..::; · e w..:: on (Wiiiy A.dll'llrllt1rt111r1 1uu111llfl, sis Mo. S)'Utntt"• s1 .• Sant• ....... c11t1or1111., •t administration. Some IUbsta~ ,,CTITIOl.11 • .,,...... """'Ith tlmt tt141 btdt •111 bt ""'41cl1' °"""" ..... "'" ..,. ........ ,,.. LF.GAL NO'nCB •AMI ITAT•MlllT U.•UMA Ml•U•L ...... \. ,..... ~ tJaJ CQfS involving Clntda Thi fllltwl,. lllf"'*I 11 dolnt IMllWfl ,.,.. ... Mt. .......... ,,. -~-"Y are · the ks .. : A• " w111 _.. " tit ""*"* 1111 ~ w11t1 ,..._ w .,.lnciMllM ·~........ m wor • PICTTTIOVS •uttll•I• MAOOI CO••·• Dl!COllA'TING Milch,,,,_ orilllt In"" .ntuflftl'lt <~1y""' 11'1 lfll CWftty All'"lnllfrtitltn A Commerce Dtpartmtnt •AM•,, .. .,...... WOJllCSHOPS. ODo.11 ,,., Ntwpllr1 htCll. hlllli111, SU Ho. Sn•~.""''""'· CtllfitmM. Official f•-J• Utat the U.S. TM flllowlrll' ,.._ h ..... ...i-C.IH ""'-Minimum W"1I r•te tor ttilt ,,..ltd Mw "'91 ""'" .. ,... lt'1"" ... ,., ., ""~~ N : • Mff.1 CCIMI CtNu,_ A. Goltl), WI S.....V"'" •Y 11-lltlon tMSJ, • Cllllf tf Mlldl II ti! Ifft kl IN f'lfkl tf ... trade deficit for 1m probebly THI GlllllENHDUSt:. n• w. c..11 Htt1y#OOll ......... lM ~ c""· mt Clift;" ...... ,..." •llP'f'V•to~ • 0 ., will be "'••er than last year'• Hlltlwi'I· .........,. htdl. ~If. ,,... Thi• ...,.,.,... '"' ,~ "" '" •• •111111n· ..,.,."" 11 ulltf -. S«11oM 1m.1m..s tt "" uw '°" ..nltfl win .. 1AM "o it: ""-N en• Wllkl ,......., m .._. ,_ ._lrt....Jbtm v ~ ~ .. ,., "" .... thM ttN ....-at ..,. ,..,.. ,,,,,._...,.."".----111-,;,;;.~n=-.1;;;:n ... 1r,-.. h•<• WU the 1111 -----llM<!IMI; , ... " .... "' "'"' II .,. .. bllrln, "fltl"k.11* IM fMICMtllcl """"'"' Ill • • UJUU UC.Ill.: IUI ~!'llflt, l11bM .......... (tflf, fW1 ~ c• 1111 IJ"IC\fllofl .t tlll """'°""' ~ 1111' :oiS-7"5 first time the u.s. faned to Thh "'"1""' '"'"'"' • ...-. ""... 1MI""'" A. c.MI) °"" " ..,...... 11ma ,,. ,, .... tmne ,.. .. ., ..... -..u "..w --- Diily Ua•-lfllllYlllUtl 11111 Ill"'""" W9t fllfld ~ tN (~ "'"' "' ~ tf ... '-9 M lll'f" llllllt • ...., ..,. """no-tAMto4N run a !IJ?Plu.t. Thb ta oc-cr111 WllllW Ms tr Cltrk or DflMll ~"'Mil' 1s..,. .., .. .........,._ """"'..._._. ::.,.c:-,_:.. ~r111.:.~::"'J: ,_St.,_._ -currln1r ~•te the J:>ecember TN• "'""""" •"4 ...... c-tr •"•"-..... ,.....""' ··-,... .,., M ""' lhct'-• .,. ....._ ,..,. 11t1 *' l'IWl'IMt " ,.._. .... ,.. --· -·-z• . .., ..._.... Otrtt., OrM'!Ot ~.,. ,..., a: ttn. ••----... • tllllt. I AM to 1 PM devalu.ation ol the dollar, ,., ......,.., J. ~ .,...., (.-if)' 1m .., c.-. "......., ~Kfl •ww .,.., Mw!'tll ... Nt ..., , .. "'*""' dritcl. attwiM "" , ,.. ttctpt CM: etntw> wbk:b amounted to nurly u ca.11. ......, ...., et11.. .,.."'-"''* • ........,. ...., _. ,..,.._ " "" .,.. • .. C'.wl'lt"t • °"""" , ,. ,,......... • 11'1 ~ "" ... ..,. """ ~ .... """' ....... ~ ""'' ... perHnt qalnst major fOttlgn ,_,.,.... °'""""' c.... °""' ""'· • om ....., w11 ....,. """ .,.. ..,...... CMtrw:t " "" .. ...,. 11 _,.... ttlrt\. ,,,.. ""' • ... _ JI IM JllM l, 14 rt lf1I 1.fM.11 ""*"""' ~ CMd Ol1"t PllClll, WHll tf ftllwt t. tlllw 11'11'o lMfl Contf"tcl, !tie ........ tt h dllc* ... Ill fwo. cumncies. ._, • · • .., 11. ,.., ''· ,,.., Jt.lftf 1. ''" ,.,,.,, """' •• .,. "" • , ....... ..,. ""' '"" ...., w111 .. ,.,..,.., .... 111 c:.wi" .u~IA~~t !~~~~of LEGAL N011CB i.£GAL NOTICE "~1111 -.. ., .,. • """' ,_ rumw.t 11oy "" tMltY • °"""· -...... WWI Nit" Ul~"9 Tiii llJcittUfll ....... llllJI .. ,.."11 .. fVnlWI. tt lllnt tf flfrllftf ... lt4141t, dnatuatlon l'OQ)d not beneftt n .. ,... .... ., ,, ..... ........,iv.: ~MMK IUllNm .. ~ .... "'*-... , '"ltd .... ...,_ .... """'"'"""" ..... lfltJI .. Ull lift flCtl'T ... llftl...... 11AM1 llAT•M•NT W 19" If .. .,_. ti ttlt CM!ff"ld, M ~ .... ""*" 40if tt flit Lhe ball.J'll'eoCf-pl)intntl pico-Tiii ,.. = .._ ............ .. 'nit "°"""" ,.,.... 11 *"" Ml"'911 MW1111nc111 Code, Mil -Wf'ffl' Wn<ll • tit .__, tt ltK tt tM ~ hJre ttnl ..... I.. but that ._ N fl W. .....,._ NIM OAV •i .. ,,.,,.... h lllll'lfljf MttlilNllU ef ._, c.trkf1 111111 _. '-.. fl11! .. .. --Y· II~ LIA.II... . y, .. .., "'(" """ SKIP r:u.1aTT IAILMAICllt. JM~ tr'IVif "' "" ~ °""""' a lnwrll'ICI ~ll'llW ., Or-.. c-ty, )'Cll'S end the trade blJ.attee • ...,..... ...... ""9!. CllfffitHI... ftd St ___.. hklt.. T .... ,., ti'~,_.... .. rltfll ft rtfld tflf #ti-..._ trlll fllf llhouJd be ... """-'I ...... 1-. of lJn,. bt fkftt_. w.tflllt --~ ,.,:r It~ S. 1....n 111, J)I Tllllfft fllCWtr1!rMapt !Ill .... ,,._ .... W • MM .,, ............, .. llll'f .._ . . ·~ --~~--_.......;.. ...... _ .. COAST 11 _.......... ...,.. ... ,illllf11or ... 0wm1111 • ,.,.,... ...., ~ provtmenl 14. ::,;., •..:::• _. , ... Alfo. .,._ ,:• ~ h ..... ...-... Irr .., Jo.rlA.DI• Of' THE IKWIC Of' *U'l.AV~ OI DltAHelll COUNTY, CM.lo DtrtJUtJ Al&lltanl lecrtWJ "';:;. c.:."v--. ....... ,~ l~YMOHD L R\.IOTT Ill =.,Mey ... 1f1t off Codii.et'ft ld'tJard "1~ Cdt. TMI *"'°'"' fllooC .CW. .. ~ , W.I , n .IOMJI orecub a NODrd .. _,... "NI ...... .. w ,_... "' I Dir'-" 0-..... -~ M. #tiff llti. 1,.... I c.lll'y 0.. -..-.-... C\Wll ln ----~-~:u-:: ... --.. -~--._ .... -... -·· _,......--z--JOIMI D. V.utel' °"'-CllMiiLlf ~.Ci .... -••-· mt ... _. __... PJJM PWf ~Ale 1 __ ...., -------·-----....... aiM u. .... ..., "' .. .,..1, 14. ft. "12 i.a.n """-1\, ..... '· l4 "· Im MIN'J ~"'-'a.°"" ..... ., M .. -1\o rm ANO SOUTHERN FEOEJ:IAL !';AVINGS 1 I • 1,. • \ 1 • I I ;. _, .. . -·'" !i t.:l 61 _,,... ·'' .. .. -·· ... . ... Stock Prices Fall Sharply • . - • W-*i•••· M&1 ll. 1972 SC ' Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List S11t:1 Nil (ML) Nltll Ltw Cit .. Chf, 1tl11 Ntt IMh,) M ltll l.IW CltM Cl\t. •• .., DAILY ~!LOT .. =. ....... -:: • I • I I ... er P!Lor TONIGH'rS TV lllGIIlJGHTS KTLA e 7 p.m. Movie ... Edee of uoom ." Dana Antlrewa, Farley Granger and Mala Powers star in two-hour 'drama. CBS • 8 p.m. Carol Burnett. The show regulars preS<nl their full-lenfth spool of 1 musical, .. The Dolly Sl!ters. 0 NBC D 8 p.m. Adam·l2. "The Tip." Bandit• using tear gas and a unique e&cape route rob an armored truck and a savings and loan bank. KCET 1111 9 p.m ... Reme mbering P.O.Q. Bach." A humorous look at Peter Schickele's imaginary character as a lake·off on baroque music:, filmed at the Kennedy Center. KHJ G 10 p.m. Movie. "The Trojan Hone," star· ring Steve Reevea, John Drew Barrymore. ... . ' ••••• ••• ••••••••• ••••••••• • • •••CH a LVO. AT l!LLla • • •••· co1•T .. wv. • ••• tH•oo ,. __ ••l'·••o• . "4UNTIWOTON a lACH IJ.Cll •<;1•11.NCAGIM•HT ~--··A VERY FUNNY flM" VINCEP<fT CAMBY Nn'-YOltK TIMF.S ,, ... ,~ wooo' Allf N \ ,.. __ .,_ ~vl_A.,-IT A~A IN. " ..... ~ "'nlE JICtnCERS ........ ._. ...... _ --_ ......... -~ ....... , .. .,..,._ IH I . .• ... . . 1.,.. •w Item 1 , .• : c .. tl•••11t IHw let. _. hit. ff•• I •·•· PllCll UNTIL 4 r .M. - ADUUI -4 Jb II.it You don't assign him to murder cases. You just turn him loose. . •• . • .g:~lifl~f . ~:'·j PANAV1St~tl' • Tf..::11N1co1 oR• ·Warner B:os .• A Kinney Comoanv·: ;· 'HOLD THAT POSE' -Joanne Wolcoll sketches lhe toga·clad Larry Eldon ----'-~'-------.-.-,,.--------·• wh ile Noel Fillastre affixes a tipsy gaze in this scene from the Irvine Com· Ji m•• Ga rner in "SKIN GAME" :_ ~ munity Theater comedy "You Can 't Take It With You/' opening Friday at .J!i!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~llll! 8 o'clock in the UC Ir vine Humanities Hall Playhouse. ---------------------;··!:·. Wednesday Evening MAY 11 Yislt th1lr hom1tow11 ef thll1d11ph11 ! tfttr • 25·yttr abttnct. ID ""' lrtlll• -ID tll llrb •"' l:GI. (() ~ C.IN (II) Wllil1 tr11ll111 11 1mbitloua youn1 u at- l :M uf:M (llralford Dlllmtn) fof tcd· e OEOlltGE McGOVERN 111nt lftlllriM, s.nnon 1t1ms his P•· * Thi Man l Tht: l11u11 tltnt Illa 1 aeriout ni1rtt11 ,iobl•m 11'111 won't admit h• 111itd1 help. l:IOllr.,eem-l litl!'•"•c--t• (l)(j}QJllttt' r 1 lll••• De ... ..., c...., MICMM 811'111 F11clon, CIJ WIW WIN .... Tilllllll Houlton, !pikt NIUi111 11111 Theater Notes 'Can't Take It With You,' 'Absence of Cello' Open •: = Jteklt Vernon fllllt. !llZ..•I -tBDnPll JlllOC~·MMWfM m By TOM TITUS Playing major roles in the continue tonight t hroa 1 h -e 9 ...._ "R1m1mbuin1 .f. >"''If ot ,.,, 0111, ,1191 11111 w:i tW,.,..,. LallJI r .D.Q. lldl" A h11moro11J look 11 "'h.. ~ .:t~"""' 'fl/I' ,.llllllllf' Irvine comedy will be Joanne Saturday. 111_.,...,,,,.,. · r1t1r, Schlck1l1'1 l111111in1ry ch1r1c· H .,,,, ....... iav.--They say a lawyer who Wolcott. John Phi 11 i p s, Ken Kornweibel, Jim ml LASf .. ,-.IL .. i•URE SHDW AFM!9'1' PETER B09DANOV1Cll ACADEMY AWARD WINNER lllT=•=·---~ . ..,._,., IEIT=••••.,.. (l.OA!S ll~ ' GT•jt MMllNN t• •• • bkt-off on blrOQllt mUJJe. GRUT IMllAllD defends himself has a fool for Charlotte Mitchell, Bud Slaughter, Nancy Bond and 1::=:~-==-1-,30-·_~:·,.";:"'-"il,.-:.,._CIOl~ .. ~:,"wht=-~·~--.-,. ~ -r ·;r,~~ilaxr~·-"'-11'!·~~ -_•_u~~~H""-'0.,w·-·w.u-w5w~...,1-11 .,,.-,, .. -. --a client, and-4~elRer-Of'---OOt-~nettP;-S~>t'i!J!.,-Heu9ink-~-Cheryl Bn~ -hittd--the· east at .._.,,.. Colld (com) 'IO .... Tony . Gl !IMki that adage al59 applies to Waller Orange. Waiter Dudek, the playhouse. 606 Laguna C..rtla, °"" Mlrtlrt. JaMt Ltllfl, l :JO fJ fl)()) IB TN Ptrauldtr• "Tlwi l=:;:;:;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:::~I directors who acl in their own ·Larry Eldon and -'.'Ian Levy. Canyon. Road , Lagune Beach. JDCINATID~ ICIP'MY ••llAAC--.. ii -~-.... -.....o::-Y ..... ,. mTfitlWR& .!..' · ·...., <)!in.,, C0<..-00otlll'fl -••l-.,..:T'°" -LJOOT~-............ l'l'f"=· •-•..,.IDllOul' JU' lll'O~ I '"'" ...... """'"'-""""'°"I l:\~,t~•- I . t ' .llm.n Whitmore, l111b1r1 Nlchol1. GCIOdb)'i" (II) Otnnr i nd 1,.11 find productions 'the Irvine ·Com· Completing the corhpany are Reservations 494-0743. Wiien chttnlaltJ ,rotmor II e1u1h1 1 eriihtd ,11.,. with th• •k•ltlllll . ' • . Zetta Patterson, Jose p h * with 1 ,,.tty 11r1 ttud•11t. h• 1nlll 1 of •n IMntor wl'oo diJ•IJPt•rtd 12 m~n~ty th~ater~and this col-Jackson Jr., Elaine Shannon. Completing the Ir en - frl1nd IJftl:•MI It "'' Jlrt of t11111 ,.,,, .,,_,_ 1MOOt1 11..YO ...r .. UOll 1T. umn1st-w11l find out this Jack Ogborn, Beth Titus, Noel gagements this week are a "' COITA •fll 61'·"71 undtrCO'ltf Vl"Dft: for tti1 Fii. D 11 ....,. weekend. Fillastre. Mark Rickels and splashy musical at UC Irvine, (IJ Cll Aen . lllAwirh•• z .. lr1sou111Of11111111r.o nn Yours truly is taking the David Wilson. "Kiss Me Kate." and a com- 9 MM: ('C) .,,.., Md tlll 11111-'9 lldft( Fttfl Klll)'ftlll hrt: A JOUILNIY 1£YOKI IMAGINATION unlikely role of Grandpa Eight performances a r e edy revival by the Costa Mesa ltatlt1" (ODii!) 'H -Dtbblt Wt!· scheduled. Fridays a n d Civic Playhouse. ''My Sister '°"· o.nwr l'yl1. 11:00 fJ ()) Mlltllb: (II) ,,..,. F1lr II •11lcnt Vanderhof as well as directing Satur'"'ays 81 8 0 'clock through Eileen." "Kate" r e s u m e s llW,lflflt$SlllW kid111pp1ll"rtwo1ntnwtlolt•w • running• the ICT od t' f "Y ' t . ht d I h h .. pr uc ion o ou June 24 .at the campus onig an pays t roug m ,..,.., Jlld IN ,,.,_, Mlt w1mln1 Minnix ltilt 1nlJ' ,,. aJ Flrlq u,.. cin 11..,. tit r. • _ _ Can't Take It With You ," playhouse. Reservations 547· Saturday, while "Eileen'' fD Milt" ..... (") D 9 m Jli(ltt......., (R) An ollt ---·-opening Friday for f 0 u r 7733. performs Friday and Saturday ~~-.... ...,,.,..,1,,_ ..... ,,.~,,.._.,l_"<......, __ l'llt• ~ -... _.,, ___ ...... ,l ___ .... IQNCl.•1-.. •·t-J••- ... , • fl. fo:>_..._. .... .:-.. .. --r-..... -I DOtf'T MISS nus MUCH TAlKll A.oul PICTOdt NOW SHOWING! IXC\USM\ T AT THISI SllK'ft9 TfflAftlSI ID,,...,,. 11111t 1nll his 1r111dton 111•rtr k d b 1 ·1 't II * only. 91,...aa. 1w1ittlllcomin1 ollht M .. l1hln ?!!llHrT -MMESCtlMllN wee ens-u 1 wasn rea Y Clayton Garrison heads thel ~===================== CD .v..... M ki C:.••6'11 "Tht Mtnit h on Mott Str11t." 111r· '::=:"':": ... =:":':'":":':' ===::/ planned that way. When an ac· Bill Fucik has stepped in to directorial staff for the Colel; S Wldtdl .a..... rin1 EdW1rll G. llDbinlOfl i nd Ricky I· tor in a major role walks out replace the ailing Ruth Porter musical at UCI, with a~ Elliot Mintz ~n; and • stott owner b hllr>td •N TH• ~•f.''!!NST11.Tt c•lNT•R with two weeks to go, you McCulley as director 0 f Donna Fuller and Bill Miller br "Th• hl~tld Mirror.N which 11111 .............. ••••••••••• "Absence or a Cello" for the t · the I d. I ldSG"'"*'M.... Zu Z11Gabor,Mh111 0'Conn1U1MI :· • • ·~ don't try to bring someone in Lido Isle Players. Jackson ~~stnHall a: intai:r:S~ 1:111. CD D m ..... RMlll'lllY DI Clftlp. ••• .... cold-you do it yourself. \Vilcox heads the cast as an Mason end top support 8 Mtvil: (21u) "ldp ti ..._. 8 m "... "•······••••••·········· The revival of the Kaufman-individualistic scientist at-"Kiss Me. Kate." Inspired (dral 'fiO -D1n1 MdrtWs, F1rl1) G Miv4•: IC) (1'1r) "Tl!• TrtlH w••T••H•T11. .. AT o oto 11.M wa T Hart comedy classic is one of tempting to bend h i 8 by Shakespeare's "Taming of G-··••. ••t• •-•n. Hone" I•~) '62 -Stt'll Rum. IETWl:EN :::0 .. ~:.°o·::.~:. •~2 ·t4tJ N>rsonatr·ty to l'rt the corporate ••·• "" four new productions on the ... ~ the Sh, rew," will be staged at (j)TMll ., Canlll•m Joh n Drtw 1trrymor1. , , image. h II CJ)-Cl S.hrt tt AMl!lut1 local boards this weeK as the 8:30 in t e UCI Vi age U 1 tlll S.uH A Hal W..llis Pwo<r .... 1-Others in the Lido cast ere Theater. Reservations 833-IJWHt't MJ IM Im M~ n.trt-TM,... .,._.. C".i....r. curtain begins lo descend on Elsie Painter. Annette Bell, 6617. I:=..~ .... ~" 1111111 "TM Cripple" (II) Red~ravc . JackS<>n the 1971-72 season. Starting the Nancy Geer ling, w ll y n e Diana Spencer and Debra GI Hittltftp G) T• II AaMlllKM week off was the Lido Isle Gibson. Jonathan Charles and Ensign head up the cast of . CILUr11rse1111a.,.11 c.1111111 0) LI LIJIMI Ill 111...t Ph1yers third show of the Nat Michaud. ''Eileen" for Costa Mesa 8FM•: "1llftt s,.t" IO:lO (J)T'M llWl!iqm ~ear, "The Absence of a "Absence of a Cello'' con-director Pali Tambellinl, with IJ•-•• , ,...... ""111~1.1 •+1 1"' Cello," which O""'ned Tuesday tinues tonight through Satur· Ron Gibb topping a sup'porting t:sozs.n1 John Forsyth• lllflltU ..._.. .. nu•••• ' ..... , ....... ,.,\ .. l\H.... ...~ • Worl1: Mc::!~ !:!~j~ w ~1 c:!""uf. CUM Robtttsotl ;"' ...... ; .. ~:-;..---.. ~ r~~:: s:;~~~~.conti(ltlously ~~b~~u!~~70~t V1i~e L~~osd~~~ ~~~edi~~~tAl;~c~~~~ B~r~r: throulh Mfll •nd lll•llCI. ii !ht surpriucl 1111i1. ,.. ~,..,_. . ......,....._ Two other attractions which Newport Beach. Reservations Garlich and Jack Murray. CIJ T• Ttl Ult Trutll ! 1111 ~ Mllw ''BUCK ~~E PREACHER'' also open this weekend are the 673·6112. Performances are given at (l)llli'll•tfJN111ll a.1llllb111ct '" SanClementeCommunity * the Community Center -MilMlll I .... : --r) "111· Ill nl•: '\nt II fie l uwnttl'l" Theater's "emergency•• pro· Aud itorium on the Orange u '"'' ""'" ED u rt.. "Dear L I a r . ' ' originally llqt" (1dv) '5l -A11n lldd, Roi· .ei.c:.dl .. c.i••IJ.o duction of "Dear Liar," staged by the Laguna Moulton County Fairgrounds at 8:30. u nt Ptldtdl, Lloyd Nolen, Clllll VI ,...... IN TH.: Wl!a TM•N•T1:11t C l!NT•" debuting Thursday. and Reservations 834-5303 . .... ••••••••········ 2 Playhouse. moves to the Wiiis. Sl!ll'f or 1dvtnturt1 II tht 11:008 DD e e ID lnl •• •• . . •••• another k>ok at the popular San Clemente Community * lm11n1l11 of ,cu-bl. (])())QI hrt : . 1 ! musical "Fiddler on the Theater Thursday n i g h t, A trio of continuing com-Hit•~ • DOM SU,..,... · · Roof." wr·ndr'ng up the Long 1 · h led edies completes the bill of fare Ill ~,...., "· •. · rep acing t e cance pro- l.JIJ Cl) M1nillll DlllH •••• •••• Beach c1···1·c Lr.ght o~ra d 1· r Th F p for local theatergoers. with ~ '"' -~... m .. ... ... . .. ... . y ... ~ u_c 100 0 " e ront age." !JAi : •• ..,...... Tnit11wc.n.ci11111w Wl:aTMINSTl!ft ATODlDl!l\IWl!ST sa "th r ·d •ht the Huntington Beach -•·-'""'' ~ ·•umm•• S.I· m ·~ ,~ -............ -v• • e son w1 a r1 ay ntg flap Graham is directing the u:i ... -.J _,.., ._ l rTWEEN ..... Dl•OO ........ 192·4493 . Pl h t . "C t h M 1ds" (R) all DectlH '72 opening.. autobiographical drama wit h ay ouse s aging a c e mn l1Wrttt.ti ......... (R) AJ()lmNfYlfYOMllMAGIN.lTIOH The new erriva\s boost the David Paul playing George If You Can," the Fullerton dJ"11lltllll Mullc field of current stage offerings Bernard Shaw and Betsy Paul Footlighters presenting "Don't 9.1 MM: (2kr') "l11tt•flll"' (1dv) 11:15 II fedftt fll•la: 'tulu" ·11ICnt to 11. one of the heaviest com· enacting Mrs. pa 1 r i c k Drink the Water" and the ••1 -.'t.ntllony Quinn, Arthur Ktn· 11:30 8 ()) CIS Utt Mtwlt: (C) -s.1-runrvng• plements of the season. Also in Campbell. Performances will IA>ng Beach Co mm u n It y . ntdy, V1rclnl1 Fl•ld. 41, hi 911 MM" (•••) '51-Roll· • __ "'".. production this week are South be .Jiven Thursdays through Playhouse premiering "The toOIJ())Clrtl 11""11 fR) The thow lrt T1ylor, Jullt London. ..-..-·•• Coast Repertory, UC Irvine, Saturdays at 8:30 in the Savage Dilemma." All are n1ul1r1 prts1nt thtir lvll·l•nrth 0 9J m ,,._ fflwR'a Trt, ti the Costa Mesa C i v i c Cabrillo Playhouse. 2 O 2 being performed Fridays and 7"60.!Vl••HD Sat d . apoor of 1 1nu1lcal, "Th• Dolly Si1· lllKW Gffl.llON CKUtll"IH" Playhouse. the Huntington Avenida Cab ri 11 o, San ur ays. tm." • 8 ~: ~ (~) '41 -/::::::;::;;:;;::::;::;:;;=~1--B.each.P1ayhou.se., the Laguna Clemente .. Re:ser·vatio-ns 492--John-Loughman, MI rt In IJm.W .. ·11: ''Tllt r._ .. (R) M~!Ctr1J,r1 111tn1 G06d1td, IN Ml SION VIE 0 Moulton Playhouse. the 0465. Fuchs and Merrell Ann Had- 81ndit111sin1 IN f •• , •nd . ufllq111 a I.ILi~ ED Did Cnttl Fullerton Foot lighters and the * dan star in Alex Koba's pro-- WINNER OF *THREE* ACADEMY 1· AWARDS "fiddler on the ~....,.day 12£1() Noon -til 9:00 ,,M. ltserved ,..,.,, alto -ilatQ It Mut\d, libtr· IY· Aotrcils ancl Wardl's Mv-sic: City. - F<t• 5flt(lll Arr•110tme.ita l"or GrttuPI of 15 ttr Mort (fll $31·l1'1 lltvt•IJ Spr1y. MATIN IU WM.· s.t, ·Sa•. *'Pt 1111111 roll 1n 1nnore• trvdl GJT• Td tt. 1d Long Beach c 0 mm u n i t y duction of ''Catch Me'' at Hun· 11H1 1 uvinfl 11Nf loin Nnt Pl ho Two ambit i OU s but tington Beach. Curtain time.ls"----------------------0 ~~---.... u-. u~-...... ~ ay use. d .. ') 00 t• -.I 11.1w 111U ,_ ~ '""' 11Y u.:i --1ss1m1 ar pr uc ions con-8:30 at the playhouse, 2110 .... Fl'llllr '1111 lll'it.ttor" (R) Tom 1J ...... : "'Litt U,.W. ..... (dr.) "You Can't Take ~t With tinue their lengthy runs along Main St. Reservations 636-•~d Norm1n Invest ht •• ell wtll tn '65 -Cfllrlts Dinner, Anni G11lot. v_,,...,.._.i;i.,.11o:~-Yo1•" moves into' •v the the: Orange Coast as South 886t. "MAIT ""'Of S<OTS" H ·1· H II I ho 1 li p from t w1lt1r (Htl C:.00,.rl. m .... : (C) "AtfllM" (~) '64 umani Jes a Pay use on Coast Repertory heads into its Mitchell Sanford d I re c ts CJ) llllJ Cnlla• Cllallltlt em.It -«•nP SIWlrt, Akim• Kita. the UCI campus \Yilh a cast of third week with the drama "Don't Drink the W.11ter" for f'lAlldJllirilflt~S• -18 characters recreating land "Pueblo" and the Laguna the Footfig-hters with Sidney _ ti) hny MIMR 12:30 Ill C.~ Mak EDWARDS C INEMA embellishing) the Pu I i t z er M It Pl h 8\n .... ,_ •71 .1 M ., t HAtlOltllVD.ATADAMS c~,_. ou on ay ouse continues Ellison, Muriel White and II.I:/ u.wovll • m•1• 1 ... n1 n 1-. ~DD rn--~ Prize-winning storv. of an Un· r'ls . I •-r·r 1.. ·-1.:£1 ~ .... i//!!3102 summer musics "Dear Mr.chael Hanlon heading the .... 1 01n • a"IV"' conventional ramilv "relax· Ernest." GIL11e~i Ubr.WrtSttlni l :ste...,..: (C')..,.. "•• 111 tllt fltZAWTMTo\1'l01 ·11C1WOMt:rON ing" in the mr'ds.t of the cast. Curtain is 8:30 at the C'iI!l btlclOI C.ntrll lullet" (wu) 'S9-.\udl• Murpl!y. '1IAMMllSMITK IS our·· (II Depression. "Pueblo." a dram a tic Muckenthaler Center. 11 9 l:JO.IJO mNIC Mydtfy n.tn-D Hl,.._,httll 1 N=;•;•;•:;-;:;~-~·~·~·~·~·~·=-•~·~·~;;;;::::~:::;:::::;::;::;;;;:;:;::::::-I documentation of the 1968 Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton. McCltllll ''F~th Mi n In ' strln1 ID U.Jlltfllt a-. .._.,... NOW SHOWINc;. -WED. THRU SUN. ship-seizing incident, is the Reservations 528--1973. Qu1rl1t" (RI Modtm po1itica i nd Caltlt," •1117 fl tM lb,•..,~. finest piece or the 8 t e r "The Savage Dilemma," a etd world tits 1111111 In11111rd1F. llli1 •• ltrtlt" MGDEIN TllEAflE lf lfS FINEST: n iltns1 •se11I sttfJ mounted Jn Orange County w or Id .premiere, continues Sk.111. N1vill1 811nd ind 11., Oen, t f •H i1 crisis set 111i1st tM Wta•er Nckfrt••• t f •• this season. Martin Benson under Bert am Tanswell's nb W11v1r's '°" Rid: 1uut. l:lO IJ ~~ -,._. KllkH" ctur tauill I.I tM uatss tf WtrW "9Utical ,...... directs the epic produc"on direction at the Community D (I} (I) EE n 1 S•ltll F1llllJ (dr1) 'U: -hulttt1 GOdd11i, Ml· u Pl h 5021 E A h I "Ho/lllO!lmin1 · (Ji) Ch•d •!Id Jetty dlitl W11~illl-""1"' "-"'fltt·~l'lf. 111t·w••11e~1.,. witti Don Tuche heading a ay oust, · na e m Thursday ll'YTIME MOVIES Nearl y Everyone Listens to Landers __ ..... _. • "*''"' · · · ,.....,.,., ""* --'"',.,."'' huge cast as Commander St., Long Bea.ch. Curtain Is "IMfk" ,..., i. "" 1111 Hvtr11 ._..," Lloyd Bucher. 8:30; reservations (213) 4JI. • -. • • • .. DIJIJ "1•1 P e r t o r m ances--,.-Esume-0536. =::::==~==-=:! PUEB. LO tr STANln L tonight and continue through H tt1t111' Sunday at a o'clock at the · .f,>uth Ct'd'-I Repertory C o~fo Mesa • 64 6 -1 J63 or Mut ual Agencies Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Reservations 64'-1363. Kids Like to Ask -Andy "Dear Ernest" is 1 light.tr offering, a musicaJ version of "The Jmportlnce of· Being Earnest," directed by Frances Rafferty Baker. Ptrlormances • "FR&NCH CONNECTION" 1---AllD "llTt llM Tll•IT" Nll'Mf' •I M.tlM • c..lt MIN -IB SNOWTIMIS ~ .................. M '"' a.t. """"\''"'""'" »U ... 11 JIM ......... , ............ ....,.,.. l"M • 4 . - ................. ~ ..... ...,_ Dtltr •1q 1 Jet..-_ Ir•.._-.. ~ffATUll - JM\lS COIUIN "THE HO•IERS" .. , .-:· "' _, ••• ~ .... i f I I I J I I I ·' I Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION Today'• Fln•I N.Y. Steeb ' ' ~ voe. 65, NO. 152, 5 SECTIONS, M PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 31', 1972 TEN CENTS Mesa :tlarine Ending Roseless Career By AR111UR R. VINSEL Of llM DfliY 1"1111 Sllff Nobody promised Willson Price a rose garden 30 years ago last week. when he joined the U.S. Marine Corps and left Window Rock, Ariz., for a world torn by war. Nobody promised Price the glamor aod glory that history bestows when you're on the right side and you win. Nobody promised the young Navajo In-- dian anything but action. Now 50, Price was principal .develo~r of a radio communication system baslfd on the Navajo language, one or 200 tribesmen Japanese soldiers in the South Pacific craved to capture. None of the Navajos -classed as top secret personnel -were ever taken prisoner but casualties were heavy . Price, of 871 Victoria St., Costa Mesa, Y.'OD his own particular Purple Heart on Guadalcanal in 1943, but told the medics to take care of the badly wounded first. "I just had some shrapnel and a busted leg," says the man who is at Camp Pendleton today, tying up last Joo,,e ends of a 3G-year career from which be formally retired Friday as a master sergeant. "I spent three months strapped to a hospital bed in New Zealand," says the television repair shop owner to whom nobody eve!' promised a rose garden. A Marine Corps recruiting poster in his home garage repair shop shows a Ufil.1C drUl instructor screaming lhe slogan al a wid~yed young trainee: "We don 't promise you a rose garden~' Price says he didn't plan for a J\1arine Corps career, but found educational op- portunities a Navajo youth couldn't e1· pect otherwise. He didn 't join it out or personal bravado ; there was a ••orld war in prog· (See MARINE, Page 2) Citizens _Group Pushes • Open Space Philosophy: . __ Enertiy_Trqops Make Offer To Surrender SAIGON (U.PI) -At least 100 North . Vietnamese soldiers caught up in the bat- tle for Kontum have offered to surrender to government troops inside the city, front dispatche! reported today. The dispatches said the Communists lost more than 3,000 dead in the battle for Kon tum. It wa! the first known mass surrender offer of the war by North Vietnamese allhough JOme Viet Cong units SW'· render«! in lhe pas~ the dispatche< said. Heavy lighting continued in aome areas or Koobnn . and waves of B5U bombed CommlDlist positions near tht city in what spokesmen called the heaviest strikes since the Communist offensive began on March. 30. , But the front dispatches indicated those Inside lhe city apparently had had enough. ~ John Paul VaM, the senior U.S. ad- viser in the Central Highlands, told newsmen of the surrender offer and said negotiations went on all day. He said the Commtinists broke in on Soulh Vietnamese radio fret(uencles with the surrender offer and that at one point four Communist troops, bands in the air and without weapons, began walking toward government lines. However, they disappeared behind a small knoll and did · not appear again. Vann said South Vietnamese troops were ordered not to fire into the sur .. render arta of the city and that the Com- munists were not firing there, either. He would not identify the North Viet· namese unit involved. because that might jeopardize the negotiations. "Things are going ltell in Kontum" despite the continued heavy fighting, Vann said. "The North Vietnamese in the city have a shortage of supplie!. They have no replacements and units that have taken heavy losses have been denied permission to pull out of the city." Meanwhile, a U.S. spokesman reported the heaviest American air raids around the major North Vietname.se port of Vinh since the Communist of£en!ive began. ~!~si~g~~ Bea1ns ·Belly Da1icer Finds Henry's· Lap TEHRAN {AP) -Henry A. Kissinger met a belly dancer early today and she ehded up in his lap. The raven-haired beauty, 28-year~ld Nadipa Parsa, was performing for several hundred journalists arfd ·government officials at a dinner party given by the Ministry of Information when President Nixon's bachelor aide arrived after midnight. Still in tails and white tie after the state dinner given for President Nixon by the Shah of Iran, Kissinger immediately attracted a crowd. After be and Prime Minister Amir Abbas Hoieyda were seated on cush- ions in the hotel ballroom, the dancer, who tiad been gyrating on the stage, was led over. ~ · " . Dressed in lier shimmering costume with discs the size of silver dollars on her breasts, she performed a pulsating dance a few feet from Kissinger and the prime minister, kissed the prime minister's cheek and plopped in Kiss- inger's lap. · 'l'l!t White JIOUR swinger, whose daler wilh American beauties haw made him the talk of Washington, beamed broadly, · "I will be back," .tie said as he left the party. Investigation Begins In Police-truck Cra.sh By JOHN VALTERZA Of 1M °'11llY Pllft Si.ff The District Attorney's office today began considering the filing of complaints stemming from last weekend's crash of a San Clemente police patrol car and a small pickup truck in which one youth was fatally injured and four other persons were hurt. California Highway Patrol officers said this morning that two main factors aSsertedly contributed to the tragedy at El Camino .Real and Calle Dolores late Friday afternoon. Spokesmen for the CHP said the prime factor in the mishap was the asserted high speed of the police unit being driven by Patrolman Gary Adams, who was responding to a call involving a car being driven erralicallY. The secondary factor, CHP aides ad- ded, was the asserted failure to yield the right of way by 16-year~ld Daniel Alan Cross of Long Beach, who was assertedly at the. wheel of the small pickup truck. said CHP reports, quoting several witnesses. The one prime consideration added, the spokesmen, was that the patrol vehicle's red lights and siren were not operating at the time of the tragedy. The posted speed limit is 30 miles per hour. Adams, himself, suffered minor injuries in the mishap and was released after emergency treatment at Mission Com- munity Hospital. The other two passengeD and the driver of the small pickup suffered pain· fu1, but relatively mild injuries. The case which started the tragic se- qli'aq,ce of events began when a citizen walked into police headquarters and reported a late-model blue car being driven by a 11crazy or drunk" driver. The reporting party also furnished police with the license nwnber of the vetllcle showing a San Clemente resident as owner. CHP investigators indicated t h a t Adams apparently had the vehicle in his sight as he accelerated along the nearly deserted highway. Files Study ---~ ~ Demanding Protection The .Laguna Beach Citizens Open Space Committee Tuesday filed a detailed. report calling fur preservation and e1· ( panslon or pubUc beaches, and shoreline, protection of the wilderness surrounding the Art Colony and a ban on destruction of heritage trees on either pUblic or private property. Proposod as the te.i for the open 'P"ce element of Laguna's GenerlJ PJan, it WU forwarded to the city planning com- miuion where i\ drew strong praile. "It just fits Laguna," declared Plan- ning Commis!ioner John McDowell. Hearings on the guidelines for future land use are expected to be beld by the commission starting June 19. , Major elements in the proposal by the Open Space Committee include: -The SborellDe: Protection of the open spaces or shot eline and beaches and ac· cess to them is a. paramount concern. The sequestered coves, rocky headlands and sandy beaches alike should remain open to the public use and be maintained impeccably. Public access should be such as to ensure that every portion of the shoreline be accessible for_ wat.;r- oriented recreation and enjoyment of scenic beauty. -Physical Hazard!: To protect public health and safety, au geologically unsafe lands should remain in permanent open space as well as land having slope! ex- ceeding a specified grade ... land hav- ing inadequate access for projected density should not be developed. To preserve valuable watershed and natural flood plain sponge areas, efforts should be accelerated to acquire the Laguna Greenbelt acreage . . . annexa tion of floodplain areas should be encouraged and zoned for compatible open space use. DAil Y PILOT ll•ff ...... CODE AUTHOR PRICE REFLECTS ON 30.YEAR CAREER They Didn't Promise Him a Rou Gardtn and It Wa1n't Council Hopeful to Lose . Volunteer Post in l41guna a.:rpnmu.on,.ol..,1..quna'a ... V••· • Post will make It necessary to terminate the eervJces of city council candidate Beth Leedt, at leut for the duration of her candidacy, post Directer Lyn Davis announced today. •1Tbe new board " said MW Davis· ' ' "has eatahlishod the principle tllal tho Volunt~r Post cannot be \lied, or.seem to be used, by enyone seeking poijtlcal of- fice. In consequence of this, Mrs. Beth Leeds, who recently filed for city council, will not be connected with the Volunteer Post, at least until after the July 25 municipal election." Responding to a letter from the post's board of _ dlrecl<J!"s u;B!!!IL_ her reconsider her candidacy and cliOOSi tu "devote yoµr time and energies·-to tbe work of the Volunteer Post," Mrs. LeedS said, "This Is a democracy and I am enacting my own democratic rights in seeking pUlce .... I do not accept your decision to tenninate my affiliation with the Volunteer Post during thUI time •.• I feel there is no rea!On for my reslgna-· ti on .•. " The Volunteer Post, said Miss Davis, has begun the proces! of incorporation as a non-profit corporation. It has prtviously been 'solely a research facility of UC Berkeley, operating on a Federal grant to study community organization problems. This emphasis, she said, is being changed considerably a! the post goes under local control with a local board to "tackle local problems in a practiCal rather than a theoretical way.'' An lhitial task, undertaken in coopera- tion with the Laguna Beach Coor<ij.b.ation Summ;r Sign-up Begi1& Saturday In Laguna Beach The Laguna Beach RecruO°"-l)epart. ment is braCed for its annual ~f "'l'eation-mlnded resld,ents w b e n rf5 ... tratlon for summer prograpa: gets under way -.t ·9 a.m.. Saturday at. the Recreation Bu.ilding, 175 N. Coa.at Highway. Opentng day· of regl1tratton USU1Uy fmds a Jong waJting line well before .tJae actual sign-up begins, but director George Fowler says everything po!!lble will be done to speed•the procedure thll year. Numbers will be dlstrlbuJed to thost In line, and Information on ·classes, fees and hours will be circulated and members of the Junior Woman's Club will be on hand to sell coffee and doughnuts. Fowler noted'that exteruiions added to some clas&e! la:it year, to aecomodate high enrollment, have been Included in the regular program format this year but he still e1pecta that many popular cllssu will rm on the llt91 morntns ol registra-tion. · · Brochures with · complete elm liJting1 are available 1t the Recreation Depart.. ment, or Jnfonnation. can be obtained b,; calling 19f.ll.21,,Ext. 15. 1......-.. j He said the Americans were firing television-guided bombs that "just can't miss" and ·that major ground .in- stallations were destroyed. A command spokesman said U.S. warplanes flew 240 raids into North Viet- nam. They smashed a blg fuel depot and destroyed or damaged several rail and road bridges outside Vinh, the country's southernmost port 130 miles south of Hanoi. The high-speed, rear-end collision claimed the life o.'1' Joseph Britt, 16, of Long Beach, who 6,iffered fatal head and internal injures when he was thrown from the bed of the truck alter the im· pact. The estlmat~ speed of the patrol car was between 65 and 70 miles per hour, A.!J he drove to intercept the vehicle the small pickup pulled onto the road from a side street, faltered for a brief moment, then assert~ drove in front of Adams' car. The youth!, all from Long Beach, were apparently headed toward a camping outing during the Memorial D a y weekend. -Village Scale: Open space should be used creatively to achieve a sense of natural openness throughoot the town. and to maintain the village scale and identity. Foot travel through the town, canyons and neighborhoods should be facilitated by conveniently located trails and linkages. Encroachments upon e1· isting pubUc walkways should be iden- tified and removed. Multi-family residen- tial structures should he1p share the cost of open space and park Jlfeds by dedica· tion of parkland or contribution! to a park fund. Hillside development should be planned lo conserve open space and prevent scar· ring of land and removal of ground cover, Stories Served At Breakfast • J The 1,000-pound "Walleye" bomb car- . ries a TV camera in the nose, a Navy spokesman said, and the pilot monitors a televi.s.loo set in the c~iL He-tunes in - on what the' bomb "sees" and when the target ap~ars, locks Jn on it. "You just can't miss," the spokesman said. Laguna Will Screen Krisbnamurti Films Two movJes on· J. Krishnamurti, pbliOl!<lPber, will be shown at I o'clock tonight at the Laguna Beach lllP Scbool audliorium. Admlalon b rm. Krtshnamurtl, wi-w r It I a C 1 an: orl•ntod Jonrd tbe young<t ,....,atlon, wlU be lntervle.....i'ln the lliml by H.,_ roo smtlh, J"O(....-ot llblloloollY-at Massa•tn.,.tts lnltltute ol Teclinology, a!ld Ollver llimtin, Mlllowi odltcr ol the BrltlllrBNOdcullng Com-. ....... Laguna Police Questioning Beaten W onian Laguna Beach police are investigating the possible assau1t of a 25-year-old woman found lying in the street on Graotland Drive at 6 p.m. Tuesday . The Yict.lm, identified as Susan Bleich of 160 St. AM's Drive, told of[icers she had been beaten by two men, but was unable Tuesday night to give a coherent account of the alleged assault. She wq taken IO Sooth Coast Com- munity HOsbltal by ambulance, found to have sustained a fractured arm and · posaible concusstDn and transferred to Orange County Medical Cont.r !or fUrtber treatment, police said. A Medical Center spoke.1man said this morning Mia-Blelclt had be<n releaS<d after treatment at that facility .. Laguna Beech· police MD continue their iB- , vtSU&•llon today. Their camping gear and supplies were strewn over a wide afea after the impact. Bobby Baker To Be · Freed . WASlllNGTON (AP) -Bobby Baker, the quiet country boy who became a confidant or Stnale powubrokers and gained a degree or power himself, will be released Thursday from the federal prilon camp at Alleowood, Pa. The 43-year-old Baker. onetime secretary to Senate Democrats, will have served 16 months and 17 days for attempted tax fivaS1on, grand larceny, transportation of stolen money. fraud and eon- !piracy. Without parole, be could nol havo been freed befo~ nut May I. ., ' ... City boundaries should be protected with substantial open space buffers ..• all new !lUblic works programs such as roads, water and sewer trunklines and the like, must be in conformance with the open space plans as determined by the Planning Comml$sion. -Parks and -Recreation: Existing public parks and recreation facilities must be preserved and protected from encroachment. Standards Ito be determined by planning commission) should provide a park for each neighborhood that will be within con· venient walking distance. · Tall tales will top the program at tbe Laguna Bea.ch Chamber of Comn1erce Wednesday breakfast next week. II will be Storytellers' Day at the 7:45 a.m. get-together in the Hctel Laguna, complete with an applause meter to measure audience response. Everyone i! eligible to participate, says program chairman Bill Cwinn, wbo sug- gests that the stories be kept reasonably short, clean, and· preferably non=political since this is an election year and he doesn't want any ruffled feelings. Reservations for the breatfut. may be made by callini the Chamber, 494-1011. Funeral Rites Held All unused clty~wned land open spaces should be reviewed for po!sible use as miniparks or trails. To provide a needed regional pe,rk facility for the area. the ci- ry.::lbeuld coordlnale with the Regional For Former Lagunan· J>ark Advisory team to acquire t.a~una ,. Lakes and Sycamore Sills aa a regional Private servtces were held Tue&day in site, with Sycamoie Rills -dedicated to Redlanda, Calli. for 1.A!lllie Blggln, former low-Intensity rtereational uses. • 11 ·Laguiia Beach reslden1 who died Sunday -WOderne11 Opt:a Space: Laguna'$ In a Redla.ncb convalescent home, foll<iw- surrounding canyons and ridges such as ing an illness. AU90, El Toro and Lagwia Canyon should Mr. Blggln I.! survived by hls sister. be rtllln<d In their natural beauty u 1 Ellrtda Blggln or 411 Aster Sl., Laguna (See OPEN SPACE, Pace ZJ Beach. ' .. • ' ! ' Weat.lter · Warm temperatw-e1 will agaln visit the Southland Thursday with highs at the beaches at 6S rising Jo 80 Inland. Lo#! In lhe !O's. INSIDE TODAY A Trto.tVTl/ agent tMorlztd that a ltak11 oaa Hnc ~ re· 1JX7nfi.blt j(IT tht tiplolion that f'iw<d th.,,.Qh • bomb 1h<ltn at tht home of a Vald.e1t, N.C .. Urtilt tUCMtive, k11Una µ.,, childrtl'l. · L.M. IM 1 -.. CllllWN I c-,c-1• Ci.tt!llM -0... ....... . cr.s...... .. DNMI MttlCQ f .. ,., ... ,... . •11flrl•llll'Mtt ""'' , .. 11C41 n-tt . -tr.,....... ' """-cwt tt ·-~JI MM ....... '' " I """"" ,.., --.. tuKMal..... f4 0r ... a.r ' .,. . IYIT!f ,_., U 1..-IHI Dr, lttlllctW 1S ttect .,.... ... Tei.ft.... » """"~ »17 . .. '"' . ·--........ -----. \ ' .. Lt Regents Allocation Navy Cleric Hm New Post ' . · Planning Funds JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - cmdr. Andn.w F. J..,.., the first Na")'. !lbaplalo ever to f@ce a court· 11111'1~1. ~ l!fet1 ~lgned .. PrtncetOn UnJverally. .. :~Given to UCI Jenaen , acquitted at Cecil Field Naval Air $talion in March on a :harge of misconduct by adultery: will sludy lOY<'ard a master or pastoral theology degree a t Princeton. , A total of $2S,OOO of UC Regents' funds to encourage participation In communltv planning efforts has been allocated to UC lr\line, Campus planntr Euame Utmallu (pr~ nounced Weh-maht'..soo) said today tome or the money hu gone to pay uslltant UCI planner Mtl\lyn Roop to attend even- ing meetings of the Jrvine CiLy Council, plannlns COllUJlialon aod ldvllory com- mlttea. n. bullk or the plannJnf fundJ , how4nler, hive been allocated-to two Police Arrest 3 ·Men in Niguel ~urglary Case · Three Lapna Niguel men who 1Ueged- ly olrlppod a nurby model borne of more tban f700 wonh or fumllUrt and palntlnao ware booUd Into Or111J• County Jail TuudlY nlPt on bursWf' cbar111. 9blrlll'a olll<m are today aaeklnc qurt aeUon aplnlt J11nea llennll GI .. 10!'• %1, or 2881it Aloma Ave., Douglu (Jral( Dodoon, 21. or :mm cane Becerra ind Jtrry Alan Youni, 15, or 21Je1 Calle BIO!ll'I . .U of Laguna Nlauel. lleputlal claim the trio broke Into a piodfl bclne •t 21871 Calle Juca Mon-. da;j. nllhl and, carried orf furnllhln11 and paJntqo valued by the Slandard Paclllc Corporation, dtvelopm or the Crown Park tract, al flJO. lnv11U,atoro uJd the trio broke the .__""""Si1ciil>l ·Jlliild00i' at llle rear of lhO recantly completed borne and loaded tlielr loo( Into 1 VolklW111n buo. omctil ~ the lurnlturt and p11ntlng1 hive been rtCOYlftd. Laguna Niguel Soccer Meeting Slated Tonight rat11ar1 and IO!!l ln the Laauna Nlruet al'ff -·ft' lrttmtled In IOCctr ... tlfltles this summer are welcome to an or'Raniiatlonal meetina: tonight at Crown Vllloy lcbool. - Lee Andrew•, chairman ot the parlt1 ind · rf!:rtallon committee for lbt CJJ>lslr•no Unified Bchcol Dlolrlct, llld t~ meeting wlll start at 7130 p.m. in room 0.5. If enough fathen and sons show an ift. terllt. organized aoccer acUvllie1 would be aet up to take place at the school Weekdays for youngsters aQ,d ·weekends ror adulta. Potential p\1yer1 unable to attend tonight's meeting can obtain lnfonnatlon by callin& Andrews at 495-5721. Saddleback Unit • eets Thursday Saddleback Junior College Advlaory mittet on Real Esllte will meet at a 'm. Thur1d1y in the c:ollege board room . ! The adv isory oommlttee 11 composed of f11preaent.1tlvt front the colle1e and com-itunlty and maela t<J dllcuoa college Efucational programs. 'Community repre1entatlve1 art : rl0Ugla1 Kraut.er, Lelwre World Foun- ~tion community relation• director : Don <)ten, member Tustin Board of Realtor•; f'forman Rudolph, Sin Clemente realtor; Simpkin• of South Orenge County rd of Realtor•; and Robert Turner, sldent of Laguna Beach Board of Jtora. · OIANllCOArT LI DAILY PILOT Tfl• °""'9e c .. st l».t~Y fill.OT, Wllfl twrilefl I• awnDilltll Ille N~ Iii ~!.,_,. W tlte ONnte c ... , ,.,,.llelllflt ~"'" • .,.. rate Mlf!lon1 •r• put1H1llfd, Mond1y tllrovgl'I frldlr, tor Cotti Mfll, l'f~ INdl, t41111tlntl'lrl 11rtct1/,0V11t1ln Y•llf'I', ue11r11 alldl, l..,lnt/S8ddlebfct •nd St" Clt!Mft'4/ Slrt Juen C1phtr1ntl. A 11119!• rf'IJloNil illlllloll b. J1Ut>1111* lt11Jn11y1 end Sund•.,,_ The prlnclpll ,Wlllllli'lf ,it11t Is •I lJD W..t .. ., S1'1'1tf, CO.le M••• C.11tomle, ni». tl:1~1rt H. W1tl . PU•ldtnf Ind Publi.,.... J,, .. R. Cwtl•y Ylrt '°"'"""' 111111 0-.1 ,,.,.,....., Th1l'l'ltt l(,,.,n -E•ll'lt T~'"''' A. Mirrphin• """'91rw l.itw Clt•rlH H. lo11 Rit~•,..f r. Nill Mlt'-11 Mlllttlrtl ltfllN .......... om .. ZJJ f•r••t Avfilw• M•Th .. ,AM,..H: P.O. l•1 , ••• t2•12 --a... .. l -.... .., ltr9t ·~: 3aJS ................... ... '4wt e.cti: 1111S IN<ll l«MlllN Mn _..."1tl El""'"'-1111 .. 1 "'"' ,,, 17141 '4J-4JJ1 Cl Mil ....... ~. '41•N71 a..,.. ...,. Al hpa1 z•: , ..... a ....... , ... "" °"""" c ... 1 ""*""'""' -.... -....... ll!ullrtl ..... .... w • .....,., ., .,._..,..,.... ~' !'MY .. 1•1• t• WttlWwf -"""'"' Jet• ........ ..,,.....,.... ...... ~--~"" •• Mttai. Celi ...... _......_ w Wtlw ~ =, "',;;:" ,:;:,,mtflldM', l'lltllrw? I -.. I research studlts being completed by the Public J>oJJcy Research Organization (PPRO) attached lo 1he UCl program in social ecology. One study wUI project population trend• In Orange County cities and unin- corporated areas for the period 1960 to 1935, providing a basis for UC decision affecting UCI program.a. and yielding bue date for future 1tudle1 In areu 1uch u hou.1lng and tra111portatlon, Uemallu .. td. Tilt other study, for which ft,000 has been 1et ttslde 11 Uct'1 contrlbutlon, will provide an updattd cenau1 of school dilldrtn produced by communltle1 1ur4 rounding UC!. Earlier the Regents' funds paid for Uct'• 1hare of the De v elopment Economics Institute 1tudy o( t h e economic effects of the prop o 1 e d reorgantz.atlon of the Tuatln Union High School District lntb three new unified ochcol dl1trlcto. UC! contributed M,000 to that otudy, Tilt Irvine Comparty paid for the balance of the ta.aoo research. The community planning grant to UC! 11 part of a 1tatewlde commitment of $309,000 of Regents tunda to involve each of tht nine campu.u in community plan- nln1. A UC apolce1man uld the money a1tlgned to Irvine 11 1'to enJW'e .tha_.t ~ development of the campu• and the com- munity remain• Jn confonnance with the South Irvine Ranch General Land Use Plan and Regenll' po Uc lei." Uemat1u 1ald today the apeclflc direc- tion. Involves the Wllllam Perelra and Altoeilte1 plan for a 10,00J acre city or 100,000 people announced In lleO. Since then the Jrvlne Company his revealed pllll1I to develop a U,000 aO"e ci- ty or 430,0llOJ>eOP)e cm.lando Including lbe 10,000 acre1 covered by the Pereira· plan: Uematau aald he aee1 no conflict Jn the' Intention• of the two plana. He a.uggelted the R'lenla' concern II that Ibo Irvine campus, In order to be viable, must be sUrrounded by a community of at least 100,000 peraona on the adjacent 10,000 acres. To that end, the regents funds, and the base population projections the money is paylng tor, will aid the University in definin& It. lf'Owth needl. "It11 up to u1 · to let the neighboring c!Ue1 know what It is we need from lhem ," U~matsu added . In turn, UCI Is offering jts information and guidance to the neighborlna citiea, ffi.. c!Udlni tllt now city of Irvine. ''It is a fine llHlgnment ." Jensen said Tueaday. ''But It was my le<'.'· ond choice. ?.ty first choice was to stay at Cecil Fleld. We had '° many friends who supported us :Jere.'' Petition Drive Seeks Renewal Of 3 Contracts Petitions seeking renewal or the con- tracts of three top Laguna Beach school administrators are being circulated throughout the communi ty by the C.Oncerned Students for Schools, president Peter DiSandro announced today. The petitions urge the school board to renew the contracts of District Superintendent William Ullom, assistant superintendent for instruction Robe.rt Reeves and assistant superintendent for business Charles HeSs. Tlfe board also is urged to fin alize tls decision as aoon as passlble, DiSandro ~id. ~ Persons wishing to ass1't with circu la- tion of the petitions may contact him at 449-3783, he added. The board of trusteea currently is con4 sidertng a change Jn Its.policy regardJng contract renewals. Student Jeweh•y, Pottery Stolen Jewelry and pottery made bv art students at Laguna Beech High School and valued in excess of $200 were taken in a holiday weekend burglary at "the 1chool'11tudent art gallery, police report. The burglary was discovered when the gallery was re-opened Tuesday following the three-day holiday. Police said there was evidence of forcfd entry through a window of the bullding at 625 Park Ave. . School ofllclals are contacting student exhibitors to compile a precise inventory or the loss, police said. From Page I MA~NE RETiffES ... ret1 and the eorpl1 recruiter Qot to hlm LaVerne attends San Diego State first. College, majoring In premtdlcine; Lor- The Navajo ·code he helped develop raine goe1 to Orange Coast C.Ollege plan- after 1peclaliled Indian atudles confuaed ning a career In child psychology and and Confou nded the Japenese, who l:.aura goea to E1tancla High School. generally performed with polish when She wanta to major in music, while imitating American accents on the air. Willson Jr. ls a typical 17-year-old. "The Jepaneae ~ad English-1peaklng "11e doesn't know yet," says his father. men that llstaned to our radio and telephone conversation and aome C>Uld The newly-retired master .sergeant even get into the conversation by Im-figures he'll '1,ay In Costa Mesa at least a itatlng Brook1}11 or Deep South accents,'' year, untll Willson Jr. graduates, then he e.iplalns. htad back to Arizona, 30 yeers after leav4 One monitor bruenly began a strate&Y ing chit with Fleet Adinirol C h o 1 t e r · Nimitz. "We 've 1ot ·a lot of land there," he ex- "E1cu1e me, Admiral , but that's not a plaint, aaylna: he'll rai•e alfalfa .and ' buddy )'OU're talking to," said Price, lo-vegetables. ttrruptln& the ta lk. ''It's goln& to be kind of aad leaving a Indian dialect is what jinxed the place where you've spent a thlrd of your Jai>anese. Ufe," notes the ex-Marine who purchased "To my knowledge, the code was never his first local home about 22 year' ago. cracked by lhe enemy," he explains, "But I've seen the world," he says of notln& every explanatory book was the return to Window Rock, where he was burned at war's end. Research into his own heritage also bo~iJ p revealed an hlstorJcal Indian hoax, says 1 son rice Won't talk about an in· Sgt. Price, who notes most tribes u1td creasing crusade among young ltldJans runnera IO dellver me.9Saie• before Nava4 against the condltloT}I which have ad- jos had radio . mlltedly held them back for decades. "I wa1 surprised to learn that amoke lie agreed he found a better chance In signals and tom-tom measagetr were the Ma rine Corps -but. questioned on itricUy Hollywood,!' he •xplains. ~ views about native Amerlcan.9 as a whole So are some of Sgt. Price's Pacific -WllllOn Price's race turns blank; Jm- combat recollectlon1. passive. · He tells of one tribesman'• capture by "Be aure to g~t .lhat II}. the picture." he what -in earlier wars -would have says, pointing to the ofd Marine Cd\'pa been the enemy, but on Iwo Jlma was his recru iting poster on his desk that says own side. nobody promises you a rose garden. Given permission, the Navajo radiom1n headed tor a neerby camp to get a haircut. but was waylaid by a suspicious Caucasian lieutenant. "He thought he wa1 a J1p ..• put a .4S automatic righ t to his head -he was re&! dark -and, \Vhoocee!," Price declare•. "The k.id1'1 ~mmandlng otneer h•d to come down to ld•ntlfy him and aet him out of the 1tockade. "The lieutenant had to go ei:plaln to his own C.O. and then apologize lo the 'prisoner' personally/' he adds. A veteran of Vlttnam and Korea, one of _Sgt. Prlce11 histo ric memories la watching the Flag-ralolne -atop Mt. Surlbachl on Iwo Jima . "We had a iUY with them," say1 Price, who could 1ee it 11Ai-mlle1 away, while htarlng It deocrlbed by bis Navajo buddy between calla for mortar bomt:ardmtnt. One GI helping ralst the Fl ag -11 wu taken down again so ce meraman Joe JWtenthal could gtl his historic ahot - was 1nother Indian, Ira Hayu. Stor~. a sona and a movie portrft}' the tragic aftermath for H1y11, who couldn't cope with fame and drowned one p()!twar nllht In a desert <rffk COUliJla ·home from a nlcht on tho town. Nobody promlMd Willson Prlct any ro11 gardto during or an.. tha war, bot he ~ms saU!lled. Ha ,00 hb· wUa, Rooe, have four chltdrtn, J.a\leme, 12, J?ralna, 2~ Lal..., ,II, and Wilbon Jr., 17< all ol whom art lo school. , ''That says It all ... " he concludes. Duke of Windsor Returns to Land He Once Ritled ' BENSON, 'England (UPI) -The OUke of Windsor returned In dtath today to the land he <>nee ruled es King Edward Vtll , ending-the long exile that?ollofml hlr1n- 1l1tence on ma rrying the American divorcee for whom he gave up the throne. A Royal Air Forte VC10 of Queen EU11beth'1 own fleet o! planes brouaht the coffin of her uncle, draped with his red and gold per10D1l olandtrd, bock rrom Par.I.a wbere be died Sunday of ~ prolonged· lllneu btlleved to he cancer of lb• throat. . The 7~yeaM>ld duche11 w11 Ill wllh 1traln and lhock and did not accompany the ·body of her 77·year-old husbond 11 she planned, ,She 11 upected to arrive Friday In another royal plane ror lhe funeral Jn St. Gecrge'o Chatl<l at Wlhdsor Monday. She will he a IU"'t of U:o Q\lffl\ 11 Buck· IO&ham Palact. . , A black bearae wllh motorcycle escort oped !Min lhe WlndlOr mansloa to a French air base at Ille vlll11e of Du111i» .. ., , f'romPageI OPENSPACE ... •• part of the Laguna Grttnhell. -S«aic aod Historical Va I u c I : outstanding natural physical charac- ttrlltlc1 such •• · caves, rock out- croppings, the heritage trees and arovt•• 1hould be held inviolate, and an ordinance 1hould be drafted regulating 1he removal vf tree s from public or private property. The plan also called for certain agricultural w;es to be pei-mitted wl1hin l:ielected areas along with property tax in- centives to encourage such agricuitU'ral developmcilt. The report said the city would maintain a close watch to see that provisions or the plan were being followed and to initiate programs to acquire the neces sary lands.· Jt also called for allocations of funds for the necessary studies requlred to support the open space plans. Committee members are: Chainnan Nonnal Powell, president of the Laguna Beach Tennis Association; Don Rose, postmaster;-.Al Trevino, urban designer: }tarry \Villa1s, motel owner: and tttlldred liannum, writer. Assembly Passes Burke Proposal For POW Count well Sh11t My Mmith:. The California Assembly Tuesday p a s s e d a resolution authored by Assemblym an Robert Burke (R-}lurto tington Beach) urging the President to get an accurate account of how many U.S. prisoners o( \Yar are being -held in North Vietnam. The Assembly passed two resolutions unanimously on a 69 to 0 vote with oo debate. In addition to Burke's measure. the lawmakers approved one introduced by Assen1blyman John Burton (0.Sen f'ranclsco) urging the goverrunent "to do all within its power to obtain the release of all American prisoners of war." Thomas Hall, 25, ol Salem, 1a1ass., gasps as he is named w~· er of $1 million at the drawing of the Massachusetts lottery. Hall, o makes $125 weekl y al the New England Telephone Co., oald, ";m going to quit my job." Jlall and his wife Susan accepted check for $50,000.: an d \Vill receive a similar check for' $50,000 in each of the next 19 years. ,,, The North Vietnamese claim to be holding about 360 Americana a1 prisoners of war. However. families or me n·miss4 ing in :iction in Southeast A!ia contend the figure is Inaccurate and that, in fact, many more soldiers are In· prison camps in North Vi etnam,· Laos and Cambodia. • Employes Oppose Battin In Unprecedented Action Caspers Attends Transport Meet By JACK BROBACK 01 I~• D11lr flJlel ll•tt The Orange County Employes Associa- tion, representing more than 8,000 county workers, today issued I 1peciaJ bulletln, to members urging that tirst District in- cumbent Supervisor Robert Sattin be defeated in his bid for a second term on the board. "For the first tim.e in the history of the OCEA, we fee l we must oppose the reelection o[ an incumbent member of the Board or Supervlsor11'1 the letter· to members read. lleadlined: Special June 6 (primary election date) Election Bulletin, the letter urges strongly that association member• "vote against B1ttin'1 bid for re-elec- tion." r GEM TALK TODAY by J. C. HUMl'HRtll GRADUATION WATCHES The watch, for generations the t•aditional college graduation gift, is today appreciated al•o by child· ren at grade and high •chool level. Choice of a watch for graduatea at an3' le~I was formerly a simple matter al selection by price and style, A watch wasa watch, tu al· most (asual purchase U•ually , .. suiting In genuine appreciation. Today, modem technology and styling have combined with :rpeclal· ized uses to make satisfactory , .. tectlon Infinitely more dlitlcult. There are, however, steps you can ta~e to make sure your gr3duate will wear this gift with pride and pleasure. You should be aware of your graduate's activities and of the kind• and styles Q.1 watchea wbrn by his friends. You shOUld then 1ee a reliable· local j~weler and d!Jcuu your problem. ' We have watches for Ill lfN, from rugged tlmeplece1 for active children lo the moot sopblsUcated and 1peclallzed watchu .avlllablo, And U, In oplta of 111 your care, you r gradoale wantt aomethlnc dU· leren~ we'll 1ladly ucbanfl for exactly 1\'~t ht w111u. I "A vote against Battin Is a vole for jOOd government,'' the letter concludes . Listed are 15 reasons why the board or directors of the OCEA feel that Battin should not be reelecttd. They include : -Battin alor>e voled agai11St adoption ot salary, fringe benefits and conditions. of employment in an agreement reached by the OCEA with the county per&0nnel department. -He voted for placing county depart- ment heads on a monlh-to-month pro- bation status. -He voted against implementation or the Emergency Employment Act, com- monl y known as the PEP program. This federal project has provided more than 1,000 ne1' county jobs for unemployed persons. Ronald \V. Caspe rs, chairman ol the Orange County Board or Supervisors and Gordon "Pete" Fleldlng, genera I man.ager of the county transit dlstric;.. left Tuesday for Washington, D.C. to at- tend sessions of Transpo '72, a federal ttansportatlon needs and development ~xposlt.ion. _ Caspers represents both the supervisors and the district a• a member of the district board of directors. Fielding will study matter.a a:fplicable lo the county's fl edgling rap! tranalt program, including ·intra-and inter.city bus Jlne plans, "Dlal-a-Bus" programs and the latest conetpta in people movln&: developments. • Your gradualt. Gi'9 lhem on Omogo. Aquolil)' gift that di1~ngui1h11 iholl for sly ling, occurocyand tht a111110nc1 of ovar o cantury of quo lily emf bmonship. 01,.~111 sroduot1.a timepiece to rtlyon, •• Omogc) t.ir.wt~ • ........r,,_, W. 111.t ~le "li'llti ..,,,.l .. 'thlatow "-' "-ltf: .... ••tellhll 4!.I. • IU ~ .,,.., .. lllf..t .... •1111 ....... 111 ........ ••t~ltM ,,.. ........ ,.1.i..w... _,.,..,_.,_•••m••--t13( 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., ~OSTA MESA CONVlNllN'f TllMS 2& YfAAS IN SAMf LOCATION IANu.MlltC.00-MASTll CHAl$1 PHON 141·140! ; \ -' ' ·-,. --• ' I • • r' • • Saddlehaek Teday' .. Flaal N.Y. S,.._ • VO~. 65, NO. 0152, 5 SECTIONS, 64 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEONESOA Y, MAY 3 I, I 9n TEN CENTS ,.. . Mesa :tll}rine Ending Roseless Career By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .. 0.llY Pli.t lltH 1 home garage repair shop shov.·s a USMC drill instructor screaming the slogan at a Nobody promised Willson Price i rose garden 30 ears ago last week, when he joined t U.~. Marine Corps and left Now 50, Price was principal developer of a radio communication system based on the Navajo language, one or 200 tribesmen Japanese soldiers in the South Paclfic craved to capture. "I just bad some shrapnel and a busted leg," says the man who is at Camp Pendleton today, tying up last loose. end! of a 30-year career lrom which he formally retired Friday as a master sergeant. wide-eyed young trainee: 1 Window k, Ariz., for a world torn by war. · Nobody mised Price the glamor and glory that his bestows when you 're on the right side d you win. Nobody prom' the young Navajo In- dian anything but a ·on: Music Program Set at V-if!jo Mission Viejo High ~hool's Spring Music Concert, featuring both band and chorus, will take place Thursday end Friday at 7; 30 p.m. in the school gym. Friday will also be music awards night. . Tickets for adults are $1.50; students, $1 and children uoder 12, free. Tickets can be purchased at the door. None of the Navajos -classed as top secret personnel -were ever taken prisoner but casualties Were heavy. Price, of 871 Victoria St., Costa Mesa, won his own particular Purple Heart on Guadalcanal in 1943, but told the medics lo take care of the badly wounded first. "l spent three months strapped to a hospital bed In New Zealand," says the television repair shop owner to whom nobday ever promised a rose garden. A Marine Corpe recruiting poster in his "We don't promise you a rose garden." Price says he dkln 't plan for a r.tarine Corps career, but found educational op-, pcrtunltles a Navajo youth couldn 't ex·" pect otherwise. He didn't join It out of personal bravado; there was a world war in prog- (See MARINE, Page %) Battin Oppose~ Employes' Group Cites 15 Reasons By JACK BROBACK Of Ille D1llr Plitt Sllff The Orange Coiinty Employes Associa. tion, representing more than 8,000 county workers, today. issued a special bulletin to me1nbers urging that First District in- cumbent Supervisor . Robert Bettin be defeated in his bid for a second term on Headlined: Special June 6 (primary the board. election date) Election Bulletin, the letter "For the first time in the history of the· -urges ~trongly that association members OCEA, we feel we must oppose the "' 1 . t 8 11. . bid r I reelection of ·an incwnbent member of vo e • aga1ns a in s or re-e ec- the Board of Supervisors," the letter to 'f,n." members ·read. .. "A vote against Battin Is a vote ror ,---------------------------, good government," the letter concludes. • Enerny Troqps .Make Offer To S.irrrender · K . . . R Is-s•nge~ eams· Listed are ts reasons why the board or __ direct.ors _of: the....OCEA_feel -that-Batun - should not be reelected. They include: SAIGON (UPI) -At least 100 Nonh Vietnamese soldiers caught up in the ~at­ tle for Kantum have offered to surrerider to government troops inside the city, front dispatches reported today. The dispatches said the Communists Jost more than 3,000 dead in the battle for Kontwn. It was the first known mass surrender offer of the war by North Vietnamese although some Viet c.ong units !W'· rendered in the past, tlte dispatches said. Heavy fighting continued in some Breu of Kontum and wavet: of' B52s bombed Communist positions near the city in 'vhat .spokesmen called the heaviest strikes since the Communist offenaive began on March 30. But the front dispatches indica~ those inside the city apparently bad had enough. John Paul Vann, the senior U.S. ad· viser in the Central Highlands, told newsmen of the surrender offer and said negotiations went on all day. He said the Communists broke in on South Vietnamese radio frequencies with the surrender offer and that Jjt.one point four Coml)lunist !N!9.PS, .~amts ~in the a.ir and without Weapons, began walking toward government lines. However, they disappeared behind e small knoll and did not appear again. Vann said Sooth Vietnamese troops wereJ-ordered not to fire into the sur· render area of the city and that the Com-· munists were not firing there, either. He would not Identify the North Viel· ' namese unit involved because that might ! jeouardize the negotiations. "Things are going well in Kontum" despite the continued heavy fighting, Vann said. "The North Vietnamese in the city have a sho.rtage of supplies. !l'hey have no replactments and units that have taken heavy losses have been denied permission to pull ogt of the city." Meanwhile, a U.S. spokesmen reported the heaviest American air raids around the major t-;orth Vietname!!e port of Vinb since the Communist oflenslve began. Citizen Groups Schedule Meets Around Irvine • Six Irvine citizens advisory committees have meetings scheduled tonight and Thursday. •• Belly Dancer Finds Henry's Lap TEHR>.N (AP) -Henry A. Kissinger met a belly dancer early today and she ended up in his lap. . • The raven·haired beauty, 28-year-old· Nadina Parsa, was performing for several hundred journalists and government officials at a dinner party given by the Ministry of Information when President Nixon's bachelor aide arrived after midnighL .. SUll 1n tails and white tie after the state dinner given for President Nixon by the Shah of Iran, Kissinger immediately attracted a crowd. After he and Prime Minister Amir Abba.s Hoieyda were seated on cush- ions in the hotel ballroom, the dancer, who had been gyrating on the stage, was led over. Dressed in her shimmering costume with discs th'e size of sliver dollars on her breasts, she performed a pulsating dance a few feet from Kl83inger and the prime Jni#'!er, kilsed the prime 1Ilinlster'1 cbeek and plopped iD· xis. lnger'1 'l1p. ,, The White House swinger, whose date! with Anierican beauties have made hlm the talk of Washington; beamed broadly. "I will be back," be aaid as he left the party. • U.S. Gives LA 2 Years T·o Meet Air Controls • • WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Retreating from an earlier stand, the government to- day granted more than 25 cities including Los -Angeles; San Francisco a n d Sacramento, a two year delay In im- posing traffic controls needed to reduce air pollution. The action gave the cities until mid· 1977 to meet limits oo the amount of carbon monoxide or photochemical ox- idants in the air. The originJ deadline was mid-1975. Both pollutants come prim rily from auto exhaust, and spokesmen confirmed that lhe delays were granted so the cities would not have to impose traffic controls. The concessions on regulating com- muter traffic, perhaps the m o s t politically sensitive area of Pollution control, were included in rulings by the Environmental Protection Agency on plans submitted by SO states and five jurisdictions to meet air cleanup stand- ards mandated bY the 1970 Clean Air Act. EPA Administrator William D. Exchange Club Sets Meeting on Thursday The Exchange Club of the Saddleback Valley will meet at noon Thursday at the Jolly Ox reataurant in Mission Viejo. Club member Edward Hatter. an in· vestment manager, will speak on "What You lla\'.e to Know About Investing." • Ruckelsha us approved plans submitted by nine states, plus Guam, Puerto Rico and American Samoa. Plans from the other 41 states plus the District of Colum· bia ani:I the Virgin Islands were approved in part and disapproved in part. Approval was given to plans submitted by Alabama, Connecticut, FI or id a , Mississippi, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon and Wt:st Virginia. If the disapproved, provisions are not changed to the EPA's satisfaction, the agency must Impose its own plans on recalcitrant states. (The Asociated Press said a day-old court order clouded the validity of the EPA action. (That order, a major victory for en- vironment groups, required Ruckelshaus to review the plan.s and grant approval Only if they give complete protection to air already cleaner than required by federal standards. .. (There was · no ·Immediate an- nouncement whether the government would appeal,. the AP 1aid.) The act set a mid-1975 deadline for ~ meeting the standards but empowered the EPA to grant two additional years for areas where cleanup technology is in· adequate. In announcing the standards on April 30, 1971, Ru ckelshaus warned that many cities would have to limit downtown traf· fie by mid-1975. He said he anticipated no delay. But a number of cities subsequently re- (See POLLUTE, Pa1e Ii -Battin alone voted against adoption of salary, fringe benefits and conditions or emp loyment in an agreement reached by the OCEA with the county personnel department. -lie voted for placing county depart· ment heads on a month.to-month pro- bation status. -He voted against implementation of the Emergency Employment Act, com- monly known as the PEP program. This federal project has provided more tha n 1,000 new county jobs for uneinployed persons. -Battin attempted to replace planning commission members with his own personal appointees for hls own Personal reasons. The letter also states 'that Battin voted qalaot new l!lm~lcatioat •"Of·~li)iploye joDI, ·and recluslflcatloit ot pc)sltJons "that affect county em;iloyu until February of this year." "With his reelection on the ballot ln JUQe, 1972, why do you think he changed his vote against county employes? 1" the letter adds. A! a final thrust the OCEA bulletin states, "the news med.la has amply revealed the machine politics and spoils system represented by Battin. Is this the kind of government you want?" Snipe.t(Bomb Kill Two More British Soldiers BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - Sniper fire and the bombing of a heavily guarded Belfast army.Police station killed two British soldiers today, raising the death toll to live in two days of pro- vincali violence -despite a cease-fire declared by a wing of the Irish Republi- can Anny. Gunmen killed two civilians Tuesday in appareni assassination strikes in Belfast and Ballynastreagh, a small town 30 miles south or Belfast. A 12·year-old Protestant girl wounded Sunday by gun- fire in Belfast died Tuesday night. The deaths brought the fatality toll in nearly three years or Northern 1reland violence to 357. Ba!Oed army officers launched an in· vestigalion into how a bomb was smug- gled inside the heavily fortified joint army·police ~station in Belfast's Roman Catholic Springfield Road district and planted In a locker room . The blast at 1he station, which was turned into a virtual fortress ayear ago after IRA members hurled a suitcase full of explosives into its entrance, injured two Civilians and six soldiers. One of the troops died of his injuries . The other soldier died early tod ay when bullets whizzed through a back door o[ .his armored car in Belfast's catholic Andersonstown district. smashed through the driver's seat and killed him. DAILY PILOT Sllft ,.... COOE AUTHOR PRICE REFLECTS ON 30.YEAR CAREER They Didn't Proml1e Him a RoH Garden and It Wasn't Regents Fund Aids UCl's , _Co~~~ty Plan S~u.dy A lolal of 125,0llO of UC llltl!Blll',f!u41,, to encourage parttclpa,Uon In m\miamty· planning efforts ha. been allocated to \JC Irvine. campu1 planner Eugen<-Uematsu (pro. nounced Weh-mabt'-900) said todaiy aome of the money bu Jone to pay usistant UCJ planner Melvyn Roop to attend even-ing meetings of the Irvine City Council, planning comip.Jsslon and advisory com· mittees. The bullk of the plaMing funds. however, have been allocated to two research studies being completed by the Public Policy Research Organization (PPRO) attached to the UCI program In socia l ecology. One study will project population trends in Orange county cities and unin- corporated areas for the period 1960 to 1985, providing a baai8 for UC declslon affecting UCI programs, and yielding base date for future studies In areas such a~ housing and transportation, Uemal.su said. revealOd p~ to d<velop 11! 000 ·~ ty ol QO,OllO -Jo OD~ U.0 10,000 acra covered by the Porelnt pion. Uematsu uld ho ,... no conlllcl In the lntenUona Of the two pl1na. Ha 111Qelled the Regentl' concern la that the Irvine campua, ln order to be viable, moat bl surrounded W-a contmuiilty Or It least 100,000 persons on the adjacent 10,000 acres. ~ thal end. the regents funds, and the base population projections the money ii paying for, will aid the University lit defining Ila growth needs. "It's up to us to let the ne!a:hboring cities know what it ls we need from them," Uematau added. In turn, UCI la otrerlng 111 lnlormaUon and guidance to the neighboring cltle.s, iD- cluding the new city of Irvine. Caspers Attends Transpo.-t Meet The other study, for which Sl,<XMl has been set aside as UCJ's contribution, will provide an updated census of school i:hildren produced by communities sur-&nald W. Caspers, chalrman of the rounding ucr. Orange County Board of Supervlson and Earlier the Regents' funds paid for Gordon ''Pete" Fielding, g e n er a l UCI' h f th o eve I 0 Pm en t manager of the county tran11lt district, s s. are 0 . e d f h left Tuesday for Washington, D.C. to at-Economics Institute stu Y 0 t e -tend sessions of Transpo '72 a federal economt.c ~ffecl.s of the P r 0 P 0 8 e d transportation needs and d~velopment reorgan1zallo~ of the Tustin Unlon ~~gh exposition. School ~ls~r1ct Into three new un ied Casper! r e P re s en t s both the school d1str1cts. UC I contributed $4,000 to supervisors and the district a11 a member that study. The Irvine Company paid for of the district board of directors. the balance of the $6,900 research. Fielding will study matters applicable The community planning grant to UCt to the county's Dedgllng rapid· transl• ts part of a statewide commitment of program, including Intra.and lnter~lty $309,000_of Regents funds to Involve each bus Jine plana, uDilJ·a·Bus" programs o~ the nine campuses ln.communlty J>lan-and tile latert concepts in people movln& rung. . developmenta. I A UC spokesman said the money ...._ assigned to Irvine ls '1to ensure that the r-------------. development of the campus and the cotn· munlty remains in conformance with the Soulh .Trvine Ranch General Land Use Plan a'iid Regents' policies." Uematsu said today the specific dlrec. tlon involves the William Pereira and Associates plan for a 10,000 aere city or 100,000 people announced in 1960. Since then the Irvine Company has Weather The environmental quality group will meet at 7:3'> o'clock lonllht In the ground noor terpporary tjty hall meeting roo.I!L_ tn Irvine-Town Center, 420t -Campus Frlve. The public highways and transportation committee also meets at 7:30 tonight in Room 100 or Humanltiu Hall on the UC Irvine campus. ~in Says Victim 'Pleaded' to Fish Warm temperatures will again visit the southland Thursday with highs al tho beaches at 15 i'lalng lo 80 Inland. Low1 In the I0'1. INSIDE TODi\Y A Treall'TU ogent thtorittd that a leak11 QQ.$ line WOI rt• 1ponsiblt for the trpk>sion that r·ipped through a bomb 1ktlt1f at the l1omt of a Valdeae, N.C .• textil e ezecvtlw. kUling fit>« children. (See 1torw. Pao• 4). Meetings called for ~30 p.m. 11lursday are: Arts and culture In Room 211 ol ltumanitJes U.11, UCI; educaUon, in University Community A s 1 o c I a t i "O n Clubhouse, WO Sandburg Way, and a Joint meeting of the parks and open space and recreation conun1ttet1, in Room 10$ or Humanities Rall. UCJ. Rcmodelln& of the city co u n c 11 chambtrs In Room 200 of !nllne Town Center require the temporary use of the ronner dry cleanlni 1tore oo the llrsl floor of · town ctnter, 1 city opokesmao noted. From Wte services PARKER, Ariz. - A bitter Fletcher Dart reflected today on the tragic death of his ?·year-old Huntington Beach grandson on tile Colorado River over the weekend. The ls.year-old Dari. who lived within blocks o( hfl deceased rolatlve •t SIO Ind SL, In ~ older portion or Huntington Buch, recounted that the boys had . ta::' with blJn all day Saturday to go ''But I ""1lfd 11111i1 night to lei the crazy foob get of! the river.'" he said. "I guea they wennl Ill of!." '!be old« Dari finally look et.ois Dart • and 11-year-old Donald Thomton out on the river after dark and was fishing about 9 p.m. when a powtr cruiser rammed and then passed over thtir own 17-foot aluminum craft. Young Dari was apparently hit by tho propeller of the. power cruller and was reportedly dead before rescuers -could pull the llwnlnum craft lo shore. Young Thornton was rushed by air to 1 Phoeniz hospital wlth· a badly mauled leg. llh condition"" nported aatiltaclory. The elder Dafl was lo the back of the boat and was not serioualy hurt. "We were anchored cloae to the ahore: with our ruMlng lights on," Dart recall- ed. "f h~d Just baited the boys' hooks and had accidently kk:ked over a tackle bo1. "I b<nt o_ver to pick II up and It h•1>- pened. The boat juat came out or nowhere and ran right over ua. I thought we were golng to 1lnk.11 The power crui>er reportedly otoilt>od· momentarily after the accident and -then sped off. " · "It was a clear case of bit and run," 0.rt claimed. · · Yuma County Sheriffs, who are handl· Ing Investigation of Utt mlshap which oo- curred 1boul 10 m11 .. north of Parm, • Arii.ona. said they have located the boat believed to have been Involved. The Yuma County attorney'a office bu added that the boat Is reg\attred to -Dona1d--A. Pay1e, owner of a marine aup- ply store In Newport Beach. . No arrests heve befn made or war .. ram. Issued. Funeral arrangementl for Chril Dart have been :iet for 2 p.m. at the Ep\tc0pal Church of Huntington Beach. Interment wtll be at Westminster Memotlal Park. Dart ·la IUl'Vived Ii)' h\1 par..U,J R!Chan!Tnd Nancy, ariil i 1lif~ ca. They live ol 733 Lake St., Huntington Stach. --· ' t ' J.2 uAll~ PILOT IS w.....,.;<ll;y )1, 1912 Pair Get $250,0_00, Arrested EUGENt:, Ore. (UP!) -A couple who allegedly threatened to biol> up a 396-bed Roman Catholic hospital have been ar- rested as they picked up a package con- taining $250,000 in ransom mooey and an electronic .. beeper," authorlUes reported today. · FBI agents said Charles R. Bobkiewicz, 34, Cottage Grove, Ore., unemployed, and • hia wife, Betty Lou, 31, a waitress, were taken into CU!tody six miles 80Uth of here u they picked up the mooey alongside a freeWay. They were booked on a federal charge of interfering with interstate commuCe. • • Vincent E. -Ruehl, assistant special agent in charge of the Oregon FBI office. Biid Sacred Heart General Hospital was ,,Prehed and no bomb was found. . Ruehl said a helicopter equipped wi)h' a i1homlng" device to track the movement of the money package hovered over ~e drop area as the couple arrived at the scene. Police Olitf Dale Allen said all p0ckagea brought Into the ho!pital had !>Oen searched .a~ the first tetepbooed .tbrta.t was Made at 4:10 p.m. He said he fru "confident" there was oo bomb in tlle bolpllal. . • "The money -In lllD4IJ bills as demand- el --waa left at the pickup site by a policewoman posing u the nun in charge of the hospital. · The caller told hospital officials he Well Shtit My Mouth! wwld pick up the money at iO p.m. and Thomas Hall, 25, of_ Salem, Mass ., gasps as he is named winner of ·$.l telephoned one hour later to give the million at the drawing of the Massachusetts lottery. Hall, who makes locaUoo of the bomb. At ·~ '""-1•·1 -~•·•·tr to d··" $125 weekly at the New England Telephone Co .. said, "I'm going ed to'';~e·'tb: ~;ti:J:t ~rsm~~ to quit my job." Hall and his wife Susan accepted check for $50,000 ~eu:i:,_afleUalka .wtlbJl!o.FBI_an_d ~ ~nd_ will receive a similar check f or $50,000_in_each of the next 19 police they agreed to bide an ~ectronic _...:y:..e_ar_s_. _ __;_ _____________________ _ "beeper" in the· package._ - The OOx wu the aize of a care Of beer. • The utortJonllt made a second call two bO'ura after h1a first conversation but cerminated it when he heard a click, police said. "The ,JocatilJI for the drop was made final on a ,_.d call. •• • Another Nader: Girl, 11, Duke of Windsor ·'.Returns to Land He Once Ruled !{aps Saturday TV Ads WASHINGTON (AP) - A Florida school girl told Congress toc'lay that some Saturday morning television commercials aimed at kids are deceptive and might even be dangerous. Dawn Ann Kurth, 1,1. of Mel~urne'.s Meadowlane Elementar'y Schbol, s:&Jd "'I don't think children realize what the com- mercials are doing." children"s television as part of a school project for above-average students. "For the first time, I really began to think about what the commercials were saying," she said. "I have always listen- ed before and many times asked my mother to buy certain ·products I bad seen advertised. But now I was listening and really thinking about what was belng said." . BENSON, England (UPI) -The Duke .r~---hl ... lh _,"'the ·1ind he once ruled aa Klng Edward Vlll, · ~ding the long exile that followed hi• if>. Ntence on marrying the · American divorcee for whom he gave up the tlifone. As the chi\dren grow older, to ages 10 and 11\ tbey tend ftottie' skeptlcif df ithe commercials, she told the Senate con· sumer subcommittee. "They start believ· ing teaclfers and other adults." (See earlier story, Page 4). • ·A Royal Alr Force VClt of Queen Elizabeth's own fleet of planes brought -Ole coffin of her uncle, draped with his red and gold personal standard, back from Paris where he died Sunday of a P.fOlonged illness believed to be cancer of ihe throat. The 'T>year-old duchess was ill with strain and shock and did not 1crompany the body of ber Tl-year-old husband as •he plaruied. · She Js apecl.ed to arrive Friday in another royal plane for the funeral in St. George's Chapel at Wlndlor Monday. She wjll be a guest of the queen at Buck· 11.gham Palace. f A black hearse with motorevcle escort jped from the Wlnd.5or maiision to a french air base at the village of Dugny. -~ijack Plea Inno~ ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ricardo Chavez-Ortiz, aceused of hijacking a jetliner from Phoenix to Uls Angeles In l\pril, pleaded innocent Tuesday in U.S. District Court here. The 36-year-old Mex- Jcan national is charged with air piracy. ;:rudge Francis C. Whelan set June rJ for ' trial before federal Judge Charles H. ~r. • • 1 OUN•I COAST DAILY PILOT Tit. Ofoltlte CH1t DAILY PILOT, Willl Mllm 11 co..,.rllf'lf tti. N._Pr,n. 1, p.ibllihed bY ~' Or•noe C011t l"llbll1lllnt Compa11y. 51'pao r•!' lldillo..• ''' tiublJ,l'ltd, MDl"dty tll~lt f rich7, tor Cos!t Mnt, Newport ''tdl. 11wnlln;19" ll•tcll/~oun1tln Vtl~, LllOUM llHtll, 0lrw~IS1ddldlltk ¥od S.11 Cltmttl .. ( S.n J11•11 Cepl111-" 1!nglt ""UloMI .. .Ol!ion II P11lltl1lltd Sttw.,,1y1 tncf Sundays. riw princ:lp.111 Plltlllhlnl pi.111 Is '' D wnl .. ., S1rt10, Cttlt MtM, C11Jtomi., r.•A. Robert N. w,,d PtHllMn! tlllll .... bNf J•tl: R. C1i11l,y Vitt ,,ttlcf.,t tnll ~•I MMlttf' Th•'"•• IC•••il Eoll.!er ThoM•• A. Mlll'phi11• M8N91ft9 Eoltor CJ.•rl•• H. loot l itk•rd r. Nill Aultl-M1-ilrw Ellllotl Offkn As to the connection between disbelief or the commerc1a!s and the adults behind them, Sen. Frank Moss (0-Utali), said "We have a word for that, alienation." Throughout the hearing , the school girl In plaid, bangs, and green knee socks, was composed and thoughtful. She said she studied Saturday morning From Page 1 POLLUTE .•• quested a tw~year postponement. Irwin Auerbach. director o[ the EPA staff ~.-hich reviewed the state plans, told UPI that almost all those requests weri; granted. "The fact that a city got an extension doesn°t mean it's off the hook forever,'.' Auerbach said. He said the EPA could reconsider and force a city to meet the 1975 deadline. Cities granted the two-year delay in· elude Birmingham and Mobile, Alo .; -Phoenix and Tuscon, Ariz.; Denver, In- dianapolis, Kansas City, Mo., and Kansas City, Kan.: Baltimore ; Washington, D.C.; Bost.on; h1inneapolis and St. Paul, Minn.; Newark ; New York City and Rochester, N.Y.; Dayton and Toledo, Ohio; Pittsburgh and~ Philadelphia; Corpus Christi, Houston and Galveston, Tex., and Seattle, Wash. Laurence ]. fl.toss, vice president or the Sierra Club, crit.icized the EPA action and said cjties quickly could curb tralflc by buying more buses. "We shouldn't waste any time/' Moss said. "lt's abundantly clear that in most of our large mettopolltan areas it wUI be nHessary to restrict use of the automobile if we're going to meet the standards." Housing Project Begins in Viejo A new adult community is being con· stnicted in Mission Viejo. C.lt Mnt: )II Wtll l•r 1 ....... llf...,-t 9eKPI: SW NtW'llOl"t louirtvlf'd ~ a..dl: m Fern•..,_ loflllril""9fM •tllt'JI: 11111 llMCll lovJft'9•11 "" (*'*"'I JU Nor1'I ~· Ct"'lno. 11: ... ' Cltlled ca.ta dcl Sol, the housing proJ· • I T .. 1 •• 111 f 714J 64J..4J21 c .............. ,.2.1611 S-Cl .. A• hp•,,_.lltl: T•"•' I 4ft.44t• ect is being rtesigned for adults over 45- yearHf·age without children. The first phase of the 1,000.acre piano neighborhood will ~mprise 92 acres east or Marguerite Parkway and north of La Paz Road. It will be built en a series cl hills ln Mlsston Viejo'& oorlhem sector. 1be first Wlit of home.-. wUI overlook Saddleback Mountain and lhe Oso Creek Vall•y. De>lgned by Grougold Associates. Joe. of Seal Be•c.ll.Jbe.bome1 wW be two &ocl -tliiiibtdrooms. The new nelghborht!.od will have 1ts own recreallonal facllltles Including a new golf course . In a ooe-hour period she 'sllid she counted 70 commercials on lhe three networks. Miss Kurth said she felt that cer- tain commercials for candy· coated vitamins might even be dangerow:. "If my mother were to buy those vitamins and my little sister got into the bottles I'm sure she would eat them just as if they were candy," she said. She submitted a quest ion n air e ansv.•ered by some 1,500 third-through sixth-graders: -1.203 said they asked their mother \o buy the products seen on TV; 330· said they did not. · -1,120 said they asked for a product to get the free bonus girt; 413 said they did not. -668 said they were satisfied with the product; 873 said they were not. -1,113 said that they believed certain products seen in the commercials made them happier and that they would, have more friends ; 420 said they did not believe that. -918 said tbey felt their mother was mean because she wouldn't buy the prolr uct they wanted ; 620 said she wasn 't. From Pagel MARINE ..• ress and the corps' re<:ruiter got to him firs!. The Navajo code he .helped develop 'after-specialized Indian studies confused and confounded the Japanese, who generaUy performed Vo'ith polish when imitating American accents on the air. ''The Japanese had English-speaking men that listened to our radio and .,. telephone conversation and some could even get into the conversation by im· itating Brooklyn or Deep South accents," he explains. One monitor brazenly began a strategy chat with Fleet Admiral Ches t er Nimitz. ' "Excuse me, Admiral, but that's not a buddy rou're talking to," said Price, in· terruptmg the talk. Indian dialect is what jinxed the Japanese. "To my knowledge, the rode was never cracked by the enemy," hf explains, noting every explanatory book v"as burned at war's end. Research lnto his own heritage al.so revealed ao historical Indian hoax, says Sgt. Price, who notes most tribes used runners to deliver messages before Nava· jos had radio. 1 "I was surprised lo 1 ... m !bat smoke signals and tom-tom messagH were strictly Hollywood," he erpla.lns. So ""'Sl>me of Sgt Price's· Pacific comliat rt<Ollectlons. · H• te!11,4f one tribeman'a capture.lly what -In earlier tvars -would .hive been the enet!IJ', bul OD !WO Jlma WU hil own side. -. I Fatal Crash . Bombings Mar Is Probed Nixon's · Leaving In Oemente Disn.eyland Tour Seven top railroad officials from the Soviet Union will include Disneyland and a railroad exhibit in Anaheim in their itinerary during a tour of American rail installations beginning today. The officials are coming to the U.S. to visit Transpo, 72, an exbibition at Dulles lntemaUonal Airport in Virgina featur~ ing new developments in the transporta- tion field. The delegation, headed by Minister of Railroads ~ri.9 Pavlovich Breschev, \fill spend several days in New York before traveling lo california: Jn Anahei'11, they will vi.!lit the Southern Pacific Railroad locomotive simulator and will take a few hours off to see Disneyland -and probably ride the monorail. They will also visit San Fran· cisco prior to returning to MOSCilw June 11. GEM TALK i j ~ TODAY ' • i by J. C. HUMPHRIES GRADUATION WATCHES . . I The watch, for generations the traditional college graduation gift, is today appreciated also by child· ren at grade and high school level. Choice of a watch for graduates at any level was formerly a simple m~tter of selection· by price and style. A watch"was a watch, its al· most casual purchase usually re- sultlbg In genuine appreciation. Today, modern technologyiind styling have combined with special· ized uses to make satisfactory·•• Jection infinitely more difficult • There are, bowever, steps you can take to make sure your graduate will wear Ibis gilt with pride and pleasure •. You should be aware of your graduate's activities and of the kinds and styles of. watches w9m by bis friends. You sliould then see a reliable local jeweler and dlscun your problem. We have watchu t..--all-•1e1, from rugged Umepleces for active children to the most sophlstlcated and speclall.zed watches available. And II, in splte of all your care, your graduate wants something dll· ~ ferenl, we'll gladly exchange for exactly what he want.. area. Meets Thursday Saddlebaek Juni(f" College Advisory Committee on Real Estate will meet at 8 a.m. Thursday in the college board room. The advisory oonunittee is composed of representative from the college and com- munity and D'lffts to discuss college educational program!. ' Conununity representatives a r e : Douglas Krauter, Leisure World Foun- dation community relations director; Don Osen, member Tustin Board of Realtors; Norman Rudolph, San Clemente realtor; Don Simpkins oC South Orange County Board of Realtors; and Robert Turner, president of Laguna Beach Board of Realtors. By JORN VAL TERZA 01 1114 Otllr Plit'J SllH The District Attorney's ornce today began considering the f1ling ol ct>mplainlt i\temming from last weekend's crash of a San Clemente police patrol car and a small pickup t~ck in which one yout~ v.'as fatally injured and four , other persons were hurt. California Highway Patrol cfficers said this morning that two main factors assertedly contributed to the tragedy at El Camino Real and CaNe Dolores late .F'riday afternoon. Spokesmen for the CHP said the prime factor in the mishap was the asserted high speed of the police unit being driven by Patrolman Gary Adams, who was respond~g to a call involving a car being driven erratically . The secondary factor, CHP aides ad- ded, was the asserted failure to yield the right of \Vay by 16-year-old Daniel Alan Cross of Long Beach, who was assertedly at the wheel of the small pickup truck. The high·spced, rear-end collision claimed the life of Joseph Britt, 16, of Long Beach, v.'ho. suffered fatal head and internal injures when he was thrcwh from the bed of the truck after the im· pact. The estimated speed of the patrol car was bet~·eeu 65 and 70 miles per hour, said CHP reports, quoting several witnesses. The one prime. consideration added, the spokesmen, was that the patrol vehicle's r ed lights and siren were not operating at the time o(ttle tragedy. The posted speed limit is 30 miles per hour. -·· Adams,..himself,.sulfered minor injii.ries. in the mishap and was released alter' emergency treatment at ' Mlssion Com- muOity Hospital. The other tv.·o passengers and the driver of the small pickup suffered paln-- f ul. but relatively mild injuries. The case v.'hich started the tragic se· quence of events began when a citizen walked into police headquarters and reported a late-model blue car being driven by a "crazy or drunk'' driver. The reporting party also furnished police with the license number of the vehicle a~ing a San Clemente resident as owner. CHP investigators indicated t h a t Adams apparently had the vehicle in his sight as he accelerated along the nearly deserted highway . As he drove to intercept the vehicle the small pickup pulled onto the road from a side street, faltered for a brief moment, th~n assertedly drove in front of Adams' car. The youlh.!i, all from Long Beach, were apparently beaded toward a camping outing during the Memorial D a y weekend. Their camping gear and suppliea were slrev.11 over a wide area after the lmpact. I Yourgroduole. Give them on Pmeva.A quo lily gift that d;slinguishes ilwll /orslyling, occurocy ond IR• assurance or ovir a century of qUofltycraftsmoMhip.. Givt yoyr gradua:e.a timepiece to refy ~n.,,OmegoJ M•wfMlllt. ........i.tr.et"" •tt o,r...~ _.i,. ..... , ... .,.., o1..a ~ -...... u .. •I. _.;__ -'.Id ...... .,._Ii;. $111•'"'41• -1"-...... m .. lllltl ft 11.,~l<ou ........... ,.., ..... _ --t!U' J.C. .J/~mphritJ~ OO ewefer4 1823 NEWPORT Bl VO., COST A MESA CONVENIENT TElMS 21 YE.All IN SAME lOCATION • -- IANKAMERICAltD-MASTE.-CHAl6E 'HONI 141·J4GI -- • ' I I • " • l .. -·-·--~·· Hunting.ton Beaeh . ' Fountain Valle1 Today's ~••al N.Y .. Stoe.ks voe 65, NO. ·1s2,. 5 SECTIONS, 64 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 31, 1972 TEN CENTS Huntington Seeks Federally Funded Projects By TERRY COVILLE Cl tl'lt D4111r f'llel llllf Huntington Beach hopes to snag a few million federal dollars to build a beach front convention center, industrial park facilities and a commercial marina. These and S@Veral other public works projects are on a list of objectives designed by Bill Back. the city's economic development coordinator. "We hope we can get 50 percent federal Powerboat A cement Described From Wire Services PARKER, Ariz. -A bitter Fletcher Dart reDected today on the tragic death .__of _.his 7·year-0ld Huntington Bea~h · grandson ·on the Colorado River over the \ ·weekend. · The 65-year-old Dart, ·who lived wiihin blocks of his deceased relative at 310 2hd St., in the older portion of Huntington ~each, recounted that the boys had leaded with him all day .Saturday to go shing. ~·But I waited until night to Jet the crazy fool s get orr the river," he said. "l guess they weren 't all off." The elder Dart finally took Chris Dart , and 11-year-old Donald Thornton out on the river after dark and was fishing ebout 9 p.m. when a power cruiser rammed and then passed over their own 17-foot aluminum craft. . Young Dart was apparently hit by the propeller Qf the power. eruiser ,and was reportedly dead befo rescuers could pl!).l the aluminum craft to shore. Young Thornton was rushed by-air to a Phoenit hospital with a badly maQleil leg. Hil condition T:as reported aat.i.sf.tctory. The elder DaIW'as in the back of the boat and was not seriow:ly hurt. "We were anchored ·close to the !bore with our running lights on,'' Dart recall- ed. "I had just baited the boys' hooks and had accidently kicked over a tackle box. "I bent over to pick it up and it ha~ pened. The boat just came out of nowhere and ran right over us. I thought we were going to sink ." The power cruiser reportedly stopped momentarily after the accident and then sped off. "It was a clear case of hit and nm," Dart claimed. • Yuma County Sheriffs, who are handl- ing investigation of the mishap fhtch oc- curred about 10 miles north of Parker, Ari1.0na, said. they ba"ve located the boat believed to have been'involved. ,._ The Yuma County attorney's offi~e has added that the boat is registered to Donald A. Payse, owr:ier of a marine suir ply store in Newport Beach. No arrests have been made or war- rants issued. Funeral arrangements for Chris· Dart have been ;:et for 2 p.m. at the Episcopal Church of Huntington Beach. Interment will be at Westminster Memorial Park. Dart is survived .by his parents, .-~~~ard and Nancy, and a sister, Rebec--ta. "They live at 733 Lake St., Huntington Beach. · Rosa1·y Slated For'ji~tington · Traf fie Victim 'RosaryYor Terry de Jong, who died Saturday from injuries ahe suffered after being hit by a car, will be recited at 7 o'clock tonight at the Dilday Brothers Mortuary in Huntington Beach. Mass for the--girl, who was an 11-year, old fifth grader at St. Francis Elemen. tary School, is scheduled !or 10 a.m. Thursda y at St. Simon and Jude Catholic Church in Huntington Beach. She will he buried at the Good Shepherd Cemetery. The youn811ter, 19912 Gtouchester Lane }luntington Beach, had been in crltic;i condition at Pacifica Hospital since she · a~ three other children were struck f.lay 20 by a car driven by a juvenile. She is survived by her mother, Mrs. Catherin de Jong ol Huntington Beach ; her father, Andrew de Jong of Santa Ana: two, sisters1 'Mary and Julie, and a brother, Hank. all of the home. and an uncle, Leo de Ro~ ol Holland. Ex-official Dies SOUTH PAsAIJEMA (AP) ~Henry P. ••pat" Sullivan ~ former -.ecretary of 1tate, died~y, appattntly of riatural causes, the poroner't offke said. 6oillvan, 50, was lound dead In a cbfjr in, 1 vacant -by tmployes for a moving \'an company. He had planned to move !rom 1 -nearby, oUlclall Pld. - funding through the Economic Develop-- ment Administration (EDA)," Back ex~ plained today. The federal government has authorized $30 riiillion for nine western states in another effort to "creat e jobs," Back said. The money can be spent on general public works projects which will have a lasting benefit to tl!_e community. The city must make its requests through the county, which has the responsibility for designing an overall economic development program. The .Orange County Board o f Supervisors Tuesday approved the coun· , ty's participaUon in the EDA program. The couifty is eligible because the unemployment figure is about six per- cent. "We don't know how much money we can get," Back said. "But we 'll try for all of it we need." ~ILY PILOT ltaft ,._,. The most glamorous prOject on the list would be a beach front c<mventlon center. Back said the federal government granted $898,000 to Oshland, Ore., In 1969 for construction of a 800-seat 'auditorium and ·indoor theater. "That could be the keystone to our downtown cleanup. We could create a tourist industry," Back said. City officials have not worked on details or such a convention center yet. Back said city proposals probably will not go before a county committee for another 60 days. He had no cost fJgure on such a con- vention center, but said whatevtr the price, the city would p1 y half under the EDA program. Back also said he has no cost figures for building a marina in the Sunset Bay area near Huntington Harbour , bu~ added that the re is a need for such a marina. The projects for whirh he holds the mos t hope, however. In volve im- provements to two key industrial areas ill the city. Back "'OU\d li ke to sec the city install Sl n1illion worth of "'ater, sey,·er. gas and electric Hnes. as well as curbs. gutters and stor1n drains ln the ~luntington Beach lndustrial Park bet'A'een Bolsa and Edinger avenuts and Springdale and (See FUNDS, Page %) Surrender Sought 100 Reds Make Offer .at Kontum • SAIGON (UPI) -At least 100 North 11eavy lighting continued in some areas negotiations went on all day. Vietnamese soldiers caught up in the bat-of Kontum and waves of B52s bombed tie for Kontum have offered to surrender Communist positions near tlie city in He said the Communists broke In on South Vietnamese radio frequencies with the surrender offer and that at one point to government troops inside the city, what spokesmen called the heaviest front dispatc9e;s reported today. strikes since the Communist offeMlve The dis~tChes said the Commublst$ began on March 30. . four Commun!Jl troops, buds lo tile atr . and. without weapons. began walklnl toward government llnes. How.ever, they disappeared behind • small knoll and did to.st.more tllan 3;000""dead iii the battle for Bllt the front di5patches indicated thOse KonlUlllr lnSide. the city apparently had had It was the first known mass sur,,.ender : · enough. .. not appear aga1ri.' ·' . cffer of the war by North Vietnamese John Paul Vann, the senior U.S. ad· although some Viet Cong units sllr· viser · fn the Central HlghlandS, tOld' Vann said South V!et11.4mese troops were oidered not fo fire ·Into the sur- (See SURRENDER, Page Z) rendered in the past, the dispatches said. newsmen or the surrender offer and said Delay Gi ·ven For High Rise Tower Trial j A one week delay has beta ordered In the Orange County Superior :·c.un bottle between a homeowner grwp and backete of a 17-story apartment tower planned for construction on Adams Avenue in Hun- tington Beach. Judge J.E.T. "Ned" Rutter held the lawsuit filed by Arthur Knox. chairman of the . Citizens Zoning and Variance Association, over until June 6 after hear· ing two days of pre-~imony arguments in the dispute. Kissinger Bea1ns Belly Dancer Finds Henry's Lap TEHRAN (AP) -Henry A. Kissinger mel -a belly dancer early today and she ended up in his lap. Tho raven-haired beauly, 28-year-old Nadina Pana, wu perlol'llllnt for ' -II hojfldre4 ioumaillll •lld .IOf!im111<nl olltclal1 '-t a ~er Plil1.1! ... by the Mlillstry' ol ll!forrnaUon -· Proaldanl Nlxoa I badlilot aldt tafu'cl alter midnight. . 8tl11 tn 1au1 an4 ..mit. Uo<ellfr the llat. cUoner alvlll .~ by Uie Shah C1f Iran, Kilsinaer tmmedlatety attractal a.c:fOWa.:~:.:.·.;. · -~,.....··~ ~ After he and Prime Minister Amir Abbu Hoteyda were eeated on cusho" lonJ lo tho hotel ballroom, the dancer, who had bem w•lln& on the atqe, was led over. Dressed In her ohlmmerlng coatuma with dJllCI the Ille of tllver dollm Oii her breasts, she performed 1 puluUng dl!ICO a low leol lmn Ktuln.ler and the prime minister, kissed tho prime minister's cheek and plopped fu Kls .. inger'a lap. The White House swinger, whose dates with American beauties have made him the talk of Washington, beamed broadly. "I will be back," he said aa he left the party. PAPER AIRP.LANE CONTESTANT JEFF OWYER LETS FLY Al Huntlngl<ln Be1ch'1 Gisler School, 1 Rite of Spring Knox' group has been joined in the court battle by the Huntington HOME Council, an alliance of local homeowners' associations. Both groups are opposing · the construction plans of the First Chris- tian Church. Judge Grants Probation For Valley Cont~actor Paper Gliders •Jn' Gisler Class Sponsors ' Cont;est f-,~I By MICHAEL GOODRICH Of 1M D•llY Plitt St•ff -·Hello fans and welcome to the first annual Gl8ler Paper Airplane Contest." Mrt. Dottle .McClure, a math· teacher at Gisler Intermediate School in Hun· ~gton Beach, had just stepped to the microphone to welcome 700 cheering and waving students. The event Wa$ a paper airplane contest sponsored by Mra. McClure's second period math class and this reporter was among the papel of. judges asked to ptc k the best paper gliders in the school. Mrs. McClure said the idea for the con~ test origihated when a multitude er paper airplanes had begun to show up in classrooms ,as Spring fever captured the design and a strong ·arm as he let go with a 40.fo:<>t flight for. his plane which cap- tured the award for the longest flight. Eric Holmes sent his sm811 plane sail· ing for an eternity ot 4.7 seconds as he captured the award for the longest time in the air. In the "it's-a-good-idea-but-it-will-11ev~­ get-off-the-ground" category, scot t Vander Molen swept top honors with his red .. ~olgred resemblance of a single engine airplane. It was really too nicely constructed to risk damage in flight. Willy Upton wasn't able to make the competition himself, but -his plane, a long paper cylinder with a large loop on one eI)d and a small loop on the other won the Judge Rutter ·gave both sides an in· dication of his future rnllhg.., on the dispute with the comment, during two days of rulings on a series of legal mo- tions, that "the variance was improperly granted in the first place. "I think I'm going to be obliged to hold that the action was invalid," Judge Rut- ter said. If the judge stays wlth that opinion after hearing testimony now scheduled to begin Tuesday, it might mean that the .... city's building director will be ordered to Cancel the building permit granted to the church in January. Construction approved at that time in· volved a portion of the parking lot re- quired for what is planned as a 287-unit, $16 million apartment tower for the ac· commodation of elderly citizens . on Adams Avenue between 17th and Main streets. A Fountain Valley contractor lndicted _the fall tenn and ordered Varney to by the Orange County Grand Jw-y on make restitution. Varney had been charges he overbilled the county by $200 • scheduled to go on trial today. for weed kilUng work was placed on pro-The contrador was arrested by sbel'· bation Monday for one year. tff's officen following a probe of his weed Superior Court Judge William Murray killing activities and the bills he sub- ordered a one year county jail term after mitted for them between March and July Edmund Varney, 571 of 18972 San Carlos of 1971 . St., pleaded nolo contendere (neither County officials said Varney had 'been gui~ty nor innocent) to grand theft responsible for weed abatement on !l,000 charges. parcels of land in unincorporated ter- Judge Murray immediately suspended ritory. . .t The contractor drew $105.746 ror .the Countians Get Raise SAN DIEGO (AP) -Salaries are going up 4.3 percent for the average San Diego city errl ploye, but county employea. will get slightly more. County tupervlsors ap- proved pay raises averaging 5 per~nt Tuesday despite objections of the San operations carried out In 1971 compared to $68.422 paid to him by the county dur· Ing the previous year. Judge Murray promlatd Varney·• lawyer that he would recommend to the State CoritrllCllng L1<tnoe Board that the Fountain Valley man be allowed to retain his 11ce .... students. · -"This time of year paper airplanes pop up everywhere. So we thought it might be a good idea to·su back and enjoy it for a day so the students couJ.d get It out of their &ystems," she said. (See PLANJi:S, Page !) That initial constru ction was necessary to allow the church to apply for a feder!.,. grant from the Department Qf Housing and Urban Development. Federal of· ficials have frozen that application pen- ding Judge Rutter's ruling on the disp1,1te. Diego County Taxpayers Association. Rules, of course, bad been established. Flnt, each student was eligible to enter a plane constructed somewhere off · the ~bool campus. Secondly, for ecological reasons, all entries were to be con· structed from used paper. _ T•nslon filled the school mall as Mrs. McClure called the first contestant~from a field of 30 finalists . .Stuart Shim moUnted the stage, ac· cepted his plane from Mrs. McClure and planted his feet firmly on the floor.'"He reached back with his plane and let it go, clipping a {ew beads in the audience, but turnin& in a mpectable distance or 23~ 1 .. t From that polnt on, paper aviation hiat9'Y wu Jn tilt making at Gisler. Paul ChapUn turned in an amazing pertor:inanco with .his loop and circle plane. By "throwing the ingeniously deslcned plane !tom Ill nooe, he was able to make it Dy loops and by releasing i( from Ill tall, beomade it Dy Jn circles. It -sood enough to 1'ln him the awards for best entry and best stunt flight. ~ J1110W1ky dtmCJ!151rated a sletk ·'Dangerous' School Girl Hits TV Ads ~ WASffiNGTON (AP) -A Florida was composed and thoughtful. school girl told Congress today that so me She said she studied Saturd ay morning Satu rday morning television commercials childten's televisiori as part Cl( a achoo! aimed at kids are deceptive and might project for above-average students. eyen be dangerous. "Fot the fl.rat tlme, I really began to Dawn AM Kurth, 11, of Melbourne'• think about what the commerciall were Meadowfane Elementary School, said "I saying," she uld. "I have alway1 lilten· don't think children realize what the com· t;d before and many times asked my mercials are doing." mother to buy certain products I had As the children grow older, to ages 10 seen advertised. But now I was llttentng •nd 11, they t.nd to be skeptical of the and really thinking about what was being commercials, ahe told the· Senate con. said." sumer subcommittee:. "'nley ·•tart bellev. \· In a on&hour period abe said ahe ing teachers 'and other adults." <See counted 70 commercial\ on the three earlier Btory. Pase 4). networks. - As to the C90n<ctlon betwoen dlsbelie! Mia Kurth said she felt that etr· of the commercials and the adults behind taln commerciala for c a n d y -c o a t e d them. Sen. Frank Moss (0.Utah), said vitamlnl might even he_ danaeroit1. -~ _ "We have a word for that, alienation." ''U my mother were . to buy thole Throughout !ht hearing, the school girl vitamins aocl .my little sls\er got Into the In plaid, bangs, and groen knee socks, bottles l'm sure silt would ell them Jllll as if they were candy," she satct. She submitted a q'uest lo nna'l r'e answered by some J.500 third-through sixth-graders: -1,203 said they asked their mother to buy the products seen on TV; 330 1aid they did not. -1,120 said they asked for a product to gtt !he fret bonus girt ; 413 said they did not. . -MS said tbey were sati10ed with the product; m said they were not. -t,113 uid that thty believed certain produc"'b aun in the commercla!J rmde them happier and that they would ,JlaYe . more frlendsi 420 said · they · did nOt bell••• _that. . -91t aald they rett their mother was mean becaust.ohe wouldn'I buy tbe f.rob- llCt lhq wante<li f211 aald she wasn t. . ' 0raa,. C.alt Weatlaer Warm temperatw-es will again visit the Southland Thul'lday with highs at Ille beaches at 15 rlslni to 80 Inland. Lows In the 80'1. INSIDE TODA.\' -A Trtruurv agmt theorl.tt4 that a leaku ga,s line wa..t r e- 1P.,nslble for the e,wlollcm that rlpp<d through a bomb ahelflr at £ht homt of a Valde11 , N.C •• teztile executive; killing /iv. children. (See itorv, Pa.oe 4). ' •. " I " .... :; -.. ,, Moitval '""" 14 MtllM .. .....,_ ... °" ... c-w ' PTA 21 lft'Vll ,.,.. u ,....,,. IMt or . .,.~ '' ·-Mwtllft D1' ,_ . ""-'"' ,..,, •• ,..., f w1ic-• ....,. • ._ .......... --. .__ ______ _. > • ( - I • ., I :l DAILY PILOT h U.S. Okays Air Remedy _Date De~y . WASllINGTON (U~I) -Retreating ~ rrom an earlier stand. the government to- day· granted more than.25 cities ificluding Lo3 ADgeles, San Francisco a n d SllTamento, a two year ~elay ln ·tm- poalng trafnc controls needed to reduce air Pollution. The action gave the cllles until mid· 1977 to meet limits on the amount of carbon monaxide or photochemical ox- f4ants In the air. The original deadline was mld-1975. Both pollutant.I come pr!marily from auto exhaust, and spokesmen c nfirmed chat the delay1 were granted so ~cities would not have to impose traffic ntrols. , Steering Vnit All-year School --.. Panel Instituted A st.eeri11g committee on all-ytar ochooling ha• been lormed will) repr ... n- tatives rrom each of the Fountain Valley School DE. 's 16 schools. Super· ndent Mike' Brrck said today that pre · ary approval for Fountain VaJJey'a all-year plan has made fonna· tJon of the corrunittee· poslible. "The state was very encouraging t.o us," Brick said ... We have pennission to Implement an all.year school calendar whenever we have a sehool community that want! it." Included in a report that will be presented to trustees Thursday night is a ••fact sheet" on all-year schools that Brick proposes to distrlbuft u part of the district's efforts to inform parent! on the subject. "There are a lot or mi&conceptlons floating around." Brick said. "But once we explain wtfi.t we have in mind, people tend to wann up." One of the most prevalent mlsco~ · ceptlons, Brick said, Js that Fcwitaln Valley plans to implement a staggered attendance plan. "'!bat's not true," said Brick. 0 Under our plan, everyone would be in school at the same times and on vacation at the same times. Fountain Valley's plan would divide the year Into four quarters, with students at· tending school nine weeks and being out on vacation for three weeks durlnJ each quarter. Attieqdance at "enrichment 11essions" during the thrte-week break periods would be optional , · The concessions on regulat g com- rhuter traffic, perhaps the m o 1 • ~lltically sensitive area of pollution ~lrol, were included in ruli s by the Environmental Protectlon Agency on plans submitted by 50 states and five jurisdictions to meet air cleanup stand· ard! mandated by the 1970 Clean Air Act. Tlae Duke Goes Home • "We have hard data from Hayward that proves the education advantage of en all·year calendar," Brick said. "This is the first such data we hive seen The total number of required 11chqo1 days would remain the saine under the all·year plan as It is now, Bi'ick said. EPA Administrator William D . Ruckelshlu1 approved plans tubmilted by nine statei, plus Guam, Puerto Rico and American Samoa. Plans from the other 41 states plus the District of Colum· bii. and the Virgin Islands were approved in part and disapproved in part. Approval wu glveri to plans submitted by Alabam.1, Connecticut, F I or I d a , Mississippi, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon and Wtst Virginia. ·He's Got $100 . Bond Re-ceipt One of the cs.Ddiditi1 ror' West Ora"lle County Munlppal Court Judge, Wtlllam Carbon, ,.;d today he posted a $100 bond with Hun· i Ungton Beach prior to placing any pollt!Cll atgn& In the city. Carlson waa one of several can· didates named by the city Tuesday as not having posted the required sign cleanup bond. The Huntington Beach attorney today showed a receipt for the bond posted May 23, and uld be did not put up any aigna or posters prlOr to that date. O!Oclals In the building deport- ment lllld Ibis mornini they have no record of Carlson'• bond, but ad· ded he might hove paid It In another department and the receipt wu DOI transferred. f'romPqel FUNDS ••• Graham streets. The city would pay half. "It wotild cut the cost for indu!trlal developers and make us competitive with other lndustrial park.I," Back says. He'd alao like to see the same Im- provements extended lnto the industrial property ak>ng Gothard Street from Heil Avenue to Slater Avenue. The cost of that project would reach $1 .3 million .. Back said. Other projecll 10< wl!kh Back hopes to secure EDA funds through the county in· elude: -A fire station to ae<Ve the Huntington Beach Induslrial Park. -A branch library near Marina High School ... -An acces1 road north of Huntington Center. -A railroad spur into the HuntinatOn Beach Industrial Park. Back could not estimate the city 's chinces on obtaining the requeated federal flmd1 , or how much the city might get, but said thert will certainly be "considerable competition for t h e money." OUN61 COAST HI DAILY PILOT rti. or..,. Cont Ol.IL Y ,!LOT wtift ~left 11 cemltlwed flw Nrn.Prt5t, It Pllblltl'ltd illY ... OrMte (Nit '"*'bhlnl templn,. ,,.,... ,.,, MUlons 1r1 P\lbllsiMG, MIWldly th"""" 1'ri111y, ftr C.SI• MtM, N......,.,.... hlefl,, HIMtlnlfM Bffd\ll'flllllt.in V•lllY', Unne ••Id!, lrvlM/Salldllllkt Inf SM! ClmMnltl 51n J111n C1pl1tr'MI.. A 'h1ot1 "9lorl•I ldUIOll k pullllll\M S.Nnll,. pot SuncllYJ. • lhe prlnc:~I •Wtlllf ,.,.. Is •I D Well .,, $ll'ftt, C.• Mm, Qll""1111,, f'lll». ••t..rf N. W1H ,rnlhnt end ,uo111hm" J11tlt R. Cv,.1y Vici ,,_IOtnl tnd 0-•I M1Mtff n'"''' 'K1Hil Htw T~1111111 A. Murphln1 MalllSlnf U\IW cti1rl11 H. Le1t Ritlt1r4 "· N11ll ~ Allll~nl MlftlOine EllllWI T1r,., c.,,ar, ....., Qrll'lfl C-tr .. ,,,.. ' .....,.. ...... Offtce With arms clasped, BritiSh Royal Air Force cor· porals carry coffin of the Duke of Windsor to wait- ing jetliner in Paris. The Du'ke, the former King of England, died May 28 at the age of 7f. Loading of colfin today was carried out with pageantry typical of British. The Duchess, the woman the Duke gave up the throne to marry, \Vas too distraught to make the trip today, but is expected to attend the funertl- Monday. circulated In this area.". Brick cautioned, hov;ever, that what has worked in one school district will not necessarily work in another: ''The 11Chooil he long to the people," Brick stressed. 11U they don't want all· Nixons Get Big Welcome From Polish No Rose Garden Students Clmh Witli Policemen -In Football year schools, they won't have them, and we won't try to pressur~ them." But Brick showed enthusiasm over the Hayward test results which showed some grade levels achieving as much as 1.1 Mesan Retires From Marine Life years ahead of e1pectancy on 11tand--WAF\SAW (UPI) -President Nixon 1r- ardized test! after three years on all• rived to 11 colorlul welcome in the capital By ARTHUR R. VINSEL or ,,,. 0.111 .-uet tlaff Nobody .promi.sed Willson Price a rose garden 30 years ago last week,. when he joined the U.S. Marine Corps and left Window .Rock, ·11r1t., 10< t world totll,J>Y_. war. . ,, --- Nobody pf9mised Price the itamor and glory that history bestow11 when you're on the rlght side and you !'in., NobOdy promised the young Navajo· In· dian anything but action. Now 50, Price was principal developer of a radio communication system based on the .Navajo language, one of 200 tribesmen Japanese soldiers in the South Pacific craved to capture. None of the Navajos -classed as top secret personnel -v.·ere ever taken prl.90ner but casualties were heavy. . Price, of 871 Victoria St., Costa Mesa, won his own particular Purple Heart on Guadalcanal in 1943, but told the medics to take care of the badly wounded first . "I ju1t had fOPle-1Jtapnel allJ:l a ll~ed leg," says the man who Is at Cl.mp Pendleton today, tying up l~st loose ends of a 30-year caf'ft:r, from which he formally retired Friday as a ma!ler sergeant. "I spent three months strapped to a hospital bed in New Zealand," says the televi1lon repair shop owner to whom nobody e'lft" promlsed a rO!e garden. From Page I SURRENDER. • • retxler area or the city and .that the Com- munists were not firing there, either, He would not identify the North Viet· namese unit iAvolved because that might jeopardize the negotiations. "Things are going well in Kontum'' despite the continued heavy fighting, Vann said. "The North Vietnamese in the city have a shortage of supplies. They have no replacements and units that have taken heavy IO!lses have been denied pennisslon to pull out of the city." Meanwhile, a U.S. spokesman reported the heaviest American air raids around the major North Vietnamese port of Vinh since the Communist offensive began. He said the Americans were firing televl..!lion-guided bombs that "just can't mis s" and that major ground in- stallations were destroyed. A command spokesman said U.S. warplanes flew 240 raids into North Viet- nam. They smashed a big fuel depot and destroyed or damaged several rail and road bridges outside Vinh. the country's southernmost port 130 miles south or Hanoi. The 1,00().pound "Walleye" bomb car- ries a TV camera in the nose, a Navy spokesman said. and the pilot monitors a television set in the cockpit. He tunes in Oil what tht bomb "sees" Jnd when the tar~et appe-ars, locks in on it. "You just can't miss," the spokesman said. From Pagel PLANES ..• aYlard for m01t creative design. Nol to be left out of the fun lvere the Gisler tea chers who were entered in their own special cat~oiy. )'ear calendars. r Also included on the proposed fact 0 Poland today for a finaJ stopover A Marine Corpe recruiting poster in his .. !beet 11 a poutble all-ytK school eaten-before returning home and reporting to homdrlll~ gi::_~ge repair shop shows a USA1C . A brisk rivalry ill expected to be dar. Congress· and the American people on his UlSwuctor screamtng the slogan at a launched Saturday afternoon between the "None of thla ls carved in stone," Brick historic eight days at the Moscow awn-. wide-eyed young trainee: senior class at Hwitington Beich High said. "One of the job! of the steering mit. · "We ~_projnis~,:_ou a rose "~en." School and the city's police force. committee ~be-to-recommend Nllon and his party new to waraaw ~e sayslle ldn't Plan or a Marine ~ li!t men fronleacb ww ·ctash tit Cfiinies." --:-· · Crom Tehran, Iran, where ~departure Coe bu• I nd ed u I the first aMual "Sow Bowl" nag football ' 1be steering committee~ made up en-d 1 -• b . ps career, • ou uca ona op-t~'" of --~I oll!Cla'-8 -teachers. · was e aycu y a series of bombings -:- rt .,. N . th Id game at 1:30, p.m. in the high school u.;., l!UIUV .. one or the t h h po uni 1es a avaJO you cou n't ei· stadium. . . . Brick aa"ld tHat ·ht hal met With many m near a monumen w ere e • pect otherwls~. . Senior Class President Jim Pearlman parent and teacher groups on all-year :!~~ ~~~eath after the area bad, He didn't ·join it out of Personal hurled the challenge to the police depart·· ~r2Uv:.~ that response has been The PreQdent leaves Warsaw Thurs- bravado; there was a world war in prog· ment saying: "Even your choice men ....... ,. day, and alfer ~arrival jn the evening ress and the corps' recruiter got to him cannot show the Oilers the bitter ta:ste of "' he will go directly from Andrews Air first. ' defeat." Force Base to the ,Capitol for a 6:30 p.m. The Navajo code he hilped develop PollceChieIEarleRobitallleofleredto Attorney Bush PDT report to ·'a joint session of. after specialized Indian studies confused send his female clerical stall as adequate • Congres:s on his mi.ulon to MOeicow. and confounded. the Japanese, who competition, but declined. on aecood The Warsaw weather was fine -a generally performed with polish when thought, adding: "The game ls scheduled Seek:iri· g" Seat warm sun in a blUe sky -when Nl1on'1 jm.itatlng American accentll on the air. during an important coffee break." plane, The Spirit of '76, arrived at 1:21 "The Japanese had English·speaking The chief said his best men, who have a.m. PIYI'. men that listened to our radio and never lost an athletic contest, will be OD 0 Sch } B d Nilon, in a rare foray Into another telephone conversation and some could the field Saturday afternoon. Il 00 Oftr language, called "Sr.olem, Zocnlerze'' even get Jnto the conversation by im-High school cheerleaders will spark·· (Gretienp soldJenf"'to an SO.man honor illti!Jg Broollyn or lle<p Sputh acc..U," ~othusjasm !or ~ seplor ell\~ P\•Y;!!t l!I--Dalt! .ll!!ab. f°"""' ,city 1~ ol guard ..,,.mbled •t the airport. hO explain.!. ' · while girls Iron! Ille pdDce ~rplor'ii'i '· H~ Seich, 'ls l cani!!date foi ' a '"flf cheer y"1, Mr. President,• One monitor brazenly began a !trategy will boost the officers• morale. • vacant .eat on the Huntington Buch City fembers of the guard shouted back. chat with Fleet Admiral Chester Police o!ficialJ said they may also (elemertary) School District' lloard •,oe Nixon was greeted by Polish President Nimitz. bring their pig macot, 1"Fuz.z"· 1o the ~ trustees.\& % Henryk Jabloukl and both Jeadert IPOk• "Excuse me, Admiral, b\lt 111,t's not a game. '· · '?be 2~ llePlt*'lof Volft or the , dole ·historical rol1tiooahip buddy you're lalking to," said Price, in-Ttckell for th~pme ...,..,.pmdlo9ed office ' . · · y lhat Ibo Ji'ynr between tWr countries. terruptlng the talk. at tho lllSh school or lb!l"ll!>.rqi, p>llce old pradlclni ottornti)'.1 .... Wild hll Nixon slipped in his brier speech, refer· Indian dialect ill what jinxed the depar\ment. The c01t ls ftO eent. with a papers well In advance of the Juile 2 ID· ring to Jablo111ki u "chairman ol the Japanese. student body card or 75 cents Wllbool~ ing deadline. Council ol Minlllten" -the post btld by "To my knowledge, the code was never prior to the game. 'ncketa will alto be The onJy other candld.ate to file 10 far Prlme.Mlnlster Piotr Jarouewicr.. cracked by the enemy," he explains, sold at the stad.lwn, but the price will be for the August 1 election to fill the teat of · But the Presldeiit tJ.61. warm wordt far noting every explanatory book was 25 cents higher. reJlgned trustee Ivan Liggett is Louis his host country, saylng hl8 arrival was burned at war's end. All proceeds from the game will 10 Kidder, presklent of the Coast Muaic "a very special moment for me ••. For Research into his own heritage also toward the senior clw graduatkll proj.. Company in Costa Mesa. the first time, a president of the United revealed an historical Indian hoax, says ect. The deadline for fillng la Friday. States stands on Polish soil .•. Sgt. Price, who notes most tribes used IF~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;11••••---~--~--;:;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;.-runners lo deliver messages before Nava-I jos had radio. "I was surprised to learn that smoke signals and tom-tom messages were strictly Hollywood ," he explains. So are some of Sgt. Price's Pacific combat recollections. He tells of one tribesman's capture by what -in earlier wars -would have been the eneIJl¥, but on Iwo Jima was his own side. Given permission, the Navajo radioman headed for a nearby qmp to get a haircut, but was waylaid by a suspicious Caucasian lieutenant. "He thought he was a Jap .•• put a .45 automatic right to his head -he was real dark -and, Whoottt!," Price declares. "The kid.s's commanding officer had to come down to ldentify him and get him out of the stockade. 'Man of-Year Name Deadline Set June 10 June 10th has been set as the deadline for names to be submitted to the Hun- tington Beach HOME Council for tbe seventh · annual William H. "Bill" Gal-· Jienne "Man of tKt Year" award. Local clubs and civic organizations are Invited to submit the names or in· divlduals the:t believe qualified for the award, according lo Brian Parkinson, president of the HOME CotThcU. Galllenne was manager of the Hun-- lington Beach Chamber of Commerce for more than 30 years. until his death in 1965. He was known as '' EI Generalissimo" for hi! showmanship and strong per90nality. He originated the Huntington Beach Fourth of July Parade and the Orange Coast "40 Miles of Christ mu Smiles." GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHRIES GRADUATION WATCHES The watch, for generations the traditional college graduation gift, i• today appreciated also· by child- ren at grade and high achoo! level. Choice of a watch for graduates at any level was formerly a simple maUer of selection by price and style. A watch wa• a watch, its al-• ·most casual purchase usually r• suiting in genuine appreciation. Today. modern technology and styling have combined with special- ized uses to make satisfactory se- lection infinitely more diWc:ult. There are, however, steps you can lake to make sure your graduate will wear this gift with pride and pleasure . • . . .. Your graduot .. Gival!itm on Omega.A quolitygilt 1717S-lt•ch a.1111,,1nil .--,..._, ltlllt AIUr.11: P.O. l1x 190, t2t4t 0.... Olllo.; ' LlllJM '4Mfl• ,,, ,., .. , ... ,...... . ·P.lrs. Carol MacGregor. a physical educatlon teacher, brought d0Vr11 the house with bet whirly bird special. Pm:bed from a laddtt on the stage, she dropped he:r small yellOw plane which fluttered to the ground llke a !ailing snow fiake. Another big success amoog tbe teachera' tntriel was 'the Tankmley special entered by alxlh grade math teacher Jlm Tankersley. Throwing left handed. Tankutley sailed hir t...,.loot , Men eligible (or the award 1hould have lived In tDe city 1t leut one year, made a not.able contributk>n to the civic bet~ terment of the community ind must belong to one or more civic organizations. You should be &are of your graduate's activities and of the kinds and styles of watc.bes worn by bis friends. You should' then "" a reliable lbcal jeweler and d1Jcus1 your problem. !hot di1ttnguisMs ilalf for Jtyling, accvracyond dt1ommmceofOV11taconturyofquolitycroftsina.ishi!' Oiw~r 9roduar..a·timlpi ... to ralyon".Omo;oJ ... '>f .... , Ala ...... V. N .,.,...., ... _....,.,.,.. .. ' c.te MIMi a. w..1 ... , >trwt J""""1 ,'"-di: 3iD H..._, hti'-"ll'd 'SM C ......... l a Moflfll I.I ''"'"-._, "" 'l;trn (1141 MZ-4121 C' I .... ~· M2·U71 ,,_ ,...,,... c-.tr <-~• ' 141-1121 ~ ""' Or....-~· il'Wll#lllll . .. . ..... ..... '"'*'"' ..... .,... .. ~~,,... -... ~--wt...,, .,...... ,,.. """"" .. --· ----·--· Mllli.... ......,..,... t<r rUl'ftlr a.at _.....,,, Ir ...u U.ll .,...,( ...... .,, ........ ...-.r. •• Entriea: mar be submitted to the HO~fE Counci at : "Man of the Year1 ' Award Selection Commlttet, p_.,Q, Bo1 long plane over the hetds of the •udlenct 1601 Huntington Be1Ch ror a 59·foot trip -tbe. lon1ert of the A • brief reawne ~f the m a n • s COl1lJl<litlon. ' background •nd accomplislunenla· showd "Ira, McClure •l'! pl1111 •tt 1lmc!y be Included wttli the entry . under ny !or lltxt year'• piper airplane l'!Jvlous Winnen honottd by the conie.t. , . uaME Coitilcll lnc!Ude : M.,,or Donald She added: "Moybt"" 1bould lplllSOr Shipley, WUU.m Suum1n. R 0 btr t 1 bubl>le P1" cootest loo, ., we cao 1t1 Dlnpail, Mayor J1clc a....., VlDcl that out ol their systema." Moorhoute Ind lrvlnf Tudcer. ' l .. _ .. -.. We have watchu for aD aget, from rugged timepiecu for active children to the moil sophilUcated and speclaUzed watches available. An.d if, in 1pite of all your care, your tfaduate !!anti sametblna dlf· ferent, a'll giaclly excluU1ge • for euc:U, what be wanll. ........ ........ ...,! .. "''· , .. '-Ii. .,_tc. lflf..wW .. ,,,. ....... 11"'9 M _. ....... lfllll ""'°' .... 1..-.... _ •1• ' 18~3 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA - CONVINllHT lllMS 01 YIAH IN IA~I LOCATION IAHICAMlllCAlll>-llAJTll CHAlfl PHONI \lll·llOI • l • ,, ' 1 I ,. ~~~ -_.:~::::-::::~~==,:,.~;::;;,,_,:~,..:::::~....::=·~=-~~========-==-~--====='----""=',;;;.::::;:::::,,~_:__:_'.,'~~~·--='---'.:;,~=:~~:::~:.:::___.~~~~~~~~-4:::_'~~~~:_~""°--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--''.llll... • " I • • • County ~mp lo yes Iran Blasts Bobby Baker To Be Freed WASHINGTON (AP) -Bobby Baker, the . .qulet country boy who became a conlidant of Senate • Bombings Mar • powerbrokers and gained a degree of power himself, will be released rbursd>j' from the federal prl.lon camp at Allenwood, Pa. The 43-year~ld Baker, onetime secretary to Senate Democrats, will have served 16 months and 17 days for attempted tax evasion, grand larceny, tramportallon of stolen money, fraud and con- spiracy. Nixon's Leaving Without parole, he could not have been freed before nei:t May ti. Charges Eyed In Clemente • " Police Crash By JQflN VAL TERZA Of th DlllY ,lltt IS.ff The District Attorney's office today began consldertng the flllng of complalni. Stemming from last weekend's crash of a San Clemente police patrol car and a small pickup truck in which one youth was fatally injured and four other persons Were hurt. Californi a Highway Patrol officers said this . mornlng that two main factors assez:ti4!Y ~ con.trii?uted to ~ traged¥ it El Cimino Real and Calle Dolores late Friday a£iern0on. ·· ' · Spokesmen for the CHP said the prime fa· '.or ln the mishap was the asserted' hi ,::h speed or the police unit beine driven by Patrolman Gary Adams, who was responding to a call involving a car being dr iven erratically. The sec<1ndaiy fa,ctor, CHP aides ad- ded, was the asserted failure to yield the rl!!ht of way by 16-fear-old Daniel Alan Cross or Long Beach, who was assertedly at the wheel of the small picktlp truck. The high-speed , rear~nd collision claimed the life or Joseph Britt, 16, of Long Beach, who suff~ fatal bead and internal injures when he wu thrown from the bed of the truck alter the im· pr.ct. , The estimated speed of the patrol car was between 15 and 70 mllet per bour, so d CHP reports, quoting. oeveral witnesses. The one prime consideration added, the spokesmen was that the patrol vehicle'• red lighls ~nd siren were not operating at tbe time of the tragedy. The posted •peed limit is 30 miles per hour. Adams himself, suffered minor injuries tn the niishaP and ·was released alter emergency treatment at Mission Com· munlty HO!pltal. The other two pasaengers and the driver of the small Pickup auffered pain- ful. but relatively mbd injuriesi TEHRAN (UPI) -President Nixon en- ded a one-day vslt to Iran that .'was marred by temirlats bomb attacka today and flew to Poland. • One dynamite bomb e1ploded near a monument 45 minutes before Nixon'• acbeduled arrival for a ceremony. Nixon went ahead with the wrtatt.. laying rite, delaying his appearance 45 minutes while American ecurlty agents swarmed over the site searehlng for ou1rr bomb!. He rode to the ceremony in a bullet· proof limousine under tight security, bur there were no further incldents. "He wanted to go -the Shah wanted him to go," said White Howe pre.!11 aide Bruct Whelihan. PreS! Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the series of bombings that rocked the . lFanlan capital early today were believed an attempt by political opponents to e~ barrass the shah of Iran, Niton's host. Ziegler said be did not believe the blasts were intended to injure the Presi- dent. • Niton left Tehran 20 minutes behind sc~edule at 3:40 a.m: PDT for the flight of a little over five hours to War.!law, Poland. Spedal •ecurlly precautlona cawied the delay._ ~ . A guard of honor under the wat<:hlul eyes qf a doubled security IOrce stood at attentlqn u Nlxon, ·smiling broadly, boarded his plane. Only oUlclal govern- ment representatives were allowed In the ·airport. Officials said there were at least aeven explosions in the Tehran area early to- day. Other explosive devices were fotmd before they went orf. · The blasta injured a U.S. Air Force brigadier general, damaging his car; kllled ooe Iranian and Injured two other Iranians. and ble'! windowa out of the- U.S. lnlormaUon Agency building. Iranian government officials blamed the exploslou on a leftwlng organizatlon backed· by nelgbborlng Iraq. They onfered tight aecurlty for Nixon'• •la14 beca\llO Iran bu been plaguod In roctnl moolhl by tern>riltl lncldenta. Nixon and the shah reached agreement today oo lbe luueo of !IOuthaalt Asia, tho Peralan Gull, tho Middle East and narcotlcs, according lo a joint com- munique. The shah also accepted an invitation to visit the United States at a "mutually convenient time," said the communique Soviet Railroad Officials Take Disneyland Tour The <'aae whJCh ,~ tbe tra8k ... qoonce of events ~_when a cJtl;'wJ• walktd into police headquartm and reported a late.model blue car being Seven top railroad officials from the driven by a "crazy or drunk" driver,. The Soviet Union will Include Dllaeyland and reporting party also flltniSbed police with a railroad e1hiblt in Anaheim in their tm license number of the vehicle sfiowing Itinerary dwing a tour of' American rail a S3n Clemente reskleilt u owner. iMtallaUons beginning today. CiIP investigators' indicated t bat The officials are comlng to the U.S. to A·· ms apparently had the vehicle lb his vlsifTta.nspo, 72, an elhlbttlon at Dulles 5i-;;ht aa he accelerated along the nearly ~ International Airport in Virgina featur- dc!scrted highway. " ing new developments lo the transporta- A1 he drove to intercept the vehicle the lion field. The delegation, beaded bJt1 sqiall pickup pulled onto the road from a Minister of Railroads Boril Pavlovich sl4e street, faltered for a brief moment, Brescbev, will spend several daya In New then assertedly drove In front of Adams.' York before traveling.to California. car. ' • Ih Anaheim, they will visit the Southern The youths. all.from Loog Beach, were Pacific . Railroad locomotive simulator apparently headed toward a camping and w\11 take a few hours off to see outing during the Memorial D a y Disneyland -and probably ride the weekend. ; mboorail. They will alao visit San Fran· Their camping gear and supplies :were ci.sco prior to returning to Moscow June strewn over a wide area-8.fter the impact. 11. Issued at the end of their aecond business 1~sion. 'Ibe shah, the communique aaid, ltreued hi.! determination to streqthtn Iran's ability to insure the nation's secu-· rlty and to enable Iran to cooperate wl.lh other i;.atlona in the Persian Gulf area. BotWNlxon and the Shah said it was or "vital importance" for security and stability to prevail among the oil-rich na· tions of the gulf area, Ooe bomb exploded behlnd a wall about 100 yilrds from the tomb of Reta Shah the Great, the father of the current shah, in the little town of Rey about Ove miles aouth of Tehran. Officiab said there were no injuries in thla .expl0sion which came about 45 minutes before N i x o n was scheduled to arrive for the wreath-laying ceremony. 'lbe bomb was fashioned of two sticks of dynamite attached to a c)ock device. CBS Correspondent Phil McLaughlin waa standing near the wall at the time. "It almost threw me off my feet, the explosion was so loud," McLaughlin said. _ The blast burled debri.5 over a wide area. Pair Grabbed ... ----. .· -In $2·50,000 • Ransom Plot EUGENE, Ore. (UPI) -A couple who allegedly threatened to blow up a 396-bed Roman catholic hospital have been ar· rested u they picked up a package con. talnlng $2.50,000 in ransom money and an electronic "beeper,'' authorities reported today. FBI agenta said Charles R. Bobkiewicz, 34, Cottage Grove, Ore., unemployed, and hil wUe, l!etly Loil, 31, a wallml, were taken Into CUlf<icfy she mllea soulh of bere as they picked up the money alongside a freeway. They were booked on a federal charge of lnterferlng with inter1tlte commerce. Vincent E. Ruehl, assistant special agent In charge of the Oregon FBI office, said Sacred Heart General Hospital was searclled and no bomb wu found. Ruehl uld a helicopter equipped with a "hominJ:" device to track the movement of the money package hovered over the drop area as the couple arrived at the scene. Police Chief DaJe Allen said all packages brought Into the hoopltal fiad been searched alter the lint telephoned threat was made at 4:10 p.m. He said he wls "confident" there wu no · bomb in lhe hoapital. The money -Jn small bills u demand- el -was left at the pickup site by a policewoman posing as the nun in charse of Jhe hospital. The caller told hospital offlcilll he would pick up the money at 10 p.m. and telephoned one hour later to give the location of the bomb. At first, bospllal admlniltraton decld· ed to give the extorUoniJt the money. However, after talks with the FBI and police they agreed to hJde an electronic "beeper" in the package. The box was the size of a cue of beer. The extortionist made a second call two h«u's after his .first convenaUon but tmn.lnated it wbeo be beard a click, police sald. The location for the drop wu made flnal on a third call. Just No ·Room for Wallace Humphrec;; McGovern W o:.ildn't Run With Al.ahaman LOS ANGELES (AP~bert H. undfr Jlmfll that barred tha !nHwlnf· dlcatlng Ibey would sUpport wj)lch ever Hwnpbrey ha1 apoJoglud' for aa)'in( that Ing exchanies o1 t he l r first aesilon of them wins tbe Democralllt iiomJna. Sen. George McGovern'• tu plao made SUnday nJgbt. tion. , . thC SOuth Dakotan "a fool," and Doth "II waan't quite u lively bul I think It Humphrey displayed a less agre.,lve candidates rejected any posslbUity of was equally, and perhaps more, in· style, apparently reflecting fean by ad- hivlng Alabama Gov. Georfe c. Wallace formall~," McGovern told reporter1 vlsen be had been loo strident Sunday as a nmnlng mate. aftenrard. nlgbt, but continued to uaail McGovern'• The tone of the ltCQDd televl.led con-He aakt the 1'12 camp1llJ'I, more thal'.l "income 1upplement" plan, hla ta1 frootalioo between the ltontrunnen for 1111 other recent one, Is foc:uslng on the reform proposals and bi. call for a f32 Jbe Democratic presld<n\lal nomination bulc 1a1ies cmlrontlng tho United bUJion cul in defense IJ>endlng. was milder than tbeir fin! encounter. It Statea. Although be apologiud for calling foc111e1flargely on McGovern'• tu and Humphrey, wbooe Drat reaction waa an McGovern a fool, Humphrey relteraled de!Oqte propooala. objectlcn lo tho fonnaJ , aald the wllhout ~ why that the sOutb Their tlllrd and final Joint aI?P<lflllCO meetl,.. wllh McGovern are "having a Dakota aenator'1 tu plan Is "coo- ls idilduled ilunday on an erpendod woodd1ul lllect" 111 bis eUort lo beat filcatcry," and aalcf a 11i.bUllon delenoe version ol tho ABC lnter>1ew program McGoffnl la 'l'llesday'1 C a I I f o r n I a cut -.Id be "reaoonable" without 1M111 "Jauel and Amftl"I." . primary, apeclfiCI, Early In Tuellday nlgllt'• debate, "It's llU ·'rillnllnl," tho MlnntlOla Humphrey aalcf he bad no\ wood In on Humphrey apolCJlfzed for bavlll( 111&· -·declaftd. McGovern's def..,. proposal• Willi tbe rested Sunday In Fresno, that McGovern Aste! about tho fact that questlonlnc C&llfomla c on I e 1 t beca"" "people wolild be a fool to~ whit Jhe MI... -....i mi McGovmi'1 proposail, wertn't taking dlher .~ McGovern-« neJO!an tenned conllacatory tu pro-HllllPlnJ IAld, "That's prob 1 b I y myself very aerlOulli>: . posall. beca• be bu._ printed up." McGovtm delended hil propooal for 1 The MJ.nnesot.an nllt "That't un-& llkl be w11 turPriled thtrt wmn't 11 percent tax oin lnherilances over fomlnate lal"llUlge and ·l r: •. 1 r.1 "::1s tt r.:n crueltlon1 on \la urban and en-: ... ~"')!I, said ;i r'r..:lr,e to keep California mll\.lke.11 He delcrlbed Jti-:~o·rc..":l::: a vironmental1ft'~. air b · •.~ 1 do .··1 connlct wit fine man..~ At· tbe aztRt Of the apedal one-hour dc>'"""C prOpo!t''·.. even -~ Inhibited by the pro. version al NBC'1 "Meet the l'lal," both famUlcs who would pay llOllle more tu,. cram lorll'la~ willch called fer tbem lo candklatto re]<cted Wallace u a pooslble for'hls "Income aupplement" pion would .,,._ qlllllilol from lour _..,.,, >!Ce Jll' ...... lal NDlllnl 111111 While In-1et IUbotanllal property /el. • I• • I • Opposing Well S.hut My Moutlil Thomas Hall, 25, of Salem, Mass., gasps as be is named winner of $1· million at the drawin g of the Massachusetts lottery. l!all , who makes $125 weekly at the New England TelephoNe Co., said, "I'm going to quit my job." Hall and his wile Susan accepted check for $50,000 and will receive a similar check for $50,000 in each of the next 19 years. Burke's POW·Plea Passed The California Assembly Tuesday p a a s e d a resolution autho~d by Assemblyman Robert' Burke (R-Hun· tington Beach) urging the President to get an accurate account of :how many U.S. prisoners of war are being held in North Vietnam. The Assembly passed two resolutions unanimously on a 69 to O vote with no debate. tn addition to Burke's measure, the lawmakers approved one introduced by Assemblyman John Burton (~San Francisco) urging the government "to do all wilhln Its power to obtain the release of ali American prisoners of war." The North Vietnamese claim to be holding about 360 Americans a!l prisoners of war. &wever, families of men \mlss- lfl& In action in Southeast Asia contend the figure ls Inaccurate and that, in fact, many more soldiers are in prison camps in North Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. Burke's resoMt!on called upon Presi- dent Nixon "to demand full accounting from North Vietnam of all prisoners , of war taken in the Vietnam confliet before completion of American t r o o p withdrawal.'' The Burton measure alao called for the settin~ of a withdrawal by the President in exchange for the release of the prisoners. , Both resolutions now go to the Senate for action. • OAJI. y PILOT I Eattin Supervisor. Draws Fire \) For Record By JACK BROBACK Of lllti C•lly l"Jlel ll•lf The Orange County En1ployes AS!OCIS. tion, reprcsentin& more than 8,000 c:ount1 workers, today issued a special bulletin to members urging that First District I~ cumbent Supervl!M>r Robert Aottln ht defeated in his bid for a seeond tenn 011 the board. ''For the first time In the history of the OCEA, we feel we must oppose the reelection of an Incumbent member of the Board of Supervisors," the letter la members, read. J-leadlined : Special June 6 (primary election date) Election Bulleti n, the letter urges strong ly that association members •:vote against Bati,m·s fbid for re~lec­ t1on." "A vote against Battin Is a v9te for good goverrunent, '' the .letter concl udes. Listed are 15 reasons why the board of directors of the OCEA feel that Battia should not be reelected. They Include : -Battin alone voted against adoption or salary, fringe benefits and conditions of employment in an agreerhent reached by the OCEA with the county pereonnel <lcparlmcnt. -He vo ted for placing county depart• ment heads on a month-t~month pro- bation status. -HC voted again.st Implementation of the Emergency :F,;mployment Act, com monly known a11 the PEP program. Thill •federal· project has provided more tha~ 1,000 new county jobs fOr unemploy~ persons.· 1 -Battin· attempted to re'place-plannlnci conimission member!! with his OWRt personal appointees for his own personal ,' reasons. 1 The letter also states that Battin voted: against new claulfication.s of employ•; jobs, and recl"'31lfication-Of pos1t1on1, "that affect county employes until; February ~ thl.8 year." : "With hts .redecUon on the balkit In· June, 1972. why do you think he changed: his vote against county employes?," the : letter adds. • Youth Found I De~d in Camper ,1 -. ' -A Tu'stln youth waa found d~ad early this morning under my1tirlou1 circumstances tn a camper t r u c k In Garden Grove. Investlgator1 aald they received a call shortly after mldnJght that "a man needs medical attenUon." The addresa given was 10872 ~pson St. 1 A police unit WU dilpalched ancf officers fouod the body of Edward J. Markusic Jr. of 14767 Leon Place, Twtln,. in the camper. Orange County Coroner's Department depulles said the youth bad been dead about four houri. They added Jhat toxicological teall would be made to determine the e11ct,, cause of death. There were no obvlouJ signs of foul play. ,.,' 9.0wn ff. eountru- PATIO SHOPS ;:t I ·~ ·- SAVE S18.00 ON 'l'BIS 5 Pc. TABLE sn TAMPICO 42" TAIU WJ)'H•1 69 4 ARM CHAIRS ~~~. $247 M IMI .... CHAIS! LOUNGI . lllT ...... $103 569 NII DnlmY tN OUN•• COUNTY CHAR·IROJl ® GAS COOKERS • MOBILE BASE Allowt Yff te toll ~11r t rill 01rt ef tfie ••r wiie1 ••I 111 ,, .. $8983 POST MOUNT St1y1 ,.,,,.1111Jttlr 111 tfie tr111und. ID" l•t1t po1t h nitt ,,,,f,J, t~•l'I p1!11t.a, s Al ,,._ssnua rtlAIGUA • PATIO MOUNT 01llt11M for lfltt1n1. tle11 111 •tl1tlAt P•tiet. n,.,,, .. ,, ' • ' , j OAll.Y PllOT Midwesterners -, Slug It Out JIICKY TICKY POLmX: A couple of Mldwe1tem boy•, one. who UJed to push J>!tl<riptlo111 u a dru&a!Jt and the other wlio J>Ulhed for the Lord u a mlniJter. •t 1t each other 1g1in via ~ UilevilJon tube !Ht nJiht. 'J'fle at1ke1 today, however, are 1 Utile hlilher than a 1ood'coll«tlon plat. or the price of oome mlsralne headache r'P"edy. Th11 one.II for the Presidency of the Unltod Statea. So it wa1 that Senator Hubert H. llwnphrey, the Democrat from Mln- neoota had onolher video confrontation wltll Senator George S. McGovern, tile Democrat from South Dakota. ActUally, thla TV appearance for the pair wu a lot calmer than tile first ont. • Jn tile flrtt one, Hwnphrty yelled oome at McGove{D and 111er1edly called blm "a fool." THl8 TIME AROUND, Hwnphrey dliln't 1et lo yell 1t McGovern on 1ccounl of he lol lntnrupted by I commercW. AidltJonllly, Humphrey 1pologized If, he Gld. It bad been tboU1ht he'd called McGovern 1 fool. 1 ..ffe'd (lll)y meant to uy anybody who would 1upport Mc G o v e r n '1 "con- fficatory" tax program was 1 fool. -..nably Mr. McGovern au»i>ortl it, Nwever, to I don't know where that Jevei t110·fooltalvle11. tktyway, the televlakm confrontation ~ another effort. by the two Jeadlng ~1Uc presldi ntlal bopefull. lo <•!>' tire Calllbrnla'a 'delegation to 1he ·na- tfonal convention. ·After one hour of being questioned by a ~tttty of newsmen on their variou.I oo- tibnl, it'a no wonder they're having dif .. fleulty aw1ylng tho voter•. Alter 1ll of It abakea down, they're really pretty much alike. • .BOTH HUMPHREY and McGovern are )lfelly llber1I. Bolh of them want the war over, taxes cut. jobs increased and all those other good things. Then you look at their backgrounds, Both came from humble be&lnniniS. McGovern was In the Air Force. Humphrey was an instructor in the Air F01't't. 1'tcGovern rtprtsenls S o u th Dakola. Humphrey w&1 born In South Dekota. Wlllace, South Dakota , to be p7etlle. . • Which brings 111 to another point. B<ml AGREED they really don't wint to bf: on the same tlckel wlth Alabama c;ov. George Wallace. Both allO agreed that with Gov. Wallace, the feeling would likely be very mutual. There were some curlou1 points 1n the pre1entatlon1, too. Humphrey, who in ttM u .aamstant senate majority leader, wu cr<dlted with pushing to ldoptlon ·.:>the mmt massive Clvll Rl1ht1 program since RtcOn.Structlon, spent contlderable tlmt explaining why he would 10 slow on acbool bullng for nclal bal1nce. McGovern, on the other hand, who has been COIYilll up to the liberal camp of tile KeMed)'s and the super·llberal youlh rnovements, spent considerable tlme e1· plalnlng wily he J.m' '° liberal u to be called a radical. IN THE END, I'd call Ille 'N con- frmtaUon another draw. ·Some folka think 11UrnPbriy won the first one while MCGovern w11 the victor lut nJihl. Neither of them 11em loo plllsed '°' di11 with tho wbole alfllr. McGovern, however, 1ppar~nUJ took no chances. Be had 1 very long blosraphy of hll life on the air juat u aoon u the televlsion confrontallon w11 over. Wtll, at least llumphrey couldn'l in- terrupt, th1t. Hearing Postponed LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A final protrlal heiring in the Pentagon Poper• cue lnvolvtqi Doniel Ellsberg and Anthony J. Russo ha1 been put over until 1-tGIKlay. Court attaches said Tuesday the delly was granted to give attorneys 1d· dltlonal Umo to prtpare the cose. -, • Meir Vows Retaliation for Massacr·e with blood ·ud Uttered wltb bro!<" bodies. Some victi.ms were IO mangled that autllori~ea ~d d!Ulculty 1&)'io& u· 1ctly bow many persoos were idlled. TEL A.VIV. (UPI) -Prime Minister "and rtlwed. Bui il listed eight peroons Goldi Meir hlntod today 1t Jonell In criticil coodltltn rotrlbutioo 1aainat the Arab auemnu The death toll did oot Include lhe wbo sent three neatly dretled Japaneae Japonae wbooe suicide mission ended -to L""'•· ••-whero they muucred when one blew hlmseU UJl with a srenade ,_ ~..-· ud llJOlber waa ohal and kllled by a men, women and child,.. Tueldly nllbt. • ...,,ponton. The thlnl man -c1ptured. Sbe called It murder by m....,,1er. Arab brolclcalll aid lhe J1-w.re A pollce 1pokeaman aald the ofllclll. Henclnc lhe deatb of two 1uerrt1w lhot deatb toll was 2% ~l'IOlll killed and 70 ud killed by llraell ooldlen durln1 an wounded •In the violence In which the 1bortive hijack at Lyddl alrpclrt early Ji-look 1ubm1cblne 1una and hand tbll montb. · grenodea from their oullcllel and opened A apokomwl tar the Populir Front for fire m 1 crowd of 300 penon1, many ol .the u~iton ol p-•~·-· Monllt them Puerjo Rlcana Cll a pll¢maffo to ~· ~0-. a the Holy Lind. group lnl1D10111.Jor put hl)lcldnl•, aid However, the Natlonll Rldlo lator In Beirut that swill llraell retribution came out wltb a report tbat 2i pmons wu expected. A apokeaman aaid the were killed and 1bout IO wowided. many laraell reprlall would be directed agllnot of tbem IO all&htly tbat they were trutod Lebanon but tbat that country was blameless. Ma. Meir, tired and drawn , said ln 1 nationwide broadcast from the K:neMtt (Parllament) Building in Jerusalem that Lebanon bad hatbored the guerrillas. But sbe was especially critical of A1r France on grounds it had not taken normal aecurlty precautions when it Oew , the three Japanese in with a group of touristJ. The masucre began abortly after 10:30 p.m. (1:30 p.m. PDT Tueoday) when the three Japanese disembarked from the Air France plane with 112 other passengen. 1lley claimed their baggage and then removed their we&l'l'M -hand (IJ'tllldel and AK47 ChlDeie-tnade a u t o In a t l c weapons and opeoed fire without warn• Ing. 1lle airport waa 1 shambles, spl...ood Suddenly the terminal -small by ...,._ pari!on with hue• American airline tenninall -expolded with the aound of hand grenadell and the aubmachlneguna. W~en and chlldren ICfeamed and dashed for cover, but many were blown to bits u they~ aalety. Tom Golden, 30, of New York City, who was waiting with his mother for: the ar· rlvll ol their slalel' from Now York, said "'JI 1tarted with wtilt aounded like I COU· ple of popi." "I suddenly looked to my left and about 15 feet away 1 saw the Japanese otandtqi tllere firing bia macbinqun toward tbf bapaae area," Golden aaid. "Be was atandiDg there b1altiDI 1way - lt WU unreal. • . II His mother, Clare Golden,. 60, was WOWldtd in the shooting. Screams 'Real' 1lle ~·-tdenliqed tbemaelv• 11 inemberl ol 1 group called "The Army ol the Red Star." Japanese pol~ aaid no 1uc'b organization existed, but the Japanese Kyodo News Agency slid II "" an ultraleftist radical organization ot Japan-youths wbo tortured and killed 13 of their oWn members earlier this year in a purge of dluidenll. The newspaper Yedloth Abarolloth aaid the lone captive told hll inte.rrocaton be bad received training at an Arab cuer- rtlla camp in an unidentified Arab COUDo try. It quoted blm as oaylng many other Japanese had undergone such training 1s part of a world revolution. , " Jet Hijacker Kills Self At 4irport Roller Coaster Plunges Off Rails, Killing Three . . SAO PAULO. Brazil (UPI) -A bl· jacker seized a Brazilian airliner Tue,. day night, demanded and received $254,• 000 and three parachutes, the11 killed himself as army troops stormed the plane. Three hostages escaped by jwnping out the cockpit Windows just before the soldiers rushed the plane. LONDON !IJPI) -It waa the moment when everyone ii expected to scre1m - at the very top of the_ roller coaster about to hurtle down. But the fear in the screams at Lon- don's Batt<nea lun_lalf luraed chillingly real Tuesday u three cars plunged back· wards and smashed on a bend. Two boys and • girl died• sm-other children were injured. Brig. Gen. Delio Jardim Matos, com· mander of the Brazilian 4th Air Zone, idenUfied the hijacker u Nelson Meg.. quill, who boarded tile Varifi Airlines I I Electra prop}et at Rio de Janeiro. . . JN SHORT "He shot himself before the plane was .. · • • • taken by security forces," Matos said. Mesquita pulled a pistol from a picture .__. __________ _. album thit 'had been hollowed out and forced the pilot, Celso Ca1deira, to return ·~ to Sao Paulo's Congonhas-Airport-after ~ had taken off for Plritiba, capital or the A brakeman was ridina: between the secood and third cars oUl>e.!!l!il Dip,_ -per""rotler coaster. train b<U.g1'ill<C!Dji- cable up .to·\he ~ foot lllartloi peak. It · carrled.zl -· mootly chlldreo out ,for a day's fun during their mid-term ' U"I T• .. "'9t. CLEANUP BEGINS AT ISRAEL'S INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT 25 Per10n1 Died in Terror Attack by Thrff Ja1Mn•H Halt of 'Manipulating' Kiddie · TV. Ads Pushed WASHINGTON (UPI) -A parents' group today asked Congress to halt the "manipulation or children" ~y ad- vertisers who overload kiddie tefevislori shows with commerical11 for sweets and toys. nit plea came in testimony prepared for a Senate consumer 6ubcommittee from a Massachusetts-based organization called Action for Cbildrtn's Television (ACT). For years the group has bffn uratng the government to keep a clo1er eye on programs that are beamed to youngsters. Since children "simply do not have-the experience and maturity to make rational conawner declslon1," said ACT bolrd member carol Liebman , all those under the age of 10 "1hould be protected from , all 'IV advertislng." She said advertisers deliberately play oo the innocence, gullibUlty and im- agination of children to peddle their prod· ucts, particularly "vitamim, ·toys or edibles" of questionable worth. ''Because advertisers art aware that chlldren are different from adults they prepare ads aimed speclfically at children." Mrs. Llebman said. "We think this manipulation of children must· stop . ' . "ACT ba s been working through lhe federal rigulatory-aa:encies to secure 10 end to the advertisers' exploilation of our children. What is needed now Is a clear declaration from Congress that children are never appropriate targets of ad- vertising campaigns." The committee is considering both 1 truth in advertising bill and another one to set up a National lnsUtute of Advertis- ing, :h-farketing and Society to study behavioral sciences. To underscore her testimony. Mrs. Liebman brought llong I IS.minute film blending segments of children's cartoon shows, high-pressure commercials and views of professors and doctors on the ef- fects of TV on youngsters. She said it wu • "ud fact11 that the broadcasU"I code permits only 10 minutes of commercial time for adult prime-tlnie shows while allowing lt minutes of ads per ho\D' Of kiddie pro- gramming. "We do not expect childreri to purchase the family's foods, decide when he is old enough for a coq>ler chemistry set or prescribe his own f!nedicine ," Mrs. Lieb- man said. "Yet we allow the 'IV ad· vertlser to bombard our children with subtle and earefully researched ads at the average rate of. one every 2.1 minutes which appeal to him to exercise e:1actly this aort ol decision making." Mrs. Liebman aaid medical evldence showed that candy v~tam.ins touted on TV can actually be harmful to youngster s and that many of the cereals, candy and cakea they are urged to eat are "nulri· Uonally worthless." ~uthern state. o!. Par~uu•. .. , . • . The hljacker demanded $254,000 and three parachutes and when they were delivered on the order1 of President Emilio Garrrastuu Medici the gunman released the 88 paSsengers and all crewmembers except the pil,ot, copilot and mechanic. Release of the passengers houri of negotiations over radio from the and part of the crew came after seven p-to the control tower at Congootw as the plane sat m the nmway. By then the plane had been surrounded by troops. Caldeira said he and the other crewmernbers slipped into the cabin, locked the door and jumped out the win· dows or the flight cabio, then potice and troops rushed the aircraft. "This was my first advenhn'e of thi~ nature and I hope it will be my last " Caldeira said. . ' DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dellwry of the Dally Pilot Is vuannteed Mendey.Frlday: Ir )'av 4G net Mve yeui• S-PW' lly J:JD p,m., CIH ~ )IOl,lr COPY WIH a.. brvulht • .,..,.,. can1 ,,.. ""'" uin1u 1:JD p.m. lltvrMy .,.. ~: " .,.,.do not ~ you.!' COll'Y 11'1' f 1.m. Sfltllrdlly, Ir I 1.m. sund1y, call ..W I (OP'!' WHI M brOug~I t11 ""· c.111 1rt1 11k1n unru 10 e.rn. TtltphOnH Moll Of'lll9t c-ty Arut -···••, '°'4m Norttiw.I Ht.1t1llntton llleh .. •rid W.tmll'lltllr ..... ~ ....... ,_ •• ...,, .. II C...,.,,tll, Clplsfr-l4illcll, Sa11 J..-11 C.pl1!reno, 0.111 f"olllt, hvtt. La9Wnl, Lffut11 NJtwl .... ~ vacation, . · e Bremer Plea UPPER MARLBORO, Md. (AP) -Ar· thur Herman Bremer pleaded innocent Tueodoy to llate d>lrgea stmnntng lrom tho May 1s shooting of aov.;:g• c. Wallace and three others. The 21.year-Otd unemploy Milwau- kee, Wis., bus boy entored the plel 1t a 15-minute _ arralgnment . in a heavily guaniid Prine• ~ County Circuit Court. '# The plea was recorded by Judge Ralph Powers alter ID informal discussion about wbetbrer or not Bttmer'a federally appointed· attorney would also repruent the defendant on the ltl.te charges. The . question wu eapec!ed to be reoolveil lator tbil ....it . e 'Eletlated' Shoes WASHINGTON (AP) -Shoeprlceo are going up, but not u much as lint lelrtd. The Price Commiulon Tueoday ruled that shoe oomjlanleo could ooly pus on to consumers a dollar-for-dollar increase in the price of leather. • The companies bid alked for up to 9.7 percent price :lnc'realel. e Inmates Surrender PATERSON, N.J. (AP) -Sile mef. lious inmates protesting conditions at the P&Maic County eh a v e surrenderff following a tour rebellioo in· which six guuds were infUred. · Sheriff Frank Davenport said the trou· Bomb Shelter Blows Up l\.illing Five Youngsters VALDESE, N.C. (UPI) -A backyard bomb shelter built during the Cuban missile criail 10 years ago exploded Tues- day evening, killing live children wbo were playing on ita steps. A sixth child waa Injured In the blast which authorities speculate mai_have been caused by !~from 1 butane tank or fumes from large quan. ti ties of gllJQline stored in the shelter. ~ The powerful exploSion, blew the body of one ~hild 300 feet onto a road and big pieces of the !oot-thlct, steel-reinforced concrete shelter were scattered o\ter a wide area. bomb shelten ln Valdese. "I think there1s thr,. more right in this nelghborbood • he said. ' Mrs. Florence Garrou, siater-in-law or the telllle uecutlve. aaid tile bomb shelter is "an autbtnlic thing. It'1 been checked »<riodlcally 1nd under contn>l and usable since." ble began Tuesday when the six Inmates -armed with homemade weapons4>ver- powered three unanned guards, grabbed their keys and freed about 100 other pris- oners from their cells. · Davenport satd the released inmates did not take part in the dlaturbance. · 'l1>e stz: rebels suf'Kteied about four houn later when ja~oflidals 1groed to discuss their grievances: "fck> ·roo skinny. too fat. too Plain..: Democrats Force Runoff Election For McClellan . LITI'LE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -A.rlcanu1 Democrata have re!uaed to glve 'Vetarln Sen. John McClellan a majority en- dorsement for nomtnation to a 1Wb term, forcing a poUUcally rlliy runol! with Rep. David Pryor. · · · McClellan led the ticket as expectod In Tuesday's primary, but his vote tot.al was well below the majority in the f<>ur- man race that would have allowed him to tscape the runolf. The handsoo!e Pryor, :I, · · tllat Arkans11 incuJ!lbenll ~ have foundered in runoffs, prodlcted vic- tory In the June 13 rmiatdJ, IJMlliainl tile voter1 "cine ol tile most eacltlng races ever nm in Attanaas." McClellan, 7', -oge filured ., a major iuue, II.id he bid demonstrated during the campaign that bll age wu not a handicap and thit he was ready to wage a ,vlgorou.s runoff campaign if necessary. He has been in the senate for 30 -years. ' Although · bl1 vote total hovered II about 45 »<rcenl through tile 'night, McClellan would not concede that he 1'11 forced into a nmoU but admitted that he WU I "llWe diloppolnted" at bia llJow• ing. With 2,442 ol 2,118 procincts reportad. McClellan bad 205,193 votes to Pryur'1 194,021. ~ Las Vega's Hi ts 10 I High · The children, police said, were playing 11Wl.d's games" on the steps Jeadiug down Into the U-by-25 loot abeltor lnllle ... · ecutlve Ed Garrou had sunk into the side of a slecp bill about 70 feet to one side of his fl!J,llllO brick home. Bll'l'OU, durl"I the sbeltor·bulldlni lreney in tile 1962 missile crlail, hlcf stocked the sheltor with 1arp quantities vi guolln• for an electric generator Ind also lnat1lled 1 bulano tank. • T-pet'.tltttre• ""' uw .. r.(. " .. .l1 " ..... . , . ·'' It .. n 11 1 ... " n .. " ... n • .., ..... " ,, .... .. .. .. .. " ...... .... .. n '' "' " ... " ..... " " ....... ., . .. " " .. .• " . I( .. .... " " . ...... ,,. " . -~ 11 ... ... -~--1 i .. • • .t Keith Selgall, 19, a member of tho Valdese Rescue Squad, said the nplosk>n shook his !titler home three quarters of i" mile away, and "when I got hero, I amelled the gasoline fumes rel! strong." 1lle deld included G&mlll'a dlUChter, Jean Anlla, II; Donald ~. JJ; hll s~ler R11ina, 10; Gloria Blmmond. U. and Mika Powell, 10. The Clll1 Mtivor -tile nttcJ>borbood cblldNn Flll1fl1I .::"J.,..*.,. ~u:,. ~ 1t the abtlter wu Bea Picou, tbe Garrau "" ~ " _, • " u lnDh cbiki'• cou&ln, who llvu nut door. ffl •"'""-• Miclly Md Tllllrldl.,. -... -of the ...-n1-t--' _._,,_ tltfl toay, 1t fltlr lllN<Nt IN IOt J. llllD' "" l.'111:1 .._,.,...,.,.. "-._..., ··~.... . downhill, tbroucblbe door_ no '= . -·----.. n>ofcoffi!•• bu'"'······~~J · ' ff ,..,. ........,._... , •• ,,._ ..... '.# ..... ""' UUUlW "" " " "' ., _ _. ... " ol the victims ~ ncb 11 Pie.of.,,.,,. ••AJ•l#iJ4••ow s11-. M-, Tides •l ~~~~~~~.lll hllvy (fil]MIDMll' ,~ wwownoa., • • Authorities llld thtre W'lft V9'J flnr >-. s.c-f lllttt ............ 11• ... u BUcb sbelters In Vlldese IDd Gvrou'a s.c.. ..., ............ .lilt"""'• 2·' Wat uptDlivt lo l'Onitruct. Family ~~. ,,...,.., frleDdS aid he "kept it up• and fre. .. It ltlret -.............. J:" .. , .. ' _....... ..... .... -... ~ t ~,,, ................. f::lt....... ,:. ... ....... _,. ....... 1"1 tbt ·-.., fo6d ~. -c: ........... ·r.-u --I!'~ . ~ =:-.a.i"i;.4i'~A ti~~~· .. ~ Howew.r" DeputJ-11rl.Jilmlaal llllnflt ........ ;.w: · -..1 ..... \1:tt-.-. .... •:»..,,., , Brittlln llkf there were ••1 ~~ .. 1 ·~1 .· • . ~--lUCUI WOUUS. NllG .. OU DIG TifllOUOtf Dlllll . Pt.. Y-ton Kiiied in ...... Sholtar lllnt · • \ • .. 7 ' • ... • • •• Orange ·Coast Today's ~la.ii N.Y. Steeb VOL:. 65, NO. 152, 5 SECTIONS, 64 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 31', 19n • N TEN CENTS Old Newport: Is It a Old Newport 11 going lo · become a "high rise graveyard" if t:ity councilmen maintain their present atlitude in mntng concepts, a Newport Beach ·architect charged today. Likening councilmen to ostriches, William C. Clapet let fire at both the pro- ~ height limit ordinance now before planning commissioners and the COWlcil's reaction to an innovative development plan for the Cannery Village area . He was also critical of council adoption City Mulls \., ., Growing Up ; • "-Or Out of strlcl oil-street parking reglJ!aUoos In the Old Newport.cannery Village area. Cl11P<t had repr....,t~ the <:annezy Village Association outllning a preJlC"ll) to ttdevelop Uie Old Newport area at a meeting of cowicilmen last week. Councilmen declined to e n d o r s e Clapet's plan, instead adoyting the tough parking r u I es .and telling ·Cannery Villages representatives to come back with a more specific proposal. · "I personalty feel the city i.. either avoJding, or lgnorlng, the lndlvJdull needs of unique portions of the city, not only In the ~ area bul other areas," Clapet aa1d in a letter to coun- cilmen. "f realize we only had time lo present one segment of need in a specific area of Newport Beach," Oapet said, adding, "f also n()ted that the council did not show enough interest to !llggest a task force or the Cannery Village A.ssorjation and members of the city staff to continue High Rise Graveyard~ • along the llnes ol our pmenlatlon to 4evelop g.W so that solutloos could be achieved. "How can progrtss be made whether It be slow, radical or whatever, if one or the principal Parties takes tbe posture of the ootrlch with Its head In the sand hoping the problell\ will solve Itself," Cl a pet said. Councilmen have not fannally received Clapet's letter and Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis said tbi..s momlng he will reserve comment on It unW he has a chance to read ~t. Clapet, In his le_t!~aald 1bt new P8tk· Ing regulations, which require one Off. street space for each 250 aquare feet nf store space "15 only golng to drive out the investor and create a low level slum type area in the back yard of city hall. "Attacking . the propooed h • I g h t ordinance, whlcl\ wou.ld allow buildings up to 50 feet tall. with use ptnnlts, ln the Old Newport area, Clapet said: "It cnn only result In !ht beg!Mlng of a high rise graveyard. "I reel the are1 Imm the Arches lo McFadden's lan<llng and beyond should be maintalned In a relnli\'c low rise developnlcnt si nce this 11rt•11 is Otl the ac- tive lnglewood·Ntwport Faull ." Clnpct said. "Nnl only from tht slnndpol nt of the fAult, but the fact that the rnrly cily of Newport was ronned In this 11reA, I f~·t this is an important @lenient th11t should be ~e~erved," he sald. Surrender Sought 100 Reds Make Offer at Kontum Heavy fighting continued In some areas negotiations went en all dAy. Trimming both population and the height of buildings in Newport Beach will _ 1. !F'-=-";be discusse~ by planning commissioners, -ThurSday. • ' -~ ··. · SAIGON (UPI) -At least 100 North Vietnamese soldiers c8u8:ht up in ,the' bat- tle for Kontum have offered to surrender to _government troops Inside the city,· front cl\t~a~~ ~ \mi:.. · · i-----,,;e spa c es said the ·Communist! lost· m<ire than 3,000 dead in ~ battle for K«;>nt4f11. ... ._ . · -· • . . , or Kontum and waves of B52s bombed lie !Wiid the COmmunl11ts broke in on ·Communist posltlona near the city In South Vletname,,e radio frequencies wllh what spokesmen called the heaviest the aurrtnder offer and that at one point lk.et..ainoo_~unlst olfeMlv.t-lour CJ>mmunlw troopr.·hB1d1 In t11ralr-~ I I I t 7 Commissioners will unveil a ~oposed density ordinance at a.3'p.m. stlldy ses. '"'s1ori and wUl conduct a public hear~ a proposed four-zone high ris;~ance at 7:30 p.m. B6th meetings are in city ball. Both ordinances would be interim easures pending completion of an up- ated master plan of development. The new density ordinance, drafted by he city staff, would cut back population rojections markedly on Ba Ibo a enlnsula, slightly less in West Newport, but only nominally on Balboa Island and 1n Corona del Mar. "That's mainly because there Is less R· 3 and R-t zoning in the-latter two areas," explained Carl Neuhausen, advance pla- ning director for the city. He said most of the ft..2 (duple1es) would not be s;everely affected by the ordinance, "exr,ept in Welt Newport. where you get into smaller lots." "Balboa Isl.ind and Corona del Mar meet the new minimum lot size r~ <iuirements," he said. In addition, he noted, the decrease in West Newport is not greater becaU!e most of the area is not developed. \ , DAILY ""'°" llilft ,..... CODE AufijOR l'RIC! REFLECTS OH 30,YEAR CAREER They Didn't Prom1·,. Him 1 RlllO Gorden and It Wian't Under the proposal, total population that could be added under current rorung in these four areas is about 6,000 people. No Bose Garden Under the proposed o r d i n a n c e , Neuhausen explained, tha~ figure would be reduced by about 2.000. ''The one thing that this doetn't reflect." he said, "is to eliminltl the Mesan Retires From Marine Life possibility of residential units within By ARTHUR R. VINSEL commercial or manufacturing %0De1. °' .,. ~ ,..,. It•• "Accordingly, ~t woiild mean ev.en ?fobodY pl'()JD.i.sed Wilison P-rice a rose further reducti!)D Of the total potential gafden 30 years agO tut week. when be population," he s;aid. joined the U s M · · e Co nd 1 ft Neuhausen eiplalned lhat the 61000-· • arm r rps ·a e person increase would be even greater Wi14ow Rock. Ari.J.,.for a world tom by under current zoning since residential war, development is presenlly allowed in these Nobody prombed Price the glamor and non-residential zones. glQ!Y that history ~ws when you're on Specifically, tht-'proposed ordinance -Ulirl&ht aide aD<t)'OO.""""Yiiii. woutd: Nobody promised the )'OU.DI Navajo In- -Require 2,500 square feet as a dlan anything but action. minimum size for a duplex lot (compared Now SO, 'Price was prlnclpal developer with 2,000 square feet now). of a radio communicailoo l)'ltem based -Cut back the buildable area of a lot to on the Navajo languia:e, one of 200 80 percent. CurrenUy dupleies and tribesmen Japanese· soldlen 1n the South apartments can occupy u much as 333 Pacific craved to ca~ i . percent of the lot size through the use of Nooe of the Navajos -classed as top multi·story buildings. secret peraonnt.l -were ever taken -Require use permits for any res¥J,ep-prisoner but casualties wen heavy. • tial construction in existing unclassified Price, of 871 Victoria St., Costa Mesa, zones. won his own particular Ptlrple Heart on Commissioners will be conducting thelr Guadalcahal in lfO, but told the medics •econd public hearing oil the pl'OJ>OffCI to lake care of the badly Wounded first. high rise ordinance and may mate minor_; ;,, ... J just had some abrapntl and a busted c~anges ~f-ore recommending it to·tbe ~." says the ~ who ii at Camp city council for adoption. P)9lletoo today, "tying up last loose ends As written, t.he height ordinance would of· r 30-year career (rom ' which he place a 24-foot ceiling in residential areas-· formally retirtd Friday as a master and a 32-foot lid ln commercial areas. sergeant. · Commercial buildings in some areas t•t spent three months strapped tc a could be built u high u 50 feet with use hospital bed In New z.e1aoo," say• the permits and lo an wilimited beight In television repair flop ~ whom other areas, like Ne'!fparl center, with nobody ever prom.bed a rose . eii. use permits. A Marl.De Corps recJ'l:11Ung r ln hi& Kissinger Bea1ns • Belly Da;.cer .Finds .J!enr y's Lap TEHRAN (AP) -Henry A. Klsalnger ~ a belly dancer early today aod she ended up In hi3 lap. The rsven-halnd beauty, :II-year.old Nadlna Pana, .was performing for several hundred )oumalllts and government ollJcta1i at a dlruM!t pally given by the MJnlstry of Information when President, Nixon'1 bachelor aide arrived after midnight. . SUll In lall• aod white lie after the stale dinner given for President Nixon by the Shah of Iran, Klsslnger Immedlately attra<led a c:rowd. Alter he and Prime .MJnL<ter Amir Abbu lloloyda .,..... aeated on c:wJ>. lom In the hotel ballroom, the -. who bad ... l1Tllilll Cll the 1Llgt, .. wu led over. _ • Druled In htr-lbimmerin( C01t•n•-dllcl'lbo ilbeol all..,. dollart on her breasts, abe perfmned a pulsat!nc d-. a ,..,, feet from Kissinger ind !ht prime .mlnlJler, -the prime ........... ....., .... plopped In ((ju. inger'1 lap. The ·While -llW!ni•, -~ rib Amlluu beaatles have made him the talll ol WadlJniQlo, beanlad ~. "f wt11 be bid;" bt aald u be left Ibo porty, home garage repair shop shows a USMC drill instructor screaming the alogan at a wld...,yed young trainee: "We•doo't promise you a rose garden." Price says be dldn't plan for a Marine Corps career, but found educational o~ portunlties a Navajo you'th couldn't ex· pect otherwi&e. He didn't join it out of personal bravado; there~ i world w.ar in prog- . ress and the COflS' recruiter got to him first. ' The Navajo cQde be helped develop after specialized ~ studies confused and confound~ed the J:apanese, who ~e~er~lly per! ed with polish when mutating Amerlc accents on the aif.. -· "The Japaneg had English·speaking men that listei>e<f to our radio and telephone co~setion and aome could even get into t6e cOnversatlon by im- itaUng Brooklyn or Deep bth. accents," he explains. One monitor brazenly began a atrategy chat with Fleet Admiral C b e s t e r Nimitz. "Excuse me, Admiral, but that'• not a buddy you're talk.in&: to," said Price, in- terrupting the talk. ·Indian dialect ls what jinxed the Japanese. "T~ my knowledge, the code ,w.as never cracked by the enemy," he explains, ·noting . ev-ery explanatory book was burned al.J!N'I end. Rese.,clr"lflto his own heritage also revealed an historical Indian hoax, says Sgt. ~rice, who notes most tribes used runners to deliver messages berore Nav1- jos had radio. "I was surprised to learn that smoke signals and tom-tom messages were 1trlctly Hollywood," be explains.~ So are some ·of Sgt. -Price's-Pacific combat recolledlonl. He tells of·one tribesman'• capture by what -in earlltr wan -would have been the enemy, but on Iwo Jima was his own aide. Given perm~ Navajo radlomao headed for a neerby· camp to get a haircut, but wu waylald by a suspick>m Cauculan lieutenant. · "He thought ha wu a Jap · ... plil a A5 1utomatlc right to hia head -he wu ml dark -mt; -1." Pr1ct clecilr ... "'l'he.llda'o Ci>!limandlng olllcel" had lo "°""' dowll'to ldelllfy him and gel him oot ol the alockadt. '"Ille Ueutenam had to go explain to hil own C.O. and then apotoglzo lo tha 'irteoner' pmoaally," ha ___ ,.. A wteran ol Vietnam and Korea, of set. Prie<'• hJstorlc memoileo Is (loo H.\IUNE. Pl&a I) . began on March 30. ~ without weapcns, l:M!gan walking But the front dispatcM1 lndlcated those toward.government ll11e1. llowever, they It was the first known mass· 1urrender offer of lhe viar by North Vietnamese although some Viet Cong units sur· rendered In the pas~ the dUpatcbes said. ins.Ide. lhe city apparently, h.iid bad disappeared behind 1 small knoll and did e.fioUgh, ~ . not appear again. John Paut Vann, the senior U.S. ad,,__ Vann said South Vietnamese troopl viser In the Central Highlands, told were ordered· not to fire Into the aur- newsmen of the sWTender offer and said (See SURRENDER, Paae I) Park Opponent Two Out of Three: -Labels Bonds As 'Stupid; By L. PETER KR!EG --..,,,......,,, Newport Park Advocate Sees Hope in Bond Vote Newport Beach residents are "stupid" If Ibey vote for the proposed II.I million park bond issue on Tuetday'1 ballot, a man leading the campaign against the bonds said today. · "Government is rucking us dry, suck- ing the blood out of your veins. People are stupid if they want to get more land off the tu roles," 1ald Carl Arthofer, a former Corona del Mar beach con-- cessionaire now in the. real estate business. Arthofer Js one of three individuals or groups that have apoken out against the bonds. The two others Involve groups of people who claim they would be displaced il the bonds pass. Residents ot Marinapark, the cJty. owlted trailer park on Balboa Peninsula, have hired attorney Roy B. Woolsey to help them in their campaign again.It the bonds and to save their leases. City councilmen have ordered 1 study or the fea sibillly or converting the four. acre trailer park Into a public beachfront park. , . The second group of concernea homeowners live in an area between the 38th Street Park and the West Newport channel. A spokesman for this group, Harold Sweetser, 3618 Park Avenae, said homeowners fear that if the ci{y gets the bond m~ey, plarui to widen Balboa Boulevard from 33rd to 46th Street will (See BONDS, Pare I) • The dialrman of th• cltlsens commtttee for the park bond tasuu said today 1be 11 optimistic that at leut two ol lhe three proposltlons on Tuesday'a ballot will pass . But she Js. Iess optimlsUc about pauage of Propo1ltion H which would create 1 '3 million reserve fund for future park purchau1. Mn. Ging.,. Page reported this morn- ing she has found people believe these '°" called u:tra fun<ls are not of Immediate Importance and could be voted 001 In the future. "I am very optimistic F and G will pass but I am more concerned about H. 'Ibis ts the end result of a poll I toot W t month at a meetlng of concerned citizens in Newport llelghts," she· said. · Proposition F -$3.1 million -prC>o videt for the acqul!ltion of property for 12 parks, 1 SO.mile bicycle trail sy1tt:m, three harbor scenic sites and p1thw~y1 linking reaidentlal area• to acbool1, ·puts and beaches . Property development and necessary equipment would be provided by PropOll· . tion G, which 11 for $2.4 million. These bonds· would give cllizen1 their 1 f opportunity to aee where their s going and to control it 11 1uch, 11 1. Page. "A~ of us ahould have our God-given rights to open space," and can take part In CQJttrolllng populstion den1lty by tell· Ing the municipal government wbal " Boat Crash R~t~unted By Boy's Grand{ather From Wire Services with our running lights on," Dart recall· PARKER1 Ariz. -A bitter Fletcher ed. "I had just baited the boys' hooks and Dart renected today on the tragic death ''bad accldently kicked over 1 ~ckle bOx. of his 7-year~ld Huntington Btach "I bent over io pick lt up and It hap. grandson on the Colorado River over the pened. The boal just c e out of nowhere weekend. -and ran right over UI. ght we were The SS.year-old Dart, who lived within going to sink." blocks of his deceased relative at 310 2rl4 .---Xbe .power m1l1er repo ly atopped St., in the older portion of Huntington momentarlly after lhe acct t and u.n 8each;-recoon1ed-1bat'"'the01)}'1 !ml aped off. pleaded with him all day Saturday to go "ft wu a clear ease hit a'i!.i nm,• fl1hlng. Dart claimed. "But I waited until nigilt lo lei the Yuma County 81)er1111, who are hand). crazy fools get oU the rJver," he tald. "f tng lnvestlgaUon of the ml1h1p which oc- guess they weren't all off."; curred aboul 10 miles oortb of Parker. The elder Dart finally took Olrls Dart Arizona, said they have locsted the host and 11-yeat-o1d Donald Thornton out on btlleved to have been Involved. tbe river after dark and was flshlng The Yuma County attorney'• office bu .about I p.m. When a J!OWer crul&er added tliat tbe boal Is registered to ramined anil thfn pa..td' ofer·thelr owo Donald A. Payae, owner of a marine aup- 17-foot aluminum craft. pty otore ln Newport Beach. Youn( Dart was apparently hit by tbe No arreou bin· been made or-war· ... Uer of the -cruiser and WU ranta --reportedly deed belorl retcuers could l"untral arr1n1ement1 for 'Chris Dar! pull the allll)!Jnum craft lo abore. Young have been 'el for 2 p.m. •t the EpiJcopal Tbornton ".~by air lo a)'1-lr Chur<b ol Huntlnaton Beath. lnttrmtnfi holpltal with a badly llUIU!ed 1eg. His will.W'll W'8tmliiotee..M•morlsl Par recreational f1cllltlt1 they wanl, 1he uld further. lf all three propo1ltlon1 paa, tacb Newport Beocb hou1ehold would psy al" proximately Ill.JO per year. for the If. yeor life of the bond1, accor<llnc to cit~ officials. Parker's Jail Trusties Back Police ·Request l"rom Wlre Service• RENO, Nev. -O ... tlme Newport Beach Police Capt. Jamea Parker IJ hav- Jng hlJ share or troubles In a 1tormy 111 months as chief of pollct here. First Jt wa1 hla own men -who r-tfully complied -when ordered to quit moonltglltlna In offduty hOlD'I u gambling room security men at Reno'• casinos . Hit In the pocketbook where It really hurta, Reno'a unlronn palrolmen saw sberlrt•1 deputlet grab all tht casino Jobi they vacated. So Chl!f . l'arker'1 men are now d~ mandlng a dime per hour raise and Tuesday they got 1upport In tbe form oC , a sympathy atrlke by the very prboner11 . they put behind bara. Jail t.ru11Ue1 -a total o( S4 working off their m1JJClemanor 1tentence1 -rt:fustd to go to their duty wtgnmenLI. They said Jt wa1 to 1how rupport for ~the pallcemen'f. pf! demand1, but noted they were al® protesting quallty of their Jailhouae .ch&. We adler Warm temperatur'' will a;:aln vl1lt the Southland Thurtday 'lltth hll)11 et the htacbes at 55 rlJlng to IO in!Md. Lowt In the f0'1. INSmE TOD-' l' A 1'•111Vl'll CIO<ftl thcorfUd 1h41 • ltokr I/GI u., "'°' ,,. 1panllblt /01' the upjo.lfon Illa! rlPl>fd thr01'{1h o !>olllb 1/ltltn at lhe h~ oJ a Vatde11, N.C ltzlll• tucudoe, kllli•g 11J· cl<ffdrrn. (SH &tol']/, llfl91. 4). , -.... ... --... ... ~ ........ ,_ urw .,... a-.. ' CllllllW .... '1'A • • C9Mlf1 •. Ith-It Plrtlr II ,, .. ....,. .....,.. ~ 0.-1• N.tldt • Or, ...... ,, .. ,.,. .. , .............. ... 1111""•....., JIM1 T........... • ,.... 1t4t ·Tl sic, ....,_.. ,., ...... ' ..... . coodltiorr•U"?'l!!)l'Uillillll!adory. -Dart Is oarvtved by his part;iite, The tldtt Dart •"!,In the -ol the Richard and Naocy, and a lialer, Rebe<> · • boof and 'wu not -ly burl. ca. They Un al 731 Like Sl, lluntiqlCll ~ : ~=.,· "We...,, -ed clooa.lo Ibo dloro Buch. ,, . .. ~ I . ..... ..,...... .. ...,. .... • ' • 4 D-'llY PILOT ' wl•la Tom arphine .... ,. !' ';; Midwesterners Slug It Out JUCXY TICXY POUl'IX: A couple of J.Udwt1lern boy1, one who used to push PftllCriplionl u a dru&1ltl and the other who puahed for the Lord u 1 mini1ter, wtnt 1t each other again via tho lelevilion lube Jut night. The stakes today, however, are a little higher than a good collectJon plate or the price of some migraine headache remedy. Thl1 one ta for the Presidency of the Unli.d StAlet. So It was that Senator Hubert H. Hwnphrey, the Democrat from Min· netota , !lad another video confrontation with Senator Georte S. McGovern, the Democrat from South Dakota. Actually, this TV appearance for the pair wu a Jot calmer than the nrat one. In the fln:t one, Humphrey yelled some at McGovern 1nd a11ertedly called him "• fool." TlllB TIME AROUND, Humphrey didn't 1et Jo ytll at McGovern on accounl at he 1ot lntmupted by a commercial. Mdltlonally, Humphrey •Polotized Ir, he Aid, It had heen though! he'd ealled McGovern a fool. <He'd only meant to aay anybody who would support At c ~over n '1 "oorr f!Katory " tax program was a fool. ftelumably Mr. McGovern 1upportJ it, however, ao I don't know where that · Jtavt1 the foollal1N!11. ·' . ' Meir · Vows Retaliation · fOr 'M a ssacre TEL AVIV CUPI J -Prime Mlnltltt and releued. But it U.ted eitht pel'IOlll blamel..... Suddenly tile terminal-small by coin· ~itb blood and lilltred with bn>k .. (;olda •ltir hinted today at IJraell in critical c:ondttkJD. ltfra, Mtir, tired and dra~11. said in I pari.son wilh btJ&e American..,.~ bodies. SO~! victimll. ~ere IO mancled retribulloo •&•Inst tile Arab tumlllu 1be death toll did not Include the nationwide broadcast from the Kneaset terminal# -upolded with tbe iouDd of that author1Uea bad dilficully aayil!I ix· Japaneae wl>Ose suicide mluion ended (Plll'llamenll Bulldimr In Jerusalem that hand arenadea and the aubmachlneguns. actly bow many Jl'l'IOlll were killed. "'ho ""t three neatly drwed Japaneso when one blew himseU up with a l'enade Lebanon had harbored the guerrillas. But Womtn anil children screamed and The ~apanese idenllllod themselvtl aa to L.,0-1.t Airport where they mauacred and another Wll allot and killed bl'.. 1 she was especially critical of Air France dashed for cover, ·but llWtY were blown memb<n ol a group ealled "The Army of ma ....... and cblldren ~ nJcbt .• componion. The third man wu captureil: on arounds it had not taken normal lo b!U u the' -1it lll!ety. the Rod Star." Japane,. pallce aald no Sbe called Jt murder by meuenaer. Arab t.'Oldcaata aald the J•paneat were security precautloru: when it flew the 'J'om Golden, SO, of New York City, who such organization exl.!ltd, but the A pollct apakttman uld the ofRclal avmctlll the death of two tuerrillH allot three Japanese in wilh • group of waa waitlnt with his mother for the ar· Japanese Kyodo News Agency said It was deat.b toll was 22 peraona 'killed and 70 and killed by Iaraell soldiers durlna an tourists. rival ol their &liter trOm New York, said an ultraleftist radical organization of wounded ln 1he violence Jn whlcb the abortive hijack at Lydda airport early The massacre began 1hortly after 10:30 "it 1tarted wttb what IOIDlded like a cou-Japanese youths who ·tortured and killed Japanese took aubmachlne IWll and hand tblt month. p.m. 0 :30 p.m. PDT Tutlday) when the pie of pope." 13 of their own members earlitr thll year grenades from their auitca1e1 and opened A apokesman for the Popular Front for three Japanese disembarked from the Air ''I suddenly looked to my left and in a purge of cUssldenta. fire on 1 m>wd of 300 pf:nom, many of France plane with 112 other p.85.!ena:en. about 15 feet away 1 saw the Japanese 1be newspaper Yedioth Aharoootb said them Puerto Ric ... on 1 plJ&rlmaie Jo 'the Llboratlclll _of Paleatine, a Manlat They claimed their bagga1e and then atandilltl there firing his machinegun the Jone capUve told bla interrocatora ho the Holy Land. • IJ'OUP infamous for past hijactinp, uld removed their weapons -band grenadel toward tbe blgpg~ area,'! Golden aaid. had received training at an Arab cuer- Ho'#eYer tbt National Radio later iit that IWift Iwaell retrlbutlon and AK47 Chinese-made a u to ID a t I c "Be was ltandiDIU>tfe~LutlD( away -rUla camp in-an unidentified Arab eoun- came out ;.Ith 1 report that 25 penom expected. A spokennan Aid the weapons and opened fire wftbout warn. it wu \mell. •. ,. try. It quoted bJJn as aaying many other were killed and about ao wounded, many rtprlsal would be directed 1gainlt ing. His mother, Clare Golden, &>, was Japanese had undergone such tralninl as of tbtm ao sllgbtly that they were treated n but that that COWJlr)' wu The airport was a shambles, spl:ubed wounded in the shooting. part of a world revohrtk>n. • Jet Hi jaeker- Kills Se lf At Airpor t SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI) -A hi- jacker seized a Brazilian airliner Tues-- day night, demanded and received $254, .. 000 and three parachutes, thew killed himself as army troops stormed the plane. Three hostages escaped by jwnping out the cockpit windows just btfore the soldiers rushed the P.lane. Brig. Gen. Delio ia!<Jim Matos , com· mander of the Brazilian 4th Air Zone, identified the hijacker u Nelson Mes- quita, who boarded the Varig Airline!: Electra propjet at Rio de Janeiro. "He shot himself be.fore the plane was takentby security forces," Matos said. Screams 'Real' Roller Coaster Plunge s Off Rails, Killing Thrye . LONDON (UPI) -It waa the moment when evfryone ii exp«.'ted to scream - at the very toP of the. roUer coe.!ter about to hurtle down. But the fear in the screams at Lon- don's Battenea fun faii-turwod cblllintlY real Tuesday u three can plunged back- wards and smashed on a bend. 1"o boys and a tirl died• sm.en othe!' children were injured. I IN SHORT •••. 1 ble began Tuesday when the six Inmates -armed with homemade weapona--over- powered three unarmed guards, grabbed tDeir keys and freed about 100 ~ pris-- oners from their cells. Davenport said the released inmates did not take part in the dlsturtJance. The stx rebels surrendered about four houn later when jail officials IJl'ee:f to discuss tbe.ir grievances. Wick s 1myway, the-televtsJon ·confrofttatlon-- WJ• another ellort by the two leading · n,m&crauc presidential hopefula to cap- tlp'e C8Ufornla'I delegation to the DI• ~ttonaJ convention. Mesquita pulled a pistol from a picture album that had been hollowed out and forced the pilot, Celso Caldeira, to retirn -to-Sao-Paul6's Congophas-lrirpon.:atterit had taken. off for Curitiba, capital or the southern ·state of Parana. The hijacker demanded $254,000 and three parachutes and whefi they were delivered on the orders of President Emillo Gama.stun Medici the gunman released the 88 pa.Ssengers and till crewmembers except the pilot, copilot and mechanic. Release of the p&stngers hours of negotiations over radio from the and part of the crew came afttr .seven plane lo the control tower at ConlOOhu A brakeman was riding between the second -end third cars of the "Big Dip. per'"?Oller coasi.r t>airrbelnn>atted~;­ cable up Jo the 60 _loot ~peak. 1ifr canied 22 persons, mostly children out for a day's fWJ during their mid-tenn · vacation. - After one hour of being questioned by a bittery of newsmen on their variOUJ oo. tl6ns. it's no wonder they're having dif· flCulty iw1ylng the voter1. After all of Jt 1laake1 down, they 're really pretty much alike. . .BOTH HUMPHREY and McGovern are J:fetly liberal. Both of them want the war over, taxes cut, jobs increased aDd all tbo,1;e other good things. Theo you look at their background.!, Both came from humble beginnifllS. McGovern w.11 in the Air Force. Humphrey was an instructor in the Air F'Orce. McGovern represents S o u th Dakota. Hwnphrey waa bom In South Dakot.a. Wallace, South Dakota, to be precLse. Which brlngs U1 lo another p0int. ' -l!Otil AGREED they really don't want to be on the .same ticket with Alabama Gov. Geors:e Wallace. Both alao agreed that with Gov. Wallace, the feeling would likely be very mutual. There were some curlOUI points in the presentations, too. Humphrey, who in 1964 as aasJstant Senate majority leader, was credited with !"'•hint lo idoptlon the mo.st massive Civil Rl&hta program 1dnce Reronstructl9n, spent considerable time explaining why he would go slow on ichool bual.ni for racial ba11nce. McGovern, on the other hand, who has been cozying up lo the liberal camp of th~ Kennedys and the super-liberal youth movements, .spent considerable time ex- plalnln1 wlty he Im' '° liberal 11 to be called a radical. IN THE END, I'd cnll the TV con- frontation another draw. Some folio think llumphrey won the flrat one while MCGovettt w11 the victor tut nl&ht. Neither of th•m aeem too· pleased to- day with the whole alfalr. McGovern, however, 1pplrenUy took 110 chancu. He had a very long biography of hl.! life on the air just as BOOn as the television confrontation w11 over. Well, at least llumphrey couldn't in- terrupt th1t. Hearing P ostponed I.OS ANGELES (UPI ) -A final pretrial hearlna Jn the Pentagon Papers cue involving Danlel Ellsberg 1nd Anthony J. Ru!SO has been put over until Monday. Court 11llachts said Tuesday the delay was granted lo give atl9rneys ad- diUonal time to prepare the case. -· \ Ul'I T1le""'-CL EANUP BEGINS AT JSRAEL'S INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT 25 Ptrton~ Died In Terror Attack by Thrff J1ptn 1M Halt of 'Manipulating' Kiddie TV Ath Pushed WASHINGTON (UPI) -A parents' f:roup today asked Congress to halt the "manipulation of children" by ad- vertlsers who overload kiddie television shows with commerlcals for sweets and toys. The plea came in testimony prepared for a Senate conswner e;ubcommlttee from a Massachusetts-based organiiaUon called Action for Children's Television (ACI'). For years the group has been urging the government to keep a closer eye on programs that are beamed to youngsters. Since children "simply do not have the experience and maturity ta make rational COIU!WTier decision•," said ACT board member carol Llet:man , 411 those under the age of 10 "should be proteeted !rom all TV advertising." She said advertisers deliberately play on the innocence,. gullibility and tm- ag1naUon or children to peddle their prod- ucts! particularly _ "vitam!ns,..,. toys or edib es " of questionable worth. "Beciuse advertisers are IWIJ'e that chlldren are different from adults they prepare ads aimed specillcally at children." Mrs. Liebman said, "We think this manipulation of children must· stop "ACT has been working through the federal regulatory iigencie.3 to secure an - cnd to the adverOsers' exploitation or our children. Whal is needed now is a clear • declaration from congress that children are never appropriate targets of ad- vertising campaigns." The committee '-'considering both a truth in advertising bill and another .one to set up a National Institute of Advertis- ing, ~farketing and Society to study behavioral sciencts. . To underacore her teatlmony, Mrs. Liebman broutht along a IS.minutt film blending segment s ol children's cartoon shows, hlgh-Jl'essure commercials and views or professors and doctors on the ef- fects of TV on YOUfl&Sters. She said it wa,.a ".sad fact" that the broadcutlng c@e permits only 10 minutes of commercial time tor aduJt prime-time shows while allowing l& minutes of ads per hour of kiddie pro- gramming. "We do not ezpect children to purchase the famlly '.s foods, decide when he is old enough for a complex chemistry set or prescribe his own medicine," Mrs. Lieb- man said. "Yet we allow the TV ad- vertiser to bombard our children with subUe and carefully researched ads at the averqe rate of one every 2.1 minutes whicb appeal to him to ezerclse ezactly this m of decision making," Mrs. Liebman said medical evJdencc showed that candy vitamins touted on TV can actually be harmful to youngsters and-that many of the cereals, candy and caket they are urged to eat are "nutri- tionally worthless." Las Vegas Hits 101 High Temp erature• Mltll Lf" "''"· " " .~1 " .. ... 11 M .I• " .. Tl S1 t.u " ,, .. 41 ,., " .q .11 .. .. ,,, " " .... .. .. ... u " ~· 0 ·" .... " " ,,, ,. .... 7f "' ,'4 " " tJ " ·" ,, ~ ~ " 11 " .a ,, .. ... . " .. " " . ., ·'' " .. .. ., ... " ., • • : : , T"' ~ wtvt bMlft O'lf' th11 ~'' Y .. m,,., nntrlbVll111 • r.::.:!:.r."'ac•t 1r1111c. •nd , •t<: !h'ftwhlt l1t1'rit'!' '11111 of 11 Wll Ml~ IM 11 llour holld4IY period. as the plane sat in the nmway. · By then the plane had been surrounded by troops. Caldeira said he and the other crewmembers slipped into the cabin, locked the door and jumped out the win- dows of the flight cabin then ~ice and troops rushed the aircraft. · "This was my first advenlw'e of thh1 nature and I hope it will be my last " Caldeir" !aid. 4 ' DAILY PILOT DELIVERY .SERVICE Deltviery of the Dally Piiot is 9Uo/&flterd Mondty.Frldly: If -bu: do nff l'Mlw your PIPlr by S'IO p.m., <•II tnd )'OUr copy will bot lll'OUlhl to JOU. Cllit ert laktn lln!U 7::111 p.rn.. s.11un:l1y •ncl Sllnd1y: ff vov da not renlw your ~Y by f 1.m. Sltun:i.y, or I 1.rn.. $11nd1y, Clll Incl I eopy Will 11t ~Ullhl .. Voll. Ctll1 1r1 llklTI un!U 10 1.rn.. Telrphontt N.Os.I Onntt County ... ,... .. ...... 60-U21 Nar1h-I HunllnCllon llfldl - ind W11tm tmltt' .••.•......• ,, ... , Mt-lnl $In Cltmeni., Clplstr1110 11..cll, Si n Ju1n Clpt1tnno, o.,,.. Point, SOvlh LltuM, L111111a Nlrlutl .... <tn'"" ·• BrBlnel' Ple a UPPER MARLBORO, Md. (AP) -Ar· thur Herman Bremtt pleaded innocent Tuesday to state charges stemming from the May JS shootln1 of Gov. Gtorge C. Wallace and three others . The 21-year-ol.d unemployed Milwau- kee, Wis., bus boy entered the p1ea at a IS-minute · aJTalgmnent in a heavily guarded Prince Georges COunty Circuit Court. The plea was recorded by Judge Ralph Powers after an informal discussion about whether « not Bremfr'1 federally appointed attamey would aillO reprtl!ect the defendant on tile ataU! char1es. 1be question was expected to be reeolved late-this ,...k, e. 'Eleeated' Slaoe1 W AS!IlNGTON (AP) -Shoe prices are 1oin1 up, but not aa much as firat lemd. 1be Price Commiallion Tuqday ruled that shoe companies could only pall on to consumers a dolJar.for.<follar Increase· in the price of leather. The companies had· asked for up to 9.7 percent price increases. e Jn1nates Surrender PATE RSON, N.J. (AP) -S!J: rebel- lious inmates protesting conditions at the Passaic County jail h a v e surrendered following a four-hour rebelliul in' which six guards werw injured. Sheriff Frank Davenport .said the trou- Bomb Shelter Blows Up ., l(illing Fiv:e Youngsters VALDESE, N.C. (UPII -A backyard bon1b shelter built during the CUban mis.sile crisis 10 years ago exploded Tues- day evening, killing five children who Wert play1D1 OD Its steps. A s!J:th child wao;inJlll'ed In the blast whlcb authorities speculate may nave bttn cau!ed by leaking gas from a butane tank or fumes from large quan- tities or gasoline stored in the shelter. The powerful explosion blew the body or one chil d 300 feet onto a road and big pieces of the foot-thick, steel·reinforool concrete shelter were scattered over a wide area. &> ' The children, police said, were playing j!Wid's games" on the steps leading down lnlo lhe l~y·25 loot sheller tul1Je ex. ecutlve Ed Garrou had sunk into the side of a steep hill about 70 feet ta One side of his $40,000 brick home. Barrou, during the sheller-btllldlng . frelt!)' in the 1962 missile aisil, hid <' stocked the shelter with llU'lt quantities or guollne for an electric generator and also lnslAlled a butane tank. Keith Selgall, JI, a member of tho Valdfse Rescue Squad, said the e~losion !hook his trailer home tbr~ quaHirs or_. mile away, and "when I got here, I smelled the 1asollne fumes reai strong." The dead included GatTOU's daughter, • Jean Anita, 12; Donald Robinson, 13; bit •~I.,. Re1ina , JO; Gloria llammond, 12, and Jlllke Powtll, JO. 1be onlJ oumvcr amont the ntllhborbood cblJdren JlkJllll - at tile sheller was Bea Picou, the Ganw child'• COllllo, who livu nm door. 1be force of the expl-went~ downhill, ~ doer. 'l'l>e be6V1 , roof cawd In, btil'ytng the botht of lllrOl of the victim• tmder 1uch a pile of JUbbl1 that • authorities had to brfnc. lft ltea'ii' tqulpmtnt Jo ..,.,..., them. ' bomb shelters in Valdese. "I think there's three more right in this neighborhood," he said. Mrs. Florence Garrou, sister-in-law of the textile u:ecutive, aald the bomb shelter is 11an autbtnt.ic thing, It'• been checked ptriodfcally and under control and usable since." . 'Too skinny. too flit, too plain .. : Democrats Force Runoff Election For McClellan Ll'ITLE ROCK, Ark. (AP).:_ Arlcanaa1 Democrats bave refused lo t1ve -an Sen. John McClellan a majority tn- dorument for nomJnatk>n to a s1xth U!nn, forcing a jiol!tleally risky runoff with Rep. David Pryor. • McClellan led the ticket as txP'l'led Jn Tuesday's primary, but bis vote totll was well below the majority in tbe four~ man race that would have allawed him to escape the runoff. 1be handsome Pryor, 37, ncotnlailll that Arkansas incwnbents tr1d!Uonally have foundered in nmoa,, prtdJcted vic- tory in the June JS nmatclJ, P'Omiainc the voter1 "one of the most acitinc races eve.r nm in Arkanaas." McClellan, 7f, -•I• flgured as a major issue, said be had demonstrated during the campaign that bit age was not a handicap and tbat he was ready to wage a vigorous nmoU campaign tf necessary. He has been in the Senate for 30 years. Although hb volt total hovered al about 45 petcenl through the nJihl, McClellan would not concede that he waa forced into a nmoll but admitted that be wu a "little dbappointed" at his -- ing. . With 2,442 of 2,818 precincts reported, Mc:Clellan had 21J!,493 votes lo l'ryor'a . 191,021. Aulhorllles Hid there "'"' Vf!rY In suclt shelttrs ht Valdese, and Garrou'1 ,,., uponalve Jo conslrucl. Famllf fr!-Hid he "ktpl It Ill>" and fre. qumtty d\ln(!Od lhl waler and food ltored Jnaidt. • -. ""' T--- " . " ... However. Dai>uo ~)lllnbal -..in . ll~UI WOllKlllS. NllGHIOlls DIG THROUGH DlllUS ~~lain laid tfler! "'"' "a pd -· Fift Y-.pton Kllliil In ._. Shelt.r llut' II: ~~~~~~-~-·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-~L·~~~~~~~~-·-·~·---·--~~~~~~~~~-·-·~~~~~~~~~'~~~'~~-·~~~~~fr~'~"~~~'~.1111 - • Orange Coast Toet.Y's F•••r . N.Y. Stoeks -'> • VOL 65, NO. 152, 5 SECTIONS. 64 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNES!>AY, MAY 31, 19n N TEN CENTS Old Newport: Is It a Old Newport is going to become a "high rise graveyard" ii city councilmen maintain their present attitude in zoning concepts, a Newport Beach architect charged ~ay. Likening councilmen to Ostriches, \Yilliam C. Clapet let fire at both the p~ posed height llmit ordinance now before planning commissioners and lhe council's reaction to an innovative development plan for the Cannery Village ar~a. He was also critical of ~ll adoptk>n City Mulls Growing Up -Or Out ' ol strict oil-street parking regulations In the Old Newport-Cannery Village area. Capet bad represent~ the Cannery Village Aasociation outlining 1 propooal to ffilevelop the Old Ne;wport area Bt a meeting of COWlcilmen last week. Councilmen declined to .n d o r s e Clapet's plan,..tnstead adopting the tough parking r u I e s and telling Cannery Villagea representaUves to come back with a more specific proposal. "I pers<ioally !eel the city Is eith<r avoiding, or lgnoril>g, the lndlvldual needs of unique portions or the clly, not only 1n the C;mnery area but other areas," Clapet said. in a letter to COW>- cilmen. "I realize we Ollly had lime to present one segment of need in a Jpecific area ol Newport Beach," Clapet said, adding, "I also noted that the council did not show enough interest to suggest a task torce of the Cannery Village Association and members of the city staff to continue High Risf Graveyard? aloiig the lines Of our pr6tltllllon to develop goals so that ooluUODI could be achieved. .. How can progress be m1de whether it be slow, radical or whatever, lf one of the principal parties takes the poature or the o<trlch with Its bead in the aand hoping the problem wW .solve itself," Clapet said. Councilmen have not formally received Clapet's letter and Mayer Donald A. Mcinnis said this morning he will reserve commtnt on It unlll he hM a chance to read it. Clapet, ln his letter. said the new park· 1ng regulations. which require one off. street space for each 250 squnre feet of store space "is only golng lo drlve out the investor and create a low level slum ty~ area in the back yard qr, city hall. "Attacking the prtJjlosrd h , I g h t ordinance, which y,·ould allow buildings up to 50 feet tall, \\'ilh use ptnnits, ln the Old New~t area, Clapct said: ''It cnn only result in the btginnlng of a J1igh rise f.:raveyard. "I ret.I the arta !ro111 the A.l'('hes to McFadden 's landing and ~yond should be 1nnintnlned In a rclalivt low rise devclopn1ent since Ibis urea is on the ac'- tivc Ingle\.l•ood-Newport ~--11ult ." Clap1.~t sold. "Nnl c:>nly trom thr Stnndpolnt or the fault. but the fact that lhr t~11rly city ~f Newport WRS fonneq in thl~ Rreit, I fet.'I this is an in1tiortant f'lenu~nt tlu1t should be preserved,'' he -$aid. Surrender Sought lOQ Reds Make Offer at Konturri SAIGON (UPI) -At least 100 North Heavy fighting continued in some arells neiotiations went on all qay. Vietnamese soldiers caught up in the bat· or ·Kontum and waves cf BS2s bombed lie said the Ccmmunlsls broke In on tie for Kontum have offered to surrender -Gommunist positions near the tity In South Vietnamese radio frequenclrs with Trimming both population and the height of buildings in Newport Beach'will be discussed by planning commissioners, -Thursday. . A • -commmton!ts wnrtllWi!rra propose to government troops lnSide the city, what spokesmen called the heaviest the 11urrendtr offer aod that at ont tni fro.nt·dldfatches reported tod~u,_,, ___ ~s,trlkes-SIOC6-tha-Communist ofhmivt--1ourt.'bm~ll1ilteti1hllii"c;•;;;...---~e · 1sp8.Tclies said Jhe Communist!! began on March SO. and without weapons, began walklng denSity ordinance at a·3 p.m, study ses· ,,. sion and will conduct a public h~aring on . B proposed four-zone high Tise ordinance at 7:30 p.m. Both mettlngs are ifl city hall. Both ordinances would be interim measures pending completion of an up- dated master plan of development. The new density ordinance, drafted by the city staff, would cut back population projections markedly on Ba Ibo a Peninsula , slightly less in West Newport. 9> bot only nominally on Balboa Island and in Corona del Mar. "That's mainly because there ls less R~ 3 and R-4 zoning in the latter two areas," explained Carl Neuhause.n, advance plae- ning director for the city. He said most of the R·2 (duple1es) would not be severely affected by the ordinance, "except in Weit Newport. ~ere you get into smaller lots.'' DAt&.Y PILOT...,, ....... lost, mor& than 3',000 dead it! the battle for But the front dlspatch'es lodlcattd those toward government lines. llowC!ver, they Kontum. -Inside the city apparently hod had disappeared behind a sn1oll knoll ood did It was the first known mass surrender enough. not appear agsln. offet"-of the 'war by North Vietnamese John Paul Vann, the senior U.S. ad-Vann ·said South Vietnamese troops although some Viet .C.Ong uniU sur· viser In the Central lilghlands, told ·Were orderfd not to fire Into tho 1ur-- rendered In the past, the dispatches said. newsmen of the suITender crrer and s:ald (See SURRENDER, Paae z• Park Opponent . Two Out of Three? ' Labels Bonds Newport Park Advocate As 'Stupid; S H B nd V By L. PETER KillEQ ees ope in . o . ote .. M ... ...,,.!""'...., .,· Newport Beach rtsldenU are "stupid'' The cbllnnan of the cltlzena comm tee recrntlooal lacllltl" Ibey want, •be 11ld further, "Balboa Island and corona del Mar meet the new minimum 1ot size ~ quitements,'1 he said. ~ In addition, he noteJ, tbe decrease in West Newport is not greater because most of the area is not developed. CODE AutHOR P!UCE. REFLECTS ON 30-YEAR CAREER They Didn't PromlM Him 1 Rl!M Garden and lt-Waon't If they vote for the proposed $8.9 million for the park bond 1J1ue111ld today ahe 11 park hone! Issue on Tuelday'a 1>allot, a optimistic that at least two ol tha thne man leading the campaign againrt the proposJUonl!I on Tuesday's ballot will If all three propo1ltiono pill, Heh N•wport Boach ,household would pay 1p- pmimately !ti.ID per year for the n. year )lie or the boodl, ICoordJni to city officlal1. bonds said today. • pass. ~jJ'Mlent is sucking us dry, suck-But she ls less optirnlsUc abollt passage Under the proposal, total population that could be added under current zoning . in I these f!i areas is about 6,000 people. • Undir t proposed ordinance, Neuhausen xplained, that figure would be reduced by about 2.000. No Rose Garden Ing the blood out of your veins. People of Proposltkln H which wouJd create a $3 are stupid if they want to get more land million reserve fund for future ·park off the tu roles, .. 1ald earl Arthofer' a forll\er corona del Mar beach con· purchaset. Parker's Jail ' "The one thing that this doesn't reflect." he said, "is 1~ elimU.te tJ?e possibility of residennat~ units within commercial or manufacturing iopes •. Mesan Retires From Marine Life cessionaire now in the real estafe Mra; Ginger Page reported thla morn- business. ing she has found people believe these so-T • B k' Artholer Js one ol three individuals or called exlra funds are not ol Immediate rustieS aC "Accordingly, Uiat would mean ev~n furth er reduction of the total potential population," he said. Neuhausen explained that the 6,000- person increase would ~ even p-eat;er under current zoning 1nnce res1dent1al development is presenUy allowed in these non-residential zones. Specifically, tbe proposed ordinance would: -Require 2,500 square feet as a minimum size for a duplex lot (compared with 2.000 square feet now}. --Cut back the buildable area cf a lot to BO percent. CUrrently duplexes and apartments can occupy, as much as 333 percent of the Jot size ~ough the use of multi-story buildings. -Require use penrtits for any re1id~ tial C-OnstrucUon in existing unclaaslfied zones. Commissioners,Jrill be conducting their second public hearing on the proposed high rise ordinance ·and may make m1nor changes before recommending it to the city council for adoptioR. As written, the height ordinance wouJd place a 24-foot ceiling in residential areas · and a 32-foot lid in.commercial areas. Commercial buildings in 110me areas could he bllilt .. high .. 50 fe<t with u .. permits and to an unlhnited height in other areas, like Newport Center, with use permiUi. By ARTHUR II, VINSEL Of tlM l),alf'r .. , .. ll•ff Nobody promised Willson Price a rose gaiden 30 years agO lut week, when he joined the U.S. Mirin~ Corps and left WID4ow Rock, Ariz., fot a world tern by war. Nobody promised Prl~ the glamor and glory that history bestows when you're en the rlg)lt side and you win. Nobody promised the young Navajo In- dian anything but acUan. Now 50, Price wai prlnclpal develcper of a radio communicatloD 17rtem based on the Navajo Ianguige, one of 200 tribesmen Japanese SOldfera ln the South Pacific craved to captu:r,. None of the Navajo.s -closed as top secret perspnne.1 -..wtre ever taken prisoner but casualties wn heavy. Price, of 871 Victo(ia fl., Costa Mesa, wan hl.s own partiatllr>•1'1rpk-Heart on Guadalcaoal In 1913, 11111 !aid !be medics . to take care of the ba\fi1 •unded lirsL "'I just had some sbiapatl an(a busted leg," says the man who is at Camp Pendleton today, tying up last IOOS< ends of a 30-year career lrom ' which he fonhalb' retired Friday as a master sergehrit,. ' "I ~nt three m0ntha strapped to a hospital bed in New Zealand,'' says the television .repair shop owner to whom nobody ever promised a rose garden. A Marine Corp11 fieruiling poster in his I Ki~siriger 8eams Belly Dancer Finds H~nry's Lap , TEHRAN tkP) --Henry A. Klsslnger met • belly cbnctr early today and she ended u~ lap. ' The raven-haired beauty, 21-yw-<>ld Nadln1 Paraa, waa per!onning 1..- several hundred journalists aod gOYe{lllDOilt oUlciall 11 1 dlaner party given by the Ministry of InlormaUon when Preskient NiJ:on11 bachelor aide arrived alter midnight. · · , \ . · SWJ in t.aUs and while tie .afler the at.ate c11mier given'!« President i'il•on by the SbAh of Iran, KWlnger immtdia~ attracted• erowd. A!i.r be and Prime Mlnl!ter Amir \\i>bBJ Hojeyda were ....... "' c:uJb. lonl in the hotel ballroom, the dancer, wbo hid &em IYl'IU., Oil the atage, . was led over, • . Dmsed In her >lllmmerint ~ dbcs'tbe obe of lllver dollm on her br.asts, she 11ttformed • pulJatlnCdala • '"' fftl &om IO"lnler 111d tbe prime minister, kisled the 'Prime mlnllter'1 dal; and plopped In Kllt- inge:r'• lap. -... , The White -nrioger, -c11i..wtlh Aialun bollatlel hive made him the talk o1 Wuhlngton, belmod """""1. , - "I will be hick," lit aald u lie WI the par!J. ' ' • • • --- groups that have spoken out against the im""'H"""e and could be voted on In the home garage repair shop sbowa a USMC bOnds. • . fut~~ p l ' R drill imtructor screaming the sfogan at a ·-.The two others inv6lve groups of people ''I am very optimistic F and G will 0 l.Ce equeSt widHyed young trainee: who claim they would be displaced if lhe pass but I am more concerned about II. ..... "W d 't · a-.a " bonds pass. This is lhe end result cf a poll I took Jaat }'rom Wire Services e on promise you 1 rose gan.ien. n--=dents of Marm· apark, the c1'ly-mo th t ell I ed It'·· Pr·ce sa h didn't I I M · ~ n a a me ng o concern c wr::ns RENO, Nev. -One.time Newport Cor 1 ys eoo f ~~or a arme OWBe<t. trailer park on Balboa Peninsula, in Newport Heights,'' she said. ps career, t ou ucatiooal cp-have hired aUorney Roy B. Woolsey to Proposition F -$3.5 million -pro-J;leach Police capt. James Parker la hav- portunities a Navajo )'OUlh couldn't ex· help them in their campaign against the vldes for the acqulsltlon of property for Ing his share of troubles In 8 atormy als pect otherwise. bonds and to save their leases. 12 parks, 1 50-mile blcycle trail 1y1tem, months as chief ot police here. He didn't join It oUt of ptnOnal City councilmen have ordered a study three harbor scenic sites and pathways First It wa1 hl!I own men -who bravado; there was a world war in prog· of the feasibility of converting the four. link1ng residential areas to school•, parks resentfully compUed _ when ordtrld to ress and the corps' recruiter got to him acre trailer park into a public beachfront and beaches. I h first. park. , Property development and necessary quit moon lg Ung in offduty houra at The Navajo code he helped cfevelop The second group cf concerned equipment would 'be provided by Proposl-gambling roona security men et Reno'• after specialized. Indian studies confuaed homeowners live In an area between the tion G, which Is for S2.4 mllllon. casinos. and C-Onfounded the Japanese, who 38th Street Park and the West Newport These bonds would give citizens their flit 1n the pocketbook where It really generally perfonned with polish when chaMel. ''first opportunity to see where their hurts, Reno's unllorm patrolmen aiw imitating American accents on the air. A spokesman for this group, llarold money is going and to control it as such," sherUf's deputies arab all the casino johl "The Japanese had English-speaking Sweetser, 3818 Park Avenue, said said Mrs. Page. the-f vacated. ,, men that listened l.!l._.~yr radio and homeowners fear that If the city gets the . "All cf UJ should ~ve our Gocf.glven So Chief Parker'• men are now de. telephone converseµon and IOt'Oe could bond money, plans to widt.D. Balboa rights to open space, and can take part mHnding a dimo per hour ralae and even get into the copversation by im--Boulevard from 33rd to 46th St,reet will ,In controlling population ~en1lty by tell·_TueJday-the.y~coHuppor>-ln t , !tating BrooklYJU_r__Deep_1klutJLaccenu,!t -(See-BONDS,...Pa~>-----iin1g e---munlctpat-govei'Jlmlftt wlill R sympathy strike by the very prlaonen he ei:plains. J_ ...... ,-they rut behind bars. c.:e ~ih1'°f1:az:'~ganl Cah~e ,at<gyt er B c h R d Jal trustlts -a total or 54 working ofr t te their misdemanor sttntencts -refused N~~~use me, Admiral, but that'• not a oa ras ecoun to go to their duty lllianmenll. 1 r • They aaJd lt wu lo ibow support f0,. buddy you're talking to," said Price in-the policemen'• -· demandl, but noted terrupting the talk. ' • ..-,, ·Indian dialect' is what jim:ed tb'e B B ' G ndf he }~fJx:eJ!,':.protesUng quality of tbelr Ja,~~:°:y·knowledge, the <'Ode was never I y· oy s ra at r cracked by the enemy,'' he explains, noting . every ei:planatoey book was: burned at war's end. , Research into his <lWll beriµge also revealed an historical lndiail hoax, says Sgt. ~rice, who notes most tribes used runners to deliver messages before Nava- jos bad radio. "I was surffe'lsed to learn that smoke signals and tom·tom messag es were ltrictly Hollywood," he explains. So are some of Sgl Price'• Pacific combat recollections. l ' He tells of ·one tribesman'i tcapture by what -in earHer wars -would llave been the enemy, but on lwo Jima was his own aide." Given pmnlssJon, the Navajo radioman headed for a nearby camp to get a haircut, but wu waylaid by a swplclous cauculan Ueutenant. "'He thoughl ho WU I ·Jap . •. put I .45 automaUc rlglll lo his head -he was .... 1 dark '..: and, Whootee!." Prlee declares. "The tkb'• ci>mmandlni orflcer had to oome down lo Wesilily him )od get him out ot the 1tocude. ""nle llewm.t had to 10 explain to hit own C.O. •nd then apologiu to the 'priloner' perooa11ly." be ldda. A V<tmn ol Vietnam and Kor.1, one or Sgt.· Price'• historic m.-ies Is (!oe M&IllNE. Pap II . From Wire Servlets 1 PARKER. Ariz. -A bitter Flelcher Dart reflected today on the tragic death of his 7-yellr-old Huntington Beach grandson on the Colorado ruver over the weekend. • The GS-year-old Dart, who lived within blocks of his decea~ed relatlve at 310 2nd St., in the older portion of Huntington Beach, recounted that the boys had pleaded with him all dlly Saturdoy IO go lislting, "'But I waited until night to lei the crat)t fools get of£ the river,'' he uld. "1 guesi ~y weren 't all of!." The elder Dart rinally took Chris Dart and 11·yMt-old Donald Thomtcn out on the river after dark and was filhing about t p.m. when a power cruiser rammed NXI thtn p8SMd over their own 17-loot aluminum crall. ·voung Dart was apparently hll by the propeller or the ......... crulter Ind WU rtpOrtedly · dead before mcuen cou14 pull (he aluminum craft to ahore. Young TbornlOo WU rushed by •Ir to. Pboeoit holplial with a ha<lly mauled leg. Ult aindltlon ,..,.....,,.ied aat!Jlact«y, • the elder Dart WU In the hod< of the boat and WU not,l<fiously hurt. •·we w1r1 aocllored cklee lo tt>e obore. . " • ., with our running tights on," Dart recall· ed. "I had just baited the boya' hooks aod had accidently kk:ked over a tackle box. "I bent over to pick It up and it hap- pened. The boat just came out of nowhere and ran right over ua. 1 thought we were going to 1lnk." The power crulter reportedly stopped momentarily after the accident and then 1ped of!. "11 was 1 clear cue-of bit and run," Dartcli. Yuma Co nly ShorlfJ1. who ire handl· Ing lnve · !loll ol the milh1p which OC• curred about 10 rnlles north of Parker, Arli.ona , aald they hl,ve Jocated the boat believed to have been Involved. The Yum1 County 1ttomey'1 ornc. hat added that the boat It reglsttred to Donald A. t'ay.e, owntt of a marine Ill~ ply -• In Newport Beach. No arrests hive bten made or war· rants !.aued, Funer11 arrangements for Olrll Dirt have been 'lfl for 1 p.m. at the Eplscopel Ollm:h ol Huntinaton Beach. lnltrmall will be at Westminster Mtmorlal Park. Dart ii survived by his • pattnla,, Richard Ind Nancy, uic! 1 llllttr, Jl<beo. ca. They llvt at 733 LaU St., Huntqtoo Beach. ., i . ...... It C.ut Warm temperature• wUI again visit the Southland Thuraday 'fill! hlgha at the be1ch,. 11 11$ riling to 80 Inland. LoWI In the Ill'•· t-~mE TOD.\ Y ·I A . Tt(41•'1i ogent 1 thtorlud that 0¥.ak~ 1141 lint iocu r~ 1poiuib fCIT the t:rpfomn t/ult rlpptd rough a bomb 1/t<rter · ot tht ' oJ a Vatdt1t, N.C .• tt:itJla zicutivt, killing fil'C chfldrm. (SH 1tory, P<VJ4. f ). L.M..... 1 ~... . . c!-~--!t ClliNI,,.. 4'• ..... . ,,....., .. ' . DNI• NtlflUI t ••IWWlf ,... • '"..,,...,... ""' ·-.... '"'......... ' .... I JI ... \MllMf'1 ,. .............. ,. l • • • . ~J OAltY PILOl, u V.S. Okays Air Remedy Date Delay render area of the clty and that the Conr munista were not lirlng there, either. He would not identify the North Viet· namese unit involved beoause that might jeopardize the· negotiations. "Thlngs are going well in Kontum" despite the continued heavy fighting. Vann said. "The North Vietnamese in the city have a shortage of supplies. They have no replacements and units that have taken heavy losses have been denied pennission to pull out of the city." • Meanwhile, a U.S. apokesman reported the heaYlest American air raids around the major North Vietnamese Port of Vinh 1ince the Communist ofienstve began. Four major department stores and Broadway and the rest of the smaller He said the Americans were firing about 80 specialty shops are b e i n.,g shops. Final completion date ha! not been television.guided bomhs that "just can't planned in the Laguna Hilb Mall, tile set. miss" and that major grou~ first phase of which wilt be com~leted in The mall itself will feature Spanish stallations were destroyed . fall, 1973, ROS:SJDoor Corporation-and tiles, flowers, trees and a large exhibition A command spokesman said U.S. Ernest W. Hahn, Inc., joint developers, area for arts and crafts shows and warplanes flew 240 raids into N<lrth Viet· have announced. seasonal entertainment. nam. They smashed a big fuel depot and The Broadway department store, Buf· Rossmoor envisions the mall as serving . destroyed or damaged several ran and fums' and Sears, R?ebuck and Co. are Laguna Hills, El T<lro, South Laguna, road bridges outside Vinh , the country's three of the four ma1or concerns already Laguna Niguel, Laguna Beach, Dana southernmost port 130 miles south of signed for the $30 million shopping com· Point, Capistrano Beacb, Irvine, San Hanoi. plex. The fourth will be announced later, Ro Juan C&pistrano and San Clemente. The 1,000..pound uwalleye" bomb car· a ssmoor spokesman said. ries a TV camera In the nose a Navy Located at the Intersection of the San The $6 million Sears store, at 214,688 spokesman said, and the pilot ~nltors 8 Diego .Freeway and ~I Toro Road,"the 80 square feet, will include a garden shop television set in the cockpit. He tunes jn acre site borders Leisure World and the and a 2<kar capacity auto center in ad· ~ 4 l TODAY by GRADUATION "'WATCHES on what the bomb "sees" and when the saddleback Commu nity HOfipi~l. now vn· dition to its regular1.~e.rchandise. target appears, Jocks in <ln .. it. der constructi on. J It will be the 27th Sears store in Los The Watch, for generations the "You just can't miss," the spokesman The area , being constructed by Hahn, Angeles-Orange County area. traditional colJege graduation gift, 1--t&i . ---...-lnc_is_parLoLa.largeLl.2Q:acre_it_a._c_t,_"'°"B"u'!.!f'-'fam!'.!."sc.' ,,,w'1'ill'-"be._.,aec50"""000""'-"''-"-•'!.!"W'foo'!'t'-1 ~:zoned ··regional comme.rtial," . which two-.levet fashion store, the loth in -:-is--today--appreciated also b,}lcbild .. ' .. OlllA.Nal COAST • DAILY PILOT Tiit Or....-c ... 1 OA.ILY ,ILOT, wllfrl whkl'I IJ c:otnllMd ff'I« Ntwt-Pmi. 11 llUbllll'ltd ~'I' ~ Ot ...... CN.tt '-"1llllng Colnp9ny. $fH. nt• Ml!llns ·~ PlolbllllMd, Mond•Y lflroll!ll'I Frldty, Jot at11 Mna, Ntwpeotl 8tKl't. HWI~ 8tethf"-ltlll \1•119y, ~ •ftldl. l,..,....,fldcl~ tl'ld Sin Clemlnl1/ ""~"'" Ctph!~ A sing!• nolonfl ectl • Is PUblkMll Satul\Nys _, SIJ!ldfl'S. ""' IM:ll>il """'~ "'91'11 11 •• .JJO Wftl .. 't' $trw!, '*"' "'"'· Clll!omlt, m.~. 't loNrt N. WtM .. ,...Id..,, ... Jltllli11!tr' J1tl: It. c.,.,J,y Vb ,,.IOenl W 0-•I Mt"'Ofr TMtn•• Kff•ll ' £di tor Tiio"''' A. MVfphi110 MMllMabllW L ,, • ., JCrit{ MIWp!Wt llMdt (Dy dllor .. ..,. ..... 0..... lJJl Htw,.,t ... 1,,,f4 eventually could reach more than one Southel;'n California. ren at grade and high school level. million sqQare feet of leasable space. The 32nd Broadway in California· The Rossmoor-owned Laguna Hills mall Nevada·Ariwna will have three levels in Claoice of a watch for graduates Is planned to feature a Spanish motif In the .mall ('1)mplex. t I l Jts 900,000 climate-controlled square feet. Architects for the mall only are Burke,' 3 any eve 'f3S·, formerly a simple, 1, The Sears and Buffums' department Kober, Nicolais and Archuleta <lf Los matter of sellC'tion by price .and stores and more than hall of the 80 shops Angeles. style. A \Vatch was a watch, its al· will be included in the first phase. · ~xclusive leasing agent for the center most casual purchase usually r• Scheduled for phase two are the ts Coldwell, Banker and Co. · From Pnge 1 MARINE RETIRES ... watcblng the '·Flag-raising atop fi.tt'. SurJbachi on Iwo Jima. "We had a guy with them," says Price. who could see it l'it·miles away, while hearing ,it described by his Navajo buddy between calls for mortar bombilrdment. ,Lauta goes to Estancia High School. She wants to major in music, while WllllOn Jr. is a typical 17-year~ld. "He doesn 't know yet," says his father. The .newly-retired master _.sergeant figures he'll stay in Costa Mesa at least a year, until Willson Jr. graduates, then hend back to Arizona, 30 years pfter Jeav· suiting in genuine appreciation. ' Today, modern· technology and s!Yling have combined with special .. fzed uses to make satisfactory s• lection infinitely more difficult. . . Thbne are, however, steps you can (lake to make sure your graduate wlll wear this gift with pride and pleasure. . • ~· ( ~taal Stopover Nixon Welcomed ' By Polish Cro,~d ()n's presence was "'a sign of Poland'i authority in the w<lrld." The President and his \Vile Pat walkfd slowly down the plane steps and , at the bottom, were given bouquets of roses by two Polish children. The children receiv· .ed kisses from both in return. The Nixons were smiling broadly and appeared unperturbed by the bombing in· cidents in Tehran. The Nixon inotorcade route from the \Varsaw airport was along a five-mile ex· · pressway lined with green lawns, trees and new apartment buildings. to the Old Town district where five·story houses were rebuilt in 18th Century style. Ft•ot1a. Page 1 BONDS .•• Your grp duole, Give th om on 0mbgo. A quality gilt that d1Stinguilhes iistlr ror stylirfg: accuracy and · • Ma5n11 ArlJ,...: P.O. lff 1111, t26•J• " . --- One GI helping.raise the Flag -it was taken doWn again ao cameraman Joe Rosent!W could get his historic shot - ' was another IndJan, Ira Hayes. Stories. a song and a movie portray the trsglc ali.nnath !or Haye!, who.s>uldn 't C(lpe with fame and drowned one postwar night In a desert creek comlJii home Ing. . • "We've got a Jot of land there," he ex· plains, saylng he'll raise allaUa and vogelll>!..,. You should .be aware of your graduate's actlvitie!fl and .. of ·the kinds and styles ol watches worn by his friends. You should then see a reliable local jeweler and discuss t . . • IJ>aossuronceofoyeroc1nturyofquolityctaflsmo~ip. 'I\· ;.Giva~~rgroduole.a·timopieco lo ,.!r,on .. _.OmegoJ ~ .. 1111 ... ~f.W "" .i-1 im..k .. Nklll1111·1N1~-... --• -1 Crom a night on the t9~n. - Nobody promised Willson· Price any ..,. aarden during or afttr the war, but be seems satisfied. He and his wllt, Rme, have four diildren, Laverne, 22, L«ral111, u. Laura, 11, and Willson Jr., 17, all ol wboin are In 'acboot-. - . Lav.,.. .•~• Sen Dltac> Stale ~. mljoilng In. premedlclne; Lor- • n1111 -to Orange Coast c.o.,..plln- llilli a career in dlild paycbology and ' ' • ... ••Jt's~going to be kind of 1ad leaving a place whtri you've spent a tblrd <lf your me," noi.s the U·Marlne who purcbastd hi'I llrst local home about 22 yo_ars qo. "But I've aeen the world," he say! af the return to Wtndow Roclt1 where he was boni. · , I Wlll,son Prlce won' tlllt about an In-~ Cl'IUing crusade amo111 )'Ollll( India"' agatmr the-.ondttlMa whldl-ba'e ad· - mlti.dly held them bljk for decades; ~ , .. your problem. We have watches for all ages, lroni rugged timepieces for active children t9 the most sophisticated and specialized watches available. And lf, In spite of all your care, yow:_graduate wimts something dil-' ferent, we'll gladly ucbanga for exacU what he wants. -~----r -• ' .._.loot .......... 111., llh/. ~-a.... . ISll lW!tot 0,-lc. U .... Jlfil .. trilll -.i.,i.1u., 4i.l 9"" alel~llM otMI _- ••ololHl -, IUf I •. J. e_ .JJ~mp~!'ie6 }-ewef m I 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVlNllNl TUMS 21 Y IN SAMI LOCATION "'Ni/,AMERICARD-MASTU ~RQf rHONE 141·1401 ~-~~~~----~~ ........ --- \ . "'- • • '· --. . • ' \ ~range Coast Teday's .Flnal N.Y. Stoeks VO~. 65, NO. 152, 6 SECTIONS, 68 PAGES . • ORANGE COUNTY, CAL IFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 31', 1972 c TEN CENTS Mass Surrende.r Offer Kon tum Troo ps Hea r N. Vkt Plea to Give Up SAIGON (UPI) -At least lllO North Vietnamese soldiers caught up in the bat· tie for Kontum have offered to surrender to government troops inside the city, front dispatche! repartee! today. · The dispatches said the Communists lost more than S,000 dead in the battle for Kontum. · · It w-as the first known mass surrender offer of the war by North Vietnamese although some Viet Cong units BUr- rendered in the past, the dispatches said. ·Park Property Fate Appears Local Issue Heavy fighting,continued in 80me areas of Kontum and wavea of B52..s bombed Communist positions near the city in what spokesmen called the .heaviest · atrlkes since the Communist oUensive began on March 30. But the front dispatches indicated those inside the city apparently had h.id enough. John Paul Vann, the senior U.S. ad- viser in the Centr.al ll!ghlands, told newsmen or the IU!Tender offer and said uegotlaUons went on all ~y. He said the Communists broke In on South Vietnamese radio freq uencies with the surrender o(fa!rl and that at one point four Communlst troops, hal!ds in the air and without weapons, began walking foward government lines. llowever, they disappeared behind a small knoll ancf did noLappear again. Vann sald South Vietnamese troops were ordered not to fire into the sur- render Ilea o[ the city and that the Com- -munists were not firing there, eilher. He would hot identify the North Viet· namese unit involved because that might . jeopardize the negot iations. ''Things are going well In K<>ntum .. despite the continued heavy fi ghti ng. Vann said. "The North Vietnamese in lht ci ty ha ve a shortage of supplies. They ha ve no replacements and units that have taken heavy losses have been denied (See SURRENDER, P1ge I) Gr a ndfather R ecalls Boat Crash Horror Fnm Wire 8erYlcff The late ol state-surplus property eyed -Ja<-~ia-u-5ilo.ol.a.-mimal-llll1< appears to be in Jocal hands agaiB today. · _j!.yug;;!l,_Nl!. -A bitter f!~cher __ _ Dart reDected today on the tragic death of his 7-yea.Mld Hunting>n B'each grandson on the Colo111do River over the ' CODE AUTHOR PRICE REFLECTS ON JO.YEAR CAREER Assemblyman Robert H: Burke (R- Huntington· BeaCb) said Tuesday a trade between the NeWsom Development COm· pany and the state for a portion of the They Didn't Promise Him • Role G1rdan ind It Wa1~'t No Bose Garden Fairview Park property "was definitely off." "It's not even being consider~ any more and ha s-.been removed from the Friday agenda Of tlie Public Works Board," Burke said. Mesan R etires From Marine Life Earlier, it bad been assumed by Mayor Jack Hamme. that state Directar of By AllTIWR R. VINSEL or thl DlllY 'Utt St•ff Nobody promised Willson Price a rose garden 30 year11 at<> last week, wf.n he joined the U.S. lbrlne CorJ11 mf1 Jefl Window Rack, Ari>., !0< a world torn by war. Nobody promised ·Price the glamor and glory that 'history bestowa wheb Y.OU're on the right .side and you wln. N-Obody promm.d the young Navajo In- dian anything but action. Now 50, Price was princi~eloper of a radio communication system based on the Navajo langutlge, one of 200 tribesmen Japanese soldiers in th,e South Pacific craved to capture. None of the Navajos -classed as top secret personnel -were ever taken prboner but casualties were heavy. Pric.e, of 171 Victoria St., COsta Mesa. Duke of Windsor Returns to Land He Once Ruled BENSON, England (UPI) -The Duke of W·iiidsor re~ned in death today to the land he once ruled as King Edward VllJ, ending the long ei:ile that followed bis in- sistence on marrying the American divorcee for whom he gave up the throne. A Royal Air Fqrce VClO of Queen Elizabeth's own fleet of planes brought the coffin of her uncle, draped with his red. and gold penonal standard, back from Paris where be 4ied SWlday of a prolol!ged Illness believed to be cancer of the throat. . The 75-fear-old duchess was nr with strain and's~ did not accompany the body of her ~-year-old husband as sbe planned. • She is fxpected to arrive Friday in another royal pl~ !or the funeral in St. George's Chapel at Windsor Monday. She wUl be a .guest ol the queen at Buck· ingham P~lace. t 1 General Servi~ Lawrence R. Robinson won his own particular PwPle Heart on bad only delayed action on the trade for Guada1canal in 194.1, but told the medic! 30 days. to take care of the bac;Uy wounded ~ Burke said bei had received word from "I just.had some shrapnel and a busted Govemo< ReqiD'1 of!lce th1t negotl• •~.· ," .u-. rite IDlll 'libo i. at r • .-. liool. belweiq N.,.,;,:' Rohl•IM for "'" ~-__. a leasehold mi.n11 oa tJio ,....i Pendleton toda,y, tyJoi up last Joooe ~ "was oo 'lonpr ...... ca• of a .3Cf.year career from which he Fnd Sonabal, city · manager ol Costa formall)' reUred l(rlday as a master Miil conllmled the roporl and aald that sergeant. ~·lmd Per~Y advised b1m of "I spent_ three months strapped · to a ~ de~~ · ,, 11 • hosplW bed in New J,ealand," says the New1101111 !'ell boll, be said. He ls television · rep&ir shop owner to whom ~ no longer lnt~ted in the prop¢y and nobody ever promJsed a rose garden. now ls loo~at other rtate surplus land A Marine Corps recruiting poster in his at Q°amarlllo State HOBPltal and at Patton home garage repair shop !hows a USMC Slate Hospital in San Be~lno.''. drill instructor scteaming the slogan at a The exchange or Newsom s holdings at wide-eyed young trainee: the Squaw Valley ski resort for the local , "W do •t · d ,, 36-acre parcel was to have been taken up . e n pro~1se, you a rose gar e~-Friday by the Public Works Board. Local Price says be d1dn t plan for ' Maru1, authorities had been given until then to Corps career, but found educational op-th perty for a $4 million price portunitles ~ Navajo ~uth couldn't ex.. :"be f:= with approval of the trade. ' pect othen;ise. . . "I'm very pleased about tbla,'' said He d.ldn t join it out of personal Sorsabal, "but It means that we will have bravado; there waa a world war ln prog~ to work that much harder to Ce\ the ress and the corps' recruiter got to him property acquired during the nut year." first. . The Navajo code be helped develop alter speclalized Indian lludies confused and confounded the Japanese, who generally performed with polish wheo imitating American accents on the air. "The Japanese had English-speaking men that listened to our radio andir telephone ~conversation and some could even get into the conversation by im- itating Brooklin or Deep South accents," he explain>. One monitor b(fZeO}y began a strategy chat with Fleef· Admiral C h e s t e r Nimitz. "Excuse-me, Admiral, but that's not a buddy you're talking to," said Price, in- terrupting the talk. Indian diai1ect ls what jinxed the Japane!e. . "To my knowledge, the code was never cracked by the enemy," he explains, noting every explanatory book was burned at w"ar'1 end. Research into his own heritage also revealed an hist«ical lndJan hoax, says Sgt. Price, who notes most tribes used runners to deliver messages before Nava- jos had radio. Estancia Drive Traf fi e Safety Studies Rush ed Studies are now being rush~ on the best way of improving traffic safety on Costa Mesa's Estancia Drive, literally creating a paradox Oh paper. The city mwt make haste on the nar- row strip of roadway where it begs motorists to slow down. Originally, the city planned lo widen t.he north-90\lth crosstown connector• car- rying 3.6 million cars annually per year by this summer. Revit!wing the situation at a Monday night COUJICilmen's study sessoo,. three alternatives were presented, with a September deadline for getting two well under way: ! 11.\1LY PILOT llllft' ..... weekend. The ~yew-old Dart, who lived within blocks of his deceased relative at 310 2111d St.. in the older portion of Huntington Beach, recounted that the boys had pleaded with him all day Saturday to go fishing. "But I waited until night to let the crazy fools get off the river,'' be said. "I guess theY. weren't all off." The elder Dart finally took Chris Dart and 11-year-old Donald Thornton out on the river afte.r-dark and was fishing about I p.m. when 1 pow'?' crulser rammed and t(>en pasted over their own If.loot ahnJllmilll qaf~ THE BROAD BQYS POSE IN THEIR Ri SPECTIVE UN IFOllMS Paul, the E19la Scout, 14, and Pop, the Policeman, 50 Young Out -iPPIJ'lllll1 hit bJ, the propeller ol the power cruller 1nd wu Hpartedly deld before racuen 'could pull tho aluminum craft to 'lhore. Yowig Thornton WU ~.by air to a Phoenix holpltal with a y mauled Jes. 1111 condition 1:u u lllfactory. The elder Dart wu in the bock ol tbl boat and wu not seriously Jiurt. I. Pro11d Father "We were anchored close to the shore with our running llght.!1 on," Dart recall- ed. "I had just halted the boys' hooks and bad accidently kicked over 1 tackle box. Roscoe's Kid l s A n Eagle Scout "I bent over to pick it up and it hair pened. The boat just came out of nowhere and ran right over us. I thought we were 1oing to sink." ·Hawaiian-born Roscoe Broad Is a modest man who has a Jot to be proud of. He p~ayed professional football, win-- rung 1947 All-Hawaii League honors as a 175-pound tackle and his nicknaqie: Rock. A high school · dropout due to Pea•! Harbor and duty as a U.S. Anny Ranger in the South Paci!ic, he qualified for Honolulu and later Costa Mesa police employment. ' He spent seven years in night !Chool fof an Associate of Arts Degree in police science. . He was Cosia Mesa's 1968 Policeman of the Year and just last ·Thursday was named Officer for the Month ol May by the city's Crime Prevention Committee. Something that ga.Jie him more pride than all the rest, however, occurred the same night. · Roscoe and Lorraine Broad saw lh1;ir oiiJy son, Paul Kanani Broad, become &n Eagle SCout in a Troop 80 Court of Honor ceremony. "I'm proud of him, damnn proud," Of- ficer Broad aaid Tuesday, as 'the Mater Dei High Sthool freshman and budding scientist blushed. "What's your favorite subject?" be prodded. "Riding my motorcycle," replied PauJ, seriously .. "No. I mean in school. No kidding," said his father, "Isn't science your bed subject?." Paul, holder of 23 ·merit badges, agreed. - A member of Troop 80, in which his rather Is active as an advisor, the youth's favorite...pastime is off.street motorcycle riding in the Salton Sea area . Too young for a California driver's license at 14, he still owns a Suzuki~ cy- cle and wore a windbreaker jacket bear- ing the Suzuki emblem over JUs Boy Scout un.ifonn. \ The power cruiser reportedly stopped momentarily after the accident and then sped oil. "It was a clear case of hit and run," Dart clalmed. Yuma County She.rilfs, who are handl- ing investigation of the mishap which oo- curred about 10 miles north of Parker. Ariz.ona, said they have located the boal believed to have been involved. The Yuma County attorney'• olllce bu added that the boat ii registered to Donald A. Payse, pwner of a marine SUJ>' ply store in Newport Beach. No arrests have been made or war- rants issued. Funeral arrang~menla ror Chris Dart bave been -:et for 2 p.m. at the Episcopal Church of Huntington Beach. Jntennent will be at Westrnlnater Memorial Park. Paul also holds the Catholic Church's Ad Altare Del award !or servl<e to his Emp.l oyes Get Raise fa.ith, piMed next to ha shilfy new silver . Eagle. SAN DIEGO (AP) -Salaries are g?inl Gettlng back to science, Roscoe · up 4.3 ,per~nt for the ~verage San Diego remarked that Paul built a near·perfect j city emPi~ye, but C0W1ty employes will (See HONORS, Page IJ get:ill bliy more. County supervisors •!>-prov pay raJses averaging 5 percent Another ~Nader: Girl; 11 , Tu ;y despite objections or the San Diego County Tai:payers Association. A black hearse with motorcyCie escort - sped from the V{indsor mansion to a French air hue at~ vlllaee ~ Dugn_J.:_ "I was surprised to learn that smoke signals and tom-tom messages. were (See MARINE, P9e I) -'Ibt city c0u1d proceed with plans to widen the existing curvy alignment through' use ol •late property rlght-ol· -l • way. Rap s d c.m -I .... I 'Kissinger Bea111s Belly ndnc~~ µinds Henry'"s Lap TEHRAN (AP) -Henry A. Kissinger met a belly dancer early today and lbe ended up in his lap. • The raven-llaired beauty, :Jl.,yur-old Nadina Pana, was performing r..,-- oeveral hundred joumaJlsta and government olllclals at a dinner party given by. the Mintsb:J .al lnlormaUon when President Nlxoa'1 bacbelor aide arrived alter mldnlg!ll. , Sllll in tails 11114 white tie after the state dinner gJ\otn !or President Nilion by the Shah of Iran, Klasinger Immediately 1ttractld • crowd. i · · . Alltf he and Prime Mlnilter Amir Abbu lloleyda were seated on cush- ions in the hotel halJroom, the....,., who bad been gyrating on the sl>ge, WU Jed over. • , JlreOled in bei 'lblmmerloc _._ discs the '11za ol 1llver dollars on her breasts, &he performed· • pulsatJoc danco a fiW 1 .. t from Klaslnger and the prime min1*1 -~ prime ~·· cbodt and plopped in ltiso-lnser'• lap. · • The Wblte -1wtnger, w_.dales "1th.American beauUes have mado him the Wk ol W~ beomed broa!ll1. "I '!)II be ~ lfet.lcl u be Jolt thO party, \ • ' • 'CV Ads---'r.he-city could-also re-align :Estancia..____ Drive, then running it straight through s.alur ay two types of public property and creatmg 1 mor.f p'roblems. /' -The s~tuation coi:.ld ~left as it is -WASHINGTON (AP) -A Florida project for above-average 11t{adenls. · dangerow to careless o{'speed!ng dri vers .. . 11 _ but with addition ·0 r mOre safety school girt .told Congress today1 that some ~For the first time, I rea y began to d · Saturday morrung· television commercials think about w~t the commercials .were evtctS. . . saying" she said "I have always listen-lf the.city chooses to widen tht'exlst1ng aiJ!led at kids are deceptive and might ed before and ~ny times asked my st.reel, it ~ust get started, because the even be dangerous. mother to buy cutaln products 1 had unused ngbt.ol-way returns to state . t , . . ownership and control by September. Dawn Ann Kurth, I • ol Melbou!"~.• 1 seen ~dvertl•ed., But now I was listerung By straightening it out by a ridwly fl.f~dowlane Elementa'?' School, 1a1d I r-and ~~ally thinking about what was being aligned route, E!ltancla Drive would then don t think cblldren realize what the: com-111ld. 1 slice lhrough additional sta~ proi>-mercials are doing.•• . In a one-hour period sbe said the erty and a 30-acre fu\tJle hJlh achoo! site. A1 the children grow oMet, to qc~ JO counted 70 commerciab on the three Time-consuming negoti.ation..s with th e and 11, tbty tend to be s~ee!jcat of the networks. Newport:Mesa Unified School District conunen:lals, she told the Senate con-l\flas Kurth laid she felt that cer· and the stite;a Department of... General sumer subcommittee. "They st.art be.Bev-ta in commerclab for c a nd y· coated ServJces would result. ing teachers and other adults." (See vllemlna might even be dangerous. nie outaome could l>e continued high earlier story, Page 4). . "'II ~other were to buy -thole acddtnt ntfs on what Costa Mesa Tral· As to.the connection bet~. disbelief • vltsmtas and my little •Isler got into the fie ~ Jim Eldridge notes ii the ol tbe commcrolail an<Hhe a ulll behind ' bottles I'm sure silo would eat them just city'• only~ tiller in lta rate of them, Sen. Fraok MOSS tah), aatd . u tr they were candy,'" she said. regular fa&al.IUH. "We have J wotd for that, alienation." She aubmJtted a q u e a t I o n n a l r e Eldridp hoc aid the rate could lie cut Throughout the. hearin1, tbe 11<hool girl 1111wer~ by some 1,500 thinl·lhrough by continued uae ol roadw•r marten in plaid, ~g,, and creen knee soc;ks, 1lxtb-grader1: ..mldl g!Y& driven a vilua point ol as composed and thougl>ttul. -1,203 slid they a~ed their mother to re!mnce apliilt_tlto ~b'Jlat.iidds tq She 111d 1J>utudied Saturday morning bey the product• seen on TV ; S30 Aid pup tbalr ....._ c dren'1 telOYllloo u part ol a school (i!lee COMMERCJAIJ, P.ap I) .. ' • • • - Weather Wann temperatures Wiii again visit the Southland Thursday wJth highs at the beaches at 65 rising to 80 inland. Lows in the 60'1. INSIDE TODA;Y A Trra.tUrv agent th~oriztd that a leak11 gai line WOJ Te· rpun.sible for Ulti ezpUl.rion Chai ripped throvoh a bo~ 1'helttr at th e· heme of a Vald~se. N.C .• ttztilt t xecUtive, killuig /i" children. 1s .. llOfl/ PaQ<'fJ. • • • .. • -. 111 DAil Y ~ll01 c Woclotld&J, May SI, 19n • -· U.S. Ok(lys 1ir Remedy · !)ate.Delay WASllJNGTON IUP!l -Ritreatint rrom 1n earlier 1tand, the govern.meat to. day granted -more than ZS cities including Los Angeles, San Francisco a n d Sacramento. a two year delay ln tm- Polilng traffic conLrols needed to rtduce air pcllullon. The action gave the cit~ until mid· 1977 to meet limits on the amount or c11irbon monoxide or photochen1ical ox- idants in !ht air. The original deadline was 'Tlid-1975. Both pollutapts come primarily from auto ei:haust, and spokesmen eonflnned that the delays were granted so the dtlts would not have to Impose traffic controls. The r.iccessions on regulating com- muter · traffic. perhaps the mo s I politically sensitive area of Pollution control, were included In rulings by lhe Environmental Protection Agency on plans . submitted by 50 states -od fjve jurisdictions to mee t air cleanup stand· ... ard1 mandated by the 1970 C1ean Air Act. EPA Administrator William D . Ruckelahaus approved plans submitted by nine state1, p,lus Guam, Puerto Rico and American Samoa .. Plans from the other 41 state11 pl us the Distri ct of Colum- , bla and the Virgin Jslands were ap proved in part and dllapproved in part. Approval was given to plans submHted by Alabama, Connecticut, F I o r i d a . fl.fi sslssippi, New Ham)>!hire , North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon and \V1:11t Virginia. If the disapproved provisions are not changed to the EPA'11 satlsfadioo, the agency m\LSt Impose its own plans on recalcitrant statet. Order of St. Gregory Pope Paul VI delivers an address from the Vatican e.Qurtyard beCore bestowing the Order of St. Gregory the Great on Italian fireman Marco Ottaggio, 20, who overpowered the hammer·swinging Hungarian emigrant who damaged Michelangelo's statue of the Pieta in St. Peter's Basilica recently. Valuable Radio Gear, Memories Taken in. Mesa Frotn Page J MARINE RETIRES ... strictly Hollywood." he explains. So are some of Sgt. Pri'Ce's Paci.lie the return to Window Rock, v.·here be was born. combat recollections. \Villson Price won't talk about an iJr He tel.ts or one tribesman's capture by creasing crusade among young Indians what -in earlier wars -would have against the conditions which have a~ Final Stopover Nixon W el~ined , By Polish Crowd· \VAR.SAW (UPI) -President Nlxon Ar· rived to a colorful welcome in the capital <lf Poland today for a final stopover before returning home aod reporting to Congress and the American people on his historic eight days at the Moscow sum- mit Nllon and his party Oew to Warsaw from Tehran, Iran, where his departure was delayed by a series of bombings - one of them near a monument where he later laid a \.\'reath after the area had, been checked. (See ftlated story, page 3) The Prtsldent leaves Warsaw -l'hurs. day, and after hii arrival in the evening he will go directly from Andrews Air Fo~ Base to the Capitol for a 6:30 p.m. PDT report to a j o i n t session of Qmgresa on hla mission to Moscow. The Wanaw weather was fine -a warm sun in a blue sky -when Nixon's plane, The Spirit or '76, arrived at 8:26 a.m. PDT. Nixon, in a rate fora y into another language, called "Szolem, Zocnien.e" CGretiengs soldiers) to an 80-man honor guard assembled at the airport. . ' "We chetr rU you, Mr. President,'' members of tM 1uard shouted back. Nixon was ""ted by Pol~h President Henryk Jabloll;\; and both leaders spoke o! the cl.,. bbtorical relationship between their countries. States stands on Polish soil .•• •· 1 bring especially warm greetings from the millions or Americans who are so proud of their Polish background." A 56-piece army band pta yed the Polish and American national anthems. Jn Warsaw, Polish and American Oaa:s, hoisted at the last moment. flew fro utility poles every 15 yards along th• motorcade route from the airport. Piiore than a hour be.tori the arriv~. crowds began to line the route. The President's arrival was televised live by Warsaw television to both the Polish people and back to the United States. The Polish commentator said Nix· on's presence was "a sign of Poland'' authority in the world ." The President and his w..ife Pat walked slow ly down the plane .steps and, at the bottom, were given bouquets of roses by two Polish children. The children receiv- ed kisses from both in return. The Nixons were smiling broadiy and appeared unperturbed by the bombing in- cidents in Tehran. The Nixon motorcade route from the \Varsaw airport was along a fi ve-mile ex~ pressway lined with green lawns, trees and new apartment buildings, to the Old Town district where flve--story bowes were rebuilt in 18th Century style. From Page J HONORS .•. (The Asociated Press said a day-old court order clouded the validity of the EPA acUon. 1 (That order, a major victory for en- vlronn!en!_ID!lll!l!.Je<lµir.edJlucktbhaus Harbor Area Realtor Harold Boyvey didn 't sell the small home his son had oc- cupied when the )'OUJ'lger man died about twn years •&OL. -· __ been the enemy, but on Iwo Jima was~ mittedly held them back for decade.s. own side. He agreed he fouod a.better chance in Given permission, the Navajo r.idioman headed tor a near DY-camp to get a the Marine c.orps -but, questioned <lD Nlson Blipped Jn bl.I brief speecb, refer· ring to Jablonski as "chairman ol the Council of Mlnlsteni" -the post held by Prime Minister Piotr Jaro.szewicz. But the President had warm words for . model of the problem-plagued Apollo 13 hls-ho&t-country_.a.ying-hls arrival-was"_ .1ba.t came so clDse: t.Q_dJ.suttJ' on lta-- "a very spei::lal inoment for me •.. Far re!,urn to ~arth. . 1----toreYiew the plans and grant approval only if they give complete protection to · air already cleaner than required by Iederal standards. "(There was no Immediate an- nouncement whether the government would appeal. !he AP said.) The act set a mid-1975 deadline for meeting the standards but empowered the EPA to grant two additional years for areas Where cleanup technology is in-- adeq·uate. In aMOUncing the standards on April 30, 1971, Rucllelshaus warned that many cities would have lo limit downtown traf· fie by mid-1975. He said he anticipated no delay. But a number of cities subsequently re- quested a two-year postponement. Irwin Auerbach. ·director of the· EPA staff which rtvlewed the state plans, told UPI that almost all those requests were granted._ "The fact that a city g"ot an extension doesn't mean lt'a aff the hook forever,'' AUerbach said . He said the EPA could reconsider and fQr'ce a city to meet the 19'15 deadline. Cities granted the tw~year delay in- clude Birmingham and Mobile, Ala.; Phoenix and Tuscon, Ariz.; Denver, 1n-o dlanapolls , Kansas City, Mo., and Kansas City, Kan .: Baltimore ; Washington, D.C.; Boston: Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn.; Newark: New York City and Rochester, ... N.Y.: Dayton and Toledo, Ohio: Pittsburgh and Philadelphia; Corpus Christi, Houston and Galveston, Tei:., and Seattle, Wash. Laurence I. Moss, vice president of the Sierra Club, cr!Uciied the EPA action and said cities quickly could curb traffic by buying more buses. "We shouldn't waste any time," Mou said. "It's abundantly clear that In most <lf our large metropolitan areas it will be necessary to restrict use of the automobile U we're going lo meet the standards." • Cakes 'Not So Sweet CARLISLE, Engl•nd (UPI ! -A bakery quickly rounded up a bate~ or cream cakes It delivered to several starts Tuesday. The man who sprinkles liugar oh them accidently covered them y,·ith salt. DAILY PILOT ni. ~ C011t OAH.Y ,ILOT, W111t ~ ' ., ~ ... ,,._'""'" " .,,,.,... .,, tl'I• Of"MOI' CO.If ,ubllttll ... ~y. ,.,... ni. edlllon!I ...... P\111111.llN, Mond1y "'f"Ollllfl Frid.ity, ~ COlll M~1. tt"1.ort lfHfl. HW!tl"'fon teecll/F-11111 VllW,, L..- ••dl, 11'\'f!'tWS~l-.etl: end S111 C""'""l•f SI~ J11111 C1pl•I•-A lj"'llll "9(llonll . ldltiori b llublithfd S1111nStrs 111d suno:1.Y.. 1,.. prl!w.IMI pub!l~.Jl!tnl it tl.»0. W.ttl_ a.r s1rwr, OM• MM. C..JlforTllt. ,~ ••liert N. We.4 ,,..)dent ~ """'!"*' ~ J1c:k •· C1rf.1y Viti ~I eftlll c;.nwa1 MMN111' n.,,.., KeeYil EdllW n.,,. ... A. MWrplroj110 M-..W Editor C'i1rlo1 H. leo1 liclo1r4 ,, Htll At1ltteltl M-olrll 111'9n C--Ofllu , JJO Worl lo1y Strott Moifi1tt A"''•••: r.o. It• 1160, t2624 --.......... ll#dl: WJ......., ... : ..... ,,. ~ ftlocfl: m ,._.., A¥eltV9 Hvnt""f"I .. ttlil; 11WS ...o lloWl..,.'lt SM Cllinln1': »S ,.... El D~ a .. 1 Tai-11141 Mlo4U1 . C...._, .. ,. ..... HZ·llJI ~.. ''11. ~ c.Msl "*''"" .... ~r. "'• MWt •""'"-IOV11r11i.... ....... ,.,,.,,.... ... ~..._,. ~ w.y M IM1ftt# ..-... '"'"" ..,.. ...... . ..,,.,... .... . -~..:--............ Celie "'-· He simply shut up the residence and locked it, but ha! come to check the premises almost every day since, ac· cording·Jo Costa Mesa police. haircut, but was waylaid by.a~t1.fcious views abput native Americans as a whole Caucasian lieutenant. -WilJS(ln Pri~s face tllrn,, blank ; im- the flr st time a president of the United When it malfWlctloned up there, be ' brought his model to me poln,ting to one Boyvey, 67,'tOld Officer Phil Alexander he arrived Tuesday to discover someone had broken into the dwelling at 214 W. Wilson· st., burglarizing it. "He thou ght he was a Jap ... pu t a .45 passjve. . automatic right to his head -he was "Be sure to get !hat in the picture," he real, dark -and, \Vbooeet!,'' Price declares. "The k.ids's commanding officer says, poinUng to the old Marine. Corps had to come down to identify him and get recruiting poster on his desk that says From Page J SURRENDER. part and said. 'I'll bet the problem is right in here,'" Roscoe said proudly. ''And it was. h1aybe someday he'll be up, there on the moon," the proud dad him out of the stockade. nobody promises you a rose garden. "Tb 1· ute t had 1 J · to hi "That says it aU ... " he concludes. e 1e nan o go exp am s permission to pull out of the city," ' • • concluded . The Harbor Area's newest Eaj;Je looked a bit negative at that. Patrolman Alexander said Boyvey·s son was a radio and communications buff, and the burglar who forced the back door may be too. own C.O. and then apologize to the fl.1eanwhile, a U.S. spokesman reported 'prisoner' personally," he adds. Ch W ed the heaviest American air raids around ·'Not until they build a betler spacecraft," the boy said. Loss included two portable radios, two oscilloscopes, a record changer and one antique moviehouse poster depicting an old Edbon phonograph. A veteran of Vietnam and Korea, one avez afll the major North Vietnamese port of Vinh ol Sgt. Price's historic memories is ' since the Communist offensive began. wat~g. the Flag-raising atop ~t. C' • F He said the Americans were firing Suribacbi on lwo Jima. ·~ ""ontinues ast televisio1>gulded bombs that "just can't "We had a guy "With them," says Price, ~ miss" and that JIU1jor ground Ur who could see it llh·miles away, while PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Despite .Jtallations were destroyed. bearing ii deocribed by bl.I J:iavajo ~ warnings by dorjors t\lllt he is -1aPo4 a A .. command spokesman said U.S. From Page I COMMERCIALS Value of the dead man's poueal"" was aboui~, hit fatber~ld, noting tbe. old theater bill was worth ISO alono. ,between calls far mortar \>Olll~en~ significant risk ol pennanenUy damaging warplants n.,. 240 rald.s Into North Viet· they did not. one Gt helping raise the Flag ...tJt was his health, fmn _labor. leader Cesar nam. They smashed a big fuel depot and -t,120 said they asked for a produd to taken down again IO cameraman Joe Oiavez today went mtQ his 20th day or a destro~ed or damaged several raf1 apd i:et the free bonus gift; 413 said they did Fairview State Items Missing Rosenthal could get his historic · shot -fast. road br)dges 0%'ide Vinh, the coUntry'S . not. was another lndilll, Ira Hayes. Drs . J<;;o1rie L;lckn~ .~ ~Ill'. Jpse and "'"tliel'omost .JIOrl J3d milet IOUtb of -618 said they were.satlalled wilh tbl Stories, a song and a movie portray the Aiigus\o · ort.iz dt 'Ph~ bOtli urged Hanoi. , product; 87S said they were not. tragic aftermath for Hayes, who couldn't Chaves to end hi:s fa!t hrlmtclafely Tues-The 1,1)()()..powxl 0Walley~' bomb car--1,113 sald that they believed certain cope with fame &nd drowned one postwar day because he is ertremely weak and ·ties a TV camera in the Dose, a Navy products seen in the commercla11 made night in ·a desert creek coming home may have to be hospitalized 300t'I. spokesman said, and the pllot monitors a them happier and that tbfy would have from a night on the town. Chavez. who supporters !BY bas Jolt 25 television set in the cockpit. He tune.s in more friends ; 420 said they did not 1nventory or various wards and facilities at C.Osta Mesa's Fairview State J{ospital has turned up a total of $1,250 In pilfered or misplaced supplies. Nobody promised Willson Price any pounds since May 11, is fasting to protest °" what the bomb "sees" and when the belieye that. rose garden during or after the war, but passage of a measure by the Arizona target appears, locks in on it. . -918 said they felt their mother was he seems satisfied. Legislature to ban harvest strikes and "You just can't miss," the spokesman mean because she wouldn't buy the r,1'00- He and his v.1ile, Rose, have four eliminate most boycotts. said. !JCl they wanted ; 620 said she wasn t. children, Landa'.lerne, 22• Lorraine, 21... fAiCiwiiii:Ci.iii::>ii!:iiii.ii!Ci==tii2!~Pi =iiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili:.iiilii!!:a;;ri:;iiiiiiiiiiraaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij llospital official Merwin E. Long turned in the litit to poUce Tuesday, ex- plaining the items disappeared over a period or time throughout the facility for the mentally retarded . Laura, 18, Willson Jr., 17, all o[ lili whom are in school. GEM TALK LaVerne attends San Diego Slate College, majoring in premedicine; Lor-~ raine goes to Orange Coast College plan- ning a career in child psychology and Laura goes to Eruuicla High School. Losses include a 16 millimeter camera and matching Jens, a Polaro id camera, a large industrial-type floor buffer, three buffer pads and eight hypodermic needles. , Officer Bob Arnold said the list would be forwarded to California State Police in Sacramento, who also Investigate crime on state property. Hijack Plea Innocent LOS ANGELES IAP\ -Ricardo Chavez-Ortiz. accused ·or hijacking 'a jetliner Crom Phoenix to L<>s Angeles in April, pleaded innocent Tuesday In U.S. District Court here. The 36-year-old h-1ex· jean national is charged with air piracy. Judge Francis C. \Vhelan set June rl for a trial before federal Judge Charles H. Carr. ~ She wants to major in music, while Willson Jr. is a typical 17-year-old . "He doesn't know yet," says his father. The newly-retired master .sergeant figures he'll stay in Costa Mesa at least a year. until Willson Jr. graduates, then head· back 't~ Arizona, 30 years after leiiv. ing . "We 've got a lot or land there," he ex- plains, saying he 'll raise alfalfa and vegetables. _ - "It's going to be kind of sad leaving a place where you've spent a third of your life," notes the ex-Marine who purchased ru,, first local borne a.boot 22 years ago. "But I've seen tbe world," be says of Major Shopping Stores ~ . Set for Laguna Hills Four 1najor depa-11lm.nl ~10ies .and · _lkoadWU...and__t.he..tesLoLt.he smaller. about &O specialty shops are being shops. Final completion date has not been planned in the Lagun~ Hills Mall. the set. first phase of which \\"ill be completed in The mall itself will feature Spanish fall, 1973, Rossmoor ~orporatlon and tiles. Do\\·ers, trees and a large exhibition Ernest W. ·Hahn, Inc., Joint developers. area for . art.s and cra!Ls · shows a·nd hl!lve annolll'lCf'd. I nt t · t The Broadway dfpartmenl store, Bur-sea~na e er a_i~en · fums' and Sears. Roebuck and Co. ~Ire Rossmoo_r envisions the mall as serving three .of the fQur major concerns alr.e.ady La~na. H1.lls, i~ Toro, South Laguna. signed for the S30 million shoppin,i com-Laguna N1gue, Laguna Beach, Dana pltx. The fc>tµ'th will be announced letu, Point, ~plstrano Beach, Irvine, San a Rossmoor spokesmao said. Juitn Capistrano and $aJ1: Clemente. Located at lbe intersection or the San The $6 million Sears store, 1t 214,881 Diego Freeway and El Toro Road, !he ao square feet, will include a garden ~P acre site borders Leisure World and the and a 20-ear capacity auto center in ad· Saddleback Commu.ruty ~ospitak now un-dltkln to it..s regular merchandise . der construction. · · It will be the 27th Sean stort In Loa 'the area being constructed by llilhn, Angeles-Orange County area. lnc . is part of a larg~r 1121>-ticre tract Buffams' will be a 50,000 squer4 foot zooed "regional commetcl11l," which lw<>-level fashion atore, the loth Jn eve~tually ~uld reach mQre than one Southern Cllifornla. million square feet of lea.sa~le ~cf. The 32nd Broadway in California· The Rossmoor-oJmt(I La.guQI' lt11\s ma11 Nevada·Arlzona will have thrte levels In J, planned to feature • Sponl!h molll In !he mall complex . 1b 900,000,cllmate-<0ntro!Jod tquaro feet. Archited1 ror the mall only are Burke TODAY by J. C. HU~RtlS GRADUATION WATCHES The watch. for generations the I tra~itional college graduation gift, is today appreciated also by child· rcn at grade and high school level. Choice of a watch for graduates at any )eve.I WM formerly a simple matter C)f selection by price and style. A watch was a watch, its aJ. most casual purchase usuaJly re- sulting in genuine appreciation. Today. modem technology and styling h~ve combine<!.'IYL!h special· ized uses to make satisfactory se- lection infinitely more difficult. There are. llowever, steps you can take to make sure your graduate will wear !his gilt with pride and pleasure. You should be aware of your graduate's activities and ot th~ kinds and styles of watches worn by his friends. You shouJd,tben see a reliable local jeweler and discuss your l(n>blem. . ' ~· We have watches for all ages, from rugged timepieces for active children to the most .sopbui1cated and •peclalized watches .av~ilable. Your graduate. Give them an Omega. A qvolity gift that distinguishes iiself for styling, a~uracy and \ tf!~ ossuro'nc:e or over o century of quality craftsmanship. Give ycu~r grcrduole,a timepiece to rely on ••• OmegaJ s.1r .• 1~.u111. _,.,.,..,Mto1 w .. "°' °'"""1' "'"' '""'~ ... · ... 1111"" •IM' I •-'-' ............. ru .. 41f!, ---·"·---"--·-·-·...: J I SJ leofl•• ClyMl!llc..t•ll·wlMl!tt •IMi ft>it-NUI.,. 41•1 1H oNl•IN ol..t -· I leth'-111 -· .....! -·---···~·~ .. -·-$1JS ~J.C. ~umphrie~ Jew~fer~ 182J NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA ~ . . '• " _,., .. --..... ,,......, w _.. a .11 ~, Mtitwr ...... ,..,. ""' fMfllMv. • Tilt Sears ahd Burrums' deparlm<!nt Kober, Nicolais and Arcl>uleta ol Lol '....., and more lhJn half of the II> sbopo Angela. _will bo lncJuded ln1bt Ont l>hait. Exclua!vo IHS!ng 1g111t for ~center And if, In spite of all your care, . your. graduate wants sonfeth~g dif. !erent, we'll gladly exchanie for exactly wha~ he wanll. CONVENIENT TUMS 21 VIARS IN SAM! LOCATION IANOU.MEllCAlD-MASTEi Cl<AlGIE fHONl Ml-1441 selimiilod for ~ Two are the b CGJdwelJ, BanJw and Co. I ' • ... ... --...... , ,.. .. , .. ,_