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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-05-25 - Orange Coast Pilot----...... -. . ' ew .or ac J' Reds Down Two Generals • ID Third Oiii~er~s Air~rait • Ill Res~ue . DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 25 , ·1971 Dead Down Three-inch-loni snipefishes_, w~ich some~imes s~i!TI h~ads do~ and sometimes honzontally. swi m m the vertical pos1t1on 1n a Scripps In· stilution of Oceanography tank. The fish orient themselves head down by means of gravity receptors in their inner ears. These were caught recently off \vest coast of Mexico. Newport Council Ca11cels Freeway Pact With State By L. PETER KRIEG Of !fie D1l1Y l'li.t II.it ·Newport Beach councilmen voted unanimously to cancel the Pacific Coast Free.WI.)' route agreement Monday nijht but the expected action came only after they were told they would be sued because of it. Calling the acl of unilaterally breaking Oru1e Coa1t Weather The stock market isn't the only thiog dropping suddenly. Look for a five-degree dip in the mercury W~nesday, from 75 to 70 degrees, along the coastal a~a. INSIDE TODA\' T hret. community lheatt.rs are re111rrecling two old time comtdies tlli$ 1t1eek. while UC Irvine mounts !ht first counfy production of a Ttrrncsset. Wil· /iom! drama . See Theater Notes , Page 20. M•MI '•""' 11 Nltltfltl l'llW'I +.J °'-c..~.., ' ·~·"1• ,,ri.t ,. ._.... 16-11 St.ell l•llMlttt 1•11 ,. ..... ,,.... ,, ,.,. .. ,,n ,,.,. W"111tr • W~lit Wll~ '' 11 contract "reprehensible," E. 0. Rocle ff er, a Newport Beach developer, told the council: "lf the Division of Highways or no other group steps forth demanding damages. I will personally do it." "Al my own expense," he added. Rodeffer said he might also sue the slate for failing to li\le up to 113 contract with the people if it doesn't take any ac· ti on. There has bee n na indicatiOn the stale plans to act. Ca lilornia Public Works D I r e c t Qr James A. Mae has said he won't instigate litigation O\ler the rescission while the State Highway Commission has remained virtually silent on the subjecL , Mayor Ed Hirth tried lo talk Rodeffer out of it, urging he instead cooperate as Moe has pledged to da in finding allernate traffic probl!!ffi. solutions via the city's traffic study. Rodefrer was not to be dissuaded. He called the study, ."too Jillie, too late'." "I recognize the fact I'll be unpopular,'' Rodeffer said, also telling councilmen he re'alir.ed they have no olhcr cholce~t to follow \he diclates of the electorate. Ntwport Beach residents xoted nearly 6 to I ti.1arch 9 to rescind t~greement, which was signed in October, 1968 and which CO\lers the proposed route from Bayside Dri\le easterly through eorona de.J Mar. ' U.S. Senate Ni.Xes Draft Amendment WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate Tuesday rejected . legislation that would ha\le forbidden the use of draftees on combat .assignments in Southeast Asia . Opponents:, led by Sen. John C. Stenn is (D-Miss.), said the amendment would ha\le crippled efforts to attrad more volunteer·s into the Army. Instead of enlisting, Stennis said, men would havt? waited for induction, knowing it carried a guarantee against combat assignment. But Sen. Gaylord Nelson (D-Wis. ), chief sponsor of the amendment, said the regular Arm y, drawing on men who enlisted voluntarily. should be able to eupply manpower for Vietnam combat units. He said draftees now are bearing an in- ordinate share of the casualties -57 per· cent during 1970. "You're asking them lCI risk their li\les for a cause that is not in the interesl of this country," Nelson said. "That's too much • • • .I "Where is the regular Army?" ~ ask· ed. He said there are 700,000 regular Army enlisted men, and the manpower for Vietnam combat assignments should come from among them. or from the largely volunteer Marine Corps. Stennis insisted that with draftees ruled out. the Pentagon would not be able to meet Vietnam manpower requiremenls. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn. ), called the amendment 'the one first step l"e can take" in Congress to push the process of disengagement from the Viet· nam war. "This is the test vote on whether th is Congress really means business on get- ting out .•• " Humphrey said. Before voting on Nelson's amendment, the Senate rejected. 61 to 7, a measure to bar the use of draftees in any combat zone without specific Congressional ap. prov al. Sea. John V. Tunney (D-Calif.), who proposed the draft bill amendment, sald it was designed to reclaim C<>ngressional authdrily over war mak.ing decisions. Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.), called the TuMey amendment dangerous, and said he would rather entrust one man, !he President, with the decisions of war than more than 500 members ot Congress. "all or us influenced by politics or by the regions we come from, or by the people that we represent.'' Grove Man Drowns - • I 100 Arrested Pendleton Air Police Quell-Area _Lease Travis Race Riot TRAVIS AFB (UPI) -Air police in battle gear put down racial braw ls in· \lolving an estimated 400 airmen today ()n this sprawling Air Force base, a major embarkation point for Vietnam. A1ore than 100 persons were arrested, six injured. and a fireman died of smoke inhalation fighting a blaze in an officers quarters which base ()fficials said was apparently set. The fights broke out ti.1onday night following sporadic weekend clashes between black and white airmen ap- parently touched off when a white woman airman was roughed up Saturday night. Order was restored aboul midnight, and the base took on a normal ap- pearance by dawn. Bill guards in ballle dress and bearing carbines were sta- tioned al its 1nain entrance. A base spokesman said the fighting ''scen1ed to be connected with racial trouble" which was reported sporadicaHy ()TI Sunday. Firem·an James T. ti.-1orsberger of Napa, died while fighting the officers' Quarters blaze. Another fireman was in· jured. The 6,500 service personnel on the base were restricted to Quarters during the night. The trauble apparently broke out dur· ing the evening meal when fistfights erupted in the mess hall an d several men began throwing salt and pepper shakers at each other. Fighting quickly spread into the central portion ()f the base. Travis Air Poli ce called for help from surrounding city police departments about 9 p.m., an hour after the disturbances started. Base Commander Col. John Blake an· nounced shortly before midnight that the situation was under control, but all Field Service Gets $200 Gift A gift of $200 has been presented tn the Corona de! ti.1ar Chapter of American Field Service by Corona de! Mar Kiwanis Club. The presentation was made by Club President C. E. "Buck" Schoeller at the club's Ladies' Day Program, when four foreign students currently attending Corona de! Mar High School on American Fleld Service scholarships -Eli Fure, Norway; Friew Ke.lemu, Ethipla ; Ann Bouffie!j., France and Denilo Fodriquez, Costa Rica -were the speakers. newsmen were barred from the base. Before leaving, they reported seei11g several airmen taken by ambulance to lht: base medical center with injuries. They said that fights had started out on a racial basis, bot soon spread in- discriminately, Blake said those arrested would be charged with such offenses as assault, in· citing to riot and insubordina tion . Officers from the Solano County Sher- iff's Office, California Hiway Patrol and (Ste TRAVIS, Page ZJ Generals Saved After Aircraft Hit, Grounded SAIGON (AP) -Viet Cong marksmen shot down a U.S. helicopter carrying an American general and a South Viet- namese general today, but a third general in an accompanying helicopter rescued them unhurt. Aboard the downed helicopter were ti.1aj. Gen. John H. Cushman , commander of the Military Assistance Command in the Mekong delta, and Maj. Gen . Ngo Quang Truong, commanding general in the delta military region. Their chopper was hit by small arm!! fire while o\ler the northern part of tfie U A1Jnh forest, about 145 miles southwest o! Saigon. The U.S. pilot and his crew were wounded, a U.S. military spokesman reported, but all the passengers escaped unhurt. They W!!re rescued in a few minutes by a helicopter carrying Maj. Gen. Nguyen Vinh Nghi, commander of the South Vi et- namese 21st Infantry division, which has been conducting a large sweep operation in Lhe U ti.-1inh forest since Dec. I. A U.S. spokesman, Maj Richard Gard· ner. said Gen. CUshman and Gen. Truong were on a "routine visit to military posts" in the Ca Mau peninsula. Aides of Gen. Truong said il'was the fifth time in the war he had been shot <k>wn in a hell copter. ~e.a.Qwhile, North Vietnamese forces 23 miles northwest of Saigon made another attack early today on allied troops pre>- vidlng security for American bull<k>zers uprooting the Bol Loi wood!. Wins Okay WASlilNGTON (UPI ) -The HouSI Armed Services Committee today re- jected a proposal backed by President Nixon to declare as exce53 federal pro- perty 4,055 acres ()f land adjacent to bi.I San Clemente beachfront home. The committee recommended instead thaL about 1ix miles of beach at the Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base be leased but not donated or sold to tbe 1tate for use as a public beach. Under th.is arrangement, the land would be available for Marine am- phibious landing exercises. Also, the beach area to be leased by California wauld not include a one-half mile beach used by an enlisted men's club. The commiUee rejected outright lhe recommendation that some 3.400 acres or an inland area al Pendleton be declared as excess and turned over the Genera.I Services Administration (GSA) wbicb reporfedly planned to · sell tbe land for residential development. The unanimous voice vote came as tbe committee considered a Navy excess land disposal report previously approved by the Federal Property Review Board whicb President Nixon created in 1970 to find ways of making available ur;nued federal property. The Marine Corps through a lease sign- ed March 31 by the Navy Department and the state ·of Ealifornia agreed te lease 3'n: miles of beach at $1 per year for 25 years. The President announced at that time while be Wall in California that he would seek congressional approval for an additional three miles and to make available the 3,400 acres. Thus, on March 31 . a Navy dispo&al report was filed with the committee re-- questing that all a~ miles of beach and the 3,400 acres be"d"eclared !xcess'federal (See BEACH, Page !I 4-bit Gunmen Stage Holdup Three youths used a snub-nosed revolver Monday night to hold up a 40-year..old woman on the park.Ing k>I. of a Huntington Beach sboppln& center. , The victim, Mrs. Mary E. Cady. told investigating detectives tha\ the youths she descri~ as beina: abouJ l.f year1 old approached her on the lot about 9 p.nt One held her at bay wllh the gun while the othen rlned her purst. She honked her ho(n •• the trio fled but nobody came to her 1ld. , . •-·• Nun 1J•l4 Wt•lll ""°" •·• Rodcffer said damage.1 resulting from the councl1'1 action "will be untold · millions" and gaid Newport res\denll didn 't understand thi1 or they wauldn 't have voted the way they did. "Tbe people should know 'A'hat their tall' iS.t FREEWAY. Pase Ii A Garden Grove man drowned Monday night in the swimming pool of a motel, the coroner's office reported. Vernal G. J ones, 44. of 12151 Firbrand St., was found at the bottom of the pool of the Fire St11tion motel, 12625 Har8or Blwd. American Field Service prov Ides scholarships to enable foreign students to attend hlglt schools in the United Stales: •nd for American high school 1tudents tG study In other countries. The enemy opened up with a 20 round mortar b3rrage about 3 a.m .• then follow· ed up with a ground attack firing rocket grenades. The U.S. Command said The yourig bandits eac1ped with ~ !Ste GENERALS. Past Ii 50 ctnL!. I ' I " I I • . . • ;f DAILY PIL01 !:t ·:£api.J.1e Ba11 ·;: For Newport Beaches 01{ · Despite last-ditch protesls from a handful of dog owners, dogs and cats and all other four-legged animals v.•ere ordered banned from Newport Beach beaches and oceanfront sidewalks by the city council Monda y night. The: ordinance, approved unanimously: • ~ostltutes a ban from June 1~ to Sept. I:> :t:t this year will not go into effect for 30 ·Oya, until June 29. . • : The cotmell ordered an a~tom~tie l-evlew of the ordinance at its first : lneeting in September, tenl.atively set Sept 13. f l • The ordinance covers all ocean ron beaches. Dogs have long been prohibited on bay beaches. Guide dogs used by blind persons are ,xcluded. ,. . d _._ 1 The action came after a ve1le ~uo::a ·from one west Newport resident. : • "This will not be the end if you pass : lhis tonight " sald Martin Zalcio. 4904 : Seashore Drive, who declined t 0 : t.Jaborate but who brought to mind a ~~- • Cent referendum in Laguna Be.a ch forc~d by dog owners after the council there in· .)t.ialiy passed a total ban .. Voters in Laguna Beach wiped out the ordinance and a compromise Jaw was ~ 1JUbsequently adopted that bans pets from : the beaches only from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. ·Curing the swnmer months. Not necessarily germar1.e. but Zaldo queried Newport councilmen about the legality "of a part-time San Clemente resident who takes his three dogs to the beach. . d .. ZaJ•~ ·"Who picks up alter his ?gs,. uu said, referring to President N1x:on s three pets. . L'd Roy B. Woolsey, 113 Via Venena, 1 o Isle, told councilmen he felt t_he ban ~as necessary but suggeste~ the city l<?Dk into the po15slbility of creating a special sec· tion of the beach where dogs would be a llowed. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers suggested the Pacific Electric right-of-way in W~t Newport and Mayor Ed Hirth said this possi bility could be discussed when the council reviews the issue jn the fall. Councilmen also ordered p r op e r · ootificalion of the new law be posted on fhe beaches and sent to all homeov.•ners in their water bills. AWOL Marine ·Faces Charges In Valley Rape An· AWOL Marine arrested over the ~·weekend by Fountain Valley police was ~eduled to face arraignment today _in. , the West Orange Counly Judicial District Court on charges of kidnap, rape and armed robbery. · Peter Michael Alex Silva, 22, was book- 'ed in Orange County Jail after officers 'claim they tracked him down in a new bOU1ing development by using a police dog from Garden Grove. Police allege Silva kidnaped an 18-year· old girl Saturday night in the parking lot of Santa Ana High School, drove her .to the subdi vision located near the m- lersection of Heil Avenue and Sugar Loaf Street, raped her and robbed her of about f2 in change. A Fountain Valley patrolman who stop-J>ed to investigate the presence of the auto near a construction site, apparently 8Urpri.sed the girl's abductor who ran into the tract of half-completed homes. Aided by officers from Westminster end Huntington Beach as well as the Huntington Beach helicopter and the Carden Grove dog, police found Silva biding In the attic of a house under con-- 1truction at 16678 Mt. Cachuma Circle. ou.N•• coar DAILY PILOT "'.,..~ ..,__ c-.-"*' ......... -·-,.. C1•1 t9 OlAHGI COAST r Ul l.ISfflNO COM,.AHY Re\.ert N. Wee4 ''•!""I •"' Pull!""" J etlr: R. C1rl.., . \'kl ,,...,_.. •Ill ~•I MIMtll' llieM11 Keevll "'""' lho1111•• A. 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'"' -'*" U.Jf fNlllJll.'JJ lly fl'ltlll &I.Pl ~I lfllllllrf ··~• itlJS -*Ir. • ·- Tue~da:t. Ma1 25, 1971 ; Ota West <:oast Chrysler Plant Closing Up Shop LOS ANGELES f AP) -At the age of :!9, the Chrysler Corp. assembly plant in l.<ls Angeles is out of a job , a victiin uf c·hanglng times if not advancing years. The !inn announced ~1onday that at the end of its 1971 model run, July 9, it will close. Current production v.'aS of in· 1ermediate sized Plymouths and Dodges. In 1932, y,·hen il started production. the idea was to provide a \Vest Coast as.sembly plant for Western sales -sav· ing time and money compared with ship- ping from De,troit. the Korean \Var. and componenls for guided n1issiles "'ere other plan t projects. Peak e1nployment was ubout 5,500 at the plant in past years. The plant, which \\'<tS turning out 2ll assembled cars an hour, is obsolete and not suitable for modernization, the com· 'A1·so11 Probed 'Let 'E11i Go Brol~e' The techniques or rail shipping no1v have advanced LO the point, lhe company announced, that for instance it is more economical to ship from Detroit to the Pacific Northwest. than from geographi ca l ly closer Southern Califo rnia. Other modernized methods in Delroit also make it less advantageous to build here. the firm said. 111 Fatal Fire Aboard ShiP, From Wire Sen•ices Cigar-chomping Gordon Rule, a con tract \vatchdog for the Defense Department. testified before a Senate subcommittee Monday that the )?overnment should turn do\vn the Lockheed Aircraft Corp.'s request for a $250 million loan guarantee and let the company go broke. See story, Page 4. About 1,200 employes, all orfered jobs elsewhere with Chrysler, are affected. A union spokesman said he didn't know how many would take th e offer to move. Chrysler has seven other assembly sites . VANCOUVER, B.C. -Investiga tors disclosed today that arson is considered a possibility in the tragic fire that killed 32 crewmen of the Norwegian cruise ihip Meteor Saturday morning. From Page 1 FREEWAY ... bill will be as a result of this action.'' he said. Rodeffer said the costs to lhe city y.·ould be the amount spent by the state in engineering and land acquisition and damages to people who sold out and packed up and lefl because they thought they were in the path of a freeway. He also said Newport Beach residents a10fle would have l.o pay the cost of new roads to handle the increased traffic. "With a freeway, lhe federal govern· rnent would pay 90 percent and the state would pay the rest," Rodeffer said. "You're going to throw all that av.·ay and it'll all be on your shoulders. You may have mon ey for the studies. bul no money to implement them," he said. Councilman Carl Kymla, who once led council opposition to the rescission elec- t.Ion. contended that the public had been well-informed prior to tbe election. "The people must have felt the damages would go av.·ay,'' Rodeffer replied. ROOeffer, a nev.·comer to the 10-yea r- old coasta l freeway controversy. lives in Corona del 1\ilar and heads Rod effer Jnvestments which currently is head- quartered in Arcadia but is in the process of const ructing a five-story office building in Newport Center. Earlier, Vice Mayor Howard Rogers had suggested Rodeffer "look up Lorenz. Stoddard and Hart and fine some good henchmen or allies." Rogers referred to forn1er Ne\vport Beach may ors Charles E. Hart and James B. Stoddard and former Vice J\.1ayor Hans J. Lorenz who had unsuc- cessfully sought an Injunction to bar the special freev.·ay election. "J don't need any henchn1an ," Rodeffer retorted, "I've done my ov.·n soul searching. This is the worst thing I've ever heard of." Rodeffer indicated he may act quickly. "I 'll fil e as soon as J"m sure nobody else is going to," he said and when Rogers pointed out th at the state has in· dica ted it ·won"t do anything, Rodeffer responded, "then J'll have my la~'yers start dra wing up the papers in the morn· ing ." Councilman Richard Croul did not at- tend ?.londay night's meeting. From l'age l BEACH ... property and turned over to the GSA for disposal. Once declared excess federal property, the GSA could have donated the land to the slate provided it was used exclusively for public parks or beach. It could also have sold the highly desirable 3,400 inland acres to land developers. Subcommittee chairman Samuel S. Stratton (D·N.Y.), explained in a report to the full commitlee that "this beach frontage is essential to Camp Pendleton training, and .the subcommittee believes that the government must retain use rights on this beach area." Loss of the 3,400 in land acres y;as a matter or "great conce rn" to the real estate subcommittee, Slratton said, because it provides "an absolute\v necessary buffer zone betwei?n residenti81 areas in the city of San Clemente and the Marine Corr-s camp at ·san ~tateo and Talego and the associated training ranges and i1npact areas in the upper San r.'lateo Valley." He said that althou11h 1he Navv had suggested the land ·would be turned over to California for recreational and cam- ping purposes a GSA survev recom· mended ''very unequivocably" ·that it be sold for resident/al de~·elopn1ent. Fiery La\'a Strea111s 200 Yards Fro1n Town CATA!\""I A, Sicily (UPI) -Two offshoot streams of lava seared O\"er acres or ftrtile h1rml11.nd today and advanced lov.·ard the IO\l'n of r ornauo on the side of erupting t\1l. Etna. Six collages \\"ere destroyed . Two fingers of Java crept directly toward the town of r ornazzo, burninR illl v.·ay to v.•ithin 200 yards from the edgl"' fif the to\l·n proper. But these branches rilowcd during the day and ofri('lals stlll hoped lhey v.'ould turn Into the dry Sam· buCQ Creek bed ne::irby. Nation's Symbo~ Dying; MoreDeadEaglesFound CASPER, \Vyo. (UPI) -Three more eagles \\'Cr!! discovered dead in Wyoming ~fonday and a federal investigator said a lov.·.level aerial sea rch also turned up a number of dead game anirr.al~. The discoveries came as s!atc officla!s Coast Pioneer Romona Castle Services Held ,1·ere confirming an earlier finding that the eagles y,·ere dying e>f :in extremely potenl poison knov.n as thal!i•Jtn. Charles Law~euce of the l/.S. BlH"i:'JU u£ Sport Fisherirs and \Vi1·Jl1f i! saa.I Inc bodies of two r.olden C:!gl~• v.·rrc foun<l near GlenrocK in cen tral Wyumi:"lg and on ranchland 35 miles south\ve:;l of Casper. The third bird, a bald ea glr, was rour.d near Cheye:-in'!. Lawrence ~:::r.id there wa~ nolhii1g to in· dicate that the other dead aninu1!s niet their dea ths bv the same p::iisoning:. bu~ said a Jaborat~rv study y,·outd be maJe. "We made :i lO\V level ~earch of a large area using :1 helicopter :ind iounrl several Funeral rites y,·ere held today in San ga1ne animals lhal \\erc C:tatl -Crer, '·This is the wrong day to ask, it's pret- ty emotional in the plant." said Chet Lundstrom recording secretary of UA\V Local r\o. 2.10. "Some of the guys have been tht're for 2{I or 30 years." "Nobody is happy at losing their job,'' he said . "It's a company decision and in 1ny opinion it's the importing of foreign ca rs that"s causing it.'' Lw1dquist added one other note: the union loca\'s Tuesday election voting has been called off, and there are no plans tor \"Ollng later. "The local's gone," he said. A company spo kesman recalled that in its heyday the assembly plant turned out l'lymoutits, Dodges , Chryslers .and the old DeSoto. The last went out or business :11>out a decade ago. Parts for big <ilobcmaster planes used for troop and t.'quipment movement by the Air Force in .Ba ndits Steal Pills, ~1oney in Santa Ana Diego for pioneer Newport Beach resi-antelope an•J iivestock." La·,.:rcoo::•! said . Two b,andils. interested in more than denl and authoress Mrs. Ramona Duarte ''We collected samplrs f;-on1 eact: of inoney, held up a Santa Ana pharmacy Castle. 82, who died Saturday in I.a t\1esa. these animals.'' Monday night and escaped with more The woman \Vho grev.· up in the seaside The samples \viii be ser.~ to Den, t r lor than 2.000 dangerous drug pills and $400 \'illage's heyday as a railhead and analysis at federa~ laborator1t>S thcr" in cash. nierchant shipping center published a col-Both federal and stal:! official:. Police said the two nien forced two lee-lion of reminiscen~s only last year. meanwhile, ~·"!re attemp~1n11 11 learil !he c;alesgirls and a customer to sit on the '"Old Newport, The Seaport Years," is source or tne thallium p n 1 :; on 1 n g . noor in the back room o( \Vagner's the title of lhe book, compiled and edited Anlhorities believe that 1nany of the 43 Pharmacy, 1224 E. McFadden Ave., and from a series of taped interviews about eagles found <lead in the sta!e sincz May ordered pharmacist James E. Goodal to her early life. 1 have been victims of poison, v.hich has empty the cash register and hand over The 48·page volume published \vith aid been described as being tour tiines 1nor1< Seconal sleeping pills and Dexedrine All 66 passengers including former Newport Beach mayo r James B. "Jay" Stoddard and his \\'ife Florence escaped the blazing vessel in lifeboats. Searchers J\1onday recuve.red the re· maining seve n bodies fron1 lhe charred, twisted wreckage of the crew's quarters and said all bul four have been identified. The t\leleor stearncd int() Vancouver Harbor's Burrard Drydock Sunday and a tight police guard y,·as immediately. posted around· the area .. Fire erupted about 3 a.m. Saturday, turning the foresectioo of the 2.856 ton ship into a death trap for the ill-fated 32, \Vhi\e 42 other crewmen escaped. Ex·mayor Stoddard and his wife were awakened by loud noises and the smell of smoke, leading them to fl ee the ir own passenger quarters, adjacent to the cre\V section. The Meteor v.·as 60 miles out of Van- couver in the Strail of Georgia, on the last day of her firs t week·long scenic cruise of the summer tourist season. Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Federal Transport D epa r l men t ffi. vestigators are probing what happened aboard the Bergen Lines vessel. Information was expected to be given directly to Transport t\firi.ister Don Jamieson, v.•hile Nor .... ·egian Vice Consul Tor Virding said in Vancouver a full in· quiry will be forthcoming in Norway. "Based on what crew members told me. it appears a fire broke out and simp- ly spread explosively fa st," Virding com- mented . Despite the fact arson hasn't been rul· ed out, the vice consul said there is no reason to believe an explosion preceded the swift-spreading names. or several Newport Beach civic organiza-potent than arsenic. sllmulanls valued at $125. tions, contains a captivating chronicle of I..'.::.:::..:::::::_.::::.:::_:::_ ______________________________________ _ bygone days. including houses on stilts and a sea serpent. A trio of bearded , distinguished Stan· ford University professors boarded a train upon hearing of the discovery , one \\•inter around 1900. and foun d the beasl to bC a rare, 20-foot·long oarfish. Born Aug. 31, 1881 to Spanish-speaking tilcFadden Brothers I o n gs ho rem an Joseph Duarte and l\1rs. Helen Munsen Duarte. falr·complexioned and of Scan. dinavian descent, the late ~1rs. Castle was one of 12 children, eight of whom survived infancy . Her brother. Joseph Duarte Jr., Ytas lhe first baby boy born in whal y,·as lhen Nev.· Port, \\·here the farilily lived in a house built on stilts to escape high tides. One unique n1oving day involved towing the fan1ily home across the shallow harbor on barrel fl oats for relocation near the existing Newport Pier. Survivors include a sister, 1.1rs. Ann ('arn1ack, of Balboa . Island , a brolher t-:mesL of Costa t>.·lesa, daughter ~liss Nettie Duarte. of Anaheim, a so n Loren .I. Caslle of Los 1\ngeles, and a son H. C. Castle, of La l\lesa. l'rom Page l GE NERALS . • • helicopter gunships and artillery broke up the assault. A spokesman. !.laj. Richard Gardne r, said Jl North Vietna1nese were killed and one was captured. One U.S. soldier from lhe 2nd Squadron, 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment, was killed. and 18 v.·ere v.·ounded, while South Vie l n a n1 es e t•asualt ies y,·ere one killed and nine \1"0unded. Accordi ng to intelligence reports. a North Vietna1nese regiment has been trying to rt-establish a base camp in the v.·oods. "·hich already are infester! \\'Ith enemv booby !raps and n1ines. J{iding hea\'); duty bulldozers, U.S. Arn1y Engineers have levelled nearly 10,000 acres since April 1 to deprire the enen1y of hideouts and storage depots. The An1erican cavalry squadron and South \'ictnamese millliamen are providing security. and military sources say 171 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong have been killed. Al least 11 Americans ha\"e died and more than 100 ha\'e been v.·ountl· ed . .,r.-~,,~A LD EN 'S F rom P a g e 1 TRA VIS ... from nearby police departments were called to the base lo l\ssist nir police. Firt trucks sprayed high-powered hose!> at the enlrances lo many enlisted men"s b:irracks to keep airmen off the titreets. The air police sent a large number or patrols throughout thn base. The potlcemen were armed with rilles and gas 1nnsks. CARPETS. DRA P ES 1663 PLACENTIA AVE. COS TA MESA 646-4838 ' SANTA ANA, OU.NGI,, TUSTIN Call •• , ALDIN'S JtlD Hill CAlt'm " DRi.PIRll'S 11 174 lrYlftl, T•1tll1, C.rlf. lll·Jl44 r s. at "' d n· rs • 32 'p er •• r- d, rs d. er • ly, y, on 2, • o{ w n- he ic d .. ed en n ul n· Id I" 1- no ed ' ! 17 Buntin(lton n·e·a~h Fountain Valley I ~ J • Today's Final N.Y. Stooks VOL 64, NO. 124, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1971 TEN CENTS Fluoridation Issue Still Up Water • Ill Air By TERRY COVILLE 01 11'1• D•llY .. Ji.I ltltl There is still no solution to the con- troversy over water flu oridation, even though last April Fountain Valley and Huntifti:ton Beach chose distinct routes for deciding the issue. The Fountain Valley issue may be set- tled with an election June 8, as agreed on a 4-1 vote by the city council April I. In Huntington Beach, however, a $70,000 budget to inject fluoride into city water could rest on lhe health of one councilman or the fervor of 40 pelition collectors. Technically, the Huntington Beach council agreed to go ahead with an earlier endorsement of water fluoridation when it deadlocked 3-3 April 5 on a pro- posal calling for 8.Jl election. But Coun- cilman Donald Shipley was hospitalized at the time and has since stated publicly be would favor a fluoride elect.ion . Shipley has not yet returned to the ) council. but when he does, the question of an election might be posed again and pass 4-3. Meanwhile, aboilt 40 members of the Huntington Beach Citizens for Pure Water are walking the streets carrying petitions which call for an election before fluoride can be put in the water. They have until Sept. 21 to tum in the names of about 4,000 registered voters. The' pure water committee failed in April on • petition drive because of a 'Let 'Etn Go Broke' Cigar-chomping Gordon ·Rule, 1 contract watchdog for the Defense Department, testified before a Senate subcommittee Monday that the government should turn down the Lockheed Aircrlft Corp.'s request for a $250 million loan guarantee and let the company go broke. See s_tory. Page 4. Valley Man Dies In Head-on Crash On Canyon, Road A head-On collision on Santiago Canyon Road just south of Peters Canyon Road Monday ni ght killed one person and in- jured five others. Dead at the SCf;ne of the 11:30 p.m. ac- cident was Donald D. Lilly, 47, of 10320 Warner Ave., Fountain Valley, who was alone in his sm'all foreign car, the cor- oner's office reported. The driver of the other car Jeff D. Jenkins, 18, of Anahe im is reported in gertous condition today in the Orange County Medical Center's intensive care unit Also in 5erious condition in the same hospital is one of his passengers Jay E. VanMarter, 17, of Anaheim. Others injured • Include . Dav i d Abdelnour. 16, in fil.ir condition today; Richard Ramos, 19, and Cha~les ?· Crowson, 18, both treated for minor in- juries and released. The three are Anaheim residents. A fifth passeng1er. Robert. A. Peskin , 21, of Silverado Canyon Road, was treated at" the scene for minor Injuries. California Highway Patrol investigators gaid Lilly"s car was traveling north on Santiago Canyon Road, cros.sed the center line and crashed into the southbound vehicle. Nixon in W allnce Land To Test South Strength • MOBILE, Ala. (UPI) -President Nix- on flew into George Wallace country to. day to test h1s Deep South political strength and participate· in ceremonies marking the start of construction of the S 3 6 5 -mi 11 io n Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway. . Mome nts after Air Force One arrived at BrookleY Field from Homestead, Fla., the President was greeted by Wallace, who may challenge him in the 1972 presidential election. But the Alabama governor played down the political implications of the visit. "Let's not talk aboui politics," Wallace · told reporters morhents before the Presi- dent arrived. "We're happy to have the President in Alabama. We think it is a great honor to have him here." Nixon chatted brieny with Wallace . aboot the weather, wbich bad been rainy unUI minutes before he arrived. "I hope you needed the rain,'' the President said. Nixon then invited Wallace and three other Southern governors on hand for the ceremony -John Bell Williams of Mississippi, Louie B. Nunn of Kentucky, Reubin Askew of Florida -to ride with him in Air Force One during the af- ternoon to Birmingham, Ala., where he planned a briefing with Southern editors , and publishers. ' Nixon entered a limousine with David and Julie Eisenhower for a four-mile trip through Mobile to the Alabama .st.ate docks, sile of the ceremony dedicating the waterway. Nixon hailed at lhe outskirts of Mobile and changed from the limousine to a con- vertible and rode into town with David and JuJie at his side. Wallace rode into town ahead of the President and did not participate in the moforcade. Open House Set At Ocean View Ocean View School District's business office and maintenance-warehouse fa cil- ity .will be open to t.he public from 6 o'clock lo 9 o'clock tonight. A spokesman for the dislrict said the opea house i.s being held to display the district's recently streamlined operations. The business office ls located at 7972 Warner Ave. and the maintenance-ware. house facility is at 8291 Warner Ave. Both are ia Huntington Beach. I confusion in deadhnes. ).tore than 4,500 names were collected, but they were turned in a month past the due date. If the petitioners fail and the council doesn't reconsider an election, nuoride will become a reality in Huntington Beach water by early 1972. Fount.a.in Valley voters. however, will choose their course June 8. But the election is not a simple "yes" or "no" proposition oo. nuorlde. Instead, it asks voters to decide if they want a ci· ty ordinance prohibiting the injection or fluoride at any time in the future without an election. Jt ls a double negative. lf voters approve the ordinance -by marking •·yes" on the ballot -then another elec- tion would be nettsSary before fluoride could be put in city water. '"The signi ficant part is that the only rE:ason for this election is the ordinance, not the fluoride issue," says George Lindegren, leader of the Fountain Valley Citizens Committee for Pure Water. ··nils ls not a pro and con proposition.'" Llndegren is unhappy, howev er, that3 both arguments on the ballot lead toward the fluoride issue -rather than the question of establishing an ordinance re- quiring elections. 'Die argument favoring the ordinance asks if the city council will assume re- sponsibility for "motUed teeth, corroded household plumbing," and ends with (See FLUOIUDE, Pa&• Z) Budget Cuts Seen Library, Parks May Get Fund Clwp Huntington Beach may chop ii.! library and parka and recreation services next year to balance the budget. City Administrator Doyle Miller recom- mended Monday night that the library budget be cut by $35,500 and the parks and recreation department by ~71,000 and the money transferred to the general fund. He made the recommendations to offset a projected $552.000 deficit ln the general fund for 1971-72. Miller also suggested transferring $250,000 of an expected $272,000 surplus in this year's general fund to next year's transferring $70,000 in ga.s tax funds to the general fund and moving $125,000 left in the capital ouUay fund to the general fund. As alternatives lo this recom- mendation, Miller said the council could consider raising the property tax rate from Sl.45 to $1.52 cents which would bring in anotiler $245,000. cutting salaries of all city employes by three percent for a saving of $250,000, trimming 25 people earning $10,ChXl a year from the city staff for a saving of $250,000 or f~z.ing all step sa lary increases and relircmen~and insurance benefits to sa:ve $143.090. \ Spelling out what the recommendation means. Assistant City Administrator Brander Castle warned, "We will have no cohtingency fund. no capital outlay fund , and if we make all the estimated revenues we will come out in about the same position next year -broke." Miller added. "In private enterprise, they operate with a 10 percent con- tingency. The best we have been able to do is 3 percent. Now v.'e have nothing." The recommenda tions came at the end of the third council stud y session on the budget. Mayor George ~1cCracken promtptly called a fourth study session for 7 p.m. June 1 to allow the councilmen time to mull Miller's recommendations. The councilmen obviously were divided over how to bri~e the deficit althougb most seemed impressed by a suggestion from Finance Director Ben Arguello that they could readjust the budget during the ye<1r to reimburse some of the depleted services if revenues exceeded pro- jections. State law requires that a balanced budget be adopted by June 30 but Arguel lo pointed out that if, instead of adopting it by ordinance as the council has done in the past, the council could adopt it by reso lution and readjust it dur- ing the fiscal year. "It looks like we are going to be an ad- justable council for a year." was the reaction of Councilman Ncirma Gibbs. Mrs. Gibbs, who pointed out that she had only one regular council meeting left before leaving on a trip to Sweden, made clear that she objected to trimming lhe library and parks and recreation trash c.ollectioo fee that wu dropped Jan. budgets. 1 u part of a general tu: rtvamp. SlJe said that some city employes got / Miller's proposed cut in the library as much as 13 percent pay increases last services came aft.er councilmen bad yea r and said that no one received less agreed to back a request for a parttima than 8.25 percent. She would be more in secretary for librarian Walt.er Johnson at fa vor, she said, of freezing all st a fr a cost of $.1,000. Miller had vetoed this re- salaries. quested item. . Councilman Gibbs also fel t the council Commenting on the proposal to slice could reconsider reinstating the $1.50 (See BU1>GET, Page 2)· Council Takes Scissors To Huntington Budget By ALAN DIRJUN Of tl'I• 0.llY ,1191 11111 Facing a $549,000 projected deficit in the municipal budget for 1971-72, Hun- tington Beach councilmen vowed to go over it llem by item to see where it could be cut. They scheduled three study sessions on the budget with City Administrator Doyle Miller. Monday night they completed the third session and the result of their 8\.ii hours of deliberation was clear : the budge t should be increased by another $3,000. The $549.000 deficit had become a $552,000 deficit . How did it happen? At the first session, the councilmen simply were briefed on re v e n u e estimates. At the second they were told where the cost of servi~ would increase or decrease next year over present ex- penditures. Mondiy night they confronted each department head to &ee wbe.re aaving1 could bt made. These were the itemJ whittled out for special attention: A $4,000 checlr; writing machine re- quested by the city treasurer; codifica- tion of civic ordinances, $5,000; a $1,800 2- channel radio for the harbors and beaches department; repairing the roofs of beach rest rooms. $23,750 ; extra man· power to clean the resl rooms , $10,100; a parttime secretary for library director Walter Johnson. Of those items. only the check writing machine and the codification costs had been authorized by lhe city ad-- ministrator. The council okayed the check machine but vet.bed codification for a saving of $5,000. The 2-channel radio. rest room repairs and cleanup, and part-time secretary for the librarian were not in Miller's budget (See ClJ'l'BACKS, P age I I Newport Council Cancels Freeway Pact With State By L. PETER KRIEG 01 11'11 D•llY .. llol 11tft Newport. Beach councilmen voted unanimously to cancel the Pa cific Coast FFeeway route agreement Monday n.lght but the expected action came only after they were told they would be sued because of It. Calling the act of unilaterall y breaking a contract "reprehensible," E. 0. Roc:leffer, a Newport Beach developer, told the council : 1 didn't understand this or lhey wouldn't have voted the way they did. "The people should know what tbe ir tax bill will be as a result of lhls action,'' he said. Rodeffer said the costs to the city would be the amount spent by the state in engineering and land acquisition and damages to people who sold oot and packed up and left because they thought they were in the path of a freeway. He also said NewPort Beach residents alone would have to pay the cost of new roads to handle the Increased traffic. Reagan to Send Q,m Tax. Reform To Legislature ' Great Man Rush Set "lf the Division of Highways or no other group steps fort.b demanding damages, J will personally do it." ''At my own expense," he added. Rodeffer said he might also sue the state for failing to live up to Its contract "With a freeway, the federal govern· (Stt FREEWAY. Page!) C:Oa1t SACRAMENTO <UPI) -Gov. Ronald Reagan toda y announced he will send the Legislature his own tax "reform•: pro- posal consisting of a huge reduction In property taxes coupled with big hikes in the income and sales laxes. . Reagan said he decided to act tn an at· tempt to get the Legis\atu~ off. "dead center" after five months ol 1naction. Under the governor'• new propos11l, properly tax reductio~ w?uld range from 20 10 100 percent -w1lh less ti· pensive homes receiving the biggest benefit. The owner of a $15,000 home. for ln· ztance. would receive a 55 percent reduc· tion In property taxes next year. For .1 $20 000 home the. bile would be 40 percent le~ and for a $2.S,000 home lt would be 34 percent. Reagan said his progr1m would include establishment of the payroll withhofdlng 1ystem of st11te income tax collection. . It also would Include 11 minimum in- come tax designed to lorci even the wealthiest persons to pay 10m'e levy. Women Will Converge on North Dakota Countryside NEW SALEM. N.D. (AP) -Looking for a husband? Like to a:et away from the roar of the city and live ln the quiet countryside?' Wi th that in mind, women fro m far and near will converge next month on this community in western North Dakota '• range and grain country. This town of 1,000 is. holdlng its annue.I Bachelor Days celebration June 11 , 13. The object: to lure brides for the area's bashful bachelor farmers. About 12 to 15 couples have been mar· ried y a result of the celebration whith begaN in "1967. It all started u a joke. says Ray Olin, director of thit year'• ctlebr•Uon. "Some- one wrote • a letter to ll womtn's t:ol- Jose In New York, saying we had 40 eligi- ble bichelors ln town worth $100,000 apiece." ' Olin 1ays about 50 women from out of state re&lslered for latt year'1 ~elebra· • lion "and a lot more came who didn't register:" Lee Hollingsworth, active in the pro- gram, says the area has about 100 bachelors. Many m middle aged and most are farmers. \Vhy are so many men unmarried? The peop~· hereabouts say it'• beeauae they are shy, hardworking men too busy to spend much time couftlng. Th en, too, thert is a shortage of eligible women. "We had ebout a half dozen marrlagt!s lest year," as a result of the celebration Hollingsworth says. Inquiries about this yea.r's event hav' coi;ne from womtn 11 far away a:s England. Celebration ofrictal1 AY thert have been no divorces emong couplet mruTled as a result of B&che\or Daya, but ma ny have movtd away . "Please don't use my J11ame,'' pleaded a woman who brought children with her from the West Coast. She said 1ht: fears her former husband. .. I wouldn't _trade these yearg for anything; I got the cream of atl bachelorhood. Since I got married in Ne w Salem two years ago we've had one baby and another on the way,'' she says. Farmer Christ Henke and his 24-year- old wife, Polly. won't have much reason to go to this year's ctlebration, which is. to inelude a carnival, rodeo and ap- pearances by lwo country Western singing 11tars. Two years ego Folly gave up a $15,000 1 yf!'ar private nursing posJtlon In Con. nectlcut •nd came to New Salem. She se.ys &he 11 now "horse: trading" her husband'• fum lnto a real moneymaker. She came tn Ntiw Salem after reading about Bachelor Days. "I couldn't bellevt it was for reel. so I wrote to a few of the b11chelors and from their letters they aounded like nice 1:uys." And so she drove to New Salem and she and Christ were manied a weelr; lattr. with the people if it doesn't take any ac- tion. There has been no indication the 1ta~ plans to act. California Public Works DI r e c t or James A. Moe hes said he won't instigate litigation over the rescission while the State Highway·Commission has remained virtually silent on the subject. Mayor Ed Hirth tried U) t.alk Rodeffer out ol it, urging he instead cooperate ii!'! Moe has pledged to do in find ing altemat.e traffic problem soluUons via the city's tre.ffic study. Rodeffer was not to be dissuaded. He called Ole study, "too little, too late." '"I recognize the fact I'll be unpopular,'' Rocieffer said, also telling councilmen he realized they hive no other chO\ce bul to lollow the dlctatea o! the electorate. Newport Beach reaidents vot.ed nearly 8 to 1 M1rch 9 to rescind the agreement, which was signed in Oclober. 1968 and which cover• the proposed rou te from Bayside Drive easterly lbroogh corona del ~ar. R.odeffer 11ld demage11 resulting from the COltncll'a 1ctlon "will be untold mUUons'' a~ said Newport residentl l\'eatlter The stock market Isn't the only thing dropping suddenly. Look for a five-degree dip In the mercury Wednesday, from 75 to 70 degrees, along the coastal art!a. INSIDE TODAY Thrtt communitlJ theaters ore rtsurre cting two old tim e comedies this week, tohilt UC Irvine mounts the first county prod.1'ctfon of a Tenonc!see .• Wfl· Zlo:m.t drama. See Theo:t;r Notes, Page 20. l C11!ttr11I• t CllM.ltlllt u, I CllHI~ It-If C:9111ln 11 CrtH~ IJ 0.•11'1 l't•lk" • ldlfOflll !'••• • IWIM'l•ll'lm•"I lf,2t l"llll lKI Ji 1 .. 11 ... .,...... 14 ..... t..-n u Mewi.t 1 .. 21 Mijflltf P'-"t It ft•lt•r"I ..... 44 °''"" c""'' • lYl'fl• .. t1'1ff 11 • .....,. 1~11 Sieck INrkth 1 .. 11 Ttlt'tlt*t If '~"''r' ,,.,. W11""'' 4 Wiit:• Wt WI l• .._., ..... 1>1• Wtftf ,....,. "4 ' ' l } I , but \li'tre brought to the C0W1cil'1 et· 'tention by department heads. City Administrator Brander Castle oolved the problem or the I-channel radio by lllU•sllng the harbors department could get one from the police when the police switch to another frequency. The councihnen agreed to Castle's sug- a:esUon that rest room repairs be made during Ole year only if the roofs cave in. A majority of the councilmen insisted, llQwever, that at least $5,000 be budgeted lor cleaning the beach restrooms and that Johnson should ha\'e a $3,000 "half'' • · ~ecretary. This meant a net increase in the general fund budget of SJ,000. ~ On the toilet cleanup, C:Ciuncilman Jer· ry lt1atney put it this way, "You either flush the john or you don't flush the john. If "''' can't keep our faciliti es clean we'll Jose our reputalion." The councilmen did delete one other non-capital item from the budgel City Clerk. Paul Jones had asked for $20,000 tQ cover the cost of a special election - petitioners may force a public vote on the fluoridation issue -but councilmen felt they should cross that brldge when they come to it. They left in the budget $70,000 in pumping equipment for fluoridation. Harbors and Beaches Director Vince -Moorhouse was the most vocal of the department heads in pointing out "·here his budget had been cut. He stressed the need for a two-channel radio for emergency communications but agreed, "I can get along ~·ith flags if I have to." Councilman Jack Green qui pp e d that he understood the city had allocated a rusty car u•ith 118,000 miles on it to Moorhouse. "Thal's all right,'' responded Castle. •·\Ve can solve that by giving him another one with only 100,000 miles on it." Police Chief Earle Robitaille pointed out that his department would have to lop off 20,000 to 2.5,000 in man hours of service next year but said that the police were providing service in areas in which they were not obligated by law. And Fire Chief Ray Picard said that whateve r action the council deeides the fire department will be providing a lower level of service than it did in July of 1969. f'ro•n Page 1 BUDGET ... the library lax rate from 12.27 to 11.Z7 cents, Johnson said that the library was part of the county-funded Santiago library system -al l citie s except Anaheim are -and he believed that a ·:i;tipulation.of this program was that !he lax rate v.·oyld not change. Mayor McCracken question~ the city's parks program arguing that although the voters had approved $6 million ln bonds for park development interest from this money had been plov.·ed back Into th.is program raising the amount to $6.9 million. He felt the interest should go into the general fund. Staff members replied that the bonds were only for acquisition and develop· rhent or the parks and that the extra 1)1oney v.•as needed for maintenance. Gls Get Good Word; No More KP for Year FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -Grs at Fl. Benning have received !he good v.·or'd. - no more KP for at least another 12 months. Actually. soldiers at this Army post ha ven't been doing KP 1 kHchen police) sinCe last January. Civilians took ii over then under a pilot program designed to make Army life more at- tractive to \'ol unleers. The Small Busi ness Administration an. nounced r-.tonday a $3.9 million contract J1as been awarded to a private food i;ervice firm, Best Services of Columbus, to take over KP chores at 49 F't. Benning mess halls from Jul y I, 1971, to June 30, 1972. OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT Oll:ANGE COAST l'U•LISHING C'CWl'Alfl" l •ll•rt H. WeM ,.,.IO«I, •1111 ..... ltkr J1clr l , C1rf•'f Viet p,...IM!t W C0-11 MMlfW' n..111•• "•••ir l!:dltor Tli•"''' A. M11r,J.i11ir Ml"'llflt Edltof' Al111 Dirki" Wftl O••nte C-.1y Edl!Dr }.lberf W , l1t11 A11oc:llto Editor H1111ri11ttN IMc• Offk• 17171 l11ch l•11J1.,11• M1ili111 A•dr.u: r.o. 1 ... 7to, t2641 Othr Offkn L ....... a.di: 7r. l'W•f A-Cotte Miii: J.111 Wnt ••Y S1....r NIWPO" •Mdl: :tm """'°"' Bou:w1 .. S«1 '""*": * HOf'ttl Ill C.""'-~•11 OAILY Pll.OT", •1111 ""'ldl It ~ .... .. ~. " lllltll~ 111•111 ~ ~ 41Y ill Nlll'inole •llitrl& fW L ....... IMdlr N...,.,.I ._di. Clolt• Mal, HwitillolM ._.., ~'91rt VlllfT, S... C"""'"' Caphtr-. •11111 ......... d(. .... ...,,,. - r .. leMt ""'loft.. Mftc:l~:,1nt1,. P1tn1 11 •• -W.f .. , 1wwt, ~· ""'*· • l ei••••• 1714) l4J""4H1 • er...,...·_....,... '•a.1•11 • • -- 'Cuardia1i' Move Abortion Battle Due Dr. John Shriver Gl'i·ynne may be laced with a countless number of ne"' and in- tangible adversaries u·hen he faces abortion charges June 2 in Orange County Superlo~ Court. Santa Ana attorney Robert L. Sassone described them in a unique petition filed v.·lth the court Monday as the "many thousands of unborn children who "'ill be deprived of life if the present abortion statute is repealed." Sas.wne ask.s in his la\\'SUit that the court recognize him as the legal guardian or "baby boy Jones, baby girl Smith and all the children yet unbom who are f'rono Page l FREEWAY ... ment 'o\'.&Uld pay 90 percent and the state would pay the rest," Rodeff..:r said. ··vou're going to throw all that away and it'll all be on your shoulders. You may have money for the studies, but no money to imple1nent them." he said. CouncUman Carl Kymla , "'ho once led menaced by the like of Dr. Gwynne." Earlier story, page 9. G"·ynne, 29, and his mother r.trs. Rubye Unruh Gwynne, 56, face trial on charges of atten1pted abortion and con- spiracy to commit abortion. The physi- cian confirmed Monday that he is still performing daily abortions at his Santa Ana clink·. Sassone, \\'ho unsuccessfully sought election to a Fountain Valley City Council seat last year. v.·ill be admitted to the criminal action against Gwynne if the court accepts him as the legal guardian of unborn children. "Baby boy Jones and baby girl Smith are just fictitious representatives of the untold number or chil dren "'ho will never know life if Dr. Gwynne's arguments are accepted," Sassone said. "No party represents: them and my petition is de- signed to protect their interests." The petition is unique to Orange County but its language closely follo\\'S that of a lawsuit entitled the United State.s vet"Jus Milan Vuitch. That court action, still undecided, also seeks to prevent the passage of abortioo lay,•s that would mean the death of "un· born children who will be adversely af.R fected by abolition or the abortion statutes,'' Huntington Proposal HOME Council Eying More , Recycle Stations A, J, "''"" 1"1'1919 OFFICER MOVES TO AID CRASH VICTIM FAIRCLOTH council opposition to the rescission elec· ?\[embers of the HOfi.1E Council will the city's Admlnistrative AnneJ', Fifth Four Cars Col lld• at Warn•r Av•nue and Springdale StrHt tioo, contended tha t the public had been discuss a proposal to establish more and ftfain Streets. well·informed prior to the election. recycling stations in Huntington Beach The proposal will be presented by a "The people must have felt the during their meeting Wednesday night. spokesman for the city's Environmental 3 Hurt in Huntington Collision of Four Cars damages would go away ,'' Rodeffer The meeting "'ill be held at 8 p.m. at Council which outlined the project at a replied. meeting earlier this month. Rodeffer , a newcomer to the lG-year· R Margaret Carlberg, chainnan of the old coastal freeway controversy, li\·es in estaurateur environmental group, said her organi:r.a· Corona del 1.1ar and heads Rodeffer lion is studying the poss ibility of !!letting S I N up recycling centers In shopping center! lnvestments which currently is head· ara l ewman and 24-hour service stations in the quartered in Arcadia but is in the process northwest and southeast portions of the A fqµ.r-car collision at a major J~un· tington Beach intersection left three persons injured !\fonday night. Officers said the accident occurred about 6:56 p.m. at the intersection of Warner Avenue and Springdale Street v.·hen a camper collided with another car and the vehicles spun around on the pavement. Robert J. Faircloth. 43. of 17552 DeLong St., Huntington Beach, driver of the camper. "'·as the only one to be ad- mitted to a hospital. Officials at Hun· tington lntercommunity Hosiital thi! morning reported him in satisfactory condllion. Also injured wre drivers George P. Hutton-Potts. 36, of 17631 Prescott Lant, Huntingto n Beach, and Logan B. Schir· mer. 43. of ri.1urietta . 'I'he fourth driver, Kenneth H. Koerner Jr., 36, of 17372 Ava. Jon Lane . Huntington Beach. was not in· jured, according to police reports. of constructing a Uve·slory office building S · • S city. in Newport Center. ervJCeS et Currently, thert is one station in the ci- Earlier, Vice ?\1ayor Jio"·ard Rogers ty at the Five PoinlS shopping center had suggested Rodeffer •·Jook up Lorenz. Funeral services will be held Wed. which takes glass, alwninJ.UU and da d f. nesday for Costa Mesa restaurant owner newspaper for recycling. , Stod rd and Jiart an tne some good That center has been operated since he ch JI. " Sarah G. Newman who died 1'1onday at n men or a ies. November by members of Students to Rogers referred IC> former Ke"·port Hoag 1'femorial Hospital after 8 lengthy Overcome Pollution of Fountain Valley Beach mayors Charles E. Hart and illness. She \.\'as 55. and Hunlinglon Beach High Schools, the James B. Stoddard and former \'ice Mrs. Ne"·man. v.·ilh her husband Keith, American Association of Unlverslty o"·ned and operated the El Pescador Women and the Junior Women's Club. lo.1ayor Hans J, Lorenz \vho had unsuc-restaurant on 17th Street since 1960. l\1rs. Carlberg said location of the cessfully sough t an injunction lo bar the l-.lrs. Newman was an avid angler and recycling stations in shopping centers is special freeway election. El Pescador is decorated "ith photos and •·a natural location because the Valley District Gets Land, But School Work Delayed "I don 't need any henchman," Rodeffer stuffed trophies which attested lo her housewife. no matter where, ·what age, or Skill as a r1·she-"oman. She was al"" a income goes there empty handed ••d retorted, ··rve done my o"·n soul '" "" · ""'' member of the Huntington Beach returns "'i th bags of groceries. Sbe could searching. This Is the "·orst thing I've \Vomen's Golf Club. go wilh a bag of recyclables to do her 'lit- ever heard of." A residenl or Orange County since 1932. tie thing' for the environment, which Rodeffer ind icaled he may act quickly. she and her husband were living at 8122 cityv.·ide could become a 'big thing-:\; "'I'll file as soon as I'm sure nobody l\lunstrr Dri\'e, Huntington Beach, at the In addit ion to a discussion of the rt-- else is going to,'' he said and "'hen lime of her death. quest for mo re recycling stations, Rogers point.ed out that the stall! has in-In addition to her husband, l\1rs. members or the HOME Council v.·iU talk dicated it won't do anything. RodeHer Newman leaves her mother. Gertrude about the high school district's tax over- The Fountain Valley School District no"' owns 10 ac res of land for a crippled children's school thal probably won't be buiU until mid-1972. Mayor Appoints Liaison Group On City Boards 1'1ayor Ed\\·ard Just is trying to eliminate a ··communication gap ' ' bet"·een the city council and the planning commission in Fountnin Valley, He has appo inted five persons lo a coordina ting committee to smooth out communications bet\\'een the t\.l.'o bodies. The members include James Dick, chairman of the planning commission; Councilman George Scott; City Attorney Thomas \Voodrulf : Clinton Sherrod. plan- ning director, !ind City l\lanager Jame.(' Neal. The mayor decided such a committee "'as needed because of conflicting decisions between· the council and U1e commission on some zoning matters. Se\·eral projects have been .dela.\"erl v.·hile planning decisions were appealed to the city council. then sent back to the commission for further action . The ne\v coordiriating committee is e,;· peeled to reduce the number of appeals by making it clear what city councilmen "·ant and don 't want in term.s of zoning. Board of Realtors Slates Ch-ic Lunch Ci1y officials from lluntington Beach nnd Fountain Valley \\'ill join members of the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Board of Realtors al the fourth annual C' Iv i c luncheon. \\'ednesday at the Sheraton-Beach Inn. Supervisor David Baker is the guest speaker al the luncheon. \\'hich l;Ughlights Realtor Week in bolh cities. responded. "then I'll have my la \vyers Irvine and a brother, Joe Irvine. both of ride and a resolutidn to name a park District officials closed escrow on !he start drawing up the papers in the morn· Jfuntington Beach. after William Gallienne. land 1'1onday at a purchase price of ing." Services u•Hl be conducted at 2 p.n1. Galllenne served as manager of the $313,700. The site is near the northeast Councilman Richard Croul did not at-\Vednesday in the Pacific "·iew Chapel, l~untington Beach Chamber of Commerc• corner of \Varner Avenue and Bushard lend Monday nighrs meeling. Corona de! l'\lar. from 19'25 until his death in J96S. Street. 1-------'-----"------------------------'-----'----------'-But a Jack of state funds will hold up construction on the orthopedlcally han- dicapped school until new state con- 6troclion bonds are sold. The school will serve 110 crippled children from six districts that make up the boundaries of the Huntil\~ton Beach Union liigh School Distritt and the Ne"•port·Mesa Unified School District. Plans call for construction of a school v.·hich "'·ill serve for classroom teaching and therapeutic training o{ handicapped youngsters in one wing. and normal classrooms for 300-40U children in another "'irvJ. The school would also pro\·ide op- portunities for the h a n d i c a p p e d youngsters to rrUx with the other children. AWOL Marine Faces Charges In Valley Rape An A\\'OL ~tarine arrested over the \reekend by Fountain Valley police v.·as scheduled lo face arraignment today ln the 'rest Orange County Judicial District Court on charges of kidnap, rape · and am1ed robbery. Peter r-.tichael Alex Silva, 22, was book- ed in Orange Coun ty Jail after officers claim they tracked him , down in a new housing development by using a police dog from Garden Grove. Police allege Sih•a kidnaped an 18·year- old girl Saturday night in the parking lot of Santa Ana High School. drove her to the subdivision loca led near the in· tersection of 1-leil Avenue and Sugar Loaf Street. raped he r and robbed her of about $2 in change. A Fountain \."alley patro!inan \vho stop· pcd to investigate the presence of the auto near a construction site. apparently surprised the girl's abductor "'ho ran into the tract of half-completed homes, Bigelow's ''Kaleidoscopef1 Shag C~rpet~ bursting'w~~'.~!:i!!i_a·ii.t~colorl 1~om•.·, ... fea ~t. y~u r:, ~yes!, A,.,.,.,,, modl•y of,;, •lb••" <oloo, .•.. $10 95 that'1 ICat.idoKOf"I You '"'"' ,., It to r•all11 1what Q lifr thl1 9r110I Bi91low COr?el tO" 9iw1' 1yov• clKor. O "lr Bigelow 1t>1pcr11 co" u .ote l• ca1,,.1 ~k.1hi1-olri-• with 1ti. ••cill119 1 .. 1;119 ,0Nl y· SQ~YD.1f _.of todQyf • • J From Page 1 FLUORIDE ... •·Remember, it is the role or the city council to serve us. not to rule us." It's signed by Llndegren. Ellen l-.f. Bak· ke and Donald Crane, all members of lhe pure \\'ater committee. Lindgren said his ballot argument was written by a professional but he's unhl'p- py "because Jt's amateurlsh ·· The argument against lhe proposed ordlha nce "'as wrillen by ~!ayor Edward Just, and t\.\·o citizens who tiUpPOrt fluoride, Donald Fr;ink llnd Roy D. Richards, the dcnlillt who first propo!ied fluoridation of city v.·atcr. Their ballot argument lists several 1tattments labeled •·facts" about nuorldt, such as: ''It redu1..-cs cavllles by 60 percent, costs ten cents per person per \•ear. four to five hundred new com- lnunilies each year add rtuorldes," and other points. They remind voters that a "no·• vote Is a vote for fluoridation . The Fountain Valley water dtpartment budget contains $14.000 for fluoridation lhis year, but. if the rnonty is not used, it v.·ill go IO"'ard capital improve1nent.s -a. ALDEN'S CARPETS· DRAPES new \\'tller "'ell. SANTA ANA, OU.NOi. The June 8 election will cost Fount11ln TUSTIN c1111 ••• Valley nbout $5.000. COSTA MESA ALDEN'S lllD HILL CAllJllTS Ro!h Huntington Beach and Fountain & DAAl'lllllS \1a.lley first deidcd nearly e year ago to 646-4838 llJ74 1r,,1"", Tntt .. c.tH. fluoridate water. Y..'hen, or If, Jt v.•111 ha~ I ----------------__'.~============ -~===:':":·':':"===:::'.'...._ pen is still up in th( air. '· r the er re rty e· ty I a us !so on af.- on th a J a g rs • e r d is • r d d ~ h . k r• k • • • Tuf!day, Mar 25, Jqn H DAIL V Pllln' :l Two Generals Shot Down, Rescued in Vietnam SAIGON (AP) -Viet Con& marksmen shot down a U.S. helicopter carryiug an American general and a South Viet. namese general today, but a third general in an accompanying helicopter rescued them unhurt. Aboard the downed helicopter were 1'1aj. Gen. John ll CUstunan, commander of the ~lilitary A.Wtance Command in the lttekong delta, and ~faj. Gen. Ngo ~g Truong, commanding geoeral in the delta military region. Their chopptr was hit by Bmlll arms fire while over the northern part of the U Minh forest, abou~ 14S miles southwest of Saigon. The U.S. pilot and hia: crew "'ere wounded, a U.S. mUlt.ary spokesman reported, but all the passengers escaped unhurt. They were rescued in a few minutes by a helicopter carrying ~1aj . Gen. Nguyen Vinh Nghl, commander of the South Viel· namese 21St lnlantry divWon, which bas So Ions Nix Arson Seen Possible On Vessel f'rom \\'ire Sul·ices VA~COUVER, &.C. -Investigators disclosed todav that arson is considered a possibility in ine tragic fire that killed 32 crewmen of the Nornegian cruise ship Meteor Saturday morning. All 66 passengers including former Newport Beach mayor James B. "Jay" Stoddard and his wife Florence: escaped the blazing vessel in lifeboats. Searchers Monday recovered the re- maining seven bodiea from the charred, twisted wreckage of the crew'.s quart.era and said all but four have been identified. The l\1eteor sleamed into Vancouver Harbor 's Burrard Drydock Sunday and a tight police guard Vlas immediately posted around the area. Fire erupted about 3 a.m. Saturday, turning the foresectioo of the 2.856 ton ship into a death trap for the ill·fated 32, \\'hile 42 other crewmen escaped. Ex·mayor Stoddard and his wife were awakened by loud noises and the mtell of smoke, leading them to nee their own passenger quarters, adjactnt to the crew gection. The Meteor was liO miles out of Van· couver in the Strait ol Georgia, on the last day of her first week·long scenic cruise of the sUmmer tourist llUIM. Royal Canadian Mounted Police •nd Ff.deral Transport Department in- \'estigators are probing what happened aboard the Bergen Lines vessel. Information was expected to be given directly to T r ans port Minister Don Jamieson. while Norwegian Vice Consul Tor Virding said in Vancouver a full in- quiry 11-ill be forthcom ing in Norway. "Based on what crew members told me. it appears a fire broke out and simp- ly spread explosively fut,'' Virdlng com· mented. Despite tbt fad araon hasn't been rul- ed out the vice consul aaid there is no reason' to believe an explosion preceded the swift-spreading flames. 3 Rabies Clinics Slated in Cotmty Orange Coast dog owners will be able to obtain low cost rabiea vaccinations for their pets at three locations Thursday. The vaccination clinics win operate from 7 p.m. tG 1:30 p.m. at 17500 Bushard St., Fountain Valley; Leisure World Laguna Hills Corte!le Stablea, El Toro Road and A1oulton Parkway, and at the )range County Animal Shelter, 561 S. J(anchester Ave ., Orange. The shots are $2 per dog. Local lawa -equire every dog four months of qe or ,Ider to be vaccinated again.st rabies. The clinics are apm90l'ed by the •range Coonty Chapter ol the Southern .:.ntomia Veterinary AsaoclaUon and the ~:ange County Health DepartmenL II Held in Huge Haul Of Southland Drugs LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A throe-year Investigation ht1s resulted in the arrest of 11 men and the setzure of $'750,000 in -marijuana. barbiturates, cocaine and heroin. po1ice reported M?nday. . Authorities said the sell\ll'e came Fri· day night "'·hen U.S. CUstoms olftcia!J stopped a car driven by three of the suspects as It crossed into the United States from Tijuana. 4-bit Gunme1i Stage Holdup Three youths WJed a lllul>oooed revolver Mond•y nla'ht to bold up a 40-year.()ld wom~n on the parking lot or a Huntington Beach ahopping etnlt:r. The Victim, Mrs. Mary E. C•dy. told Investigating dttertJves that the youths Me dtsttlbed 11 being about 14 yean old approached her on the lot about t p.m. One hfld htt at bay with the gun while the others rlned her purse. She honked her horn as the trio fled but nobody came to he:r akl. Tht Youn& bandits escaped with 50 ctnU. Crooke d /!Ille Try driving the straighl and narrow on Reno Avenue in ~tid\\'est, Ok.Ja., where street painters did their best to m'ake things interesting. Clirysler Plant In Los Angeles To Close July 9 LOS ANGELES (AP) - At the age of 39, the Qiryslcr Corp. assembly plant in Los Angeles is out 6f a job, a victim of changing times if not advancing years. The firm announced Mooday that at the end of its 1971 model run, July 9, it will close. Current production was of in· termedi<ite sized Plymouths and Dodges. In 1932. when it started production, th e idea was to provide a \Vest Coast assembly plant for Western sales -sav· ing time and money compared with shl~ ping from Detroit. The techniques or rail shipping no\v have advanced to the point, the company announcro. that for instance it is more economical to ship from Detroit to the Pacific Nor thwest, than from geographically closer Southern California. Other modernized methods in Detroit also make it Jess advantageous to build he re, the finn said. About 1,200 employes, all offered jobs elsewhere with Chrysler, are affected. A union spokesman said he didn't know bow many would take the offer to move. Olrysler has seven other assembly sites. "Thia Ill the 1'l'Ollg day to ask, it's pre!· ty emotional in the plant," said Chet Lundstrom recording secretary of UAW l«al No. 230. "Some of lhe guys have been there foi' 20 or 30 years." "Nobody b happy al Jming their job," he said. "'It's a company decision and in my opinion it's the importing of foreign cars that's causing it." Lundquist added one other note : the union local's Tuesday election voting has been called off. and there are oo plan.s for voting later. "The Jocal's gone," ht said. A company spokesman recalled that In Its heyday the assembly plant turned out Plyrnoaths, Dodgts, Ouy.ler1 and the old DeSoto. The last went oul of bualnesl about 1 decade ago. Part& for bJg ~ Globe:maater plant.s used for troop and equipment movement by the Air FCl'Cf: In 1 ·the KOl"'HI War, and compooenta for p lded mlss!lts were other plant pro)e<ta. Peak employment wu about $,500 at the plant tn past years. The plant, which ••• turning out 2il assembltd can an hour, ls obaolete and not suitable for modtmiz.ation, Lhe. com. pany said. Workers can rettive up to 3t •·eek.Ii unemploymtnt compensaUon from the company al an avtrage r1tt of abou\ tl.29 weekly per worker, and sup- plemental unemployment compei\Utlon tor abou\ 1 year •fl.er that, tr they dloose not io move, the company uid. The firm al., wlD gtv• aid to those wlolting to rind new jobs in the Loi Angeles area, already hard hit wllh unemployment brought on by cut.I In eovernment lpeodin& on aer06p8ct and defense. I been conducting a large SWet?p operation in the U Minh forest since Dec. I. A U.S. sJ)Okesman, Maj Richard Gard· ner, said Gen. Otshman and Gen. Truong were on • "routine visit to military post.s" in the Ca f\1au ptnlnsu\a. Aides of Gen. Truong said It \Vas the firth Lime in the war he had been shot down in a helicopter. ~teanwhile, North Vielllamese forces 23 miles northwest of Saigon made anolbu auack early todny on allied troops pro- Vldlna ~urlty lor Am~Jc1n i>lllldozen upniotlng the Bol Loi woods. n.. enemy opened up with a 20 round mortar bln-ap about S 1.m., UlfO follow· tld up with a ground atlack ftrlng rocket grenades. Thi U.S. Command said helicopter JWlshlpa and artillery broke up the assault A spaltesman. Maj. Richlrd Garc!Mr. "8id 13 North Vietname.se were killed and one was captured. One U.S. soldier from UIO In<! Squadron, lllh Armor"4I ~v@lrJ R~giment, wu tWed, and 11 were wounded, whlll South VI 1 t n a rp ea• easualLies wen Ont killed and aldl wounded. Acconling to lotellipnco "POrU, • North Vietnamese relf,ment hat beta trying to r&alablllh a -camp In tht wooda. which alrea<ly '"' btlHted with •"""1 booby traps ""' blloel. Jlldln& heavy duty bulldozers, U.S. Arrey iin11ntm ht" ltffUed 11HrlJ 11.- acrea alnee AprU I to deprive the toem;y of hldecuta and 1torqe ~ no Amorlcan cavalry squadnln and Scllth Vietnamese militia.men are provJdiac stcurity, and mllllar}' ...,.., uy 171 North Vietnamest and Viet Con& haft boon ldlifd. At lellSI II Amerlcanl bave dled IDd more than 100 have been wdwal- ed. Marine Beach Turnover F • h . N B Leaseldea 1g ting ew attles Suggested Deserter Holds Shattered Dream of Home As Alternate By LUCINDA FRANKS AND PETER FREffiERG Uftl!td l"rtU l"llmlflffll The 11igl1ts were the wor&t. n urin~ the doy. lie could wield the boyo11ec, march the lo11g marches 01u1 kiU an imaginaru e11emv wit/tout thinking. But at night things closed hi on him. Nig l1t11W res would co111e; voices t hundered in his head and mell ra1t in circles .screami11g, "kill, kiU, kill!'' He would wake up, llis slieets soaked with sweat. And so, just rour weeks after he a,. rived as a draftee for basic training at Fort Dix in New Jersey, 19-year-old John Picciano Jr. (serial no. US51980l46) could stand It no longer. On Sept. 20, 19ij7, he starled running. Six months later ri@ reached Stockholm and became one of the first American deserters in rxile in Sv•eden, Today, John lives in a to~'n near Stockholm, manages to find work , is stu· dying at Uppsala University, has a steady girl friend and is in good health. He gets by. But he is not happy. One day he would like to go home. T hhiks Abo11t Coming Dome Tt is probable that mo st of the eslimated 500 American deserters in Sweden feel as John does. Some dream or coming back to help bring about socia l changes they think are needed. Others just want to pursue careers and be near their families and friends . Almost all fet-1 like aliens in Sweden. adrift In a culture with which they do not identify. John 's desire to come home Is over· ridden by his belief that he will be a permanent outcast in his own country. It is not so much the tw<ryear prison tenn he would probably face. Jail has an end. But lha sentence imposed by society doeJ'll not. What he fears most is being branded an antouchable for an act he feels he committed In good conscience. Like most of the other ex-servicemen in Sweden, John considers himself a "patriotic dese rter." This story of John Picc.iano Is based on many talks with him in his Swedish exil<'. and long interviews over a period of several montha with his pa re n I s • relatives, high school cla~smetes find former school teachers In his home to"'" of Lodi, New Jersey. Although John Picciano never got to Vietnam, he and the other deserters in Sweden are still very much products or the war. Vieh1am has produced a deser. tion rate that has increased as sharply as the national debate over American in- voh1ement . Rare Shows A11i111de• Official Defense Department fi gures show that in Lhe year ending June 1970, the Army 's desertion rate was 52.3 per l ,000 average strength -a 350 percent increase over 1965. The rate is higher than it was during the Korean ConOict, reflecting the different Am erican at4 titudes toward di(fert.nt undeclared wars. In the 1950s, Korea sparked little debate and certainly no moral challenne from the "silent generation." But with even coogresslOl'lal leaders sharply divid· ed o\'er war policy today. the response: of young men called to fight also has been mixed. The Penl.Bgon, concerned · by this and other unprecedented dissent within the serv ices. has created a special deserter section and is offering rewards to anyone ~·ho helps apprehend a deserter. It dots not agree th.al principle is the primary motivation of deserte rs. In the Der e n s e 0 e part m en l '!f views, "most absentees are motivated by the same reasons that soldlers have gone AWOL since the dawn of history. These reasons include financial problems, fami4 ly JJ'Oblems, romantic involvements. act& of misconduct which have led to dlaclpllrwy 1ctlon, lnabillty to adjust to military Ure. family presa:ure and em~ tional appeal prior to overseas tour and dtfk:.iencies among junior officers in recognizing potential A WOLs-deserters." /llemo q11edion• Mo tica tio n "Current information." says an official memo issued last September, "indicate1 that an ei1Ttmely a;nall percentage of absentets art: motlvatt:d by politica l reason or anU·Vietnam proteat. ·• Jn estenslve talks with John Pk:cbno 11Mi other desMen in Sweden, the classic moUvatlons for dt!serlion. in· eluding fear of death, art freely admitted to. But they place rar more lmport.:i.nce on an unwillingness to kW people against whom no enmity is felt or lo be tilled iJI ' HIS EXILE IS RESTLESS Army DeJerter Picciano L WAITS IETL Y ND HOPES John · 1a no Sr. a "·ar thry \1ie\Y as I m mo ra 1. These feelings. combined with a revulsion against military life by a generation that seems more rebellious than most, are to them the most decisive reasons for their dese rtion . J ohn Picciano was bom and raised in l.Qdi. New .Jersey. li e tlved Jn the same sn1al1. l'A·o-story house until he l\'llS drafled shortly be fore his 20Jh birthday. A l<tll. hulky hoy -he now stands at six rre1-he had ft!w rrienWJ and \\'as too shy lo ask a girl fo'r a date. Jn summing up his acadtmic record and gene ral beh11v· ior. Lhc principal of Lodi Hlgh School says, "lit: W&.!1 so average it wils ridicu· Jous." Lodi itseU hardly stand!'! out am id the Industr ial landscape of Northern New Jersey. Although it Is only a 45--minute bus ride from New York City, It might. as well be a thousa.nd miles away. If you go into a bar on Union Street near John'" home, the customers will tell you frankly they live in a grimy, polluted town. But they'U quickly add that it'a a town wherP. hard·worklnQ: ptoople try to Uve decent fives, where "the family is slill the big thing ancl people try to Improve the Jot o( their children ." Some older residen ts can·t underslan d why the young want lo leave. "\\o'ho knows "11at these kids of t(r day v.·ant" they osk. "Even the kids don't know." A l'ail11rc At Onl11 24 No one amens John's f:iends has 1cfl Lodi, but they aren't au that content there ; it's too easy, they say, to allow yoor lile to become a rooUne of eaUng, I sleeping and working. One schoolmate of John, only 24 years old, describlt blmaelr as a "failure." When Lhe talk turns to John 's desertion. his friends expresa: aor· ' roW-the whole thing happened. They are alao iAtrigutd by some aspects of bis life In exile -about the excitement of 1tam- ln1 1 new language, about Swedish girls, about starting with a new slate. No one was thinking of war, the draft or desertion when John was bom on Oct. 26, 1947, the on1y child of John and Connie Picclano. The begiMinl of lhe Cold War had not blown 1w1y the euphoria that followed World War Il, conscription had ended and the country was experieoclnl growing prMperity. Like three-quarters of Lodi'.s 25.000 reiiident.a, the Piccianos are ll.llllan. American. Piir. Picciano, a soft·spoken , thickset 1nan with crew-cut gray hair, came lo lhe United States with his parents from Italy at the age of nine. He has experienced some hard times, but on lhe "'hole feel'.'! this counlry has been Jlood to him. I-le has worked in textile f;ictories niost of his life, earning modest 11alaries. He lives in a &mall world ac- cepts things u they come and seems • hit overwhelmed by much of what hap- pens outside Lodi. Joh1fs mother is a frai l, neat woman who prides herself on keeping her home Immaculate. Her health has deteriorated since John'• tlesc•rl ion. .'11d11• Cloae T n llo11te As a child, John 11tayed around the house most of the time, often playing in the small backyard. His father was han. dy with tools, and by the age of three or fou r John was taking things apart and putting them together again, John remembers always hating to be cooped up-a feeling that was to emerge again In the Army barracks. One day when he was live years old, he was sit· ling in a closed room while his fathe r read in a chair nearby. The door wa., lo<:ked and John became angry, Deciding lo jilet ou t by himself instead of asking his father lo open the door. he picked up a screwdriver from a toolbox and removed the lock before his father knew what he WRS doing. John's best fri end -virtually his only friend -throughout childhood was Ken Barry. Both were introspective. Neither enjoyed playing stickball or basebaU or any of the sports popular with the nei ghborhood boys. With school and St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, where he went to ma ss every Sunday morning located within two blocks of hill home: .1ohn rarely ht1d any reason or desire to leave Lodi. Indeed, he had almost a fear of travel -a fact that 11trikes both hi!! friends and fnn1ily as ironi c in view of his 11resent location in Sweden. .. Every time we went someplace," his mo1her recalls, "he was afraid. He would get upset if we look a different train from the usual one. I'm .surprised he's over !here. I can 'I understand it." Next: Crnduatio11 and lA. WASlilNGTON IUPI) -The Hewe Armed Services Committee today rf"' jected 1 proposal backed by President Nixon to detlare as excess federal pro- perty 4,0M 1crts of land adjacent to bis San Clemente beachfroot home. 'nie committee recommended Instead that about alx mllea of beach at the Camp Peodleton Marine Corps baa4 be leased but not doolted or sold to tbe lta1e for use as a public beach. Under tbis IZTangement, mt land would be available for Marine llm· phibious landln« exercla11. Allo. tllt beach area to be leased b)' Calif.nta would not lllclude a one-half mile beach Uled b)' In enl isted men'• club. The committee rejected outright the recommendation that some 3,400 acres of an inland area at Pendleton be declared as excess and tumed over the General Services Admin istration (GSA) which reportedly planned to sell the land for residential development. The unanimous voice vote came 18 the committee considered a Navy eueas land disposal report previOtlSlJ approved by the Federal Property Review BQard which President Nixon created in 1970 to find ways of making available unued federal property. • The Marine Corps through a lease 1lgn. ed ~larch 31 by the Navy Department and the state of California agreed to Jeese 3 \ii miles of beach at $1 per year for 25 years. The President announced at th at lime while he was in California ihat he would seek congressional approva\ for an additional three mile.s and to rq.ak1 available the 3,400 acres. Thus, on, March 31, a Navy dispOsa l report was filed with the committee re· questing that all B\ii miles of beach and the 3,400 acres be declared excess federal property and turned over la the GSA for di sposal. Once declared excess federal propm.y, the GSA could have donated the land to th e state provided it was used exclmively for public parks or beach. It could also have sold the highly desirable 3,fOO inland acres to land developers. Subcommittee chairman Samuel S. Stratton (D·N.Y.), explained In a report lo the full committee that "this beach frontage is essential to Gamp Pendleton training, and the subcommittee believes lhal the government must retain use rights on this beach area.'' Loss of the 3,400 Inland acres was a matter o! "great concern" tG the real estate subcommittee, Stratton a.hid, because it provides ''an absolutely necessary buffer zone between residential areas in the city of San Clemente and the 1'-farine Corps camp at San Mateo and Talego and the associated training ranges and impact areas in the upper San Afateo Valley." He said that although the Navy bad suggested !he land ~·ould be turned Over to California for recreational and cam- ping purposes a GSA survey recDm- mended "very unequivoca bly" that It bt sold for residential development. Senate Rejects Draft Exe mption in Vietnam \ ' IV ASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate today rejected legislation lhaL would have forbidden the use of drartees on combat assignments in Southeast Asia. Opponents, led by Sen. J ohn C. StennlJ {D-Miss.), said the amendment would have crippled tfforlll to 11ttract more volunteers Into the Army. Instead of enlisting, Stennia said, men would have waited for induction. knowing Jt carried a guarantee against combat assignment But Sen. Gaylord Nelson CO.Wis.), chief sponsor of the amendment, said the regular Army, dn1wing on men who enlisted voluntarlly. should be able to supply manpower for Vietnam combat Ul"lls. He said draftee. now are bearing an in· ordinate 11hare or the casualties -67 per· cent during 1970. "You're a11klng them to risk their Uve1 ror a cauee that ts not ln the Interest of thls country," Nelm said. ''That's too much ••• "Where Is the regular Army?" he ask· ed. 11e said there are 700,000 regular ,Army enlisted men, and the manpower for Vidnam eombat uslgnmenta sboWd • come from among them , or from the largely volunteer Marine Corpa. Stennis insisted that with drartees nt,led out. the Pentagon would not be able lo meet Vietnam manpower requirements. Sen. Hubert Jl Humphrey (0-MIM.), called the amendment 'the one flnt dep we can take" In Congress to push tht process of disengagement from the V~el­ nam war. "This is the lest vote on whether tb1s Congress really means business on Cet.· Ung out ..• " Humphrey said. . Before voling on Nel.ton's amendment. the Senate rejected, Bl to 7, a measure to bar the wit of draflees in any combat 7.:0ne without 1pec:ific Congresalonal is~ pro\· al. , Sen. Jahn V-; TuMty (0.C.lif.), 1'ho propased the draft bill amendment, JJJ.ld it was designed to reclaim Congressk!pal eµthority over war making decisions. Sen. bf')' Goldwater (R·Arlz.), caAed the TUnney amendment dangerous, l.nd 1.-ld he would ratbtr entnm one mlln, the Presidt>nt, with the decisions of War than more lhan 500 members of Congress, "all of 111 Influenced by poliacs °" by Oil! "''"'"" we come h'on\ or bJ the P'(lple lhlt we rtprflHllL" • .,. • I J . .. --- .:J DAlLY PILOT TotsdQ", Ml)' 25, lt7l ltlmaetar9 Meeting U.S. Seeks Help Panama Ca11al Parley • For Dollar Woes \ \ •• I ?.1UNICH (UPI) -The United States called on its European and Asian partners today to help the dollar by end· ing restrictive trade practices and :shouldering a larger share of free '>''Orld defense. Paul A. Volcker. undersecretary of the treasury for monetary affairs, put the Soviet SST U11der Heav y Fre11cl1 Guard PARIS (UPll -The Soviet TU144 supersonic airliner landed today al beavi· ly guarded Le Bourget Airport, giving \Vest its first look al the Russian plane. Shortly before arrival the Anglo-French Concorde SST streaked 2.794 miles from Toulouse, France, to Dakar, Senegal, in 21? hours. Police ordered lough security measures to guard both the TU144 and Russian pilots and dignitaries attending the Paris air show after receiving lips that ex- tremists planned to attack Russia n airliners in retaJiation !or the trials or Je"'S in the Soviet Union. The silver and y.•hite TUl44 glided onto the field at 3:46 p.m. (10:46 a.m. EDTt after making lY.'O low passes over the field and lipping its \Yings in a salute to hundreds of spectators. NEW TALKS between Panama and the U.S. over Panama Canal jurisdiction are approaching. Pan· ama wants authority over the Canal Zone -a strip of land five miles on either si de of the 50-mile Jong interoceanic canal -which in the past has been administered by a \Vhite I-louse appointed governor. The Soviet craft \\'ill be the star Russian entry at the 29th Paris air shO\'J opening Thursday alongside the riva l needle-nosed Concorde. the \Vest's only fa ster-than-sound airliner since t h e United Statrs dropped its 01vn SST pro- ject. The Concorde flight lo Dakar today \ras a combination endurance and test flight. A croy.·d of enthusiastic Senegalese headed by President Leopold Seda r ~enghor applauded it.s arrival at Dakar Airport, its first land ing in a foreign l'OUntry. Mother Does Her Duty, Son Nabbed for Drugs TITUSVILLE. Yla. (AP) -Pclice 5ispatcher Donna Wood's 19-year~ld son was behind bars on a narcotics charge Monday because she did her job and relayed an anonymous telephC<ne tip to ol· Czechoslovakia Thanks Soviets For Intervening PRAGUE (UPI ) -Czechoslovak Com· 111unist Party leader Gustav Husak lormally !banks the Soviet Union and il.1: leader, Leonid Brezhnev, today for the ir "brotherly help"' in intervening in Cz.ecltosovakla in 1968. ''This act of international solidarity saved the lives of thousands o! people," Husak told the 1,195 delegates lo the opening session of the 14th Czechoslovak Communist Party Congress. Brezhnev tnd a top--<l.rawer array of leaders from Russia and the other communist coun- tries -sat on the podium behind Husak as be spoke. Turning to Brezhnev, •lusak said, "In the name of the ·whole of our party and the overwhelming majority of our work· lng people, "\\'e express our sincere thanks lo the Soviet Party, government and people and especially to you, Comrade Brezhnev." The dclegates rose in a standing ova· lion. ficers to be: on the lookout for hr.r C1wn car. Randall Glen \Vood 11·:11; arrested v. ilh l\li'O companions after police located lhe automobile and discoverer! 1vhat the~ termed a large amount C1f here.i n and marijuana. 1'-1rs. \Vood said that ''hen she tins"·ered the telephone at th": Titusville police station Friday. the 1nai~ caller said he knew a car parked at a local shopping center had heroin ::i it . \\'hen he dest·ribed the car and gav~ the: license number. the ,.,. o m a n dispatcher sa id she i m '"e di a t e 1 y recognized it as her auto. She had loaned it to her son a short time earllc~. ~1rs. \\'rod radioed pair.ii car<; in t:ie area to keep "·atch for the vet'iicle. ~1oments later. a Titusville patrolman spotted it and stopped it for irspecllon. Soon after, he ra dioed headquartrro; and asked t<.trs. \\"ood for permissio11 to search the car. She agreed. Detecti\'es sa id that among Lt.c items confiscated from the car were cigarette papers. some marijuana. enough heroin for 20 ''fixes'' and a S)Tinge. Three suspects in all "'ere ch;trged wit h possession o{ heroin. marijuana and narcotics paraphernalia . Bond 11•as set at St.~ for each teenage r. Only \\.ood rema ine':I In 1ail r..tonday. The others posted llatl. t<.trs. \\lood now refuses !o comment on the case and Police U. Charles Ball said he had auemptrd lo keep hr~ in· voh·emenl 1 secret. Expert Blast.is ' Lockheed Loan Action by. U.S. WAS~JINGTON ~UPI) - A civilian con- tract official y,•ho "'orks for the Navy has told Congress it should ler Lockheed Aircralt Corp. go broke rather than give govemment backing to a $250 million loan for the aerospace firm . Gordon Rule. chairman of the Navy·.'! Contract Claims Control & Surveillance Group, told a Senate Joint Economic sub- committee Monday the loan guarantee 1.'l •·most unwise from a procurement point of view." "I can !ell you there are other co1n- panies standing in line right now,"' he said. "If y.·e do this for Lockheed. we y,·ill ne\'er live it do"'Tl •.. if their manage· ment has been lousy, t say let 'em go broke. I don "t see y,•hy "'e should lake Lhis action, except possibly that they·re from Califomia." Lockheed is in trouble because of cost overruns on government contracts, and because Roll s Royce, wh ich was building the engines for its LlOll jum~ jet, y,•cnt bankrupt. Prin1e Minister Wins Trinidad Election PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (AP) Prime ?i.finisler Eric \Villiams Jed his rul- ing People's Nation al t<.1ovement to a complete s"·eep in t<.1onday's general election. but many voters heeded the op· position's call to boycott the. voting. \\'i\liams' party won all 36 seats in the Trinidad and Tobago House of Repre5en- lath·es. gh·ing him a fourth fil"e year term. It "·on 24 in the 1966 election. Police sources said "particular precau- tions"' y.·outd be taken to guard the TUl44 and other So\•iet exhibits. It \\'as expected the aircraft y.·ould be placed under 24- hour armed guard and v.·ould be follo\.\1ed by jeeps or armed police every time they Laxicd on the ground. The sources said the prec<tutions were ordered after police agents picked up tips that extreme ZionLst groups in France \1'crc planning retaliation for the sen- 1encing of nine Je....-s in Leningrad and the nc\v trial of four more in Riga. The sources said precautions to guard the regular 18 Aerorlot Soviet airlines flights in and out of Orly and Bourget :iirports each \\'eek v•ould include having a jecpload of French police meet !hem on !he end of the runway and folio...,· them in- to the terminal. 3rd Quake Jolts Ce11tral Tm·key, Houses Rattled ISTANBUL. Turkey (UPI) -The th ird rarlhquake in 13 days shook central Turkey today, cracking walls and tumbl- ing chimneys. But officials sa id first reports from the cities of Eskisehir, Afyon and Kytahya, about 140 miles southeast of Istanbul, did not mention casualties. The latest tremo rs came even as rescue v.·orkers counted the toll of an earthquake \Vhich devastated parts of tht v·estcrn Anatolian region last Saturd:iy. Storms Hammer Midwest The latest death toll in !hat qu&kt', <'entering on Bingo!. "·as 844. Officials forecast a final toll exceeding l.000. Bingo!. a city of 17,000 "'as 80 percent leveled. But temporary ten t shelters Ytere springing up Lhere today and ample. relief gupplies "'ere arriving. Today's tremor was described as cA ''nledium strength.'' An earthquake 15 months ago in the same region left hun- dreds of persons injured and homeless. Lightning Kills Golfer on Cliicago Course Student Seized By Turk Police In Kidnap Deatli California •Y U"'ITID PlllSS lNTllll"'AT!OfrtAL w,...,,, t~•'"'" lt1 1~• mhl·10t. '"" ~r.,,, w•r• tt.. rut• tllrG\ltfl most el 1'oll""-'" Ct 111ornl1 todty w!lfl ""' ~rv ~K""" tt.. mlo.tos In ~ t rl -•· lt.cru tlon 1•N1 wtrt w~ tout lllll"rt~ cooler. lo. Mwlft I nd vlclnlfY htf '"'°'"' .,,n.,.., WHIM• .n... low <loud\ I P'ld t..a4 ~ cltt ... ofl f!lt COii•!, A l'tlftl "" 11 wn toAU1t foM1 c-•W to 7J "-'"· Al ~ bHchtt I'! WH mMfl";" Clo\lllV W dttrtnt In ""-·~ WI""' .,,. to IJ ml191 .i llwr-. e•l*led. Tiit l'tltfl -I ,,.., Ml wlf!I h Wllwr ,1. Mount•lnl -.-. tuMV ....; w.r"' whll ,._, ltvtl• r.-"11"' 1'~ ~ ""r 10. 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Ot111r 111111"-ltlld flMVY ·-w1r1 ti· -1ed 1'1"(111'1 t fWl,1,.. "'•' rekN 11e'1 of N1t!W\U1. "A bllll '"'"""' ~I ltlt lu•I l•tt 1 rotli;," -11\t dlkrielloro -'"lttlHI ...... frot fM '°"'-tl•et CC•UHll ,.,..,,., ........ "°' Fr•••ito;llt1, Kv. Sbl ---• "'-"'"' \n1urtll "'°""' Iii.ti wi..a r1""" """' tit l.Ut ,.,.. ... '°*"IM. ...... o.-fflf W lkll,_1, u....., ,,_ ... .,,,,,. -· ,,,.. w.,. - .. fltlt'lola. M,_,,..., Mh.tl•'-91, T- ...... Art-Jo <>Ml 1tnd MICl>lt11\, Con.stal Hnv '"""'"'' '*"'· l l9'1t """•~I• W!flll• "l•M l llCI lnOrtlll'lof llaufl MC°"'• I"' wtl!M!Y 10 to 11 ktlqtii in 111 .... fl-10!\fy • ...., Wl'dMM111. H!l/I ~ Cit ... 4J to n. CNH1I 1_.t!U•tt ,..!Off trom p .. 1$. 1"11"" ltn'lfl..-1lur.,. r1t1tt ''°"' ll " •• Wl!H tt""'lr1t111• t1. S1111, 1110011. Tides TU•IOAY ~ ll fpll , •....•. 10:1t•·'"· •1 ~ ICM J:M ... ln. ,.1 W•ONllOAY F l'"" 1111'1 • ,, ,,. lt;llO~.m. J.t ~1 ... 10... . ......... i .4 1.fl'!. •1.1 J«Gnd "11111 , II :to to.m. f 0 '-Id ..,... . ' . ,.,. ,,,,.., l.• '"" .......... '"' ,,.,. 1:~ '·'"· MDDot ·-,!. ·-· l•l• 10 .• '·""' Tc1npernt11res •1 UNITl!C 'lll!JS l/r1Tfll"'AT1DN_.L r..,.,,,.., .. tvrn •'Id 1trKl011.,1.,,.. tof The ?•·ll:iur Ptd od en<!i~t •I • 1 "'• A•b1t"• Albll<,,Jff~UI ,t.!l1nt• Anc'>o•tlf ·~,., !l<Jff•lo ("••klt!t Cn~tto (i..CI"""'' Cl...-tltnd 0,,1111 DPllVr• Del ,,...,,fin o.·~ F8P<'Nn~1 Mlll"Cl\llu ,,..,1.,..oo1 .• JK!itonv!lle ,_, JIC•,.••• Cltr L•i Vf<!t1 l lH ...... ,1 •• loul•v•ll1 Alf"l!ofl•I M l•f!'lt ~l!w•ll"tt M lfl'*'l!Ollt N .... Orl11111 N1YtY01"~ Ol<t•ll«flt CilY °"'•"• P1'11-IPll•t P'llofn!J: ,.1'1Jtl\H'f1' P01!11'1d lt•l>icl ''"' ·-S.ctll'fl«IM JI, Lo\llt 1111 L ..... Cll\' l S.n Dlt'fO Hltll Lew PrK , I} J• ,01 " " 81 11 ~J •? 1• 5! .. " .S1 I STANBUI~ (APl -A major suspect i11 '° 45 the kidnap murder or an Israeli diplomat " J1 .n 1s JJ ' oi "·as captured tolay y,·hHe neeing Istan- ~ : 1 53 bul. Justice ~1in,ister Ismail Arar an- " ,. nounet!d in Ankara. ~: : :~ He was identified as Nahit Tore. 24. a •1 •J i-;1 udent at the Istanbul University sehool u " of t'COno1nics. 11 $4 1.01 '' ro Arar said Tore is a "militant"' of the ~' ,. radical )'Outh organization Dev. Gene. '' ,. .01 d " i1J Tore \\'as one of nine persons picture ;~ ~ 1 .. in "'anted posters hung throughout lstan- 11 JJ ·'° hul after Israeli Consul General Ephrai111 ~~ ~ 11 Elro1n "'as murdered by terrorist kid· .o •J .11 napcrs on Saturdny . :: ~ .r. Police officials claim Tore is a member 10 JI or the Turkish Pe<lplt~ t.iberation Arn1y ~ ~ -TPLA -""hich lddnaped Elrom on Of Al ~lay 17. ~ ~; :r~ They 11aid he is the link between two '( :>t TPLA. cells. one of which kldnaped Elrom !: 11 .os and one which killed him. ~ ! ··• Tore was captured near Gezbt, 40 .. )I miles east of Jst141bul • American case lo a meeting of more than 200 leading bankers and government finance officials from 20 coWltries. German Foreign ~iinister Walter Scheel set the stage for Voleker by criticizinc: those \\'ho claim current in- temational monetary problems reflect a dollar crisis. He agreed \.\'ith Volcker tha~ no single ct>ilntry or policy is at fault. The bankers heard Volcker and Scheel as the U.S. dollar bounced back from its lo11·est price in more than 20 years to reach a fixing for the day in German markets of 3.53 marks. This compared \1·ith an officia l exchange rate of 3.66, and ~1onday's low of 3.4990. Dealers in the Frankfurt exchange said that for the first time since the money markets "·ere reopened May 10, business \ras about normal. But the central bank still refused to unload any of its hoard of dollars. "'hich Foreign Minister Scheel estimated at about $19 billion. Volcker sa id !he U.S. government con- siders the latest monetary crisis raises three questions. ··The first is \\'hether the United States can successfully regain its rightful posi- tion as an island of st ability in the ,,·orld." Volcker told the bankers. "I think \\·e are on our 11·ay to regaining that no"' (although) certainly at \•ery con- siderable cost internally in terms of unemployment and other !actors." He said !he second queslion concerns restrictive trading practict's "'hich were acceptable in the immediate post\i:ar period but are not now. He singled out Japanese restrictive trade poliices as being particularly to blame for America's "deterioration in current account." ''Thirdly. the United States does carry extraordinary defense burdens.'' Volcker v.·ent on. •·1n a shee r arithmetical sense, our mili tary expenditures overseas more than account for our basic (balance of payments) deficit. \V ith the changing relationship of economic strength in the 11·or!d, I think the old question in that area !of sharing tht defense burden) beromes even more pertinent." A \"ice president of the \Vest German central bank prediCted \Vest Germany v;ill noat ils-mark for at least a }'ear un- til the United States restores faith in the dolla r. Hefty W 01nan Gets Sentence i\11Ai\ll (UPl)-f\olrs. i\1ary Louise Peterson, a 315-pound mother of six ch!ldren. has been ordered by a crimina l court judge lo lose three pounds a week until her Y.'eight drops to 250 pounds. Judge Murray Goodman madt the diet part of Mrs. Peterson's l~re_e years probalion r..1onday afte r finding the "'Oman guilty of assaulting a policeman. D_uring J\1r~. Peterson's trial, assistant public defender Stephen ~fechanic told the court his client "'as on welfare and had been unable to work because or her ex- t-ess y,·eight. Mechanic said Mrs. Peterson's norma l weight was 250 pounds. Goodman ordered r..1rs. Peterson to weigh in each week at the public heaJth department and bring proof of her '>''eight to Mechanic's office. '7PS Spare P11r se, Spoil_ Schools By THO~IAS fl1 URPHJNE Of lllt Diii, P INI 11111 FOR \\'Arr-.-1 OF A NAIL DEPT. - A black-bordered advertisement appeared this morning on the back of the first sec- tion of Santa Ana's daily ne\\·spaper. It \\'as a seven column ad, 16 inches deep and pretty well dominated the page. Inside the black border v.•as another black border around a photo of McKinley School in Santa Ana. The \Valls of old ,._tcKinley "·ere shOY.'fl being supported by angled braces planted in the ground. Beneath the photo was the caption, ''Isn't it About Time \Ve Supported Santa Ana Schools in Some Other \'lay?·' The final message at the bottom of the ad called on Santa Ana citizens lo vote yes toda y and ackno"·ledged that the ad 1vas paid for by the Save Our Schools Committee of l.000. OTHER THAN TliAT. the County Sea t paper did carry a t"·o-paragraph notice at the bottom of lhe lead page, secood section, reporting that there "·as a school tlection in Santa Ana today and tha t the polls will be open until 8 o'clock tonight. Actually, the advertisement by Lhe committee of 1,000 probably tells the iitory of Santa Ana schools in recent years. Support of the schools has mainly been provided by steel bracing to hold up outer and inner y,·a\ls and nets of chicken- "'ire fashioned beneath ceilings to catch tailing plaster. Olher kinds or support -in money for example -has been note\\"Orthy by its absence. SO \\"HAT REALLY is al stake in today·s election is some money to take do"11 the braces and chicken,vire and support Santa Ana schools in the more conventional way. Santa Ana volers are being asked to provide $33.25 million in bond money to be borro\ved over the nex t 2.i years. The cash "·ould build l I new .schools and shore up some old ones. Additionally, the district's voters are asked for a 54-cent school tax increase In operate those schools. An identical re- quest Y.'as rejected last February. Jn recent years, coastal folks who ha\'e been County Seat-watchers have been preuy amazed as they observed the story of Santa Ana school system unfold . THE FACT THAT educa lional decay ~·as really beglnning lo set iJt became evident when Santa Ana closed ·Julia Lathrop Junior High out on South t<.1ain Street. There y,·asn't any money to fix il. I happened to be on hand, quite by ac· cidenl a few months ba ck. v.•hen Santa Ana closed Willard Junior High. A lot of people turned out. They played taps, lo"·ered tht Flag. and that "'as that. So it is that today ts the day coastal watchers of the County Scat "'ill see \\·hether or not Santa Ana folks have ha d it up to here v.•ith the notion that schools can go on fore\'er even H you cut !hem off at the pocketbooks. Santa Ana does ha\'e a ne1v superin· lendent of schools in Charles F. Ke nnev. the former headmaster of the Capistrarlo Unified School District. A lot of his friends "'onder why he took the challenge in the first place. Kenney, however. generated quite a bit of steam during the losing effort of February and some people believe he·~ drawn enough public support to pull it off today. Coast-watchers ·will be watching. "1• ihall see. Hot Pants Wintaer liliriam Pau1, 21 , tndian·bom mother or two children. model ii; a l\ro- piece sUver outfit which gbe wore to win the f\1i.~s Hot Pants 19il contest ln London. She said !he made lh~oullit herself. l 17 .. Newport Beaeh Today's Final N.Y. Stocks EDITION VOL. 04, NO. 12~, 2 SECTIONS, 2'6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C:ALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1971 TEN · CENTS State Coastline Management OK'd by Council A policy statement agreeing to slate takeover of coastline manageme'nt -to a point -"'as adopted unanimously by the Newport Beach City Council ,.tonday night. Councilmen called upon the state to form regional agencies with a "majority of elected city officials from cities abut· ling lhe shoreline in its membership." The policy, adopted in response to a number of proposed state laws that would pre-empt almost all local autbority over Balboa Man Facing .Rap Or Freedom A decision on whether or not John J. BieguJ11 of Balboa will be prosecuted oo murder charges was expected today, aftrr a conference with the Orange Coun- ty District Attorney. Biegun, 21, of 42.1 W. Ba y Ave., was ar· rested and formally booked Thursday on suspicion of slaying Mrs. Susan Lane ' Constant 21 , with whom he Jived. Coron ers' preliminary . examination in- dicated the young mother of a l~month­ old son had been choked to death, while a drug overdose was also considered . Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson said to- day new evidence based on toxicological tests is being evaluated, to determine ill ~sible impact on the homicide.t:ase. "He might be ba ck on the streets by this afternoon . or else we'll get a murder complaint," Sgt. Thompson remarked before leaving for Santa Ana. The body wu round about 1:30 a.m. Thursday by the suspect 's brother Thomas, 24, who reportedly told detec- tives Mrs. Constant had mentioned 5uicide before. Police went to the Sea L e v e I i\partments about midnight Wednesday regarding a family disturbance involving Biegun and Mrs. Const.ant The outcome was the immediate arrest of Thomas Blegun on a drunk in public charge and the booking seve ral hours later of John Biegun on minor traffic warrants. Released after a mandatory sobering. up period, the older brother returned to the apartment to find Mrs. Constant dead in bed with her baby crying beside her. The infant was turned over to county juvenile authorities. Reagan to Send Own Tax Reform To Legislature SACRAMENTO (UPll -Gov. R<>nald Jl.eagan today announced he will send the Legislature his own tax "reform•: pr~ posal consisting of a huge reduction m property taxes coupled with big hikes in the income and sales taxes. Reagan said he decided to act in an at- tempt to get the Legislature off "dead center" after five months of inaction. Under the governor"s new proposal, property tax reductions would range from 20 to 100 pcrct;nl -with less tJ· pensive homes receiving the biggest benefit. The owner of a $15,000 home. for in· st.ana. would rect;ive .a 55 percent redu c- tion in property taxes next year. For a '2(1,000 home the bile would be 40 percent Jess and for a $25,00ft home it would be 34 percent. Oruge Cout \\'eather The stock market lsn 't the only thing dropping suddenly. Look for a five-degree dlp in the mercury Wednesday, from 7S to 70 degrees. aloog the coastal area. INSIDE TODAY Thrtit communitU thtiattrs are resurrect ing two old ti mt comedies thls week, whilti UC Irvrnt mounts the firit countu productio n. of a Termesste Wil- lioms dra~. See Theattr Notes, Page 20. C•L/ftnll1 ' M•"'al ,-l lHlt " Cft«llltf U• ' ll(•tlfMI .... • •• Clttlllftt .... OI'•-C..ltY • c-1c• " • .,..,... l'tf'tM" " Cren-' " --, .. ,. °"'~ ... ,11: .. • lltc.k Mtrll•h '"" ._...,..r "'" • T-" l111wttl!I"'"' "" --"" l'~ll(t '"" w •• ,,,., • ... ,..i.e ... " W•ll• ••• .. Allll LI"''"' " We"*\'t Nm !J.1• ....... ... Werlf N"" •·I coastal development, also calls on the legislature to provide for "management al the local agency level." At least a dozen bills calling for state takeover -some to the extreme that any building permits would require approval by a regioqal board -have been filed in Sacramento. "There's going to be something passed Otis seSlllon," Councilman Milan Dostal predicted. "lt hopefully will be lhe bill that's least Hawaii Callitag -damaging," said Councilman Und.sley Parsons. In that light, councilmen said in their policy: -"All of the people in the state have a primary interest In the conservation and utilization of all of the coastal resources as well as for other massive resources such as rivers, mountains and deserts." -"The state should develop criteria and guidelines for uses cf the coastal :tone which should include components for all lawfu l uses and which should not DAILY PILOT S .. ff ,..._ Monday night was Hawaii Nigh t at Newport Beach City Hall and no one enjoyed it more than Mayor Ed Hirth. The mayor and other city cou ncilmen got the royal treatment from princesses for the city's Hawaii Week observance. The Newport Harbor Chamber of Com- merce-sponsored observance continues through May 30. Think Hawaii. The mayor did and look what it brought him. Councilmen Pass Pet Ban From ·June to September Despite last...dilch prolesls from a handful of dog owners, dogs and cals and all other four-legged animals were ordered banned from Newport Beach beaches and oceanlront sidewalk11 by the city council Monday night. The ordinance, approved unanimously, institutes a ban from June 15 to Sept. 15 that this year will not go into effect for 30 days, until June 29. The council ordered an automatic review of the ordinance at Its first meeting in September, tentatively set Sept. 13. The ordinanct covers all ocean front beaches. Dogs have long been prohibited on bay beaches. Guide dogs used by blind persons are excluded . The action came after a veiled threat from one West Newport resident. legality "of a part-time San Clemente resident who takes his three dogs to the beach. "Who picks up after his dogs," Zaida Raid, referring to President Nixon's th ree pets. Roy B. Woolsey. 113 Via Venezia. Lido Isle, told councilmen he felt the ban was necessary but suggested the city look into the possibility of creating a special sec- tion of the beach where dog11 would be allowed. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers suggested the Pacific Electric right-0f-way in West Newport and Mayor Ed Hirth said this possibility could be discussed when the council reviews the issue in the fall. Councilmen also ordered p r o p e r not.ification of the new law be posted on the beaches and sent to all homeowners in their water bills. generically prohibit any lawful. use . -"A single state agency shoold be designated to sive leadership to state planning and to develop the coastal zone criteria. -"Local agencies within the coastal zone must be required to develop coastal elements of their general plans that are in accord 'f\ith slate criteria. -"Regional coordination .should be ef. fected through a review and. comment process within county lines. -"Regional coordination established through an existing council of govern- ment. a joiril povters agreement or a regional planning district whenever two or more counties occupy a single "eo- vironmental comparlment." ' -"t.tanagement must be at the local agency level in response fir st to state criteria and guidelines, and secondly to coastal elements of the local agency general plan when developed." -"Specially regulated uses may be su bject to slate approval after proposed uses are reviewed and commented upon by counties or regional ageocies." The policy also says "in the effort to conserve and enhanct; the coastal :tone, consUtulionally guaranteed personal and property rights must not be violated. The burden of financing should not fall en landowners in the coastal r.one dispropm-- tionate to the benefits received by them." The statement also calls on the state to provide adequate funding so lbe burden of implementalion and enforcement does not fall on cities. Route Suit Looms Newport Cancels Freeway Agreement By !. PETER KRIEG Of !Ml D•llr ,lltl li.ff Newport Beach councilmen voted unanimously to cancel the Pacific Coast Freeway route agreement Monday night but the expected action came only after they were told lhey would be sued because or it. Calling the act of unilaterally breaking a contract "reprehensible." E. O. Rodef fer, a Newport Beach developer, told the council : "If the Division of Highways or no other group steps forth demanding $15 Newport Tideland Fee Quietly Dies Replete with a post mortem by a former city councilman, the Newport Beach tidelands use fees died a quiet death Monday night. -The $15 residential fee and sliding com- mercial fee were adopted more than a year ago in a controversial city council action. Mayor Ed Hirth alluded to thal furor as he called the Item on lhe agenda. "Thi5 used to be controversial," the mayor, a firm opponent of the fees , com· menled dryly. Earlier, former cooncilm.an and city manager Robert Shelton , who as a coun· cilman led the battle for institulion of the charges, suggesled the council might want to wear black armbands for the oc- ca!ion. Councilma Li n d s I e y Parsons, ~'ho cast the lone dissenting vote against repeal. stuck to his guns. "The public is entitled to compensalion for private use of public lands,·· Parsons offered futilel y. Roy B. Woolsey. 113 Via Venezia, Lid!l Isle. who led the lighl for the Association of Newport Harbor Yacht Clubs against the fees, gave the council his "sincere thanks for the time devoted to the study of this malter." Peppard Union Ends BEVERLY HILLS. Calif. (UPI) - Actor George Peppard, 38, and his wife, actress Elizabeth Ashly. 31. aMounced Monday they had legally separated after five years of marriage. They were mar· ried in Hollywood in 1966 and have a son, Christian, born in 1969. It was the second marriage for both. damages, I will personally do it." "At my own expense," he added. Rodeffer said he might also sue the state for failing to live up to its contract with the people if it doesn't take any ac· lion. There has been no Indication the state plans to act. California Public Works DI r ector James A. Moe has said he won't instigate lltigation over the rescission while the State Highway C.Ommission has remained virtually silent on the subject. ~tayor Ed Hirth tried to talk Rodeffer out of it, urging be instead cooperate as Moe has pledged to do ln finding alternate traffic problem solution1 via the city's traffic study. Rodeffer was not to be dissuaded. He called the study, "too little, too late." "I recog niie the fact I'll be unpopular, .. Rodeffer said, also telling councilmen he realized they have no other choice but to follow the dictates of the electorate. Newport Beach residents voted nearly g lo l March 9 to rescind the agreement, which was signed In October, 1968 and (See FREEWAY, Page%) Former Ziegfeld Girl Edith Dillon Succumbs Death has closed a final curWn an the career of actress Edith Heller Dillon, onetime Ziegfeld Follies girl who acted, danced and gang with all the heroes of yesteryear IA American s.1.age and cinema theater. No funeral will be held for Miss Dillon, 75, who spent her last 10 years in Newport Beach. The woman who broke into theater at age 13 in Washington O.C. with a role In •·J>eter Pan" lived at 3S Beach Drive, with 1 clo!e friend , Mrs. Claire Del.eon. Her career apanned the early days of vaudeville theater, with several later tilarring roles in silent films and finally a 2Gth Century Fox Studios comeback as a contract actress. She went back to work in the mid-1930! after her seror.d husband, film director Jobn F. Dillon died. A son by her first marriage to theatrical producer. L. Lawrence Weber Jr., is currently starring in the Broadway hit "Applause," with actress Lauren Bacall. Mrs. Dillon also leaves a son Anthony P. Dillon. of Hollywood:, a sister Ethel Varsa, of Hollywood and a brother, Walter Grady, of San Diego. Her Broadway stage debut came in ''The Peasant Girl ," with Emma Tren- tini, while she sta rred as Prima Donna of the 1916 Ziegfeld Follies which featured some other young talent. Cast members included W .C. Field!:, Eddie Cantor, FaMy Bryce and famed humoriat Will Rogers. Appearing in Jerome Kern's ''Leave It t.o Jane," Mrs. Dillon also introduced the siren song, while her lines in film.! "Governor 's Ghost," "Children· of Destiny" and "Human Hearts" were all written subtitles. The veteran actreSll .and Washington D.C. native won a role in a 1909 Capitol City prod4ction of Peter Pan, appearing DIES IN NEWPORT BEACH Silent Sc:rHn'• Dillon with Maude Adams. Additional credil.3 include playing op. posite the late Clifton Webb in "Voguea and Vanities," and appearing with William CoUler in "Nothing But Lies." Following the death of her second hus- band. Mrs. Dillon returned to acting on a contract with 21'.lth Century Fox Stu<tios in Hollywood. "This will not be the end if you pass this tonight." said Marlin Zaldo. 4904 Seashore Drive, who declined to elaborate but who brought to mind 1 re- cent referendum in Laguna Beach fo rced by dog owners after the council there in- itially passed a total ban. Voters in Laguna Beach wiped out the ordinance and a compromise law wa11 subsequently adopted that bans pets Crom the beaches only from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. during the: summN months. Newp·ort Helicops Backed Final arrangemenl.3 for the late ac- tress, who died Friday, are being handled locally by Westclif! Chapel Mortuary, with interment this week In Forest Lawn Glendale. Fire V nit Aids 2nd S~ry Man Not necessarily germaae, but Zaldo queried Newport councilmen about the Policeman, Fireman Assanlt Rap Sought WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen• l • Judiciary Chairman Jame.s O. Eastland (0.MiSll.), today proposed legislation to make it a federal crime to assault a policeman or fireman. And. ln an open t1ltempt to overturn re- cent Supreme Court decisions. Eastland also proposed It be made just as much a crime to "encourag e or promote" such acts or to Ad!iocate the overthrow of any governmental unit by force, violence or by assassination of any officer, lncludlJ\g. po!Jcemen. Police in Sky Program Defended Against Critics Newport Beach's police helicopter pro- gram won a unanimous vote of con- fidence from the city council 1t1onday night after a ringing endorsement of the program by Mayor E. F. Hjrth. "In aome cities you can't walk the street! at night," Hirth said, pointing out Ahal crl.mes are on the deerease in Newport Beach. He called for massive public $upport of the program. "You ought to be thankful they are there," be said. Referring t.o an increased nurober of complaints against t h e helicoptera, primarily because of the noise. Hirth said, "For the pollct to do their Job, tbty need the backing of the public. We may have to put up with a litlle In- convenience." He said the department is working to Improve the noise problem. Prior to the vote, Councilman Lindsley Parsons. who has been repeatedly criUcal or I.he nolst problem although avowing hi& support, urged the department carry out a stepped-up public relations pro- gram, el!pedally among young people. He noted that petition he submitted to the council protesting the program w1s signed mostly by young people. . COlncldenlally, tl>e department's public relaUON st.I.ff was golng hard et It at the same r1me1 riiht in Parson'a own bacjcyard. Dennis Blackbum, the dtp.artment11 toml'flunlty rtlalk>ns officer and Officer John Heene, a hellcopl.tt pilot, addressed the combnned Cameo Shores and Cameo Highlands Community 8.!lSOCiations Mon· day night. Blackbum said this morning they did not receive one complaint about the helicopters from any of the 116 persons In attendance. Par1011s, who representa that area, has told the council the noise problem is tbe worst in the eastern end of town. ··we did not re«lve one derogatory ~mment from ~e homeowners,'' Bltckburn nld. "We were shocked," he said, "we had expected at least some questions." Several residents of the dty were at the council meeting to voice aupport of the program, each of whom came uying they were afraJd there might not be1 anyone else who Wt!Uld. Passersby paused Monday at the Spte- tacle of a second story man entering a Balboa Peninsula apartment w i t b Newport Beach fire Department help, Nothing was amiss about the 2:45 p.m. Incident al 1712 w. Oceanfront, firemen emphasized today. Occupant W. J . Kerner had mtrely locked himself otU and needed help reaching the second floor window, with a firemen"1 ladder. Pops Concert Slated The mus ic department of Corona del Mar HJg:h School wtll present t Popa COn· cert at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the schbol IYfT'nasium. The concen Is Open to I.hi public wilh a don.allon ol fl. • ' I ..I•• I I I l I " 't DAILY PILO l ,, . • • . Sanctuary Proposed Bay Club To Build Newport A cts to Extend Marine Preserve Ne\\'J)Ort Beach want! to extend the C-Orona de.I Mar Jl.1arine Pre.serve Cit Lil· tie Cdrona south to Laguna Beach and has asked Laguna and the county to join in requesting state legislation creating the sanctuary. Councilman Lindsley Parsons sug- gested the extension l\1onday nigbt, saying the Irvine Company favottd it but apparently r*lt knowing that company of· "ficials had already Mked lo ca I lawmakers to introduce such legislation. This ·was disc\o~ when company Clf· ficials were asked to romment on tpe ac- tion this moming. In a letter to Slate Senator DeMis E. Carpenter CR-Newport Beach) and Aasemblyman Robert Badham ( R • Newport Buch). Roymond L. Wataon, executive vJce president af the lrYlne Company, said : "M you know, the Irvine Company and representatives from the 11tate, Orange County and the cities of Newport Beacti and Lagwia Beach have been involved in a cooperative planning program for the three milts of company-owned shorellot betwem the two cities. "In addition to onshore public recrea· tion possibiUties, the offshore marine environment was identified as a valuable natural _ resource v.'hich should be preserved and enhanced for the public's enjoyment· and education as an undersea garden park and marine laboratory," Walson said. Newport-Mesa. Board Trustees Study Lowered Graduation Standards Proposed mmunum graduation re. quirements for the Newport-Mesa Unified school district are being studied. by the Board of Education prior to discussion liet for the June 1 meeting of trustees in Costa Mesa City Ccuncil Otarnbers. At their last board meeting three dif- fering viewpoint5 on the course work guidelines were presented by members of the diltricl's high school graduation re- quirements committee. The study group also presented a second draft of the pro- J>Med requirements. Alter the board expresses its views on the proposal, another revision is expected before a final version is brought to the board for approval, Associate Superin- tendent Norman U:>ats said. The 19-member committee wis set up to fonnulate requirements in accordance with the 1968 Senate Bill One. That legislation authorizes local. districts -tor ihe first time in Califorrua -to setup their O'A'll guidelines. The state sets only a bare bones schedule o! required courses. Brieny. the state minimum re- quirements are: -Completion after grade six of a one Res taurateur Sarah Newman Services Set Funeral services will be held Wed· nesday for Costa Mesa restaurant owner Sarah G. Newman who died Monday at Hoq Memorial Hospital after a lengthy illness. She was 55. Mrs. Newman, with her husband Keith, owned and operated the El Pescador restaurant on 17th Street since 1960. Mn:. Newman was an avid angler and El Ptseador is decorated with photos and stuffed trophies which attested to her liklll 11 a flsberwoman. She was also a member of the Huntington Beach Women's Golf Club. A resident of Orange County since 1932, she and her husband were living at 8122 llfunster Drive, Huntington Beach, at the time of her death. In addition to her husband, lltrs. Newman leaves her mother, Gertrude Jrvine and a brother, Joe Irvine, botb of Huntington Beach. Servlcts will be conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Pacific View Chapel, corona del ~far. OUN•I COAST DAILY PILOT CflAHGE COAST t>UaLllHIMO (CW,,A)!'f ' ll:o._wt N. w.,4 "'-*"' Ml htli.w J 1cl l. C11rf•Y Vier ~I Pl ~II MIM,.. "''"''' k'., .. 1r ••tlw 1\11111• A·. Mw1plrilR1 M""0·"11 EOl!Or 4, P•l1r ICrl•t ,...,.,,.,., ••dt (:Uy l•H.r .. ....,.,, ..... Offke )]JJ N•wpo rt loul•••'' M·1ni119 Aicl11n: r.o. 101 1115, 1266J Orftff Offk• c.i;lll ,.._..,: U0 W1U a.y ltl'Mf yt-aMcfl: m l"«ftl A....iw k un!11'8hl1 Sttdl: HITS 8ff<ll lOlll..,•nl ·J.ln Clcmttll't: * Norm El "ttmll'le llttsl DAILY ,11.DT, wlltl Wkt1 h di'/...,_ "'9 ~ ... "'*'"""" ••lrt •<• ...... .,. "' .......... Jti....1 ..,. u...... hKfl. N~ a•Jelll., CW.II IMM, H""'lirlCtMn lttCl'I. l'-r.111 V•lt.y-1 .. JI! C""*"tl ~-.,.. .... 1tc>t<ll., ..... """ -rw11eMI ti111ti.. ''11>CIHI IW1fllll"4 '4t111 i. M .. Wiii ••r tt,_:, C.!• lift-. ~ Tel•11•••• C71 41 14l-4Jl1 Cl..tfW A'-'kl .. 141-1171 semester course in each of five subject areas: English, American histor y, American government, mathematics and science. --Comptetion of tOO minutes of physical education for every 10 days of school. --Completion of 200 units of course v•ork after grade eight. -Succenful completion of a stan- dardized or d.istrid developed math and reading test with al least eighth grade competency, or, -Enrollment in a remedial math or reading course, should a student not meet the eighth grade proficiency level . A stu- dent would take such a course at least one semeater. The di3lrict committee added similar eighth grade level of proficiency st.an· dards in the subject areas of writing, spttch and listening. At the recent board meeting committee member Bill Watkins said he supported both the general goals of the proposa l and the objectives Epelled out for achieving those goals. He said. however. parents frequentlv asked him "how many courses will students take to meet those objectives?" Watkina ur1ed the board to ext.end use of the present system 'A'here students must meet specific requirements for a number nf course9 in a subject area, before being given a diploma . Another commi ttee member presented a differing viewpoint. Fred Peterson said there was a "split between the traditional approach and the use of behavioral ob· jectives'' being proposed in the new minimum graduation requirement.! draft. He said some leacher11 dislike having the committee "dictate" the objectives. He urged the board to adopt the general goals statements and mandate that ways of meeting the objectives be: decided by indl\·ldual schools in the district. Larry Banner, also a committee member, recounted the effect of the prior two wggesUons and compared them v.•ith a third alternative. With 'the statw quo, Banner said. students are locked into taklng courses they may not need and into a grading system that doesn't necessarily renect on their knowledge. The second alternative allov.·ing schools to di9COver way1 of meeting educa tional objectives, Banner said. v.•ould be dif· ficult to achie\'e and v:ould result in a wide varianct in achievement of district grads. Schools v.·ould be unlikely to arrive at similarly challen&:ing courses. Unit.! of desired learnin&: 9.'0uld be loc ked inlo courses in ways not very much dUferent from the present system, he .11uggested. BaMer's alternative was to set up both goals and objectives and let schools assign the materials to be learned to any of a variety of coursta presenUy offered . Further, students would be required to take a certain number of courses in several subject areas. but would decide. d e p en d l n g on 1eeds and Interests wJUch eoorses to take. Grading 1n such a 1yattm would hinge on their sat- lalying the graduation requlremenf3. Ba11- ner suggested. that 1trade1 then would not be punitive, but rather an assessment or where B student st.ands. Dr. Loats noted that at the J une meeting the co mmittee "·outd be seeking board dire ction on the goals and ob- jectives only. They "'ill consider assess- ment techniques -testing -at some later date. "Because some or our students are capable of satisfying these requirements in th eir sophomore or jun ior years."' l..oal'I said. ''lt may be deliirable to establish a set period of time we'd want a student to remain in the high school en- ,·ironment before relmsln&: him." As for colle&:e bound students , the pro- posed system allo"'s for schedule nex· ibility. A student would be able to uti1fy gradu1Uon requlrement.s and then tailor his remalning hiah 1chool &dledule to col- lege entrance needs. S500 iu Sound Gear . Stolen Fro1n College Sound equipment and visual slide pro- jection equlpment worth more lhan $500 has been 1tolen from Ore.nae Coast College'• ln~tructlonal Media Center. Campus official Harold Hohl !old Costa Mesi Polle• of the theft P.londay, saylnr 1t ~·as discovered In 1 year-end 1udl1. "lbl marine flora and faW11, however, are now without protection. Tbty are being carried away and destroyed by the souvenir hunters and the curious. "The tidelands, bf course, belong to the public and they may do what they are doing as long as there is no la\v against it. And thre is none.'' AlthQUgh he did not mention it, at !\ton· day night's meeting, Newport Mayor Ed Hirth had been se nt a cop y of the letter as had Lagwia Beach Mayor Richard Goldberg and Fifth District Supervisor Ronald E. Caspers. Jn their action, Newport Beach council· me11 instructed Hirth lo contact Badham and Carpenter expressing the city's sup- port and to write Goldberg and Caspers seeking theirs. From Page l FREEWAY •.. which covers the proposed route from Bayside Drive easterly through C-Orona de! ,_ia r. Rodeffer said damages resulting from the council"s action ''will be untold millions·• and said Newport residents didn't understand this or they wouldn"t have voled the way they did. "The people should know v.·hat their tax bill will be as a result of this action," he said. Rodeffer said tbt e-0sts lo the city would be the amount spent by the .state in ·engineering and land acquisition-and damages to people v.·bo sold out and packed up and left because they thought they v .. ere in the path of a freeway. He also sald Newport Beach residents DAIL'!' f>ILQT lllH '~•t• AFTER CRASH, VW HOOD REMAINS STUCK TO TRUC K Three University High Coeds Injured in Collision Bead-on Cra~h Three Students Injured In Collision .With Truck alone would have to pay the cost of new .Drizzle-slicked pavements contributed small car was impaled on lhe truck's road.! to hand.le the increased traffic. • "With a freeway, the fedetal govern-to two auto accidents thls morning in the bumper. ment would pay 90 percent and the state area of University High School sending California Highway Patrol of!icers said would pay the rest," Rodeffcr said. four persons, three of them El Toro Tony · Alleegos, 24 , or Santa Ana, the "You're going to throw all that away teenagers, to Costa Mesa ritemorial dri\'er of the truck, "'as not injured in the and it'll all be on your shoulders. You Hospital. accident. may have_ money for the studies, but no Richard Bingo, 71, of 28(2 Drake Ave., U · 't H. h P · · I v· New Mot el The Balboa Bay Club will demoli sh Its t.xisting 28-unit motel and build a $1 mil· lion 75-tlnit ne"' one in a n1ove that will open up a 350-foot vie\v corridor to Ne\\'• port I1arbor, tlub official11 confirmed this morning. Richard Stevens. executive vice presi- dent of the club. said this morning that the city"s highrise moratorium has stall- ed plans for the esc·s apartment projel:t so a decisiQfl to proceed wilh other plans \\·as made. He said constru ction of the new un its .8nd demolition of the old \vas in the club's master pla n all along. and is mere· ly being mo\'ed ahead in priority. He said the 350-foot streU:h at t h e eastern end of lhe property, planned as the site of eventual high rise apartments, \viii be used for parking but will provide a-vie\v from the Pacific Coasl High\\'SY to the water. Stevens sa id plans call for work to start this fall. The ne11• motel unlt!I would be three stories in height and "'·ould be located alnng the coast hightA·ay adjacenl to the existing swimming pool . Stevens said. Stevens said the parking area probably 11·ould not be depressed. a requirement proposed for the ruture by the Lo\\'{'f J\'"ewport Bay C1\·ic District s1udy com- mittet'. "\l/e ·would ha1·e severe problems with that as w:ill everybody else in the area," Stevens said. He noted that the terrain naturally, slopes on the properly, whiC'h ls city~~'ll­ ed and ]eased by the club, lndicating views would not be a problem. Field Service Gets $200 Gjf t money to implement them ," he said. n1ve rs1 Y 1g nncipa 1ctor Sher- Councilman Carl Kymla, who once led Costa ,_iesa, was in serious condition to-reilt said the school's Parent, Faculty A gift of $200 has been presented to the council opposition to the rescission elec. day after the car he was driving went out · and Friends Organization is concerned Corona del Mar Chapter of American lion. contended that the public had been or control on Bonita Canyon Road and about the speed lim it past the school F'ield Service by Corona del Mar KitA•anis ~·ell-informed prior to the election. struck a utility pole about 6 a.m. which presently is set at ss miles an Club. "The people must have felt the 'I'h 1 The presentation \.\'as made by Club damages would go away,"' Rodef!er ree Un versity High School students hour. President C. E. ''Buck" Schueller at the replied. \\'ere injured about 7:30 a.m. as their im-A second e-0ncern registered with traf-club"s Ladies' Day Program, ~·hen four Rocleffer. a ne"·comer to the 10-year-port, C-Ompacl car collided head--on with a fie engineers \.\'ho have promised to foreign students currently attending old coastal freeway controversy, lives in garbage truck at the i1tersection of survey the situation. Sherreltt said, is the Corona de! l\far High School on American Coro na de! ?ttar and heads Rodeffer Culver Drive and Campus Drive. Jack of a left turn lane. Much traffic into F'ield Service scholarships -Eli Furr, Investments which currently is hesd· Judy, 15, and Dixie Newbill, 17, both of Norway; Friew Kelemu, Ethipia: Ann quartered in Arcadia but is in the process 13325 Wake St., El Toro, and Carol the school comes south on Culver and Bouffier, France and Denilo Fodriquez, of constructing a five-story office building Hawes, 17, of 13326 \Vake St., El Toro, must tum left onto Campus Drive, he Costa RJca _ were the speakers. in Newport Center. were listed in fair condition today. Miss noted . American Field Service prov Id e s Earlier, Vi ce Mayor Howard Rogers Hawes' car was in the intersection mak-A parent said this morning "we've been scholarships to enable foreign studenls to had suggested Rodeffer "look up Lorenz:. ing a left tum off Culver into Campus wanting the speed limit lowered for some attend high schools in the United States Stoddard and Hart and fine some good Drive when lt struck the truck which was time. Now that three students have beea and for American high school students to henchmen or allie!." headed north on Culver. The hood of the hur!, maybe something will be done.1' study in other countries. Rogers referred to former Newport ,------------------.:.._ ___ _:_ ________ __c_.:.._.:.._:=.:.._:=.:.._.:.._ ____ _ Beach mayors Charles E. Hart and James 8. Stoddard and forwr Vice ,_tayor Hans J. Lorenz who had unsuc- cessfully sought an ·injunction to bar tbe special freeway election. ··r don"t need any henchman," Rodeffer retorted, "l"ve done my own soul searching. This is the worst thlng i·ve e\'er beard of." Funeral Service For Mrs. Groth Conducted Today Funeral services for Mrs. Marion Groth, 63, of 1907 Bayadere Terract. Corona de! 1.far. were held today in Pacific View Chapel, Corona del Mar. .J\frs. Groth died Saturday. Mrs. Groth was active 'in community organizations in Southern California for many years. A rtative of Sea!t!e, Wash., she Jived in the Nev.'J)Ort Harbor area IO years. She \\"as a member of Angelltos de Oro, Irvine Terrace Philharmonic Asso- ciation, San l\1arino Branch or John Tracy Clin ic. the Assistance League of Southern California, the Opera Guild of Southern California, Newport Harbor Yacht Club, Irvine Ccast Country Club, Balboa Bay Club, the Fine Arts Patrons of Newport Harbor, the Orange County Ph.ilharmo11.ic Society and Hoag Memorial Hospital Auxiliary. MORE -,_IORE -hfORE . . . . She is !Urvived by her husband . Jack E. Groth: a daughter. l\trs. Sandra Frush of San :\farina; two grandchildren, and four brothers. The family has suggested memorial contributions to the Hoag Memorial Hos- pital building or cobalt funds. Jack V. Tilley Las t Rites Held Funeral services llave been held ror NetA'port Beach businessman and buildlng; contractor Jack V, Tilley, 60, who died \\rei:lnesd dy at his Udo Isle home of a heart and respiratory ailment. l\fr. Ti lle}'. of 319 Via Lido Soud .• wa.' one of two men cited by the Federal Housln&: Authority in li49 for plinned community excellence Jn the East \Yhit- Uer development. The project "'as the n cited t s one of America's best. He and partner ?t!ark Boyer founded Jackmar Homebuilders in 1939 and were instrumental tn developl.ng East Y.'hittJer, Montebello and South Gate. He was •llO In the resllurant 1upply dlstrlbutlon field. Survivors include bls wile Ju1nlll 11.nd five children, , .. -,_..,___ r..,. ... -·- Bigelow'.s ~:Kal~ld~~~O~J~hl!g·Cai'pef• bursting with brilliant colorl i . ...--• ..._....... .. ' Come .. ; feast,your,.•Y••I. . I ' -.,.. . .... ,,,.. ~ A ,.:"''"' -dl•r of 0. •l1>~M <Olon , • ' $1 095 . ithot'1 Kol1ldoKOpel Yo11 '"""' 1ff it to ,..,li11 , .... hot o lilt thi1 91nt Big•low co•p•I con gi•• •, (your decor. Only l ig1!ow ••Pi!rll (gn c.1MI• ~ ,• CO!pel llk1 thtt-<1r.,,, wilt. lh• I ACiting 1 .. u"'•oNt v: SQ? YO. i. ol}odoy\•. . • • -J , ' 't ~ \ -ALDEN 'S CARPETS . DRAPES 1663 PLACENTIA AVE. SANTA ANA, OUN., TUSTIN C•I. , • ALDIN'S •1D HILL CA•l'lfS I DUrt•tn COSTA MESA 646-4838 llJ74 l"I•. Tnth!. C«Jf. t)l-lJ44 17 • Cosia ~Mesa Today's Fl••I EDI TI ON N.Y. Stoek8 VOL . 64, NO. 124, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TU ESDAY, MAY 25, 197 1 TEN CENTS Mayor S~el{s 'Super-dream Agency' • Ill Mesa Creation or a committee to dream up new concepts for Costa Mesa's 21st Ce n- tur y destiny -a visionary advisory agency -v.·as revealed today. Mayor Rober t h-1. Wilson said he will ask the city council ~1onday to authorize appointment of such a group. He en- thusiastically Identified its . proposed members. The idea is an outgrowth of Monday night interviews DI a dozen candidates Mer11taids All who applie·d for two expiring Costa Me1a Planning Commission terms. Mayor Wilson said he will. at the same lime. propose re-appointment or Qim- mission Chairmari Charles A. Beck and Commissioner C. C. "Chic" Clarke. Architect Beck la a veteran member, while Clarke was named last summer to fill resigning Commissioner Don Hout's remaining 12 months. Each wanted a new term. but Mayor Wilson ia ao bnpressed with talent a.nd expertise of the other applicants he believes they can be valuable too. "I don't think this type o! thing baa been done at lhe city levtl anywhere else in Southern California,'' he declared. "We would like them to dream of what they would like lo see for a Costa Mesa of the future," Mayor Wilson eiplained. • ''The whole tbougtit behind it is not to give them assignment.! -perhaps 110me suggestions -but really to let them come up with their own Ideas." DAILY ,.ILOT Iliff Photf All of these girls are fishing for the Miss Mermaid title to be bestowed upon one during 26th annual Costa li!esa Fish Fry an.d carnival June 4-6. Kneel· ing,..(from left) are Debi Usedom, Susie Bies and Lori Bekas. Standing (from left) are Jacqui Spurlin, Marianne Bergeron, Jacquie Frasco, Micki Spell· meyer, Joanne Padilla and Jo Ellen Diedrich. Lawy er Defends Unborn Children In Court Case Dr. John Shriver Gwynne may be faced with a countless number of new and in· tangible adversaries when he faces abortion charges June 2 in Orange County Superior Court. Santa Ana allorney Robert L. Sassone described them in a unique petition filed "'ith the court Monday as the "many thousands of unborn children who will be deprived of life if the present abortion statute is repealed." Sassone asks in his lawsuit that the court recognize him as the legal guardian of "baby boy Jones, baby girl Smith and all the children yet unborn who are menaced by the like of Dr. Gwynne." Earlier story, page 9. Gwynne, 29, and his mother Mrs. Rubye Unruh Gwynne, 56, face trial on charges of attempted abortion and con· spiracy to commit abortion. The phys!· cian confirmed Monday that he Is still performing daily abortions at his Santa Ana clinic. Sassone, who unsuccessfully sought election to a Fountain Valley City Council 1eat last year, will be admitted to the criminal action against Gwynne if the court accepts him as the legal guardian of unborn children. Mesa Apartmen~ Projects Given Planners' Approval A series of apartment projects to be built under zone exceptio n permits ruging from 12 to 61 units was given the Cost.a Mesa Planning Commission·• stamp of approval Monday. One rezoning application openh1g the way for R4 multiple density development in a Harbor Boulevard commercial zone wa!I recommended for city couJ1Jci1 de- nial. A second similar request for a S.13 acre property in northeast Costa Mesa, now intended for semi-public use such a! offices, recreaUonal and cultural facili- ties. was CORtinued three weeks. Ward Inveslment Company won lent.a- live approval of a 44-uiL deveJopmet 11t 770 w. WJl!IOn St., reduced from an orig· inal 56-units the staff recommended for denial. Rede!ign of the project in an existing JU medium density zone provides a two percent~lncrease in open green area at Reagan to Send Own Tax Ref onn To Legislature a two perce nt reduct.ion tn structure«:· cupied land area. A tone exception permit for builders Fredericks. Mlller and Rochelle, to con- struct 61 units at 140 W. Wilson St., was given unanimous commission approval. Commissioners voted against a rezone petition by John E. Wells and Donald R. Ward for a switch of Cl property on Ponderosa Street at Harbor Boulevard to the R4 density designation. Complaints generated by apartmenl! now elisting in the area, plus general plan designation for continued commer- cial use were cited for the action. A.delay until the June 16 meeting was imposed on Land Evolulfon Incorpor· ated"s 5.13-acre rezone from Ml indus- trial to R4-CP zoning on Pallsades Road west of Red Hill Avenue. Staff plaMers had recommended denial on grounds the property eventually ad· jacent to the Corona del Mar Freeway is intended for semi·public development and u.se. Study on freeway impact is now due. One other apartment project for LaRue Frey Inc .. of Santa Ana , to build 12 units at 2009 Maple St., in a tmedium density 2one with certain setback changes was unanimously approved. Re said for the Present tht panel would be established for a one-year perl~. com- prised of five members. Mayor Wilson also referred to the p~ posed committee as the Planning Group of the Future, saying it could delve into various aspects ot orderly community growth and development. He 1uggested certain areas of study by these eiamples: -Preservation and organization of open space and recreatJonal areas, a topic of much community concern. -Examination and review of a recently adopted General Plan, geared for what the city will be like in 1990, at its pred icted population saturation, only in terms of v.·hat lies beyond. -Methods of controlling the trend of increase in multiple density apartment development to provide adequate -but not excess -housing. Planning Director William L. Dunn warned months ago of an impending crisi.! In rental vacancies. baaed on er: isting and future apartment construction. Ground has already been broken for one 1,100.unit lakeside compleI in the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club and Mesa Verde vicinity, while other large projects are now opening for occupancy. ·A few more are in planning stager, while builders are ofte.n being turned down in new bids for high density, where medium or low density growth is cs.. DREAMERS, Pare I) Panther Cleared Seale Kidnap-Murder Case Dropped NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP\ -A SUperior Court judge today di!ml ssed murder -kidnap charges against Black Panther Chairman Bobby Seale and a local Panther lead~r Erika Huggins on grounds an unbiased jury would be im· possible to select. The decision came just 24 hours after a jury of seven whites and five black!! rep:irt.ed lt could not rea ch a verdict in the case, and the judge had declared a mistrial. Decision Due In Balboa Murder Case A decision on whether or not John J. Blegu.a ot Balboa wiU be prosecuted on murder char a: es was expected today, after a conference with the Orange Coun· ly District Attorney. Biegun, 21 , of 42.1 W, Bay Ave., was ar· rested and formally booked Thursday on l!lUspicion of slaying Mrs. Susan Lane Constant, 21, with whom he lived. Coroners' preliminary examination in· dicat.ed the young mother of a JS.month· old son had been choked to death, while a drug overdo!lt was also considered. Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson said to- day new evidence based on toxicological tests is being evaluated, to determine its possible impact on the homicide case . "He. might ht back on the streets by this afternoon. or else we'll get a murder complainl.'' Sgt. Thompson remarked be fore leaving for Santa Ana. The body was found about 9:30 a.m. Thursday by lhe suspect's brother Thomas, 24, who rep:irtedly told detec· tives Mrs. Constant had mentioned suicide before. Police went lo the Sea Le v e I Apartments about midnight Wednesday regarding a fam.ily disturbance involvi ng Biegun and Mrs. Constant. The outcome was the immediate arrest of Thomas Bicgun on a drunk in public cha rge and the booking several hours later of J ohn Biegun on minor traffic warrants. Released after a mandatory sobering. up period, the older brother returned lo the apartment to find Mrs. Constant dead in bed with her baby crying beside he r. The infant was turned over to county juvenile authorities. 38 Passe ngers Dead In P a nama Bus Crash PANA MA CITY (UPI ) - A bus racing another on a bridge over the entrance.to the Panama Canal crashed through a guard r11il Monday and plunged 150 feel. killing 38 of 43 passengers. Five Rurvivors were in critical at Gorgas Memorial Hospital In the Canal Zone. ''The state has put 11! best root forward," said Judge Harold V. Mu1vey. ~ Mrs. Huggins was mobbed by Panther supporters as I.be left the court.room. Seale remains M custody, awaiting posting of bail on his four year contempt conviction in the Chlcago conspiracy trial. The defense argued that the Seale- Huggins trial and the prospect of a new trial created "an absolutely unique situa- tion in -the history of criminal trials in tbe United States." David Rosen, Seale's local attorney, said. "A retrial in this case weuld not be a trial at all in the 1ensa that the Constitution requires it." Chief prosecutor Arnold Markle moved for a change of venue and a delay in the proceedings until the publicity around the ca!lt abated. The judge denied the mo- tion. Judge Mulvey noted that Mrs. Huggins (See PANTIIER, Pace I ) Waterway Ceremony Nixon in W allnce Land To Test South Support MOBILE, Ala. (UPI) -Presldtnt Nix- on flew into George Wallace country to- day to test his Deep South political strength and participate in ceremonies marking the start of construction of the $ 3 6 5 ·mi 11 ion Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway. !\ioments after Air Force .. One arrived al Brookley Field from Homestead, Fla., the President was greeted by Wallace, who may challenge him In the 1972 presidential election. But the Alabama governor played down the political implications of the yisit. "Let's not talk about politics," Wallace told reporters moment! before the Presl· Restaurateur Sarah Ne wman Services Set Funeral services will be held Wed· nesday for Costa Mesa restaurant owner Sarah G. Newman who died Monday at Hoag Memorial Hospital after a lengthy illness. She was 55. Mrs. Newman, with her husband Keith, owned and operated the El Pescador restaurant on 17th Street since 1960. . Mrs. Newman was an avid angler and El Pescador is decorated with pho!()s and stuffed trophies which attested lo her skill as a fisberwoman. She was also a member of the Huntington Beach Women's Golf Club. A resident of Orange County since 1932, she and her husband were living at 8122 r.:unster Drive, Huntington Beach, at tbe time or her death. In addition to her husband, Mrs. Newman leaves her mother, Gertrude Irvine and a brother, Joe Irvine, both of Huntington Beach . Services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Pacific View Chapel. Corona del Mar. dent arrived. ''We're happy to have the President in Alabama. We think it ii a great honor to have him here." Nixon chatted briefly with Wallace about the weather, which had been rainy until minutes before he ·arrived. "I hope you needed the rain," the President said. Nixon then Invited Wallace and three other Southern governors on hand for the ceremony -John Bell Willianis of Mississippi, L<luie B. Nunn of Kentucky, Reu.bin A1kew of Florida -to ride with him in Air Force One during the af .. ternoon to Birmingham, Ala .• where be planned a briefing with Southern editor• and publishers. Nixon entered a limousine with David and Julie Eisenhower for a four.mile trip through Mobile to the Alabama state docks. site of the ceremony dedicating the waterway. Nixon halted at the outskirts of Mobile and changed from the limousine to a con- vertible and rode into lown with David and Ju1ie at his side. Wallace rode into town ahead of the President and did not participate in the motorcade. Light Quake Jiggles San Diego County SAN DrEGO (AP) -A light earth- quake wa!I felt over a wide area of San Diego County early today. No damage was reported. Resident.'! of Escondido, Jamul, La Mesa a11d San Die.go told authorities that they felt the shake. at 3:03 a.m. In Pasadena, California ln!titute or Technology reported the temblor gave a preliminary reading of 3.7 on the Richter Scale. The epicenter wasn't pinpointed. Weather "Baby boy Jones and baby girl Smith are just fi ctitious represenlatives of the untold number of children who will never know life if Dr. Gwynne'Ji arguments ar~ accepted.'' Sassone said. "No party represents them and my petition is de· gigned to protect their interests." The petition is unique to Orange County but its language closely follows that of a lawsuit entitled the United States versus Milan Vuitch. SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald Reagan today announced he wlll send the Legislature hls own tax "refoNJ1" pro- posal conslating of a huge reduct.ion in property tues coupled w:ith big hikes in the income and aalet taxes. Newport Lawsuit Seen The stock market isn't the only thing dropping suddenly. Look for a five-degree dip in the mercury Wednesday, from 75 to 70 degrees, along the coastal area. That court action. still undecided, alAO seeks to prevent the passage of abortHJn Jaws thttt would mean the death of "un· born childr en who wUI be adversely of· fected by 11bolition of the abortion statutes.'' J\{edina Da te Delayed FT. McPHERSON, Ga. (UPI ) -The Army ~ionday postpOned for the lhird lime the pretrial hearing for Capt. Ernert L. Medina, charged with o v e r ·a 11 re spoMibillty In the My Lal mas5acre. The new "tentative" dlfte (or the he.arlng w11s set for Ju.nil 16. Re.ag11n aald ht decided to act in an at· tempt to get the Legislature oU "dead center" after five months or inaction. Under the eovernor's new propoul, property tu reductions would range from 20 to 100 percent -with less ts:· ptnsive homes receiving the biggea:t benefit. The owner of • $15,000 home, for ln- 1llnct, would receive a SS ptrctnt reduc- llon ln property taxes 11ext yea r. For a $20,000 home the bite would be 40 percent leM and for a i25,000 home It would be 34 percent. Council Votes to Cancel Freeway Route Agreement By L. PETER RRIEG Of rl'lt Cl•llF "ltt ll•lf Newport Beach councilmen voted unanimously to cancel the Pacific <;oast Freeway route agreement Monday night but the expected action came onJy alter they were told I.hey woukt be sued because of It. Calling the act of unilaterally breaking ·a contract "reprehensible," E. O. Rocleffer, a Newport Beach developer, told the council : "If the Division of Highways or no other group steps forth demandll'lt • damages, I will personally do il." "At my own expense," he added. Rodeffer said be might 11lso aue tht state for fa iling to live up to its: contr1ct with the people if it doesn't take any ac· lion. There has been no indication the state plans to act. California Public Work1 D I r e c t or J11mes A. Moe has said he won't instig1te liti9ation over the rcscis,,lon while the Sl8te Highw11y Commission has rtmalned virtually alltnt on I.he subject. Mayor Ed Hlhh tried to talk Rodeffer ' out of it, urging he Instead COClperate aii M~ has pledged to do In Unding alternate traffic problem 1<1lutlon1 via the city's tr11ffic study. RO<ieffer was not t.o be: dinuaded . He called the study, "too littlt, too late.'' "I recognize the fact I'll be unpopul11r.'' Rodeffer aaid, also telling: councilmen he realized they have no other choice but to follow the dictates of the electorate. Newport Beach retldenls votc<t nearly g to 1 Ma ri:h 9 to rescind the agreement, which wa!I signed in October, 1968 and (See FREEWAY, P11e ll ), INSIDE TODAY Three community theaters ar• re surrecting two old. t i m e comedies this week , while UC Irvine mounti the first coun&y production of a Te 1rne1see Wit. liam.t drama. Ste Theater Noter, Page 20. (•Ille"'!• I (lltdi;hnl !J• • Clli .. ltlM •H c-lt• u Creu"""' IJ Dfflfl ... llttl ' '"""" "•" . l1t"'1•!nrnt11t lf>lt Pl11111t• 1 ... 11 14GJM(... ,. ARit ltll41n 14 Mt.IM ,.,,. I I I . - • ' DAILY PILOT c DIES IN NEWPORT BEACH Siient Screen's Dillon • Ziegfeld Girl Edith Dillon Dead at 75 Death has closed a final curtain oo the career ()f actress Edith Heller Dillon, ooetime Ziegfeld Follies girl who acted, danced and sang with all the heroes ()f 1esteryear b1 American It.age and cinema theater. No funeraJ will be held (or Afiss Dillon, 75, who spent her last 10 yeara in Newport Beach. ' The woman who broke into theater at 11ge 13 in Washington D.C. with a role in ~·Peter Pan" lived at 35 Beach Drive, with a close CrJend, Mrs. ClaJre DeLeon. Her career .spanned the early days of \'audeville theater. with several later Starring roles in silent films and finally a 20th Century Fox Studios comeback as a Contract actress. She went back to work in the mid·1930s after her second husband, film director Jbhn F. Dillon died. A IOD by her first marriage to theatrical producer. L. Lawrence Weber Jr., is currently starring in the Broadway 11it "Applause," with actrtss Lauren Bacall. 1t1rs. DWon also leaves a son Anthony P . Dillon. of Hollywood, a sister Ethel V~sa. ol Hollywood and a brother, Walt.er Grady, of San Dieg9. Her Broadway stage debut came in ''The Peasant Girl," with Emma Tren- tini, while she starred as Prima Donna of (he 1916 Ziegfeld Follle.s which !eatun!d i:ome other young talent. • Cast members included W.C. Field!, Eddie Cantor, Fanny Bryce and famed humorist Will Rogers. Appearing ln Jerome Kem·s "Leave it to Jane," Mrs. DUlon also Introduced the 3fren SObg, while her lines in films "Governor's Ghost," "ChUdren o f Destiny" and "Hwnan Hearts" were all 'V!Tltten subtitles. From PIJfle l PANTHER ... had been in jail more than two yean and Seale hsd been held in Connecticut more than one year. The court clerk had informed the judge that the array of prospective jurors had been practically elhausted in the some tour months It took to pick the jury for the first trial. J udge !11ulvey said a new panel ()f pro· i;pective jurors could not be assembled until September. ORANGl COAST DAILY PILOT Oil.ANGE COAST PU8LISHING-COM,ANY Ro1t•rt N. w •• d ,,._:Hnt •NI ,1111111~ J•cli: R. Cwrl•y \'le• ,rc1ld"'t er.cl ~r11 M1,,.,.. Thorn 11 Ke1¥ll l!dl10I' lho,..•1 A. Mwrphin• M1n1tlnt l!:dl'°1" Ch•rlet H. Looi Rich••d P. Nell Anl11•n; M1n1olrit1 Ed!lor' Colto M"• Offlcit l l O W11I l 1y S1 rt 1t , M1;1ing Adel••••: P.0 . Bor 1560, 'l616. 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' Tutsdat, May 25, 1971 Low er ·Gr ad 100 Arrested Standm·ds Air Police Quell Bid Studied Travis Race Riot Proposed mm1mum graduallon re-- quirements ror the Newport·?i.lesa Unified school district are being studied by the Board of Education prior to discussion set for the June 1 meeting of trustees in Costa fo.1esa City Council Chambers. At their last board meeting three dif- fering viev.·poinl! on the course work guidelines y,·ere presented by members of the district's high school graduation re- quirement.s committee. 1'1le study group also presented a second draft of the pro- posed requireme.nl!. After the board expresses ils views on the proposa l, another re vision is expected betore a final version is brought to the board for approval, Associate Superin- tendent Norman Loats said. The 19-member committee was set up to fonnulate requiremenl! in accordance with the 1968 Senate Bill One. That legislation authorizes local districts -for the first time in California -to setu1> their own guidelines. The state sets onlv a ba re bones schedule of required courses. DAILY ,ILOT ,Mfti lly ltld'IM M:tellltt' TRAVIS AFB (UPI) -Air po!Jre in battle gear put down racial brawls in· volving an estimated -100 airmen today on this sprawllng Air Force base, a major embarkation point for Vietnam. More than 100 per.sons were arrested. six injured. and a fireman died of smoke inhalation fighting a blaze in an officers quarters "'hich base officials said "'as apparently set. The fights broke out ~londay night following sporadic weekend clashes between bla ck and v;hite airmen ap- parently touched off when a white woman airman v.·as roughed up Saturday night . Order was restored about midnight, and the base took on a normal ap- pearance by dawn. But guards in battle dress and bearing carbines were st&· tioned at its main entrance. A base spokesman said the fighting ••seemed to be connected with racial trouble" which was reported sporadically ()n Sunday. Fireman James T. 1'1orsberger ()f Nap a, died wh.lle fighting the officers' quarters blaze. Another fireman was in· jured. Briefly. the state minimum re- quirements are: -Completion after grade six of a one semester course in each of five subject areas: English. American hist or v , . .\i;ierican government, mathematics alid science. INTERIOR SECRETARY STOPS TO SIGN HIS NAME Bo y Scout J an Van Zeumeren Lends Strong Support Tbe 6,500 service personnel on th"e"Dase were restricted to quarters during the night. . --Completion or 400 minutes of physical education for every 10 days of school . --Completion of 200 unil.! or course work alter grade eight. ---Successful completion ()f a stan- dardized ()r district developed math and reading test with at least eighth grade competency, or, -Enrollment in a remedial math or reading course, should a student not meet the eighth grade proficiency leve l. A stu- dent would take such a course at least one semester. 'Ibe district committee added similar eighth grade Jevel of proficiency slan· dards in the subject areas or \ITitinc. speech and li.!ltening. At the recent board meeting committee member Bill Watkins said he supported both the general goals of the proposal and the objectives spelled out for achieving those goa1s. He said. ho"·ever. parents frequently asked him "how many courses \vii i students take to meet those objectivtS ?" Wat.kins urged the board to extend use or the present system where student.!! must meet specific requiremenl.!l for a number of courses in a subject area. before being given a diploma. Another committ.ct member presented a dllfering viewpoint. Fred Peterson said there was a "split between the traditiona l approach and the use of behavioral ob- jecUves" being proposed In the ne1v minimum graduation requirements drafL From PIJfle l FREEWAY ... ~·hich covers the proposed route from Bayside Drive easterly through Corona de! Mar. ROOeffer said damages resulting from the council's acUon ""·ill be untold millions·• and said Newport residents didn't underst.a.nd this ()r they wouldn'l have voted the way they did. "The people should know y,·hat their tax bill will be as a result or this action,'' he said. Rodeffer said the costs to the city "'ould be the amount spent by the state in engineering and land acquisition and damages to people "'ho sold out and packed up an d left because they thought they y,·ere in the path of a freeway. He al so said Newport Beach resldenl.! alone "·ould have to pay the cost ()f new roads to handle the increased traffic. "\Vitb a freeway, the federal govern- ment would pay 90 percent and tht state \\.'ould pay the rest." Rodeffcr said. "Y()u're going to throw all that away and it'll all be on your zhoulders. Y()U may have. money for the studies, but no money to implement them," he said. Councilman Carl Kymla, who once Jed council ()pposltlon to the re.9cisslon elec- tion, contended that the public had been \1•ell·informed prior to the election . "The people must have felt the da~ages would go 81\'ay," Rodeffer rephed. Rodeffer, a ne"'comer to the ]~year· old coastal freeway controversy, lives in Coron a de! 1'fa r and heads Rodeffer Investments "·hi ch currently is head- quartered in Arcadia but is in the proces.\ of constructing a five.story office build ing in l\'ewporl Center. Earlier. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers had suggested Rodeffer ''l90k up Lorenz. Stoddard and 11arl and /ine some good henchmen or allies ... Rogers referred lo forme r Newport Beach mayors Charles E. 11art and James B. Stoddard and former Viet Mayor Hans J. Lorenz "'ho had unsuc· cessfully sought an injunction lo bar the spectat freeway election. Cabinet Member. Morton The trouble apparently broke out du r- ing the evenj)J g meal when fistfights erupted In the mess hall and several men began throw ing salt and pepper shakers al each other. Visits Viejo Students Fighting quickly spread into the central portion of the base. Travis AU-Police called for help from surrounding city police depQ;ments about 9 p.m.1 an hour after tbe disturbances started.. Base Commander Col. John Blake an· nounced shorUy before midnight tha t tht Secretary of the Jnlerior Roger" C. B. htorton made lots ()£ friends at La Paz Intennediate School in Mission Viejo 71-1onday "'ith plans for coastal wild life preserves and a pledge to do his part in conquering pollution. La Paz. the first school belo\v lhe university level to receive a visit from J\.forton, turned out in full force to greet the tall. striking cabinet minister. J\·lorton explained to the students !hat he \\.·as in California lo fly over the South Coast and Los Angeles area seeking places to preserve for migratory \veter fo"·I and other birds so •·they too can slay "'ilh us and be part of the life systems which are part of ~ and nature. "I'll also be going to the San Francisco Bay Area hoping to develop a national recreation area similar to the one that went to Congress for the gateway of New York Harbor." he said. J\.1orlon complimented the students ()n !heir reC<'nt \\'eek long activities delicated to patriotism and lighting pollution. "I hope you continue it in this school and as individuals aU through your lives," he said. He said there are many things people and government "·orking together can ac· complish. .. \\'e must make sure the countryside remains clean, beautiful and fun to Jive in. I pledge to you I will put 211 the resources of government at my command to do this if you will help me." Later, in an interview "'ilh La Paz's student newspaper editor Jim Harris, l1r1orton again commented on the \\'Ork students at La Paz had done in the field of ecology. •·1 think it's the greatest.'' he said. "Government can·t do it all. Students must do as much as possible." He added that there are more pro- posals ~fore Congress this year for soJv. 1ng environmental problems than ever before. ~Orlon arrived at La Paz by helicopter, landing in the school parking lot. lie "'as greeted by principal Don Hickman and presented a large "One Ex· Ira Club" emblem. The emblem, the symbol of the school'• F rona Page l DREAME RS. •• de.signaled by the General Plan. Developer Phil Spiller told councilmen o_nly a wee~ Igo multiple density i.'I literally being, des ignated from an economic standpoint in today·s moli'ey market. forcing the builders in that direction. Mayor \Vilson proposes Jack A. Chap.. nuin as a ternpo rary. 90-daJ chairman for his conceptual planning com mittee . Chapman ls a business administration executive with Philco-Ford Aeronurronic, \\'hose staff includes another con1n1ittrc candidate. C' om pan y troubleshooter \\'illian1 Bandaruk. The mayor said Ba n dar uk , Aeronutronlc Special Assignments Direc· tor. is eminently qualified tor the panel based on his t"·o years' experience on a~ .Orange County General Plan review com- mittee. He ,.,,ould round it out with Bruce A. llowie. real estate investor; John A. \\.ooclard. Copper Pipe tnstitute represen· tath•e with broad building and plumbing industry know ledge and James A. Agrusa. management cost and engineer· ing executive with Douglas Aircraft, ecology club, means '1one extra piece of paper picked up plus your own." During bis brief visit, Morton examined s~udent exhibits in the library ()R pollu· lion and patriotism, exclaiming "Your program is as fine a one as l'\·e ever seen ." After speaking to students at an assembly Morton took time out to have a chat with Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers. Caspers ha s urged that federal funding be sought to turn the Back Bay area of Newport Beach into a \l'ildlife preserve. " The ca binet minister shook many hands and stop~ once to sign his name for the Y·Indian Maidens. Having nowhere to place the paper, he used the convenient and willing bead of Boy Scout Jan Van Zeumeren. "Jt was a tremendous experience for the kids," said Assist.ant Principal George Blek. "They will remember this more than any of their educational ex- periences.·• Field, Service Gets $200 Gift A gift of $200 has been presented to the Corona del Mar Oiapter of American Field Service by Corona de! Mar Kiwarus Club. The presentation was made by Clu b President C. E. "Buck'' Schueller at the club,'s Ladies' Day Program. wMn four foreign studen l.! currently attending Corona de! Mar High School on American Field Service scholarships -Eli Fure Norway; Friew Kelemu, Ethlpia; An~ Bouffier, France and Denilo Fodriquez Costa Rica -were the speakers. ' American Field Service p r o v I d e s scholarships to enable foreign students to attend high schools in the United States and for American high school students to ~ludy in other countries. /" ' .\ I I Bigelow's "Kaleidoscope" Shag Carpet' bursting with brilliant color! ' ' ,Come ••• feast your. eyes! A twln11ln9 l'll tdl1y of 1lx vlb1onl colort '. • . 1 0 !hot't Kol1ldottop11 You muJI stt lt to ,toliit $ 95 "'hol a Ult thl1 <jlrtO! l i;tlow ccnp11 con uivt your dtcor. Onl~ lliitlow 1ap1rl1 con cr1ot1 o carpel lik1 1hi1-oliv1 with the t •dli119 fHUng ., ONLY. . of today! . SQ. YD., "I don't netd any henchman,'' Rodeffer retorted, "I've done my o"'n soul searching. This Is the worst thing J've ever heard of." • Long Beach. situation was under control, but all newsmen "·ere barred from the base. Before leaving, ther reported seeiag several airmen taken by ambulance to the base medica l center with injuries. They said that fight.. had started out on a racial basis, bul soon •prea d in- discriminately. Blake said those arrested would be charged with 'Such offenSes as assault in- citing to riot and insubordination. ' Officers from the Solano County Sher- iff's Office, California Hiway Patrol and Crom nearby police departments were called to the base to aSsist air police. More Eagles Found Dead In ITTyoming CASPER, Wye>. CUP!) -Three more eagles were discovered dead in \Yyoming Mo1day and a feder.al investigator said a low-level aerial search also turned up 8 number of dead game animal•. The discoveries came as state of£icials "-'ere confirming an earlier finding that the eagles were dying ,.f O'.tn ntremtly potent poison known a.s thallium. Charles LaW!ence of the U.S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wil11di:! said t'1e bodies ()f two golden e'lgle1 were found near Glenrock in ctnlraJ Wyoming and on ranchland 35 miles south1Yest ()f Casper. The third bird. a baJd eagle, was found near Cheye:ia!. Lawrence said there was nolhin" to In- dicate that the other dead anlmaia n1et th~ir de.albs by the same p::iisoning, bu: sa!d a laboratory study \li·ould be madt . Special Service Slated in Mesa · Fairview Baptist Church of Costa ~fesa has gotten right into the spirit of the Jong Memorial Day weekend. ln a unique move, they have scheduled regular worship hour at 7:30 p.m. Thurs· day for those in the congrtgation who will be ()Ut ()f town Sullday enjoying the lon& holiday. According to Rev. Met Taylor, there will be a child care are• and tbe kids will be shown special nature travel !II.nu. A fami ly refreshment time will follow the service. The church is located at 2525 Fairview Road . ALDEN 'S CA RPETS. DRAPES ~~ef~er Indicated he mny act quickly. 111 file as soon as I'm sure nobody else ls going to," he said •nd when Rogers pointed out that the statt1 hiis In- dicated It won't do anything, Rodeffer responded, "then I 'JI h11ve my lawyers start drawing up the papers In the morn- ing." ""'e as a city council honestly know "·e don't have all the answers needed ," !llayor \Vilson remarked today. "'But some of our citizens 11 re anxious to serve and also have fantastic erpcrUse .'' He cited local leaders.hip efforts to draw more clttzens Into communHy dc\'tlopment and problem·solvlng in fleotds of avlaliOll, crime prevent ecology and charter goveornmcnt study. 1663 PLACENTIA AVE. SANTA ANA, OU.NGI, TUSTIN Coll , •• ALDI N'S RID MI LL CAR•ns I DRAP'tRllS Councilman Richard Croul did nol at· fend J\lond(ly n ight"~ nlt'C!!,. .. ' I COSTA MESA 646-4838 11)74 l"IM, T .. tf11, C•llf. IJW:t44 g n d e t 17 Saddlehaek EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL 64, NO. 124, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1971' TEN CENTS Morton Gives Viejo l(ids Hope for Ecology St:cret.ary of the Interior Rogers C. B. Morton made lots of friends at La Paz: Intermediate School in Mission Viejo ?i1onday with plans for coastal wildlife preserves and a pledge to do his part in • conquering pollution. La Paz:, the first school below the university level to receive a visit from Morton, turned out in full force to greet the Lall, striking cabinet minister. Morton explained to the student! that he was in California to fly over the South Coast and Los Angeles area seeking House Nixon - Guards Ask Newer Boat In Clemente San Qemente's chief lifeguard made 1 item plea Monday for a new, $14,450 patrol boat to city councilme11 studying next year's budget -a ves.sel replacing the present sea skiff which is •·woefully inadequate." Lifeguard Chief Dir.k Hazard said he made the budget request this year aft.er actively studying other lifeguard rescue craft for the past six years. Councilmen, meeting in study session. could take no action on the request, but seemed convinced of the need for the new fiberglass rescue boat which H a z a r d terms the most important piece of rescue equipment available. to his lifeguards. If councilmen agree to leave the ap- propriation in the budget some use might be realized from the new boat before the end of this summer, Hazard sa id. The new, 26-tcr-29-foot all-weather craft "'1ould replace a deteriorating plyw~ aea skiff with an outboard engine which Hazard said is "completely shot." "The engine has .go~ almost twice the number of recommended hours by the manufacturer," he told councilmen, "and the botlom plywood is almost all go~e. The whole bottom is really epoxy which we have been pouring in for years.'' Hazard said the remainder of the hull has many cracks and patches of dry rot. The plywood also has lost most of its &trength. The vessel's proposed.replacement con- rorms , roughly, to craft in use for the past severaJ years in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach. The boa~ a.re used primarily in riptide rescue st1uat1ons and assisting boats in dist ress. Hazard pointed out to councilmen that San Clemente gµards will undou~~ly play an increasing role. In 8;5SISt1~g ves sels in distress as yachting activity in- creases at Dana Harbor. "We expect a lo( more distress calls on our beaches, and with the pre~nt boat giving a tow to a stranded vessel 1s really 1 tough job," he said. Even a small derelict boat churning nn the surf could be a deadly incident -not only to the occupants of the stranded tTaft, but to swimmers as we.II, he added . One selling point which has won some councilmen is the tight nature of the lifeguard departmtnt budget proposed for the next fiscal year. L Cuts appear throughout the materials, ,upp\ies and services section. The total ""department budget less the proposed cost of the new rescue boat ia $54,320. The expense for the rescue crart will come from another budget category - the revolving fleet account. If the boat ls purcbased, it would replace a boat in operation by local guards for the past 13 years. The old a~iff was purcticased by the County of Orange and operatr.d by the local guard service. Ship Takes on Water SAN DIEGO !UPI I -Th• unique Scripps Institution or Oceanography reaearch vessel Fllp began taking on water early today and was in danger ol sinking at the B Street Pier. The Flip is unique in that it can be placed In 11 vertical posllion by Oooding the b•llast tank. The ~year-old ves..~I ii used for underwater 11coustical research. I places to preserve for migratory watu fowl and other birds so ''they too can stay with us and be part of the life systems which are part of us and nature. •·r'll al.so be going to the San Francisco Bay Area hoping to , develop a na~onal recreation area similar to the one that went to Congress for the gateway of New 'York HS:rbor," he said. Morton complimented the students on their recent week long a c t i v it i e s delicated lo palliotism and fighting pollution. "'I hoJ)e you continue It in this school and as individuals all through your lives," he said. He said there are many things people and gove~nment working together can ac- complish. "We mwt make sure the countryside remains clean, beautiful and fun to Jive in. I pledge to you I will put all the resources of govemment at my command to do this if you will help me." Later, .in an interview with La Pai.'s 1tudent newspaper editor Jim Harris, Committee Morton again commented on the work students at La Paz had done in the field of ecology. •·r think it's the greatest," he said . "Government can't do it all. Students must do as much as possible ." He added that there are · more pro- posals before Congress this year for so\v. ing environmental problems than ever before. Morton arrived at La Paz by helicopter, landing in the school parking lot. He was greeted by principal Don l(ills Hickman and presented a large "One Ex· tra Club" emblem. The emblem. the symbol of the school's ecology club, means "one extra piece of paper picked up plus your own.'' During his brief visit. Morton examined student exhibits in the library on pollu- tion and patriotism, exclaiming "Your' program is as fine a one as I've ever seen.'' After speaking to students at an assembly Morton took time out to have a chat with Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers. Caspers has urged that l ·~'"0'~Ft;· "'" ) 'i: ~~ ,;; ·, . federal funding be gought to turn the Back Bay area of Newport Beach int.o a wildlife preserve. The cabinet minister shook many hands and stopped once to sign his name for the Y ·Indian Maidens. Having nowhere te place the paper, he used the convenient and willing bead of Boy Scout Jan Van Zeumeren. ''It was a tremendous experience for the kids." said Assistant Principal eGorge Blek. "They will remember this more than any of their educatkma.I ex- periences." Beach Giveaway COUNTY FLAP BRINGS CITIZEN PARTICIPATION Mrs. Beverly Dlehl, Mrs. Constance Benedict Viejo Housewife Pickets Over Tax Collector Move Mrs. Constance Benedict of Mission Viejo was on the job again Monday in the county seat. Since January she has been an almost comitant "watchdog'' of things.that go on at the Board of Supervisors sessions. Monday she and a. friend. Mrs. Beverly Diehl, also of Mission Viejo, picketed county Tax Collector Robert Citron be.cause of "his unfair attack on county Data Services Director Robert Farmer." Last Tuesday Mrs. Benedict, 39, of 24182 Spartan St., backed Farmer in his appearance before the supervisors In defense of his office which had been at- tacked by Citro n. She told board members "Citron owes Farmer an apology for his statements and 1 asked him for it." Monday afternoon Mrs. Benedict told reporters, "1 telephoned Mr. Citron this morning and ask him if he was going to apologize. He didn't seem interested in talking to me, in fact he hung up.'' 'l"e two women took a stand in front of the Tax Colleclor's offict, 630 N. Broadway, Santa Ana and explained to passersby why they were there. They carried placards reading, 11What'l'I Going On Here?'1 and "ls Citron Fair?" They explained, and urged questioners to attend today's supervisors' aesslon. One man asked, "Who is Cil(on?'' Another said ''I know who he is, t work in data services." The diminutive Mrs. Benedict sa id she has been concerned about C'Ounty govcrn-- ment "ever since t read in the Daily Pilot in January that those three men had put all county department heads on notice." She referred to an action which tot1k place at the first stsslon of lhe new board I aft.er new Supervisors Ralph Clark and Ronald Caspers were seat.ed, in which the pair. along with Board Chairman Robert Battin put all county department heads on notice by refusing to reappoint them for 1971. On the motion of Supervisor Caspers they were renamed to their posts on a month-to-month basis for the following six months. Mrs. Benedict next appeared before the. board when an abortive attempt to fire County Administrative Officer Robert E. Thomas was launched by Battin and Caspers. She sa id she didn't "think it was fair to fire Mr. Thomas wlthout a proper hear- ing." The Thomas fir:ing fell through, for the moment, when Supervisor Clark refused to go along with the other two. Since then Mrs. Benedict has appeared 1t almost every board meeting. ' . U.S. to Borrow Cash To Stem Dollar Flow WASHINGTON (UPI) -The govun- ment plans to borrow 5500 million Jn Europe even lhough the interest cost w1ll b& $.1.3 million more for a three-month period than it would be in the United States. - The European borrowing Is intended to sop up some or the dollars which have been flooding European c u r re n c y markets and which have rtaulted in five Euro~n countrieli Increasing the value of their currency relative to the dollar. I Pendleton Area Lease Wins Okay WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House Armed ~ces Committee today re· jected a proposal backed by President Nixon to declare as excess federal prtr perty 4,055 acres cf land adjacent to bis San Clemente beachfront home. The committee recommended instead that about six miles of beach al the Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base be leased but not donated or sold to the state for use as a public beach. ' Under this arrangement, the land w.ould be available for Marine am· phiblous landing exercises, Also, the beach area to be leased by California would not include a one-half mile beach used by an enlisted men's club. The committee rejected outright the recommendation that some 3,400 acres of an inland area at Pendleton be declared as excess and turned over t'he General Services Adminislration (GSA ) which reportedly planned to sell the land for residential devr.lopmenL The unanimous voice vote came as the committee considered a Navy exc;:ess land disposal report previously approved by the Federal Property Review Board \\'hich President Nixon created in 1970 tn find ways of making available unused federal property. The Marine Corps through a lease sign- ed March 31 by the Navy Department and the state or California agreed lo lease 3lh miles of beach al $1 per year for 25 years. The President announced at that time wh!Je he was in California that he would seek congress ional approval Jor an additional three miles and to make available the 3,400 acres. Thus. on March 31, a Navy disposal report was filed with I.he committee re- questing that all 61h miles of beach and the 3,400 acres be declared excess federal property and turned over to the GSA for disposal . INTERIOR SECRETARY STOPS TO SIG.N HIS NAME Boy Scout Jan Van Zeumer•n Lends Strong Support Clemente Council Probing Expanded Fire Services San Clemente city councilmen Monday pored over initial plans for an expanded lire department headqua rters and staff, but remained nonco1nmittal about a plan which would give six full-time firefighters one of the longest work weeks in the state. Initial proposals to institute a two-pla- toan. 24-hour system with four new firemen are included in the proposed 1971·'72 budget. 1r councilmen approve lhe plan and the proposed new headquarters building were to be completed by neit January, the new firemen would be added to the existing force of two firemen and a chief. Volunteers still would form lhe bulk of the city firefighting force . But some councilmen e1pressed con- cern that the work week -up to 20 hours more than many Orange C.Ounty cities, would cause personnel complaints by the men involved. By comparison, the city or Laguna Beach, which ts comparable In .size to San C::Iemente, works its firemen 63.Z hours a week. Under the proposal made by City Manager Ken Carr one engine crew would be available around the clock. Fire Chief Merton W. Hackett proposes a seven.man crew, instead, which would bring lhe average work week down t.o 74 hours -still well above the 62-hour COUll· ty average. The estimated cost of the extra men for the last half of the coming budgel year would be $16,8.12 in salaries, plus in· creases in holiday pay and city pension and workmen's compensation fees. One other aspect of the propoged $30,578 fire department budge t is the purchase of a special chain saw with a hard metal cutter for use in tires and ac· cidents where victims' are trapped in autos. The $475 saw, Hackett told councilmen, would reduce rescue times cons_iderabJy. Planner Holds J(ey Vote On three separate crashes during Ult past year. he said, the saw would have reduced extrication time from 15 minute.I to Jess than 30 seconds. Orange On Clemente Cycle Shop The fate of a request to operate a com- petition motorcycle service shop in a building near San Clemente's business district will rest on the vote or San Clemente Planning ~Commissioner Roy Garbarine Wednesday. Garbarine, absent two weeks ago when the request ·yielded ·a Z.2 deadlock· \'Ote, will ·Ca&t the deciding ,vote on a request by Mike Ryan o( 120 AveniCla Serra. Ryan· has asked · for city permission lO oper,te the shop in lhe lower level of an. Ruta par~ shop at the corner of Serra Rnd' El Camino Real. · Commissioners who opposed the use in 11 commercial zone said they fesr noi6fl from the high-performance engines would create a nuisance. Ryan proposed to build a sC'und·proof room t.o test the engine if noise became a factor. The premises, he told com- m!Nlonen., were the only available COm- mercially zoned rooms where lhe business could lake place in the city. I Commercial zoning. he argued. entitled him to the motorcycle use at the bulding. Commissioners Art Holmes and Ed Lesnenski voted for the use in the com- mercial mne. Commissioners George Bowles and Ray McCaslin opposed the idea,. • Gaibarine Will break the tie · vote On Wednesday. Coach Slates Speech . 8 . GeOrge Hartmaii. Sad d I eh a c k College's bead football coach and athletic department chairman , will 11ddress atudent1 and their parents at the flrst an- nual a\hletic banqueL June •,at Marco Forsl<f Junior High School. ''Tbe....[O\e_ .tO{ , AlbleUcs Jn .. Everyday- Life'' will be Hartman's topic at the 1 p.m. evC!nt to be held In tbe 1c:hool cafetorium. " ' . Weather The stock market isn't the only thing dropping ·suddenly. Look for a five-degree dlp in the mercury Wednesday, from 75 to 70 degrees. along-tlil? coastal area.. INSIDE TODAY • Three communttu theaters are resurrectirtg two old t i m. e comedier this week, white UC Jivitie mounts ~the fir:Jt r..out1t11 produotion of a Tenneisu .Wil- liams dra»ia. See Theater: Notes, Page 20. (1Uf9rttl• I • M\llWI '"'* 1t CM<•I*' o, I Nltlefltl Ntw1 N ci.u UIM tt.H •or .... c.v~,, ' CMll<t 11 l']Yll Ptrltf 11 c .... won u SllWtl '",' Dtllfl Ht1kt• ' SIOtlt Mlltii. 1•11 fill«I•' ,..,. ' Ttlt~TdM If lnlHlllnmtnl H•tt n..itwt lt:P, "'~~ 1 .. n ·-w.1rhtr ~ H-K-U Wlllt. W•'~ 1, Alfn LlflOlrt It , Womtn't frlltwt 1).lt MOVhi• , ... ,. W.rll ..... W • I I· I . i j i ·:'! t All. 't Pll.01 s: Tuudi11, M1y 25, 11J71 ·Pip·e \Gripes Expected W a ter District Projec t May lre·Public By PATRICK BOYLE Of t1M D•llY f'li.I Sl•ll Jn a move that v.·ill go against traditio n and possibly evoke some public outcry. the Laguna Beach County Water District is going to lay a pipeline prior to street paving -not afterward11. The appannt break ln Standard Operating Procedure, according to district supervisor Bill J\foorehead, can vnly be attributed to lwa things -money and city cooperation. The district now has the money to construct the main pJpe line up Summit Drive and the clty will cooperate by not paving the street until the job is done, probably near lhe end of the i;ummer. Told by Cl emente Agent .,,old by Lagm1a Detective The public outcry , 1'-toorhead says. will be the res ull of pipeline construction on 1he narro.,..', winding road. The people v.·ho live along Summit Drive or in the hills above wlll be greatly inconvenienced by the frequent closing of lhe street and the no ise of heavy equipment. lnstal\ation of lhe 2~·inch cement waler 1nain is scheduled to begin sometime this ,1·eek and the $100,000 job will be ac· complished by Kisling Construction o[ Laguna Beach. !\foorehead said con· tractor ~lickey J{jsling, a former superintendent of the water district, is perhaps the best man for the job. By JOHN VALTERZA Of "" 0.11, , .... '"" : Maryland is not the only area or the -country where a young drug user can 1vtallow or inject Phencyclidine then i;Guge his efes out of their sockets. . 'nie South Orange C.oast holds the ~enUal for equ ally grueso1ne behavior. ~ause phencyclindine forms the bulk or the psyd1edlic market in the area. : 'So says San Clemente narcotics detec.- ti've 'ferry McAdam. who warns t~at despite a dozen different labels, the ~angerous animal tranquilizer is among the numbe r-one illicit drug ingredients now being sold in the area. : ••it's been around for months," he ex· ~ed," and PCP (the drug's shortened aame) probably has worse effects than fven I.SD." •McAdam said he was not surprised when he heard of the bizarre case in Baltimort, Md., last Friday in \\'hich Charles Innis Jr., the ~year.old son of a promine nt Massachusetts lawye r, clawed his eyes from their sockets while wider the influence of the drug. "It's really scary stuff," McAdam said. No one can really predict the exact ef· tects, especiaDy when it's blended with oomething else." Where does PCP come from? The pharmaceutical manufacturing firm of Park~Oavis produces a small 4;1uantity of the drug, usually_ used in primate research as a tranquiliur. Thus, because so litUe is legally made, --most of the illici t PCP Js brewed in ii· legal laboratories. And when it reaches the market, it's peddling becomes part of the con- temporary marketing and labeling syn-o drome of the drug culture. Mixed with LSD, deaJers might label it "'organic mescaline" -sell!ng it as the ••natural" variety or the drug which nature places in peyote. '"The term 'organic' is big In drug sell- ing these days," McAdam explained. '·The kids figure ii it's 'organic', then it must be good." The same drug generally forms 100 percent of every dose of Psilorybin (the hallucinogenic mushroom ingredient) sold on the South Coast. The recently isolated drug TI!C, which Is the c"emical essence of marijuana. also is in demand on the drugmarket these days. .. But all THC is Phcncyclidine as well," said the officer. Other labels placed on the potentially deadly drug include: -"Super 'Veed"', peddled as a potent form of marijuana, hut actually parsley flakes laced with PCP. -··The Peace Pill." : -"HCL". whi ch ironically ronforms lG the chemical initials of hydrochloric acid. -"Dust of Angels"' Another irony ste.ms from the latter Peppard Union Ends BEVERLY HILLS. Calif. (UPI) - Actor George Peppard. 38, and his \l'ife. .aclre$S Elii.abelh Ashly, 31, announced ~J.fonday they had legally separated after five Jears of marriage. They were mar· ried in Ho\lyv.·ood in 1966 and have a son. Christian, born in 1969. It \\'as the setond marriage for both. OIANG-l COAST DAILY PILOT . • . • • • • • OAAN(.;: CO~ST PU!!LISHfN(; '<lMPAN'f Robt rt N. W 11d ,., .. ,.,ef'I •nd PwOJl~~·r J1<k R. c~,1 ,., Vici Praklllnl •nd c;,,,.,.11 '"'""~'' lho1111• lr:tt•il EO•IOf" 'J}lol!'l•I >.. M ~rp~;ftt M1n1g1t>9 EOilllr C.~11l1J H. leo1 P.ic~ard P. Nill >.111,11 n, M1111>;'1"1f i.Gl\Oft i..o,111• lfftii Oflk• 22? Fe1••• >.•1 •~• M~llin9 1dd1•u : l'.O. l ot ~b6. '9l6Sl s.. c 1e111.,.te Offl•• JOS No1lh fl C•mifto R.111, t2•lt Otffr Offlctt Ca11• Mto1: m w"r !•'f !i•rtrl tl1W1191"1 IH<~~ lU3 How~ ICNl<:Y1rcl tt...,rlroflon eu cil; 11ui BHUI BOllJl•••ll DAILY P io.OT. Wlllo -i(ll 11 temilfot~ ,~. tl""'·l'rr." ~ ""°'il~td dl<!V t•,IPI i ..... dl"f 1t1 '"'"'"'" l<llliO<ls for l.101111• lt•<ll, tol(orpMI 1 .. c11. co.11 Mn•. 11 .... uno•on ltltfl, l'OU"!litl V1\1N, S..11 ci.:..,..,1.1 CIPltlfllflO •~.cl S'ddl•OiclC, 1 11,. w11f! -~IO!o<>tl (dillo.•. l'rl"<IPI! pr!l\11"" pl1nl l.t et UI w .. ; .,., .lolt•t:, cci.11 Mn•, T~t,Mitte 1714> 142-4121 Clca11fkti Al.-.rtltl•' •42·5•71 Sell CS-.•I• All h 111ert ... n : t~., .... ~tJ.4410 Lett•• le•lt All D•J1•rt11el'tl: 1.1.,11e .... , .. ,.~. ~t. l9'1o ~ Cot1I l'~bll•lllflf , C-WI' JtO -· llfl'lh. Ul1•U,.llilfll , d !llil'i.t • ""'" ...... •d ...... l .. INflta "'*""" '"l "f DO ~ Wl-1 11M'(.ltl P«• """'*'_ .. ~ ---,. - $fCWlf ~ _,... .. ~ 11 Mtw!IOl'I ~·~ 81'14 c...•• """., c1111.,,.i.. s..bler•llf•O'I .. , anlW 11.1' -\l!tlf l II'( m.111 I? IS """"''~/ mlllllrt ll1tllMI-. si.J:t 11•11ftl,, label placed on the combination depressant. anesthetic and hallucinogen. Dealers sometimes refer to "Dust of Angels" as "DOA". Those are the oft.used intials for ''dead on arrival." Board to Eye Elections Of Trustees By PAJ\IELA HALLAN 01 ttit O•llY l'l'-1 Slllt A change in trustee areas and possibly a change in the method of electing representatives will be studied · by trustees of the Saddleback College District. Han! Vogel, chainnan of the college board or trustees, said Monday that a study will be made possibly involving trustees of lhe school districts v.·itJtin the college•s sphere or influence. J "We are at the point where reap- portionment is necessary. whether or not we make a change in the election procedurts," said Vogel. "There has been massive growth Jn Michael Collins' district. the Saddleback Valley. It dwarfs the others now. There are 22,000 people, almost as many as in Tustin which has two representatives." He said when reapportionment takes plact!, the Capistrano area probably v.·ould remain the same and boundaries would be adjusted so that the Laguna area would add about 4,000 people. The Saddleback Valley-Laguna Niguel area would probably be cut down while the two Tustin districts would be enlarg· 'd to include the northern part or the Saddleback Valley. Vogel said he appreciated the interest taken by the trustees or the Capistrano Unified School District v.·ho recently ask- ed that a change in the method <>f elect- ing tru stees take place. Trustees are currently eleeted by the entire college district voters, even though each one represents a .particula area . The Capistrano board asked that each trustee be elected only by the people from the district he represents. ''The education code specifies methods of electing trustees are up to the board."' said Vogel. "We haven·t yet heard anything from the other districts but we can look into this."' He said reapportionment, however. '\'ill take priority and that he and trustee John Lund will do a preliminary study. Nol only is Kisling able lo handle the specific COJ;JStruction problems which wiU be encountered along Swnmit Drive, Moorehead says, but the contractor has also had experience \\'ith irate citizens whose lives have been upset by con· ~!ruction of a water line. Moorehead says the winding street, barely v.·ide enough for ty,•o cars to pass • each other, will be closed ror short periods of lime during the next three monU1s. However, the contractor will be responsible for allowing room for emergency fire. police and ambulance unils to pass the site. The contractor \vill be able, because of such limilations. only to lay a short distance of pipe at a time. The con- struction ditch will ha ve to be closed each night, Moorehead says. The contractor v.·ill also be responsible for erecting fences and guard rails in the area for safety purposes. Beginning at the intersection of Agate and Glenneyre Streets, the v.·ater main goes under Agate to Summi t and then up Summll Drive lo it s intersection wilh Summit \Vay. "And then when we get done with the pipeline," ~1oorehead notes, "the city will have il lied up again v.·ith paving opera- lions. '' The line "'ill carry water from the main system under G\enneyre Street to lhe Summit Reservoir. v.·hich supplies water to homes in lhe surrounding hills. 11oorehead points out that "·hen the road is closed. all of the residents Jiving in the area will be able to use Alta Vista Way as an alternate access to their hom es. Jn addition to the Summit Dri ve line construction. 1!oorehead says the district \11ill also soon begin work on a new 3.5 million gall<in rese rvoir on the hill above the Festival grounds. The new facility, costing about $500,000. will replace the dilapidated J00,000-gallon existing struc.- ture and should be completed by the summer of 1972. He said there should be little public in- convenience in 1he reservoir construction and the site v.·il\ be landscaped as a park upon completion. "Too often, people haven't been made aware 0£ the care that goes into such construction,'' Moorehead says. "They are only aware of the inconvenien~ they are subject to." Shi p Takes on Water SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The unique Scripps Jnstitulion of Oceanography research vessel Flip began takin g on \vater early today and was in danger of sinking at the B SI.reel Pier. • Capistrano Takes Steps For City Manager Plan San Juan Capistrano took its first i.lep to institute the city manager form or government h1onday with several major shifts. The city council authorized the first readJng of an ordinance v.·hich creates 1he office of city manager -filled by Donald G. Weidner. It rtplaces the office of city administrator. \\'eidner also was named city clerk. Acting City Clerk Robert Johns resigned so that he can devote more time to his position as city planner. As a ci!y manager, Weidner's salary \\-'ill remain the same but hi s responsibilities 'viii be increas.ed. According to the (lrdinance he v.·ill be responsible for the hiring and firing or department heads and their subordinates except for the city clerk, city attorney and treasurer. While all employes of the city v.•ill bt responsible to him, \Veidner will be directly responsible to the city council ror the ··efficient and e f I e ct Ive ad- ministration or all the affairs of the city which are nov.' under his cootrol." The ordinance states. hov.·ever. that all matters of m<ijor importance will be first discussed with the council and he v.•ill ha\•c no authority in policymaking or legi slative (unctions. The ordinance further states that the council and its members will not give orders to subordinates of the city manager except for purpcises or inquiry and 1vill not give orders to the city manag'cr except during council meetings. Lagu11an Leap s Fro1n Path As Trucl{ Slants Into Home A Laguna Beach 1,1·oman gazing out he r the vehicle. 1nve$tigators said tire tread ~tudy \1·1ndow narrO\\'ly escaped serious marks on lhe curb indicates the wheels injury J\fonday arternoon when a runaway hari inderd hem turned. pickup truck plunged down a sterp hill :ioon:!e~~~~c':~:~: ~;r~ ~!~nnuc: :~da~~~ and through the sidt of her house. tinulng down the embankment into the Pol!ce said ~frs .. John Vickers, of 815 side of the heuse. investigators said . Park Ave., \\'Ould undoubtedly have been 'T'here u·ert no injuries bul the truck and hurt had she not seen the \•eh!cle coming the house sustained m11jor damage. and jumped out or its palh. Flre units reSPonded to a report of A The truck, a Ca.llfomia Department of broken natural gas line and severed elec- AgricuUure Vehicle. embarked on irs tric;:il lines as a result of the vehicle's dri\'erless journey__!:om in fro.~t or 8fS __runa'A·ay trip. Both the gas and the-power Park Ave. F'fed Mang old. an Orange res!-were turned Qff, Two lowing trucks we re dent and department employe, claimed required to pull lhe veh icle back up the tie had set the parking brake and turned hill onto the roadway folloWing the 1c- the v.·heels toward the curb upon leaving cident. · ' , o•n.v t it.OT 11111 •11t1e BACK IN CLASS Staf•n Schin1inger St udent Leader Back to Sc hool Af te r Tri1111ning University High School's outgoing stu· dent body president has complied with !he Tustin Union High School District dress code halr rules and returned lo school. Stefan Schinzinger, 17, of 18001 Gillm::in St., Irvine bad been suspended J\'!onday for having sideburns that exceeded the dress code limit. J\londay allernoon he shaved them to the required length and y.·as readmitted lo classes, school ofri· cials said. Under the districl's dress code students may not wear sideburns that "flare" or grnw below a line drawn across the cheek from the boltnm nf their ear lobe. Schiniinger. a juni<>r, is student body president of the ne~·Jy-opened high school ()fl Culver Drive near UC Irvh1e. Town Wins Skir1nish Over Soa p Phospha te AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -'Dhl.s city, one of the first in the nation to pass a law banning all phosphorus detergents. is in the process of repealing it. There has ·been a compromise betwee n officials and detergent manufacturers. Officiab: said Monday manufacturers or major detergents agreed to lower phosphorus content to 8.7 percent. The city, in return, has agreed to revoke the section of the ordinance that would ban tr.e sale or all phosphorus detergents by June, 1972. I Hit TraicJ~ Three Students Injured in Crash Driule-slicked pavements contributed to two auto accidents this morning in the ~rea of University High School sending four persons, three of them El Toro teenagers, lo Costa Mesa Memorial liospital. Richard Bingo, Tl , of 2842 Drake Ave., Costa 1.1esa. was in serious condition to. day after the car he v.·as driving v•ent out of control on Bonila Canyon 8oad and stfuck a utiUty pole about 6 a.m. Three University High School students v.•ere injured about 7:30 a.m. as their im- port. compact car collided head-on with a garbage !ruck at the lritersection of Culver Drive and CamPus Drive. Judy, JS, and Dixie Newbill , .17, both or 13325 'Vake St., El Toro, and Carol llawes. 17, of 13326 Wake St., El Toro, \Vere listed in fair condition today. Miss Hawes' car was in the intersection mak- ing a left tum off Culver into Campus Drive when it struck the truck v.tlich v.·as headed north on Culver, The hood of the small car was impaled on the truck's bumper. California Highway Patrol orficers said Tony Alleegos, 24, of Santa Ana, the driver of the truck, \\(as not injured in the accident. University High Principal Viclor Sher- reitt said the school's ParenL faculty and Friends Organization is concerned about the speed limit past the school which presently is set at 55 miles an hour. A second concern registered with tra(- Last Rites Set For Mr s. Reed Funeral services v.·ere held in Santa Ana todav for Nannie Haskell Reed, a longtime . Laguna Beach· and Orange County resident who died Friday at South Coast Community liospital. She was 89. A native of Kansas, Mr!. Reed had liv· ed in the county for 67 years and was' past president of the Spanish American War Veterans Aw:iliary of Santa Ana. Services were held at Winbigler Mortuary Chapel in Santa Ana and in· tennent follov.·ed at Fairhaven Memorial Park. Mrs. Reed, 1,1•ho li\'ed at 270 Cliff Drive, Is sun•ived by a son, Virgil of Laguna Beach; two daughte rs, Mrs, Louise Pen- na o! Laguna Beach and Mrs. Mildred Wood of Santa Rosa; one sister, Mrs. Willett Vestal of Indiana ; 1 O g r a nd c h i l dr e n and 21 great· grandchildren. fie engineers who have promised to survey the situation . Sherreitt said, is the Jack of a lert turn lane. ~fuch traffic int~ th e school come!! south on Culver and must turn left onto Campus Drive, he noted. A parent said this morning "we've been \1•anting 1he speed limit lowered for some time, Now that three students have been hurt, maybe something will be done ."' Coast Pioneer Ramona Castle Services H eld Funeral riles v.•ere held today in San Diego for pioneer Nev,.port Beach resi· dent and authoress Mrs. Ramona Duarte Castle, 82, \\'ho died Saturday in La Mesa. The woman ""'ho grew up in the seaside \•illage·s heyday as a railhead and merchant shipping center published a col· lection or reminiscences only last year. l "Old Newport, The Seaport Years." is the title of the book, contpiled and edited rron1 a series of taped interviews about her early life. The 46-page \'olume published wiUt aid or several Newport Beach civic organiza· lions. conlains a captivating chronicle of bygone days, including houses on stilts and a sea serpent. A trio of bearded, distinguished Stan- ford L'nlversity professors boarded a train upon hearing o[ the discovery, on• \\'inte r around 1900. and found the bea~t to be a rare, 20-Foot-Jong oarlish. Born Aug. 31, 1881 to Spanish-speaking McFadden Brothers I o n g s h o r e m a n Joseph Duarte and ~1rs. Helen Munse n IJuarte. lair..complexioned and of Scan- dinavian de.sctnt, the late 1.·lrs. Castle \\•as one o! t2 childrtn, eight of v.·hom survived infancy. Her brother. Joseph Duarte Jr., wa s the first baby boy born in what was then New Port , \vhere. the family lived in a house built on stilts to escape high tides. One unique moving day lnvol\'ed tov.·ing the family home across the shallow harbor-on barrel floats for relocation near the existing Newport Pier. Survivors inclucll? a sister, htrs. Ann Carmack, of Balboa Island, a brother Ernest, of Costa Mesa, daughter Miss Nettie Duarte, of Anaheim, a son Loren J . Castle of Los Angeles, and a son H. C. Castle, of La Mesa. ~-A U DEN 'S . CARPETS · DRAPES 1663 PLACENTIA AVE. tl>STA MESA 646-4838 SANTA ANA, ORANG-I. TUSTIN Ctll •• , .1.LDt N"S l !D Hin C.1.lltlrS & DRA,i•IES 11374 1,...11,., T"''•· cam. l ll·ll44 ' I • Lag1111a Beaeh Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks • VOL 64, NO. 124, 2 SECTI ONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1971 TEN CENTS Morton . Gives Viejo Kids Hope for Ecolog_y Secretary of the Inler ior Rogers C. B. P.1orton made lots of friends at La Paz Intennediate School in Missio n Viejo Monday with plans for coastal wildlife preserves and a pledge to do hls part in conquering pollution. La Paz, the rirst school t_>elow the university level to receive a visit from ti.1orton, turned out in full force to greet the tall , striking cabinet minister. Morton explained to the stude nts that he was in California to fly over the South Coast and Los Angeles area seeking places lo preserve for migratory water fowl and other b~ds so "they too can stay with us and be part of the life systems which are part of us and nature. "I'll also be going to the San Francisct1 Bay Area hoping to develop 1 national rec reation area similar to the one that went to Congress for the gateway of New York Harbor," he said. Morton complimented the students on thei r recent week long a c t i v i t i e a de\icated to patriotism and fighting pollution. "I hope you C()Otinue It in UUa school and as individuals all through your lives,'' he said. He said there are many things people and government working together can ac· complish. "We must make sure the countryside remains clean. beautiful and fun to live in. I pledge to you I ·will put all the resources of government at my command to do this if you will be\p me.'' Later, in an interview with La Paz's student newspaper editor Jim Harri.!!, ~1orton again commented on the work students at La Paz had done in the field of ecology. ··1 th ink it's lhe greatest," he said. ''Government can't do it al\. Students must do as much as possible.'' He added that there are more pro- posals before Congress this year for soJv. ing environment.al problems than ever before. ~1orton arrived at Ls Pai by helico pter, landing In the school parking lot. He was greeted by principal Don Trustees-elect Moving To Reject 3 Contracts * * * Judge, Balk s At School Halt Order A lawsuit aimed at preventing the outgoing Laguna Beach Unified Scbool District board of trustees from authorlz· ing contract ext.ens1ons ind pa y increases for supervisory personnel ran into trooble Monday within minul~ of its being filed in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Robert Banyard refused to sign 11 court order prepared by the Laguna B1ach Taxpa yers Association which would have halted the proposed action by districl trustees and brought both sides to his courtroom for a pretrial hearing. Judge-Banyard told attorney John Downer that lhe causes of action con- tained in the document were insufficient to allow him to restrain the trustees from action that may be laken at tonight's meeting. Signed by laxpayers association presi· dent Frank Collin. the lawsuit asserts that what it calls a present "lame duck" board Intends to extend the contracts of district Superintendent William Ullom and Business Superintendent Charles Hess from the present expiriation date « J uly I. 1972 to July I, 1973. It also states that the board intends to reclassify upwards the post of director of instruction presently held by Dr. Robert Reeves into a new category, Increase his salary and extend his contract in line with the recommendations for tnJom and Hess. Such action, the complaint claims, would mean "irreparable damage0 to the school district's taxpayers and would ··usurp the function of the incoming board of trustees." The comp laint notes that trustees Patti Gillette and Gerald Linke -due to take office July I -were elected last April 20 en a platform lhat pledged co.!ll cutting and greater economy within the school district. William 'Dlomas llJ, elected at the same time, is already in office filling an une1Cpired term. It may not be possible, the association warn~. to effect such economic.! and achieve reduced rates per pupil in the di.strict if the outgoing board is allowed to take the action outlined in the lawsuit. * * * 4-bit Gunmen Stage Holdup Three youths used a snub-nosed revolver Monday night to hold up a ~year.()Jd woman on the parking lot of a Huntington Beach &hopping cenler. The victim, Mrs. Mary E: Cady, told investigating detectives that the youths she described as being about 14 years old approached her on the lot about 9 p.m. One held her at biy with the aun while the others rifled her purse. She honked her horn u the trio fled but nobody came to her aid. The yowig bandit.. escaped with SO cents. B~Motel Claims $18,000 Loss in Laguna An early morning blaze which began mysteriously in a Laguna Beach mote l room today did an estimated $18,000 damage to the bullding before being brought under control b)r firemen . There wen!! no injuries, either to the motel occupants or to the men fighting the fire . Iavestigators said this morning they had not yet determined the cause ol. the fire. which broke out at about 1:30 a.m. at the Beach Motor Inn, 985 N. Coast Highway. The flames originated in a second floor room occupied by Robert Hall, brother of motel manager Kenneth Hall, firemen said. Smoke from the blaze filled the at.- tic and was pcuring: from the rafters when firemen arrived, leading them to believe initially the entire structure was on fire. However, the flames were centered in Hall's room, located at the end of the building, firemen uld. Hall told in· vestigators he was awakened by the smoke and sound of the flames and escaped his room to sound the alarm, The mote1'11 estimated 30 guests were roUted out of their beds and all were out of the building by the time firemen ar. rived. New Laguna Trustees Say Not Linked to lnj~nction The three newl y elected Laguna Stach school board members who Monday Issued 1 joint statement asking the outs:o- ing board to delay reRewa\ of a~­ mini.strative contraclS. today denied knewledge of an attempt by the Laguna Beach Taxpayer 's Association to obtain a court injunction in the matter. Mrs. Pat Gillette said, ''I'm shocked. I don't know what to say. But I do feel th,oit we have a right under board pc\iey to oonslder this ourselves." Capt. Gerald Unke said he had heard 10mething about the suit but knew nothing ~about ·It. "If-they (the T11C· payers) ar' doing It.. lt'1 their bsulntss, not mine," he said . Truster William Thomu W d he didn't know anythlng about the 1ult, but added, "Maybe the board should have seen It coming. 1 imagine It'• a good ldu. To renew 1 contract like this when a new board is going tc be 1eated Is lcind of uneth ical.'' Attorney John Downer, vlct president of the Taxpayers' Anoci11tlon, who filed a complaint for an Injunction Monday, r;eeking • temporary restraining order to halt board acUon on the contracts, said he waa going "back to the h1wbook.s" k>o day to seek add.JUonal authority for the legal actkm. Downer nld ht felt Judge Robert Btnyard, who denied the injunction Mon- day. would IS!Ue the restrsinlng ()rder to- day ii he could prov ide u lcttptabll precedent. • ' New Board Trio Try to Block Bid By BARBARA KREIBICH Of lfl• 01llY l'fltl Sti ll Identifying themselves as. "the ma· jority of the Laguna Beach board of education" as of July 1, three newly elected Laguna Beach achoo! trwtees moved Monday to head off renewal o[ the contract& of the thret tap district ad ministraton. Extension of the contracts of District Superintendent William tnJom, Business Superintendent, Charles Hess and Direc· tar of Instruction, Robert Reeves is an Item of bu.sinesa on the school board agenda tonight. In a joint statement of pclicy delivered ta memben of the outgoing board. Mrs. Patricia Gillette, Capt. Gerald Linke and William Thomas DI, who were elected in April , charged that extension of the con· tracts is ''unwarranted at this time" and aMounced they would call a special board meeUng on the matter July 1. Mn. Gillette and Capt. Linke will take their seals on the board on that date. Thomas, elected to serve oot the term of retiring trustee William Wilcoxen, was seated immediately after his election. "U these contracts are renewed now and there is a need for revision on 11eating the new bOard member s, this could be a financ ial burden of over $130,000 to the district," the trio states, apparently Implying willingness to buy off the contracts if nec essary. 7"ne statement request& that "the voice of the electorate" as reflected in the new board members be accepted and any gesture ol defiance be avoided by the present board . Under a pclicy initiated last spring by trustee Wilcoxen, an attorney lhe Laguna Beach board moved from four-year to two-year o:mtracts for district ad· ministrators, but with the proviso that the tontracts would be renewed annually ao the holders would always have the security of at least a two-year agree· ment. "Thoogh most districts work on four· year contracts," Wilcoxen said today, "we felt an incoming boa.rd should not be bound for that long. The two-year period was selected as a fair compromise, lo give the new beard time to work with and evaluate the adm inistrators while sti ll providing the security needed if we are to auract top people. "The change was made precisely to avoid hampering a new board." The al· torney also noted that "hundreds or hours" had been spenl by trustees evaluating the three administratars in question. Outgoing beard president Larry Taylor gaid, "This ia a judgment decis ion of four legally elected , duly stated board memben. They have the information and have spent time to make that judgment ." A joint statement lssued today by 'Taylor and present board memben P..1rs. Jant Boyd. Dr. 'Namlln Browne a.nd Dr. Anthony Orlandella points out that the in· coming board members have been Invited to join the okl board In budget &tudlu , provldtd with evaluation forms 1nd ln· vJted ta express their opinions on the Bd· mlnistr1tor1 whose contracts art up for "'JOWOI. 11\e statement concludeJ. "Wt would assume that you, as three d.isUnct tn- dividuals, are Interested ln I.he welfm of the district and will vote your perlOl\11 conscience in every decision. Wt are not awai:e of any publicized 1\at~ nor any l mandate by the voters for anything other than qualified leadership. "Anything less than a i;u preme effort by all of us lo maintain positive and amiable attitudes will bring UMecessary cha cs upon the district." Judge Sentences Sex Off ender To St~te Prison A man who pleaded guilty to kidnaping charges after being accu sed of abducting and sexually molesting two teenag e Laguna Beach girls and their 4-year--0ld brother was sentenced Monday to spend one to 25 years in state prison. Orange County Superior Court Judge Byron K. Mc~1illan ordered that prison term for Nicholas Grant Beard , 27, of West Covina, after ruling thal the defen· dant was not a mentally disordered sex offender. Beard was arresled June 3 after being identified as the man who picked up his three hitchhiking victims on Pacific Coast Highway and moles ted them at knifcpoint after driving them to a remote area. Both girls, 15 and 13; named Beard as their attacker. Nine other felony counts stemming from alleged kidnaping and sexual molestation charges were dismissed by Judg e McMillan. Hit, R un Driver Injures Woman In Laguna Beael1 A 54-year-old Laguna Bcacb woman suffe red minor injuries Monday afternoon when she was struck by a hit and run driver while walking across Coast Highway. Police said Helen W. Shamel, of 815 N. Coast Highway, was knocked to th e pave· ment moments after she stepped from the. curb into the crosswalk at Coas t Highway and Beverl y Street. She SUS· tained bruises and minor cuts but did not require hospitalization following the 4:45 p.m. accident. Witnesses told investigators a light blue or tan Ford Mu stang being driven by a blond. teenaged girl turned from Cliff Drive onto Coast Highway and struck the woman . The young driver of the ca r stop- ped and got out of her vehicle to see if the woman was all right, police said. but when a witness approached, she ran back to her car 1111d sped awa y. The mishap Is under investigation. State Senate Okays Nou~mokers' Seating SACRAMENTO (APl -The stale Senate has gjven fi n•\ leglslalive ap· proval to a bill requiring airllnes, buses .and I.rains: to provide separate seating areas for nonsmokers on all nins 4Jrlglnating In the state. The measure by Sen. James Mill$ (0. Ian Diego), was sent to Gov. Ronald Reagan's desk Mnnday on a 27.1) vot.e. Jt would take effect Next Jan. I. ' Hickman and presented a large ''One Ei· tra Club" emblem. The emblem, the symbol of the school's ecology club, means •·one extra piece of paper picked up plus your own.'' During his brief visit , ~1orton examined student exhibits in the. library on pollu· tion and patriotism, exclaiming "Your program is as rine a one as 1 ·ve ever seen ." After speaking to students at a.n assembly t.forton took time out to have a chat with Fifth District Supe rvisor Ronald Caspers. Caspers has urged that " federal funding be sought to lur.11 the Back Bay area of Newport Beach into a wildlife preserve. The cabiilet minister shook many hands and stopped once to sign his name for the Y-lndian t.faidens. Having nowhere to place the paper. he used the convenient and willing head of Boy Scout Jan Van Zeumeren. "It was a tremendous e1Cperience for the kids." said Assistant Principal eGcrge Blek. ·'They will remember this more than any of their educational ex· periences.'' ' INTE RIOR SEC RETARY STOPS TO SIGN HIS NAME Boy Scout Jan Vin Zeum eren Lends Stro.ng Support Lease See1a Instead Hou se Panel Rejects Plan For Pendleton Beach Use WASHlNGTON <UPI) -Tbe House Armed Services Committee today re- jected a proposal backed by Presiden t Nixon to declare as excess fede ral pr1>- perty 4,0flS acres of la nd adjacent to his San Clemente beachfront home. The committee recommended instead that about six miles of beach at th e Camp Pendleton l\.1arine Corps base be leased but not donated or sold to the state for use as R public beach. Under this arrangement, the land would be available for ~1arine am· phiblous la nding exercises. Also. the beach area to be leased by California would not include a one-half mile beach used by an enlisted men's club. The committee rejected outright the re!Commendation that some 3,400 acres of an inland area at Pendleton be declared as excess and turned over the Genera l Services Administration !GSA) which reportedly planned to sell the land for residential development. The unanimous voice vote came as the committee considered a Navy excess land di sposal report previously approved by the Federal Property Review .Board vohich President N11Con created in 1970 to find ways of making available unused federal property. The Marine· Corps through a lease sign· ed March 31 by the Navy Department and the st.ate of California agreed lo lease 31h: mile.s of beach at $1 per year for 25 years. 1'he President announced at that time while he was in CalUornia that he would seek congressiorial approval ior an additional three miles and to· make available lhe 3.~ acres. Thus .. on . March 31, a NtVf disposal report was filed with the comfnlttee re- questing that all 6!4 miles of beach and the 3,400 acres be decla red excess federal property and turned over to the GSA for disposal. '. Once declared excess federal property, the GSA could have donaled tht1 land to ihe state provided ll w2s used exclusively for pubfic parks or beach. It oould also have sold the highly desirable 8.400 inland •cres to land dcveloper1 . Subcommltlet chairman Samuel S. Stratton CO.N.Y.), uplalnt!d In 1 report f to the full committee that "lh:is bea:ch frontage is essential to Camp Pendleton training, and tbe 1ubcommittee belleve1 that the govel'nment must retain use rights on this beach area.'' Loss cf the 3,400 Inland acres was a matter o( "great concern" to the real estate subcommittee, Stratton said, because it provides ''an absolutely necessary buffer zone between residential areas in the city of San Clemente and I.be Marine Co rps camp at San Mateo and Ta\ego and the associated training ranges and impact areas in the upper San Mateo Valley." He said that although the Navy bad suggested the laod would be turned over to California for recreational and cam· ping purposes a GSA survey recom· mended "very unequivocabty" that it be sold for residential development. Orange Cout W eather The stock market Isn't the only thing dropping suddenly. Look for a five-degree dip in the mercury \Yedncsday, from 7S to 70 degrees. along the coastal area. INSIDE TODAY Thrttt communi!u theo.ttr1 arc resurrecting two old t t m e comtdie.s thil wtttk, while UC Jrvi11e mount.Y t/Lt first count y productJon of a Tenneastt Wit. Uams drama . See Theater Not.ts, Page 20. C•ll,.,,,11 I Cllte~!"' u, I Cllutllff toot• C•mlct IS CrtUWWI U DNlll Mlllc11 I E.itorlll •tH ' '""'t•l~-1 l't-Jt ,hllll(I 10·11 HoNMOll U A.Jiiii L1"4•,_. 14, """""' lt-1' • l I I ' It DAILY PILOI SC .. ----Tuffil~. Miy 25, 1971 . . Pipe Gripes Expected Water District Project May Ire Public By PATRICK BOYLE OI 11!1 Dl llt l'llfll Sllll In a n1ove that "'ill go againsl tradition and possibly evoke some public outcry, the Laguna Beach County \Valer District is going to lay a pipeline prior to street paving -not afterwards. The appare11t break in Standard Operating Procedure, according to district supervisor Bill 1'1oorehead, can only be attributed 10 two things -money and city cooperation. The disttict now has the money tu construct the main pipe line up Summit Drive and the city will cooperate by not paving the street until the job is done, probably near the end of the summel', Told by Cleme11te Agent The public ()u\cry, Moorhead says, will he lhe result of pipt:line construction (Jn !he narro"" winding road. The people \l'ho Jive 'along Summit Drive or in the hills above will be greatly inconvenienced by the frequent closing of the street and the noise of heavy equipment. Told by tagm1a Detective Installation of the 24-inch cement wale r main iS scheduled fo begin sometime th is treek and the '100.000 job wi.ll be ac· complished by .Kisling Construction or Laguna Beach. Moorehead said c.'On- lractor ri·lickey Kisling , a former su perintendent of the water district, is perhaps Ute best man for the job. By JORN VALTERZA OI ...... O•llt Pllflt Sti tt Maeyland is not the only area of the country where a young drug user can &\\·allow or inject Phencyclldine then 1ouge his eyes out of their sockets. The South Orange Coast holds the .potential for equally gruesome behavior, be cause phencyclindine forms the bulk o! the psychedlic market in the area. ' So says San Clemenle narcotics detec- tive Terry McAda m, who warns t~at despite a dozen different labels, the .... dangerous animal tranquilizer is among the number-one Illicit drug ingredients now being sold in the area. · "It's been around for months," he ex· plained," and PCP (the drug's shortened name) probably has worse effects than ·even LSD." McAdam said he "'as not surprised when he heard of the bizarre case in Baltimore, ?I.id., last Friday in which Charles !Mis J r., the 25-year-old son of a prominent M;wachusells lawye r, clawed flis eyes from their sockets while under the influence of the drug. ''Jt's really scary stuff," McAdam said. No one can really predict the exact ef- fects, especiaUy when it's blended with something else." Where does PCP come from? The pharmaceulicaJ manufacturing firm of Park&-Davis produces a small qu ant.ity of lhe drug, usually used in primate research as a tranquilizer. 'Mlu.s, because so little is legally made, most of the illicit PCP is brewed in il· legal laboratories. And when it reaches' the market, it's • peddling becomes part or the con· temporary marketing and labeling syn· drome of the drug cu1ture. fi.11xed with LSD, dealers might label it "organic mescaline" -selllng it as the "natural" variety of the drug \vhich nature places in peyote. "The lerm 'organic' is big in drug sell- fng these days," ll1cAdam explained. "The kids figure if It's 'organic', then it must be good." The same drug generally forms 100 percent of every dose of Psilorybin (the ballucinogenlc mushroom ingredient) sold on the South Coast. The recently Isolated drug TI-IC. which is the chemical essence of marijuana. also is in demand on the drugmarket these days. "But all TllC is Phcncyclidine as v.·eJl,'1 said the officer. Other labels placed on the potentially deadly drug include : -·•super Weed '', peddled as a potent form of marijuana, but actually parsley flakes laced with Per. -''The Peace Pill." -"HCL . ., which ironically conforms lo -the chemical initials of hydrochloric acid. -"Dust of Angels'' Anotl:er irony sterru from the latter P eppa 1·<l Union Ends BEVERLY ll!LLS. Calif. (UPI) - .Actor George Peppard . 38, and his wife, 11ctress Elizabeth Ashly, 31, announced · Monday they had legally separated after five years of marriage. They v.·ere mar· ried in Hollyv.·ood in 1966 and have a son. Oiristian, born in 1969. ll \Vas the second marriage for both. ' OIANGI COAST DAILY PILOT OR,t.'IG!.: CO.UT PUBL.ISHINC. COMPANY Rabt r' N. W eed Prnlelml 1t111 P~bll'lltt J~ci.: ... c ... 1.,, Voe' Pris!Ollfll .,,., c;.nulJ l.ltM;tt lho'"•1 )C,,,jj l'Ol!or lho"'•'-A. Murpliint /,\lnlf~ td•ll>r Cht rlt1 H. Loe' Rlc.~1•d' P. N1!1 Aul1t1~; #>\l"•olnv Efhor~ l tttufl• leKtl Office 11? Fa1t1I A•t"ue ,M1,itin9 tdd1eu: P.O. l o• 61>6, 9265% Se.-Cltlft•~I• Olflc.t 3C5 No1th El Cemi"o R11!, 92.671 Ott.tr Olfictl (Otlt Mou• UO Wt>! 1111 S!•f'f tfl.,.PD'T 1111(~· ll:U Ntwe<>fl llou:t'>'•-d Munll"ll!Dll lltHll: 1117~ lltKll ll;ut•votd label plaoo:l on the combination depressant. anesthetic and hallucinogen. Dealers somelimes refer to "Dust of Angels'' as "DOA'·. Those are the oft-used intlals for "dead on arrival." Board to Eye Elections Of Trustees By P Al\IELA llALLAN 0 1 '"' D1llY r lltl S11H A change in trustee areas and possibly a change in the method of electlng representatives will be studied by trustees of the Saddleback College · District. Hans Vogel, chainnan <>f the college board of trustees, said Monday that a study will be made possibly involving trustees of the school districts within the college's sphere (lf influence. "We afe at the point where reair porUonment is necessary, whether or not we make a change in the election procedures," said Vogel. "There has been massive gro11,·th in Michael Collins' district. the Saddleback Valley. It dwarfs the oUters now. There are 22,000 people, almost as many as in Tu.st in which has two representatives.'' lie said when reapportionment take! place. the Capistrano area probably ¥:ould remain the same and boundaries would be adjusted so that the Laguna area would add about 4,000 people. The Saddleback Valley-Laguna Niguel area would probably be cut down while the tv•o Tustin districts would be enlarg- ~d to include the norUtern part of the Saddleback Valley. Vogel said he appreciated the interest taken by the trustees of the Capistrano Unified School Disfricl \vho recently ask- ed that a change in the method of elect- ing trustees take place. Trustees are currently elected by the entire college district voters, even though each one represents a particu!a area. The capistrano board asked lhal each trustee be elected (ln!y by the people from the district he represents. "The education code specifies methods of electing trustees are up to the board."' said Vogel. "We haven't yet heard anything from the other districts but \\'e can look into this." 11e said reapportionment, flo"·ever. \\'ill take pri(lrity and that he and lrustee John Lund will do a preliminary study. Not only is Kisling able lo handle the specific construction prob lems which will be encountered along Summit Drive, r.1oorehead says, but the contractor has also had experience with irate citizens v.·hose Jives have been upset by con· struction or a water line. Moorehead says lhe winding street, barely wide enough for lwo cars to pass each other, will be closed for short periods or time during the ne~t lhree monti1s. However, the contractor "'ill be responsible for a\lo"'ing roon1 for emergency fire, police and ambulance units to pass the sile . The contractor will be able, because of st:ch limitations, only to Jay a short di stance or pipe at a lime. The con- struction ditch will have lo be closed each night, llloorehead says. The contractor \\'ill also be responsible for erecting fences and guard rails in tbe area for :;afely purposes. &ginning at the intersection of Agate and G!ennerre Streets, the waler main goes under Agate to Summit and then uµ Summit Drive to its intersection "'ith Su1nmit \Vay. "And then when "'e get done with lhe pipeline .. , Moorehead notes, ··the city will have it lied up again with paving opera· lions." The line V.'ill carry water from the main system under Glenneyre Street lo the Summit Reservoir, v.·hich supplies waler to homes in the surrounding hills. Moorehead points out that when the road is closed. all of the residents Jiving in the area "·Hi be able to use Alla Visla \Vay as an alternate access to their homes. In addition to the Summ it Dri\'e line construction. Moorehead says the district "'ill also soon begin work on a new 3.S million gallon reservoir on the hill above lhe f.~estlval grounds. The new facilit v ('Osting about $!100,000. will replace th~ dilapidated 100,000.gallon existing Btnic- lure and should be completed by the surnn1er of 1972. He said there should be little public in· convenience in the reservoir construction and the site will be landscaped as a park upon completion . ··Too often, people haven·t been made aware of the care that goes into such construction," t.-Joorehead says. "They are only aware of the inconvenience they are subject 'to.'' Ship Takes on Water SAN DIEGO fUPJ) -The unique Scripps Institution (lf Oceanography research ''essel Flip began taking on "'ater early today and v.·as in danger of sinking at the B Street Pier. Capistrano Takes Steps For City Manager Plan San Juan Capistrano took its first steri to institute the city manager form (lf government lo.londay v.·ith severa l major shifts. The city council authorized the fir st reading Of an ordinance which creates the office of city manager -filled by Donald G. Weidner. It replaces the office of city administrator. \Veidner also \\'as named city clerk. 1\Cling City Clerk Robert Johns resigned so lhal he can devote more lime to his position as city planner. As a city manager, \Veidner's salary will remain the same but h i ! responsibilities will be increased. According to the ordinance he v.•ill be responsible for the hiring and firing (lf department heads and their subordinates except for the city clerk, city .attorney and treasurer. \Vhlle all employes or the city v.·ill be responsible lo him. \Veidncr v.·ill be directly responsible lo the city council for lhe "efficient and effective ad· minis tration or all the affairs of the city \~'hich are now under his contro l." The ordinance states. however. that all matters of major importance will be first discussed with the council and fle will have no authority in policyn1aking or legislative functions. The ordinance further states that the council and its members will not give orders to subordinates of the city manager except for purposes of inquiry and v.·ill not give (lrders lo lhe city manager except during council meetings. Lagunan Leap s F1·om Path As Trucli Slants h1to Home A LagW1R Beach y,·oman gazing out her study "·indow narrowly escaped seriou~ Injury flt onday aftemoon "'hen a runaway pickup truck plunged down a steep hill and through the side of her house. Police sald Mrs. John Vicke'°', of 81S Park Ave .. would undoubtedly have been hurt had she not seen the vehicle coming and jumped out of its path. The truck, a Cnllfomla Department or AgrlcuUure Vehlclt. embarked on lls drlverlcss journey from in fronl of 825 Park Ave. Fred f\tangold, an Orange resi- dent and deparlmcnt cmployt, claimed he had stt the parklng brake and turned the v.lttls lo"·ard the curb upon leavlna: { the vehicle. Inrestigators said lire tread marks on the curb indicates the 't\'heels had indeed betn turned. The truck rolled for a distance cf about ~00 fttl In leav ing Park Avenue and con- tinuing do~·n the embankment Into the ~ide of the house, investigators s11ld. There were no Injuries but the truck and the house sustained major damage. f ire units re5po11ded lo a report or a broken natural gas line and severed elec· tric11l lines as a result af the vehicle's runaw11y trip. Both the gas and Ute power were turned off. Two towing trucks were required to pull lhe vehicle back up the hill onto the roadway foUowlaa the 1c- cident. • DAILY PILOT "'" Phllt BACK IN CLASS Stefen Sch inzinger Student Leader Back to Sc hool Af te r Trini1ning University High School's outgoing stu- dent body president bas complied with the Tustin Union lligb School District dress code hair rules and returned to :;chool. Slefan Schinzinger, 17, of 18001 Gillman St., Irvine bad been suspended lllonday for having sideburns that exceeded the dress code limit. blonday afternoon be shaved them to 1he required length and was readmitted to classes, school offi. cials said. Under the district"s dress code students may not v.•ear sideburns that "flare '' or grow below a line drawn across the cheek from the bottom of their ear lobe. Sc.hinzinger. a junior. is student body president of the ne\\'ly-0pened high school (}TI Culver Drive near UC Jrvirie. T own Wins Skirmish Over Soa p Phosphate AKRON. Ohio (UPI) -'Olis city. one of the first in the nation to pass a Jaw banning all phosphorus detergents. is in the process of repealing it. There has been a compromise bct\\·een officials and detergent manufacturers. Officials saki Monday mp.nufacturers of majo r detergents agreed to lower phosphorus content to 8.7 percent. The city, in return, has agreed \G revoke the section of the (lrdinance tha t-v.·ould ban the sale of all phosphorus detergents by June, 1972. Bit Truck Three Students Injured in Crash Drlule-slicked pavements contributed lo two auto accidents this morning in the area of University lfigh School sending four persons, three of them El Toro teenagers, to Costa Mesa Memorial }lospital. Richard Bingo, 27, ol 2842 Drake Ave., Costa ll1esa. was in serious condition to- day after the car he was driving went out of control on Bonita Canyon Road and struck a utility pole about 6 a.m. Three University High School students \\'ere injured about 7:30 a.m. as their im- port , compact car collided head-on "''ilh a garbage truck at the iritersection Of Culver Drive and Campus Drive. Judy. 15, and Dixie Newbill, 17, both of 13325 Wake St., El Toro. and Carol llawes, 17, o[ 13326 Wake St., El Toro, v.•ere !isled i n fair condition today. 11-liss Ha"·es' car was in the intersection mak- ing a left turn off Culver into Campus • Drive when it struck the truck which was headed nor th (In Culve r. The hood of the small car was impaled on the truck's bumper. California High"·ay Patrol oflicers said Tony Alleegos, 24 , of Santa Ana , the driver of the truck, ·was not injured in the 11ccident. University High Principal Victor Sher· reitt said the school's Parent, Faculty and Friends Organization is concerned about the speed limit past the school which presently is seL at 55 miles an hour. A second conetrn regis tered '\'ilh Ira!- Last Rites Set For Mrs. Reed Funeral services "·ere held in Santa Ana today for Nannie llaskell Reed, a longlin1e Laguna Beach and Orange County resident who died Fridlly at South Coast Community Hospita l. She was 89. A native of Kansas, f\.1rs. Reed had liv- ed in the county for 67 years and was past president of the Spanish AJnerican' War Veterans Auxiliary of Santa Ana. Services \Vere held at \Vinbigler r.tortuary Chape l in Santa Ana and in- terment followed at Fairhaven f\femorial Park. f\>lrs. Reed , who lived at 270 Cliff Drive, is survived by a son. Virgil of Laguna Beach: tv.·o daughters, lltrs . Louise Pen- na of Laguna Beach and Mrs. Mildred \Vood of Santa Rosa : one sister, Mrs. \Yil!ett Vestal of Indiana; 1 o g ran dch i 1 d re n and 21 great- grandchildren. fie engineers v.·ho have promised to survey the situation, Sherreilt sold, Is the lack of a left tum lane. lltuch traffic into the school comes south on Culver and . mu.st tum left onto Campus Drive, ha noted. A parent said this morning "we've betn \\'anting the speed limit lowered for some time. Now that three students have bee11 hurl, maybe something will be done.·• Coast Pionee r Ramona Castle Services Held Fune ral rites were held tcxlay in San Diego for pioneer Newport Beach resi- dent and authoress Mr:;. Ramona Duarte Castle, 82, "'ho died Saturday in La f\.1esa. The v.·oman "'ho grew up in the seaside \'i!lage 's heyday as a railhead and merchant shipping center published a col· lection of reminiscences only last year. J "Old Newport, The Seaport Years," i! the title or the book, compiled and edited from a series or taped lnter\•iews about her early life. The 48-page. \'olume published "''ilh aid of several Ne"'port Beach civic organiza. lions, contains a captivaling chronicle of bygone days, including houses on stilts and a sea serpent. A trio of bearded, distinguished Stan- ford University professors boarded a train upon he.aring of the discovery, one winter around 1900, and found the beast to be a rare, 20-foot-long oarfish. Born Aug. 31, 1881 to Spanish-speaking ~·lcFadden Brothers Ion g s ho rem a n Joseph Duarte and Mrs. llelen Munsen Duarte, fair-complexioned and of Scan· dinavian de50?nl. the late ~1rs. Castle "'as one of 12 children, eight of whon1 survi\'ed infancy. Her brother, Joseph Duarte Jr., was the first baby boy born in "'hat was then New Port, "'here the family lived in a house built on stilts to escape high tides. One unique moving day involved towing the fam ily home across the shallow harbor. on barrel float s for reloc ation near the existing Newport Pier. Survivors include a sister. lilrs. Ann Carmack. or Balboa lsland, a brother Ernest, 0£ Costa Mesa, daughter Mls!'I Nettie Duarte, of Anaheim, a son Lore n J . Castle of Los Angeles, and a son H. C. Castle, of La Mesa. e-~-·-AUDEN 'S CARPETS. DRAPES 1663 PLACENTIA AVE. COSTA MESA 646-4838 SANTA ANA, ORANGI, 1 TUSTIN C.tl ••• ALDIN'S l l:D HILL CAl,.m & DllAl'IRllS 11314 lr¥l11e, T.,tla, CGnr, l ll·ll44 I I San Cle1nen1e Capistrano VOL 64, NO. I 24, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ED IT I ON ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TUESDAY, MAY 25, 197 1 TEN CENTS 1 Morton Gives Viejo Kids Hope for Ecology I I Secretary of the Interior Rogers C. 8. fl.torton made lot! of friends at La Paz lntennediate Sc.hool in Mission Viejo 11-tonday with plans for coastal wildlife preserves and a pledge to do his part in conquering pollution. La Paz, -the first M!'hool be.low the university level to receive a visit from Morton, turned out in full force to greet the tall. striking cabinet minister. Morton explained to the students that he was In California to fly over the South Coast and Los Angeles area seeking Hous·e places to preserve for migratory \vater fowl and other birds so "they too can stay with us and be part of the life systems which are part of us and nature. "I'll also be going lo the San FrancisC1J Bay Area hoping to develop a national recreation area similar to the one that went to Congress for the 11ateway of New York Harbor," he said. Morton complimented the students on their recent week long a c t i v I t i e s delicated to patriotism and fighting pollution. "I hope you continue it in this school and as individuals all through your lives," he said. He said there are many things people and government working together can ac- complish. •·we must make sure the countryside remains clean, beautUul and fun to live in . 1 pledge to you I will put .a.JI the resources of government at my command to do this if you will help me." Later, in an interview with La Paz's student newspaper editor Jlm Harris, Committee ~1orton aga in commented on the work 1tudents at La Paz had do'ne in the field of ecology. ''I think it's the greatest ,'' he said. "Government can't do it all. Students must do as much as possible." He added that there are more pro- posals before Congress this year for solv- ing environmental problems than evl!r before. Morton arrived at La Paz by helicopter, landing in the school parking lot. He was creeted by principal Don l(ills Hickman and presenled a large "One E1· tra Club" emblei;p.. The emblem. the symbol of the school's ecology club. means ··one extra piece of paper picked up plus your own." During his brief visit, Morton examined student exhibits in the library on pollu- tion and patriotism, exclaiming "Your program is as fine a one as I've ever seen." After speaking to students at an assembly Morton look lime out to have a chat with Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers. Caspers has urged that federal funding be sought to turn the Back Bay area of Newport Beach into a wildlife preserve. The cabinet minister shook many hand! and slopped once to sign his name for the Y·lndian Maidens . Having nowhere to place lhe paper, he used the convenient and willing head of Boy Scout Jan Van Zeumeren. "It was a tremendous e1per1ence for the kids," said Assistant Prlocipal eGorge Blek. ''They will remember thit more than any of their educational t i.· periences.'' Nixon Beach Giveaway Guards Ask Newer Boat In Clemente San Clement.e's chief lifeguard made a item plea Monday for a new, '14,450 patrol boat to city councilmen studying next year's budget -a vessel replacing the present sea skiff which is "woefully lnadequate.'' Lifeguard Chief Dick Hazard said he made the budget request this year after actively studying other lifeguard rescue crafl for the past six years. . Councilmen, meeting in study session, could take no aclion on the request, but seemed convinced of the need for lbe new fibergla~ rescue boal wt.Uch H a z a r d terms the most important piece of rescue equipment available to his lifeguards. If councilmen agree to leave the ap- proprialion in the budget some use: might be realized from the new boat before lbe end of this summer, Hazard said. The new, 26-to-29-fool all-weather craft would replace a deteriorating plywood sea skiff with an outboard engine which Hazard said is "completely shot." l , "The engine has gone almost twice t,pe number of recommended hours by the manufacturer," he told councilmen, "and the bottom plywood Is almost all gone. COUNTY FLAP BRINGS CITIZEN PARTICIPATION Mrs. Beverly Diehl, Mrs. Con1t1nce 18"edict The whole bottom is really epoxy which we have been pouring in for years." Hazard said the remainder of the hull has many crack! and patches of dry rot. The plywood also has lost mO!t of its strength. Viejo Housewife Pickets The vessel's proposed replacement con- forms. roughly, to craft in use for the past several years in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach. The boa~s a_re used primarily In riptide rescue 1t1uat1ons and Over Tax Collector Move assisting boats in distress. Mrs. Constance Benedict of Mission Hazard pointed oul to councilmen that Viejo was on the job again Monday in the San Clemente guard! wiD undoubtedly county seat. play an increasing role_ in a.ss.isling 1Since January she has been an almost vessels in distress as yachting activity in-constant "watchdog'' of things that go on creases al Dana Harbor. at the Board of Supervisors seuions. "We e1pect a lot more distress calls on cur ~ches, and with the present boat Monday she and a friend, Mrs. Beverly giving a tow to a stranded vessel Is really Diehl, a\3o of Mi~ion Viejo, picketed 1 tough job," he said. coun ty Tai Collector Robert Citron Even a small derelict boat churning nn because o~ "his _unfair attack on countr, the surf could be a dead!)' incident-not Data Services Director Robert; Farmer. only to lhe occupants cl the stranded___ Last Tuesday Mrs . Benedict, ~· ?r craft but to swimmers as well, he added. 24182 Spartan St .. backed Farm~r in h.1s On~ selling point which has won some appearance ,befor.e the . supervisors 1n councilmen is lhe tight nature of the defense of h!s office whi ch had been at- Tifeguard dcpartn.ient budget proposed for tacked by Citron. .. . the next fiscal year. She told board members Citron owes OJts appear throughout the materials, Farmer an a.Pology . f~; his statements iupplies and services section. The total and 1 asked him for it. department budget less the proposed cost Monday ~fternoon Mr1. Benedict tol.d of the new rescue boat is $54.320. reporters, I telephoned Mr. Citro~ this The expense for the rescue craft will morning and ask him if he was going to come from another budget category -apologize. He didn't seem Interested In the revolving fleet account. talking to me, in fact he hung up." 1r the boat is purchased, lt ... would 'r'e two women took a stand in front of replace a boat in operation by local the Tax Collector's office, 630 N. guards for the past 13 years. The old skiff Broadway, Santa Ana and explained to was purchased by the County of Orange passersby why they were there. and operated by the local guard service. They carried placards reading, "What's Ship T a kes on Water SAN DIEGO !UPI) -The unique Scripps Insti tution of Oceanography research vessel Flip began taking on Yi"ater early today and was in danger of ainking at the B Street Pier. The Flip Is unique In that It can be placed In a vertical position by flooding the ballast tank. The 9-year-old vessel it u~ for underwater acoustical research. Going On Here?" and "Is Citron Fair?" They explained, and urged questioners to attend today 's supervisors' session. One man asked, "Who is Citron?" Another said "I know who he is, I work in data services." 11ie diminutive Mrs. Benedict said she has been concerned about rounty govern- ment ''ever since I read in the D1ily Pilot In January. that those three men had put all county department heads on notice.'' She refemid to an acllon which l(l(lk 'f'l\ace at the Ural session of the new board after new Supervisors Ralph Clark and Ronald Caspers were seated . In which the pair. along with Board Chairman Robert Battin put all county department heads on notice by re~ing to reappoint them for 1971. On the motion of Supervisor Caspers they were renamed to their posts on a month-to-month basis for the following six months. Mrs. Bene.did next appeared before the board when an abortive attempt to lire County Administrative Officer Robert E. Thomas was launched by Battin and Caspers. She said she didn't "think ft was fair to fire Mr. Thomas without a proper hear· ing.'' The Thomas firing fell through, for the moment, when Supervisor Clark refused to go along with the other two. Since then Mrs. Benedict hag appeared at almost every board meeting. U.S. lo Borrow Cash To Stem Dollar Flow .. WASHINGTON {UPI) -The govern· ment plans to borrow $500 million In Ew-ope even though the il'\,terest cost will be $3.3 million more for a three-month period than It would be in the United St11tes. The European borrowing Is intended to sop up some of the dollar1 which have been flooding European c u r re n c y markets and which bave resulted ln five European countries increasing the valut of Lbelr currency rel1Uve to the doll1r. • ' Pendleton Area Lease Wins Okay WASHINGTON (UPI) -The •louse Armed Services Committee toi:l1y r~ jeded a proposal backed by President Naon to declare as eicess federal pro- perty 4,0SS acres of land adjacent to bis San Clemente beachfront home. The committee recommended instead that about six miles of beach at the Camp Pendleton Maiine Corps base be leased but not donated or sold to the state for use as a public beach. Under this arrangement. the land would be available for Marine am· phibious landing exercises. Also , the bea ch area to be leased by California would not include a one-half mile beach used by an enlisted men's club. The committee rejected outrlght the recommendation that some 3.400 acres of an inl and area at PendleWn be declared as excess and turned over the General Services Administration (GSA) which reportedly planned W sell the land for residential development. The unanimous voice vole came as the committee considered a Navy excess land disposal report previously approved by the Federal Property Review Board which President Nixon created in 1970 to find ways of making available unused federal property. The Marine Corps through a lease sign. ed March 31 by tbe Navy Department and the state of California agreed to lease 3lh miles of beach at $1 per year for 25 years. The Presiden t announced at that time while he was in California that he would seek congressional approval for an additional three miles and to make available the 3,400 acres. Thus, on March 31, a Navy disposal report was filed with the committee re· questing that all 61.h miles of beach and the 3,400 acres be declared excess federal property and turned over to the GSA for disposal. DAILY PILOT 1"11111 -, Rlclll r11 Klllltlf' INTERIOR SECRETARY STOPS TO SIGN HIS NAME Boy Scout J an Van Zeumeren Lends Strong Support Clemente Council Probing Expanded Fire Services San Clemente city councilmen Monday pored over initial plans for an expanded fire department headquarters and staff, but remained noocommltt.al about a plan which would give six full-time firefighters one of I.he longest work weeks in the state. Initial proposals to institute a two-pla· loon, 24-hour system with four new firemen are included In the proposed 1971·'72 budget. lf councilmen approve the plan and the proposed new headquarters building wefe lo be completed by next January, the new firemen would be added to the existing force of two firemen and a chief. Volunteers still would form the bulk of the city firefighting force. But some councilmen expressed con- cern that the work week -up to 20 hours more than many Orange County cities, would cause personnel complaints by the men involved. By comparison, the city of Laguna Beach, which Is comparable tn glze to San Clemente, work! it& fireme~.z hours a week. Under the proposal made by ity Manager Ken Carr one engine . would be available around the clock. Fire Chief Merton W. Hackett proposes a seven -man crew, instead, which would bring the average work week down to 74 hours -still well above lhe 62-hour coun· ty average. The estimated cost of the extra men for the last half of the comlng budget year would be $16,632 in sa laries, plus in· creases in holiday pay and city pension and workmen 's compensation fee s. One other aspect of the proposed $30,578 fire department budget is the purchase of a special chain saw with a ha rd metal cutter for use In fire s and ac- cidents where victims are trapped in autos. The $475 saw, Hackett told ccuncilmen, would reduce rescue times considerably. Plnn·ner Holds Key Vote On three separate crashes during the past year, he sald. lhe saw would have reduced extrication time from 15 minutes lo less than 30 seconds. or .. ge Coan On Clemente Cycle Shop The fate of a request to operate a com· petition motorcycle service shop in a building near .San Clemente's business district will rest on the vote of San Clemente Planning Commissioner Roy Garbarine Wednesday. Garbarine, absent two weeks ago when the request yielded a 2-2 deadlock .. ·ote, will cast the deciding vote on a request by Mike Ryan of 120 Avenida Serra. Ryan has asked for city permission to operate the shop in the lower level of an auto parts shop at the corner of Serra and El Camino Real. Commissioners who opposed the use in a commercial z.one said they fear noise rrom the high·performanu engines would create a nuisance. Ryan proposed to blpld a SC1und0proof room to test the engine lf noise became a factor. The premises, he told com· ml!,ionen, were ·the only available com· ml"J'cially :r.oned rooms where the business could take place In tht: city. I Commercial zoning, he argued, entitled him to the motorcycle use at the bulding. Commis.sloners Art Holmes and Ed Lesnenski voted for the use in the CQm· merclal zone. Commissioners George Bowles and Ray McCasli n opposed the 1dea . Garbarine will break tilt tie vote on Wednesday. Coach Sla tes Speech B. George Hartman, S11ddlehack College's head football coach and athletic department . chairm•n. will address students and their parenQ: at the first an- nuli! athletic banquet June 4 et Marco Jo"orstcr Junior High School: "The role of AthleUcs in Everyday LUe" will be Hartman's topic at the 1 p.m. evtnt to be held in the school caretorlu m. ,I Weather The stock market isn 't the only lhing dropping suddeoly. Look for a five-degree dip in the mercury Wednesday. from 75 to 70 degreeJ, along the coastal area. INSIDE TODAY Three community theaters are resurrecting two old t i m e comedies this week. while UC li'vine mounts the first county production of a Terrnessee \Vil· lioms dromo. See Theo,er Notes, Page 20. Ctltllfftll I Clttdllnt U1 I CllU!flM 10·tf C.-C.1 U Crtt1W91'11 IJ 1111 lriliflct• t RdU6,lll ''" I tft!tf .. lnmtnl It to fl'lftlftCI lt•ll H1.-MtH It AJlll L1M1trt It Ml'#lt• lt•tt I • Mu!IMll l'u1141 11 """"'" ........ .... OrMlff C111nt1 • 111w11 "l•llf' 11 JHrll 111-11 mft Mlrbll l•tt TfllYltllofl 19 Tfltlltrt '"" w"'"" 4 Wllll1 W1tll t• Wtl!'lft'I MIWI IJ.14 Wtflt MIWI W I l '. 2 DAIL V PILOT SC l=------- Pipe Gripes Expected Water District Project May Ire Public By PATRICK 00''1.E pavlni -not afterwards. 01 tilt Dtlll l'Uet Sll!I In a move !hat vdll go against tradition and possibly evoke seine public outcry. the Laguna Beach County \V aler Districl 1& going to lay a pipeline prior to street The apparent break in Slandard Operating Procedurr, according to district suJ)ervisor Dill f\loorehead, can only be attributed to two things -money and city cooperation. The cficltrict now has: the money to construct the main pipe line up Summit Drive and the city will cooperate by not paving the street until the job is <lone, probably near the end of the summer. The public outcry, ?i,foorliead says, \\'ill be the result of pipeline construction on !he narrow, \\'inding road. The people 11·ho live along Summil Dri1·e or in the hills above will be greatly inconvenienced by the frequent closing of the street and the noise of hea1)' equipment. Told by Oeme11te Agent froid by Lagm1a Detective By JOHN VALTERZA Of W.. Dtllr l'Ut! Slltf .: Maryland Is not the only area or the (.-d.mtry where a young drug user can 1wallow or inject Phcncyclldine then 1®ae his eyes out of their sockets. _trhe South Orange Coast holds the p:JteoUal for equally gruesome behavior. 12(!cawe phencyclindine forms the bulk o( u.e psychedlic market in the area. ::So says San Clemente narcotics detec. tive Terry 1itcAdam, who ·warns that despite a dozen different labels. the dangerous animal tranquilizer is among the n~r-<>ne Illicit drug ingredients now being sold in the area. ;"It's been around for months." he eX· plained," and PCP (the drug's shortened filme) probably has worse effects than even LSD." McAdam said he was not surprised when he heard of the bizarre case in Baltimore, Md., last Friday in which Charles Innis Jr., the 25-year-<>ld son of a prominent Massachusetts lawyer, clawed his eyes from their sockets while under the influence of the drug. ''It's really scary stuff," McAdam said. · .No one can really predict the exact ef- fects, especially when it's blended with something else." · Where does PCP come from? ·• The pharmaceutical manufacturing "firm of Parke-Davis produces a small .quantity of the drug, usually used in primate research as a tranquilizer. Thus, because so little ts legally made, ··Yn.ost of the illicit PCP is brewed in ii· h gal laboratories. · :And when it reaches the market, lt's • peddling becomes part of the con- • temporary marketing and labeling syn- • clrome of the drug culture. Mixed with LSD, dealers might label it ~'organic mescaline" -selling it as the . •':aatural" variety of the drug which nature places In peyote. , "The term 'organlc' js big in drug sell- Jng these days," 11-fcAdam explained. .~'The kids figure if it's 'organic', then it must be good." The same drug generally forms 100 percent of every dose of Psilorybin (the , .tiallucinogenic mushroom ingredient) sold Pll the South Coast. The recently isolated drug TiiC, whid1 . is the c"emical essence of marijuana. also is in demand on the drugmarket these days·. "But all TllC is Phencyclidine as well,'' said the officer. Other !abet.. placed on the potentially deadly drug include: -"Super Weed'', peddled as a potent fonn of marijuana. but actually parsley flakes laced with PCP. -"'The Peace Pill.'' •· -"HCL'', which ironically conforms to ptbe chemical initials of hydrochloric acid. -"Dust of Angels" Another irony stems from the latter label placed on the combination depressant. anesthetic and hallucinogen. Dealers sometimes refer to "Oust of .Angels" as "DOA ... Those are the oft-used intials for ''dead on arrival." Board to Eye Elections Of Trustees By PAJl.1ELA llALLAN Cf fllt C11ll~ 'l'-1 11111 A change in trustee areas and possibly a ~hange in the method of electing representatives will be studied by trustees of the Sadd.leback College District. Hans Vogel, chairman of the college board of trustees, said Monday that a atudy will be made possibly Involving trustees of the school districts within the college's sphere or influence. •·we are at the point \\'here reap- portionmenl is necessary, whether or not we make a change in the election procedures," said. Vogel. "There has been massive growth in Michael Collins' district, the Saddleback Valley. It dwarfs the others now. There are 22,000 people, almost as many as in Tustin which has two representatives." He said when reapportionment takes place, the Capistrano area probably would remain the same and boundaries would be adjusted so that the Laguna area would add about 4,000 people. The Sadd.leback Valley.Laguna Niguel area would probably be cut down while the l\\'O Tustin dlstricl.! would be enlarg- l:!d to include the northern part of the Saddleback Valley. Vogel said he appreciated the Interest taken by the trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District who recently ask· ed that a change Jn the method of elect- ing trustees take place. Trustees are currently elected by the entire college district voters. even though each one represents a particula area. The Capistrano board asked that each trustee be elected only by the people from the district he represents. "The education code specifies methods of electing trustees are up to the board ,'' said Vogel. "We haven't yet heard anything from the other districts but \\'e can look into this." He said reapportionment. however. \\'ill lake priority and that he and trustee John Lund \\'Ill do a preliminary study. Installation of the 24-inch cement \l'aler main is scheduled to begin sometime this \1·eek and the $100.000 job "''ill be ac - con1plished by Kisling Construction of Laguna Beach. f.foorehead said con- tractor 1'.lickey Kisling. a former superintendent of the water district, is perhaps the best man for the job. Nol only is Kisling able . to handle the specifi c construction problelns which 1vill be encountered along Summit Drive, l\foorehead says, but the contractor has also had experience with irate citizens \vhose Jives have been upset by con· .struclion of a water line. Moorehea d says the winding street, barely wide enough for \\1·0 cars to pass each other. \Viii be closed for short periods of time during the next three 111onths. However, the contractor will be re sponsible for allowing room for en1ergency fire, police and ambulance units to pass the site. The contractor will be able, bttause of such limitations, only to lay a short dis tance of pipe at a lime. The con· .struction ditch will have lo be closed each night. f\1oorehead says. The contractor \\•ill also be responsible for erecting fences and guard rails in the area for :.afety purposes. Beginning at the intersection of Agate and Glenneyre Streets. !he \\'ater main goes under Agate to Summit and then up Summit Drive lo its intersection with Su111mit \\'ay. "And then when we gel done with !he pipeline.'' Moorehead notes, "the city will have it lied up again \\'ilh paving opera- tions." The line "'ill carry "''aler from the n1a in system under Glenneyre Street to the Summit Reservoir, which supplies \\'alcr to homes in the surrounding hills. l\toorehead points out that when the road is closed. all of the residents livi11g in the area will be able to use Alta Vista \Vay as an al ternate acces.s to their homes. Jn addition to the Summit Drive line construction, Moorehead says the district will also soon begin work on a new J.3 million gallon reservoir on the hill above the .Frstival grounds. Th~ new facility, costing about $500,000, will rrplace the dilapidated 100.000.gallon existing struc- ture and should be completed by the sun11ner of 1972. lie said there should be litUe public in- convenience in lhe reservoir construction and the site will be landscaped as a park upon completion. ''Too often, people haven't been made a\\·are of the care that goes into such construction," Moorehead says. "They are only aware of the inconvenience thry are subject to." Ship Takes on Water SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The wiique Scripps Institution of Oceanography research \'essel r~lip began taking on water early toda y and 1vas in danger of 6inking at lhe B Street Pier. P eppa rd Union Ends BEVERl.Y IIIL!-5, Calif. (UPI) - Actor George Peppard, 38, and hi.s wife, actress Elizabeth Ashly, JI, announced =Monday they had legally separated after .five years of marriage. They were mar· ried in Hollywood in 1966 and have a son, Christian, born in 1969. ll \\'as the second marriage for both. Capistrano Takes Steps For City Manager Plan • . • • . • Ot ANOt: COAST DAILY PILOT 011.-'HG:: COAST PUIL"HIHG :OMP-'HY Robt1t N. 'Wtt<I ''"kl.,I •"' Puo1 .. Mr J•c.l R. Curley Viti PfQ kllnl Ind <itn.rtl l.\1111ptr n,,,.., 1e,,,iJ t:ol!ll!' n.01111' A. "'4 urpl.;11t MtnlO•"I fdllllt' C~11l•1 H. 001 Rit~•rd P. Nill ... 1111~1 MIMglnw EOllOrl Lo9w110 lffc.h Ofll,• 21~ Fo1t1I A•enut M~ili119 1clclre111 P.O. lo• t.66, 92651 S.1 C:le111e11tt> Olllc.1 :!OS Nortk El Cimino Rtel, 92671 Otlltr Olfl(1l COiie M•11· lJO Wt11 81'( S!,tef ~C""Perl l11u>: )ll) loltWf'Or! lieu'""'"' 11\111/lnflon ltH~; I/Iii ... di loultVflll IJA!LV -1\.0T, w1111 whklo ;, <-om~!M~ the frl-~t. b ~w.1111\iO OttlW t•ttJll ,...,., ,1., "' MD•r•I• w ru •• .., ttt• L1911111 •••<II. frlc ........ I lttdo, Cft!I M .. 1. l'l..,..t ... I" Bttcn, .,..,..111n \/•l1tV. 1111 C'";"'"'''' c;1,iu-1r,t $1tcll•b•tll. """" "'''" -,,..,_. ldh!A.•. ''•n<.!Pll Pf'1111n' .,11111 i. ot )ll Wftl l•Y S!rtt,. C"lt Mno, Tt1.,i..11e 17141 142°4Jl1 CloulflePlt AINrtltl•• 14J•ll71 S. c-... ... 1. All Dtptrt-t\: TtltptloH "'1·44JO lapN ...... All Dt11•rt111Hftl ,,,.,... .. 494--9411 C:.,cfl'lt. 1tn. Or•nt• Cont '~111111\ll'IGI • (:Orflfltll)' frlo -•!O'lh, 1llw11·1•~1. d f!Wltl • fl'llltel' W 10_,l...,....ll l!etf'lll _,, tier ,...,...~ wlll'ICWI ..,ci.I ,_, ..,,.,;.,. ol eopyrllbl -· ltt• Cf1t91 ,_. 111W •I NI-' ltwi. ,,.,. cwt. M•to c,111..,.,11. -.u..-.r1~1t011 .., c-rrw tJ.tl '"°""'11' w ..,.n u )I -4lllr1 IT\lllllty ""IJM ""'' ttJS'"""1M1. San Juan Capistrano look its first step to institute the city manager form of government f\.1onday with several major shifts. The city council authorized the first reading of an ordinance which creates lhe office of city manager -filled by Donald G. Weidner. It replaces the office of city administrator . \Veidner also was named city clerk . Acting City Clerk Robert Johns resigned so that he can devote more time to his position as city planner. As a cily manager, \Veidner's salary \\'ill remain the same but hi .t responsibllilies will be Increased. According to the ordinilnce ht! will be responsible for lhe hir ing and firing of departn1ent heads and !heir subordinates except for the city clerk, city attorney and treasurer. While all employes of the city \\'ill be responsible to hin1. \\'eidncr \\'ill be direclly rcspon~ible to the city council for the '·efficient and e ff e c Ii,, e ad· ministration of all the affairs of the city which are RO\\' under his control." The ordinance states, bo\\·ever. that all matters of major importance will be Jirst di scussed with the council and he will ha\'e no <1uthority in policymaking or legislative functions. The ordinance furlher stairs that lhe council and its members will not give orders to subordinates of the city manager except for purposes of inquiry and will not give orders to the cily manager except during council 1neetings. Laguna11 Leap s Fro1n Patl1 As Trucl{ Slams Into Home j A Laguna Beach \\'O man gazing oul her ~tudy window narrO\\'ly escaped seriout injury ~1onday afternoon v.·hen a runa~·ay pickup truck plunged down a sterp hill and lhrough the stdt of her house. Police sald ~1rs .• John Vickers. of 815 Park /\vt .• \\'Ould undoubtedly have b(!tn hurt had she n-0t sten the vehicle coming and jumped out of its path. the vchlcle. Investigators said tire tread marks on Lhe curb indicates the whet:ls had indeed been turned. The truck rolled for a distance or about 300 fer-t in leaving Park Avenue and con- Unuing down tht embankment into the ~ide or the house. inve111igalors said. There "·ere no injuries but the truck and the house sustained major damage. ' B·lt Truck Three Students Injured in Crash f>Alt.Y ,ILOT !TJll ,11911 BACK IN CLASS Stefen Schinzi nger Student Leader Back to School After Tri1nn1in g L'niversity High School's outgoing stu- dent body president has complied \\'ith the Tustin Union High School District dress code hair rules and returned to :;chool. Stefan Schinzingcr, 17, of 18001 Gillman SL, Irvine had been suspended Wlonday for having sideburns that exceeded the dress code limit. ~londay afternoon he :iihaved them to the req uired length and \1•as readmitted to classes, school offi. cials said. tinder the distrirt's dress code studenl3 may not wear sideburns that •·flare" or grow below a line drawn across the check fron1 the botton1 of their ear lobe. Schinzinger. a junior, is student body president of the newly-0pened high school on Culver Drive near UC lrvine. Town Wins Skirmish Over Soa p Phosphate AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -'Utis city, one nf the first in the nation to pass a lav1 banning all phosphorus detergents, is in the process of repealing it. There has been a compromlse between officials and detergent manufac turers. Officials said Monday manufacturers of major detergents agreed to lo\\·er phosphorus content lo 8.7 percent. The city. In return, has agreed to revoke the section of the ordinance that \\'ould ban tf'e sale of all phosphorus detergents by June, 1972. Oriizle-slicked pavements contributed lo t\\·o auto accidents this morning in the nrea of Universi ty Hll:h School sending four persons, three of them El Toro teenagers, to Costa Afesa ~temorial Hospi tal. Richard Bingo, 'Zl, of 2842 Drake Ave., Costa f\1esa. was in serious condition t<>- day after the car he was driving went out of control on Bonita Canyon Road and struck a utility pole about 6 a.m. Three University High School students \1·ere injured about 7 :3<) a.n1. as their im· port, compact car collided head-On with a garbage truck at the iriterseetion of Culver Drive and Campus Dri\'e. Judy. IS, and Dixie Newbill, 17. both of 1332:, \Vake St., El Toro. and Carol Hawes, 17. of 1332& Wake St., El Toro, \1·ere listed in fa ir condition today. f.Uss Hawes' car was In the intersection mak- ing a left turn off Culver into Campu! Drive when it struck the truck which was headed north on Culver. The hood of the sinall car 11,·as in1paled on th e truck's bumper. California 11ighway Piltrol officers said 'l'ony Alleeg0s. 24. of Santa Ana . the driver of the truck. \\'as not injured in the accident. Univer$itY lligh Principal Victor Sher. reitt said the school's Parent, Faculty and Friends Organization is concerned aboul the speed limit past the school \\'hich presently is sel at 55 miles an hour. A second concern registered with Ira[. Last Rites Set For Mrs. Reed Funeral services \\'ere held in Santa Ana today for Nannie Haskell Reed. a longtime Laguna Beach and Orange County resident who died Friday at South Coast Community Hospital. She was 89. A native of Kansas, Mrs. Reed had liv· ed in the county for 67 years and was past president or the Spanish American War Veterans Auxiliary of Santa Ana . Services were held at Winbigler Mortuary Chapel in Santa Ana and in- terment followed at Fairhaven Memorial Park. Mrs. Reed , v.•ho lived at 270 Cliff Drive, 13 survived by a son, Virgil of Laguna Beach: two daughters, 11-1rs. Louise Pen- na of Laguna Beach and Airs. Mildred \\'ood of Santa Rosa: one sister, Mrs. Willett Vestal of Indiana; l O grand chi I dr en and 21 great,,. grandchildren. ._,... ... ... -.. .. ~.. . " 'aigelow's•'.:Kaleidosco~i'·S~c.!9·Carpet'; ;bur.s.ti_~~wmi;~.!!.!!'!!i!..€0•.0r1 · ~o'!'e .:..· · • .!,8.a!t, Y.C?.ui;. ~est. { ... ,,,,,, .. .,., .... , ... ~,, ..... . . . $1 Q9S thol't Kolt idOKoptl Vou ''""' tt• ii lo rtoll~• •hot o II~ 1hl1 gtffl l igtlow C•'!MI con glv• your lllectH'. Only llgtlow t.qNrte co11 crtol• ,• coipet lik1 thil-oliv• •ilh the ••tlti119 1 .. 1111111 ,.0NL y, ,SQ~YO.J l,J. 111 todoyt.. 'J fie engineers "'ho have promised to survey the situation, Sherreitt said, is the lack of a left turn Jane. ~1 uch traffic into the school comes south on Culver and n1ust turn left onto Can1pus Drive, he noted. A parent said this niorning "we've been \\'anting the speed limit lowered for some time. Now lhat three students have been hurt, maybe something will be done.'' Coa st Pioneer Ramona Ca stle Services Held Funeral rites were held today in San Diego for pioneer Ne\vport Beach resi- dent and authoress Mrs. Ramona Duarte Castle, 82. who died Saturday in La Mesa. The \\'Oman who grew up in the seaside \"illage's heyday as a railhead and merchant shipping center published a col· lectlon of reminiscer1ces only last year. , ''Old Newport, The Seaport Years.'' it the title of the book , compiled and edited from a series of taped intervie\\·s about her early life. The 48-page \'Olume published with aid of several Ne\\·port Beach civic organiza. lions, contains a captivating chronicle ot bygone days, including houses on stilts and a sea serpent. A trio of bearded, distinguished Stan· ford Uni versity 1>rofessors boarded a train upon hearing or the discovery, one winter around 1900, and found the beast to be a rare, 2Q-foot-long oarfish. Born Aug. 31, I88l to Spanish-speaking ~fcFadden Brothers I o n g s h o r e m a n Joseph Duarte and f\1rs. Helen f\1unsen Duarte, fair·complexioned and of Scan· dinavian descent, the late Mrs. Castle \\'as one of !2 children, eight of whom survived infancy. Her brother. Joseph Duarte Jr., \\'a.'I the first baby boy born in what \\'as then New Port. \\'here the fami ly lived in a house built on stilts to escape high !ides. One unique moving day Involved towing the family home across the shallow harbor-on barrel floats for relocation near the existing Newport Pier. Survivors include a sister, Mrs . Ann Cannack, of Balboa Island, a brother Ernest, of Costa Mesa. daughter hiis! Nettie Duarte, of Anaheim. a son Loren J . Castle of Los Angeles, and a son H. C. CasUe, of La Mesa. ·.A LDEN 'S CAR PETS· DRAPES 1663 PLACENTIA AVE. COSTA MESA 646-4838 SANTA ANA, OUHGf. lUSTIN CaU • , , ALDIN'S •t:D HILL C:A•Pm I. D•A,lllU 11174 ll"llM, , .. ,. .. c.rJf. tJl0 JJ44 The truck, a Callfomia Dcpartmeot of Agrlcul.t urc Vchlcle, embarked on its driverless journty rrom Jn front or 825 Park Ave. Fred Mangold, 10 Orang~ resi· clent and department emJ'lloyc, claimed ht had set the parking brake and turned the \\'heels toward the curb upon leaving Fire units rt'sponded lo a report of 1 broken natural gas line Bnd severed clee· trlcal line$ as a result of the \'chicle's runaway !rip. Both the gas and the power 1vere tumtd off. Two towing tn1cks were required to pull the vehlt':lc back up the '1111 onto the roadway following the a~ cidcnt '---------------------------------------- • • ··:...... '"'?_ Fo1· The ·Reco1·d Dissol11tio1is Of Marriage 1!~11 .. 1 M11 U llf!ogi, (1ro1 J. 1110 Rober! [". r>ct~:;1,5Su11n K1111tr!ne I nd J1mft1 Munlu. Jolln C. 111<1 llo10m1ry Hu!IOn. (1r1 A. 1n11 Pamtll G•ll fl~".,o,j:n· Pettr J-11 111<1 l lttlr'11 Gon111u. 5•1•1~ i ncl Jtc!nlo M, A~ Lourtfll P111I 111<1 l.fllnll Hllfll.~~111> f raricli Jr. 1no "•'J" C. Cn111. Lt Jt1n I nd Pt1tr l.1t1n<J M n1 lldOIPI>. (t•I E. 1no Niric• I\, H1n'<lll, 0111>1 Lwm1 •llO Mlcn•tl o. • •·•llC, Jo"'""~-1 ·~ )n r· ..• ' T1b11r, Jo•il• 1no Glenn E•uel!~ Tlr1n11. H1rl1n Lt 1101 i ncl 81•0111 !.o~h~r ... Marv,. J. 1...i ''"''' 11 M1nwtller, Mlrllell L. 1nd 111<11110 l tlr1v. D1wld T. lfl<I Ev•l•n Lant. \llrctlnl1 $ tl'IO Hubfrt J. "'""°"· ~hl•Je• A Ind W11nt s. Holl. Wt!IY 11111 Httl 8 llttd, Roo...,y lllCI Loh M l urn1r; Oorotn• P. 1nd llao.r• II rtnn. eul1 J.,.nne ""' Een 1tkn1r<1 Flrc1t. lltllY Jo •llO D0<11ld A. CcoP..-. Emmttr K1n1111n lflCI Neomt P111llnt t11-11n, Btllv L and F••ted Slllf19, Jolon E. Jr. I n.cl £1f•n LtiTlt H1wkln1. Ktnn11~ A. 1n<I N1nc1 Lou s.,.ll1no. 11,,.,...1, L. •rid Roe.rt J . G°"Uf'IS, it.lbtrt 1na i.l'Cllt More1u. Wlnllrtd M1rlt t nd llont ld l1w,.nc• llr1v. OCM"nt J. 1110 EmO!"v Jr. T1rro. Ca•ol Ann and IUth1t<1 ll••dv P•l~':i:.~·. R1vm011d LOUii • n ' t Wlil n. ~!1 J. Ir.cl David T . Bro.,..11, Lott1!r,f 1111• ~nd Nll1 HOh'lt5 H•l1, Mar-. J. •nd wl1111m t . fllrfle!t. l•nn Gordon ind l(f!hY Ann C"o&. G~rv (•. 1n!l 11on,o• M. De Mlle. SnMon J. In<! ll obfrl Don•ld H1~1•51n. C1nd1ct LH 1r>d Frtdtrl,K R•Chard l'11TtllD<•. D'"lt L. 1no Ot•ld l . !'ltGlnlr.. IC1!hrvn An11<1 '"" Mltn11I l.llCICtnllt '-"1<1, t .... en1 I. tnd l(fn~~ 0. Welqnl, CtrDI Jtln 1nd LYltll H1 rrl,M tte11i.iir1. Cl•ol Oline and 81rlon IC. M11I. Antt~~JA~"&ELtr'l!~otiltt Ellll"d M1y U k .,,,1,,. Soa~tr T. llld Haut MH l!nttre.I Mllf 11 ~11m, Ant~cnv J. 1n<1 Sul.In IC, V1rv11. Vlr9lnl1 Dlxlt I n.cl Cl .. tnc1 '=•'"lffd l'lttclltr. to .... 1rd C. J r. •llO Ntntw o. ll1rn", L1,k1 L. Incl Wlll llm H. 811,, Sl>Mon tr.d 8000• Lte C1nl91n. Pl!rlck J. 1nd 11~1n C1•Pf'<lllt, 81rb.or1 M. 1nd Arth11r E. F<!'l'Onel1. Hiida tNI Jolin E 1';r1n1do1. M1<1tll"'° t nd Otnltl Cnt rJe1 Ecj1r. Ethtl Mlrlt •NI Or:~•ld Etrl l'l1ton, Lvlldt (. l lld S.m~I C. Rtllltm•n. R11 Roc:llfll1 t nd Jolln S.m~t 't ~•'f'l/1+11, lHSli1 E. Ind P!HY W, r.11h1n. Fr111•l1 C. and Piul .C.tlo~ C• r!lii. 5IC11>1• Sh1rr1U Jnd Oenn!~t ""'" g~~~~t, C1ror.11 Ann 1nd Dtnltl C\"lllG, Stl&tD•e Jtmu and Jwnnino V•ltnt•I. J~ C.. I nd Gtora••nnt r :,,~,i" p~1,1c11 Lee 1nd 11...,~1nv t,.. C.o!•wood. P1!rltl1 LU<>t 1r>e1 J1mot GAti.I Oto,11. Alt>e•lt Pf\11111 and James Ro"· "" (~rl~ C1rol 5, 111d Dou9l11 J. E::i:;,o Ht'.';f • c~~~o~~"Zn}~~-v •J;•ilm, Otvid A •~d M1rv M••iorlt '"'o .. •11 P11rlcl1 Ann Ind Sleol>en C•rl ~"er,~:bf,11 L••o• Joseoll 1nd oe111 "'~\t':;':"· Lv lt Vtrlln 1•.d CtoroTl<y lnllnSO<'. J1nt• IC. 1M Froderk~ ll, nlou. (l\trloltt W. •NI Wllll1m H, S•n<ltr1, Ctrol E. and JO/In 0. Ltti.re. (l1dt Jtromt J r. t nd Ch•iilint "'"" llre•n DILLON r.~,!h )-+ol>lor O•tlon l! 8et cll Orow t, No,,P<ir! lltac:~. Ottt ot Cl!tlh . .v.1v 21 . Su•••v•d by ion, L1,,.•1nce Weber, or "'"" Y0t• Cilv Ser.kt• wH• hekl to· "'"' TundlY, We11clllf (111HI, lnl••· ,.,enT. f0<f>I Lt wn Glt<>d1I•, W'1tcl!lf (111oel Mor1111rv , ld ·'HI. Ol•O"Clllff. CALLAVl.N Thcmt1 L. G1ll1•1n. Ant 611. ltf 617.1 l tr Mt•COI' Drivt. Hunllnaton lle1<h. 0.1'1 of ae1rl\. M1v 21. Surwiwtd by '"'" w 111i.m 0. G1111v1n; d1ll9Mtr1, Jtnt Hoflntll, Te•eu G1ll1v1n, Mt•"f WHton;. molht r, IC11 G1ll1v111; nro!~•"· Wl!lltm. P1!rk;k, C.eorgo In<! Col. Rat>en G1+11w1n; 111· len., (ttlle"n• C1,mltl10ll, Ht lt11 Well. ~l\CI Sl•ter M~ry Dil•elet. ROH r"/, WIO· "f~IY, 1:XI PM. Smltlls Chtoel. Aea ult m Mt n. ll\U..,.,I•. )0 AM. 55 Simon II. J~de C1!11ollc cnurtll, ln!1rme11!, Goe<! Slltpllerd Cemttt•V. 5'1'!1111, Morlu•••• Olre<tor1. Jit.Cl<SON ~ell J. Jtt~son, '9f Coa11vl1w llr!vt , L1au111 Be•ch, Ct1t1 QI C1Ntn, M•v 71. SUrYIWd 1W Cl~UQhltr. Phyltlt J•ck"°"· Prlvl!t !lrtV•ll<M ,trvlc11. Wedne-Wtw. tnQlt'NWll Park Ctmtl•I"'/. McCormick l1avn1 tlete!'I MO•TUl!"V. Olrtc!Ori. NIEWMit.N S1r1/'I G. tJewm1n Agl' SS. o' 111'7 Mun· ,,,.. ();I••· Hunlln91on lleach. Ot'lt ef dH•h, M1v ?•. Mtmt>t• of Women'• (.all Club ~ Hun!l1191011 l!e.cn. S11r- vovfll IW /'l\/Sb.111\d, l(til/'I; molhor. GO•· lr110• lr.<lne: b<o•twr. Jct ll"l'•ne; SIS!••· 111.11..,, L•••• lr .. no, 1'1 o' Hun!ln9IQfl ll110i. s.,,,1ce1. W!dnuo~v. 1 PM, P1tl· toe V!t N Cn1oel. 3~ P1cilot Vltw Orwe. !Je,.oc;•' llt•cll. 111•erment, P1tltlc Vlow "'""°''I! P1r~ Smlllll Mor1UI•¥. 0•· llOlllNS C1rl llot>01n1. 100 Ml,~ion Odwt , c ... 11 ~\••• 0111 "' <l••ln. MIY ,., Su'ViYld !iv "'""· S10TtV L llobDin1; Hvt 0.u•h· '""· Peul•. C1•l1 ~"" !r1Ml1, 111 el c ... 11 Meil' Mrs. """ Pl1w, Altlhtlm1 Mr!. 81rbflr1 Jll!>nl,,... D•1"9t; lllO• f!au9h!t•", Mrs, DebDlt 8rlerl1. A1111'1el'l'!' two 10n•, RDl>t•!. of Co•I• M1w; ICe"' nein, 1nol1n1: Dnt '""' ln ICeMuc~•I •nd nine ar1ndch\ld•t n. Funl'r&I otr•· l<h. 'NtC1111sct1v. 10 AM, St, Jonn !ht !l•oli)! C1.,,0'llc (ll~rcn. lntermtn!, Good y,~~nerd Cemot1rv. 11•111 Co511 Mt~• M0<tv1rv. Olr tc!Of"•. VANDElll&ll~ H••btrl I.I. vanoe•buro. Ill AMloM l 11i , 1111no1 h l•nd. D•!t o! "'"'"· M•v n. ~yrylved 1W wile. M1rion; IOn, {"1rl15; d~uQhltf, Htltn 0 11t .Cr1i9 ; ••1ler,, Et/'111 Jolliffe. Jutl1 M•ll~1n, Oo•o•"Y \lt~t!e>r 1nd Vlralnlt Dt 1-<1rU 1,,1 ar111e1<nll011n. Sir.ten, Tllu,.<lt v, t PIA, P1c/!.c \l lt W (h&P•I • .,.llh DI". t 111ri,1 H Oltrtntltld on1d1!1n<1. IMI'.• "'!!"II'· P1clllt VitW M1marl~! Pit~ P•C•· l•C v ..... MOrtu1N. DirtC!O,.,, VELA M•llU~I II. Ve!I. 11011 PtlJTlailt St. l•un11n9IOO'I 8Htll. Ol!t ot d.Hlll. M•Y IS s1 .... k•5 pen<1 in9 1! Smit"'-Mori.,.•~. ARBUCKLE & SON \VESTCLlt'F l\IORTUARV 427 E. 17th St.. Co5ta l\tesa '4&-4113! • I BALTZ l\tOJ\TllARI ES Corona del l\lar •• &73·94$0 I Costa l\fe111 • • • • 6~6-tm • P,ELI. BROAD\'9 AV /llORTUARV JlO Broad\\'ay. Costa l\1esa LJ 8-3433 • McCOR~flCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY Ji95 Lag11na C1tnyon Rel 494-~15 • PACIFIC VIEW l\IE\IORlAL P ARK Cemetery l\lorluary Chnpel l500 Paeifl~ Vltw Drh·e Ne'lporl Btacb , California '44·!700 • PEEK FAMILY WLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Boll.I Al'e. "'e1tmla5ter m..sm • S~IITH'S MORTUARY 121 l\lala St. 53M53' Hanlln1ton Btat• Puhlisl1i11g Firm Sues Ex-o,vner SANTA A NA lington Beach publishing com- pany "'·ants $200.000 i n dimages from 1he fo r1ner O\\•ner of a shopper's guide il purchased four years ago in an Orange CoWlty Superior Court laws.till charging the defendant \\'ilh breach of con· trac t. The Van De Publishing Company, 16161 Cot hard . states in the action Lhat defen· dant Robert ?<.tilhous a greed when he sold his ·'t<.ir. t<.1iser·• to the plaintiff that he \\'ould not compete iii areas taken over by the new O\l'ners for .!levc:l years. hlilhous , the suit alleges. has been "adve rtising and soliciting m aterial in Orange County" in violation or t he contract drawn up 1,1hrn Van ·ne Pubtishir.g Co. boughl the business from him and "'iUiam G r ay in October , 1967. County Man Faces Trial In Murder J Tutj(jay, May 25, 1971 OAIJ;;Y Pllt! f) Red11eed Charges "''" C:Onvention LEGAL NOTICt; LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Aho1·tio11 Charges In Cormty? PICTITICWI IUllN•ll P·UU .... ,.t1 MAM• ITATWM•Nl Pl(TITIOUI I U111CU1 C•llTll'ICAT• OP aUlllfllll Plltd """' z,i, 1'7l. NAM• ITATfl<!lllCl l'l(llllOUI NAM• Tht Ml~ -son• 11t 1olnt Tiii' tollOWlllll ll«IO!'U t rt °'°'nt T,.,. llMff•lt""' dot• Clrtlty ''"It,.,. 11¥1l1W1t ti: IMl1ln~1 ••; d11<tl11t1 1 IHltlneu 11 UO Vlrt ln.11 NO, 1, LE"Ullll! CONCEl'TL ,,,, Oul'll'I Cktl,.011.EH IJNLIMI TEO, Ht•bOI c;,,,, M.u, c1n ..... 11. uMlf' .... lk.• S ANT' 'NA Tile 1975 Ot~. N.,._, IMC!l. Ctlltornlt '2... 'VI-kll ll \llopel!M C1t1I•• • MU.rlllllr tltlou1 flrm ntrnt of IOEAI. a lAUT V " " -l'ttrldl. Ill. c.llH , .-01 l'O<I f'ro~ll'l(t. ll~o. & 5111 Jet•ul" Hlll1 llld.. i&i. $ALON •NI 11'1111 .. Id !!rm 11 '~ convention of the National .,. __ , 1ffdl. c1U16111tt M1C.A111111r aou1..,1ra. N'"''°" •-"· oi tht 1o11ow111e H•to11. whoN "'"" 11, As,oclatlon of Coun11··· may wuu ..... G11i-1v, I'. o. l u •1t4. SAMUEL H. AULD. Jll •• ltSt \I I.It IUU 111<1 !>I.Ct "' •tlldtnCt !1 ti '9!'-'l ;,. Torr111<e, Ctlll.,.nli . C11/dtl, NtwllOfl I HOI El/ELYN L. Mldfltll'lt Wrltfll, 3Ql E. •11 Avt., be held jn Orange County, T1111 1MJ11n.,. •• c-.~11t1 11v , ,,.,...,1 AUl o. 1Ut 111111 ,,..,,1, N"""-i ti•lbff, c1111ornr•. H•fflfftlll•. !•o><ll. D.llMI Ml"t :). lt M Supervisor David L. Baker f'11r1tt 111. <:01111 11111 DU1lnn1 h 11t1 ... ceoMIUC'leo •Y • M1a.11111t wr1t111 Th1·own Out £01· 3 G TM1 11111tn1t11 w11 tllld wlllt tllt C8'1ll• l"•rlnt•tll\11 S1t11 o! C1Ulor"lt, Or11111 Cou111Y: Of s rden Grove prOpotied tv Cl..,.k DI Or fl! C 1 a 1 1 fv•iyn L. Auld On INiv J, lt11, t>tlort mt , 1 Ne!t,. By T0~1 BARLEY Also. cleared of oibortlon renewal or lhe long·slanding <llCtlt<I bv !lit :r.m11 ::..~. Oii •• n· l'ublllhfll Oran~· CM~! 0 111'1 l'llot, "ubllc 1 .. 11111 ffl<" ••ld Sl.i•, H •Mt'ltlif 01,... a.11, ll'lll'i '"" allegations hfonday by Judge '"'·°' • M•• 11, 11, '.s ,.,.. J1111t 1, 1•11 llCi'l·7' u •ot er.,:t M1<111t1111 wri.~1 k"°'"" 10 m• invita!lon at the upcoming Ol'NN1s L. Gl'ILllll to ~ "" ,.,...,, ~ n1'l'le 11 •ullKr!ll· SA'NTA ANA -Abortion Mast Wt'. re Barbara J ohnson , c.:onvcnllon or the c ounty t1n ow .,.11, orl••· '~·•• •~ 1 ____ L_E_G-,A;,L;-.NcO_TT_C_E ___ 1 "" to 1111 .,.;1111n 1""'""''"1 fl"d charges against three Orange 32 Tu t d R th N t.i ... ,.n '""'· c1llftrft11 ""' ,.,., •(M....,.,.1e.:1~"' 1111 •~KU!"' 1111 5tm~ , s 111 an U ev.'nlan, •Jl't:anizatlon and the board ap· All"ft'' coFF1c1.1.t srALI Coast \\'Omen who worked in 22 Azus a Pub!l1hfd Or1nw Cti.llSI D1llv P.101. '1CTITIOUl IUllNIS• M•IY 8Plll Mortoll -' . proved . HAMI' llATIMl'Nf N01••• Publl"C1lllot"11l1 ihe Santa Ana clinic <>peratcd All five y,•omen and Debbie M•• 15 •nd J11n• 1• 1• u, 1•n 1111·11 "''"" M•• 2i, 1•11 . Prlnc1011 Offlc. in by [)r, J ohn Shri\'er Gvr•nme B aker snid 4,000 lo S,000 ---LEG_A_L-NOTTCE ,,'.~• 1D11ow1n1 "''°" 11 1oln1 .._,,,llU• O••~" Cotin1, J • Fullmer, 17, or Garden Grove h ,.,,, (ommlHl911 fnlr• "''e re dis missed M onday a s the d elegates usually atten d t e1---:==~:-:===c---I MiowEST·WElT CONST11;UCT10N A.ittll '· 1•1s physician and his motlier "'ere irrested by Santa Ana annual conventions. The sup-su~:~·i~'.t Tio~:~o!~o;~. ~~~PcA.~1~.,:.~~ E11f 111t1 s1r"t, S.ftl• M::bl~~ 1~,~~nfi-' 0.111 1:~ii agreed to face Orange County polic e who ha\•e described the port or the county's c itie s and 1TAT1 oF ca1.1ro11N1A 11011 w, "· •lld AJtoc111td Lid , t 11m1t""t------------- t11h Sir .. ' Prem., ted cha1n•-rs of-mmerce w1·11 "-TH• couNTY or o11•tr.1G• "''"'""!•. '~ 1"11111, o. w1111-,, LEGAL NOTICE Superior Courl a ction June 2 1 es opera uo:: -..v uo:: N1. A .. 4"' G,,,.,,1 "'''"''' .sm c1uewj .... °''"'• <>n reduced charges of at· by the 29-year-old physician as sought to a id in landing t he E•t111 •' FA\IE EOtlH INMAN. 11~ YMll• Lln<11, C•!llo•nll. 1------------- h • • k1-~ 11 l'1Yt £. IM"ll ll •nd 1> F. E. lo\, F. Wftllfl, lfl""l...,.n! Co., ll'IC. 1 ¥ ""4"11 tempted abortion and con-a ''I r1v1ng a bortion mi11." event. ""'"n, D«•&11t<1. H11 G. WJillll•, 5H retl0'. 1s.io w n.nire c•1T1•1cAT• OI' susu1.-11 •p;racy to comm1·1 abo•11·on. -·,--------------------------------1 NOTICE IS Hl!llleaY Gl\IF.N fl m1 . 8oul•vtrd. L9t A-Its. C1!1t0t11!1 f'ICTIT IOUI NAM• ., crfl<fh•r. II rno 1116vt "'"'"" <1~c~d1nl 'lllOU, T,,. t;n11er1it...., _, «rllly 111\r.1 I•• San ta Ana f.iunicipal Court rn1t 111 ..e•wn• n1v!no c111mi 1t1l11H '"' Th!• DUtlntu 11 urMtu.:tH bl' t 111111r1t c-vctlnt 1 bul•11tts ,, ll'Ol e ... .,_ sold dectdent '" roquor"" lo lilt-mem. 11•l~tr5/llt. NtWllOfl ltt<ll. C•!1fot"nl1• unlltr 1111 lie:• Judge Paul hlas t threw DUl the .. nn Int ftfltHlfV """°''''· in lhf 9u1ce H, F, WHITTL E INVESTMENT tlllou1 llrm '""''.,., WEST COASl Ol!CI( charges filed against Diana f.1 . 01 ln1 cl~•k 01 1111 t0ov1 t n!it1ea court,•• c,o, :.,", '•. ""''''' ANO HULL 5£AVICE •1'111 11111 wl~ firm lo are1111! 111..,., w1111 tl'lt ntetl\11• ... 11 (Of'l'I'°~"' of int 1~-lnt1 l'frHllJ· Grinslad, 22, and Diane J, vou,h•••· to In• ullllt._i,,,..., •• l~P Q!llc• P1r!~• "'"°'' n1'l'lt1 lft 1~11 •nd ,11,,1 of Bod. OO h f OM 2 S ol hl• AllDrnll' AO!lert P lunn~U. H !\ SK1"el1rv fulcltnc:e 1r1 15 fOllaw1 : lne, 18. I 0 ""' ISi I., Ctllre>rnl1 Av,nu•, 5outn Gii•. C•l•latft•• 111\• >11l•m1n1 w11 111.., w1rn I~• Coun· Wllllam !••n1r<1 11;1,.., \'OJ I'. flllbDt. Costa f.1esa and \Vaynette •GJIO. w111cn 1~ 1111 Pia<• o! bu$<11en ol TY Cl••-of Orono• Counr~ 011 <1111 1... Ne.,.oort l •1t11. C1llla•1111 Ill• uN;tet1IUl\tO 111 •II m•tref\ P•ll•lnlnt dl<llf<I by file tlltl'IP 1bov1. Jolln 8trn11d Hallm1n, l tcl [. Bruce, 18. or 7741 Con{'()rdia to .,, .. tll~lf ct >till dKtdtn!, Wlllllft • "1M>C l•lbol, N .... ....,, !•Kii. C1lllen111. Pla<:t, \Vestminster shortly riee :C.fi::~ I ller "'• llfll PUbllc1llo""' 111!1 M::~~s= J~~"'I.' 1.'ft~,)~lilY 1;~~;, Dtltd.t1l'1~~m301."~'1nt befor e he ruled himse lf in· c1rH1 M•v •· 1911 Jollft 1, Hallm111 h J~c• L~• Inman LEGAi. NOTICE Sttl• of C1lllCH'fll•. Ort nM c ... "IY! eligible lo serve on the benc E•tcu•or l------oc:::-------1 o.. AP•ll 30, 1tn, btlor• me. • N•1er'I fo r further court a ction . c• 11\f w111 D1 "·••U P~bli( in 11\d • .., 111d s11e, "'""'•llY 1•· l~t tbc>V• ntmtd Gectdent P1(Tll10US IUSINESl pet•ecl Wflll1m I . lllnt tncl J~" I . Ht!· Judge t<.1ast is the author of 1 11101r111T ,., •UNNITT Nit.ME 5lATEMENT !men •flOwn to mt to bt tn1 pt,•n~ ' I• d a k pin.ton wh·tch last 14lf C1Ultrn11 o\•tnv• T11~ 1c11owl11a pe•i.ons "" •11111 wllou n1mti tr• 1ub•crlb"1 10 Ille wltM11 " .,n m r 0 Stul~ Calt, C1lli*rnl1 H1M bui,ntu II. lnil•umenl 1ncl 1Ur.nowltd1td th•v ~~· .\'Car led ID the abandon1ncnl Ttl: nui "'''"' P,t.,RK LIDO MEDICAL CENTEll , t<Ul-td !ht ttme. bo h • TRAVELERS Atr1r111v l•r ~11:rcut1r .it61 MicArlllY• lloulowtrd, S11ltt )Ot. (OFFl(IAL SE AL) of a rlion C arges against "" tlt'• Nf\llo><H't IHUI. C•lllarn•i ,~uo M1rc111 o. Mthon•v Dr. Robert Cumming Robb of P11bll!i11ed 0 •• ,,9. Cot!! Ctllly Pole!, W1lll1m Ml"f~··· CorPOre!ion I No!t r• Publfc·Ct llklrnl1 M1~ " ll, tt. ts. ltll 1!1.>1·11 (~lllutM" (erparallon. Olil1 M.cit.r1nu• Prl11ch1,111I 0111<1 tn l..aguna Beach. He argued in 1o-u1,v.,d. ~ult• J06, NewPOl"I l e•ch. 011n9e cou11t• th I r ti I c 1·r ·a· CHECKS LEGAL NOTICE C•!•IDrni1 "'' CommlHIOfl l!K,lrn a ru 1ng ia a J orn1 s c.,1111ne" •nd c..o11to•" COMPi nw. Ao•ll i.. lf1l 'fhcrapeulit' Abortion Act of 1-------.... 1111 "'' ,,., ... ,thur leuf•~•rO. $Ullf l(lj, PuOU:ll'f'd Ot•~ff Co1sl 01111 l'llol, h b · f h CElllll'ICit.TE OJ< I USI N£SI, N•wo•>rt le•ch, Ctil!.,...,11 M1y C, fl, JI, 2J. "" let4·1l 1967 -l C aSIS Or I e pro-l'ICllTIOUS NA ME T11l1 b111lneu h conducted ~V • hmltlKl l---------------- S e CU I i On \1'3S Un· DURING Tnt vnae"I'""" oou eef!I!• mev ••• 11,1nt<sl!ID MAY ONLY cor>d~cllnt • bu .. nen 11 UI Fl<nl~IO'lt' '.Vlllltm s. Mn itn•., COnstitUtiOnaJ and invalid. Or •• S1nr• An1. {1lll<1<nl•, undo• 1n1 Ile· ,_,\tv /. 1'11 LEGAL NOTICE Dr. R obb. 68. \\'as later in· tilloY• flfm n.n,~ ol VACHl WATCH Tiil• >ltll ml l\I "''' 1•1"1 .... nn !.,, 1---------------- 0IVING ' Mit.!NTE.NAN(E I n.cl "'" tll<I c ... nrv Clt<K of Or.1n11 CounJy ... M•v lit.It ms d ieted by the Orange County 11rm 11 comP01td of tht to110 .. 1n1 .,~r...,, 1, nn NOTIC I! TO c111ao1To1ts B wt.0•1 n11ne1 In lull •n<I pt,c11 1t I U11£1l101t COUltf 01' TH .. Grand Jury and today faces r"kl1nct •rt •• tolia....~; M<Oit.,,.lll ANO MtOANll!L STAT• 01' CALIPOllHIA 1'011 S · r, t · \ ·d 1Cin11etn Ltt M1•~t Sr .• •11 FllnbJ.onl All..-MYt II Lt.,. TH• CO\INTY 01' OllAMO• uper1or vvurt r1a on 1 en-or .. Santa Ani , Paul• Mi•k•, 111 1>0 w11.~l•t '"''" su111 ,.. HO. ,. ""' t ical charges. Flln•Uon• Or.. Si n!• An•. I.ti Aftttlt1, c aiu ..... i. tMlt 1!:111!1 of ALIEllT HAlllllY t+OU(IC, Pair Ordered To Pay Auto In jury Suit S ANTA ANA -Co-defen· n No service charge on .all the First National City Travelers Checks you want ..• up to $5,000 worth D11eo M•v 10 ltll 1•1•n Dttt11~d. ICPn11tt~ Ltt M1•k1 ,, l'uflll1n...:1 Drt n'" (001! OlilY l'aci, P10l1CE IS HE:llEIY GIVEN ,. lh• Paul~ Mlrkr M•Y 11. II, 2' t nll JUnt I, ltll 111 .. 11 <rtctltor1 of tn1 t OO•P. n1mH dtctoftnl 5111, &I C1htornl1. Or1not Cotinl• 11111 111 person• h1vl111 <l1lm1 1t1lnJ1 !he On M1v 10, !'11. bftort Nit, 1 Noll•Y Lf:GA.L NOTICE 1.11d <IK"1•nl 1r1 reoulrl!'d hi flit "*"• P11b!ic In I ncl ,.., ••Id S1tl•, l't•6Clllt lly ----"'"'"'"'°"'-'"'----lwlth !tit 111c111.1rp "°"°'"""' In , ... vfflU' 1ppa1rf'(! l(enflelh lit Mlfk\ Sr., t nd P·HJI of the tltflc 11 1n1 t bovt e11fllltd ctvrl, "~ P1ul1 Ma••• -nown lo mt lo be !ht l'l(TITIOUS I UltNIESl lo pr .. t nt fhfM. Wiii! fflt llttetMf"' P•'*""' when• n1mt1 ••~ Jutl1<rlllf'll lo ICAMa ITAll!MENT •otichert, 11 lllt unot-n1•""' •I flit tlfk:• •~• wllltin 111\lrumonl 1...t i cknowllCIOt<.I T~t 1elk>w1~• H HOl'a .,. l oine of ~It •llornew. Jo1t 111> I. And.,...,,, ... N. tt.eY t o't<u!td 1ht 11mt. butln~t• 1~; Mtln S! .. Suitt IWr.I, S•11l1 Ant , C1U ..... 11lo, (OFFICIAL 5£it.Ll Pit.RK LIDO MEDICAL CENTEll WEST. 1'21111, .. fl!Cll Ii !hf olict ot butlnnt al //,ARY !ET H MOlllTON ~ 4 11 Mlt it.rthut tlwlewtrd. SU•ll -· Ille undtto!tflf<I In t ll mtlllrt H1'111nl~t No11,.., Public, (~lllorn1• Nt.,..oort &HCll. Cii1/0tnlo '1..0 lo tilt <Hllfl ot 11ld dtt"1tnl, .. 11111" loll~ P•lnclPtl O!!lct Ill WILLIAM Ml S SE NG ii: II COit· m°"'1n5 11lt r fht ll•ll PllbUctlitll If .. I• Orenge Co~nlv l'OllATION, • C1lifornl1 Cot<>ot"1!1011. notice Mv Comml~s'clll !:•Pl•., •Ul M•<Arfnur IOUlev1•d, Sull• n , o.tfd MIY s. Hll Aotll t, 1tlS New,on ll14cl\, C1ll!ornli I\/ (;AYLOR O 1!."'MltlElll PullU:Jled Or•ng1 CNll 01llr l'Jlol. CAUTH EAS & GEOHEGit.N CO .. °''I e•tCu!Or ot !ht Wiii Miv I!, !I. 7! 1nc Juno 1, 1'71 1111·11 MttA•tn11• Beul•wlfd. Sul!t lG ,. ol 11'111 1bavt nlmtel 4K"1tfll Nowporl ll~•cll, C1lllorni1 JOJf."k 1. ANDl!lllON, Thi• b11~lntn i1 c-ucle<I by • Um•ltd llH N. Mtlft s1 .. sun1 1111. P••ln~'llll• 111111 A"'• Ctlli*tflll '111'1 Wllllt m S. Mt n t Mtr Ttlt Jt1· .. U l'·Hl4 Tnis tl1!1menl was lil!NI wl1n tno ce.i11· Alttr,..1 ..,. •••<wtt-r Pl(TITIOUJ IUSINIS• ,, (It •• ol Ofl ntt (OYftlY •n M4Y ,, P11bll.1Md Or"'" Cuti 0111• ... 1 .... NAMI! STATEM•NT 1'11 Ml• II, lt." I nd Junt 1. 1'11 111•11 LEGAL NOTICI:: ••. Altw11t•• t i u. ... 1. METAL AECOVERY. IHO i~otrlor uu Wll11'lrt ll"4., lvlt1 JH LEGA.L N<YflCE danls Dr. Ebbe H artelius and Mrs. R eba Vaughn, bolh of Costa t<.Jesa, ~'ere ordered J\ionday 10 pay $10.000 In damages to a "'·oman motorist \\·ho "·as Injured three y ears SANTA AN A -A man \\'ho ago \\'hen lier auto w:is struck -~.-­'~ NtWPOl!r ·u i .• i_,.._ ,NATIONAL ,';ff . .. ~'.LBANK.J~ ::--":~ r.~·~ ln~ lollow•nv Pf!f \.Ofl h nolnt ll\lsl11eulMtD•NllL & McDANllL AVt., Co.ilt ~If, C•lllo<no1, Ltt Ant•ltt, Clllltrnlt ,..,. V1vlP l o•I••, lt5' Pom~n1 A•t , T·1>0JI P·4U11 was sent to s tate prison for al· b y a cnr drh·cn by t.1rs. tempted murder and returned Vaughn. ~ ',.-----· c.,.;11 Mt11. c~lltornl1 ltubh\1>..i Dr1n91 Co1~1 0.,1, "1101. lh•I bu1111eu l• .,.,.,. c-ucleo bv •n M•• tl, It, 1} •nd J-1, 1'11 1111·11 CEllTIPICATI! 0, CC>lt,.Oll•TIOM 1'0. TlllANSACT ION 0, •UllNlll l,INDt:• P 1Cllll01,1$ NAM• 11'111fwfdu1I. -- to Orang e County whe n his Orange Counly Sup e r i o r l'obli~:" 0~~:;; c ... ,, D•"• ,,101, victim died has been ordered Court Judge Le.~ter Van M•~ 11. 11. ~s 11111 June 1. nn 11a..11 --,,lllTIFICAT•~;-auu11,;,-- LEGAL NOTICE lHE UNDEllSIG NED CORl'OllATIOl'I _.. "'"relw tt•ll!Y lhll ti II ~lnt • b!l•lnn' 1Cc1le<I t i tOU ... Acl•m1 Aw• • H11n!intl011 l tldl. C1IUot"I• uNli.t !ht fktlliou$ firm n.,,.,. DI DON J05£ and !l\11 ttid t1rJTI 11 c.nPOMd flf !ht l+iltw- inl cerPOratlon. """"'' prlf'IC:illtl ... Ct II bu1ln!H 11 '' lal-1: 9 CONVEWENT OFFICES SERVING ORANGE COUNfY ' .. to fa ce a Superior Court Talenhove awarded t hr OTICEc:o----'1c1tT1ou1 NAMa mu~,, tr>·al Jun• 21 . Atrpllf1 Ollic1/M1cheluit1 1t MacAr111ui/&J1·311 1 1.EGAL N_ ------! 1n1 vnd1rtl1tflff 6°'" carru~ 11~ 1, c-a11· 1u damages lo Susan Eby of o:r~tt11111 • 1><>•i11t•• 11 1wi Pomot\.t Aw., J d e B y ron K 'I ,,·11 l1ylid1 Oflitt /81ysidt •t J•mbortt/642 1141 p iU• Coslt Mtw, C.llforfll•. Vnlle• Ill• tlC• u g • I\ Ci I an Newport Beach after hearing C.1111• l"ul: Oflitt/Nulwood •I Commonwttllll/171·1900 f l(TlflOU\ llU!INl'll N•M• hllo .... 11""' n,,,,. "' MEDll EllllllANEAt.t set that d a te for Gerald allegations that t<.1 rs. Vaughfl. u 1unt Miu1 0Ttitl/lr1surt. Wofld, l•iun• Hillt/830·3200 STATIMl!NT MOT011 YAc•n ~ '"" 111a1 ••Id firm is Roland Caron. 30. Garden .. I I • 011• L W B 596 2U l~1 lolla..l11t 1>1rJ011 I• do'illl ••11•nt"I <omll01o"d 91 rtw loll-1nt Of'•-· """''° DOii J05£ llE5T .. UltAHTS, INC,, '6tl E Adam•. H~nlll!llTOll .....,., Call!. WIT NESS ht. hind 11111 ll'~ lll"t of ~Y, n11 27. was under the influence of 1 ••c ltt/ t !lurr or!cl. Seil 21ch/ · l 11; n,..,. In 1u11 '"" •I•~• 11 rt1idenca 11 Grove, and o rdered the de.fen· narcotics "'·hen the collision Sunn, HUii Olllct/H1rbor ~l Brra/871·72'0 OT.t.HEITE 11K1N1 ANO stt111.T cD., •1 111iows· f Sup1riot Offiu /Supenor 11 Pltcentir/641·!1511 11• M1rl111 Avt l•lbli• h l1nd Fran• PQlll/I. Hi lt GrPP"<'••· t1nt1 DON JOSI( lllESTAUlllANtl IN(. dant to appear June 4 or a ""Cur-d •t tile 1·nt.,scct1·on of u . c a111e>rni•. " ' An•, c 11uor .. 11 n~J "" •.. " ll'"'lil1 Offitt /[15f Cll1pm1n al Stale C0Ut1e/17!1·•140 o 1CI 1t'1 he-aring <>n a motion to d ismis~ Anahei·m ,•nd 19th Streets, w " 1•1 0,1. W 11 0. 642 3 011ne111 SllclPPt, ,, ,.,~ 11 .• 1-11rmo1a ""' M•1 , Joo M..-lalti>h ,,.5 " •~•c 11 1c1/ rslcl1 1{ ~er/ · lll 111,h. C•Ulornla fr111k Pollu• Charges and June 10 for '_...':(;o:":S~la'....''~Je~S~O~.~O~l~I :J~U~l~'°:_'l~7,:_'.1968~=·_.!.======================::::::===~l lhlt b-Utlnt!J Is bt!nt t'Cln<IUUtd by !hf 5111t of C1!1to1n!1. Ori-County· Pretr1·a 1 action. Sr111 QI C1111or .. 11, I t • cor1Ja11llon. On M1v 1•. 1111. tltfort mo. • I Jtmts Ptt~ Nol1rv Pvbllt ln 11\d t~ 1110 Sl&lt, Caron was serving the third PullT!~od or111<1t (o•ii D•llr Pllet, "'"'n111v ,_.,.., Frink '00111 k......,.n ST ... TI! OF CALIFOlllNIA, (OUNlY OF OAANGE. 5S. On !~I' lrd d•Y ol M1v. A.D. lf71. °"fort mt Je'" l . Jobil 1 N9'11Y li'ub!l1 111 • .,., tor 111<1 co~111y 111d S1111, '"ldln• lht r•ln, oulv commlulcnlld 11\d •-11, H flOlll ll, ·-•rtd Jew MorlOSIPl'I lcMWfll to ,.,. la bt Ill• P,..110tnt of "" CO•• Jor&liOfl thll e•ec11lff th• wlllllft l11- t1ruma11t 1..,, bth1tl &f tllt co•-lllofll lllt •t ln .,.m,d, tnll eck-1e.l"d Ill m• '"" 111cl> COrPOfl li911 PKU!ed "" ttm• f May 4 11 It IS !'11 10•5-11 lo me lo bf 11\l Per~°" whe11 n1m1 11 month. o a s tate prison term ----· • • ___ 111b•crl1>"1 1., 1h1 w11n1n 1nirrYm1n1 '"" of two to 20 i·ears when LEGAL NOTICE ''"'"°.,..teao..s ni. •-ecvtf'll lllt '•m•. 40fFICIAt. SEAL! bartender Douglas Sny der, the -----------Jo11n ll. s1un••ri<11>. 111 man h. •-at ,. n t O Un· P·O'l• ~loltrY Publl<·Cl l!lornf• UC ((lllT!ll'IC .. Tl!i O• aUSlN•$l D•aner (otin!r consciousness a year ago in a l'ICT1T1ous Ht.Ml Mr comm1 .. 1a11 l!•••rt1 di d T111 und~"ltned d0'1 ct •!llr nr h <•~ 14ov. t, lt1' s pute over a y,·oman. ied . f dut;r/119 • tiU11!n••• •' 1"0 lll•ndo1"" ..._.,.. "U'bH'lllte1 0,.11,, C'"O..t 0,,111 •·le•. I~ Wltnt u Wh•rfff. I ll1v1 lltrtul\lo lf"I 1111" h'lld 1n11 •1111"1 ""' ofllclt t tet ! Ill• div and '"' tn 11\11 ct tlllk:ei. llrir •llOVt .. ,utet'l. d · d · t CO•I• Mol.A. Calllorn!8. 1111d•r lno 11c111cu1 Sny er rematne in a conta ~=="'====" you were 0 ll•m n•mt cf ALL 5ElllVl(E & 11.E:PArR, .• _._._,._~c'-=-'"=Mc:'-· •. rs, 1911 l1t-1·1I from the date of the beating, co.'""'"'' ,,r., ll•m 11 •om-01 1h11 LEG•L NOTICE loJta..111• P••!.On • ..,.,Q:.t n1m1 ln 11111 and I' IOFFICIAL SEAL) las t June 30. to his d c11th Jan. ol•<•.,., •••ld•n<t 1111 1e11ew" ~~---1 S. The pro secution \\"JI) ;:isk for l dt' e tomorrow O O O O O who L"'' L. Koch, 1•21 Mlnorc1 Dr , NOT1CI TO ClllEDITOllS Jt•" L. Jallst Notary Public • C1llfornl1 l'rlnclnl Olfl<t 111 Or1nt• County f.e~I• MU•. Ct lllarftl• IUl'la lOll COUllT 01' TNI the death penalty in lhe n C\\' Oiled MtV i. 1'11 1T•TI! o" CALJl'OlllN IA "Oii M • tommtulOn 1!11.,1rr1 M1rc11 1, nn I LltrY L. l(oc• lH• COUNTY OP Oii.ANGE Ina . I sr .. t of (all1ornl1, OrtnQt c ... ,,.,. Nt, A ltlU f'u~l1/ltd Or•nt t Cotrt ,.,."' a. 11. u. 1L 1t11 Oally 11'1111. ICIS1 .11 ------- Cvcle Ri<l er I d h h b 0" Mtv J, lt11. l>tlo•• mt, t No11ry E~Ut• ef M!L Olll ED MAllll .. CllllLL, U a V e t e U r PubUc I~ •nd tO< ••IO S!lr., •"•>Onllly Otctl'.td. W 0 -•o""""d lMtV L ICotll know11 lo mt In NOTICE I! HEAEtlY C.IVEN ,, lh• LEGAL NOTICE I " '" ,., .... ''"' eom• " '"'~"''' '~""' " '"' ,,.., e.m~ •K~•"' t~ 1n, ''"'"'" 1n,1<~monr .,,... •<•.nowlfdQ· !f\~t 111 "'"Oil' n1vln1 clf!ms 101ln!I lfltl---------------- " Files Suit SANTA AN A A ll•!n· tinglon B each c yclist 11·ho blames a California High11·:iy Patrol office r for injuries :suf· fered when he \\'a s knocked off his machine last June 22 has sued the officer and the Sl ate <>f California for $17.000, "'alter R. Vi'interowd, 175."1! San Roque Lane. idenrifics Qt . ficer Ernest Lee \\'insor <1s ' defendant in an Orange Coun-J t.v Superior Court comµlaint charging the patrolman n·i1h negligent operalion of his CHP \'ehicle. \Vinterowd a sserts he 1\·as! cycling through I h c in· 1Ersecti<>n of Spring dale Str eet and Warner A venue on a green light \\'hen \\linsor's auto ran into him. A claim filed b y \Viterowd a gainst the State of C alifornia for $17.672 \\'IS denied l11st Nov. S. Drag Race1· Sues Driver TRVIN E -Dragster Bob Hendrix wants $19,000 in d am ngts fro m t he Orange COunty International Race.\\·ay for lnjurifs sufftrtd when his ear \\'as wrecked on lht trac k last Aug. 2!. The Arleta driver names ~$ c:~efendant in tht': Orange County Superior C.ourt s uit Lawrence A . Brighi, lhe driver of a car which allegedly stopped in lfendrix's path a s the plaintiff drove hiJ ''Bold Americ an" In a qualUy lng run. Hendrix c laims he surfered "ser ious pttsonal Injuries" In the collision and that his ear \I'S totally destroyed by the lmp:icL rd n~ ~"!<u1•1 tn• 1.1m1. ~•Id dKedt t\I art reQ~;•ed te 1111 lh•m, "·41'11 d f k • g f • I !OFFICIAt Sr At) wllh !hr "~teuiry voucll.,s. 111 the o!lk~ ClllT11'1Cit.TI' OP I USINISS e n 0 m a 1 n 1 n a M1r1 8"1h Mor!On ol !ht cler~ of the 1b<Nr tnli!ttd tourt, or ll'ICTltlOUS NAM• 1<011•1 Public. (1h111n•1 to orrnnl lllPm, wl!h lht ~ttH•'Y Tiit underJltntd dolt c1rlll~ l!11y 1•• Princ:loo! Otllct In VO\lcn~rs. If> !ht und•rsltned al lht or!let <Onduetln• • bll51fl!H 11 3)1 M1rlnt0 A11t •• Ortn•e Cou11t1 01 Ills Attornt"t. 11tob1rl A. E1:1tm•n, 21'0 l•ll>OI ltlll'IO, C•lllotnl• '1611, undtr It>• t ? W 1 d M~ Com'l'llHIOll E•plro> 111rbllr lllvd .• Suit• Jiii, (C111 Mttt, Col!. fle!lllout firm lllMI of LOCK, ITOCl<'N' rra ngeme n S 0 U Apf ll t , 11/S /Orllll '""· ..,,.,;,11 l> IM plaeo of bU11,.qt IAllAEL tlld 11111 111d fl""' 11 com-d a . "Ulll!lll'd D••ng• Co11t 0•11• l'\111, Of in~ ll"<ltfl•9""" 111 111 m1tten 1>trttln· ltf the 1..tlclwlnt H•t.0n1. ""'OM "'"''' !~ MIV 4, I!, II. 1). lf11 IOl•·11 IMQ lo the t l!tlt <11 11111 dec;t01n1. within 10!1 •~O pl1<e1 ff ••1kltnct I ll 1• ,-;;:::;"""-rotir monl~s 11l1r lh• l!ut public1tlon of lotlow1; k h d ' LEGAi .. NOTICE thlt n1>11c1. How"d Loww. l U Dnn A•t ,, 11111111 th t t 1-------, Dllt<I /.\IV I, 1'71 hl111d, C1l/lornl1 t:IU2 ey now W a 0 0 1"·41111 LOWELL W. CAIL! ShelltY ~ow~. 3ll On1l1 A••., lllbt• . """""' " '"""'" '"'"'" ..... "'" ""~· '""""" ""' At Pacific View, we have helped hundreds of fam ilie s through this difficult fact of life by mak in g all the orrongements with them before the time of need. We provided them with on itemized list of things that were legolly necessary, others thot were f1noncioHy desireoble. You see, something will be done when you die. And today, when th ere is no undue emotional $h'ess, you con determine what, and how much it should cost. A phone call to Pacific View today can save you money and your survivors mucti onguish.. )t con only take on hour or so in time, but it scnes so much mOfe! PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK ti MORTUARY 3$00 P'AOAC VIF# ~ H!WPOIT •uot CAltJ<>eaA. '2663 • CA.U 7141 ~4"4·1700 l"IC.TITIOUI NAM• ol the i bove "'"'fd dec:tCl~~I Edw1rd Mll!m1n, 111'• Jt<lt A.wt ,, Tiie UOOtr~lgneG <IMI Clrlily ht II con· lll•Hr'f •. ••11m111 ll•lbot ltltnd, Ctllla•llll ., .. , duclln<1•~uslne11 11 tl02 5c11t11111'lr• D• .. ''" Ht rHr •1¥,., H•. ltl Ct ndlt• Mlnm1~. Ill '~ J•d• A••• Hunlln°tan S"'"· CAlltarnl1, ulld"' •~• Cttll Mtll , Ct lll, 1'306 ll &lbo• l!ltnd, C1tlt11tn/1 '1W liUlllOU1 firm n1m~ &f LINDEMAN AND Tl!: lllJI ~9'I Olltd M11 I. !tit COMPit.NY. it.DJUSlEAS I nd 1ft1I tAld AntrntY i*r 1!i Ku1lr H-trd LDwY firm 15 te>rnPG<tCI &f "'" 101..,.,.ln1 •••· Pufl!lsne<t Or•n9f Co••t n111v "lo!, ~l>t!lev H L"""" Jon, whaw n1m• •n tuU 1NI Pl•~t of M•P 11. JI, 2S ,,., Jllnt I. 1111 l lrt.1-11 C1nd1<' L. Mlll'l'!lll r,,.l.,..nc• Is '' tallg·#t ----Edw•rd A. Mlf!m111 M1vn1•d Edwatd Llnot.,..,11. f:i01 LEGAL NC1fJCE Siii• ol C1lllo•11l1. Or1111e Count~: 5cutn~re D• .. He. On M•v J. lfll. btlO<t mt., 1 Net•r"t llt!<'il M•• )(, ltll Public 111 and IOI ••Id Stale, H r-Hy MIYll .. d E. LlrHttm•~ 11'·1'425 IPPIArlKI Howt •d loW'f, Sl\tl!ff L_,., Stitt ot C1lllornl1, Or1nge (ouni.• ClllT.ll'l(All 0" IUllH~IS EdWl•d Mittman. Ctlld1c1 Mfllmlfl On Mt Y 74, 1111, btfote me. I Nottr"/ PICTITIOUS Nit.ME b10wn 11 na to 1>t Int P1r-t """"'' Publk In •rMt •or 11ld s1,11, '"'°"'II' Tiit uftdertlllltd don <t rtlfy Ill Is COii-nt m•s 1r• 511b1<rlbtd to "'"' .,.111'1111 111- •DPt•rt<I M1vn1rd Eh1•d Llf'Hl•m•n dvt lin• I DUtlntu 11 11111 ltwlnt 1tr~mtnl 1l'IO ac-now ll<ll.O Ill.-,. t •ecu1M •-11 I• m• IO bt Ille • ..,..,, Wllc-..1 IQUlt•••d, Tu"ln,. Ct!lfDrnl•, u!Hler llit tt.e ••m•. ntmr Ji 111i><crll>t'O to !flt wllll1'1 lft· llctlllout flfm ntm' ol llJI( LEit.SING (OFFl(!Al SE.it.LI ~l•vmtnl •1'111 t<knowltdffd II• t•O"Cllle<I COM,.AN'I' •NI lh1l ••Id llrm Is com· htb!!I A. H1l•i<k 1n1 11m1. Jo••d fJf lh1 lolla..J~o 1•r:on. who•• No!1,.., Publlc.Calitornl1 (OFFICIAL SEAL) n•mt In fwll 1<><1 '11(1 If rt ,ider>et II 1i. Prlfl(l•ll Dlllc,111 In Jttn L. JotY-1 IOllowt: Or'"'' Cotinfy Not••• Publlc.C1ll!Olnl1 llffn11• J. Ko.ut lmtn, 1 )6 ' 7 Mv CammlAIOll E••lrtt P•lnclo11 Olllco In ll01f1lncl OrlYt , Tuttln, (•llfor"l• '26IO Aarll 1, 1"5 0•1n91 C011n1V D•led Aorlt 79, lf'1 PubllthM l}rt"flf Colli 01!1y ,.1"1, llY (Olflmlu lon E•olroJ !~•n•rd J. 1Coer~elm1" M•v i, 11, 1•, :ZS. i•n JO:l>f.Jt Mardi J, 191) ~tilt of C1l!lornl1, Or1n1t Cotintv: ------------ "vb!l'lll"" 0••"911 C041tl 0111, Piiot, On it.prll 7', 1111, btl0<~ "''• • Not••v LEGAL NOTICE M1v 1j 11\d JUM ), I, U. ltll 1''1·11 P11bllc In •n<I 10< ll ld Stale, ~·.;on•llV • ------·~~t11ed 8•r111rd 'J. ICOl!rtelmt n ~nown lo "'• tC> ~• 1111 H fl•n wl'IO•• 111mt Is IAll rn1 tull•crlb~d lo tne wl!M11 ln1lrume11l •nd tU,.111110111 COUllT 01' TH• -:-----I 1cknewlldt..i ht •lt,ule.I !ht it mt, STA Ta 01' CALIPOltHIA "Oil CAif: NO. "·71"1 (OFFICIAL S•ALI • THI COUNlY 01' Ollit.NOI. ClllTll'ICAlE 01' r. 0 II I' 0 •A T I 0 N l;lotnor M. C:ronln CAla NO. A0·»6-t DOINO IUllNil$ UNDl!ll ll'IC· Neru y P~bllc C1lllo•11t1 CITATION 11.• "llOCl!•DINO TO "11111" TITIOUI Nit.Ml Oranit COUnl• MINOlll "II.OM rAlllHTAI. CUITOOY IAlt JUI My Com'l'llJllon El,lfll AND (ONlllOI. TH!.' UNDE R51GNEO COll POltATION Mi r. I, lfl• tn !ht Mt tttr . 9': GllAkAM l'AUL doe• htr~bv {ttllty !1111 II it <°""ucllnt' l'ublll~td 0<1/l\lt COis! OtilY Pilot. HAlllTLl!V, Mlnllr Pltlon ...... tll.vld tit bv1!n!1~ 11 ISi W111 lltt. Sire"', c .. t• Mtv '· 11, 11. 11, 1'11 llMl·11 dt<llrltl •·~ from !/'It cu•1911r •1141 coi.- Mffl, C1illor11l1, unclt r l~I fltllllotil llrm lrol QI l\lt ot rent. LEGAL NOTICE "'"'" ti tNTfllNATIONAL WHDLEl,l.LI! LEGAL NOTICE THE PEO PLE OF lH[" CDMPA,,.'I' and In•! !hi n1mt ol 11ld.o·~--~~-----~---I Sl ATf OF CAl.IFOANIA, tot'l&f'lllo<'I and Ill PtltM;l•ll ,+1ct .,. TO~ CANDACI! LAURI E WESTMit.N i,u1lnt 1t I\ 11 lollow1: NOT•C• TO <••OITOlll t n<I lo •II l'IFIOlll ci.lmlnt It bt 11 .. GllANf'$ FDR Guld, INC .. '" Wt11 IUPl'ltlOll COURT Ofl TH• motlltr" 1114 minor -IOI! 111tv1 ... ,.... \It~ Slrtfl. (Oii• Mt1t, C:tlltornll ITATI. 01' (ALll'OllNIA "0111 td, l)llH wn :it, 1f11 ,,.. COUNlT o• Olt ... NS• I Y trdt<' "" lflll (O\lrl rO\I t rt fltreb"t GlllANT'S •Diii CUHS, INC. N•. A4tlM clltd l l'ld feO\llrtct to ...... , btlOrt -E. I . Grant, Elftll fll Mtmle W, 'Vin DI-Jlld11 Pr11ldl11t In ~1rl!Mnl 1. '°' Prt·t6tnt Dtctl "'d· (jyl( Ctnltr OrlYt Wt1!, 1111!1 An1, "I. O Grtnl NOllCE IS HElllEIY CIVEH I• tllt C1Ul11t"l1, of "'"' 1boYi t11t1ll!'d Court ett /----------------, I .o.t.C tF IC \11!:\lr \ I I I I I \ ' P4CJ11C Vtf\M ME..O"Al f:'>loilt( G MOl~lfY _,•"' .. -.... •··~ J~OO ,AC1flC Yl(N OR!V(, N!W'Oltf t (.ICN, U<l lf'. 9244l ,,... _,, * I .. " ...... __ • \ 1T.t.tt . . ' ......, .... · .... · ."' I , I r -------------I ./ Stcr1l1rY tr..,llOtl &f ~ l b<Nt n:&l'l">H ff<""•nl A\1111'1 J. 1'11. 11 •:I} A.M. fll 11\t t GtYo STAlE: OF CALIFOlllHlA !1'11 Ill ... r10n1 h1YI"" Clllt'lu 1•1lr11t I/It llltn 1nd lntfl hi 1how C_.,lf , 11 l nf, YW COUNTV OF Olllit.NC.E. 55 5t ld dPCtd..,I 111 reci11l•"1 II file llle!YI, htWI', will' Nici "'"°" t/1"'111 no! tit On 111t1 )Ith <llY " it.prll, 1111. b~•or1 •Ith lt!t nt(f U llY V<IU(llt"' Ill "" Dlfk:t deC!t •H ,,., ....... !+le CO!'l•ol of Ill• ... •• I Nol••• 'ubll( Ill '"" 10f ••la Coun ol I~· Cle•k "' ~ lboY~ tnlllle.1 (Ol,lrl, OI' P•••n!~ •t(ot'dl"' II Ill• '"'""" ... 11!1 '' Ind 5111•, .. r-•11• ·-·· ... '· '· IO Prt)tnl -· W!l/'I ,,,.. ntc•INrY ""'ti•. Gr•nl 11><1 M. D. Cir•"' k~ft to Mr ,., "" "ttueft.rJ, II tht ul\d'1'~19Md ti 1111 ofllte Olven vndt1 mY 1111111 and , .. t QI tftt tllf li'retldrnt •NI •Kret1N ef !tit cor• ltf M• Al!fll'ntl" ll•nlff A, 1"11; .. ., '51 su,..r1.-Caurt ., tilt Caut11, tit D••n••• P9<lll011 lhll t~t(UllO , ... wit/Ill\ 11\o •out!! 5Prl"" Sir"!, N9. •U. L09 Afttltl•I• l ltlt of (•llfo<lllf , Oii Mlv '-1,n. 1!"1m•M 911 bH!tll d Ill• cor-.ii.ti C:l lllttnlt 900\l, Mlldo It !tie 1ltct t4 W. If, ST JOHN. """"" "'""'· I M •<k-lld'I .......... builnt n ., ''" ~no .. 11•"" In Ill mtlllrt C-ty Cler1t •fld 11111 WU! "'"'•11911 1•rcultd 1111 ••m•, l'tr!tl11l111 "' ll>t "1tl• ef wltll 41Udtnf, Clert. .,., ll'lt (Ol'FICIAL $!.ALI wllllln • monlllt t iler llM llftl "'bllCtltlon Sul'lri.<" Cou'I 14 111• ltlch••~ M. s r11c1, Sr. ol •hi• no!l(•. S!tl• ttt c1n11r1111, l'lol1•v Pubtl< • C1llter"l 1 0.ltd Mlv 11, 1'11 In 11111 lot t111 l'rlntlPtl Ol'llc1 In l 1r1 w. "'" o. ... .,. C_.., of 0r1,... Or•fttt Cw~IV f•ll(~I ... "" Ill• Wiit l lltn K. G1n1~1 My (omml111or1 lr•I... 01 "'' l llcMI n•mH dte.Mtftt DrPUIV Jul• 1, 1,JJ tlfllltY A. "~IN1, JOllPN •. IOWAlllQI lllATTlllAY. I NYOlll a \.l\llN•ITOH 4M Sfflft ....... ,I'"" N .. 01 Att.r111r 11 \.aw AtMrftfft •I \.IW lff Aft••1t1, Cllltff"I• "'" n• kvlll ·~-A•twU4t ltU Htrt~ M1l11 It., l wUt tl't Ttll IUJI MAii .... J.U11 "fll~tllll, Ctl""1111 .... l tftl l Aria, C1UI. ttJtl Allwrtt1 flw bMVl"' Tt..,., .... t (1141 1n ·lt-lli fth Mf·1~1 ,...... Alhwfll't' lilt htlf!-. Pubrl.,..., Or11111t CUii D.1111' l'llo!, 11'1*\lth" O•tnQ t COl•I Ot,(, f'!)elt, l'llll!ltt!MI Cr1,,.. c .. 11 t)1tft Plltl. M1y .. II, II. ?~. ''" lDS0-'1 M•v 11 .... ,J '"" Ju~e 1. ttll 10f1·n "'' II, '" 21 Inf Ju111 ,, lf11 111~11 I I •• JO DAILY PILOT SC Torsday r~&y 25 19n Your Money Vets Get Advice On Job Benefits Dy SYLVIA PORTER If you are -or you know - a veteran now re-erittru1g this the ttghtut and most unensy labor market In years 1t will be crucially Impo rt ant for )Ou to be thoroug.hly aware of your rights to your Job promotions fringe benefits ~eruor1tv etc Basically, I n1 sure vou know that under the law yo u are entitled to get back the JOb you left lo go into service - \I lib lhe same pay set11or1ty and status you would ha ve had tf you d never gone -up to a lime limit o( four years ! Or five years if the government requests the extra year ) But what 1! )Our old JOb has been ehm1nated" Or your Old boss refuses to rehire you' With U S veterans now com Ing home 1n mounting numbers such questions as the~ take on great urgency fhu s here are answers 1 ve ob. la1ned for you fro-m the Pren t 1ce Ha ll Per s onn e l ~1anagement Labor Relat1ot1s Service Pass them on to veterans you come across Q What if yl>ur old JOh has been abolished" Or the cum pany bas been sold? A If your old 1ob has been elurunated you re entitled lo the nearest slmliar )Ob m pay sen1or1ty and status n us rule also applies 1r y(lu can t do your old JOb because of physical d1sab1hty or because rhe Job has been changed As for sale of the company that doesn t mailer as long as the busmes5 still goes on Q Wbat do you have to do to claim your rlgbt11? A Ask your employer for your Job back w 1tlun 90 davs after your release and 1t s a good 1dea to apply 1• writing If you re m the hospital when discharged the 90 days is ex tended by the time spent in the hospital, up to one year Q What about reservists It '" .,.. .. , llll11t Aawm1111 hrffce Y•• .,. Ht eett•"tl •II .t '"' ..... TILIPHONI ANSWlllNll IUIUU 835-7777 INCREASE YOUR INCOME I DALE CARNEGIE' COURSE !ft fll.Ct v• ctmmvnlttti.ni. tltfl (l<1li4...c.t ,.,... llijml-rtl.i,.111 PhoH Todoy -17141 Ol-4191 OVER THE COUNTER Saturday is Uncle Len Day Meet )'9ur man from 'Market He'• Wully Evnns of the Qumlm1 & Jenmn~s lnsu1.111ce Agency. And he can help' ou team up \\ 1tl1 othc1 nlt 1nl)er~ of your tr,1<lc ~1~"()(:1at1on ol f 1 1ntlu~e grou1> to :,ave monev on tn:..u1 ance Wally hR.< 1 ecenlly been n11mecl .m All Se1 vice Agent of \Im ketVyne lntc1 naL1mrnl Aud he tlffers a t'Omm< I{ 1al 1n~1.1rance program thnt h,is won Lhe endor sement of more than SO trade and busmess associntlons smce lastsp11 nl(. W1Lh MarketDyne Agencic:;, ne. you gctndvantages usually avmlnble only to the very lnrgc 111s11rnnce buyer J,,011 er cost, becauRt' lossc~ n1 l "Prend otttovcr p11rt1c11)nnls.. Cha1zce to ea1 it d11;1rlr.nd~ bee iuse of reduced costs Loss p1 eventum program ,umecl .tt keepmg cost.s down And, of course,~ ou get md" 1dual service from your All l:icrv1cc MarketDyne agent. \\ally Evans He's located at 4501 Birch St, '.l:ewpo1 t Beach • Complete-New York Stock List lalft Ntl IMl1 I Mllfl l t• CltM Cht I • • • • c • • •• I,: t: " l: " " " • '• " t .. •• i: ,. <; •• •• • • }: .. • ' • , • ~ .. '· \, l• '· • " .. •• " 1: ,, .. .. • '• •• •• ~ I: .. .. '" ' .. " ' .. •• I• • •• !• ,, }• •• ~ 'I ~ •• • •• • " •• • • 1' • • , • • • • • I _r~"~'d~•1c.....M_11'-'25-'--1•_1_1~s_c~~~~~~•-•_1,_v_•_•L_o_r-"J~I~ Tuesday's Closing Prices-Complete New Y o'rk Stock Exchange List llltt NII··-------------· Uids I M)tfl Ltw et.. Chi Stoek Leaders " '" .. • " " .. .. " " "' ' •oo ' "' '" ' " ' " ' JS :;.1 l • • , • ' ' s' s •• '° 39>... 70. u . 9 11•• 16. 1 ... 11 3 '> ,, ~ 15"• ' ' , . ' ~h 1.,,, S\o lo o 11 '' • 11 21 • ,, . ,. , , 11~­ " + lllo + ' s '• - " ' .. ... r,• ~ ~; " • "' " ": " " "' "' ' " ,. " ,. " " ... M ' ' ,,. t I I o 1 9 ' "' " , , , 1 ~ , 1 15'• 2• I Utt 9 o ?lV. ll l 5S\'li 5!i , .. I 'o I 1 s.c Jl • "~· ll • lS o H ., . . .. ~ l l • 7 u ·~ :»>• ,,~ ., ~ .... "" ~" ~o.~ ~ • "~ • " ?J>o ll . ., M M l~o l~>.. 11 \ 11 lt • ,, • "1 ' ff ., " . ' S1 SI " " m 1 ' ,,, ' • • • '" ' , .. ' i '?l " , . 19 10 I 11 ' '" 1 •l • " ~ l~ ~: ~ yll. Ul SS o . ~ ~ •1 77 • ' .. ,. ' ~·l.lo ~ ~1: s1l !f! )9J 15 I 76 ll\lt •• 26h ,,. 1 1'~ ~s~ s: ~I ' " . •is u . 2jt 60 sl, it • ., 6 • ~ ... . ~ .... . '~ I~ 'l ~~ l, ''• " "' ' • h ,. ~.,,.~ s5 '"' . ... u :-"' ,, ,, J 100>'1 N.Y. Witttters and Losers rd "",..,. Uo tt l MEI COP u11 1 ' 1 en"'" 1111 Uo ~JILOf•Coo Ull ~ 1 • '11pi11A111 of Ull 5 }C:CI COt'JI 111 uo •ll~mmP •t UP • 1 ' AWcui F<:I Ull ••I F11/l.H Uo •• t Rt-Vo • ! 111 • .,1 "' UD • 11 F•r wn11"n UO •011N•-I UO • 0 J A 111110 S1111t1r Vo 'I" G•<1 R1rr.c Un l lJ l'Or~t k tfl Vo l I It S""t' Afrmel Ull l Jill ... mo<O I> n t,10 l J \I Ntllol I " UO l!lt Rclltr Sl'I ue J 'I" I~'' 1111 lln VO >j 21 Id llrtp Vo j » '"n' Un i U1> 11 il Oro ltr Inc ,. ~ -~ -11. -·· ol.~ <lnMf 40 ,f,.b II~ p 1 it.cm• H•m ACI on rod AO•m1 AYUl Adm • n •ALEP •llP Stocks Decfu1e In Heavii1g Tralle NEW YORK (UPI) -Sloc~s fell across a broad 66 "° • 3?'!1 s1 , • 21 • front 10 heavy turnover Tuesda) ~ ls~: il-.! Analysts said the hst \VJS weighed do\vn parUy l: ll ) ~} • by a consol1dat1on of past gains and partly by a x~ '1 • 2p ' pervasive concern about r1s1ng interest rates The ~ ~· ~ • 1na1or !ear 1s that higher interest rates may slo\V Soll 11 ~ 16't 16.,,~~ IJAI. l"r , 10t H1l' 1117\ + an eco nonuc recovery no\v 1n progress u.-.L p1"' , ,,,, ,, .... , ...... ~ Th D J Ind IA ff660 UJ'ltCO ~ 7u 1 • 11. ,~ _ •• e O\V ones ustr1a verage \\as o ~~c c~ ft ..!1 ~· ~~ • n .. -at 906 55 near th e fma.I bell \\ htle Standard & Un• (0 "'° ·~ 1~ ~ J' 1~) ... • Poor s 500 stock index sho\\ ed a Joss of 0 57 at ~~ ~~f<11 : 1 00 3.\>io :M\o l~ 99 56 Un°"' (Ol"P I ' ~ ... 4l 41'\<o ! U" E'K 11 .;: ft~ ~: ~; -•· Of the 1 655 issues cros:n ng the tape I 000 de 8~o~c:f •: ' 1s J1 1s + • chncd and 386 advances uoc. p, ~ ~ 1 ...,N 1"'~ "' On \Vall Street electronics '"ere 1nLxed \Vhil e un P• CP 1 , '° Il l $"0 -l 8~i ... r:~1 .i 1• s. • ~ .. ~ .. -steels motors and chem1cals traded over narrO\V un ()tl• n M 3ST XI 2'I > ,,., -\l Un ov• 1G • ~ ~ 311' l'IJr price ranges and tendmg easier uni 1w• o 1 ~ ~tt 1:~ n.:!-1\ Amo ng !he most active stocks \Vere Continental un•hoP• 40 16 •IV• •1 •1\..o + 8~e ~nd• 8~ ,. ,,"' ' .,.. ?tt. + ~. Telephone Lone Star Ce1nent Great AUant1c & u 8 d pl 10 'J t~ ~~ ~ ~ii Pacific Tea Co Gulf Oil and American Telephone u ,' ',," 13 :n~. l?'t 31• ~ !,, u~ '" cV. s 16 't 11 • 1s • -,;',b>o:;.,J:0;'1"C::,..,CJJ<:Z:"'::l:=,.,c:::::E,;;::ll.IO'-'"'C-::::Or.::"';:iG:::;"1"1 ~<n Gas 10 J1l1 SJ o Sl • SJ .. -\ lln l Ind 2Q to•S .,.•••• • -un nr:•2 :: f: • ?l ~ 4 T,~,.,'/o ~b ' 1 ~ 11 l T nWF n _.Ot •S1 1J 11 , 11l~-:. i 1 Uni~~ • k s 11) 11 ) 1 .. .,. 6 6S 6S 6S -1 •nom • \)Jn h •• I& Uo t unN.ie IO ?ll• 2:t>o 1 T 1ns U 1 XI 1 1 .. •J.' •l • -1n1c"" r; t H II\• 1"-Un P-~ n !11~0.:.211'>214 TensWA !01l0 71•'19 •-•l l nlC Inv '"° 1 1 l o +o lJ.SFOG1l0 UJ 11 0 21 U -~,T nWAI DI 10 I• 1 l1•-hl 1v' l 10 JOZ Jl>t ~I t Jlh US f n Oloe " " ' ' ' 1'~ • .. " ' • ' •• .. I •• ' . • '" • '" . ' " . ~ " ,. " ' "'' " • • ... " "' "' ·~' l~S 1l 1 191 JO . ,. " '" • • )4 , l . " " " . " " ' . ' •• ' ..... "'' tll41 l Mltll \,"' (lfM OI .. Complete Closing Prices -American Stocli Exchange List • • i " • .. " " ' " .. " m ~ ' ,j " .. ' • ' "" • " , " " " ' " ~ •i • ~ • ' .. ~ " ~ • " ' u " • .. ' ,~ • ' " ' ' "' ~ ' ' "' .. " "• " " , " ' " ,. " " ... ' " • .. ' " .. ; . • " . • ' • .. " ii m o "'' : . ,! '" " ... " '" " •• .. '" •• " ,. • '. • " .. • • • l&. 16 .. ~ ~ 11 • • 1(1 \91'oo . '. ll • s • • • • • • • s ~ s~. J ~ ~ • 1~ • 1~. ""n le ' I • \o/211 . ' , , • s 't l •O:. 1• • "°' I' ' 1' ') 11 1 • 2 • J • l • lOt• ,~ • 104 10,. " ' , • 1 •• 21 • 27 •• • • ~ ~h " . ' ,, ' ,. I o 1 • I ' ,.._ ••• ..i. 1i ,. ... "" ,,, ' " s . u,,, 2S • 1.S 11\0 11 ~ 9 • U:. '~. 1~ ' . , . 91.!i no I ' I • " 'h "" "' ,. 15 • ' "' 11 • " ' ' "" ,, . . .. •• • 16 ""' • • 1 I• 70 5 !4 '1 'i 1 l o '" ... ' '" !! 5 I n, ''• 1• .... 2 1 ~ 'i ' I •I 06 ~ ' . ... ••• "" ' . -" . 'i1 • .,_ ' . ,,4, - ' " " , ... 11 • , ' . " -.. Sl,IH Ntl lfttlt I Hlfh IAW ci.u C~t • . .. l "' • " " ~ " " ' .. 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' ,, .. + .. ·~· - Finance Briefs ClllCAGO (U PI) 111• <'h.'Ctronrc bartender has JUSt made its appearance 1 n Chicago The Jolly Ch c ! ltest .. uranL cha n bas 1nstallcd three electra bar sy s I e m ~ m 1de bv National Cash Rcg1s1 e1 Co or Dayton Ohio To mrx a dry martini ti~ harl cn1ll!r ( 1 harmaul JUSt pun ches a ke,} The bottle racks a bar cash reg ister a computer logic unlt the dispensing head and a curbon1c gas co1npressor are all r nketl tog1 !her Th e sys1<'m contro]i, the n1casur1ng or the liquors :ind tnocer~ the pn1:1ng and colleclion and the lla.r I n ventor y all s1n1ult:ine-0 1sly :ind a I.s o 1>unt'hes ou~ a charge ticket ot cash 1 ece1pt LOS ANG ELES !UPI I Sl'lnta fl" lnternat1onal Corp has sold its Ill-vessel ofrsbore and supply Octl lo Offshore Logistics Inc of Lafaye tte La for 60 000 shares of stock and $4 8 million in notes ~EW YORK (UPJI lntemational Telephone k Tclegrllph Corp stud its Br1h~h subs1d1ary Standard tclcphon~ & Cables Ltd has obtained a $22 rnilllon contract to pay :i 16 circuit submarine cable beh11een Br11z1l and thft. Canary Islands for service tit' 1971 I I I • f • • JJ DAI LY PILOT Meets the Preside•it U~I T1'""'-1t .... , \ Work, or Lose Aid /louse Prepar~s Welfare Measure WASHINGTON (UPI) million women who are now starting, July t, 1972. The flag, as far~ as Is known, heading families with young In the first year it will cost still is safe. Bul Congress Is children and getting welfare $900 million lo sel up day care changing its n1ind a bout payments in their belief, centers across the counlry to motherhood. There are about 3 million take care of the children while As radical as the idea may families on welfare in all now, their mothers are away from sound lawmakers \\'ill vote and, lhe figures are expected the home, $:xxl million to give to rise rapldly. mothers training ; $800 million shortly to repeal the old max· In all, there are about 15 to pay for 200,000 new public Im that a mother's place is in million persons on welfare. Of service jobs: in hospitals, the home. this group some 3 million are 5 c hoo I s , 5 an I ta ti 0 n They'll also be v o ti n g blind, disabled and aged. departments. and city halls; against the time honored idea Another 12 million are in some $100 million for various other that proper v.·ork for women is lhree million families. support services and a whop- rais.ing children. Of the 12 million, nearly all ping SI.I billion just to ad· "'ithout many objections, are children. or the 3 million minister the program. the house. is expected lo ap-familles, 2 millioo are headed,------------i prove a bill to force mothers by wo~n without hu~bands. out of the home for gain ful So the work requirement is employment or for j n b not an easy solution. The re- training if they ha\·en't any quirement is going to be cos- v.·orking skills. tly, and there is no guarantee /}::==== Not all mothers will be fore-of success. ............. " tho!IOllH ,,.,_, Miss USA , h1ichele ?.fcDonald of Butler, Pa., who said she always \vanted to meet Md converse with President Nix on. has her \Vish granted. The tv.·o are conversing at Nixon's Key ~iscayne re sidence. ed into v.•ork though . Only First, there Is a question of those who want to keep their where the jobs will be found . welfare payn1cnts. Next is the question of The work requirement is a whether the welfare mothers THE RED BALLOON comersklne of the new ''Fami· can "hold the jobs. Another Russ Troop Cut Bid Pondered Jy Assistance Program" pro-question is the type of jobs - posed by President Nixon and where the work will be clean· modified by the Hou~ Ways ing somrone else's home or and Means Committee. other menial work. Th e w o rk-0r-lose-moncy Surveys show that only one Ry PHIL NEWSOM U~I 1'1r•l111 N..-t A1Wl11f Since the end of World War 11 , a primary objective of the Soviet Union has been to get Uni ted States forces out of Europe. Kosygin, chose this particular time to renew a proposal that the two sides explore possibilities or 11 redu ction of forces and armaments in Cen· tral Europe. philosophy was wrilten into of every fi ve welfare mothers Russians might have had the bill by those v.•ho believe has a high school education. something else in mind. welfare rolls arc rising too ~tore than 30 per cent have This could be the increasing rast, that it should be harder nev.er gone past the eighth to get on weliare and easier to grade Many can't read likelihood tlf British mem· · · gel off, and that the present Welfare mothers who now bership in the European Com· $10 billion federal cost ol want jobs often can't get them mon Market and the creation welfare is too high. beeause they don't have any LTI). --'*""-~ New ... Summer's things f<!I' Sumn1rr's child by r lnrrncr Eis!"m11n Ruth of Carolina Na Iii ----llu• 1110>1 olrli~h1fully 11uu.i11I rl1ilolrt11'~ ,111rr in 1ht 1en1hl111d loylll Travel Byllnts FORMER MATSON LINER SETS WORLD VOYAGE FROM LOS ANGELES IN '72 Jc-11 Boid 1ninJ l'.;ci11c f~r 1r1l1a, Ntw Guo11t .;. /\l ,1'y111, [151 Li11r on 1n nnu11c•n~ art un· ln.11.;, Cri!on, ))c-1·1 hrlle l1bndJ, rre<rdrnrC'.i "orhl (r<ll•I' trom I ~" and S?u1h A trill, B r1l1l. Ca!otorn1a ..,h,,h ·~ r irt-ttC'd 10 B.;rl-adn•. ( U••<•(l, P•n;i.1111 and l!tf•<I a n11mbrr <>I Or1n,1:t .... IC'U<O. :O.horr r~cur>10n• • 11( l>r f nun!\' rt11deru~. Thi' luiury ohcrc.i •n all ro11•. anol r~rrn\l\r lmrr '\~ ... IARIPO~A •ill dC't'11rl o•·crlan.I 1ou111rt 111rht11hn. Loi An,1(<"11'5, /\tan h 10. l 'l~ 2, on nH>JI 11•1:"' rnr rloOJC' •ho • 11h 111 1 'Xl-d•1· .1:lnN-ro11rt loni;: ""l~t. Jl"C' ,u,h ~rt·a, "' 1he l·.;J1 l\lro(an ·1 he, 1 u"" Ill•• l • 1 hr tirJt 111ne µme re"'""' "' Jtr•I• rh<" M AR ll'C)~A "' auy nl l>rr Prictd lrom $ 1,fJ,O rn ) lZ.- '"tC'f J!up• •fl 1ht h1>1nr1 ,,f thr 8 ~1\ per rt"r111n.dc-rl'ndon;: "" "'I"'"'" l lt·t·r h., ... cn1h.rl•·<l ou 1.;h111 ''I'" an,! !m.;11on. 1hr 11i. 1 ,i:r•nol "nrld 'nu,r. aod ,1,., 11 I 1 r -C·< I•"< r u ;,,.. " c Krt·c 1cri 10 1hc <>nly t i.::>. rl.01< '""d ,d1lm.1< •I'll nut "'1h1n "<"<"l• The T<"(fnr .-.n >tl<h a lfH•rne) on l')-~. 1'1111-Pl I L11\td1")11 l.•r.oud ~1 rdtr('rfl ,, J· .. r f.•,I 1 Hl<' ronl nvt·rort·r•· nr~n Cru"e •'•• !ullv hnok~J ''"" nt the o\lllRIPOSll .ouJ 1h' l'Ctot(';t 1-ro..hurc' nuld r•'('f1 ""° ,\tONTl:Rl:Y earlier 1h" 1·t·•r. rnnrcd. l'nrn11·r l\l11>on cro,i"e cnn1""'"'f. all 1he Jmc n.od;.,on~ p~~>l'll,io:U • h11·e alrtady recr .. ·td and mnu ul doe emrlnvctJ of a rrd•m•n•ry announctmrnr o\1•1'<111 !~inc. ihr<>ui;h 1hr HMrl. "I hey. and nrh. T., "'""r au t'X!t• 111..,-.o>ure .,f <'r onrerr" .. d "1•l•v1d.i.ol•, ~hould tOn~t'•n~lu r .. k1f tt11yd "di host cnni.c1 Bnyd Tr••·c! omn1cd<1t<'i\· a J:• !·l.•<ju~'"'""'l donni-r r~rry tnr I. cnn,ult.or.un ~ppnonrmr•H ~h.~ur a u1nnrh hr!or<" ,.,1,n,:. Tiit •i;<'ntr" ln.arrt! at 70~ \\:I. ""h 1n•H•"""' t'\rrn.lui !" all i-rh ~lfC<'t. :-O•ni. Ana a...! m~y (nuo"d'l' "h" ... ~,,. hnolrJ on he rc•th('rl hy (·a.lhni: ~1; . .112;s thc•ru"<"'htnuJ<hRn,J'lr••rl hrt ... ttn I) •nd \ ... tnnday I'"'" l•n<h on 1hr JlJnt•ra'r rf>rnui;:h ffld.o•·, or ~a1urd,1· ~· "" !ud<" I!"'"''"•.'>• mna, 1 1 I' h · '" ern I 0 •nd I. IAnd<. Tnn>:a. Ne• Zl'aland, Au'· Leonid I. Brezhnev, the Kremlin 's No. I man. referred lo it specifically four years ago in a speech at Karlovy Vary, Czechoslovakia. It has been inherent in the various Soviet proposals for a Euro- pean security conference and other suggestions for a reduc- tion of forces in Europe. By doing so they passed up what propaganda value the Soviets might have drawn from Sen. Mike ~1ansficld's drive for a unilateral cut by half in the United States' troop strength or 300,000 in Europe and what value they might have gained from the unac· ceptable upward leap in the U.S. balance of payments deficit. of a new bloc of 300 mill ion \\'ays and ~1eans Comn1itt~e skills at all. Chairman Wilbur P . Mills, I()., The latest cost estimate for N } E persons linked not on I y k ) · I d' d f ear y Veryone economica lly but prob;:ibly Ar . is a ea 1ng a vocate o putting we lfare mothers and that philosophy. the few male adults in welfare 16877 Al,l(onquln ~I. lll'''l"l'l:TU,, 110• II (7J4) 846-1666 defensively as we11. ~1ost affected by the work families w work is "·• billion Listens to Landers If this is the case, then other Soviet moves may well be in , fr~e~q~"~ir~em~e~nl~w~i~ll.:ibe~"~P;;l o~2~~in~J~· "~s~I iith~e~f o~'rs~t:.,;f~"~fl~y~ea~r~,~:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimj the olfing also, includ ing 21 II new approach to the problems of a divided Berlin and en· couragement of some sort for West German chancellor Willy Brandt'~ program ~r But there is a legitimate question as lo why Brezhnev and later. Premier Alexei It seems, therefore, the "nstpolitik." 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ONLY $2299S HOME IMPROVEMENT PLAN'"3 ThE" hride can enhance her living TOOm decor "ith this Sylvania l\ll'ditrrr11ncan 1tyled 1teren C"onsole modE"I SC20.5 fraturing 50 watts Df'&k musiC" prl\•·rr. FM/ AJ\.f plus FM sterro r11.dio, 11utomati(' rf'l'Ord playrr snd sealed 11ir suspen- 11ion SPf'Akcr systr m includrs convenient remote 1pcaker and tape jacks. OUR LOWEST PR1C1 EYER 519995 HOME IMPROVEMENI' PLAN 11!4 ·Get them off on the right toot with 1 flant 25 inch screen (dia(. meas.) Sylvania color TV model CL813 Jn Spanish styled cabinet. Jnc~ush- button AFC and tfie long.Ji re @fu'.!Ltar a cha.al&. NOWONLY $54995 lV.T•~ GTE_ Sv~·""'" l"CO<--"d, TV RECEPTION SlMULATtD • • 111te grlt.11 n11d Depe11dnhlllt11 •l11ee 1947 l COSTA MESA 411 (. Seve11tee11tlt St. '"'·1 614 llcrll't t •t : Set. t ·6 IEllVICI : l41°J4J7 EL TORO Le11111e Hiii• "••• • .,.,, 19 Stw.Onl IJ1-JIJO 4•11' 1 0-6; Tlturt., p;rJ, 1 O·t • I I , I I I , Tltey Like It Dana Emmi!, left, and h-1isty Rathbua1 seem en· thralled v.'ilh the art work of the kindergarten youngsters at CordiJlera School in Mission Viejo. Parents like the creations of the various grades also. The school's Art Fair was held Saturday. Valley Man Dies In Head-on Crash On Canyon, Road A head-On collision on Santiago Canyon Road just south of Peters Canyon Road Monday night killed one person and in· jured five others. Dead at the scene of the 11 :30 p.m. ac· cidenl was Donald D. Lilly, 47, of 10320 \Varner Ave., Fountain Valley, who v•as alone in his small foreign car, the cor· oner's cifice reported. The drive r of the other car Jeff D. Jenkins, 18, of Anaheim is reported in serious condition today in the Orange County t.1edical Center's intensive care unit. Also in serious condition in the same hospital is one of his passengers Jay E. VanMarler, 17, of An aheim. Others injured include David Abdelnour. 16, in fair condition today; Richard Ramos. 19, and Charles E. Crowson, 18, both treated for minor in- juries and released. The three are Anaheim residents. A fifth passenger, Robert A. Peskin, 21, of Silverado Canyon Road, was treated al the scene for minor injuries. Ca\Hornia tlighway Patrol investigators said Lilly's car was traveling north on Santiago Canyon Road. crossed the center line and crashed into the southbound vehicle. Mari11e Arres ted In Knifing Case A young Camp Pendleton t1arine . is being held pending military investigation in the stabbing last week of another leatherneck. Bas e spokesmen announced Monday lhal authorities v.·ere holding Pfc. J ,a,1Tence A. Pauter. a member of 1st r·orce, Reconaissance Co., lst Marine Di\'ision, in the stabbing ~'h.ich took place during a scuffle ~·lay 18. Pfc. James Jajack. 21. of Headquarters and Service Co., Schools Battalion, was reported lo be recovering from a single stab wound to the chesL Former Ziegfeld Girl Edith Dillon Succumbs Death has closed a final cu rtai n on the career of actress Edi1h Heller DilloJl ... onetime Ziegfeld Follies girl \\'ho acted. danced and sang \Vith all the heroes or~ yesteryea r in American stage and cinema theater. No funeral will be held for ~liss Dillon, 75, v•ho spen t her lasl 10 years in Ne\vport Beach. The woman who broke into theater at age 13 in Washington D.C. with a role in "Peter Pan" lived at 35 Beach Drive, with a close friend , Mrs . Claire DeLeon. Her career spanned the early days or vaudeville theater. with several later starring roles in silent films and final ly a 20Ui Ce.ntury Fox Studios comeback as a contract aci ress. She \\'ent back to work in the mid·l930s after her second husband. film direetor John F. Dillon died. , A SOll by her firsl marriage tG theatrical producer, L. Lawrence Weber Jr., is currently starring in the Broadway hit "Applause," with actress Lauren Bacall. f\.lrs. Dillon also leaves a son Anthony P. Dillon, of Hollywood, a sister Ethel Varsa, o( Hollywood and a brother, \\.'alt.er Grady, of San Diego. Her Broadway stage debut came in ''The Peasant Girl," with Emma Tren- tini, while she starred as Prima Donna or the 1916 Ziegfeld Follies which featured some olher young t.alent. Cast members included \V .C. Fields. Eddie Cantor, Fanny Bryce and famed humorist Will Rogers. Appearing in Jerome Kern's "Leave it to Jane," t.1rs. Dillon also introduced the siren 500g. '.'while her lines in films "Governor's Ghost," "Children o f Destiny" and "Human Hearts" y,·ere all v"rilten subtitles. The veteran actress and Washington D.C. native won a role in a 1909 capitol City production of Peter Pan, appearing v.·ith Maude Adams. Additional credits include playing op. posite the late Clifton Webb in "Vogues and Vanities," and appearing with William Collier in "Nothing But Lie~." Following the death of her second hus.- band, hlrs. Dillon returned to acting on 11 contract with 20th Century Fox Studios in Hollvwood. Fii1al arrangements for the late ac- tress. ~·ho died Friday, are being handled locally by \Vestcliff Chapel t.tortuary , ·with interment this week in Forest La\\'11 Glendale. Clemente Girl Gets $50 Fine e A San Clemente woman has been fined $50 in Santa Ana municipal court for lhe part she played two weeks ago when a group of demoruitraton picketed the San- ta Ana headquarters of the U.S. ~Jective Service System. Judge William Thompson set the fine after accepting the guilty plea filed by Susan Marie Hester, 20, of 307 Via ,_lontego. to misdemeanor charges of trespassing. t.liss Hester was one of six peraons ar- rested in the wake of a protest march that began outside the Orange County Jail and ended ~·ith the sign.carrying demonstrators shouting their protes t outside the draft board offices. Two Irvine students are among the five co-defendants fa cing charges of trespass- ing . David Albert Zalusky, 18, of 203A Camino Mesa Court and Ronald J. Howie, 18. of 101 Camino Mesa Court, are scheduled to appear for arraignment Thursday. Both are frt!e on bail. l\1eclina Dale Delayed FT. ~1cPHERSON, Ga . (UPI) -The Army Monday postponed for the third time the pretrial hearing for Capt. Ernest L. Medina, charged with o v e r • e 11 respon.sibility in the My Lai massacre. The new "tentative" date for the hearing was set for June 16. ·Paper Plot Plagues Police ~1idni14 ht Raiders Plaster San Cle1nente Station San Clemente has its share or special- tnterest organizations. But the nev.·est of the groups has local police curious -and a Hiile big angry. The group calls itse lf the "San Clemente MidniFht Decorating C-Om· mittee", and police healquarters last weekend became lhe first choice by com- mittee members ror an experimerUal project. The committee used toilet paper el• elusively during it.s decorating session. Then someone in the anonymous group -a person well versed in the skill of making time exposures \\'ith a 3S. millimeter camera -made several ri:ames of lhe handiwork. The strip of negatives \\'Ound up in the DAJLY PILOT San Clemente office 1nail slot before Monda\' mornin g. They sho"' slopes near p o 11 c e headquarters plastered with garlands of us.sue - a mess whi ch city employes had to clean up after dawn Sunda y. Accompanying the three frames came this message, printed in blue ink on yellow paper : "\\.ho"s Mindini:: the Fort~" •'Dear Dally Pilot, "On May 23 belv.'een the hours of 1:10 a m and 2 a m. six brave and courngeow: n~e~bers of . the San Clemente Midnight Decorating Committee toilet-papered the s.c. Pollce Department. We ~ill accept all congratulaUons for the greatest coup of the century~" Besides the message, the DAILY PILOT re«ived a pair of anonymou~ ttlephone messa ges on a \\CCkend ,•, NOCTURNA L DECORATIONS CAUGHT IN TIME EXPOSURE Polle• In San Clemente Did n't Think It Very Funny tel ephone recording device. One csller said "Kllroy's group did it again. We toilet-papered the police department. •• " Police have evidence of their own -in- cluding a large poster showing the time. honored charic11ture of "Kilroy'' peering over a ledge, Beneath reads the equally time-honored Phrase made immortal by Kilroy hlmsctr. The detective bureau was locked up Sunday. On Monday rooming, beneath the smnll "investigation'' sign on the bureau door, was another message. Whoever had to clean up lhc com· mittee's mess apparently lagged the sign on the bureau door. "Kilroy was here," It said. Now It 's committee one, Cops zero. Let 'cm try 1t again, said one pat rolman. r....i.,, M" 25, 1971 s DAILY PILOT II Fighting New Battles Deserter Holds Shattered Dream of Home By ~\!CINDA FRANU AND PETER FREIBERG U• .... ,.,.. llM,...IMll The night• Wtre tht wor.st. During the ctau, he eould wield the ba11onetJ march the long man:he• and kill an imaginary enemy without thinki,..g. But at night things clottd ln on him. Niglltm.ores would come; votce1 thundered i'n hi1 head and men ran in circles screaming, ''kiU, kill, kill/" He would woke Mp, h~ 1heiti 1baked with sweat. And so, just tour weeks after he ar- rived as a m-aftet! fw bit3lc ltiUPlna: at Fort Dix in !'tew Jersey, 19-year-old John Plcclaao Jr. (serial JV>, US519801M) could stand it no longer. On Sept. 20, 1967, he started running. Six monlhs l•ter be reached Stockholm and became one of the first American d11erttr1 tn exile ln. Sweden. Today, John lives in a tOwn near Stockholm, manages to find work, 11 Btu. dying at Uppsa]a University, bu a steady girl friend and is tn good health. He gets by. But he is not happy. One day he would like to go home. Thinks AfJout Co1nh1g Home It is probable that most of the r ~limated 500 American deserters in t>den feel as John doff. Some dream oming back to help bring about social 1ges they think are needed. Othen J.1.;t want to pursue careers and be Dear their families and friends. Almost an feel like aliens in Sweden, adrift tn a culture wiUt which they do not identify, John's desire to come borne Is over- ridden by his belief that he will be a permanent outcast in bis own country. It is not so much the two-year prison term he ~·ould probably face. Jail has an end. But the sentence imposed by IOCiety doee nol. What he fears most Is being branded an untouchable for an act he feels he committed in good conscience. Like most of the other ex·servleemen in Sweden, .John considers himself a "patriolic deserter.'' This story of John Picciano is based on many talks with him in his Swedish exile, and long interviews over a period o( several months with his pa re n ts , relatives, high school classmates and former school teachers in his home town of Lodi. New Jersey. Although John Picciano ne\'.e; got to \lictnam, he and the other deserters in Sweden are still very much products of the war. VietAam has produ ced a deser- tion rate lhal has increased as sharply as the national debate over American iD- "olvement. Rate Shows Attitudes Official Gefense Department figures show that In the year ending J une 1970, the Army's desertion rate was 52.3 per 1,000 average strength - a 350 percent in crease over 1965. The rate is higher than it was during the Korean Conflict, refle cting the different American a~ titudes toward different und eclared wars. In the 1950s, Korea sparked little debate and certainly no moral challenge from the "silent generation." But with even congressional leaders sharply divid- ed over war policy today, the response of young men ~called to fight also has been mixed. The Pentagon, concerned by this and ether unprecedented dissent within the services, has created a special deserter section and is offering rewards to a11yone who helps apprehend a deserter. It does not agree that principle is the primary motivation of deserters. In the Defense De partm en! 's views, "most absentees are motivated by the same reasons that soldiers have gone AWOL since the dawn of history. These reasons include financial problems, fami- ly problems, romantic involvements, acts of misconduct which have led to disciplinary action, inability to adjust to military life, family pressure and emo- tional appeal prior to cverseas tour an d deficiencies among junior officers in recognizing potential A WOLs~eserters." Memo questions Jtlotlvatlon "Current infonnation," says an official memo issued last September, "indicates that an extremely small percentage of absentees are motivated by political reason or anti-Vietnam protest." In extensive talks with John Picciano a11d other deserters in Sweden, the ,,, ;.:lassie motivations for desertion. in· C1uding fear of death, are freely admitted to. But they place far more importance on an unwillingness to 'kill people against whom no enmity is felt or to be killed in a war they view as im moral. These feelings, combined with a revulsion against military life by a generation that seems more rebellious than mosl, are to them the mosl decisive reasons for their deserlion. John Picciano was born and raised in Lodi, New Jersey. He lived in the same r;mall, lwo-story house until he was drafled shortly before his 20th birthday. A tall, bulky boy -he now stands at si:< feet-he had few friends and was too shy to ask a girl for a date. In summing up his academic record and general behAv· ior. the principal of Lodi High School says, "He wa s so average ft was ridicu- lous." Lodi,ltself hardly stands out amid the lndustrial landscape of Northern New Jersey. Although it is only a 45-minute bus ride from New York City, it might as well be a thousand miles away. If you go into a bar on Union Street near John's home, the customers will tell you frankly they live in a grimy, polluted town. But they'll quickly add that tt.'11 town where hard·worklnK people try to live decent· Jives, where "the family Is still the big thing and people try to improve lhe lot of thelr children." Some older resldenl.1 can't understand why the young want to ,, ...... f UP'IT ........ WAITS QUIETLY AND HOPES John Picciano Sr. leave. "Who knows what these kids of to- . day want'' they ask. "Even Ult kids don't know." A f'alf11re At Onll# 24 No one among John's friends ha.s left J..odj, but they aren't all that content there; 11'1 too euy, they say, to allow your llfe to become a routine of eating, sleeping and working. One schoolmate of John, only 24 years old, describes himself as a "failure." When the talk turns to John's desertion, his frl~nds express sot· row the whole lhlng happened. They art ~lso ialrigued by some aspects of his life In exile -about the excitement of learn - ing a new language, about Swedish girls about starting with a new slate. ' No one was thinking of war, the draft or desertion when John was born on Oct 26, l!H7, the only child of John and Connie Picciano. The beginning of the Cold War had nol blown away the euphoria that followed World War JI, conscripti"on had ende~ and the country was experiencing growing prosperity. Like three.quarters of Lodi's 25,000 residents, the Piccianos are Italian. American. Mr. Picciano, a sofl·spoken, thickset man with crew.cut gray hair, cante lo the United States with his parents from Italy at the age of nine. He has experienced some bard times, but on the whole feels this coontry has been good to him. He has worked in teztlle factories most of his life, earning modest salaries. lfe lives in a small wortd ac- cepl.s things as they come and seelns a bit overwhelmed by much of what hap. pens outside Lodi. John 's mother is a frail, neat woman who prides herself on keeping her home immaculate. Her hea lth ' has deteriora ted since John '• desertion. Stau• Close To llonie As a child, John stayed around lht house most of the time, often playing iD HIS IXILE IS RESTLESS " Ar,,,., Dtitrtor Pf"I"'° • . ,. the small batkyar!L His lather •11 Jiu. dy with tools, and by tho Ip o! lino· .. four lohn WIJ taking things apart ibl P\lttln1 thtm together again. John remembers always hating to )>a cooped up -a feeling that was to emerge again in the Anny barracks. One day, when he was five years old, he was ~t· ting in a closed room while hi.a fal;lJet read in a chair nearby. The door wa1 Jocked and J ohn became angry, Deciding to gel out by himself Instead of asking ~ father to open the door, he picked up a screwdriver from a toolbox and remoVed the lock before his father knew what be was doing. John's best friend -virtually his only friend -throughout childhood was Ken. Barry. Both were introspective. Neither enjoyed playing stickball or bueball or any of the sports popu]ar with £he neighborhood boys. Wlth school and"6t. Joseph's Roman Cathollc Church, wb he went to mass every Sunday mornl?tg, located withln two blocks of his home, John rarely had any reason or desire.,to leave Lodi. Jndeed , he had almost a fear of travel -a fact. that strikes both his friends and family as ironic In view or his present location in Sweden. "Every time we went someplace," h11 mother reeall.s, "he was afraid. He woqld get upset if we took a different train from the usual one. I'm surprised ~·· over there. I can't understand It." 1 Nt:rt: Graduation and IA. UP'IT ....... THIS WAS JOHN PICCIANO<S HOME IN LODI, N.J. Hl1 P1r1nt1 Still Live There, Wishing He W11 Home l Flood of Addicted Troop~ ' Being Discharged-Finch j BALTlf.10RE, Md. (AP) -Presiden. tial adviser Robert ~I. Finch said Monday 2tl,OOO drug addicts are being di!charged annually' from military serviCe. Treatment programs are bandied within eac h service, but Finch noted a "violent difference of opinion," on bow to combat drug abuse. "It's been difficult and spotty. Each aervice has Its own program," he told a new conference after an address on health care. Finch said rectnt military bases tn t:urope and Africa had revealed that e(. fort.! to prevent drug abuse among American troops 11appear not to be altogether ef{ective." ' But Finch said he found a realist.le response to drug problems at the bat· talion level. He said officers who dlseow:r such problems often try to keep offend$'1 out or cities where drugs are euJ!y available •nd, st the same time, try~to keep men with drug problems out of ten· tact with more youthful a i d Impressionable soldiers. ~ f<'inch. former secretary of heallb. educallon and welfare, spokt wttb newsmen at John Hopkins HOJ!pltal aftv calling for enaclment of the Nll:On admlnistrallori's he11:lth cl!lre package. • ' \ I I 4 DAIL V PILOT Tursday, Mo1r 25. 1~71 1t101aetary ltfeetitag Panama Canal Parley U.S. Seeks Help • For Dollar Woes NEW TALKS between Panama and the U.S. over Panama Canal jurisdiction are approachi ng. Pa_n· ama ,vants authority over the Canal Zon e -a strip of land fi ve miles on ei lher side of the 50-mHe long intctoceani c canal -'vhich in the past has been administered by a \Vh ite House appoi nted governor. Mother Does Her Duty, Son Nab bed for Drugs TITUSVILLE. Fla. (AP) -PcliC'e :fis pa tcher Donna \Vocxrs I9-year-old sou .,·as be.hind bars on a narcotics charge YJooday because she did her job and il!:layed an anonymous tel eph c·ne tip lo of· Czecl1oslovakia Thanks Soviets For lntervenii1g PRAGUE (UPI) -Czechoslovak Com- mun ist Party leader Gustav •lusak formally thanks the Soviet Union and its :eader, Leoni d Brezbnev, today lor the~r "brothe rly help" in intervening 1n Czech:)sovakia in 1968. "This act of in ternational solidarity 1aved the lives of thousands of people.'' Husak told the 1,195 delegates to the •pening session of the 14th Czechoslovak Communist Party Congress. Brezhnev •nd a top-drawer array of leaders from Russia and the ot her communist coun- lries sat on the podiu m behind Husak as be apoke. ficers to be on the lookout (or her ow n ca r. Randall Glen \\'ood 11·:is arrcsh:cl \\i1h t"·o companions alter po\ic~ ll)(:atcd the automobile and discov('rerl \•.hat !hey termed a large amounl o( heroin end marijuana. !\lrs. '\'ood said th11t 11·he11 she anS\l'Cred 1he IP\ephonc al th'! Titusville police slalion Friday, the 1nni.! C"alle;· said he kn('\V a car rnrkr~d al a h,c:ii shopping center had heroin i!l ii. \\"hen he described !hr c:1r and gav·· the license number. the \'/ o n1 a n dispaJcher said she i mm e d i ale I Y recoinized it as her auto. She had loaned ii to he r son a short time e:i.rHcr. ~lrs. \Vood radioed patr.'11 car~ in t:1c area to keep ''':itch for the vc1'iC"lr. l\loments later. a Titusville patrolman spotted ii and ~topped it for ir>~pecl!ou. Soon after. he r.:idioed r.eadquartcr'> vnd asked l\1rs. \\food for permissio11 tu search the car. She agreC"d. Detectives said that among tl,c ile1ns confiscated from the car '"ere cil;a retl<! papers. some marijuana. enl)llf;il heroin for 20 "fixes" and a ~)'Tinge. Three suspects in all \\'ere eh:irgC'J \1'.th possession of heroin. marijua1,J and narcolies paraphernalia. Expert Blasts Lockl1eed Loa11 Action by. U.S. WASHINGTON (UPl)-A civilian con· tract official who works for the Navy ha:\ told Congress il should let Lockheed Aircraft Corp. go broke rather than gi\'e government backing ·to a $250 million loan for the aerospace firm. Gordon Rule, chairman of the Navy·s Con tract Claims Control & Surveillance Uroup. told a Senate Joint Economic sub· con1miltee !11onday the loan guarantee is .. most unwise from a procurement point or vie""" "l can tell you there are other com· panics standing in line right no~·." he said. "If we do this for Lockheed, \\'e will never live it down ... if their manage- 1nent has been lousy, 1 say lcl 'em go broke. I don't see why ire should take this action, except possibly that they're from California." Lockheed is in trouble because of cost overruns on government contract-;. and because Rolls Royce. \\-'hich \\•as building the engines for il s l..JOIJ jumbJ jet, \\'Cnl bankrupt. Pri111c l\1inis tcr Win s Trinidad Election · fo.1UNICH (UPI) - The United States called on its European and Asian partners today to help the dol~ar by end- ing restrictive trade practices and shouldering a larger share of free \Vorld defense. Paul A. Volcker, unde rsecretary of the treasury for monetary affairs, put the Soviet SST U11de1· Heavy French Guard PARIS (U PI ) -The Soviet TU144 supe rsonic airliner landed today at heavi- ly guarded l..e Bourget Airpo~. giving \Vest its firs t look at the Russian plane. Shortly before arriva l the Anglo-Fren ch Concorde SST streaked 2.794 miles from 'Toulouse, France, to Dakar, Senega l, in 21.: hours. Police ordered tough security measures to guard both 1he TU144 and Russian pilols and dignitaries attending the Paris air show after receiving tips that ex- lremists planned to attack Russian airliners in retaliation for the trials of Jey,·s in the Soviet Union. The silver and white TUl44 glided onto the field at 3:46 p-.m. (10:46 a.m. EDT) after making tlro Jo1v passes over the field and tipping ils wings in a salute to hundreds or spectators. The Soviet craft "'ill be the star Russian entry at the 29th Paris air sho1v opening .ll'hursday alongside the riva l needle-nosed Concorde. the \Vest's only faster-than-sound airliner since I h e United States dropped its own SST pro· jcct. The Concorde flight to Dak ar today \\'as a combination endurance and test !light. A crowd or enthusiastic Senegalese headed by President Leopold Sedar Senghor applauded ils arrival at Da~ar Airport, its first landing 1n a foreign country. Police sources said "particular precau· lions" ll'OUld be taken to guard the TU\44 and other So\•iet exhibits. It 1\·as expected the aircraft \\'OUld be placed under 24· hour armed guard and \\'ould be fotlo"'ed by jeeps or armed police every time they taxied on the ground. The sources said the precautions \\'ere ordered after police agents picked up tiµs thal extreme Zionist groups in F'rance \\'ere planning retaliation £or the sen- ten cing of nine Jews in Leningrad and the new trial of four n1ore in Riga. The sources said precautions to guard the regular 18 Aerorlot Soviet aiolines flight s in and out of Ori~ and Bour~et airports each •.veek 1\'0uld include hav ing a jeepload of French police meet them on the end of the run11•ay and follow them in· to the terminal. 3rd. Quake Jolts Cc11tral Turkey, Houses Rattled ISTANBUL. Turkey (UPI) -The third earthquake in 13 days shook central Turkey today, cracking \.,.alls and tumbl- ing chimneys. But officials said first reports froni the cities of Eskisehir, Afyon and Kytah.va. about 140 miles southeast of Istanbul. did not mention casualties. American case to a meeting of more than 200 leading bankers and government fin ance officials from 20 coun tries. German Foreign Alinisler Walter Scheel set the stage for Volcker by criticizing those who clai m current in- ternational monetary problems reflect a dollar crisis. He agreed with Volcker that no single country or policy is at fault. The bankers heard Volcker and Scheel as the U.S. dollar bounced back from its Jov•est price in more lhan 20 years to reach a fi:ting !or the day in-German markets of 3.53 marks. This compared ,.,.ith an official e:tchange rate of 3.66, and ~1onday'.s low or 3.4990. Dealers in the Frankfurt exchange said that for the firs t time since the money markets \\'ere reopened May IO, business '''as about normal. But the central bank still refused to unload any of its hoard or dollars. \Vhich Foreign Minister Scheel estiinated at about $19 billion. Vo\c kcr said the U.S. government ron· siders the latest monetary crisis rai!les three queslions. ·•The first is \\'hcther the United States can successfull y regain its rightful posi- tion as an island of stability in the ,,·orld." Volcker told !he bankers. "I think \re are on our "·ay lo regaining that no\v (alU1ough) certainly at \'ery ron- siderable cost internally in terms of unemployment and other factors." 11e said the second question concerns restrictive trading practices "'hich "·ere acceptable in the immediate post..,,ar period but are not now. He singled out Japanese restrictive trade poliices as being particularly to blame for America's "deterioration in current account.'' "Thirdly, the United States docs carry extraordinary defense burdens." Volcker "'e nl on. "In a sheer arithmetical sense, our military expe nditures overseas more lhan account for our basic (balance of payments) defic il \\lilh the changing relationship of economic strength in the world, I think the old question in that area (of sharing lhe defense burden) becomes even more pertinent." A vice president of the \\'est German central bank predicted \Vest Germany \\'ill floa t its mark for at least a year un- i ii the United States restores faith in the dollar. Heft y W 0111an Gets Seutence i\JfAi\11 tUPJ)-i\lrs. i\lary Loui se P<'terson, a 315-pound n1othcr of six children, has been ordered by a criminal court judge to lose three pounds a week un til her \\'eight drops to 250 pounds. Judge J\1urray Goodman made lhe diet part of J\1rs. Peterson's three years probation l\1onday after rinding the wo1nan guilty of assaulting a policeman. During l\1rs. Peterson's !rial, assistant public defender Stephen J\..1echanic told the court his C'lient \\'as on welfare and had been unable lo .,.,·ork because of her ex- C"ess \\'eight. l\lcchanic said ~trs. Peterson· s nonnal 11·eight \\'as 250 pounds. Goodn1an ordered J\lrs. Peterson to "·eigh in each week at the public heahh department an d bring proof of her \\"Pighl to Mechanic's office. Turning to Brezhnev, Husak said, "ln l'he name of the whole of our party and !he overwhelming majority of our wor k- lng people, we express our sincere thanks lo the Soviet Party. government and people and especially to you, Comra de Brezhnev." Bond was set at $4.500 !or ea ch teenager. Only \\lood rernaincd 1n 1ail !\fonday. The others ,posted b,ul. l\1rs. \Vood no11• refuses '.o commC'nl on the case and Polic(' Lt Charles Bnll :-.2id he had attempted lo lo.cc;) he!' in· voh·ement a secret. PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (AP) Prime l\1inister Eric Williams led his rul- ing People's National Movement to a complete s1rccp in flfonday·s ~encra l election, but many voters 'heeded the op- posH ion ·s call to boycott the voting. \Villiams' party 11·on all 36 seals in the Trinidad and Tobago •louse of Rcpresen· \~lives. giving him a fourth five year term. It ~·on 24 in the 1966 election. The latest tremors came eve!1 as rescue \\'Orkcrs ·counted the toll of an earthquake which devastated parti. of thr \rcslcrn Anatolian region last Saturday. ·-.. The delegates rose in a standing ova· \ion. Storms Hammer Midwest The latest death loll in !h;it qu c.kr, centering on Bingo!. 1\'as 844 Officicits forecast a final toll ex:ceedins l.000. Bingo!. a cily of 17.000 "·as 80 percent leveled. But tcmporafy tent shelters \\'e1 e springing up lhere today and ample relie f supplies "'ere arriving. Today 's t.remor was described as of "medium 5trength." 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I"'°' ptCV•olld in ~ l.O'I ArovelH Bttlfl ll:!CltY, t <CO"!'"' It fl>f Al• Pollullol'I Control 0+11rl<f. Joof1e 1'1191'11 MOtld•Y •lld lor..C11I '"''""""'' Toa.' lt1e"1otd Loni !ln<ft 7J·7S. S.."11 11\9"1(1 jj)-'-l, l u•l>en._ IUS. Ml. Wlllotl 71·1S, ~.l'ft(Mlt ,..n, J1l~t1"1ld9 ""'°' P11tft So•lnt• "'103. llkirnlltld ''·"· i.tn 01"° ,._.,, 51m1 l1r!Mor1 6141, Mthel,,.. ~11 AM 7$-IJ. S ummary ''"°· f wo c• ~I t-N~«ll ""''f I• IU'l'd. T'll tn•tl "•O ll~l'l l~tl!tr wn· °"'' • ''"· In Tt....e-. .. t . t ... o ot•10l'I• ""' ~u•! •• 1 '°"''"° tou'""' -n .,..,, JtV· -· o.tm.glllf •"°"' !~ ,,,11,., ()!ft~' l<•lu rlil t"" h~•VY o...-19t Wt•• ••. oorlf'd !!"VI' 1 ,....ltler '"'I r•l:f'd ,,.,, Of 't11nvrn1. "A bl~ tuftMl '"', !ff~ lu•I (l•o • !'0(:1," W'tl '"' dtl(rtol~n oet "'''""" ••v• IC•'"' lOl"ftlOO 1~11 Ct~lefl "'""•r 111m.it in ~11nu+n, "'· Coa•tnl M•1t '~~'"''ll' IOOtl'. l"lll Ylf<lblt .,,""' n·9M •n<I ...ornltlt novrs b«om· •nt Wt!lfflV 10 Ill II ~"°'' Tft •fl•t• nocm1 1r41v t r.cl Wtdne~tf. Hl1h f~ GtV 6! IQ /0. CO••l•I ,,,., .... ,,tvru .. "" ''"°"' ,, •o I~ 1•\t"ll t..,,,,u1nirn ••~ from ~ •o 10, W•!tr l<'mQfrtlY•• .i, S1111, Moo11 , T ides f Ul lDlltY Te111perat11re• ., UNITED Plll"SS INTlillN.\TIONAL B T k p l' 1em..er.1urts •n<I oreclPU'1io" for y llT 0 ;ice !ht ?•·~oor i>trlod e"41"9 U • •·"'· ... lbB~V Alt>u<iutrouo AtlfMI A"t"Orf9t lko•nn llull1lo C111r1ot11 C"ltato (011clnt11ti c 11vtlf11<1 O.!le1 o.-..u De\Molf\n Delrcol F ~l•IMr\1 1-1-lufu IMi1111001,, Junt .. w ~1n111 c,1, Lis l't~•• LO\ A~~•l'I l CN'l••lll Mernch11 Mltml Mllwt~~r­ MlnM•ooll~ N"" O!'ltl/11 N.-'Yor~ Okl•hom1 CllV °"''~' J>11l110.l11~ •• Hit~ L•w Prt c. H ;; " I 11. Kidnap De"tli SI •? " " l>6 s• .fl !STANBUL (AP) -A major suspect i" '° 65 the kidnap murder or an Israeli diplomat ,. si .11 1 n . 1 •• rJ ss 1 o> "'as captured tolay \\'hi e eemg s ... n- '' 60 1·13 bul. Justice l\1 inis ter Ismail Arar an· •1 JS " " nounced in Ankara. ~ : •1' lie was identified as Nahit Tore.. 24, a ,, •> •11 ~ludent at 1he Istanbul University school " 11 of economics. '' s• 1.01 .1. .. I " 1A '° Arar said Tore is a "m1 1tant o u1e 51 !: radica l youth organizalion Dev. Gene. :~ '-I .o• Tore "'as one of nine persons pictured is ~ 1 ,, in \\'anted posters hung throughout lstan-~ ss .10 bul after Israeli Consul General Ephr aim • ',,5 Elrom was murdered by terrorist t.id· 7f .1t '° •l .n napcrs on Saturday. '' ~ .O' Police officials claim Tore is a member .. -10 .SI or the Turkish Peoples Liberation Army Y .. •s -TPLA -"·hich kidnaped Elrom 011 " \ \ •' I ~ps Spare Purse, Spoil Schools By THO~IAS l\1 URPHJ/'\t; Of lllt DIUJ P l\91 11111 FOR \\IAl\'T OF A NAIL. DEPT. -A black-borde red advertisement appeared this morning on the back or the firs! set· tion of Santa Ana's dally newspaper. lt \.\'as a seven colun1n ad. 16 inches deep and pretty \\'ell dominated the page. Inside the black border v.•as another black border around a photo of i\-lcKinlcy School in Santa Ana . The "'alls of old /\fcKinlcy were sho\\'ll being supported by angled braces planted in the ground, . Beneath the photo was lhc caption. "Isn't it About Time \Ve Supported Santa Ana Schools in Some Other \Vay ?"" The final message at the bottorn of the ad called on Santa Ana C"i!izens to votr yes today and ackJ10\\'ledgcd that .the ad was paid for by the Sa\·e Our :Schools Committee of 1.000. OTHER THAN THAT. the County Se:-it paper did carry a t\\'O-paragr:iph notice at the bottom of 1he lead page. second seetion. reporting that there 11•as a schoo l election in Santa Ana today and that th e polls \1•ill be open until 8 o'clock tonight. Actually, the advertisement by the committee of 1,000 probab ly telll\ the !Story of Santa Ana schools in rccen l vears Support of the schools has mainly been Provided by steel bracing to h?ld up outer and inner walls and nets o! chickt'n· wire fashioned beneath ceilings to catch falling plaster. Other kinds of supµorl -in nloncy for example -has been no!C\\'Orthy by its absence. SO \\'HAT REAL.LY ts al stake in today 's election is some money to take dO\\'ll the braces and chick<'n11'irc and support Santa Ana schools in the more conventiona l \\'Sy. Sanla Ana \'O\crs are being asked to provide $33.25 million in bond monev lo be borro\\·cd over the lll'xt 25 vears. The cash v•ould build 11 ne'v schOols and shore up son1e old ones. Additionally. the district's voters are asked for a 54-cent school tax increase l.o operate those schools. An identical re· quest \\'as rejected last February Jn recent years. coastal folks \\'ho have been County Seat·\\·atchers have been pretty amazed as they observed the story of Santa Ana school system unfold . THE FACT T1JAT educationa l clecay \\'as really beginning to set in bccan1e C\'ident when Santa Ana closed Julia Lathrop Junior l~igh out on South Mai n Street. There 1va~n ·1 any money to fix it. I happened to be on hand. quite by ac· cidenl a fe"' 1nonths back, when Santa Ana closed \\l illard Junior High. A lot. of people turned out. They played laps, J_owcrcd the Flag. and that \\•as thril. So il is that today is the day coastal \\'atchers of the County Scat ''ill see whet.her or not Santa Ana folks hal'e had it up to here with the notion Iha! schools can go on forever even if you cut thc1n off at the pocketbooks. Santa Ana docs have a nc1v superi n- tendent of schools in Charles F. Kcnnry, the former headmaster of the CapistranG Unified School District. i\ lot ol his friends 1vonder 1\·hy he took the challenge in the first place. Kenney, ho"·ever. i;cncratcd quite a bit of steam during the losing e!fort of February and some people bclie\'C he'~ clra•••n enough public support to pull it off today. Coast-~·atchers 11·ill be 11atching. ~Vt .shall see. •r T"I AJIOCl.4t•O ,111!11 ,.,_..., tl-td .,..ti' ,,. "'~'" fodt'I" In fl\t ""fkf OI ltVl ll "'ulldfr· ,,.,..,.,., 111d lllrMdctt. th.II "'t Yltd tnl,Ktl 01 ftuo! ,.,loo! llld N fll (If IN SI• HtlO<\I wt•t 1l lQMIJ '"""'d w!'\tn t>!t!'\ '"""'I "Pll•d •~h o" '" ~In !ft COlum!NI. 1'>11. '.~(i>r>Ol ""'~ 10 17 o.m, '·' ~'cona la.i l.~ 11 m, ti WlDHl!SCIAY p-..1, P IH!~ur~n l'ori•end lttP>d Cl'"' lh~o ,, " fl.ltly 17. ~ ;~ :~ They ~aid lie is the link between t"·o Rot Pa1ats Witataer • '°""" -'· Thi """"\ cia!mter Ollt 1111 •"'" fltMnlflt kllf.cl llOl!tfl 111111\ltr, '1, °" • wi11i1rt1111 '°" """'~• *"" 111 c~i. 0.m.ttd tlUlfd1n~1. '-'"'GI'!"" '"" tlld illo""'ntO OllhO/lf llftfl "''" IOrMl!\O'I .,, llHllOft, Mlnoor1, 1~111111 onl, ''"" f\tuH, ""''"'''' OhoO t~ M ~"'DI"- r '"' h1~~ 11 lll ~ "'· i.s 1 1•1' 10"' J.l'l •m .• 1.' ~.r.,.,a hl<1~ \1 Ot "·'"" •.O ~<l<>d I•"' . •:Moprn 71 $~11 lt!1t1 J 16 1 ""· Sttt 1 SO 1 "'· ~ J \OI •. It I.ti\, 5111 \0 M 11.ftl. ~"''""n'• SI LO..OI\ S•tt lt~• (•IY k <1 Ditto t •S n TPLA cells, one of \\·hich kldnaped Elrom :~ .r , .cs and one which killed him. n -'° .H Tore was captured near Gezbr, 40 ~ ;: 1niles ea5t of lst1nbul. J\1irlam Paul. 21. lndian·born mother of 1\vn children. models ;i f\\O· JJicce ~liver outfi t \1·hic h she u,·ore to "-'in the J\.fls~ J-lot Pants l IJ7 I contest In London. She said she made th\ outfi t herself . I """ Neg1·0 Slain by Police Fii·e As Chattru1ooga Cools Down . CHATI'ANOOGA (AP ) -A Negro was ihot IO death by law enforcement officers Mon- day night, but authorities said civil disorders which have hil the city for lour straight nights subsided with the presence of 2.000 National Guardsmen on the str~t.s. Fire and Police Commis· sioner G e n e Roberts said Leon Anderson, 22. wa s killed as he threw~ brick at 12 city, county and state officers who ansv•ered a cat! to an area v.·here sniper fire had been reported on p~vious night.s . He "'as the first person killed in the disorders. "The victim was hit in lhe groin." Roberts said. Christian Leaderi;h1p Co n- ference branch. agreed, "The trouble Saturday and Sunday v.·as based on police action." he said. ''F'riday night's Incident was forgot- te n." Robert,; ~aid he had not personally t.eard any of!lcers using .<ibusive 1 an g u age although i:n!ice had be!n abus- ed verbally. He would not Comment on the other charges but sairl earlier that one pe11.on arrl'sled durir.g Lh? \.\.'eekend required hospitaliza- tion. Police reported 39 arrests 1'1ooday night , 38 for violations of a 7 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew, which was ext~n<ted for the firsl time throughout sur· rounding Hamilton County and nearby cities. Chattanooga, a city o £ 119,000 persons with about 4a.OOO Negroes, had the curfew Satu rday and Sunday nights. Sniper fire was reported four times J\fonday night. There "'e re l.hree minor fires -a: a coel yard. laundry and unoccupied house -and arson 1-~•as suspect.ed, police said. Asked $450 Tip Dock Worker Fired 111 Gleason Hassle UPI TlllPftOll J. EDGAR HOOVER, MRS. MARTHA MITCHELL 'Emperor Didn't Get His Roman Toga Back' State Safely Commissi oner Claude Armour ordered an in· vestigation of the shooting, which occurred shortly aller sniper fire "'as reportep two blocks front "'here AndP.rson was killed. The trruh;e erupted Friday night after black soul singer \\'ilson PickE-H refused lll ap- pear at a sho1v because he \\'BS not paid in advance. But t11·0 blark ministers t.1onday blan1· ed the continuing disturbances Saturday and Sunday on police. NEW YORK (UPI) -A longshoreman lost his llcense J\1onday because he asked for a $450 lip to carry comedian Jackie Gleason's luggage on board ship and then badgered a Gleason aide into giving him $25() and his v . .'ife were sailing to Europe aboard the S .S . France. The commission said it knew about the incid->...nts at the time but the investigation wa s delayed six months until the Gleason party returned. Not Fazed in Least By Blasts-Hoover The Rev. Paul f\.tcDan iel said police sv.·ore at bla cks, "'ere abusive, used the word "nigger" ;ind arrested in· nocent pe<>ple. A h1r111g agent also had his license suspe11ded for 4il da ys for using ''vile. obscene and insulting language " and com- miting "an obscene act" when Gleason refused to give him a drink. The commission s a I d r-.1atuszewski and four other l ongs horemen carried Gleason's baggage aboard the ship and then v.·ere given ~ b.v Frank Buller. Gleason 's aide. WASHINGTON FBI Director J . (cPll Edgar Hoover, in a rare oubltc ap- pearance. has said recent criticism of hlm anci the FBI has caused him no concern. "It doesn't both er me at all.·· Hoover said r-.londay night. "I"ve been under that kind of pressure for 40 years." Hoover v.•as besieged by reporli rs when he appeared at a dinner hono ring r-.-lartha r-.litchell. wife of Attorney General John N. Mitchell. The dinner '>''as sponsored by the American \Vomen's Newspa· per Club. FBI spokesmen said they believed it v.•as Hoover's first public social outing since 1968 when he appeared at a dinner for ex·FBI agents who had been involved in the capture of John Dillinger. He also poked fun at himself and his critics in equally rare public speech. Cwrk·typist At one point, Hoover, 76, referred to a recent Life l\-fagazine cover depleting him as a Roman emperor. "\.\1e emperors do ·have pro- blems and my Roman toga ""BS not returned from the cleaners in lime," he said, referring to his tuxedo. Referring to charges he tried to transfer an agent "'ho criticized the FBI to Butt e, 1'1ont. Hoover said an FBI photographer who took a bad picture of Mrs. Mitchell and cabinet "'Jves visiting his of· fice had been reassigned to Anchorage, Alaska . r-.Irs. Jl.filchell said in reply, "lf you have seen one FBI director, you have seen the m all.·· Hoover praised r-.1 r s. A11tchel1 as a person who "lell!I the chips fall '>'·here they may." The Re l'. H. H. Wright, president of the local Southern FDA Hit For Meal 'Cancer' WASHI NG TON 1AP) -The food and Drug Ad ministra tion is violating federal law by al· lo'>''ing residues of a cancer in- ducing hormone to reach ·con· The Ne'>'' York Waterfront Commission announced the ac. llons J\fonday a g a i n s l L o ng sh oreman James r-.1alusze'>''ski. 39, llf Ridgefield Park , N.J .. and hiring agent Ed'>''ard J . Gray. 38, of Roose~lt. N. Y. The incidents o c c u r r e d March 20, 1970 when Gleason Ballots Ca st Iu l(eutuckv • sumers. Sen. William Prox· By Tbe Associated Press mire, (D-Wis.l. charged today. Voters turned out today to Proxmire urged an im· nominate candidales r or mediate ban on the artificial governor In Kentucky and to hormone DES. kno'>'·n to cause fill the t-.J a r y 1 and con- cancer Jn Jal>or;:itory animals, grcssional seat Vlicated wirh and tn incite beg i n n in g the appointment -01 Rogers C. can cers in man 1n the fat-B. r-.lorlon as secretary of the 1en1ng of caltle. interior. BaSf d on Department -0f Ken tucky Democrats chose Anguished Pair Flee With Baby NEW YORK IUPI ) fearful their adopted daughter would be taken from them by adverse co u rt decisions, an anguished couple has fled wilh the child from New York state, according to their lawyer Attorney Jacob D Fuchsbe rg told the State Supreme Courl t.l onday the couple, fo.1r. and Mrs. t\icholas Demartino, had departed with one·year-old "Baby Len<>re " bul did not say whe re the y had gone. . Vietna111 Veteran Fi11ds It's a Woman's World Agriculture sample checks, between former Gov. Bert T. the senator sai d it 1s safe to Combs, 59. '>''ho resigned a estimate between 100.000 and federal judgeship to run his 150.000 head of cattle con-third race for lhe office. and taining residu es of the LL Gov. Weldell Ford, 45. hormone \\'ere slaughtered last _::_n_ce_a~a1de to hi s opponent. year. '"Thus. the Food and Drug The Dem artino's were under court orders to retu rn eustody of Lenore lo the child 's natural unwed mother. Olga Scarpetta. of Colombia. South America. l\-JOSES LAKE. \'lash. IUPll -Henry Bender has a rea l problem -he can'l get a job because of his sex. Bender. 21. a Vietnam veteran. '-'"BS a clerk-typist in Administration is a 11 owing the Army. He types at the rate meat cont~ining DES residue of 00 '>'·ords a minure and In be sold to consumers," takes short hand . Proxmire said. ''This is a But in the year since he was clear viola tion of lhe Delaney released from military service amendment . . . '>''hlch pro. he has been unable to find a hibits the use of any food ad- job as a clerk, stenographer or ditives that cause cancer." typist. Proxmire made his charge Protect Your NOW! Home IURCiULAR ANO FIRE ALARM SYSTEMS RETAIL INDUSTRIAL PROTECTION .. There are plenty of jobs." and his request for stopping Bender said. "But none for a use of DES in a Jeuer to r·oA TIGER male. I've been intervie-.1•ed Commissione r Charles C. FREE ESTIMATES-NO OILICiATION RAY BECK 492-1412 for dozens or Jnbs. bul I'm Edwards. constantly told thRl no man He noted that 21 countries ALARM "'ants another man for a have banned the growth 11:ttv1,.o All c•A,.G! cov,.tY NEW SEALE TRIAL El'ED NEW HAVE N. rr,nn l\P1 -A judge will "e1gh tort:tv !•. possible retrial for Bl~clt : Panthers Bobhy G. ~<t!+> and : Ericka Huggins. whri~ 14 : month long first !rial ended : wllh a deadJocked jury. ·~ , ____________ . • ..S-"-'> .............. ' -· ... -~.o ~~' <:iK:a1r--s,,..i:...,.,1....,t1n.w..iot1,i...-.......i Jojn our Sterling Silver Club Just picture yourself entertaining. using your very own complete set of Sterling Silver. It's not as impossible as it may seem. Through our Silver Club Plan, you may purchase your entire ser- vice for six. eight or twelve. There's no down payment. no finance charge. And, depending upon the size of your purchase. you'll have up to 12 months to pay in equal monthly amounts. In other words. use your silver while you're paying for it- instead of getting a piece or pl ace setting at a time . To join our Silver Club. simply stop by our silver department and select your pattern from our complete selections. SLAVICK'S Jru·elers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644 -1380 Open Mon. and Fri., 10 a .m. to 9:30 p.m. '· ·. . .. . ~· ·' • ~· :f -: .. I • .. --,. ~ .. Education Cost Hikes Questioned OKLAHOilIA CITY IU Pl l - Educators are saying more money is needed for public education. and vo1ers are ;isk· ing why , U.S. Education" Com· missioner Sidney P. r-.Iarland told the i5th annual National Congress of Parents and Teachers. secretary. hormone as has the Common SYSTEM IJll N. EL CAMINO ll:EAL ··office work is the only -~M~a~r~k~ct:_. ________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~·~·~c~L~E•~••~r~l~~~~~---_: _____ .:== _______ ::_ __ .:.::====----t.hing f'm trained for," Bender ------said. "But this is a \voman's Since 1965. Dr. il.1;irland said. voters have sho"·n a grO'>''ing re luctance to approve school funding and last year rejected hall of the _money re- quested. approving $1.6 billion of $3.2 billion reque5ted fun- ding. "Budget cut.s. or refusals lo approve school budgets. are forcing cutbacks in school &ystems throughout the na· tion." f\'larland ~aid. \.l'Orlr!." Af!er making 38 weekly trips to the State Employment Office here -and finding job opportunities available on each visit -Bender is con- vince rl he is being discrim inated against becau se he is a ma le. He has given up job seeidng and has applied to \'olunteers in Service to :- America ! VISTA) to become a v;orker for the anti-poverty program. The Grant C<lunty Com- munity Action Qiunc1l. an equal opportunity emplo}·er. put Bender tn work tem- porarily as a typist "'hile he Is \\'ailing for his VISTA ap- plication to be approved. COAST SUPER MARKET FOSTER FRYING CHICKENS Fott•r lroltd Wltote F-ry•rt 39~ HOME DELIVERY C.I! NI Ntwfffl I & It 1.111 .. •11•H11. I I.,. h W.V• 11te .. 111 ... lltl ...... , .. ,, -•r W:UI• &I ill y • • r klklll!! .., 1 mld.111.,,...11, ·' -. . ·. .. : :: ............ . . ... -.. .. • DON SCHOLLANOER _ . • , ..• , .. OLYMPIC GOLD ME.DA L WINNER •• ;·:• -"·.'" .-·· -7 1 ALKS ABOUT LONG DISTANCE., ' • • • ·· • ~ .. • .~ TELEPHONE CALLS: . ·. • • ' '.;" • ·: ... ' ' . ··' . .. - ' . -·~ .... • I r PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE irport 'Safety Op posi ng any n1easure put forth in the name o( · 11afety for the generaJ public often can be likened to b<'1ng :ig3i nst motherhood ..• or for unrestrained sin. . ..\nd so lt I~ in the case of a proposal to build a 400· foot dl't k over the depressed Corona de! 1\.1ar Free,vay no\v srheduled to be built along Palisades Road at the south end of Orange County Airport. The sudden hue and cry for the •·safety deck'' may be \vell Intentioned . totally sincere. It also could be an e~fort In keep a foot in the door for future use of the airport by heavier jet airplanes -and more of them. If 1naximum safety fron1 overshooting the runway on ta keoffs and landings is the case for the 400-foot deck. then !he 1na.ximun1 insurance that the airport \Vil! n·it be used for more and larger jets \\•ould be to leave thin;<s as they nre. The present proposal of a 400-foot deck over the future free" a\· \Vould osl an estimated Sl million - monev th e state says it \von't put up and the county doesn't have. But if the money \ve.re found, and spent for the purposl". the 1nvest1nent \vould be still another argu- 111ent for ~oine future governmental agency to use to incr(':.'.!'C USP of the airport for more and larger jets. Ne\\'port Beach City Councilman 1i1ilan Dostal put the ea <:e \veil in a letter to the Divisio n of 1-l ighways in !Sn t ramcntn. In rebuttal to statements by Airport Com· mi~sion£•r F,. R. Ablott, Dostal wrote in part: '"No nne quarrels \Vith increasing safety at Orange County Ai rpo rt -but this proposal transcends safet y. This permits so me future government agency to ex· p1 nd the r Li n\l'a\· structure to permit operations at the : irport \\'hich \\Jll uUerly destroy the cities of Ne\vporl ""'each. Costa J\fesa , Tustin, Santa Ana, Orange and Villa Park·· number of fli ghts. Safety factors beyond what exist now are not that urgent unless heavier planes and more flights are plan· ned . If this is not the case, and extra safety is as impor- t.ant as Ablott claims, then the commission had better start exploring alternatives. Arresting gear for use in emergencies might be one possibility. But the only one that will satisfy most affected res- idents V.'OU!d be telocation Of the airport elsewhere for commercial jel use, and restricting Orange County Air- port to smaller commuter planes connecting to the major commercial jet ports, and to ge neral (private aircraft) aviation. No Time for Overoptimism Leaders of both parties in Congress have hailed President Nixon's announcement that the United States and Russia will concentrate on reaching agreement for the limitation of anti-ballistic missiles (AB~fs) and of· fensive strategic weapons. To restrain undue optimism, it is only necessary to remember that: -This is not an agreement in substance; it is only an agreement to start moving again. -To get a workable agreement with Russia, yo u have to bargain long, hard and cautiously-and from at least equal strength. -Russia has made spectacular gains in nuclear and navaJ strength while the U.S. has be.en mired down in the Vietnam \Var and split apart at home as a resul t. U.S. equality, much less superiority, in nuclear strength is in grave question. The Board of Supervisors is on record against any increase in the number of commercial flights. And cer· t::unly puhtir opinion in the cities near the airport is -dead set aga1ns1 increasing either the size of jets or the Even if agreement were reached with the Soviets, their history of reneging on agreements "'hen it serves their purpose provides no basis for immediate confi· dence . 'Yes, sir, chief. There won't be a more orderly nation in the world ... except maybe the Soviet Union .' . lvera.ge Citi:e1i Has llad E1iough Police Chiefs Win Support \\'r\~HJ.\"G TO:-.Z -If !hr opinion of rf'~id,,111~ oi t·· 11 or !he most troubled r i!it!' of !he nr-11.on 1~ ;i i;::oolf measure, the n1uch n1;;i!i"n<'rl ch '~f of rn!ice is coming t~···k Jn''.l h·:; ''"" :i~ a P<ipular fi~ure. rorrne-r f'o' i·t> ron-.m1 ,<-10.1er Frank L. P ·zo'!' ),.r,rJ l1d.• v1r!nrs <I'.' I he J 11 rnr .. ·'".1t1c 1,1 1n1nee for 111avor of f'til:id 'rt.la ::ir.rl lhl' r•;nent public sup- port fr,, \\ ,, 111r~1n11 Chief of ro!ice Jerry l\"il.i;nn 111 111~ 1ri:1,~ ~rrrq rr m'lrr /li··n l~O<:n J"' O!t'.!t:~ J.L' ,1rfS Jn pn;nt Ri:11n :::nd \\1!~,,n l 1\r a s;oorl c!e.:..I 11' mmrin, 'fl•{'\ .:i ? the\· ,]1 i --ii lhe '~~ ',,. ~"~A -. c11m,:!;;.rr .:; fl•'-.t/""!,,t. ~1·! !11 p•c·~"r\r ··rA "'r ti C' r. fl'!":-.<1r,:.!l\' r ' ·;11\e 1 '(lir.1t ( m1n1nd rif 11peration~. ,.·kr lhtT'fl''' !1r~ t·.1"!1lv \!~ihlc in crise'> :;:;1 :irr 1\r<'f.~rr·rl t11 1·;1he persvnal and 1• I 1r·J J t'.-j11 r 111itily f()r !he con"ie· l•l! l'l('t'~. THI~ RFQl.IRF.S ii cC'rt.Jrn fla ir fl)r ,.,,. 1 r{ 1. l 1 a 1 l•~:ic assess· ""• ·t nf v.nJI fl· p1h]1r \1111 stand inr 1n \\D\" (lf r:i:r. -!,•.,.:ilitv. R!zzri orderer! tk Ptr.'il'rs ~lrirpclf arr1 hum,liate'1 rf' 1hr n111~ r:i~ ·ra5. \\"il5on • ~rrl· rl nr1rn1;il :ir r. ~l rrncedure~ 10 r .nd up and H!lpO'..ll"rl r.1~".} thousand~ nf l' \\hn lr1..:r! !n brlr-Z go\emment ·~J.'.•ni; Jn fl !11 11 tn \\"ash1ngton by o '1!1~ r"f:':r,(,irr 1r.1lri<". \'. • 1 !· f'Q i":' 'ri:: r<, rnr !his and 11 1.Jrl dn 11 th" ~~rr:e \1a\' o\er ag111n. l r,f> ::r·ri1·n\·, I 1n (\1n:::r <·~~. \I hlch con- r, t .. tr.r !· 1 r:il <':ty i~ fl'.~r11helm1ng 11 i :i~ n ... r.~rr,\ J t! r.1:10~ flambfl,. 11t rrcr?.' ·r· i11 P!i11-.dr·rl11J \1ere 01 ei- 1111t!lm1ni;I:· !'Upporl['d. Richard Wil son It \Yould seem a fair conclusion lhat in Philadelphia and \Vashington at least the average citizen has had enough. He "'anls no more tumult which impinges on his (IWO freedom of movement and ways of li \'ing and working. He "'anls to be freed from fear for his own personal security and property. And he is willing that the authorities shall infringe upon civil libertarian concepts in emergencies if done so effectively and successfully. !\IAVOR RICl!ARO DALE'"S re-<"lrc- lion by a big majori!y in Chicago cnn· firmed his hard-handed control of !he rlots at the Chicago convention in 1968 - riots "'hich brought liberals lo the con· \'ention noor to protest as the television cam('ras and commenla!nrs hrnadcasl the C\"ent.s as a national horror and disgrace. The clamor !hen against lhe Chicago police stands in contra st to the new na- tional atmosphere "'hfch fa\'ors firm police control of demonstrations. in- cipient or actual riots and street crime. Safety 1n the streets and al home is clearly of greater concem to lhe average citizen than organized crime except v.·here the two coincide such as the drug lraff1c. The Supreme Court has mover! in resoonse: to rea ction again st a legal syslem v,·hich stacks the deck in favor of the criminal. Its recen1 rulings have had, or \\'ill ha1•e. the effect of freeing police from necessary and u n desirable restraints. CHJEF JUSTICE Warren Burger adds his own personal in junction against in· civility . .He 'said in a recent speech : •·\Vith passing time 1 am developing a deep conviction as lo the nttessity for civility H we are to keep the jungle from closi ng in on us and laking over all that lhe hand and brain of man has created in thousands of years. by wa y or rational discourse and in deliberative processes. including the trial or cases in court. "'\\'hether in private negolialion or public discourse, in !he legislative proc· ess or the exchanges among leaders in • the debate or parties. or the relatively !'ii111ple tnatte:r of a trial in the courts, the nece ssit y for civility is imperative.. "\Vithout civility no private discussion, no public debate, no legisla!iYe prOCe'.'ls, no political can1paign, no trial. of any case, can serve Its purpose or achieve its objeclive. When men shou t and sh riek or call names. we witness the end or ra- tional lhought process If nol th.e begin· ning of blows and combat. I hardly dare lo lake the risk of adding that this may also be relevant to the news media." TllE CHIE F' J USTICE thus dares add his \'Oice in some degree to Vice Presi- dent Agnew's criticism of the news media. 1o1·hich has made ils own con- tribution to !he atmosphere of national incivility. Law and order, it may 11ow be said. is no longer an issue as it was supposed to be in 1968 but a political imperatiYe with a general public which has had enough of its lack and goes to the polls in the na· l1on·s largest. cities to say so. Attorney Genera] Mitchell, Vice Presi- dent Agnew, and President Nixon have aligned themselves v.~th \\'hat they con- cei \'e to be the new atmosphere of 1971 in \rhirh la\v and order are not dirty words. Cuba's Anti-loafer Draft t', \"'Pl\f"",T'"'I\ -1h1 m1·d.a ;;re say- ,.. -:; ,. ,· ti ol \, .. ~1':1n.!'ln and • ... 11 ,,1 1,rrrr. ·.I.E.' ~.:o>r..,s O[ i '"' t • -: r l It~· ~1~1ll!1<.ant CQTI· 1 ll ' t 1 • .e, l:i \'.";, ·';,ri ., ~Lil In !ht> prn('e~s or r• \•1 ;,-f,.111 t r.•11e l>3tt1·rjni:: and ii • •ol 1 ·•· \ m1"1un1 t-1n(!1rnted and rl r• rl · .•. 1j \:Jr· d1~r 1ro1qccs and d ··1 Jr1 •. u b11 r f1qhr i~ br1n;:-11·aged in 11 ,. !'l ·-.1l" :ir -! ronl1nu1nrr nl 1he ·1~;.I! \n :1 • 'mrnt of <1nt1·\'1eln:im ~·11,·~. p.1 •'hi'.' u~ir;i hbl're!I<, ;:ind (l\he r rn11i1un1~ <ire fur,r•u.~Jy fil11:-11:1ter1ni:; tG •k.c.~1 ti-it• llf>1rr-pa·~ed IHU extending 1 ,e <lr<iII two mrire )rats. (IJtl':•ri1P ol l h•~ f::itf'fl1I ~tru~i;lc is U'l ~1·1:;11 Tnp C'\: ws Sclccti\·e Scr,11ce ,,, t 1 ·>.p1n'~ .Jun\."' ;;u. 'IEl'i\IH!Lr. I\" r11Ji1111hrrc.. a!t in all Jrrin Cur11ln c ,1111;r~,..11111vcr.~:il n11l.1:ir)" Tuc~rlay, . ay 25. l ~il Tht ('d.lorrcl pr.fl" of thl' D11i1y Plluf srek.f !O 11 fr;rm and -5tlnt.- lf1f:tr rrarirr.i. by prr .i.r nt1ng tin s ""'i'~rarfr's 01'>H. 1on.s und cc.m- nlL'n rary 01~ tn;i1rs of interrst a1irl t.'rJ11iJ1rcnc P, by prr11;1d1n g a for~•m fr,r t/11! erprr.sston o/ our r ,.,.,,,.,s· arnonns. a11d bl/ prr~r·:111.9 t /11' d11,rrsr vie10- pn1 .ts n/ lr!/1 m1itr.l nb.~r-r11'r$ a·id s;J(ll:t1n1~11 Vtl 1op1Ls <i/ the dnp. Robert N. Weed, Publf."1er ' ' AJleu-Golds1niLh '·- . training is perma.enl and mandatory, dictator fide! Castro. the 1dol of radical i·.s. youth, has put into effect sotill another t:lraft system. By arbitrary edict -with no debate. consultation or anything else -lhe bulky de.spot has proclaimed a so-called "anti- loafer draft." Aim"'d at \YOtk shirk ers and similar "social crin1inals," as they are officia lly branded, the purpo~e of this lat est ter· ror1sm is to strike :it tlle v,·1despread and increasing absenteeism and idleness among v.•orkers. That's nothing nev,· in Rl.'d-ruled Cuba. but ii 1s the first time Castro ha5 at· IE•mpted to cope \\'ilh It by a so.called !;iv.'. tiXOER THIS Nt:\\' "l11w," violators are punished by be ing drafted for for¢rd lalxi r for periods of from six months to l\\"O ye:irJ'. l)ur1ng 1 h1~ timP lhty ""ill be requirtd tn ·'<10 productive 11ork "' -as decided by the Conimunist stale, Currently, Iha~ mrnn!t being sent into the sugar field~ to cu' cane. Right now, that i!t "d m 1 t I e d I y flrlrt1cularly urgenl becau.~e the SU'\a r crop 1~ runnlng ~e.nously behind .schedule. In a ~l11y Day ~peech, Castro conceded lh11 year"s crop is likely to be 800,000 ton.~ le~" than his loudly fanfarl!d goal of 7.S m11iirin ions. f That goal In J~tr 11·as an ack.nowlcdgmenl of a major setback.· LAST YE~R THE . bo"fasuc 0.1ban dictator vaingloriously announced a 10 million ton record. Somewhere belv,.een 6 and 7 million tons were finally squeezed out. Sugar e:irperts say Castro will be lucky to wind up with that much this year. Untimely heavy rains and mounting labor and mechanical difficulties are severely curtailing production. Apparently there a.re a lol of "social crimi11;als" who have run afoul of Castro·~ new draft. ln a ~lay Day speech, Labor ~lini~ter Jorge Risquet declared that in the short lime the edict has been in erfect, more then 100.000 Cuban workers have been ar· rested and sentenced under it l() ''rehabilitalion Ct'nters.·· Risquet made another equally reveal- ing disclosure -that these culprits "represent only about one-third of suspected violators.·· Dear Gloomv Gus: l\1y thanks to those motion pictu re houses that run Kidd!' matinees. Jlov,·ever, I have sttn children running v,•Jld up and down lhe aisle, dfsturblng those who go for the en· tertninme:nt. \Vhat kind o( parenta do they have? --<:. IV. ll!l1 l••lvA rtfle~h ,..,.,.,.., Vl .. \o fltt ftllt'INtllf "'"" tf Ille MWWtt .. r. s.M •our HI _ .. , JI er..'"' Gvt. Dtl" ,1111 • Gai11es' Novel ls Worthy of ' A Pulitzer . • The Boo~an ' -· Jn ''The Autobiography or Miss Jane Pittman." Ernest K. Gaines has wr:itten a novel I feel deserves a Pulitzer Prize. That honor is given annually "for distinguished riction by an Amer ican author. preferably dealing with American life." Harper l..ee:"s "To Kill a l\1ock· ingbird," for example; or Sco tt r-.tomaday 's novel of an American India n culture, "House Made of Dawn." Gaines' theme is as American as a Negro spiritual which, 3.n effect, it is. ll opens in 186.S with somebody holler· Ing and everybody starting to sing .. Just sifiging and d~neing and clapping. "Old people you didn't think could even wal k started hopping round there like game roosters ... " THI:: l\tASTER OF a cotton plantation had announced to his assembled slaves they had just been freed, and all "'as joy and confusion. A girl of 10 or so heard the master and remembered that a passing Yankee so ldier v.·ho did not take lo her slave name. 'l'icaL, had renamed her Jane. And ~tiss Jane she remained ever after. Ernest Gaines look on a difficult task here. He brings dt off with style. skill and considerable emotion. He has set do\\·n a century or black history as experienced by one lady. Now a centenarian \\"ho has lived most of her life on a Louisiana plan- tation. r-.tiss Jane remembers many lhinJ!:S. She talks of the m, often in rambl- ing fashion and over a period of months. to a young black schoolteacher who pr eserves her words on a tape recorder. THAT IS GAINES' book, a gentle. loYe- Jy novel in spite or the rednecks and scalawags that enter the story oc· casionally. in spite of the Klan killings and Twentieth Century civil rights strug· gles. Gaines. the San Francisco writer \Yho grew up on a Louisiana plantation and has written of these experiences in l\\"O previous novels, "Calherrine Carmier"' and ··or Love and Dust.'' may have something more than fiction here. It i!' nol impossible more that he has taped the words of a grandmother . or an aunt. or. if not taped, has recalled the sto ries of black people as retold by the plantation v.1ome n \1·ho brought him up. TH ERE IS SOMETHING vivid I y ::iuthentic !n l\1iss Jane's memories t "memories v,•asn·t a place, memories \\'OS in the mind "), people as retold by the plantation women. memories or Reconstruction, or the Depression 1930s l "Huey 1..-0ng came in the year after high "'ater ... "). r-.'liss Jan·e is a memorable character. a "'ise lady with a great insight into Ute human condilion . She speaks v,·ith jus~ a irace of the old slave accent (one hears her !ipeak. a tribute to Gaines' ear and the rh}1hm of his prose l. I hope. many people hear her speak. and that G11ine_s, who for 11\l his talent has never gAined ,11 l,11rge re:1dership. is read widely in this Puliizer Prize-worthy book \Dini: $6.96). "'illlam Rogan Quotes Archie l\1oore, former boring champion now "·orking "'Ith you1h-"S<lmethin~ i~ wrong Jn our school sys tem v.hen narco tlcs peddlin& and use is treated lightly.'' • Basic Faults • Ill Judicial System It used lo be a joke told ,1n the back ( rooms of county courthouses: a la"'yer asked a prospectil'I': juror, "\\'ho in· fluences you the most -the \\'itnesses, the judge, or the lawyers'?" And lhe: prospective: juror replied : I ain 't influenced by anything said by the v,·itnesses. judge or lawyers. l just look al lhe prisoner and say to myself, 'If he ain't done anything wrong, why is he here'?' And I vole 'cm all guilty,'' II is not a joke. really. The presump- tion I conscious or unconscious) or the ordinary law. al>id· ing citizen is that if a man has kept his nose clean and done no '>'Tong, he \vouldn't be sland- ing there on trial. THIS r-.t1G1rr HE true in an ideal society. Or in a society where lhe police and prosecution are scrupulously fair in their motivations and methods. But that soc1ely is still a long v,•ay ofr. In a country like England, the D.ireclQr of Public Prosecutions is a servant of all the people: he is not politically elected, nor beholden to any party machinery: which means he does nol have to curry support by making a '"good record "' - which implies a high percentage of con- victions. He will not l'>''ist or withhold eYidence favorable to the defendants. IN Tllt.: U.S.. l>ecause: the judicial system is so intimately connected with Sydney J. Harris j i the political process. every case is a "ronle:sl" betl'•Ct'n the prosecution and the defense . This 1s why deals are made -the defendant -.1•itl cop a plea tthat ts, plead guilty to a lesser olfenseJ 10 make the prosrcut1 on·s record of con· victions look good. It is all an elaborate legal charade. a (ormali7.ed game. 11·ith only the remotest relationship to juslice, or even ln sin1ple truth. And lhe police. as v,:elJ as the pros· ecution. are involred 111 1L. bt•tause the police commissioner is appointed by the mayor. and the mayor also wants a ··rine record"' of obtainin~ convfcllons and •·cutting do\'1n cri1ne."' HO\Y CRl\IE IS handled 111 an Arr•erican community is rnorr a maller of public rela11ons t.h an of Jurisprudence. Public Officials are conce rned about their "batting arcrage·• - and it is too caS\" to make the record look good by geti1ni:: mca111n~less COO\ 1cti11ns again: t petty criminals. v,·h1lc the bis r1sh continue to operate v,·ithout jntcrfere:nce. Neithrr judgt;~ nor pro~Cl:ulor" ~hould be elected olficials, oblig:ited to lhe par!y n1ach.inery: their fi!ness .-Old be evaluated ilnd rev1c\1cd regula!'l y by !he bar, not by the YO!e:r:., \\"ho ha\·e only the dimme st no11on of wh;11 rcal!y SOC'S on liefore that defend ant slands UJ> In court. And. eventuril!y . that·s the only \1·ay we"ll get. a more tractable and reformable class of prisoners. Democr.acy' s Assassins One has to cringe al times \\"hen some or the leftist radicals define their con- cepts of freedom. Their vie ws frequently differ not a whit from those of Hitler and Stalin. They are· all for freedom so long as it is defined as a license to do any· thing they want to do. But never \\•ould ttley extend the same privilege to some-. one \Vhose thought.s differ from their own. This is aJv,·aYs the grea t danger nr revol utionary activity, whether it is the real thing or merely a pretense as most of the current furor ds. The revolutionary jul!tifies his acts by concluding that he is right -11nd that any who oppose bi.rn are wrong. He becomes, in Eric Horter's phrast.. a "true believer" in his own in· 1111\ibilily. ''TllE TRUE BELIEVER." Hoffer wrole, ''is apt to see himself as one or the chosen, the ~It of the earth, the U~bl of the \\'Orld. a prince dtsguised in meekness. v,·ho is deslined to inheril this earth and the kini;:dom of heaven. too.'' There is mort than a lillle of lhis pom- pous attitude displayed by some of the radic11\ prnpt\,ets of our own llmt:. Soron- \'inced are they of their own unsullied \'irtue they disavow the right of anyone to dispute their contenlions. At · a large universily In Dtlifnrnl11 r e c e n I I y , a conservativHrienterl rie'>''!paper was bnnned by en ultra-liberal clique on the spuriow: grounds thnt lll publ!catinn might interfere \\'ilh an u~ cnmlng election . Time sfter time on c.a1n· pu~s !cros! the country thl! radical aloJ,Ta~rs have disrupted speeches by 1pok@sml!n for ''IC\\'S diffe:rl!nt from their own. 1°h9l could not be bothered to hear Guest Editol'ial th"' other .side -or to let others hear It e1lher. RECE1':1L 'r at llarvard tJn1\'er!'i 1 11 Committee on Rights and Rcspons1h1ll11cs held hearings on the case of 24 persons accused of disrupting <1 pro-Vietnam \\'11 r teach-in sponsored by Harv;ird-Radcliffe Students for ;i Just Peace. an olflihoot' of Young Ameri cani-: for Freedom. Presun111bly the committee will rule soon \1·hether 1.0 discipline the student s or exonerate them. Mow it rules could \vell delermlne \.\"hether freedom Of Spee<;:h nt Harvard ~s a right reserved for all or merely for democracy's assassin~. The OaUy Callfornlan El Cajon By George --- Dear George · As an old-line consel'\•all \'e and member of lhe s1lcnl majonty. I cruf l go all· tl-e "'"Y w11h the ridiculou~ exlrrmes &t!ainst so-call- ed r11ce jokes. ""1h:il"s thr metier \\'ith rflce joke~. If thrv're fn nn1 ~ SILENT MAJORITY Dear Silent l\lajont.~': flear this r(!Ct Ji•ke~ C.111 A~k~ Spiro Agnt"' \1·h111. he thought nf !hi! Tndianspnlis 500 4!nll Spirn Aiitnew says every one of thcn1 should be clapped into jail. " • Tutsd11, M1y 2.5, 1971 DAILY PILlll' , 'f PRICES EFFECTIVE WED. THRU TUES., MAY 26 TD JUNE 1, 1971 ' OPEN MEMORIAL DAY MAY 31, MONDAY 10 A.M. TO 7 P.M. >'-". ' · RUMP ~#~· · · ! ROA$J:.~~"'. EXTRA LEAN FAD SUCEO BACON c PORK """ 34c lb. ROAST ~:~~:' rb. 48~. STANDING lARGEEYE RIB ROAST ~~~~(! 87~. FARMER JOHN 23c SHORT RIBS ~::,~ 48cl" . LINK SAUSAGE .'~,~~~~. u . OF BEEF ~~~~Cf • GROUND ;;~~OMY BEEF 3 lBS.O•OVEO lff\N, OEPEN(')A BLE QU/llllY 5,c SLICED PORK :~~~ .. 79c lb. LOIN CHOPS ~:~~' Lb. lb. C · AWBERRIES BASKns ~­RADISHES OR g:~~:s BANANAS 10<,. LOCAL llOWJf CUCUMBERS 2: 29< CORN:H~COB WHITE ROSE POTATOES 5i49< US #l 5~. MEMORIAL lUGI FRESH ARTICHOKES LARGE CANTALOPES GAIDIN FRESH 2i29c 19~ BELL PEPPERS 39~ --;fc~=------ DAY FLOWERS • . Fresh Cut 98C Fresh C111 168 STOCK ~;~g:~ED DOZEN GLADIOLUS DOZEN 61NCHPOr Fresh Cut 129 FRYING :.:~~~<&ODY CHICKENS ~~ .... . ~ $ 35~ •onm 297 MARGUERITE Fresh Cut ) 29 MUMS IA. DAISIES BUNCH CARNATIONS BUNCH BONELESS ~~~:~~7c, 89C Fresh Cut POMPONS 98C Free ' LEMONLEAFANDFLORALPAPER CHUCK ROAST lb. COLOR FUL .... • WITH PURCHASE OF ALL CUT FLOWERS I -Jj. ... -~~·~-JI_ ~-·0-}ft "I-~ ~.J1.. :J:1.. Jjt. ~ ·-~· I PAPiR°Pl'.Ai(s""' ... 68c GOTHAM • 30 QT. )19 ~-FOAM CHEST SICOUNT •70Z. SA COUNT 34< FOAM CUPS 49c Q-TIPS SU NTAN Oll OR LOTION • 2 OZ. lU8f ASSORTED COlOJ:.IS 249 COPPERTONE 79c SLUSH MUGS c iiiiiiiiiir;e~iieooLeR c a.: ~ -• -'rw-y.-,.,-·. "'I -.,.. •• ,.... c . . --~ DISPOSAIU Dlto'PfltS /'1i"'\ ,AltMeR JOHN • Al.I. MEAT ~' DAYtlME -PAMPERSc~., J49 ~ WIENERS , " PKG. 5-7c f1*'i D'5'0"'"'-' DIAi'!•• ~PEN"&• QUILL-DIPS a oz. 33c ~ Ovemig~tPa!ftpe.rs c6i.,JfC ~~ . r1*'i OfSPOSABlE DIA~R5 , ~ Newbor11 Pampers co'i., ) 29 /'1i"'\ OfS~~81..E TOWJU 49 ~ HANDl-WIPE ,,COUNT c ~-KAAfT •JfTPUfF~ I 2 ~~ f?'arshm11llo11w1 1•0LMG 5' I ® CHICICEN SUPlflME• 5.8 OZ. &OX Uff ~TROGANOFFe 6.2.S OZ. SOX 'LIP-TON DIN~ERS 59' @ · ~IE$vE'ilvE'5"w••"'.::~:. 92' ® ooirFOOD l>.SOL CAN 15t ~ C~TAOlNA ~ TOMATO.SAUCE tot.CA• 9c ~ 6 VARIETIES ~ 0-~ Springfield Beverage ·~A0.' 1 OC.. ~ BUDD/G OSUCED • 35 ~LUNCH MEATS ioz. c ~ RATH •AUMEAT •ALLllEEF • ~Sliced Bologna 1,. PKG. 69c R!GUlAR OR SWffTMt~ PILLSBURY BISCUITS , oz.'"" 9c FAD POTATO SALAD WITH EGG , ,. 37c 2 LB. 65c-~BANQUET• fROZfN 1 s9 ~FRIED CHICKEN "•· @HAWAIIAN PUNCH ~~~'39' '* fll:OZEN 10 oz.45c ..::::.. REDDl-WHIP TOPPING ").~,*:;.. POPSICLES or 49c .. ~.::::: FUDGSICLES ••«OF " f•ORN PARTY ICE lll.BAG 23C ~ Al!X IOOZ.45 \8/TORT or TACO CHIPS c • I • ) If DAILY PILOT CHECKING •UP• So111e P1·es idents ' 6th Da,is Case Jud ge Und er Fire Shout ing Match R eagan in Welfare Clash SACRAr..1ENTO (L'PI ) -croy,·d began loudly applauding and was booed by the audien~ Gov. Ronald Reagan's fi rst Reagan's calls for restoration complained to Reagan about venture into the conimunity to of the ''work ethic,'' an end to his appointment of Dr. Earl rally support for his proposed "u nemployed hippies who w. Brian as state f\1 edJ·Cal overhaul of welfare has ended sneef' at society w11ile clutch· direl'tor. in a fing er-wav ing shouting ing food stamps'• and PI e a s She Riso "'arned, without 1=, ~ for reform "now." I bo 1· lh it•;, • Larks, So1ne Owl s SAN RAFAEL, Calif. tAJ') -Ruchell Magee succeeded again 1'-tonday in stalling the murder kidnap case against himseU and c ode fe n d ant Angela Davis by demanding removal on grounds of pre· judice the sixth judge assigned to the proceedings. n111tch with angry recipients. The \V. e 11 are reci·p,·enls. e a ra ion. at "somebod y's ry'"111 Th going !Cl {;et a blood bath jf fl::======-===::; e proleslors attempted to meanwhile, occasionally punc-don •t get tho se eyeglasses next Ir Bv L. ~I . BOYD IF ,·ou DON'T think the female or the species Is more bodv conscious than lhe male, ask' a man and his y,iff' their hip measut'fments. She' l I know hers. n1ost probably. Lil- lle chance he'll knoy,' his. ho"·e1·er. '.\l:.'1'1 i,:eOt"ral!y are of the op1n1on their ch es I s ootmeasu re their hips. Arnong the arcrage. that's \\'tong. The ir hips are the bigger by a couple of inches. SOBODY, !\'.OT c1en Charlie Chan. ever p1npoinled th~ ex- act time of a d~ath by the degree of rigor mortis ... TlfE SLIDE RULE ROYS contend the average citizen annua lly "'alks a coasi-to-coast distance .. J\'A\' TO TELL 11 hether an orange is ripe. the experts sa~·. is by its sme!l, not its looks. CUST0'.\1ER SERVICE : Q. ''In y,•hat states can a woman be req uired tn pay alimony'.'" A. Alaska. California . Ha"'aii. Illinois, ' Iowa. K a n s a s , f\1 as !lachuse!!s. Minnesota, !\ew Hampshire. Nor t h Ca rolin a. North Dakota. Ohio, Oklahoma. Oregon . Texas and tr ah. HERE 'S a highly unusual phobia . A fem inine Fresnoile says sh e has not been able tn bring herself to call any of hf'r boyfriends by their f i r s I names. Adrlresse.'I them as Sport. Buh, \.1 istC'r, and so on. But never utters lhe true nomenclature. Says sh e doesn 'l know why. And she has ne11C'r heard of anybody else '>l'i1h this affliction. I ha\'e. It's rare in \\'Omen. But it crops up among s1vinging men·about-town 11•ho a re scared they'll ¥:h1spcr the v.·rong name in emotional moments. \\'HAT have you done for your grandson lately? Agatha Christie years ago signed over the rights of her play, ''The ~louselr;ip.'' To her 12-~·ear­ old grandson 1\.1 a I t h t w Prichard. He's about 30 now. And n1 illiona iTe therefrom ... ro~SIDER those sports y,•hn 00....·I regularly in leagues. Nol one in 100 averages as high as 190. But just above fi ve in 100 ;iverage under 125. League bo\'.lers' ave rage is 1~4. ADD l\'0,\1INEES to the Proper ,Job Club : of Ventura, Calif.: J\1r. Nichols. a coin clea!Pr. Of Lewi ston. Ida .; Mr. Rake, a gardener. Of Shyder, Tex.: ~1rs. Tune. a piano tea che r. Of Lubbock. Tex.; Mrs. Neunabor, 1 Welcome \\tagon greeler. ALL fl.1EN. it's sa id. are either larks who li ke to gel up early or ov,.ls who like to slay up late. Franklin 0 . Roosevelt y,·as an O"'l. Harry S 'l'ruman, a lark. D'>l•ighl D. Eisenhower, a lark, John F'. Kennedy, an owl. Lyndon B. Johnson. an owl. And Richard M. Ni xon . I think, a lark on daylight sav- ing time. "AS FOR RECITJSG the alphabet backwards," wr ites George C. Leftwich of Lub- bock. Tex., "! can go both wavs -a to z and..back -in 10.3 seconds. exactly the time it took Jesse Owens to cover 100 meters on foot in the 1936 Olym pics." Your questions and com· menu are welcomtd and wilt bt used in Che cking Up whcrei:er poss i b I e. Please oddress your letlt!rs to L. fol. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, f1lewport Be a c It , 92660. Superior Court J u d g e Richard E. Arnason, sitting for the first time in the case, halted the court proceedings and several hours later filed a two page answer that sai d: .. I am not biased .. , I believe the defendant can and would have a fair and impartial trial if conducted before me." Assistant Marin Co u n t y Counstl Joseph Forrest said the CaliforniR Judicial Council has been asked to appoint an outside judge as quickly as pos..c:;ible to hold a hearing on fl1agee 's challenge. l\.1agce has challenged Arnason's five predecessors on the bench. Attorneys for a.1iss Davis have several n1otions y,•aiting IO be pr esented in_the pretrial hearings. Three d isqualified themselves, a fourth declined to hear substantive matters because of friend ship y,•ith a victim in the case and the fi fth ignored the challenge but served only until l\.lagee ex- ercised his one peremptorv challenge. • J\1agee and J\1is.s Davis. 27- year-old bl ack m i J it a n t , former CCLA philosophy in- structor and avowed Com- muni st, are charged with murder, kidnap and con- spiracy in the Aug. 7 shootout al the J\-larin County Ci vic Center in y,•hich a judge, two con victs and an accomplice were killed. l\.1agee is ch a rged specifically with firing the !lhol that killed Superior Court Judge Harold Haley. r•oliss Davis is no! accused or hein~ present during the crime but is charged with plolf ing the escape and supplying the guns. Committee Stalls Bill On Taxes SACRAMENTO !UPI ) -A Dem oc r at le -dominated Assembly committee has stall- ed a bill backed by Gov. Ronald Reagan imposing the \\'ilhholding system of income tax collection de s p ! t e argurTien ts it y,•as needed to keep lhe state from "falling apart." The revenue and taxation committee postponed action on the bill f\.1onday h y Assemblyman \\'it!iam T. Bagley IR-San Rafael I. until other y,·i!hholding legislation can be heard by the com· mittee. B3gley accused lhe com · mittee or "jousting with the governor" and holding "the bill for ransom in order to achieve their own t a x package." He said withholding ls a necessity or this state is going to fall apart." But Asse mb lyman Jn e Gonsalves (D-La ~1 i rad a ) . committee chairman, said hr did not want a withholding bill to move through th e legislative process sepa rately fr om a tax reform packa ge. Bagley Clffered to have the y,•ithholding bill trail along behind a tax revision plan. but the com mittee still refused to act. present Reagan "'ith ·an tuated Reagan'll speech 1,•:ith "'eek." She reminded Reagan THE BEST "award'' for being ·'the facetious cries or ''ri1?ht on.'' that last yea r he remarked, 1·n T l!.1•d• .. liip pell1 prov• "'••· highest paid "'elf are recipien t e~pers flared during a a reference to cam pu s nuh" 11 on• of tlle worl11'1 "'"'' in the .iit.ite," a reference to question and answer session disturtia[ces,__ "If u lakes a popoil1r c•mi• 1trip1. ~ •• a a Y.'hen a black 11.·oman who said bloodbath, let's gel it over dtily lit th 1 DAILY PILOT. lhe fact he paid no state in-,...;sh~e~h~a~d_a"._·~·h~e~a~rl'._'.c~on~d~;~l;~0n~·~· _'w~·;~lh:·:" ________ _::::::::::======= come tax last year. And the governor, his Irish blue eyes flashing. shouted • back they should stop '1im· posing" on other people and •·listen to the facts . ., The spirited confrontatio n erupted Monday night du ring a "toy,•n hall for u m • • sponsore d by the Sacramento Metropqlitan Chamber o f Comrnerce. fil'agan's aides said it was the first lime the go\'ernor has gone into the community at- large to pitch for his con· troversial proposal. w h i c h among other things "'ould re- quire able bodied recipients to accept "·ork or get off \1·elfarc. A spokesman lor t he j governor sa id he may consider 1 similar invitattons from other communities if they are of- fered . Expressing impatience with !he legislature for holding up action on his huge program, Reagan called upon California cit·izens to "fill the corridors of the Ca pitol" and lobby for hi~ bills. The governor, speaking in caver n o u s. 5 ,0 00-seal n1emoria l auditorium. drew relalively little response from the pr imarily middle class au- dience of 400 until 30 members of the California Welfare Rights Organization marched in an d took seats near the front. After that the chamber * * * Drop Noted Bide of Te1·ror Strict Bill On Pollution \Vins Ballot Last ~·car the situation "'as re\'ersed when R e a ga n ·s unsuccessful tax shirt proposal contained y,•ithholding a n d Bagte~'. author or 1he plan, balked at app roving a separate withholding bill. Bagley told the committee f\.1onday he had made a mislake by not providing for withholding regardh!ss o f '>''hether or not o!her tax re form measures were ap- proved. 111 Welfare SACRA:O.f Er\TO 1 !._'P/) W 01nan Fl ees Hail of Lead The nun1her of Cal!(o'11ians on .,,,cHare h<:~ decunt:ri for thC' l1rst lime in t•,\'O ~·ea rs, th~ f{ C' a~ a n a d m i nistrali~n reports. \VATSONVILLE !UPIJ - To Mrs. J\tary E. Grant. what happened to her \vh ile driving towa rd Watson\·i l!e late at night seemed Ii k e a nightmare . But she h;is 17 bullet holes in her car today lo remind her it y,·as reality. Mrs. Grant. 36. of f lagstaff. Ar iz .. y,·as driving alone from Santa Cruz along the Pacific Coast llighway to \\'atsonv11lc. Look-c1.like Kin R eturns Fron'lS aigon TAi\\J IS A'A ro1ir.E BASF.. Calif. (AP I -A ~2·VC.'lr·'lld man \\•ho went tn war in h1~ brother's place has rl'turned to the lnited si ates in a hurr\· to get homt tn il'laine and o0t y,·anting to 1alk about if. ''This (;i JUSI m~· ow I personal Thing." 1~ ~II \\'r~lcy Storer, a ~k1 instructor from Yarmouth .. \l:une, would !RV to reporter~ v.·ho mPt th'e char1er fl1 gh! from Vietnam l\.1ondav . \Veai1n1? c;l'ihan clothes an:i rarrytng hi;; be!ong1nJ!S in :i grten clo:h tag slung o\·er hi~ i;houlder. Storer b rt e ze d throu,l!h cu~111ms an~ durkrrt irtt1 the ).r1erican Red Crn~~ (,lfiC"e to arrange transports t,nn. , abMJt 70 miles: south of San Frahclsco. about :i a.m. J\fon- day • .,,,·hen a "horribly Insane SACH A~1 Ei\'TO {UPI J -A s I r in g e 11 l r1nlipollutioo in- looking" gunman in another i!iative described by one or its car fired at leasl 17 shots into chief !lpnnsors as a document her \'Chicle during a fright en-"'industry can live with " has ing chase along the frec"·ayii. qu alified for next year 's "He had the most horribly California ballot. 'Harve' Hit On Finance s insane look on his face I've Secretary of Stat e Edmund e\'er seen:· she t 0 1 d in-G. Bro.,,,·n Jr. announced f\'fon-LOS ANGELES (UP\) - vestigating officers. "I step-day that the People's Lobby Radio disc jockey Harvey ped on the gas and got out of Inc. has obt:iined 328.235 "Humble Har11e" Miller. ac· !here." /.l rs. Grant "'as not in-Slf:lna!urcs of \·olcrs to qualify cused of the i'olay 7 shooting jured. the proposition for the i'\o\'em-death of his wife, has been And Jay,· enfo rce menl agen· her. 1972, 11eneral election ordered not to spend any funds cies up and do"'" the coast ballot It needed at least from lhe couple's community Thcrr were 2.21lJ,f>Ut persons rrct'iving "clfare p,:iyments in April. down 23,,'l6 fro n~ f>.1arrh. "------- LET'S BE FRIENDLY It you ha\e n"\V ncighb<lrs or kno1v bf anyone mov1 n~ to our area, please lcJ/ us :;o th11l y,·e may extend a friendly \\'Clcomc l!l nd help thcrn to become acriuaintcd In their new surroundings. "·erP on the lookout today for 32.'i.504. properly. the assa1/ant. Hoy,·e\'Cr. thcv The JlCOplc 's lobby IS headed Superior Court Judge !l.1ax So. Coast v1·sitor y,pre hampered in their search hy Jo.vce A. Koupal, \~ho. \'.'ith Z. \Visco! issued the because illrs. Gran t failed to hC'r husband. Ed"·in. fallerl al restraining order f>.1onday pen · 494-0579 494-9361 set his car license number. iwn ;it1cmr1.~ in 1!167-fill ttl ding a hea ring June 14 on a Harbor vi·s·itor i'olrs. Grant said she y,·as recall GO\'. Ronald Rl'agan. A petition from Barbara J A small investment we made four years ago just paid o[ It's not unusual for a business to <luring the summer. ' sponsor college scho!ar~h1ps. Did it \\/Ork? The degrees-in ma.jors But a while back, the Gas Compa ny like 1\1athemaucs, Po!iuc.i.l Science, ' sta rted a ~c holarsh1p program that's a Social Science, /\:u1 s1ng, Engineering .and returnin~ In the h 0 me of similar antipollution in1 riat1ve Esposito. li, daughter of Mrs. 646-01 74 fr iends \\'here she y,·as staying -~fa~;~1e~ri~l~o~q~u~a~n~ly'._'.'.la~s~l ~\~c.~"~·---'='~'~'~'l'~M~;~11~cr~,~'~5~. ====~~~~~~~~~~~~~! \\hen she saw a car p;irked)i ------ !utle different. Prc·Law, from ~chool<. like UCLA , instead of standin,s 111 line to offer .\1ar}'Inount, Cal State Los Angeles and , along a remo te stretch of the freewa v. As she passed lt, shC' i-aid. the car started up and folloy,·. ed her. "H y,·as JUSt li ke he \vas waiti ng for me:· ~he said "He pulled onto the road as soon as 1 I passed ." :0.lr!. Grant said the car crept up t'O close behind her that she decided lo Jet 1t pass . but the ririvtr continued following her "only inches from my bumper.'' HAMS " . • • So Good It Will Hount You 'Til It's Gone" Ou• ll•m• ~·• Ill• flne1r corn ll'd low• Nl•~t'• -Ou• 10l"' """ cu•lnp mert.orl. •HI WltcOn11n 1 .. c~n•1 nrw:J aro!twoM 1mn~•nQ a"<l Jll.ll1111r 11utn bA~ln9 non•v •n IP•C .. 9l~lf •'• unlQUt In aft I~• woi•ld So 1tellc•01.1• •1111 ·~"""O wt [ult wouldn'! ~now "°" 111 lm~o"" 11111 i><Ollu<! <H'Yt iwtn m~k 1ng K>• J• yeA•J, ~l) .. ~I ,h<M hlo, from 100 111 b(lltf)tl'I 10 tn•' ,A<ll dtlt<IAblf unolo•m ,1;c, c'n ~ ~n.evecl tflo•llt H!V Comolttttv b•kf<I and re!Mlv 10 •erv~ Or· Cit• you• Hontv &tkoid Ho,., toa•v, ~n lllvtnlllr• 1n M•..,.lo~'Tlenl 'l'Oll'!I ~'"'' 1crot1. ~rants to the straight A :-;tudcnts :ind USC-~ay it did. ·I valedictorians, \ve looked for other Obviously we're prou d of what these kind~. De scrvin,ll studcn1 s. Bright young men and ....,.·omen have ace.om· students ""'ho didn't get the top ~rades p!ishcd. And their success has cn cour• in high school-for ~ood rc.1~on <.. ,'v\J ybc aged our program to gto\-11. So far 67 it \V:IS :t ioh that got 111 the \l'.1y. Or :.tudcnts have been 3\\'ardcd Gas Com· f;'lnuly rroblcms. Or pcr~na! problem~. pi1ny schol.-1rsh1ps. This year we're again Ur 1ust a late start. offcnng 18 in cast, central and south Our program started out small. I"---. central Los Angeles. Only 10 !-iiudcnts lhc first }'Car. We A We figure it's an investmen t _£;ave them a hand \Vith expenses. ~' \\·here \\'C can't lose. And ollcrcd 1hcm sood·p.iying 1obs QQ§ ~~~.~If,~'.!'!!~.~. Company Final!r. she a;ald , ~he deciri- td to stop. thin king !hr o1her driver migh t be in trfluhle . A We're investing In tomorrow. man ~ot out of ~e car and l'=~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::~~~~;;;;~::::::::::::::::::;;:--"'hen !ihe lo.,,,·cr('d the "'111dnw. I he looked at her wi!h the "in.~11ne" !arr. She sped t1ff. ---- I See Dy Today's Want Ads • Htrt'i1 11 r~1 v.•11h its 011 n tr;ultr' · In iood cond1r1nn too'~ !!'~ a HOBIE CAT "' CO\/r,<.r .. lor onl) S9'"1. Chtc-k Clil•s 909 f11r rjr. IAll.S, • llA~ ~')UT l1lr '~ rtrrA!ll betn in""" ~our 1.1-~ rivcn "TY'M~l'llr" ~ \\,•II, MW i' ~011r h11 rh11nr"' • • l!'i1 II ·i:;1 ,\IG fnr (\fli\ gtl !h1~ .•. $~:.O''' . c .• u IYIV.' brliltt' 1t'~ Miit!, e A rr ,\••u l1izh11ni;;: M11n~" Arf' ~'OU 1'(1'1~R:~ -t'flll•< - liltl~? Arr ~ilu lntr<1r•t•·d 111 ELF.X'THJC t',\r.s~AA \\'rU, th1~ 2-ri r 1nn1irl n111v hf' )'OUr nrx1 vrh1"t" ' e Do )'ilU nrrd a frirnrl;? \\'tJi, l\t)y,• lli'w'il!I 11 r 11rtf'lly can10f'~ Samo)'f'd p11ps tH'l" i!Ov.' ~Atiy to move thrlr dog rll~h into you r hnmt. Choose· One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: * MAIN OFFICl!::9th &. Hiii, LOt Angeln. 823-1351 * WILSHIRE I t GRAMERCY PU.CE:3933Wllahlrt Blvd., L.A. • 388-1265 L.A. 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Plus many free services -money orders, safe deposit boxes, etc. Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COMPOUNDED DAJLYAND PAID QUARTERLY.• 5.00°1•-5.130/o Passbook; No Minimum. 5.25°1•-5.39°/o Three Month Certificate; No Minimum. 5.75°1°-5.92°/o One-Year Certificate; $1,000 Minimum, 6.00°/•-6.18°~ Two-Year Certificate; $5,000 Minimum. • Elftctlve Annu•f E1mfng1 INSURANCE TO $20,000 ' '••· ... It .. ; I . . - Fo1· The Reco1·d . ., D"issolutio11s Of Jtl111·ri11ge EM1.-d Mi r ll ll rie•n. C••ol J. Ind 11r:,orr c Oo{~:;,"Su••" K1tl\tt nr 1nd J1me1 Munlu. Jolln ( Ind llo1rm1rv !IU11or>, (,It! A. Uld P•m111 Glol r 1 . .;;::,~:11, Pr11r JOU1>M end lhtlml Gont1•r• ~.ivl1 1nd J1dnto M. Afllfl, LOllfUll PHrl 111<1 ltltlld JIM•• flll&ll, JO.Sll>ft Frtnc<1 Jr .,'Cl ll'lftn C, i~ri:~~}1:,•i.·;~./'~':~c~'~:' Mino tlonoon. Oltnt Lvnn '"" Ml<hlrl D. _.,.,G. JO:IOrl ~ n ,3 :')ft ''" r l •04rr. Jo11lf1 tno C.Jrr!L t verr!lr Tlnnu.,. H1rl1n Lr ll~r 11\G ll•riurt i -~r.ri, ""''"~ J "'"" , • .,.,, ~ t.•1n ... ttlrr. M••lltll l n .. tt llo<nt•O L ll•1v, 031110 T. •1111 Evtl•n I '"'· Vlrnlnlt s 1"11 Hu~rrt J, t ·rl•onw \nlrler A •ncl Wivnt 1. l<O!f. 11/V '"~ Hrr! II. llotd, llMnev 1nd Lo,. M. f~rner. Ooio1hv P 1110 llot>.-11 "· l't1111. P1u11 Jct~nr '"" Eiltl II"""'' "'"" llrnv Jo 11111 oor,.ld,. (°.::~l""Emmtlt 1(1n11t1n •rid Neoma lt~t.>fl\, Belly I.. •ml F••!'fll S•U1>11, JOl\n E. Jr. irnl E1·•n L,~,,~ H1 ... •ln1, Ktnn~rh .Q,. •~a Nancy Lou ~1>lll•<>11, lll>()oliP L •na Roe.err J G~:>tnl-Albert ~na ~1·c•!t M()fr111. Wlnlfr..., MlrlP •n4 ll<>ntld Lt..,rtncf B••v. Oonn1 J. Uld Emarv J• '•lro, C1rGI """ '"" Jl:kn1rd llr111• P~ ltr~, ll~Ym0t1d LOVIS Ind cn1r~ne LYm•n. !><>nit J. •na 0 1Yrll T 8rGw1>. Lorr,1.r.~ lhfJ "'" r;H~ H~!1nr\ *'Jlt, Miry J . ~nd w1111,m L. e-01nert. Lvrin Cia•dan and l{o!~y Ann 'c;, G~•v C,, .1nu flon•'" 1 O~ No11e, ~h11•Qn J. inc lloCer1 Oon11d fl•ndt ru n. Candice Le• 1fld F1td~ro<• ll•tho•o l'•llffSOrl, Mi>lf l. ~nd David L /.'cGlnlry, Knlnrvn Ann• 1n<1 M•<l•••I i.111cK~n1rt ' ~Id. Lrrd o I , tnd l.'.•n,...•n O \Vffllhl C'tOI J••n and lvl•ll HfUi>Off "•Mir~·~ Cl•OI Doane tna Btr!~n I(. Mt~f. A"Dfln J Ind lonn• \OV!sr ll'tN.t.l OEC ll EE £•1lfrfd "'-•• 11 Hunt•• Boekor r ana 1-iil<I M•• l'l!llrtcl M11 II '"Ill, '""'""' J ind SuHn IC v.,v•I. Vit•lnl• Q;kio t nd :11rtnt-• o:, "r•a F"lttc~•r. t•nw1rd C. )'. and Ntncy O. B1rnoJ;, l&illa l Ind Wllll•m H. B•I•. S~•N)n -··1n 8oi'n '~• ( t llofln. Patrltk J f'ld B•lh (&tP"'ll10f l!l&r1>1r1 /h l •'d Artllur ~ F-.H. HlldA ... a Jllf1n E_ r0r•nAao•. M•G~lln• ~n(I Dini•! (~~··,. f-c~ft .. Etn•I .0.'•••~ •na Oenak1 E••l Fltt-pn, LVndl C f t"" St,.,l·•I C R""lrm~n II.le RD<hfllt and J~~" Slmu•t 1'~"'1tMll l•••lir E 1nd Pr'r. '.'/. r·&llltn. F•pn~•• C •rid l'1ut ,f,I!•·• f • '1•u. 11a~~ ~~'"'" Jnd Or•1nlu """ fu rch!ifl, Cl•Ol•n Inn ind Daniel lioll1rr C'i;.~PO, ~1la10,. Ja-i 1"a J•tnn••• v.rrncr,. J-x G. ~na G•No••nna f 'a~d:• ,,.,,.,,. l•• ·~a Tl..,,,~v l•• G?lrwoDd, P11rltl1 tu~ •~er J"'""' (,~D•I 01>!/•n, Al~1t1 Ph'lll• 1na J1n111 r.~n· "" f'a•:• C••o! S ond Oouftl\ J l!l•••r. H~rr~ C •nd B•llV Lou lovl""" (•lit lfld John An1llO"V </,.Hm Oavid A •nd M"rv /~~'hlf't Ho.,•11 l'•!rid a Ann 1n~ Sl•ol>f•I <trl ~h"fhfv, Lrrov Josoo" 1nd Oe111 E'l!11bttn ,l-ck••m1n. l~lt V•rlln 1r.d Oerot~v f~v'11• Jnllt1l0n, J8n(! IC. 1nd Frl!'<i••!tk ti, lnl<>fS, Cn•rlottf w. 11n!I Wll!l11n H, !>8ndotl, C"•OI !;. 1n(I JOl>n 0 . lltllllP, (Iva~ J••ome Jr. ~nd Cll•h lln1 Atnn ll'r•n -· I I OUllGE COUNTY Puhlisl1ing Firn1 Sues Ex-o,vner l .SANTA Al'\A A Hun . lington Beech publishing com· pany \1a11t s S200.000 in damages rrom 1he fo;·n1er 0\1·ner of a shopper's guide it purchased four }ears age in an of'.ang<' Cou111y ·super ior Court lawsuit charging the defenda nt \1•ith breac h of COil· !rat'!. '/'he V::n De P ublishing Con1pa11.1 . 1616 l G o I h a rd , states in the ttclion lh;it defen· dunt Rober I i\li!hous agreed ll'hen hl' so!d his "l\lr. t.liser" to th<' plain!ilf that he \\'OUld not compete in areas ta ken ore: by tile ne"· o"·ncrs for .~1>1 1 yC"ars. ~lilhous. lhe s uit alleges, has been .. advertising and soliciting material in Orange County" in violation vf the con!racl dra\\·n up 11·hrn \'an De Publishir.g Co. bought the business fron1 him .ind ~Villiarn Gray in October, 1967. County Man Faces Trial In Mur<ler Red11ced Claarges Convention LEGAL f':OTICt: Aho1~tio11 Cl1a1·ge s In County? . .... ll'ICTITIOUS IUllHlll MAMI STAnMl"T Filed Ml' Jt, lnl. Tl>I lollowlnt P1'1..U l tf '0!"11 llll1IMH 11: LEISUllllE COHCiPTS, Jl1' Du,.6111 SANTA A NA ~. 1-s CrlV<ll. N....-110r• lfKll. c1111or .. 1. '7 .... • · -'ur; ~' "•lrldt. •. co1111, iOOl "°'' "•o~lnc•, convention of tile National ltlrw-1 111e11, c 1111orn11 Association of CounliCll m ay w1111.,.. G11i.w.1,, "· o. •o• .,,,, Torr1nc:1, C1lfl1><n!1. be held in Orange County. 1n11 rr..11ne11 1, c°'*'c''"' DY • ·-·01 a1rln•t1hl• Tl11·ow11 011t f 01~ 3 By TO~I BARtEY DI lllf Otlt1 "lltl SllU SANT A ANA Abortion charges against lhree Orange Coast \\'01nen \vho ,1·orked in !ho Santa Ana clinic operuted by Dr. J ohn Shri\'er G"'Ynne "'ere dismissed l\1onday a s the physician and his mother <1greed to face Orange Count,v Superior Couft action June 2 on r educed chnrges of at- tempted <tbortion and con- .spir.11cy lo commit abortion. Santa Ana i\lunicipal Court Judge Paul i\1aslthrew oul lhf charges !lied against Diana !'.!. l:rinstad. 22, and Diane J. Budine, 18, both of 30i 21st SL. r uslti 1\lesa and \\'aynette B1·uc e. 18. of 77-ll Coocordia Place, Westminster shortly before h~ ruled him self in- eligible to serve on the bench for further court aclion. · Judge Mast is the aulhor of a landmark opinion which las t year led to the abandonment of abortion charges against Dr. R obert Cumming Robb of L.1guna Be ach. He argued in that ruling that California 's Therapeutic Aborlion Act. of 1967 -the basis for the pro- se c u I io n \\'as un- conslitulional and invalid. Dr. Robb, 68. ""as later in- dicted by the Orange County Grand Jury and ttX!ay faces Super ior Court trial on iden· lical charges. Pair Ordered 1'o Pay Auto Injury Su.it SAl\'TA A!'\,\ -t:o·defcn· d ants Dr. Ebbe Harlelius and l\·lrs. Reba Vaughn, bo1h of Costa ~lesa, \1·ere ordered l\londav 10 pay SI0,000 in damages 10 a \\'Oman motorist Supervisor DE1vid L. Baker l'111k~ • Collet . •f (iarden larove pro""~....1 1~1• ,11tfn11111 w,, 111tc1 w.111 '"' coun. Al I d r bo I ~ ,, (!'!'Ok of Or•n.i. Coun1v on a.1. In· · so. t eare o 3 · r ion renewal or the long -standing 111c11.a "' 111, •t1n1p •••· allegations t.tonday by Judge invitation at the upcoming 0ENN11 L, 011Li;r:·oc ~1ast were Barl>:ira Johnson, convention of the county ,u, Du "•"' orlY1, ,.,11, " 3' T 1· d R lh N """"''" ltt(~, C1Ulorn!1 n.t4 ~, U!I tn an u C'\l/tnan, organlza\lon nnd the board ap-"'""''' 22, Azusa, proved Publi•htd O••nte ca.11 o.uy Plini. · Mov 21 1nd J""' 1, 1. 1s, "" no.n All l ive \.\'Omen and Debbie Baker snid 4,000 to 5,000 -- Fullmer, 17, of Garden Grove \\'ere arre~ted bv San!a Ana police y.·ho hnve described the 17th Street premises operated by the 29-year-old physici:in as a ''thriving abortion m ill." del!gAtes usually attend the annual conventions. The sup- por1 of the county's t itles a nd rhambers of commerce \\'111 be ~ought to a id in landing the event. 0 ree TRAVELERS CHECKS DURING MAY ONLY No service charge on all the First National City Travelers Checks you want ... up to $51000 worth LEGAL NOTICE NOTICI TO C:lll!OITOltS IUl'l'lttO• COVllT 01'" T"I. STAfl 01' CALIFO•Ht" ,.Olt TWI' COUNTT 0, OIAHQI "'· ........ "' Etl1tt el FAYE EDITH I NM~N. 11so k-n l l Ft'Vtt !. lnm111 Ind I \ F. [ fnm111, Ot(r111'<!. NOl lCE IS HEllllEl!IY GIVEN '" the trtdltc" ol 1111 1bov1 ftlmrd 1«.tdon! 111•1 •II "'''°"'" ~•vln• cl1lm• •a•lnst !ht llld d~(td~fll lff tf.Qu!rNI 10 tilt ll>tm, woln tnt "ttt•Hrt •wUtf'rJ. i" Int elflt• ot !ht cl••~ of rn. 1t>G~t entltltd cwrl, or 10 ,,,...,, ll'ltm, WllJ\ !f>t ntCt,1UV YDUChe••· IO mt undetlllft!'<I ., Int •ltit• al ht• Alla•n•Y llOl1ff! P llunne!I, HlS Clll!t)fJll• Avtnuf. iouth Gitt. Cllolornl• 907lt0. w~lcn 11 m, PllC• nr 1tusl11t•1 ot lh• ~nd••ll•~•d In •II m~ne,,. p1>rl1ln!nt IO Int 1•1•t• 01 1•111 de<IOent, whno" • monfti1 11ler mt ""' "ubllc11i.n of '"" nati<•. 0•1e<l .0.\•1 '· 1'/\ J•ck let ln<n•~ E •tcutor ct '"' v1111 01 Int 1bove n1m..., o.ceoen1 lt Dlll!llT '· IUH"ITT UU C1lll••nl1 ,f,v1nu• S.utft G111, C•lll1r11!1 "'" '"' ClU) Uol·llH Al!lffttY ltr l•tCU!1t ,. .. ,,. . PYD!illl!d O•IM• (Ol!I Otily ••IOI, Mo1 " ll, 19, 75. lt/I lOll-11 Lt:GAL NOTI C f~ Tuesday, May 25, 11l71 •DAILY Pll.P. $ LEGAL NOTICE LEG.<!. f'(OTJCE l>'·llU ,.-41tn l"!CTIT10U5 IUllNlll CllT111't(ATI 011' aUSlltlUI. "AMI STATIMa"T •tCTITIOUI MAM.I '"' ktl1ewln• IJl'tolll ••• "'"* .,. ... Mndtt•I-doel tfrt!fv ""' ll C611o lluJlnoo •1; dwllflt 1 llu1lnn1 11 UO Ylrtlfll• Mtl. J, Cl11LO•l!H UN LIM11't0. Hftbo< (Mii M•u. (1lll•nl1, ul'lftr 1111 fl<o View Hllll S/lttctllll'lt C.,.,er · M<A.tttr.ur ll!louJ llrm l>ll'M 01 IOEAL l iAUT'I" alvd, & S1n JoMulrl HUit ltd •• 161• $Al0N """' 1htl Mill firm It ,_,.., Mt~A•ll!w-•011lev1rd, Ntwi>O•I l!l .. cn, el ,,.,. lollowlfl<I ot<1on. wlloM ,..,.,. In IAMUl!l H. AULD, Jill., "" Vitt• !UH and Pllet ol ret1d1nce 11 ,, !vi._,: C1ud1I. NtwPO•I 8t1Clt £\IE LVN L, Mll+lt!t11 Wrllll'I!, Xl6 E .•• , AW• AULO. lt5f Vl111 Ct0Jf1I, Ntw-1 l1lbo1. C1llfornl1 lltl<h. DllHI Mir l, ltlt Thi• ou1lneu b 111111• c.M11ct.,o bY • Mldlltl"' W•ltll• l'tr!n1r1fllp Siii• ot C1lllo•nl1, Olin•• c-tv: Ev rlv11 L. Aula On M•v l, ltll, befart mt, 1 Nel.i"' P'u11.11~"" 01•nw. c.,." 01llY Piiot, Pulllk In '"" ro• 11111 s111~. "'-'•llY M•• 11. 11, 71 ""' June '· ltll 11"'·'' IPH•rtd M1dt!llllt Writ~• kllCIWn '" .... lo Ill 11'11 "''-wll01• n•m• Is ltllltltr l~· LEGAL NOTICE "" lo Ille wl!l>ln ln"•urne~t l lld 1-------~~~--'-----l ;o<k>IOwlr-dffd ·~~ tAfCUted rn1 1•m1. 11'·1.Wt (OFF ICIA L SE. ... ~) ll'l(TITIOUI •utiHIS' M1r~ l!lt!n Mortool NAMI Sf,f,fl!MENl N"'orV Publlt·C•lll()fl>lt ~llld MtY U , ltll. Princi,.11 0111<1 111 l,.. !o/lowln1 ""'°" It ool111 l>utl1>rs1 tlr1ntt CCIUtlty '" My Commlt1lon E!(lllfK ,f,p1!1 '· "" Publl>llta D••flllf CIUl~I Ot!I~ P11,r. MtY (, 11, !I, !!. ttll IU·ll Betit.Ir Not i("e.J 11·ho 11•as Injured three }ears ' METAL 11Ecovi::11v. 1uo sue~"'' h f<v~ .. (nlfil ll't ll, C~hlornio, SANTA AiV.A -A rnan 11 o aso y.•hen her nuto \\'as struck "'••If l!IO\+•r. 1•~ Porn<.n1 ,. .. ~. LEGAL NOTICE DILLDN [11 1" 11~1ior O"t?n JI ll•tcn Or;vr. I Nf NPGr l l!lfo1Cft Ollf 1)1 lltllfl, MIY 1!. ~"'"'"'d by \on. l1Nr~tr l'l'tbtr, or N,.., Ynr• Cltv St1vlte1 "'trf hfkl IO· ld,.,v. Tut ia1v. WesrcHll cnu•e!. Inter- "''"'· Fort'i L•Nn Glelld"'' V/fitclilt (ll•ootl Mortu1ry, U6·•HI. 01rt<lofl. GAlLAVAltl 1'>0m~• L. G1U11v11n. "''" 60. of"-» Ill• H.••IJC• Orlvt , Hunllt1QIOn fttath. Dalt ol <ltllll, M1v H. Survlvf'd DY i.an, WIHI.,., 0. Ci1ll1v1n ; d11ua111rr1. Jan• lior<nfll, Te,.,, G1Uov1n, Mar-. Wrston; mo!l'lfr, la1 G1llav11n; Dro111er1. w11:1~.,.., P11r k\. Georvt afld Col ii:oe~rt G1ll1v1n; •I•· le". Cllhffone C<>rmlcnarl. 11tltn We.i, 1n~ SiJlfr Mory OeUI\' llo•1ry, W•d· '"""'•v. 1·JO l'M. Sml1111 Ch1Pel. lh•1ulom M ~n. ThUt$dl~. !O I'.",, SS Simon ,_ Jullt C11tnolo< Cnu•<h '"'"men!, Good ::;n.~11,r11 Ceme•ery Sm•t~I Martva,,, Ol•et!Cfl, J"Cl(SON '4f'11 J J&ck1on, f'9f (ofsr•lew Drlvf. L•Pvno Be&(h. D••t ol de.it11, M•v 1J. ~ur vivtd OY 1111.itiMor. Ph•lll• Jack•cn "•IYMr O•l•tllde u rvlcu. Wellnttdov, •~01,.,000 "'"' Ctmet'"' Mccormic~ LaDvna 8oath M<>"U••Y, 01ftt:10rtl. NEWMAN ~~•th G Ntwma" Aot SS, ol II ?? Mu"· "'' Orlvf, Hun!lnpton B••ch. 0111 nl <1ea•M. M11 ;1. Men>be• o• Wom rn'1 r..,11 CluD ol HunllnPt0'1 lltacl•. Su•- V•~·~ llY hvlW~d. Kt olh; mother, Gt•• I'll!• trwne1 Drorrt•. Joo Irvine: l •ilt•· •~ ''· LI••• lrvlnp, t ll ol Hunlinoto" ~· • S•rv•c•1, l'.'rdn,K11v, 1 PM, Ptcl· t • v , • cn111e1. l J.ea P1cltlc VJ,.,. Orivt, "~ _,, Be•ch tn!er,.,en•. P11c.tlc V•'Nf I --e"•' Pt r• SmitnJ MOrtu•••, O•- '""''' ROll!NS C~·' Rollll•n\, 10d Moll'°" °'"'· Co111 I• I Dal• ct dt,,h, MIY ;,. ~ ............ (! hV vi••, Sco!lv ~. llabbln!; livt dau9h· .,, 1>11113, C1t11 l hO 8rt"111, 111 ol ro,., Me11 • M" "'"" Ptr,,.. •na1ie;m: 'I.. 81r1Mr1 Jotln~"· Or1noe: 1le11• rl•~u~•er. M'1. Oel>Ole l!lr\erlv, An1~lm1 !;~ snn1. Rebert. el Co1!1 Mew; Ktn· ''•Ill, !nditn•; onf' ''"" !n Ktnh1c••: ~"" n.ne 9r~nacn;1<1ron. Funeral If••· I·•!, W-CneldJJv, 10 AM, ST Jc~n !ht l••,.:.sr C4tf!Olic C"urcn. ln!1•,.,•nt, Good '~r~lt••d C•m!!trv. B•l!1 Ca1t1 Mtl• I,, ''"'"'' O.reclor s V•NOERIEll.G '''•~rrt M Ven!ltrDuro. t!I Abtlon• I . .,, S•lbol Iliana. 0''' or dt•I~, M•v JI. °"''v>vrd llY wilt. M1rlon; snn, r-,r1r" t1•uqM1r. llt!tn Dllr Crel,., '"I~•,, l:l~tl Jol!lfle , JUii• Mllll9en. n,.0rnf Vto••o• 1n11 Vl•gl"I• Of H•rl : • -~ Qran~cnildrtn St•YICtl. T~orll)ay, i rM, Paclllc v o•'N Ch~orl, wl!~ Or. r ·~tit• H O•r••nlltTd olflc;1ti"'1. l~tor­ .-. '· P•<•l•C VotN M'ma""! Par•. P1ci-v., .. Moflulf~. Oortc•o•1. VELA -'•n~•I It, Vfl~ I IGJ7 P,i!mdllt ~I , ' J.M,nQIO~ l!lt~C~ 0dlt of dtl'~• l.'tY Se.vktl Ptnd•"ll 1! Sml!n, Marl111r.. ARBUCKLE & SON \\IESTCLIFF f\IORTUARY 4!7 E . Jith SI .. Costa l\1csa 646-48" • BALTZ l\IORTUA RIES Corona del !\tar 673-9450 Costa l\fesa ... 6~6-%4%4 • GELL BROADWAY l\IORTUA RY 110 Droad\\·ay. Costa l\1csa LI 8·3133 • J\lcCORi\flCK LAGU1'\A BEACl:I J\tORTUARV 1795 Laguna Canyon Rd. 49~-9" 15 • P ACIF IC \'IE\V 1\IE:\10RlAL PARK Ccmeler y 1\lortuary Chapel ;:.,;oo r aclflc View Ori\'c 1'\e"porl Beach. California 644-2"/0D • f'EEK FA1\1rt.Y COL0~1AL FUNERAL HO:tlE 7Brll Bol~a A\'t , \\'etlmlnster 193-35%5 • S)IITH'S MOR TUARY m !\lain SL 53M53t ll11nllngton Bt"ch 11·as sent lo state prison for a t· b.v a car driven by l\.lrs. i~~·~!!:iic1~11=.~~· ~cnol11C•M1 bv 111 M=~11:;~h::. ~~·:~"'Ju':.:'1~tn?1"'1Y 1 ri~~;; te mpted 1nurder and returned Vaughn. t"lliv.a11~1. l'-11113 Cl'llllTt,ICATI! 011' co•,.o•.t.TIOH l'O• TIAHS,f,CTION 011' aUllNIESS UHOl:R ll'ICTITIOUS l'IAMI! I 0 C I h h. VIYIO llll'll•f o range oun Y \\. en is Orange County Sup e r i or P11D1i.hen o ....... c .... ~, 0 1,,, P•lo• victim died has been ordered Coort Judge Lester Van 9 CONVENIENT OFFICES SERVING ORANG[ COU'ITY M•~ 11, 11, 's ftnd Jun•'· 1tn "°' 11 c1.11T11'1CATI 0, 1us1 NEss LEGAL NOTICI-.: lHE UNOER51GNE0 COltl'OllATION OOH ~Mtlw Ctr!!" ll\ll ti ll COl'ldt.r<tlnt 1 bu•l~t ID<•1f<I •' ~ £. Adtmt Aw . Hun!lntlon 8~1cl!, C•lllornlt Ul'lllM' lflt llctlllou1 firm n1mt II OOH JOSE 1nd ,~., ••Id llrm ,, CatnNOld "' 1111 lohew· Int corPOrll'-. ,....,.,, •rllKIPll l lKt ti DY•lnt•• i1 ft Ioli.wt: lo lace a Sunorior Court T 1 h d d 1 h ' ----..-1cT1T1ou1 "AM1 ,..~ a en ove awar e e LEGAL NOTICE 1111 11tW11nlonM -· <•rtl1~ 111 1, ce,.. murder triaJ June 21. damages to Susan Eby of Ai1port Olf1ct /M1chrl$011 11 M1cAt1hu1/8ll 3111 ,------I a<>etuig • IM,liint u 11 lMD l'OP!'IOO'll Ave., Judge ByrC»t K. l\1c~1illan N •-· h I h . l•YMdt Oll1ct/lbrsid1 •I l1mborrr/642-1 ICI ,. SlM Co\1t Meu. Cllilornio. 1in<1tr '"' lie· e\\'J>Orl .x:ac a ter earing Cl!IJ•1• ,,,~ Ollkt/Nutwood II Com111011~111h/87J -2!00 ll't(T1TIOUS IUUHl!llS NAMll llllou• llfn! n•me ,, MEDtT!llll~EAN set thal d ate for Gerald allegations that l\1rs. Vaughn. Urir111 Hill• Oflicr/lt1surt world, L1iun1 Hills/831).JlOO tTATEM!f"IT MOTOR Y•c Hrs '"" rn.r 111d """ 11 Roland Caron. 30. Garden •-I .. do 0111 /l · W •· I B 596 1" I Tnr 1011ow,n1 ~'""" !1 llolnt 11111!11&11 1omNUd "' !ht ltrllowln• -•on, wl'IOlt 27. \\'as under the influence of ...,, 1 ct t 1svrr oild . .xi llth/ · ~ ••: namor In tyu .,. •••u Of ,.,kltnto '' Grove, and ordered the def en-nan:ot,·c, "'hen lhe co11,·s,·on Sunnr Hill• Olli<1/H1rt>or .11 8rr1/871-7290 DTA11ErTE 11K1H1 Jt,ND SH11tr co , •• •ottow" 00 ., , 0 ., .,,,,,,, ... , OOH JOSE lt ESTAU•AHTI, If«: .• 'lltl E. Ad•m1, Hunl!"l!on ltlCll, Calif. WITNESS 111 hind lhl1 Jr d dl V tf MIY, .. $ . Ofr /S . f'I I /642!151 1 ,1, M I A I 111'1) t I Frink Po\iut, 1052 Ci"f/ICI~. ''"t• " .. ,., <!ant to appear June 4 for a occ urred at the intersection of upttlCH' !Ct u11trior 11 teen 11 · c1111orn~:."' Yt · • t 11"°' An•, c1111ornl• .,,e.> INC. , ll11ivenitJ Dffic1/(1st Ch1pm1" •I State Ca!1t1r/17!1·48•0 0 r a M 10 1t11 JDt Morl•••P~ hearing on a motion to d ismiss Anahe,·m and 19th Slreels. or1ne11e s11~~e. ,, 111n s1 .. Hermou • • •• • ''''· "" WtllcJill Ollict/Wtslchlt 11 Dovei/642..JIJI 8oich, Cllllornli. Fran~ Pollul charges and J une 10 lo r. _ _'C~'os~l~•~~~l~e~sa":.·~o~n'...:J~u~n>e'_'l~7~.~J~968"'1~·_1_==============================-i Tn11 Du1!nei• 11 ~·n• c•nduc1t11 by ,,.. s111r o1 c1111orn11, D•1ne• C0<i111v· ~~~1~~~~'(,L~~~~~'.ASs. P'elr'·al 3Cl>.O>>. .Sttie of C111rornle, I t 1 <nrt>OtUion, On MfV 1f, ltll, belOre mr. • I Jtmr~ Pee\ Noten l'vblJc In •nll tor i•ld STiie, On lhl1 Jrd dtY ol M1v, A,0, t"7!, Caron \\'as serving the lhird Pub'·=~"" or~~ti' COA>t 0,11, Piiot, H•son•llY •t>Ptffld Fronk ,.,11111 k.nown belor• mo Je1n L. J~>I • Not1<v l'uDIJf M•1 .. 11 II '.i 1911 IOt.S 11 Ill me hi bp lh• '"'''on ..,,,.,,, nt me I• 1n Af\d for 11ld C•un!y and 5!1lt, fllldlnt month of a slate priSOll term ____ . ' ' · •ubl(1IDld tn rnt wllhln 1nuru1T1•nl •nd .,,,,,rn, au1v comml11iontd 1nd two,,,, Or lwo lo ~ years \\'hen LEGAL NO"rlCE IC~"'""'•dDtd ~· fAOCull'd ll'lr ••me. l>f•so~•llv •P~"'"" Jo. M«lestplt k-· •o ------·!(OFFICIAL SEALI lo mt lo bt 1ht Pre11cient GI' rhl CO"• barlender Douglas Snyder, the -Jolln l!I. i•un11~,,0n. 111 oorallon t~•• ••"-ulld tht wn111n 1,.. 'nan he beal ; n Io un· 1'·•167' Notlfv Publl<·C11llorn11 •"~ment en 11111111 er Int cor.,irr1llo" _c E•r,',',':,~',o'uo,'•'•"•'•'HIS5 Or ono• coun!v m.,t ln n1mtd, and •<know11dtM IO "'' conscious ness a year ago in a • • MY commlnlon E•11itn th1t 111<11 carpor11lon ••etul"" !ht .. ,,.,.. d d Tnr ltndH>ltned doM cer!Uv ~. h ~on· HIW. t, ltlt In Wltneu Whereof. I htYt n..-111n10 tof ispule 01•er a v.·oman, die . f avc11n1 • ~111ln!•• at mo R1ndo1on Av~.. l'uttllcn...i 0,,,,Q, c"'" 01111 Pllo!, mw h•nd 1nd •'ll•td mv 1fl!tl1l 1111 th• Snyder remained in a ('()Jna :;;:;;:;;:;:;;::i you were to ~~·n~.:.~·'o1c~~~·~~-lt~~·~ ':'11'~(~:.u~ M1v u •M Junt 1. •• !J, 1t11 111f·11 !!!11:'. Yllr In lhl• t1•lltlc11t II•••·-· from the d ate of the beating. co. 1no rn1r !•Id firm'• com,.,,ioa of •n~ LEGAL •·OTJCE IOFFICJAL SEALI lollP'#;nf p~•-· ~est t1•me In lull Ind I~ Je1n t . Jotiot last June 30, to his death Jan. 111•<• 01 ro~latnc• 11 '' '"''Pl<I" 1----Not1r. Public. c111lorn11 5. The prOSeCUliOn U'il) ask for d 1• e tomorrow . . . . . who Lfrry L. l(oth, 1f71 MlnGrc1 Or, "OTICI TO C•IDITOllS Prl'IC!Pl l Olll<t 1" Cn•I• M!111, Citllo•nl• SUl'l!•ro• COU•T 011' THI! Orin•• ("univ \he death penalty in the ne\\' D•ted Ma-. l . 1'11 tTATI' 01' CALlll'D•HtA ll'D• Mv C..mmlnlor. E••l•H I · I l•rrv l. l(oW> T"I COUHlY 01' OllAHGI! /\'~re~ 1, 1'1l na · .5111• d C•ll10rlll1. Or•nD• County J11. 4 ftlM "VDl111'1td Or1n11 CNJI Cycle Rider Files Suit SANTA ANA A llun- tington Beach cyclist 11·ho blames a California tligh\\'BY Patrol officer for injuries suf- rered \rhen he was knocked off his machine last June 22 has sued lhe officer and lhe Stale of California for $17,000. Waller R. Yiinterov;d. 17551 San Roque Lane, identifies Of- ficer Ernest Lee \\'insor a s defendant in an O rance Coun· ty Superior Court complaint charging the patrolman "'ilh neg ligent operation of his CMP vehicle. \Vintet o"·d asserts he 11·a.s cycling through the in· lerseclion of Springdale Street and \\1arner Avc~iue on a g reen light \\'hen \V insor 's auto ran into him . A claim filed by \Vitcmv:d against !he Stalf• of C;itlfornia for Sli.6i2 \\'as denied last r\OI'. $, Drag Racer Sues Driver lRVJNE -Oragster Bob Hendrix \\'ants $19,000 in d amages from the Orang County Internationa l Racey.·ay for injuries :;uffered \\·hen hi!I car \\'as 11·reckcd on the track l11st Aug. 22. The Arleta drlvtr name5 as co-defendant in the Orange County Superior Court aull Lawrence A. Bright, the drivtr of a car which allegedly stopptd in Hendrix's path a s the plaintiff drove his "Bold American'' in a qualifying run. Hendrix claims he suffered "serious ptrsonal injuries" In the colllsion and lhat hi!! car ws totally destroyed by the impact. 1 d h th b On M•r l, 1'/I, belort m•. 1 Notlty f.:Utlt ot MILOlilED MAllll lE CIULt, iv..v .. 11. 11, 1\, ltll V e U r PuDli( 111 '"" ,.,.. ••Id U11e. P•tlOnl!IY Drc••~td. IC----------------w 0 U a e -•Pot.,td L•"Y l 1-:Mh kno....11 In me 10 NOTICE IS HEllllE8Y GIVEN le lh• LEGAL NOTICE ... •• W~O WM'< ""' " ·~"'"" """~' • '"' ·-· "'"" ·~ .. <M D.t.ll p '119t, l~l-11 •a t.,. ... 11n1n lnth umenl •n<I •<•nQ"'I""~· l)lft 111 ""o>n• r.t vln1 c!1im1 1q1!nd rnel---------------1 1 ed "' ••!'CUltd lh• i1m1. wld dl'Ct<ftnl u 1 •t<IU)rld lo ll!t 11W!m, •·•1611 d f k . g . tOFFJCl "l SEALJ \tillh ll!f ""'''""' vouchero, In lh• olfk• ClllllTll'ICATI! 011' •u11Ha1s e n 0 m a 1 n 1 n a M•rv 8•!n Mor!"" ol 1h• tlPrk of lt\t tboYt enllll td cwrr. 01 FICTITIOUS HAMI Nat1rv Pubhc, C•hlornl• In ••t.Unl tn ..... , wit~ The M'Ctl!.lf~ 1'h1 u11<11t1ltned don <t•lllY rl'I•~ "'' Prlnel••I Ollie• In vouch1tt. lo Ill• unaet1l....,a •I tn1 nllkt Conduclint • bu1l""u ti ll1 M1rlM Aw , Or111ut Counl• ot 1111 AUornrY. Rob«t A. E••'"''"' 11'0 1!11111?" hf11\d, C1lll0rtnl1 'rltn, undt• !ti~ t ' W 1 d My Commlnlon E1plrt• HltllM lllvd., Sul!t JOI. (Gitt MHI. Ct ll· llCl!l>Ou> llrm nomf cf LOCI<. ST0CI( N arrangemen S Ou A•tlf '· !'1S larnltf26~. wtilcn !1 !M Pl1<t o! builneu 8ARlll:L '"'! 11111 ••Id llrn1 h '""'"'"d • l'ubllll!td Or1nDt Co•1l D11'~ l'!lot, "' lh• ul!dtr1lantd tn 1U 11,.u.,, cet1•in· cf lht !Dllowont peroon1. Wi'IO'le n1me1 111 M8Y t, lt, 1•, 11, 1'11 1Cl6·11 Int !n !ht •ilt1r or l lld dM:fC'eM, wl!Mn 11111 1nd pl1c11 ol ftJkl•ncr •rt •• LEGAL NOTICE lour mon1n1 •II•• 1111 11'11 PUD!lc1Hon Of fCMIOWl; 0 .~ • , .. h k h d ' thl• "oue, Hov11rd L•.,.,, lll "'" Jt,vt., 1 1 t t to 0111<1 M~v f, 1"1 ltla"ll, C•llfornit "16'!2 ey now W a 0 J'-ll'U LOWELL W. ('ll JLt Sllt ll!Y U.wr, .lll Onvx A~e., Btlbol • Cl!lilTll'IC"fE 01' IUllHIS• E••<vtor af lh• Wiii h l1nd. C1lllornla t'6'1 -. At Pacific View, we have helped hundreds of families through this d ifficult fact of l ife by making all the orrangemenls with them before the time of need. We provided them with on itemized list of things that were legally necessary. others that were finoncially desireoble. • You see, something will be done when you d ie . And today, when there is no undue emotional stress, you con determine what, ond how much it sl>ould cost. A phone coTI to Pacific View today can save you money and your survivors much anguish. lt con only toke an hour or so in time, but it saves so much morel PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK ti MORTUARY 3$00 ,AClftC Vl!W DRrvE, NFW'°JT I E.A.Of, CAl110llNIA 91663 • (AltfA 71 4> 644-2700 /----------------, l'ICTITIOUS NAME ot th~ tbOY! nlmftd lle<:~!nl Edwt rd M11tm1n, 111•; J1d1 AVf ,, T~e Vlldftt'1lont<1 do.1 crr1111 h• 11 (On· 111~.,t A. l!.t.olmin ftolbo1 l!l1nd, C1lllo1nl1 '1N1 llutllno • IHt1ln1u II t:ICll kul~•""'• Or .. 11ff Htrlltr ••vd., Ne. HI C~ndltt Mlltm•n. 111'• Jt dt AY1, HunllnMon 8t11ch, C11lllornl1, una ... lht c11t1 Mttl, C•lil. r.1'21 llnlbo1 lslt n!I, taTlfornl1 9'U2 li<•lliou• flrrn n1t"t ~I LIN DEMAN AN O Tll: Ulll Solf·fUt Oiled MIV I, 1911 COMPANY. f<0JU$TER~ •~d lhtt ••IO Atl••fllY ,., 1!11<111... How1rd Lowy llrm 11 com11111od ol "'' lollovrlnt ~e•· Pub!ls~td Ot•nw Co.I•! Dilly p;101, ~h1U1v ~•. lO,WY •on. wno" n~mr in lull •nd Plltt nf Mi v IJ, 11, 11 fnd Junt I. 1~11 1110.11 Ctndlt e L. Mtllm1n t!'llO•n(t I• 1s lollo.,,, Eaw1rd A. Mlt1m1 n M•vn1rd EdW•rd Llnde.,...n. t lOt LEGAL NOTICE SUit af C11110n\l1, Drlnt• Counry; Sour~1nort O•., H ft. On M•Y 3. 1111, btlort mt .. • NOl•rY Ofltd M1r 1•. 1t11 Putfk In lfld tot 11la s111e, 1tr1C111lll• M1yn1rd £. Lln0tm1n •·•'•U •ooe•rrd How1111 LOWY, 5ntU11 L ..... ~. 1111t of C•lll()fnlt , Ortntt Counno • CllTll'ICITI! 01' aUSIHl!SI Edw1ra Mltlm1n, Ctlld1c~ l.\lllm1" On M•Y 7•, 1'11, lllfOtf mt, 1 No11ry ll'ICTITIOVS l'IAMll: knnwn II mt In tit Int JtrlOn• "''"'"• PuDll< ln .,,., for 11ld S1t lf, H tMlltllt't TI'le ulldertlt hld dOIS Ctrl!IV ~• I\ UI,.. n•mts 1r, •11b1<r!btd 10 ''" V1tll~f11 ,,... ,PHlrl'd Mt vn1td EdVltlrd Lllldt,.,111 llu<1ln1 • Du1lneu ti 11211 lt•I.., ~lrumtnl 111<1 1ck-ltdvtc1 l!'ltY IA•tulld •nown 11 n'lf lo bee lhe "~'" "'"'°'' l!lou!tY••d, T11911,., C1tlfor"I•. undsr "" the ••mr. ntmf ;, •Ubl<,,_ IO ll>r within In· lf.cllllou1 firm n•mt II 8JIC LEASING !OFFICIAL SEAl l 1uvmrn1 I nd Kk,no\<lltdltd "' !~Kl/ltd COM,ANY I nd 111•1 111kl l11m Is tam• h •IH-1 A., Ht!•idt: mo llmt, POJtd ol lht !Dlk>Yrl... !H•JOll, Whol.t Nol••• Publlf-Cl lilo1nl1 !OFFICIAL SEAL) ntmt In fulf t nd l lKf of reildenct II IS Pr1nt1Pel Ofllct I" Jttn l . JOIHI lollow1: Or1not Counl1 NOf•rv Publlc<1t11orn\1 llt•n1rd J. KtMrie•m1n, ''' '1 MY Cnmmlt1lo11 E•Plre1 Prlnelntl Oiiier In illlott llnd Orlvt, Tustin, C-1lll01"nl1 '200 Aprll l, 1'15 0•1119• Ce11nty Ot!M Aorll l't, 1'11 Publi.nrcl 0 rl"llf! CNll DlllV ,.Bot. M, Commlulon E•Portl 1lern1,d J, Kotn.tlm1n M•V ~. 11, 11. 2', 11)1 14)9./1 M1,t;tr '· 1'7J Stitt ol C1111orn11. Or1nn C11Unrv: PutrH•htd Otatl{>I '°"'' 0111v Pilot, On A..,u 71, ltll. btfo" 1'1•. • Nol••• LEGAL NOTICB Mo-. ti t r.cl JuM 1, t, IS, 1t11 1'1~·71 "ubllt I" t nd tor Mid St1!e, P•rwt11llyl---------------10~1rtd B11n11d J. KMrJtlm1n known la m1 to bf 1111 Hr!On wno1t """" It I AI mt 1ub1crllled to 1~1 wllllln lnil•ument llld IU'f:•IDll COUllllT 01' THI ICknowltdft<I ht t WKVltCl tnr l lmf. .iTATI 01" CJl,l,lll'O•Hl.1. 'o" CASI "0. "·tU91 (OFFICIAL SIALI TNI COU"TY 01' OIANOI CSllTll"ICAT• OP(' 0. I' 0 • .t. TI 0 N Etetnor M. CrOl'lln CAif: NO. A0·11j.I OOI NG IUllNIJJ UNO•• l"IC· lfoUrY Pvbl!c Ctlllornlt CITATION •t: l'llOCllDIND 1'0 l'Jl t:r TITIOVI NAMI! O•.t.n~t County MINO• '•OM ,.Alll HTAL CUITODY •A• )lOll M1 C11mmlt11oft E~ai.,, ANO CONT"•OL THE UNOE•SIONEO CORPOJ!AHON Mar. I, "" In tht M1fler cl: <;illl"HAM l'AUL <IC>f_\ Mlt'tbv ttrllh fill! It I~ COnd<>ellnt ~ "ubll!hl!d Ot~ntjlf Cotll 01llV PJlot, l'IA.llTLEY, NllnGr per1cn wno 111.ould t!"" bu11nen U 151 West 111h Strt01, Co1!1 M•v J, 11, 11, '5, lt11 10~1-n dtcl1rl!!I rr~e l•om rnt tu1te>11v 1M c~ Melt, C1!1lornl1, Ulldtt lht llcllllOUI fl<m ltlll of hi• PftrMI, ....,,,,. or INTERNATIONAL WHOLESALE LEGAL NOTICE THE PEOPLE OF THE COMl'ANY Ind l~lt ll'lt n1m1 of Mid SlA.TE OF CALIFOll H1A, CMllOl'l llOfl f l\d 111 PrlnclP•I ,,.et el TO: CAHO ... CE LAUlllE WESTMAll l>utlMU ,, ti lollowJ! HOTICI TO t •IDITO•s '"" lo Ill •• , ..... Cl•lmln• to DI .,,,. GRANT'S FOR GUNS, INC .• t !l Was! IU,.l•to• tOUllT 01" THI mother tf 11ld trtll'IOf .,.,.., t llo\lt n•n" 11111 S!rttl, Cotlt M111, C1Hlornlt STATS 011' CAl.U•O•tUA POil ltd. OU"' Aorll ~·. "" T"• COUJllT 01' OllAN•• •v .,o., .. ,,.,, Court YOU .... ll!lrftt¥ Gll ... Nl'S F01t GUNS, INC. Mt. A.f"H O • cll..a I nd rl<llllrld I• IPl>•ilt bt~•• ltlt E 8, G•1nl, E1t1tt II Mtmlt W, Yt n l'll'tt JUdllt PrpJIOln1 111 Oroirtmofol I. le.. LEGAL NOTICE PrHld,nl Ot<•••td. Clvk (tnl1r Orlvt Wtu, $fnl1 "nf, M, O. Gt1n1, NOTICE l.S HERE I Y (;IVEN lo lftl C1lllorni.1, of !flt ibovil ,n1111.., '°"'' ,,. SK'ttllrv' (t ... llorl ,, ..... 11o-., n•m•d ll«ldMI """""' s. u n. It •:IS A.M of ·~•I l'fy, Sl.Q,TE OF CA LIFORNIA lhtt •II PH»"• 1!1vln1 Clt lll'll l~tln,l fl'>t 11'1tn Ind lht r• It thew Clllll. 11 t ny, ~W I II T'•(l~I( \lt[\IJ \ 1"'4CIFIC \llfW MEMOaAL PAR( G" MOlTUA"° _..,, • .,,....,.. .• ,. •• , · I I I I I ' ' JKICI ,,t,ClflC '1CW Dtlyt, •tlllf'Ollt 8(11Cf!, CAI.If. 9266) .... .,... ~ I "'" '"' ....... _ il .rr ,,, --------------• I I f I ../ COUl.ITY OF ORANGE S$ 1•k:I aoc...,,hl ,,, f<!<!lllr"' lfl lilt ,.....,, II•••. wiry uld ... ,_, '"""" llOI DI on 1n!t 11th a1v of "''"'· 1'11, ll•lor• wltn "'' t1K1n1r~ vOU(ltet>. in "'' Dllltt dtcl.t.rf'll l•rt ,,...,. th• ~n'"'' ot ~ 1 mp, 1 NO!lr1 "uDllt In '"" IO< Mid Cou,.. flf lh• (~I-flf tl'lt •DOY• f<lflllt'll <OUrf, <1f' 111rent1 ttC<lf'dlnt ID !l\t H llllon o-n lolo tr 111<1 l••t•, at•JOnlllv •-•r•d (. 1. Ill 11<t;en1 lhlt'n. wllh tne n11<1u1rv ltfreln, Ot1nt •11<1 M. D. Gr•Jll k-n !fl me I•"' YClllCl!trJ, !O ti.. llndffSfl Md " ""olfi<f! Otveot \lndtr mY ~IMI .,.,, .,., et ·~· 1111 l't•.11dtnl 1'111 Stt:r111rv II Int c.or· of 1111 Altorntr, Sl1"l1v JI,, Pllllllfl, ~ lutt•kot Courl of tttt Cou"" of Or111t·, POl'lllorl lh•I ••tcuttd '"• wrtll!n 1 ... Sovtll s..,..,.. Sir .. !, Nt , •1.), Les At1Mlt1. Sttle of C1lllONll1, on MI V .. ltn • lltvmerrt on btf'll N of the <:er-1ti«I Ctllfornle teOU, IO!'tlct< 11 Int J'ltct GI' W, E. ST JOHW. lhltet11 ,..,..., 111d 1clt-ltd1N t. m1 bullflfo\t ol lt'lt 11ndto1ltt11d In •11 ml'll!rt CounlY Clt•lt allf "'" WCl't ""-'"°" 1•«11ttd th• """· P1rt1l11lnt t. lllt t111lt II w lcl ftttdlt'r!, Clerk of fl'rt (OFF tCIA.L SEAL I wl!Mll t "-11'11 11!tr 1n1 llrtl ""tllctl!on Su11trloi" Cau,t of ,,. 111cn1rd M. •11t1, Ir, of 11111 nolltt. J1111 of C1llto111lt, llO!t•r l'ubUt -Ct lttor11l1 Dtltd May 11, ltn In 11'111 for lhf l'•tncll'tl Olllc• 111 11•1 w, Y•n DtY•tr C'ou"'' « Or•llte 0,1~ .. Countr EkfCU!e>t Ol fllr WI!! l:lltn H. G1111h1 Mr comrn1111t11 E11rr" 01 1111 tbovt "'"'"' 4«Mtfll 01111rr Ju!V /, "" St~llltt A. ,.lllHt, JOtl'N I, IOWA•DS •ATT•AY, tNYOl• A LIYINCllTON 4M 111111\ l1rl11t l lrHI 1'11. tU Altf1M¥ ft Lt • Att1n11•t 11 L•"' Lt• A"'ltl• .. Cltllunl• mu "' ••11111 111<11111 A,111111 JIU Hotlh Mtlll H., 111111 tft Tt h UUI MAdf-.. HJI .l.111~111". C.llftr1t11 neg 5111te All .. (IHI. '17'1 Alltl'fMI' .. r l•1tut1r 1'tltlltl'llt1 1'14..1 1n°11Q Ti it .. ,.,... ···~N I AlttfRlf ltr ,.11111-tl "ulllltl'ltd Ort~h Co~ Cf lt' ,11,1, "ull!h'*f Ort,.., CO"" O•llY Pl16'. '11blllllld Ortntt C'e1sl l'>•llr J'oie!. NlilY '· 11. !J, ll, ltlt 10»1! M-1 ·11, ! .. n ·~d JYnt I, 101 IOll·ll NtY 11. II, u '"" JM"t ,, lJl1 111 ;.11 • \ f -- • f0 DAILY PILOT s T ~IY M<1J' 2S 1971 Complete-New York Stock List Your Money OVER THE COUNTER ' Vets Get Advice .... .. lhel I Hllll Llw <llH <~• • Pnc-*' .......... nhiU W _,.... _,.,,_ er c.mmlltlML. Armtt (II; \'I 10.S ?!,~ :t,I\\ "' -\II UtriltlJi!_!' -... On Job Benefits ••*""""'9 ......... _,. ..... ., .......... ..., t AM nm MAtO. Armr pl4.1S r.ioo •1 '' fi -1 !uui,111 Ill NASO Listings for Mond1y, May 24, 1971 ~~clu4,.o~{'-rt 3'.:~ If ~ +1~ ~~~~· • ..., .. ,., ....... ..,.,. .. ,.,.,a••m• .. •BBCl"'<:l""'""•'"'••••••••l"-ni Cor• ~" • N :J -" "'U"wr A •N~ ,,. • f '31't \.\ Ill utl!HH I.JO A>• ml l 'O l• ,. '~ "-"' -~ 'l'CloM I ...... ,.,... .. ...... Asl'll A I ,, .. ,, ..... •7\ll _, YfPUI Miii 1 liol ...... l iol '" AMI ... " •l• UIHI ... !~J, g•ewfll ,, '~. '~~ 3,i; + tt Aud G I l'O ~V. S.S SS -1'-NEW YOlllt IA .. ) A•"'1 Iv )\~ 11>\Ctow C• 11 :zt t10ll>Om 1\o I li1P•r~w H I~ '\\A..:! So l 70b :UYt J.IY, :W\) -'It O.n Rh•tr -t 1141 lo low"-• lltl A.C.C •ot ',',~ -,, c,-,., ,' '' 1 ,_ H.oo~.r n •9Yll P• F•111 1oi, 1ou Ana T••11•11 JI 11\i 11vi. I'"' + ~ 01,.. co 1.2s 11 ' N e<ltd Al G11 U .. olU1 lll , • M0<l1 Rt! 6+t ltl'. '°lu tV P 1l\ I A!f~ tllol lt lU• I • 01tl 1"4 jOb Ntllon41 *u 11111 tllrd Al l ll1 Com Cit •U. IX ko..rd G ~ IQ P1v1 le 11~~ 1l~'o Al ~· I t ,._ 1, 7"1-• 21\1 221, O•rt 11\Ci p1 1 By SYLVIA PORTER seniority .S)IStcm -In a con o.1e• AHn ovtt811 Pn1c 1 ... 1 corroi sn lli\U'"'H°"'tr\d 11 211\P1vL °'" '""u Al R t11111 1Q1 nv. 11.., 1111-·g:11 P•oc:••• t"" cwnlfr a11111. a1t111 Hw 111., ll'IO Com Gti• 7\oo 7~, H11t-Mlt ,1, l\lo P•rl Ml u~. U'4 At Re~ "'Hl ~ 521\ 52''> »h -\\ vcOCp I,, If •ou are _or JOU kno\v _ tract or In pract1et' -you 1 '"'''net a. u111o,n-•t1m 1ut 2s"-2s'hl comw p1 ,:i., ,,,. Hiid• '"•• 3•1'1 >.1\1 Ptir111 T J0\1 :n ~AH Rich 1 ,u 1y, 121\o'i 111 -h v~ P'•.u ' d I d th Q I la I Odtl B1 r11; ~ 141 l\o Com PIY t l/i 1 1 HI> 11 P 1 • HI PtM Pie 1 1'-' Allll:c~ pt .Ill .fl 1.4!0 ~ ~\'I + ~ 0.riln Jt a 'eler''I -•w r c-enlcruig Ill"' must be ere I e WI sen1 r t ••nt al'ld Tf'llu 11'"'" F .so111 51 tnPI cm 14111 ~.,,., Hritt C• 11 , ''" P• Ga.w( 21 , ,, All•' Cht"' 1 •• ll llu '~ -n O.v nH..., 50 •-~ Jf !·• 6 '' > •' oo >>• ,. c I ~ II o o • '' Al ao Corll 15-1 ll• i. l\\o ~•lnPL 1 •• t.iror\OUrlitnelnsel'VJCe "'~p • •fllmr ..., m11n11 l\l •\\HVllll111 ._ll~PtOI W 1 .. 'ATO lncot1 1)1~1!.110\\-t,OPLDfOI-. the tightest itind most uneas)I 1 111 B., •r 11.\lo ,. ,. 1ur1• Mk ~· ',',, c~,• _Tee 1oi.. 11111 •m•e. 5v '"-10\o P•1ro111 ~ 11 \ Au °'' Proc1 u 04 10v. 1°" _ ft IJiiL te 7 _ In II there h~ been a general pay 1>1E111.11 s 1i"' 1• attcNll ..... ... .... -1\lo 1" lfl'lti Cp 1 ... l-. Pdt °"" ,, • u • Autorn 0 11, , ~ , $6 S6 _a.:. "c , ·• labor markel years ll .,.,L H•nt NC 11 J7llo 11e1111 " u U\o c .... P1• 1'1o f\1 Ina Nuclr 31"-».Phi ~uD '°"' 20\'o Autcwntn 11111 ,, 1ot, ,.._ •~_VI t 0 be Cru•ially important for )OU rtll!Je or Increase 1n benefits MlCIJ lll1 ~ "' a1n1 s111 itv. 20111 on ~«t 11.i ,,. 1111or nc ui.. u • P~11111 01 u 1• Avco coro 11 1st .. '''-,. , _ 11o g:1~·:~ Ill • I I d t •• l Sh1w BM tt SJ'4 llt t Hit ' U Cont 1n 16 1'1':1 lnlo 0 N> $\\ ' Photaon t o t • Av<o C11 wt o1C1 • •\\ "' De 1 Ar S4 I be th OU".,'Y aware of )Our )OU re en II e O l.l1ese 00 u v1 eu uc. JJO.. a.ii Lill .so., JI orenco u\11'9Vt1n1r1 Ind J J. P te1m1 A 1:it11i.. Av(o 1111,20 11 •~\ •O'" "°"' o. ec Int O or Ii'" Q ,._ Id •et more ..,, N .,... 211. •~· &lt111 Ml ,..., ~h C0<p s '"" 1\lo 1111ri1 i. 1n 2111 l-. P nkrtn 1•Y 1s .. A.,.,, Pa 1' 1 ni. ll"' J7 , OettK 1.,. 1 ri<hlS to )OOr )Ob promouons ~ you CGU " 1ni.ur•11<• Bl ""' w ••~ ""' Co5m Yr1 ''~• ,,,,, lnl•ml G 14. u1o P111 11n 11>.. 11 Avnet inc 11J ll • u t u 1 -~ o.nn M 0 r," Pay lbilO '°'hell )OU Je ff'> FM:! Un LI ,.., )91./o 8 rd Son .. ,.; 1 Cr1w Cl n~ 19"' lnBk W111 1\1. 1loo Porl HIC 11 '"• AwM PO 1~~ •J tOCI "" 100 O.nM\lo 11 I frinse bentftlS !leOIOf llV Ct(; IM1111tr11h l lrlchr l 'O J~1 C 011 Co 410 ... lnl1l1 Cp I~ !ti\ POHll M II I V. AtltCOll I NI » If' lt lfl'I + \:i OtnnwRU .f4 l'asl'•lly 1 •n "Ure you A Yes you share an a ny ""' C• s .. '""fl ct HI 1 :i.t~ ""' c u1 Re• 21t 1"' 1n1 M11111r 2•~• 11v. P « P1 11 11 o.... 111 yin 1 .. " AFA Pt$ ,. II 8ot1"4! El lh ,,,. (111 t Ftd " .. '"'Int SY1lm ~ SS p 0 CiOll s ' -8--o.ott(O al B k lh l d lh I ua1ns -and also losses or A D inc • 10 Boo• AH Ult> 1t vP com 1~ 131-. l11t•w•v l:Kt n ,,. Pr11a Mn ~11Jh '' ~SotGlnc oo now a un er e a" vou " k d ,; AITS lllC •t• 10,, ao11 c.,. 1 , ', D•n• •D ~ 1~ 1an1c1 1ne u 11r I• Puos NM l'O>o n. B1bC:kW ..so 111 JI• 11 • -11. e e:~11 l .:i are enl,11·• lo gel back the ~ changes 1n wor Ing con lwOl\S ""M c11 10\t 101t er•Oen '"" 1 ., cu.n1v M ""' ••• 1.s.ou u1 21\ii 29"-Pi.as NC 11~ , ... B,...•O n 10 1sJ ,..,, ll • 311 • -l o 019 n ~ ·-h le you were Abtrl ltll'I I • 1 • Brin!>.• SI "'"'ID••• Ca '}') ,,~. JICOO Fl ' oil!. P11ohnr 1 "'"' ft• • GE I 12 IS ,... " 19 ' • d all" ) OU left l0 go into servJCe --OCCurr1ng \I; I A'11lhll p 22 1 Jl!.ol6tU kl nt. 1JU OM• Oen llo , J1oul11 C 11llo \211 Pu fP-tl C\t llanoor Pi.nl &I 12 , 11 1 II \ -I 0..1 Ed atS 50 Adml ?>t J Orwnt Ar II • II 0&1• Gt'! 1Jla '' J•m W.i Jiit IP llt11Mf 11'' 29 ftanoP pf 1 i 1t t 2• • 21 t -I Ot~ rr 24 with the same pay sen1Qr1ty aw:'IS A!ldl•n w u ~ 11 Br>11 le• 20 :ro 'ID•t• Pk~ •to •llo J•m.• " "'-3'\• PutD C1p ~ s1, flt "Cal 1 3• 1 30 ffi n"° -~. o • " nan 50 Q \\hat about promollon s" M• Ro•) S t ftiK~DM I\•' O.•tnP S\, 1 .J•m•PY ' tl.Qu•ICM 1:1 1 111oBu•k1>IHYI 11 gv.1:• •S -!•01m1nt IJJ and status you ¥.ould have had ff 1 An..-s111: u 1 11, 11uc~ey• 1 , 11 oav • "" 9 o 10. JUfy Fe11 , J. RT ~'~' •" .,. l!~O ~ f1' ~ 11 ,1 , ~~ -"gi·~hshr,,•,• Ir You d ne"er gonC _ Op to ll A pr0tl10 1011S 3 f e A 11111 J l 1 Bllftl l!n J.'• '~ °"" 11 l•'I ' , 1~ Jo•l111 M 20'4 21 • Re9en Pr 10\o !].(, llerel CR 2Ja 19> ~'.lo .11 0 S7\o -1\o Oi!S 1 OI -• b d I lh f A """ H• J • l 'Mlfturn S m )~>.. 3-• 0.~u~ C J-J9 1 KOi (p I • 1 1 R~ho I Cc Yl!o 10\lo Bl>IC 1...: 1111 11 11 ll"lo DI I•~ "' linie limit or rour iears {Or au1omnt1c ase -On eng o At>ert1 IJ•" c.w~. 21>,21-.0«0 '" • •v.KMS 11111 no12t1.R•n•"11 E '1t.111 a1ir1 Mtt 11 u, nt.o lJ~-\>o;~t1aa ":an enlploymenl JOU re entitled {O A Co I( 1-\o 6 o C1mbr H l \o 1.i... OeK D At 21\.f ,. Kii" Sil :lt\.>:i lO R1ycn CJ> 1 G l)!\i 111!11 Mt pl 1 I I • 11 11 -OIG 0 to f11e )ears tf the governmen~ AIC90 Lii if1Sj\~1M Mii 101 110 o.~ DI 20 l!l,,K1!tS!l 11I lt,,20'4Ra•mM 16 6 ~11•hlllll 1~ 71 311(,, lO~ JOl•-·O~lt•'EQUO B an) promotion you "Ould have A ae" El 2;. ~1. C11111Dn a 101 1 o 0.1 C;onT 6 ~ 1 Ka var '.II ll'i:o R*<-ot E; 21 11 ~, B• h 1>1 ckl 1 ,. " 1• 1''4 -• o u l!llhm tO requests the ex! ra year ) ut Al ,o Lll(I 11 • 11"" c1"r•d P 1JV. 1• Oaf 1n1Br :11;o 1" K1m1n A I••• u 11 Reect )0 31 e1usc~Lb to m 111 Al l s ; 1 o , _4i1 oil on to 6• d oh h bee 'ec'''ed If You h.dn I been m AU tt<h 1. 3 C•P Ml~ 21\\ ?6\~ °"""' " I" ' Kl. G. l l\o Rf>P e v s , s B&XI lib l•l ll ~ :n :n'h + v. o····· -\\hRtlf}OUrol J as n Al o Be~ o 1 r C11>5w\! 110 111oo11>mcv ,~101,K1v11m 31, J~Rctd 1>11 20.11 ... a1r~C t50 1 10 100,. 10 ol~e•,..rll 'llm'noled' Or your o ld boss .'Service A a E<11>I I '• I l'I C1aln Ar 5 ~ 51, 0 t t•I 1-,p • \ •I» K•ar Tr ,, • " .. ROia E• ., • d i. Bel n•• 1 l ., •• •flt 19'111 -1 0 vM111 1 OJq A VII a•c IOJ.. 10 .. C111 T*<. J . 311 01,' on 7'I )1 ICttl!I Cp u • 12'111 Rcb II M~ "' 2 , llfe1Fd$ 111 I) ~9 I l8 l8 -1 .. OrPeaoe olO refuses ,. rehire you"' Q A.od fringe benefits s uc h Alo-crm , ., 1l.o c1 ... Cp > , ' o i.c 1~ 21,,. ""Kt ''' 1'11. J"' Ro1r1aon 1 ••• Ile• '"II• pl • 10& 10& 1o.i _, OomeM"' '° \"l!h U S I 00\V com as pf.OSIODS Of .,._,uranCC A Pin Cito! 4 •,.Co 1 c; " 2•\.o is Doc11tirt I~ ..... 1(1llW<1 :Ill :ttV. Rowen '" 1 11.. lleCI 0 j• lO 701 "' 311~'t '91'0 + ~'o Oo11nf eY ~ w 1-~ "' A pnnm Jo J '~' !• B • '" 2 1 Ol•n Cru li'~(l~ Ke 099 A I• 7'hl Rau1t "6 '''"" fteckmr,n SO ~S "~ 4l •l\• -JU OamFllCI l5Q ·l' ve erans A U !he benefits depend on Am ausP 21 \ ?J c1sc NG 11)11. u"' 0on11 u 11~ 2 ,_Ke 1~ Svc 11 y, 211<o Ru• 51ov JT 3111 B"°'A r '° 10s 2~ 20 • 20 • -h Doric Co 11 tng hon1e In m 0 U n l Ing A El l b I 'o I' Cl .~ C 11 111'1 Oow Jaon1 "" '""-1(1ulf El• IS II ,, S.d ler J .. l\o aerQo C ~ 110 11• I~ I""° Oon Ollv• Jc nnlh of service vou m u s t be Am EA•" 106>..104.Z c.~~r PS 11" 11~ Dayle oa ~1"' 3'11o l(ty• "o uo.. 1114 Scan 011 1r 1 110•1«>, "", !iOll .. 19'~ l• • 19 • °°''"' 10 numbers s uch questions as " ""' Finl JOI.. JO~ ...,Y L•D 11\0 J 0..11t n o 171, 1~ Key Cu•F 1J,. u Scent11 El '"° s11 • en 60 J '' • 11 ~ 111 -'o °'OW• Cn 11 crechted for the lime y ou wer e A F ,, LS 16 ,..,. tnanc• A ""' 11.14 oup •P 11.,, " l(•r' Pc. u .. 1• Sc1>o1 n ,,. 1 1111e1nvH 40ll '2 2&' 27 • ?av. -0owc~,., , 10 ' hese take on great urgenc\ , , , , ,, , 0,, , ... 0 IC'-int , .. >• "" ''" , , , , et How to 47 cs •s •S -1; Dr·•voeo 1 '° If hi l m 11 " ' ' ..... u• °" 21"2"4 ~... l -: l"SC1Plt\ H 71 2, Ile lnlrcon !I ll o 11~ l~-~•Dnll»d 1'° Thus hereareansv.ersl\eob a\iav )Our rig 0 8 :"'M~r:~ ~.~t',l~=~nn 'l1~ ;ll~!11:•;~ U~l;~~1::':'cE~ 1 ., • sc Po 3 .•11em11co,o i ii 10 . ,,~, 10.-.1ooreuPtJ20 tained for )IOU from the Pren pension or a longer vacau on Am re r.o 11>.1o n ~ c11e1a u1 11 11!1.IE1>1r n t" u 1J1-t 1C,..p v 111 .:11v. Jt ~~11l'd P," 211, 1• t::=1: ~ ~ 11~ ~ ~j'• ~ , _ 1 g~~~:''c.' 1 I depends on period 0 f Am WtlO IQVI IO'o CrlJ fir Of ff >100 EcM UO 1'i!. l Lin<• In l1 JI 1 ..-• lt P iJ I ?l~ Ben11 CP I~ 3~ ~ \ .I.I ~ SS ~ -"'Dult Pw I io l ic e Hall Per5onne A11<1C1 t i 3\.oCnlltori u s EduCl sv •• 1 .L•n<1At\ Jl.fo ••f>•iCon 1 12 Benellof4JO 115~ 1n 15v +1 Oultepll70 '''"age'n,,11 Labor l'elai!OrlS e1nployrnen1 )Out m1htary A11~f\11 II •11. • c~r l~S• l?l )) E Pa• E 6~• •~ L•11e wo ' • ' ~nee• " ~ • 1 senu 5ol 2 so •loll :n 11 , n 0111t~ Pt6 11 \ A11~en tn lo> 111 Cllr sS pf 100 0. E ~ Sv•I 16 • 16"' LI IOI! l" J • '• Stnl n I t 1l Bt<>0"4!! ll' 9 ~ 1 1 I -, ll\Jn8rl!I )(t Service Pnss !hem on to st'fVlct' musl be counted. For A c1 no ' 1 1 c ''" Mto u u, E dor ar '" 1\.o U•d" Cp 1 • l1•01svc c p 6 • 6 llf'n;u11 fn • 1, 1 oup '" n1 I k A ~MOP ,. 6 • c •nUT A 11~ :IT E fC Nt.1CI 38 cl'I Leh CCII ) 1 I S.wtn u 61 614 Btrk•v p,,., l l llf'o 1111 11 • auP ... 1 ''°" \ eterans you come across (llher benefits you re 1 e any A 11wtc; 11'1. u • c1 111u1 a 11 • 11•• E ectrm UT 11 , L• 1 c10 "• o • ~nco R r ' • 11 er,h s11 1 70 111 '1 11•~ 11 1 -ouPon1 Pl• 51) II I ho ha bee ,.,,,.v l" ~ •h CI~ Ml 21on>..f.t<: Mt>d 21'1 1 0 Ltws BF I 1 11 ISl'rlB11s n 6 1 Buthtt 60 I •9• •9'4 •9'.14+\•Dul!Lt '" Q\\ba tll y-0urold1o bha s 011.>rempo)e\V S n A rJW H l01 J1 c1eu.,111 1 11 i:. .. 1rch ,~,.,unB(•1111 ... u.sn.oPT 1 '°'" l•ckOkll 5110110 "01G\-•o 011<1Lt""t' 0,1 1,a'e -'JYiCll to•.110CnlnOll J J11 EmpS(lll V o 61A ~~o,n!t , .. 1\1SCo!W1t 15 .c!J\olllalrJOllll .. 116 '11 20\• l'Oo+\.41)q3Hnl1~1 heen a boh s hed" Or tht coin ........ ~ 1 , 1 SoNE Tei J1 • 3a B u L•uo 1 .,. 12~. '2 "' 71~ + ""o .. , 10P1111 Id • Q How Jon• do )OUr rigbl!!i L~ c11av 1 • n. sw 01 CP 16 1 61• Bt«k HR " •• •U• 61 67 ~ Dvl'NI t...ci Pa ny b.as bee n lO .. , _ •• ._ .. ,...,Lo~ E1tn ' ..._SwEI s .. 11i.11v.B1111e111l'IO "'JO ""at\ ov111mAm h I (., -.-. -.... .-... LYMCh C 21 11,,. Sovrn CP lJ ~ U ftobD!e Bk' loll lJ•o 5 , µo -A If your old Job as been as Mio~ o 1~ 1•~ SNcerv 1i. 3v. eoe llll co •o ,16 JJ l 21>, 11• -,., 'llmlna"d You re enllll.d lo A )OU cant be fired or M I F d M•\ Pool 1111 , s11n<1y" ,6,, 11~ s1111c11 '511 •ti u 1~ ~ JJ'--1:u E~eleP c llG lit a un S Ml Riiy 11 11'4 Sta RH [J 711.1 71\• apne1 111(1 1 131, ,,,, 13\e -Et>eo (p 90 lh' n'ares' Similar JOb ill P"\ demoted for one year except U M•I krt 16~ 111. s11n HPo 31 :i.v. 11oc1iM1h 1 11 1 1.si, 2.s • 2l • -~ Eo11 Ar u11 u.; Minor Cc 1lo I , ~!tr!, Sir l~ cU\'o Borden f 20 2'11 21 o M 26 o -lo E•11G, I Ott Seni0f11y and status. Thl3 rule for misconduct or other good M Br ..... r 11 Jp, 51 •wD c1 ., ~ " .. eo ow•r 1 2s ·~ ,. • 191~ n" -, E111u11 1 '° Y d Mlul LP l U V. SubK T • Jll 3 ... llOtmnn lOD 6l l~l.o 0 o 10 'o -~· E11Kad~k 1 alsoapphesdyoucant do reason our seniority an __ , Mc<:or .. 6111 sutd•IF lOh lhB01E!l1'l6 HJI 31 J10+•.Ea1ncp1.:i be f Other r'gh's last .' lon g a. Yoo McOvtv 2Jl'I :uw ~.,,,., El 11 11 Ba. Eel a ll u rno 101 IOI• 1014 -Edin" Ml "° ,0ur old Job cause o IM<lic: H ,~ 1 .TIME oc 11 11~eou'"' inc 1 u, 1• "'"-~,Ecte1J1< 11 Slay On !he )Ob NEW V0RI( (A Pf Caonslel G 6 It 14' !mP C:.t~ I t7 ... II N E a 10 <& 16 4" Mtd c M 1• , 1J>i T•m1>111: 26'1 1246 Bra" I A!rw 11') I >lo lot, 11 <o -V. Eel< 0 NC 40 ph)ISJCal d1sab1l1l)I or because -11>1 tc ow flt D<iO Co11t Mll1 .... I .. ric:F Am I• OI u )9 N Hor I 19 I 11 11 Mf<ll l1""cJ1!o T•Ul'I• 2ll l' ar OQSI l tel .. 5 ,. •S!lr .,... -1.4 Ell 1aonllrot I bee h d A Q "'ha t u your employer F & , II 1 ... Pro Fullll 10 IJ IJ ll ,.....,i;n I '°"" ,, T1vl0< I t'llo '""' Brill My , ,. l'OI "" u 'S -l}o EG&G 10 the Job has n C ange s " aHon• tuPlll ..a 01 '""' Ci1n 10 n 10 •2 ric: 1 s 11 ). ; P, ',,•,nrtl 1 01 1 11 Meter En 911 , A, T•r r wl lOlll>I03\'J er 1 My P• 1 3 •• , u~\ •• 'I e: re1 Auoc for sale of the company that refuse r lo rehire you" 1111 N1ton• Auoc:1-Corp Lor 1•G111s1 1~~~~~ ~1s1~1Jp,,,. SIP il:fi~~MCI•~ w l1~11v.Ttc~ Pub sy. s,.1~~::1,0~ 1~ lf~ :i~ li~-.,.~~:m0~:., d .. sn l maller as long as 'he A You Can b ring a Ja\\SU!I 11 on I SKur ! t• (Irv Ca• IJ .. h J1o !CA l J 61 1' Y• Purn1m Full(ls Mlct Cl C1 t fla l l!'(um P lll 111 Bel....,. Hile 1 11 41 41l '2 _ EIMM1~ Pl l O..t!'\ Inc ttC•n WD<t •H •ll n• Gud w:>J ~5:. Eoul 111 1 t1MIC1~• 1>o 1 •7•fcom •~ •1"ac1wYk• pi t 1 "''' 49,, '9~i-•oE11tln Nit bosln••s still •-· on 1n a federal dLSltiCl court and rtif pr t•s 1t wh cnfcrn wo11 1 20 111 Jn<te:$ s oi 12 si u 1a Citoi"'l 1• 111•" Mldw Gt llR: lJl'l TV '""' •~• 1~ 11•-"""G s 10 "' 35 ~ 3"' 3"', _1 • EtPt1tNG 1 .._. .,,,._, ntse •Kii tidtlleqn f9 66iltl ~•or> C.Cu" Grwt~ l06011SI lltp 51~SI Tenn•nl 21 2l""Bkl~nUG 11} • 'S• lS 25 + E1r1C11 12'11 Q \"ha ldo )ouba\ie to dolo a sk the US attor ney locou"' h1v1 ONnOeltw••GrwP 1u~.,.,i ,,S.$1 1nuwn 11a 1 t1Ml tM111 11~11V.T!•AmO tt'o ll'oB•cwnca 1 ti,, ,, ... FMI L!CI 119a 1 ><>111 ZO'<I °' oouenil DKtl n 2l 1l l1 lnu ~ > 11 II' ••Wtll 1 1i t 07 M ne " 111, IJ • Tr.t "' A 2>.o l\'o ewn<;nra 1; , lG 0 101 101l _ 1 Efl'lt El 1 la cla im )Oll!rlg bls'> reµresl!n! \OU )OU can g el i1J1:f<l)Mo...,.l1 ~.,.. llJll•t f'..o •Sl •tl v1,, 1 1••ssM11l•Gs 3!\34 Tfnvco 11'1 11 BwnSl>otl.511 11 ll\?:JI lll'I+ EmtvAlrF1 h I •I. •• "'k Del .. I k I i~ s GU l~ ,, 11 ,, Vll\lac. 115 I a M!u Rr 1s•. It T !Inf In .~. ~'lo Brun•~ ' ,,. Jl. ll~. ll +-~. Emh•r! I 20 A Ask your emplo\er for e p or furuier 1nlormallon at AGE Fne1 s n s 4l Dode co~ u ~, 11 02 H Kt 9 111 • ~· R•"t e 10 PA 11 '' M •• v G 111.,u ' t thn G P • , sx eucv E• 1 20 uu :IT , 2t 29,, _ , Emioo111 1 '' lh Orr I v I Alll<Cln 1111Jl0rtxt •1lt/J ll•>'V l>l•lRnltl H•ll$1JMo Rotf\ lJlYTotlELt • •V.BUCldCo 7l!l o1J'IO l7o Em,prTGIJ \OUr job back w1lh1n 90 d ay.! e ice O e ersns Mmr•ttr FvNh Ortvt Fd 115 l7 111• Rt.Sn soo S11Sct1111• Ultl t•M<>llwk R ?t :H\\Tr•C1>• c 3 \ nt.llU<ld coals tXI "1 60 "° E11trlhMI" Cl """mploymenl R ights _ Grwtn 111 llJDre,1 Lv 1••2U1Qll tl 7'l!ll9GScue111tr Funai Mon! Col llt l'o t r...;n! G 1~w1,~1 1111dgF ~1 60 J 7'i 1 Ji+ Enn1BF ll4n ~f\er Y, release and It S 3 l u:;:<: 1ncom •JI"' 1' E:1 onl.HOWlfCI lvv 1 20 126 IM f\Y ~n11va I Monrt P lOV. 10>\ T •nso 0 1~ 11 Bllllttl tf\d I t ~~ lb -h Eov I G1 ? JO I I Which L'I p a rt o f the Labor 1n.sur t a.o 10 1 •• •n 10 u11 02 J,,ll_•nc-• o Ii BQ s.>tcl l! os JS os MoO<e s l~'t 16'1• Tr MoD H s nt. 11u1tFor1 1 10 JD """ •111' ~~l + v. E,•~ tt1r '611 good Id to app )I )JI lVrl 1ng """ lfl s 62 .. u Gtwlh 1J so" IS "'"'"'" "16 n ,, 8111" 15 S9 ,, st Morr ... I( UV.CIS \ T ca PO 37. JI Bulo\laW 60 1 """ 2llio n~• QUl'rFO '°" JI You re Ill the hospl"I ~hen Depar tment and has of(Jces 1n Ae1n1 ~ 10 :io 11 1s 1ncom • 1l 1 eo Kt,•,•,~.' t uM• Com sr c 59 10 St Mt11e TrA J• 2..i~ Tr dal J , ~ llun~r Ramo >111 u ll u _, ESa l11C l 10· ~ IJ •• U S All ll•ICI 11 Ill Sl>9cl 9tl1011 < 0 vo11197\tc11r!r Fun:!• MtgTr wl '' l•Trtn OG "'-,,,.ButlllR pf1SO 11 "l~ lJV. J90-l"°E11111l t JO •'scharged the90davs1sex e1t1es a over uie Also Allu• F 10J110J1 soct l•1J1SM ,",',, 1•1 1~n E1111v 31' • OMo1cn M 6 1 11.TvM111 F 11"'u11o11u 00160 n ''"' .1 ... .,"'_~E1 .. x1nt 1xi U1 Fd 11 16 £11 1101 IJ.16 15 IS 11 19 )) 1 £J nvtU ~ I '00 Mot Club 21'"° 11 Un K J•u.• Bur Nor 15' 21 41 't •J-. •2o;. -l:V. Es•eK 1112.1• tended by the lime spent lII )OU can go to t ilt local VA ~~ii. 1129,U Eeet Gt lJllUll c, •• ,", I ll fl• 1.1!1 ,,, .,,Mo.;el er 11 11 '>Unc HM 1:0.:. 3v.8u NO< ot.U 17 11.. 111 11'i+\~E•ltrln 159 I .'.'' ••ElunTr 1901 "' 1fll64 SttCIA"I tiOIBl2Mi.rDh P 7Ul oUl!l lul'I! 29 79~6u•nCIY'la •1l~11l 1 2J~\+~E!hrtCoM 'he hospl'al Up to One year .state emp oyment se rvice or A111n• ., Cui K1 s •1 t 1.<1 o;.e1 Si>e(S 16 '' 11n ,,.. •• .., M,.,, , , ,._ !lu g~• xi 1J1 u1...., 1n .. 1», -Bo E1h~1 011 «1 A.ml:•P • "" I°' Em..-SK • 1' • 1 Cul ~ 19 ll 7 ~1s~M G!h I tl t 1 ~, .. ,' .~~ ., -.., ... .. Bu>ll UlllV JJ U"· 11" ,,.~ ' • "' b bo i I any \ eterans organization fo r Am eus J l'l 3 19 Ent 'v 11" 1J .. ~ ... s2 10 s 11 "' s.. .. .... 1 \ ''~ us en~nt a 1 ' " •• .. -,. v•111 Q Wat a ut r eservs s AmO vt!'l oinioEnoit '"l :>o cu.~l .~ilSh~~~l•lfl'i1N1r1tCP 1111 11.usFnvP 11oc1t , -C-E•Cr ll0 1'll a n d na tiona l g uards m e n" guidance Am Eo w s "" 111 1 •,"u 1v ~ '600 "• ~ c1n ~ , U'l 5 ~,1 snr1r ,o JO ~r~J',l ~.·ic!•,0R 101<o 11 • us tr~~n si It~ !ab<>! CP 10 , .. • 41 , .. , + ~ ~~~i;a;• ~ ----------------!Amf'< E~p ttl 1111 I uh t 1 n l"G • •(It • 41 Sht• !nY \ •1 n .. " u I "I 11 •Univ A ~ • I'll. 1a1nc@ 11111 'l 9 u, t 0 _ Ficto:'A IO AYouremployer muslg1\' C•P' •OO•ME"q11tPo ••1 4 k1Cn c•o .1st l/5h~rmo un11'llNH01.1> ' ••VPP"'P ''''i • F!n•11 11 •• 1 ••-l\Fi l <llC ln<Me t i 10 1F1rtla 10 .. HMl(nic:-GI IOJll l9 '~e FCI 'tSlOHNI lb ll l l9 IU lnCI 74 IS Ce •hn Mnp •S 12 l'o ll>l ~I F tm )OU lea~e of absence for any S!Jlllbols 1n•t•I tM ,,.Fa m su 10 1110 uLrnc• ~a 610 7•lSQmf FuM• N P•1tn1 70 ~ n 1va 1r Fe a • C~mPRL~ •J o J . J 11 =• 1 ' 11111 1'• S1>tt 'l5 F de t• G oup l •• Ci h IQ lll 101 C•PI! 9 1110 It N SotRlh 111 11 Val ev C1 10 H)li <~me So I 10 6J ., , JI 0 JI\~ + {o ~1 ':"fi'1 I lrainrng penods and if vou re $ oc• •,. tc 1s c10 t n so 11 M Le R~ 16 16 11 n •n•e.i 1 s1 1 &1 NII ~now J J • v1 ue LO 1 • 1 o c~n~ouRv J 1!50 36 l6 36 •'" h iel•I 1 ltU tt , t 1111111(1¢ 11 Am G 'I 6 II I tl Conl!CI t )t 10 tt l or r Fd t •S I 05 T UI! 9 Cl "l Nit <;I~ S 51• V•nO Ar 9 o 0 'ICdn a tW <IO 16 1 ~ 7 ) ~ -~ F•m ~Fl 60 h h Is UnlfH ol'ltrwl• llOllll ''' •t d • Am Miii ••1107' EHt~ 1 •J4Utf~l1 n• ''' 11J~ ... 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CaO•unl.JO 21 .. 117\tr .... +t.~f!ltrltll'O Q Are all jobs covered~ IClolnd 1 Grwl" 1111 n 1J ~· ,,,, 11 • 1• c~ •II l •O l• '° s F m C.1 • 116 • u NoC1r Gl u •cu~ w 11:uc1e ' , 1• C•r11 e 60 • ,'~l 1p . 6!/r tdMoo 1.IO A All except tem porary llltod 11 '""''' •r• idtnl!flt'lt In 1111 Fd In• t 14 10 1 Fllllr.t 11 Proo Mu I' U t .l-1 ~!11C1man f-u<1111 NW N11G 10 lOV. altr Tt t to \~ ero Pll 1 -.I SO 71 'o n>.o ?lh -v, FtdPKEt h'lf"I • • 1 "' PIY-I -CIH.. lr.tfllt • ?l t 11/ Trf'nd 2! Gl JT u 1 (4p I 11 11 11 tl 5 IP $! .. J 4177 N tur 0 I •l>o ''" ih NG 1Vo 16/o !' OC&Oll S U•O •· 61 • '1" -II.:. FfdNMlf ff '°' f!Wlft• '"°"""'' Vtf\I ... !! .. " O•n• ... 'ti Lore! .ADI 10 , J ''" '"" 'Ol 4., NW Pus.. 7M ,, .. tbb Rt 1~ 11" •ro Ttc 11!1 1• ,,..,, ?!~... 22 + \\ F PK oil 11 ones -A•11 fJUr• OI frlrl• ~II , ... Aolr"" ~" S.ll lnCILtlf J '! • n LI> h B 0 11 ~' n 61 A\IO .. I )<I 1 ., No•el C11 61 61'11. 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"""" Pub ,,.,,ti • C• In Df"•.50 J 60 iiO 61'.1 -.. t Clc!M 1 "° It yo• .,. "' 111l1tt A111werl19 s.r.k• , •• .,. ... ""'"' .n 1f y111r catll. TEllrHOHE AHSWl!llNG IURUU 935.7777 "vl:Hnd O< IP 11 uo --DK:llr.., 0 N " g, ' IC•'! • " ... F•! s • I I H I I! "''" Tr "3115 et Svnt Cit>I 10 t 111 01 IO mant 11 ocl l>.olW" 51 I.I• 1•1 , ... Ctl!CO 1 ... Ml 105 •"I •!li •I\· +· ~ ~l lrO Fl «I lltkCi11 ~l•7 llF•tCtP •H IM•., i !l•HTMR"~"1J e1/"lov~rNA 1,1 1 we11;11 11 ,u >Centi::av 1121.11 71 Flntt<:t~r•'" 1'111• v"r •n 1<C\l"'l>llll•t ••u• .... Th lloruu -6-10 1~ F t J"nd J 64 Ma ... s 13 1S lJ 1'! Te•c~tr 10 I • 01 0•~ Cit 1S I ,. I W••tmd 3'I l9 'i ''" Hud I ti ' 11 JIJI '1~ -\ F ~"c~· I C1•0-•l11•Nffrs.nN,wlllllt -ll<>lln $k IJ!tOSFr.llGll •!IJ7Jll.l dt.),1 J IJ ,JITtthll(l Jll•HP•bstBr !o6 M1Wn1 WM 7•niioCtnllL11.U l lll 1(o1'o -1 1 lllld h • ¥t•r O!Ylde<>O cwtl1f"d. Clt-!IOIT l'on 11 ... 1,?!Foundt• GovP M.,...,.. J O)tl ~JTempGI unt.•• P~c G Ro I 11 lw"'' M l 12 1'\'JC•nlPS 1 1!1 II n. 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' " •• " • • " • ' . u. '" .. ,., ' . " '" " ' " • " " . '" '" • " " . .. fl " --' -· + Stock Leaders MOST SHARES Cv1k 01 Out~S10 10 o ..... o iO ~I I ~nP 10 " " .. ·~ " • M " ~· " " " • "' •• ' .. tlll " " ' " , .. '~ ·~· ,,_ " . .. "' ' '. ~­• ". .. . " .. " ' " • .... ' "' . " . 10 ,, 49 '8 • ' ,. ' "' " ' " " " " " 0 " ) • " ' ' "' 1! "' • • .. .. " ' ~ '" "' " •• " " " • • " '" • " ,, \'l ' ' " "T ' • ... .. " ,. " "' ' " ' " ' • " ' ~ • "" • " ••• u " . " "' " • .... • "' '" " "' .. " .. ... ' • " " • • ... " " .. • ,. ~l " • • n ' 1S ' " . ' " . ' " ' .. " . '"' ' ' " . " " '"' .. • • '" • ' ' . • ' ' . ., • .. .. n " . ' " . " " ... ' ' " " , .. •• " . ., , ... 0 -• " " ,. • • , .,., • ··---" ' ' ) " ... ' Wi1111ers a11d Lose1·s .. 11111 Nt!'l]::tc::EJi:;,.i:l;,::z::'"'S::;;!:S:."':ll0:"1IOC:C::Sll:::0,.::J"'ill:Cl:!:: .... 0r-::::::;;;;;:::i;i;;;:;-~:;-;;;;~;:::::::::. (hell I Hltll L-Cl-Cllt _,_ OO'N JON•I AV•IAOll ~tw Y0tk!A,J1'1NI Oow-J-1 I VfflOft ..... . .. 0....1 """ Ln CIMe cq. l~ ~ti': ~O,T M I D lit 1 OCKI OD9ll Hloll L•"' Cln• ,..,, ~:I t{;irl • 2?i ~,? ?:!: ftf,o wa111 Ct 1 to Ji ,~;o l~;, • a1~ {et ec ies 1: :r::4 ~*~j1'tlt:~~L";,,''*;-:~~i"F~~~ n ~ft·~ 1t~~,:::~;;· :t '' l! l,•/~ !i S1k llUI• :io .s.i :io 1t X1'1:1'9 -t '2ulfor$ ,,,., H ~ :1i1 .. + .. W1!kn JO!ln• i 17. T 1n1o1cl-In 1tock1 vied I~ I VI •11n u Fr" IA ,.~ \ ,.,~ -.... w1vn Gp1 " • ,~ 1•. ndul 1n,4.00 u OVP"'I ) ,, ~ j,\.,.. W1v 0 p 1 '° Is. .. ~ 11n l lO >OO uGvP pf1llO 11 lf" l!: ri 1 Wt ll Vn l 49 •1 1 U UI I! 1.,,JOO LI l"°"I Ml IM o o }lo = OJ. Wt: h 110 • ?s ?•~ h t• I T d• ~ lk 1221•us L•.t.'41 '' •"• .i. .i.. w•1>11 o. E 0 ,_ l 1g it 1·a mg ·~------------------·1'1 PlvCll M )l:t., 00'• XI 1 -l•twe1Mk 101 1l ~ U PCI\ ~.)O 1J1 16\ )I)' ir.-· ,: 1;., 70" Vitt l Hltll L. ... CllM (.flt ~ s?:'.' ~u 50 31 ~:\;, ~·· ~ -+1 II I Jl l l ltltt Hfl UI 5l'lol II t 2• ' ?~ • ~· S o u $IH I ?«I u "' u~ ll W••T• ~ ' I ~l T l lllfl'lr• 51 l\t 16 • 111\ hlli -~II U Tc.bi t 110 6 till< ~I .\,\l,, + WP Pop J.09 ·~JS, NE\V 'ORK UPI ) Th t k k l f 11 ~!~r,'1 1..0 J~ 1~\t 1~~. 17,\,:t.\\8~11 Ul 1 ~1 ~, l! ~~ 'i,,._ ;~~'e~nc' ~ • • ti f t ht '! d l t d Tr1wlodo 2 • "ni.., ~. "4-1AoU11ur 1111.JO 1 »":' J:l \ »1-t ~We1 11 P1c ., , 1 ( -e soc mar e e r •v•', P• ! , • » ~ .. ,. ui ,, 11 , ,,,L ,. , ,,~ t , w," Md .o T 1nos yo 1 s O\\n \\e1g 11 on a) as 1 con mue , icon 1 ~ 'l 1 ., u"l~o,. _.0 1,, ,, '"'· ,..._"1iw"u"ilfl 1'11 --to co11sol1datc past v:u ns furnover \Vas moderate Treon p11 ,•, .. " , ... "'unv• com• '14 11~ JO• 3011 -i.~w"v" ,u'° • \ 11\GINI I ! ... llli Uplofln I to 151 *'• Sf'• l"' + W11 Un oU '° ", ,., .o ").i.•o Ad•111g to the 1narket s \IOeS 11ere concern ,.,.1un1 1 11~ 111v l'•-\;ur1&1c11 .o n nu u µ. _,w,,,i; '° i 'o 111• -~ t:w IM 11 1o; ii'' r ,, l 1 USL Fi 511 1$1 .. h •Slilo <t& -.. w,, E • ll.1 1C'I !..! 151:_ tbout \\orld monetary cond1t1ons dLSa ppomtlng lit~=~ ~ ,111 rl1~ tf _f}..,~i~ ::r 0 •: ;1•• ~~ W:::».~!~~~ 0~ :e 1:.: :?•-econonucne\1s andtalkt11atkey 1nterestrates may T:=.~",uc;,11112 11; 1~i.. '"• ,,''=::8~c:~ ':>, ~,f 1'~ ,,~ fo'~~1 :Z!~~~:.u~s •, 1 ' be head mg higher soon r~ ,, cor• n 711 '' • u ..... -..., u1.~ PL , " JJ l"' w• t~h -w,_ P" s1 ~ ~ The. Dow Jones Jndustr1 al Average \1 as off 7 80 -U V-~!~'£ "11~ ~~ i: { ,: , 1i~ + ""~=1;1~ ~ UAL INC 1•1 l1 • lt• 3'~-1 v-r''r.e 11 J1._ l? :!J~-.. W~ll(• 160 16 ~t91407ncarthef1nalbell \1 hileStandard&Poor s ~:kc~"tio '1' ~ ,. -1•v-..c. 1., , I•) 1• 1• _..,.wnic .. *' 500stock 1ndex\1asorr 071 at 10028 Derltnes uu c.1 11 ~t ~: l'! U• .... ~F•cc;:•..,'d10 ~ :': :i • ''"'-\~=~:~rJ~io:' • "' •• " ' " l ' ' " • ' '" " " I '" .. "' " '" ~~ . ... .. " . ~&~ ,. ' ' • " • •• " " " "' • " " " . u "' ... .. " " . " , ' . UMClnll 1J J1? H•o .,, lf•o -~ C •• IJ li!o h i> lllo -W~l1•er 101>ped adv<inces 965 to 377 an1ong the l 60:> 1s Un• co .o • H • ,! • j• v t °"'' "' ~ ,, , J6 . 11, .... \• w 1-·•Cor11 ' Uni HV tl<I ?~ ~ 19 1 l~ t ~:!o:r: '°7 l !S Jl • 1tl ;t•o W ltou to sues on the tape ~~~:~fa-2 1~ ,9 ~•· 41 Y•EP ""11 .~o 1 J o..,-)w 1m' co Point sized 1novers ltl the electron1cs generally ~~ r tfo ~. ,1\, ~ 0 I~ I -'. ~: ~= ::: :i J ~ 2° !t 1,, • riv. :;:1 ~ :;;:: ~ :P io u crc Ill reverse gear Oils traded In both direc tions ~~fl~"'"°' J,: :r r !' ~:..~.'.:. "' J 1!! 111• I~ 1~ -I a1~~~s :{ r.lotors \~ere mostli IO\\e r Other stock groups 111 une llf • .o u u ss vs co .. 0 'I' • ~ 1•, + ,wli.E" ""'° U..O ICt 160 Ill JI 31 0 JI "'-Vu(l ft Mat I t ;st.. 2! + WKP~ 1 • eluding airlines aircrafts and chemicals moved uoc. ""'° .. ~· 51~ s:J -~vwRun1 ' t . ~".,"0 ,,_ •w;<•Cti" 1 d 11 un P1cc111 •? ,,. .. s•o i.. -W ·XY~ wcoe:o111s narrO\\ y iln genera y \Vl th out a definite pattern ~~rl(p:.c ',J I! SJ'• ~. M -_.' ·.·.·.',.,•.·,•.so aoo s,1 . •'•' r •. ~:: •o :z~.~ ~Q Do'v Chen11cal one of the narrower movers 8~~: ~ U ~. 1 . i ~ ,,w•<~ Dllto ; 10 10 10~· -• ~::1~.....;; said a nc \1 ty approved <1 nt1b1ot1c developed by an un ,,,, 11 • 12711 ios 1oi 10. .... 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J o $ • 0 , • • • ?l ,,.,, ,, 11 11 1 11"' i rio + 11 I • o .. , -' ,, ... llh 111-•l :II>"' 7' lO oo t 7 I~+ 10 t t I <Ii I I I • -lt .... • • • ? l o I Jo II ll • 110 \J .. . . . .. . . • '1110 6 P o S o + I I 1 o 1 1 I JO 10 71) lOS Sl 0 +1 I l~ 1J • I• ll Ii • lo • 1' • -' '. . .. -• O o 10 10 ~-• 2Ull o l •-• i ' • • •?•1•·'•'•-· I I • I 1 ' . . • 110 IGO~ • • IOt'.Xl:itlO ~ llSoS o l Jl•l~Jf 6S •S•So -• '°' •.• ··-. l i s l 7 µ,,...s.i. l J '°'o '°"" -1 I • • ' • • .. ,..~1 • t !J IJ IJ""-• ol ?l o 21\ 2•r - )I? t ,, ··-1 11 0 1•.1 'IP -• ll ' l.. " -• /\111 11 116 S o J o l •-• 14 5 •• •o -1• •l o ll1 _.1 • ' •"" 61'> s ••• u. II 6 I 4 I o )•lol•I + ~,, 11.11.-., 10 0 0 0 lO Ila 1j, J•o -' • • ~ + I t I• t' -11 I ., s , I I I '> t ..._ I f'> '• 9 1 -\~ 'J • ',"' 2, I • II o I& ' 60 6 0 6 l t t6116-tl-4 l u o • I• 1 I I 6 -.j 1 16 IS, lS~-1 11 ,1 : 1l1, ,:,: I 6 I 6 111 l••· 14 l t ,. )t ,,.. .. 31~-... I t • <o ·~ I t 16 16~-1 • •t.. ~~.+ ... Wall Street Chatter NEW YORK (UPl)-Saxon lndustr1es Inc ls negot1at1ng a $$0 m1lhon 1 ne of cred1l Chairman Myro11 P Bennan told the annual meeting lie did not identify the prospcc t1ve lenders \VASfl!NGTON IUPI) The Secur1t1es and Exchang& Commisson has sued Sharon Steel Corp D\VG Corp an<l NVF Corp char~1ng unlav.fu l investment of Sharon Sict>l pension funds Also named 11!1 defendant" were Victor Posner lJcrnarcl Krakower and \V1lbur T Bltur The suit said tie dcfcndant!C invested Sharon Pen ~Io rt assels 1n co rpo rahons in \\Inch they had benef1cl ttl Interest lrt v1ola l1on of lhe law and failed ID hie t'trtaln requrred report!! with 1he SE \\ AS lllNGTON IU Pll The Justice Departmer l ha:. filed an anti trust nctton in Brooklyn N V Federal t:ourt lo compel United Ar1Lst11 Corp lo di ves t ltsc:lf of Prudential Thenter Corp bought in 196lf The suit said the purc:ha~ reduced theater comptllt1on in Grtaltr New York DETROJT (UPI) Ml Central Corp has obtained 3 $14 mllhon contract lo pro1lde: 7 IXXl quarter ton tn1c.ks to th!'! US Postal Department ThL1 ·~ in addition to the 9 700 veh1clcs ordertd fro1n Al\1 General by the post off1c~ In Febru:;'l' TllfsdaJ', May 25, 1971 t Meets the Presidetat I • • II > •• Work" or Lose Aid II ouse Prepares Welfare Measure WASHINGTON (UPI) million women who are now starUng, July 1, 1972. The rlag. as far es is known, heading families with young In the first year it will cost still is safe. But Congress is children and getting welfare $900 million l() set up day care changing its mind a bout payments in their belief. centers across the country to motherhood. There are about 3 million take care of lhc children while As radical as the idea may families on w-elfate in all now, their mothers are away from sound lawmakers will vote and, the figures are expected the home, $500 million to give to rise rapidly. mothers training; $800 million shortly to repeal the old max· In all , there are about JS to pay for 200,000 new public im that a mother's place is In million persons on welfare. Of service jobs in hospitals, the home. this group some 3 million are l'iC h 00 I s, s an It a tio n They'll also be voting blind, disabled and aged. departments, and city halls ; against the lime honored idea Another 12 million are in some $!00 million for various other that proj>er work for women is three million fam ilies. support services and 8 whop. raising children. Of the 12 million, nearly all ping $1.l billion just to ad· , Without many objections, are chlldren. Of the 3 million minister the program. the house. is expected to ap-families, 2 million are headed, _____ __:_::__ ____ , prove a bill to force uiothers by women without husbands. out of the home for gainful So the work requirement is employment or for job not an easy solution. The re- training if they haven't any quirement is going to be cos· ~===== working skills. tly, and there is no guarantee i Not all mothers will be fore· of success. 0.1 ........... "' .... 11 ... .. ·- 111iss USA, 111ichele McDonald of Bu tier, Pa., \\'ho said she always wanted to meet an d converse \vith President Nix on, has her wish granted . The two are conversing at Nixon's Ke y Biscayne residence. ed. into work though . Only First, the re is a question of those who want to keep their where the jobs will be found . welfare payments. Next is the question of The work requirement is a whetht!r the welfare mothi::rs THI: RED BALLOON cnrnerstont: or the new ··rami· can hold the jobs. Another RussTroopCutBidPondered ly Assistance Program" pro-question is the type of jobs - posed by President Nixon and where the work will be clean- modificd by the Mouse Ways ing someone else's home or and Means Committee. other menial work. The w o rk-or·lose-1T1oney Surveys show that only one By PHIL NEWSOi\1 lltl'I Fartlt " NtWI AMIYll Since !he end of World War 11. a pr imary objeclive of the Soviet linion has been to get United States forces out of Europe. Kosygin . chose this particular time to renew a proposal that the tv.·o sides explore possibilities of a reduction of forces and armaments in Cen· tral Europe. philosophy was written into of every five welfare mothers Russians might have had the bill by those who believe has a high school education. something else in mind . welfare rolls are rising too f\.1ore than 30 per cent have This could be the increasing fast, that it should be harder never gone past the eighth to get an welfare and easier to grade. Many can't read. likelihood of British mem· get off. and that the present Welfare mothers who now bership in the European Com· $10 billion federal cost of want jobs often can't get them mon Market and the creation welfare is too high. because they don't have any LTD. Nf'W ... Summrr's th ini::s fen· Summrr's child hy f!orrncf' Eisrman Ruth of Carolina Na hi ~ .. tilf' 1110'1 1Jf'li,1hlfnlly UHU•Ull thi11lrrn'• .1urr in I~ 1outhl1od '-.....···>·.·~· .. - Boyd Trovtl 8yli11t1 FORMER MATSON LINER SETS WORLD VOYAGE FROM los ANGELES IN '72 Jell b o1J in1nl l'aL1l1( f•r f.au l ine 1n annnunru1;: an un- rrC'ledcn1rd ""'Id , ru1,e ll om <:alitnr111a "lut h i~ e~p<'<-ICd rn ••trac1 • nun1bcr nf O ran,i:e f.ot1 nty rc~1drnt•. T ht l11xt1rr l1 ne1 S!:t t.tARlPO.'t .... ,.,11 depart Ltn ,...11.1:<le,.f.larrli 10. 111:"~,on a 'JO-d.iy ~lobe tll< 1rdu~ VO) .i;:e. T hccru1!<" ma•L• .~ .. hrs! 111nc the I-IA RI P05,... nr 1ny l'lf her ""'' ~tur" 1n 1hc h1>101y nf the f.l•"nn I kc1 h•~" cmb•rL<"J on 1 i:rdnd •cnr!J cru1w. anJ rh1s 11 11.c nnly ti.~. tl•.i: 1t'"d s.u!111~ 1>11 •u,h a j<>urnt; in l'l,:!. l'Adf- " I •r I ~'I Loni" lflnk ..,, ... , nr'rra· """ "! 1ht· ,,1 .... RlPCJS ... and ihc ~H).'•.-11 Rl.Ytdrlicrtl11<''"" ''"''"'"'";:all tht• 1.,1<· 11~.l1 111>11' lnol 1110<1 Pl the cn,rlnr<'<'' nf 1'l•"<lh1.t1ne 'I" '"""l' au"~'"' l\H.°d\Ut('fli l 011).:l'11,iil!j'. ]l•!) Jl•)j,j .,,,JI llfl\I i i;:,<1 A< qu.11111~.1 rlin1n r r.ir1y ~i.nur a 111n11rl1 h<"lnr<" •a1!1n;:. ""h 11\\J!Jtonn' ('\l'Tldl'ol ("all I '"'"'"''" .. 11n ucrc N>olt<I nn 1hl CrU•<f." ihrou.i:h Hn)·d Trd\< I I ~noc l•nrl< on 1h~ iun<r••y 111• I u•I~ ! t.1 .. a1i, ~amna. Fi 11 I•· l1nd,,"loni.;"-/\<""'' Z<".1IAnd. Au•· n.ilia, l\'t'•' C1u1 n r.1 , f.t1!11~11 . lnd1.1, Ceil.in, !'.!t:):,hdle f,).1nd1, l"•q 1nd :<>nu1h .... lflCI, Rr.1111. B.1r1'.1Jo•. { ur.u:.1u. P.111.11n1 i nd f.lt'~tU> ::>hnr(' e\ru r1t0n~ 11 111 N: (Iii<: red 1n .ill 1>0r1 '·.ind irx1en>J\{ O\'('rl.1nd rnur•lr<" 1n 1he pl.in· uin,1: ""~'~tor rhn•C 11 ho w.i1h 1n >re •uch •<t·.1, '' rl1c I .11t ,..tr.can ,lj,•mc rc\tr•<"> on dcrrh Pt1lcJ 1 .. 1m S J.')711 ro S 11.· 8 ~II p<"r pl'r<nn. J<"pcnd1n,; on ~.1bu1 rq1c .inJ 10<.Junn, rhc 11i- llr\I .r J.1,, c ru"c "<"~ recitd 10 ~di nut" •t!un ""LL•. "I h<" rrccn r l'l·l:J.1~1J1,on c..r .. nd f.1rd1t<"rt• nt'Ari L Hll\(' ""' lully l>ot)LtJ b<·to>rC' • i"-r•KIH••r 'nuld t<cn be r11n1rol. Jprmrr !"1•1•<10 CtUl5C fU"<"n~l r' h,,, c ~lrri,lr rrro ,,.,d a rrrl1m111.lf\' Jnnnun• cmr'1! tl"""!'h rhr m.ul 'I lo(\', ~nd n1h t>t 1111<1''•!<·0! rnd<,,d.,AI<. 'hOlild rnu,.l 1 fln1 ,I TrA'rl 1mmed1,11d) l•1r a cn111ul1,u""' ~rrn"un1en1 'J~r ~J:('ll<r ,, ln<Atr.!" ;11 ~ \'1:1 l ~d1 .'trr<rr. '•nr• A"• ~nd m•r 1-t •CJ< lord by r1llmi: ~I ;.1(! iS l"-t •"<"tn •) ""'! ~ M('tnda) 1hrnu,11h I r1d•1, or ;,111ud"' iJ.c. !1"'tCT\ 10 »nd I. Leonid I. Brezhnev, the Kremlin 's No. I man, referred lo it specifically four years ago in a speech at Karlovy Vary, Czechoslovakia . it has been inherent in the various Soviet proposals for a Euro- pean security conference and other suggestions for a reduc- tian of forces in Europe. By doing so they passed up v.ilat propaganda value the Soviets might have drawn from Sen. Mike i\tansfield 's drive for a unilateral cut by half in the Uniled States' troop strength of 300,000 in Europe and what value they might have gained from !he unac· cepta ble upward leap in the U.S. balance of payments deficit. or a new bloc or 300 million Ways and ~1 eans Commiltee· skills at all. 16877 .4.1,iconquin ~t. Chairman Wilbur P. l\.1ills. (0-, The latesl cost estimate for 111''11''·10·' 10:.+.111 N } E persons linked not a n l y I d. d f '~=='~7~1~4~) =-=='= ... ==~~ ear y Veryone economically but probably Ark .) is a ea 1ng a vocate o putting welfare motllers and that philosophy. the few male adults in welfare defensi vely as well. Most affected by the work families lo work is $3.4 billion Listens to Landers If this is the case, then ether requirement y,•ill be up to 2 · · l th f t r II Soviet moves may well be in po~~~~~~~~~~~~'";,.~'"~'~~·~~,,.,~~,~~y~e~ar~,~;iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;iii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;~;~;;:..;.~~~~~~:.;; ........ Bui there is a legitimate question as to whv Brezhnev and later. Prem.icr Alexei It seems, therefore, the the airing also, including a[I new approach to the problems of a div ided Berlin and en- couragement cf some sort for West German chancellor Willy Brandt's program cf ··ostpolitik. '.' ONE FULL WEEK OF SENSATIONAL VALUES FOR OUR WET SEAL CUSTOMERS Timely Warm Weather Fashians for a Wanderful Weekend SAVE UP TO 75% COTTON KNIT PRINTS & SOLIDS SHIFTS Reg. $1S .OO use your POLY -COTTON DRESSES Reg. to $40 PRINT And SOLID PANT SUITS Reg. to $40 MASTER CHARGE FAMOUS MAKER ' JEANS, PANTS , SHORTS WET SEAL CHARGE VELOUR COORDINATES 113 OFF REGULAR PRICE 7 SOUTHLAND LOCATIONS 204 Motlllt A¥t., Balboa l1hlncl IOHI> SvNl•y, it •"' 1111 n 270 E. 17th St., Co1to MffCI 321 Main St., El S~u11do )]]] lrl1tol, Sowrh Coost fllcna 1777 Edht9tf', Hu11ti119ton Cent ff 240 lroodway, Lotwlla leach 4000 W. Chaprnen, City C•nlre, Ora1191 ;\LL SALIS PINA.I. The After the honeymoon, tbe bride and groom will have the fun er setting up housekeeping. 1vlake it e\'en more fun by &tarting them oft right with a Sylvania home entertainment product, There are superb stereo products for the living room, big screen colar 'l'V's for the fam ily room, radios and portable televisions !or the kitchen aod. bedroom. Whatever yourcboice, you'll be gh•ing them aomelblng to make their marriage even happier. Bu~ be &Ure to pick the best: a Syl\'ania. --r -·~ ---~---~··-- HOME IMPROVEMENT PLAN*1 \\'hen the haneymoon is O\'er, they can come home to Syll·an ia 9 inch (di ag. meas.) screen black and white porlebleTV. llas buil t·in VHF and bow .. ti' UHF' anttnna. Convenient carrying handle. ?ilodel l\1T6 priced to lake with you. ONLY s7_99s HOME IMPROVEMENT PLAN *2 Jiere"s a stereo tha t will help to keep the romance going. Syll·Bnia matched com ponent sttre0 model 1.15110. Jncludes r :..lrA~I plus Fr..1 stereo radio and automatic &tereo TI!Cord player. Sealed Air Sus- pension 5peakf'r!i. lin!cd dust ca1•er aod st.and included. ONLY $2299S ' I ' I l • ; \ ·. ''\, ~ >\ .... J' i .,. • The bride can ('nhance hrr living room decor tl'ilh lhis Sylvania l\1edilf'rranean stylrd &lereo COn~oJe mode] $C2(Y.; fCB IUl'inJ; 50 IA'8ltS tl('llk music flO\l'Cr. FJ\1 /AJ\1 plus FJ\1 stcrro radio, eul.omatiC' record playC'r and sralcd air suspE'n · ji;ion sf)('akrr system includes conveniC'nl remote speaker and tape jac k~. OUR LOWEST PRICE EVER •19995 HOME IMPROVEMENT PLAN "'4 Get them off on the right root with a giant 25 inch screen (diag. meas.) Sylvania calor TV model CL813 in Spanish styled cabinet. lncludes udl- button AFC and the long-life Gibraltar 8 chassis. NOWONLY s5499s "T'<.T~ GTE Sv'"-"'o l~l.t. T\.' R.ECIPTJON S3fULATED • l11tegrlt11 and Dependablllt11 slnee 1947 COSTA MESA 411 I. '-"•"'""'" St. 646°1614 4olly '·':!Ii.at.''' 5lltVICI: 141·l4J7 • I EL TORO Logu"o Hiiis "11•0 ll7·lll0 C•lly 1 O·•i llt11"·· '''· 10·9 ' , • ' -. , .. BROOKS TO THE RESCUE Chemise Makes Comeback Donald Brooks' Fell- winter 1971 Collec- tion includes e black velvet chemise gown with rhine5tone trim sleeves I left) end e che.cked wrap-on coat with badger collar end sleeves. BEA ANDERSON, Editor tlltMl•r. M•r u. 1m ''" 11 ~. --- I • For Tricia's Trousseau As cool as a summer breeze Is this full.length frock by Anne Fogarty. The violet and white Dacron and cotton voile with grosgrain ribbons is one of four dresses Tricia Nixon models in the current issue of Ladies Home Journal which features photos of her trousseau. Other fashions are by Priscil la of Boston who U"I TtlWM .. designed her wedding gown, Leslie Juniors and Oscar de (..a Renta . The photos accompany a candid intc~view with Lynda Bird Robb. '11ley exchange 5Uch personal lnformation as, in what room of the White House they received proposals. .. . • f' By MARIAN CHRISTY NEW YORK -Remember the good old chemise which brought on louder hullabaloos than the midi and then became a clauic?. ·It's back. Donald Brooks 1howed hJJ1 Fall-winter 1971 collection llere recently and the shape of fashions to come -dresses, coats and even slinky evening gowns -is Cln the straight and narrow. Brooks analyzed· what elegantes had hanging in their closets and, by the pro- cess of eliminaUo n, i.eroed In on the chemise. He says: "Everyone has turtlenecks and pants. Everyone owns a shirtwaist dress. And everyone . but everyone, has a slew of separates like shirts-sweater~ skirts. The chemise shape suddenly look!! new because it's a straight up-and-down fit that takes its shape from the wearer." The chemise shapt is simple. But Brooks pumps it with daz:r.le. Daytime chemises in dashing paisleys and whisper-weight challis have wide leather belb punctuated wilh oversized hardware where the buckle usually sits. The belts become the conversation piece because the hardware is a facsimile of unidentified nying objects. Brook! call11 them UFO belts. They're his current signature. HE~ILINES SETTLED Hemlines are settll!d at Brooks . Suits and dresses .11re 11bout lwn Inches below the knee. Coal~ arP. more like lwo inches ab ov e -l he -anklt -11.nd predictably as narrow as an arrow. Standout versions, in tie-dyed wools by Orsi of Milan, are swirled with irregular blurs or color and outlined 1n fluffy while fox . One word best describes this opulenl brand of couture: Sumptuous. Brooks on elegance that fuses ~ fashions with the 70s : "$uddenly I'm taken with lhf! word 11\luring. It was 1 40s word that described ~!amorous movie stars . "They were 11luring In their bias culs !hat emphasiud curves. Tod 11 y ' 1 fashionable IOH braless and airdleless - and .she wants clothes cul to emphasize tier 8S3tts rather than constricted 1hape1 that squash." Okay, suppose you're a braless en- thusiast but still harbor inhibitions that preven t you from putting on a free show. What kind of ladylike clothes can you wea r? Again It's Brooks to the rescue -he does one-piece dresses that look like suspender pinaforea over turtleneck !hirts, but aren 't. He design11 the suspenders In a curved crisscros11 that cove r strategic poinl.s acros!I the bo!lom. The braless woman couldn't be more elegant or more FREE. Brooks uses his own antenna when deciding on a look . He 's the designer who did Ju liP. Andrews' clothes in "Star" and countless Broadway shows, includlng "Barefoot in the Park." He always has been stage-stru ck -.11nd now that "Follies" and "No. No, Nanette" are Broadway hit!, he can't help but be in- fluenced. Brooks put 40s fashion on fl realistic level : "The chemise shape frees the woman. She's unboun d and unfettered. J hear tha female cry for freedom all the time." A sf•ndout version of his cockteil chemises is this n•rrow ts •n •rrow dron. n •• shirt. sleeves •rt complete·· ly covered with tortoise-colored sequins the! glere - but not r1cou1ly . \ \ • µ ____ . ...,. Chemise gown has exaggerated leg-o'· mutton sleeves and horseshoe neckline that dips embar· . rassing:y low. Most coat hemlines are •bout two inches •bove the ankle,. while suits and dresses are •bout two inches below tho knee. ' • \ I J,J DAILY PILOT lutsd~y 1/1'1.)' 25 1971 '-"--'---'--~~~~~~~~~~ Club Welcomes New Executives :\l·\1' offiCl'rS of \ht• Sooth (.'oust Club rec('nt!r \\l'rl' lcled during a eoltet· 1n lhl· SOutll Laguna hon1c ol i\11'~ l\ I' Kr1s1ensen. Serving :is pre~1de111 11111 hl' ~·lrs. Harry Bl'lcher 11~sisled bv lhl' ~Imes .Jue· /\an('. :.iaudl' Lucas, P~ul Hill :ind (:. S Pell. 1·1t'l' p r 1· ~ 1 de n t i. . lieorg!' John5'1n irrnsurrr. It J Kelse~· and ~11.~s Anna .\1cCallum. secrl'1ar1t•s: fo.lrs. (i. ~1. \'ancr, nt·11~!etter. and "!rs. 'fed o·connt'll, luncht.'011 chairman. Other romm111er <:hoirn1t!ll are the r-.lmes. Dora to.lury :O.lacdonald. Ora Sllrkeil. ro.tary IJ!shman, Christel Sharri. E. L Str<Jl\On. rtoz Jucksun, l'hili ri Townl' and Harry Pell. The Clobetrotlers will travel lo San lJiego al 9 a./11. on Thursday. r-.·lay 27, ror lunch in thl' Coronado llolel and a cruise around San Diego Bay. South Coast Cluh w us u1·g1111iztd to p r o 1n u 1 !' f1·1endlinl'SS. ph1l:i111J1ropy iJnU cultural and 1'dUC'ational in- ll'rcsl. :O.lcn1bers ilre 11·elcon1e to regular n1eetH1£1~ !he first \\'ednesu:n or t''1l'h nio11th in the To11·er$ rf's r au r;1111 . Art1vilil's 1nC'lude bridge. design for living. s oc i a I outings and con1munity bet- terment. El t oro Chapel Scene of Rites 'Burnire Kendnll Egan anti 'J\rmy Cjpl. John Cle1nen\ ?.1attina II exch;1ngcd \•011·s and rings before Chaplain E. L. Gallagher in lhe 1'h1rine •• C,.l ""°" MRS. MATTINA Joins Brides Horoscope Corps Air SiatiOn Cha1>e1. F.I Toro. Parents of the brid;it couµll· are 1'1j1J. I rel. I and ~1rs. Thomas Hobert Egan of Hun- tington Beach and Col. t rel. f and to.1rs. John C. J\lattina ()f Studio Clly. r-.liss 1·erry Egan was her sister's 1naid of h<lnor. and bridesmaids "·ere Aliss Laura Gaskin. ,\\rs. Stanley .Shirley und ;\lrs Jatk Braun. Attending ilS best nian 11·ils f:-ipl. John Solon1on. :1nd ushers 1rl're Lt s. J a me ~ Newport. Hay Delabrid;1 and ~lark Galindo. Aftl'r an t.•xtended tour of norlhl'rn t:al1fornia. 1 he ne1vlyweds 1vill reside in 1\1arin:1. 1'he bride is il ~ra<luatc or i\cwporl Harbor High School ;1nd UC I. lier husband is a graduate of SL John's r-.1ili!ar~· Academy and Hiram Scotr t:ol!ege. lie has just returned ft'()m a tour of duly in Viet- nam. Gemini: Cooperate With Taurus Person WEDNESDAY MAY 2b By SVDNEV OJ\IARR ARIES t~l arrh 21·April l9 l. Entertain at hu111l'. Do whal is familiar. Hcfuse tu heed sirl'n call that 11•otild take you 1ntu strange areas. Adhere lo 11rin- ciples. Dine \\'llh one 11ho understands and is 111- ieclionate. TA URUS I April 20-illay 201 : Obtain hint from A r i e s messagr. Be surr of tac1 s. Base actions on reliable in- formation . Ccn1in1 individual could helri solve any finnnci<1 I dilemma. Accent on rela tives. i;hort trips. GE~11NI Cl\lay 21-June 20l: Cooperate with Taurus in- dividual. You actually gain in financial sense hy giving , tak- ing chance nn abilities. CANCEH 1June 21-July 22 1· Lu nar cycle rises: you c~n n1akc new contacts. ga111 1n general and itllpress opposite SC'X. One )'OU love "'ant s you to knO\\' il 1s n1utual LEO cJuly 23-Aug 221 Discretion is a necess11y. Bl' sure l'onfjdential matters ;irr keµt that \1·ay. Some arl' \\'e)COITir \he TIC\\': pul rorth origin nl concepts. Keep n1i11cl open to" kno11·Jedgl'. You <trt~ not n1<1rried to pasl. Look lo fu1ure . SAli ll"T ARIL'S 1,'\0\'. 22- Dec . 211 . Tilke plenty of tin11• 11·here finaneiiil decisions arc concerned. Ob\<1111 cooprration tron1 rnate. partner. Oon"t reel you arc alone. ~l any arl' HI your cornl'r: you get nl'edcd support. CA PH I CORN 1 Dec. 22-Jan 191: Cooperath·e efforts suc- reed. S!udy Sag g i I a r i u !I' 1ness.agt.'. C'.et together 1rith l'isrr~ indil"idual . Aecent on llexibility. Plenty of soci.11 ac- 11v1t~· indicated. AQUAKI US 1.J;i11 20-F'eb 18 1 · Health n1a!lt>rs n1a~· don1inatl'. Take care o r 1·ourself: not n1at11· 01hers 11·111 ~\tend to !hat taSk. l111provr rcl;llions with asso<:iatcs. co- 11 orker.~. l'ISCES 1 Ft•b. 19-i\!arl'h 20 1: /l ssoci;iti11n \lllh Ca priroru i11· dividua! n111v (·;in llC' fn1i1t11!. Cood lunar ;ic;prel p111111~ u11 t'l"l'<lll\'llY. rt.•lat11J11.~ \\' 1 \ h 1·hildrcn: Hn·;ik 111rou~h l'f'd !apt•. ll1ghtighl ert·:1ti\·1· ;u·- l11·1ty. curious. "'ant to delve into IF TODA\' IS V 0 U R \'Our affairs. rilai ntain (>()isl'. HIHTllDA 't' you arC' a dignity. Re\·cal only 11·hat i~ dedicated. detcrn11ned person. necessar). You nre raµable 11f .'.lc- \'IRGO iAug. 23-Sept. 221· cumulating \\"ealth. Kl'y is to Some friendships develop into have confidenrl'. tu b 1• meaningful relationships. Give yourself. Trying lo be son1e- your all. Rrsults of efforls one clSl' dl'ICr~ progress. currently put forth can be Ry October, you l\'lll be frl'e to especial!~· l"l'\Varding. Accen t express yourself. lo put intn on fuH illml'nl uf u n I q u e n1olion ide11s \1·h1ch arr desires. creativr.. progressl1·e. • ANNIVERSARY CELEBRANTS Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Almgren Almgrens Mark -Golden Years Fum1lv <>nd friends olfered congrattilations to golcll·nwcds ~lr . and 1\-1rs. R. H. Ahni:re11 of Fountain Valley duri ng an :ifternoon reception 1n thl' ltunttngton Hcach Firi.t L fuh·J . \lelhodist t:hurch, ho<;lt·1I Ji\ 1hclr !ions :.ind daughh.:r ;\1rs. Ah11~1·en, a nat1\1• •if Audubon, ~1 inn., ;111cl h1·r husband. a torrner rrs1dl'nl uf L;ike Park. ~!inn., 1\·cre 111at·~ ncd in Audubon Tht•\ 1111·1 while she 1vas trach1ni: 111 L;ike Park The Ahngrens <"an11· 10 Hun- llngton Beach 1n 19.17 :i nd 11111\'Nl to Fountain \'allty three years ago. Thei r children are ;\lrs. H:ir- ri<> \\'oods of Hacienda lle1glus, Ho!and Almgrl'n •lf ('t.·n:ral \'alley and Kent Almgrl·n of Fountain \'alley . They have eight ~r:indehildr('n. Alrn.~rcn. 1•.tio \l'B.~ f'rnployed at an 01! rt•/111err prior to his rL·l1n_·rncnt. is a \\'orld \\'nr l \':'!l'ra11 ;.111d enjoys gardening. Ills 11i!1•, :1 n1l·tnber of Ecistl'rn St11r and ;1 eirt·le al 11H· ehurrh. likes to read and knit. Know Yourself Theme Headlines Club Year S1h er and rose l'olr1rs l·on1- b1nl'd with thl' ihl'llll' Knu11111g Yourself ls the Key Tl1:1I \\"ill {)pen Your 11.:-art to fJthrr.~ 1~ the installtition then11• 111 :0.1r ... 1-:IC'anor CaS.'iC'll. prr:;1dc111 ol Beto Cainnu1 t:haptcr. l·:p~1l11n S1gr11a Alph11 . Serving 1v11h :'llrs. l'aswll follow ing inslallation 111 th1· 1\1ill' SquAr(' Golf Clull nf Fountain Vall!'y 111!1 ht• 1he .\JJ,!l~'S. :'II icky Flynn·. SV<"lal: Eleanor Bupprll. \1·;1ys and n1e:1ns. and l'r1L ,\1 or c ~ , 11L•lfar1•. Al so un 1he ()():Jrd :irt• the ;\1 111 c s . Georgl' IV t' i r , philanthrop_v : c:eorge Fril'ald , ~carbook ; Hubert ;\l cClc11Hl'I}, June Date Set '"rr<iphook: Cllrnn 13l'Ollcric~ and \\'1lli:irn t;111hn1" pre·~~ st•c·rc•L1r.'' iilld 0:111ards. and I\ ·n l\lt.·J11n. 1'QlU1<"1I dl•il·gart· O!l1t.·r officers :ire I he \Jilll·"' .'\taulry l'nctl!'<in. ci1·it·. :111d J.:irry Eva ns, rush Tiu· llt'W lllJ;Jrtl \'>lll llll't't 111lh !ht• pre!ildt."111 on Thu r.>d:1y. ,\lay I. lo plan \h(• ne\I' l'alendar :-..4'>1 nicrnbers !hl' ;\1n11•s. HrrrdPrii.:k. Holx.'rl Child11'1c~ :ind Ken \l'illi;irns w r r..: pn•s,·ntcd during :1 c:i11dh· lighting t:l'rcrnon.v. Tt1e ;\Imes. \\'i llian1 lll'l\"s1on. (; l' n r l:l 1· l\l'ller. l\l1·h111 :ind Cassl'll t'.'.Jnu•d :111;1rds. Spt.'1:1a! gL11·~t :.ll lhl· banciut•t 11 a~ honorary n1cn1ber :\lrs. .\lar11cltc Peek. Shirley Ross to Wed The .Jt111c 2S 11'l'dd1ng µIJns of Shir!f.'y Ann Hos.; and Paul l\lrCracken \\Crc re\' en It' ti dunng a l'Ocktail rec1_•p\1u11 hustl'd by ;\I c Cr n r kl' n ' f' brulhcr. ~li.1yor t: l'O r gt• 1\h:Cratkl'n 11 I I lunl1ngton Beach <1nd ;\lrs .. \lt·l'racken The rcce1H11)11 look pl:1<·1• 111 Expresso Club Plans Meeting :\lce!111g at 10 a tn 'fluir,. day, ,\\;i,v 2i, 11·111 be the l:x. prt•sso Club or Xl•l'.fl(Jrt l\.1r - lJor 1\lrs .. Jnsrph E1 ri11.'I 1vill Ofll'll hl•r Ne1rpor! Bench hQlll(' fur tht' riHair , A dt't'l~ltHI 11111 bt• 1nadl· ;1bou1 1011un1: r h " Ar!1ficial Kidnev ~ Found;it 1011 11( Southern California. l lunt1 ngtun Sl'iJtl1f[ Club. t:uuntry Th(' bride-to-be is t h e daughtl'r of !ltrs. II. C. 1!1•1n1<1nn of G('nrgl'town. Guinea . Afrir:1 :111d 13Prnard 1\ Hoss of Hochestt'r, :-..· Y. Siil' <ltlt•ndcd ~ il za rr th l'ul!1'ge. Hoel\<·~h:r. arid l\lar- qut•l\e l'nir t'rsit y. l\'i.'I. 11 hcri' 'lu· rt'tl'll'l'd hl'r n1a~trrs dl'j.;rtl' 1n n1ath(•111a11 t'!i. l'urrf'ntl~· ~hr i.~ a ll'achrr <ii !'111<' .Junior ll1gh School, Los :\lar111\us ll rr l1ancc. ~on of :0.1rs. \'era Pnnt·e and the late l\1r . \i1•orge L. ~lcCracken. reccil'· rd his BA fro 1n l'CLA and 11•as ~r:idua!ed fron1 II a s I j n g s l'•>lll'l::l' ol La\\·. San Fran- t l:O.l'fl. lie 11 ~~ :1rfll1:H('d 11·i1h Df>lta S1~111a Phi anti Phi Alpha lX'ha. The <'Ouple plan to be mnr- 'rird durin~ ;i nuptial innss in SL .Justin Church. AnnhtilTI . LIBltA 1Sepl. 23-0<'1. 22 1: --------------------------------· Professional efforl ~ pa )' dividends. \'ou are ll'l(lrC likely to be appreci atl'd by pro- fe~sional ~u~riurs. l'rornv· t1on. added responsibility n1ay be on .agenda. Put finishing totith('S on Jlrojcct. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No\'. 21)· Good lunar aSJX'Cl coincides 11 1\h travel. ~llange of sce nery . ' '\)\) e re ~l 51,ll i t"-'}i t'\-~ • ewels h oscph OIAMONOS ANO ESTATE JEWELRY PURCHASED So..,tli Co 111 Pl111 l ri1tol .ti tli1 s ,~ Oi190 Fwy, Co111 M11• i~o.,o~• , NEW 'Z"'J:J 'GIRLS TENNIS TOGS NEW · 'Cla:JJic ' DRESS FOR "MOM $Js00 NEW '111en:J '2>e11 ' FOR FATHER'S DAY ADIDAS SHOES 1&10 W. COAST HWY-ACROSS FROM THE BAY CLUB NOW-OPEN SUNDAYS 60·8208 Ann's Advice Panned, Praised DE:AH ANN 1.Ai\DERS: ~Jy boyfriend htls requested Iha! J v.-rite lo )OU to protest !he in- ;ide<iuut·)' of your ans11·t'r \\'luch dealt with \'C nereal d1scasl'. It was n1u(·h too latk- 1ng in sriet•ific11y to be of value IU illl)'Ulle. ANN LANDERS nol Use Drugs."' The state-t ment should be SO 'A'Ords or Jess. J would appreciate hear- ing from you as soon ns possi- ble because I want to com- plete this project Thank you ,·ery much. -. STEVE ll., LEXINGTON. KY You did not deserihc the syphili~ic chanrre nor did you describe the cures for either gonorrhea or syphilis. Considering lhl• vast funds and !'esources <ii your disµu sal it ts d isgraceful that you tou!d nut h<1ve come up 1\·1th a bcller response. 't'ou 011e 1t to you1· public lo in1µrol'e the qualil,\' uf you r ans11ers. or If ~ ou <.irl' as ignorilnl as you sccn1 to be ~ ou should keep ) uur stupid 1nouth shut. I'm sure \·our real moli\'e \1 as to sea.re people illl'ay fron1 se;.;u:il acliv1t1c~ Yuu 1111] not succeed. -/\llSS J, AND nn. LOVE OEAH to.USS L Ai\D on . t OVE · Thank vou for 1·our lelter. Here arc Sonic excfrpts frurn letters on the san1e sub- Ji:Ct. DEAit ANN LANDEltS: ·rbank you ror your excellent column on VD \\hit'h appeared in lhe Uei to.loines Tribune. \'ou ha\'C performed <1- lre1nendous ser\'iec by helpin~ to educale the public :tlxiut a gro\.\·iug menace u m o n g teenagers. -1\1EL\llN 0. LIGHTENER, AD- /\l l NfSTRATOR. POLK COUNTY ll EAL'fll DEPT. DEAB AN~ LANDERS: Your l'olumn on VD may have saved n1y life. I \\"en! to the <.:ounly lll'allh Dt'partment after I read it. As I had suspected. I had both gonor· rhea and syphilis. 'fhe doctor said I \\'as lucky -that the diseases are in the early stages and both tan be con1- ple1ely eradicated. I will be in your debt as long as I live. God bless you -A.It OF SAN LEANDRO - OEAH ANN I.ANDERS: 'fhank you from the bottom of my heart for your column on \ID I speak for nil the heaUb Squaw Valley Session educators in lbt> co untry. The information you printed 1Auuld huve been Impossible to gel fr(lm parent s or teachers. J\lruit parents don '! HAVE the iniorn1ation and t \•en ii they bad ii, most children 'A'Ou.ld not nsk such questions of their parents. Yuur column ls read by milllons of teenagers all over the North American eonlinenl. They trust you to !ell it like it is. Your contribution to the youth of · our nation is in- caleulablt. Thank you, thank )OU, thank you. -Indianapolis Teacher. DEAR Ar<-'N L~KDERS: t an1 IS years of age and l an1 11·orking toward rn y ad- vancement in Boy Scouts of Ameril'il lo bccon1e an Eagle Scout. ~·ty final project is to gel a statemenl frorn Ann Landers on "\Yhy Young People Should DEAll STEVE: I don't know who thought up the idea that I should 14·rite a SO \\·ord state- ment as part of YOUR project but it's very interesting to say lbe least. Since you are !he guy ~·ho is 'A'orking toward his Eagle, you should "'rite the statemcnl. I ha\•e 14·ri1ten many thousands of 14·ord s on "·by leenagers should nol use drugs. Resrarrb my back col- umns !the library has !hem! and ~Tile the SO ~·ords yourself, Bub. Drinking may be "in" to the kids vou run with -but it ran put )·Ou "out" for keeps. You can cool ii and stay popular. Read "Booze and \'011 -for Teenagers Only .'' by Ann Lan- ders. Send 3~ cents in coin and a Ion g. self-addressed. stamped envelope with yotir request in care of the DAILY PILOT. Mesa Delegate Named Education On Review Occidental College - Edut'ating. 'fom o r row's L'.!adership 11·ill be presented by Hobert i\lagnuson to the Emma Sansom Cha pter, United Daughters of th e Confederacy . TO GIRLS STATE Stephanie Hubert Costa 1'.iesa Jligh School's represenla1i1·e a1 19il Girls Slate 11·ill be ~liss Stephanie Huber!. daughter of Mr. and r-.1rs. C \\'arren Hubert of Costa :'llesa. lier selection has been ;in- nounced by !he fa culty of the school and the American Legion Auxiliary Unit 455. The 28th session 1vill take place .June 28 to July 5 in Oly111pic Village. Sq u a 1v V;illl'I' Self·ct('d on 1hc basis of leadership. ch a r act r r. scholarsh11>. service a n d 1·\tizenship. the Girls Slate delegatl' al11·;1ys is an out s1a 11d. ing junior student. according lo Airs. Robert Fisher. unit chairman. She 1\'ill join rel)resentatives of high schools throughout the slJ!e for an eight.day project Republican Women Plan Busy Schedule in practical Americanism ant.I citizenship training 11·hich is a simulated city, l'ounty and state governn1ental system org:Jnized by the delegates themscll'es. ~1Jss Mubert served as Girls Leilgue representative during her freshrnan vear and was lhe 11•inner of the E. I. ~-loore :11v11rd for the oulslant.ling sophomore girl. This year she is a 111en1ber 11f the Educational Develop- rnent Cuuncit an1I t he r-.'ladrigal S i n g e rs and parlicipated in lhc dance pro- duction. She also is a member of the Cahfornia .Schol;irship Federa- tion <ind was named treasurer of Junior Achievement for Or;inge County. Her hobbies are s11'imming and sailing. and her outside activi!ies include teaching Sunday school. Alternate is 1\liss · Cathv Langston. daughler of Afr. and Mrs. \''· E. Langston of Costa ?1-,esa. :-.·!embers ll'ill gather at l p.1n . Thursday. ro.-lay 27. in the Santa Ana ho1ne of t>lrs. C. A. Nisson. AI.'.lgnuson is assistant to \hr president of Lhe L-0s Angeles eollegc and \\'ill be ac- con1µanied by two ret'ipicnls or the Louise r-.lontgomery Bevolving Scholarship Loan, eslablished in memory of 11-lrs. Viet-Or :-.tonlgo1nery who organized the chapter. '----- 1\ !Jus~ 1non1h's ~cht·dulc will hcg1n t11r l!untu1g1on Jlarl>ou r lle11ubhcao \Von1en's {"l11b lu1norrow ll'llt'n rnrn1bers ga1hr1· ;.11 10 a 111 111 the !!arbour l.igh1.~ Snf1;1I Hooin !er their r~'!iUlcir Hlet't1ng. The DAILY PILOT-J- T ops 1n local Sports I troduced by :\olrs. B.oy Hughes, t=:=======:::=:=:=~===~~~~-====; prograrn chairn1<in. Thurnas C. !tugcr s , 1·h1:1irnu1n of the Orange Coun- 1.v CenlrJI t:on1111illee. \\'ill t;itk ;1bou l lhe future reap- port1011111ent of 1h(' cnunty and discuss how the central com- m1tltt ""orks He \1 ill be in- Alumnae Gather Phi l\1u Sorority, Orange County Alun111ne Chnp1er 1vil l ~;llhl'r ;11 8 p.rn. Thursd<J.1', :O.·l;iy 27. 111 th<' ~anf:i Ana hr11ne o( to.l r~. F. O. But Irr. Ur. {;. E. l\lillcr of 1he L!('J l"lil'1nlstry dl'parlnll'lll. \l'ill t'.~plnin 1he UC! nucl('ar rear- lor. Assisting lhl' hoStl'ss 1"ill be r-.1rs. l\1erritt Conroy :ind 1\h s. Glenn Crocker. ()o \Vednesday, June 2. rnenlbt'rs 11•ill travel lo the 1\1rpotl:•r lnn for a luncheon hosted by lhc Southe r n Dil'ision 11nd on Frrday . .June J t sereral representalives ~·ill alll'nd a Judiciary Seminar scheduled 1n the Disneyland Hotel. All interested Republican 11omen arc invited to attend. regular 1neetings and r-.lrs. Charles Allen. membership cha1rn1an. 11·ill furnish further information. TOPS Member Tells Method A Century A11·nrc1 "'inner 11·1!1 address the TOPS ro.terg- ing :'l!er1n:ilds 1rhcn memlK'rs gather al 8 p 01. Thursday, :.lay 27. in \\'oodland School. Costa tlles<i. 1 ,\lrs. Edi!h Gillanders received the award for losing 100 pounds. ~---------- Cheese Of The Week OLE PANTRY RIGULAR 20' : $129 1.49lb. OFF w A Oel1ghtlul New Chee1e Mede With Por1 Skim M!lk. Wil h l!s No1urcl Eve Holes And Rich Golderi Color, Its Ac1011 Between A Brick And A Cht"ddor. Seml-soh, Nutty 1n Flavor ii Melis Smoothly And Keeps Well. iici;;·i•!ms. -... .. r~11an 1 .. 1101Cl!11,. $11~ D1flQO frwy COSTA MESA PHONE 540 ·6991 ' 5x7 NATURAL COLOR ~ORTRAIT c • OM ID.i:ltl 11tr ltmllr • Addi1lo ... 1 11111~,1 ""'* ltrrtily l l.OO llt~ • 'fOllOI II.DO •dfltlcl~1i DI! ,.,loll~ I Croup1 111111110 to """· MAY 25 thru 28th Hours: Doily 'til 8 p.m. SANTA ANA t:•l11t1r ilfHI U ••hlOI , .. l•lh~·· COSTA MESA Htrblr I011l1v1rd 11 WlllOll 2HI H•l'blr 11\'f. WESTMINSTER l "lh loultv~"' .i Mr'•llll.,. 1JUO lttch I N•. HUNTI NGTON BEACH 19101 Mt•Mrl' 11 G1ril1id ~ porttlllU by ~ KAUIOOCOLOR JU 600 A~BEV YOU . .. J DA 1 Begi, b Sc.en\ l OFamo puprie l4 s~1all l1v, C l ; Adr1111 l{' N1d l"IJ 17 fi ogh nff1c 10 "···- D'Ur l'i IAaor; """" 20 Not 1 .• '~ F .'!SI ~~ N. A pl.lrl 2h Devi •b 27 Sn.'!• 31 A. Br l~lr J? £m '" ,.~ 35 Of I "'' l~ --- A j') ~"r •() F ~!· •l lr1d1 '" 4) R.1Y Fra1 ' .. " 10 Jl " • TUMBLEWEEDS A'.ltl'I EXPRESS LETTER FOR SNAKE-EYE ----.:---:7"-r;;>-.._M<flJU'! "llEAR SON: DIS IS iO INFORM \O.& OAT '<OR IM!IY l'RUWER"SNOOl<JE" IS ON HIS WAY 10 VISIT 'ltXYSE. I llUS' AATHER SUPPl'Nl.Y I.EAVE TOWN Afl' WOOl.0 'PPl\fCIATE IT IF YOU'SE WOO'P TAKI' DA CHILD OW~Ell YER WING FER A Sl'El.l.. I MUST By Tom K. Ryon CHEE! flJW NICE'TWll.L BE 'T'M'll': DA PATTER O' Ut FEETS AN' VA RIN6 O' CHI I.DISH l.AUGHTER 'f!DUN DA J~f>/T! ' VER 11.Y, I MUS' Pili ASIV.E ME NORMAL SORDID ~5 AN SET A GOOD EXAMPl.E FER DEAR'l.l'l. SNOOK IE! W~AT A JOY TO COME HOME TO -':~,·~· Cl.OSE NON AS Ill FUZZ IS llREAKIN' I/OWN ~ POOR. HANG 1.00SE. YO~ l'l'.ITIN' MUWER' S ·2S JUDGE PARKER 1 -.---""'=:;;::=-==--===::::j-r==~~-==;==-;, I• TME P"2KERS .a.ND I CANi STANP 600P MIGMT. SAM! SAM. DR\VEJZ Jl5T A '4E$SV ~EF! 600'7 NIGHT. A&SEV! !'LL c;.1VE YOU A C-'LL IN A D/...V OR TWO! S022Y TM°'T I LEFT. JOMNNY! I MELPEQ CLEAN U..N'T MEET YOO WMERE WERE IP THE KrTCHEW ~ ~02 LUt.ICM . VOU ? TOlhOIC:!lOW~ PLAIN JANE ....... By Al S.liith By Frank Bo9insld ~ FQR:ALOUSYQJ ""_, SENDANYOLD MAl..E_ I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R A POWER I ACROSS. 44 lhl' Suri Yl'Sll'rd~y's Puzzle Solved: 10 FamCHIS pupr-etef"' 14 S'Tlall piece ol hv<" co.ii 15 Adm 1•ablr l~ Nide~;l l'+l.'d 45 Oi!lusrd l1om a tl'nl~ 4 7 111.'l~l 11rn with J sp1gol 51 St11kt with J Nhl!'I Sl (fjem1nJtr l!('f\Ofl\ 54 Cf'f\.il'" 1110 gan~nl s 1z~ .. lill All OO J 17 Hn/h \ocdl ~; l:CllC)' ' 1 N C 10 S T NII{ 11!lic..... 5!) ) .. !'et lfl"O'I .. Ct ~TS (( 10 " ••••. ol th" ~I Cn111 oi A~1~ O'L\rt)('rv1!lrs " bl \l'dli.im -·· l? ~?.Oo'i war-<:11.ib Efll}. 1111111· (.r'1.i•n lood > ~Assault 1'/oo(l i!lfr 1!1'~tgtlN 20 Nol drl,1yl!d_;, bl RctJ,1~l l W()lr\!> 22 Fastened 'll•fh ~ cham 2~ N. Anie-rk.Jn pt ant 2b Dtv1c!' u<:"d ~ hookb111d•11!J Z1 '\n~rl jl A 611\i<;h l~lr· Af)(V. Ji [ml'!(-ls J3 '<mil rJ °"'l'"al ')Jl/K"flM'I l~ Of '"'mt l'f 'IJOll 38 --ll'Of'l,,... ~· J.f'f""l•l('•~ 3'1 :;,, .. n •O J.'.Al~rhoorl 41 lndtv•do.LI ~1 l'i:)t"flE'!. •l R.111!!!" of r,~,u:~ l J " " " 18 " Jl " " •1 • .. • l• .. b~ T"o 1 ... ~ri. 'I Hold 00"'" that brat --: 10 C.il"' 11 G1v1' .lS dll'" lZ COf'CP1!1U") f'kl~lr'i! lnn~ you1 Wl!f:. fi.f. 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STEVE ROPER ' LOCI!(, ..,ll(E .'·~t Ll ADMIT il-l "T IT W,_S PRE TTY SH"8BY. lAKll<A3 ,_DVAl./TAGE OF 'lOUR GOob M.llTURE TO ~VOLVE )OU IN THIS TMlMG/ PEANUTS 'l:JJ ™"" '1111 °"' 1111<! w fAQI ,wl1lllN(i kl'Tll A $601.E "" \Qlt FAGE •• • c > WEU., 1\lAT~ NOT ~- Ll'L ABNER • r f >" TAltJ'T QUITE AJU.. f>o\Alo.IL'f '$1"ANLE't'.".' THAR'S l'OOM f'O' ONE MOR.E- SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS "'"Oo By John Miles By Mell LEl"!S .JUST SAY youiz FACE ANO FIGURE Al<E NOT' YOUI< 9EST FEATUl<E.5, Bv Saunders ond Overaard "' . ., •••. DVt(E.' LOOI<.'··· T)IEl;'E (A..r T BE TOO WJN TRUC.k.S O\JT TONIGHT WITH THAT MAME ON 'EM.' By Charles M. Schub <QI 51WJ>>=fAal lllAT aw> Rw-4 A OAV ~TH A s.)161/l 6(X)?flREAj(f/6f 'l:J)R IE.llT, A Q£lll IN ~ elE NIP l'fi'Cf lN \WI!~ .. 't ' " ' .. ll . - I:\ ':.~ < ' ' ~ \'{ MR.MUM " ·~ . . " "Y:, DAIL 't PI LOT 1 G By Chortes Borsotti : ' -• By Ferd Johnson By ROCJet' BoDen 0 - DENNIS THE MENACE • I J If D<ll Y 'llOT Laguna's Muther • Ill Only Turbo Car at Indy By DEKI-~ HOULGATI::: drlv~ the Jack Adams tu~ine car on slnct \he car isn't compelltlve here. he used a 23 .~inch Inlet. and one year By careful modifying, Mut.her'c crew ''The initial cost is c~eaper, and keep. Of ''" 0 .11, l"Ji.1 11111 the US,o\C championship trail but who will ~1uther has had it on the track a couple later, Leonard started on the pole with a has increased horsepower or the turbine ing it up is cheaper," 1i1uthrr said. "lt'c INOJANAPOLIS -There hasn't be<'n a be on the sixth rov.· in a turbo-Offy in the of times lO shake It down for !ht= 15.9"inch turbine. from 317 to 460, but "thal's all there i:I ," easier to work on. When the tur!:lir.es ftrst turbine car in the Indianapolis SOO since 500 Saturday. Milwaukee race. which occurs one week Muther 's turbine is restricted to 11.9 Muther said. came here they caught everybody a llllle Joe Leonard set a qualifying record of .. I've seen a tremendous change In at. after the Indy 500. inches, which puts out less than halt the The last turbine left in racing was a big J71.a59 mph and nearly won the race in utude in just the year we've been running "\Ve 'll run it on the mile course;,;.'' µower avallable lo Jones four years ago . hit in Argentina last February, according unawa1·e. It scared a lot of people." 1968. the car." Mut her said. l\luther said. "It's not that W.?. really f\-1eanwhlle, the Indy establishment ha:; to Muther. Muther added that the ai!' pollution Biller talk surrounded the turbine i:a r "The USAC ofricials realize lhey might relish the idea. It 's just al! we havt". We switched from racing v.1!tb 4 SO ''There are really some quite Jn!E:lligent issue might have something l'l do \Vilh .along i:;asoline alley then . Rancor v.'aS so have acted a little bit loo sharply. I see a have lo run with v.•hat v.·e have." horsepower Ford engines I() thr. ROO people there." he said. "\Ve \\'ere sur-changing altitudes of racing peop\1! about strong 1'l led tn Andy GranatcllJ's la1nnus change in them. The other mechanics The talk in gasoline alley is th11t the horsepower lurbo·Offies and turbo-Fords . rounded all the lime. They said ours was the turbine. la~·suit and disturbed or ended many have all changed their feelings about it. USAC committee v.·ill reconH'lelld a raise "They're talking aboul increasing the the only car they could see any ad-"\Ve may be coming to a C:.iy .,.,,hen the Jriendships built up over the years at 1hc The fans. especially I.he ran s, really lo,•e in the size of the air inlet area, a lacwr air inlet. but I've heard they arc l~lking vancement in in the last IO yeari:." turbine engine will run on the street," he Speedway here. !he turbine ." 1hat determines the horsepower output. about 12.8 inches. If they di) l~.at. \\'e The peop le who really count, l\1uthcr said. "It is a clean engine, and that mny The talk is diff<'rent now, according tn Adams entered the turbine car in I.he \Vhen Parnelli Jones almost won the race won 't even change. JI isn't worth \\'hile," said, are coming around now -the dictate to Us we ought lO be developing it 'Rick rt1uther of Laguna Beach, who 500 mainly lo secure e1:tra garage space. in 1967 with the original STP turbo-car, Muther said. mechanics. for the street right here at lndla napo li,." ~~~~-'-~~~-=--=--'-~~~~~-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-----''--~~~~ • -~ • ... . -· ' -...-::--... -~ i. ~ -.. -.. 'Ji ..... WASHINGTON 'S DICK BILLINGS RACES BALL ON WAY TO GLOVE OF BOSTON RED SOX CATCHER DUANE JOSEPHSON. RICO PETROCELLI Den1p sey Gets Award; Huff Supports Allen t-;EW YORK tU PI ) -Sam Huff can"t belp it. Ht> begins talking about his uld boss, the late \'ince Lon1bard 1. and ... "'·ell . . . he juo;t can"! help 11. Sam Huff hasn't been v.·ith the Wa~hington Redskins for n1ore than a vcar now and officially he has no con· Tirction with football at all any lo~ger . But he'll always lo~·e the game and lhose in it. So as the man in charge of market rievelopmcnl for all the ~1arriolt hotels. v.·ho do Ybu lhink was at lhe hole! entrance to greet all the NF'!. t•oaches for their conference here ~1onda v? Sam Huff. one-tlmc king o' lhe linebackC'rs. that's who. Sam H11tf. thP. youngest 3&-~·car-o!d you C\C'r sa\\" T11-en· ly·fi\'e pounds lighter Lhan he was 111 h1~ playing prime and looking romplelcly un· marked. In no lime al all he v.·as talking fool · ball. In no time at all he ~·as talkin~ ahout the Redskins' new roach. George Allen, and ab(lut their old one . Vince Lombard i. ''This gu~· is a \\'inner." he said about Allen . "He's lnw k<',\' ;ind he df'l('S things rlifferen11~· th<1n c(liH'h Lombarrli rlid. hul basicall\ their ;::oals are 1he sarTil' \\'in· ning. r ih1nk Cieorl!r Allen \\ill dc1·el(lr a \1·inner 1n \\"ash1ngton So1nebndy asked ll utr whether he thought Lilmbard1 \1·ould h;n·e anv tro11h!e coaching today's kids and Huff sairl he doubted it. ''\\then Lombardi s<1id son1C'thit1,:: ·you listened. no 1nat\C'r ho\\' olcl ~·nu wrre or ho1'' young you \l'('rr." Huff said. "1 believe in the same thini::s he did. I think 5hav1ng the hair oH your face is " small pri~ to pay for playing for a man like .Lombardi. . "Let's face 1!. a b£'ard ancl lnng h::i:r 'jus! don 't look p.ood on an :ithlelC' Lom- bardi had a n1ethnd for e,·eryl11.11'..! hP. diJ .and his ballplayers respo11dC'd. l '.remembf"r ~·hrn I was his ;:ssistant :Coach with \\lashington he 'd'"'"· "gec7.. t ;\\•ish one of 'cm would gel up Rl"'rl sa\' to :me wh(l in hC'll do ~'OU think yo u ;ire or :get off your high horSC' ' • ''I'd listen to hiin trll me 1;1:it ;ind I'd :fiay !o hun. 'I dnn"t blame !h"m for not .'ayinJ:: an~'thing to you. coach.' " Sam lluff wasn·t the only onr th,nk•rJ,! 'ebout Vince l ... ombllrdi Monday. Othrrs Were . too. That's Gratitude Fas test-ever Rookie Gets Bumped by Boss INDIANAPOLIS, Ind . (AP) -John ~1ahler. \vhose qualifying speed of 170.164 miles an hour wa!I the fa stest ever posted by a rookie at the Indianapolis Motor Spce<hl'ay, was bun1ped from the 33-car llnC'up Monday by his boss. Dick Simon. a Salt Lake Citv, Utah. driver-businessman, announced ·he will taxe over the No. 44 l'raveLodge Special •·10 fill contractual obliga!ion!l." rtiahler, 36, of Betlendurf. Iowa, had qualifed the turbocharged Ford in 27th position. \Vith Simon al the wheel. the tar now moves back lo .1.1rd ;ind last pl11ce in the lineup as a penalty for changing drivers. Simon will make his second i;\a rl in an Indianapoli s 500 -he finished 14th last vear -had qua lified his own car -a Companion to the one assi gned to ~!;ihlcr -al 168 003 m.p.h. Sunday. He wa!! bumi;ied, ironically, by Mahler·s faster speed. With final time trials over and the $1 million lineup set, most of the driver" played in the Speedway ~olf tournament. l\ionday, though rain dampened their play. Meehanici; i;pent the day filling new engines lo their cars <tnd preparing for carburetion runs \\"C'clnesday, 1he I as 1 chance for drivers to get on the 2.fi.mile course befort' Saturday's noon start. find for the fir.~t lune in Speed\.\'3.V history. the spectat ors will he 1dlo\.\'ed to v.·atC'h the carburetion runs at SI eac~. One specdv.•ay expert estimated t h a I more than iJ0.000 people already had paid their v.·ay into the 62-year.()\d racin~ plant during 19 days of practice and four d11 ys of qualifyin~. \Vcdnesday·s carburetion runs v.·ill gi"e the tean1s a chance to check Juel con· sun1p1ion and tire \l'ear. Thty v.'ill be gi"cn an opportunity later in the week to practice pit work. '!'he :J3 starters averaged a sparklin~ 171.61ifi m.p.h. led by Pete Rcvson's pole poi;1tion run of !7R 696 in one or the new winged ~leLaren car.s lrorn England. The field as 11 v.·hote qualified at an a,·erage speed of 4 ~26 m.p.h. faster than lasl year. Simon. father or se\'fll. sard he hated l:l put the Speedway's fastcsl rookie on the .sideline. "I knov.· I v.·111 be looked on as a bum for doing this," he said. "but I had no allcrnat1ve. The contract I have '~1\t h Tra,·eLodge is that I drive the car lhat carries their endori;ement " He said he \\ould ha\'e a caf for i\1ahler In drive in the nthcr \\~O 5'10 n11lers on !he t; S. Auto Club champ1onsh1p trial. at Pocono, Pa .. and Ontario, Calif. Dodgers F ete Mays Tonight LOS ANGELES 1 AP \ -It's W i 11 i e. r>1ays' 20th anniversary in the major leagues today and he celebrates with San Francisco Giants teammates in a game tonight against the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Giants lead ihe National League \\'estern Division. nine games in front of the Dodgers and Atlanta . For Bill Singer, it will be his second Mt• lS M•~ ?6 M•• 11 M•• 11 Dodger Slate All GI Ml l 111 KF I ('401 ooe1o~rs v1. Sin F•1,..c1~co 1:55 p in. OoCIDtri "•· S•~ F•1ncl1~ 1 :5~ "m. Ood1t•• ~•. ~~n Fr1n<i1<0 7:55 Pm. Coa11e•• ~I. P~ll•dllP~ll 7.55 o M te~l in as many weeks against the powerful Giants and pltcher Juan fl..tarichal Singe r lo~t his lasl game agai nst San Frant·iseo in Candlcst1ck Park 1-0 hul held the Giants to lwo hits. bolh in the seventh inning. One wa s a dou ble by ~lays v.·ho went nn lo score on a single by Richard Diel7.. The Dodgers managed to get six hit:i; off Marichal but he stayed in for a shutout. Tonight's gaine n1arks the beginning of a 12-game home stand for the Dodgers, lhe firsl three againsl the Giant s. The friendly rivals celebrate !\lays' Wth year with the Giants toni~hl in pre-game ceremonies The Dodgers vd!I gi\'e hin1 20 cake~ 11nd \\lillie will present them to youth groups . Arkansas' Di cus In Charger Fold To Ope11 Road Ho stilities SAN DIEGO (AP l -All-Southv;ci;t Conference wide recei\'l"r Chuek Dicus of Arkansas and four other rookies ha,•c signed lo play for San Diego. the National Football League club announcC'd f.1onday. The 6-foot. 175-pound D i c u s , San Diego"s seventh-round draft choice, holds Razorback career receivin g records of 12 catches, 17 touchdov.·ns and 2,018 yards gained. Also sii;ning, Chargers' Gener a 1 l\·1anager Harland Svare said. were run· nin~ batk Eric Humston, the No. 15 drafl choice from Muskingum; linebacker Mel Ror;:ers and defensive back Charles Sasser of Florida A&M and plaeekicker \Villiam DuPree of South Carolina. OAKLANn ( AP l -The troubled California Angels "·ill get et least one break 1n !heir two-game series here with the Oakland Athletic~ Lhat opens Tuesday night . They \von't face Vida Blue, the A's 011 T \1 T o11 i g/11 C l101111e l o'i at II -young lefl·hander v.•ho \l'On his 10th s1raight pitching deci sion Sunday. The A's, leading lhe \\le stern Divi~ion of baseba ll's Ameri can League. don't know if thry 'll face Alex Johnson of the Ani:;els. "'ho y,·on the league batting championship la~t year and h111s b c en benched recently bet:ause of his attitude and other problems. The Angel~' Clyde Wrtghl, 4·3. will face Chuck Dobson. 3.(1. in tonighfs game, the firs! 1921 meeting of the teams in Oakland. Last month at Anaheim. the A's swept l'l lhree-game series. Catcher .John Stephenson of California and outfielde r Reggie Jackson of the A·s are on hot streaks going into tonight"s duel. Stephenson has hit safely in 15 straight games to push his average to .409 bul doesn't have enough At-bats to be listed as the league batting leader. Jackson is 9-for-17. with two home runs. in the A's last five games. His average stands al .230. up 104 points since April 21. ., ""';!:. • .. ,,. -:: ' . ~ :Yx:.• WATCHES AS UMP CALLS BILLINGS SAFE. THE SENATORS WON, 8-6. Ex·area Ace Cold , Calculating Tag Put on P1·0 Basketball Cold and calculating. That's the v.·ay former area star John Vallely has found professional basketball after a year nf infrequent play with the Atlanta Ha~·k.s. Vallely. back in his Corona del ?-.lar home until September. didn't expect to see a lot of playing time as a yearling b1.1t he ·s hopeful to get more action this com· ing year. "Unless you're an Alcindor or a ?-.1aravich, you won't play much in your rookie year." Vallely admits. "Generally rookies are supposed to • OLINN WNir• ------=-=www::r WHITE WASH . ------- watch and learn . I find the pros cold and ralculating compartd with other levels of the sport. "So I try lo do my Job, be quiet and do wh at the y tell me. .. , played in fi5 games but usual!y only ror five or IO minutes at 11. time and in that span you can't do anything except take up the slack for the guy who went out. "You can't get loose. But 1 did gel to play against everyone and had enough time to learn their moves." "The pros a'te inconsisten1 because you fan play well one game and then sit on the bench for the next several. It's hard to keep the right frame of mind -you just ha~·c to develop a pro attitude.'' Vallely, who closed out regular i::cason play with 26 points against the Chicago Bulls. says Atlanta player-coach Richie Guerin indicates he'll play considerably more this coming campaign. The former Corona dcl Mar High and Orange Coast Colle~e product tells his impression of playing against his old UCLA teammate Lew Alcindor, no\\' a super star with the \\'Orld champion ~iii· waukee Bucks. "It makes you wish you were on the other side." says John. "You have to change your shots and it's tough to drive Ol'l a guy like Lew." Vallely also believes the Bucks will monopolize the National Basketball Association like no other team ever has.'' Boston used to dominate tht playoffs but they'd occasionally rinish se- condor third in the league during regular season. Then Russell and those guy, ~·ould get tough in the playoffs. "But Al cindor will win every game for you.'' Vallely, now 22, hasn't much to say about Atlanta teammate Pistol Pete t.laravich, the ex-LSU hotdog who started with the Hawks as a rookie. "i\.1aravich brings 'em !the f;u1s) in-they come to see him play ," is about the only romment John has. However. one must note that Atlanta "1ent from a divisional title without t-.1aravich lo lhe third poorest record 1n the NBA with him. As for the club's decline. Vallely cites Inabil ity for the players to coordinate with each other on the floor as one of the keys to the demise . Looking ahead. Vallely is anticipating heavy playing duty this comi11g season. But currently he's setting up orfice hours ( 11 ·6) at the beach. • . -=------""i..-=i-.- Ba11 Against ' UCI Lifted f The California Collegiate Alhletic I• Association (CCAA) has lifted its ban on UC Irvine athletic teams. effective immedialt'ly, it "·as learned exclusively by the DAILY PILOT today. Eddit \Vagner. ronference com· I • missioner. confinned the fact 1 CCAA schools had changed their , minds on enforcing a ban but the j: t decision comes !Oji late for coach Tim Tift's basketball squad lo in· f elude any of the teams on its 1971· " 72 schedule. A possibility exists. ho\.\'ever, that the annual UCI invitational tourney can again be increased to eight teatns, instead of four ai; planned, for next DecemOOr. While the ban affects the basket-· Gale S<'!yers. the Chicago Bears' slick hlflning back. talked 11bo11! him \1"!llit' ~resenting the George Halas award f(.r :t:ourage to Tom Dempse~·. !he N:-w :Orleans' place kicker v.•ho bni;it" i;.;. }•ardcr:ii Although he v.·orks "'1th only hal f :a risht foot. : Sayers. you may remembe ... "·as 1hP. ~it of the New York ch11ptrr'~ pro· lessional football writers' dinnrr J a~t i·ear when ht' turned over the ver1· s:une liward to teammate Brian Picctl'l, wiio Hied shortly therearter or c11nrer. Unitas Still a for J·Baltimore ball schedule this year, none of the other ucr teams will be bothered because most of the schedules are not made up this far in advance In their entirety. The lifting of the ban v.•ill help 1he newest Anteater i;port more lhan any other -track and field. : SAyers 11ga\n was eloquent al 1'1onday tilghl'!! dinner. : He be~an by saying, "foothnll i!I my Ji ft" and that he <'X!X'Cls to br br.rk 111~h the Beara this fall. lie also s:ii1 "I !urn iiy back'' on thn!!e proftss1n:i:1I fc11r1h:1il ~ayt>rs v.•ho . h~ their llit11temt:nts. "set fit lo denlgr111e the game of footb11 ll." : Gale Sayer• then talktd about Vince rmbl!'dl. ~ ; ' NEW YORK ji\P) -Ai; of tod11y. lhr No. I quarterb11ck for the Super Bov.•I rtiampion Baltimore Colts still is Johnnv Unitas -limp and all. But wht>.n he wilt be able to play Is lhe un11nJJwered quc~ 1~n . , "\\'e're e1:pecting him berk, bu1 l don 't k11ow if he'll he re11dy by the time !ra1nln.i:: camp opens July 11." said co1tch Don ~1C'Cafft:rty . ··1 clnubl !ha! hr'll br h11ck tor the Collcgt' All Stllr Jl.in1e July 3-0. • "I rlon 't kn11v.· lhe l1metahlC'. Hr ~I'll r1d of the ca5t and crutches last week and he's hn1p1nJ:!. around nO\\' You can guess i':O\'. I or )Ou might be right saying Sc!pl . 1. I just don·1 knO\\, .. llowevt?r. trlrtarrerty is preparing f11r the poss1bit1ty I.hat 11i:e and injury might mean the Colts v.·ill be forced to do \\lthout Unitas for Ont: of thr. few ti!'Tlt'S in the past 16 years. At age :\8 wilh 11 tc;1n Arhtlles t('ndon. Unitas n1ii!ht be through. "Jnhn's il~<' anc1 the lime th3t he ln· jurcrl !hP fool \Viii t)(:< his lnughr~t pro· blcrn." ~aid ('()ach \\'eeb Ev.hank or the i\'I'"' Vnrk Jr!,~. \l'ho co1trhed Unitas 1tt Bf!ltimore. "He might have trouble silt· ling up and then pushing off to pass." "The v.·orsl thing that can happen \\OU!d be thal Unitas can't come back and Sam H.avrilak and K 11: r I Dooglas don 't pan out." l\1cCafferty i;aid. "Then v.·e ~·ould only h.avt Earl ~lor· ritll. Then v.·e'd be looking for ll!'IOther ouar!erback. But right nov.•, v.·e're no! looking." Unillis, \\'hn holds num<!roui; National f'ootbatl League pass.ing r e c ords 11s J>'rhaps l~e grc1test quarterback in history, tore the tt!.ndon in late r-.111reh giving him less than four months to reco,•er. It took six weeks lo get the cast off ar.d now he Is undergoing lherapy. "His past history of coming back from injuries. the way he 111.Ays In shape, hi!! dedication ... his r(!C(lvery looks gONt. Others might not come back," f\lcCal· ferty st1id. ··Johnny. of course. is optimist ic. He \VII~ at our rookie practicr last SAturday 11nc1 \\'Orked wllh the quarterb11ckll. kllk· 1ng to I.hem. He was playing goU v.·lth the casf on:• ' lf nolhing else. the Anteaters can be included in du&\ meets to make them triangular or double-dual af· fairs in the spring giving coach Bo pi Roberson and his charges an op- portunity to compete against the CCAA schools. The ban came about when UCt f' declined an invitation lo join the CCAA. r-.-tember schools and co1n- misslnner Ed W11gner fell that UCt 1 should become the sixth conferenc:. 1 member. •• )'1 • 1 ' IO Yardley No1ninees Revealed Nominees for the George Yardley Trophy have been an-- nounced with JO of the Harbor Area's lop 197().71 athletes picked to vie for the award. \vhich has been given annually ex~pt for last year. Ttie last winner was basket. ball player John Vallely. This year's list of candidates Is as follows : · Robbie Cunnlngha1n and Glenn Cripe -They are a single entry in the derby, hav- ing combined to "'in the Ojai loorney and CIF doubles crovrn while at N e w p o r t Harbor High last season. Cunnin,!lham is currently at Or~nge Coast College while Cripe plays for UC Irvine. Charles Coakley -Last year he Y.'On the national juniors bad m tn ton cham- pionship and this year he came on to win the men's na- tional crown. lie is a senior at Costa Mesa 's Estancia J{igh. Chris Gammon -Was state 100 butterfly champion and flnished second in the 200 fly al the 1970 state iunior college swim championshios. l le was Orange Coast College's 1970 athlete or the year. Grant Gt-Iker Was -.. . ' ..... ' .. T~Hday, May 25, lq71 DAIL V PILOT i 1 5-8, 155-pounder Mesa's l(a"lama Not Typical QB By HOWARD L HAN DY 01 "'' 'llllV PHii Still Pat Kalama has a secret ambition but you wouldn't know it to watch the Costa Mesa lligh ~1ustangs practice during spring drills under nevi head football coach John Sy,·eazy. Kalama performed as a defensive halfback and a tailback last season under t.1ax Miller. And did so ef- fecUveJy. S\\•eazy isn't mCiined to be hasty and make a switch and at the moment is undecided aboc.Jl Kalama's future. Pat doesn 'L hesitate to say that h.is thoughts are on one speci!ic facet or the game, however. "I played quarterback for six years including P o p \Varner football and I wou1d like to play the re this coming i>eason," he says. At 5-8 and 155 pounds, he Isn't exactly the typical physical speciman for the signal calling berth. "I'm really not too corr- cerned about my size," he says and then moves out to play catch with his rival for the quarterback position, Flip has ended," he adds. "We don 't have enough boJs out for football to afford oor staff the luxury of playing dlf· fcrcnt boys on offense and defen se. Many of them wfll have to double up." The ?-.·lustangs have a tott.1 of 73 players out for three teams under direction of four coaches, Included in the group are 16 or 17 lett'ermen with varsity experience. Sweazy was the sophomore coach a year ago and is high in his praise of two junJors. Mark Schrupp will probably move in al safety on defense and do the riunting. Bryan Forsdick, 8 6-1, 215-pound tackle, is expected to play both ways this fall. Tri tons Gain Berth In Finals Darnell. San Clemente liigh School is unanimous all.CIF first string lackle and is the second plaver in Newport Harbor Hi~h history to earn a berth tn the state Shrine football classic. Chri.o; lloroel -CIF wrestt. CINA'S BOB NEALY PREPARES TO FIRE OVER WEST GERMAN PLAYER. CINA WON 6-S Both are seniors with the lone Orange Coast area Darnell standing 6-1 and survivor for team golf laurels weighing in at 175. Kala.ma after complelion of semiflnal Ing champion last year at Ney.·port Harbor and \\'as undefeated for the season. Dave Johnson -Qualified ror the 1970 state hi,l!'h school championships but then suf- fered an injury in the prelims. \Va!! runnenio to eventunl slate champ Jackie White in th~ Cir 22n finals. Kurt Krum n hol z - Standout Corona de! 1.far Hi~h sv;immer. \\'as on Corona drl 'fi.far's water polo team whil'!i lost only once and finished third in the CIF pl:iyoffs. Krumpholz set four school !\\'im record<: lhis season and \\'on the CIF in the 100 freestyle. l\fike flfartin -SparkOO UC Irvine to the NCA.o\ colle~e division SY.·im championship and "''as on the U.S. national water polo team which toured Europe larl summer. Curt Thomas -All·CfF in football, Irvine League back or the year and a basketball let- tennan. \Vas chosen athlete or 1he year at Estancia High. J ohn Yule -Off to a slo'v start then earned a starling center's berth for the llniversilv or Ok I ah om a basketball team. Formerly a star at Newport !~a rbor and Corona de! Mar lligh. Yule played In the prestigous Na- tional Invitation Tournament at Madison Square Garden ty,•o years running. He's a junior at Oklahoma. Stevens 2nd in Discus; MacLean Tops Milers NORWALK -Orange Coast area discus leader Mark Stevens didn't improve on his personal best bu t he did manage a 167-7 second place effort at Ce rritos College J\1on- day in the ClF Southern Sec· lion discus qualifying for the June 4.5 state meet at UCLA. Camarillo junior Fred Huston was tops at Cerritos at 182·3 while Orange's Cody J\taresh (164·11), Camarillo's Larry David (164·9) and ~1onte Vtsta junior Fritz Cof· Iman (161·7) went 34-5. Newport junior Terry Albril· ton barely missed qualifying at ISS.5. Although eliminated from further competition in last Friday's CIF semifinals at Cerritos, Costa Mesa's junior 1niler Doug ~1acLean returned to the top of the DAILY PILOT's track and field honor roll four-lap list with a li/elinle besl of 4:21.4. He pushed Mission Viejo's Bee 1320 finalist Ed Radennacher (4 :22.4) and Marina's Bob Brickner t4 :23.0) back one place each in the mile. The only other change oc- curred in the shot put whe1·e Stevens pushed out h i s California best to 6,1·! I in the CIF semis. All the more amazing about the Tar weight star's lalest feat is the fact that he 's been under a doctor's care the last three y.·eeks and he ac· complished his career topper by only being able to use the palm of his throwing hand. The fingers on his right (throwing) hand are being treated for muscle spasms in that area. 100 -Pnll M11s (F01.1.,t1 ln V1\11y\, f .t; C1r10 TOSll ((Or°"" <!ti Men, JClhn Milts !Coro,.. dfl Mar), 8ruc1 Gfr110le IEst1nc11), Jot Ventlmlgllt !M1rl.,1), f.t. »Cl -C1rlo Tott! ((°"'"' del Mir). Pnll M111 (F01.on1tln V•ll•v!, 11.1; 8r1d McKtnllf ($1n Cle<ntnreJ, 27.J "'o -Eric Olson re1tu11;l1), •9.91 J•m Ket1n1ev (Wntmlnlfer), SO.SI Grill A.mies !N~-1 Htrbc<). 50.9. NO -Nick Rost {Coron. de! Mid, 1:5'1.6; Je!r VOi.inv !Wettmlnlltrl, 1 · S1.I; Jolin Mulllni (Hunf!ntron Buell), Prt ston C..mobtll tM1rln1), l·sr.o Milt -!>out MtClN" ((O!ll MHI}, 1:21.4; Ed R1derm1c""r !Minion VI. Cunningha111, DeHoog Pace Co1nets ' Victory t !ol, I n .f; BOD Brkknrr (Mtrin11, 1:n .o. T NO mli. -Dev• l oc:km1n fMl•- 1.,.), t .26.6; J Dl'ln Olsw1119 !COlll Mil.I), t :lJ,t ; WtVll9 l Hd! llFoun• u r., VtlltYI. f ·J1.•. llO HH -Gtrtl! Wl!t (Huntington Be1tll), Jl .!, 11.Jw; Sttvt Plcktord t Hun!lnglon BNtl'!I, Mttl Hotltll {Now• POrl H1rbor), 11.J. !IO LH -Ge"9 T1VIOI' CMtrl"I), lt.1; Mitt Hot1ttt (Nf'Wpgrl Htrbor), If 1; O.nn!1 ""'"'' (Mlrl"I). It I. Tim Cunn ingham and Danny Delloog paced the Costa Mesa Comets to an 8-4 victory over visiting Douglas Jets Sunday afternoon at TeWink le Park. Cunningham pitched six in· nings, giving up one hlt and gaini:ig credit for the victory. DeHoog had three hits in four plate appearances Jn· eluding two rbi to pace the of· fense. ••• 0C0 000 I~ 6 I OCXI 1U IJ•_. t 4 0011,111 Jt ll UI Konig, 7b Harlll"'. rl 8 . KnloM. c F ll1petrTc•, lb Brown, u Ju11u, It GlmPlf , lb Y1~n~!, t i 1brtcrbl j l 7 0 l l G 0 f 0 0 0 • I 0 0 j ' 0 0 ) 0 ' 0 . ' . I.ID rtlav -M1r1.,., il.I; Fountain 'V1lltv, il.2l Coron1 dtl Mar, IJ,J, Miit 1t!1v -N~llOrl HtrbOr, 3.1!.l t W1r1tmln11tr, 1:'5.•; Co•-<111 M1r, 3;16.S. 5. KnloM. p • ' ' ' . ' . HJ -Jot>" Kalmer (Newport tie•· borl. 6-1: RIV "''"'' (Fo1m!1Tn VII· levJ, 6·l ''.>; v ... n MCC.rrv (~•n Cit· menlfl, 6-J. Tot1l1 l l . . ' LJ -Rev H1<rl1 (Founl~ln V•llf>), 1J-O; G1rrt. Wl11 (Hunll»t!On ll!IC~I. 11·10!1!; :.IJ·lw; lloo (oHl.,gi (Edisonl, 21·•· Co1i. MIU (OIMIS Ill Bl•ndel, lf·P Sllveromlltl, rl Wl!ll""'" rl He<!dad, Jb 0eH009. lb C.ilmo<1 ... EVll\I. d ~""· t (Mr. C Farrel, l'b Moorr. ltl Cun.,l119'!1m, • Gorclof!. !I To111s 1b r I ~1 l 1 1 1 l 0 0 D l I 0 0 • ? ' 1 • l l ' ' 0 0 1 • 0 0 1 l 0 I I 7 0 0 c l c 0 0 1 7 1 0 J l l 0 I 0 0 0 » • ' • PV -Tonv Holfmln fS.n Cltml\nt~l. ,, .. ,,; Terrv P1rk1n10t1 (FouM•ln v111evl. 14-P ~; Bi" Sprout t~en C•t- ml\ntt l, ll·I SP -Ml'~ Strvtllf I N.......,rt H1r• borl, '3·1!; Terrv Jdb!'lllM (N,...llOrf HlrtlOrJ, 62·11 8rl<I Borden l (Olll Ml\IJ, li·l1'J. OT -Ml'1f Sltven1 !Ntwo>orf H•r· bor), 1111-1''.; ttriwtrd llov1t1r l(O<MI <!II Mir), llf .. : Terry Albf'l'tton !Ntw· POrl H1r110r). Uf·I. PLAY CiOLF! PRIVATE LESSONS $6 EACH OR 6 LESSONS FOR $30. GROUP LESSONS $9 For Six Lessons · Inc ludes: Free Use of Clubs And A Game of Golf ALUMINUM GOLF CLUBS FOR EXTRA DISTANCE ,,,. CLOSE-OUTS .............. _ ...... so•;. o .. SKIP MA Y'S I SKIP MAY'S NEWPORTER GOLF COURSE COSTA MESA GOLF RANGE 1111 JAMIOlll I D. 644.ttlO 2717 Hl W,OllT ILYD. i 45·tft) "' ttt. H•w1tort1r 11111 "' tfle OrOflt• C1111ty folr Qro11"4s Retur11ee Bolsters Lagunans By CRAIG SllEFF 01 l~t OtH' Pllol Slt tl 3 Area Polo Teams Battle in Qualifying throws from the left side and round action at ~1issioa Viejo Darnell from the right and Country Club Monday. Sweazy is toying with the idea San Clemente finished In of having them both in the third place of 23 team! com· backfield at the same time. peting at Mission Viejo with This would give the offense Huntington Beach, Estancia considerable versatility on and Corona de! ~1ar all falling pitchouls, rolloiats and other by the wayside. offensive gestures of a good Beverly J-ll lls High was trle quarterback. team leader with an aggregate Three area water polo will be under the banne r or When Sweazy was asked ta score of 395 and was followed tean1s will attempt to qualify Phillips 66 G\V, compare the two prospective by Dos Pueblos (Goleta) with for the Pan·An1erican tryouts Ten games are scfieduled signal callers, he was terse a 397 then San Clemente at 393 v.·hen a qualifying tournament Wednesday with two more and to the point. and Rhigetti al 399. } is held \Vednesday and Thurs· first round lilts 5et Thursday "Right now Kalama is the Huntington Beach finished better ruMer and Darnell the \\'i!h a score of 404 in seventh Laguna Beach High football day at Cypress College. morning. The championship better passer. \Ve won't be place y,•ith Estancia eighth at coach Hal Akins is one guy T~·o teams from the Corona bracket games are set for t i, making any decisions about 407. Corona de! fl1ar. 412 and who's tired of losing. de I Ma r .t r vine-Newport noon , 2 and :1 p.m. Thursday. personnel until spring practice • :r.1arina, 414 \\'ere the only The Artiru: have suffered Association lCINA.) are en· The top four teams from the other area entrants. ; through two straight agoni zing lered along with a club com· Cypress tourney ,viii ndvanl'e The leant championship wjll campaigns, \\•inni ng just one H 10 s l be contesled al California game in each season . posed primarily of Golden to the PanAm trials Friday, ang e Country aub in \Vhittier on But Akins IS optiinistic \Yest players. The latter team Saturday and Sunday 81 Bel· Tuesday, June 1 bety,•een the about the '7t campaign_ and mont Plaza in Long Beach. At Raceway top four teams at Missio n Vfe- ont: big reason for that is the The leading eight teams in jo and four from the other return of tailback Telford Col· B ttllfights the PanAm tryouts have semifinal match in Riverside. tam. already been seeded. Orange County International Individual competition wUI Cot'"m, a "II. 11~under. r-td W Raceway will host the Hang 10 be staged at the same location w ~ -,... L" TV uv en es t will play ill the F ea 500 th' s 1 d d ,. ·ih 1 1. figured to be the Artists' bi,!! lVe on unny r LS a ur ay an 1me Wl payers qua I• fun in 1970 _ but it didn't same bracket 8S Cal Poly with qualifying beginning at 2 fying for both team and iri· work out Ih a! way. Just pr,·or (Pomona) and Riverside, p.1n. and racing following dividual compelition playiog Anaheim Convention Center tin r-1 p I t I W d f 7 11 d to the start of the season, Cot. mee g '-"ii o ya e nes· rom . . one roun . tam suffered a freak injury y,•ill be one of three Southern day and Ri verside at 5. Forty cars are entered in San Clemente won th~ when he was stepped on in a California arenas showing a CINA 's C squad faces UC the clambake with the 500 Crestvie\v League title and practice session. closed circuit colorcast of the Sa n Diego at 11 Wednesday being the $500 which will be Bob Volga was the medaliSt morning and Jolani of Hawaii paid in bonuses to the quickest with a 152 score for 36 holes. The resull was broken bones •·nullfight of the Century" on at a a.m. Thursday. CINA 0 funny car in each of the four Teammate Jay Olson was nl'ist in his right fool and Cottam Sunday. June 13. meets Arlh at noon Wed· rounds of racing. v;ith 153 with both qualifying watched the rest or the '70 The event \viii feature the nesday and Phillip.o; 6ti c at 4. A total purse of $10,000 is at for the individual competition proceed in gs from the highe st paid sports figure in Wednesday'• Palring<i stake with Whittier's Richard at California CC. Volga shot '18 sidelines. ihe world, El Cordobes direct 8-Phillips 66 c vs. Arth Siroonian, Dave Beebe of and Olson 79 at t.fV. But Akins report s that Col· from the Plaza de Toros. 9--Cal Poly vs. Riverside Anaheim and Los Angeles Other San Clemente tearh tam, a tailback. appears to be Jaen, Spain. It "''ill be brought JO-El Segundo vs. Jolani driver Sush ?.1 at sub a r a members include Richar d okay now as the Arlisls beJ:in tiere live and direct via 11-CINA C vs. UC San favored to take the bonus por· Barnard, John Allavie and their second week of spring satellite. Diego lion of that purse. · Sieve Ringer. ball. El Cordobes will be joined noon-Arth vs. CINA J> Siroonian's 6.64 elapsed time Larry ,_·largison of ~1arin11 Cottam. who will De a senior by felloiv matadors El Viti and I-Phillips GW vs. Cal Poly t.lay I at OCIR is only .02 off along with Kelly Gifford, Bart in September, could go both Jose Fuentes in the first col· 2--CINA C vs. El Segundo the 6.62 second all-lime best DeBoe and Gary Weiler or y,•ays but Akins figures he orcast from cont i n' n I a I 3--UC San Diego vs. lolani by Don (Snake) Prudhomme Huntington Beach will com- might just save hiin for of. Europe. 4-Phillips 66 C. vs. CINA D. of Granada Hills. pete in the individual play. fense only. Other arenas showing the 5-Riverside vs. Phillips 6ti North ridge's D\\·ight Estancia will be represent~ event are the Forum in GW Sat· b th · r b T Kn' hi L .. As a sophomore, he slarteci • IS ury was e winner o y erry 1g , e·• three games at the end or the I n g I e wood and Swing Thursday's Palrin~s lasl Saturday's top f u e I J\lcGowen. Steve Robertson season. as a de re n s i v e Auditorium in San Bernardino. 8-lolani vs. CINA C dragsler fina l al OCIR. and J\lark Les with other halfback and although he wa s Tickets are now available for 9-El Segundo vs. UC Sari He clocked 6.72 seconds and Irvine League entries in· green as grass he came along the event that ii is estimated Diego hit a top speed of 220.04 mph eluding John J\finkley and Jim quite well," Akins says. will have an audience o[ 50 11. 12, 2. 3-ChampionMp in defeating Bob Williams ot Cote of Corona del Mar and "I'm rea\ly deb a tin g,_m_ll_lio_n_. __ ==-----=-b_r_a_c~ke=l=g~a_m_e=s_. _____ ._~s~a~n~D~i~eg~o~.---r;;;;---B~;~11~B~oei;;;se;,iio~r ~E~d~is~on~·---· whether he 'II go both ways for I us "'"' season. We may JUS! Ba,seball s tandi"ngs use him only on offense and run·the heck out of him." Cottam has the speed and slrength to carry the load ex- pected of the tailback in Laguna 's quadruple option al· lack. "He 's had an unofficial 10.0 in the 100.yard dash," say s Akins. "and he's been Y.'orking . on weights this spring." Akins feels that with the return of Cottam and the fact that the Artists have some key personnel back Laguna oould have a much improved season in '71. "This team cou ld bring us out ol the doldrums,''. says ·Akins. "We really came on at the end of last season and that win in the final game (over El Dorado, 25--18) I think is going to really help us. We hope it carries-over. "We're working with a note of optimism. We see some daylight ahead," says the Laguna coach. NATIONAL LEAGUE East Div ision w L New York 2! 15 St. Louis 25 J7 Pittsburgh 24 17 Chicago 20 21 t.fontreal 16 J8 Philadelphia 15 25 \\'est Div ision San PranciS(.'O 30 13 Dodgers 21 22 Allanta 2l 22 llouston 20 22 Cincinna!l 17 2.l San Diego 13 29 MelHll J'I ll:el11lh l'hlledetphlt t, ClllClfll'lltl 1 ~en Dl"o 11, ''· LOI.Ill ) "'t1•nt1 t, Montrt1I 1 Dtlly ''"'" 1~1H, TN1r's 01mu Pl'I. .615 .595 .585 .438 .471 .375 .698 .438 .438 .476 .405 .310 GB "' I 5 51> '" AJ11n!1 !N!Hro :J.31 II Mo!llrtll !MorlOfl ),S), 111•1>• .s." Fr•nc:l'KO (M1ricPl1• 1·11 It DMltttt tsi .... t r 1 .. 1, nlohl Hous!Ofl ceun,..h1ni 1•JI 11 "" Dlto1t (t(lrD" :t.J\, nl9~1 l>hlltc1e!pnl1 tR•vnolCh °'4) " Ntw Yotll !KOO.· ,.,.., J.'1, nigh! ClndflMTI !Grln!11rt< 0-11 ti Plnlburth CMoOst 1 11 • .,r,111 Ai\fERICAN LEAGUE Boston Baltimore Detroit New York Cleveland Washington Oakland Minnesota Angels Kansas City 111lwaukee Chicago East Division W I. 26 14 23 16 22 19 17 22 17 23 16 26 \\'est Division 30 15 21 21 21 23 19 21 16 21 IS 22 Mtll4tY'1 ll:tl~lll Wtl!\1"910fl I, llG1to<I • Only ''""' ad!Kuled. TH 1•'1 OlmH Pel. ,65() .soo .537 .436 .425 .381 .6117 .500 .477 .475 .432 .4-05 GB 2'1 '"' 81\ 9 II 7" '"' s 1.~ 10 II A•ttls cwri.ht 4·JI •1 01•111w:1 CDott1G" ).0), fllthl Mlr.MMlll (Hfffllfl 1-41 ti Ml!WtUkft (l(rl\/IH' l•Jl, nl•ht Ntw Vortic lltllflltfl , .. , II 0.troll !Colt'mln 1.01 nlthl C!tv1l1nd (FMttr J.'l 11 B1hlM0•1 f~n 1.1) ... 1.111 W1shl"'f>Ofl !O-l1wsl!l H) 11 Boslofl tlonbofo 1·01. nlthl K111111 Cll't {Of-•·II 11 (hi<-fBrHl9\I J.t). nlthl llTH ANNIVERSARY SALEll BIGGEST & BEST YET I DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 Servic• and Parft for All Imported Cari Modern Body Shop for All C1r1 Orange County's Largest and.Most Modern Toyot o and Volvo Dealer OYllSIAS DILIYIRY srrCIALISTS DEAN LEWIS ITIQJYIQIT@ ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS COROLLA 1971 Dt lflD .;;1111:z SPECIAL $1777 VOLVO 1971 DEMO $2999 14? ttd•n, r1clio. h••ltr, 111!01t1•fi• , trent. USID CAii SPICIAL $3195 I t6t Volvo 164 '-'• 11:1<1~, llt•l•r, •ttl•muic..wer t1t1trf111< P~llry tlr ctnfllltfl, l~ll 00) I PUTTING PROBLEMS! TRY AN AIM STROKE Sooner or later every "sollc:r tcn $tJ up on a putt. It's nothing to be ashamed of; it•s j ust lhat everyone has a nervous 1r>y~tem .tnd somcfimes it runs ou1 of 1:011- Jrol . • • ~ " Many golfers ha~e more or ,ICTIT1:u:n=u11N11• 1"·1111 Jl -1llt ,,,,.,,.::,'":u11Hl!SI .. &Ml IT.l.TIMliNT l'ICTITIOUI •UllNl!ll JllCTtTIOUI IUllNllS " Fo11r Monarchs Named LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE T.,. lollowt.,. "'"""" ....... Mlnrt1 NAMli ST.l.Tt:MIENT N,f,MI IT,t,T(MliNT N.1.Me ST•'YIMENT T All A I T ••· Tiie lo!lowl,. "'-'" tol~o Tl'lt JoOllOwlflO WIOll 11 001,.. 1>u11rws1 Tiit hlllowll'l9 .,.,_ •rt wi.,. 0 nO'e Us earn VIKING IMl"OltTS ,t,H!) INTl!ltlOltl, 1Du1IMU '" • ., tMt1i11en ·~: • b . 17')1 llHl:h Boul•w•rG. Hllnlintlon TOM CRISS INSUllANCI! SEll:V1Cll!, VllCING FURNIT\,IR E. 11131 e1•th CLl.N INOUSlRIES. ,,.~ WiotlfOVI&. 1i-1:1te r nei l·ligh's P..fonarchs c11ptured f o u r All-Angelus t..eag\lt! boisebalJ berths anrl an honorable 1nentinn as selc<:ted by lhe loop's co.iches. 'll••ck ,JS w. 1tfh .s1r""r Juttt p, Co.I• Mtw, ~i.tv•tO. Hu111l11ot1on lluOI. Av•., Ntw-1 Be•tft, C1111or1111. J L 11,fl S. 11: LI"' Ctlllor11l1 t'U17 J1~ LI,.,_., 1"21 S.11 ROQUt L•nt, Cietr11t ll.0111l!I Dt•CM, .OS Clubhau1, .I M .. ' -> Hu!.T:!Ofl 1 .:::C11 11 091 " ' Mtek Tllom•• Ctlu , "' Jl'1rlt Dr.. Hu111ono!011 B1Klt. Av•. N•wPOrl Beeth, C1lllor11!1. OF-Ci1ry mP9Qll, ..,.... ir. ... · > -••> '"'' builntll Ii Wln11 tonduc:ted bv •n Wllh...,ln1 Lllll111 Pe1c1111, 4 o I OF-RIV Sll•ttr. Ml!ff Dtl sr •. 367 Tft!1 tkt1lnn1 11 bllnt 'ondllciN "•n Apt, 31, Cosll Meu, C•lllo•n • .. • , •• ,....... (IVl>llOO\e A••·· Nn<l'l>Ol'I B •• ( h. "' l110lvl(l11tl Pait R1m~e<. D>5 CevlO<I -.oec1, "" "' OF-J MIO'l<liOU. 8!SllOIJ Am&f Sr, • · J C ' ... C ''' > -•>> '' Jemlo L&~ C•llforll•I. OF-Miki Oll&ttl, $i, P ..... 1 5r, .:wt Sit....,: lrflll LlnH <» t ,.,...,,, 1 orll 1 " "•• Thls bu1JMU h ~'"' (Ollll\1(1"' bv I~ • •-Tllll ll&t-111 liltll wllh tl'9 Coo;nlY Thl1 bullMH II &>elnt C-..Cled '' t Tlll1 >l&lemtnl llltO with Ill<' Counl~ l&-A VerOllfll, llhoP Am.I Sr. ,_,. Cltrk of O<UKll Counrv ell' ~w 11, Ull NrlnotrSlllP. Cltlk or Or•111• Coonlv on: M•V 11, 1911, lnolvi!lull. Ko tie Mtfllltli p I 0 I fl Pllbll\l\td Oranve COollll OlllV P llol, Cieorot R. Dl lCOll c --I ZI Pullll$>t<! Or&nve Cotll DlllY j OI, M~ T·:..;::rcr111 MIV 2J .no June 1. •• ts. lf71 Ill .. /! Thi• U•rtmtnt lllto wl!h lht (OUlllV Tom otl•ee '(M•I••. Otl), 8 n ,M-Nwv 2S &<Id Jimt I, •• IJ, 1t71 1771·'1 ,,,,,,, ••• O••·-, •• ,, O.l!v Jl'llo!, Clar~ pf O••l>llt COl•lltv Oii M•v 14, Jiil m~•mll\ (Setv It), •to S&nrlOll '" L•"G 'L No~cE ---,,,.,, ••• O••n-Coa1t O.llV PH.,., •11-.1.n"''' LN911• , , ....,, M -• , ,,, , ,, .c.. " •• ...... , 11, 1•, ts •nd Jut1• 1, 1t11 1101.11 LEGAL No~cE ,,_ - ,. ( '· II! ' .... '' 111 ' &II 'l-----""-~==--'-''----1---'-;-.;;:c..-:--;;;;:;:;...,:;;----1 ---:;:;:;;:;:;:~~";;.;..---l~M~·:•_>~>~o~od~Jun• I, I. IS, ltrl 111 .. li C•n1111 lll lUllll• ""1~. McGIYnl\ 181!h011 Amit), P1! Jl-t1t11 p~ll Ccwwirllno, ll llMo llm•I ~·. 1•\ Polll..-IP!~ lO. C:E•TU•teAT• ol' IUllNISJ LEGAL NOT ICE CITY 01" COSTA MES.I. Jo11n E1>9!flct. S!.Anll'!Ol\V St. oi~, 'ICTITI0\.11 NAMI Ol&NGE COUNTY, C.l.LIFOllNIA P-Bl!rnlt Hltnor, BllJleo Ami! J<. 0 ll TM t•nCl1:r1!"'*' Clott ctrtl!, It 11 UH.. I.I.II: J20l HDTICI'. INlllTINO llOS P-Ml~e Shlpp,;e,Bi~neo Am"! Sr, Cl~ GOLF TIPS duc:tlnt 1 bu11nn1 11 131 lnOu1"l•I NOTIC'E TO CREDITORS NOT ICE 1$ HEllE8'1' GIVEN tn1! u1!· T·Jl12' J11 w1 ~, COlll MtN, C1lilorn!1, uncltr 1'-e SUl'EltlOll COUIT 01' THE 9CI 11•-I• Wiii 111 rec"111~ by 11\f Clh SUl'l<RIOR COUllT 01" TK• C-Pll 0'Ntlll, P IO\ X ,,_ }O~ llUlllOlll Urlll llltne o1 GULL HAll &OR STATI! 01' CALll'OltNIA 1"011: ot COii& Mtll ti !ht otl!ct ol ~ CHY ST.I.TE OF CALl,CRHIA l'C• '·-·~~;;~•:,'',·-',',· ~::::w-~, ~~·, ~l Wit!\ LltW•NllMllC•I'• CLOC l(l tll<I tl'ltl u h! flr111 Is <f)l'IWIOMd THE COUNTY 011' OllA NOI C!lrk 11 11\o CllY H1ll, 77 F1!f Orl11e, 7HIE COUNTY 01' Oft.I.NG« " "' Jl••dlct Al Tiit oJ II>• IOllowlne Pl'tlO•" ~ n•m. In !ff. A·'"tll Cos11 Mt11, C•lltornl&. unlil Ille llO\ir ol A-&"41' lnt-JO!lnSclirre. B\11>DP Amal J•. '°" NEWPORTER I NN lull tr>d Pi<lct of rnlcltnct II 11 lollow1: E1l•t1 11 OLIVER MORTON H,t,R. 11 :0D 1.m. flll T11e1111~. June I, ttll, 11 NOTICE Cl' HE,t,RJNO 01" "ITITION IM-J1ml1 Oulr~. Sl. P•ul Jt, •~} Rl1• C1mtr1 Co,, Inc., U7 lnclUllflil ll:ISON, &llO knowri 11 OLIVER M. HAR· Wll(cil llmt lht'I' will be ~ PUll\l(lv l"OR l'RDIATE 01' Wt LL ANO 11'011: 1"1-Pu•,..Ptll<•r, 511"'" .J• llG PAR 3 GOLF COURSE W•~. C01t1 Mtll, C1U1. 11:150N, ~t•ll'd 111<1 rtld el-I" tlll Council C"•mbet1 LETTERS TESTAMENTARY IMl-1!119 !.llNllO, S<llvolr S,. •10 1 Dlltd MIW )0. 1971 NOTICE IS H~REBV GIVEN IO !ht lot" FURNISHING ALL LA 8 0 R , Etlllt ol LOUISE MERILLAT, Dtc111• 1n1-Ernl1 Sencnc1, 81V><NI "'m Sr .. XI? Sl .00 wltll rt.ii ..... 11 cl•yt R!n C1mtr1 Co., lllC.. c1111ltor1 o1 !he •bovl ,..111fd declC'l111t MAT ER I A L 5 , €OU IP MEN T, ..i. LEGAL NOTICE k ss solved the problcn1 or putting nerves by soirig 10 .:tri "arm stroke." In stead of combining wrist and arm action (illus1ra11on II) they cmp10y only arm mO\'C• ment. The arms mo\e rro in 1he shoulders just like a cloc:.k's pen- dulum (illustration 12}. OF -Bob H&llJ)Clrl, M"" Doi S• •• j..0 ;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! Bv O.vld L. o·a.,..n, "''' •U Hr-1'11\/(M cl1!1111 •o•lftll 111• TRANSl"ORTATION .I.NP SUCH OTHEll! NOTICE IS HEREe'I' GIVEN trut l ==~~~~~~ ..... ;PI~ Pre110en1 11lcl Cleeffell! ,,.. required 1'11 Ill• llltm, FACILITIES AS M,t,'I' BE REQUIRED LERO'!' BUO MER!l l.AT 11•• tl!tO hertln ----I STATE OF C"LIFORNIA I Wlll'I tll<t nKtlH•¥ ~chtrl, In mt Olllt t FOR THE INST ... LLATION OF ,t,N, Hll!iO!I lor "'Dblle of wlll 11\d !or COUNlf OF ORANGE I 9'. ol IM cltl'k of ttll 1bov1 tnlllltO tour!, '!J' AUTOMATIC SPRINl(LER SYSTEM FOii: ln uor..:e d Ltllt•I Te1l1menUrv '" 111• On M•w 1(1, 1n1 before -· '"'" \lf'I-le prtllnl "'-"'· wllh "" ""''"" APPll.Ol<IMATEt,.'I' n,ooo s 0 u ARE Ptl<lloner, rtllftMI IO wh!Cll 11 mldt ,.,.. 11.r1l9..W, 1 Nat1rW PubHc In tnd tor W1Ud'ltt1, lo 11\t' llnfltot1l-8 11 tht llW FEET OF LAW!rl A.ND GROUHO COVER lurl .. tr PC1rlotu la1>, incl 11\&t !!It llmt &nd 1tlG Coun1Y •rid Sl1le, penor>fllY •· ofll<H of McO~n. Cir"n tl\CI Swlllll , JSCI AllEAi SOIL PREP ... RA.TION OF LAWN PIK t ol l>tt,,nt 1111 umt 1>11 bHl\ HI Hl•e<I D1vlcl L. O'Bry&l\, kl'GW'lt to in. Elllt Cl\&11<111n Av......,e, Ori~. C&lllor11!1 ,f,NP GROUNO COVER AREAS; fOt JVnP ], 1911, &! t •JQ 1.m,, 111 t~• lo Ill 111• P1t110ent. ol lht <Ol'POtlliOn n.6U, whlOI II I ... ~ice ol PNllMU of tHST.-.LLING CONCRETE W AL I( S , courtroom of DtOlrlmcnl Nfl l o1 still 11111 lktcUllld ~ wlltlln IMlrvmtnt, Ille unde,sl91)ed ln I ll m1tltr1 Ptrlllnl111 BENCHES, REOWOOP H E A 0 £ R court, i i 100 Cllllc Ctlll•r Orl~t Well, on k,_., lo me lo !'--l(ln wtlo "'klll&G lo 11'11 Hll!t of Wkl dee..,....!, wltllln lour BOARO; PL.-.NTING 01' TREES , lht COY 01 Sa"'• Ane, Calltornit. !"-within l""trvmlnf OI'! W..11 "' 1"I men1t11 11!1t Ille lfrll 1'•ibrlc.1tiotl ol !hit S~llUBS, LAWNS ANO OTHE R AP· Oflt<I M•Y 11, 1t/l, \. c....-&llOfl lhlt'tll\ ntmtd, tncl 1d,_I-nolltt PURTENANT WOlll( AT EST ANC1.-. W. E, ST JOHN, """ ,,,, ... f'L_,,,... The aTms seem to be lrss ~u~­ ceptiblc lo nervous tension than arc the smaller n1usclcs of the wrists and hands. By taking 1hc~ smaller mu scles out of Lhc stroke, you may find that you jerk or jab fewer pulls. - .09l'O lo mt 11111 AKl'I COf'PWillon ••· Plied APl'll 2', ltll PARIC CDllnlV Clfrk Kuled In. wlll>I" 1111'""'-I -1 .... n1 Ch1rltt M, Harrison A 1.t of plin1. tPKlllc1t!on1 1 no Olher llt(HAllO V, BAllKSOALI! lo Ill bV·l-1 °'\ fllOiullon of II• E~ttulO<" tonlrKI doc:umtnl1 mev be obtalnlld 11 7111 Mitl!O!il Av•., Sulll J bol•G ol dlrtelat"I. ~ Of!"-Wlll ol lllt olll<t of Ille Cllv Cltr~, 11 Fal< Orlve, Rlvtnlde, C1Hlorl\l1 t1J04 (OFFICIAL JfALI 11'11 iboVf n1mt0 doct!ltnl COSll M!tt, CllllO<'rill. uoon e C!f'""°'lt of Teh (11') .... lJ41 Doris W•lklf MCOWEN, GREIN ANO SYLVIA llJ.CO. .-,. clwlrot of 11.Q) otlll be m1de 11 Allorntr lor l'tlllloMr N011rv JlubUt• llornl1 j)O E11f Clll•mlft Ave~..-~fnllltd bv mtll PLEASE MAIL Pubtiil'tt<I Oran~ Co.n Dt lly Pllo!, Prlnclp1I Ollltt In OrtflM, C1llftrllll tuU SEPARATE CHECKi Mav 11, IP, 25. 191! 11tl·ll 0.-1noe County !'14) tJi-Jlto E•Cll bid sl\11! ~ma.at on !ht oraoos&••I '.'.:C..C:C.::'..::CC:::.C _____ ::::.:_ Mv Commlu lM fu•lrM Alll!'ntrs fl!' lt•teulor form tl'l!I In Ille mtnntr P•oVl!lt<I In "'' FIO. " 1t12 Publlll'ltd OrlnQt COid C•li'f Pllo!, CO!llrKt documtnll, '"" 1111!1 !)<! I(· "ullll111e<1 Dr1rio1 Coll! D111r JIUO!, Mar 4 II, 11, I'S, It'll 104-71 comp1riltd bv , ctrUllMt or cal~ler''"·-----~--,-cc------MIY 25 11\d Junt I, •• IS, ,,,, 1)7•71 <:hKk or. bid l>Dn!I IOf nol ltSI tl>•n loo,;• BAii l1"7 LEGAL NOTICE ol lllt •mount ol !ht bid, made PIV&blt IP SUl'Ell.1011 COURJ' Cl" THI! LEGAL NOTICE lht Cllv 01 CoS11 Mesi. STAT E DI' CALIFORNIA ,.Oil LEGAL NOTICE Jl'-<lln CASE NO, !">tun NOTICE I~ FURTHER GIVEN Iha! Int THE COUNTY OF Cll:ANGI. New MD Q uarterback Could Help Get Title YEARS OF SERVICE CON GRATU LATES. C . CATI. C~ I l!St CIEltTll'ICATE 01" OUCONTIN\,IANCI! City Council of 11111 Cltv h11 hetelo!are Nt • .l.•6t411 ·F·li~1 IOUS P'IRM ~~~.. 01' UU! AN0/011: AaANOONMl.NT 01' lll•bllil'led I PreYll!lrig ••It end 1Clle o! NOTICE 01' HIE ... RlNG 0 1" ,.ETITICN ' ' '> G < ">I FICTITIOUS NAMt' WIHI. In K tot!llllCt with l1w, lo be oalo FOR ,.ROIATE OF WILL .I.NO l'Oll: H£ UNDER I N 0 do Mrebw (!., ¥ 111 tll<t «<11lr11dlon of lllt •'Dove e11llt1f!I LETTl!RS TESTAMENfARY ltitl !hi, ••• conduc•lne • RllO'• P1tttr11 IAR 2211 lmPf'OV....•ri!1. T .. 11 ••Ill •II• .,,., ICl lt! bl/Jinns It 1lllCI H11o•d. City ol THE UN0 £RStGNEO do Mrfb'I' C!rtlfy Wtl -led bw "" City CO!lncil bv E11a1t ol HUBE R G. WILSON, Ptc111· W11!ml11•!e•. Coi..nl'I' of Orenet. ~tare ot fflU, t!!e(tlv• Jenu•f"f' 1, 1911 ""' cetH'CI lttlOlullon No. 10·11• on the 2hl dav OI 111· IS HEREB'I' GIVE N ftlll C1Utornl&, uneltr ti-. llcllllo111 firm Nmt to Go buslnrn uno... Ille lltl!ll0111 flrm Pect mbt'f', lt10, •rid Is ..,. Ille In lllf ol· N~TICE of RIGO'S JIATT ERN, nam• d INTEllHATIONAL Wli0LE5ALE l!ct ol 1!1t CllV Cltrk of 51,0 City. Thal L""1s~ II. Woll0'1 net Ille<! l'll!rtln ' Pl\h• And 111&1 st ld Urm ti <om-of l~I COMPAH'I' &I USG Newl'Cl'ft 8oultWlrG, Mid ••It tnd ~tit 11 lltrfln reftrr!d lo !Iott !or PrOllltt ol Will Ind IOt luutnct lo•~nti Pfl'IOlll, wt>oH ""'"'" etld eel-Cosll Mew. C1lllornlt, WlllC1'I bu1l111n •rid tllflpr.d 111 lhll l'Ollct 11 trlouoll lull• ol Lellf't1 Ttsltmflltt lY lo Pfl!Uoners, dte1111 ere •1 IOllowi,. to-wll : w11 formerly comPOHd of flte followlnt ,.,., comoltltl' •tt lo•lll htre,n, •nd 111,1 'ele.-tnct lo ,..,.,.,. h maot l1>r l'ufl"ef' Oict • Ankltllfl Gome1, lt96 T..,, Avi ., Pff\Oft" wriow names lft lull t nCI 111l&Ct1 ••Id K&lt, ts MIOoltO i,.,. 11111 •t'OIUllO", fltrtlcu~itl, •no rn1t !ht tlmt i nd lllKr F D11nt1ln V•llll' '210I. G11lflt rml111 Nor& OI 'tsl!ltMe ire 11 IOllOwi,. lo-wff: II m-1 Nrl or lhll nollct bv rtletence Ol 1\earinti lht semt h~• t>ffn It! !or J11n1 By ROGER CARLSO N OI' 1t1e D1Hr '1!01 Sl•ff Coach Bob Woods of ~later Dei High School has never been one to go out on a limb during spring practice con· ccming his team's future grid fortunes. But there is an air of coo- fidence and self assurnnc:r nbovt lhe Mon arch 5 ' 1askmaster lately that makes one think that perhaps the coming fall will product' the first Angelus League cham· Top U.S. Stars Tr ip Ne t Ri vals PARIS (API -America's three lop hopes Arthur Ashe, Stan Smith and Cliff Richey -slammed Uirou gh fi rst round matches Monday in the French Open T e n n i s Championships. Five U.S. men 11nd two women won opening tests. Ashe, lhr No. 2 seed, ad· justed \\'ell to the clay courts of Roland Garros Stadium in luming back Geza \1arga of Hungary 6-2, t).I , >7. 6-1. After sweeping the first two sets easily. Ashe relaxed momentarily and dropped the third set. Yet.. in the fourU1 he reeled off five straight games before Varga managed to y,•in his service. Then Ashe ran ou1 the match, Richey, seeded No ~ . overpoy,·ered Massimo D c Domenico of ttaly 1)..2, 1)..4. 6-2. Smith, the towering U.S. Davi5 Cup player, smashed Ni ck Kalogoropoulos of Greece 6-3. 6-2 • ..,;, Bobby Lutz of Los Angeles. M!eded No. 9. defeated .111·i l{rebec of Ciechoslo11akia 6·2, 6-4 . 1)..1. To1n GoTm11n of Seall le rallied after droppin~ lhe fir!lt tv.·o sel.5 for a 21h-h0Ur victory over Andre"' Pattison of Rhodesia 2..fi. i.fi. 6-3. 6·3. &-t Marty Riessen of £vansto n, 111., seeded No. 7, does 1101 play until Tuesday. .Jan Kodcs. ol Czecl10$1o- vakia, the defending ch:1n1· p)on, is seeded No. I. The top pros connected Y.1!h Lamar Hunt·s \Vorld <..1ia1n· ptonship Tennis troupe -Hod Laver , Ken Rosewall. John Ne .... ·combe and Tuny Roche - .ere not competing. An American ha~ not \10n here since Tony Trabert u1 1955. . I VaJerit: Ziegenru.~~ n! Sa n Diego. and Becky \l(·st nf Jackson. flfiss.. "'t rC' the Americans who odvanutd 111 the women·, division. Kristy Piiteon of Danville, C;tlif.. y,•as beaten. ~fis11 7.iegenfuS!I 11T)n ov rr Katalin Borka of Hungary li·2. fi·2 while i\llss Vest. Y.'<t~!rd four mntch poinl~ before finally disposing of Kerry liar· rls of Australia. pionsh.Jp sinl'c 196G And one of the key reasons for the opt1n1ism U1at prevails around the Monorch carnpus is quarterback Billy Clough (like I in rough). Clough must nu lilt' vacancy 1 1·reated b y Bob Haupert. \1·ho will be graduated I.his spring after leading the ~1onarchs ror three year:-:. Bul desp11e H au p e r 1 's 1lorninantc <1~ a lc~un leader, Clough 1s nol Villhnul CX· perienct'. 'fhe 5-10, 16(1.poundcr guided the sophon1ore tea1n lo I hr Angelus League ch<i mpionship al'!d lasl y ear he tossed three touchdo"·n st rikes and a two· pointer for the varsil~. He ron1ple1t'd 47 9 ptrl·ent t)l I his pas..o;;es 123 of 491 in four Angelus League games. I llis ruadi rates hln1 on a p:1r in lhe speed department v.•hell L'Olllp<1r1ng him with I laupert. And he ~ l'Ons1dercd a better pure passer . l'.'ilh cx·1 cellcnt ve l01.:i1y. ''Billy can t.'Onlrol the h:tll v.·ell on dC'ep patlerns <ind hc·s1 1 fundan11•nlally snund.'1 s n ys \Voods. I 'fhc Costa i icsa resident rracturcd a srnnll bone in his right hand during thr baseball I .season , but rt didn '1 deter hinl rro1n kt>eptng sharp by lhro1v- i11g lhe football during the spring. He\ nol !he :-;amc t,1·pe or passer as llaupcrl "'1lh the sprint out slytr or play. preferring lu dro11 back and st•l up \Vood~ bases a lot of Clough·~ polt·ntt;il on another phaSC' of the Big Red ~lac:hine. And that's \n the defensive dep:i rtment. "tf we ha\'e !hr defense I think v.·c're going 10 have !hen 11•c'll be able to usc> our pas.-.ing gnn1e a gre<it dl•.'.11.'" S<l,VS \\'ood!' He rates thr co11fidt'1u.:c lh<t l MICHEUN Michelin makes one grade of tire. The best. PRICES START AT $36.00 fl 7S I l •) p!111S1.91 r ( 1 1i • (11, <red1! \trllll IVl!li blt , •Mlch11l11'1 Wlrrlnly IO• x ••d!•I Hl9flw1y Tuh!ftl Whollwall fl•• •ho"'n ,._ co~•rs 49,11» m!le ,,..,d l•ll. Ptfech In .,..rt,m1nSh•• •nd mlltrltl' incl ~0,.....1 Nid fta1 .,d1 lt•clw<il"9 ,..Pll••bl• """"'u•n w"'" tlrt 11 io1ed on 60mestl< ,...,.,.a•r Ytf'llcln on ""'""'I 11rVlct lft (On· hn&nlll U11 lttd Sltltl, tr rt4..,.1 •I Mlc ... 1111'1 tpllonl It "wit la '"9· ln•I rtlall Pllt'C~IH fl"l<t mwllltl•l'<t br perter>lftl tf Wltrl "IOfd llli ... •ge nal <1111 on tilt, I This steel belted Rad ial Tire ca rri~ !he Michelin Warn1nty• tor 40.000 miles ot tread we a r. (Many owners get m uch more) Puncture resistan t M1chel1ns stop faste r, cornl!r better. give more traction on wet surfaces. Yet !hey cosr lei.s per m ile of drivrng lhan any lire you can buy Now !here are M1chehns for 111 domestic car s . Wh) nor stop 1n and select "the best" today for yours. l'\o. I asset. "And he proved - Gome., '"' Tt•n Avt .. FOllntt ll\ Vtllt~ E. B. Gr1n1, llU No, LllUI" lllt tl, Tl\t ConlrlClot Shill In 1 h · J, !f71, ii 9!JG i .m .• '" '."I! courtroom Pl t 1711a J.ont1 A"'" C•I. nm " lorrr .. nc:e 01 111 _:.. '"" 1 1 De1>1rll!lfftl No. l flf """' court, .01 100 WtTNI!!' m' ll•nd ffll1 )0th d•r OI M. D. Gr1111, l4Sf M&ptetrcwt' ROtcl, Pt~e<nerts conl t 1 tt>e l bor c:;· Civic Center Otlvt Wttl, I" lht Cll'f "' Ml 1'71 °'"""· Ctl. '2111'7 ' orm '! • e Senta An1, C11lllornl1. '• Ctrtltlctt• !or lrAMKtlflll of b1n lneu of lh• Stitt ot C1llforno1 •1111 other. l•ws Oa!f!I Mav 11. 1911 Oscef' ..... IOl'tlo °""""1 111\df lhe 1bov1 f'tl'llolll mt Ind I of IM Sll!e ot C1hlotnl• IPOhtablf W E ST JOHN Gulllffmlfll Nor1 Gcwnez llG&v~I of Publlc.•tlon' lher.:t: ,;t .,.. 1T1; lh ... tte. Wlln Ille t •CtPllon Gfl!V ol WCh Cciuflr\. Cit•~ ' STATE OF CALIFORNIA In "If orlice of lht CfllJlllV Cttrll' el v1rl&tlcw" 11 mi~ l>e 1et1ulrt<I under l~e COOKSEY, SCHUM.I.CHiii, COLl!MAN, COUNTY OF ORANGE OtlnM C\l\llllV, under 1,.. ptovlslol!i of SPKlll •lt!Ultl out ... 1111 lo .... lcJI PIO. MINYARO & HOWARO O~ lh/1 :IO!ft II•• of M•'I' A.O .. ltl1, St<:llon lu.6 of lht ClvH Codt cMlllne1 l\erevnC111 •rt Taken Incl W!licl> II¥ JlmH Schum•chtr ::::;: ;::',~•: ~;lclM~:i!.~~ 1',,aN;::,~~ WITNESS our l'ltncll !hit .2'111 day of ~T:i~.....:, ::nt...":'~ ~~e!.~~ lU Town & Covnlt'f R ... re1l!ll11t m.rtln dui'f eommhtlotM'!I lnCI ~rll, ltll. E 11 Cir nt l•bor lhtll !)<! ti~'" Olli¥ 111 1111 manner Or1n•t, C1HI. tt4tl sworn P8<10!!1ltv """''t<I Olea• II ' · 1 ' Pravl!;!...i D1 tiw Pll°"': 1111) '''·'111 Gome~ •ncl Ciullltf111ln1 N. Gomn. 1>111-Pltllltr No blo snill i,. coni lGtrt!I Ufllf.ls n i. Allor"!¥• !or: l'tl!U•ntl' D&ncl I ncl wilt, k,_n lo mt to IHI lllf M. P . G••nl, maot on • blank •orm tu•nlihl!d t>v lllt PvDh>l'led O••noo. ((Hit! 0 1111'1' ~''"'· ........... wholt ntmtt ,,, IU bttrlbtd lo P••lftff (/Ty OI COllll Mtla • .,., h m1df '" I C· MllV 19, 2n. 25. 1911 11114.11 Int wl!l'lln lnllr11mtn1, 1nO ..c:k,_ltc!Md IATTl ... 'I', I NYPElt a LllllNGSTON tot0ana wlll\ the pro1tl•lot1t ot !ht pt() lo me "'•I lhev •11ecut!d tht •~m•. IN AllwMVI ., LIW POStl •e<111l•em .... ~ WITNESS WHEREOF, I l>&ll t lltreunto 10$l N0tl1I Mll11 St,, SVll& f01 Et{~ tllcldl'r mu;t bf hcensed •nG •l!i!l "'I mw hlnCI •nil •111•.cl my ottlt lt! IN! S1nf1 All•, C11llltrl\l1 '2711 P•t<1utllllt<l t1I rf<lu lrNI l>v 11w. 1---------~------ !ne a1v 1n11 '"' In lnl1 ctrfl1lct1e flttt Tt l: U 7·UC• TM Ci1v tQlln{ll of lhf Cilv o1 CollA 11,t,lt nu •l>Ovt w ritten. Publll/lf!I Ora"Ut Co11i 01!11t "llot, Mtla reserYtl Int roghl te <t lecJ •nv Pt SU Jl'£1l10R COURT 01' Tiii: (OFFICIAL SEAL) M&V 4, 11, U, 1S. !tll 111#-11 11! bids. STATE OF C&Lll'O•NI& l'Oll FR ... NIC G, M,t,RZOL INO 0.t.O M1v 1.1, lt11 THE COUNTY o~ OR,t,HGI. NO!lr'I' Pul>llc · C1llfor1111 LEGAL NOTICE BY ORDER OF lHE No ........ u Dr&Mt Coun!Y CITY COUNCIL OF TH E NOTICE OF s.-.LE 0,. ltlAL ... o. M, Commln~ 1!1tplr11 ""1127 CIT'I' OF COSTA MESA, P£RTY AT Jl'RIVATE SALE JUlll :19, 1n1 Cl!RTIFIC.1.TE CF CORPOll:ATtON ,.CA CALJFORNI.-, I~ l"e M~t·er ol !tit E•lllt <JI M"RV PullllV...i Or&llQO-Cotl! Dlli'I' 11'11111, TIAN1ACTtON Cl' IUSINE$S UNOIR EILEEN P. PHINNEY LOU ISE BAl!l<ER, al"' k,_., 11 MtY 2S tr>d Jurw I, a, lS, lttl 1:11·11 f'ICTITIOUI NAME Cltv Clert. o1 lllf' LOUISE llAl!l(EI!. Dt<•a~ LEGAL N"""CE 'THE UNOERSIGNEO CORPOl!ATION Cltv ot Cosll Mtl&, NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN lh&I (Ill or V 11 dott l>t •l'tlv ctrfl!y I"•' It 11 c-11clln1 1 C1Hfor"l• ~lier June 19, 1t11 '"" un<1era!1nftl. ----~,~.~.~.~.~.-.~,c.c.N~.----·lbu1lntH loc:&!!d 11 2991 Greet Line, Put>llll'fll °'""llt COii! 0111¥ Polo!, WILLIAM EUGEN E B,t,l!KEll, &I E•· IAR 2711 Cos!& "'"'' C1Ulor~I• 11l\Cltr lht flt11liou1 Miv 1.'., l1, lt1t 11Ull ecu!Of of lhe WI!! ot M"RY LOUI SE' FICTITIOUS •UllNl:SS llrm n~mt or ABC HEATING AND AIR ---------8.-.R!<ER, 11\0 k,_n •1 LOUI S!'! NAMIE 'TATl:MINT CO NDITIONING •1111 lllat said llrm Ii LEGAL NOTICE BARKE'!, decc~st(I, will 1111 11 PrlYilt Th• totlowl,.. ptr1ot11 •t• etoiftt (Ol!IOOJ.td of ll'lf, 10llow111" carpgr111on.1 ________ -------w!e to lht hi"11t1I '"" be1I nel bleld••• t>uslr..n 11 otho1e ..,1nc1ot! olt <t ol butll>!'U ii •• 1ubled to <Oflt l•m•Hon br tht lbolle '"" lHE OAICllUllN COMP .. NY, :MI01 fDllowl: If l'·llnt lillttt .<.u,,..,lot Courl. 111 !he rill!ll. !!ti•, e&v1Gert lt,,&t l , Corone dtl M1r, Ru5P ll W. 81nMrl, IM .• '9tl G•ICt CE IFIC&TE OF IUSINl.SS, iMtrtst t r>d ~!tit 01 ~ GKeil&nl ti lhl c1morni1 t'HU lene, (11$11 MIS•, C1lllorni1 '"'' FICTITIOUS NAME 1.m. ~' toe• !leatl\, """ 111·1n .. •lohl, 1!11t Br-•ltr L A•m,, clo 51tn•I 0 ,1 WITNESS Ila l'l•nd 1t1i1 11111 <11v el Th• u"""'rs<oned oou Ct rlltv h• 11 ton-.ond lnte•esl ""' ••llle n~•, I>• l!Pfri!io" Comp1ny, 1010 Wll ... lrt 81,..,,, Lot April 1911 dUC.1'"9 • bul•MH II 1601 Willo Ln, pl ••w "' ot~ ..... ~. •<lllliritd "'~·· !ht,, An~elts tDOH RUSSELL W BANGERT. IN C. CoUI "j1tll, C&llklrno1, 11r>llH tl>t l.C· 0, I" l<ld<liori !O 11111 of tnt dtcf!ltn! 11 Llovd L. Aubfrl, 1ll01 ll'l'ldtr• Ter· 81t l •I l!USSIELL W. BANGERT !<IOU• Ne;'"' E""""' ol SHEUR SHOl lllt time DI' h•' °"'Ith In fncl to 1111t Cf•· 'f ee, Coron& Gtl Mir, C1Htorlll& '26'5 Pretiae"I NAIL.I > '1 OUIPME"1 R NTllL •nd l•in •NI ""'"'"'' ICK~lfd !II lllt Counl\I nl I' STATE OF CllLIFOltNIA, lllll 11 d I <m 1' <om<>0..., of the l'OI· Or11n11f, Si,r, of Calllornl1, llH<.rlbtd •• Llo¥d l . A~berl, J r., UD1 !•n '" lowlno l>ff1fln. W'hc11 Mme Jn lull tll<I •-•1ow5· Or, Nf'Woorl ee&efl, Ctl!lor"I' t1"0 COUNTY OF OIU.NGE, n , PIKf ol •t1ldtr1<t ;1 Is 1<>11"""'' "" T•-"'''" _,,., •-I -'• >'-•oo >· Edw••d J, C•>t. ll'lJ Lhicoln St•ef'f, &tf°;,• "'~t 1r;c~~'EL~N:11~1.1· 0~ZSo~1~ J1mtt Hnw1<d G•t11orv, 1t01 w111o 81~·; "E" 0t ;.,1,;"'Nc"' 71';., cn:nciee~ A111""1"'• Ci lltornl• Notarv Put> lie In 11'1d tor 11111 C1111nh &no Ln ' Cost A Mt ti . Ct. Mtnor, 11 ll>O'wn on • Map r~d!d r~ El!l&belh W. Colle,, '9!111 "•clllc Sl•lt, re1idln11 ll\frel11, oulv comm!u lonN Dt•ei! Mt' )1, 1911 BOO!< 11, pa~u J d~d l <11 Mitttlle11eou• Avt nut , San Franc:lu:o, C1ll!or11l1 IS in(I •worn. IN•IOn•llv IOOtlrl<I ltUSSELL Jpme1 H""*"ll'd GrtOPf"f' M O -O C Mt•' W, Gt!lk!, CIP Elh&IN'4~ W. S!alt of Cillrorn<a, O•tn1te COllntv: &PS, tfCOf ~ "' •dnoe Oll!!IY. Con•Y• 7900 P•clllt Avtnue, S1n fflfl. W, BANGEl!T known to mt lo be Ille C•litn•nia cllce. Cilllornll IJ Prt Sldenl ol the co•l>Ol'llio11 !1>11 •••cw"d On M•v 2L 19111 bflort mt • Nol••v SUBJECT 10 cov•n~nts, <OfO!llliOlll. M,.. P•ullnt No•d~!•om, e io F r!dltf!C !ht wll~ln in11t11mtnl on beholl of I"• Public In •nd fOf ••Ill Sletr, Per'>Ontllv rtier•a!IM\. •ft trlctloni. rlvM• •nd M. McN•l<y, s11111 l10, 40. Wfl,hire totPOttllon l~t•eln nt med, 1 n d •1>1>1•1"" J•m•• HllW•t!I Cir•IHl•V known ,111~15 Ol wait o! •eCord. floult111r!I S1n11 Monlc.e e1lllornl1 1cknowlt<f11i.!I lfl mt '"at 111cJ1 to.,•or1tlCW1 to mt 10 be •~~ Pf'IO" WhO•r name 11 Bin or one" ••e Jnvll"1 !or 1~ "'°" '°t!1 mw• ·A. P1ttt•"'"· A~~n•H01l!l1v ~;:u~e;',,':~,:n:r· ~~ ~~~:n.~;t•;~~!~J ;~~*c1:l~E~::•1•~~t:;;'.i 1'~~·~.~·t~1 •ncJ :=r1':,.'.~" ,:;'~~~ b[l;{.;;~~'1:,i' ~:~n;'~~1~: Hfllel-Ap&rlillo P(lllll)I No, l 2 I , mv ,11ll!Cal ~eal tne OIV •NI Ytl r In lnl1 MAI! y SETH MORTON o! hil ettornfy, CLAUDE E. YOUNG. 115 (Ulfl\I VICt -MorelOl-Mt lltO Cf •lollctlt rlrll l boYI Wflll~n. No!nrv Public. CllltO<ni& YltH lnl'!I S!tttl, S"nt1 llnll, C1lltor11\&, Jcl!n Cllttord Tlnsm111, Cu,10cll1n fOr !OFFICIAL SEAL) p,inclo•I Ol!lce 1" o• m•y Do hl('ll In tnt pltlc• ol 11\t (1,•k L•Yert K•v 71n1m&n, .as T1ttor Drive. Isl J1CQuel111f J. Dln1'0!! O••nvt Coun•Y of lhe Super111t Co~•l 11 enr lime ''"~ Slll!t cr111, Ctlllotn1• t $060 N01•7 Pvbllc·C1lltor1111 ,,.,.,. C""'mtH:Oll E~P!•t• t~t Jin ! oubl!{l llon at th\1 NcUce t nd l(lm Ll1lll lln.,,.1n, 4tl l 1bor Orlv1, PTlnc:•Pll Olllct In April t , ltll before f~f mo~;119 <If int •tie. Sft nt1 Crv1 C1Uf0<"l1 1506G Ori noe Counlv Pubhi""" Ortollt COAi! D•>I~ Pi!ol. T~•mt tnd c-l!lon1 OI 111•; C11J1, Soulh .:..i Co., P. O. l o• 60'11. Mv Commlu ion Exol•e• """'' 15 •nd Jul>! 1, I. 15, 1911 1111.11 l•W1ul momov <11 tne Uniteil Sll!tt of Tt!'mln1I Annex LOI Ang1let C1lll0<nle Ma"<h t, 1'73 .-.merlc&, Trn <>!'rctnl (10•o l of !ht fl)(:.~ ' ' VlllTUE AND SCHECK amoon! Ollt•«I mu•! KccimPf flV !ht wrl!· Miu FIOrtnu Wtll. 1'1 R"11 ltOld, 1611 Wnldllf Dr., N.•·'" LEGAL NOTICE 1.., 11,a 0, 011.,. •nil ine bal•nc:e mull bO> lltn:tltw. C111!ornl1 t l70I N-port lletcll. Cililtrllll UHt paid uocn conll•mftt!<I" Pl s•I• bv •••II M1rlln J. Wtll E1telt, Tl>t 11"1<1 of Alllrllll'1 NOTICE 01' INTE NTION TO ENG,t,GE Su<>!'t•or CDVrt. Stod Slit Woll M mtOt C1!llarnl1, TrvtlH under lhl will of Pub!l ... Ofd Orl"ltf COis! 01!1'1' l'Hot. IN THE S,t,LE OF ALCOHOLIC IX>Ol'I !ht u•u~! escrow ll'f'ml Merlin J. Wtll, c/o Lucv CIK>llc-. M•v '-11. 11, 21, 1n1 1044·1! IE\/ERAGEI 8111• mu~! o. ~·lleil •nd will o. 111>1',..d •Hl1l&..t Tru1I Otllctr, ... 0. 80• l4'0I M1v 11. 1911 1t Tiit-otlice <11 CLAUD E E YOUNG, 315 "Tttm!111I Anrw•, Lo. A~1elea. Ct!llor1111 LEGAL NOTICE TO WHOM IT M•Y CONCERN: WHt lhlrd Slretl, Stnla "'""' C1lllornl.o, ~:gln!t C. W!11l!rh1lltr. 760 5.1--------,-.-,-.,-,------•l~:.ibl:i!!. ::.ii:!"~,n~•.,:~vtn:.,,!~'~hs:'t ~:~ =~==ed:t';" ot 10 o'Clol;~ A.M. of l~t S1n R1l•el, P11adl'ne, C:.1Uforn\1 t l!OI Cl!RTIFICATIE 01' •UllNESI u"G~•S•Ontfl P•ODO'lfl !o 1ell 1lcoholi( Tiit o•111>t•tv ntr0:., described 11 '°"'" Thll PN1iMI• 11 lll!nt col\Cluc:lld br • FICTITIOUI ..... Ml. bt've•IOf l •I Int Prtmi1e1, ll•SC"Ded ~· ....... 1y '"fHt<I lo •• oe11tr•I c1rlnt•JhlP. The wn0,,,,1,11n1 Clo cerlity IMY •re loll"""~ :'OS2 !oo11tn D<1n11t A•""""· S1~11 ,.,,.., THE OAICllUll:N COMPANY; cOnCluctillg 1 bllllneu &I 16071 Sptl..,Gile 19121 (ry1t1t Sir~, li11nliM!O!I Beath Cotilor";1 92107 ev: Llo~d L. Aube<'! S!rttl. Huntlne!on ee&ch, C1lllornit. Pu•tU'lnl to 1uch inltn!lnn, tne l/n· T"" un<10t1lqnod •t•e•ve1 !he rlthl to SILtoyd L. Aubert 11nder lh! ll(l!llQU1 llrm Nmt ol SPRING· cl••lllln,d 11 IPDIVlnt to lhp OeP•rlm•n• rei ... ! ~flv """all b1G• Thll S!•ltmtfll l ilt<! wllti 1111 Cou11lr OALE .-.PAllTMENTS i nd l~el ••id or Altcl!<>hc 8tvtr~Qt Cont,01 !Qr i .. uanct OATEO l.\~y 19, 1911 Clerk or O••"'ii Countv Oii M•v '' 1'71 llrm 11 comPOstO ot The klllowino ""'"°"'· b~ lr•n1 ler <>I an al{.,,,ol!t °""''""'" \Villlam Euoen .. Bark•r BY lltvtrlr J. M1C10o., Ptt>utv C1!1,1111Y who~ names in l'ull ar>d ol1ct1 cl lit.,.lt tor lictnH1) lor t~'' P'fmi•e1 •• E•etutor o1 tne Wiii Of Cler-re1!Genc• i re •1 tol!ows: IOlklws. tn• •Mv• namitd dl'cNl•~I. l'ublhftf'd 0rfnll't Co11I Ptltv Piiot, Htnry B_ & S11.oh C. Ht115IO!"f', 16012 ON SALE DEER CLA\,IDE E. YOUNG MfV 11, II, 25 •nd J~M I. Jt11 1111·11 5prin11d•lt St., Hu"""''°" lle1ch, C&llf. Any°"' Getlr!n1 lfl Prete•! tn• luuar..:' .o.nomn for Eiroculor Allen 8, • Eva11Ut l!fll C. Ctf'WI, 1101 ol such Ucen1e(1I "'•V lilt a vtrlfi"' Prll· JIJ W••I T~lr!I Sttett Pe,.~l~O Orlve, Plav• deJ Rev, te1t ti 1nv <1Hict of !ht Oep••lmonl O! S•nt1 •111, Coli!or"I• LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Ca!llor11!1 AltohollC lleVffl Qf Conlf<ll. 0, bv mail lo PHONE: (71•) i-11 ... lJI Henry B. H•ntle\/ in , P"Ol •tmenl of Alcono11c Bev•••9• Publi111t<1 Ortnoe '""'' 01lly ~Bot, D• Sa•4'1 C, H1n,1ty Control, !?IS D St,te!, ~.,,~mento, M•~ 1i. 16 •nd Jvn• 1. 1971 1166-11 C'luugh's tt•uinm:ite!> have i I~· 1 or monstrakd in him "' his MICHELIN p _·.,:· last year that he cnn throw lhe ball." saV.s \Voods. NOTICE TO CO"'T••CTOlll CA••trlln111t11t !Ir 11111 Clough·!> specinl iutnr is "FOR SAFETY'$ SAKE " SEALED PROPos•Ls w111 be r1c!1~111 <l""lslant coacl1 T o1n C;irrnll. 11 mt A<1m1"111•111ve Ofllcts o1 th, Fou11 U i11 Valle-Sc.llOOI OIS!tlcl, Number One formrrlv of SL J\o lhi.n11 , 011r Llehlllou11 L•ne. Foun111n v 111 t Y, "I LlrrUll·s t"'ITim"lll!> 'nn U11•I c1111,,,1111 up to '~OD P.M., TU£SDA'I'. v v ""' JUNE lS, 1911 t\1on:ir<:h ll•;1dl'r 1s 1h<1t he "1~1 s.kl o;111 •~ ... ,.n .. on 11id "'" t. bf I bl k. ) ·• publlc!v Ollf:ntel l nll '"'d lot "" :1 l't•ry t'OllC 1:1 (' J(. REMOVAL or A PARTITION Al Thr Mon;1rchs V.'t'ap up , 209 .c s C.& THE L"MB ,t,NO TAMURA SCHOOLS, SANTAANA Bu:on I.••·······•••••·•••• -7·5615 Fount11n V•ll1y, Drll\OI Counl¥ i;pring drll l!<i .lunt 12 \il!h a , COSTA MESA 1739Svperior{l7th&N-) •• ~ 642·3314 C•11'°'"1' Ji(!d.\\'h1le IOUl'h game al S:i n·/l-------~==°"°"==~=~-,,=·=-~==·----,,-----fl Or1w1n11• •nil 5pecinc11ions '°' ••· amlnallon •re on tile &I lht t>l•"lcl la An:i Rov.·1. -----------------A<1m1n111r111v~ Plll~t1. Foun11111 V1lk!Y ----------------------------------------------·l k!!DOI District. Numbtf' 0... L!Gri"'°"'t Lint'. FOl/'nt&ln V•lln, C1lilot"lll1 incl !ht otllcei ,, Ille Ardll~ CARMICHAEL· 1.ong-...s.in-.-.s• 1nc1uc11ncta. New direct -co 5-'amento starting June ~ s111nc111c11nc cu, H oacin<J nonh? Tt'Jen head tor PSA and Long Beach A1rpo1t. It's not all that Jar. !l's easy to get ... • in10 and out ot. Plenty of oarklng. And lhe crowds haven't found it ycl. Your travel agent knows the way. ,_.M. ICEMP, AR CHITECTS, ?tlO LOI F•ll1 Pl•ct. Loi ..,,...Its, C1lllor,.11 OOD.1'. Conl••t •ot1 WIKI ire lle1lrD111 fl/ 1K11r· 1.... •le11\, 1pttlli(•llon1 Ind Pn>P:IN1 1orm1 lor the au•PO"' of P•t111rlne '"" 1ubmllti~o • OfOP<Kll for lhl1 -• m&V do .., lllblK ! 11 CPrt11n condl!lont. ,,..,"' ln&fttr it&ltd, lrom Ille 0Ulc11 OJ !flt Afthl!ecl OlllW. ,t, llffl!Hll ot ''·" Otl' t.t wlU bl ,. 1111lred lo 1u1t1n1.,. mo ,.!u•n, lfl 'lood c11n<1111on of Pl1111 •nil 1oecrnc.ilon1 wlll>l11 FIVE {I) ll•YI 1Jltr ll'lf' bid llPI"' In• 11•11. JI'• EOU ... LI PICATIONI: No b!(I wl!I be •<CfC>ltO r.om • c°"" Ir 1<:10< """'° "'' not bttll 11c~ m ae· cordont • wlth tllft l>l'011ltlon1 OI lhl Con· ''•~tor'• Llcenst "cl or 10 wtw;>m • P-.1 Form n~• no! O..n 111u..i sPKl· l\C&ll'I" '°'° '""' tlll•POSt OI Mll:lmlltlflO • bla tor lllls 0<olecl. No bld will M t11n1lo:lt!'· tO -..nlttt 11 I• mede on 1 "•000111 l'Ol'm lurnhnH 11'1 1n1 A-chl!tct •1111 •C· co..,.,,t nll(l bv t Bld11t,r '• (Uhl,.•s tl>K~. Of' c..-1111N;t (l'tfe~ mtelf NVobl• IO '"" SCl>ool Plllroct, I" !M JllM or I! lf•1I '"· "' "'' ltnOl/111 of ""' fl•it 81~. 0 1'1tl<I tMR"'tt l!>f •loM 10 fflfC.1 In' ..-111 blth or lo W&I"" •nv lrrt1ult•ltl11 Ot 1nlorm11ltl11 In "" biGt ... 1,, ll>t bl• Glne. Ol1tr!ct hott O•l•rm1ne0 "'' -•I GffYl !llllt fill ol lltt d] .... WI Ofl, Ill lllt' IOC•tl1¥ ......... "'''"IO'~ II lo flt H•lorm· I'll. lor ••(ii c••ll or IYH d -•m i n nffolt<I lo t~tcult Ill• Ci;wt!•1C1. C!»itl Ol Ill~ AK""ttlo\l'd Wtff fllf1 I••°" fllf I" lht Pl1lrlci'1 oflltt !. fllll trt lv&ol&t>lo It '"' 1n11r•tlfoll P•"' on •toUtll. Tl!• •uc:· Cei1Pvt bld!lltf will boo r1<1ul .... 11 -I 1 COP, ll'lt<tol t i •tell loll Sil•. ti Ml&U "' mlndt!OfV II-11\t C°"' lntclot lo -lllt C'1'11••CI It IWI,_, 111(1 u.,,,, 1nv 111bconh&t t .. Ut'ldt• lllm, lo P~W "Iii !ftl the~ lllt 1•1d ll't(!lll'Cj <ti"' fD •II -\1\'ll " eMP!o>'td II'/ lfttlll lft ll'lf' ••l'tlltlon o4 lilt' Conl•1c1. Nr the •• owl•tl!ltl\11 d I.Ibo!' (OClf Stell-111'11 '"" 1nJ. No t>lllcltr 1111¥ -.11~ar1w 111• "d W • lltflO(I d SIXTY Itel dflvt •llH ~ G•lt HI for Int Olltfll"t of b•dt, 8Y OIOElt 0' THE 8 0ARO PF TRUST Eli• FOUNTAIN VALLEY lCHOOL !)1~tltlCl MR, WILLl,t,M I[, Cll:AN(. Cllrt OI ll\1 o,,...,~1ft1 Bo•N ~\lb!!""'° 0r.,... ((Wiii Dlill~ Jl'li.t. -----------------------------------~>----------11.1.o~ }' '"" Jllf\t I, "11 U11•1l ,11.tlv·in·facl C11Uorn1• ~sau, 10 •• Ip ~ ff'tt/vf'<l Sa• el> C Htntlw wlthlll lO Oav• ol !I'll! aett !~t prOf)(ISN! E11~ng .. 11M C. Crtw1 P•eml1e1 wtrr 11,.1 POStNI, 't~t :no LEGAL ri.:OTICE llll1n 8. Cttwl 11rwnd1 10< dtnlt l II P•Ollid!d I» law. 11~1------------~OFFICIAL SEAL! P•...,....11•• .,. now lic•n1f'd lot Int 101~ ~I I AI! ll'1 Btnl1ml11 Dt1nt ~lcol\ollt bevl,~OfS. l M• IOfm Ill vt tl!I(" SUl'ER IOll COURT OF TH• N"'ttV Public · C1lllor"l1 t1nn mov lie 00!1!110!! l•om 1n~ 01!1ta 111 SfAlE OF CAL!~OllNl,f, f'Ollt L"' ll111tlH County lllt 0.o•rlmfnl lHE COUNTf 01' ORANGE Mv Comml11lon E1rpir11 EASl MAN, Gl!rdtln L. No, A """l Aug, J. 1974 EllSTM.-,,., M1ry E NOTICIE 01' S,f,LE 01' tlEAI. l'•O- STATE OF CALIFORNIA. Publil/le<I Ore'""' (°"<! P~Ov Polo!, PEllTY Af l'RIVATE S.-.LE OR ANGE COUNTY: Mlt 2i. 1911 17n11 ll'IC Elld!f o! l("lHR'l'N "NN JOtlNS. On Aptll 27, 1911, btlorf mf, I NO!lfV •l•o lo.nown •I l<AIHR;YN A. JOHNS, 11'4 Jlullll< I" eno IOt 1110 Slalt, """"'!Iv LEGAL NOTICE lo."OWn •• I( .-, JOHNS. Pttt11st0. IPPtl•fd Ev1n~ll11t C. Ct,wl know" IO I-------NOT1(£ IS HERESY GIVEN tftit t~e me IO be the Ptnon wllo•e n11ne it unG•'119M!I, 11 EA"tw!tl• ol tn• Wiii ol 111bKrlbed la lhe wl!lllft lnllfUmtft! •1111 "·41'!6 ·~• 'll>OY, n'lmeil dec:itdtll!. will Hll •t ac~~1-~-t0 lhe tlltCUltO lll1 1ef"M11, CIRTl,ICATE 01' I USINl!SS """...... flCTITIOUS NAME Pfovale ... 1. IO !hr nlehtJI ind btJI t>lllclet' !OFFICIAL SEAL) Tho llndtriloo\f!I dots certllv flt h cc"' uco~ !M ltfm• """ (-•lions ~ltftln~l!e• lknnit J, A.r111ll•on9 mP11liOflf'!I '"" suDiect ra CO!llltml!ion b'I' Nola•v Publk. Cih+ornll Gut1i110 I buslM\l et l!l!ln Vii Pdl"''"°· ·~·a 511"'"~' (our•, O!I l nund"'· July t, !:..C: t='i!.~~~~Plreo ~·.~e''o1C~l~':;~'R 11 L'7°:e ·~~!'~~~~~/11~ :~;:,.;:,;'t....,~:'~ 1!1, 1,:,! :;=~ :v"'I,,!~ Mar, 2. 1'14 co. '"" Ill., •&Id llrm Is • .,..,_,, DI I~ Al ,~ .. O'ftt• DI t~t uno .. sl•~ L•tcu!•I .. STATE OF CALIFORNIA lo!lrtwlno <>e<1on, y;now n.,,~ in !Ill! "NI ANNE E RUTH, EAtc:u!n• o1 thf Etl~!t COUNTY OF OR ANGE. SS. Plit t of rn ldtnc:t Is 11 l<>llow1· O! lt•tl••vn """ Joltn,, PKe&itO. !" C••" 01\ llPl'll ]0, 1971, ~ore m!, Arel'ld1 S. CiNr·91" D. C•Mtll", l5llJ Vl• 01 RONALD H PREN"IEA;, Atlornt Y •t PtttrMtt 1 Noh'" Public, Jn t l'ICI for 1tl!I P•l•llno, Irv·~•· C1. Stitt, ... f lOlll llY t PPflr!d ~lrlh C 0.leG MAv ll, lt/1 Law, 31S Wr\t Third $1,eet, S8"11 A"•• Ht ntlt'I' known te m• to 111 tl'lf' H•.on Gf:OtOt P , Ctl'ld•llt C1l;lctni1 t?ICl. Ill "onr, 1111•, lnte•t" who,,. namt Is subK•I~ to Ill• wl1~/ft S!Alt of C1lllo•"I•, O•'lnfl Covnlv~ and 151a1r ol \ll;d d•<Hle11t •I l~e !Im• 111 tnttr11m1n1, ,.,., •<knowlldtld te 1111 thtt O" M1v 11. ltll. b•foro mr, A NotefY ~., ll•l!h. Anll •11 ""hi, Hiit •nd I""''" ""' tlf'(u!!d Ille ""mt. Put>llc !n 1nll lot ••Ill s1.i1. P'"onell• 1n~1 ""r e1 lal• m•r h1vr •<aulr•d ~v !OFFl(l,t,L SEAL) taat~•!'d G..,..gf O. C•Mltli, kn"""" to OC>f'<'etian Ill law. 01 Olht<"'llt . Sift"A .... r "••nd• s. Petttlen m• to Dt lht fle•!on wl>o\~ n•rnt ,, d••lh. in •"0 lo lhr ro110w1n, Gncrll><!d Nolt•V Public . Celllornl• 111bK•lbfod lo 11\e within 111\lrumt ril •no f~41 "'°"'''' PrlnclPI! O!f!ct In lt~n,,...ltOlltd ~• t~teu••d 11>cc ,~me. Tl\f Notti\ <;D ltl't ol I~! Soul~ 15~ IOf'! O•enoe Count• !OFFICl.-,L SE&Ll ct ll\• E•1t Ml! ct !he No•lh .. 11 ou•rt!tf M V Commlnloll Exoir•I MART BE;TH "'ORTON cl l~t SO\llh,tst ou•rt., ol !h• M•• 711, i•n Not•fY Public, Ci lllo•n•t ~01.Jlht~•I ou1•ttr o! SetHO" N111,, (Atlorntv 111 F•cil P•lncl•AI Otl!ce In Town1h1<> Flvt ~t~. R~.-ot T•n Yltit, ~TATE OF CALIFORNIA Or•not Count• ~) tl'ldl<~lt!I On t maa ol Tree! No Soe. LOI ANGELES COUNTY: M~ Commh1lon E•Pl•fl •e.-<>tO~ In Boak 'f, P1ot JS cl 011 ..... 11 JO, IJl1, bflo•• ""· lh~ April t. 1tls Mi•<~llA""°"'I M•ot. ttctrd• ol Count ... 11...,..rslontO, • Nct1ry P11bllc 111 •11<1 lot l'!Jbtl.i.to Or1,.,.t co • .,t P•l•Y "'lo' ot O••~ 1•lcl Sll!t. l'ftlO""l1Y IPPt••ld Sari~ C. ""'' ,I i nd Jur>t 1. t. IJ, ltll 111)-11 EJ<ct~l•nt •~•11r!rom lllt W•ll IJt Htn1leY known lo m. 111 be ~ penon F•ot Wl\Olf l'llmt 11 iubtc•lbff ~ the wllh\11 • LEGAL NOTICE: Common!• ~nown •• olllt NO<I~ Ht rbor IMlrul'J'lfnl, 11 !hf AllOfl'I~ In l•t1 ""I--~~--------llwl•v~•!I. S•nl1 '"a. C•ll/Q<n11 H&nrr II, Het11l•1 •M K--·~-"' 9·G~ er c~,... Jrt l"Vllfll lor •••d mt '""' Ill• 111btalt!H .... n1m1 ol SU,ERIO" COU•T OF THIE "'"ti o• P•oc••!•. •11 •U(h bid\ l!IUll bl H•ntv e , HtlllltV lllttt to ,1 prirl(il:il l I ncl STllE C' CALll'ORNI& l'Olt on wr .t,na, ••10 will tit fftflved 11 tl'lf' 01· .,., ....... n•m• •• Allarn•1 II\'"'· THI COUNTT OF ORANGE he• (II AN N E RUTH. E~"(Wlrl• ol ,~. WITN£S$ "'Y n1na"'"' ottl<!1J "''· Ni . A ... tJofJ E1tl!t OI ltATHll;YN INN JOHNS, (0F,ICIAL SEAL) NOTl(I! 0' HE,t,"ING 0 1' JllETITION OOce&•M. t lo RON&tO H. PllENNE!t:, Artl'ldl S. Pll'f"""n POI ""OIATI 0' WILL •NO l'OR ,t,no-n.tv &I L&w. JIJ Wtll T~lr!I Strttt, Nottry Put>llc . C1l1Wf!OI Ll!"ERS TllT&MINTAll:Y C N 0 S&ril& ""'• C&lolot11lt tV'DI, Of ,.,..., ~ l'rJJl(iP•l Ofll(e In I ONO) •11«! W•tl> !h• Cltrt. ol ,~. •b&Y• n•mH O•ll'Of' CP11nty £1tele fl/ HIENl!Y FREOEllCICS, SUP"••,,, Cou rl, 0t t'l'tfy W !ltUY•rfll It Mv CommlttoOll l•,;111 DtcN1fd. ••Id E •t<ulrlo l'f.f'°"•llv, II '"v llm' M•' 26. lt'2 NOTICE l' HEllC!Y GIVEN m11 •II•• '"'' ""bU(lliOn Cl "''' notlc• .... .Mcllvl«/•11 Rot!111 F•tderlt•I fl•• IU""' ..... ~In I "''I "''""~ t~f t'1'14~lno Cl Nia ••I• STATE OF CALU••OllNIA I rlon lot Ptol>•tt OI .. 111 Aflll lor lnu•nt• ol TERMS OF s.-.L E; C11h, t1w1u1 m ....... COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES I ss. L•tlrt1 T•\l•ll'>•11!1r¥ (NO 8 t n Cl I of 1111 Un•ttd Sllltl. T,n !If' Cfl" 110 .. 1 °" A••ll ,,, 1tn , btlofi ,,,.., lht: 11,,..,. rtttttll<t '° wftltn I• m10t lor li.tlhtt ol lh• •mount ottrrF'<I m11\t 1ccomPtnT •ltlltd, • Nel•ry Publk In I nd l'Q! N ill 11trltcul1r1, I nd Ill•! ll'lt' llmt •!Id ol•c~ .... W/111 ... bid Of CltM. Ind t~~ t~l•M• s11i,, 1~1t1n•H\' •ll11t•rotd ,t,11fn a . ol ""'1"' lllt ,,..._ ~"' bffn Ht '°' Ju"' mull bf u 111 uPOll me tO!lll•f"llllCll or ,,,,.. .. ~-.. IO "" IO be 11'19 ""'"" 10, ltlr) II t ·)O • "'. In lllt t0\1'1•"""" °' \l it b'I' u lOll SUO••to• Coun $•14 ••It WI.I •"'°"' fltmt 14 •llDK•lbed ,. "" wlll>!n 0.ll•f!mt nt No J of 1a;a «MJfl, '1 100 l>t m•d<I uPCn '"" u•11fl IHC.OW ferm.. 11\~ltumtnt • ..., tO>nowlfdltd lllfl ht Cl~lc: Ct<'ll ... QtlV• w ,,,, fn !ht (lfl' ot O&tto· MIY 10. lf/1 t~KU!tO!I fl>f '""''" $inti A"•• C•lllornl•. ,O,NN IE, l!UlH WllNESI mv 1>11W t nd tfllCll l I-ell, OtlfO Mtv 14, 1'74 IE<tcut<>• o1 tnt f •!1le of 40FFl,IAL SEA~I ., W !. ST JOHN K"THlt'l'N ANN JOHNS. ee~t1m111 011111 Cou~iv (Itri.. dt<tt•tll Nott rv PIJll!lc • c111tor11!1 llUIW!tl, MUllW!Tl ANO •IMlll: ltDNALr;l H, PREN"'l lt Prlll(ll'fll 0111(1 In 4JO·ftllll ltr"I •norn•¥ ler l:·~~1r11 Lct An,t!•• Coun" Ntwiltorf lt•C~. C1U"r11I• ¥.i•M ' Jll Weil Tl'llrl itrt•I M~ c .... m11111111 E~elr.• ftl: lilt ) ''>tCl711 Stnl1 A111, C&IHor"(I n'11 •u11. ), 1t74 "'""'"' r., l'tll!lil•••"' Tt1-on11 1n 11 ~1.1)11 Pub111jo.•!I P •l<MI( Co.<i" l;l1lr. Jl!IO!, ,.llblt•h~ Or1noe Co•u! Pell v.,_."ilet, Pu!lll~ O••~I"' (11ou! 0111'1' 1"l1et1 • NJ>f •• 11. lt. 11. IOI .. ~? 71 M•Y 11. ,. 111!1 JuM ! 1t1t G'&$-I' "''" u, h .,,,., Jvnt 1, lt11 111'-ll , • T11t~dAy, May 2!1, 1971 DAIL V PILOT TV's Fu11ny Bigot Number~ Technicolor, Movielab to Join ·~.f~ t>.tovic!ab slnck outsta ndln& ~ By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Television's Archie Bunker, the most popular blgol in the nation, has made it a.ll the way to the top. of !his hilarlous\y blunt and all things, the show settled in· crude f el Io w -a n d the lo a nice middling position in outspoke n contemporary way the ratings -respectable but he is showcased-is already not great. The public, it RP· having effects at the various pearcd. was getting b1ase nety,·ork..s, which are alert to about ~ontroversy. trends. But the second I I n1 e end, curiosity. People ab- \'iously just wanted to see "'hat all the talk was about , luned in and got hooked. In almost no time al all , "A ll in the Family '' moved quickly from its middling posi- tion to a strong contending spol in the rati ngs, to right below the top-and, finally, in HOLLYWOOD (AP) T ee h nic o lo r , Inc .. or Hollyy,•()()d and ~10\'ielab, Inc., of 1'1cw York City. '"'o giants or the mollon picture pr·o- cessing busines:'{, ha ve an- nounced an agrccmen~ In prln· ciple to merge . !\pokcsnlcn for the con1° panies said Sunday Technicolor "·ill issue 17$.438 shares of ils stock in exchang~ ror the I.407,266 shares or under 1he agrcem('nl. The public stockholders of f\·lovielab st ock will receive one share 0£ T1thnicolor stock for 7.62 shares of Movie!J?b The CBS-TV situation com· edy in "'hich he vents his social and political prejudicrs each Tuesday. "All in the Family," outrated every other network video show in the 70- market Nielsen rankings for the y,·eck ending ~lay 16. In short. il "'as No. 1. 1'he suddenly explosive pro-around -lhat is, the mincnce of '"All in the reruns-proved to be the Family" is rather astounding charm for "All in l he to industry obse r ve rs , Family"; plus the fact that Although the original fef'ling n1ore and more attention was about it was that it v•ould be being called to the series by eilher a big hit or a big flop, v: o r d. or· mo u t h opinion. most persons-including some Cr i I i ca I praise y,•hich of the cast-thought it would culminated In a burst of be off in 13 weeks. various awards, and, in the the latest 7a.markeL statistics. A """'IR"'P11t£10 __ 8_. Ti~ to the No. 1 position. There ------------II isn 't another situahon comedy in the ratings unlil the JO!h AUNMRS.11.~T\lil. ACTION PICTURES FIRST RUN SHOWINCi ltATlD !RI CHILOllN ONLY WITH PARINlS Below Archie /played by Carroll O'Connor) in the ratings "'ere such longtime television s m a s h e s as "ro.iarcus Y.'elby, r.1 . D.,'' ''Laug h ·in," "Bonanz11." "Gunsmoke'' and ··Lucille Ball", Archie is moving in fast company. spot. occupied by Doris Da y's g c. show. T he f a c t i s , a II houg h so m e' ~ii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;ii;;ii;ii~ii;iiii;iiii;iii;iiiiii;iiii;iiii;iii;iiiiii;iiii;iiii;ii~ I furor was caused by the first1i episodes of '"All in the Family," there really n·asn't n1 u ch explosi veness sur· rounding the series in the beginning. The or i g in a I surprise al the concept seem- ed to \\'Car off quickly, and, of SEEIT To Believe It! And you can bet the success TV DAILY LOG . TONIGHT SKILES AND HENDERSON BOON DOCKS Jlll W. COAST' HWY'. Newport l e•c:h M2.,.2fl NEW ORANGE TWIN DRIVE·INS! ORANGE #1 ALL"EWI ALL EXCITING! Allll> ORANGE #2 Tuesday Evening MAY 25 1tst, seatelles for the rhlfl01 by car,'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! ''"""' "' '" loo!. I NATIONAL GENERAL THEATERS ALWAYS HOM£ OF GREAT MOVllS I 0 An1tl 811tb1U Calif. An~eb vi. r-~:~~~~i~~~~~~jiij~~!~;~~~I 01kl1nd Athletics at Oakland. (JJ Al Juut S1nta Ana Freew1y Chapman Oll·R1mp on Stale College Blvd. (714)5-47-6011 fi :OO O 111 Ht1111 Jerry Dunphy, (])ABC Nt-.s Rea!.Oner, Smith. 0 KNBC News l orn S"Yder. 0 Tiit Atl&n Show Guests i re Slr1h V1u1hn, Betty Wa\~er, fos1ti Broaks end Dr. Rich11d Sand. 0 Sir O'Cloct: Movie: (C") (9(1) "Si>[wrdo1 In the Grus" Conclution (dr1m1) '61-Natalit Wood, WHren Be1tty, Si ndy Dennis. Pit Hinilt Whtn 1 hl1h scl'lool 1i1l lries to c.om· mft suicide. she ls c:ommi"ed tn 1 mental instltutlan. O Dick Vin Oykt m The nlntstnnu aJ Star Trr• ED A llme IDt kihn /Q1rlle's P1d @ID ns1ier F1mllr ail Notid1ro 34 m Dutt! YlllrJ Dl)'f a!) LI Kon F1mlll1r con Consuelcl (E Nm Jim Hawthorne. m To Till the Trlllh fE I IJltlll I Critbrttion ol Arrtn· tin1'1 Nrtlon1I Hotid1y (2hr) Music and docurnent1rin. SD Fun Ci~! l nlNtSmtft ill Los IMrly lie P1111YUJ0 l:GS mi Los Aflcionfclos en la Com1111ld1d 1:30 (J Htt H1• (R)" Merle Haggat d, Eddi1 Fukano and Bon ni• (hwens 1uest. o rn@ mABC Miwlt ol th• Weft: (C) (90) "A.wutt on tltt Wa"fl\t" (R) {advtnlure) '7G-.loYph Cotten, Llo1d Haynes, Dewey Marti n, Leonard Nimoy, William Windom, Keenan Wynn. Slory 1bout 1 deadlf battle ol wits for control of 1n Amer· ,- \. - lean n11tl11r subm11int . I STARTS ___ WED. J (I) I iJIC1ll I Onl Roberts TY Fest!-~, _ nl Jimmy Durant• i nd Bobby Golds· 'A 'IWeftiS born 1ra 5J1eci1I 1u1sts. • AU RD!! m D.vid frost ShO'# Diahann C.r· lAl);!n,.tlNS-''barialias'' ....._ °' rail and G1K1ree Martin 1uest. CHM1.lSHIDE 'Ol!R bl'~ -Umfld Am.tw fi:30 (1J 1few1 Biil Huddf. @ Tnrtt1 or Consequenw (]) C8S Newi Willer Cron kilt . 0 Candid C..u11era ~ MBC N!WI D1vld Brinkley. m Thi F1Jln& Nun tEID~eMI: !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! EI:) Patt1tn IOI' LMn1 €I1 L• Col.1 Juzpd1 ... ,:00 0 ~ m NBC T!M-Sd1, Movl1: (C) (2hr) ''lllt L0¥1 God'" {com~yJ '5• -Don Knoth , Anne fr1ncis, Edmond O'Britn. A sm•ll·tawn pub· Ii sher !Inds his bird·watcheri' lllOnlh- ty mag1zin1 ha s b11n turned Into 1 btsf.ffl llna cirli1 ma11zine 111hllt ht \1111 out of !he country. ED Hodfel'Odr• Lodi!• EI:}Sllldtd n1111/Mu~ul1 m Tiit DMrt RtpGl"I a!)TIA m- 7:00 O CSS Nns Walter Cronkitt . 0 @D NBC Newi D1vld Srlnkley, l'.Il To Tell Ille Truth 0 Wl'llf1 My Un1? @I Oltk Van Oyi1 m I low Lllr;y aJ ({) Dr1111.t ED Con\ltrutlorrs Wllll 1 Ptychl•· trbt Dr. [dward St1inbrook. @m Chrlst tllt Uvln1 Wor11 @Ii) A111eUI01 Jrltf'OI ([!)SI No rut11s tu CD MO'ti1 611111 7:30 1J (jJ Swlrfy HUlblll!tJ (R) Granny drt1ms thl! Ell1 M1y marries 1 1i int !rot, In 1 nigMrnare Inspired by M1rk Templ.toa. 0 @! EI;} Julia (R) "Co~rtln11 Tim!." Jull1 ls cousin Sara's (Oi1n1 S1nds) witness In 1 uiur\ suit while her baylri&nd Is lht ltW)"H tor lhe opposite sid e. 0 M1el Wtnll·Up 0 (]} CIJ aJ Tht Mod Squad (Rl "Is There Anynne Lrft In Stnh Paula?" fern1ndo Um1i £Ut5!S a5 1 pollu llMenant lnvolvl!d In !he m ftlnny Sq1.1ad ED Thi ldvocltu "Should 1. [d1ar Haoyer B1 Rep\ated? EI:) Challen11 Cl!) El Peudo d1 Sofl1 9:30 IJ (J) All In the r1mlly (Rl Ml~e invites 1 legally unmarried couplt to 111tnd th1 nl(hl 11 lht Bun~er hause. m 1r .. wr1 mi Muslule/Pntor'1 Dtlk fl) LI Cfu1 dt M1 riM Cruct11 ([!) fntiYll Mtxlctnt 10:00 6 (]) 60 Min\1111 o cv oo m M1rcu• we1by. M.o. (Rl "Anothe1 B11tkl1 tor Wesley Hill.~ A vigorous young r1nche1 lapses In· lo desi>0ndency when ht bfc:omes dependent on 1 kidn!'f mad!ine. Glenn Corbell and Chill Wi\11 auest. 0 Sart1r Watd Hns ID News Putnam/fisiim1n. ID M1nl11p A.I Hamel hosts. ED Ent011 P1ri1 (R) Adot Charles Boyer n1n1tei this film by Frederic Rossil ('1a Die In Madrid'") 1bout th1 Paris of yestttd•Y ind today, both illVI Ind hi'tOltlU!. Illegal e"tf"1 (If Meilu n youtns 10:30 O Clltnne1 5 Hl'lft ttross the Ctlilotnia bordtt. ID Bill Johns Ntw1 0 Mlmnn S MO'tit: (C) (21/Jht) m tallena dt An111stln "Tht M11nUlcent Snen" (df1m1 ) · '6D -Yul Brynnrr, Ell Wal\ad! 11:00 I) Cl) ill Nrws Allll!tlc.1n jiunlleiittf3 air hired to 0 ®: m ff1 .. pr~~ect a amtll Mex:can town from 0 Movli: IC) "Dlxl•" (muliUI) '4J ou, 1ws. -Bini Crusby, Dotothy L1mour. m lrvtfl 11 Co11$1Q~ce1 ({) htth V1!1ey DI" mu T•~n. Thi•' o C.fj m Ne .. til I lftt1lll Los lnf1IH Plll lhn· mon!c -1812 (R) Prestnted In tltrfO Mmu!ust with radio 1f1!!on l':PFK, 90.7 FM. Tthlakavsky's "181 2 Overture" 11 perlormed b~ Zybln M1ht1 and th1 tos Angeles Phil~" ITl(lnlc 11 lh1 Hollywood Bawl In 1970. (ID Cinema 30 m Esptd1t11lo• a!)TBA 1:55 m CufftlM d• S.pndol 1:00 I) Grten Attn (R) Oliver Is l1eed with two cflyi: Usa is !ea r"in1 to drive ind he rnuit h1Nt51 hi1 1pple crop btfore It spoll1. 0 @:om I IJttllL I Kllttv -Tllf: 81•c' Rhlll(l(llDS (A) A blolD1IJt srud!u tilt lift p1tt11n1 of th1 r~I notl!IOS Jn 115 Alflctn htbi\11. John Goddard, 1 Cantdlan 'l!ildhlt biolo· W ednesday DAYTIME MOVIES t:OO O "Clttln1 Strtlt'• ltrttl" <com· ed'() '45 -Dsnni1 O'Kt1!1, M1rl1 Mc:Doflald. "Cri1111 Wl!Mr.rt 1'1u/1n" (myaltry) 'J'-Cltudt Rtlns. M111<1 m "Down " lM $11 ln ~lp1" (Id· venture) '49 -Rich11d Widmtrk, llnntl 81rrym<1t1. 9:l0 O (C) "Conp em.In(' (1dvtn rt) 'S6 -Petet Lo"'· VltSlnlt I M1)'0 • D M0\111: "Th• NUii tnd tht s,,.. ir-ant" (drama) '62-Rob&rt Web· brr, Ann• Sten. m Mcwir. '1111 Enlnrttr" (my~lery) '50-Humphrey 80111rt, Zero Mostel. m ••n !ht Clock ED Rtalltln ''Thl1 Lind ls.~ (R} lt:lO 8 Cl) Mm 'tlffln 0 ®l m Joh11nr Ctl10FI 0 (II ti) m Did C.vrn ID MOYl1: "TIN 0¥trl1nd1r1'" (td· ven!~te) '46 -Chips Rarterty, Daphne C1mpbell. 1:00 1J M"h: ''Tht MGI!" (dramt) '51 -8roderlc.k Crtwford. QJ OD(l)@J N.., 0 Ont Sltp lt)'611d m AH·fU111t Slitw: "5Qhl\r1," "list o.,. ,, POMpell'" ind "ta!1• ltotd.· O (C) "Ntr« TM Ltll" (comtdy) '65 -Connie Sttvtnt. P1ul ford. 10:00 {l) "'SIY111 Su111riMt" (urmedy) '63 --Cl111d1 Jutr1. Allllr\ rime. 1:00 m IC) •1t0fll' ltlwr" (drtm1) '50 -Rory C1lhnun, Pel$r Grt"ttl. 2:00 D (C) .. ,0 '""' lo .. Pldl• P•:u" (wts!rrn) '67--A.i.td!e MuriihJ , Ml(.ll- 1el Burns. 3:00 (.JJ T1A 4:00 iJ (C) •A '°111 lo Rt1111mllt1" (d/1· n11) '45 -t.Mel Wildt, Mtrlt """'· 4:30 (J)'mt 11 lOAM Movlt. 9P "Probably the most terrifying film you will , A -~ .... , . ever -,', "r·, '' .. -.. ~ 0~-·~~1 see. !~ ~ .. ,l 1 • VINCENT PRICE 1 L :_.._ JOS-EPH -co_T.'"'n'""N-- '(Jboi.;nobl•hibE' 1,IB,=:: -J p ( "'""'' ~'"""'') .• HUG H GRIFFITH -TERRY-THOMAS iiiiG1NIA Nf',!l~ NOW PLAYING 2NO CHlll[R 2NO SUSPENSE FEA TURE "Hl.f~Ot• 1\ ,p },,\{"I·:" "'W l--IA l"F.VF,R 1--IA PPF.NED Qriens1PM. ·ro AUNT Al.IC E!" St~ns 01 Dul~ WtekOOy1 6·4~ Sn!. & Wn. 1,15 .... -..... I .. .,,.,,._. ~J11n1 l•• o.., ...... • . , .............. , '611•U 11111:o1 ... ' ... 1 ... ,. p,.,, r • ,;..,.,.,,,_. u...r., 'I Mvu ~' w,,,, ...... , "SIMON lllN& Of TNI WITCHIS" (11 ""·. , ...................... .. "lHf YAIM,111 tOYfl S" (I) h .. -•••• I .. ,,.,,_ ill !/II ,11/ l. .. .,. 1·" '""', ll•u '·' • l"-""'I' """"'1'"'""~'"'"''"'-"Tlllt1G111110" ttJ "" '"'" ,,,., '~ HI lOYI M'I' Wlfl" (I) l•..-N•••• "'""'" ., .... , ~,, 111 ' , ... 111....1 1 1.,11,.., 1,. .. ,.,,.1~,. .,, '""'" "lti<•+••~h l•e M••••• lteo.,loot" f'P) r-•••• ""~" .••• "TM II••" 11,,, o,.,,..i llool"" 15P) -ANDREW PRINE BRENDA SCOTT .AIRi( ~ · llORlWI Ult* -··-·-·----,-·-·--· -·------·-~ -:-....:= METftOCOLOR liJ-c.~i:="'- IWl 11111-• 111111 DI ll~IWIBR TllE FOll•llli PllO.IECT A UN•£RSAL P~IURE • l[C/iNICOl.OR" ~ "111~SlON" 0 2ND TOP HIT CllntllslWVOd ltUln. ... orllU~ ... ·•-.. did ~ a IJl'<'1il•V! '"'•l••'>l!CO"'"""" '"Cl~l • lftt<"'l'.n.0-• ELLIO TT GO ULD "I LOVE MY WIFE" (R) STARTS WEDNESDAY MAY 26 AT fDWJ.ROS CitonMA (lNEMJ. WEST I CIN£MJ. V!EJO 2NOTor HIT M•tho•I Co•"• nnd t ,,u Hlnnd i.. "GET CARTER" (R) 22ND GREAT WEEK -·· ROCK llUDSON ANGIE DICKINSON i ·ELL Y SAVALA.S Also · Anna Calde,.M~"hall In "WUTHERING HEIGHTS" (G) STARTS WED .Walt 2Qooo' ~ues-Sea MAY 26 Disney's ~ "" ENDS TUESDAY 2ND BIG HIT TECHNICOLOR" tGJ "A RAii Dlll,HT, THf llVll Of SUCCISSfUL I \IENJION IS MlRVflOUSl f HIGH. 'A Mt• lttf' •c•l••ti •~• .,,11, ••4 i111Jr•!.Wt 1.....4 •' ••••• " .... 1. , • ..,.4;., •f '"' ,..11· A:ji'•iii~£ii~I y~ ~ (.(1lor by MOVIELAB Borbro Strei~ond ·Jock Nichol son "ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER " {G) STARTS WED. MAY 26 Richard & Nigel In "TH£ VILlAIN" (R) Burlon Oovenport • HAL WALUB -.. ~ REDSKYAT MDANINB !:, Visit the future where love is the ultimate crime. THXll38 W11n~1 R"l• Dlttf"I• IHX ! 1)1 ~ O...·•·l 111d Oo>-i••!! l'lt-•Mf'Clt 1 K"~>CCJlor* 1.C.'llll'KOPI" :;;..,.-:.::;, i(f:i)o 'QPl TARTS WED •• Walt 2Qoool ~"'--Sea MAY 26 Disney's ~~ ""' ENDS TUESDAY Best ACIOt·G@Orge c. 5',ott BEil PIC11JRE PA1TON TECHN ICOLQOO BESlSCREENPlAY Ulion Gould On11old S<1rh•1lci11d ~11\S ·ll ' [ • --. - . '• . .. ' •' .. .· ' .. ... !0 DAILY PILOT Theate1• Notes 2 Old Comedies ·at 3 Playhouses WANT TO DAILY PILOT WANT ADS By TO:'lt TITUS 01 ,,.. 0.11, ~.i.1 "•" H's llme lo turn batk the pages of theater histor.v -and go over one \vell·\\'Ofll page twice -as four new pro- ductions blosson1 on Orange County stages lonight lhrough Saturday. The vintage comedy of the late Thirties and early Forucs is being resurrected u1 the form of two separ<1te versions nf "The Man \\'ho Can1e 10 Dinner." at Laguna Beach and F'ullerton, and a revival of "Arsenic and Old Lace'' in Irvine. Rounding out the week of new shows v.•ill be Tennessee \\'llliams' .. CaminQ Re a l . '' being .staged for four days on· ly at UC Irv ine. The firs! "f\lan \\'ho Came to Dinner" bows in tonight al the L agirna Moulton Playhouse. \\·it h llap Graham doing double duty as director and actor. repeating the role of Sheridan Whiteside he performed a mont~ ago in Costa Mesa . Joining Graham in the 22· character cast will be some of Laguna·s most familiar na1nes -Julie Haas as Maggie. Paul Toft as Berl. Betsy Hev.•ett as Lorraine. Robert Engman and Helen Vai l as l\.1r. and 1'1rs. Stanley, Marthena Randall as Harriet, David Pa u l a!'i Banjo, Walter Daly as Beverly Carlton, Robert \Yentz and John Briggs as Dr. Bradley. Susie Scott as Miss Preen and Eric Van Deusen and Debby Paul Kermode. two second generation playhouse perfor1n- ers, as !he Stanley children. Complcling th,e Laguna cast are Doug Williamson. Andree Davidson, Hetsy Paul. \\lilfrid Henry, Jackie Flanegan. Fred Lang and a fe w local sur- prises. Perfonnances will be given Tuesday through Satur-' - ENns TONIC.HT "2001 : A SPACE OOYSSEY" Alio JUL/I CHRISTIE ,, "FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD" I Starts Wednesday I fllalterl'latthau I amnel'ID9 "A fte<o Leal" fG1 P;tt~ Pnit~ Colo< ~..,. •nd Lii MAllVIN CLINT IASTWOOO JI.AN SE !llR6 N.~Wl.i.'\Tl'Ol~-.i. IWNT \t>ORWA<,ON w.•mr 1l:Oml.C.I" AMl.\IDt'\'rat"I' •• ht. Sl1ow, 7 '·"'· l11rtol• l1hftl11 ... Wed., l '·"• FASCIN- ATING ' / , GOOD FORTUNE ~ Betty Tcsman plays a gypsy fortune teller and Larry l..ott is Casanova in the UC Irvine production of "Camino Real." opening \\'cdnesday for five performances in the Fine .A.rts Village Theater. days until June 12 at lhe play- house. 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Reser· vations 494-0i43. * Taking !he stage or UC lrvinf''s big Village Theater \\'ednesday \\'ill be "C<1mino Real." under !ht dirt·rtion of tlerbcrt Machiz. A cast of 40 studcnls \\•ill 1x:rform lhe story or Don Quixote's dream. Primary roles \\'ill be taken by E:laine Barnard. lktty Tesn1an, Don Freenllln, Hugo Paez. Larry Ult!, L o r i \Volrram. Rober! Almanz11 , James Nor\\·oocl and Raul Garza. ~do lftWHlftlllOI -"''"·--,. l•Ml• .. li<f• I& -or. ~-lllO ENDS TONIGHT Gle11do Joclu1111 ,, "WOMEN IN LOVE" Jamtt £1111 J11net "THE GREAT ~ WHITE HOPE" STARTS WEDNESDAY The Rolli111 Sto11e1 , ;, "GIMME SHELTER" Jo11" '"' "CARRY IT ON" "Ciirnino !lc;11'' \\'ill br presented \\'ednesc\ay through Saturday onJJ~ 11ith a 2:30 p.m. matin(:.Lon S~urday at the Village Theater in UCl's Fine Aris Village. Reserva- tions SJJ-6617. \* An old con1cdy \Vilh a nC\\' kl(Jk Joins the Jive theater linrup Saturda~· night when the Irvine Community Theater r;i1scs its curtain on Joseph l\essch·1111{s ''Arsenic and Old Lace " Riclu1rd Dn\v is dircC'- 11ng 1hc shn\v at the old UC! Studio Thc;Hcr in 1 h c univ('rSily's h um a n i I 1 cs bui!dlng. .Joanne \Yolco l\ and Eugenic r.1ax:well will portray the elderly sisters v.·ho compile a collcclion uf con>ses. while Toro Titus i.~ cast ;rs the Sell'gno 1Mle1111des & Brasil '66 F1i. lhru Mon. M11y 28 1hru 31 2 Shows f11th N•lt 8·00 p.m. & MidnHt Amrui:1 J G•l4!flt V1t11•1»1 81111. ., Kings Caslle lak11 T11hot l Nevada (7021831·11 11 drama critic nephew, Ray Scott as the Karloff lookalike nephew and Paul Steele as the Roosevellian nephew. Others in the cast include Bill Brady, Sharon Threadgold, Gary Saderup. Bud Emerson. Monte Sims. Pete Gallagher, Jay McCormick, John Phillips and director Dow. "Arsenic and Old Lace" will bt' staged Saturdays and Sun- days for the first t w o weekends and Fridays through Sundays for the second two weekends with an 8 o'clock curtain rather than the usual 8:30. Reservations 833·1"24. * 1'he week's second version of "The ~1an \\'ho Came to Dinll{'r'' opens a I hr e e - weekend run Friday when the Ptlllerton Footlighters stage their production under the direction of Mitchell Sanford. Reservations 527-4.JIS. * South Coast Repertory returns to the two-platoon system of theater this week. staging the American comedy "Luv" on \Vedncsday and Thursday nights and the Irish co1nic drama "The_ Ginger Alan" Frida.v through Sunday. Michael fuller di rec ls ''Luv," a J\furray Schisga! satire on romance reatu;i_ng Don Tuche, 1'1artha f\lcF'arland and Art Koustik. "'The Ginger lifan" is being staged by Martin Benson, with Da\•id Emmes, Ron Boussom, Cherie Patch and T o n i Douglass comprising the cast. Both productions are being presented at the company's Third Step Theater, 1827 Ne.,,,.port Blvd .. Costa f.1esa. Reservations 646-136.l * Galloping into its third CLEAN UP ON YOUR CLEAN OUT? FOR FAST! -....... I~ I -1..... I~ I _,,,... l~ General COLLEGE PARK Enjoy this delu.~f' FOUR BDR:'lf Tl\'0 BATII horn! with h~ge living rm., F/P, Din . .Rn1. and 8/1 Eltcl. Kit. including dishv.•asher and disposal. Front court yard, 14' x 28' pro!tcted cov. effd patio. 1;;· x l5' HEAT- ED AND rrLTERED POOL, v.·n b loads of decking and two dressing rooms. Local· ed near all gradts or ele- mentary 5C'hool, high ~ehool and Oi·ange Coa!>t College. The perf£>1·t iins11 f'r for 11 growing family. Priced IO sell at $3.1.9.jO .,,,.ith F.H .A.- V.A. TER:'11S, Macnab-Irvine Rtally Company HARBOR ISLAND SOUTH BAYFRONT TI-IE CHOICE location in Ne1vpori Harbor. Enjoy this beauriful hoTTle' this <11um· mer. l yrs. new. Slip for 65° yacht. Huge LR, DR area & kitchen. ma.~!er sui1e v.·/ rR. all overooking bay. 4. BR's 5 baths, plus maid's suilf' or billiard room over garagl". C\Ji;tom built by present owner. For app'i. cal] Tom Turner at 642-8235. Macnab-Irvine 675-3210 Gener el DO YOU HAVE 5 members 1n your lanuly?T U so. 11·e can sell you thia great 4 hedroom homt on 1ht "NE\V F.H.A. Program" for jus1 $100.00 a.s do'4·n paymtnt. Thia born! is ready to occupy. Carpets, drapes. 2 luxurious batbi. Fu!J price is $23,900. Call us now -\\'t'IJ show you the house and explain the pro- gram. Walker. & Lee 2790 Harbor Blvd. al Adams 54;).-0.)6;1 Open 'ti\ 9 PM * REDUCED $1,DOO ~ HURRY ON THISI Don Rhoades occupies the wheelchair as Sher i cl a n \\'hiteside in the Fullerton pro· duction, with Eugene \\'endcl, C a i l Chudacoff. Katherine Luckell. Bill Chris Ii an, Creighton Barnes and Karen (:rorge taking other principal roles. \\'cekend is the old-time co~­ edy "'Three li1en on a Horse" al the Long Beach Community P layhouse. Ro n Albertsen directs the show, which features Michael Bowe rs , f\firiam Kaiser and Nick Sylvester in principal roles. FAST! 4 Bedrooms & 5 BEDROOMS VACANT Performances are g iv en Fridays and Saturdays for four more \\'eekends al !he playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim SL, Long Beach. Reservations \213 ) 438-0536. Pool ACTION! Evf'nlngs Call 612·7~38 VPry lo1•Ply home: in i\lesa Jiiiiiiiiiiiii;i"-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"" 1 ll 1ghlarn:ls, rompletr!y car-Harbor View Homes BeaufiJuJ rtsidenee' v.•ith v.·et bar, lovely carpetinc, sell· cleaninc ovens. Quick pos- 1cssion. Owner anxious! Performances .,,,.ill be given Fridays and Sa 1 u rd a y s through June 12 at the Muckenthaler Center. 11 9 Buena Vista&J.Drive, Fullerton. WALK TO THE pe1ed &. rtrai>ed for your CALL BEACH pleasure. \'ou'IJ find 4 large DAILY Fa111iliar Faces PILOT Actors Bou1ice Back CLASS- w. 1 N TVs . IFIED it i ew eries By CYNTHIA LO"'RY !\E\V YORK ~AP) Telev1slon actors have n1ore professional lives than the lt•gendary feline. r. v e r y Scptemtxir an assorlmcn! of pcrforn1crs einerge in new TV series -and niost of !hem are familiar fates. A series that bombs in the Nielsen ra!ings -and al least """ 6:45 '"E. ...... a.1-.. hftlnwl• I.AST TIME TONIGHT "HUSBANDS " .,, "THE BABY MAKER" "**** HIGHEST RATING A COMEDY GEM!" lll:lU l l •f 111 0••••••' PLAYING "Breath - Taking!!" • ,...,,.,i . c.,.,.i~~ .. e-··,~,.,~ one thir·d Qf then1 do -may hurt !ht' involved actor's bank account tcn1porarily but it helps many of them get a foothold. Ni psey Russell sai d lhe other day th<1l even if his •·Barefoot in the Park" \\'as 1h1s scaso!J's shortest ll\'ed sho"·· It "helped me a lot. .. "People found out I could do something: besides stand up and tell Jokes." he said. f\·lonte f\larkhan1. \\'tth two earlier series that bombed , has been one of the past seaSon ·s busiest guest stars on other peoplf'0S shows. He has been playing everything lr<Jm noble souls to villains and nobody holds either ''The Se- cond Hundred Years" or "f\lr. Srriith Goes to Wash ington" against h11n. Darren i\lcGavin has starred in a number of series, from ''Riverboat'' to "The Outsider." and none has ever approached !he hit t· 1 a s s filcGav1n. ho\Yever. i.~ a busv actor playing big roles and getting star billing. Lee f\tajors moved rrnm "The Big Valley '' into "The ft-len From Shiloh" and then \\'as t'as\ lo co-star in next season's '· 0 wen i'olarshall, Counselor at La\\'' as soon as the long playing 11·estern was canceled. Bobby Sherman. 11'hO pla~·ed nne of 111e brothers in "Mere Come !he Brides" lor a couple or seasons 11·ill return In the fall as star of his own musical sho1v. Dean Jone~. \\•ho has starred in a couple of series over the . 1cars, will be in "'Chicago Tcdd.1• Bciirs " A not he r member of the cast "'ill he John Banner. TIO\\' lhat Sgt. Schulti. alter all tho s e seasons. no longer "ill De gu<1rding "Hogan's Heroes" Larry I lag1nan. d u r i n g periods \\'hen ··1 Dre;im of Jennie·• ll'as rumored to be ailing. made a number or pilot films. One. "The Good Life." has 1nade lhe grade. and Lar- ry wil l play hal f of a young couple \\'ho hire out as cook and butler tn a rich family . Rod T11ylor was a series star In "Follow lne Sun." and Den- nis Cole played a young t'op· in •·Felony Squad." They \\'ill be t~amed in "The Big \Vheels ." Regulars in drop out series frequently wind up w i t h leading roles in films made specially for TV. Barban:i Eden, a frequent variety sho\\· gut>sl slar. recenlly was sign· cd for a lead in an upcoming .. "'orld premiere" reature . Julie Somn1ers. lnte of "The Governor and J .J ." \\·ill hove 2 big pnrt 1n n filmed adaptation of a John S1elnbeck story. "1any performers moonllght mak;lng pilot$. The well kno"·n r.t.c. of an established da)'lime talk show said that during a long gap berween fK't\\·ork shows, he sunrived nicely by hQ.11\ing gan1e sho11 pilo1s -he made n1ore than he did from a s1eady job. "Bul J \\'Orried 1nore, loo. because t figured every call would bt lhe last I'd ever aet, ·• he saj.~. DEPT. D I A L D I R E c T -- 6 4 2 .. s 6 7 8 This lz.rge la1nily hoine j~ all llf'droom! plus family room. cos!om. 4 BR., 3 Ba .. fam. • Delightful swimming pool rm. plus den 11·\lh wet b8r. 11•ill makf' your Summer The !'el.I 111~ rool & slun1p-compltlt. Just S:W.500. stone v.·all say -~Iexico. W!!,:ioo. ---• COATS & WALLACE REALTORS -SU-4141- NOW ONLY s;,s,soo INCLUDING TIIE LA.ffil CORBIN- MARTIN REAL TORS 644-7661 Coldwell, Banket' ~ NO-VETERANS- ~~~~~~~~:'NO QUALIFICATIONS OWNER Thars correC1 • you need (0ptn Evenings) DESPERATE no! be a Ve!eran 10 tak!: H11., hi:; ,R'oods packed and over a 6)~ annual perttnt· 833-0700 644-2430 2 STORY ~hipped to England, sit!ini; age rate VA Loan. No cl't'dit STEAL 00 crJ!f' and 11.ahinK for or employn1ent qu11litica· Th1i; fantaslic b;irgain of only .\OUr off<'r. Huge 2200 sq. lions to put your family in $26,9.1() 1ncludl'!i -I hui.:f' brd-f1., l bedroom, 3 bath beau-this spacious 60:<130 It. lot. 1-00111s, 1.i x 2o fnmi!y roon1, ly. clean as a pin \\·irh car· Cleanest home in mo1t de· formal dining room, 3 balh!i. JWlS & drapes thruout. All sirable arta. 4 bed1·ooms. 3 carpels 8: drapes lhruout !ernl~ at a bargain $31.::00 bath~ms. tl.rerric gait for PLUS over 2000 sq. ft . i'>o Tradt ~'Our.~! max1n1um pri1·aey . mis1al;f' or misprint. ACT w lk & L Walker & Lee NOW. To·•rl• "°""· a er ee Walker & Lee . R""'" 1682 F.dinger 1114 • .1112-44:1.I or .}40-:il UI Rrat1ors 7b.~:! Ed1ngrr 1- 11\ h 812-·lljj or 5!0-:il.W VIEW THE BLUE PACIFIC PURCHASE OR LEASE/OPTION Almost nt\v 3 BR hon1r, tr;;- f<1m rm & sunken l1v. r1n. •1·ith firepl. Juli crpts & drps. rlorida ki1ch .~ patio. Ask- in.1; $28.9."l(I or leaSC>/option at S2;JO PC'r nio. Call j.10-1151 (•)pt•n rvr!I!. HERITAGE tl.U UlAR -~-Comeo Hi9hlands View 3 bNlmoms and den LargP b;ickyard 11•1!h p11110 snrl t>i·e:n roo1n ror 11 pool. Off- t>red fnr lhf' first hm~ 11n<! ~xclu~11·t>ly our~ al on l y Sl9 • ."i00. CALL 61.).49'.IO. From this 3 bdrn1, & den h0n1r in Cameo Short~. Corner Joi insurps privacy. /1 also ha.o< access to 3 pri- va!e bC"aches. 0flt'o of our best . Call 10 sre. S67,j()Q. --Coldwell.Banker ~ 833-0700 644-2430 3 Bedroom • 2 Bath Eastside Costa Mesa Hardwood f Io or 1. fireJ1l, crpts. drps. cov'd patio. dbl ca r gar. Lrg back yd. :\!any b!1tut fru it tree~ & shruM, $1.8,500. Terms FHA or VA, Roy McCardle Realtor • COLESWORTHV&CO.I 1810 Ntwport Blvd .. C.;\I. 548-7729 l----'~T.2!!~1,.oH !:========= $23,950 NEED MORE ROOM? If .YOU have bren feelin~ C'ran1ped. h<'re'11 y nu r rhanrP to ~lrt'lrh out 4 BR ., 2'~ barhs, formal dinini; rooin, rlrn, tirkfst. nook. big y11rd. S~l .900. 20-13 n·e:stcliff Onvt 6*-i711 OPf'n 'til 9 P~f NEWPORT HEIGHTS \\'alking distance le all schools. Separate chitrtren1 play yard 11·1th climbing trct. Good s1ie room and big bright kitchen $33.900. Ca ll 646-7171. EXECUTIVE DESPERATE!! ?.lust sacnfict his n1ini-es!a1t \\'ilh towering llhade tr!ts, 4 panelled bPdrooms. FOR· !11..\L rtining rooin. and COY• ered pario. AIJ trrm11. trade yours. $29,75() -\\'O\\'! Walker & Lee Real ton; !7141 842-14;,5 or 540-5140 $23,950 4 Bdr +Den Beautiful home, f'Olry hall . la1ge room!! throughout, built-in rang! + oven + dishwas"er. firf'placf', Open til 9 pm. 540-1720. TARBELL 29SS H.,bor 3 Bedrooms Expanded·S24,500 No do11·n to VPL~ on th11 charn1l"r in Cos1,1 :'llts11. l.iv. ini: 1uon1 & dining room hal'e been e.xpandf'd profes- THIS JS IT! Tho1'011Rhly 1m· nl!H' 1n & ou1. J BR, J ll Ba, fa1ni!.v rm p!u.~ rov<>rNl rnrlo~rd palio 111th rrnu1v . ahlr 111nrlo11 ~. 1\1! r·arr•·lrd. tastefully df'('OJ'ated. Pride of ownrr~h1p. Larw in R•alty, Inc. 21.J62 Rronkhur;;:. H n1~n Sch S46-S411 anytime ~ siona.lly . outstanding vltlu• ......---............. -11·on·1 las! . ~ -Far- 1'0\l' Rlln. $24,950 Sufll'r ro11agr hraut1fully drl'- nratC'd HP1irly-to-n101·e 1n! C01'1'\{'r lot J bdr llon1e wi!h pa1K.'led double 11:ara11;e. Con. 1·pnient to school;; & shop. plnh. Call now 646-7til. Coldvvell~,..,:~er '-B-IG_C_O_R_D_N_A_B_E_A_C_H And the point are an t11;;y stroll fron1 l~ rtf'\\'l'SI, niCf';;I warm /,, iqmc. 3 BR. A\a\I. in ht>11l1!. nlrl Corona. Home Show Realtors "A1mC'hair Jlousehun1ing" 3J35 E. CoA11t H11-y .• Cdl\f IRVINE TERRACE- 3 BR, 2 Baths. BeauL par· qvrt floor~. beam ceil';; .. 01\·nf'r 11n.>;10us. Call /or app't. Sl1,9::o0. 673·3663 613-~ Evl's associated 'IROKERs-REAl.TORS ZOZS W Bolboo 67l.J66l 833-0700 644-2430 New, View Ho-mes Dover Shores cust blt. lia1·"' king ~i1,e, choirl" hom~i;itf'S .,.. 1·if'11'!1 N.B .. fr'" or lt11~e· hole'\. l tl('W horn!"~ und 1-"0n:<t., ready !or oce. in ,June. Visit lll33 :O.·lariners D. f<Jr preview -4-5 BR honies 11•/pools. lv11n '\'rll~ k ~n~ 103.i i\lariner11, Do11er Shorr~ 646-lJ.-J() Open Dail y REPOSSESSIONS Sparkling clean homes, some nt'll'ly pa int td &: r11.rpptf'd. 2 3.~ & 5 bdrms. Some \\1!h pooJ5, FllA-VA con\'. lerm,, fron1 $20,00) to $~0.000. WATE RF RONT-Collins II. Walls Inc. DOVER SHORES 8843 Adam.i; A""· 962-5.>23 60s:t00 lot. Pier & ~lip !or 40 * MESA VERDE * '1 -bcwi.t. Charmina 3 BR. 2 Lol·ely imma.c. holm'. Beau!. B.\ homt. den, 11('( biar, ltl'OIJndl. Ow. patio. l BR. stC>am room. Xlnt vit>\\, It fem . rm. 2 811thll . ll;,900. $tl7.9j(l. Xlnl line lll•a.11. George Willl•rn1on Ownt'r. Trtuie 11C't'ept11blt, REALTOR ~1 IS-l93fi or 641-<168-t l6T.\-.ll'i0 64~1~ STEPS TO BEACH * 358 ESTHER * 2-~t~·. A-f~nic. 3 BR. .+ l..ov"Jy E11slaldt Co~1a ~lesa lanilly nn. Cornt'r Int. loc. Tip !op ~nil. 3 Bdrms., Only Sil.~ · 1ern\J I 2 ba. Sh11k,. roof. 8uiJ1.ins CAYWOOD REALTY Only r.?7.9.~ 6306 W_ Coaat Hv•'Y·· N,8, MORGAN REAL TY 548-1290 673·6'42 ' 675-6459 675-7225 --IN-COME~ U-N-IT_S_ ( 41 2 bef!t·oom, (I 1 :i btd· room, owne1-s un it. F'Pn~d patio;;. clo~ecl l"(St.'11"(!5. Own- rr 11-nJ financf'. N11·pt Hgh1s area. Pett Ba.rre!I Rlty, 642-~200 JUST REDUCED to $.11,950 .. \lodem 3 BR bl'ach homt>, newly dtt"Orst!d , (h1•ner 11·111 consirf. IPrm•. JEAN SMITH, RLTR 400 E. 17th St., Df 646-32.>.l NOW'S THE TIME FOR 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 -------~· - Tuesday, May 25, 1971 DAIL V PILOT 2J Everyone Hes Someth,ing Thet Someone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Cen Sell It, Find It, Trede It With e Went Ad ·rhe Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results -..rorSolo I~ I "'-for!M I~ I -..1orS•• Real £11 .. 11, [~] Gener.al ~~ General General * * * * * TAYLOR CO. * BAYCREST -$79,500 New offering! Beautiful family home on f!U iet street in prestige area. 5 Bedrooms & fam. r n1. \V /4 baths, 40 ft. pool with "no inaintenance'' patio. J1nmediate possession. ''Our 26\tl Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 Sa n Joaquin Hills Road · Newport Center 644-4910 General General JJn.Ja J6/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 8 Linda Isle Driv& Spacious 4900 sq. ft. 4 BR .• 4'h bath home. Dining rm .. fan1. r1n .. study & 38 ft. wa ter~ front living rtn. 2 Fireplaces. Carpeted & ldsC'pd. Consid er $1200 n10. lse/op t. $155,000. For Complete lnformalfon on all homes & lots, pleas• call: BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N .B. 642-4620 General YOU HAVEN'T SEEN THIS YET! tr you're siill looking for a V\>ry sJl('eiaJ hon1e in Costa \\lesa with 3 bdr. 2 ba1hs, family room, very cll'an & neac · throughout, rrcshly painted, shag cpt, large Joi, niC"Cly landscap<'d, room !or addltion<1I conslruc!iun & pool + boal/trailt'r/c<1n1(X'r, and a 5\~ •,;, assun1ab!" VA loan -you just lo11nd ii~ Pt·ice S::ll.JOO. Phone 5-16-2313 for additional ir1forination. COUNTRY SIZE -KITCHEN- anr1 counLIJI sizrd lot. &au\ I Brt, 2 story cusron1 hon1e \\'Uh all :o.:trns incl 3c gar. 01vner transf'd to Franc~, must l0a\"f' i1111ncd. Priced for 11ulck salr at an unbr- 1 icvable S4 l.j00. Call 5-15-842·1 \oix;n eves) \outh ~(~ oast Ir***** UNMATCHED TdE'al for [)(){'\ors, lnves!Ol"!'i, Pit. 2 Bcdrms. 2 b a! h s. i\eerl.~ l\'ork 1n;;1rle & out. GOOD LOOKING FIXEH UPPER ;ind \\'HAT A W· CALE:!! Arnold & Freud .WI E. 17th SL. C.i\T. &l6-77jj days &16-5.)::S evr General FORE~T [ OISON '"' RFALrOR S OPEN 7 DAYS A \VEEK Would You Believe LESS THAN $75.00 A Month lnvrstn1"s srrrial. Tak" ovr•r 511~ annu11l '~ ratr FHA loan. Neat ;i.nd rlean 3 bt•rlroom hon11'. Can he yours for 1 ... ~.~ thn.n $77i a 1nonth. Ra1·r find nl•stlC'd on hu~e 11·.-ll kept lo!. For llir partic•uJa1· homr. buyl'r or thr di~crrnint: Inv<'~· tor. Don'! fail to inve;;- tii;:;ite !hls unusual 011- fl<lrlunily, \Von't last so hurry C8 11 645-0303 BACHELOR "BEACH" BARGAIN rr :sandy hrnt·hcll ;inrl t hr rour Qf 1 hC? stu·r llH'n you on, th!s is iL Suinmrr·!un cot tlf~e. Sp;:H·inu!'i living roon1, hrii;hl ~hlny kllchf"n. llU"'!.;c bedrooms. IN- CLUDES living room funliturf' anrl t't'frlµrra- tor. 01vnrr llquidatir11: ror f11,;1 :snlc. J.>on't pn~~ u11 1h11t brlsk-mnrning l"un on the 'and. 1-Jurry -"'nn't lai;t. Dini 645°0303 f ORfSI' E OL \ON "' RF A J.rOAS 2299 lf,.rbm', C~tn Mr~ General COLLEGE PARK -AREA- $26,950 Lovely comer lot ho1nr, \\•l1h 3 bedrooms + 2 hath!!: + httg(' rumpus rin, All this + an.. assuinable 67" loan ot Sl8.li.'il. Payab!C S174. nio. includes 1a..~E's E'IC. Hurry on this onr. Newport •• Fairview 646-8811 (anytime) MESA VERDE Truly a ~rfec11on1st"s drcan1. Better than nl'"'" spollcss t'OUR BOit.Vi. T\VO BATH. Fan1ily P..n1. ho111r ll'ith Bi l Kit. and rear l1vin~ fl111. OVCl'IOOking-a!ITaC!i\•e enl.'.lo.~ rear yard. Ne'" caqx.'ts, beautifully draped and exquisitely <k'coratcd. O\\·nc r leaving area and n1usr sacrifice sonic or his hard work. Pri('('d 10 salr at S·l:l,9;iQ with lO'lo 00\\iN to qualified buy<'r. 220 E.17tH 646-0555 Evenint:s Call &1-1--7003 HOME WITH POOL l Bedrn1~. 2 Balli~. hrd\\·d !loors, FA h1. crp1s. drps, J..arge kilch, hu~" S('p. !an1. Hy rn1. NorthCa!"t Costa :\1f'sa. $29,:iQO. 4 BEDROOM 2 BA TH L11rgi> 2 ~Jory hon1f". shllkc roof, firepl, crpts, <lrapes & many, m;lny x1 1·a.~. S.J2.~i00. Roy McCardl• Realtor J810 Ne11·rort BIVd., C.i\'I, S48-7729 HISTORY IN THE MAKING 011r of a vsnishing brc,,rl or ' \If'<;» Vf"rrlt llom"s und<'r SZ8,.'i0(1. Soon th1>rr• won'I hr an.v uad1•r $.'lO,(lOO. !'n drin't n1l~s this oppor1un11y rri s<'C a truly sharr 3 bed- room formal cl1nin~ hnmr 11·ith kJtchen eating nook t'lr only. , , . $28,Z!I 10'= Do11'n -Call Quick 673-&'i:iO -546-2313 A STONE'S THROW- TO THE BACK BAY $24,950 PRICE 3 bc'drooms, sl'(itirll!f' hni:" f:tn1lly Rooin , 2 hcautHul baths. Pnllshed hard\\'ood [)()()rs. To\\·erln~ shade trre11. surround th1J lj() fl J;irm.si..:<'d l1n. ~v·t 11(\- pr:uscd and 11rprov1•tl. Nol on~ thin dinl<' lor Vf'tS. Oon'I drag Yollr feet. CALL Walker & Lee :mo llnrbclr Blvd, al Adnms t>-1;,.o-t&.1 OJM!n 'Iii 9 r:.1 Westcliff 3 Bedroom $.W.900. Ownt; 642-~9 -----~---'"-}~or lhlit u .. m 1lnd~r $50, try ti'"! Pr~y Plrw;hf!r General U1'11()Uf ti()~fS Re111 ~1ta1e. 61{>.6000 HARBOR VIEW Bargain l islltig ~ Popular Broad1noor spl1L level, 4 BR, \\':l!h family room and large dining ruon1. Sort)(' v1c1v. Ne<x!s sonic v.·ork and a ne\I' hack yard but thi5 means savings fol" the buyer. Pn<'• f'd to sell at. $&1.9.)(1 .. or u...e your imaginallon. Call U·NEEJ\" tHj..6{)()() U1'11()Uf ti()MfS Reil [$\ate.67~·6000 2~•l E. Cod~t Hwv. Co•Orlfl Del M1 r, C•UI. COLLEGE PARK L.AH.GE LOT 3 BR -2 BA This ho1nc has all of the Corona det Mar Corona del Mar PANORAMIC VIEW FOUR· PLEX 2520·22 & 2524-26 SEAVI EW ' Located in prime Corona Del "rifar location, Schedulecl for c:on1petion in n1id-June. Car· pets -d 1·apes .-landscaped • solar lighting. This rare investn1e nt 011portunily. OFFERED EXCLUS IVELY BY . WILLIAM WINTON, Real Estate 67S-3331 229 Marine, Balboa Island Corona def Mar Spacious & Charming Hame Plus Income \Valking d istance to lh<' beacll a 2 bl'!lroo1n, fanuly roonl or :1 bedrooin hon1r 1vi01 dark \\"<JOO floors nnd ol)Cn bean1 ceilinr,s :c;i!ua1cd on a roon1y 40 It. R2 Int ."OUlh of Baysidt' Drive \1'llh a 1 ho.'Cl1"00n1 ren1al to help \l'llh !he taxes. Only S74,:il0 To &<" Call 673-S:,:;o ~-i>'THE REAL \"\l ESTATERS orr N UNTii ~PM Costa Mesa NEWPORT HTS. l!r1ghts area of C.:\I. Palmer St. ·I bdnns, 2 barhs, Nice q111c1 sl1'('rt Lan::c R·2 lol '"'alley J.,,: fu1urc 1'C'•ltttl 111111. 011·ri1'r anx1ou)\, n1akc orrr-r. Asking $19,000, CALI. (!) '"•·1414 ~ Ntt r Nfwport Po•t Offi(t T Reduce[$1 ,oooT F!IA. VA, Cn11vc11t .. or yn~1 na.n1e it! 3 Bit. + lt1n1. rni. 2 Ba. S2ll.700. Call: !~al \\100(1 ;,1:·1-2.\00 ~.-rnie Pro1><'rlies ti7:i-~TW Huntington Beach 4 BR. + HUGE FAM. RM. 2 BATH BEACH -$22,900 Newport Height1 Lots for Sale 170 \;;;;;;;;;;E•A•S•Y;;;;;L;l•v•1•N•G;;;;;;;:;;;\:x~··nrRA;'i'klg~,~-""~'~'.~"~v;.i,;.w;,,,~B;RR.\.-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 4 ba, bar, frplc, 3000 sq ft+ MARINE Luxurious Stanf<.Jrd niodC'l 800 bonus, $52,500. 2-ll La COMMERCIAL 1t)Wnhousc in Village III. Jolla, 673--1672, 548-5.171 niarirlt'" Service Station Ovrrlooks rools & grcenbe1t.1 ~--~------I 7j feet on 2 frplcs .• 2~, ba., 1\'cl ba,r. Santa Ana Nt>Wport Blvd .• -with lg<'. family r1~. & 2 Bdrn1~.1·,-B-,-.--F~a~m~il~y-Roo--m~, Bulkh<'arl & slipl Irvine • All for $42,;,oo. C<J\•t'rcd patio. Take over $195,000 f ;1 111aslu.: (<'rm~ 1001 Low i) d h•11 51,i;:; GI. P<1yn1cnts Sl53 tlo11·n IS all ~'Oll nrt.·rl. illod· re I n s A I !' per 1110. ~st • . oca ion. l'l'n lhrU·O!il. flockl'd drt'Or John Irwin & Assoc. 11-.11!ll. Hir ll 11·ood pun.:•1!111g, 636-1170 ()PEN BC:.\,\·( CEILINGS. REALT\' illll.:t> HR's, En!crtaining Univ. Park Center, Irvine 1 'T~A~l~<F~,-o-v-,-,~G~l'"°6"=,;-.~l~r~3.~500'°'I f:u\HI~· l"lll. Built-in,~. Dish-Cail Anylin1c 833-0820 f/pricc. 3 Br, 11\o ba, corner REALTORS "'~1.~hrr .• \\;_1s~iv~· covi:r«111a· I """""""!"'""""""""""'I lot. Frplc, bltn!'! & nt'11,' SINCE IM4 110. Towcnnli u·l'l's. \\'t'll Laguna Beach t'Ul"JK'L John ln\·in & Assoc. 673•4400 l«·pl 111·r<1. Close to bcnrh, ti:lG-4·170 Ju.~1 Ji.~t~·.t _ \\'on't last. Call SUPERBLY l is:ii!lAARHPP-3lFB;;:,.°"blih10;<,,:-f;1,.;;plko,:l""""""H~'~l~G~H~"""""I l7ll) %:.?-558;1. LANDSCAPED crpts/drps. Assun1r low 6~~ FORE\T .. E OtSON RE,,.tTORS J!!l3L l:31~10kht1rst Ave, 1 luntinc;1on Ueflch Lush enclosed cou1·tyat·d \\'ith GI. $183 a mo. John Jn\·in & IN MESA VERDE rock 11·atcrfall, fishiJOnrl & Assoc. 63&-4-170 I'm a very unusual home sflf! bh~I balh. Cornt;>r Jot (X'r-1~~~~~~~~~~1 on a quiet cul-de-sac litreet. n1J1s wiJC' l<nl"ns <toubJ<' pa.I, ~ Fron1 n1y level building tios & boat ya'rd. 3 Bed-Ae1I E1t1t.. ,JUI p;1<I, high on & hill, I can i'OOn1s, 2 bl.I.th.~. fan1ily rooni I '---c-~-'-'-'1 __ _, sr1• thr. go!! course and the 11'ith fll'<'Pi11N>, buiJt.1n ki!eh-l1gh1ii or the city, C 1 me $.,-'I"• v 1 I d" iir11nd on me and see for ('I\. ,1J,. ""'· C .s • OIY ulYU. A f I l SO C.o1JJ _ creage or 1a e yout'."<'lf. $21,950. Ca 11 AO/an REAL ESTATE ---5-16-2313. Land Opportunity A few nJJl<'s h'Om Sun City 8.-•Lake Perris, 70 n1i. L.A. JO Bco u1. level acrcs-F1-...'Y. \~:THE REAL '\.: I;~'[J\IERS ll!JO Glr.1uM.'yre St. 39'.l. \\l;iter -sunshine -R2 wr zoned for 1 to 10 ·191-!lJ;:\ :H9-031ti sn1og frf'e air. 197:\ \\1\11 SC'C .1 60x30.' N _ I . f '" p . uni s, J. r coun .. 3 f('aturcs & qualities many !----~--~-'-"-~-~--~·" P'(>plc hope lo fiod io " BEAUTIFUL COLLEGF. PARK ARF:A Sharp. 3 Jge . BH. ho111<'. t-'am1ly mi .. 2 [rplcs .. shag i·1•ts. $31,9j(). 2jl5 Vassar Pl. POOL SIZ E PARADISE $lU'l'llllldS this 1Yx32' JIOOI 11·11h Jols ol df'ckini: + .J Bl:. 2 Ea h<>Jllt> 11'1 ftrcpl, l"rpts, drps, blllns, n1'1v P<iillt ir1,;id1•. Close 10 shops ,<;,,_ IX'ach $27.900. All tf'rn1s. (';ill S!7.\T21 SEYMOUR REALTY ITI·ll Beat:h l3l"d .. 111i;:n Bch $ lti.9Cil) Special. 2 bcri, 2 com~ l'.~nn o L<>kC en·is. club, C.i\I. Realtor, (213 ) ga1tlen ba, 32' l1v, beam F<'as1b1h!y study, m o b 1 I 37·1-1418 collect ~f'll, v1c1I', close in. hot11c parl< -housini;:. Prir"-1-~~~------: single properly: E.-;cellent LARGE DUPLEX localion, \'cry sharp con1l1- tion, 1·onm for. boa1, trai!ei:, ONLY O'.\IE IN TO\VN. r:arh Open 't1l !l P~I "I •.iVI l 'J 4 ••A ! "1 ' e \~ + Acre, vlmv lot e "'' """' I;. rgunl, .,..r' ·' :: f'(j rnr. imnwd. salf'. $~{1,000. b ' "· I t Comna d"l "lar n, 1'pBc1ou.~ "''11111 t·l•t iv, Hope G errie Realty ' " I I ' •673-2010• pool, additional constructron.. u1111 a ·I Brdt'OOn1 21".! ba1h elr. N i c e \ y \11ndsca)*.{I, 111th app1·0.x1n1all'iy 2.000 s•I MAJESTIC SPANISH CUSTOM BUILT 11n _rn1, f>4W! ...:r. r11 1n. ')L-1--!IVll , 61:i·J.r.:m 1 ~~-~-~~~--1 s11;,,.iQO, lkran Jo 1"Qnt, ·1 lx·d, Mesa Verde Fairway ~·~ hu, 111•11. AN\\iJo;R TO 'fllE $ CH ISES Jot. Onr. 531-7307, 6424364 fruit 1rees, sprinkler systen1, rt. Only 2 years olrl. EnJO~ }"OR sal1· hy 01vne1·: ii bd11n hon1<' nr schools ,v_ ~hr"g. SZl!.flOO. A:;;sun1ablr fHA IDnn at :,\,•;... 11115 Dorset L.anr, C~·I. Phone 54~2421 r1•i; Alll•n Rt•a!lur. ·l~~l.7:J7& Re11I .r:~tale! Ancl 1h<' hot· 1-----o=====-- -lrsl real ('S111tr i~ r1'crea· BUILDERS 12 x 15 covcl't>d patio • and 111p int'(ltne. f'Xl'C'llt•n! loca- a ;1\{ 1,;. assumable VA Joan. llOn. and luxury living. Lido Isle 1innal! ;., 10, 20 <it". cl.lnv. 10 A TIENTION Price SJI,500. Phor"E' ~-2313 $T9,.JOO "'ilh only IO~:, down. rn.1n1 1l1n1bl,. lU'l'hf'd ('nlry tn adnl)(' 1'l'd lllf'd 1'0t1!. :'l hu~r Hr,<;, Q1i;1om dral)l"'l"lf'S. Au iJ r.Jn lwk,<;helv<'11 antl t'n<i i11hlC'". 1.nv:iblr ··sriek" rll·· '""' ldlcn:r:. JO' hl'PI11'1 u~t bu1·. Ln11,d1 ~n10k<'d t;la.~~ ;)t"i"()1• JVo'r l'll"h \\'\ll'fTI\\t10d pa111'l!it1J! •• <;punish Joi::burn- in~ Jll'•"Pl~··1· llnly \1·: )I'.~. !dd. Cu.~· 11n built. C1·n1r,1l h1•;11·h ,tre,1. 1-:-7. ff'J"ln~. i\1 U~I .St'f' 10 h,'l lt'V1•. Bf~ r·u~sT~ Call !1111 9G2-:i."i.'l;1. ~ilv<'rwood lakr. S797.00 f)£'r Va<'<1nt lol 32xXS · ·· · SJl.:iOO ac. Lo dn. Pri\'e is \Vfly Lot -S6.000 • room for 4 2 BR. 1 bn, :mxAA ••.• $17.500 untlt•r niarkC'I. Bkr. 614-4670 units Duplex -$28,500 . two ~ BH. 3 hi1, f.Ox!lll .•.. S7!1,500 L·OV'T I I 1• \" ,0 hdr. Total $34,500-Call now! to sec. CALL 673-8J:i0 East Bluff B/B ?2 YE,\RS OJ-' Rf':AL ESTATE SERVICE JN THE JIARB0 l1 AREA CAMEO SHORES :Vliu~nifiN;'nl vie1v. Pri{"f" ju,;t reduced S:l,000. J111n1a1:ula!e 4 BR .. 3 ba. CUSI0111 hlr. hon1r in on(> or our bf'~! area.~. 3 Priv, bl':ich 1'11- trances. Ne"' price S72,:,QO. 675•3000 -BEST- FOR THE MONEY VETERA;.IS TOO!! u~e your elig-ibillty_ .FHA for all 0H1crs. Alm assume low 111- l<"rest Joan. Channing 3 BR home, quif'I cul-de-sac-. 2 n1ass1ve lirrpl'~ and all 1he mod. convcnio>n<.'t'~. A muh1 ti> se" at $'.i0.500. Ca 11 :>-i::-.-8-12-1 (open C'VCs.) YOUR OWN "SPA" 18 x :)6 heated pwl Jr. scp- ar;11e Jacuzzi, 2 char·glo BBQ's, heRI lamr. sunken lire pit adm\st lusll land- sraring -PLUS & Jow.ly 4 b<lr home -carpeting drap- eries, el('('tric J;arai;:~ door opener ~ Rig11! priced prop- cr!le!' arr !'ellin~ $.-thls is RiJ,!;IH ! only $4l!,!l:"1. Call 6·16-7171. $22,500 Ju~• l1stM, 1r.rrific 3 BR hllll1(' 11•i1h OVPJ'Silerl hit, rm for boat or trlr, Ov:ncr llas hou.iiht anothe1· horn<' a n fl mu~l st"IL No cln VA/lo dn F'llA !et ms. Paynns $187 per n10. incl (U..\f:S & ins. Call :i,16.;,ggo 1open t'VC's.J eq;.?, HERITAGE ~ Jiil UTAl1 Corona del Mar Separates 2 Deli1thtfnlly furnished hou5- t-,( on -One lo!. !«'P.,irti1C'd by pr1vatl' y11rd. Soutb of the hl~hway. Lill(' Jn orlf' 11 1}(] t•ollrct 1'f'nl hum 1hc orh1•r. Jo.~1 !'If'~ to ~horping end lhr hrach. J.j1,7~l(). Phonf' 673-8.-,j(l. 4 STAR**** f Neat 2 bflrrn. hom('.~ on 3 valuable P.-2 Jot~ i91) ft. f. }o'inci;t tt11idtnlial a r •a. $112.~00 Univer1ity Realty 3001 E. C~I. ""'Y. 613-6.".itO 2 ON A LOT 2 • 2 BNlroom hoU~t'.'> in oil{' of our hcsl south-o(·th<'-h1;:h- 11ay local1on~. I·:xcf']Jcnl Ill· 1..'1Jr111• and can h" ~•'l'n al- Jnost 0 11ny1inH". $4j,!.riO. Call 673-S:~-J() lor appo111nnrnt. 325 MARIGOLD Terrific hunlly homr. ~rmr,. :: &h·111s., 13.' ba. Lge. k1h·h, 1v,.•;i1ini;: area, Oirp. & d1°aj)('s. 1 1~ B!k~. to CK.~Bn. e £.\'CLtJSJVE AGE:-.'TS e &\L'ES • LEASE~ N"ll'Jllll"I 8f':1ch ~---- Fountain Valley SAClllt'lCE! l\lusl i::o this \vknd. rark sid1· l111m1>, 4 hr, 1l!"n, 1·11vcn'tl 11a1lo. :1 1·1 u· FORE~l'.J OISON PE'AL T OllS • ~ar. Aero~" h'Onl i:: o 11 1:1131 Brookhur.st fl Ve. 1·•1ursr\ J1'~ll ~IZt' J.,I -f. l/u111 1ni;ton Af';1C"h Vll{'l\111 , µ::i.:~txJ. i 7 J •11 1-----: Xi:t-:..i:i2 VA L•d I I ' anr -J nt". ,vrt {' B k . . '. ~o Rea ~y, nc. l.:inrl Pat:kage, llSj Ar-" sure to chec this one! .'13•7 V1:1 L1d11. N.B. r oivhi·ad Ave San Call 646-7171. 673-7300 Hernarr!ino, Ca ' LIDO \~lP lu1 _ :11·X1u1': Cemetery lnrgrsl 11v<iil on 1hr island. Lot1/Crypts 1S6 V111 Lore11, $.-.:i.;oo. Bylc:~-n~,~-,~'T-:-~p~.,~.~li-,~V~o-cw-7s;;~,,~5.I M.,.;:ob:;=;i~le=;:H~o=m=e~/===:: n\\nPr 21.~/4 19--2!¥.1$ -iScthn~ nnw S!ll:l.1 ' Trailer Parks 171 Mesa del M ar * fi.l·l-19l!:"i * 2 11n.1 . lots. Pn1·if1c Vic\\' Bl'.:AUTirUL 2~, acre 'I I I N R $'./\fl mohilc hon1c sites~ Trre11 & HlllllVra ;i . ""''• 1·n=n 2 h LA lJ br. :l ha. lgc k1tclM'.'n /d1n'g * ;~{)..3S64 * ~·1e1v. a"·"'· rs .. --, ro~1,, hc·o··k poot.. fcrn1i:. call owner. 213/ '"~ ' '' ' '-' "'• J BURIAL ·1e. Pacific Virw trf'f's 1~1nl('r hot1se 11'/sidf' ll 674-193.~ ' Metnorm1 P11rk. Pr1v8tel=--~--=-----I :vurd for boA1 o~ trurl,,1·., 2 pty. 494_1<)21 f'Vf's. Ranche1, Farms, n1111t1l<'s 10 n1aJOr she111 g • Groves 180 1·rntcr, h·1,,.1v<1ys, s<"hool~. Condomin1umJ Outstand ing Location Ownrr ;1nldous. 1-~~~--~---i\l} )'ard 11ork. Lus1·101_1s :: FORECLOSURE ;i0 ;.il"l'e pa r k. SJl.500. for sale 160 20 ACRES producing Orange 5 \fi-~.0~6. 1-A-R_T_l_S_T_S_&_P_H_O_T_O __ Grove in Riverside at Van Bul'tn & Clr.veland Good ·I Hr, 2 bu, in;.ny custon1 FANS site for trailer pk or 1ub- rt•atuN'.:. $31.::.00. As~111111" J'f1•zzanltto sly1t> niasrrr bed-division .. On ITHlin hwy to ~'1!;....:io~~~I/\, f'rin. 0 11 Y • rn1 w!!h d1i·gsi11g r1n & dbl i\-1arch. field. \Vri te CM!. :-.,---;-,--.,------I cl(l~rls, and •t bath up-~11\Tlin, 8TO No, M&!I\ St, MORGAN REAL TY Hr, 1()11nhousr. 1~rofcsio;1on· 67 3-6642 67S~64S9 11lly rlccni'. in~1de ,r.,. nut . 2 DR,-\STICALLY r<'ducrd. l.nnd:scap•'ll p;11in:>, v1•1ypv1 l!arb<lr Vic1I' ll1l!s hnn1e. 2 w/pl1 ·11sr1nr \'l('1v .~ pool. Yrs. nf"\1'. :.iduH 0t·i·up1ed. 4 $?7,500, John Irwin & ,\i;soc. BH. 21 ~ Ba. Vii'\\'. Ay a pp"L fi:lii-'1170 64--1~6~i!"r1 Afl. :l l'Lll ~-~--~~~------Huntington Bea ch HAP.BOP. Vic11· Hills-Lu11k home. 4 Br, 21~ ba, 3 rar l':ar., oCC'::in v1rw. ~li~i..JoO. Pvt rty. !"IA.\T-~1P)..J. 8.'l~7119. '.l PI\1-!"I P:'<f, 6·1·1-10,<;(J 1."lfl ~JiOR.t:C'LIVF DR. +OPEN DAILY 1 TO 5 * Vlr1v-:! f\r-~ Ba. Sll:i.000. Pf'1r E11ITett Realty 6-12-71200 Costa Mesa COOL OFF I thii; s\ln1mrr in this Jowly 40 ft. s1\·in11n1n.i:. pool. 01,·n- er trans. &. has purf'hasf'd 11 nc1v l1111nr 111 analhcr al'l':'a. so m11kr an orfrr on lhi~ 3 BR. 2 ha. MPs11 f){'t i\T~r ho1n<' .. Just rcdurt'd S2,000 10 SJ3.9::.0. Delancy Real Estate &H·7270 EXECUTIVE HOME Jn .xln! a1'<'a. •I Bil, h1;:' fa n1· ily rn1 \\'/rrfril-'.l'ratcd \l'••t bar, h<';in1 rrillnr.:, ftrf'l)l, 11·/w l:""rpl~ ,t· rlq1.s, fl11 1n;d •hn ari•a, c•ul.rJr.Af!f! t>ll'<'·: plus ll uniqur J\EY J1IH1()(>rl w·x If/' fJIJll!. s:1 1.ooo. No rln Ct. Ln dn fo'JIA. Call .ll-17·1221 SEYMOUR REAL TY 171~1 fi(•n1•h Blvd., f-lt~n llch 01)('n '1i l 9 Pi\l Near The Beach D;in1ly ;.: lll'<lrnon1 2 baOi. N••1v l••ng i.:i'f>~'n ~ha~ car. p<'ls. p;n·r !)Jock l\Ull frnl'ed. Ou1s1a ndin1": v.)lUr ln llun1- lngton Be a eh. $18,!};,o. 812·2.i.i:i FIXER-UPPER "'l'ou hargaln hnn1<'rs ~top $2.1.~iOO full prier. Ni•f'd no1 h,• a Vt'I lo qualify lor this sharr 3 Bil h•nnr. r.10,_~ 10 s1·hool.~. sh<lpp1ni;: and IX>11ch- 1·~. SlOOO .rown )11()1.,·s you in or use ;,our CJ w1U1 no o!own payn1L I' illage Real Estate '62·4471 ' r.::) 546°810] Divorced! Must Sell! R00.1\11" FOR B01\T Olt 1"/lLJt• Pric(• n•dtle•'d 101· 11ui1·k 'i8.lf'. Shurr 5 bedrm! j.,ovcly car- f><'1 s! RC'.<;I IH't'11' HAFFDAL REAL TY 842-4405 l·:vrs: 5·!1-2.llh RETIRED $Pe tf11s lovf'ly I B.ll. doll J1011sc, sll In 1hc shad" of sprawl1ni;:: IJ'l'f's and reli1x f1ir a l<'w niom<'n[s, nnly $J Ci!kl. Rehl £111:11" hy McVay X9.1-S.i3:1 or 51.1-0158, Mesa Verde stain;. Studio 11f·n ""itil dbl RiversidC'. 92501 -----------I elosets, fu!I balh & xtl"a l 'R~.-.~l~E,-s7ta-t~e-----I • EARLY A~1ERICAN • rin ·for storage downstairs, E x change 182 ln1111uc 3 BR, 2 ba & fan1 dark rm, or :o.:11·a slccpingl-----Z------ l'lll. S1l0inrd ri:inrllin_i: b ~Mei•. Sfl('cm l owner financ-TRADt:; $28.500 C h at t e 1 11·ollp11f)f'r. 2 lgc usi'd hrirk in'j. Try"Sl.'JOO. dn. no points. mor1gagc for dwn. pay. on frplr"s. Onr, $ 3 l , 9 0 0 , no seconds. no qualifying, ix'h. house or t>.;_h prop. '.';1&-2803 nnd only $23,JOO. pr~·rerre?. Pay." $3j(l. mo & ·1 BR + Fan1ily, 3 BA. Larwin R ealty, Inc. 1~12 StiOO JlJO, ~ u I l Y Cugtom dt>cor 1hruout, 2 t:iG2 Broukhur~1. Hntgn Bch ~1 ~8~91\~/3~d pvt, ply. (rrk" di~ r~1 .. an cl<'f' kit. 546.5411 anytime • eve. . .F.!rrtronn: air f11!r r. $48,000. soMETHING-O LD-3 BR, 2 BA, nrw heat . 8lr _01vn('l". 5'11)...6627 SOMETHING NEW l'f'frigerali_on 14. t.on), heated Newport Beach 2 anrl 3 B<'droom condo's, in pool, lurnisbed 1 blk Palm Sprini:s Shopping Center. ----------IBt>aeh Arf'a, all ready .!or $3:1,000. for Laguna, CIL'1', DOYER SHORES Y"" 10 mov, io. Ch••P<l' Newport "''"' 0 W n • r VIEW HOME lhan 1-cnlln~ and more tun 675-0677. too, Prit.'C'd from $17,9~.l=--~c--~-~-~,I Take ovrr lo1v ln1erest eXis!-Real E state Wanted 114 '°" >'llA '"'°'·°'Joy FHA * CASH BUYER * For Sale By Owner 221 ;irvJ?ram wllh $100, do. 1 J)ovf'I" !'hon's view. 4 bed-pl u5 costs. roon1 2 bath hon1t" + f11111. Larwin R&alty, Inc. Don't lls~ ynur home, tly !"'Jon1 \11Hh sunk<'n \\'et 21562 Brookhurst. Hnti:::n Bch 5:l'U 1t ro us. >-.nr. 2 f1n·placcs, forn1nl 546.5411 a nytime Save lime, save money, d111\ni::-r o o 1n, 9f'pariJ1e , immcd. firm offer. Broker 1,,.,,11.krnst roorn. Valentine Dupl&xes/Un1fs * CASI-I BUYER 1r 1>1111!. 2 vrars old. 3200 .c;•i sale 162 R,12-7;177 & r.10~53.16 fl, :~ car garage. $89,.j()IJ. CHARMING Duplex, E/sidr. 5 BDRl'.f. 4 -0r 5 ba, Dovl'r ;,,1f1.t~:i:i CM'. $30.500. Xlnl ~ond . Well Shores area. Must be well e ONE e cared ror. By owner. m11in1ained. Principles only. 64.1-1~48 Call 64~3710 office hrs. Of' A KJND VU HOME 4 LCE: br, 2 bn, fam rrn. lovf'ly <!rp~ & Bie:<'k:11v .c;hng crpt ihruout_ Slate <'nlry. Xlnt f"Onrl. 2 patios, bf'aul JnnUscaf)('d easy-c11.r1• yard. t.1any ]J!f' ln'<'S. Qulr! 1·~il· <Ir-sac i;tret'1. Prit'<' r•'duf·rrl -01l'nPr 1n1n!>frtTl'd. S.17,(KIO. 1701 011h11 Pl. 5:i7-1fi:i1 lnoking! 'f his 3 BR, 2 BA I,,.., ____ _ 5000 s(J fl Dovrr Shores Income Property 166 3 Bit. 2 BA. in Collo•gc Park 11rea. Anthony pool. Jov••ly ya1·11 \v/brick pa1 i0. 5~~·,;, al'~un1nbl<' G.I. l oan. $.10.000. f\42-2~2 BY 011r1rr, 3 BR. 2 bn, <-'01'· ner lol. Jlale<Tr~t area, Avail Aut: I. Sm l'<JU]ly, ai<,<;umr. loan, 5-JD-6090 .oft 5rnt. h01111', 1s <111ly 7 yrs young liul ;i l11r11is!1o•rl .t;i>n1. A Ian- lit:<;tir buy :ii SIR.~l()(t. I' 1llage Real Estate 962-4471 'r.::.) 546-8103 $19,500. 3 Hf'droo1n, carpers, draf)('s, clrc:r. k1t1:h. 1111!10, Cornrr Jot. /11lult Of'C'llflif'll. Low •hi, 817-8.){)7/968~13i7/9f>'(.J 178 BREATHE EASY Con1crnp. Spanish dci::i~n I I~ Elcc!!'onlcrilly nir·l:Jeanffi 4 Bit + n1aid's, ·1~3 ha F'OR Sale· hy Own~r. JO unit Financi1I • <-. V' r· Spat·io"~ aournirt kill·hrn t'llllrt on l at• of lanrl. Zon1•d "--------' ™'otl!y. ·"'' INta"., incst llnti(fu;'ru~r/i _fountain for 3 more units. Close in.1',·•••••••••• sltTt.:lc ~li1ry 4 l}('drm, 2 11 yrs olrl. Cpls, df"fll:I. J!1• h;1th, ldt>al lor <1slhn1atir~ atr1h;~~-,JJOIJ4-ca: ;11r·r,1i;;~s. ~paf'ious 2 Br hse~ & 2 w/ 3 Bu1iness ora ller~ics. A1l l·us10111 lloor ---~--~=--I Br. 2 Ba's. All 11•/ Pncl priv Opportunity 200 [l, \l'lndo111 l'OVf'fllll(/i. nlinl 3 BR. & DEN p;itios & all. R8r. s1:;.1,000.l.,;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1·.ire yitrtls wllh ~11n11kl1•r11. $3,-IJOJ) d• J•• $1"~/-•" I' Nrar Cl1(f Dr. 01slom home ·' '" "'-• "'-"' ",,_. TO BUY OR Fir111 ti111{' o!frrf'd and orJy always renled. Ideal for $37,:iOO, All lf'rnis ;;ivnil. only fi yrs. old. 3 l3drn111. & syndica1lon. 673-:IBOO SELL A BUSINESS Larwin Realty, Inc. rtcn. 2 lull baths. kit. bltnl'., . HOLLAND BUS. SALES 546-5411 anytime pn[lo. Ohl, gar. on uilry. A GT Oppor1un1ty -O>.~ta "'J"hc Broker with Empalhy'' " I b I $~· """ Mc.c;a. 4-rlrs. Li:f' moms, 1716 Oran C ,1 ooc uy a '""·""' lot 0~.' 125. •"11,500 or GI an.. ge Ave., ·"' 4 Bdrm, 2 ha, f<1n1 tn), frp1, <111.~ "'"' ,.-cA~ Al70 i;pario11s ki1 w/r1u111y IV CALL (!) '46·141<1 praisnl. 962--4219 W : &IQ.0608 anytime b11n.;;, lrg ~arrlr11 p;1l10, lu A~Jd,111,,,, 2 -4. Pl..F.X, C.M.,;) br, 2 ha. e. need sales ))®pie mu\nt )'ll. rul flt' l!ac, 2 hlk~ ;"1 EAl..TY · 7.7xG. 10'/c> dn, 20% rct. NEEDED: ltlO::l'<>SESSJO:\IS CUSTOM HOME 1ti sr·hl & 1hpg. $2!.1,750. Nr•r Ne .. porl Po11 Office $118,000 .. princ. only, ti) \VORKIN'G PARTNER OR "'-"" *WATERFRONT* <96-l&l(). PVT INVESTOR Subslanl-Gov"t & (\lhrrs. Anyon<' f'lll'l ON big munlry ~il(' lot. df'- !')uy. low rlo1vn, S~2:'vl 10 ta ('hetl Jl'lu·ai:t· and roon1 10 7• 7B7f<~.~~~,-,,-,,~,-,,-F~,-,m-,7t~.i-,,,·. I Industrial Property 168 la\ return on money invest- inl{. utility Jt f1u11ily rm Olth:r duplex. 2 Bit each ed. secured W/l'Ollo\tertt.I. $-!Om. \\/ill~ Rl!y. &16-780;, r<ialll, 3 Udrn1 12 ha., aU tile \\/lrplr, 21; bri, 2·100 r1. PIE!l f..: FLOAT For more into \\•rite P.O. 1iprlr1klcr~. 0\\'Tlcr, !1<12-2167 $52.000 HAVE Bo:t 1819. Sanla Ana, YF:AR olr! :l hr Spnni~ll !!lylr, d••l,111.~ a1 H<'UI r:~t111r by Crp1!!, <lrp,~. p" r I i a I! y l\1 cV11y J~j.{H.)S, 8'.13-8:,;i.:1, BI::ST Buy in lhinttngton WALKER REAL TY NE\V Offlce.J;!ulldlna: COIN Ol)('rated Launt!romat lnd~rixl. As' um e GI. ~i.\.l-4207 3 BR on f'Sln!c. !liZt' ocr.1n view 101, $24 .9.lO. 01vnf"r, l(}IO Linden Pl, Cilf. 642·1122 AfESA Verde by owner~ BH, trim rm, 2 BA. p111io. Open d11ily $29.l'l7i0 M.~2075 fl;Tf.SA Del Mar 5 nn, 3 BA. J\lnny extras. By Ow11cr. 5'16--liOI ~~' ll1'rb«1r. $·1~).7i'l(J, .John 67S-S200 \V/$100 K tqulry, on Beach Blvd, l'r1ced to ~ Irvin,. & Aiisoc. 636-<1470 CORONADO honic. 3 BR, $Z71\ Nt>t Income produce incorne for SUPt:H. Sharp 4-plr.x, 11.B. F1ln1ily rm, Plush shast WANT quolifil'd prnM>n in llun. ..,,..~ ... ~~~""""'"'I SI0.!100 tlo,vn. John Irwin Ii carpet throu.e:hout. Lnt~ of F'JtEE "· CLEAR lh1;.:ton Dch ftrta. C.a.U BY OWNER A,;soc, 636-41170 other •'Xlrt•~. t 111 m c d lndustrlrd Blrl'g 962-.<!996 Parific Snnrls :I br, 2 ba, po~:w~sifln. $32,500, 837-9.iOO or 1.ot (1 acl l·L~•~\U~N~D=R~Y~. ~.~.,-,,,~l-'~N,...F=o~ld,.,-1 1·rp1,, rll'jl!S, gar w/hot1I Irvin• Or 830-2.SOS W.R. DuBo111: MS..7100 s;,,000, Long: lf"R.'•J. Tenns. door. Corner Jnr. \Veil Ind-3 BR, 2 bn hon1c on I~ loL" Lots for Sale J70 Suire. couple. Old esi.. aid ~Cflll, -'"C1v'1I 1>11 tiJ. c-..t'r;1.~. 2·S1'0RV cnndn ho.me, on Lido Js!antt. Sundc~k, cu~romrr.1, old machlne!I & Bio'.ltain ~2.l.000. Eves & r.round to roof glu:zrn11:. :z rQOm to build, $62,00b. * * NEWPORT ~2 lot, cor-\\'l''re old, too. :;.JS-5&10 wknd11 !'i.16-'i,1:1'!. P<&Uoll + alrium, '4 hr, 2,1 6i3-7J85 rt"r. blk to ocean. $27,000. BAHBER sho_p f<lr rent. T1·adf'r's Pnralll!;e column i11 ht"i. lir"· fnm rm, !iv'::: nn, lL\RBOlt HIGHLANDS Ownrr. 673-8088 Costa ,\'le~" locat1fln, An ff'lr you! 5 Lint's, ~ 011)"1 lor fnrm111 din'ir r rn. $40,T."iO, ~ br. 3 ba, 5W FJIA Turn unuttd Jlt'trt~ in!o quick "q u l pm en t . Call J.a'I Cnll 642-So~ Now! Tile faslf'~t dniw In !he Wt'!f •• I. DAiiy Pilot Clas5\ficd Ari. &12-56T~ ~ ----------· S:I, Cn/I fl'ldny ... 6'12-X78. ~:t.~1:l.'l7 t S19,9:'i0 0\1.inrr 64&.-2063 t'ash, rr.tl +>-1?.-riGi~ 61!.-1170 DAil Y PILOT Flnancill T.V. RERUNS AGAIN TONIGHT? \Vhy not turn 11 frl\' of lhOAe-unproductlve spare Ume hours intcJ a prolitablr-&rcond In· cornc ! If you h8\'e a car and sre \.l.illlng to utilizr 6 lo 8 hours or vour free time, \\·e cnn i1ffcr you an opporlun· 11y to expand thl.: l'>l.lltrc tln1e ln lo 11 ""llrlght" rrononuc f u· lurr. Venda-Talker. Inc. i~ scorching for indi\'ld· u11.ls to purcha!>e a nd serviCf' our unusual TAlJ{ING VENDlf\'G }.tACHINES. As llule as $900 10 ~9.000 in- vested in profit pro• during VTI l!\lklllJ:' \•ending machin1•s can hr the be"'innlni::-<Jf y o 11 r O\\'tl pe.rsonn I business. \Vc secure 1111 v our locations and fully train you In 1)1'- j;,ln cnjoyin~ 11 S('C'Ond incoml.' in1m~iatt'ly. Therl? are n1 a n y choice locations in this area, so pll'asc ,\·rite Tllf'sday, May 25, 1971 305 Houws Unfurn. Newport Beach 305 Apto. Fum . Cost• Mes• 360 Apt. Unf\lm, General 370 BEAUT. mod, townbouse, 3 BR,, 2~ BA, (rplc., patio. Pool. 2 Car _gar. All bltns, nu carp, drapes, ~ $29i) rno. 111 523-<l'nO or 846-5001 evestwknds. *SUNNY* *ACRES* '* Molal-Aph. -Ii Studio A 1 Bedrootus LOW RATES * l.OVEl.Y CARDEN APT. QurET 1 BR. ocean view, l block 10 beach & town, Year lease, winter ralea year-round. Mature adults. 49-1-4029 day, 494-3839 eve & wkend. Sl6CI mo. 2 OR. Jo'"RO?.t $155 ,.s._n_••_A_•_• ______ s_._.,_._A_n_• _____ , COMPLETELY R. E D EC. CLEAN & t'OZY F A1'1IL Y UNITS. CONV. LOCATION. $115-Util pd, Comp) furn l Br dos~ to shop".':· University Parle 2 BR. 2 ba. swnmer , . $325. $25 Week-$100 Mo. Dally Ra1cs Avail. • Color 'fl/, Alr.Cond Vlll.A ME.SA APl'S 719 ,V, Wilso11 &16-1251 HARBOR GREENS Balboa Penlnsul• $19J·F'l'Uit irees·2 & den on 3 Bit, sun1mer ........ $375. • Pool, POOl 'fable •Sounds 2376 Nc\vport Bl vd. GARDEN .i STUDIO APTS Bo.ch. I, 2, 3 BR'a. from $110. BRANO new DELUXE 3 Br, 2700 Peterson Way, C.M. $1JO.Utll pd, Lrg. B1tch in Lai;:una, Tri patio.very niCf'. \~ ac. Kidi & pe11 ok. 4 BR, ;?~ bath11 ...... $350. SIB-9755 2 Ba apts. !EiOO bloclc E. 546-037o BLUE BEACON 4 BR, \\1th tan1 lly room NE\V OWNEJt.under NE\V J.1ANAGEMENT Balboa Blvd; close to ocean * $170 * BLUE BEACON * 645-0111 * 1 * 645-0111 * TurUe Rock ........ $375. -3J.BD-"Mc.,.t.'°, C:Fom-'-'-u,'-rm=.,-.,-rie~ I 3 BR. 2 bfttlis ••• ...... $323. or bay, l yr lease. Incl 3 Bl', l~~ Ba, patio, bJtns, ---*:-;l°"JJO;;;-;U°"P"'°'•---I D/W, drp5, frpl & crpt. crpta, drps, Ask about our GIANT 1 & 2 BEDROOM! 644-4161 days, 673--0253 C\'CS discount plan. 880 Center e f"INE LOCATION' -2 Br \I alk to shops. PE"t ok. Sll i like yard. Costa Mesa. Kld1 3 BJ{. 2 baths; furnished OK. brk., $200 a month. NO a11J;1.i), .>\ug. 1st ••·•••·· $400 FEE. 54!>-1720. e YOUR O\\'N 00:\IAI:"i! Balboa Peninsula Cozy 1 Br. £.,.cellent neJgh· borhood. $90. OCEANFRONT~ just built 2 ALA Rentals e 645-3900 st)'·fantastic bay • ocean vie"'· 3 Br, 2 Ba, f.am rm, Fountain Valley patio, sundeck, dshwhr, SU:\!'-IER rental avail June bltns, drps, C'rptl. Adulrs, l8. 4 br. $300 mo. Cbi.ldren .& sml pel. S~50/mo. lse. pet& ??? 962-3533 675-503~ Huntington Beach Costa Mesa 1 BEDROOM. one pe rson 4 BR, 2 BA, Garage. Jenced $87.50. 2 bedroom $l35, 2 yd. Newly painted. Cp!a, bedroom $150. Close to clrps, relrig. electric Tange. lwach. adults, no pets. No pets. $235 mo. Water pd. 53&-17S3 Security dcp req. 649 Ross, Pbone after 5 pm., Ci\f Dally 1DAi\1·7Pl\1. (ired hill REALTY Univ, Park Center, Irvine Call Anytim~ 833-0!20 G<lrgeous, park-like setting. for appt. St., CM. 642-8340 Closed garages tor ma.x.-lc;;c-~-'"'°'~~---IN=E\~V~l~B~R~~---il~.--1 imum security. Quiet street. Coron• del Mar • ucam cc 1ngs, \\'ood paneling. All Adults, no pets, 2020'1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii features. $165. Adults, Fullerton Ave (llarbor toi• pets. Call now 646-0J7l. Bay, then So. until 2 blks :m \V. Bay St. 8600 'Q. SPAC 2 Br apts from $140, I-lid pool. Play ~·d. Crpts, So. of Newport Blvd. 6'12-~~ - Unbelievably Beautiful drps, blttis, pa110. Nc\\•ly Condomin iums VAL D' ISERE Garden Apt.-;, ON TEN ACRES dcroratrd. Kids ok. Unfurn. 320 Adu.Its -no pets, Flowers 1 &: 2 BR. F'w'n &: Unfurn. l!)<J8 J\1aple No. 1 &12~344 ----------everywhere. Stream & Firepla~a / Pnv. patios. ==~~-~--~-1 Laguna Hill• Waterfa.11, 45• pool Rec. Rm, Poola Tennis Contnfl Bkfs:t. REAL Valur: Cl'p1s, drps, 3 BR 2 Sil.una, Sgls 1·2 Bdrm, Furn· !JOO Sea , ···, CdM "<26Jl dshwhr, pool, 2 Br . NEW dlx. sngl sty , ...,..JO;' on-.-.30 M dull I · ~ bltn .....,., Unfurn. !rom $135. SEE rr: ("-·Arth·-•• "···t H~l ~· . ature a 11 on y. No BA. crpts, .,rps, S, !"""· ......... -.... ............ ..J .... ,, Qu' I -p ,,. 2000 Parsons, 642-8671> ,.~ . 1e . "~;," ac :c Cbildren OK. 2 C enc gar. I ~~~~~~;;;:~~"";l !!!!!!\!!!~!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!J!!!!!!!!'!!! Avl'. 548-6878 or 642-4129 grd &: trash pimp inc $265. NEW LRG DELUXE APTS SPAOOUS 2 BR., l~I, ba., Bier. 837-5506. Bach-furn .••••• $139.50 !rt. apt 2 Blks. to Big *REGENCY* A Gtui>ll "fl/,. co. ........ 1-'-· "'o.dtJr.,,. -u.. """ ..... My 11omtttr ~., "Thlfl'• •hr -,..,.., LGE older 6 r m home • 2 blks 10 ocean. All util pd, HOUSE 1 yr lease, lrg fam • • • • • • • • • I $225 mo. 536-7400 or 536-6n3 rm \\'ffrplc, 3 Br, 2 Ba, Crpt'd, drps. block fenced Duplexes Unfurn. 350 1 BR-furn ••••.. $149.50 Corona & shopp·g. Adults. ---,..,..------2 BR-furn ...... $179.50 No riets. $250 Month, Costa Mesa UNFURN AVAILA BLE \Vesl~y N. Taylor Co. 2 Br, l Ba, crptg/df1>11, Sl'!! 1 ,....-_.,.,...'"~'-"_"_'_11~·.:.:~~·~ .. .,..,"';-~~C•:: .. ::"::'::'::'"~-=-=•:•:•=:':'~I clean gas: oven. encl gar, pa. tios. [>.JS.3605. 377 \V. \Vilson. Apt. Unfurn. 36$ Apts.1 Furn. o.-Unfurn. 1 BR Suitable l or 2 ladies. Newport Beach 370 VENDA TAIJ<ER. INC. Newport Beach rear yard. Neat. l!t, last + RE1'.10DEL. 1 BR, W/\\", 2800 \V. J\1ockingbird Lant' ADULTS ONLY, NO PF:I'S * 644-4910 * 1760 Pomona 642-2015 * COROLIDO APTS * * SUS CASITAS 2 B•. studi0< & """1 Iev•I" 1 _ • 1 f B cbelo & $185 & up, Dsh\vhr. frpl, dbl -1• Bnice YFu ~h~ odr .• carport. LARGE Pool. 156 22nd St., C.l\1, Costa Mesa Dallas, Texas 75235 2 BR House, furnisbed. good 1 7rl~•7P~· 7$2"'~·-"'~""-'-"~'~~~ blms, bric gas (rpl. beams, r am interestro in n1ore in· view of ocean & ]slands. NE\V drluxe Spanish 3 br, 2 pa!io. 1 adlt·no pets. $134. formation nbout making Cau 213: 446-5400 or 714: ba duplex. Shag cpts, drpa, ,Y~~"=''Y~·7"'~~"-'-~'°'---,..,.­~~) 1h.a!~ll! av~:i:iJ"16s·~ c"':::;.4~~"='~· ~~---= yard. ~ide. $225. Rel. PVT patio. encl garage, 2 br, ,,,,_..,, PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS AJ\tA.ZlNG Adutt Livtn ;:: r. rn...,, "" m e... 673·3378 open daily. New rental rates 1~=~--~----,, hour! per u·eek spare lime. Houses Unfurn. 305 yard. E-!lde. $225. Ref. crpts & drps. SlfiO. O 1 can invest over $900. J't'Q'd. Realtor, 642-2222 673-36'!Kl CLEAN 2 BR lov.·er , Crpts. drps, bllns, no pets. $1•10, 96&-1455 2 BR. Crpts, drps, dosed garage, adults only, 2214 Rutgen; Dr. 646-6919 Barhrlor, 1 or 2 Bedrooms, and Townhouses. Spa, pools. ll'nnis. From $17:5. Across from Fashion Island at Jam. bo1-ee & San Joaquin Hills Roods. i71 II 61.J..1900. Beaut. l & 2 RR furn or unl Apls. Sell clean. ovens, D/\V fin 2 Br) displs, shag cpts, df'P5, jllCtJzzi & uuna bath$. Huge pool. 0 I can invest over $0000. General 2 BR house on quiet s.t. Very iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii y .J clean, crpts & drps, Yard ........-- -•r:;; :'.'\ 2110 Ne"'POrt Blvd, CM 1'"0R lease deluxe new all -===7.i-;:-.,.-;==,-1 elec 2 Br, l Ba. BA YCLIFF MOTEL unobstruct«I vi•w ot bay & * LO\V \VEEKLY RATES * ocean. Adlts only, S390 per Kitchen, '!V's, maid service. mo on lellM!. 673-6992 Name • ··········-··. Ad dress ··-·· .................... . City •.•..• State ...... Zlp W·• Phone ( l .... ., ................... . -Ot'pl. 6I47A - NEW INCOME POTENTIAL \Ve need a dlstribulor for our company from this area. If 'you are complacent, al. "'a.ys tired and s.atlslil'd \\'ilh your present earning~ \1·e don 't "·ant you~ BUT if )'OU are aggressive, rner- getic and eager lo do helter YOU might be our n~w dis- tributor. \Ve have a nc1v idea in the fil"ld ol ''end ing. This does rt'quire a deposit of S9'J5.00. \\!rite for pel'50na1 in1ervicw 11a1ing )1'.lUr name. address ~ telephone number lo: Jntcr·NatlonRI Distribu!in:,r ~}() So. 9rh East. Dept 9S5 Salt Lak~ City, Utab s.ll\O BEACH stand -Food 10 i:o. Beer, plus Tl"n tals. Fast 6 month operalion. 67~26&) Money to Loan 240 1st TD Loan 6%% INTEREST 2nd TD Loan RENT OR LEASE e 3 HO~lES IN COSfA MESA e $225 per mo, 3 BR, nrw crpt, 2 Ba ..•. ALSO $325. Jrg: homf', l\lcsa Verde w/ formal din rm .•• ALSO • $200. 3 BR home. 546-9521 or 540-6631 Nichols Real Estate e \V,\l.R TO BEACH! Spac· ious 1 Bdrm, Stove, reb'ig. Kids & pets. S1D5. e 2 BLKS TO BEACH! 1 BR, stvlt'l"f. Kids ok. Sl2:l, ALA Rentals e 645-3900 s1r. ...... 3 Br, dbl gar. fnc<i yd, kids & pets \\·elcome, H~ated Pool. 2 BR deluxe. Walk to beach. maintained, no garage. $160. Ap1rtnltnts fur R'nl ~ E\'e!S & \vkends 646--0688 l , ~. 1~~~~~-~,..,-1 2 Br. <'lcr lrpl, gar, lncd in patio. wshr/dry rn1, nr shop'g, $185/mo to mo or $175 lse. 646-6961 or 646--1246 Apts. Furn. 360 646.3265 Adults. 546-4431 wkends, * Studla Apt. $110 833-lm wkdnys Ge~_n_•_••-1 -----1 * 1 Bedroom $130 Costa Mesa MAPLE ~i~'o~~AR 19TH FAIRWAY CUTE 1 BR house. Fe~d. Rent Beautifll! Furniture gas sto,·e, nice gnrdcn, Nr. for as li ttle as - 5 _'· _'00_'_hi-n._A_•"_"'~•"_'1.1 ONE MONTH Avail 6/l. $140. &JG-31 13 ftlES A VERDE home with 3 BR. lrg fenced yd, near schools. $250 per mo. Call Agent: S-16-4141. * WINTER RATES * * * ALL SU?-.1~1.ER! '* * VILLA APTS. c omplete with Quirl • Al!rac Studios & 1 your 100o/o BR's, SUO up. Adlts, no 2 & l BR's Purchase Option pets, 2135 Elden, Mgr Apt 6. Private patio. pool -indiv, 2 Br. 1987 A Charle, CM, lnd. Hem se!ccUon. Dana Point ~!:'1,%~agc,. Co. Ai,........rt & S145/mo. No dogs. Call 24 Hour Dely. ·rv 6<1~7017, 642-22.'19. CUSTOM SINGLE. TV, pool, pets ok. UCr. Adults onJy. F ·1 R t I till & up v.·kly. Dana !\farina 20122 Santa Ana Ave. 3 BR·FP.. ,N,.~ .. occ. CplS. urn1 ure en a ~... 7 W "S-3-Sl lnn, 341U Coast Hv.y. l\lgr. lilrs. Joachim, Apt 3·A drps, cov paUo, f'ltt BI·RO 51 . 19th , C.:\f, 54 I S.16-6215 lliOO sq . ft. S23.i. 635-6750 Anaheim 774·2800 Huntington Beach L:tllabra 69-1.3708 Park-Lille Surrounding Huntington Beach L Q • QUIET _ l.JELUXE '"~''"'""~ "'",Br. '"'' __ _;;_ ____ cHATEAu LAPOINTE a umta Hennosa refrig .. rrpls, tJrps, gar. e 'VALK TO BEACH! 1 Br. LOVELY 2 BR apts. Furn & At! ~~~!1:i!r Cbild ok. Bll·lns. carpets, drapes. Unfum. Shag C?l>t'g, htd Spanish Country Esta~'uv-Prv patios * Htd Pools BLUE BEACON Child. Sll5. pool. Carports. Adults, no ing & Spacious Apia, T~r-Nr abop'g *Adults only * 64S-0111 * pet8. From Sl-tD. raced pool; &unkena:uBBQ • SPACIOUS 2 Bdrm! Crpts. 1!»1 Pomona Ave, or. Mart1"n"1que Apts e SPREADING RDm1? 3 d l ~ nl kid & I ~~-~-~~'---Unbclil?vable Living • Only • rape!!, enc.:u ya • s · Balboa Peno'nsula 1777 Sant A A e CM l.GE 2 Br, 2 Ba studio, new l --=~=~=~-- shag, bltns. Cbildre.n ok. EASTBLUFF $165/mo. 64;>-1496 alt 5 1-Bdrm. ant., upstairs 1\•ith yard, $250 per mo. 545-7761 frplc .• carpeted & draped, 3 BDRtll, 2 bath, nr shopping bltns. &: retrig. $185. center & schools. Lrg fenced 675_4050 ' DLX 2 Br, l~ Ba, cpts, drps, stove, dsh1\1lr, gaT. Children WIOl IW!•MMllJ Cl.,llllC. Merrimac Woods 425 J\lelTimac Way, C...i\1. l Br unf $125. l BT. furn $140. No pets. 820 Center St., c .:r.1. &12-5848 Huntington Beach Parklike Beach Living lor Adults ok. $150. 642-7958 A New Way To Live Casa Del Sal in Newport Beach 1 & 2 BR.furn/unt. Pvt pa. East Bluff OAKWOOD GARDEN tio, frplc in 2 BR, elevators, NEWPORT BEACH APARTMENTS tlsbwshrs, crpts, drps. Pebi Villa Granada Apts. On lGth Street btwn accepted. From $145, Four bedrooms with balron. Irvine and Dover Dr. 21661 Brookhurst St, HB. le'\ above&. o,e1ow. Gracious (71 4) 642·8170 * (Tl~) 962.6653 * living & quiet. :llUTOl..tnding LOVELY BAYFRONT KIDS \VELCOJ\1E for famUy with ehi.ldrf'n. 2 Br, $159. 3 Br $189 All Near Corona de! ?.tar 1-ligh 2 Br. From $365. xtras. Pool, pets 01\. Avail School Fitt!place u·ct bar & Furn/ Unf. N o""" ~2.71iO. 968--7:>10. built.in kitchen a'pplianCt'1, NEWPORT TOWERS 17431, apt o. Keelson Ln. 835 Ai.\lIGOS \VAY £.J.t.29!11 * 6tl-2al2 + H.B. Coldwell, Banker & Co. 2 BR. :.! BA, crpts, drps, ff 2 & 3 BDR.!\1S. $150 UP. ~fanaging Agent 541-52:?1 bllJns. Couple, no J>l'IS. SJ6j Patio, pool. Chlldren. e NEW DELUXE .-mo. Nr. Hoag Hosp. l\10RA KAI APTS, 18881 3BR.2BAAptforlease.lncl,_647>-4~38~7=====~-Mora Kai Ln. ~-blk E. ol 1· Beach at Garfield. 714: ~~cd.bltnaster suite, todin.,:_m * TOWNHOUSE.* !162-S9S-l. "' garage, au uuur 3 BR. 2 Ba. 3-Carport •. $275 .---~~~----1 opene:r avail, Pool. & Rec. RE.\LTOR .>J8-6966 Laguna Beach 'Bdrm, 2 Bath, Bltns. 2 car J"lf'ls. $150. 1 Br unf $150-furn $175 a na v ·· ' gar. Children ok. Sl70, ALA Rentals e 64.S..3900 2 BR. Jurn . .Lg upsta irs apt. 2 Br unf $175 furn $210 Mgr. Apt 113 646•5542 • $2'65 • \VESTC1.IF1' .. Drive -2 BR. 3 BR C J I' B I sunricck. Yrly lse. $200/nin. ALL UTJL L"'l"CLUDED * $130 UP * 865 Amigos 'Vay, NB Ne'll'ly decor. Blln ap.. area. 1 & 2 BR Apls. $185-$210. Ocean vle1v. 100 Cli.ff Drive .Apts. Ph. 49'1-5933. . • l·tE•R THIS•. 2 BR. }"ncd · on · 2 a. poo s, GIANT 1 & 2 BEDROOi\f! piianres. Pool. e &12--6274 " "-· 1120 \I'. Balboa Blvd. No. 7. S""CI I B il l\faMg•d by ' '',,; •. Encl gar. Kut~ & pets. 1 7'c~l·/"~~~·,N~·~"·"'~·-· ~'"~'-·'2'~"·~· ~r~'~s_'_'_· I i'•;·.,~~1~>;;<~•·;~=-;;;;;;-<,;:;;; ,,~ a onus; a s vcr. Gorgeous, park·like selling. Santa Ana ..., " ~ .-....... ~ plated candle .snuffer is Clo.sed garages for max-\VILLIA?tl \VALTERS .CO. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 Irvine CLEAN bachelor apl!;. Steris yours If you bra1g !his ad imum security. Quiet street. Garden Grove Kids Love It! ! ! VISTA DEL MESA to beach. iioo & up. 315 E. \\'h~n you visit our models. Adults m pcls. 2020 -;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I FREE I! Balbo.1 Blvd, 673-9945 4 blks s. or San Diego Fnvy Fullerton Ave (Harbor to • Grt'at JlCIV 1, 2 & 3 BR. Child Apartments Landlord•·Owners 3 BR., 2 Balhs ........ S32S Corona del Mar on Beach, l bl k \V. on Holl Bay, then So. until 2 blks $81R60 T02 B$1A7TOH c11rr. ccn!cr. Large club-l & 2 Bl<. Furn & Un!. Dish· \\1e <A'ill refer tenants to you 3 BR. & tamily rm. home, to 16211 Parkside Lane. So, or Ne"'PQr( ruvd.) 2 • • house, etc, BBQ, 3 heated "'asher -Stove and Reirig ~ FRE£ of charge, •. '.\ta.ny (incl. ~ardcner) .... $3-l5 (21 BACHELOR apts, nr big lTI·1) 817'5-Mt &12-8690 * * NEW * * pools. Shag crpt'g-1.rg Rec center. desirable tcnanls on our 3 BR. 2 Ba.. Choice-green-Corona $1.10 & Sl:W / n10 RL'JG BROS. Announces Gas & \Va trr Paid $145/UP RENT Starts $15.'i v.·aHcng list. bt>ll locarion "" ...... $32S Yrty. t Adlt, no pets. Laguna Be11ch Apts. Koiv Available Air-cond. Dishwashers SOUTH COAS'l' VILLAS Tustin & Mesa Drive ALA Ren1als e 6il,j.390Q 4 BR., :I'~ Ba.. & fam . rm. 642-8520 MEDITERRANEAN Pool. Jacuzzi Pool UOI \\I, i\lacArthur Blvd. * 545-4855 * Turt:e Rock, nl'ly new.$350 QUIET ga rden apt Recreation facili tiMI '516·it823 -- SIOJ·S<'p. Bach. Srv, ref, c:pts, 2 BR. 2 baths ........ S273 LRG 1Br2 blks big Corona. do1~·nt0\\•n, I BR, ck>cora!or VILLAGE Pallos, Bar.Bc·Ques 2 BR · FURNISHED Newport Beach drps, infant, cal ok. Furn. SJ:i5. \"early. 1 al.lit, turnishecl, ocean vie1,1,·, 1 blk 2·100 Harbor Blvd. Limllctl Chilcll"('n LARGE 2 bdrm, upsta u·s, ]-Ba.th. $275 l\fo., yearly T~rm1 based on equity. no pets. 642-8520 10 beach, ocw ep!s, drps. Costa ~ll'Sa EL CENTRICO Apts l'"arpets, drapes. stov(' & 3 BR. -UNFURN. 642-2171 54.S.0611 $12fl..1 Br. £/side, dbl gar, e 2 hr. Bills paid, $200/mo, paint, Mature adlls. )'ear ITI~) 557-8020 2 blocks N. G.G. frv.'Y 11!lriir, lenccd yard, child 2 Baths. $325 l\fo., yearlt d Id al I 'I d I I $200 •"' ,._ d liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii OK. rras. 531-7377 BURR WHI Servlng Harborarea21yn:. n1C'r yar. e ma . c1 · yrl y. Au ls, no pe!s . case. 1no . ....-.v~;, ay,)• off l3 rookhurs1. TE S•ttler Mortgage Co. BLUE BEACON 6i:.-3.SI1 494-3839 eve & \\"kcnds * BRAND NEW * 9931 Central Ave. W=••..,•_cl_iff===--:----: I Realtor 67.S..4630 1iiiiiiii336 ... iiEii.iilii7\hiiiiSiitrttiiiiiiliiiiiil * 64.S..0111 * . SINCE l9'l6" 2 BR. nr big Corona, Newport Beach LA t'QSTA APTS, 1 & 2 BR. Garden Grove (714) 530-2Jj() QUIET, SPACJOUS _Ne\~' 2 290l Nev•port Blvd., N.B. t• • PRIV 'CY Ai;!SUR ED•. Z Sl85/mo "t'eaTly, Adlu!s, no Bltns. "''mm•'n• ~1 • gar-"!'"'!'!"'~'"'~'"''!"''"'""i B 2 Ba d ' Pl h " " 1· B k Bid BAOIELOR t It l T• ~ .. ~ • T, gar en ap · us Santi An• Cash Fast I. Bdrm ft'nct'd yai-d. gar. 151 \ t•s1crn an ~ pets. 6-12-8520 . RP • 11 e cc. age, All util pd. $150 to $170 Huntington Beach gold crpts, drpi;, bltns, p\'t -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I child '& JK'I. Slj(). 11111 \'•'l"~ily Park ~C-o-st7a~M7e-,-.------i S\\"lm ponl, t'!lCI l!ar. 1 blk mo Adult no pets ----------I pa110, chandelier in mas!Pr • Oay1 831-0101 Nights ocean. Sl·IO. 210 Cedar. 3'·' A. ," CM 's12.9703 , b h Lo t k' VILLA MARSEILLES 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds :i.1s-11~1 ·" voca o, ' . . Seascape Apts at . Ls o on-site par g FREE APPRAISALS e NEAR BEACH! Com/or-L B h SPEC lt\L _ Lo Rates froni 1 ..:_:;.~c.,.~~~--~,I•!!!!!!!!!!!'"'!!!!!!!'"'~!!!" + cov'd i.;ar. A!! sgl story. BRANO NEW I "I 1 B• P• drps child aguna tac * LRG 2 Br. furn ilPL 935 UNF'Uf'N 2 BR, 1185, LOVELY nc\V 1-2·3 BR. l \\'~lk to ~., .... ·~•· '''es1clilf SPACIOUS Co•ta Mesa Investment a" e '· c · ' · ----------1 $2j "'k, Kit avail, ni a id '" " \..v " "' 548-7711 t' SllO. -* VlE\V HO:\IE * scrv, TV & ph. Sea Lark \V, Balhoa Blvcl. $165/mo. Dran1a1Lc 2-sty. I.iv. rm. blk from ocean. Crpl.'11, drps, Pluza. Adults. $.185. 6-12-0239 1 &· 2 Bdrm. Aptl. ,..,..,..,..,..,.,•.,".,Y.,•.,m.,•..,..,, I ALA Rentals • 645-3900 Dcluxt' 3 Br. 2 ba. Nor1h end Motel, 2301 Npt Blvd., c:-.1. Yearly. No mrn. Ph before \\'/frpl., Ove r I oo k ~ n g ~3Li~~~~~~~1~4;~~~ck, frpl. Apts., Adult Living 1\vno Keeds Money? $ l .• ARGF; 3 bedroom, just kw, ,;!nt ocC?an Vi<'11·• All I ~·~•&-~· ~74~4~'-------f ;;9;;;;"~"~· ,";;tJ.-00,.,--;3';;:;:;:--;-;;:-f tropil'al lndscpd S\\•imlning Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. & Unfurn. ;n,ailable on all IYl't-'-~ 01 iwinted , "a~W>t~ & dr11 ~s. blln kitch. rr11l. O~n beam \VESOCLIF'f' Drlve • 2 Dr. pool & patio, 145 E. 18th St., 3 BR. i-·reshly painted & Dishwasher . color eoon!lnat" R I E I I 'd ! I I d d f ·1 CC'tl"s. $375 n10. • FURN. JNCL U ti I. Ne.\\'ly tiecor. Bltn aP' 642-4603 clean, bttns. l'tpL~. drps, (.,,-,-:-:-------«I applianc• pl h sb ea s a e·pal or or nn. rnre yar . ami Y room, DELUXE bachelor & 1 br lc-==-;c-:-:--,,"'°':--::::-i~tc & air rond. Nr schls Co•ta Mesa 11 • us ag 9 lo 9 pm, (taily. TR L:Sf childrtn and pets OK, 2\J ~ltSSION REALTY Ap•" $l5 weekly & "P· l\to. plianccs. Pool.• &IZ-6274 LARGE 2 bdrm, l 'i ha, un· .,. carpet _ cboice ot 2 color DEED CENT . nr. ,., r. p.m. \\'alker & Lt e, rates. Terms Avail. 998 El • \VlN'fER RENTALS • furn. $150 mo: a r g e sc emes • athl • stall ER I "k * 494...{}731 '"* t shopn.11; & parka. Kids OK. ~!ji!iiiiiiiii!!ijiiii,j!il h 2 b J.123 N. Broadv.•ay, S.A. Rraltors, 8 •12-44 55 or Lagun1 Hills Cam hlO. 546-(]4jl. Rent NOW for Sept .! b:1chelor, unfurn, $100 n1o. no pets. Ph. 830-l~IS, NEW NEW NEW sho\\·crs . miITor!d \\'ard- 51Hl81 ~I0-5140 ABBEY REALTY 642-~50 91!4 El Caininn, C.:\i. ./ OIEZ ORO 1\PTS robe donrs -lrdirect Jlgbt· ---------$25 per week & up "'""7 •0 12 ,,.__ A I 1 8234 Atlanla. 1.2.3 Bdrm~. Ing in k"t h b kf Mortgages, 3 BlJR.i.\I. + 1amlly rm., full t.SE nc\\ hoine-3 br. 2 ba, air BACHELOR & 1 BR. • OCEANFRONT l.GE 3 ,,., -ru • """" nigr, P · J c en • rea ast T D -' 260 2 221 V OCEAN Pool. Private g a r a g ,. . VILLA CORDOVA bar !Juge pr1vat I ced rust e.us dining rm., built-ins., brk. rond, crpts, d 1 h w sh r . TV & ma.id serv. avail. BR. BA. -1 \ . -SPACIOUS 1 Br. apt!. Crpts, ,Vshr/dryer. 5 3 6 _ 0 3 3 6 . • e ~n $39' a montb. 1'0 FEE, Lndscp malnt'd. Adj to clu b 430 v ·ct · c :\I t"RONT, 675-IDlO. drps, dsh"T· all blfns, 1 536-2'727 patio • plush landscaping • NO ONE can top our prices-Newport, 540-1720. flOOI. S285 mo. l\tr. Freeman 1 ona, " · * 2 Br. Ul>lllr!t "'/~unrlk, child ok. $150 peT mo, All QUIET-SAFE brick Bar-B.Q'1. tarp heat. CASH in 24 hn. for )'()Ur "f\lAKE Room }'or Dad· 83()....6319 ,•, F1 DRISVEl BBY lu • hanging lrpl. Nr kh. $250 ulil incl'd. 6~5--0981. 307 NBE\VLY dd~cora~~~ 2 B~. 2 COOL -FRJSll! ed31"'°01''s&o."B"~,:stol St. Tru1t l>ef'ds.TRUSTDEED dy", .c lo•n out t'--"\VEED I• " I ~ O\\'er I. r, rn ()T y•l••.Nopcts.r·57-8ol00 Avocado,C~1,Apl9 A stu io . ....._...,11n \'ll'I\'. 1.\'cnrBackBay] • '"" 1 "'" reap ' .c ean unfu•n. 0 --loc•oo· n i·n C.,I. 1,::.:,·;::·:.:.:.:::.~::.:-~c::::..~11;;;;:;m;;o-;-;;;--;;;;;;;--;;;;r bl · "-' · t 1· (" •tL N I So ~--CENTER I ]323 N h I CASH & h • °""' f I tin~. reu ,g, pT1va e pa 10. 40 U • Ad I ,. . o . \.,~I Plaza) Broad"''";" ;rA. 543-~i ~~~'oi~;P:: O~iliK ~~:,, ~1~:~~~1 atra~ail; I 7&!&-0920=~-·~"'~57·597~•0_ . ...,. __ 2e1~111~n:~1:~ 1~~!~·2 fo;:!· 1~~ S~~~~irp!, ~~ni~~ilin~s: Tradcwinds ~al1y 847~ll Apartm:~: Co~~lex Santa Ana anytim.. ad. Pilot CIM~!l\l'rl ad. 642-5678 LGE I BR, ba I cony, St, NB. 646-46&1 patio. Adults only-no pets. ~2~B~R-,-,~ithz-:c=ro~1=,~.-,;:,.,,:::-,.-n=,=,=rl 1 & 2 BEDROOMS PHONE: 557-1200 ]:;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;:..;:;:;;::;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;:;_.;:;;;:;;;:;;::;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;:;: dishy,·asht>r. $130. l\lgr. 7~:i l b tl 2 Ba d 1 Rcf"s. 2354 Santa Ana Ave. beach. Up~tair11 \\'/patio & Enterlaini n"g will be a pleai;-I iiiijiijjj B Jaml"s SI. &l6-227S: r, en, ' C! uxe 673--0395 g11ragr. Re,ady for N'n! urr. Dccorat1 n" 1his lo\lt.ly. I 1 612-8017 duplc>x nr beach. Rt'fs T't'Q'd.,.,,,,.,,=·=-;;--;;-=:-c;eo: 6/15 96.11-313 " $©~~lA-L£"BirS" The Purzle with the Built-In Chuckfe 0 Raammoe ktt•t7 cf the IOIW xramblt!d words be-- low Jc form four simple \Wtdr tio•• I SETHEL I . _11'111. I· i '1~ r R1 I ; I RAVAL 11. • • 111 ear..waih sign tn ·a San I I• I I Francisco garage: MMotorcy· clM Washed al Half'l"ico, 1 .. rl __ T_E_Y_L_l_IV--.lduding -· s.U' .._,1 ....... ,-....,.-.-.,..1-i 0 Comolot• th• -......, by 1111""1 In tho m'--.l -YoU d...-lop fR>tA :sttp No.. 3 h.low. ! ''':;'.'i,'~~~i'ls l.ETitR$ IN I' I' I' I' I' r I ~ ~~?wr.ELm~s I I I I I I I SCRAM·LETS A,.SWERS· IN CLASSIFICATION 900 Aduhi;. $ZIO/r110. 642-."U!R2 1BEAUTIFUL 2 BR. 11;; Ba ' Sj)l\ClOUg /'lfll will be n joy. DUPLEX 2 Bn, J BA, ronipl, . Studio adults.. no pets. See 2 BR lownhouse nr oct'an. e ~P"Cial eabill('I "P'ICt> red('(', Crpts.. dt"J'S. relrig, Newport H•lghts 111gr, 9-D, 7~ \V . 18tb St. Crpt~. drps, ·washer/dJj'er. •Lock gara.:-es w/ Jg slor l ~------~~-:1 i;tovr . E-side nr Catholic CLEAN l or 2 Br. Acllls, no,~C~•7t.~~---,-,-~-=-Stovl?, ttfrig. 962-2.1172. e Bin <"til e Lndry e Pa!lOR 11 "hurch, Older cpl, no peti;. pets. Lg kit. $l35-$150. 242l NEAT, clean crpl'd l Br 2 BEDROOM, neur ahop'g. • D\Yl d1spl •Huge gas s1xe Rooms: -l_l_501._Aigl',-. •"'~',-·"1'"";;· 0·-;;;c--l ,E=·~1~6~1h~S~t.~N~I~l.~6~4~&-~1:"'~1=•' \1'/g11r. SllO. Back !my Newly dccoraled. $120 Mo. • Special 5011ndproofing I • 2 BR Util pd ~ -1 M•r GE Realonomica Corn. 675-()700 e Deep 2 col.or Sha"' ...: • Apt. Unfurn. 365 111~0 """' ......, " • '" " \\'ILL renr lovtly furn. ~lttp-* No pets. * '"''"' DELUXE 1 br $140. Also :i br carpets, drnp!'s lnA" rooni \\'/priv ~ntr & 21:'l0 Ne1\·p:>rt Blvd, C.i\t. 4 NEW Apts, 2 BR. I BA. No unit. 2 hlk.! lo Htg Cntr. All CAS & \\'ATER PAID pri\• hn. to elderly ernpl~·-i 2 BR $1ls POOL General 309 • y· si~ t'I .... bll.n•. B!).1-49'".'4 aft -4 Mo. to Mo. From $140. .1"" -pets. 1•1onte 1sta. '"· ..... · g1·n1IC'n1an only $50/mo. Adults, no pets. 642·9520 & l'lp. 548-3963 SJIARP 2 BR. \\'fpriv11('y. ~ EJ(!(on Avt, C~f a-15-1023 Cpts, d~•. g11 r. Chlld 01\. See l\.htr. Tt<I '\'oodhl'nd f'UHN BACHELOR OR 1 BR. VEN DOME ./ CLEAN 2 Br, cp~ . .,,,., ·" 646-0032 J6,; to "'""" l•dy In my Nlcrly deeoratE'd SU!>-$140. bltns, ndu\ts, no pet's . Sl55. 50-38620v.-ncr Jo,·eJy qu1f't hnml' inc. :P.1. Pool. •\dults, 6-IZ.'ll81 n.n.tACULATE APTSt $125/mo. 54()...8100. Laguna Beach No rn10k1ng, ttfcrences. QUll:.I R.llrac sludlos $115. ADULT and DELUXE l BR. !JOO sq. ft., ------~~...,,._,. * * * + 54G-7'195 I Br. $12.l. Adlts, no pets. FA!o.1lLY Section bltn~. crpts, drps, refrig:, l:, blk bench. 1 & 2 BR. Pool. El Puerto Mll!se Apts FURN, u111 pd, ldtal for :?1:.;; J<:l1lf'n, ~lgr Apt 6, C~1 . Close to shopping, Pa rk gar, bale. like new . AduHs l.c-IU'('. 2175 S. Coast * • • ~ ,;!uclcnt, S:>ZI prr mo. Com· Z OR, 2 bn. sunken liv rm, • Spacious 3 BR'a, :z ba 1 .,.962...,.-<~'~"'~·.,-,,--,,,,-.,-,,.,,,,, !·{\\')'. 4~-0209 1 Bedroom Apts. n1unity bft. Fenia!c only. frpl c, bal<.'Ony, Sl.'IO/n1n 125.1 * Swtm pool, 'put/green • LRG 2 Br ~lcsa Vf'rdc NE\V lux J BR. l lJ BA, 6l2-8J20 BakE'r St., C:\1. s.m-2570. * Frpl, Jodiv/lndry fac'li up g Ir s , Io c ~ e d gar. oetM vu. pool , $210. Adl1 s, $130 Ir up Incl. uHllties. A.ho f;-L;;IV"E°"'o~n-8~,~,~,,..-71,71,-nd~-,h7t..f NICE 1 br dpl<. Quirt. .$('p 1145 Anaheim Ave. $1'4>$150. No pets. i'J.17-MOO no pets. -1~ aft s fut!" Pool & Rf'Cl't'11uon 1 , · ~u-ea. Quie l Environment. summrr IC~, 11 mo. \Vomen by garages. 1 adull over 30, COSTA l\U:SA &U.282.1 2 BR w/ gar new paint, fncd Mes• Verde Ott stttct parking. No ChU. onl1•. :'\lak.. RC?~rv11Uoi• no Pf'IS. ;,.48-lO'll yd V.'/ pat. \\ltt pd. 636-4l.20 d "°'r. 177 Agal f'. 675-3613 ./,\VAIL nm~' •1 & 2 BR hlrn. Just for Single Adults 2176 Placentia. A\'l"·D $130 ~,~.~1t""N~,-w-,~.,~,~,.-•. ~.~.,,--•. ~t~oc~k·.1 ~~ ~:.~~" For Rt.nt ON E • iwo gen 11 e me n; Pool, rec rm. i:rl l!X'ation. SOUTH BAY CLUB 3 BR, 2 Ba. IM!v.'ly palntC"1l. f'd gar. II ll r b or / B ll k e.r l9"i}.1!16l j\1aple 11Vl". rnn.ster bdrm. ttfrig, bt11.u t. No chl!dttn er rwc15, &IG-5824 APARTMENTS Near 11tM>p1 &: 5cbools.. $159. Shop·a. Adlts. No pets Co•ltt ~tes11 home \'le; P.C.H. & Uca.ch """EEO u .tr rt'ap'', ,clean Newport Beach :>.~744 514Zl/n10, Gl5-.151:i Olvd. !i.16-851R oul 11111!. ll't'l\l(utu & trMli -&icJ Irvine AYf'. LCF: 1 br 11pt \\/anra;:e. DLX 2 & 3 Dr, 2 Ra f'ncl DIAl..dlteCI &li-5678. Cila.tg<' HOO:\t k.1r n"nt $40 n'll>. turn into (ngh thru • Daily ~Irvine and 16th) $135. G-1~2623. il2 Shollmnr, '"11', $1·15 It up. Ht1nt11\ Orr: your 11d, thrn sit bAck a.nd Ge.nrlc>man !Inly. 1;;s l\tonte Pilot Cli1.1,111~o1 ,.rfl:&l2-56i3 (714) 645-0550 Ap1 C 3095 i\ln(."'l" Avr .. SIS.103~ llstl"n 10 fill' phor nt111 Vljt;~. Cl'l~!.i :'\lt>sn Rrntall 400 y .__[ _''"_"~ __,]~ [ Rent.ila Rooms 400 Rent•ls Wanted ~ Lost SSS Babysitting 11_B_c_f,-ll-ba-th-l-g-. _<i_ooe_U_p-vt QUIET bachtlor 50 yri a.·,,-SS-IN_G_E_""_l_•_h_m_,~-,"'oou""" BABYSITTING my home, PROFESSIONAL fol A I I\ T, LEW Takas & Son'a Plum. enl pat. 3 blks to bch bay \\'Ants cl,an, quiet furn. dog. \\'hile w/brown 1pot1. lrt fncd yd, hot meals, day me work, pr u n In C, bing R.tpair Re Pipe 673-1023 alter 9 am til ll l"OOm w/ priv. bath & en-Vic. San Juan. L•rce & nJte. 642-5299 1pniytr11, disease-& weed Remodel Free Estimates pn1 . trance in home or apt?' nr.• rey,·anl. 4!)3..4023 evts or \VILL babysit by !he "uk. ('Ontrol. Spmkl'r nipair.1,.0646-834='-'oo'.--___ ~~- Gardening fURN. ilpina: rm, quiet, Fuhion lsle. ApfltolC. SlOO 819-0858 collect. Lovini care. So. Costa Clean up jobs. Gtorie, LE\V Takas &r: Son·s Plumb. •I•'" p"v. home. Male on-mo. No pets. Dbl or king. LOST K h d 1 °l\.1e•• 664574 6'&-M93 Ing R~. R.tpi~, Remo-......... " 1 . "·d M ,. s ,. -ee1 on rreY -. ENlNG ly, ir17,50 wk. Evt!1/wkndl "'In ""' · ~ aiu e rv · h ky '"") · Ad C I AL'S GARD del. Fr!e est, 646-8340 ., 644-6250 days. u!i -i;ype uv~ Vic ams •rptt S.rv ce f prd '"''" & 11 ',:.64,:. .. ,,_'°'~'-~~-~-1 ---~-----1 & Magnolia. H.B. Playfully ot &i,,.,. ima COLE PLUMBING 'Roor-.t for rent In my beaut. HOUSE to lease, 4 BR, den, bit neli:hbor'a child, must M I RAC LE AN Ca 1'P et landscaping · servtces, call 24 hr. Service homp. College 1tudent pn!f'd LR, DR -Palos Verdes, locate. 968-S464 Service. fast dry lhlllllpoo, ~. Qn~::.:e=•---*-":c:,;.~1~1<1::,._* __ _ QlU D11ve, 838-0038 J-lunl. Bch, Laguna, Corona1s'~M'"""LLc;-7h7l'°"k-&;-:wh7,"~t-=""'1 "I f~e aoil retardant &.color Shores, Westcwt. ,. $8 HOUR del Mar -near Good schls. A ac 1 e ma e brlgbtneu included on Pl SLPG rm"1or 1teady work'&: ~lD & family. Write PO Box dot:;. Vic. Broadway, 01. every job. All work iuarn. * LANDSCAPING * umbin&/electrical repair older man, no cookg. By mo 4369, \V\chit& Falh, Teic 548-RM-4, 642-9789 eve1. &. Reu. call for fret eil N~ lawns. tn!e removal, MZ-7155 642-1403 only, $40. 1543 Orange, Cr.I. 7Sl!O. "'<'ekenda. 64~M9 sprinkleni, drains, arbors, Remodel & Repelr NICE room for working man I <'G~A~RA:;=,G~E~.~~~n~l:od<.~0:,.;,~,;,-;,wo;;;!FR~E\~\~•Ai:RRoDT! JLo::oistt ll5~t~h~. ~w~h~iti'• lc~ARP~~ET~-.~-""=,..=;,,.::::-,.....,d:=ry ratios fences walls. Uc'dl------....;. __ _ wfcookin&" privilege, Ea.st car suitable !or building 14 Samoyed Husky w/apricot foam. Resid, comm'I, win. contri Use ~I~ter Chara:e. ARE you read.v for the Sum- C.f\1. 6"12-0326 ft, ' fil...-la.ss boat. \Vil! ears. Vic :irlth, Santa Ana do•• , •··rs. ~-••I. 13 yn 1oc exp 536-1225. me:r Season? Handyman """'"' or; uuu ",...., .. • • 8~Claliat. All types repairs Help Wonted, M & F 710 ACCOUNTING CLERK 2 YPara: clerical 11.coountina:, AIP or Receivable or job co.t. Type SO w.p.m. elec- tric. For Appointment Call !11du~tr\a\ Relations 17141 494.9401 TE LON IC Industries Inc:. Laguna Be•ch Equal 011portun1ty e:mployer Summer Rentals 420 leave no mess. Call 646-4665 A\'f', C.M. ~731 &fl 6Pf.l. 962--0672 JAPANESE Ga rd en l n C & fix ups. Call BUI, Befott after• I: \\'kend!'i Bl.ACK cock-poo female Diamond Carpet Cle:anin&: Service. Neat "'Ork. Cleanup 911.m/a1t 5PM, 96&-68.17 Accounting Clerk 301 Edgewater-Bal; Bay!rnt w/pvl heh. 3 Br/2 ha, garaie. 3 or f BR house by June 5/20. Vic 2111t &: Fulle:rton. Ave Jiu room SS yd. malnt. 963-2303 Roofing Adding i\1ach. Y.x[>er. No i\lr. Robinson -Davis Realty Phone &12-700) 15th. 1 )T lease, Prefer c .r.1. 64fi..-042t alt 5:30 &: Repalrin& " Installations CLEAN Up Specialilt. haul··1,-,~..,,..;;.,,-..,..-,-,....-: I typing, Local, Call Loraint>, Newport Hts area, Call co1-1~wnn<'i'"d",;;;;;;;;;-;:-;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;tt l .Fr:,::•~·~"';:::'~· ~===-"645-~·~1~31~7 in&" odd job11, new fence & LEE Rooting: Co. Roo~ ol \Vestclifl Personnel Agency, lee!, 213: 542-2391 LOST, brown &; white small ORIF'OAr.1 CARPET CLEAN repair. Reas. ~ all types. Recover, repairs, 2043 \\'estchtf Dr., N.B. ~~~~~~~~~~i dog w/ red flea cellar. Ana. in your home or office Exp. Japanese Gardener ther-mo roof eoatinp, while 64a.mo 303 Sapphire-Bal Isl 2 Br/I ; ~ to S1uher. l9&l·A ~teyer Pl, Tomlin Svc * 557•9669 Complete Yard ~ice ~.,.~1.~r:....?:,ic/bonded since!; _________ ;[ ba cottage, avail June. $140 [ Ptnon.ils I C.l\.1. Reward. ~ estimate 540-5332 .,.. .... , .. ,.. wk, J uly $165 "'k, Sept 1-15, . FOUND, Glemeyre and Carpenter -.-J:_A::PA:N_:E:::S::E::::G:..ARD;;::E::N::E:,R~.·l·rr,-;G;;,c.:yc;Rcoo;;;;;;ting;;;;-,"io.-=:i,1;;0";,.'°'cTt. I ASSEMBLERS $165 \\'k, J\1r Robiroon, ag'1e, male Siamese Seal· T do my own \\'Ork &45-2i80 D " RJ 0 •2 1~ CARPEN~RY ?.1alntenance. cleanup • ' A• •mbl•s •l-tro-mech· avis ry.,..-,,.,., 530 point. Ve..., fr lendlv. 54&.9590 ~ L" Personals •J J MINOR REPAI No Job HB FV Ci\1 area * 842-8442 ~"-'""~~-~---I anlcal df'v1ces & sub-a5sen1-BA YFRONT co!tage avail 494-2856 b' Sewing/Alt /'on• ---00'~"=""="'---l-'"'-:C::'====~--· I Too Small. Ca met In,pr. JOHNSON 'S GARDEN ING er" I blies, Jntrrprets assembly Help W•nttd, M & F 710 CARPENTERS ExJ)erienced ORANGE COAST E..\f PLOY ~1E:-n" AGE~CY 1869 Ne"·port Blvd C05ta fo.1e8.8. 615-311 l CLERK TYPIST- An intellia:ent capable typist la needed by ClUr manu· fa.cluring en~intering s1aU to genrra!e data processing Inputs, type memos, & n1ain· t1.1rr filer;, r.tust be. able to opf'r:tte a flexo"Titer & type 53 to liO w.p.m. 2 Years l"lerlcal eicper ls al91'1 requir. t>d. Apply in person. PERTPHE'RAL BUSII\'ESS EQUIPi\IE:NT. INC. 17112 Armslrone (Irvine Industrial Complex) Santa Ana, Calif. 92103 (TI4l 540-SJ.ro COCh."TAIL \VAIT RESSES for exciting new nightclub. A]M) COOK • Xlnt hours, Dell exp If possible, mate or fernale. Sf'e r.1r Baker anyt1n1e a.lier 11 am, The Vl'!vet Gypsy, 1550 Superior, c.r.-1. Help Wanted, M & F 710 DOMESTICS o:I all kind&, moitly houw: and otfiee cleanUlR. Somt. drivlha: er- rands. Ph. 12U) 83.>82ll or <714) !168...fi~T EARN FOP. A SUMMER VACATION, A CAR, CAMP OR COLLEG£ F'OR YOUR CHILDREN. Be an AVON Representallve & earn extra money, \Vin prizes. Meet people, 1~11.ve fun. It's ea8y to get started. Jtut call: ~'\41, ~7041 ESCROW ASST/ REAL ESTATE LOAN PROCESSOR UNITED CALIFORNIA -BANK- 2712 \V. Coa.st Hwy Ne"·pon Bea.ch, Calif, 646-2-lll Equal Oppor, employtt ESCROW ASST. Expt'rienced UNITEO CALIFORNIA -BANK- 3141 E. Coast Hwy, Corona de! r-.1ar 6/15. June $75/"•k: July, f R £ £ REWARD I I Aug, Sept. $!50/wk ()r ages & other cabinets, Yard ca~. clean-up!!, plan-• Dressmaking. Alterations draw ings . specifica1ion $500/mo. 64&-7823. G":~~a~~it::i2~~~at. 545-8175 U no answer leave ting, 1prlnklen. 96i-.2035. Special On J-lems prints, part.\ list~. 1 Yr pre· COFFEE shop \vaitreF.S • AU 673·92~0 E. Costa r.1e~ii...J br. 2 M. July &. Aui;, $300 54&-.2712 Basic boating course of. mag. at 64&2372. IL 0. EXPER. Hawaiian Gardener Call Jo * 646-6446 vious electro n1echanical shifts avail. Apply in pel'!IOn Equal Opportunity Emplcyer 11t flfesa Lanes, 1103 . n10. lered !o !he public h-ee LOST-Eye glasses in case, Andel'S()IJ. Co mplete Gardening EUROPEAN Dressmaking 11.&sembly exper; Soldering of charge by the Balboa Bifocal w/black rims. Vic ANY u job. Relid., Comm'I, Service. Kanialanl, 646-4676 Expertly Custom Fllted: techniques. Power Squadron. &iii as Laguna Beach, Fri., S/22 Indus., Apt.s. Reas. Fret e1t. Japanese Gardener Accur. Rell!i. 673-1849 well as power boating Phone 499-4116 962-1961. Exp'd. Yard \Vork Alterations _ 642·5145 BACHELOR 10 share 3 Jaught, New cla.~ses 1tart LOST-Black male short hair Cement, Concre:e Clean--0p, Plantin&: 646-0619 Neat, accurate, 20 years exi>. bdrm; comp!. furn "'' color at 7 11.m., i\1ay 31. E\•ery tat "'''aring blue collar, vie. FREE 1 Co I t!al ."'"''Y .,· ... ht f--13 67' =• c -'CRETE Wo·k. no J"ob es · mp or par Tllo TV, frpL On sand. Cati John "" '" Irvine Tt>rraCP. ............. \71~ • Ja\\·n ma int. & cleanup., _________ _ Fullerton 538-1000 or "-eeks. At N<'\.vport Har-100 small. Patios • pool L ,1 G _ _, 6-12091• 1~ 61• •••7 bor Yacht Club, 72{) \V, 4)ST dark caliro ('a 1. decks . brick • &tone. . ". R1uen1n1t . a CERA'.\IJC Ule ne\A & .ro.>O Bay, Ne"'port Beach. r rmalr. Pla.s11c collar. Vic 642-()478 Frtt est. General Services remodel. Ftee P.~r . Small L\1ATURE male to share B•t""• -1ebook • -nc,·1 52nd St ' N.B. ('VCS &12-9889 I job& \A'eirome. 536-7426. Ch f • .. "" "" ,,.. QUALITY cement work, et rrx ho 1 ren!. aracier re s re-first night Registrr at FOUND a hunch of kC"ys at George do it. Lic'd, Bonded. . up >'O~lr me or Tree ServJce quired. Age 2S-l5. 1714} that llmP. 'contacr ~!rs Harbor Vista. Apts. 2257 Apt ~5--1695. spring. No JDb 100 1:mall.1..,.__,..,... ______ _ Rentals to Share 430 For Appo1ntrn,nt Call lnd11stri<1l Rrlation& 1714) 494.9401 TELONIC lnduttries Inc:. Laguna Be1c:h Supt>rior St, C.M. COOK Exper. F ftime APPLY 1:'>1 PERSON THE RIGGER 63.l-42SO, ext 22'2: 675--8443 lf.8.bc-1 Pease 613-18;,5. D. Carpentry, pitinting, wall TREES, Hedges. Top, Trim, SHARE n1y "·atf'rtront home 1 --"'=cc.:..:;;=,===-'-·1~==--""",-,=""-=~ CE~lENT \VORK, 110 job too paper. drywall etc. Free cut, removed, hauled. Ins. NO. 16 FASHlON tsL,\ND "" "" * FULLY LICENSED * LOST small black poodle ~mall, reamnable. Free f'51. 546-5319. ~A2 'OJO B•"g John iv/dock. t-.lan. ,...,...,,., years. I ht k' Sfil J • k rn 0~5 lu.::;;;-;;;-;;;;;;;;;o:;;;M;::~l;~:;;,~c;;'.'.,'~C'.:'.:::'-__ ~ ASSE~IBLERS, Exper. !or NE\VPORT BEACH Equal oppo1'tun1ty '°'mployer $150fmo. 6i:>-1331 Reno\\·ned Hindu Spiritualist "' \\ mar ings. I eg. Estim. H. Stuf11c , J"IO•<><>• • Husband Busy? call ~1oos• GENERAL I ,.,~ c•m""" Jacio~" Apply, 669 Adv'.,, 0, ·" mallers. Plrasl" call 645-7'.!54 ree ser .... , "' 1~• ·~ ...... PATIOS, "·alks, drive·; in-545-0820 after &Repair cl All oo h \V. lS!h SL , C.i\t. CUSTODIAN WORKING girl to sha.re 2 br Lovl", fo.larria"e, Busine~s \'ORKSll lRE T<""''"· Vtc", all I b ·• B ild •· M I Th' 'anup. arou an-1==~=0--====--I E • d I 6/'"/71 .. , • , st new a1vns, saw, re .... , ·+';";";'i;;.~;i;-.cv;;',;;f°';;;;:rr'"'ii'+·i ,;dT"~'"~Re::'.'.'.'.:' :064&-'.".'.:58.J~· :::''.....-!ATTRACT. WAITRESS xper1ence BJl! \\'/sn111.e as o ...., · Readings given 7 rlays a Eas!hlull area. Re"·ard. rf'move. 548-8668 for est. LABO UNLl 'llTED ' " 675--71:).l alt 5;;30 k 10 I JO * R ' * U h I t rx.....,r. Not und("' 21, NO ORAi"GE COAST ·wee · a.m. o p.nl. 6.15-16 11or774-74~3 TE ~ N P o s ery <:... ,~ • E'IPLO\"lENT AGENC" " 312 N El C R I e e CONCRE . r-100~. l!ANDY~IA PllON'E CALLS. Apply 1, i• ". i l L \VILL ~hare apartment with . amtno ea , girl. 1 child OK. Prefer San Clemente LOST 1'.lin. brown poodle, patios, drives, si<ie\\•11\ks, \Ve.Jding -Ca.rpentcy 673-1922 VINYL \Veld1n1:-Cu 1.~. burn~. person, Sur! & Sirloin, 5930 1869 Newport Blvrl, Chris!ian. tH.>4574 492-9136. 492-0076 fcmalr, 4 n1os o711d . ,Vir.644th slabs. Reas. Don 642·8514 Hauling trars. cu~ton1 dyeing (all \~·~"~c~.m~·~"~'~"~"'~"~N:·~"~· -c-c-I '•c•"'•" ... "' .. ''•'•"iiiiiiiiiiii•'"·"·"·'·"· I St., N.B. 67.1-75 · n ter Child Care colors) ~~2237 (n1obile) -: Garages for Rent 435 \VE guarantee our shampoo G " " 1 "NO Job 700 Small", Lite 833-3!M2 APT House fo.1gn;. Couple for will stop hair loss & in n1ost OLDEN fi:ctrlever., vie. 0 1 hauling, ""'"' & ''"'I·~~~~~~~~~! 30/40 un11s, Painting & STORAGE GARAGE cases will gro\.v hair back. Caslla Capi!'itrano, yrs, 00 CHILD Care, myl ><>m•6· clean-up, \\.'inrlo"'s \\.'Ashed. Lill cle11n1ng. + Apl ulary. * NEWPORT BEACH Con1pletely guaranleed.l ~~lt~c~, ~bO~y~"~po~l,~4~93-4~~:WO~.~~'.I \Veek daya. Ar"t "s•' •tc. '"'o "172 btw" •10 am I I if --"-"-'-'~'-'"-"'---'--~~-I Cosls only $2.7.5. You be ihe MacArthur &; ower, . . "' '"""" o-Employm&nt _ -$20.00 -1 2 5'19-3187 or aft 5 pm. L--------' AVG. $2:"1 t1oy, 1~·ork 3 hrp; * ED RIDDLE * judge? Sir \\al!Pr's, 20j [ · 1~1 ~:.::..:::::...,------'-ev,.·s. T<'I. frorn honl". 6-16-8811 jNif;"u"'°ft:'E' ~B,-lvV•IV.~C)"'a'~· veffio f l--l~'=''='"~c~tio=':.__J ,_ C~•-n_t ... :lo,c_t_or ______ YARD, a:arage, cleanups.I••·-------Dehv. In Arf'll . Call 9 to 12 . ,.....-.,. ..Jti. Re:mov~ trtt~. dirL Ivy, J b W DAY DISHWASHER Apply In Person Ancient Mariner Restaurant Office Rental 440 SINGLE? WI DOW ED? MY Way, quality h<:imf' Akiploader, back hoe . o anted, Pemale 702 .•-•~l~•7•k_d_'Y7•_· ~5:J6.~""".,,--- *Divorced Over 21* repair. Wall!'i, ceiling, floors ="~""'~"~'C..~--~--!;:;;;;;;:;;:c-;:-7,'.::;--;::;:::::::: &1b)'Sll!er f.1y Hom~ 2607 w. Coast Hwy. * PRESTIGE OFFICE Oldest & larg('st. For a self Schools & etc. No jnb too small. TRASH & Gange clear>-up TYPING & Sec't strv11•r. 6 Days, 1:30 Afo.1-tPr-.t Newport Beach Nexr ro Real Estate firm. explanatory message 24 hrs instructions 575 547.-0>36, 24 hr ans. M'N. 7 dayi. $10 & load. Free est'. IB:\1 Selett1vr. _ II av r =c==C=.•~11=6-IZ-~73,--79_,,.-,,-!~"""""'"'"'"'"'"'"' R<"dccoratecl -crpts & drps. a day. 541·9991 Additions * Remodelin~ Anyt\m,, 548-5031 Slenorel!e & l)irlaphone BABYSl'ifER, livP-111, for 01-:NTAL A8st, Jn>nl SC'c'y & XJnt for insurance, tax ac· ANYONE interested in ahar·. PIANO LESSONS Gerwick & Son. Lie. MOVING G cl tralW'riben;:, 1:-i )TII €"JCp. school·agr rhildrt'n, prcsentJvc nurse. l\lature coun1an1 flr architect. 1860 ing l"Xpense of Los Angeles Your hom~. Certified teach· 673-6041 * 54~2170 & lite hauli~;.~e~~~b~:. 540--0202 or j.46.!R92, Laguna. 494-12!!0, s.17-126.'I wnman, rnjoy J>E'OPI<'. Exprr B,, Newport Bh·d .. C.:\l. phone line to SE portions of f'rs. r-.1us1c Systems, Mr. Electrical Free cstimatc:o;. 645-1602. \VANTED: day "'Ork, l"X· BABYSITTER, allrrnoons, 5 Pn'f'd but 1ntellig<>nct & W. E. LACH ENMYER -~O~ra~""f:'~C~o~?~4i>l-i56~96~~:rl ~H~a~th~coc~k~,~&l~1.{)~H~4~. ~~: 1 ;;..:.;..~:.;..______ per J' n c e d and h<.1ve hrs, 3-5 days prr "·eek, rnthusiasn1 may make dif· 1860 NE'\VPORT BLVD. LIC'D Ele:ctnc.ian, main!. Housecleaning n!ferences, $18 a clay. $0nJ(' "'knds. 962-4986 fcrenrr. H.B. 962-2136 r. 645-3""° /E 613-4-77 Tired of Bars & Dance!'i? ~====-~--=-,, ....,JI "<0 Vf's J *EVE'S DATE BOOK ~ serv. Also, resid. industrial. HOUSE OF CLEAN 542~781 BARTENDER. dayr., 30-40 DENTAL ass'1, C'ha111lirlf' Qr DELUXE PROF. SUITES Parucular GALS & GUYS [ Serv' nd R · l 642-4174. Comm'! &: Res1d. Cleantng-A IDES r 0 R C 0 N· hn>. p:'r "'t>l'k, S2.2S hr. frnt offitt, Lido \\'ril<', 17612 Beach Blvd., H.B. Cali EVE Z-Spm. 774.7'745 ieu .i 'P' 1 " Ga(dening Free rs!. 1r 642·6824 1r VALESCENCE, f'ldf'rly OanH Villa, Dana Pl. Classifier! ad No.1~1. Datly Plentiful pkng, A/C, jan., ~~~~~~~~F.'i::l ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;.;; I ·---..;..----~ &y & Beach Janirorial rare or fan1ily ca re, 496-~727 Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa music. new c11rpets I n•int / GoLF • Ttvinr Coast C. C. ONE stop Japanese garden-llomemaker~ · 47 "~~1 ~-~----~~-•t c I"! 92'2' •-B b 'ti' Crp", windOIA'&, floors clc. 1~~=--·~·~'~-~== BOAT C1tr""n1er ..,r Cah1net "esa, a 1 • • drp~. J2j 10 900 s\'J. fl. Suite mem~r:o;.hip for sa le-terms. a ys1 tng ing & minor landscaping. H I r I ===~~~~~~-· I ~" 6~2-TJll/cve, 548-9722. 1--'--...:.-----~-••t SJ" -17, Harbor Res. & Comm'!. 646-1401 e p Wanted, M & F 710 !11aker, exrer. Perm. job. DENTAL A$s't. Experience S. Ph. 847·2:U.l COSTA MESA "= ' ~ )'rt""'' "--f,I•. L.akP Ar-h · 'd 0 ·1 View, & Turtle Rock fo.1('!ifl Cleaning Service [;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; """" c a1r~1 t . .,.. ary open. DESK space available $50 PREGNANT? Ad 0 PI io n• PRE·SCHOOL Carpets, \Vindows, Floor etc. rowlH'!Rd Marina, f 7 I 4 ) Laguna Hi\11 area. &:1.0-1130 mo. \Viii provide furniture <1 bort ion. v as ec I" m Y Special summ<'r Program AL'S La.nd8caping. Tree Resid. & Commc'I. M8-4Jll A BcltC"r Temporary 337·2501 DENTAL Rec e P 110 n i 5 t Ex•c. Sales LOOK AT WHAT WE OFFER e lla"·a11an Vacat10n ffor ~) • fmmediale 1971 Cadillac: plan • Top compensation • free tra1n1ng program \I/ITH THESE JNC'EN'f. IVES & A POSITION THAT ALLO\VS YOU UNLI~OTED POTENTIAL&. ADVANCE- !<IENT & EARNING PO\V. ER, FLEA1l3JLITY. VA- RfETY IN ACTIVITIES & SECURITY \VE KNO W YOU'lL DO YOUR VERY BEST IN i\1AKING BIG MONEY FOR YOURSELF &. FOR US, NO COLLEGE OR EX· PER. NECESSARY, JUST AGGRESS CVE BRIG HT OlITGOING INDIVIDUALS \VITH THE DESIRE ro t-.lOVE AHEAD. ST ART A PROFESSION· AL BUSINESS CAREER \Vm-1 TREMENDOUS FIN· ANCIAL SECURIT Y & PRESTIGE. DAVE LOOK· JNGLAND, FINANCIAL IN- VESTYIENT ANALYST, R. E. BROKER, CO?iti\IUNJTY LEADER. & PROFESSION· Al. SALES'.\IAN \VILL BE REVJE\VJNG APPLICA· TIONS li\1MEDTATELY. CALL NOW 547·6771 at $5 n10. Answering service counseling & information. !Srh Ir. Monrovia, % day + remova1, Yard remodeling. Posillon Bkk F /C 1 $6(10 · d available. 17875 Beach Blvd. 642-4436 Trash hauling, lot cleanup. HOUSECLEANING pr 0 v.•anted. Ex Per ten ce Ask for Mr. Ohare Hunlington Beach. 642.-4321 "'=s~in-g~l~,-,~D~.-n-ce~C~l'•-,-,-1 Pf~g~, :i'~~~~h~'.'~~: Rrpair sprinkltrs. 673-1166. Will d~ any type houseclean· URGE NTL y NEEDED Immb«l l. Qpc111nt;' In fp""1 lirn1, 1,0'="•'="7',"-"~"~'"-'7°'-'--~· I "!!'""""'"""'~"'"'"'"'! ln.t:: Ex11 & R,.a~ 546-0821 Sia c & 1:1'01~·1ni;. easant DENTAL Pedodonric a.sst. Executive Secretary DESK space &vailable $50 Elegant atmosphere, 2·6 hrs 6::l() AJ\J.6 Pi\'1. EXPER. Jap11nese-American · · · · · • SECRETARIES oflh·es. sz:; increa~ ea. 90 r-.lusl be exper. in tah & $ mo. Will provide furniture 5:\.1·22'2\ $18' wk-CO~tPARE! 6424050 gardener, complete garden-DEDICATED CLEANING e TYPISTS days fflr 1st yr. Call f\fiss chairside pl'f)('cdures. Non 600· y at S.:i mo. Ans\llering scrvi~ ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. or SJR-52.,7, ing service & cleanup. We do evcry!hini;:-. Fn!e e PBX OPRS Conni<'. 557-6122, Abigail Ab· Amoker. 644--0611 SH SQ, C'.ood rypi!it. ounc available. 305 No. E l -217 . 1~------~-893-0150 estim.at,, Call 673-4072 e KEYPUNCH OPRS 230 Company. Call Loraine, Cam in o Real, San Phone 542-1 or \\Tile BABYSITI!NG my home, hot PrrS1Jnnrl Agency, DENTAL Assistant -part \Vrsrchff PersonnrJ Agency, Clemenle. 4924420 P.O. Box 1-'23 Costa '.\lesa. vtc. Bushard & Hamilton, LA\VN care & garden v.·ork. Ironing e ACCTNG CLERKS \V. \Varocr, Su1!e :lll, S.A. lime. Experirnc,.. "*'<'-f'~sary, 2CH3 Westdttt Dr., N.B DeLuxr Office j:,>j sq fl. Social Clubs 531 ~Js~Y. eve., hr., or wk . ~~ah~nh~:.u~:fj 54~9~~' d • Jronini; & Alterations \Vork Y:e~.,;t!1l'btrc e BLUE DOLPHIN e Call bet. 9 k 5, 89."r-2415 s.is-2no. i·ee Pa.id, Also Fee Carpet-Drapes-Panel \Valls Al f\ly Home Hastes~. f'Xper. p/Ume. AP· DISTRIBUTORS w a. n t e d, Jobs. !\eYi'f>Orl ~ Bay Center BALLR00:"-1 dance lesons 51>7&1l ply. 335.l Via Lid<'l, NB. new prorlucl. XJnt com· -EXP--E-R_l_E_N_C_E_D __ d_tn_n-,-,1 2052 Ne\\·port Blvd, C'.\1 Pvt & class instruction.* * * * * * * JRONING + Interim BUSBOY mission. R4&-&75 cook. 5 nites Wttk. Conract (Also ·~ off avail) 646-1252 Business men appts avail. S2 hr 1n my home Personnel Service ApJlly In Perf.On DRAPERY Jerry between 9 k 5 pm. DESK space available S50 E\'eryone welcome. Elegant!,.-----------------... 642.-083.l WOODY'S WHARF SEAMSTRESS i\1r. f\Iikf>'i1 209 Palm St., mo. Wiii provide furniture I !•~lm~o,;~p~h•~tt~" ·~"'"~222~1~·~~~11 1 Masonry 778 W. 20th, C.M. 2318 \V. NP\\•p<>r1 Blvd. Eic perienced Balboa 675-jTi·I at S5 mo. Ans\\·ering service I, Trader's r>arad1'se MASONER.Y \VORK AU types &12-7j2J, 546-2.)92 l'if'Yi'{lOr! Bra('h s2.::io.SJ hr, EXP'D fun time co11metician ava'.lable. m Forest Ave, [ I ~ r, (IV 191 ' Pl I ORANGE COAST Take full ch•-· cosmetic 9466 Lost ind Found Free csl. Thoroughly expel, • on ti • 1. ro aecn ia, TY IST " ·• Laguna Beach. 491-1 642_194S right on Placentia to 20th CLERK P E~1PLOYMEN'T AGENCY dept in rlru£ stflre. Submit PROl'~ESSIONAL B!d'", 45c ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~11 I' S s1 h 20 1 Good rii;:ure 1tpl1tudr & ~ 1869 Newport Bl vd name & tr!r. numhf'r to Box . I ne p . ,. & . " ng 1 on t IJ. 111 It. Air-conrl, crpts, rlrps, a1n 1ng lng. X1n·1 hrnefits, fee Paid Cost;i ;\ll"s;1 fi.l.'i-311 1 ?.65, Cdi\I for intrrview gd parking. Xlnt loc. 3:;11 E. found (free ads) 550 Paperhanging By E111nloyrr. * DRIVERS * EXPERIENCED driveway 171h St. C.i\1. PETE BAR· tt" mes ----------IAdm Sales A l~ fee .Tob11 • salesman. Sh1Lrp! Ne.at only, RETT RLTY. 642-43S.1 PROf". painting. Exter l i\lary Bauithman No Experience Salary & comm. 545-9843, FND : S. A. very lo ... ahlr. 1tory, low as $223 w/a:d TRAIN TO BE E 1 DESI\ space avaU in ex· fri('ndly, blonde ca1, J le.gs. pa.int. Avg rm $18. Airless .. xecu ivc Necessary! .-l_0-_3_P_M _______ 1 ecutive office bldg, northern w/Je"'elerf pink collar. Anx-doJ larS ipraying accou8. ceilings, 2 AN INVESTMENT P<'rsonneJ Ag('nry . . ~ X PER. Land' cape part ()f Htg Bch. Beach & ious for onr or lovable new COUNSELOR 410 \V, Coast lfwy, NB f\.fust have clean Calif. dnv. Sup c r; n 1 end en l • & Erlln,l"r nr Htg Center. coats SIS. Roy, 847-1358· Sulit> Jr 615-2716 lng record. Not under 25. .. • d 1 -• homr. S.18-2185 No Wasting !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! YELLOW CAB CO estima~ors wRnle mmeu. 847-8001 i\IEN 1\'llLJTARY \VO'.\IEN • Phone 542-4428 NE\V office, grnd fir. Air· FOl!NO-Half I gro1vn black Late modrt Chrysler. con-Jfave J.l,{X(I sq. ft. hldg on *WhW,,ALyoL"P~,~~.Rlac'! NOW'S THE 186 E. 16th St., C.M. EXP ER moto r c Y ct• 2 N !0ilr1prd ma e ti::;rr cat 'hi J k ncl't" l\4 Acres nr R.edlanda fwy. ._.. " PRESTTGOUS POSITION cond., only S60. 16.~.,-! i e\\'· w/flully tail \\Canng flea v,,r.1!,. e, 'u e new.,~ ~n~;; Trade for LOCAL pro-y. 548-1444 646-lnl NO\V AVAILABLl'~ TO IN-EXPER. SECRETARY sal<'sman ln Aclive a.;:ency . .. 11 Blvd, CM 642-"°"" ev1s II Ea II II ,OM/ m f!5, llu r-•• TIME FOR 1680 N•wpo1·1 Blvd C M ·-co 11r s \J area SCHIVORER LESCO PAINTING DIVIDU'"S 11'110 ARE Typ•ng 50 w.p.m. SH "~ ' ....... 642-JI06. fi-1~1 1q 11 6 · \\'arranty, rrad" for older ,....., • _, ~UICK CASH °" Bob. NEWPORT BEACH . A pni. ear or ~ &1;,.139;:; 673-2654 ResJd & Apts, Sprayin&: ac-CREATIVE, TNTELLTGENT ,. w.p.m. BLl.i: & grey stripe cat 50me Have Kimball ~plnet piano, Ha\·e oceanfront duplex. cous. ceilings. Jnt I Ext. & l\lONEY l\IOTJVATED. THROUGH A UNITED CALIFORNIA r;a~J~~. ~~\i~~lll-n.~li;: * $1~~~~ * brown spot~. Collar and Dux man·,. chair & ottoman: \Vant 2nd T.D.'s, equil)' in L1c'dffn~. 645·2399. DAILY PILOT -SANK-vestment. Gen I!. 'f1() bc.-11. On ?CC campu~ l!ome pr of Lanct'r 77 ~krs. \Viii house or • ?? PA INT ING : Ito n e 't' \VHEN y OU REPP.E-201 Avenlda Del ~1ar Arm s l re et. 4 9 4 --0737, 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, C~l r·rom 300 sq/ft, J.X:_ ~ It. ST;,-2464 or 541-5032 3i00 NE\\'PORT BLVD, NB *ON THE BAY* 67~2461 or 541-5032 e NE\VPORT Beach Df!tuxe V1f'"' oll1c('~. Alr<0nd. Priv. Ba. 210o W. Coast H\\•y_ IN"DIVIDUAL OFFICES New Trv!nP Jndust. complex. Top loc. 833--'\443 anytime () XLNT Orf'"TCE Space now av/\ll, LIDO BLDG. 3355 Via Lidn, N.8. 67:H501 S~IALL office 11oragl' room. l~ZO + to1lr! lho'-''t'r. Eas1 C.\t ~11G-HM3 Business Rental Econ. hu1td1ni:. 8.14-J71:i exchange for :i;m car or ? RICH IRWIN guaranleed 11mrk. L!c'd. SENT OUR CO!llPANY \\'E WANT AD San Clemente 4~2072. 494-lOOJ, 545--0487 }'~OUND reddish 8 Bro\\'n &r.l-459.1. ReaHorlExchangor 6T.r6060 Local rel'ti. Call 675-5740 a11 \VANT YOU TO KEEP UP 642-5678 17141 492-5123 al V. C t talll=--c=---:--,,-;;c:-;:::=;:-5. THE l~1AGE & QUA LITY Equal Opportunity Employer Daily Pilot \Vant Adi have m e PUTIPY· Lc on lnen San Clemente on the beach· lNCO~fE PROP. San Oe-,:::.-,~~--,~--:--1 \VE I-I.AVE BUILT. SO, \VE ~;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:=;;;:=!.;;=========~~h~m~•~in<~g~•~loro~~· ;;;;;;;;;;;;.I Av,., C.i\f. Ap proic 4-6. 9 units or 5 uni~ & 4 unl!!'i m<'n\t', Del 1"1at Ave. 2 PAINTING. professional. AH \\'ILL GIVE YOU ll\fMED--; 548-4785 sep;.t-alt:d . $30,000 equity. Slort's, 3 apls. Will trade work guarn, Colo r JATELY A CHANCE TO P I " d • I TD .,., 111e ci alist, 962-6143, 2 Puppies. Vtc au arino an Trade for lots or · or .. -prop, or • • DRIVE & O\VN A NE\V 1971 Vlc or Del l\lar In Ci\I 496-3702 C1tll ¥.»-3762. 547·l44t. CADILLAC. 540--17R1 Slil'J,OOIJ eq!y In over tile PICK 11 [l true'k & Cadillac YOU Supply Th c Paint. FOUND: Doherman malt' counter stock. Trade Io r \v/air & clean. Trade for Rooml'I'. pa.lnled SID ea, Call e YOUR CO>IPENS1\· vie. Newport He ig h ts ranch, land, apartmentli, limousine or what have _54:,,c,0-_7_°'_6_~-----,-1 TION lv!A \' BE 1;-,o.000. 548"-6S24 or ?? you. Ask for BiU. _ FOR clean & neat Jl&lt1\lng, $100,000 PER YE AR T ~16-5984 * * "A"'~ * interior & exterior, Call THROUG}f COl\fMlSSIONS FOUND blk l: wht s-m fem1~-~--""°'-,,,.-.....,,. ~ .. hound. Vlt: Jllai;:noha & Want Van or Van Camper. sa; -OLYMPIC C!as11 RAC· "D~l~ck~·~-=-"'"""-----.i & SERVICE FEES. Slater. Con111cl 968-6146 Econohnti or Chev wfauro Ing Sailboat, glau hull 16~•· PA 1 N TING/paperinc. 18 ==~~-,--,---l ~an, Trade '61i Cro\.\·n 1 1 11 .1 fl•lr •<Kn Yl'l. In Harbor an!a. Lie & • Start tmmed111tf'ly F,.OU12NDmlko,ag~~L~~~~~ P~;:,.y: hnp .• ·C:J6h·rylt'Jllcr. r .P. k fact. v~~~. ~o:"~'i<~up: ~ .. ;~: bonded. Ref's fUrn. 642-2l.'i6, e Liberal fringe ben('fltS .,.... I •. PAINTING/paJ>(!ring. 18 yn e Plu•h othces 837-4260 11 r. ·'· · C111r, ? 833-1526 · · CT lot In Harbor a1ea, Lle & Have t11·0 Arl,ioinin1: " s \VANT VA~ 1\VITH \VALK-YOU'LL BE ABLE '1Yl BLACK ff'mal~ Poodle ''IC. on S. Bro.itll\ay, LA. Tr:tde AROUND ENCINEI TRO: bonded. Ret'a furn. 612-2356 ACHJEVE FINANCIAL S"E· Del i\l~r & Nr\.\J)Clrl Blvd. ~~""" .1 l-"-·t dt'· Pl I p I h Repelr SHO\\"ROO~I. mfi;:. &: office i:.Ao 7 540-·922 """·'"""l"<lu1y v • 11"" • '67 CORTINA SEDAN. as er, 'C 1 CUR!TY It PRF.STIGE spaC". P11.rkln11:. Clo~e·1n .roo~l l3 or ;:, IMl'lds, or what ha\'e yoo of * 536-l 131 * THROUGH ASSOCIATION La..,•nA. $&54395 r-.1 o. Found in Cd:\1 Friendly red· <'Qual ..,111. 673-(MO:l PLASTER.--Patc;.h-Rm Adda.. W f TH PROFES.<;JO~ALS 0 • b /" H '"' 1 ..... _ o.-Acoou.~. cei!lnin, stucco 49.1-4653. dish rown puppy "'' 1Jf'a TRADE 25' Pivrr Trimaran ave 'TU 8 IP Ill .>anfa Dd..I· tttin. Ftte ~';i Im ' t • •. LIKE BARRY DAVIS, X· USED Car Lot-Llghl-' collar. Dr. Stockton 6n.1050 for Oregon land bl ara to eUxchlaoNge for 30' or BM-1591. 545-4583 aft 5. sTOCK BROKER, F'CNANC· olf1ee. comple1e $400 mo. FOUND male cat. grey k or araer s P n ewport ap. ..:::::,::::,:::.,:.:.:..,::,::,,:===~I JAL CONSULTANT&: DAVE ~•0 Har~r. CM v.·hitt 1tri""1 lo ni ha I r prox 1 mo in mimmer. * PATCH PU.STERING LOOKIN,LAm>. FINANC· ~ w r~ v.•hllll'VM'. 2lJ 981 o 61 Alt -· ~-••tlm•I•• 00\VNTO\\'N BalboA store _w;;i:i/co;f'll•=r;;. ;;;5<~!>0.1_33nreicri;;;;;,;f---~·~M~Z~·J~l!l8':'.'..___ -vl · "'Call"~ JAL Tl'-.VF .. 51'~fENT AN· IJulldtn~. U'x80'. $140 mo. PAIR mt!n·s Jltf-ICTlption \\'ESTCUIT LOT F 0 R AJ..YST, R. E. BP.OKER. 67)..6.5.i;o :::1'11SSf'l, \'il'. Amip \\'tt~. What do you ~, .• lo tnde? EQUITY" ~I~ .NEWPORT Plumbing lndustrlal Rental 450 N.8. Call 644~1807 Lillt It ~re -In Orang. BEACH HO:'-... PLUMBING REPAIR. Found Bl'aalc vie Bolaa Chica County'11 ltt~I aad trad. \ !-~,. No jrlh 100 11ma.ll h ST CM le f.d ln,.er, H.B. 846-J~M lna: posl.&12-5678 I Oth1VJ 1 ___ •_6_'2_,_'1_2'_• __ EAST 17t .. . • • Sho11 k otficl' 220 Powe:r Dally Pilot \Varit Ads have * * * * * * OAJLY PILOT for action! Atk for Mr. G1nnon •1 S~ll=n-'~'°~"=lh:._~<'~5.fltJO"-'""-B-m_k_•'...:..-b-""'"'-'17n•-"gal_°"'~·~~~ liiil. ......................... ~C.~ll!tw~Z-S67~~8~&~Sl!"'~I--),!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'~-~ CALL NOW 547·6771 DA1l V PILOT l[ll] Help Wonted, M & F 710 · Fiber9l11s Foreman To ~. E~rcr. In l11n1inat· ing, n10Jclu11: S.· tool mak111~. NEWPORT Personnel Agency 833 Dover Or., N.B. 642-3870 FIBERGLASS: moldenr;. Ap· phcat!oni;; now ~inf:: taken. Clipper l\111rine Corp, 1731 S. r:.11chey, !'anta Ana. FOOD & Corktatl \\'a11n>s..c; P>:f1Cr. P/t1n1r. Could dr\'Plop 1ntn lllimf'. D11y ~hilt. Rancho ~!In Joaquin Gflll Cout'$r. 1S021 CulvC'r Rd, Irvine. Nrar U.C.I. Ask for \\"a~·nr. 83~112 GENERAL CLERK Op.on1ng ln our HJt o!C'. lf ,ou r;an arcur. l~·pe :ii• ~1ords per min & ill'f' 1ntcr- f'Strd in \\'Ork1ni: !or a P'O""· in,i: ins. co. "·/xln'r cond,c; & J-,pl'l('f11~. Call PrrsonnC'l. 812-TijJ. Un1garrl lnsura.nct' r.1'(}uii GENERAL off1cr h:no•1ledhf' or 11r counr~ pa~'able ~N'l\•ahlP k payroll. r.1us1 hf' able-10 1ake full <'hal'l;e or 1 girl of. lict>. 897-1093 GRANT BOYS *SALES CLERK* full & p 111n1e Apply in pPr~n ,\~k for \1r. \\'1lc'Ox bf>r.1een 2-j pm onl~ The Grant Boys Jij() NY.\rPORT BLVD .. COST A i\IESA ~)fll)ll oppor!uni1y f'll1flll'lyPr HAtRDRESSEf'..." \fan!,.d; Head Hunler Beau!y Salons, 6i:M2.12 or 67;>-3701 HAIRDRESSER nee tic d f/lime. Atlract. b111;y ~hop. Xln"t workin; conds. Ahn\"e avg earning~. Jr.sk ror Brlty Barton, GiGi's Jlair Slylcs, 8-1&-.<JlOO HOSTESS Apply In Per:;;nn WOODY 'S WHARF Z3IR '"· f\'P\\Jll}r1 Blvd NP\\·ptlr1 Brllrh HOUSEKEEPER 1 or 2 <la~·~ \\·kly. Thurs .t: f'\"rry oth"rl Sun. Apply 1n prr:-.<1n Hl32 !'aniiago. N.B. II ,\\f !hru rhnrl('r at j pm. $20. prr rla~·. HSKPRS t~mplyr psy1 fee. Geon::e Allen Byland Ai;e~ ry JQ&.B E. 16!h, S.A. !'"~1-0395 HOUSEKEEPER·L\€' h~kpg, ir0n1ng. )1011. \\'Pd & Fri. l Hn; a (lay. l\fr!I. Carrington 67:>-'311.lO HOUSF.:KE~:Pt:r.s. lull llnl<'• par1 t1n1". E x p P r 1 r n r r '1 pl'PfPrrE'd. Park Lirln Con· \'!11!'.'~('l'Tll (P11Tt>T &11~0-11 ---• * HOU.l::f:KF.F.PER I.: LAUNDRESS Call 6~6-7i6 1 ·-.~H~O~u=sEKEEPER~· 'l'Omf'n 71 or o\·rr. 1!"11-J17.l !RV!NE PERSONNEL SER.YICES"'AGENCY Cn~t ,\c·Mun lln!! tn $..llO ;...1ri"r 111111 offPnlli;: happ_v Pr!· \·lronmf'n1 & plcasanl aSY>f'· 1att'~. 0€'rk Typ1~1 10 i111 KiC"I! pl'rron11l11y .r,· >:,....~i irroomini;: \11lJ J::ind this bf'. ;z1nnfn::: pos 111on. Girl F1"1d~y Po1~f'd at1rar1. i lfl lo a~-1~1 1n t·ash1on ::11m-0~phrrt>. L1ti:: l1i::ur,. "·ork I;}[) r:.·11111:::. f'1IP Cl('l"ks ~~00 B"g1nn1n£ (1(''111011. :\ln"t ad· vancement opportun11y. -t88 E. 17111 r,.1 lr.•1t!('l C )1. 642-1470 ----' JR. ORAFTSMAN f nl\ t1n1r, [lf'rn1.1n•'!!t <'tn· ploym,.nt 3\\"11.llli lln ~rnh11- 10u." 1nd11·1•11111l 11·11.111111;: t.i "11\Pr !hr dr!lf!ln<:: r1f'ld. fi :O.lon1hs 10 I Yr. <'\fl('f. nr 1r11.1nu11: hrlplnl hu 1 001\ mandatory, Apply in fl('r· l'/'11'. PERIPHERAi. BU~INES.~ EQ!JlP\1ENT, 1;-.;'C. llrvin@ l ndu.~tTiaJ Oimplex) San111 An~. Cahf. c n H ~Kl·8..~.W • AIRLINE AND TRAVEL CAREERS FOR MEN AND \\'OMEN e Tra1irel Agent e Ticket Sales e Communications e Reservations e Air Freight Ca rgo • Ope rations Agent "DAY A ND NIGHT CLASSES" ACCa EDITfD: N.1,0.,.I Auoci•lion Tr•d• I T,ch.,;. c•I School1 • >.pp•o••cl for v,1,,,.,,. Eli9ibl1 in 1ti+11· lion under Ji.1 F1det•llv t~1ur•d Student Loin Pro9r1rn. Airline Schools Pacific 610 East 17th St .. Santa Ana 714-543-6596 HOPE HAVEN 1621 Monrovia Avenue Costa Mesa 642-4769 Special Summer Sessions Ag es 2 lo 5 Y r s. EDUCATIONAL CENTER FOR THE MENTALLY RETA R 0 E 0, MUL Tl HANOICAPPEO CH ILO •.• '"If iu r u11drr~tn11</ t/1c IPur11n1~ t;lrr119th.~ 011rl lf'Pnl;ur ssc3 oj corh r·lul<t n11d prcporr n. men111n~f11l, st:quentiul presr11'<1t1ou of 11101.eri· fll pertincut to his life s1tualio11, l1r. 11Ji/l learn . . lie ca1111(lt br> 111Jia t lie is 110!, but n1ust be all tlwt he is." OPEN YEAR AROUND 7:30AM 'Iii 5:30PM CALL FOR SESSIONS AVAILABLE. ONE SMILE-A-WHILE DAY CAMPER FOR HAVING TOO MUCH FUN \\'hf'I""" 11:18.l Br~u!I !1"1Jll'1fltrl \\"hy. S" H'l Si'h'l<>l e Sp .. rt~ e ('r;itr., Co"k"ul.;, • Trq•• • t t1rrn1-:!;hl::. \~'hn: Hin~,\, (;1rl• I·! I Rr~ardlf'••$ ,,f ~··ho1 1I 11l111-rmr11! \\'h,.n· Yn11t· Chrol<"f': f\v 0:fy. \Vf·rk, \l<•nlh ••1" \\"h1•I<· ~11111111•·1. Special r.:clucatinn Children \Velconic. FOR REWARD & IN FORMATION 530.3333 -CALL -894-231 2 NEWPORT -MESA PRE-SCHOOL 140 E. 22nd ST., COSTA MESA 645-2323 SPECI AL SUMMER PROGRAM ENROLL NOW FOR FALL ' • Schools and This variety of fine schools conld introduce you to a new tomorrow. Instructions For fu rther inform etion re9t rdin9 t h• Otily Pilot Schools tnd Instruction Directory What is this child doing that disturbs us? Nothing. • And .that's disturbing. It's a small world for this small guy. Too young lor public school, his world isn't muc h bigger 1han his yard. So ha runs out of things to do quickly. Which means he learns about things slowly. Pity. Because h a c ould be attending ono of lhe linesl pre-schools in the country. Sunflower Early Achievement Center. Where he would discover the world of science. math, reading and creative a rts. (No t by lorce-led information. But through discussions. acting, and other interesting learning experiences.) Chances are. he would even di::.cover the greatest thing ol all. Himself. Our school is open all year long. So child ren aged 2 to 6 can be enrolled anytime. So drop by ... if your c hil d isn"t doing anything. Real Estate School PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM IN 4 WEE KS Licen:i;1ng Jl reparation for: • Real Estate S<Jlesmen & Brokers • Building Contractors • Ins urance • Day & Evening Clas~es California Deparln1cnl 0£ Education 1\ppro\·ed-1\Tastcr Charge and Bank.i\.1Tiericard .Accepted. For Information-Brochure- FR EE GUEST LE CTURE P hone 646-3229 Sunflower Early Achievement Center 2515 West Sunflower Avenue Santa Ana. California 92704 714/540-4750 A member of the U. S. Financfal Group Anna's Pre • School -2nd Grade ANNOUNCES A Fun P rogram For Summer e SWIMMING e ROLLER SKATING e READING Ma ny Mo re Fun Filled Activities • ANTHONY SCHOOLS .OF NEWPORT BEACH 2110 Thurln Ave., Cost1 Mes• Ph: 646-1444 ~25 North Nc,vport Blvd. Nc\\·por t Beach • 646-3221J Ed1noncl 1·· .. lackson CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 r fii:.:1 , ~ .J~ l· ~.~;;,~,;,E~ COST• Ml$• CALI~. ' «•·1211 The Secret Of Yog a -Yoga 1neans oneness. It is a scientific method for rene1,vi ng life energy -phy~ically & mentally. Yog3 is a philosophy, nol a religion. designed to en· rich yo ur life & )'our vie\\•points. Bharatl (left) & Kalidas teach at the Yoga Center, 445 E. 17th St., Costa i\lesa. Free Demonst ration \Vednesday the 26th at 8 P.M. Ne\v classes start ltomorro\v mo rn· ing) at 9:30 A.1.1. & the follo1,ving \Vednes· day night. .Junr 2nd al 7 P.~1. Come As You Are! See You 'fontorro1v~ Call 646·8281 . CLAD TIDINGS PRE-SCHOOL 15th & Monrovia Streets Newport Beach (I loag JlospitaJ Area) ~· ' YOUR CHILO IS A SPECIAL PERSON! Their ('are & l!:ducatlnn I.~ Important To I/is Future Gro\vlh & Development. Glad Tidings Pre-School Considers The Individual, As \Veil As The Group. Our Act ivities Include : e MUSIC e LITERATURE e AWARENESS e CONCEPTS e PHONICS Call Today For lnfor1na tion & ~lake Appointment To Visit Us . , . 646-6620 SEW-KNITS SPECIALIZ ING IN STRETCH & KN IT fA 8RICS and LINGERI E All Brands Stretch Patterns Vogue & Butter ick Patterns WE J-tAVE THE FINEST SELECTION 01'" KNIT FABRICS ON THE ORANGE COAST. 2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD COSTA MESA 540·3268 S-T-R-E-T-C-H & SEW (T.M.) a CLASSES 2 hr. Lessons Morning -Afternoon and Evening -1 r-• .-.-.-·-·~·-·-1-1..-I~ I I I • 'I Aha.lone Divers EARN UP TO $30.000 PER YEA R • ,l'-• • • • • • • • '• • • • • • 1. COSTA MESA PRE-SCI-' JL 1797 Monrovi a Avenue (Corner of 18t h Street & J\lonrov1a) Costa Mesa 642-4050 or 838-5237 Open 6:30 AM ·rn 6:00 PM SPECIAL SUMMER PROGRAM Full & Half D ay Sessions Age1 2 to ' Years **Hot Lu nches & Snacks **Creative Activities **Music, Stori•s I I I e I I I I I I • I • I • •I ·1 • • • .1 • • • •I • .1 ·I • • • • • • • • • • •1 • • • ~I Newport Air Associates Flight School & Flying Club LEARN TO FLY $500. IFi11011cillf A•olloblt1 * FAA APPROVED * Course lnclude1: JS Houri flight time in Ceisn• 150'1 with 20 houri dual in,truction. Club member~hip. 3 Month"1 free duei. Individual instructio11, t1ilored to YO UR ability . 10 AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY Learn to fly now --and ha ve fun I * Fly Mexico & Canada * Special Rates for Commercial or Instrument Students. For Complete Details Call NOW 673-0313 ·~~~~~~~~~~~--i J • ·. Tursday, May 25, 1971 [.,.111eut Help Wanted, M & F 710 MAID & MAINT. l'olo1e1. Apt +. Ci'S-87·10 Help W•nted, M '-F 710 Help W•nt•d, M & F 710 Appliances 802 Miscellaneous 818 TV, Radio, HiFi, fE~lAL lli;et stripe kittens, -"-'--------1 Sttr.o 836 11:ray/89.1-2861. 5127 PRECISION '1 ANA G ER-lnintt for SHEET~ETAL ladies hen\lh ~pa. full or part timt>. Good uppnr1unlty ASSE LERS lor self-«t11rl!n.1e i;iaL l.1·i11urt' 1 Lady ~pil, 2l:i21 Pt1lil"J d1· \\'Ul per rm l\Ssen1bly work Valencia, l..ag11n;a II~ I I~· of 1t1ahJ skiUE'd 11ature 011 831k>380. Apply 111w11 !U & l I ~xpe.l'\niental & protolypt' i\lATUHE rci;ide11t 11\lllla)l;Cl", ~hcet Ol('IU[ componrnt& & lor prestige 30 unit ndl\. l"iOse 1oll'ra11ce a.si;embly apt. C.~f. Rep!)' s1atina l'XP. struC'rures. High school ed- 11gl', ran1lly ;i1atus. rrrscnl uration requlrt'd 1)lus :i sl!uallon r1c. \\' r 11" : vears experi!'rice. CloRSilil'(I lit! !l:o. 1~9. The .:.._ APPLY IN PERSON - Daily Pilot P. 0. &}\ .. woo. :ull HARBOR Rl.VD. Costa ii-lei.a. Callr. ~l:z:i'..!ii COSTA :\fE&\ CAUi-' ~IATUP.L Sal t>~l-;-d~ ' . wanted. '."o l'!l:Pfr neccss. Apply Thf' Sho\\·-Off, Hur1- t!ng1on Cen:rr, ITi1 Edinger, H.B. No phone L'8.ib 11lease. Z'llATURE \\'On1an \\'anted lo prepare clinner !or large famil~·. S days \\'k. 592-5275 MECHANICAL ASSEMBLER TRAINEE ATLANTIC RESEARCH Systems Division A 01vis1"0n of Susquehanna Corporation F:qi.1al oppor!unlly en1ploycr SEil.ViCE Station Allt.Jl(I. KE.t"l~JORE Y:asL .. r, $35, ex. \\'OR."l once In \\·eddmg! Siu:--. ,,,11 or p/t1n1r. Q\'e.t 18. ttllenl: AlllO washer & 16 Petllr "Lori Deb,• 191'' 7,tnlths arc here' • ~ CUTE adorable kittens to gd. • · .... -ss homt' 675-4496 5/25 Ne n t , c d • p pe a r ., Dryer set. ~1095 formal , Yrllov.•/\\'hite with 1h11n dis<.'oun1 pricts an ·111,,,=~·-,.....,.,.,,c-==-cc penonable, gd rels. 3006 DEL.UXE Uldy Kenrnore d.:'11.Sy design on kl1~g sl~ve. color, 8,tt\\', stereoa, Hurry f'R;EE l Golden Retrif:,·er, Harbor, C.J\1 . washer. Avocado S75. AJ1t. f Joor lcni.1h w I I:: m p I re for full selection. ABC Color 11,i yr old. 846-0418 5/25 SERV, Sia. Salesnian & ~izc stove, $40. &16-78~ Wli.ls!. Sl7.e 7 dyed·t0-rtiatch TV. 9021 AUanla, 11.B. FREF. kittens Balboa ts.land I •·t sl°Kli!l'I and long &li p inclltd· 968-3319 673-fi&.~ 5/25 mechan c. ~ · Cl P ~ 11 • IZ Cl& fl G. E. refrigerator ed p I S40 J Unifon11s lur11, 1\pply 2'1ll.2 ,.,.,,011 tn>ezrr S50. Call · 1 ov.,er · wUI !IC.II or DANlsH ntodern st er co. FREE Poodle wfpapers, Edina.er, H.B. 63!1-6106 or &l~7:il SZO. 8~7-• IS7. Sunday Uiru Ai\l lf'.\t \vi1h Garr a rd len1. 5'16-2848, 544--161'4 5/25 f"'rlday aftl'rnoon. turnu1ble & m n I e It in gl•.=~~--~--,-~--,-c SERVICE Sta. Salesn1an, ex---Wffher, Auto. k Sa .,. 1 00 f Er-.1. German Shorlhalred ""r. Good sala1"-', uniiorrns. * AUCTION * Sl)('a er. cn l<.'t'. 1 · Pointer $1-6896 5/25 ,~ ~ 3 yrs. old. S35. S1f-1'.lSG 64>-4235 eves, 673-571~ days. ' Che v r o 11, Adarns & Fine Furniture l\lagnolia, 11.B. Auction 804 & Appl!ance PA~ASONIC 8 ·U·B('k t·~r SHA..\tPOO Girl . 18 to :i:;. Publ1"c; Auc;t1"on Auctlons Friday, 7:00 p.m, srci"f'O \\'/Panasonic I Ptt1-Suppllt1 I~ -c w· d ' A ,. B speakers & II lapt~S . $125. l\lusl be lic'd. all for appt. 1n y s uc ion arn CAii •,·••-,•~or o.7 ,.,. bl\\'f\ 9 &. 12 am, 673--{i()70 Tues nile f\1ay ~. 7;3o pu\ .~...,... ""' .,.. -o.J,>;J SHOP FOREMAN l\fust h'l\"e exper, v.•/fiber- i;lall8 lamlnalion, tooling &. n1olds. Small local non.<fc· lense plan!, To S781l. l™NE PERSONNEL SERYICES•AGENCY -188 E. 17th !at lrv1nri C.~1. 642-1470 STAT TYPIST /RECEPTION- IST -CPA of/ice, Yng ·"- personable. CPA exper, & Xlnt stat typing ability lnspi..'t'l.ion all day 1'ui's, 20Th~ Ne\\'Jl0r1, Ci\t &16-8686 SILVERTO~E gten'O st Bl>b "s Jo"'urniture \\lart'house Behind Tony's Bldg. l\1at'I. S-100. S200 1 or rl('arest' ol7:.r. Pets , General 850 \\•Ui St'U at public auction ~JUST SEl.L! 18" Zenilh, j.1~::9 FOR Sah~ _ Pel Rabbit v.•it h entire (."Onten1s & inven1ory New L-olor TV, 7' llart liiiiiilliiiiiiil Hutch. SJ. of furniture & slorage ware· Cam I' ra ski 1. pr lb 11:::=====::====:[ 1~1 531-72!H houSt>. Partial listing of t.ypewr1ter. misc. hsl'hld l'"I· frff to You S C Bl2 more 1han 100 Jots & groups: I j_l'~'i"~·-C~oJ~l~o-6~,.._;:;=;:~m~o~rn~'[;·;;;;;' ;;;;;;;;;;·.;;;;i-•-ls _______ _ ANTIQUES I ~ J0-!7 SIA~IESE kittens, 21~ mo French, armob·s, ige carved 4 pcs blue 26" lu~gai;;(' old. I Sealnpt mllle. l 'ideboards, many, n1auy + mxl. lra!n case, xhn cond, ·I Darling klncns txtttmC'ly hlucpnt mall', 2 Russian other i\ents too nun1erous all S2j, B1·11.nd nu 6' sofa. tanie and playful, 6 \l'et'ks l;Jue, f em ls. exceptional qu!lted. ~tra cushions, old and weal'lffl rotors 2 hon1C'-no sn1all children. to mf'ntion. LIVING RM GROUPS Sola & JO\'eseat sets, tables, laJnp.s, OC<.'asion<tl chair!!, pictures, det'llrator cbairs, etc. APPLIANCES bargain $150. 962-0:ll2 evl's. blark \\'ilh v.·hi!e 1ntu·kings. 6+1-0ll5 OC ER Thr.1 Sho l tlgt>r, 5triped grl'y ntale, l ~IA,IES~" k' I TICK! K ~ . 1 t p \l'hitl' \l"ilh grey c 11 p. :s . c. 1\lens, sea pt, titov1ng S.'l.le, Things must &IZ-6?SS S/2:i chorolatc-pl, G'entJe, beaut, be sold belore \l'C nwve. ·~ · ho.'i: train., pw'Cbrd $15 ea. PriC\'. Starls f.1on. 120 E. NEED gd hon1cs, fncd yds 536-2127. Boats, Power 906 ZJ' INTERNATIONAL. 160 M~rc. Crulur. Tandem !railer, radio. R.o.r .. depth sounder, bait tank, head, leu than 50 hrs. $10.000 in· \'ested. S1500 firm. 548-3103 1968 23' f'ormular O~IC 210, 150 hours. Bait tank, radio, outrigger, suntop, depth finder, IJ·lr, n1a11y extras, $6500. 213/867-4669 29' Californian '69 V.S, SO hrs, rad. Transom door, swim step, refrig. $8150. Newmarks. (71•1 645-'!700 e '68 20' BERTRA~I ~top. pie. 160 hp l\1ercruiscr $3500. Call 615-2982 e 'il BERTRA)I 25, fiy bridge, Iisherman's delight. ~lust ~ll !* 673-1298 * Boats, Re nt/Ch•rt'r 908 ESTABL I SH ED yacht charier agency needs sharp boats, power & &all, lo 100', Ernie ~finney 548-4191 909 CAL 28 Racer, Loaded . SIS rad. Dinghy. 9~1 0 . B. Raytheon spdm!r, Spin rig. $9000. Nwpt pier avail, " !mmf'dla\I• ope1ung f,1r II 1ral1){'e 10 perform n1echani- cal •"-P!ectt'O·n1echnn1cal as- sembly opera1ions. No esp- er. required. Apply __in per- "'"· flEAL ESTATE SALESiltAN req'd. Salary open. 113.a-0801 'VANTED. S:\IALL ACTTVF. TELEPHONE So 1 i c i tors SUCCESSFUL OF'C THAT :\lorning •"-nl1n hours. Call Sto\'CH, relrigcralOl'!i, \\'ash- ers, ct<'. 19th St, Costa Mesa for 2 beaut l..ab & \Vi1n, n1ix Scl~A~M~E~S=E~k7ill7•-n,_.~.-.~,k-,-0~1d7, NE\V lteezer & di11hwasher pups, S nio·s, golden. rot-box trained. S~ to $20. Call CO LUMBIA 22', rigged for bl & I I ' or, ~IS1F, Jo\•t! k 1 d s. 5-lS-9513 494-0451 PERIPHERAL Bt;SINESS !\!AKES i\lONEY. DICK J\'iesa LlltK's, 646-399.1 ta es . amps, mov r 5.'\l-i33G S.I') 7006 5 27 r11.ce. Genoa, spinnakel', etc. DAILY Pll.111' Cycles, Bikes, Scooters '69 Bultaco J60cc. Dl?sert or motocross ready, 3 4 m rr' Mlkunl carb. Rt>ynold1 chah1 Tabloc, Aronts, Fresh Png, super fast. S 5 5 0 . 67>-6087 WANTED Jtonda 305 Running or not or \\"ill buy pll1'1s. 1\sk lor Bob 5l7-930S, DIRT bike, JIONDA 30:)1 Good cond, Custom ptflt'& k $eat Knobby ures. Own~1 moving, must seU $30(), 968-1228 650cc TRIUl\tPll; 19 6 Triumph TRS mag., bike cstm &: chromed, ~lolly paint job, 5800 or bst ctr. &12-7119 '6!1 V\V, 2-1~1, perfect cond. All extras & s e rvl ce rec:ords. Dr. Scott 544-5262 or 495-4343. Mobile Homes 'l! EQUJP:\tENT. INC. 17112 Am1s1r.:on~ (it"<li!I(> Industrial Con1plexl Santa 1\na, Cahr. 92105 !71'11 :>10-Rl-UI BEnG. 962-2~21 I 'T=E~-~,..l~P~O~ll~A~H~\"' -,~,,.ck~.-,-.~"';i J une 1111 h, Conv11ll'St'1.'n! OFFICE EQUIPMENT Desks, chairs, conference table \Vlth 5 chairs, (.-OPY 1nachin('S i5 diflert'nt rypes 1, 2 cash registers, 2 sales .t. many other itemr . camera outfit, o u ! h oard · ..-/ o s IS4 Head. running &. cab lites, motor, ne\v n1attress & T\\'O kittens. vl'ry cute. 011<' ,..-.og---------battery charger, n1 u ch INSTANT HOUSING base, n1isc. ::i:is-7.156. hlack, one Tigf'r, black and CEHJ\1AN Shepherd puppies, n101"l'. $3300. 968-9~ .l\lEDICAL Sec'y & Re(.'t'pt. Responsible girl for busy Iron! ofc. Ab<' !S-40. ?>.lust have ex per. \\/all n1e-ct in11. !·Ir!': 9A11,l.(iP1\1 daily. \\'ed. 9- 1. Sat 9-l. Salary f]exihle & allowances \\•ill be made !or a skilled person. Reis rcq'd. Phone. 646-3962 :\I EDICAL RECEPT!Oi\IST Intriguing oppor. in the ntc of a local doctor \\'fan rl1!e practice. Lill!" 1yp1ng. SltU'l S·\00. Recep1ionist ho1nf' f'Xpc'r best. Call .\Ir. tor leading legal group. 'I)'p. \\'elch, Coun1ry Duy School, ing 60 up, dic-ta phollt'. Some 847-265Zl ~i:n'I of1· t"xpcr. 'u=r=11=o~L=sr=E=,=RE=.=n-,-,-T=,-,-m. MISS EXEC AGENCY mer CXJIC r. PernL job. t·r· 410 \V. Coast. II\\')' .. NB inge beneri1s. Lakl' Ar· 616-.1939 ro11hrad ~lanna. r T 1-1) ---r. EC E P TIOXIST·TYP IST. l\ew otlice & furnishing~. }!rs S;3(J.;j, Call ·'!rs, \\'lulc S33-ll680 33i·2:illl ' VITA ?11 1 N 1nanulac1un:r 11Cf'ds Pxpe"r 1ahle1pr~. coders & gra nula!o r5 . ~7-8126 • RESP. pany 10 help in Jaun-*\\'AITRESS-lor dining roon1 droma1. Apply ~n\·n IOan1 & 5 to II P:\l shift SHERAT0:-1 6pm, 3238 E. Coast H\\y, BEACH JNN 2111 2 P11cil1c Cd:\!. Coast Hwy 11Unt. Bch. Apply PL.ASTlCS factory 1r11inee. in person only, High sc-hool grad, i\lill !a~ I ~w=A~!T~E=,=ns~.~N=n-,-. -,-,,-,.-"-,-.,-,_ oh!igation c:omple!f'd. 5'10"' t)r OVf'I", mPt•hanical abilily ini:. ExpC'rienc•·rl only, Ap · h(•lpfnl. $2.4;. hr, ~1ore if ex· ply in person at Towers Hestaurant. t;i~l S. Coasl prr. $~.1\-512;.. I lfll"y, LH.guna Beach n lcr This sale has been augnient· cd \\'ith 5 househOtd repos- sessions released & ordered 10 be sold! Color TVs, re· lrigl'L'ators, &loves, l>unk bNs, rhesls & etc. Tht> entire v.•arehousc must II<' sold. Plea~ ht> on time, BOB'S FURNITURE WAREHOUSE CAi\lPl::R shell ;:1~ 11·hi1l'. ~tothl'r Burmese, nil 8 wk s, SIN' lrom champion 12. Penguin. Like new. Top WHY WAIT? cab. Fils any' S·fl. ln1(·k. blad.; 645-5969 S/:lj !ill('. $75. Stud St'rv!ce avail. quality racing hardware. Has lx>cn on ln1rk •ltily OLIVER • a blk & \\ht !l wk l'J.17-7107 Trailer. $650. 968-1228 After TIM! all ne1v Village House ?n~·e _ ~1ke n\'11". s:i:1. {;all old kil!C'n \'cry Jovini: nredl's=r=R=JN=•c=E=R-s~,-,-071,~,-,-",-,-. I 6 pm by I evitt Mobile Systems .l26-47~ aflrr :i. f ullerlon ~'lnll' kind or h 0 10 f' . AKC, champion stock. For 1 3~7=. ~co=Lu=,m=iA-=s=A=B~R~E~. I ~·ith sloping &hake roof can REDUCE safr & fast \1·ith a.1a-1s1s 5/Zi show, hunting or p el, Si(.'('ps 4. be yours now! 1'.Jodel.J on GoBeS(' Tablets & £-Vop Bl'.:1\IJTIFUL Cream ('O!orecl 83.1-33..\~ $4950 * 714/846-3445 display at. · · CRAW F_O H. D ·s Rx bob tnilcd kitten, II \\'eeks Bi:::AUTIFUL T-(.'\JP & 1iny LIDO 14 No. 161-1 $825. "'BAY HARBOR Phannacy old. Free to gd home toy poodle pupple5, Tiny toy 871-3232 t'Xt 2370 days, MOBILE HOMES KTNGSIZE bed $75. radial 6-16-5361 5127 !ilud service. 893.-9719 644-0089: 542~237 e\'es. 1425 Baker St., Costa lafesa pow<'r sa."'· Burke goH Bl::AUTIFUL blk & \l"h! kil-TOY f'o.\: Terrier Puppies. Just S. of S.D. Fwy .at Harbor clubs. \V1lson golf bag. . p b _ _. _ _. ~ 1-lOBIE Cat \\'/trailer. Good n4/540-9470 T n . . 1 k. ~0-44-g 1en 6 wks. unusual markmgs urr r,..,, unpape''''· ..,.,. cond. Want to sell. $950.1 ----------·I aper ex v.a ers l. · ' n e t' d s Jo v I n g ho n1 e . Cropped tails. 5-18-9702 673-3788 20-I \\'. Chapman, Orange {,(K·ah•d near G.G, & New-LADY'S d111n1ond ring, 24 5-16-9682 5/'!7 SA:\10YED pups. AKC, ahov.· d iamond.~. 6 rubl('S, \\"Orlh NO 'j 11 ,,,. VENTURE '11, fully equip- ped, many extras. port Fr\\·y·s 11 blk \\', of $f,()() askin $3j(), 673.5l8Q 1 1,-00 hon1:~ for \\'Uter qua!~· J. li!assell on Chapman) N 8 ' g Span1l'l pupp1rs cu!e & 96M-!12l2 an 4pm C & : . . , , lovahlr. fncd yd 5;1S--0Sl3; AJ.'GHAN PUPPIES . Sl'l5 & ameras fl.iO set nf 6 F~ncyrlo1){'dlas R.1f.....!·193 :.1/27 up. Al\C Champion Hne. Equipment 808 & ch 11 cl re n '8 book5 TI)-. 1 honie Rock Ternls e 1-626-987;j * 968-9658 * e BALBOA 21J, extras, Ing $3200 * 673-2636 * "k· ----------\1''hnokcal«'. E>:c. c'Otlfl. $1i5 . <rua s.1an . • • 16 J\l Z'\1 BOLEX Camera & 01, Urfer 6-l6-l376 R1dgeback n11x pupp1rs. DOXIES, AKC males, S50. & Boa ts, Slips/Docks 910 NEW J\fobUe Home 20x52, 2 equip. Unused. Incl. 16mm r n t• rl Yd 5 4 8-0 8 I 3 : up. Have shots. Ripe age for BR. 2 00 . SL2.500. Set up & Call Helen Ila.yes M0-60j.'j COASTAL AGENCY 2790 Harbor Bl al Adams NIGHT \VA ITRESS F'rlday lh ru Tul'sday Apply Jn Person DILL.\IAN'S RESTAURAXT 801 E. Balboa Bh·d, Balboa SALES \\'oman exper. Career n1inded to y,•ork into assist- llO! 1ngr ol line ladie!I tlo1h- ing l"hain. Please appl;v in person. Bal'kstn>cr, •25 Frishion J5land, N.B. & Howell Projector. ~10VING, 1nusl st>IJ Ken· ~493 5/'17 picking! 962-1744. SLIP, ne ar L.ido for a 20' lndscpd In Costa M~sa·s '::,o:P;"::"=~~-~-~= l -1;14-6219 n1ol'l' f'lecl. dryer. Lgl' !.'Old , · boat GREENLEAF PARK. 1750 " O 2l I -v-, bl'O('adl' llC"Ctional •. nliM'. ADORABLE flff pupp1rs Jo POODLE 4 ~T old, gray. • \\'l,ATRE~ ver ~--\\~f~ ~ .ELECTRIC dryer, Jo'riglda1re, ~ l6-l!l'i~ or 998-1429 ~ good home. ?>.fosUy Beagle. DASJICHUND, long hair, 5 * 6~50 * \\'bittier Ave. NURSERY delivery -a pply in person, Lloyd'!! Jl.urSf'I)', 2038 Nl'\vporl Blvd., <::~ T ire Salesman $650. NURSES AIDES Call )!rs. Schmidt. \Ves1clifl Personn"I A,i;Pncy, 2Q.13 OPERATORS -!porls\\·ea r \\'estt·lill Dr., X.B. Gtl-mO fo.1fg exper. only, Good pay. SA IL Seamstress. ex p er Sleady.fi.12.3472N.B. prl'f 'd. Ap pl y to OVER 30 & v.·illing to learn'.' Taylor-:i.ladl' Sails. 817 \\', Jf you .have a background of 11th St No. 11, C.:\1. success & an interest in in-1 -="~"~""',:c,'~l~--,-~~~~­ ves1111ent J:ales. phone i\l.P. SALESLADY. Ext'd. Cur- Kruse & Co .. Jnc, memher 1ains & draprries. Udoffs Pacific Coa.~t Stock Ex-Home F'urnishings, S Coast 1·1tani;r. 2100 No. ?>.lain, S.A. Plaza. C.~1. ExpPr. Only. ~!1-'.'.0GI 54 7 -~! 9 4 I ' E>:pl'r not IS~A=LE-=s~,,-,7,~,,-,-,,=.,-.-,~171,-.,, necessary, ll"ill train. 1n N. B. Age 25-40, 111tract . OUTBOAR D i\techani<' ex-& drt'ss smartly. Star! $2 per. PertT1 . job. f"ring:P hr. for 25 hr \\"k. 644-614·1 bc'nrlits. La ke Arro11 head SALES ht-Ip \\'anted. :\itust ~l anno, {7141 337-2501. ltave exp. Apply in person PART TIME-WOMEN Jaekil'·s Fashion Cenler, 1.-, ll am • 2 pm Hunlington Cenler, H.B. i11a('Donald's, the largest car· SARAH Coventry needs n. or l'Y-Olll n'Slaurant chain. o/. pt time help. No in- fl'N; an xlnt opportunity for \"estment. \Viii train, niin nl'll!. aler1 \1·omen to l\"Ol'k age 20. a.JG--0614. ~t~t'ILET. 4r;11·N. ·Nei\·~ri runs on llO volt, $35. :,.i8-263.i ,f • 113 B r oadway. C.r-.1. yrs old, Call !>l()...jJ91 T\\'0 4-way tie boat slips-$95 1 __ "1_8·=16=9S~*-=6&_2S_l_o __ 1 Blv", NB. -nylime. NCF.WPOllTbc Beh~ch1A,!l'nnl is 6'12-4818 Iii 6 pm only 5/'17 SAINT Bernard 6 months & SllO per month. 1966 lhr.:.3 2 BR, lge awnings, " lub i\1C'm rs 1p. 'N\I. P us1~=~-~--,--~--1 61'°""" NI CM Furniture 810. ·transfer fee call a1t. s pm. \VHT long-hair niolltC'r C'nt old. $200. .,...,,._. storage she:d. ce .1 • \VA.~TED, Retire1t 1nan lor stl'ady 11/tin1e bl1!g. cust0- 11ian. R.11-!1696, !146-2820 Wanted Liv ... ln Raby-:.1tter. 5.'17-849.'t. \\"ELDF.R, he\iarr. Light n1etal. • 645-5452 • \\'IG Stylist w/sales exper. Ap ply In person, 263 E. lilh Sr, C.J\1. Women \\/HF.HE ARE THF. JOB!'~ All phase-" of s\11 11 positions are openini.?: no1v. Bcauly t'f'laled lield-excellen! or>- J'M"Jrtu nity !or cnrerr n1indrd \\"Olf\,l'll \\'ho 11ef!-d !o!ood 11ayi ng joh~. lnterviewing )lay 26 thru 29 for new Orange Coun1y locations. 6-12-5493 PVT party v.·anl~ to sell romph.•1e house of beautiful near 11f'W f\ledit furn, in- l·ludes 8' blk naug sofa & Joveseat, never used Sl:il. Bunk beds, Elegant Spanish kingsz bdrm &et &t n1ore . 21:t: !125-3622 BEDROOM S<'l, \\'h1!e provin· cial, dbl dresser. ~ dra\\'f'r cites!, 2 dwr nite s1and, Sl6.'1: crystal lamp.~. S.l~1 !or hoth; colfee table, Jargl' Pecan Med1t, $125. 8·17~1 81 anytime. BASSET white F r f' n c h Provlncinl douhll! bed \\'/head & foot board. t'ranie. hox 11prings & mat· tress inc. l.ike ne\\•, $85. 64~2868 &IZ-l!ilRi 1\f1h 1 blue rye ;ind 1 gr. * !16S-D353 * BOAT slip 8.vail, July 1st, !or Adult Park. S4995 or olfer r ·' 2 rul k ! l 1 60'-10'. \Vide slip. tES6386! Amrr!cnn fi.1obile IHV INf>: COAST COUNTRY ~·· e "115 POODLE PUPS; B \Vks, 3-}lome Sales, 545--!l'J..11 CLUB ~1EfllBERSHIP Gla-305S 51'!!_ ;\;tale: 2·fem, 673-6603 * 67".r3075 * LOVABLE N'd Rnd \\"It\. .. 8-lli-4300 * --s7L~IP~s=p7A~c=E~A=v-A~l~--lsHASTA 8x25 w/nice cabana I I U t ~· 30• S liv'g rm, Rent $45 mo, Adult C ll ARTER Menihf>~hip, en1a c co ir ITllX yr. BASSt.i' Hound puppies • .., -SAll.BOAT Nr\\'Ilnrt Beach Tenn is Club. !100M' pet, 1;d "'atl'h ~!0!;· Rl'al beauties. Champion * 673-6600 • ~:~1~-:~~s~1795· 6'16-39Jl, $3~JO. 673-6900 "-1~7181 ·11~1 1>il't'd. $15 & up. 494-5662 Lli\lfT 20· boat. Across fron1 TO I ho 6 Id HUNTINGTON • '69 Kirk• TAKE OVf~R 20 llCN'.s, NO ~ nie, v.·k. n SCHNAUZER PUPS. i\la.le Nt'"'POrt Wand. Sl.50/ft. 20x lS 2 BR l" ba. I puppy, pt , c o cker . al~tucl .Groom. 213/693-5191 y,'OO(I "· • ~ DO\\'N S:l'J nio. Near gt' !l6:?--640l 'at'll !HS--0839 645-3140 * 63.J.-2961 lake, 96M»l7 8x36 NICE, conipl~tcly tum. FOR sale Ncwpor! Bench CUTE . grey & ~h11e kittt·n. lri1h Setter Pups I llil 2 BR w/bath. Cabana ln ' Tenn!-" Cluh illembership, braul1ful ~ niark1ngs, 8 ~\·ks Cha1n p sired * 557-75-IO Trallll>«tlliOll rli park w/pool. Ready to $-100. '1[14-3927 old. &IG-536\ J/27 Horses 856 c. mmm;;m;;;;";:; mo\'C in. S1995. M:Z.-7838 NICE roll-lop desk, Sl;iJ; F~EE to gd hon1e ma1ur<: • I ~T=,.-;~1,-r-,~.~T~,-.-.-.~1---.94=5cl: \Vurli lt.rr spinet (liano, $250. Schnauzer rtog w/paper11. !11UST SF:LL NOW! Campers, Sale/Rent 920 LI S-4553 51&-11\86 all 5. 5171 Regis1ered running Qu11rtrr Horse. 1;,.2 M''scollaneous J.1~EE kitlens 2 bl'autlful Cl1l"stnut n1are. !lad traln- 't\'anted 820 orange tabbies & 1 Ulll'JUe ing. Consistent jumpl'r. -.-. dark <.'alico. 962-32.85 ~/'!7 $500, 673-4546 \VA!'ITED: !tx12 Persia n }'LUFFY longhaired grt'y 16' Sha11ta. Stove, oven. Ice ' ll"Jx, 25 gal water lank. Slrep5 6. Ell?C".lric brakes. 1 ~zi;!~~~ :~ ~a~~:1~~~ i Or1rntal n1g, 11lso sn1nller kittens. 6 \\"ks, weaned and HORSES BOARDED \l/Oil-tAN ('(ln\panion fo r KING-SZ hed. Ortho hotrl sizes, fn ~ood c ond. hox trained. 6-14-5.1S2 5115 $35 mo ** BACK BAY £'1drrly l11dy, full limf', .1nyll' $100, kingsz bkcsl' J ~4~9"~·~9.1i:':-~2.~49~'~">~"2'::_. -,.---Ji':c;;ddiy;;;;p:p;;r;;;:s;;;p,;J 510-1877 ** 546-5715 H YDR AUL I C Camper R"mov~r/stand heavy duty all met al conslruction, handles up to 12 fl. campers easily operated and lt"s very Mfl? to u.se. Originally cost $300 • will .sacr ifice for Sl50. f'or more intormallon call; per room $100. 962-7689 '68 19~~· AWO. Self~nt'd, I dbl a.xle, crp"td. Xlnt concl. ""'"""' live-in. Room, board & h<lhrd Sl:>. Sofa, 16' curved 3 7-Cuddly puppies frt'C'. Shep/l~iijjjjiijjjjiijjjj~~~~~~ salary. Call fnr in1r rv1ev.·, pc Sl't'1ional, oys!Pr "h1, Office Furniture/ Cot!1l' mother, lath<'r? ? ? J; Sec'y / Bkkpr to $560 ~1s-r.~1. cla)s. 7>1S-fi7il, bargfl in s100. &1+.2001 J-E-q_u_ip_. _____ a_2_4.J;;P;;hii,r55=·c1~>;;:i16S;;:;:'~ll;;;;';;';;;m;;;;;5;;-/1285J [ Mit~~:6m.nt ]{lt) at 1\l11cDonald 's ol Cos la J ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ,\fesa )Jon thru Fri 11 a1n - 2 pm. This permanent lC"'r round en1ployn1en1 In citron. p!casaot surround1ng5. l\11h uruforms furnished. f'\·rs. CUSTOil1 buill har 11·/ refrig PAHT C(}('kcr/Darhshund 61 ~mmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~ Ideal t'and1datr should httvt• \\'Oi\1&...-earn good morwy + & 6 chair slools. Never us· Of"f'!Cl:: Furn. d<'sks. chairs, mo~. old. Needs leneed ~$2850==-~·~646-"-'5800"7--c-'71' CAi\f PER &hell, l·lt. over 1;,· Alum. Gem slps 6, I cab. Flis any 8-11, truck. furnace, elec brakto~. Many 1 Has been on truck only extras. S19S. 673-2256 Apply .1i MacDonald's of Costa Mesa :11 11 \larhor Bh·cJ. 11;ood SH & lur bkkpni; + ll r1C\\' wardrobe ~ho.,,,•ing d lighl.!!, tablt's, misccU. yard. S-17-4~3 5{2.'i G I ahillly 10 gro1r into ad1nln-&rlinl' F'ashifltl~. Car nee. c ' • &14~7}t 5-lS-•1326 enera 900 1szra11\"l' as,,1. 6.'l&-OS42 or 539-~l"I =~=,::_.:.::;:c::.-,.-~l ""'°'°"°""';::;:-,;-:c;;"""::::;IFREl:: I1?'f! \\'ood suitable for ---NEWPORT BEAUTIFUL Spanish oak OFf'ICl:: De~k :W x f.O t.ood beach or Iireplacr. f R ( [ X-ray TralOC'f': P r ogram . 1ables, avocado velvet sofa condition S25. 557-7203 or GUi-43~!) 5/2"1 P ersonnel Agency S!udl'nl:r; beln.11: ln1ervic"·e1I & love SC'at, <.'Ustom tufted. 2~9 Ballow Lanr, C:\1. 833 Dover Dr., N.8 . for o ~ io·ol"'•n• -·r"" 2 ~--=--~-....,~j l\it!l'n.~·rrce to good homes Basic boa.ring cour!le of • ...-~. " ~ ""u "'· All n11ar nev.·~ 673-6926 -;;p , /0 826 642-3870 1anos rgons 673-56M Cutest cats in town: fercd 10 the pubHc free once. Like ne.,,,•. S275. Call I =~~-'-7.'=c----.=li 526-4756 after 5. 1''ullerton. Trailers, Utility 947 FOR Saletrrade: Sm all _B_O_X_T_R_A71_L_E7 R-$5-0-ll slide--in camper Ior 4x8 step 6-12-88'16, 646-6044 side I ruck bed, ?>.Use items, I ~--'-.'--'-;,,,.:'--~---.=~ &16--0857 Auto Servlc•, P•rts 949 I yrs rollcge required. CQn· PART time denlal ass'!. ex-It ~~~~~~~~~~~ luct Pl'rsnnncl Olficc, Sou lh 8' sofa, nf'ver used. quilled ;;:-;:;;:;;:;;;--;;:-;:-;-::;:-;:;-11==~-~--,.--'~''~·2''.I of charRt by !he Balbon pc'r, mature. over 2-1. Nl'at ·sec·'y Ins. $500 up Coast Cointn. Hosp .. 31872 floral, SCOtchguarrted SJ.10. HA.\rli\10ND, Ste inway, CUTJ>; frm11.lr c·ock-a-rioo. 1 f'owe1• Squ\1dron, Sail as ,f, inll'"l"f'Sle d. Good Oulslllndi n~ oppor \\·/N.B. Coast H\\·y. S. Laguna. fo.lalching loveseat fSO. Y_1unaha. Ne\Y k used yPar old. Blatk & hOW'.C \\'rlJ as power boatini;:: 1968 %. Ton DODGE w/Jl' Camp Ring, all ellll'A!I. Slcrps 6. lo miles, xlnt cond. S5300. 968-62.19 ERIBA PUCK I bcneli111/sa.lar.y, younR 1!('11· l.-O ihnl is i.:oini: plal"C'll. :,;{,}-1!).');, pianos ol most mAkes. Bes! 1r11inrd. f~1C.2191 &ll'i lau£hl. New cla.\ses 11!:irl TWO 40' DCFB Chris'~. Xln t The Carnpc-t• for Hnle cars. tis!. Call 6~j..IOGO afl 6 or ri~~0.,00 ,,-,,,.,, -n"·. In HI hack \civet ch a 1 r s , buys io ~.Cal l!. at Schmid! al 1 p.m., illay 31. Every cond, Local, One at S'l0,500, !!itch iv('ight • 77 lbs. Jn-r""" " ~" "" Music Co., 1901 N. ?ttain, 2 Bcau1 1~ul Ta1ib.Y klltrn~. 1 flfon<lay niRh1 for 13 \\"eeken1ls jovcly olts. Casua!1y exprr. I Merch1-"'•'•• ][~) ','a,s,t;~·s.L $k6;.. \'('J~Ae~ ..;;:,ui:h San!a Ana. loni,: h111r tnalt•, 1 frmnlr. !! w-k•. ''' N"w-r1 llnr-Avco Bkr, 1141774-7208 rrc'dlble. Z1 rt Jong, height • ....,..,·,1, <.:all :'ll1ss llos.r1uu1l', "" ~ ··"'· 1 c n('w. "",..."'"" k 1 J ~.•o ····n " 6 '111 '' ' '"' '10 1600 Datsun truck with 6'4". 2 burner slove. Sleeps . t '390 "" ~;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;~ e •.-p·,,-, & Org•n• \\' s 0 ' . ...,..,......;'). a .i 1~r y,,,·ho Cl"h, 72o IV, Receptionist o ~ :~'17-61'12, Ahigail Abbot Pl'r-STEEL. SECRF.TAR(AL ·"""' "" " ~' " camper. $2895. l\1anyex1ra1. 2 Adults + 1 child wilh ,\ns1vl'r 6 llnt's, h\)' 1na111oi:: sonnPI Agency, 230 \\I. \\o"ar-DESK S40 N£\\l·USED. Going out for r·nF.E: klttens-Silvcr/whlre. Ba), Newport Brach. 4[12-6241 alt 4. comfon. Can din(' Six. In- brochurrs. (;o.111 ty pist. Frnt nPr, :;ultf' ZlJ. s.A, Antiques 800 .. G-4&-6150 * business. Rentals SlO a mo. Part Persian. 962-6.'!58 1111 6 Br1ni.: tJOll'book &. pen · -=-~-~~-----1 dept.ndent lighting system. I llf'arallC(' --"---------S!clnway, Baldwin & Kawal pm. :1t'Il c1l hrsl night, R('gislc.r Cycles, Bikes, Self contained 1valer. Ain-0 cap ' · • Sec'y Constr S520 ANDREA'S CO~lPLLTE hnuselxlkl furn· S 1 911 NEWPORT Chickering, \'amah.1, CIC. !)AH.LING. long halred hlack al lhlll linll'. c3ntacl coo era Ple Stornge including hang- Excihn"' Iuturr 11·1N.B. ANTIQUES ishings & antiqu('s. f'IELD'S l'IA''O co '' I bel p Personnel Agency " b * 54~5191 .. 1' • !it;cr & solid black killrns, · rs. sa a 1 e Ufl close-1, Panoramic 1lin- N 8 bran<.'h of \l e]\ l'Sta · lirni. Just R eceived Costa ~tesa Carden Gro\'e 5'1&-7:l(}8 51'!1 613-1855. '69 K,\\\'ASAKI F'4 Sidewind· dows. Built-in leveling, of 833 Do64••2~3~!0' · ' OuistandCaling P,"'1 motiocnal ~P· NEW SHIPMENT PVT pt.y, 8' hlk nauRahydc. (7141 ~5-3250 17141 633-2770 SC M LETS f'r. St~! & dirt equipped. additional Adults can steep por. I ~ iss ann1e, AUSTRALIA"., E".'GLJSll sofa. never used SlOO. 213: OU ;:, wk. olri rf'm wht, 1 .. 1hr;1dor RA SI . I d ; ;;;;;;.;;::;:; ·• ·' WOULD Y 11 k · II al 5 "'' • · rong running. 47 5. i" opt1onal ad -a-roomlenl . . ~ ~7-6122, Abit?ail Abbot Per. • l"RENCll PIECES 925-3&22 -us y mix ca I ' I~ 2 w w -BELIEVE 4'.ll.~::1-1 S/'ll , 53&-1965, 7.m Detroit SI. llaJe\'erytl\lngthehi,11:orie"s PHILLIP'S !<ilnnrl Age nc}·, 30 · ar· 2380 Newport Bl., C.:\I. BRAND Ile\\' kingsize bed. !'REE ORGAN I ··oso•·s ANSWERS H.B. have and can be towed by 'K.'~ Suit-2ll SA · • ' .r..:). ,,, ,\IATUHE Sol1•rr ooy -11,. PmoLEUM . '• " ' · · 64J-.1870 OrUm. Box springs, malt. & a11 long as you like: No""~-r ;,. '~2~ '70 TRIUMPH Daytona 500 lhe small car, See it today Sec'y $225-$325 Da.i~y 11).5 * Sun,, noon-:'. 1 ='=ra~m=·~··-· _1=100_. -""'~"'~'"'~~ 1111ra11on. No obligation .. Just ;;_9i;_1 gd homt'. '16-;)~ Nes1le -Radt0 -Larva -cc, 1700 mUea. Xlnt cond. at COMPANY 4 Hrs day, good typl.~I Sii BO\\lrfront c-h!na llOsPI. J COUCH '1' traditional 3 Co111e. ,\1ondays 1:30 pm .. _ . . Ll'vuy -RIDERS S950. '494-1'1'24 BAUER BUICK noi\' hlrui~ 1,1r flt'r n1anenl N'l"d nrit nccrJ1s. 'u vy I or1}: -"helve!!, S300: Currier cushions, good rond . Tired COAST MUSIC f Rl'.:E horse. lcrhhzrr ~~1 1 Car-wash sign ln A San 1 e=R~m=c,;~-s~ro=N~E~~ ... =."1~00<~l'. 234 E. l7lh St. . P ' . . I< h·ps h a n d -co 1 or e d sliJl cover s;,a, 1147-~j(J &12-2RJI ~Y11r:s11, Santa Ana llei,11:hls Francisco g11rage: "l\lotor-Xlnt mechanical c:ond. Sl7a. Co'1a M•s• S.18-7765 rosi11on 1n tticll' compan~· phQnl-s. fill u1 f/11n1c for lltho"rllph, "A Clearing," 1 ~"'--~~,----= ~>J7-l;:i90 r.i/25 . • .. nJ"ll.'rR!t'll 11rrvlf'1• 511111on 1n :i.bscnN,.oE"WPORT 1.s~J=s;~,"~;~IS-'..-!3''=-9~---,.-I Garage Sale 81:2 ALLEN OH.GANS ~xcluslvt'ly . cycles Washrd at Half-pnce, , 646-00~7 , ~'!!~'!!!!I[ lluntlng1on Heach. XI rl 1 7 Al~ (ONN &. \vuRLITZER PUPPIES bla~k Labra?or lni•!udlng HIDf:RS." 69 HO~DA CB-350. Beautiful, ~. 3 5~cd alick p;t11rtln14 i;al11ry + all con1 • Personnel Agency ANTIQUE: Trunk, n1ed1u1n MOVING SALE <:11uld :\luslc Co, since 191 1 ~~~;~;r nux . 6 1~;7 CABIN CrulRe.r 24~i'. mund Lo mt, Stored. SJSO. trans/axle $35 ~mplete. p11ny Jnn.1<r hr11cU1.~ $: 11n 833 Oov•r Or., N .B. s1zrd. rec1a.ns:ular .~ha.per!, Slit & Sun -Olshwashrr; 204~1N.MalnSA.511-0681 · hlll!, n eeds work. New 642-2895 v.·/clutch $iii. S.t5--0906 •. ,,,1 01,pnrtunily Jor lid· 642_3870 sllith1ly rurvl'd loll. $3.). n·conb .• 33 1/J, old 1c!a s11!c l"'Rfo'F ·lovable hnuscbroken Chrvy "'' w/v-drlve 1800 -ou;~wc.-:;;;:;-;:;;;:-u;;;;: 11...:;~~;,c;:;:,;;;;..;;:;=,-I' " s:i.1 111 i,, piano -Gulbransen . • . ' · · '69 HODAKA, dirt bike. J1igh VW ENGINE 40 HP ' vancement. I '!'""""~'"'""""""!!!'... 5.i;)...-0!)()6 , 78 nlbu1n.<i: lOi.:10 1('nt Nim -ju~t ~luned £00.l rond. Pric'. ki!t(•ns tfl!s]X'ra!rly nrrd 121.lJ 371--0229 performance engine • Jns ny * 530-6:MO * : Plr11Y c:ontact Cary Car.50n. 'Sec'y Constr . $500 ANTIQUf.S by \\,.and11 Huff-ple1t>: book!! galore: misc rd at $3:.rl: fi73-.17R8 Y.t11id bomcs. 968-30l9 5-27 BOAT 12' Johni;on 5~~ hp extrns. S.125. 673-3315 ==-..,,.-=:-;-;;-;-:eel: PHILl~IP'S PF:'T'ROLEUfll JUpid raist'S. \\'ork for R"en "J man 8181 Bol11a, 1'.1id"".ll.Y item, flt J9'512 AraJrln Cir, S ti Good 830 FREE kittens 6 v.·ks. all molor &. tr!r. $295 or oUer. =~---~~,-~-1 NE\V cfll{ines, Ford v .. 1, for j CO:\IPA.~Y. Rrookhur~t & ~aJOA m.llr. Chnrmlng beach City 892-3622. Spec. In dcp Htir Bch, corner \Vn.rd &. por ng s kl n d 5. Long ha I r 316 Orchid, Cdr.1 ·7o Yamaha. ~tx. S550, Xln! boat or bu;:. $595, Complete. j Adams. Hig B('h, An E11ual ofe.s. llarmonioug ro-"'-urk· glus. Yo1k!Q\\n, 962--2161 51'11 WANTED Sabot&' 1 1 running cond & very fast. 31.~1326 1 Opportunity Employrr. ers. Salrs or niklng bark-SNOOKER lt1ble w/at'C.e!I. & Machinery 816 Nl-:\V l!ART ,Jubil~ skis It Nd good hom(' for lovable Good nd compe e. * 6"13-7436 11 t1VE 72-spoke win! wheel&, • d ht! f I Cal fl.I' cu'tom {'!')\•er, ST".)(). 5-14-164~ ----"------b!ndln.1t11, ladles, S75. WlUi orange & 1\•ht k i tten . ;' 5Jo.17".i8 e '10 Honda 350 ScramblPr · Lo \\·idc rim~. p R 0 FE SSIONAL phone jCT'Oun s,a~~~· b" I 1~8 evei ,_, U'kl'nd,. LOGAN metal h1ll)t'. 10" f'ord\c11 boot.s used 1 season ~-0813: 11364193 51711 ~---------m I . S ;j5 O. Days * ~-898J evei * 110licl1or -Dana ?olnt, San Connk', .· 1 ·A igail A • S\\ inst, 24" ct'ntfn1. CabinPI only S20. 5'1~29AA • ~ . Boats/ Marine 714/SM-19~1; 8 n y ti m ~I ·~~~~~~~~~~I Clement~. CaplStrlll'IO area. bo11 P~rsonnel Agtnl'y, 230 Appliances 102 n1ountrd. Exlru. Camhro TV R di H 'F ' fRF:f~ kilt('ns, orange or Equip. 904 642-2678 \"ork In "°"' ow• horn•. \\' \\'arncr, Suite 211, S.A. .... , a o, • 1, c111it'O. 673-:ii4 t, 306 Fernl\n• ""'"""~,_~.,,.--~~~ ~ _, 'It" .. \Ir. Hiimrnono. 1147-~31 St 836 '----------"'8 3111 II -• •-bl f [ ]~ "-.l dost In '"'· Pt~"' SIXRETAR"/GI" Frl. lo• KENMOR • ~.e·. ereo do, Balboa Penlnsu!a, 5/271~p R C I 01K1a .,..,om t'.r or r-;:r,. ""' "' ' " ' 1 ' l:: auto \YaRhl'r .,.;., SHOP 11emR, ,hetving, light~. J----------JUi:<E'i:V"iilli,;"'j;;;;;d';;<;;;;J Af '413 hrys er'a, J: 91/l sale, :O.lrch'I £00(! cond, . Auto5 fofS.t• . ipmp ~1465 bet"''«'" 9.DO a.m. )OOnR" co. In •·ounl&Jn \Vhirlpool tie<: drytr $50. ho"t. palletts, ml.scell steel. • l.O~ELY lltU~ hound n<'ffis geal'!. lo tlr'lurs S:\10, $1475. nt'ed8 ruel t•nk Ii seat Sl50.1 ,~-;;m;;mm;;;:;~~I and l\0011 \laUey. C111l 5<~3 Roth xlnt cond, g\llr &t !J.18_4326 MUVINC.., niust It'll new }OV('. t rlrndJy & in!rll. 2206 ,.. &JG..39!2 * &-12-t&W alt 4 P:\1. --SHEET MET~A~L--,,~,,~ll~•·o~N'~d".,:'1~._~"'~"~·~·~·~7-R:":11':'_l ;;u;;;;~;;:;;;;;:---;w;I Sylv11nla rolor TV. remote rtutgeric Dr. No. B C.\f 5/'17 . . Psychiatric: Tech ..,, Mi,cellaneous 818 ron!ml & antenna Incl. $200. • RADIO rt1recl1on finder-'69 BSA 150cr Supervisor Experienced • REBLT w1hrs-RDI dryT"5 a.i~l6."i KITTENS blk I< g rat Jl~athklt, Like new $50. S900 firm. Xln't mnd. Opp!y 10 h(')p develop a P~ OltA.'llGE C01'Sf S50 Guar-Delv. J\1slr Ch11:.1 ---------21" TV 's, S20 • S2j 531-:'ilrAi 5/27 675-4&39 ~!}.434S eves aft of PM. fll'?'Um In :t. nur!ing hOnte for £:\!Pl.OYf!IENT AGENCY J\I 11 Y t ll g r' p 11 r m• n · S~~~,0~2Li~l"nk~~~ll(~t, Good cond,1ton 2 Adora bl~ k!llCn$, P~rl Boats, Power 906 HOND A 30 S Street Lht rtlllrdf'd. 2 YT'I r:xper 1!169 Newport Bl\'d 714:531-8631. Call &flcr 7. S;ls-.5028 * 675--1763 Persian. 6·1'4-12!19 al! ti. 5121 Scrambler. Look!! lc runs 950 ·---ELECTRIC car, 2 dr, .xlnt cond. s;.oo. or best ofter. i &!2-sMS • itiorklng w/th(< m~nlally re· CMla :\1~ 645-3111 KENMORE i;:u dryer SS0.1--------~ J St'c-f d Al G ood $325 S4s..4 207 lardrd. Glenda!!' "r ~a. Ii. ""U ad lll tht danU!td Y..'hlrlpool ele~ deyer S35-. NE:\V Kenll'\Ol'e: wa!hf'r f7~ SONY TC-l'l'l caucttc tape 6n...~ avt'nport, le{ ri 26' CHRIS '58. TS, SS, DF. ~ • · Antiques/Classics ~· Bolh good cond, .11:uar & New uphol chair!, Like new deck. 6 m<>s old. Rotall $130, · · f Slip avall. $3200. 224 301h '68 YAMAHA 250 F.nduro $325 953 Xln'! Wary Al fringe ~n· I d•llvo~. «< ~n, 8<1 .. 115 9• ,urfboard, &ilS-5tJ8 ~acrlfle1t, S70. 6i.,.21JO BIG K8S rcf.•\\'Orks. 94:'! St., N.B. 673-7251 968--9506 ell!~. 12131 2~7-33!r.I. SECTJON? Someone I ••-u ............., =----~-~~1 19·10FORD P.U. V4 flathead F'11st ttsull~ '"' ju~t a phont 1 call A"-,.Y · 64:Z.-567S D ia I ANY 0 1ay 11th• BJ::ST day to \VEDDING COWN, ,bl' 10, SONY 560 TSEC ste~ tape Oogv.'OOd Cl-I !i/7i WANT: U!lf!d lrllill'r for 20 1m Sporut~r XUf 2/CH recently 0\1.'rhauled. Need' run •n ad! Don• t S2j, Urili!y tnller ~. Call renttr. Ne\\' cond, S200. Call Kl1iENS gray and fluf1y. 8 It. South Co!lst Of Lym"n 1Ank. 5" Ext. A oobNt seat. pt1lnt -body \\'Ork f450, ~c·~'""'-''-"''~'''-' ~·od=11'.·~"'"''"""'56~":.-.. "=2-_16>=1-•_"~'-· -~.--~--'-''"---'66='-"'-"_, ... _5.'!9 ___ \~k!I. a~brk. 548-16(\1 !it27 Jnbollrtf. fi7f>..21D1161!\-4969 2500 mt. S21M. 548-2074 I or besl offer. 836-5612 • DAILY PllOT TUHd~, M~ lS, l'J7l ,I._ ___ .. _ .. __,!§] ._I _-_1or_w._JI~ I l§l I '"'°'"' ... l§J I ·~"'~ l§J .__I _."'"""_""___,l§J I Autot for Sale !§JI l§l I .,, .. "'~ 11~1 )lnllq-/Claulcs 953 Autos, lfnportad 970 Autos, lmportad 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Usod 990 Aulos, Usod 990 Autos, Usod 990 Autos, UMll 990 ~~jii!ii~~~ AUSTIN HEALEY MERCEDES BENZ · TOYOTA VOLI<SWAGEN CADILLAC COUGAR MUSTANG '8". HEALEY 3000. Looks, runs &OOd. Recent en&ine ~ Camper for little can. work. I want ne11o·cr car. ' Hitch weiaht • 11 lbs. In· WJU atll lhia: fOr $800. cmUl>I•. n ft k>na. tte[&ht -545-2050 '6'4". 2 burner 11tove. Sleep• 'FO~R,.:.: .. = .. '-_~.6J~A-"-,~H-n~H-,-.1~,, , 2 Adult1 + l child with 3000. Excel. conct. New tires comfort. Can dine Six. In· & battery, wire v.•heels, top, dependent 1lghtlnz system. & 1onneau. s11()'.), 968-1228 Sell conWnt"d water. Am· Call a fter 3 pin Pie Stol;a&e includln1 hang-'63 Austin Healey ?-.fark If up clO&et. Paooramle win-dows. Built-in leveling, .C 3000. New tires & paint. Xlnt con<!. Sl200. 543--0931 additional Adults can 1leep in optional add-a-roomtent. BMW Has everything the big one·s have and can be towed by the uoaU car, Set! U today .. BAUER BUICK 234 E. 11th St. Costa 1'fH& 548-TI6S Automotive Excellence & ROY CARVER, Inc. '!!Ill~~~'-I 2925 Harbor Bh·d. !'.: 956 Costa :t-.tesa 546-4444 1o_u_•_•_e_u~gg~i-••~~~ DATSUN CUSTOl\f dune buggy, reblt eng, Extras. $1195 or trade for self-contained 18' trailer. 6'4-4719 RENAULT Dune Bu ga;y . Dual1, Spa~ parts ~IOO. • 646-4644 * Sports, Rae•, Rods 959 DOT DATSUN OPE~AILY SUNDAYS 18335 Beach Blvd . Huntington Beach M.2-7781 or Y.G-0442 '65 DATSUN PICKUP 01 an'Jl' County 's L.1r9e?.t St.'lect1on New & U ~l'd Mei cede:. Bent Jim Slemon s Imps. Warr1er & Main St . Santa Ana 546-41 14 '68 J\lercedes 250 SE, llke new, low mileage, $4,950. Alr & leather. new l\ficbelln ~. 493-3429. MG MG AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE J1rtuµort Jl111µon s 1970 Toyota Corolla 1200 Cpa. SPORTY ECONOMY Bright red tlrUsh with black bucket seats, 4 speed trans .. Radio, Heater, etc., Priced for quick sale. 621AKS. Sl475" Johnson & Son, 2626 Har· bor Blvd,, Costa Mesa, 540-5630. TRIUMPH '71 SPITFIRES NOW ON DISPLAY Come ill for a test drive! FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTER no E. Isl St., S.A. 547-0764 Open daily 9-9: closed Sunday VOLKSWAGEN 3100 W. C.oast H"'Y· '64 VW Newport Beact. ----~-----1 Cu!tom Paint. good trans· t.iftl THINK -''~~" port.. INUG348 ) This car has passed the V\V IS.point safety and performance test. 1 t is fully checked and thoroughly reconriitiofH"d. \\'e guarantee JOO'f., ihat we'll repair or rPplace all ''FRIEDLANDER" 1J11.o BEACH tHWY. "' inajor mechanical parts• for 893-7566 • 537-6824 3Q day,.; or 1000 miles, ERIBA PUCK The can1per ror little can. Hitch weight -77 lbs. In· credible. 21 ft long, heig'1t - 6'4''. 2 hurner stovr. Slttpa 2 Adults + l child with comrort. Can dine Six, In. dependcnl lighting 1y1tem. Sell contained water. Am· pie Storage including hang. up closet. Paooramic "''in· do"'·s. Built-in leveling, .C additional Adults can 1leep in optional add-a-roomtenl. Has everything the b1a; one'• have and can be lO\.\'ed by the small car. See it tod11y at BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17th St. Costa ~fesa 5'&3-776:> '66 VW Bu9 Show Car Burca E.~haust, \VOOd Stttr· 111&: Wheel, Chrome \\/heels $995 J1ru1µor1 31111port ~;' RUPT Racing go.kart. frame only. mag "''his, xln1 cond, $11)(). 67l--3302 alt 5pm. Trucks 962 '66 Jl,1GB, 20,000 mi's, Rem. 11hichevrr romes first. hrd tp. "Olli lacly ~chool •Engine • Transm1ss1on e 4 spd. dlr. Family v.-ork horse teacher", Sll~i fi73-EI01 rront ,\Xle •Rear Axle As-3100 \V. Coast Hwy. Fire engine red, 1 owner, re-1961 l\l G. Good mechanical ~emblies • Brake System --=N-•w_po:c.,'~' ~"'='c~h~-- tittd fireman. Sacrifice. conclnion. Sl.:,C. • Electrical S~tem. '67 YW SEDAN 1Pl'V~3) \Viii take trade or • 642-T.>IO $895 finance pvl . pry_ r.aJI 540-3100 ., '"·'"' .i1 10 PORSCHE ~ R~n:A'Rve:~:c. 'SJ1 DATSUN PICKUP '65 PORSCHE C D~ d 292:5 Harbor Blvd. White \\'Ith !"fl! interior. Ex· ' ~501' Coata Mesa 54S..444 Runs li ke new, fUVT 8~11. 00 Barwick Imports, 998 So. cellent condition. ITZP 808) I\ -1969 OODGE CUJtom 1 ~I }"uU price S2495 or take ~~ .~ T Pick Up. Mrtal &. glas.s Coast lfwy .. Laguna Beach. trade. Call 49.1.7744. 111111 cover, 6 cyl stick llhift. Like ~6-40jl or 49-1-9771. I • IH. Excellent cond1uon in & out. dtr. SpeclCl l wheels and lir. es. Has had loving care. tlll BSIV• Take trade or 11mall do\.\·n. \\'ill hnance P\'I. ply, ~ID-3100 or 494-7506. Call aft ID A .~1. '66 VIV Bui:: . Xlnt con<!. New engulf'. ne\Y clutch. S'.l7:'i. .. • • 962-9666 K•w ooly 7500 mi. 11700. '71 DATSUN WAGON PORSCllE 1910 91416. 519.3031 Ei1. 66 0, 61 61>2342 yellow. in1mac. <'Ont! 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 62 VII' h ·1 thn1out Private Party . l\JESA ' bu.~. re u1 I eng, '62 Econaline • 289 V8 engine 4 ~reed. radio. healer. Full G44-65S9. COSTA 1 · trans. $830 11r ortrr. )0 miles, good paint&. tires. P""' 11999. (Oj9CAX1. a..,. I -=c.:-~:c..-=~-cb~I--'71 VW Super Bun i.---•-"-'-·"-"-•--Must sell $1,100 or oUer. ~ 1962 PORSCHE, re t cng. "21 S4S-OQ4l after !l:JO. ,~·ick Imports. 991! So. Coast 81.1-2400 ext 456 day 11 , 1700 .'.111Jrs '!5 'f:!'n11S?SO* Hwy.. La g u n <o. Beach. _ .. _,..._2'_1_: _&_14_--00_89_•_,._,_. __ 1 Mag \\/heels, Radial Tires. .,.,.,.., " '63-1,i Ton Cbev, 4 spd, 10-16.5 5'16-4051 or 494-9771 . '64 PORSCHE. Just pa inted Orange, Black Interior. :~ .:r:!•·s~~d~~~~j 1 1-!168==0-.~ .... -,~,-dt'---. ,-,-,.-.~M=·H", Signal Red. Immaculate! $2195 1 __ , lo mi. Xlnt cone!, S1350. 83()..-0150 day~ 646-8654 eve. St. S . ._ .. na. "'~" 9110·, Eves 540-2777 """" '68 Porsche 912, super clean, '54 P /U, nu paint, lirts, gen, 1 ---,F=E=R'"RA~'"R"I,--Air, Otrrr. 547-{i()91 days, gd V-8 eng, must sell thi1 673-l!)JJ eve~. wk. Trd ok. 645-498 3 . 675--0144 '48 lnt.emalion111 P .U .• good cond, SJOO or bf-sf otr. Call be! 2 pm: 557-6583 ask Jor J ohn. '60 1 ton, g x 10 11&ke ~. Good cond. New ~bber. 1966 Pomona. C.M. 543-"21)4 'fi8 Dodge Camper Van, V-8, auto, posi rear end, loaded w/ •Xt!'U. S2!Q'.l, 545-8707 '58 P ickup w /wooden CAMPER. $500 or be5t of- fer. 494-4535 be.fore 8 pm . Autos Want.cl 968 WE PAY TOP CASH tDr used can l trucka, jusl call Us for free estimates. GROTH CHEVROLET '61 Sl:Jnbe11.m ~pint. Ntw clutch It ti"''· Al\t·fM. ttlXXl. ~ nlah11. FERRARI AuntORIZED SALES &. SERVICE J1rtuµort 31tnport s 3100 w. Coast Hwy. Newport Beaclt FIAT • Complete Stock of 11Df4ll TM1k See "FRIEDLANDER" 13750 IEACH ILYD. (Hwy. 39} 893-l:i66 • 537-6824 '66 P(ln;che 911-RPil \.\'/hlk inL s:t100 fhesr nlr. muM sell. 67.).5731t aft 4 or 11·knd~. '67 PORSCHE 912 Targ11 . Orig. O\.\ner, lo mi'!, $1150 644-5936. TOYOTA TOYOTA NEW '71 NO DOWN PAYMENT • J1rl.Uµort 31urports 3100 \\'. Coast Hv.·y. ~c11 poet Beach -,6~9 YW BUG L•'1•st Selection OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS '67 DELTA '88' ·- We've Really Done It This Timel THESE CARS HAYE TO GO LARGE DRASTIC REDUCTIONS $268* 1965 T-BIRD Full Pow••, Air, R•d lo Ht•ler. IO SI $677* 1966 PLYMOUTH l•rr.,11d• 2 Door. ll•die, He•t1r. Air. !RYMl!ll $679* $679* 1964 PLYMOUTH Club Cou~•· AutO"'•llc., Red Po. H1•l•r. !EOL7411 $52C»* •$50.00 PREP CHARGE SAVE SAVE Marcus